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The

Family.... _________.

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'
"When the weather was good, I'd spend every hour
that l was n't eit.her sleeping or eating on the tractor,"
he said. "Started one day at 7: :lJ In the mornlng antl
quit at midnight. Started again at 7::ll the next
__
morn ing.
"You get accustomed to it. What gets old Is alter
you do the same thing 11 or 12 days In a row. Then It
gets tough ."
Even when he' s short ·handed, Tolliver feels he
must mal&lt;e the most of good weather. His father can
attest to tha t.
"Back In FebllJary . when the weather was real
nasty here, l decided to go to Michigan to
snowmobile,'' said J ack Tolliver. "When I got back, I
discovered that the two ol them (Klrbya ndKeUy) had
plowed 300 acres and missed a complete night of
sleep. They got some good weather her!' and just ran
it light arou nd the clock."
"We star ted plowing on a Monday morning,"
recalled Kirby To!Uver, "and didn't q~it · till
Wednesday morn ing."
J ack Tolliver still is embarrassed about his how he
felt when he got home.
"Guilty." he said.
When Tolliver isn' t driving a tractor, it seems like
he's fixin g one.
"Ma intenanC'f'. " he said. "That's never-ending.
We've got fi\'c tractors. six trucks and a combine.
That's a Jot of engines."
And Iil'f'&gt;S.
"One day we had two wa r tires on two tractors go
nat," said TOIIi\'er. "BI'cause It"&lt;&gt; tires have ballas t in
them - wa ter and calcium - we had to have
someone from town come out and refill them. It took
about four hours and it was 9 o'clooll at night before
they were fixed ."
The repair expense was secondary .
"The time lost is what hu1t " he said . "After they
were fixed , we felt we just had to go back oot and plow
till midnight."
The kind of hours Tolliver works would rarely be
tolerated by a labor un ion - an d Tolliver has very

1988

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel ·

..

-L.~

st.rong feelings about un!Qns"
·
/)
"The middleman gouge$ consumers much more
than the farmer and labonmlonscause that," he said.
"II farmers could organiz£' ...,. which they never wUl
really be able to do becai!Se they're a mass group of
Individuals - they could b ring this oountry to Its
knees. Th~y could get whatever they wanted.
' "Back In the sweat shop days, labor unions were
great when they Improved working conditions. But
when you' re not allowed to lire a guybecausere won't
work, something's wrong. He's got union tenure or
whatever and you can't touch him . But Hsomeone's
not productive out here on the farm, you just don't
need him."
The long workhoursof Aprll wlii be concentrated on
feriillzlng and planting.
"Our big thing in early April Is anhydrous
ammonia," said Tolliver. "Nitrogen lor the corn . We
can put it on In a week or 10 days."
But don't count on II being done by April 10.
"There probably wil l be quite a lew days we can't
put it on because of rain," reminded Jack Tolliver.
"April Is a fickle month. The Good Lord controls the
Wl'ather, but we're at the (Tlercy or II."
Farming is never rained ou~ lllough.
·;You can never get ahead of your main ten ance
problems," sa id Tolliver.
'
Just as 9JOn as the weather permits lert illz~g t o be
completed, the corn wlli be planted.
"That should take about ano.ther week or 10days,"
said Tolliver. ·'We ho~ we ca n get it done by the end
of April.
" II things don't tum out the way you plan, you get In
a pinch. St il l, I'd like to think that we've come far
enough that we could sustain a bad year this year."
"But." interjected Jack, "not a disaster year."
"Agricultu re has really become capital intensive, "
said Kirby. " It takes a lot of money."
"But we can get the money ," declared Jac~.
!Ji ggering skeptical looks from his sons. ''The thing Is,
It alway s has to be paid back. That' s the kicker."

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Meigs property transfers
Pfaff &amp; Smith Builders &amp;lpply
Co. to Raymond L. Furbee, Gr..ce
Furbee, parcels." Lebanon.
Irvin g Karr, Jr. to John F. Fuilz,
Mari ly n K. Fultz. Par ce ls,
Sa lisbury .
Clara Jean Bra::! ford to Keith G.
Bra::!lord , Debra S. Bradford.
parce ls. Sutton.
Elbert Ray Bachner , Al ice
Bachner, Clair Eugene Bachner,
Marjorie Bac hner, Cliffo rd Jack
Bachner. Carolyn Bachner to Eve·
rett Leo Bachner, Pt. bt 29. Mldd.

Vill.
Robert L. Lynch, Dec ., Delores
M. Surface, fka Delores M. Lynch,
Afftd ., Mldd. VIII.
Delores M. SUJiace, Harry C.
Surface to Harry C. Suriace ,
Delores M. Suriace, Pt. lot 293,
Mldd. Vill.
Harley Slack. al&lt; a H.L. Slack.
Dec., Margaret Slack Goett , Dec.,
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royalty pa.yments paid Into UMW pmslon fund s
should not be lowered or eliminated. He said any such
action would give some operators an unfair coal
market advantage while imposing undue economic
hardships on others.
During a weekend strategy session , the NPC leader
also warned that reduced roya lties at some mines
would lead to more layoffs of union miners and
"would certainly leopardlze any chance for a decent
relrementlncome lor future retirees."
The NPC laid the groundwork lor a pubic hearing to
be held April 26, where changes sough lin the pension
plan can be aired preparatory to drafting them In a
resolullon to UMW officers and to negotiators lor the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association In advance of

the JTPA offt ce at 1l7 West Second
Street, In Pomeroy, 992·2222.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services (OBES} has esta blished
the following application schedule
In cooperation with area school
systems.
Students Interested In applying
should contact their school gul·
dance counselor or princlapl on:
Wednesday, April 9-Meigs High
School.
Thursday, AP ril 10-Sou t ; r
High School.
Friday, April ll - Easte111 H
School.
.
Youths Interested In applying for
the Summer Youth Employment
Training Program (SYETP ) must
apply through tre local office of The
Ohio Bureau ct Employment Servi·
ces (OBES} .
Youths, who are residents of
Meigs Cou nty and are out of school,
atten ding college, or other post high
school training should contact
OBES at :11300 Unio n Avenue,
Pomeroy, 992-6671 aft er April 15 to
s c h e dul e a n a p pl i c a t ion
appointment.

Lightning blamed
for ·tavern blaze
•Automati &lt;'
• Ai ~ Condilioning

• AM-n tl

CHARLESTON , W.Va. (UPII - Amovement that
strives to win a bigger monthly lneome lor retired
coal miners want s United Mine Workers President
Richard Trurnka to provide copies d. all contracts he
negollated In which royalty payments to pension
fund s were either reduced or eliminated.
Don Nunley, who heads the fledgling National
Pension Committee, planned to send Trumka a letter
today by certified mali, asking the UMW leader to
furnish his group copies of such cont rac ts.
Nunley said his group wants to look at all contracts
the Trumka administration negotiated that produced
cuts, or outnght elimination, of royalty payments by
coa l operators to the 1900 and 1974 pension funds.
The NPC chairman said Sunday thai currrnt

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comnnttee wants to review contracts

The Ga!Ua-Melgs CM has ccmpleted basic pl anning lor the 1986
Summer Youth E mployment
Training Program (SYETP ). Ar:·
cordlhg to David Gbeckner, .ITPA
Director, the progra m will be
similar to the 1985 progr am which
served approximately 65 yooth In
Meigs County .
Spec!OcaUy the program Is ex·
peeled to provide 32 hours or work
experience per week lor youth ages
14 tlu"!Jugh 21 at a wage of $3.:5 per
hour. The 'youth employed will be
assigned to work at various govern·
ment agencies and non-profll organizations In Meigs County.
In addi tion lo the work exre:
rlence, pan lclpan ts will receive
approximately 40 hours of labor
market orientation, carrer assess·
ment, and careercounsellngdunng
the June through Septem ber
period.
Potential worksltes have been sen I
a summer workslte su rvey to
determine their needs lor workers.
Any non·profll organlzatbn or
government agency not receivin g a
survery by April 1l , slDuld contact

"NI FINISH

PECAN FINISH

ELBERFELOS
POMEROY -992-3671

cnnlflltibtltfY t quue

25 Cento

A MuHimedio Inc. Nowop-

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis fire
officials believe lightning Is lhe
cause of a fire Sunday lllat
extensively damaged a Vi ne Street
tavern and carryout.
Fire Chief Ray Bush said eyewitnesses In the area saw lightning
strike the west section of the roof of
the Dock Inn. They saw sparks and
smoke almost immed ia tely. The
fire depa t1ment received the first
call from a Johnson's Supermarket
employee at 5:58 p.m. and were
also notified by a FoUJ1 h Avenue
resident.
"A guy said his TV went berserk
and when he looked out his front .
door, he saw spar ks coming oul of
the roof, abou t two-thirds of the way
back on the west side of the roof."
Bush said.

It again, but I'm sticking, to my
belief that It was Hght ning," Bush
said .
Bush said it's been "some time
back" since the department responded to a fire caused by
lightning.
•
"l remember one day we had two
in a row," he said. "There was one
at a house on 141thatdliln't burnt he
building but buckled the siding. And
right after that Ughtning struck a
trailer on Route 7. It was totally
~ngu ifed whe n we got there ."

•

the current contract' s expiration on Jan. 31, 1~.
Nunley said local unions In UMW districts In
Virginia, Ohio, West Virginia , Illinois and Pennsylva·
nia have agreed to suwort the pension commltll'e.
Support was voiced for proposed Social Security
supplements lor miners retiring before the age of 62.
An amount or $412 was proposed lil addition to the
regular pension payments.
Currently, a miner with 20 years ct service retiring
al age 55 would collect $264 per rmnth. Under the
NPC's proposal, the miner would also collect the $412
supplement unt.il the age of 62, at which time his
regu lar federal Social Security checks would start.
'Nun ley said the proposal would offer the miner a "a
stable and decent tt~come prior to becoming ei!J(ible

for regular Social Security and he would be more
inclined to retire, thus opening up jobs for
unemployed miners."
NPC members have rnalptained that the small
pension provided miners has alsoouraged many from
taking an early retirement, thus preventing jobs from
b!&gt;lng opened to younger miners who are on layd.!.
Sam Church, a former UMW president and now a
field representative for Distrtct 281n Virginia, said the
plan has merit and would benefit all cunmt and
future retirees, besldes·glvlng out.of-work miners an
opportunity to return to the mines.
Cllurch said the proposal tWutld oot rost coal
operators any additional money.

neW coal bill

SIGNS NEW COAL LEGISlATION - Ohio Govermr Klchanl
Celeste Saturday signed an amendment Co the Ohio Comtttudon which
1111tlllrbes the sale o! up to $100 mDllon wor:ith of bonds lor research Into
ways to bum Ohio's high suHur cllal cleanly and lncrease ltsderntmdon
the market. (Ftle photo).

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - 'The mlJIIon In bonds will be available
Office of Coal Development Is now from the Office of Coal Developo!Dclally au thorlzed to sell bonds ment. In fiscal year 1987, which
thai wW back research into ways to begins July 1, $.1i mlJIIon worth d.
burn Ohio's high sulfur coal cleanly bonds wlll be available. 'The
and Increase its demand on the remaining $00 miUlon will be !llid
during subsequent years.
market.
The O(tlce d. Coal Development
Gov. Richard F. Celeste chose the
Sunnyhlll Coal Mine near New wlii be In charge d. selecting project
Lexington In Perry County, Satur· plans submitted by universities,
day a as the backdrOp when he 'industries, research nstltutes and
signed an amendment to the Ohio businesses that qualify for the
Constitution which authorizes the funds.
sale of up to $100 million worth of
lxmds for the research.
The blll st!Pul~es that the state
The cei'I!I'OOny puts the executive wlll mllect a"'IJB"centaae of any
stamp on a measure that the pro!lls ultbnately earned ·through
Legislature has wocked on tor the go ver nment -supported
m:mths alter Ohio voters over· resmrch.
whelmlngly passed Issue 1 last
"The primary purpo5e d. this
November.
amendment is to expand markets
"This arnetdment represmts my for clf!,!lll Ohio coal, thereby putting
commitment and that of the our ooal miners tack to ~Wrk,"
cltl:zms of Ohio 1D this state's coal Celeste said. " It demonstrates
lndustcy andtheecoromicfutureof Ohio's commitment to solving air
southeastern Ohio,"· Celeste said. pollutbn problems."
The govel'l'ilr also el&lt;JJ'essed
"Ohio now has the iar!J!St clean
coal technology program In the pride In the public suwort o! the
amendment and the l:A· partisan
country . ~~
Between now and June 30, $15 legislative support.

Reagan turns plans to economic summit
more than :ro people were Injured

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Presl· Tuesday when Reagan bids fare·
dent Reagan, evidently relaxed and well to Anatoly Dobry nin, the
.. rested alter 11 days at his CalHorr Ia longtime Soviet ambassador to the
ranch, turns today to plans for next United States who Is becomin g a
month' s economic summit ln To- member of the Communist Party
kyo, where Western leaders are Central Committee In charge of
expected to discuss terrorism as foreign affa irs with non-communist
nations.
well.
Dobrynln Is expected to cal'lj' a
Reagan also will be lobbying this
week for his aid package for the message from Soviet leader Mlk·
Ni caraguan Contras, which ha s hail Gorbachev accepting a date lor
cleared the Senate and comes up for the summit.
a House vote April 15. The House
Reagan was kept Informed du rdefeated the original aid pac kage
Ing his vacation about two terrorist
last month .
The president also faces Ihe attacks last week - one against a
stalemate between the United TWA jet over Greece and one In a
States and the Soviet Union over discotheque In West Berlin. Fou r
setting a date for this year's Americans died In the airplane
bombing. A U.S. ooldler and a
summit .
A breakthrough could cdme Turkish woman were killed and

On the plane to Washington,
Speakes was asked II terrorism
tWuid be discussed at tte Tokyo
summll next month. He said It
would, "with tte same emphasis as
the last two summits."
Speakes declined to say II the
United States had asked Its E~
pean aUies to expel Libyan dlpfo.
mats but said , " In a case lJke
France, where they uncovered a
plot to oonduct terrorist activity
against Americans, surely It's
advantageous to get rid o! people
who are plotting terrorist activity."
Franre ordered ' two Libyan
diplomats to leave the country last
week for communicating with
Individuals believed to be plotting
terrorist acls against U.S. targets In
Europe.

In the Eerlln attack.
Asked If he plans 1D "hit
Khadaly," In retaliation for tte
attacks, Reagan replied "no comment" before boarding Air Force
One for the fllght to Waslington.
An administration official dis·
closed Saturday what hll called a
Libyan "master plan" lor terror·
Ism against roore than Jl American
facilities abroad and an IIISpecl!ied
number o! U.S. diplomats. Reagan
ordered hls top lorelgn (Kllicy aides
to l'I'View potmtlal res!KJnses.
The president "wants In see that
we do everything possible, lll:l;t to
apprehend and prosecutetlnsewho
are responsible," said White House
spokesman LaiTy Speakes.

Columbus cop killed

The fire Ign ited raft ers In the roof
and caused . par t of the roof to
l'Oilapse, Bush said . Two trucks and
li firemen respo nded to the call,
using :ll,OOO gallons .or water to
extinguish the blaze. They re·
malned on the scene unt il 8 p.m.
Both city police and the Gallla
Co un ty Sher iff 's Depar tmen l
helped maintain traffi c control.
Estimated damage to llle build·
lng was $8,00l and offici als said
approximately $5, 000 damage was
done to the contents. Officials said
the bu ilding's value Is estimated at
$12,000 and the contents, $10,000.
The building Is owned by Charles E .
Carter, Rt. 3, Ga!Upolts.
The lightning came from one or
the slorms thai rumliloo through
the area Sunday that ironically
helped dampen the danger of
furthe r forest and brush fi res
throughou t southern Ohio and Wesl
Virginia. Flteflghters In both slates
have beeo ba ttUng blazes caused by
c:i three
TAVERN FIRE - D•mage was estimated at1 blaze was believed to he Ugblnlng from
the dry weather for more than a
thunderstonns
which
hit
the
lrl-rounty
area
Sundlly.
513,000
In
a
fire
Sunday
evening
at
tte
Dock
Inn
week.
1 ,.
"f'm·golng
to
go
down
at . Tavern located on Vine 81. In G,n!POUS. Cause of the
, _., ..........
,. :..
_................ .... ... ... . . and look
." .........
"
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-

Celeste signs

CAA announces
plans for youth
work program

Linda Evans eta!, Botby Joe
Adams J r., Trustre , Sheriffs Deed,
Sutton.
Gemma M. Case!, Dec., to Paul
Cascl, Ronald Case!. Ida Counts,
David Casci, Arthur Casct, RJta
Whitlatch, Teresa Carr, Affid.,
Midd. VUI.
David P . Case!. Ronald P. Cascl,
Cindy Cascl, Teresa Carr, Ronald
L. Carr, Rita Whitlatch, Ida Counts,
J im Counts, Joyce Casci, Arthur
Case! to Paul Casci, Parcels, Mldd.
VIII.

Your Excitement Plus Pontiac Dealer••.

1 Section 10 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, April 'I, 1986

Vol.36, No.248
Copyrighted 1986

CIIMMI.Kk
DlfM.. IIIfMM•
~ &lt;'

at y ..........en tine

•

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.. .

' "-"""' ".:.n

•

ooe

PoUce Cllief Dw ight Joseph sa id
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! I Friends of Gordon Jre Rich, a Rich's 23-year career was distinColumbus pollee ofllcer killed guished by the officer's almost
Saturday momlng while writing a limitless appetite for hard work.
traffic citation, desl:rlbe blm as a "He was the kind of guy who was
hard worker who liked to have tun !he backbone d. 1~ t ree."
Casto said Rlch"was working the
and " really loVed JHe."
Lt. Ralph Casto; a close friend of speed patrol on Interstate 70 East,
Rich' s. said Rich enjoyed riding just west of the state Route 315
motorcycles and planned to rlde to Intersection, when 'he made a
routine traffic st ~.
Florida in May.
Rich, who was slDt once in the
He wlll be buried In New Albany
Tuesday following funeral servic!'s · head and once In the left shoulder,
struggled to his cruiser where he
In Columl1us.
Columbus pollee have charged managed "m report the lllDting at
Robert L. CarlSon, :10, and James 12: :II a.m., Casto sald. O!!icer Mark
Lumpkin Rattler, 25, both of Walker responded to the caU and
Columbus's east slde, with aggra· found Rich lying near his cruiser.
vated murder. '!lley were appre- He was taken to Mt. Carmel
hended about one-halt hour alter Medical Center WheT!' he died at
Rich was shot In tJie head with his 2:05a.m.
A motorist wltneslied tte shooting
own .31kallber poliCe l'I'Volver.
Municipal Court Judge Marvin and followed the men. The motorist
later led pollee an 1·70exltabout me
Romanoff set Rattler'$ bond at
million and Garlson's at $!00,00), mlle west d. w~re the shooting
They are being held In the Franklin ~urred . There, police found the
suspect's abandoned car.
Counly JaU.
Two~her ~ncers spotted the ttW
Homicide Del. Gary Rountree
sald Rich Is the first of!lcer to be walking IIEarby and pursued, Casto
killed in the lllie d. duty In about 13 said. The officers chased tte men
and captured Rattler and
years.
·
. Garison

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Page- 2..:..The Daily. Sentinel ·

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, April 7, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, April7. 1986

liE IUlM lit(
IlCHT TO UIIIT
QUAIITHIES

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"

The Daily Sentinel

:.•.

·m eo.n sveea

.

. Pcinaero:J,,Ohio
.
DEV&lt;n'ED TO THE IN'l'Eiti!STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
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,

A~

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&amp;!m~ '""'-'~..,...·~=

"'llv

ROBERT L.

~NGETT

•

Publisher
o

Provocative
foreign
polleY~--=c..:..:.eo_!;.rge--:-M_cG_ove_rn
-

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
Geaeral M1U1a1er

Aallolanl Publloher/ ConlroUer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne'll'l Editor
A MEMBER of The United Preis International, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
11011 and the American Nt'Wspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcol'l'le. They lhoukt

be len tban 300 word!

lone. Allletlers are subject to edltlnJ and must be ll&amp;ned with name, address aad
telephon ~ numbfor. No unslened lettm wUJ t» pubUJhed. Letters ahoukl be In

John Jay, writinc In The FederaliJtt
No. 4, oblerved ZOO years BIIO:
"But the salety or the people or
America againat · dangers Irom for.
eign force depends not only on their
forbearing to give just' causes of war
to other natloas, but also on their
placing and continuing themselves in
such a situation as not to Invite h011til·
· ity or 1118ult; for it need not be observed that there are pretended as
well as jDSt cause~ of war."
AI one watches the Reagan administration turning up the heat against
two little impoveril;hed states, Nica·
ragua and Libya, it would appear that
the cautionary advice of our first
chief jU8Uce, John Jay, is being
ignored,
Libya is headed by Col. Muammar

good taste, addrn slng Issues, not persooaUtlet.

L:~~=-~~--~------------------~.

Reasons behind
I aRouche fever
How come tile followers or radical economlstLynckln LaRouche lll'f' able
to generate enough public support to rattle tiE regular Del'llJCI'3tlc party In
a number or states?
.
Columbiana County Democratic Chairman Don Gosney thinks he
knows.
"The Democratic Party on the national, state and county (le&gt;vtls) has
lost ground In the past decade due to candidates having their own tu~
raising, their own organizations and the political PACs donatblg to
candidates direct," Gosney said In a recent letter.
"This has done a lot to weaken the Democrat~ Party on all levels.
Candidates in a lot or cases have rrore money than the Democrat party.
Candidates feel they no longer need apolitical party, theyareontheirC7NII.
Whe!1 parties get weak Is, the time t&gt;r radical grou(li ~ke LaRouche to
move in."
Democratic State Chairman James Ruvolo does mt subscribe to
Gosney's belief that the LaRouchlans iire a threat to the party.
But he does agree with the eastern C»&gt;lo chairman that political actlon
conunlttees have weakened old-fashioned party (Xllitlcs and are an
annoyance If not a danger to tbe system.
·
.
"There's no question that parties are weaker and tiE party endorsement
doesn't mean as much as It used to," said Ruvolo. "I'm against PACs br
that very reason. It used to be that everybody knew the party slate was
® methlng worth having."
What's changed?
"Television has replaced grass roots organization In rrost campaigns,"
Is Ruvolo's diagnosis.
.
.Television requires mmey, and political action commlttees are able to
provide that money- tocandldateswoowlllsldewlththem when the chips
aredown.
·
But political action committees are not necessartly for good
government, or In favororwhat'sgoodforllle people on balance. They are
for themselves, and chielly on a single issue.
• "The PACs are allowed to appeal man emotional Issue, and they pick
highly-charged issues that appeal to people," said Ruvolo.
For example, there are PACs opposing abortion, gun control,. and drunk
df:.lvlng. 1bere are PACs favoring InSurance companies, tavern owners
and banks.
• When you take their rroney, you vote their way on an Issue, never mind
what's best for the people overall, or they will work to beat your brains wt

tile next time.
• "The parties are there the day after the election," said Rumlo. "They
are tile thread that runs through the entire process. They are the Cllly
1
cohesive factor."
•
ln the 198!1 presidential landslide, the IRJmCrats dlscoven!d they had
lost much rt their traditional constituency. They vowed to reshape the
I!8I'1Y and recapture the coalition that represented common tllks.
: So far, they have not had much success and oow, they are being
Challenged by LaRouchlan candidates campaigning on "hlghly-chiiJ'IIe(l
Issues that appeal to people."
· TheLaRouchJanslack the money to getooTV, but as Gosney points out,
they may have as much eflect as the PACs In weakening tiE Democratic
p&amp;rty. When you campaign against drug:;, against the Russians, against
AIDS and against fanner banknlptcles,' somebody's goblg to sit up and
~e ootlce.

