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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Dally 8afltinel

Tu~~April16,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

., '

·'

1986

:~tir.ary ·donations·

Careers, cars:
moving along

·!!foey, piJilto 011 Page 6

· Looking at careers through the

THE CHANGING STYLE - HarrisonvUJe students were given a look ala funeral vehicle ol nearly a
century ago by Walter Jordan olthe Bigony.Jonlan

Funeral Horne ol Albany. He hauled In a mrs&amp;ilrawn
hearse used many years ago In lhe Wslness.
Everything Is original e~~oept lhe lop and head liner
which Jordan replaced'wliim he renovaied II.

vehicles they Involve provided
students at the HarrisonvWe Elementary School Monday lOOming
with another experience aimed at
guiding them In available vocational choices.
"Vehicle Day" was observed at
the school, another segment d
career awareness programs promoted by the Trl·County Career
Center, Curt Headley director.
In March the school observed
"Career Day" with .several speakers taJklng about their jobs. On May
19, the Center of Science and
IndusII)' will have a special display
and program at the Harrisonvllle
School.
Fourth grade teacher, Nancy
White had charge ci "Vehicle
Day." On display for the children to
look over and climb on ·were a
helicopter from the DEpartment of
Natural Resources, emergency and
fire vehicles from the Rutland
sta lion, a bus equipped with a chair
lift, seat belts, and infant seats used
by the Carleton School, a car from
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, a service rig from Herald 011
and Gas Co., an antique hearse
from Blgony-JordanFuneraiHome
at Albany, and the medical treatment truck of Veterinarian Carol
Oshorne.

'

Vol.35, No.255

·

THE DRILLING BUSINESS - Dale Lillie, employoo by Herald OU
and Gas Co., talked to the students about driUinglorgMandoUandtbe

Ulie ~

a service rig.

liKE
DIAMONDS

a

TOPS meets

Missionary Society has meeting

rt&gt;ad the secretary and treasurer's
reports and the traveling basket
was lKlld ~ Lort Hill to Mrs.
Manuel. A white elephant sale was
held . Several shuttin cails were
made and cards were sent to
several.
A rtlllllllage sale was discussed
andwUI be held at the church annex
oo May 1-18 with a bake sale to be
held on first day. Brenda Ancrrson
was welcomoo as a rrw memtl&gt;r.It
was ooted that a ITilvie wil be
shown at the church by Sue Grace
April :II at 7 p.m.
F1orence Smith will have the rrxt
meeting May 13 at the chu rch. The
Lord's Prayer was repeated to
close the meeting, and Denise and
Edith Manuel served refrt&gt;Shments
to the 12 members and tlree guests.

k.
1ng

HEARING TESTS IN MIDDLEPORT, OH.
f111 Eltctronks hearing 11111 wil be given by Wt.M Htaring Aid (IIIIer at

DR. RANKIN PICKENS
509 SOUTH THIRD AVENUE
THURSDAY, APRIL 17
FROM 9:00 TO 12:00 P.M.

Haynes birthday
Tablthla Dora 'E laine Hayrrs,
daughter of Cpl and Mrs. J. Allen
Haynes, Millngton, Tenn., observoo
her first birthday recently with a
party.
AttendlOg were Mr. and Mrs.
Derek Horn and Dee Dee, Cpl. and
Mrs. . Harry Bohn, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Mullins and Michelle. 'Sending gifts were Dora Pierce, greatgrandmother and Tammy, Long
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Jlm Haynes
and IU!oda, Mt. Alto, W. Va.
Refreshments of lee cream,
koolald and cake were servoo.

To Bank With
Us

To ~ Borrow

From Us!

THE TESTS Will IE GIVEN IY A LICENSID IIAIIING All SPE(IAUST.
Anyone who hu trouble hlarila or tlldtrstllldina conv~tsation 11 inYiltd to
have alrH hminat•t to sn if tli1 problem t:an bt htlptdllrinathis coupon
wrth you for your FREE HEARING TEST Df·S50 wlut. Adults only. P1t111.

COME IN WITH COUPON AND FOI TEST

WIIN IS IT PROPER TO DISPOSE OF 1H£ DECEASED'S PERSONAL ITEMS?

Tabitha Dora Elaine Haynes

eor.r

You Don't Have

COUPON

Wait until you fHI comfortlblt relivlna the memories
which Ibm p~tson•l items wlllevole. We sugestyou uk
1 trul1ed friend or relative to help you bqin thisluk 111d
to mtkt the decisions.
Abesic question to considlf: Hmany ol then plfsonal
items been covered in tile wlll7 If so, lhen 111turtlly lilt
disposition on these is cltmnd should be-lllndltd first.
Some items may bt consid11ed ol "htrHace" value Md
you 1111y Willi to •trul1111tll to nrllin memllm ol tht
family lor uftkHpln~
Other iltms, sudlu p~tsonal clothinJand equipment.
mty five yurs of urvlct to others. Clothlna. walllf$,
whet dlsirs, etc. can oltlft be uMd byhtaHh-carefiCili·
tits. Tools, musieal illl1ru111111ts 111d IPtciallztd items
may be used by swk:t-&amp;ivila orpnizatlons. Or ftnslly,
thert mty be rtlttlvu or frllndsto wlllm youlllinkthe
dec:uud would hm wanttd y01 to llYI ctrlain Hems.
If YOI hm any questions «lllmments pltaHfnl frttto
call ,. stoo by.

"Stttlet Plut... Atttllflll to D•flll"
BRUCE FISHER.

Bill BLOWER

Plloto .on Page 12

,,.

•

WE'RE MAKING

*Home Improvement Loans
*New &amp; Used Car Loans
*Appliance Loa~s _
*Real Estate Loans
VISIT ONE OF OUR THREE. CONVENIENT
LOCAnONS, TODAY!
Member FDIC

Peoples Bank
2nd Street
Ma1on, W.Va.
773-6614

2212 Jeckaon Ave.

Point Ple11ant, W. Va.
876·1121

5th Street
New Haven, W. Va
882-2136

CHANCEY REHIRED
Charles Chancey WIIS rehired
Tuesday night as head football
ooach at Melp IUgh School. He
has beSJihe only football coach
since the school was conso6ded
in 1967.

DRUMMER RE"IGNS Greg Dnunmer woo led the
Meip Marauders the TVC
championship this past season
which earned him Coach of Year
honors In the league and oocoach honors at the District
levels resigned Tuesday night.

Gallipolis joins
Point Pleasant
•
m cable suit
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP stall writer
GALLIPOLIS - Charging
breach of contract, the Gallipolis
City Commission voted Tuesday to
join Point Pleasant in a lawsuit
agalnst Consoiida too Communications Group· Inc., the cable television system serving the two cities.
The act ion is a response to
Consolidated's intention to drop
WPUB-TV, Athens,. from its basic
service at the rnd of the school year
and rl'place it with an electronic
program guide. The system will
then carry one publ ic television
station, WPBY In Huntington.
Marty Crawford, ConlKllidated's
general manager, .said the move
was not a deletion but an addll lorit o
the system' s chaitnel lineup and
added that he's been surprised by
the reaction in communllles served
·o§'coosolldated
Crawford. }ailt he will take the
cities ' concerns to Conso lidatrd's
board of directors.
The two government councils are
alleging Consolid ated broke ils
contracts with the communll ics by
dropping WOUB , which was offe rro by the f01m er service,
Cablentertainmen t. That firm was
purchased by Consolidated in November 19&amp;1.
"! think the people of Point
Pleasant arc as upset about this as
arc the rcsident sof Ga ilipoiis." said
Commissioner Dow Saunders. " I
think it' s a disservice to your
customers and it' s a disservice to
the communities that gran too you a
franch.lse. l don't think you'veacted
In good faith ."
'
Crawford sa id the progra m guide
- which begins at 6p.m. on chan nel
II, the channel now used by WOUB
- Is a good service and eliminates
the need -for printed gu ldi'S. Saund ers dismissed the guide as "inane."
Unacceptabl~

There I~ a possibility that WOUB
can be-kept on channel llduringJ he
day to provide educational programs to the schools, Crawford
said. but commissioners found thai
suggi'Stion una cceptable.

2 Secttons, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Wednesday, April 16, 1986

Copyrighted I 986

.MARC meets

A program on "Womi'R and the
Ecooomic System" was given by
Julia Norris at the recent •!J1eel!ng.
of the Apple Grove Unitoo Methodist Women held at the church.
Donna HUI presided at the
meeting with Edith Manuel giving
the opening Jrayer. Vicki Ables

train

at y enttne
e
Chancey rehired; DrUmmer resigns

Bortng
• Foreman

UMW conducts meeting

1 Circus

•

A minl-smw of triangle flower April 19 at Eastern High School. It
arrangemerlts judged by the was rotoo that several memtl&gt;rs
nnemhers hlghUghted the recent will be going to Marietta for the
111URSDAY
SUNDAY
meeting of the Chester Garden Oub flower arranging demonstration of
Tl!ESDAY
POMEROY - Story hour for
RIJTI..AND - Zion Church of held at the Chestl'f United Metho- Duane Reeves at the Lafayette
POMEROY - A prom meeting
pre-schoolers
will
be
held
Thurs·
Christ
is having a revival beginning dist Church.
Hotel. Reeves Is a natbnally known
for part&gt;nts of Meigs' Juniors and
day,
2
p.m..
at
the
Pomt&gt;roy
with
10:30
a,m. services on Sunday
Seniors wUI be held 7:30 p.m.
Each nnemrer brought an arran- arranger having charge of the
Library.
and continuing with 7p.m. services gement for the display and then White House flowers durtng Eisen·
Wednesday in Room 202 of tht&gt; high
each
evening through April 25. scored each ooe lor the selection of hower's presidency .The nature
school. Card labies are needed lor
FRIDAY
PhUip
H. Ling Sr., of Eastland ribbon winners. Ruth Erwin and hike at Lake Catrerine was an·
the prom. Anyone willing to lend a
POMEROY - A public dinner Church of Christ In Columbus will Eleanor Knight were msteses for nounced. For roll cail memtl&gt;rs
card table should call Pat Kitchen
will be held at the Senior Citizens be the evangelist. Robert E. Purteit the meeting.
at 992-6212.
commented oo arranging mechan·
Center Friday with serving of Is minister.
Newofllceselected ~reMaurtta lcs they Hke, ....
chicken and noodle dinners from 5
Muter, president; Janet Kobletnz,
Kathryn Mora wUI hostthe May7
MIDDLEPORT - Group II of
first vice president Betty Dean, meeting with Paula Mora as
tht&gt; Presbyterian Women's Associa- to 6: ll p.m. Dinners wUI be .s:i with
dessert exira. A square dance with PPSEOmttce
second vice president; Paula Mora, co-hostess. The jrogram wUI be oo
tion wiU meet at 7: 30Tuesday at the
the Stringdusters will be held from
POMEROY - Planned Parent- secretary; Edna Woods, assistant . birds. The meeting will include a
Middleport Presbyterian Church.
7: 30 to 11 p.m.
hood, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, secretary; and Dorothy Karr, nature hike at the Ridenour farm at
Mrs. Myron Miller·and Mrs. Paul
will have family planning clinics treasurer .
6:30p.m.
Haptonstall wUI be hostesses. Mrs.
SATURDAY
today (l'uesday) and Thursday.
In case of loss from fire,
Carl Horky will have tht&gt; book study
Mrs. Erwin gave devotions using
PORTLAND - Hazel Commun- Thert&gt; will be no clinic TueSday a rt&gt;adlng, ' "The RQad to Emand Mrs. Donald Lowery, the
theft or other misfortune,
ity Church Is having a hymn sing April 22. For an appointment, call
devotions.
maeus." Plans were discussed for
Saturday at 7: :Jl p.m. The church is !112-5912.
an up-to-date inventory
hosting the regional mretlng on
iocall'd on Rt. 124 thrre miles from
of your possessions will
WED~DAV
Portland and Long Bottom. Rev! Revival
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
help you get your insurCarl Hicks will be guest speaker:
POMEROY - The open church
BURLINGHAM- Special musiport Literary Club wlll met at 2 p.m.
wedding of Robin M. Boring and
Singing by The McDasnlel Trio will cal groups wUI II&gt; featured each
ance claim settled quick·
at the home of Mrs. Robert Fisher.
Plans
for
an
employee
and
staff
Thomas
D.
Foreman
will
takl'
II&gt; featured. Pastor Edsel Hartwel- evening at a revival to be held at the
ly and to your salisfac·
Mrs. Bernard Fult2 will review
oomes the jllblic.
Burlingham Community Church recognition dinner to be held on place Saturday, April 19, at 1 p.m.
"See You Later Alligator" by
tion. We furnish our poli·
beginning Wednesday and running May 12 were announced when the at the Rejoicing Life Baptist
William S. Buckley. For roil cail
Meigs
Association
lor
Retarded
cyholders with Per·
Church in Middleport.
POMEROY - The Belles and through Sunday with services at 7
members are to respond with a
Beaus Western Square Dance Oub each evening. Speaker for the Citizens met recently at the school.
The
brlde-i&gt;lecl
is
the
daughter
r1
sonal Property Inventory
cu.,..,t event .
Nora Rice, president, presided at Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, Baum
Is sponsoting an open dance. services will be Ray Laudermilt.
booklet that provides an
Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m .. at the Singers to be !eaturro are Savoo on the meeting. Rhoda Koch gave the Road, Pomeroy. He is the son of Mr.
treasurer's
report,
and
Shirley
easy,
organized
to
Royal Oak Park Recreation Build· Wednesday evening; Old Time
and Mrs. Lawrence Foreman ,
Wlllis
rt&gt;ad
the
secretary's
report.
It
ing. Caller for the evening will be Religion on Thul8day; Smith Famrecord the infn1t't1llltinn
Mason, W.Va.
john Waugh of Gallipolis. Ail ily Evangelistic Team onFriday; was noted that cookbooks are for
The Rev . Michael Pangio wUI
needfi!J.
Western Square Dancers are in- Pleasant Valley Trio on Saturday sate at $2 each. Room count was perform the double ring ceremony
won by the Intermediate class. A following a program of music by
and ~acefu I Valley on Sunday.
Noami Bissell was the best loser vited to attend.
special meeting wlll be held April 15 !Kllolst, Kart&gt;n Foreman, sister-In·
&lt;1 the week with Nancy GUiespie as
for the workshop. A jitney supper law of the prospective groom,
runnerup at the weekly meeting of
was planned for AprU 25 at the
214 EAST MAIN
Charleston, w .va., and pianist and
TOPS 0070 held in the cafeteria ci
Carleton School, 5 to 7 p.m. A guitarist Walt McWilliams, Akron.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
movie, "The Family Album" was
Marylu Riley of Portsmouth will
POMEROY
Dreama Pickens presided at the
The Pomeroy Baptist Missionary leader, with gifts tl&gt;ing givi'R by shown.
serve
as
matron
of
honor
for
her
992·6687
meeting with a new contest being Society met April 6 at the church Margaret Bailey, Audrey Young,
sister.
Rick
Gaul
of
Middleport,
wUi
~
..... AID
startoo to run for the next flvl' with prayl'r being givi'R by Caryl Burton Smith, Maria Foster, and
be
thl'
best
......... .
weeks. Donna Aleshire was the . Cook.•
·
Mrs. Barnhart. Betty Wiles rt&gt;ad a
SffiO
A
~~=:ill
be
held
at
the
I I
winner of the fruit basket. Two new
Mrs. Cook also gave th:mghts for letter from the Krama Canyon
members wl'fe welcomed. Meet· the day, "And That was That" and Church.
GALLIPOLIS _ A stop smoking Senior Citizens Center following the .__ _,, ·'· -~--·l
lngs are held every Tuesday at the "Pray, Decide and Go Forward."
The meeting closed with the seminar will be held SatUrday, ,w_ed_d_ln-"g'-.---·------L----.,----'---~,.,....:c...,.
hospital. Weigh-In Is from6p.m. to 7 The love gift wa dedicatoo ~ Nl'ttie hymn, "Blest Be the Tie That AprU 19, 10 a.m. at the Holiday Inn
p.m. with meetings starting at 7 Barnhart. A program on Indians Binds." A circle or prayl'f ciosoo Gallipolis. Sponsored by the Omp.m.
was given with Caryl Cook as the the meeting. Next meeting will be niPsych Group, In cooperation with
the Minneapolis Psychotherapy
held at 1:ll p.m. on May 13.
Clinic.

stop

Reds defeat·

Repos1 0C1 Pa&amp;e 3

Garden club meets

Calendar I happening

.

·

Commission Pmident Richard
Moore argued that when Consolidated ca me td the city in 19ffi and
requested rate Increa ses to finance
an upgrade of the system, It was
decreed that WOUB was a "must
carry" station under Federal Communication s Commi s si o n
gu Ide lines.
Crawford replied that the Communications Act or 1984 says cable
systems do not have to carry two
public television stations. The FCC
gives ca ble systems thl' right to
choose what they will show, he
added .
" I don't lhlnk any council would
have approved yoor rate In crease
knowing that one year later you'd
st art arbitrarily knocking stations
off the air," Sauooers sa id.
Moore asked Crawford if Consoli dated fell II was violating city
ordinances and Crawford said it
doesn't. "You've got to be kidding,"
Moore replied .
Paul Wilkowski, associ ate director of the Ohio University Telecom·
munical ions Center. who attended
thl' meeting wl!h oflicia is from
Point Pleasan t and Pomeroy, told
commissione rs that changes In the
law are tl&gt;ing drafted to protect
teicvls b n stations from being
dropped by ca ble 'ystem&lt;.

·

~ason

t&gt;r suit

Point Pleasant MayorJ .J . Wooge
ex )lained that his city council
decided to sue Consolidated be·
cause it approved a rate lnct·ease
with the understanding the basic
serv ice would be the sam&lt;&gt; and
feature WOUB.
"AU ·we want to do is get an
injunction and let the cour1s
decide," he said.
State Rep . J oiynn Boster. D·
Gail ipolls, sa id she Is "severely
conce rned " about the Issue and
noted that tht&gt; Legislature may
have lo look at regulation of ca ble
compan ies.
"I think it 's commendable you'w
bent yourlntentlon5 and-wiii keep it
(WOUB I on to I he endoltheschool
year, but I think it's more lmpor·
(Continued on page 12)

By BOB HOEFLltJt
Sentinel stall writer
Charles Chancey was named
head football coach for the next
school year and the resignation of
hays varsity basketi/&lt;JII coach Greg
Drummer was aceapll'd when the
Meigs Loeai School District Board
of Educat ion met ln .reguiar session
Tuesday night.
·
Pn February 19, the board met in
special session to hear a large
delegation which expressed It s
wishes that Chancey hi' rehiroo as
head football coach at the high
school for the next ~hoo i year. Last
night , all five board members votoo
in favor of naming Chancey to the
position.
The resignation of Drummer wa s
an addition to last night's agenda .
Drummer's name was listed for
rehiring on the regular agenda.
Drummer, theTVC'scoachofthe
year, had led the Meigs team to
championship honors during the
past season and apparently, his
resignation was not expected.
Meigs had a 22·2 record durtng
the 19!6-86 campaign.
Board member Larry Powell
v ot e d ag&lt;! irist a c ce ptin g
Drummer' s r@.;ignat ion.
Befort&gt; considering the issuance
of contracts to certified and non·
certified personal - a long ILsting
on the agenda- the board met for a
shor1 executive session.

One year oonlracts
Given one year teaching con·
tracts following the session were
Jenell Barker, Jamie Blaettnar,
Rick Blaettnar, Julie Byer, Rebecca Crow, Kathy Haley , Jon!
Jeffers, Cliff Kennedy, Lori Kilnger, Deborah Lowery, Carmen
Manuel, Barbara Mathews, Deborah Musser, George Nagielskl,
Gay Pippert, Tom Probst, Debra
Scott, Kevin Sheppard, Linda Stanley , Saundrea Tillis , Chris Wakefield and Constance West.
Three-year poets
Three-year contracts went to
Kim Adkins, Susan Nickels, James
Oliphant, Gloria Van Reeth, Thomas Werry and Rebecca Windon
wll h five year contracts going to
Stephanie Ash, Kenneth Eblin, .
Debra Sebert, Jack Slavin, and '
Nancy White. Continuing teaching
cont racts were awarded to Roger
Birch, Ca rol Evans, Karen Facemyl'r, Mary Haggerty and Jesse
Vall.
Continu ing contracts for noncertificated employees went to
William Green, mechanic; Rufu s
Brownlng, bu s driver; Belva Glaze,
Helen Milhoan, cooks; Don Richmond , custodian; Karen Sloan,
secretary, and CarotynCollins, part
time aides. Two year noncertlficatoo cont racts went to
Roger Holman, dirt&gt;Ctor of transportatio n; Linda MorrLs, bus

CHECKS DEBRIS - Ubyan rest.'lle workers
Tuesday sifted through the rubhle of a ooDapsed

driver; Sharon Blac k, Dorothy
Clatworthy, Joan Edwards and
Ruby Rife, cooks, and Kelly
Lambert, secretary.
Supplemental contracts
Supplemental one year contracts
awarded, in addition to that given
Coach Chancey, went to John
Arnott, Don Dixon, Fenton Taylor,
assistant varsity foot bail; Rick
Biaettnar, headninthgrade footbaii
coach; Tom Probst. seventh and
eighth grade football; Jim Oliphant, cross country coach; Kevin
Sheppard, wrestling; Bob Ashley,
golf; Ron Logan, girls' varsity
basketball; Chancey, athletic laciiities cart&gt;; Becky Windon, high
school cheerleaders; Cella McCoy,
drama; Jeannie Taylor, junior
class sponsor; Rita Slavin , quiz
team; Gordon Fisher, athletic
dlrt&gt;Ctor; Lori Klinger, band direetor; Connie West, assistant band
director; John Arnott , John Redovlan , Martha Verinart. guidance;
Eleanor Blaettnar, librarian; Earl
Young, assistant high school princlpal , part ttme; Rebecca Triplett,
Pomeroy Safety Patrol; Gordon
Fisher, extra printing for schools;
Joan Corder , head teacher, Brad·
bury; Carolyn Smith, head teacher,
Middleport; Marjorie Fetty, head
teacher, Rutla nd; Terl York , head
teacher, Salem Center, and Ed
Bartels, head teacher, Salisbu ry .
'lbe board postponed the award-

TRIPOLI, Libya tUPlt Ma chine-gun fire broke out near
Libyan leader Col. Moammar
Khadafy 's headquarters in the ·
Libyan capital today and soldiers
poured into the streets.
A scheduioo press conferena&gt;
with Khadafywas canceied and two
buses carrying reporters were
turnro back when the shooting
started inside Khadaty's headquarters' compound. Terrified troops
streamed from the building.
In Washington, Randy Beers,
di!'ector of the Staff' Department's
Libyan Task Force; was asked
about rt&gt;ports that Khadafy had fled
to North Yemen . .
Cars streamed our of the capital

lngofsupplemental oontractsinthe
various levels of boys' baski!tbaD
since a new varsity basketbaD
coach will have lo he named. He
will he expected lohavelnputoothe
reconunended persormel for the
other slots.
The board also did not lake action
on supplemental coaches for spring
sports since for some coaches it wUI
be their first season.and the board
wants to be surt&gt; that the coaches
are satLsfactory.
Non-renewals
By a 3-2 vote with Dick Vaughan
and Powell casting affirmative
votes and board members, Bob
Barton, Bob Snowden and Larry
Rupe casting negative votes the
supplemental contracts of Jesse
Vail, seventh and eighth grade
football , and Nancy \'ihitte, head
teacher at Harriso nville, were not
renewed.
-The board voted not to renew
non-certified, non-rrgular certlficated contracts for the extracurricula r positions of Rick Edwards, assistant varsity football;
Ca r..:Jn Crow, Robbie Eason, seventh and eighth grad&lt;&gt; football;
Molly Feesler, girls' assistant /
volleyball and girls' rl'serve softba ll; Rick Ash, girls ' junior high
basketball; Scott Dlliinger, rl'serve
baseball , and Yonlece Miller, year·
book advisor. Contracts wert&gt; not
renewed lor Yoniece Miller and
Kathy Carter for leaching positions
they have l;reen holding for teachers
who have been on leave.
Resignations
The board accepted the resigna.
lions of Mae Young, with regret, as
a teac her at the Pomeroy Elementary Sc hool; Robert 0 . Manley as a
substitute custodian; Kim Adkins
as girls' volleyball coach and girls'
reserve basketball coach; Deborah
Musser, junior hrgh cheerleader
advisor; Tim H. Saunders, a
teacher.
Lucille M. Haggerty was hired as
a substitute teacher for the remainder of the present school year
and the contract of Ma ry Beth
Musser, an aide, was not rt&gt;newed .
Professiona l leave was granted
to Tom Werry and Bill Williamson,
attending Jhe aut omotive service
counci ls of Ohio Trade Show in
Columbus; Ba rbara Mathews and
Rebecca Crow, to attend a chapterl
co nference. Columbus: Jamie
Biaettnar, Mary Brauer, Rebecca
Crow, Joni Jeffers. Ba rbara Ma·
thews. Kim Ohlinger, Rita Sim·
mons and Linda Stanley, chaptl'r 1
teachcr.s to nn inse rvice meeting tn
Mar ietta ; Ca rol Crow and Becky
Windon , an applewotks tralnlng
workshop in Za nesville; Karen
Facemyer to a federal Funding for a

apartment buDding behind the French Emhnssy In

new homr rco nomir s progra m in

TripoU following Monday's air strike by tile United
States. UP!.

Machine-gunfire breaks out
near Khadafy's headquarters
and a woman was sa&gt;n running
from a new tPievis lon station
building where shot s we re heard.
Earilcr. anti-aircraft fire boomed
In the blackoo-out Libyan capital
nearly a day after the massive U.S.
ait' strike that killed an adopted
daughter of Khadafy , wounded lwo
of his sons and drew widespread
condemn at ion.
White House and Pentagon officla Is denied there were any new
strikes. A Whit e House spokesman
said the air att ack at 2 a .m.
Tuesday Tripoli time was the first
- hut not necessarily the last Installment of the "heavy price"
Khadaiy must pay fo r his support of
lf' rTorlsm .

At least 17 civilians werr killed In
Tripoli and about 100 wounded in
the raid - the ~i~est U.S. air
strike since the Vietnam War which devastated residential areas
of the capital and also struck the
coastal city of Bengha7.1.
More than 18 hou rs later, anti·
aircraft firt&gt; echoed through the
capital, shrouded in a massive
electrlcalr blackout that began
shortly afier 8 p.m. and lasted about
two hours, Cars navigated through
the bl ~ ked;OUt streets with their
headlights off.
At 1: ll a. m. today, big guns
erupted again and at least ttu-ee
missiles were launched as unidentified planes flew over the city .

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Columhus.
L.vnn Lovdal was granted a
s€'Cond year's lf'a\'r of absence

from te11ching for pi'Ofessional
growt11 and the boa rd entered into a
purchased services contract with
Gary Walker to teach an aduli
introduct ion to microcompu ters
class at the high school. The board
authori&gt;ro fi \'r student s to attend a
high school press convent ion at
(Cont inued on page 121

Search called off for missing aircraft crewmen
WASHINGTON (UPil - Navy
ships and aircraft have given up
their search for the two crewman r1
an Alr Force F-111F fighterhomber missing since the air strike
on Libya Monday, a top official said
today .
Adm. William Crowe, the chairman ct the joint chiefs of staff, said
the search operations were halted
in the seas of Libya , and he told
ABC News, "My best judgment is
that the crt&gt;w was kllled in the
crash."

"I think the possibility of It being

hit (by Libyan fire) Is a very
definite one," Crowe said in a
separate lntervll'w on the NBC
''Today" program.
Noting there are "great uncertainties at 2 a .m." Libya time
Tuesday when the planes swooped
in low over the Libyan coast, Crowe
said, "We do have some pilots that
were witnesses to a firebomb golng
In the water off Tripoli and we
believe that was the aircraft."

" We don 't have .anything to
Indicate that they ejected," Pen·
tagon spokesman Robert Sims said
Tuesday of the fliers, who sit side by
side In a capsule·like oockpit , which
can be propelled from the plane like
a projectUe.
The pilot of the missing plane was
Capt Fernando Ribas- Dominici,
33, of Puerto Rico, and the weapons
ciflcer was Capt. Paul Lorence, 31,
. of San Francisoo, the Air Force
said. The plane was attached Ia the

48th T~ tl ca l Fighter Wing at the
British ba se of Lakenheath ,
England.
Ribas·Dominlci's brother said
the family had received word the
aircraft crashed into the sea .
A second twin-engine F-111F was
forced to land at a NATO airbase In
Rota, Spaln, on the way back from
the air sttike because of an
ovl'fheated engine. Sims said It wlll
remaln there for repairs .
He described the search and

·,

r·escue operation as extensive, and
sa id it was continuoo more than U ·
hours after the 3.1 planes launched
the prlmary attack that took place
Tuesday, Libyan time, or 7 p.m.
Monday EST. The missing aircra ft
was one ci 18 F-111Fs in the ra id.
On the raid it self, Ct'Owe said,
"We've been plagued ~ cloud
rover" rut there appea!'ed to be
"quite a bit of damage" to
Moammar Khadaiy's headquar·
•
ters In Tripoli.

SEEKS RE-ELECI'ION Barbara L. llt'tld.• of Sugar
Grove Is s£'&lt;'kln~ r&lt;H!Iectlon to
the Repuhlican Ccntrul Committee from thc loth C'Otll(n.&gt;ssional
District. A houst•wile, artl't and
mother of tlnw, Mrs. Deeds r.
the Fairfield ('uunty GOP chairman. She said she wUI " ensure
the vlgurous h'adershlp·we need,
and wW maintain the vlahUity of
the ~publlc'm Party." The
district Include'S Gallla · and
Meigs countil's.

�-

lll Court Street

ROBER'f L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher / Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
Gene•al Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEM BE R of Th P Unit ed Prt&gt;S s fn tern atlon al, Inland Dai ly Press Associ a·

tlon and tht&gt; Am er ican New spapPr Publis hers Association .
LETTERS OF OPtNION are welcomE' . They should be less than :m words
long . All lette r s a re subject to editin g a nd must bE&gt; s igned with name , addres s and
· telephont&gt; number . No unsigned lettPrs wil l be publlshOO . L{l!lers shou ld be In
good t a ~t c. add rrss ing lssu("S , no t pers ona l! tit's.

Terrorists worrying
Senate leader Byrd
. With well-grounded j u st~ica tion, &amp;&gt;nate Democmtic leader Robert
Byrd Is concerned abcut the threat of terrorism - not just In faraway
places, but in the Unitru States and specifically the t.f.s. Capitol.
And the nightma re thaI bet hers Byrd tbe most Is a terrorist attack of
some type during an address by President Reagan to a joint session of the
Senate and Honse.
He drew a worst -case scenario during a r~ent interview with the
Charleston (W.Va. l Daily Mail that should send shudders through all
gtivernment officials.
:"The president is tllere. the vice president, memb&lt;&gt;rs of tb&lt;&gt; Supreme
Court, the speaker of the House, whoever is pres iding over the Senate," he
said. "They're all there together. "
And the list of those present is even deeper than Byrd said. Also present
at a State ortbe Union address are the members of the Joint Chiefs ct Staff
a!)d the diplomatic corps.
·In other words, without saying so, the ultimate terrorist act could wipe
rni t the country 's entire civilian and military top command. Left alone to
lead the nation out of such a tragedy would be the one Cabinet member who
is always absent in the event of su ch a catastrophe.
At no other time do all the leaders of the United States gather In one
·pl}lce. at one time. And Byrd, for one, does not feel the oountry should offer
terrorists such an inviting target.
:"I don't think they should be (all together)," Byrd said . " It isn't wise. In
ffact, I would prefer the president deliver his speech by TV within the
confines of the White House. It would be a lot safer. "
Certainly, Byrd would be the first to agree that you cannot put Reagan,
or any other president, in a bullet -proof glass bubble for four years. Nor can
anyone give an Iron-clad guarantee of safety to a Cabinet memter, a
justice, a senator or a congressman.
·Recent history is too replete with assassinations and near·
aSsa.sslnatlons of public officials. It is a risk inherent In public life, more
toOay than ever before, and a hazard that officials must take into
consideration.
'But there Iss no good reason - as Byrd makes clear - why the rntire
government must bunch together to Hsten to a president. For the most
part, those who atiend such eventsdosobecause it lsexpected,not because
they really want to or because they may glean new information.
~oming at mid-evening, a presidential address Is a social event, political
theater of sorts. The message itself, as Byrdpointsout,can reach the same
aUdience by television . Only the craving for applause would not te

appeased.
Is there really a danger of a terrorist act during a joint session? Who
knows.
·
Certainly the security at the Capitol has been enhanced a great deal in
recent times and the drawing board rolds plans !or even tighter measures.
E~en now when Reagan comes to visit, Capitol Hlll resembles an armed
camp.
But the Capitol is not immune to terrorism. &amp;&gt;vera! congressmen were
wounded when a group of Puerto Rlcans opened ftre in the 1900s. More
recently, two late night bcmblngs inflicted heavy damage on the &amp;&gt;nate
wing of the Capitol.
Perhaps these Incidents could not happen today. Perhaps there is no way
for a terrorist to disrupt a joint session. But why , as Byrd says, risk the
possibility?