Letter to editor
Dai-sy Girl ScoU;ts thankful
·we would Hke to thank all the
busbless places in the conununlty
wiD have sponsored the Daisy Girl
Scout Troop 01008 and to tl»se wiD
have taken Ume out of their busy
sChedules to siDw the girls oow
om business operates.
:For people woo don't know what
. DillsyGirl Scouts are, they are girls
d ldndergarten age woo want to be
brownies but are too yourw.
They are not allowed to selltlings
or have dues taken to help pay for
· their actlvltles cr trips. So the
leaders have to lind people cr

places ol. business woo will sjlonsor
the Dalsys or dmate money cr
suppUes that they need. n you
would like to be a sponsor ·please
call one d the tlllowtng IWmbers:
992-53118 and ask for TamJliY cc
992-6368, PeglO' Lewis . Again
tluinks to everyooe for your help. It
Is deeply apprecJaU:d •
Tanuny Daniels, Susie Smith,
Brenda Barnhouse and Peggy
Lewis.
Daisy Girl Scout
Troopl0128

"I know you're

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Khadafy, a man once described by the Sidra pff Libya's coast plart!d into the and to hit a missile site. But did anylate President Anwar Sadat of Eaypt Libyan leader's hands. llts not clear one ever doubt the superiority Of the
as . "a certified lunatic." Khadafy j~t why Rea8fn ordered three Amer- Sixth Fleet over Libya's meager naworks hard at trying to convince the lcan aircraft carrie11into the dlsput· val units?
Does it really enhance the )lrestige
world that he is a powerful and dan- e4 golf. One explanation is that the
geroDS man - the world's Jeadlnc ter· administration was trying to under· and security of the United States to
rorist. Just bow powerful be is and ICOre America's commitment to free· 'risk lives - to say nothin~ of enorhow much terror be unleashes beyond dom of the seas by defying Khadafy's . mously expenstve naval umts ..., m a
his boastful aild healed rhetoric IJ1 de- claim to the Gulf of Sidra.
· provocative exchange ~tlh an unstabatable. He especially enjoys bailing
If that was the reason for the fleet ble Third World leader .
the Unlled States -the world's stron· maneuvers, one wonders why it was
While all nf this .was taking place,
gest and ricbesl nati011. He considers necessary to dispatch three ,(!iga.nti~ the administr~tion charged Nicarahimself an ally of the Soviet Union. carriers to make the pomt. Also, stnce guan forces wtth mvadmg Honduras
but there are times when the Soviets the ships have now been withdrawn and promptly· rushed $20 million in
seem uncomfortable with their North and Khadafy still insists that the Gulf military aod to the Ho~duran JOvernAfrican ally.
of Sidra ts his, how much has r&lt;ally ment, while airlifttng lfo~~u~an .
Given KhJday's apparent need for been accomplished?
. .. troops to .the Nica~aguan bordet. It
international attention, it would seem
It is true that the U.S. naval and a1r took a day and a half after Washmg·
that the recent fleet exercises ordered uniu demonstrated their capacity to ton reported the Ni~araguan invasion
by President Reagan in the Gulf of sink couple of small Libyan boats before the government of HondQras
finally agreed that their territory had
been violated. The Honduran president demonstrated the level of his
concern by going away on a brief
vacation.
It would seem that this is not really
a conflict between Nicaragua and
Honduras, but another altercation be·
tween the contra forces r..,ruited by
the CIA to sabotage Managua and the
Nicaraguan government.
Mr. Reagan blamed the Nicaraguan attack on the vote of the House
"'ii~
of Representatives against further
..
' aid to the contra forces. But congressional leaders of both parties have
said that they were told just the opposite by administration briefing offi.
cials who believe that tbe Nicaraguan
government expected the Senate to.
reverse the House vote and that aia·
would soon be flowing again to the.
contras. Managua, according to thiS•
theory, ordered the attack now before
additional aid could arrive.
In any event, it does not seem sur·
prising to me that the Nicaraguan
government would pursue across the
border those forces recruited by the
CIA that are trying to bring down the
government in Managua .
As with Libya, is it not probable
that
is overreacta .contra, dear, but do you have to be a contra the tog tothetheadministration
results of its own provoca-

a

at

breakfast table?"

tive behavior?

Diletmna's resolution __Ja_ck_A_nd_·e_rs_on....:...&amp;_Da_le_~_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON -The agonizing . Incursions there has been oo sign r1
debate fNer U.S. aid to the the flOPU.\Br support they're count·
Nicaraguan contras appears to be lng on to win.
impossible to resolve In a way that
.Unfortunately, the net result ot
will · satls(y both the Reagan tiE contra operations has)leen Ill
administration and Its critics. The give the Sandlnistas an excuse for ·
rmson is that nelt'her side In the buDding up their miUtary strength
debate has a monopoly m truth and with aid from the Soviet bloc.
wisdom.
Managua now has an army d
Desirable as It would be to get rid &amp;l,!m, easUy able to fend orr attacks
or the SandiniJtta regime In Mana· by the oontras, woo number
gua, or at least brce It to back off its perhaps 12,!0) but have never had
headlong rush toward Marxist . more than half tbat many In action
tyranny, the mntras aren '1 the ones Inside Nicaragua on t!Eir best days.
wiD can do the job. The Reagan
stnce 1982, the oontras have
administration's fatthln the oontras received more than $81 million
is sadly mispl.:ed, as wr reporter from the CIA, $'l7 mllllon ~
Jon Lee Anderson p1lnts wt bl "humanitarian ald".from Congress
dispatches from O,ntral America. . and about $15 mlllion In private
The plain truth that canoot be funding through the world Anti·
carroullaged by any armunt d blue Communist League. Yet they have
srmkl! and mirrors Is that, after never made any serious Invasion d
five years or trying, the contras Nicaragua or managed to oollj.qnto
have failed utterly to Ignite the so much as a silver of Nicanlguan
massive uprising among the Nlca· territory. They remain mtl~ng
raguan people that IIley have more than an Jrrttant to the
predicted so confidently for Ill long Sandinistas - and a tallor-made
- and wltoout which they canmt excuse for emergency decrees and
prevail. • .
pleas for world sympatl\Y by
It lloesn't really matter whether Managua.
this faUure is due to the oontras'
There Is rmre fault to be laid at
sblgular miUtsry lneptttude or to the oontra leaders' door: Uke poor
llleirdublousortgtn as a Somoclsta· Blanche DuBois, they 'are depmd·
talntw creature or the CIA. The ent on the kindness of strangersfact Is that bl all their S(Xlradic the Hondurans - yet ~ nve years

they havef@ed to developelth:!r an

occasionally.
amlcabl¢ relattonshlp with their
Interestingly enough, our repor·
reluctant blsts or to secure sale ter learned tllat the Salvadoran
alternatiVe supply lines for their rebels' footwear of choice Is
necessities. Their aid Is channeled Honduran·made boots. How they
through the Honduran army, with get them Is anyone's guess, but
the predictable result that serious their scrounging skill is obviously
"skimming'' is routble.
far ahead or any that the Nlcara·
So hapless have the contras guan contras possess.
IEcome In their lsolatton that last
Is there no choice for the United
fall, when the Hondtiran govern- State;, between supporting the
ment imposed a ban m U.S. supply Keystone Kontras or letting Nlcara·
flights to the contra camps to avoid gua become a permanent Soviet
embarrassment over the contras' satellite?
clearly illegal P.resEII&lt;&gt;' In Hondu·
There Is.
ras, the doughty guerrilla oomThe BOS (from the Spanish
rnanders ral.9ed piteous cries that Initials t&gt;r Southern Opposition
their fighters were barefoot. That, Bloc) Is a Nicaraguan coalition of
they announced, was why they had four popularly based labor, profes·
had to call df the war temporarily. sional and poUtical groups with
What makes this pathetic allbl support Inside Nicaragua and .
particularly humiliating Is that BI'Mng the exue cormnunlty. 80S is
right next dooq In El Salvador an solidly antl-Sandlnlsts, but is un·
anti-gov-ernment goerrtlla group· tainted by ties to the Somoza
- the leftist FMLN - has been dictatorship and its hated national
cperatblg br years completely guard.
Inside th:!ir own country. The 6,1XXl
One BOS component, ARDEN, Is
to 8,000 Salvadoran rebels are led by.Eden Pastora, the flamboy outnumbered at least eight·liH&gt;ne ant ex-Sand!nista famous as Com·
by the anny they're fighting, and
mandante Zero. His group Is the
unlike the oontras In Honduras, mly 80S member that has a
they have no sanctuary to which mtlitary force, and while far
they can retreat across the border smaller than the ooniras' army, it
bl tile event or a mllltary setback. has been at least as effective on
They even tlghtt)!f! Honduran army Nicaragua's southern fiank

Who's watching Congress?___R__ob__er__t ~__a__lte_rs .

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (NEA) - In an by a Pentagon contractor.
sought to prot..,! rather than critici•e for auto trips he did not take.
underatstement of heroic propor·
In Oregon, it was a Portland news- wayward lawmakers. .
But the committee voted unani·
tiona, a journalist here recently Db- paper that disclosed that Rep. James
In
Daniel's
case,
the
only
one
of
the
mously
to impose no pen*y· on the
served lhat Rep. William H. Boner, J). Weaver, O.Ore., lost almost $82,000 probes to he concluded thus far, the
grounds
that Daniel misunderstood
Tenn., "has always had an avid speculating in the bond market with panel found. that he violated House
House
rules
- an astoundingly gener·
interest In SIIUIJI bullnea.deala."
money taken from his campaign trea· rules by accepting the free flights ,
ous conclusion in a case involving a
The four:terrn representative's fi· sury. He then claimed the money was failing
to publicly report them and Capitol Hill veteran who has served
nancial transactions - large and repayment for a series of personal
falsely
billir
g the federal government lor nine terms.
small - in recent years include these loans he had made to the campaign
deals:
many years earlier.
.:.. In 1983, a local real estate devel·
Finally, II was tbe Wall Street Jour·
oper gave him a 5 percent interest In nal that first reported how Rep. Fera propoeed fll million bote) project nand J. StGermain, D-R.I., becam~ a
In Greenville, S.C., In return for Bon· millionaire while serving In Congress
er's Investment of exactly fS,
- with the help of'flrms whose activi·
- In 1t84, the same businessman ties are under the jurisdiction of the
gave Boner a 5 percent Interest in a House Banking Committee, which he
planned motel and restaurant proj..,t chairs. ·
in Richmond, Va. On that occasion,
Here In Nashville, it was the Ten·
the
a sso nessean• .on• or
two daily .
Investment.
newspapers, that aggressively pur- In 198% and 1983, Boner's wife sued reports of Boner's allegedly lm·
Today Is Monday, April 7, the !17th day of 1986 wltlt 268 to ftlllow.
received aim01t $48,000 from a De- proper business.transactions. ·
~bnlse Department! fcontracktorh, osten·
"Boner bas been enmeshed in a byz.
The moon Is moving .toward Its new phase.
11
5
·
M
J
1
d
Satur
••
Y
paymen
or
wor
e
~rantt'ne
assortment ol polt'tl'caJ.and pn'·
The morning stars are Mercury, ars, up ter an
n.
r ed
but tb h d f th 1
orm e ea o e rm vate relationships," two Tennessean
T)le evening star is Venus.
now characteriles those paymenu u reporters said In a recent maga•lne
Those
on this date are under the sign rl Aries. They lnclljde English a "bribe" to the congressman.
article. It concluded that the Jegisla·
Boner is one of four members of the t "h
d h'
bl ' If
h'
•""'t and philosopher WOllam WordsiVOrth In 1770, singer Blllle Holiday in
"""
19""
or pras'vatega
use ·n
IS "
pu tc o ice 1or IS
J915,sitarplayerRaviShankarln
..,(age 66 ),actor James Gamerbl 1928 House to be.t'nvestlgated lhl's year b.y ow
1
n th1
· h VI
(age 58). former Defense Department analyst Daniel EUsbergln l93l (age the Committee on Standards ol Offt'·
·
1
55), rum director Francis Coppola In 1939 (age 47), former Caurornla cia! Conduct, which supposedly serves
n e case o1 t e rgima and
South
Governor Jerry Brown bll938 (age 48), and rock musk:Jan John Oates bl u a walcbdog of JegiJtlatora' ethics.
11 Carolina
th real
t estatet' ventures
Bo as
' ·
The cues of tlie lour represents- we as o er ransac tons,
ner
1949·(age 37).
.
lives share common characteristics failed to report the lucrative deals on
On this date In history:
that reveal a great deal abOut the the financial reports members of Con·
In l) A.D., by many scholars' reckoning, Jesus was crucified by Roman maintenance of ethical standards in gress must submit annually for public
troops In Jerusalem.
Congreu; In each instance, the al· inspection.
In 186l!, Union forces .under the command of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant Jeged lri'OIIgdoiog was initially lnvesBoner recently - and belatedly dete"aU:d the Confederates at Shiloh, Tenn.
ligated and diJclOied by &amp;·newspaper, relinquished his Interest in the two
In 1943, American and British troops accomplished a strategic linkup In and no congressional probe was real estate proj..,ts, an action pre·
Thnlsia durtng tiE North African campaign~ World War II.
launched until the publicity became sumably intended to provide the foot·
In 1947, millions of Amertcans were left.wiiiDut telepiDne service by a intolerable for the politician involved. dragging ethics committee with an
nationwide strike. It las tal 23 days.
.
·
In Virginia, it was a Richmond excuse to condone his apparenk .
•
In 19&amp;l, crewmen or the shuttle Challenger performed a spacewalk;the newspaper that revealed that Rep. misconduct.
" We at 'Miami Vice' would like to sign you for
first by u.s. astronauts In nine years.
W.C. "Dan" Daniel, O.Va., had ac· ·
Indeed, the committee traditionally
a cameo as,s nut esse. How about II, MosmA thoughtfortheday: PoetWIIUamWordsworthwrote, "The wiser mind · cepU:d u leaat 68 - and poaibly as h115 not only allowed the news media
mar baby?
mourns less
·for_............................
what age takes away
than what It leaves behind."
.zu - free trips•nd-t~perotetl
aboard cor- .~ 'Cal·
to ~k~~he
lea~behavior
In uncoverl~g
unethi·
:::.====::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!. . .
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.................................................
_ ....... _......... many
por.ateas
..atrCI'alt-&lt;lW!Ietl··
or rllegat
"bur a1so
"flar ..... .. ....~.....•·L_:::.

Berry's World

Tod. ay I•n hi.Story

con~· mad~

the ~•ity·s

•

born

.J

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. NEW RED READY - BUI GuJIIcbJn, obliilned In
a December trade wllh Monlreal, lulled up lor the
openlns o1 the 18116 baaeball!le8IIOII Salurday wllh six

tnNDp of IIIUoul ball apbJt
Alllllta Braves.
Gulllck8on I&amp; e.:pected to make his pltchlns debut
wllh the Redlllllil weekend In San Dlep. UPI.

Reds, mintis Rose open
season this .afternoon
CINCINNATI (UPI) , Pete
Rnse, for the first time In his 24-year
career, missed playing In a season
opener today.
Because of lllness at spring
training, the Cincinnati playermanager started the season on the
l!HI~y disabled list. That limit\'(!
Rnse ·to managing his Reds bl
today's 2:05 p.m. (EST) opener
against the Philadelphia Phlllles.
At Sunday's practice, Rose spent
only a ·few mblutes baiting and
fielding, then retired to the dugout
to "psych" himSelf up for today'S
time on the bench.
r
"I'll be thinking rn\ p)aying,"
said Rose. "I'll be In the game
(mentally) .
"Sure, I'd love to be the Opening
Day first baseman, there's going to
be a huge crowd here. It wlll be an
empty feeling If a situation comes
up where I feel I could have helped
the team and I can't But if we get a
lot of runs early and wln the game,
I'll fee I OK .
"Even though I won't play, I'll
sure be part of the game," Insisted
Rose. "I may decide the game with

a right or wrong decision. I just
won't be on the 'Star of the Game·
siDw. I sure blpeoneof my players
is, though." •
Rose, who will celebrate his 45th
blrtlxlay AprUH and be eligible to
play again Aprll 18, has only been
on the disabled list ooeother timeIn 1968 when he broke his thumb.
While Rose saki he haled to mlss
the start or the season, he admitted
he simply Isn't ready to play yet.
"I'm just oot ready because I
wasn't able to do the things In
sprblg training I wan ted to do and
that's because I had a couple of
ailments," he said. "I had the nu
and for four or five days I oouldn't
do anything. I was dead tired.
"I'm gettblg tEtter every day,
but I'm still oot 100 percent. I think
It'll take me anotber week and a
half before lfeell'mreadyto play."
Along with Rose missing an
opener, another tradltkm · was
headed for the wayside " CJncln·
nati today. The Rros, traditional
hosts d baseball's q&gt;ener, were
u(litaged by the Detroit Tigers. The
Tigers scheduled their opener

Baseball returns
with five openers
By FRED McMANE
UPI AIHtant Spoi'tll Editor
After six weeks of formulating
questions In the sun of Florida and
Arizona, major league baseball
teams begin to get some answers
Monday.
That's when the season dflclally
opens with five scheduled games,
stretching from coast·t(}CO&amp;St. Boo·
ton Is at Detroit, Cleveland at
Baltimore and Milwaukee at Chi·
cago In the American League and
Philadelphia at Cincinnati and San
Diego at Los Angeles In tile
National League.
Over the next six months, fans
across tbe country wlll get · the
answers to the following questions
and lots mol)';
- Is their life In Los Angeles
without Pedro Guerrero?
- Can Lou Plnlella sutvlve
baseball's hottest seat as manager
of the New York Yankees?
- Is rodkle Pete lncavlgUa of the
Texas Rangers really the fictional
Roy Hobbs come to life?
The Detroit Tigers have the IDmr
of b!;'lng the first team to take the
field this 5eason as~ they ~ nlertaln
the Boston Rro Sox at Tiger
Stadium In an afternoon game,
beginning at l :ll p.m. EST.
Right-hander Jack Morris wlll start
for Detroit agablst Boston left·
hanck'r Bruce Hurst.
The starting time rt' the Rro
Sox·Tigers game has created a bit
of a Ill rore In CtncJnnatl, where the
Reds have traditionally had tile
honor of officially opening the
season. The Rros will play blst Ill
the PhiladeiP.h!a Phlllles Monday
but the game Is io
.t slated to start
untU 2: 00 p.m.
.
Anotller · lef!-handed pitcher at·
tempting a oomeback, Mike Flana·
gan, wUI start for Baltimore In Its
opener at home against Cleveland.
Flanagan missed inost d last
season with a· knee injury and
pliched In only 15 games. Ken
Schrom will start lor Cleveland.
A knee Injury Is already plagublg
as
defense

will take the fieldwltiDut Guerrero,
t!Eir most feared slugger, In the
lineup.
One or baseball's yw~st pitch·
Ing stars against one of the oldest
wUI be the featured attraction at
Chicago's Comiskey Park where
the White Sox play oost to the
Brewers. Ted Higuera, a Z7-yearold left· handl!r woo won 15 games
for MUwaukl.&gt;e last· season; wUI
start· for tiE Brewers and Tom
Seaver, a·41-year·old right· bander
who has won]).loarrergames,gets
the starting assignment for Chi·
cago.

Leave it to The
Good Hands
People

.to come up .

with a great

.IRA•.

today for 1::ll p.m.. li minutes
ahead ol. the Reds.
"Who cares if they start a ·
half-hour before us," said Rose.
"You oould start a game t\VO days
ago In Detroit and oot have the
same kind of atmosphere you have,:
In Cincinnati. Even In Timruktu,
they know that the baseball season
opener is really In Cincinnati."
Rros' owner Marge Schott had a
suggestion: "We're going to tum
our watches back an hour."
Rose on the bench provided an
intrigublg backdrop for the return
of foM!Jer Reds' ootftelder Gary
Redus 1ll Cincinnati. Redus critic·
lzed , Rnse late last season for
playing too much and in the
off·season was traded · to
Philadelphia.
"I don't think the fans will boo me
forwhatl said," Rroussald Sunday
after roaming a f~lllar w tfleld In
an unfamiliar uniform. "I think a
lot ct peoplpare goblgto miss me In
Cincinnati. I think they enjoyed ·
seeing me play.
'1 don't necessarily have to go
Hor4 bl the opener, butl would like
to contribute In some sort of way. I
hopo; we win by 10 runs. "
Today's start blg pitchers, Steve
Carlton and Markl Solo, were both
trying to rebound from bad seasons
last year. Solo was 12-15 last year,
his ftrst losing season since lis 1977
rookie year.
Carlton. ·41, "suffPred both a I· 8
record and a sore sh:lulder that put
him oo the disabled list 72 days last
year.
"Carlton is 100 pet"cent healthy
right now," Philadelphia manager
John Felske said Sunday. "We're
coming out to win tiE qJener and I
wouldn't put him on the rround II I
didn't think be gives us a great
chanre to wln.
"I respect him for what he's
accomplished In his carrer. He
deserves respect and I gtve It to .
him. But, he's pitching the ~ner
for us because he's healtl\Y,
throwing well and ready to go."

The Daily Sentinel .
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~fiiUIIInDI

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SUIILDCI
LITIDI
4 OZ.IOTTU

"0113~..~--

�Pau•

4 The Daily Sa 11inel

·EasterD splits doubleheader
11J sOOrr D. WOllE
STEWART- Battling back from

a ..2 defeat In !be lint game 11 a
Sabmlay aftemoon doubleheader,
!be F..astem Eagles boys' ~D
team ripped Federal lfoct:lngiDtbe
7 tl split In !be
nightcap
non-league twin bill.
Eaatern Is row f.3werall andJ.I
In SV:AC play, whlle FedPral
Hocking drops kl 3-4.
Eastern IOPhomore IIIyan Durst
pltdiEd a ~game ln the cpener,
lllwever, !be comtmatlon c1 two
l.an!l'r unearned runs and !be
Eagles' oftenslve lnabWtles resulted ID a II81TOW f-2 Federal

»

.

'

v~ctozy,

Durst' yielded· six hits, !our runs,
wallred tour, and shuck out Hve In
llllfterlng the kiss. Two 111115 were
unearned, droppliig Durst's personal record to 2·1.
Keith Barnhart su!Vlved to hurl
the ~r victory, also allowing
six bits, walking julll one EllS
batter, and strlldng out ilur.
Eastern scored one 111n In !be
llrst Inning and ooe In the tlllrd,
scoring lnltlaUy wten Eddie Collins
drOJed a triple and came home on a
Kevin Barber slnele, the smre 1-0.
Federal Hocking tied tbe smre In
the second on a · _walk to Greg
.WUfong iwo EllS errors and a
.sacrifice fly by !reslunan Toby
Workman, the score 1-1.
EHS gained a slight edge In the
defensive battle wten Barber
singled !Dr tte second -time, but
su!fered a serious ankle sprain.