••

.

· · rr·
\

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..

Today in history
Today Is Wednesday, Apri116, the 100th day of 1986 with 259 to follow.

~

,

Pomeroy-

It)' Un»ed Pftu

Exemplary justice____;;_____w_ill_iam_·_F._B_uc_kley_Jr.
there was absolute, documentable
evidence that the bcmb that went
off In the West Berlin discotheque,
killing two people, was an l'lstru·
ment of. Llbya. One Is glvm to
tellevingby Mr. Reagan, at hts last
press conference and indeed at
otlr!r press oonterences, that we
have tn hand tlr! proof that Khadaly
was behind other acts of terrorism.
The government has not given
out this documentation on the
grouoos that to do so would
endanger tJx&gt; apparatus by which
we carne around to getting that
Information. But that It extsts ts not
seriously In doubt. We know that
t!X'~ a.re camps In Libya organized
to train terrorists. We sh:luld not be
surprised If graduates of those
camps come out with tllmbs In

e-'l'rA @1966 f~ wo~ ~111"1·,.as.;~,...__
HULMe H
~

"Firl)t fire, then the wheel - now I understand they've discovered something called •income tax."'
~

Sl. Lou
f'1NbtRII
Phllil
Montwal
NY
Otl

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-

their pockets.
But if we strike against Khadaly,
and do away with that particular
mad dog, we are left with quite a
few others. Mr. Reagan has not
assigned to the leaders of Syria and
Iran a genus and species, but call
them, tf you like, a plain simple
terms: fanatics. If Ubya were to
disappear !rom the face of the
earth, we would still have left the
fanatics wh:l run Syria and make
Lebanon uninba~tt able. And that
awful man woo in the name of
religion trains young men to
commit suicide In the war against
Iraq, and tegan his apparently
eijdless reign by taking 63 American hostages. In sh:lrt, terrorism
will perhaps marginally decrease
wtth tlr! end of Khadafy, but it wUI
oot be exterminated .
What then would be the !lJr'pose
of a military move against
Khadaly?
Sharply to be distinguished from
a military move against tlr!
Sandlnlstas, It would te an act of
ex~mpiary justice. It would te a
stgn to the whole world that they
United States wUI not toler ate
studied terrorism many of whose
victims are citizens of the United
States.
Would it be worth the risk?
That, no doubt Is the point being
argued in the White House. On the
negative side, undoubtedly some
American fight ing men would die in
tbe enterprise. On the positive side,
the would would be reminded that
America ought not, really, to te
trifled with. The wrong word,
perhaps: A greatcountry permits a
little trifling. But a great country
needs io give evldencre - exemplary evidence, on oocasion- that
it Is not permanently asleep, and
that there Is a Umit to tbe
provocations it wUI endu re.
That. in the view of this observer,
is the creeping consensus In
America. Moreover, tt Is In tbe
nature of tbe American character
that we wou ld wa nt to get tt done
quickly: over and out. A Grenadastyle operation .

WASHINGTON - One reason place on the cut surface," accordthe military often pays outlandish ing to specs in force slnre 19ti2. Why
prices for coffee pots and ballpeen Joe would want to slice his
hammers Is the rtgid inslstrna&gt; m doughnut horizontally, like a lngel,
detailed specifications for every or have to use a sharp lmlfe to cut it
Item purchased .
vertically before dunking, tiX' specs
Moot of the voluminously des- don't explain. They m add tbat
cribed specifications, oc "specs," frosted doughnuts must retain tbelr
are necessary safeguards against glaze when "subjected to ordinary
shady contractors who might cut · shocks of transportation."
corners to save rmney. But 9lme,
Joe might decide to do his
In page alter page rt barely stomach lining a favor and choose
decipherable jargon, simply rot chocolate instead of coffee. A
hamstring procurement officers sale choice: !! pages of spec!flea.
wro might otterwlse U\le t!X'ir lions set the standard for GI ooooa.
common sense to find better buys Its "pH"- a measure of acidity/alon the qlell market.
kalinity familiar to gard&gt;ners Our associate Stewart Harris has must register within me point rt tiE
reviewed several reams ct military middle rna 14-polnt scale. At lease
specs on everyday Items usEd by 14 perrent of the ooroa powder must
the military. Here are tlr! high· be butter fat, and it can~ t have big
lights ct "A Day In the Well- chunks of rocoa lean: "Wben
Specified Life cl. Gl Joe" :
washed with petroleum ether, not
At brE!jlkfast, Joe can te confl· less than 93 percent by weight shall
dent that his doughnut, wiEn "cut pass through a U. S. Standard Nl.
vertically or rorizontally with a 200 sieve." This may explain what
sharp knife, shall not te greasy tiX' Army cooks were doing th:lse
over •one-eighth
inch
In depth at any
•~ I
.

mysterious pre-dawn rours tefore
we showed up for KP: sniffing
etlr!r-washed coma.
This being tiE New Army, Joe
may decide to have a marshmallow
or two In his hotchoc. Nine pages d
specs cover tiE size and Ingredients. If the marshmailoM are
colored, they must be a pastel
shade; otherwise, military marshmallows will be white.
During tbe day, Joe may ~Ide
to relleve tlr! tension with some Gl
chewing gum. It's a favorite of
urchins around the world , and no
wonder: 17 pages of specs require,
among otlr!r things, that the gum
"Impart a pleasing characteristic
taste sensation" and retain at least
a "residual cbaracterlstl~ fiavor"
after!! minutes' chewing.
GI gum comes In stick or
candy-coated tablet form , In pep-'
permlnt, spearmint or fruit navoc.
It's rated by a tasters' panel on. a
"hedonic scale" of one to nine. (The
Hedonic .·phllosphers in anctent

The moon is approaching its first quarter.
The momlrig stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Satw-n.
The evening star Is Venus.
Those bonfthls date are under the sign rl Aries. They include aviation
pioneer Wilbur Wright in 1867, actor-comedian- !11m director Charlie
Chaplin In !Bftl, actor Peter Ustinov in 1921 (age 65), composer· cooouctor
Henry Mancini in 1924 (age 62), singer Botily Vinton in 1935 (age 51), and
basketball player Kareem Abdui.Jabbar In 1947 (age ll) . - On this date in history:
·
In 1B62, Congress abolished slavery in the District of Columbia.
In 1947, more than 500 people were killed when a French frigatecarrying
"No sweat. I've been the first goy
nitrates P.xploded at the dock In Texas City, Texas.
on tlr! block to get home before any
In 19'72, Apollo-16 blasted off for the moon with three American other husband fortm years. No rne
astronauts aboard . Also that day, U.S. planes raided the North Vietnam takes that away from me."
capital of Hanoi.
"What do you do wtth tlr! time?"
In 1975, the go'lemment of Cambodia asked tte communist Insurgents
"I beg your parmn?
tor a cease-fire and offered to tum power over to !bern. - "You save two to three minutes
A thought for the day: Comedian Charlie O!aplin said, "In the end, every night, and heaven !moM yoo
everything Is a gag."
.take your life In your hands. Surely

an eight -wheeler refrigerator
truck.
"Well," I said, "you didn 't save
any time getting home tonight."
"Wasn't trying to save any tlme
going home," he told me as he
picked up the door and threw ft ii
the back seat.
"Ddn't kid me. Do. you deny you

.....

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LA

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B.1 Uimono at Torun lo
Tf?l a~

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Drtrolt at C hlc~~KQ . n(Jihl
N(W York at Ck'Yctand , nlli:hl
MlniV'SOOI a t Ca llklrnla, night

(0cshalt'5 ().(II Bl Sun FranrN:o

IMasonO.II, 4:£!\ p.m.
Plll!ltl.lfi:h IMc WIIIWrns O.h al Phllatk&gt;l·
phla tC11rll on {).J f, 7:35p.m.
C'lnclnna tiiDt•rul)· !Mil af Arlimt&lt;J IM.t~ h~r
1·11 , 7:10p.m.
Los AnllCICS (F'ow~ll 01 1 al san IJieao
rDra\Jl'C ky J.(h , 10:111 p.m.
Tlur.lq'1Gam1!!8
Sl. Loo is at Ntow York
Chicago at Monll'f'al
San Dlcao at San r rondSC"O

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Transaftions

Cla rk 12 1. Brmlv 121. Clnclnnall. Oull'ta 111.
l'arkl'r 14 1. Atkinla , Murphy 1~1. Vtn~ll l l l
Wlnr*ll Plkflen

RearMn, (1-{11. llou.~ ton .
!2-0t Clncilnall, Robinson 12.{) 1.

Montrml.

KnEw,.

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KBnus City (Saberhagr.n ().4)r.at IUion
4NI~ 1-41, t;(ll p.m.
'
&lt;Aiktan·d, (Andujar 0.11 al Mln ~la
!HIYlrYen 1.{)\. 1 : 1~ p.m.
BalllJnOI"(' IQtxon 1·01 at Toror11o d(t')l
I).(Jt , t: !J p.m.
Tex H!I (\\111! 001 at Mllwa u~ 1Nirvl'!i
0.01. 7:t.ft p.m.
New York ITewkllOOI')' ]:()) at Ck'Yt'Jand'
INk.&gt;kro ().1I, 7: l'i p. m.
Dl&gt;lrolt IMorril l·lll! Chk'ago (Ra ~nlstl'r
0.1\, l!p.m.

8, SM FrancOOJ 2

Clnelnna!l ~. AllluiiB 3
San Diego 2, Los Anl('lt'!! I, 12 Inn.
W~ · ~ GiDM (AI11nw DT)
Sl. louis (0,..~ J.(h a! Ntow York
!Darlb11i: 0.01. 1:35 p.m
Hoo ~on

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PillsiJ.u11h at Phlladl&gt;lphlcl , wcJ. r:aln

San nqo - McOJJk&gt;rs tl .(fl.
Sav""
Houston. Kerft&gt;ld W Cll'lf'lrma11. Framv

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Apr. 11.
Chic ago tAL l - Smt pllct\l•r .l&lt;r rcw ~y
to Butlalo of Arrwr k'an Assor l.:tl lln IAAAI
nn!l slp'd t'rl'('.U,(!:I.'nt n&gt;l k.&gt;f rpltchfor 8111
Dt~W IPy .

PM adrl phl a -

Sljt'T'II.'d

pllrhrr Tom

Gorman and asslgnrd him to Portland of lhr&gt;
NY

lltnu
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Haston
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Wart•. S!l'\'P Co\ll! •r 1md Dwayn• Dixon.
lilllrl y J uan Joltn..~n ~nd flghl md M&lt;llrulm
Moon".

Southern beaten, 8-1
MASON -Behind a 10-hit attack
tbe Wabama White Falcons rolled
to a 8-1 non-league baseball victory
over the Southern Tornadoes here
'fuesday evening in a blustery
cross-river rivalry.
Southern Is now 7-4·1 overall,
leading tbe SVAC with a perfect &amp;0
mark.

Brian Decker and Todd Gress
combined for tlr! win, picking up
five strikeouts hitting ooe. and
walking one along tiE way. Decker
went five innings and Gress two In
relief.
Kelley Grueser got the start for
S&gt;uthem and wffered tte loss.
Jimmy Wolfe came rn to pitch two
Innings, while Jamie Hensler came
In to finish the game. SHS pltdtlng
fanned seven and walked five.
' In the first inning Wahama
scored three runs. '1\xkl Gress
Initiated the drive with a single,
Rltchle Clark smasiEd a runscoring triple, Matt Thompson
walked, SHS committed an error,
Hesson singled, and Grimm singled
to give tlr! Falcons a 3-0 lead.
Wahama plated a single run in
tbe second, then added t...:J more in
the third . w ·ahama 's Grimm

Greece placed paramount Importance on pleasure and gratification
of natural desires - roughly the
exact opposite ri. the roidlerty
Spartans.)
Joe may head fort he playing field
during the day. Thanks to 22 pages
of specifications, he can be confl·
dent that his athl etic supporter has
proven capable of withstanding t...:J
rours of baking at :00 degrees
without losing Its stretcbabllity.
U Joe takes a date to tlr! dub on
the base, he might buy her a
martini or two, socure in the
lmowiedge that 17 pages of specs
have governed !be aives, grading
them in 10 official sizes from SJt!all
to "special super coklssai".
And finally, if Joe pi ans some
extra-military activities, he knows
that his prophylactic device whether red, blue. green, pink,
black, yellow or clear - has been
manufactured under 12 pages of
Pen la gon speciflca lions and
sa mple-tested for reliability.

singled, two Falcons walked, and
Mitch Roush laid down a perfect
squeeze runt. Another run came
oome &lt;in an enur, tbe score &amp;0.
While Decker and .Gress hand·
cuffed the Tornadoes Wahama
scored single runs In each the fourth
and fifth Innings t&gt;r an 8-0 score.
Coah Mlck Winebrenner's Torna·
does loaded the bases in the
seventh, but came up With just one
run. John RUDe had singled, then
Barry McCoy ripped an RBI single
for an 8-1 ftnal.
For the winners Todd Gress had
two singles, Rltcble Clark a triple
and rouble, Matt Thompson a
single an'! double, Hesson two
singles, ana Grimm two singles.
Davkl Amburgey, John Riffle,
Ryan OUver and Barry McCoy had
singles for Southern.
. Soutbern rusts Oak HOI in an
SVAC contest Wednesday, then
travels to Federal Hocking Thursday .
Unesrore:
Soothern ........... ............ t:m IIXl 1-1· ~J
Wahama ....... ... .... ... ......312 UO x-8-10-4
Batteries : Grueser , Jim Wolfe 4th, Hensll'f'
6!h, and John Rlffle, Decker (WP ), Gress tith
and Tucker.
\

ATLANTA (UP! )- Cincinnati's
Eric Davis did not get a hit, but the
centerflelder said he provided the
spark that helped the Reds beat the
Atlanta Braves.
Trailing 2-1, the Reds got a
three-run home run from Dave
Parker in the eighth inning Tuesday night to claim a 5-3 victory over
Atlanta. But Davis started the
eighth inning rally by draw1Jl8 a
,, 'l'alk.. from Braves sta rter Zan e
Smith.
"1 don't have to get hits in order to
contribute," Davis said . "I stole a
couple of basis, scored a couple of
runs and Ignited the big Inning we
bad. I feel good about myself right
now and the win ."
Davis also praised Parker's early
season play and said Cincinnati
would be a much better tea m If all
of the Reds were playing as well as

Parker.
the Braves have been a ti t unlucky start hitting a lot better. You have to
"He's been playing a key role in thus 'far this season and s;lid his be patient."
all our games," Davis said. "He's teammates would have ILl \!&lt;:,
Following Davis' walk , Buddy
hitting the ball all. over the place. patient.
. Bell reached on a flelder'sph.olceoff
He's been carrying the team so far ,
"We were In the bail. game the losing reliever J eff Dedmon, 0-1,
but everybcdy else bas been whole time," Virgil sa id. "But this putting runners on fir st and second .
playing hard ..It's a rna tier of time . whole week it's seem like we've Parker then drilled Cedmon 's first
before we get It rolling."
been getting beat by someone pitch over the left -centerfield fence.
Parker's home run was his fourth hill ing a home run at the right time
The Reds added a run in the ninth
of the young season, andhecrediied
on
Sal Butera 's first horner.
with men on bases. We 've only
his outstanding hitting to an early played six games.
Parker made a sensa tional over·
season peak.
"That's noi the season," he said. !he-shoulder ca tch - on a ball hit by
"I'm just swinging the bat well "W£'ve got a lot of ball games left , Ted Simmons with a runner m first
right now, " Parker said. "Nor- and we just have to hang-In there, - in right center to end the game.
matly In Aprlll don't hit for power, keep swingin g and hoP&lt;Cfu lly we' ll ·
but heck I've got four rome runs
already.
~--------------------"I just think It 's basically getting
in a groove early and peaking at tbe
right time in spring training," he
added . " It carried right into the

season."
Atlanta catcher Ozzle Virgil said

Game postponed·
CINCJNNATI (UPi l - Thurs·
day's Kid Glove charity exhibition
game tetween the Cincinnati Reds
and the Detroit Tigers at Riverfront
Stadium bas been postponed. a
tea m spokes man announced
Tuesday.
The Tigers wlll be unable to play
the game, originally scheduled for
an off-day, because a Tuesday
ralnout was resc heduled fo r
Thursday.
The Kid Glove game is an annual
fund-raising event for amateu r
baseball in the Cincinnati area. A
reciprocal game is played each
year In Detroit.
A team spokesman urged fan s to
retain their tickets, as an alternate
date will be arranged If poss ible.