.

"Go home, go home," tl1e crowd
chanted , led by a speaker shouting
through a loudspeaker from a red
jeep, where a man dressed as Uncle
Sam ·stood .holdlng paper rockets.
The demonstrators then marched
to the U.S. Embassy.
Lisa Decanay, deputy secreta-ry
general of the alliance, said, "Our
primary demand Is a rejection of
U.S. military aid." She said the
group supports Aquino's recent
Initiatives for a cease-fire between
the mllltary and some 16,(0)
communist-led New Peoples-Army
Insurgents. ,_./
·

double; Tonya Savoy had two
singles, Arlene Ritchie two singles,
Lesa Rucker a single, Lisa Drtas a
single, Heather Flnlaw a single,
and Amy Berkhlmer drew thr~
walks. Amy Hager drew !our walks
and scored four NDS.
East_ern walked twenty-nine
times and collecte:l 13 hits In
jllstlng the win.
Berkhlmer was !be winning
pitcher with four strtkeouts andtlve
walks to her cre:llt, while Issuing
just !our hits. Lori Wlllimas
suftered the kiss.
The defending state-runner up
Eagles will be ille Monday, tten
lost Wahama Tuesday.

!be

vault), Scott Nelgler (lliOO), Eric
Johnson (lX! low hunDes) , Ch,r1s
Smith (8001. Ed Kitchen (:nl), Rex
Haggy (l:m), and IDth tte 3:m
(John9Jn, Smith, Dave Warth, and
Neiglerl and 400 (Robinson , Chancey, Wess Howard, and Kitchen)
relay teams won.
Besides S. English, wmners !or
the Marauderettes Included Jennl
Swartz (long jump), Heather
WOOds (Sill! ~t), Sherrie Southworth (discus), Tammy Gardner
(&gt;1001, Mlssl Howard (80;1), and the
MHS girls swept tte
relay
events Including tte 400 (S. Engllsh,
Dreama English, Tammt Crem~. and CbarmeleTurner), !m
(S. English, June Miller, eremeans, and Turner), 1600 !Swartz.

Meigs boys and girls track teams
f!!m8lned unde!eated as they
JUnped a;er Nelsonville-York, !be
boys wtnniDg !17..34 for their fourth
ivln and the girls roBed to their
SECOnd win of the young season,
8&amp;-38, In 1VC action bere last
Thunday.
The MHS boys grabbed 11 cit 16
llrst places while the Marauderettes had 12 c1 16 firsts.
~hanle · English was the only
MHS competitor with more than
one first, however, as she won the
100, :m, and was a member In both
tlv&gt; wlnnlnl! !m and «Xl relays.
Winners !or !be Marauders In·
eluded Brad Robinson ilongjump) ,
Mike Chanrey (stilt ~tl. Paul
Dalley (discus). Brian Korn (pole

;, tour

Gardner, Howard, and Rhonda
Neece).
Second place fbtlshers !or the
Marauders Included Chan!l'y (high
jump), Gerald Moore (shot ~t).
Kent Eads (discus), Moore (pole
vault), Johnson (110 high hunDes),
Kitchen (100), Haggy (1600), Jeri
Hood (400), Howard (300 low
hunDes), Neigler (BOO), Howard
l:nl), and Joe Haddox (l:nJ).
Meigs girls llnlshlng SECOnd
Included Jenny Miller (high jump),
Southworth (stilt ~t), Amy Radekln (100 hunDes and :JIOhunDes),
D. English (100 and :lX)), Swartz
1400), and Rachael Steele (:l:m) . ·
Both Meigs thlnclad squads host
Vinton County Tue&gt;lday and also
host Trimble Thursday.

Snow Chief wins Santa Anita race
ARCADIA, Call!. (UP!) - Snow
Chle! Is looking toward Kentucky
after his easy victory In the S!iOO.IXMJ
Santa Anita Derby.
"We have one monlh untll the
Kentucky Derby, and our goal is to
keep him as !resh as we can," said
trainer Melvin Stuteafter Sunday's
six-length trtumph.

'Jb(&gt; succcss at Santa Anita was
SoDs said. "I didn't ask him to run
the fifth oonsecultve victory for untll the elghlh pole, but then he ran
Snow Chief, the J. year-old son of hJs race."
ReOected Glory and likely favorite
~
for the Kl'ntucky Derby May 3.
Icy Groom, rtdden by Eddie
Jockey Alex Sons turned loose the Delaboussaye, came from fourth
winner !lvMghths of a mile from place In the !leJc1 d seven to capture
the finish, and from there It was secol\4., 1'erdlnand, rtdden by Bill
only a question 11 lllw wide his Shoemaker, was third.
margin of victory would be.
Snow Chle! was dmed In 1: 48 J.5
"He was relaxed all tl1e way," for !be mile and one-eighth.

"Our Idea Is to· oolfte Into the
Derb): with the !reshest horse In the

race. That should give hlman edge
for the Triple Crown," said Stute,
Indicating the horse would not race
again untO the Kentucky Derby.

NBA results
'

~ ... Co~~~e~mc...

AUMUt Dt¥ilbl
W L Pd.GII

YOUR CHOICE
AEROSOL- REG. OR
EXTRA HOLD OR

~14.821

SV's Bloomfield signs
with GlenvUie State

li·Nl'W

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JI·Dt1roll
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_.: ~·

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II 41 ,fll 26¥,

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22 ~7 .2711 421h
C.lnal 01\t. . . .
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Chlca,:o
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59 19 .156 Jl t'l tlf1 21
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X·Pol'llnd

a~srrs

lli!!~a

RACINE - Breaking a 7-7 tie In
the last Inning Southern's reserves
defeated &amp;!stem's reserves 8-7..as
Mike WoUord mme home ·rrom
third on an eiTOr to win !be game.
Soutbem hitters were Hupp with
a triple, Shawn Arnott a single,
Barry McCoy a . trtple, Mike
Wotrord two singles.
Eastern hitters were Jell Cald·
weD wtth asbtgle, Wade Leaclun1111 .
a single, Tone Chapman a triple,
and Ryan Bearhs a single. Kyle
.

:.

NOXZEMA

Ira D. Brawley

ACETAMINOPHEN

SKIN
CREAM

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YOUR
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OF 50

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NE'W Jl'l"'e'Y IIJT, Ntw Ycrl S3
Dl'troh US, lncltlnt J(ll
Chlclti!O 1(£!, Atlanta 97
St-tt11e 111. 0.11111 ll9
Urah U4, Portlllnd 1m
Gokln sr m, o... Di
Sacranfo 11!1, Phorntllll)

Ira D. Brawley, 74, died Sunday
at At'cil'd\3\ Nursing Home Ji,
Coo(vllle.
A retired carpenter, Mr. Brawley
was born In Pennsylvania to the
late John Edward and Grace Irene
Rue Brawley.
· SUiviv lng are his wife. Bessie A.
Brawley, Coolville; three sons,
Walter Brawlev of Xenia, and
David and Daniel Brawley, both of
Coolville; six da~ghters, Irene
Blake and Dianne Rocklllld, both of
Reedsville, Donna Welch of Cool·
vltle, Patty Franklin of IX'Iaware,
Kathy Bobo of Ft. Leonard Wood.
Missouri, and Terry Modesitt, of
Belpre; 28 grandchildren; 15 great
grandchildren; four sisters, Dorothy Bowan, of CoolvUie, Iva
Nester, of Columbus, Margaret
Westfall of Reedsville and Betty
.&lt;;'upp of Jotmstown; and several
nieces and nephews.
· In addition to his parrnts, he was
·preceded In death by two daughters. Nancy Fleming and Edilh
Brawley; one son, Tommy Braw ley; and one brother. Harold
Brawley.
· Services wlll ~ Wednesday, I
p.'m .. at !he White Funeral Home In
Coolv ille with Rev. Roy Deeter
offlclatln~ . Burial will be In Cool·

10 LB.
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S) ~7 :II~

799

GENERIC DRUGS

PhUadelphla 95, Beeton !N
Wulllni'On D. OPvtlarKI S5
HouMon IO!t, LA Llbn; 1D
Dl'nver IM, S• Antonll d

.._.,a_

Dl'trolt I I ~1, JdiiT1
llltl1111 II Wllhtnclon. nJBfd:

DllclfiROIT Atllnta, nlltd
lbitot11t Mh1uift, ftletlr
Sttt11r II Houm., nlchf
Dlllu II OoMirn &amp;.~. rQhl
LA Lakin II PorUMd, niJtlt

Davis walked tour times.
Todd Llale got the start and
~tched a brilliant game, however,
Chrts stout was the winner bt relle!.
They combined .to strike out eight
and walk nine.
Je!f CakiWell pitched · well !or
Eastern, but suffered the lou,
Ianning four and ~ elaht ·
Southern plated ftve uniamed runs '
as Eastern commlttalllx errora. :
Southern conunJital 11x erron. ·

SHARP

EARLY DmCTOR
COLON RICTAL
CANCER

DmCTORKIT

5~3

Dl~~:~

THERMOMETER

643

AVAilABLE ONLY AT PHARMACY STORES

ON YOUR

ASK YOUR 'RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOR
COMPLETE ·DETAILS

•

Teenager injured
in traffic accident

ville Cemetery. Frtends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 Ill 9 p.m. Tuesday.

A Rt. 1. Vinton teenager was
treated and released from Holzer
Medical Center after being Injured
In a one-car accident on Ohio 325 In
Meigs County Sunday.
Alva E. Swick
Shawn Goble, 17, was treated for
Alva Earl Swick, 75, Rl. ·1, scalp lacerations, a HMC spokesLangsville (Danville Communtlyl. person said.
The state highway patrol's ·
died Salurday at his residence.
He was an employee of the Meigs Gallla-Meigs post said Goble was
County Department of Transporta- northbound In Salem Township at ·
tion and a World War Il Air Force 1:50 p.m. when he reportedly lost
veteran. He was hom June 10, 1910 control of hls vehicle, sUd off the
In Galila County, son of the late right side of the road and struck a
Joseph and Minnie Barrett Swick. guardrail.
. The vehicle was heavily damHe was preceded In death by his
wife, Adra Swan Swick. Surviving aged, the patrol said. Goble was
are one son. Anthony ·Cordlllo, taken to HMC by a relative.
Langsville; two daughters, Mrs.
Jotm (Linda) Smith, Langsvllleand
Mrs. David (Wanda) Gardner,
Rutland; seven grandchildren; one
brotter. Paul Swick, Worthington;
Meigs Coupry Emergency Medl·
two sisters, Goldla Huson, Buckeye cal Service reports 10 calls over the
Lake and Mrs. John (Marjorie l weekend - five Saturday and !lve
McLaughlin. Gran.d Rapids, Ohio. Sunday.
One brother and one sister preSaturday, at 9:48a.m., Pomeroy
ceded In death.
to
Rt. 33 tor Fre:l Burney to
Funeral services will ~ Tuesday, 1 p.m. McCoy-Moore FUneral
Home, VInton wllh Rev. O.H. Cart
officiating. Burtal In Pine Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call al the
funeral home Monday. 2to4 and7 to
CLEVELAND (UPI l - One
9p.m.
player picked all six winning
numbers In Saturday night's Ohio
Charles E. Burri
Lotto drawing.
Ohio Lottery Commission o!D·
Charles E. Burri. 65, 49556
Manuel Road. Racine, was dead on clals said $4,9:1),589 worth of tickets
arrival at Veterans Memorial were sold for !be drawing that
Hospital Monday morning.
produced the numbers I, 14, 23, '!1,
37 and 40.
Mr. Burri was retired from the U.
Th e number of playerswhochose
s. Army Corps of Engineers and four and five of the six winning
had served as projecl superintend- numbers was to be determined
ent of the Bolivar Dam. He was today.
.
born at Youngstown on June 20,
Next Saturday's Ohio Lotto jack1920, a son of the late Edward and
pot wUI be wot:th an estimated $1
Marie Burri.
mlllion, whUe Wednesday's Super
Surviving are his wife, Margaret Lotio lop prize will be about $20
• Wilson Burri; three nephews, and million.

One player wins
$4.9 million lotto

In the Burri home.
William
Wilson
will was
BesidesD. his
parents,
Mr.reared
Burri
was preceded In death by a sister.
A veteran of the U. S. Army In
World War II, he was a charter and
life mem~r of Racine American
Legion Post 602 and was a member
of tlaclne Masonic Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM.
Services will be held al 2: :,0 p.m.
TUesday at tte Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev . Roger Grace
officiating. Burial will be In Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7 to 9 this
evening.

Veterans Memorial

Parents of juniors and seniors at
Meigs High School are to meet In
room 202 of the high school al 7: 30
p.m. Wednesday to help plan
activities for the junior-senior
prom.

Saturday Admissions--Clinton
Hendricks, Middleport; Ralph
Swan Jr., Pomeroy; Edna Walker,
Tuppers PlaiDs; Howard Thomas,
Pomeroy; Mark Metcalfe, Rhod·
lela, Ky.
Saturday Discharges--Douglas
Bums, Don CuUums, Tosha O'Nell,
Robert Qualls, Merle Davis, Cllnton
Hendricks, Diane Wlllbarger.
Sunday Admissions--T homas
Lambert, VInton; Henry Hartman,
Long Bottom; Frank Wolford, ·
VInton; Flossie Story, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--Martha
Howell, Vermont Marklns, Loretta
Beegle.

Mee18 Tuesday
"

Ohio Eta Phi of·Beta Sigma Phi
Sorortty wlll meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the senior citizens
center In Pomeroy. Election of
dflcers wlll be held.

Jury trial cancelled
A lury lrlal scheduled for Tues·
day In Meigs County Coun has been
cancelled. Jurors need not report.

Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ra·
cine at 10:43 a.m. to Oak Grove Rd .
for Lena Holter tl Veterans Memorial Hos~tal; Racine at II: 24 a.m.
to Antiquity · !or Oval Diddle to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Ru ·
!land at 4:18p.m. toRt. 325 for Alva
Swick will was dead on arrival;
Racine at 6:42 p.m: to Barringer
Ridge for Louise DeLong to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
at 9:21 p,m. to Pomeroy Health
Care Center l&gt;r Howard TI'homas
to Sunday,
VeteransatMemorial
Hospital.
2:35 a.m.,
Pomeroy
transported Kenneth GUkey from
an auto accident on Rt. 33 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
TuppersPialnsatl2:27 p.m .toNew
Hope Rd . !Dr Henry Hartman to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 1:15 p.m. lreated
but did not transport Dana Hof·
fman; Syracuse at_ 3:30 p.m. to
Dusky St. tor Angela Rowt;. to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:48p.m. to Pomeroy Health
Care Center for Flossie Story to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. .

Revival planned
Syracuse Church of !be Nazarene
will be In revival Tuesday through
Sunday with Evangelist Jay Budd.
Sc!VIces will begin nightly at 7 p.m.
and Sunday services at 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Everyone-welcome.

Plan tournament
Brenner's Carryout 1vlll sponsor
an ASA sanctioned round robin
tournament Aprll12-13 at city park,
Wellston. Entry tee Is $65 and two
game balls. Trophies will be
awarded teams and Individuals.
Drawing for the event Is 7 p.m.
Aprll10, at the Wellston City Park.
for more Information, call 384-21365
or 384-5279.

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NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
(ompltte

u,. of Vegotablt &amp; flower

Plants_ Hanging ••••h, GtnJ.
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MIX OR MATCH
OP~N DAlY 9·5; .!UNDAY 1-S

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SYRACUSE, OHIO

PH. 992-6776

r~=================================~

were going to rewrite
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I

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

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H&amp;R BLOCit
THE tNCOME TAX t&gt;_EOPLE

. 618 E. Main St.

· PH. 992·3'795

The
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Feast.
It's

Ot ·re

Al:~ch.

'

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

To plan prom

Emergency squads kept busy

Atoxpoyor who Illes lis rttum 1111 will bi roqulrtd to
PlY inltrosl 1nd possibly pl!loltios on ony tox duo.
H&amp;R Block points out.
In "rtoin instan!OS, a taxpayer moy still ovoid o po·
nalty ovon thou&amp;h ht filos oltortho duo dote. tRSwlll
not oisesso p111olty if tho '"PIYtr his bttft tr~ntld
on oxt111slon oft itt timo to tllo by tho IRS or ltts spo·
clot clrcumstoncu !hot liouldbo COtlsldortd rtlsonoblo·couso lor do loy. Hawmr. Jn oil cosesthotoxpoyer
must PlY inttrlll on tllttn duo. IRSeomputes Inter·
est ot o rote bosod on tho pr1mo rote.

. !

I:Uj.j

Happenings around Meigs County..

NEXT
PRESCRIPTION

.

Presidential pest muse tn ManDa. Weinberger was
tbere w dl8ru.M 4\Jnerlcan mDitary aid to the
PhiUipplnes. UPI

Mostly sunny today, with highs ~tween 70 and 15. Partly cloudy
tonight , with a chance of rain and a low near 50. Partly cloudy
Tuesday, with highs belween 60 and 65.
_ · ' E:rtended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair weatl)er through the period, with hlglv! ranging from the
upper 40s w the upper i!O!r;' Lows wDI he In 1J!e :lls.

Oo/o

.._,.•• o....

lndl•1 II Ntw York, 7: Jl'p.m.
CWet.lrdit DPtrott, 7:.J)p.m.
Mllw111ft II 0tlc110, II pm.
Dmvei' II Plllenbl. t.:il p.m.
Dllllu ar S.:I'IJTieiiiO, J&gt;:ll p.m.

VISD'S AQUINO - President Corazon Aquino
with visiting U.S. Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger during IU caD Monday at the
shake~~ hands

Weather forecast

COULD. SAVE
YOU UP TO

~-

-·
SHS' reserves post 8-7 win
y-Lilkrn

.RITE AID

MEDICATED

•

SAVINGS•••
EVERYDAY AT RITE AID

---..-.-

Sf'.a"k'

Gc*Pn St

Mark Anderson, 20, Columbus,
who died Sunday morning when he
was shot by a robber on the parking
lot of Sisters Chicken and Biscuits
Restaurant on East Fifth Ave ..
Columbus, has local relatives
surviving.
Anderson, it Is reporled, accompanied by his girl friend, had
stopped al the restaurant for coffee
cnroute to church when a man
walked up to the car and asked
directions to Cleveland Ave. Aft er
getting the directions, the man
pulled a gun, demanded money and
shot Anderson In the head when he
refused, It is reported. Anderson
was pronounced dead at the
restaurant at 9:03a. m.
He was a grandson of Laura and
Cecil __ Hoffman. former Meigs
County residents now living on
Mound St., in Columbus. Mrs.
Lucille Jacobs and -Mrs. Lovercla
Evans, both of Mlddlep,ort, are
great aunts of Mr. Anderson.
• · The Schoedlnger Funeral·~rvlce
East Chapel, s;JiO E. LlvlflASton
Ave., is In charge of arrangements.

MINK
DIFFERENCE
HAIR SPRAY

1

The MBA aid Is !biked to the
Philippines' guarantee of full U.S.
mllltary ac!l'ss to eight strategic
raclliUes In the country, Including
Washinglon's largest overseas ·Installations - - Sublc Bay Naval
Base, a logistics and repair center
'ror the 7th Fleet, and Clark Air
Base, home 11 the 13th Ali Force.
• The United States has IS,IXMJ
armed forces personnel statk&gt;ned In
the PhUlpplnes.
.
.
Weinberger, frl, Is the highest
ranking· Reagan actminbtratlon
official to vlstt the Phlllpptnes since
a ctvUJan-backed mllltary revolt.
ouste:l :»-year ruler Ferdlmind ·
Marms Feb. 25.
Weinberger earll~r met with
Enrlle and Armed Forces Chtef
Gf.n. Fidel Ramos - the leaders c1
the revolt againSt Maroos - at
suburban Camp Aguinaldo, where
he was given a run military
welcoming Cl'remony by a PI1Dip·
pine honor guard.
Ramos accompanied Weln·
bergfr for a 40-mlnute meeting with
EnrOe at Emile's nearby oftlce.
A group o! about 50 pNtesters
wearing Uncle Sam hats and
carrying signs saying "no to U.S.
Intervention and miUtary aid"
gathered at a street corner leading
to !be camp.

The~lltance also demands the
"oustfug" of all U.S. •military
facllltles In tlle country when the
1947 Phlllpplpe-0 .S. Military Base
Agreement expires In 1991. Aquino
has pledged to allow the I,J.S.
mUitary to remain untO 1991, hut
has said she will keep her optlons
open after that.
•
Aquino, wearing a bright yellow
dress with a black belt, met for 40
minutes wtth Weinberger In her
second-floor office at the glasswalled presldenUal palace Guest
House.
·
Stepping out of the !J'nately
decorated office under -a drizzle,
Weinberger told reporters his talks
with Aquino went "very nicely." He
was accompanied by U.S. Ambassador Stephen Bffiironhand PhiDpplne Defense Minister Juan Ponce
EnrUe.
After the palace talks, Weln~rger paid a brief wurtesy call on
Vice President and Foreign Minister Salvador Laurel at the Foreign
Ministry.
"Weinberger dfered to extend
U.S. aid," Laurel said. "He was
quite happy over the tum of events
thai the people's power has
prevailed."
Under the Mllltary Bases Agree·
menl, Washington has granted a
total of $1.4 bllllon In military and
economic development aid to the
Philippines since 1979.

Area deaths
Mark Anderson

NON-AEROSOL199
EXTRA HOLD OR
UNSCENTED
70Z. SIZE

,.

-

139

Meigs track teams remain unbeaten

GLENVI!J.E, W.Va. (UP!) '!bree Ohio high school players are
among 15_w1Jo have corrunlttt'e to .
play for GlenvDie COllege !ootball
coaeh.Frank Vincent.
The Ohio recl'lllts who wiD join
the Pioneers Include' fullback SyiVl!Ster Bloom!leld of Symmes
Villey, de!eilstve end DaVId Wllll·
apts or Canton McKinley, quarterback Chuck Wharton c1 Martins
Ferry and center Andy Beach of
Dayton BelmOnt.
'·•· '
West Vlrgillla recl'lllts headed for
Glerivtlle Include de!enslve tackle
BJYan Hill ot Clarksburg Uberty,
IIQebacker Richard Maxwell 11
Parlaersburg, tree safety CUirord
Simpkins 11 Point Pleasant. and
tackle Dtll Kitzmiller and defen·
slve end Rlchard Lake 11 Q-afton,
Pl!nDBylvanla recruit&amp; mclude
thr,ee tackles - Frank Guy and
Michael Yoder or t.mbntown and
Joe Uigalakl 11 Irwin.
Virginia rec111lls Include tree
sa!ety Romey Landreth 11 Pulaski
, Cwnfy, de!enslve end Mark Beans
11 Woodbtidgl' and &lt;Jiafte-hack
Thomas ~dNs or Salem.
y

yes."

CREST
TOOTHPASTE

STEWART
Eastern lam- with a three-run lllmerunandelght
basted Federal Hocking bt lllth RBI's.
games of a Saturday altermon
Lisa r_anre was perlect at
:doubleheader at Stewart, claiming three-for-three with a home run;
;the 11rst game Zl-7 and ripping tbe Tonya Savoy had hro singles, Lesa
·Lady J...anc:ers Jl.91n tbenlghtmpl1 Rucker a home run, Amy Berkhl·
:the IIOn·league lwlnblll,
mer a single and Trtsha Spenrer a
Eastern Is now Sol on the season.
double.
Eastern broke cpen a relatively
Federal Hocking hitters were
close game c17-51n !be thll:d Inning,
Calentlne, Williams, Bui'chwell,
then never looked back !be re- MUier and Smith.
mainder 11 tbe day as they !Dare:! to
Leading 7-5 after the first Inning,
:a Zl-7 victory In !be cpener.
E&lt;1$1ern broke the game open In the
; Amy Young was tte winning second Inning or the second game
pitcher, going tbe dlstan!l', walking
when they plated eighteen runs
three and striking out two. Mlller
before au tbe !!reworks had reasm.
suftered the Joss.
Freshman Trtsha Spencer had
Eastern oollecte:l 12 hits led by
four singles, Amy Young had three
AmY Young who went !our-lor-six hits, Including a home run and

Both

.,

MANILA, Phlllpplnes (UP!) Leftist prolesters chanting "Go
home, go home," smashed against
Defense Secretary Caspar Weln- '
be!'gPr's limousine today as he left
-!he presidential palace following ·
lalks on military aid with President
Corazon Aquino.
Weinberger was hounded by a
group of protesters belonging to the
leftist Nationalist Alliance for
Justice, Freedom and Democracy,
which claims a natlon\\&gt;lde lbllowlng of 550,1XMJ.
As Weinberger's molorcade ex Ited the palace gate, some 100
screaming youths smashed up
against his llm6uslne with signs
saying "Weinberger, go home,"
"Weln!&gt;efger warmonger" . and
"Military aid no, lndemnlftcatlon

COlOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

from -Lancers

Pomerov-Middlepor1. Ohio

Weirlberger~s visit.met with prot~ts .('

Marauderettes .dump Lancer Ladies.

Pinch rwmer Mike Martin rode lllOUIId fllr Eastern.
STEWART - Meigs' Marau- In the 1VC.
fifth stralghhfln !his season. Marla
ho~ on a Steve Homer single for a
After two Innings Eastern traDe:! derettes banged out 22 hits and
Musser
hurled'tllf !btal fllut Innings
2·11ell!l.
5-2, but lied the 100re In the third scored In every: Inning In a 28-10 . Collecting two hits each were after Hatfield h~ed two scoreless
A Pbll GWian single and 1bm frame when Horner !lliiCbed on an
frames. Hatfield !anned !lve or the
Welch double lied the game In the error and Jeff Caldwell singled. victory over 1VC !oe Federal· TQrnml Wright, Gina Follrod, Jndl
six
batter she *ed while Musser
Hocking
In
softball
action
bere
Harrison,
Barb
Hatfield,
Marla
fttth before Fedei'al Hockingsooml
Hnmer soored m a balk, Caldlmi FrtdaY·
hurled well also, Jannlilg two and
Musser,
and
Shannon
Hlndy.
With
the go-ahead 111115 In the sixth on a smred on a balk, Je!f Johnson
walking only tlrre. MOler fanned
Pat GWian double, a WDi:lng walk singled and Jimmy Caldwell ' "1looh Jennl Couch and Shelly a hit apiece were Cl!l!lY RlfOe, Kim two andfWalked but one !or FHHS.
·
Stobart
led
the
Meigs
22-hlt
parade
Stewart
Carol
Sli!i!n
and
Julle
and an Eastern throwing error. squeezed home the tying 111n, 5-5.
Meigs travels to Belpre tonight
with three safeties apiece as 13 Hysell. 'Bennett and ~lller led the
Toby Workman doubled to ~t .
Eastern took !be lead In !be dl!!l!f'ent MaraUderettes had at Lady Lanrers with lhr~ hits each. ~fore hosting AlexanQ!r Wednesrwmers at second and t hlrd, setting. fourth on a Barber single, a Brent
le~t one hit. · Coach Jolu! Arnott's
Hatfield s~ the hill for day and Athens Thursday.
up a squeeze bunt by Tim Creeger. Bissell double, a Royce BlsseU
team
goes
to
G-1
on
theyearand3-0
Meigs
and received cre:lit for her
Barnhart and Federal held on for single, singles by Jert Caldwell,
lhe -~2 win.
r-------------------------------------------------------~~~--­
Eastern hitters were Kevin J~.BryanDurstandawaik
to Jimmy Caldwell, the score ~5.
Barber with two Singles, CoDins a
While Bissell was hurling a super
triple, Horner a Single, Je!f Cald- game, Eastern's bats cametollfe In
well a single, and Jimmy CtldweU a postbtg !be giant »7 wbt.
single.
Eastern bitters were Steve
Toby Workman was two-!Dr-two Horner with a double, triple, and
with a double and single for the single; Royce Bissell a tr1ple and
winners, while Welch and GUUan · two sbtgles; Barber a double and
doubled, Barnhan slngl~. and Phil - two singles; and three Singles each
GU!Ian singled.
by Johnson, Je!f Caldwell, and
In the nightcap, both clubs had
Durst.
trouble llndlilg !be rtght combinaEd Collins, Jimmy Caldwell,
tion on !be mound as sore anns Mike Martin, Greg Leaclunan each
plagued both rosters. The Eagles singled and Brent Bissell doubled.
were the ftrst to !btd the right
Pbll Gillian double:! and tripled
comblnatk&gt;n as sophomore lire- !or Federal Hocking.
• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE
. baUer Brent Bissell was Impressive
Eastern hosts Oak HUI tonight
with nine strtkeouts, three walks, and Wabama Tuesday be!ore
and just one hit registered against traveling to Kyger Creek Wedneshim In the last five Innings 11 work. day. 'Jb(&gt; Alexander doubleheader
The hard-throwing Eagle posted
has been rescheduled lor AprU 12 at
the win while five Lanrers took 10 a.m.
their turn on !be mound. Federal
pitching gave up 22 hits to tbe Unesro.-.: Game One
REGULAR, MINT
............. .......... 101 00) 0-H-3
TARTAR
CONTRO(
Eagles, walking six, and striking E85tern
Fl.'derai .. .. ................ ..... .OIIl 012 x~l
OR GEL
out three. Kevin Barber and J&lt;yle Game~
.
6.~ OZ. TUBE
Eastern
.....................
..
113 a; J-:IJ.Zl-2
Davis also took tbeir turns on the
Federal.. .
. ....... m OOl 2-- 1- 2-6

:Eaglettes ·take pair

• ROCK SPRINGS -

··. Mondav. April 7, 1986

Mondav. April 7, 1986

Do you wt;~nt

us to make any changes?
•'·

I

Before the presses roll on then~­
tion of your phone book, take a minute to
check:
Make sure you're listed coiT9Ctly.
Or tell us if you'd like more listings (the
kids, a relalive, or your spouse, for
exampleY,
Alter all, Ws your P.hone book. When you
see your name in print, it ought to be the

way you want to·see it.
So, if you want a'tJy changes or additions,
let us tell you what the charges might be. if
any. ~ust call our business office now.

(iji#l

Sunday, Monday, ~~YI
• A generous platter .of
gofden-fricd shrimp
• Choice of steaming rice
or French fries (or baked
potato after 5 p.m.) • Cock·
tail sauce • Lemon wedge
•lbasted Gn;dan bread
- PWSAll-You-Care-To-Eat
Soup,'Salad &amp; Fruit Bar!

$4.99
.
~~
Dinner Thble .

'

..

'

..

�. ... . '
' "

- ······-·
- -.!... ~

~

'

:

.. '

~By The ·Bend
·-

.•

~onday,Apri17,

19S6
Page-6 .

n

INTE ~T~iEHM

Reading .com~t~ncy exams set

Cathy Edwards has been named lnllrmatlve . and the students'
empbyee of the month for Bank knowledge of career opportunities
One, Athens, wlllch has l.ll was broadened as a result of her
empbyees.
supervision."
A teller at the Pomeroy Otflce of
In announcing Edwards as the
Bank One, Athens, Edwards ~ke employe of the month Tad Grover;
to five dltferent classes at Portland president of Bank One, Atrens,
Elementary School on career op- N.A., commented:
poirunltles In the banking profes"Cathy Edwards was named
sion. Taking the ages of her employee of the month lor March
audience Into consideration, Ed· by Bank One.·cathy demonstrates
wards adjusted her presen tat!on for an outstanding abUfty In dealing
each group. With supervision of with the p!bllc and representing the
Edwards, each srudent completed a banking Industry. She participatEd
deposit ticket, a check and a check In career day at the Portland ·
register.
Elementary School speaking on
career opportunities In the bank
Mrs. Mickey Hoback, principal, professiOn and received many
wrote: "Mrs. Edwards' presenta- compliments oo her abUity to relate
tion was entertaining as well as to school age children."

Calendar I happenings
MONDAY

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
-Garden Oub meets Monday at 7: .ll
p.m. at the Mlddlepon PresbyterIan Church. Mrs. Jeanne Bowen
and Mrs. Jackie McDaniel,
hoStesses.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Band
Boosters meet 7 p.m. Monday at the
Meigs Junior High School. Otflcers
to be elected and support projects
discussed. Parents of senior and
Junior high band Students InvitEd.
TllE!IDAY

••

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce meets
Tuesday, noon, at Pomeroy Trinity
Church. Guest speaker wlll be Toni
Hill, urban forester. AU members
are urged to attend. Lurrheon wUI
be servEd.
·
POMEROY - Jaymar Tuesday
Ladles Golf Assoclatkln meets at 9
a.m. at golf course to organize for
season; all women golfers.InvltEJI.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
MIDDLEPORT - Mlddlepon
Merchants Association meets 8 Chamber of Commerce meets
a.m. Tuesday at the Bank One Tuesday, 1 p.m., the La,SI!Ue
Pomeroy office.
Restaurant Agenda for lhl' remainder of 1986, block party dates
RlJll.AND - Rutland Vllage will he set; dlscusskln oo party
Council meets 7p.m. Tuesday at the events and chairmen; plans for
civic center.
sidewalk sate made, Jason Ingels,
· contact person.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse PrO

PQM.EROY,O.

9'2·2259
NEW LISTING - 1984
14x70 Skyline mobile home.
All eleclric. Bui lt·in double
oven . range top . 3 _lEd·
roqms, bay window . Must
move to your lot)6,500.00.
., .

mattes and En~h composition. will be given In Meigs County
Tile standards require testing at during the 1987-88 school year and
least ·once 1n grlles' one through.. tests for lhe third course area or
four, grades five thl]llgh eight, aild. grade level group will be given
grades nine througll'"eleven.
..
d\lftng the 1988-1989 school year.
11tree district-wide tests for the · · Test results may be u~ for
subject area or grade level group lndlvldualllistructlon, Intervention,
must be given during the 1985-86 guldlince and promotion decisions,
scliool year. Tests In the second so student should make !'Very
selectEd course area cr grade 'level attempt to attend.
·

Revival at
church begins
Revival service began Sunday at
theFirstSouthernBaptlsiChurch.

Tile ruberculosls leVy was endorsEd by tt-' Riverview _Garden
Club at a recent meellng held at the
home ct Mrs. RD~d Osoome with
Mrs. Denver Weber and Mrs.
Donald Putman as co-hosts.
For devotions, Mrs. Ray Young
presented readings, "Seed
Titoughts", "Dolt Now'', "Time lor

Officers named

founderanddlrectorofFellowship,
Inc. Tile-death of Ills oldest son from
an overdoseofhertonresultE!IIn tlie
birth of Fellowship, Inc. "War on

Offlcersfor19BG-87wWbeelected
when the Meigs Band Boosters
meet at 7 p.m. Monday attbe Meigs
Junior High Band Room. Projects
to support the band. will be
discussed. Parents of children In
both the lllgh school and tbe junior
hlghbandsareaskedtoattendthe
meeting. Attention Is callEd to the

the Rev. Sammie Davis and the

fact that the Monday meeting wUI
be at the junior high school rather
thanatthesenlorh!ihschoolwbere
meetings are usually held.!

~~=~~~~lk~~!~~~xa~·

Davis Is pastor of tbe Fellowship
Baptist Church of Dallas, and

9

D~~~'7~:~!e; i}roteenage
~::U~:~~/:': 1~~i~~

Church.
people of Fellowship Baptist
Tile Rev. Lamar O'Bryant, pas·
tor of First Southern Baptist
Chu~J!h, Invites the public to attend
the ~val services.

a Tuneup", and a JX'ayer of
serenity. Household hints were
given by the members in response
to roll calL
Mrs. Curt Cauthorn resignEd as
treasurer, with Mrs. Terry Cline
namEJI to that office. Games were
playEd with Mrs. Okey Connolly ,
winning the lf'lzes. Door~ went
to Mrs. Gene Wilson. An auction
was held with Mrs. Frank Blse
serving as auctklneer.
"
Refreshments were served by the

N~

.614•446•7283

W. E.·

·

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
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Or Writ• Oaillr StntiRtl Clanilitd O.pt .

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Need_. a Hoi.JIIkiiiJ ... , ., live
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Your Comp.. te AUto lody Repair C~tntw
locfy 'IM.,.., I• :Is: ; HI , PoUthiftt Cofflpouttdt, Palnlt
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BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

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011 FloW S.vlco,
larooh&lt;a ............. t .

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SfECIAUZIN, IN WINDOW l DOOR REilACENENT

PWS: Offko Suflpllos &amp;
Furnlturo, WHoling
0114 Gr...., ..
Stationory, .....,k
Signs, luloW Slompo,
luolnt11 '"""·
Copy Swricts, Etc.
2SS Mill St. MioWioport
104 lllultMrry Ar. , _ . ,

A

Totol Fund Bol . ..... 301,1533

•

\
·~

Emptoyeoo .. ............ 44 .76
Number of Cort.
Emptoyeoo ... .... ... .... .....81

loca~on:

SAllS &amp; SERVICE

SPREADERS

MGM Farm City

Jon 1 .. 86 ...... .. .. 140,000
Redumed,1986 .. .. 10,000
Bel8nce.

Dec. 31. '86 .... ... 130.000
I certify the loltowlng ro-

Public Notice

port to be correct end true.
to the belt of my knowl edge:

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY tN EXCESS OF
TEN MILL UMITATION
Notice io hereby glvl'1 thot In
puiiUonCI of o R-kltton of
tho Boa-d of Cconty Comrnio·
lionort of tho County of
Meigs. Pomeroy. Ohio, - l d ·
on the 29th day of January,
19 86. thoro will bt wbrilitted
U&gt; o vote of tho peopio of Wd
Meigo Cconty ot o Primory
Ellr:tion to bo held In the
County of Moigo. Oho ot the
regular ptocca of wting
rein. en T.-v. thO 6th
of Moy, 1998. the quootion
~g e tax, 11 e•cea of ttw
ten mill limitation, for the
btnofit of Meigo County lor
tho purpose of providing core.
maintenMloe. tre~~tnwlt and

EloiM Bano"'l,

Tre..urer of the

Eattem local Boerd
of Education
814 -986-4331

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY IN EXIfESS OF
TEN MIU UMITATION
Notice lo hertby giYon that in
PIII'IUIIICI of I R_..,tton of
tho llo.-d of Truot- of tho
Town,., of a.-. Meigs
County, Oilio, Pllllld on tho
11th dey of FobrulfY, 1988,
there wl bt .,bmittod 10 o
110te of tho i*Pio of •ld
Chootor Townofli&gt; MI ·Primory
Election 10 bt hold In tho
Coonty of Meigo, Ohio ot tho
roguilr plocoo of voting tho- ·
roln, en T.-y, the 8th cloy
of May, 1981. tho q u - of
levying I tax, in UCOII of tho
ten mil imltetion, for tho
of Chooter Townlhlp
for tho - o f pr.....tton.
contro~ ond obot..,.,t of oir

hoopitalizrotlcn of rooldento of

Meigo County who ore ouffor·
ing tromtubtraltou. ot 11&gt;opi·
tall with wlllch the Commlsolo""" of ~igo County h contracllld. M1d oupport of
tuberaJiorrio clinics. pu,.,ont
10 tho eu1hority grentod In
339 .38 of tho Ohio

Soc:1ion

ilevioed Code.
Sold w btlng: An lddltionet
tax of .50 mill to run for five

A meeting of the Meigs County
Sakln 710, Eight and Forty, to be
held Monday nigh! at the home ct
, Ruby Marshall has been IJlstpdned
io Aprt114. All chalnnen are asked
to attend the meeting slnoe annual
reports will be prepared. Mermrtal
services wW be held.

will be ~., at 8:30 o'c6ock

A.M. Wtd remai1 opa1 ta1til
7 :30 o'clodl P.M,
By order of tho Boa-d of

Election• of Molgo County.
Ohio.

Doted April1, 1986

"Frtt Estimates"
IMtallotion Availoble

For more lntormetion writt:

MAIDEN lAY CAMP

2-17·11-tfo

•• 211,
lllrrth c•lt,

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Ph. After May 1
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.

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or 992-7121

•VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
'ILOWN IN
INSULATION

2·20-lfll

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes hilt
"Free Ettimatel"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL ·
FILL DIRT

LM!t AniWtl1. Purch~t~~r ltfl:

Y.~ki~ Naul•tn-C4· ··4J

tou•us nm MDRIG.IGE ro.

L-----...:;•::,"·;:.':•;.J
·

'iUYING

3/ ll/1

010 .

TRASH -SERVICE

4/V'I6/ I

NOW SERVING THE

me.

ROCK SPRINGS

5-POINTS AREA
Far S.nrlce Cal

992-3194

• Public Notice

I .

..
.

~

hundiOd dolilrl of viklotlon
lor five.,_.,
The Poll for ooid Ellr:tion
will bt .,.. ot 8:30 o'clock
A.M. ond rwmoln .,.. 111111
7:30
P.M.
By order of tho Boord of
Eiectlono of MoigO County,

o·-

"" · "-- whidt amounts to
.1D'IT"" "'nto) for each cno

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS fOR
•ZINtTH
•SYLVANIA
•
•SPEED QUEEN tAU.&amp;RY
&gt;GIBSON REFRIGERAIO!
.SAIEWII SAlES &amp; SERVICE

•• HtwJ AFill TIM

Ohio .

Evelyn Clartc. Chlllrmln
JMOM.Frymy.
D~r

Dltld Aprlt 1, 1988
14)7. 14. 21 , 28. 4tc

,,,o.e:Jiiur~rrL S.S1·2 P"',.,

Maro.·Wod••

SDI1ordoy 10-11:30.,.

LAIGI a•au
SUIGIIY IY APPT.

PH. 304·675·2441

lEND ARIA CAU
llpley Office

,., Houre
30~--3 72·5 ro~1.tlc

Norwaglan

1

Elk Ha.rnd. Coii814-:J79-2779.

CONTRACTING

Matel motorcycle

61 • ·446-2240 .

DOZER, BACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES .
REClAMATION. PONDS,
. SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

cn~t•• ·

Call

PARTS and SERVICE

&amp;76-44t3.

lrit bulbi, all colon, 304-896-

3331.

SPACE?

3 p1rt lrittl Sett1r. f1m1le,

CONVENIENT
STORAGE UNITS

Long tnd lhon Iron )unk can,
phone 304-195-3&amp;30 .

pt.~ppitl ,

RENT BY MONTH
S1lO, IOJlD,-10124

304-fi76 -7207 .

2 Wtlitl lilkey rOOIIIrl . 304·

891-3872.

Flri'Wood, four VlfY lerge appl11
..... cut tr... and Nmove
b .. oh. 304·876-11714.

446-8592

Lumbtf to bl htulld IWIY.
ptlone 304-&amp;75-n38 .

Kanauga, Ohio

Lost: Bluk ~~nd Wtltt• B•-al• in
tht Shady Cave lnd LIIKUng
CrHk area. Hea IDOllar wrth
phone number. Rewerd . 114 -

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION ,

992-682t .

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

7

•fnsul•tion

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Yard Sale

•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

Middleport

"FI£E ESIIIIATIS"

..................................
Ctrport Stll. Curttlnl, Mdtprltdl, Knlcii-KnKkl, odd• and
endt. Thurtdav and FridiJ, Ap,il
1Oth tnd 11th. Nt~tl to Stat•

Hn

We can ffiii,i,:~iill

1

0o'"!lt. Routo7.

.... ···p·i ''Piiiiiiiiiiil .....

core
and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
ouffadiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

&amp; Vicinity

U. S. RT:50 EAST
GUYSVIllE. OHIO

2. Point Ploooont.

9

·

Authori~ Jolin DHrt,
Ntw Holl1nd, Bush Hoc
firm Equlplllnl

· ·

Dtalor

Roofing of

111 Typoo"

Work~Jn,:::'

.,.

"Freo Eo1il"eteo"

•

D~pWidllbt. men would likl lo
fti)WIIrgtdewna. Ceiii14·H2:

1271.
:-=----:----- . .

··o~~

Will do •"Y lawn meint.,.nce. •
mowfrtg , Wimming. Ylrd dun-. .
up. etc. ~inting lntidt or out
and minor rtpai,., mite. odd• ·
jobs. Ctll ;))4-1715-7991 .
Lawn mowing, CJ~tlity depand•
bl• wor... tow ,.til , call 11+- .ue.oes• JYeninu•Smtll garden• plowed and lewn , .,
fi'Dwtf' raplir. 304-1575-1&amp;&amp;3.

- ..

F1nonm l

=---..:=-=---·
.,.
21
Business
0 ppo rtU nl"ty

'' ' '

know , end NOT 10 lltftd money

throuct- the meil until you heve
lnv•tlg1t~ the offering.

nH;n t .

. .

Open end own • betutifut " •
L.diM, Jatns. Ch lkh.,t , large . ,
Silt. Metemity or combinatton
·
apperel ltort. top Brendsl Fr.. .
brodlurel t21.9715 compltte.
PIHte 11rious tnqulrin only. ·
Ailo ••" Jbou t our high volu mt' ~
otf-prlcal.:lltt ..ore. C•ll 40•· ·

419;4438.

22 M·on8y to Loan

- - - - - -··

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

'

FO.I AL OUR
l y
WiliNG NEEDS

Res!'dtnllal &amp; Coltlmtrcill

all:

C •

992·5875 Or

814-692·3011.
23

. •. "

Profeuional
Services

am a.... John.on

WANTED TO 8UY uotd wood.
cool hoottro. SWAIN'S FUIINInJRE, 3rd . • Olivo St. Golllpo-

SIELTON POOL CO . Swim· '""''
minu Pool Saln - lnltlllltionl • • ..,..
Rtptlta. Vour frltndly pool
bulldlrt. Bufftlo, W. v•. 30··
~

'

114-441,-3172

. FirM E••IP•••t
uu cOlLECT:
j l,L_,_._"_'_&amp;,...St
...N.;.;
61-41_1...:4~:.:.-iz: ;,;~f,.: :!. "-1 ;IL.-7-42_·_3-19,!.!.5~;J
1~ ;.;.!f;,;.&lt;~" ~ L._Ph_.1_
."