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SERVICES
OFFERED
MONTHLY AND
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422 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

O'DELLS
FRIDAY, APRIL 18

POMEROY. OHIO 45769

J'~

IJocs

0
1000.
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tBetween now ahd May 17, 1986, ta~e $1 000.00
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got the best value for your dollars.

OUR SERVICES INCLUDE
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THE PROFESSIONAL SEIVICE FOI A
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were doing 75 miles per hour•"
"I don't deny that. The part I'm
denying is I was going home. I was
leaving the house to go to work."
"What difference does a few
minutes make."
"The difference of me or Manny
getting the numter one par king
place in the TV st.atlon garage ."

'5-YEAR LIMITED WAR RANTY Warranty
may vary depending on equipment purc11ased
and actual use. Details on request.

A st1nuner tan

is two weeks .·

Berry's World
.

...

Value For Yo.ur Dollars

PH. (614) 992 •7270

-Co"'uterind Auounting
-Internal Control
-Tax Plaming
-Sales Analysis

SATURDAY, APRIL 19
. ro "'tt
llo,.tt ~

ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING
618 EAST MAIN STREET

LAWN AND
GARDEN CENTER

GRAVELY. Field Days

KElLER BUSINESS. SERVICES

VVhere tinme flies ________________A_rt_B_u_ch_~_Ld
you must do something with the
precious time."
He thought about this. "I get t&gt;
kiss my daughter."
"Couldn't you kiss her three
minutes Ia ter•"
"Slme nights she wants to go to
bed early, and the three minutes Is
the difference between seeing her
and not seeing her at all. l'm a good
fatber. The reason is I always make
sure I'm !lJlllng In when my
daughter runs ou td tbe house, even
If I have to hit a school bus to do it."
I left his relating to hts chlld row
he almost hjlt a cement truck so he
could te home In time to tell her a
story.
The next car I followed was a
speeding Oldsmobile Dlled with
car-pooiers.
I stopped !bern at the first turnoff.
"I notice you're~going pretiy- fast,
gentlemen. Could you please tell
me what yoo plan to do with tiE few
minutes you saved?"
"I'm going to write a book," said
one.
"I'm going to wash my dog," the
second one told me.
''I'm going to reshingle my roof,"
the third said.
The driver said, "I'm going to
watch tapes of. tlr! last three
Redskins gameS."
"Okay, tetlme h:lnestly, .why !be
reckless speed?"
"There are four of us," tiE man
behind the wheel said. "If I dtm't
jump ovs;_ Volkswagens I'd get my
last twpssenjJ'rs home late and
tlr!n tli!y would ask someone else to
be the driver."
The final car I followed was a ·
Japanese sports car. I oon't think I
would have ever been able to catch
up wjth him bad lr! not crashed into

.,...,..loMI

SanPnm
H01.1Slon
Cncnnt l

Play by the rules ____J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_Le_Jl;_an_A_u_a

You've seen them In tbe rmrnlng
and you'vesren them at night- tiX'
wtld commuter drivers hurtling
their cars through traffic at rush
row- on the way to and fromwork .
They'll cut Jn front Of you , honk
tehind you and force you over the
curb. What motivates these modem
barbartans to risk not only their
necks but yours as wen•
The answer Is TIME. :rbe people
you see driving hellbent on tlr!
streets 31\d highways are not only
saving, minutes but seconds !rom
their trips. But no one bas ever
asked tlr!m wha.t they do with tlr!
time they save.
I was curious so I decided to
follow several of them home.
The first one I took after was a
·Mercedes-Benz convertible. It
wasn't easy_ to follow him to his
desilnatlon, but 1 man~ed to do it.
As I pulled up the driver was on tiE
stoop, kissing his Utile daughter.
"Sir," I said, "I noticed you were
driving pretty fa st. How much time
do you save by scaring veryone off
the road? '
"Ina !!-mile trip I usually save
two to three minutes, unless rome
stupid moron stalls his car at a stop
sign. Tonight that dumb school bus
almost made me late."
"It's bard to believe alter tbe way
you drive that yru only save three
minutes on a trip," I sald.

-

T..u
Calli
OOIIInd

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•

A trip across the rountry reveals own afflatus, which Is to Iring
h!avjo sentiment in lavoc of doing Marxism to the nations on their
romething. on the Libyan front. frontiers, th!n we will be racing a
Slmethlng rmredeclsivethan what massive challenge tba t Indeed,
we did a few weeks ago wben we depending on wbet!X'r ~ are
reminded Mr. Khada!y, ro to speak llstenlng to Patrick Buchanan (1' to
forcefully, that he did not have tbe ROnald Reagan, will bring troubles
right to draw national boundaries as.faras San Diego, or as far as San
across a slice of the Medlteranean. .Antonio.
Often the question Is !lJI, what shall
Llbya Is a different question.
we do about Khadafy? In tJx&gt; There we are dealing with someone
context of the second question, taxonornlzed by President Reagan
What should we m about tJx&gt; as a "mad dog" . We srould remind
Sandlnlstas?
ourselves tba t Llbya . Is a great
An important distinction sh:luld trouble spot in tJx&gt; Mediterranean,
te made, and pressed by tiX' but that tbere are otter trouble
government. It Is this, that action spots capable rt mlng damage
against the Sandlnlstas Is In tJx&gt; whether Khadafy'Bves or dies. On
nature of a geopolitical imperative. Thursday· of last week a high
U the Sandinistas become fully administrative rtftcial (so ldentl·
entrenched and dlscharjJ' their ned by tbe press) reported that

The Daily

Ohio

Parker's blast, catch. stops Braves, ~-3

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Qhi()
Wednesday, Aprii16;·J986

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

, - ,, - , ._ I

~

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COmment
The Daily Sentinel

•

Offer not valid with any other promotion.
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~GRAVELY.

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~

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..

992·6311

UEISVIUE

0 DELLS LAWN &amp; GAR.DEN CENTE-R
PHONE 446-7826

2400 EASTERN AVENUE
(ACIOSS FIOM I·MAITl

OPEN 8 A.M.-5 P.M.
MON.-SAT.

�Wednesday.

Sar!tinel

The.

Giants_dump Astros;
Padres stop Dodgers
By JOE UJ..UZZI ·
UPI Spolia Writer
Phil Garner has seen Vida Blue
pitch often over his 12- yearcarrer,.
both as a teammate and an
opponent. Garner never saw him
better than on Tuesday.
Garner connected for home runs
In his first two at-bats off Blue and
. went 3-for-4 to power the Houston
Astros to an 8-3 victory over the
Giants, spoiling San Francisco's
home opener.
Garner, who ha s eight RBI In his
last two games, hit a three· run
homer in thl' first Inning and a solo
shot ·in the third. The Houston third
baseman became the 12th player to
hit two home runs In a game this
season.
Kevin Bass also horneml off
Blue, In the fifth, to chase the
left-bander, who failed In hiS second
attempt this season to notched
career victory No. :m.
San Francisco manager Rogl'r
Craig said Blue never found his
groove.
"Vida Is one of those guys who
have to get into a groove to be
effective." he said. "He didn't get
Into that groove today .The problem
was..M was throwing it right over
the plate. He wasn't getting good
location on his pitches."
One pitcher who has been In a
groove since last season Is Houston
reliever Charlie Kerfeld. The 22year-old right- han~r pltchl'd four
scoreless Innings In relief of Bob

Knepper to record his first save.
Kerfeld Is uilsmml m In his last 22
lnrungs, dating to last ye~r.
~clark, San Francisco's rookie
llrst baseman, hit his Second homer
of the sea!Kln olf the left· handed
Knepper ~ the llfth. He is hatting
.:m against lefties.
Bob Brmly also homered for the
Giants and Glenn IAlvlshlthisthlrd
of the season for Houston.
Elsewhere In the NL, Montreal
defeated Chicago f3 In 11lnnlngs,
Cincinnati subdued Allanta 5-3, and
San Diego dumped Loo Ang!'ieS 2-1
In 12 innings. Pittsburgh at Phlldelphla was jXlstjXlned because of rain.
Expos f, Cubs 3
AtMontreal,MltchWebsterdrew
a bases-loaded walk wlth none out
In the bottom of the 11th inning to
score Dan Schatzeder and lilt the
Expos. Jeff Reardon, 1-0, pitched
two Innings of two-hit relief to earn
the victory. l£e Smith, 0.2, was the
loser. Tim Wallach homered for the
Expos.
Padres 2, Dodgers I
At San Diego, Garry Templeton
singled home Thny Gw)'nn from
third base with two outs In the 12th
Inning to end the game. Lance
McCullers carne on In the lOth
Inning to pick up his first major
league win. Ken Howell, 0.1, was
the hser. The game marked the
ninth straight one-run decision for
both teams. The major league
record at the start of a season is 11
one-run decisions.

our

AT HOME
Clevehmd catcher Andy
Allan!lon iJtp Dave Winfield of the Y anlrees woo

Niekro knuckles Yanks past Indians

The Victory Circle
Ttme rea Uy srems to fly much
faster than sand In the ole hour
glass as high school baseball season
is at the haH way point as far as
regular season is concerned .
Whtle glancing through an old
yearbook yesterday, I suddenly
realized that It has been almost 10
years since 1played high school ball
oo my dad's SVAC championship
team at Southern. Ten years
doesn 't seem possible, rut that's
what the calendar says.
That year, SHS was 17-3 under
coach Hilton Wolle, Jr. and that
record stands as the best oo far. In
1982, Southern went to the regional
and !XJsted a 17-7 record. Some
names on that team that come to
mind are Kent Wolle and Jay Rees.
Currently ail area high school
!ljuads are enjoying fine seasons as
the weatherman hO been very
cooperative. Sofarrorainoutshave
been recorded, although the !rrezIng cold nipped oome games last
Wednesday.
My Eastern squad survlvl'd last
Wednesday's bitterness, numbly
and stltfly claiming a 17-2 win over
a yoong Kyger Creek !IJUad. ·
Today we may he in tlr rrore of
the same...Maybe a few of those
rays will peek through wlth some
more warmth, but I guess we can't
be greedy.
SOuthern is enjoying a much
Improvl'd season from last year,
owning a fine 7-4·1&lt;Werall mark and
leading the SVAC wtth a perfect &amp;0
mark. The Tornadoes are coachl'd
by one rimy former teachers Mlck
Winebrenner.

attempled to soore from third base In lhe fourth
inning ol Tuesday's garite at Municipal Stadhun. The
Yankees won, 6-2. UP I.

first 10 batters he fael'd before
surrendering a double to Willie
Ran~lph in the fourth . With two
out, Randolph advanel'd to third on
a wild pitch and scored on Mike
Easil'r's single.
"I threw the knuckler about 60
percent It the time," said Candlottl,
who left the game after Randolph's
run-scoring single with two out in
the seventh . "I wasn't tired and I
didn't overthrow. The Yanks just
started hitting."
J oe Nlekro liked what he saw of
Candloni.
"Tbm threw well , and oor lineup
was very Impressed with htm," he
said. "He shouldn't be discouragl'd,
but I'm sure my brother, Phil, has
told htm that throwing the knuckler
requires patience."
Only 3,223- the smallest crowd
lhe Yankees have drawn since
playing before l,IIJ'/ at Washington
on April Zl, 1970 - were al
Cleveland Stadium tlr the contesl .
"I know it was cold and damp in
lite stands," said Cleveland native

~JI

By Unlled Press ln&amp;emational
final second-round SjXlt by defeat·
The final two second-round lng the Minnesota North Stars 6-3 at
playoff spots In · the NHL were the Met Center tn Bloomington,
settled Tuesday night, with two Minn ., and wm oost the Tbronto
more underdogs winning decisive Maple Leafs in Friday night 's
dlviskm semifinal fifth games - on second-round opener.
the road no less.
The .night's results might have
The New York Rangl'rs com- raised eyebrows. After all, the
pleted an upset of the Phtladelphla Flyers were the NHL's second-best
F1yers wlth a 5-2 triumph at the team overall and the Rangl'rs
Spectrum and iJl on to play the barely beat out Pittsburgh t&gt;r the
Washington Capitals at the Capital final Patrick Division IErth. The
Centre Thursday night In Game 1 of North Stars were one of the league's
the best·ri-seven Patrick Division two most tmprovl'd teams from a
finals.
year ago whlle the Blues were
The St. Louis Blues clinched the knocked for trading away their star
goal-scorer Joe Mullen.

JACKSON PIKE · R'T.3!S WEST

---~
BARGAIN I\ITIH££5 SATURDAY
I SUNDAY • All SEATS $2.50
A!J!ISSlOH EVERY TUESDAY $2.50

.

MEAT SALE
TENDER8EST USDA CHOICE

BONELESS TO SIRLOIN STEAK ••!¥;.......

and Yanl&lt;ff designated hitter Mike
Easler. "But It's still the majors.
Every major-league city should he
grateful it has such a team. "
In other games, Oakland blasted
Minnesota ~2 . California clobberl'd
Seanle 9-4 and Detroit at Chicago
was postjXlnl'd due to snow. The r;;;;:~::::::;:::::;;;:;
game wUI be made up Thursday.
A's 8, Twins 3
Check out the great
AI Minneapolis , Moose Haa•
selection of atheltic
allowl'd five hits over nine Innings
and Alfredo Griffin went 4-for-5 to
shoes by:
highlight a 16-hltattackasOakland
. Nike . Reebok • L.A.
romped over Minnesota . Haas, 2-0,
G
A t
T torn .,
has beaten the Twins twice this
ear . U ry . re
season. BUI Latham, making his
• Bass Air · Etonic ·
American League debut, lost his
Candies . Sporto.
first game this year.
Mariners 9, Angel!! t
•
•
At Anaheim, Calif., DannyTarta·
'
bull capped an elght-runfirst Inning
against Don &amp;ltton with his first
major-leaguegrandslam as Seat tle
routl'd Calllomla . Matt Young, 2·0,
scattered eight hits over five
Innings and Mike Morgan eaml'd
Seanle's first save of 19&amp;i. Sutton,
,,"
0.2, still has 295 career victories.

..

The
Shoe Ccife

Published every aftern oon, Monday
through Frkl ay, l1l Co urt St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the Oh io Valley Pub· 1
Ushlng Company/Mulll medla, Inc., ·
Pl&gt;meroy, Ohio 45769. Ph . 992·2156. Se· ,
cond class pos ta ge paid -at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Sales,l:l.'l

Wl1h Whipped Crtam 15( Extra

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CLEANING NEEDS

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DUTCH LOAF ................. .11. •• S1. 97

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Secretaries Wee k starts ~

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42 OZ. RINSO SOAP
POWDER DETERG·ENT ........ S1.5 9
JOHNSON'S
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GLOW COAT ...................... S2. 99
101/4 OZ. CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF
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CORN ..•••••.•.••••..•.•..••••• 2.~'~· S1.19
12 OZ. ARMOUR lREAT CANNED
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LUNCHEON1MEAT .............. S1.69
33/4 OZ. UNDERWOOD IN TOMATO SAUCE
SARDINES .................. %.~'~· S1.69
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PH. 992·2446

Enter the Teleflora
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16 Ot. Btls.