Tr• Worlt Wanted . Pruning , .v
topping , rtmOvelt; hldg•• &amp; bulh• lrimmtd . C•ll 81•·4415 8071 or 304-&amp;76 --4853.
- •

PIANO TUNING ANO REPAIR.
rtd lacovtr your pllftO' I b.,utiful
toni. cell todey, Wards Kev·
bo.rd, 304· 1116·51!i00 01' 8715· • ...
3824 .
. .. ::::

Wt pay calf1 for lltt model clun

Comploto Romodoln•

18 Wanted to Do

Wanted To Buy

" 1-13-tfc

t:ompteto Gutter WlNk

Mature WOI"'''In will blbv · •it i"

HOME OWNEAS ·Relin..,c• to

TUMday • Wldn•dly. HouH·
hold goods, cloth11, miiCtHant·
out, lth hOult p11t Y on Route

992· 2196
Mtdaleport. Ohio

VlnL &amp; Aw.IIUI

"

low flud rett . Ute equity lor an'(
purp011. Ltldtr MortQJQt Co.. ·

PAT HILL FOR·D

SUPERIOI

B14·2U-11&amp;09 .

Will pl•c• clg1rltt• m•chin ... '
Good commiulon1 . Cell :J04· ; .

&amp; Vicinity

1977 OS 750 Su~:ukl 4 cyl. 4
11rok1. SH at 210 s. Founh In
1Mlddltpon. UtiO .

SIDING CO.

private hon, hat mull, lV,Ige·.
room, beth , rMIOnable. Call

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8LIS H-.
lNG CO . rtoonvnandt thlt you
do bulin•• with ptDple you

.......P.oiTI&amp;;c;-y· ........

•Storm Doort

I

Situations
Wanted

Vacancy for man or worntn. ·

6 Lost and Found

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

.

_
wv~2~~~~6o~·--------~ -

3-12 -1 mo.

~S · tk

EUGENE LONG

1·800-842-315 19.

38 feet of sldewllk, 304-175-

Jim Mink Ch"-.·Oktt Inc.

BOGGS

WANTEO : Prior Mllttary SlrVIct
Mtmb••· ·Tht Army Ouerd
nllc:lt your tiCperlenct . Join now
for 1 perl·tlm. job with benlfitl
llh rltirtment end tducatkJnal
uail:tlr'ICI. :1&gt;4-1715-39150 or

8038.

OUntDI STOIAGE AVAILMU

•Ranges

For t.formttlon call BO&amp;·M•· ,

9633.

Mo1her dog 1nd 2 m1l1 puppi11,

10 weeb old. wormed , 30•·

PH. 992-7201

•• Dlty

•Refrigerators
· •Dryers •Freezef1

Ftdtrll, Stltl _.d Civil Service

jobl now tvalltble In your lftl.

814-915-4188.

Jl MCLIFFORD

Manag• !iring On Promii•

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

33482.

my home . hperienced . Call
Puppltl to gfvl IWIV. Mother ' 81,·992-8750 .
Reg . CoUll, tether unknown . - - - - - - - Calllf4 ·742-314.2 .
Will do bM)y-tltting in lht
Middlepon, Porn~rov ar11 . Ctll • ·
3 B•evtepuppi ... to give a.ny. 1 114-992-277.2 .
· ·
bl~ek and whitt Collie. Ctll

Ulld Cll'l.

SIAU A•AL IIOIIS

tuoo.

Bo ..r • falhlr It

Sh~ Ttt.•ielu

3·3-'86-1 mo.

1

JOS lack- lire.

.

Oh.
Ph. 614-IU-5191
laclnor

Eu,- A111111'1bl,- Wor.~l 1800.00
par 100. Ouarent ..d payment. ·
No •pertenct·No Aiel. Detaila
tll'ld Hlf·addr•Nd nampld
envelope: Elan VItti -7115. 3•18
Ent..-prltt Ad. Ft. P•c•. Fl.

12

.....

MANLEY'S

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASAIIT OffiCE

o rote oot u.-inu
for cno dolw of

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

33482.

2 yr . old milt Beegle and TlfTilf
dog . Cell 114-4411 -2724 L11lie

,...,_...,....,.,....,...,.,..

PH. tas-3937

'

. . ••,...

lnsulatltl Dog Houses

, SELLiNG

VETIIINAIIAN
CUNIC

btlng: An odditlonal

Up to 24'x36'

tWIIheraeOiahWIIt.lrl

HOURS: I·S

TOWN I COUN11Y

.0 mill 10 run for fiVe

Sizes from 6'a6'

All M1ku ,

ariel

...

UTILITY ' BUILDINGS

915-3561

St. Rt. 124, Panwror
PH. 992-5468

GOlD, SIIVEI &amp;
CIIRENCY &amp; Ul£ COINS

Public Notice

MACY .·

Sizes St1rt From 12d6'

(CUI OUT FOI FUTUIE USEI

RIDER
SALVAGE

CLC· COINS

AFYII S P.M.

1837

U4-38e·8449.

J&amp;F

4/ 1/lfll'.

SHORT STEEL

JIWII.IY .

Oirtc10r

·--

AU STEH &amp;
POl£ IUILDINGS

bay A•tmblv Warkl tiOO .OO
per 100. Guaranttld peyment,.
No ••perilnoa·no •••· O.tail•
llftd tl'if·lddrlllld Nmp«&lt;
.,vtlop1: Eiln VltaHi847 341 8
Ent~r~&gt;rlle Rd . Ft. Pierce. Fl

Ptrson to mow 8 tcreii'Wn with
18 HP lewn tr~etor . Sand ·
parton•l d•tt on • " to Ltwn.
Rt. 1. bolt 330. Point Pt..unt.

Giveaway
w ... .

list.

Beg• of yerd 1111 goodt. Ctll

8-13 Hn

CHISRR--915-3307

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

WHOlESAlE '1411.

14)7, 14, 21. 2B, 4tc

.... .

Y1rd Sail Ill
Ch11tnut St.

1614) 446-7619 Dr (614) 992-6601
·417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

COINS, GOlD &amp; SIYU

Oirec10r

,.

!

4

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

. BUYING

10-8-tfc

3-24-tfc

SINGLES . MHt thlt epecl1l
ptr.onl FrM .pplctdon . Per.onel touch introductions, box
&amp;1!136 , Charleaton. W. Va .

Puppltt, 9 w ..ltl old , mi•«i
brMd. 304-882· 2514 .

PH. 949-2649

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

1-304·727-8434.

~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

3-ll-11110.

Long lottom, Ohio

1-17-Hn

"' '

Point Pleasant, W. Va., Gallipolis, Oh.
&gt;Middleport, Oh .

Oo.tort.

POJ 110 CAIIADA

Doted April I , 1986

)41 7, 14, 21 . 28. 4tc

IUSIIISS l'ltONI
16141 "2·6550
IISIIINC£ I'IIONI
16141 "2-1154

SPRING lEAl
lllllmNG &amp; RSIING
In Nert.._st Ontario

949-2263
or 949-2969

I n

9-3tl-tf

Puppl11 to glve•way mother II 1

FREE ESTIMATES

Evelyn Cieri&lt;, Chlirrnlol
Jono M. Frymywr

Ohio. • .
·Evolyn Clartc, Choirm101
Jono M. Fryrnyer

with evf?ry disc or roll of color print film
brought In for processing.
This Offer Not Valid In Connection With
. Any Other Film Promsina Promotion

I

You •re invlt•lll Hocking Veilll'f
Chept•r of Sweet Adllln•. Inc.
Opan hou11 for JWOIPK11Ye
mtrriblfl Tu•day. April B. 1981
11 7:00 p.m. Fi"1 Chrllt:llft
Church BIMm.,t, W11t St1t1
1nd Congr••· Ath.,l, Ohio .

Factory Choke
12 Gau.. Sholruns Only

1128/ lln

Gutters
Down..,outs
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

,SO mMio for eooh one doltor of
voklotion, wllk:ll omounto to ~=---~
· ~~~~~"''
ta.06tFiveCMto)for•cllono
lOW INTII£11 1£FIIANCIIG
hundred doltors of uoklotion
Mart- lt..,
for five yMrs.
·
9'12% FilED UT£
Tho Polo for IIOid E-n
On VA I ntA. low !tn•••r...t

Sold WI bting: An additional
tu of 1.0 milt 10 run for tve ·
years. 11 a rate not exceeding
1.0 milo for OIICh one dol• of
Wlluotion, whicfl omoumo 10
t0.10 ITon "'nto) for OIICh one
hundiOd doltoro of vokiotion
for five yoors.
Tho Polo for ooid E!oction
wiU bt otrtn 11 6 :30 o'clock
A.M. ond remain cpen unti
7:30 o'dodt P.M.
By order pf the Boa-&lt;~ of
Eloctions of Moigo County,

Meeting changed

JU-2027·

NEW - REPAIR ·

yeal"l. at e rate not exCMding

polution.

from Congressman Clarence
' MUter's office wlll conduct an open
door session from 11 a.m to 1 p.m. ln
the court house In Pomeroy.
Al\yone having questklns concern-.
tng the federal government Is
Invited to stop by t&gt; discuss them I
with tbe representative.

s c•

ROOFING

POMEROY
992·2181

Outotondlng

On WEdnesday, a representative

Aftwor

.,..,. -

448-0294.

2&amp;302. 1·304-727-8434.

~

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

Howard L Wrlte•l

FENCE CO.ANY
PH. 992·6931

BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
BULK,OR BAGGED

SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
BONDS

ACCENT

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Television Listening Devices
Co"'uterized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

168 Hortlo SocaiMI
Middleport, Ohio 45760

992-33453/ 2/tln

SWEEPER tnd HWing mtchine
replir, p1n1, and supplin. Pick
up tnd deHvtry, Dtvit V~~euum
Cl .. nar, on• half mile up
0Hf111 CI'Hk Rd. C.ll 81·-

Building

....,,.1

eun~r~t

3 Announcements

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Iathan

801·887-8000 Errt. R-98061o•

Slngl.. introdue11onl, frtl epptiCI1ion, Person1l Touch lntrodue·
tion, P. 0 . Bo• &amp;53&amp;. Charinton . W . Vt . 25302 ,

l'lUMIING &amp; HEAnNG
Now

GUN SHOOT

6:30P.M.

PH0NE (614) 992-5009

F11 Ah Yw ,,,.,,,, W

f·

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?

Govtmment Jobe. 111,040 •
..9,130 . yr . Now Hir6ng. Cell

An nu unce 111 en ls

....,.

sc.

Public Notice

141 7, 1to

Coli 114•448-3619

110'1, Weot Main Street, •-•roy
Phene 614-992·6771

Ill COIIFI St, POIMIOW, OfiJO 457"

"

Car•r opportunity •• .• loca-l
1..--------:-----~;;..;,..;;.-'1 repr•mtetivl far on1 of tht

LISTING- State Roote

INTEREST RATES 9 ~ ·111\
fiXED fLEXIBlf TERMS.
COME IN AND PICK YOUR
NEW HOME TODAY!
Henry E. CTeland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692

.

MEMORANDA DATA
AS HINd
Votuotion ....... 24,747,192
lnoido 10 Mlll ...... .. .. ... 4.00
Outalde10 Mill ........ 20 .10
ADM ... ! ......... ... .. ........ 911
Number of Non-Cert.

24 Hr. Se!VIcO
4/ 8/'86/ 1 mo.

dplo . . o•oEol.,oqul•ed. Coll'
.,, !roo h Oftlo 1 -800-282·
1384, Mon.-Thu ..., 8om-2pm.

'l'lltkmJ llrgett lnturtnOI compiny. No pr~ioul exptrlenCI •
nae .. sary. Cort'f'hrll trlinln; .
progrtm wtWI1you team. Benllfitt p~ekage, q,portunity tor ~
ldYinctmtnt, Clll 614 - 441 - ~

POMEROY - Owner called
and wants offer now. 2story
frame with fu II basement,
large yard, many features.
Call lor appointment Ma\e
offer $26,500.00.

VETERANS MEMORIAL' HQSPITAl

Public Notice

63 Plno St., Ga...llo

We Deliver

CAU: (614) 446-9416 .

fARM - 98 acres, tillable
ground. Pasture, house, barn,
ponds. Has great potential
ONLY $43.!lJO.OO.

1

Public Notice

1-15-tfn

wllllngtorolocoto . Ahlghochool

BOWMA.N'S HO. CAIE .MEDICA.L SUPPLY

FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY' SERVICE

lot Bear.rtilul fireplace, lamiy
room. lull basement and
equipped knchen. $27,!1:Xl.OO

r~=========~========~~~~~~~~===:;==

Public Notice

d '"""I"

W£ IIIL MEDKAIE AND OTNII INSUUN&lt;E
"''~liE
( "'MIERS WHEN .....,

HOURS: 9:00 A.M.·6:00 P.M . Mon. thru Set.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment

'FURNACES
'HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
'COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER

):lbl .. . If vou woukt
llkllo 1oom ,,.,, ""'" . Ooodl
Wo'llprovldot""'"'""'"'wl1h
ptrm1n.,t job off•ring good pay
..
raiHO. Wo wont
no -nontenH JPPNC1ntii0•17 28 n good r&gt;hvoiQol _condhlon·
who can PQI ~r 11111 and art~ ·

•Hoapitel Bed. • •Wheel Cheira

107 Sy(amore St., P01111roy, Oh.
PHONE 992·7075

heating and cooling products for the tricounty area .

A.;etlon Jobo, ,..,.,,., jobo.

•Home Oxygen

FEDERAL-SlATE
INCOME T~X IDUINS

Help Wanted

lltetricl~n

Out of Town Cull~mers Call Collect

We Ct"V FtJhlng Suppli•

Easter services conducted at Alfred

11

HOSPITAL SUPPLIES FOI HOME
SAlES &amp; RENTALS

7 - Recently' redecoratoo 3
oodroom home. Approx. 2~:re

JOHN Ae WADE MeD• Inc.

The Daily Sentinel·-

.

** **

NEW LISTING- RUTLAND
- Building, land, equip·
ment, stoc k, recipes. know I·
edge &amp; adviseand this tlour'shin g bus10ess can be
yours. Great volume. Ask lor
details. ·

hostesses to trose named and Mrs.
RDnald Cowdery, Mrs. HarUss .
Frank, Mrs. Herman Grossnickle,
Mrs. Clermont Harris. Mrs. Roy
Hannum, Mrs. Donald Myers. and
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. Next meeting
will be April 22 at8 pm. at the home
of Mrs. Myers with Mrs. Cline as
co-hostess . For favors the
members were given small wooden
magnet ducks which had been
made by Mr. and Mrs. RDnald
Osborne.

'

,1111'1 1111'111

St:r ~'ILt!)

'

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
#1 line of mobile home
By offering a complete

NEW LISTiNif ..::. 12x55 mo·
bil e home - 2 bedrooms,
all eleclric. Must move to
our lot $6.000.00.

Riverview Garden Club holds meeting
C~Edwardll

will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday at tbe
elementary school.

--~

POMEROY -Tile MefP,Coonty
test of reading competency wUJ be
given to third grade students on
Aprtl 8; seventh grades tudel\ts on .
Aprtl 10, and tenth grade students
oo Aprtlll.
The Ohio State Department of
··· Education Minimum Standards for
1Elementary and Secondary Schools
mandate competency based EJ!ucation programs for reading, mathe·

'

f 'I

INTERTHERI'Jlllt COLEMAN

E . M~ir1W

The Daily Sentir1ei-Page_:_ 7

Business
.

- .

·Employee of month named

.

The D,aily Sen tin~·~ .

•

Pomeroy-~iddleport. Ohio

Monday. April 7, 1986

llt. Call

111-441 ·3111.

-

:t'-2

837·2471&amp;.

TOP CASH pold lor '83 modal
and ntw• Ulld c1n. I mlth
luh:t:·Pontltc, 1811 Eadem
Avo., Golllpollo. CoU 814-448·

2212.

euvrn,.::v!lOki.

lilwf

cotno.

' · - · - · · old
"1'uri&lt;ott
""""'
&lt;lorbt&lt;
Y· Toplhop,
prl-

rlngo,
oolno,
.... Ed.

2nd. Avo. Mlddlepon, Oh. 114·

992-3471.

31

Home• for Sale

.: ~

- - - ' - - - - - - ••.• •
All llecuk, 3 bedroom. c.,trat .
;
anachtd ~~·· OalllpoliJ
'

•w.
Ferry. ?04-876·2932.

· . I.

�r

·,

...
Monday, April 7, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

44

64

Apartment
for Rent

...:t•

, APPL E GROVE , DIRECTLY
ACROSS FROM GOODYE AR
PL AN T.

T WO

RAN CH ERS .

New VInyl siding, new kitc hen,
bath en d utihtv New c erpet, 2

bedrooms, den and off ice. large
closets, &amp;litre in sulation. out ·
b u1klmgs. Mary Al1ce St eva ris.
F. RA GAIN ER KIRTlEY 8e CO .,

Hunting ton , W. Va . 304 -697 5 000 or 30 4-529 -0672 .

stock in this coinpany. Now
• g my ta.J"l offi"•
I'm workm
..

2 56 6200

lo t.

s_e.soo

was in buying

"My

2 bdr 6 yr . home. IY'j inl c ondi-

5 rm. house Ewin{tton. OH,

~

r-;;;::;;::;:;:::;:;:::::::::'1~;:::;:;:::::::;::;;:::1
32 Mobile Homes
41 Houses for Rent
for Sale

,h

Call 614 · 876 ·

9 489 .
NEW

AND USED MOBILE

6 acres. 3 BA, bnck hOme, lge
kitchen &amp; dining area. l g e LR.
1 Vt beth . 'h buement . l ocated
Kvge r ~~o c ree k Sc h . Di1 t
S49 .ooo . c a n 61 4-367 -7 2 39

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.

House lor Sale or Trade . 1.5
ac res ne~~: t to Clay School Make
o ti tu Cell 61 4-26 6 ·6580 or
6 14 ·44 6-151 1 .

1979 141170 Schult with till·
pan do. 3 bedroom, 1 ,h baths,
firepl eca, heat pump , deck.
twning, underpinning . Call 614-

Be11 uttful brick ranch. 3 bd r., 2 1h
bat h, lam rly roo m, with fire·
place , 2 ca r garage 5 miles from
to wn Cell 614 ·446 -0 388 alter
6 PM.

3 bdr . 2 bath. ran ch, g arage,
fi rep lace, e~~:c neig hborhood.
Walk ing di1tance city achool1.
Red uced to sell. Ca ll 614 -446·
0388 11ft e r 6P M.
In Mid dleport. 3 bedroom remo·
cteled home. Air conditioned,
vin yl 1kting . in sulated . fenced -in
back y1nd. storage buil ding,
close to achooll. Show by
appo intme nt only C11ll 614·

992 ·20 12.
1 floor home. ! torm w indow•
a nd doors , alum inum t iding,
new root. new wiring . gar~~ge.
Good co nd itio n Call 614-992·

PHONE 614·446·7274 .

4 bedrooms. Living roo m, dining
room, kitc he n. scree ned -in
po rch. wash roo m. On 2 level
lots Fifth St. in Svracuse. Oh io.
House tor sale by owner. Call
614 -99 2-7225 . PometO¥.
House in Middleport. Priced to
sell. Cell 614 -992-6803.
Restored home. Vine S1feet,
R~ c i n e . 3 bedrooms, beth, car·
pet ing. well covenng s. dr a peri ll
i n clude d . New k i t c h e n .
S35.000. Ctl l 614-949 -2540
tfte r 6 wee kdav 1. anytime
we8k'en ds .

5509 .
3 room s a nd bath, Jefferson
Avenu e. Point Pleatant. Nice
locat ion. Adults. no peU.
reference .

42

245· 5565.
14x70 Festival. 2 bdr .. 2 full
baths . lot• of closets, utiliry
room. AC. Call 814 -446 -6241
a nytime.
1978 fairmont Beyviaw, 2 bdr ..
Jarge liv ingroom, diningroom
with buih·tn hutch. appliances.
double oven, new cefl)et in
master bedroom, curt1in1, 2
porch es . underp inning , good
cond., i'nu1t sell , malte ut an
o ff~r . Ctll614-245-6815 .
1976 Richwood 14K60 2 bdr.,
part. fum . Call 814 -•48-4851
or 614 -387·0397.
largest se lection in are 12 and
14 wideJ. French City, Mobile
HOR)H , Inc . 814-446·9340.

5204.
4 bedroom home for ule. Good
Hun ting and good fishing . Can
be neg otiated with ~ner . Call
61 4-986-4 392

Cute cottage for t ingle perton,
fumished. utilities paid, 866,00
week, 304 -675 -3100 or 676-

33

Farms for Sale

Fa rm for S ele. 48 Acres on Little
Bullskin Rd . Cell 614· 256 ·
1162 .
29'h acres fenced . bern I!&amp;
tobacco ballt, 3 bedroom, 2
story l'louse. livlngroom. kitchen. beth. diningroom , anc lot ed beck porch. util iti es
roo m, shown by appt . onty. Call
aft er 7PM, 614 -268-6506.
7 5 ar:: res on Happy Hollow Road
w itl'l 6 working gas wells. Call

8 14·742 ·2593 .

36

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

Fu,ni l hed , cable, beauclful river~o~iew , in Kenauga. no city tans .
Fotters Mobile Home Park. Call

614·446·1602.
In Eureka nice. clean, part. fum ..
edu lt1 only, no pen, S180 mo.
Oep req . Call61•· 256-1636 or

614· 256·1291 .
2 tra ilers Bula~o~ille &amp; 180, city
water. sewer. &amp; gas. S150 per
month, S1 00 depolit with rent.
Cell 814-446 -3888.

2 bdr. mobile home. ref. a. dep .
required Call614-266 -1922.

Two parce la o1 land · one w-ten
ecr81 and ona w·30 ecrH .
Loc1ted on hwy. 1e0. Terms
a~o~ t i labl e. Cell614·446 -7322.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1984 14x70 2 bd r.. 2 btth s.
~ttov e , firepl ace, skin ing , storage
buil ding. on ren ted lot, S16,600.
Fr8000 City Brokeri ge. 614446 ·9340 .
Malle an Offer· 12x60 New
Moo n with 2 lge. lou, Ac , bldg.,
many ext ru , 10 milfls from
Ga llipolis oo Rt. 21 8 , e nxious lo
sell. Call 6 14 -245 -5a. 9 eve .
1974 Freedom Specia l 1 2x65. 2
SA , with underpinning, Ret. e.
Stov8 On rented lot On Kerr·
Htm is bu rg Ad. Call 614 -446·
4410 or 6 14-446 -2946 .
1977 Holly Ptrk 12x80 , CI A,
un derpin ning, partly furni sh ed.
1uc . cond . S7,500 . Call 614·
246 -5120.

1 · 5 acres,parti•ltv wooded lots
nell' epp ro ~o~ed aub -divition. T.P.
1nd C . wat•r and approved rold
to eac h lot. Rauonebly priced.
will finance with 10 percen1
down . Call81•· 986·3694.
50 ac re1, 1m111 barn, tobacco
allotrNnt , mineral rights, rural
wa ter, 304-676 -3128 .
'A acres. 8 miln hom town,
304· 875-5889 after 5:00PM .