Week, April21-25!
A thoughtful '!hank you " lo your
secretary - Sunny Day Carafe and
Mug Bouquets' W1n lwo Svnny Day
Gei-aways courtesy ol Amencan
Airlines and Hyall Hoiels. One lor
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secretary' Bolh lnps are lor lwo To
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t-.k;J purchase nec~~rv 10 enlef

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~:.~s$149

3

PRICES EFFECTIVE WED .. APRIL 16 THRU SAT, APRIL 19. 1986

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
PH. 992-2039 or 992·5721
I 06 luttemut Avt.
Pomtroy, OH.
We accopt al major rrodit mrds &amp;
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,fRfSH FROZEN

Phone 742-2100

~

Subscrlbl'n not de!!lrlng to pay the car ·
rler may remit In advance ,direct to

Ohio
13 Weeks .•. ................ .. ........ ..... llf.56 .
26 Weel&lt;s ... .......... ..... :.............. J 29.12
52 Weeks ...... .... ...................... 158.24
OultldoOblo
13 Weeks ......... .. .. ..... ...... ....... ... $15.60 ·
26 Weel&lt;s .................................. $31 .20 '.
52 Weeks ..... ................. ............ $59.80

i~~F LIVER ..............................!¥.·......... 45C

FRUIT
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16 OZ. KELLOGG'S FROSTED

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BIG lEND FOODLAND
700 West Main St•

·

GARLIC BREAD ................... S1.39
10 OZ. BIRDSEYE FORD HOOK
LIMA. BEANS •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 89&lt;
12 OZ. TROPICANA
ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••••fAll •• S1.29

St~

The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. Credit wlll be given carrier each I
mont~ .
·
No subl!crtpfl ons by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier se rvice Is .
avttJlable.

Low-.~riced

.

16 OZ. NEW \'ORII

POSTMASTE R: Se address changes
to The Dail)' SE'ntlnel, 111 Court St..
PoiTl!roy, Ohio 4571!1.
· SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BJ Carrier or Motor Routt
DneWeek .......... ........ ................. $110
One Mont h ............ ..................... 14.80
One Year ...... ........................... 157.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ....~ ................. ............. 25 Cent s

Your ·Independently Owned

3
9
(
CHICKEN LEG. QUARTERS .........!¥;.........

HOLLY FARMS GRAD('' A"

.

"

YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIVING
MEIGS COUNTY
~- SIN.CUI68 ~-

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Otito Ntwspaper Association. Na tional
Advertising ReprHentattve, Branham
NewspaJlf'r
Third Avenue.
N~ Y.Qr!L Ne.!:, Y!1 k 10017. ,
.

lf:t.)ey(i:\.j

$218

the
bunch.

DEPARTMENT STORE

SMALL

INSURANCE
1 1 Second
,_,.,
t

had some concerns oome games
were not being monitored well
enough. ;nte use ot secu1ity officers
at WVU baseball games is unprece·
dented, he said.

RUTLAND

HlltENDAtE •

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

!USPS 14Hf0)

No arrests were made.
"We are taking stf1JS to make
sure this sort of lhlng doesn't
happen again," Associate Athletic
Director Tom Shupe said, noting he

CHEESE .................. Sl.89

The Daily Sentinel
A Dlvblon of Mu1tlmedla, IDe.

stomer
. ',,

Weekend fight forces cancellation

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. IUPI\
- West Virginia University base·
ball fans have been told to behave at
home· games after a weekend
scuffle that forel'd the cancellation
of a game between WVU and Ohio
University.
At lea.St two university security
Also this Saturday and Sonday, guards will now be asslgnl'd to
April 19-~. the infamous World of home contests. The second game of
Outlaws (WOO) Natklnal Sprint Saturday' s schl'duled doubleCar tour visits the equally infamous header was called off in the third
Eldora Speedway In Rossburg, inning because of the fraca s,
Ohio. Saturday's show begins at 6 officials said.
p.m. wltli warm-ups, while racing
A fight eruptI'd when some West
Is slated for 7:30. Soliday's soow Virginia fans became unruly and
IEglns at noon and continues shouted obscenities, and an Ohio
thi'oughout the aftenoon.
University fan threw a punch, WVU
Many famous driver's seen Coach Dale Ramsburg said.
weekly onESPN's Speedweek wlll
Both dugouts emptied as players
IE on hand, including Sti'Ve Kinser, tried to stop the brawl and briefly
Ron Shuman, Sammy Swindell, succeeded. A second fight flared
Jac Haudenschild, Brad IXliy, and IEfore campus security officers
Ohio's Dave Blaney.
were able to stop it.
This Outlaw show is one sprint
thrUier every race fan soould
attend.
Eldora Is located north of Dayton,
near Greenvllle on SR 118.
Untll next time I'll see you In the
victory circle!

Rangers, Blues clinch playoff berths

The Daily Sentinei- Page-6 - ~

Ser~1ce
With ASmllell

INDIANAPOLIS iUPI i - The
'Indianapolis Indians of the American Association apparently are not
Interested In switching their major
league atfllia lion back to the
Clndnnatl Reds.
The Tribe is beginning the final
year of an agreement with the
Montreal Expos, and there are
Indications the pact wlll be renewed · "
following the current baseball
season.
"It's not proper to negotiate a
new agreement this early in the
season," Tribe spokesman Cal
Burleson said Tuesday.
"However, we have every feeling
that our relationship with Montreal
wilt . be long term, " he said.
"They've recommittl'd themselves
and have given us a stmnger team
this year. They've signl'd several
free agent pitchers for us, which
should strengthen the team."
Only a half dozen players on the
current roster were with the
Indians at lhP end of last season.
Normally, th!' turnover is about 50
percent.

300 Second, Gallipoli1

This Saturday evening Skyllne
Speedway opens Its gates for its
season qletler for late models,
hotby stocks, and street stock
racers. Warm-ups are at 6 p.m. and
races at 8 p.m.
Several racers, Including Marc
French, Bob Adams, Jr., and Ben
Hickel hav-e been preparing for the
1986 racing season In full forre .

• Wednesday, April16, 1986
The "Customer Service" at your
friendly Foodland Supermarket
means you'll never have to wait
in long lines. After you have
checked out and we've bagged
yo·ur groceries, we offer ca~out
service straight to vow vehtcle.
l'his is just one more service we
give to make your one stop shopping at Foodland more pleasurable.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IndianapOlis
not interested
in Reds pact

By ED BURNS
UPI Sports Writer
Cleveland's Phll Niekro is tutor·
lng 28-year-old starter Tom C&lt;indlott! on mastering the trickiest pitch
In baseball - the knucklebalL
Tuesday night the Yankees' Joe
Niekro masteml his brother's
protege.
. Joe Nlekro. at 41 the younger of
the two, used his brother's signa·
ture pitch to retire 19 of lhe first W
lndlanshefacedtohurlafour·hltter
over 7 1-3 innings and lead New
York to a 6-2 victory. The Yankees
have won five Slralght games.
Brett Butler's leadoff single in the
fourth was Cleveland's lone hit until
Joe Carter, Andre Thornton and
Cliff Kennl'dy Is doing a tine job Brook Jacoby produel'd consecuat Meigs riding atop the Trl.Vailey live singles to drive in the Indians'
Conference with a 6-2-1 record at only.run off Niekro.
last count.
Nlekro, 1·0, struck out four and
After knocking a tough Alex- walkl'd one before Brian Fisher
ander club Saturday Eastern Is 9-3 · relieved with one out in the eighth.
overall wlth a 5-l league mark. Fisher pltchl'd the flnal12-31nnings
which ranks second behind South- to earn his first save.
em. The area softball !ljuads have
Candlotti, 0.1, struck oul six It the
also been doing quite well.

By SC01T WOLFE

16. 1986

''
r

'

'

- Light 'n Lively

YOGURT

3 99&lt;
601.
C1NS.

, •USDA Food Slomps Gtody Acc4prtld

Ai.W, SQUIRT, ORANGE
CRUSH or DIET &amp; REG.

SEVEN-UP
2 UTER

Bll.

99C

•Not Responsible For Typographical Erro•s

�/

.... . ~..

'

By The ·Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page-6

.-

..
his work with area yooth from
Judge Robert Buck.
Recognized during ~ program
were lour fonner students now In
college. They were Jeff Moore,
Katey Parker, Jim Parker, and BUJ
Holcomb.
Parents, school board members
faculty members, area ruslnes~
men, rEpresmtatlves from other
FFA chapters, past members, and 0
ctll!r Invited guests attended ~
banquet.
Tashla Siezmore, S.E. section
vice president, was the. speaker.
The buffet style dinner include
roast beef whlch had been cooked
On a Wood fired COOker I:AJDt as a
class project In ~ Vo-Ag shop.

Meigs Girl Scout diary
Several girl smut leaders met
Frtday at the Ohio River Camp·
'--· grounds for another phase In ~ir
outdoor camp training.
They learned aoout ftre wilding,
rope ·work lashing, cooking- over
campfires, and setltng up campsites. On Saturday morning they
cooked baron and eggs il a paper
bag over a campfire. A visitor was
Mary Murray, owner of the
campgrounds.
Attending the overnight camp
training session were Marsha
Barnhart and Terrt Coover!, Troop
1276 of Pomeroy, Faye CUf!ord,
Sallsrury IZNI, of Big Bend West;
and Kay Roberts, Troop 1042, and
Anne Scarberry, service unit dlrec·

tor, cl Big Bend East, and Fred
Scraberry and Dee Lawrenre who
conducted the training session.
On Sunday, theRaclnescoutsand
~lr famllies got together for a
cleanup effort at the campgrounds.
Participating were Brownie scouts
from 1259, juniors from troop 1042,
cub scouts from 241, and by ll.'Outs
from 244, all r:t Racine.
The campgrounds which Is the
site of the old block bouse, was
heavlly laden with debris due to
flooding several times during the
year. Parents brought welners and
buns in for a roast. Mary Murray,
owner of the site, and Fred
Scarberry coordinated the cleanup
eflort.

Returns home

PRESENTS CHECK -

On behalf r:t the AuxUJary of Meigs Aerie

2171, Fraternal Order of Eagles, Debi Hensley, left; president of the
aux!Hary, presents Ruth Powers, head It Meigs Ubrarles, with m ·
check to be used for purchasing large prklt hooks br the elderly and
visually hw!dlcapped. Hensley holds one It the books.

FOE honors Meigs library

The Auxlllary of Aerie 2171,
Fraternal Order of Eagles, presented a gift of $al0 to the Meigs
Public Libraries Monday afternoon
as a gestu re of support to the llbrary
for Its services to the elderly.
This Is tbe 12th year of the grant
program, national In scope, ·
a oozen Dowers or graduated sizes. · through which libraries receive
Oasis will be used to anchor the these grants with which to purchase
Dowers and foliage In the rontalner. large print hooks for the elderly und

Forus workshop set
A workshOp focusing on annuals
will be held by the Ohlo Association
cl Garden Clubs at ~ Grange hall
on ~ A~ns County Fairgrounds
on Saturday, May 3.
The hands oolearnlng ex perlence
wU be taught by OAGC accredited
judges, Doris Schuster and Faye
Collins, bl.'glnnlng at 9 a.m. How to
exhibit datfodtls in a bortlcullure
class, and ~ techniques of devt&gt;l·
q&gt;lng line arrangements and ronvt&gt;rtlng ~m to tine-mass forms In
artistic design classes will be
taught.
Those attending are to take tll!lr
own tqols Including a rontalner,
either cylinder or round , tollage and

Registration
fee Is $6 and
may640
be
sent
to Mrs. Virginia
Covert,

::=~~e,RioGrande. 45674 '

Those attending the workshop
are to lake a sack lunch.The
morning session will consist of the
horticulture class followed by
lunch, and then ~ artistic design
class.
The workshop and subsequrnt
workshps are mtllrnlted to,Oj\GC
members. Anyone who IVt.Shes to
attend may do so by sending In IIIJW
registration fee.
··

Calendar I happen'ing
WEDNE'!DAl'
BURLINGAME- Special musical groups will be featured each
evening at a revival to be held at the
Burlingham Community Church
beginning Wednesday and running
through Sunday wltb services at 7
each evening. Speaker tor ~
services will be Ray Laudermllt.
Singers to be featured are Saved on
Wednesday evening; Old Tlnne
Religion on Thursday; Smith Fam·
lly Evangelistic Team on Friday;
Pleasant Valley Trto on Saturday
and Peaceful Valley on Sunday.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Story hour for
pre-schoolers will be held Thu rsday, 2 p.m., at the Pomeroy
Library.
POMEROY -The Rock Springs
Better Health Club will meet a t 1: 15
p.m. at til! home ot Mrs. Nancy
Gruesei-, Thursday. The program
will be by Mrs. Beuna Grueser and
the contest by Mrs. Frances
(ioegleln. Members are to meet at
the Rock Springs Cburch at 12: 30 to
travellnagrouptothe home of Mrs.
Grueser.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee

meeting 7 :30 p.m. Thursday at
Carpenters' Hall, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy; all Interested Democrats Invited.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Dance at the
Rutland Civic Cen ter Friday, 8 to
10: 30 p.m. with music by !tomlc
Sounds; admission, S2, single; $3
couple.

-:::·x:

POMEROY
public dinner
wlll be held at the Senior Citizens
Center Friday with serving of
chicken and noodle dinners from 5
to 6:30 p.m. Dinners wUI be $3 with
dessert e.xtra. A square dance with
the Stringdusters wlll be held from
7:30 to 11 p.m.

SATURDAY
PORTLAND - Hazel CommunIty Church Is having a hymn sing
Saturday at 7:30p.m. The church Is
located on Rt. 124 three miles !rom
Portland and Long Bottom. Rev.
Carl Hicks will be guest speaker.
Singing by The McDannel Trio wUI
be featured . Pastor Edsel Hart
welcomes ~ pubic.
RACINE -Therewlllbeadance
Saturday, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., at
the American Legion Hall In
Racine. Open to the public.

visually handicapped.
Eagle auxiliary units recel\fe Ill!
grants from the Order's Memorial
Foundation In appreciation of their
support of the senior citizen orIented Golden Eagle Fund which
the foundation administers. Eagles
raise money for this project which
makes available grants to bona fide
charitable organizations working
on programs to aid the aged.

Lawrence and Bessie Baughman
of Middleport, and Ray Smith of
Athens have returned after a
week's visit with the former's son,
Pvt: Jeffrey Lee Baughman, at
Fort Benning, Ga. They went
especially for Pvt. Baughman's
graduation. He is now enrolled in a
three week training program at the
Alrooume Ranger Parachute In·
fantry School. Durtng their stay In
Georgia. Mr. and Mrs. Baughman
and Smith, uncle of Pvt . Baughman, went Into Alabama for some
sightseeing.

.

P-OMEROY. OH.

-

PRICES EFFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1986

0

I•
GRADE A

DA~Y

9-5; SIINDAY 1·5

Hubbard's Greemouse
SYRACUSE. OHIO

PH . 992-6776

HUFFY BICYCLES
$105 95

5

PICKENS HARDWARE

. ~SW~"I~MS~U~IT~S_$~'~'-'~· · l~==~·~o~N,w~·"·==~

.U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

LB

Chuck Roast .~ •.•.•.
-·

BUCKET

LB.

••••••••••••••

LB.

12 '/ears Of

PKG.

SIGN UP
AND WIN.

.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

Ground Beef'!"•••••••• 99&lt;
Beef Liver ••••~~ .••••••.59

••••••••••••••

(

1.
WHIRLPOOL
CLOTHES
WASHER

Starting at 12 Months

ALL

20°/o OFF

rmm

DRAWING APRIL 26, 19BII•·•

••••••••••••••

SECOND AVE.

VINE RIPENED

Authentic M.I.Hummel,
a figurine legend

2.

Tomatoes •.•.•~~ ••.••..

For 50 years, handmade "M . I. Hummel " figurines from Goebel
of West Gennany have been given, collected and imitated more than
any others. Authentic "M. I. Hummel" is still in a class by itself.
Let us introduce you to this delightful figurine family, each
one a perfect choice as a legendary gift or personal treasure.
"Carnival.''

$ 29

BROUGHTON

2°/o Milk ......~~~..... 1.
SHURFINE
9
•
9
(
Margar1ne ••••••••••••• .
3 LB. TUB

BANQUET

Pot Pies .......~~;••• 4/

SUNLIGHT LIQUID

......

; MOIINY·
APRIL 14-18

We're hav1ng a real
sole on a real tr""o1

ilvee thicK Ioyer~ ot
real holludge and
crisp. cn. .ochy peanuts
With cool and creamy
DAI RY QUEEN
1n between. The Peanut
BusleJ Po11ait ·Now only

JUST· RECEIVED

so"""'"

4 NEW HUMMEL DOLLS
•CARNIVAL
•EASTER GR~EnNGS

Serfice To Our
Customers ...
VIe Would Like
To Show Our
A~preciation.

$ T99

·

WIN I

LB.

'

$ 39
1

Cube Steak ..•...•.•. ·

SLICED
Girls)

(

12

BOYS &amp; GIRLS
20" &amp; 26"
STARTING FROM

.

Whole FryerS'•••••••• 49
,,t4 por k Lo1n
. ......... $12 9
SUPERIOR ~
$1 29
lunch Meat ..........
SUPERIOR FRANKIE
oz.
. 89&lt;
W·•eners.................

MIX OR MATCH

. OPEN

•

WIN!

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
Complete lino of Vtgttablt &amp; Flaw or
Planh - Ha~ing la.th, Gtlll·
niums, Rose lushts, Dogwood, Rho·
dodendron &amp; Shrubbery.
SEASON SPECIAL
f7 50 PER FLAT

Check Our Jean of 1he Week
$ OO Off

•Ladies' Spring Sweaters
•J r. &amp; Misses Shorts
•Boys &amp; Girls Shorts
•Lee Big Short-Ails (Boys (!t

298 SECOND ST.

r;:;::;::;;::;::;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

rr~~-i!i-~iiiiiiii!iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-~~-ii!iiliiiJ

LADIES' 1 PC. and 2 PC.

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM.
Sunday 10 AM-40 PM

and snacks that can be prepared
according the ACS t(!;gllJm~nda- ·
lions. The recipes are simple. -·
One recipe offers a tasty way .,
add more cruiferous vegetables to
one's diet. The cream of broccoli
soup Is easy to make, Is a vety
ll!arty dish, and It follo\1\S cur
guidelines. Another dish, tofu baked
ziti, uses tofu, a low fat, high protein
soybean product (found In many
grocers' produce soctlon) Inst ead of
cheese, a food rtch In fat.
You shOuldn't try to completely
change your eating habits ~er­
night but thesereclpesgiveyw new
options and prove that foods that
really are good for you can be
delicious as well.
For a free brochure call Ill!
Meigs Coonty Unit at 002-7531.

Can certain foods help prevm t
cancer? The best scientific evi·
dence today shOws that althOugh no
one food can keep a person from
reveloplng ~ disease, a sensible
lifestyle, Including a balanred,
varied, moderate diet, may reduce
cancer rtsk. Enough evidence exist
that !Dme types of mod may
promote canrer, arid others may
Inhibit Its development.
· The Society's nutrition guidelines
are available In a pamphlet en·
tilled, "Eat to Uve", and can be
obtained withOut char~ from the
Meigs County Unit.
The pamphlet contains recipes
for a variety of main course dishes

Annirersary
Sale!

We Reserve
Right To
Limit Quantities

Some foods may preve_nt
cancer, studies showing

FFA awa~ds given
Awards were presented at the
14th annual banquet of ~ Meigs
Otapter, Future Farmers of Amer. ica, held at Meigs High SChool
recently.
Cbapter farmer degrees were
awarded to Kent Eads, Tom
Parker, Ken Rltchle, Joe Parker,
Bill Scarbrough, and Walter
Haggy.
Green hand degrees went to Rlck
Ellis, Gary Oaks, RoMie Reynolds,
Ronnie Powell, and Tony Mohler.
Lonnie LeMaster received ~ top
fruit salesman award, and it was
announced that Betty Jo HUnt will
receive t()e Stte Fanner Degree at
the state convention. A plaq~e was
presented to Everett Holcomb lor

12th

Wednesday, April16, 1986 .

•SIGNS OF SPRING
•LOST SHOP

9QC O! yOUr PQr11 CipOIIng

DAIRY QUEEN · siO&lt;e

••

I

700 NbRTH S'ECOND AYE•.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Do~y ~· ~ f'!'Oud to

suppl:)ll our local Children·, hospitals througt,
the Olmond Foundalton's Oltldran's Miracle Network T«&lt;elhon

o.w o.a. Cof!&gt;./1986

$

1

Dish Detergent':.":~. 89&lt; FLAVORITE
SNUGGLE
Ice
Cream
•••.
:::~
••••
$119
Fabric Softener'.:~ $149
...·coull(W·......
.... .•
. ..... •••••••
. ...COUP&lt;W •••••
.... -. ••......
.....
• •
•
••
,.

·····cou.P(W······~~

VELVET

••

•

: FLAVORITE SUGAR

•

•

$139
99·
(
3/Sl •
...... .................. •...................... .•
•
:

limit 3 Per Customor
Gtod Only At Powell's $4411UftiOirktt
Offer &amp;piros Sat.

••

•

LUNCH MEAT

PAPER TOWELS
LARGE
ROll

TREET

12 oz.
CAN

limit 1 Por Customor
t Good Only At Powoll"' s..,ennarket
1
Offer &amp;pirs Sot., April 19, 1916
1

1

-.

•

: CLOROX-BLEACH
GAL

!SLB. BAG

.

Limit I Por Cuatomor
Good
Only
At Powell's s..,ennarfltt
1
• Offor &amp;pim Sat. April 19, 1916

"

•· "-·

'

'

'

S

79(

,
limit I Por Customer
o Good Only At Powoll'a s..,onnorket
1
Offer &amp;pirts Sat, April 19, 1916

•··

•
t

S

·2 MINUTE
SHOPPING
SPREE
IN OUR STORE
Limit 1 of any item
(No citlareths or anything
else exempted by law I

••••••••••••••

3.
DAILY
DRAWING
FOR CASH
REIMBURSEMENT
Whatever Your
Purchase Is
We Will
Refund The
Money!

�Page-a- The Daily Sentinel
Take from. the poorest and gtve to the

wealthy,

/ Poet's. corner
WAIIU! UP,

ThlS l!l what kHps this nation so hNIJhy.

One thing sure, If we can m.ly 1.1 rvtve,
We'll know It was God who kept us alive.
Medicare going down. f~s 00 the rise ,
So tru st God for healing or starve otherwi!!le.

Wl!lliCA

Cut th(' budget Is the loudest cry rlght oow.

Our Uncle Ronnie Is at It still,
Th e poor ca n starve for the Contra btll.
Send t heJTI food and plenty of amrwnltlon ,

Slice It from Welfaf(' - and this Is how .

Leave ou r farmers with only their ambl ·

Sllc~ on

tlon.

Auction their hoft'll's and all of thetr land ,
Put the cash In (llr Uncle Ronnie's hand.
He's not wr presldm t, he's our dictator,
Wantlng us to believe he 's oo r creator.

There's HEAP that help s the poor

that a whol e l ot more.
And AOC - who ca res for the yoo th,
Cut

that budget Is the Gospel Truth.

Food stamps, yes, and commOdities. too

That helps th poor, not the well too.
Our highly likllled Play Boy Is going tO() tar

out.

But brace yourseU there Is still a lot more.

With this robbing the poor- that's what
It's about.

Start cutting the budget wtth the salary he
gets, .

And make the other Top Brass big tar,et

hUs.
:TheY can afford II wlltl millions to splill'e.
Why ca n't the rich come ~ with ·their

share.
In this cutting the

budg~

let them take

part
A dollar from the r ich man will bree.k his
heart.
With a smurk of a grln and a Jelly bean

excust I've ever seen.
Poor people have sufterOO more than ever

He's the

poor~t

before.

.,.
crew
While he destroys \.1- - what do we do"
He takes food from the averag~ Amer ica n

When ~Is finished with all of the cuts,
AU _the poor will have lett ls their· ftl\"t)ty
guts.

Ill Ccl&amp;ul St.. Pamtroy. Ot.io 4S76J

sun

Public Notice

He feeds before ours -a j ob well done.

Wake up, America , Ills getting lat er than

with dirt.

late.

wllhour hands b'l our lap,

Time Is ctie thing that Just woo 'l wa lt .
Before yoo know wha t has begun
We wUI be blasted far pas t the .!i un .
At this point eternity is bound to begln,

L et our country decay m the hands of a

sap.

It Is our lanc;l and our money bels wasting

On aid totheContras.ou rdestructlon hast ·

It will be too la:te to wake up then.

·

We pay his sa lary an~ the rest of his rotten

:12109 Higley

·

Mary Fran ces Smit h,

Road, Middleport, Oh. 45760

You'll build a brg nest egg when
you save with the classi(~eds

-

. A mooting
rng Boord of
Joint County
anoo Council will
Thursdoy, AprN
9:30 o.m. In tho
sionor'a Office, at the
Jackoon County ,, Court·

hou11.

\

Public Notice

ALL WEEK

WITH $1 OoOO PURCHASE

ou ·ODS
1986 HU K.ROGEA CO
ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SU NDAY .
APRIL 13, THR{lll r.H SATUR DAY ,
Af»RIL 19. lSI&amp;. IN CAUl POi IS&amp; I'O ~HIOY

This week your manufacturered products "cents off" cou.~ns are
worth double at Kroger w~h $10.00 or more purchase. Limited to
manufactured products coupons worth up to and including ~
Off. Coupons worth more than ~ are redeemed at fa~e . value
only. Lim~ one coupon for each product pu•chased. Ltmlt one
coffee coupon. No beer, wine or cigarette coupons will be double.
Not .valid on tree coupons, Kroger coupons or retail food store
coupons. The amount refunded cannot exceed the price \)f the
item. You must purchase product in sizes specified on the coupon.
This offer applies only to manufactured products "cents o!f"
coupons for items we carry. To assure product availability for all
our customers, only one coupon per shopping fami ly, will be
doubled on any brand item during each store visit.

~MII,Jrence Progr1m Admin-

lltrotor.
141 18, 1tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
ColUmbus, Ohio

glv111 of r•-

Athono, .Ohio 46701 .
Ia Iocated 1.8 miles

Salem Center ad)l·
cont {In 1 Northerly dlroc·
tlonl to State Route 124 In
Molgo County, Ohio. Moro
l!lotlflcllly, tho oill OCCU·
ploo portlono of Section 8
ond 18 111d Froctlono 1, 2, 8
ond 12 ISoctlono 9 111d 16)
In Solem Townohlp, T.BN ..
R.16W., In tho hollow of

for public lnapecat the office of the

umbuo, Ohio, untll10:00 A. Molga Countv Recorder.

Melga County Court Houae.

for tmprovementlln :

Ohio 46789 . Written corrn·

Thu.rldey, April 24, 1988, Second Str•t. Pomeroy,
will bo conaldored on tho bo . tid io the Oiviolon of Recla·

sis of the total amount bid. mation. Fountain Square,

Porto 1 thru 23
Building B-3, Columbua,
Athono, Gtlllo, Hodting, Ohio 43224.
Moigo, Monroe, Noble, Vin· 14)2, 9, 16, 23, 4tc

AIMITlSID fTfM f'OliCY

Etc, of tt1 ... aavt111Hd nems '' reQ\Itfed

10 be r-'ity 1vaiW. !o1 Mill irt •~eh
K~ S!Oft . t•ctpt IIIP«•Iicllv noted

11"1 ttls ld . U wt
ICI~i181l ilem, we

t.Pn end W11hlngton Coun-

do run 0\11 of •n

doo. Ohio, on twentv·thr•

wit Ofl l r ¥0 U your
choicl of e comparable item. when
u_.t~lble , r1ll1 ~ 1ing the Jlme liVings or 1
r111t'ICheC:k

wt11CI'I

iNill ll'l l t111

VOU

TO

purch.llt ltle tdven rstd ~em a1 lh•
idwniMd price Wlthltl J0 CII VS . On.., one
11endot co-upon

w~l

Ia accet~ttd per item

~

purchased.

California

trawberries
Quart

Hi-C
Fruit Drink. . .

bridges on various rout81
end aections. by cleaning
and painting, end other
related work.

Field pointing of oxllllng
llool:
Project Longth- 0.00 loot

or 0 .00 mile.

64-oz.

Hi-Dri
Paper Towels . .

Single

Rolls

5-lb.

Deupters.

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, SPRITE,

Springdale
49
2% Milk.... ........................................... ,... Gol$1

.79c

Kroger Grade A
Large Eggs .................................. ............ . Doz.

o o o

0

SLICED FREE
.'~:~~!~~~ ~I

lb.

"AS 'ADVERTISED ON TV"

BEEF FRANKS, MEAT OR JUMBO

Oscar Mayer
Wieners . . . . . . .

-1-lb.

88

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
TH£ LOWEST
PRICES?
BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS
BULK OR BAGGED

MGM Farm City
POMEROY
992-2181

Real Eltate General

HOBSTffiER
REALTY
Geo. S. Hobsttltter. lltoklr
'
~EW liSTING - I.AilGS·
VILLE -Corner ~t with 11.-ee
bedroom home, living room,
dining room, new otchen.
lllvel lot and lwo slorage
sheds. Asking $16.000.00.

Clorox
·&amp;teach·.................

Gal.

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

STEEL SAK 30-GALLON

Hefty
Trash Bags. .

15-Ct.

Estate~

.

FREE!

GOOD NEWS PIVOT DISPOSABLE 10-CT ... $1.99

Real

216 E. 2nd .St. .
Phone
1-1614)-992-3325

Fresh Baked
uAs AovEnnsEo oN TV"
au:voNE
At99•
1
French aread.............. ............................ ~~~f·
G~od News .
"AS ADvERTisED aN rv"
$J9 g
Disposable Razors..............,................... lo-ct .

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF "UNTRIMMED
WHOLESALE CUT' BEEF IN BAG 11-13-LB. AVG.
WEIGHT WHOlE
.

ole Boneless$
Ri'b EYe

Nora. Vinas. Ada

Diet Coke
.or Co·ca Cola.2-Ltr.

4-Roll

SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM ·

THE QUAUTY
. PRINT SHOP
F11 All
Pt/tlltt Nult
PWS: Oilica 5uppNn &amp;

y,,

fwrniturt, WttWing

J ond Graduation
• ltalionary, Magftttk ..
Stgns, lubber SIINIIps,
Capr Sonkn, Etc.
255 Mil 51., Middleport
104 MuiiNrry A¥., Pomeroy
992 - 3345

· ACCENT
FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931
Aftwr 5 Call
742-2027

II

"Free Estimates"
lnstallolion Available

CIRCLE

and

·

Contracting Service
(Free Ettimates)

NEW liME RD. - RIJTIAN D
- Nice 01'1! and half Slory
kame home, with ltroo bed rooms, Iami~ room, l~llg room
and large knchen,' lull basemmt doe car garage, gts oo
ooe acre. Ask~g $26,000.00.
CONDOR ST. - POMEROY
- Nice brick lwo-bedroom
home, with liv"g room, dining room, kitchen; full base·
ment, central air. Call lor details.
ST. RT. I43 - ACREAGE 50 acres vacant land. On e·
half clearoo. res! woods,
free gas. Asking $22,000.00.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
742-~92

E . MoinllooWII

illrlrrolllool

POMEROY,O.
. 992·2259
NEW LISTING - LONG
BOTTOM - A 3 bedroom
home with unfinished fam ily
room on apptoximalely 81h
acres, mostly wooded . Garage - close lo Slale hunl·
ing and park. $15,500.