36

3 bdr. house with around 6
ac ras, with in 7-8 mil• city parlt.
Call 81 4-446-3375 .
2 .9 acres on At . 664, all utllhl•
nearby . Cell 614 -367·0213

For aale or rent, 14x70, Z
bech'oo m. citv schoo ls . Call
61 4 ·379-2659 .
1980 Uberty 14x5 4 . 2 bed·
room, unfurnished. vi nyl und er·
pinning includ8d. Must sel l. Cell

Rii,al Estate
Wanted

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

304·77 3·5873 .
1975 Cemaron Mobile Home for
sale . 12 x6 0 . Cel l 614 ·992 ·
6624 .
1 2x65 S hu it. 2 bedroo m, front
d 1nm g room, raised pan el ceil·
ing. new furn iture eveil l ble.
12:1180 Bavvr ew. 2 bedroom,
fr ont and rear . Nsw 10x20
alum inum awning . 1 only . U 96 .
Call Klnglbury Ho me Saltl 11

6 Coon St. 3 bdr. Kitchen
furn ished, no ,.ts, t 250 mo ..
plu1 util ities, referen ces &amp; dtp·
olit . Call &amp;14 ·4•8·4928 or

814-448·9680.
3 bdr house. furnished kitchen
Cell 614 -448· 7025
2 bdr. "'frigerator, atove, good
neighborhood . riwerview . 1 5
Vin• St. Call 814-448 -3949 or

6 14· 992·5687

614-445·2419 .

'77 Ft1qua , 1 4 x70 mobile home.
all etec u lc, excell ent co ndition.
2 bed room, cathed ral ceiling in
LR with wood burning fireplaea,
large blt h, in·garden tu b, wall•·
in thower, stove. rehigerltOt,
win dow air condi1ionet, udllty
b.lildin g. t 8900 . 6 miles north
of Ravenswood Bridge. C1il

Two· 3 bdr. apenmenta: in town,
off street ptrrking, all utilitl•
paid . ref. a. dap. requ ired . Cell
The WlJtman Agency. 8 14-440·

304 ·273 ·9851 .
1982 14 1152 2 bed room, ·vinyl
underpinning. tie downs , 1h10
porch and e lectri c ent11nce
service. E11ce l!ent cond ition. Call
6 14 ·992 ·2772
1978 Buddy Mobile Home. Total
electric, 1 1h batt1t , 3 bedrooms.
1 4 ~~:7 0 18600. Call 6 14-247·
3675

3844 .
Nice 3 bdr. hout t full b• em.,t,
CA. f•n ced yard . Gr"n School
dlttrict At. 141 . U25 plus dep.
evaileblelmmedlltely. Cell 814862 -2918 after 5PM.
3 bedroom house, b1th, utility
room. nice and clean. Call
614 · 448 -361 1 or 614 -448·

3807
8 room houu rn city, 1260 mo ..
S100 depoait. C1ll· 614 -448·

09 24 .

614· 992 -6B66 .

Holly Perk 12165 , 8x1 2 El·
pando. 3 bedroom, ,porch. un·
derpiWining , lo11 of e.11 tras .. New
het t pufllt Sell' Cheap. 304·

773 ·91 34,
1914 mob il home, good cond,
woo d bu rn er. und erpenntng,
8 11 16 deck, ca ll 30 4 -1715 -8284
af1er 2:00 PM.
1 971 Flemingo 12 Me5, th,.1
bedrooms. AC. part . furn ished.
wood declt. e•c cond. cell
614 -446·0084 evening.• .
Old mo bile homt hamfl, aultlble
fo r mak in g tra iler. •&amp;oo.oo.

304 -676· 3000.

2 bdr., n.. r Silver Bridga Pt.u
NIce carpeting. water &amp; g•ab·
ege Plid. Call 614 -441·7025.
Unfurn ithed Z bdr. in Crown

C ~y .

Call 814-255·6520.

Upstain unturniahed apt .. carpeted . Utilities peld, no children.
no pets . Ca11814-446 -1837.
Nice 2 bclr. apt. , 4 mi. from
Gallipoli s. Stove. re fr ig. a. wtter
fum i1hed S200 month. no pet1.

Coll614·446·8038.
Duptex apt . for rent. S250 mo..
no dep .. ref . req . Call614-4464670 after 3:30PM.
Furn ished Aplnment . 21R·, 243
Jeckaon Pike, Gallipolis, 1250.
Utilities petd. Call 81 4 ·446·
441e after ?PM.
Ap1rtment for rent . Quality 2
BR , 2 bl1h 1par1ment In prime
downtown locetton with oft·
ltreet perking. Kitch 1ft furnithed
with rtfrig ., Hlf-ciNn o~o~an,
DW. gar. · dlsp., hookup tor
wathiH' / dryer. f or non-1moking
single or couple. No cttildren or
pets. All electric . .1400 per
month . Includes w att r/ llw . / truh . A one veer lees• 11
required . Call 614 -•46· 1694

3 bedroom, dining room, carpeted. utility room. storaue
building. nice lot. Mt . Vernon
Ave., Pt. Pleeunr, W.Va . Call

2 bdr . e ll electric . w ·

Route 33, North of PomMo'l'.
Large lots . Clll614-992-7479.

Fully autornartic hoaplt1l bed .
Excellent condltk»n, 11,400.
Call 61•·25e-8201 .
18 h . abo~o~e ground pool.
includes lf• horse power pu"",
Hayward fiberglas• sand flher,
1olar blenkat. and 10me cheml·
eels. Call 814-440 -1637 attar

Oll~o~e

St., Gallipolil . New I!&amp; u1ed
wood·coalstoves. 8 pc wood ~
tulte t399. bunlt bedt f 199.
lntron rtclin•s S99 , new &amp;
uMd bedroom sultn. rangea,
wringer walhers. &amp; shot~ . New
llvingroom 1uite1 H 99 · 8&amp;99,
lamps, also buying co al &amp; wood
ttov11 . Call614-446-3169 .

apt . tor rent . Bille
Nnt- mrts 'S216 . a montl'l t hat
includes an utilities. Deposit
requlrld of S200. Contact VII lag• Manor Apt . Middleport.
614:992·7787. Equ1l Hou sing
OpportunhV.
1 bedroom unfurnished apt. with
stove •. rtf ., wllher, dryer. All
utilties pd . ~tt.~~captaleetric. Quilt
country setting . 12 miles
northwett of Pomeroy on U.S·

.33.Coll 514 ·992-2807 oh or
3 room furnlshld apt. No peta.

Call e14·949·2213.
For r.,t: New f..-nl1hed 1
bedroom 1pertnwnt tn Mlddl•

port. Colll14-ltZ·f304 .

0 -4 dozer, 160 MF
plows·disc· mower a buth hog .

Coll614 -245·9248 .

Smith-Wesson .367 mag.
Dtn -Wenon .44 meg .

614·949·21 81 '
Prom dress . ShEe &amp;. Gunne
de•ign. 140 . Cell 11

2224

66

Building materiel s, r:emen(,
btoclts all •Jzes, yerd or dllivery.
Gallipolla Block Co., 123'h Pine
St .. Gallipolis. OMo Call 814·

44e ·2783.

~-..·-

- -- -- --

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Klflnel .
CFA HimeiiYin , Per1iM 111d
Slam.. klttena . AKC Chow
puppies. New p.rppi• • ki"ena.
Call 446 -3844 efter 7PM.
Tickflekt Kenni!Ka. All brled dog
grooming. Obedltnoa tratni'lg
lnttruction. AKC Germen wirtheired Pointer puppi•. C.ll

575·*579.
1984 Orond Fury 22,000 mi.
CoU 304-1175-61570 .

Ml", call 304 ·571·e9B1 oltlf
5'00.

n3-

9585 ,

John o..,. dltael 1520 F1rmat
Cub with eultlvuor1 ,
•t ,8&amp;0.00 . New tobecco aet·

1oro. 1100.00. 304-175·2328
pr l?e-2105.

3-11 ln . John Detre aemi·
mountld plow1. • · 18 ln. Allis
Ch1lrnars tami·mounted plow1.
1- 14 ft. lnttmetk»nal ditc. Cell

Liv811tock

1871 Corvlttt, Mtortd, Peel·
lent condhion, 18,000 .00 firm.
Cellafter7p.m. 304·1715-5791.
1819 RaniUh Le Car. 1800.00;
1984 Chevy Cewaller. 304-182-

3141 .
19711 01da. 304·575·5112 .

King size mattreaa. box springs
1nd frame . 2 Jtts sheet s,
S UO .OO . Phone 304 -882 ·

117• Super Beetle. fair condl·
tion. •eoo or Hit offar, phone

304·575·4220 .

13 YMr old ltlnderdbrtd mue,
..:Idle, bridle. heher. 1370. Cltl

e14 ·1M9·2181.

72

2334.

R-uilt•ed Her.tord C1ttle Sal•
-Jachon County H~reford
BNtdera M1turt lulls, Cow•
whh atwn, Heifen, FRIDAY,
April 11 , 7 :30 p.m . Liwlltodl

1871 C'-'f !ruck, 5 cyl .,

Hay

&amp;

Gra.i n

388·9887.

c.. 114·

59

367·0482 .

F.mn Suppl11:s
&amp;

TONY' S GUN REPAIRS , hot dip
reblueing , a ll typn of gunamith
work, flit 18NICI, 304-67 5-

LIV!!SIIll

k

71

AM-FM stereo,

1p0rt

wM111.

HALF PR ICE! Fluhing arrow
signs 12991 Ughted, non-arro w
8 2791 Nonllgh ted 12291 Free
lettltf'al Ontv few 111ft. Set~
locally . 1 (800 )423 -018 3 ,
1nytime.

CROSS l!o SONS
U.S 36 Wut. J1ckson. Ohio.

Farm Equipment

614-286·11451.

304·e71·188e.

81 PontiiCl Pho• 'llxAC, PS, auto
tr1n1, 4 door, hltdtb1ck, tXIf'l

dHn, 12,1185. CoM 11 4 ·379·
21"22 .
1971 Pln10-n, Coli 8142115·1582.

euto, air, 11 •• 8 . John's Auto

Soln.

8ulmlo Rd.

188t Chnette, luto., air, PS,
new tiNe.
cen 114·

n.ooo:·

OYer

'11 uHCI

14.11,00. Cl\le14-448.7844.

Nitrogen semen tank, t200 . CeH

18M Ford Oolulo 100 bodyl!o

614-256-6316 .

artglne good OOncl., t450 . t!ell

e14·387·7518 .
185 Masaie Fergu10n clb .. d
trector. Extra nice. Meslie Fer·
gu10n mower, 1 ft. bar. Sill.
John
rake . aete. New
Hellard 68 haler. •as&amp;. IN ford
with high and low ,.,,,, Naw
rubber. t NVI * ·.Two 12 pklws.
U96 . 2 row cultiveter. S1915. 3
point Mltut11bll d~c . U16.
fust ho .. digg.,. 1195 . Call

o..,.

114·286-61122 .
John Deere modal SO manure
1prHd• . t300. AI moat , _
farm w~~gon 16ft. btd, UMd poll
halo dluU•' 3 pt .. 51t. 3 pt. b&gt;Uol1
hog new t460 . 1 Ht naw ltock
rack• for 8ft, pick -up tNck . 14
ft. alurrinum JOfl ,boat. Nke n11111

wl1h Of wl1houf motor. Slnglo 14
ln . 3 pt . ptow, 3 pt, .. beolltr,

Robart Hill. Racine, Ohio. Cell

514·1141&lt;2013 .

·-

---~~

1810 Buick 81¥1on . To1oltlocl•
rio, .... con4 .. 11.100, Call
514·982-3118 Altar 6 PM
1181 ChevrOlet C itltion .

10,000 mlloo. 4 door, outo., AC,
tin. Plfl tlf ...... mullttll. C1ll

e14·882·1722 oltor 8:00p.m.
1879 Ford LTD. R.. AC , CC . Coll
514·742-21130 .
1982 Oldornobllo 4 door, VI,
CNIH, AC. Exoelltnl condition.

Prlco *3860 . •Call 114-543·
5231.
1971 Dodg... Megnum T-Top,
till, cruia.1, new U..... low mMee.

oxcollonl condition, 114·742·
28'11 or 814-982-3345 D.

- --t

·~

· ·· ·-·· ~__.;...

!

him. (60 min .l (RI.
Gl (I) MOVIE: 'Anastasio'
0 I]) (JD Scarecrow end
Mra. King
Cil MocNoii·Lohror Now•hour
(fi) Pride of Piece: Building

KRWa ... l 210 nreet bike, 1971

" - ,,...,, eon e1 4-44e-cao3.

Col e14· 882-1851.
1177 01 710 Swuld 4 cyt., 4
......... ..... 210 6 . 4111, In
Mlddloport, ooldng IIIlO.
1110 Kowuakl

LTD · 1000.

MYCIADe.AYS
WHEN HE WENT'
TO SCHOO.. ...

HE USED TO DIP LiTTLE
GIR!.S' PIG-TAII-5 IN THE
INK'NELL.o.l HIS DESK .

r NEVER REALIZED HOW
MUCH FtJN BALLFOINT
PEN51'tXlKOI.JT OF LIFE .

11 .1110.00 . 304 ·575-7725 .,.
1.. 1,30 .

BARNEY
YOU

PAW .. DON'T VOU
THINK IT·s A

WINDOW
WIDE OPEN

Cor . Fourth and Pi ne
Gallipolis . Ohio
Phone 614 -448 -3888 or 6 14·

446 ·4477

1100.00. 304·578·211e .
'11 Hti'lty Olvidton, tow ridar,
no oond, ID• rNI•. ceH ,,..,

-ARE YOU
. VENOMOUS?

-

POISON 'TO
POISON?

7387.

PEANUTS
Upholstery

DON'T LOOK NOW.

,•

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

·
'·

_______ ,.

1183 Sec . Ave., Gallipolis.,
614 ·448 -7833 or 614 -446 · •

1 :30, 304-871·1141111.

1833.
.:..;:_:..:_

Honda 125 uoo.oo. lour.y
FIMtl orgen 11 ,200.00. Cem·
111• fDr aul aiu truok •4&amp;0.00.

R &amp; M Furn itur• M1nuf.cturing.'
St. At. 7 , Ctown City. Oh. Call
e14 -266 · 1 ~70, call E~o~e . 814 -1·
o4ol6 · 3' 3 8 . Old &amp; n•w ,'
Uphostetad.
•'

304-871· 2148 or 304-112·
3343 .

'

SNAKE!!

Good -1 Exceveilng, besementa,
tootefl, driveway•. teptlc ta nks,
l~rtdt&lt;:ap ing . Call anyt ime 6 14·
"1-4537, J 1mn l. Dav ison.
Jr. owner .

oond. 1600.00 , 1873 CL350
Honde, very eood cond ,

v inced sh e is only us ing

him.

L

~·

Lacey

Cagn8v and Lacey investi·

insecl

gate 1he s enseless murder

29 Allegory
33 "What Did

son

Excavating

Chov~o.

1911. XR100R motor cycl•. e•c

LEFT

TH' DAOf;IURN

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

87

Bulloc k
Late labor
leader
26 Trial run
27 Vamoose!
28 Colony
22
25

- ,?'

BUT SOME PEOPLE
ARE WATCHII&gt;/6
VOll ..
\

I THINK THE'I'RE
BIRD WATC ~ERS ...

HOW EMBARRASSING ~

of fu nds

31 Lrarning

15 Still
25 "Tho 32 Lambkm' &lt;
18 Encou ra~"
Wo rk t'r"
mom
21 - mo\'l'
(1 962 ft lm )3 7 Spirr

on!
27 Vet..,'gruup urnauw nt
22 Blemish 29 Ros.•
39 Lin c&lt;oln''
23 Sinew
fragment
~('cr('tary

~H-

35 Quarrel
36 Nine
musicians

S8Task
40 Palm 1ree

41 Veronica
of the
late show
42 Trouble
43 Hurricane
center
DOWN
I Church
re gulatio n

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'• bow to work i1:
AXYDLBAAXR

Ia LONGFELLOW

Ton ight's gueatt are

One letll!r slands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters,
a~trophes the length and fonnatlon of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the code letll!rs are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

Bort Convy ond Rod Hull.
ISO min.) (R). In S1ereo:

• Cl) Spart1Cen1er

(I) WKRP In Clnclnna11

fii (I)IIJ Toxi
CJ (I) Remington

S1oelo
Laura and Remi ngton are
left to care for an aban·
doned baby wi1h dangerous tief to 1hB underworld .
(60 min.) (RI.
llll Thlo Old Houoe ICC)
Gi lD AJIC Niwo Nlghtllno
IHl Trapper John, M.D.
1 2 :00 CD Baot of Oroucho
(!) Skiing: Women'• Olant
Slalom Competition from
Waterville Valley, New
Hemp• hire. 180 min.)·
(l) En1erttlnmtnt Tonight
Peter Framp1on diiCUIIII
his 111111 album ' Premoni·
tion'.
III IJJ Atwhldo
(j) MOVIE: 'Hell In 1ho Pacific•
CI) IJ] Eye on Hollywood
12:30 D (I) (II) Lote Night with
.
Oavld Lenarman Tonigh1'1
guest 11 diroc1or Milos For·
man. (60 min.) In S1oreo.
CD Bill Co1by Show

30 Oul

34 Generation

@ Newo
10:30 CD To Bo Announced
!IJ Wild, Wild World of Animala
fll (I) INN Nowo
11 :DO D (I) NewsCen11r
CD Girl from U.N.C.L.E.
CIJ Pro Beaeball TNm .Arm
Wro1tllng
!ll Ne1lonal Geographic h ·
pioNr
(I) 11J I]) OI IHIIBI News
Gl (I) Hanny Hill Show
Cil Special Operation• Ex•
cutlve
(j) Eyewl1neu Newt
(fi) N.o wawetch
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
1 1 :30 D (I) IBI Tho Bast of Cor·

HOUSE?

Coli, timeatone, gravel , e1c.
OelivMed 1 ton and up. Jim
Lanier, 304-675 -1247 or 6 75-

21 Network

(60 ,min .)

LITTLE DRAFTY
IN THIS OL'

1 911. Hoodo 8hodow 500,

Indian
20 Wage r

of a Cambod ian refugee
wh ile
Harvev
worries
about financ ial dis a ster.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

7911 .

19 Caddoan

appears to

Gl IJJ Odd Couple
0 I]) (JJ Cagney &amp;

lHOMAS JOSEPH

2 Nigerian
ACilOSS
I Rotating part 3 Dugout
4 Shinto temple VIP
4 Oia ·
7 Searlett's
phanous
plan1alion
5 Chinese
8 Round
dynasty
of cards
6
Pyre nees
10 MIL'lll&lt;!ne1
republic
opera
7 Rye in
11 Provide
Blighty
13 Sioux
9 Slai n
14 Yes
10 Word (Fr)
16 "Johnny
12 Like an 24 Iron
- Note"
untended
Curtain
17 Passerine
garden
country
bird

be mutual, although everyo ne elte at the inn is co n·

10:00

Rotary or clbl1 tool drMIIng ~
Moslwella completltd ••me d ay:
Pump llle1 end tervlce. 304-'

304-878-6097 oltor 7,00 PM.

'74 Sport-. '75
304-881·3130.

v isiting actress

SU1rk1 TrN end Lawn S1 rvi ce,
IMldiCiping . 30•·&amp;70 -2010.

J1m11 Boys Water Service . Alt o
pool• fi lled . Cell 114·266-11 41
or e14-448 -1175 or 814-4 46·

uc c ond ;

by

venile delinquent 12 hrs.)
@
GNI1111 Amoricon
Hero
9 :30 0 (I) (JD Newhart !CCI
George's infatuation with a

876 ·7368.

'77 KZ1000 fully drouod. vary

3 , 100 mil••·

diiiJA'IItr(

leads a girl to becOme 1 ju~

Fitly Tree Tri mming , tt ump
remov1l. Ce11304·675· 1 331 .

General Hauling
'

good oond, f1,300.00 firm,

+

(fi) America n Play.
house: The Lin1a Sle1or
ICCI A pa inful family secre1

~-------------,

tAQ 861

1.

Cil

'

l-1·8f

five-card diamond suit. South had no W•••
Soulh
Nor1h East
problem - he jumped right to three
I t
Pass
no-trurgp.
Pass
;I-NT
2+
Pass
South bid the hand better than he Pass
Pass Pass
played it. He won the first club trick
Openin g lead: 4
with his queen and took a diamond fi.
nesse. When the queen won. he quickly
cashed the ace. even though he should
have been alerted by Easfs play of the
nine. Now be had to scramble. He
played a spade to the jack and then
played the queen of hearts. East ": 0 n , mend Declar&lt;r w111 now win all five
the king and returned a club, ~h 1 ~h J diam~nd tricks and probabl y make
West ducked. Declarer now too ~ e two overtricks This is not mea nt as a
ret! of his nme tricks and ran or sermon for sound openin g bids The recov~r . ,
.f N h asses suit was certainly random, bu t take i1
Its a different story 1 ort P . from me defensive strength or not a
originally. Now South will open. With scattered 11 high-ca rd points w1th ~o
one no-trump and North Will ral~e to rebid should not be opened. Pass and
three. In the absence of any cla1rvoy. .
ance. West will probably lead a dia· ,awalt developments.

who has problem c of he r

AND WINTHROP
.

NO RTH
• 10 8 3

EAST

9:00 D ClliBI MOVIE: 'The An·

2454.

11433 .

James Jacoby

own.

. MORTY MEEKLE

..

BRIDGE

nary skllla. Kate goes 10 a
cooking school teacher-

RON ' S Telev ision Service .
HouM cells o n RCA . Oua u r,
GEE . Spec:llling In Zenith . Call
304-576 -23 98 or 814 -•46·

8&amp;

............................,.....

order to improve her cul i·

l 14-986-41 a 1 .

Condition. 30t ·l71-

j

(Answers tomorrowl
Jumbles GOING HELLO SI MI LE OUTBID
Answer: What that Ing ratiating ba ld gentl eman
was- AN OLD SMOOTH IE

.......... -.1011__...11r l.ll ... ll_.....,.... ... hMidllntrfforn
~.............,,.0. llfii .... Ortii*, 'L. I21024JM lfleJuett y(IU I

S1ereo.

H•rctwood Ftoors. Sanding &amp;
reflnl1hlng. P1rk.t and tounge &amp;r
groova. Free eatlmetn. re-feren "
c• avelllble. Wllllfd &amp; 01\lid
Bt~nken1hlp, 61•· 440-0288 or
e1.4· 441·..0•7 . Commercial &amp;r
resklentlel .

83

Saturday's

nihlla1or' In S1e reo.
&lt;Il 700 Club
(I) 01 (J]) MOVIE: 'My Two
Lovera' !CCI
0 (I) iiJ Ka11 &amp; Allie In

Roofing, aiding , remod•l ing ,
Plinttng hou ..• and roofl . e nd
enerel r1p1ir. Estimat•. call

r r""'"x~x"&lt;&lt;&gt;'x" "x. .x,. . .r., m

. . . HE ........

herself a lone on her wed·
din g
enn iversary.
In

400. Bom~tfi~Y.

MOD milel , all the roed extr1.
11101. fairing. lgt1t1. etc. 1710.

E~llent

NBA Balka1bal1: Ml~
waukoe 11 Chicago
8 :30 D CIJ IBI Valerio David and
the twins anempt to cheer
up Valerie when she finds

Un conditional lifetime gu1r1n·
tee. loctl rlfertnc .. turniahed .
FrN 11tim1t•• · Csll collect
1-114 ·237-0488. day or night .
Rogers Be11men1
Waterproofing.

Of

Cole14-3U· 7170 oft~ 4PM.