NEW liSTING - Trailer
park with 20 spaces and
several acres near Pomeroy.
Cily walet, natural gas and
view of river. Only $70,000.
NEW LISTING - 120 acres,
more or less, in Rulland
NEW LISTING - CHESTER
Township. Good barn and
A newer, 3 bedroom
lois of outbuildings Miranch
wilh lull basemen!.
nerals. trees. pasture &amp;
garage.
EquppOO kitchen,
meadows. 6 rm. ooe II. home
central
air.
Well insulaloo.
wrth bath &amp; lorced air lureleclric
heal
pump, approxinace. $45,000.
mately
I
acre
lot $40,000.
NEW LISTING - 62 actes in
Chester Township on good
NEW liSTI~G - BEECH ST.
country road w1lh the mi·
POMEROY - Eliminate
nerals. $17,500.
maintenance
with Ihis brick
NEW LISTING - Good l BR
ranch
house.
3 bedrooms.
with r~et view. New gas FA
I"
baths,
fireplace,
baselumace, carpetng 2 11oches
ment,
garage,
on
approxiand garage. $29 ,!IJO.
malely I acre of land. Many
EASTERN - 9 acres, 3 BRs:
nice lealures. $35,000.
T.P. water, bath, full base·
ment, woodburner &amp; other
NEW LISTING - CHES fl.
buildings.
IRE
- · Exlensive remodelPOMEROY - Good 6 rm.
ing
has
added comfort" and
home with view of river,
beauty
to
th is 3 bedroom,
above all floods. Asking only
1\l
story
home. Slid ing
$12.000.
doors
lrom
di ning to nrce
BAUIIS - Bi-level, 8 rms., 4
backyard
and
garden space.
bedrms .. nice kitchen, carNew 2 cat bl ock garage.
peting, sundeck and large
Musl be seen I $28.000.
lot. Low heat cosl &amp; upkeep.
SYRACUSE - 7 rms. on 2 ·
NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
lots near !he school lor
PORT
- 2 ·bedroom, one
qu ick 11le.
floor
home
on 50'x120' lot.
HANDYIWI -lg. 2 Slllr): ~­
Location
conven
ienl to
wei ol a home wilh all utiitie
stores. Garage. $14 ,000.
iltd large level ~1. ~ees &amp;
shrutmery. RepaitS needoo.
NEW LISTING - Nice 10 yr.
BRADBURY - One fl 3 Ill
old brick ranch home in a
home. Rural water, bath, neal
good location. Over I acre
&amp; clean. Asking $20 000.
.
and
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
NEAR CHESTER - Modern
full
basement,
large patio.
ranch, quality consltuctoo.
equippoo
kilchen,
many
3 lovely BRs, nice ltitchen
fealures.
$49,500.
with dining, lull fin ished ba·
Henry E. Cleland , Jr.
semen I with stone fireplace.
992·6191
bar, lots ol Slorage, 2 car
garage &amp; over 2·acres.
Jean Trumll 949·2660
' Dottie Turner 992· 5692
Sellin&amp; Problem!
C.ll 992-3325
9\ltlll Flud Int. Illes

Housmq
Hcildquari!'IS

Complete GunOr Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked 'in home area
20 veers

KEN'S

"Free Estimates"

A~PLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Mtku
•Washers •Dishwashers

•Range s
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

4 5-Hc

CAU COllECT:
Ph. (6141 843-542 5
1-12-2 mo.

FOUNTAIN
RESTA U RA NT
Located in the
Saddlebrook Inn
Rt. 62 , 8 miles south of
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridg e

Choose from 3 Meats-

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial
Call:
992-5875 Or
742-3195
11-14 -llc

J&amp;F
1

· ICUI OUT FOR FUTURE USII

4/ / tln

3/2/iln

Real Estate General

tEAFORIUi1

1128/tln

SUPERIOR

J

And the ones who loved
you dearlr
Hope somedey Ill meet
you. one br one.

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
~ BUSINESS PHONE
16141992-6ll0
RESlOENCE PHONI
(6141 992-7754

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4- t6 ·'IIi tfn

CONTRACTING
Complete Building

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E {61
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE No. 2
REVISED 3/ 31 / 85
LEGAL NOTICE

We Carry Fishing Supplies

LOW INiUEST RIIIIANCING

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING ·
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouis
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2263
or 949 -2969
1-17-86-tln

J

Home Mortgogt loans

9'"'' FIXW RATE

On YA &amp; FKA. low Cttn ..nti~r~tl ·
loan1A vailablt. hrchOM Gr ltfi·
none~.

Yickit Houldrtn- 446-4042
COIUMIUI Fill! MOIIIGlGI
(0.
J. IJ .1 • •
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEIUTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We Hue AFill T1111

Worlt Longlh.- 0.00 loot or
JEFF CIRCLE, Sl.
Pursuant to OhMl Revlaed
0.00 mile. ·
Code Section 1513.07 {FI
Long lottom, Ohio
"The date set tor comple- notice lo heroby glv., of ro·
tion of thia work ahlll be u vioion to ODNR Permit No.
PH.• 949-2649
101 lorth in the bidding pro- D-0355, Meigo Mlno No. 2.
2·10·tln
POll!."
.. ·
owned by Southam Ohio
Eoch bidder oholl bo re· Cool Com pony, P. 0. Bo•
quil'od to file with hit bid e 490. Atheno. Ohio 46701 .
certified check or Clthier ' 1 The a~olalocotod jult South
SPIING BEAR
ALL STEEL &amp;
check for en amoun1 equal of the intorooctlonoiCounty
,._G &amp; FISHING
to five por c:ent of hlo bid, but Aood• 21 ond s. approxlmo·
...... ,..
POLE BUILDINGS
in no event more than fifty tely 1.1 miloo Southoalt of
In Narth~st Ontario
thouund dollaf'l, or a bond Point Rock in MoigaCountv.
For ""'"' mo...tJoo writoo
Sizes Start From 12116 '
for ten per cent of his bid,
Ohio.occupleo
More opeclliclollv.
MAIDEN BAY CAMP
UTILITY BUILDINGS
payable to tt. Director.
lito
portlono the
of
Blddoro muatopply. on tho Section 25, 26 and 31 1n
lox 211,
Sizes from 6'x6'
proper forms, for quellfica· Columbia townehlp, T.9N..
North Cobalt, Ontario
Up to 24'x36'
tiona et leeat ten dey• prior A.15W. The deocribod oreolo
POJ .IIO CANADA
to tho dolo oot lor opening contolnod In tho Valoo Millo
Insulated Dog Houses
bide in accordance with end Willoovlllo U. S. Goo·
Ph. Before April 15
Choptor 5525 Ohio Revlood logleol Survey 7.&amp; minute
1-705-672-3888
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Code.
quodrengle mope. Acopy of
Ph AI
Ma
1
R •
Oh
Plono ond apociflclliona the oppllutlon 11 avelllble
• tar
acrne,
•
ere on file in the Department lor public lnopecllon ot tho
1·705·647·8 33
Ph. 614-80·5191
of Transportation 1nd the of· ollico of me Moigo County
3-13-1 mo.
1-20-tlc
fie• of the Dlatrict DepuiY Recorder. Meiga County I'::::::::::::::~~~~~
Director.
Court Hooao, Second Stroot I·
The, Director reaerves the Po..,.roy, Ohio 46789, ond
right to reject eny ond oil Vlnton Countv Rooordor,
bide.
Vinton County Court Hou11,
WARREN J . SMITH, Mlln StrHt, McArthur, Ohio
DIRECTOR 41851 . Written corr"pon·
{4) 9. 18, 21c.
donee concerning tho oppll·
BUYING
cation moy lie .. bminod to
2 In Memoriam
GOlD,
SliVER &amp;
me Dlvlllon of Roclemotlon,
ClJIRENCY &amp; RARE COINS
Fountoin Squere, Building B·
3. Columbua. Ohio 43224.
SELLING
In Iovin&amp; mt11t10ty of our {4) 2. 9, 18, 23, 4tc
COINS,
GOlD &amp; lll YER
p•ents. Chules H. Wilson
WHOLilAII 14111.
ind Katie Wilson who
More Legals
piSSed IWIJ on April 12,
JIWIIIY
No:... ·s Jne JJrne for g· H · '-eO!
1935 and April 22. 1971.
DL.'\ '5 tn :.1e (IGS S1( ~ds
PH. 985-3937
You have aone wlltre souls
·on Page 12
AFTER 5 P.M.
• find rest
4-1·'86·1 mo.
And the cares of life are

· done

TISSUe ................. .

Public Notice

PLUMBING HEATING
New Location:
168 North le&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

EUGENE LONG

CLC COINS

.Martha White
Flour . . . . . . . . . . .
Northern
.
.

1-17-iln

L..------=-..

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

BATHROOM

47169 Eagle Ridge Rd.

A
&amp;

949-2801
or 949-2860

lusin11s Forms,

Part1 1 to 23 inclusive ere ponMnce concerning the
offered as one contrac1 end eppllcation m11y be a~bmH­

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIM IT
QUANT ITIES NONE SOLD TO
OEALERS

the rjght

PH.

P1rker Run end it1 unnamed

M .. Ohio Standard nme.

l•'"'"'"r 011,
PUSH MOWER TUNEUP
Turn left 1111 M•lg• Memory
Gardens, 3 mile off A t. 7 oo

CUSTOM lOUT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pricoe"

Compeny, P . 0 . .Box

I

949-2..9

OM Chanll"· She""'" Blodoo
$19.95

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Morch 28, 1988
trlbutorleo. Tho doocribod
Controct Soleo Logo!
orea lo contolnod In the Wll·
Copy No. 88· 367
koaviUo ond Rutland U. S.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Survey .7.6 mi·
Sooled propooolo will bo
quodronglo mopo. A
received at me ofilco of tho
of me oppllcotlon II
Director of the Ohio Dep1nment of Trantportatlon. Col-

UGLE IIIGE .
SMAll ENGINE CENtll
Parts • Sonlce

!Peril fncludedl

At lhlo mAtlng,.thora will
OON Permit No.
be public dlocloouro of tho I~2:~( Molga Mlno No. 1.
1 Southam Ohio
termo and conditione of the Ic
botwHn the Councll111dthe

Manufacturer's

·Business Services

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E Ill
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE No. 1
REVISED 9/ 19/ 88
LEGAL NOTICE
to Ohio Reviled
18.13.07 IF)

oontrect to be entered Into

COPYRIGHT

Business Servic.. e s

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wri1t Oainw.Stntlnet Clan Hi•• Dept.

are able.
Every other country tha t Ues under the-

.

lng. ·

The Daily Sentinel

-... .·.....,_.

You had better IIPe&amp;k up, pal, while you

Ten pefCell.l ar a hundred won't cover you
WJ~y dowult by

-~

table,

I sure wllh Uncle Sam woukl come m
J&gt;a,ck,
·This Uncle Ronnie Is a big nut to crack .
It you have a million, ten percent woo 't

hurt, . .

I

The Daily

1986

Wednesday, April16, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CONTRACTING
DOZER , BACKHOE,
mENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES,
RECLAMATION. PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; OIAT
Jl MCLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

ROSE EXCAVAnNG
IA(1HI, OHIO
FREE ESTIMATES

Oil Field Strwice.
land1caping, laJtmlnfl,
land Cltaring, Ponds, Septic
Sy1ftm1, Heavy Hauling,
Sront &amp; Gravel Hauling
Eltdrical Work
RESIOENTIAL. COMMERCIAL
S. INDUSTRIAL •
(Cenifled Electrlclanl

DON ROSE, Owner
949-2493
Home 843-5340

4/ l/'86/1 mo

Ham , Chicken or Baked Steak

Served with 4 vegetables.
salad , dessert and drink.

SUNDAY BUFFET
11 :30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
, .. $4 .95
(hildren 12 &amp; Under
1/2 Priu
S &amp; Under FREE
6ur Specia lr y
WHOLE APPLE PIES
for $4.50
0-0·00

S~o~

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

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CH£STER- 98S-3307
4/1/Hn

RIDER
SALVAGE

·.

Thlngs. 8ft' buuln' tn lt..

WANT ADS

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy
PH. 992-5468
HOURS: 8-5
3/ 18/1 mo .
TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.
SMAll ANIMAL HOURS
Man.-Wed.·Thurs. 3-5 pm
Tues. ld0-8; Fri. 1·2 pm
5oturdoy 10-11 :30 am
LARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SURGERY BY APPI.
PH. 304-675 -2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
For Haurs
304-372-5709
10-14-ilc

Teehlelet

o• D•tv

Announcement s
3 Announcements
SWEE PER 81l d sewing mach in •
repair . p11rt1, 11nd su pplies . Picll:
up and deli~erv . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one ha lf mi le up
Georges Creeh Rd . Ca ll 614 ·
44 6 ·0294

Vegetable pl~~nts ; VKtalia and
Sweet ~pan i sh Onton Plan1s:
flowers in fl ats. pots and
~ng

ha.,t·

baake11 . Cleland GtHPI ·

Mo use, Vine St., Ra cine, Ohio ,
SINGLES Meet' that specief
person! Free app lication. Per-'
so nal touch introdu r::tions , bo•

8536 , Cha rl&amp;lto n . W. Va .
26302. 1 304-727-8434 .

SPECIAL Cold Wave , $20.00 .
Helen ' s Beauty Shop, 304·8752222 .

:;:=::;;==::==:: .
4

Giveaway

- - - - - -- -·· ·
Small Terrier type pup , 4% mos:. '" •.
old . For inside·outlide. 19 Mid i· •. •
son A1o1 e .. Gallipo lis. Oh .
- H , ..

-:-----:--:-

NEED STORAGE
SPACE?

Queen

..

----;.·
bO:. • ,.

Sin mat1reu ,
sprin gs . Ca ll 61 4 ·446 ·4245 . • · •
aft er 6 :30.

ItO'/, Woo! Main Street, Pomeroy Ohlo.
Phono 614-992-6778

CONVENIENT
STORAGE UNITS
RENT BY MONTH
S.TD, 10x10, TOx24

't01.1r Compltlt A11IO lody Rtpair Center
lod'f' Fillen, *dpopeN, Polithing Compound• . Poinl l
Urtthana Hardnen . (Scld Under Whol ... ole To AU)

Dundee New R-J~Ioc•mtnl Portt

For

Ct~ll 614 - 992 - 6919 .

away .

304·

Two good refrigeretors ,

773-9122.

~

Two pan Irish Setter famate ..
pupp ies, 304·576 -7207.

(Salitft!ction

Manager li!ing On PremisH
OliT~DE IIORAGE AVAILAIIE

Cou ch .., d 2 un d table• to give

7

446-8592
Kanauga, Ohio

Yard Sale

....... GallTjjolrs ······· ·
&amp; Vjcinity

RADIATOR

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDA'IS
C!l Co f'I1JUterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds • Interpreting SeiVices

SER~CE

z

-a: LISA M.

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

~

KOCH, M.S.
:I: licensed Clinical Audiologist

z

-

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1·13-tfc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILlE, 01110
Authorized Joltn Deere,
Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipmon1
Oeoltr

Farm EquipMent

Puts &amp; Se,.lce

1·3-'86 tfc

(614) 446-7619 or (614} 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 ·
8·13 lfn

2 Family Yard Sale. , 49S 'h
East ernA 11e .. April 15 . 16 . 17&amp;

IS .
Yerd Stle 166 , 167 Woodland
Or. Apr il 17, 18. 9 -6. 1971
Honda motor cycle , clothes,

crafts. houuwares. glassware.
Lots of good lei .
Friday S. S1rurday At 180.
trailer tcro•• from Brown 'l
Market. Ni ct children• ck)th ing
sin newborn to si ze 7 . Men1 &amp;
wamens ctothing . Also mite.

items.
Movlng ·Gtrage Sale . Five Family acron fro m Vint on grade
1chool. April 17 , 18 , 8c 19 ,
9 o30-4o30.

HOSP.ITAL SUPPLIES FOR HOME USE
SAlES &amp; RENTALS

....... p.......................:..
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

614-446-7283

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs
WE BIU MEDICARI! AND OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN ELIGIBLE
BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
63 Pint St., Gallipolis
We Deliver
24 Hr. Service
4-8-'86-1 mo.

:

fam ily. Men . -.wmen Md · ·
children cloth ing (til sizes). :
Tupperwara, glusware, cook · •
4

ware. many other Items. Aptil ·
14th, 16th, and 16th. 32710 ·
Bailey Run Floed , Pomeroy &amp;1\d
looh tor

signs.