"""do CM

piiCI

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

82

cond .. 12.1500. Call &amp;14 -3877238

Dream:

!IJ

8:05

EEK&amp;MEEK

Of

American

Droem Houoeo CCCI The
homos of Mark Twa in, William Randolph Hearo1 end
Th omas J efferson are tea~
lured. (60 min .l
@ Dompe•Y end Mek•

Home
Improvements

1 910 Ho,._. Dovloon. Good

.1 .2150. Call 514-448-0844
114· 441· 71102 .

the

.

__,...___________

w.....

tie is lured into boarding a
train in a b iz arre plot to kill

S1:r v1 ces

891 ·3802

1981 Hariev Oew'ktspn low rldar.

1110 Made GLC 4 dr ., exc.

iI

1881 Vellow1toneCountryCiub
Trevel Tr1ller . Lo1'tted with
extru -eaceflent cond rt lon .
Phone 114 -992-3102 after
5 :00 or w•k ·ends.

coli 514-446·111143 ,,., e:oo
PM .

1875 Dotarn 510 4 opel .,
AM·FM llpo, 10,000 mloo.
1871 or bort olfor. Call 114·
441·2089.

814·2155·1011 .

8811 .

114·245·1M2e of1or !PM .

JIM 'S FARM ~QUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 3f W. OoKipoNo,
OMo. ~-II 614 -44e-9777, -•.
~
-·
e14 -448 -J692 . Up ffont 11'1C-

a

J

P~INCIPW:.

514 ·985-4389 .

175·2088

1982 Hand• Magne V-45.
750cc, 5,.,0 mil•. ex c. cond .,

&amp;

Mtrcwry LN? 38,000 rna ...
front whlel drive, AM · FM
caliette, •cellent oondltion.

2 alumn ctleise lotingea with
cuth ic:rnt, like new, 304 -871·

Motorcycles

18n C do ..
i PS PB
Of .,., IUIO, I r,
' •
PW, n...., •r•
pelnt, lh1rp.
C•ll 81.4·378-2882 . •1 .300.,
M .OOO mi.

2 row mechanicel tranaplant.,
110bacco litter, tobacco 1tldt1.
Polled Hereford catv... C•ll

440 John Dhre Doz:~r 350 a ,
John Dltft Tree~ End Lo-'er.

74

P~r2

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . u pa·
rlenced e~rpenter, electriclen,
muon . pe1n11r , roofing !lnclud·
lng hot ter 1pplle~tlon ) 304·

.:..::.:.:..:.·_ ;___ _ _ __

441·1816.

1328 .00, 304' 871·2988 .

12.«10.00. 304-575·4181 .

379·2112. 114,000 mi.

Flirtatkrn and Gunne Sex tor·
mala, si zes 7 1nd 9. wit h hoops,
like new , 304·076-3669 .

" Rtdline" RL-20. Free Style
Bicycle, ell extrel, niW' Cftrlttmu cott 1385 . 00 . now

'79 Cht\lluv 4x4, 4 cyl. • apeed.
new carpn, peil'lt and tirea.
15 , 000 ICtUII mlle 1 ,

0
1982 V~mlha Vision 550 with
bldcreal, 1300 milea, 11 .100.

1981 lui«* LtSebre ell powtr,
AM· FM cta88tte. cruiee, v .e,
very cleen. S4,200. Call e14·

Prom dr... pink and white , lize
3 , feli .OO, wom once. 304-

4WD PU. CoN 814·448· 7927.

44e·«Jt4.

Utility bldg. spl.: 30'11 40 ' xl ',
15 '.S ' alidinQ door 6 3' serv.
do or. 85 ,266 trected. Iron
Horae Bldgo. 514· 332-9745.

Stove, refrigerator, 2 pc gokl
ltvlng room aulte. 3 pc bedroom
suite, rocker:, 1964 Bac cuda
Plymouth, 814-245-91 57

eunnlngbo•dl. bed llntt.llkinl
ti ,IOO. Mey tr.d1 tor older

1978 Sponeter customized
paint &amp; chrome, t2.100 . Cell

oon~ . e; n-814-'448·7318 .

New Auri 876.00. Training
c:h•l r t 10.00. 304-676 · 1484.

V-8, IUIOmltlc. Priced To Sell!

1114 Ponti• Pertlllnnt ltlti·
onwergon, fuly loeded. uc .
oond .. low mlllllga. Cell 114·

_._•·-·-- -·1

phono 304·675·521 1,

18711 FORD F100 pickup, 380,

73 Vane &amp; 4 W.O.
GMC pickup 1510. 11114 C'-Y
1480. 19 83 Hoodo Scootor
Ford f -1&amp;0 4x4 XLT. cru•e.
i300. 1979 Hondo CM 115-T 13
titt,llir, PW. PDC, Iwt . fuel, aRk,
U?e. Coii814·317-CJii41 .
tow pedlage. •Hoy whH11,

_._..,_••_._••_.,_o_oo
_ ..

Gas kltch11n stove. avocado.

1873 ChOYV 10 IOn pickup, body
rough, run• good. •300. CeA
114·317·7277.

55,000 m11oo. Call 814·4454452.

month1, Sl500.00 . 304· 67 6 ·

7771 .

CoN e14-445·1885.

mUn . Reel and white. S9600.

1975 Fury 1500. Coii814·38B·
8308.

(J) Father Murphy
(!) College Booebal1: Michl·
fl!n et Minnesota
CIJ Gl (12) Hortlcol11o end
McCormick !CCI Ha rdcas·

1972 Teg· A· LQng 18 ft . trell ftt.
V•ry ~od condidon . 11495
C1ll 814-982-8173 or 614 -

1110 Toyoto !ruck I opd ..
AM· FM. badUn•. tow miletg•.
excellent condition, t3,500.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer , as sug·
gested by the above cart oon.

There is a school of bridge that ad· : ~T
+ Q ~6;1
vacates opening the btddmg whenever • 10 6 3
. K 9 74
you can muster two and a half defen- t K J 7 5
+9
+8 6 3
sive tricks. I don't really object to that +A 9 5 4
philosophy, provided that the openmg .
SOUTH
bidder has a convenient rebid. In to· ~K J
day's deal North had defens1ve
•Q J B 2
strength, but the eas~ rebid was no• 10 l 3
where lobe found. After South's one+K Q1
heart response, North wa9 lo~th to b1d
Vulnerable: Neither
no-trump without a stopper m e1ther
Dealer:
North
black suit, so he now bid his mangy

Stereo.

:I:

1977 Twin Star Coachman
trailer 5th wheel. 31ft .. 84.600.
Call 014 -446 -2990.

81

j

By Jamet Jacoby

7:35 ([) Senford ond Son

.ALJO 8cL.l~VE IN

THE:

I

(!) lneldo Booeboll
f.l) (I) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 (I) 1B1 Jeopardy
Cil Good Noighbora
ID Whoel of Fortune
01 (J]) Entertainment Tonlgh1 John 51amos 181ks

8:00 IJ Cll 1B1 Vou Again In

altar 5PM.

whh plow.I?,IOO orbfttolfor.
Alto 78 Dodge 4d euto, PS,
PI, 360 • • · ntw plint, wide
epob
t.t.HO or batt
offer, tredetor boet, R.V. sportt
car, plene or lind in Gallie or
Muon County . PriVIte owner,
caii6U-.&amp;U-27o45 .1

Massey Fergu.an. New Holland,
Bush Hog S1t• 8r Service. O~o~tr
40 Ulld lriCtOfl tO chOOH from
&amp; co rrpletel ine of new 6 uled
equipment. Largtlt Mltction In
s .e Ohio .

tors with warranty

Jmv ll~ r o1o TMlor. B,'-&gt;. uaod 6

79 DOdge Club Clb 4x4 • snow
ptow, 3&amp;0 •II · auto, PI, PI, 1ir,
nM paint, tlr•. spoU wheels.
brakH, (IMra, lodl· outa. t8 .200

CoMe14·1111· 3811.

14,181. 1881 Ford Folfmonl

61

Reduce sate and fast with
Golese Teblets end E-Vap "w•·
t• pills" Fn~th Phtrmacy.

...ko. 18.1185. CoH 614·379·
2122 .

1178 Ford Pinto. 4 oyl., IUtG·
metlc , llereo, casllltte, low
miltlge. new tlrn . A1ltlng
I 710. LDokl lnd Nftl fOOd.

1977 Buidl Centurywegon, low

oF cout:!s=.

1974 Sterertft foldout camp•r. '
sle.ps 8. COfT1»Iete with stove.:
Ice bax, lightl&amp; sink, e• c. cond.,,
Ilk• ntw. Call 814 ·388-9765

1881 Collman Campet. Like
new . e aleap• with rtfrig . can

I

Game

tn1 Bob Newhert

S'VOL.UT'IOIV.

181&amp; FOf'd F·210 pldlup, Llrill.
N:., 'S, PW, PL. C&gt;Uiio, AM·FM
CMiett•, MilO trena, du.l 11 ..

rJ

+J 10 7

comedy series ' You Again'.

I: 8i:L.U:·vE- IN

78 Cavalcldi camp•. 29 ft ..
good condition. bedroom. full
blth, ewnlng, all modern con·
•enlencn, S5 ,600 . Call 814-

Autos for Sale

1184 Ford Tempo 1uto.. eir.

4631.

FRANK AND ERNIE

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

982 ·5206 .

IDEECCA~

. A5

7:0&amp; ([) MeryTyler Moore
7:30 1J (I) (I) New Newlywed

Auto painting end body wort ,
done to your utlafection. r• •,.
ctl ~o~e 10 Ptr cent atf •nv ;o,rl
scheduled between now and
M1y 1at. Insurance c laims.'
dlttlling 1nd tome mtch1nlcal
work. frN eatlmatn. Call fO L
ippointment 1· 304 -876-268 3':

79

I (X J

WHA"T 'THE
O'f6i!l't' ~I D WHEN
A~KW' WH !! R:E Al- L.
Hl5 P'!AI't' L5 WE~I!L

The road
not taken

our

Auto Repair

w.....

""""'"· CoM 814 ·448·1841 .

For Sale or Trade

•

Gl (J]) Divorce Court
tnl Berney ' Miller

514-44e-3243 .

1977 Ford V1n 11 ,500. 1173

54 Misc. Merchandise

hardwere.
and new
11umnum
814 -992-

•us. 304-871·111179.

lflndard lhm. Cel aft., 6:00,

only 15.000 miiM. •8.100. Col
514 ·241·11405 or 514· 441-·
0212.
150 Royef Dodge R1m. 28.000

614·446 ·7585.

CJ (I) iBI Whoel of Fonune
ill Nlgh11y Buaineu Report
® Eyewltnlll News
lllJ MacNe11·Lehror Nowsh·

Trucks for Sale

1487.

2 ¥ear old Kimbel Contol•
piano-excellent condition . Call

n

I. (J

• mJofferaon•

448·0833 .

1886 · P1ymoulh Dunor, AC.

Musical
I nstru menta

114-Je7-7277.

UMRAIB.~ ..

tion '.

378· 2220 .
3· 31 Monster Mudders 16 in ch
lnd white tiiOpe rims, SIO. C11t

onetett.-IO tfQt}~, lo iOfm

hil latest album 'Premoni·

BORN LOSER

about hi e ro le in the new

Rat Te" ler pup1, atendard bob
tailed, 7 WHkl. Cell 614 - 258~

57

a

U,IOO.OO . 304·575 ·2571 .

1971 Cbevro._. Vtgl, Ne It
810 211hStrtet, PoWitPiuunt.

64

All types used 8r rebuil t'
trlnsmluionl - rren•far CINI
too . Overdrive, froot wheel
rear wheel- drtve . TrensmiuiOn
kits 6 tork convenen. Alltyp•
•lr cc:rft11,.SSOra 1 to 60, HP. 6
HP·2 otago .1 .295 . Call 614•

D (J} NeweC.nwr
•
(J) .Orean AcNI
Cll Mizdo ~rtai.J&gt;ok
(I) · ·(I) •ID ~ NIIWI
Ill (I) Dlff'rent 81l0kn
ill 3-2-1, Conteot CCCI
1IJ EyewHnell NIWI
lllJ HothaYoga

'82 Ford Escort wagon ,

72 Corvmo. can 814-441·
9445 5'00PM.

AK C Poodle pupple1, 2 bltekl
with white 875 ea. 2 whit•
t 100 ee. C.ll81 4 -448 ·0417.

304·676·11483 or 675· 1460.

~ ..4..- .

187e M•cury Cougar XR7,
noo.oo or bn1 offer. Sears 17
ft. elurm cenoe 1260 .00 . .104-

614·388·6720 .

Fox Terrier wormed , hous•
broken , t hou, 8 mo . old, S60.
Caii614·.U6-2297.

Pidcen1 U1ad Furn iture. Good
quality used fumiwre, Open 9 ta
6 or call for appointmen t

- - ; , -,..-.- - ....

'19 Corvette. ell •.11tra1. kJw
miteege, exc cond, 304·07511455 caU aUor ' ' 30.

Rotary plow fOr Grevely trac·
toat. •200.00 firm. 304-

Mixed hiY llrut aqu.,. balM,

304-e75·7568 oltor 6:00 .

- - - - · . . . ; - - - - - - - - - - --

1971 Oodgo Dart U50. 304·
895·31138 .

'11 Corvette, PI, PI, •lr cond,
tilt at•rlng whael, 83.000

Mixed hly t1 . bile.

&amp;6

3 piece bedroom su ite; king aile
mettrn1 end box aprlngs . like
new . Call &amp;14 -992 ·3339 .

1 bedroom fumiMid 1pt. 12
mil• from Pomeroy. Oerwln
" "· C.llefter 8:00, 114-812·
2807 .
·

7142 .

orlcM. B14·248·,145 .

Morllt1, Folrpllon. W. Vo.

Btocl!.', , brick. rOOrtar and m•·
to nry tupplial. Mountein Stele
Block. Rt . 33, New He~o~., , W.
Va . 304·882-2222 .

\'

............

colors and al111, call for low

Building .supplies

245-6121 .

King sile box apring1 &amp; mettre11
(used) S715 Ca11614 -446 ·0844
or 614·446 ·7602 .

3 bed roo m, unfurn ished hOUM
for rent in Middlepoft . Stoveend
refrigerator 6n kitchen . Alto 2
bedroom furnlahtd apt. for rent.

~~;~;;'!~;; ::;~. ~antln~. ~~~~~~l:~:~·:,h~ll~d.

Building Spacial, many

814 ·388·9705 .

8uildin g Materials
81ock. brick. MWer' pip•. win·
dows, lintell, ele. Cleude Winters. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 81•·

Valley- Furniture. new 8r used .
Large 1ection of CJ.~ality tumi ·
ture . ·121 8 Eu tern Ave .,
Ga llipoll•

514-594-7842 .. 684·11006.

1pt.

.

1181 Chewtte. Good ruunlng
oondttlon . SIBO. Cell 814-898·

W. Vo .. phono 304·175-5416 .

County Applience. Inc. Good
used eppliencea 1nd TV Hts.
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sat. 814-448· 1699, 127 3rd.
Ave. Gallipc:rlis. OH .

Coll814·112·2107 -

I.APA.m:mm:::;;;;;;:ii:i;;::=

3020Jotln DHrt TriCtor. Exc~ ­
ltnt condhion. 2 exltl tow boy

63

171· 5488 .

8:00.

.. d.l14-742· 2182 .

~lo

pu,..,

Crftl Mo111. 614·445· 7398.

304-676·6512 '"" 4'00 .

' HP garden tiU1r· uMd 1 'fNt.
f250. C1H IVMintl or week·

Model 12 Windtester lhotgun
12 ga .. 8600 mint condition.
Stihl 032 chain IIW UOO. Clll
1,000 gel . watertankwhh
&amp; hose. Ca1161• -643 -0058 .

W11hers. dryers. rllfrigerators.
r~nges . Shgg1 Appll1n cea,
Upper River Rd . IMiida Stone

445· 2e02 .

Hnaton 11800 lerve round bal8f'.
Call 514-11112-7401 .

,.., .... c.u 514·992· 7401 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

2961 .

3010JDDINoi. I8B1Ifi.C,..m
puff farmer miring. J D Grater
Blade, t18&amp;. 3 bottom J D
Plows, U115 . J D 1114-A Rollo,
*895.J D14-Tiolor. l895. Coli
514· 286·11&amp;22 .

6,oo.

614·446-3348 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

614·992-6858 .

..

614·266 ·6023.

SWAIN
AUCTION 1o FURNITURE 62

U1ed R·l&amp; ditch Whch Trendter
1nd 4&amp;0 John Da. re Dozer.

houn. Oaa fum.:e, baem•t,
heated gar-a•- NHd 3 referen,
cet. Good locltJon. Rtuonlble.

10 HP rototllllf . 30 " wide.
mounts on ,.., of garden
tractors~ 126(), axe. cond. Cell

Tr1 iler spaces. small Children
accepted, aewer end water
furnished , locuat Rd . back of K
l!o K, 304·675 ·1076.

Good used IJWn mo wert and
IWeepers. lots of misc. call

1 - ~room

12 foot flbergl111 bo1t with bait
well 1nd Teeny Trailer. Both tor
t400 .00 flrm. 304 · 773 -9566 ~,

614 446

'llo'Oodbumer, cerpet throughout,
AC', deck w-ewnlng, 2\1 mi.·Rt .
&amp;88. No ~ i ldren or in1kle pets.
Call 814-446·4607 or 814·
Fum ilhad ept ., utllitiel paid,
t23 6 mo . Call 614·448-92« .

WnL CATCH ;l&amp;tiT OF
HALLEY'!' COM!T.

1 or 2 doubletrail•lots. ICenic,
wooded . Space for family and
peta . Close to town. County
weter Call 614 -246-15855 or

Solid oak door, all
brasa door llno cker
dtld bolt. White
atorm doo r. Call

614· 448 · 4607 or 514 ·448·
2502 .

- WHO KNOW6 ~ 'MAY&amp;f:

614·684·7842 or 6008.

·
2 39
-COUNTRY
- ·0- -MOBILE Home Park,

'

I .ELTAM f
rJ
I ()
·-·--·-- "'
I 1. r I I

·e:O&amp; ([) Down .to Earth In
Stereo .
8:30 D (I) NBC Nlgh11Y Newe
(J) The Rlfteman
Cll Outdoor Life
(I) GilD ABC News
lll.ffi One Dey 111 Tlmo
D (I) !D CBS NIWI
ill Doctor Who
llll Body Electric
tni.Jefftraons
iB1 NBC Nowa
8 :36 ([)Salt at Homo In S1ereo.
7:00 D (I) PM Megozlno
(J) Allee Smith ond Jon11
Cll SportaCII1tlr
(I) Entertalnmen1 Tonlgh1
Peter Framp1on discusses

30•·

•e .60o.oo. 514 ·1198·1227 .,;
304·575·7322 .

..

loor ordinary words.

tn1 Good Tim••

614·446·3870.

Eff'dWICV ept. 12 ml• from
Pomeroy. Qutet: country ltttlng.

c.11 514·992· 5084.
Pomeroy, 2 bedroom madam

11 ft Procrlftblll boat. 1150 h•,
oytboerd , Iota of uu .. ,

Furniahed apt ., 2 bdr., 701 4th
Ave .. G111ipoli1. S:Z60 mo . utilitill pl id. Cell 448 -44, II t ftlf
7pm .

Furni1hed eff iciency apt .. prl·
vate &amp; qu iet, single working
person only Availabl• nc:rw . Ct ll

5181 01 114-992·7000, aoklol
U..
,

8 HP Dynamerk riding llwn

9AM 10 SPM.

Furn l1had 1p1. 3 room• &amp;r bath,
centrally loc1ted . clean, all utili·
tiel peld. c.u 814· 448 -0544.

8:00

Aluminum frame siding wido~a
with Jleas. beat offer. C.H
114· e -0844 or e14 -448·

Hell Price! Flashing trrow ligns
t 2991 lighted. ron·a" ow S279 1 Sale or tr ade for anytl'llng 10
Nonlighled t2991 Frea lettenl uled Honde s treet M·C 600cc·
Only few left. See locally. 1 200cc ell prices. Ping pong
11800)423 -0163, any time.
teble t25 . Call anytime 614·

6 : 30 . p~ m .

Beeutlful rww 2 or 3 bedroom
MOBI LE: HOM ES MOVED in- hou ... Al-a new on e bedroom
su red, reuonab le retes, CeK tumlthed epa rtment In Mkldl•
port. C11i 81 4 ·992-6304 or
304 ·576 ·2338

Storage building for ront12K60
in town . concrete floor . Cali

Sc:r.fas and chain priced from
$286. to 1895. TabiM, 860 1nd
2 bedroom, Racine araa . Call up to 1125 . Hide·a·beds,t390 .
614-992·5858 .
and up to $ 560.. 10fa beds
$146 . Rec liners . S226 . to
Gallipolis 2 bedroom mobile 1375 .• Limp• from 128 . to
home. limit 1 child. 2 br apt . ht S125. pc. dinettn from 8109 .,
A~o~e . Adults. 446 -8221 .
to436 . 7pc. t1 89 and up . Wood
table whh lix chaira U B6 to .
2 bedroo cu... turniahed mobile 8746. Detk 8126 up to 8376 .
home , t1601)0 per month, plul Hutch ... S660. Bunk bed com utilitin, S75 .00 depolit, phone plete with mattrelln, 1275 .
304·675·6512 altO&gt; 4 '00PM.
and up to U96 . Bsby beds.
8 110 . M1ttreuu or b0.11
2 bed roo m mobile ho me in ptrk. springs , full or twin , S63 ., firm,
takin g epplicationt et K &amp; K S73. 1nd 883. Oueen self ,
Mobile oHiee, 304-876·3000.
S2 26 . Bed fremu. UO .and
t26 ., 10 gun . Gun cabinets.
S350. Gas or electric r•ngn
U76 . Baby mettr• ~e~ . S36 &amp;
44
Apartment
S46, tMd frtmel S20, S26, &amp;
for Rant
S30, king fram e S50 . Good
seleclion of bedroom 1Uit11.
rockers, metal cabinet•. h..d .
Nicely furn ished mobile home, boards S38 &amp; up to S65 .
eff. 1pt., central air and heat in
city, edults onl.,.. Call 114-440· Uaed Fu rniture ·· Dre11er,&amp;r bed,
0338 .
Trundle bed, metal offi ce desks .
3 miles out 8ul t~o~ il le Rd . Open
Redeco r~ ted apt., 2 bdr., 1175
hm to ISpm, Mon . thru Sat.
onty . Ctll 304-8715 -15288 or 614·448·0322
304 -875-6104 or 304-675 ·

Outliry built 1'h story Tudor
st..-le home on 5 wo oded acres.
10 minutet iro m Point Ple.,.nt.
Sand Hill Road , $89.000.00.

I'

18ft. M.F.G .. 80 E: vlnrude. N..!v.
. .tl. hHVY trailer. E.llceleflt·
condition . • 1 900. 6a·992 l

Ulld e&amp;10 Ditch Witch trenchtr
&amp; 4150 John Deere !Older. Call

·

£YENINQ

,..onerdl Baaa Boat with trtller:
70 hp Chrytl., motor pllr's ·
trolling motor, llva Well. etc . ~
11,810.00. Lyons Additton, Me·
.,n, w.v. ~
77~ · 1521 .

. -·

Q;iJ \!:!1 ~~ ·
, unocr..-1-lour Jumblee,

4/7/88

13 ' 11einleaslfe;el bo1t. AnchO;
1nd Olf'l - i1cludld , 1126. Call

UOO . Call 514·388-9060 .

&amp;1 Household Goods

379· 2855.

3 1ern 1pprc:rx 1VJ mi. hom
hospital on hwy 180. Wl\h
terms . Call614-446-7322 .

Space for Rent

Mobile Homes
for Rent

47 •ere com blu, nver botlom, · 6385.
Rt. 7 , 6 mil• N. ot Crown City.
Call 614-268·6•t84.
Furn. 1pt. 919 2nd. Ave. Gelll·
polis. shere bath , l ing le male,
2 .4 ICrl building lot, county 8150 mo., utilitin p1id. Call
water, city schooll . Call 614· 446 ·4416 after 7pm.

32

v.,.,

mower, 38 in. cut . New blttery,
nM belt. good cond .. uklng

Merchandi se

9 rooms . 2 baths. Can be made
into duplex. locataCt on Fourth 6
Pa lmer in Middleport Clo18 to
schoo ls and !hopping. A1king
p'rice U4 ,000 . Owner will Mil
on lt nd contra ct Celt 614-592·
5558 11fter 4 p.m

304·895 ·3363.

46

·'·

814· 2Se-1!023 ,

·- --- . . .

~\IIJN}ffi'\l ~ THAT8CRAMIII.EOWORDGAME ·•
by Henri 'Arnold an&lt;! Bob Lee

Television
Viewing ·

1971 Stlrereft oepri whh 156 HP '
EW.rude.
goOd condltlo nr
13.000 . Col 814 ·44e-2154 . -

7602 .

075e.

lton. Rescru:tttd subdivis io n, 9
miles from Ga ll ipolis . Call 8 14 ·

c """;... Coli 61 4"446 . 3793·

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms end
light house k,eeping roomt . Park
Ctntrel Hotel. Call 614-446:

4 bed room house fo r sell,
fi repl ace. 3 mi south of Gallipo·
lis. !129 ,900 . Call dav t 614 4 46 16 115 0 1 nigMI 61 4 -448 1244 .

les s, carp eted throughout: ~o~inyl
siding $25 ,000 . 12 N Ma m S l ·

''

Oh. 614·288·15930.

46

RE ALTO RS , 10 18 Sheth Ave ..

and
Motora for Sale

-

The Daily

~·I

•ta.r:t•

rooms . 2 ba ths. cust o m eat in
kitc hen. living room w ith w oodburning f irepltce. eleg ant dining
room , f lJI- unfinlsh9d ba sement
an d 2 '41ln garage. t 69,900 fOtllly rem odeled inskfe lndout.

..

fillonday, April 7. 1986

Boats

1!,

MENTS (Equal ... otrtlng Oppor· Coli 514·2&amp;8-1251.
tunlt•d monthlY rwrt
at
t171 for 1 bedrOom 1nd t212 · EltotroiUJC YICCUUM clttnll'l,
for 2 bedroom, dapOah UOO, {4· 1 conditlon -auec hment,l .
Avatllble at *72.00. C11h or
IOCI11d nttr Spring Vellty Plu1
nd Foodland. -pool and CaiNe TV tlrml trrqld. Cel 114-241·
IYtillble, offic. hours •• pOtsi- 9115 .. 304-675-5799 .
ble 10 1m1o 4 pm tnd 7 pmto 9
pm MondiY·Frkley, Ctll 114· Pi..tlc Cistem ltMI IPProYed,
pla116c Mptic tanks, pl•tlc
44t-27415 or luve "t..tage.
culvltf1t, met~ I culvertt. til c.pt:
Ron Evant Enttrprilll, Jackson ,

bed-

7 roomA&amp; bath. 1 IICR more or

7&amp;

YL! ®by Len., Wright

KIT

Clfllhtr1'1 Uted Tire Shop. Ovll'
1 .000tlrll. llzet12 . 13, 14.15,
16, 11.5. 8 mU• out Rt 218 .

JACKSON ESTATES APART-

la rge, leve l lots 87 9,700 , ex tra
large brick featuring 3

Misc. Merchandiae

~

4-7

LI'L SV
J Q M BZ,
C

r

O LRMY G

,,

LF L S V

J Q MR Z

M G

R L GO L S
XCSZ
Yeetefda:y'l CI')'Jitoquote: SPRING HASN'T llEALLY
,REACHED TilE SUBURBS UNTIL YOU ARE AWA·
'KENED BY TilE FlRST LAWN MOWER. - DAN KIDNEY

,.

D LRM YG. -

(]) ABC Niw1 Nlghtllne
(I) MOVIE: 'N'asty HI·

11J

bill'

II (12) Nowa
tni MOVIE: 'Tht Only Oeme
In Town'
1 :00 CD Dobl• 011111
CIJ NFL Superat1r1
!IJ MOVIE: 'CIICO Pike'
(I) Archl• lunker't Place
• (I) Wild, Wild Wtt1
l l (l] CNN HNdllne News

1:30 CD Fa ther Knows Best
(!) Mar k Sos in's Sa lt Wa1er
Journal

(l) News
2:00 CD 700 Club
Gl) Mazd a Sportslook
cri) 1 MOVI E: 'The Sro1h ·
eJhood'
(!) CBS News Nlgh1wa1ch
2:30 (!) SportsCen1er
3:00 CD MOVIE: 'Gum Battle a1
Monterey'

�~

...

Monday, April7, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Pioneer, Historical group meets .
'

Stephen Powell, member of the
~ llf Commissioners ti the .
Meigs Crullly Park District, spoke
to the Trustees of the Meigs Coonty
Pioneer and Historical Society
Thursday evening.
Powell emphas17,1!d that the goal
or the Park Project Is to akl the
economic development of the
county as well as to preserve the
natural environment and provide
Increased recreational facUlties.
He ootllnes a variety of p:ltential

attractions, the Ohio River, nature
preseriles, rock dlffs, historical
sites, 10 bring toorlsts 1D .tlle arm . .
_Calling attention 111' oEfact that
Meigs County has contriwted a
dlsprop:lrtlonateshare lor ltsslzeof
wl!ltandlng lndlvlduals lflrl have
made slgnlf~ant contributions to
society, Powell suggested the estabJlslunent of a County HaD ci Fame.
He suggested that the. historical
society might help with research to
uncover additional historical Information about the county.

'Many Michelle Manley

Manley·birth

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Todd
Manley, Pomerey, the former
Melissa Wise, Middleport, are
announclng the birth of their first
. chUd, a daughter, Tiffany Michelle,
March 19, at the Pleasant Valley
Ho.,"J)ltal, PolntP1easant. The Infant
weighed eight pounds and was 19.
Inches long.
·
Maternal grandparents are Fona
RACINE - Harold Roush, recip- Yost; urban soli judging, Andy
Taylor,
Pomeroy, and ,maternal
Ient of the State Fanner Degree Rose, Herb Rose, Harold Roush
are' Mr. and Mrs.
grandparents
placing In the top two percent of and Brian Freeman; leadership,
Charles Wise, Mlddleporl. Paternal
students In the state of Ohio, was Brian Freeman; scholilrshlp, Andy
given special recognition 1 at the Rose; Kevin Roush , reporter's grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Manley Jr., Middleport.
annual parent-student awards ban· book, and treasurer's book, Curtis
Martha
Buckley, Mlddlep:lrt, Is a
quet or the Racine Future Farmers Jones, by MGM Farm City; fruit
paternal
great grandmother.
ft.America, held at Southern High and vegelable production, Andy
School.
Rose, Pepsi Cola Co.; morlculture,
Roush also received the Star Todd Kimes,; agriculture mechanChapter Farmer award given by Ics, Bryan Dalley; soU and water
Racine Home National Bank, and management, Herb Rose; sheep
the placement In production-award
production, Andy Rose; fish and
by Falrplaln Tractor Sales. Other
wUdllfe. Mike Johnson; diversified
awards presented and their spon· crop and production, Andy Rose;
sors were Star Greenhand, Scott horne Improvement, Scott Kiser;
531 JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST
Bickers, Farmers Bank and Sav· electricity, Bryan Dalley; and fruit
44!1·4524
lngs Co.; agriculture processing, salesman, Eric Stover, Herb Rose
BARiiAIN KATims SATURDAY
Andy Rose, Star Supply; agricul- and Chris Grindley. ·
I SUNDAY - ALL SEATS $2.50
ture sales and service, Andy Rose,_
Members presented Greenhand
AI»&gt;ISSION EVER! TUESDAY $2.50
by John HUI, Green Acres Farm;
degrees were Chester Ross, Eric
creed, Benny Dalley, Twin City Stover, 1\'larvln Bickers, Benny
APR1.4
Machine Shop; extemporaneous DaUey, Chris Grindley, Kevin
speech, Andy Rose, Racine Plan- Grueser, Herb Rose, and Larry
ning MIU; prerpared speech, Brian Sellers. Chapter Farmer pins went
•STF.VI:N 51-IJH:Ki
Dalley, Buckeye Gas Products Co.
to David Amburgey, Scolt Bickers,
n..M
Other awards went to the soil
Mickey Eakins, Jerry Grueser,
judging team, Brian Dailey,
Curtis Jones, Harvey Martin, and
lf!ill
Mickey Eakins, Kevin Grueser, Tim Willis.
and Scott Bickers, Gene Wid Chuck

Roush in top percentiles
in State Farmer Degree

IN CONCERT - Members of tlie Apple Hill
Chan1ber Pb1yers finish up the 1985-SG Valley Artist
Series season. Here, Betty Hauck, viola; Beth Rapier,
cello lUid E•·k · Stumacher, piWJo per!onn in Brahms'

Plano quartet InC minor. comp-gthe 91artet was
Anthony Prlnclottl, violin. the group aloo pl'eSftlted
selections of MO'l.BJ't and Beethoven.

Refreshing afternoon concert
last in Artist Series season
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Writer
50 Sunday was a slightly ('()0(,
mostly damp day outside. Inside
the Fine and Petiorming Arts
Center at Rio Grande College, the
atmosphere was relaxed and refreshing. just like the rains outside.
The Appll' Hill C'hamher P layers
rounded ou t the 1985-86 Valley
Artist Series season with an
enchanting ptwntatlon.
Five of seven players gave the
concert. which Included string
Quartet in F Major; K. 168 by
Mozart, Piano Trio in Efl at, Opus 1,
No. 1, by Beethoven and Brahms'
PianoQuart!'l m C minor. While tile.
crowd mav have tx.:.en som ewhat

small. thi-y were more than
apprecial ive of the group's effort .
Members of the cham her group
performing were Anthony Prlnciolti, violin: Sue Ra bul , violin: Belty
Hauck. viola: Bel h Rapier. cello
and Eric Stumacher. piano.

Closing your eyes to listen tand
many music instructors say that
sharpens the hearing se~se) one
could almost see the period which
produced the music - tte women On Nov. 2, the American Boychoir
in fine gold dresses , hair piled high will perform; the Footpath
upon their heads; tile men in Dancers wUI appear Nov. 21.
breeches, long ooa ts and white
Skylight Comic Opera wlll pres·
wigs.
ent The Mikado oo Feb. 22, 1987 and
There has been a resurgance d
Ihe season wUI close with John ·
this lime period In music Maxwell in a one-man show, Oh Mr.
probably due In part to tile success Faulker. Do You Write, March 29,
of t te movie," Amadeus" the live of 1987.
Wolfgang A. ,Mozart. More and
more, young people are wanting to
he ar of this young . genius. In
additions to Mozart, they are being
Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs.
ex p:lsed to the works of other great Clair Follrod were Clara Follrod,
composers.
Nina Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
The line·up lor the 1986-87 Valley Watson and Stacie.
Art 1st Series season was announced
Mrs. Jo Lamp, Lisa and Erica,
al the concert Sunday.
Toledo, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weber
For fans of a Prairie Home and Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Sammie
Companion· on natl:tnal Public Brown, Aaron and Alec. all local,
Radio, the Butch Thompson Jazz were Easter guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Trio will be at Rio Grande Sept.:.&gt;. Arthur Spencer.

Review

('~
-~
' .

MUNICIPAL BONDS
Exempt from
Federal Taxes

Alfred notes

Ohio loncls are free of state
income taus for Ohio residents.

593-8805
COMING SOON!
"NIGIITMARE ON ELM ST. PART 2" .

IDO's. 17 mg. "tai". 1.3 mg. mcotme, light100's, 11 mg . "tar". 0.9 mg. n1cotine,
Ktngs, 17 mg. "tai". 1.2 mg. nicotine, Menthol Kings, 18 mg."tar". 1.2 mg. nicoti ne,
Light K1ngs, 10 mg. "tar". 0.8 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.

Vot.35, No.249
Co!iyrightod 1986

' .

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senlmellllall wrtter
A recreation area for Pomeroy
wUI be developed on the land
between Ebenezer St. and Monkey
Run. This was announced Monday
night by councilman Bruce Reed
during the bi-monthly Pomeroy
Vlllage Council meeting.
The vlllage, according to Reed, Is
leasing the land from Jay Hall for $1
a year.
Calling the announcement "good
news," Reed said a committee has
already been formed to begin
planning the dev~lopment o( the
recreation area. Serving on the
c'Ommlttee are Pomei'O)' residents
Robert Burton, Donnie Myer. Ed
Cazart, Bob Smith, Roger Abbott
and Jack Stanley.
Reed said the committee will he
soon be laying out a ball diamond
and later a basketball court. Other
additions to the park are also In the
talking stage.
Councilman BIU Young said the
Meigs High welding classes, in·
st ructed by Dick Fetty and Ken
Eblin, are " In the pi'OCI'ss" of
making swings and banking hoard
units for the new park. as well as for
the village park at Sugar Run and
Naylor's Run park. Equipment
may also be made for sites on
Lincoln Hill and Lincoln Helghls
Young said.
Recreation lund money will pay
tor the equipment being made at
Meigs High.
'·

"more or less, m restraints oo
boats" regarding speed as they
travel the river'. The mayor had
reported In an earlier councU
meeting that much of the erosion
oa:urs as boats pass the problem
point at high speeds.
· In was also p:llnted out that Ohio
Power Co. Is making plans to move
IXJ!es along the eroding hank.
Council has received letters !rom
the teaching staff at Pomeroy
Elementary objecting lo the removalti WOUBAthens !rom the cable
televiSion system.
On behalf of the mayor and
council, councilman Young will
draft a letter to Consolld11ted
Communications Group, Inc. of
Point Pleasant to "formally protest " the elimination of WOUB.
J . M. Crawfor-d, gen~ral manager 11 the cable company, wrote to
the mayor on March 21 to Inform
the village of the company's plans
to remove WOUB.
According to Crawford 's letter,
tile company feels "that one p.~bllc
broadcasting station Is sufficient"
and "the fact that there are more •
subscribers In West VIrginia than In
Ohio Is the reason Consolidated
choose to drop WOUB rather than
WPBY rut of Huntington.• W.Va."
Crawfortl stated In !he letter that
he knew there would be oomplalnts
regardless of which· PBS station
was dropped.
Young said he understood the
company's IXJsltlon wt that "It
should also consider our wants."
WOUB's week-day signal will be
broadcast on cable channel II until
the end of the present school year
Crawfortl's letter read.
Coundl voted to pay $3782.15 for
pollee liability insurancr !rom
WI'Stern World Insurance Co. of
Keene, N.H. Clerk·Treasurer Jane
Walton said she was "shocked" by
the premium Increase which Is
more than double till: $1600 amount
paid last year for Uablllty.
(Continued on page 101

!rom Mlnersvlile and froin Route 7
down to the IXJinl of the break. Th e
Salisbury School was closed due to
the break In the main . Meigs Local
Supt. Dan E. Morris said that a day
will havl' lobe added to the school
calendar of the Saliswry School
due to the closing.
There was no estimate this
moriung as to when the repair work
will be completed.

Repair wo~k continues
on lock's gate seals

.

O llliMWI~

...

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FtmJRE PARK Sli'E - Pomeroy Village CwncU Willi pleased to
announce Monday night that plans are underway wdevelop this valley
between Ebenezer St. and Monkey Run mlo a recreation area. 1be
•

property Is being leased by the village from Jay Hall a&amp; a cost of Sl a
year. A committee to plan tile ]NU'k development has already been

fonned.

Industry's interest sought for enrichment plants
WASHINGTON (UP! I - The
federal government wants to know
If Indu stry officials are Interested In
assumlng reslXInslblllty forthe U.S.
uranium enrichment program, but
a spokesman said the matter Is In
the "very preliminary" stages.
A notice, publ ished In the Federal
Register Monday, requested "expresslons of Interest" from industry
by !he end of May and said a
briefing to provide further details
wit! be held in Washington on May 6.
"This Is just very, very prelim!·
nary. Tesllng the waters, I guess,
would be best way of phrasing It,"
sa id I;Jan Butler, a spokesman for
the Department of Energy. "We're
just fact -find ing more th im any·
thing else."
One enrtchment plant In Pa·
ducah, Ky., employs 1,2ll people
and Is operated by Martin·Marietta
Corp., a government contractor.
Another plant , In Portsmouth. Ohio,
employs 1,944 anq Is run by
Goodyear Atomic Corp.
A third plant , 1n Oak Ridge
Tenn .. was

year after a DOE review of the
three facilities. The plants produce
enriched uranium used In commertea l r eac tors a nd nuclear
warlleads.
Discussion ofturning over the enrlchment program to the private
sector Is not new In the adm.inlstra·
tlon. but Butler stressed that Mon·

day's notice did not mean that any consideration.
decision on whetter to sell the three
"This request for expressions of
plants.
interest Is not Intended to be a
"We've picked no op~ons;" sollcllatlon for proposals," the
Butler said. "Industry may look al Federal Register notice said.
It and say, 'No, we don't want lt."'
"lnst!'ad, It L~ an attempt to
Stlll. the notice makes It clear obtain Information and to Identify
tha t the idea of "privatiza tion" of p:lsslble or Interested privatet h e program Is ' under sector or Interested private-sector
part)clpants quallfled to enter ilto
an Industrial access program lor
the plrp:lse Of eventually assuming
total financial and operational res.
CLEVELAND (UP! I -This week's SuperLotto game may have
ponslblllty for current uranium en·
the blggestloltery grand prize In Ohio history.
rlchment production facUlties andLottery officials said Monday heavy weekend sa les had pushed tile
or advance uranium enrichment
jackpot to at least $22 mWion, and tlley were scheduled to announce
technology development and de·
later today If it had Increased even lurtller.
ployrnent," II said.
Even at $22 million, It would be the second-l ar~s t jackpot In state
Sen. Wendell Forti, D-Ky., has
history. The40-riumber Lotto game had a $24.6 mllliongrandprlz.e In
called In the Idea of IXJSSibly puttlng
August 1984.
Industry In control of the defense- •
The 44·number Super Lotto game , which llkHegular lotto rfljuires
related program "wrongheaded ."
players to con·ectly pick the six numbers drawn to win the jackpot.
A Senate aide woo works on
hegan Feb. 19. The last jackpot winner claimed $7.7 million March
energy matters sa id Monday there
12.
is "great ske pticism" about
"This game was designed to do this- roll over a couple times and
whellE r the proposal Is viablE' and
generate a big jackpot," spokeswoman Anne Bloomberg sa id.
wllether It was a good thing to put
"Frankly, we didn't expect this 10 happen this quickly."
the private sector In charged the

Jack,pol near record IeveIs

placed;o:n;rese
::rv::e~la~s~i..!======================~pro=gr:a:m:..-----~

. EUREKA - Repairs to the gate was operallonal again In three
auxiliary lock of lhe Ga!Upolis days, Bayartl noted. The estimated
Locks and Dam are estimated to he
repa ir cost was $'J!O,CXXl.
completed by the end of this week,
The current work Is Independent
barring any problems, a U.S. Army of that accident, the Sp:lkesman
CollJS of Engineers spokesman said, explaining that the corps had
wanted to get Into Ihe auxUlary lock
said.
The COilJS repalrfleetlscurrently at the Ume the rotten timber was
at Eureka to replace timbers In the discovered but wE're unable to
360-foot ioek 's .gate seals that the because of hlgh wafer. High water
COilJS discovered had rotted and prevents the construction of temporary dams around the gate, and
needed replacing.
·'There are a lot of circumstances In order to do the work, the lock has
Involved," said Dave Bayard ofthe to be drained. Crews are working
COilJS' Huntington district , refer· around the clock to complete the
ring to the completion date, citing job, he said.
high water as 11--pot ~ntlal probl~m .
The repair fleet was earlier
Thl' repair fleet was moved from scheduled to be at GaUipolls for
lhe Marmet locks to Gallipolis last repairs, but Bayard did not know
week and would have been at what kind of work would be done.
Gallipolis even If the accident that The OOilJS makes up Its repairs
damaged a gate in the main lock work list during the fall and winter
'hadn't occurred last month.
d eacttyear, he said, and If the job '
The gale was struck by a tow Isn't too pll'Sslng the corps weighs
March 18, damaging a main the IXJsslbUlty of p.~ttlng the project
.
oorlzonlal supp:lrt beam In the off for another year.
"Gallipolis
a
!way~
seems
to
need
gate's upper section. The beam was
a little wock," Bayard said.
part dwhatBayardreferredtoasa
In 1985, the' COJilS was scheduled
hinge mechanism. Two l·beams
to
repair the auxUiary chamber's
hold the gate In place, Bayartl
lower
gate, damaged In a February
explained.
1984
accident,
and replace lhe
"The accident hit high up and
upper
gate
In
the
main chamber. .
rtght by the wall , so there was an
REPAIRS NEAR COMPLEriON -llepllln to the urdluy Jock II
The
main
lock,
at
9llfeet,andthe ·
awtullot clstll'Ss transferred to the .
auxUiary are the smallest on the ' the Gallpolls 1..oc11s and Dam are estimaled to be mmpleted by the end
mechanism," he said.
'
The
,. beam was replaced and the Ohio River systl'm.
I

...... h

26 Cents

A Muttimedia Inc. NewJPaper

Committee chosen
for park's planning

Pomeroy VIllage employes were
fi ghting a ma jor break in a water
main Tuesday morning with several hundred residents being with·
out serv ice while repairs are being
, made.
Work~rs were called out abou t 2
a.m. Tuesday due to the break
which od'Urred neat· the Simmons
Motor Co. of East Main St. Services
was out from the Sallsbmy School;

Based on manufac!uwfs sUggeswd rera1l p11cc Pr1ces opllunal With pariiCIPlllmg IClailer~.

1 Section 10 Pages

Recreation area un~er development

Waterline break closes school

,)

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesda

•
Young reported representallvi'S
from the U.S. Corps of Engineers
w~re In Pomeroy on March 31 to
Inspect a river bank eroolon
problem oo East Main St. In regard
to the findings of the COilJS, Young
said, "They felt our problem did not
meet the Imminent threa t
classification."
' Mayor Richard Seyler reported
he Sp:lke with U.S. Coast Guard
workers wlrl were In the area last
week, and was told that there Is

'

•

at y

e

lnsped erosion

SURGEON GENERAL'S WAR:NING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth. And Low Birth Weight.

•

II IIIII weu ~ to a U.S. AnnJ Corpe .P,kesmMI. 'l1re repair
fleet lacumntly replaimgtnhersln the 1180-foot klck'sgaleseal!l. (File
photo).

.

'

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