.. ·· --·p·•''Piiia sa·r.r--

•

&amp; Vicinity

Roger Hysell
Garage

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trm1111111on .

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc
DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

SERVICE

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing end gutter worfl.
- Concrtle work
- Plumbing 1nd electrical
work
!Free Estim~~tu)

- V. C.

YOUNG Ill
'192;6215 or 992-7314
Pomtroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-lc

BUILOING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DE~.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shoteuns Only
9·30·tf
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801
· or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

"FREE ESTIMATES"
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. Se&lt;ond
Mlddloport, Ohio
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
- FREE ESTIMATES-

L,

PHONE

(614) 992-5009

SPECIALIZING IN WINDOW l OOOR REPLACEMENT

.............. ........... .
Flea MsrkeU il Cur ley' s E.uon , 2
mi tas out Sand Hill Road .
and 4 Will ta ke .,d want'
consignments , for mare infor· '
mation call 30 4 -675 -31 26 after
5 :00 r:: ell304· 675· 391S .
· ~

M•v&gt;

Yard Sale, Fr iday and S~turday,

Rain or Shine, 9 :00 till 4 :0 0 ,
furnitu,. , Burdette Addn .
Yard Sele. 3rdS treet. Ma1on. W .
Va . Thurs and Friday . Btby beet
and maltrns. btby cloth es, teel1
an d adult clothing . pt1y pe n .,.d
many more items

"
9-o.
W..-:a~
n::
te=-=d"T"'"o:--;;
Bc-:
uc-y ~.

··

We pay cash for late mod11l d ean
used ca rs.

J im Mink Chev .·Oids Inc

_.Wo ·E. (Bill) SNOUFFER
FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
PHONE 992-7075 .
nuunS: 9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Mon. thru Sat.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment
l!fS-'86 lin

RE-OPENING MARCH

17th

JO'S
GIFT SHOP
Rt. 124, in Syrac!Ma
Co .. In and re1i1ter for
FREE BIRD BATH to be ginn away
NOTE: Firtt qualitv morchandiee from factory
NEW POnEIY &amp; . .D BAINS UE 1N
Kluing cement yard dolls. cement animals. clay
rod fire hydrant with dog, flower pols of all kinds
fsome with otandll; Glfta of dlthoe, ligureines,
lamps,, clocka, braso. v•••· toys.
SHOP HEIE &amp; SAVEl 3·13· I mo.

Bill Gene John son
6 14-446 -36 72
TOP CASH paid fer '83 mo'deC :
end nBWer used cars. S mit h. ,
Buick·Pontiac . 1911 Eutern
Ave .. Gtlllpolls. Call 814 -446 2282 .
Used mo bile homes. Call 6 14 446 · 0 1 75 .

Wanted : 1 QOII. w ill ing to

~V

•10 .00 fo r one. 388-8810 .

Buyklg dsily gotd , silver co ins.~
rings, jew•lry, sterling ware , 'old
coin a, large currency. Top · prtces . Ed. Burkitt Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middleport. Oh. 6 14-

992-3476 .

Employ mP.nl
Services
1 1 Help Wanted •
Government jobs t18 ,040 ..
e&amp;9. 230 yr . Now hlting. ·Call
806 -687 · 6000 a•t. R-4582 for

current fedtrall ist .

•

�"·

.. '

...,..,

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

44

Apartment
for Rent

74

61 Household Goods
12111 B carpet with P•tl
f100 .00 . Sun humidifier
•40.00 RCA stereo conaole
•75.00 Phon• 304-176-G. 10

Bab~ettter nHd.t. can 11 • ·

441 -1200.

Now 1ccepdng .,.,MCiftonl. 01·
OYinnl'l Df O.lllpoMI, 431 I•
cond Ave.. O.llitf&gt;lil.
E11y A•lmbl¥ Woritl HOO .OO
per 100. GuerantMd prftnlr'lt.
No •PII'MnOI·No 111M. Ottaill

Mnd Htt·addratllcf ltlf!!pld
lnVelope: Et.1Vtul ·711, 3418
Enterpril• Ad , Ft. pterce, Fl.
33. . 2

Furn. apt. 919 2nd. Ave. Galll·
polil. there bath. 1inglt male.
*135 mo.. utllltt&amp;t p11d. Ceil
448·4418 after 7pm
Oov~.-..nt

Jobt •11,040 ·
&amp;59,230-yr Now Hiring. C•ll
1·8015·187· 8000 Ext R·9805
for curr.,t t.dw1I'Hit

Electrolu11 vaccuum cl11n•t
A 1 condltlon -athchment• '
Avalllble et t72 .00. Ctlh or
termt arrenged Cell 814-245
9118 or 304-878-8799

4/16/86

1979 Yamlht XT 600 Enduro
Eacellant conditiOn. Can t. 111n
at Rutllnd, Ohio or Cell 114·
742·2588 tnytimt

6:00 IJ Cil NewoCenter
(I) Green Acreo
(!) Mazda Sportol.ook
ffi 0 ffi ID (HI @ News
fJl (!) Oiff'rent Strokes
(!) 3-2·1, Contact ICC)
®I Eyewi1neos News
(jj) Ha1ha Yoge ' ·
(jJ Good Times
6 :05 ffi Andy Griffith
6 :30 U IJ) NBC Nightly lllews
(I) The Rifleman
(!) Inside the PGA Tour
1ffi Ill @) ABC News
fJl CD One Day at a Time
D CIJ® CBSNews
ffi Doc1or Who
illl Body Electric
(jJ Jefferson•
@ NBC News
6 35 (!) Carol Burnett
7 .00 U l1l PM Magazine
(I) Alias Smith and Jones
(!) SportsCenter
(I) En1ertainmen1 Tonigh1

75

Locutt pott for 1111 or Yldt
Pickup or dtllvery. CtU 814448 ·4299

'715 Toyotl Cellca GT. 4 IPMd .
2810 Mtple A~t~e, 304-8764014 .

CAPTAIN EASY
THE ALIEN SHIPS
DISI NTEGRATe AS
THE Y ARE DRAW~
I~TO THE TAIL OF
HALL EY"$ COMET.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Women 26 Inch bi cycle Ell cel·
lent condition 160 Cell 814·
992-2428

OPENINGS AVAILABLE 1llhng
Merrl Mtc'l ~lrtntNd toyl,
gift• 1nd homt dtcor ltllma. No
lnv•tment, dlltvet'lng or col·
ltcting Your own houf'l C1H
304-417&amp;-117&amp;8 ., 1-800·6&amp;3·

eon

Jobl 1111nllbll ucrellry, bllhng
ln.urtnc:.. reuptionllt. 304·
175-12«

12

Situations
Wanted

Vac.,cy for m11n or wom~n .
p-iv•t• hoiN , hotm .. la, TV , lge
room, b1th, re..onlble. Clll
114 -2118 -11609 .
W1ntld middle agld , lldy to
lhtre home with ecttve tkllrfy
lady. Coli 814-448-9&amp;79
Beck hoe work t25 . per hour
Enquir• It .. ttlon ecro11 from
M•aon City Fire Dept.

18 Wanted to Do
Experill'latd per10n 11-":ing em·
ployment 11 an 111i1t1nt m•n·
ISJM 01 m11111111t In rtltturtnt or
,...,Ice ttttlOn It you ~re
Mlklng e11periln011nd rtlllblily
pt_.. ca11114·448·2474 .

Will c.re for lldtrty or lhul-in. in
their hD me, celll04·175· 1278.

f lllilllCidl
21

1- - -- -'------3 Wdroom houM Me Mildred

Rice, 1109 Adrlen Ave ,
ne.ooo. Coii81,·448-317B .
8 IC,_, 3 br brick home,
loceted in Kyger Cr..k School
Dittrlct. •49 .000 Cell 614317-7238
3 ecr11. 4 bdr . firtCJIKt . 247
Neighborhood Rd. Call 114
448-8181
lerge 3 bdr hou•. 3 mile from
town, '2 full beth1, CA. g11 h .. t,
price reduced Call 814·241&amp;·
9248
In Middlepon, 3 bedroom remo
deted ho!N Air conditiOned
vinyl tiding, intuleted, fenced·l~
btclt vard. 11or11Je bu11ding,
doM to tchoolt Show by
appo1ntment onty Ctll a 14·
992-2012 .
4 bedroom horne far 1111. Good
Hunting end good filhlng . Can
be negotleted wkh own•. Call
81,·918-4392
9 roomt. 2 blthl c~ be mllde
into dupllll. LOCittld on Fourth &amp;
Palmer in Middleport Clou to
echooll tnd lhopping. Atking
P'ict t24 ,000. Owner wiN Mil
on ltnd contrect. Ctll 814·592·
5588 tft•r 4 p.m
70•1001ot 1 1httoryhou•e. 3to
4 beclroamt, dithw11h11, double
rtnge ltoVII, tully cerp .. ed,
wood tnd coli bum1ng stove.
CkJtt to IChool end hoepltll.
•n.aoo. Colll1,·992-loeo .
Government Home~~ from U IU
r11peir) . Alao ddnqu.nt tea
I"OP"'V Col11 ·808-887-8000
Ext. QH -9805 for Information
Ntw houn for Mil. Rocklp·
ringo. Ohio. Clll814-992·8518
after 5:00pm.

8usineee
Opportunity

IS roome, bath, utility garage,
aluminum siding, 1torm win·
dowt. doort, central h.,t, tir
condition 814·992 ·15204

·~u'ST~LL;,..-HouH,

I NOTICE I
...,11 1cr11,
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISH· IXtfll on OUtlklrtl of Aut1and.
lNG CO recotrmendt that you Will negotlltl 114-742·3008.
do bu•n•• wlttl people you
ltnow . and NOT to Mnd money O.U•IItv built 1 Va story Tu'dor
through the mill l.l'ltil you hiYI etyle home on 6 wooded tern
10 mhtut• from PolntPte. . nt:
inv1111glted tht otftring.
Sand Hill Ro.t, t88 .000 00
Own your own Jun ·IPorttwe•r. 304-198-3383.
'-fl.. epp1rel, chlldrent. largt
llze. pethe. combklltJon dON, 1814 Mention mobile home.
metemlty. dancew..r, ICCIIJO• )Ocatld on lot 4 of 2 C' t Treilsr
riM. Jordlcht, Chic, lH, Lll'll, Perk, Ctmp Conley. Ctntrll 1ir.
l.rod. Gitano. Tor.-.oy. Calvin dilhwllhlt', eppli•cee. toft
Kletn. Set'gio Valtnll, Even with metchlng chlr end tabl•
Picone. Liz Claiborne, Mtmblrl vinyl t~ting and mttllstoreg~
Only, Gttolint, He11thtex, owr building. Coli 30'·87&amp;·8808
1000 othen . •13,300 to
124,900 inventory, tr11ining, REDUCED EXTRA NICE HDME
/ lxtur•. grend opening etc Can - 3 bedrooms. ,..edy to move
opWI 15. dtyl Mr Loughlin Into . Cenull air. pool-dedi
chlin link fence, Qll'dtn plot:
1112) 888 4228 .
lots of utr11. Cell that" 5 p.m.
Own your own Jtan · 1nd WHk.,.d,, 576-304· 7211 .
SportiWIIr, llditl IPPtrel,
c:hlldr.,l, large aile, petite, Rlldoced all brick, 3 bedroom,
comb.,atlon stoN, met~hy. ltrte kitchen and liwlng room,
dlnoeweer, tcc•sorl... Jord· carport, large com• lot, 304·
Idle. Chic. lM, l.vl, bod. 175-3030 or 878-3,31 .
Oheno , Torrboy, Celvln Klein.
Strgio V...,te, Evan Plcone. LI.r
32 Mobile Homes
Cltlboml. Mtmb«t Only.
olin e. Htelthtell, OYet' 1,000
for Sale
othera. •13 ,300 to U4,900
invtntorv, trtlnlng , fl.11tur11 ,
grtnd oplr'linV etc Cen op., 16
dtyt. Mr Sidnty' 140')252· NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"$ QUALITY
4489.
MOilLE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS AT 38
PHONE 814·441·7274. •
22 Money to Loan

1914. 101156 V1n Dyke mobile
tlome. 2 bedroom, living room
with tip out. new cerpetlng end
llnoteum, U,OOO.OO 304·175·
&amp;813 or 878-2149
FOR RENT WITH OPTION TO
BUY. 14x?O, 3 bedroom mobile
home, litting on • lot reedy to
move into. U215 .00 down
noo oo month . 304-782·
2221

33

Farms for Sale

HOME OWNERS·Rifinlnct lo
lOw fixed rett. Ute tQUftyforanv
pu.,oH LHdtr Mong1111 Co ,
814· 59,2 -30&amp;1

23 Profeeeional
Services
Window Tintlng.· Auto , commer·
cial. re~tdentl.t. Frw ettlm~tla .
Coli 814-448-93'1

1971 14x70 Schult with ell·
pando. 3 bedroomt, 1 'h b1th1,
llroploco, hol1 pump. dock
IWning, underplnniflg C1ll 814:
2U·B588 .
.
1981 Vmture C1thedr11 ceil·
lno• . gat. CA . underpinning,
19.100. W·O walt!• drytr.
t10,000 wllh Coli 814·2•8·

9240

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
rldilc:ov., your pllnO ' t blautlful
tone. c.111 1odty, Werdt K~ ­
boerd, 304· 875·1600 or 175·
:1124 .

14x70 F.. tivtl. 2 bdr., 2 full
beth•. lott ol cloMtt, utility
room. AC Ctll 814-441-8241
anytime.

SHELTON POOL CO. Swim·
ming Pool Selet · lnatelletlont •
Rep11n . Your friendly pool
build•n Buff1lo, W. Ve 30ol·
937-2478

1980 Llbony 14&gt;14. 2 bod·
room. untumlthld. vtnyl undtr·
ptnnlng lnctudld Mun 11U. Call
304-n3-1873.

HouM Painting, Indoor or out·
door. re~tonlblt prlctl. Phone
30,· 875-12'2 or 114 -8&amp;26&amp;03 .
•

Rt:d l
-·

31

Esl;lle

--

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom houR, fir•plece, 3
mi . .ou1hofGtlllpollt, t29,to0
Call deyt 114·448-1!1&amp; or
IYenlngl 11 4·448· 12....

1 roonw &amp; blth. 1 ecre more or

Ia... cerpetlld throughout. vinyl
1kting ue.ooo. 12 N. Meln St.,
Chl4hlro. Col 114·«1 -3783
Government hoR* from •1 (U
,.., .. rl .4110 dtliquent tea prop.ny. Call 108·187·1000
OH-4112 for infortnlllkH'I .

••t

3 bck. . 2 b~lhl. vinyl olcllng,
rtnch .tv~•• eollr unit. hNIICI
OOQI, 1 h32 llrto lo~
ml
trom hoepttll on 10 .J . Whhe Rd
Owner retiring. moving to Flor·
ldo con 11,·441-9785. 1'PM .

1"

1SplctoUI 4 bedroom In town.
Z~ blth, gar-ve. a much more.
Coli ' "·«8·21n
Ill• 1 :00 - . . . , o.

....eoo.

19715 C•meron Mobile Home for
ule . 12x80 . C1ll 814-9928824

29'/t teres fenced, bem &amp;
tobacco b•ae. 3 bedroom, 2
story hou... llvingroom, kit·
chen. beth. din1ngroom. en·
cto1ed back porch. ut•lltie•
room . llhown by appl. only . Ctll
tfter 7PM, 114·251 ·1605

4i

1
Kret with houae. barns, 2
lgt pond1, lim•ton• C•ll614·
2415·9248

1878 141170 mobile home, 3
bedroom, 2 full b1ths, applltn·
Cll included, undtrptnnlng,
304·878· 1418 .
Trel.., with onttcreltnd, uldng
•15,000.00 01 bHt offer. C.l
304-878-8881 .
1971 Mini homo only 17.000
mll11. •10,100. Owner m1Y
right OlriY· 304-411·

fin.,..
1911.

2 bedroom apt ttowe. refr1ger1 ·
Plt111nt, WV
3018

C1ll 814·441 -

2 bdr

apt, 199 mo
30,·175-61 04

Call

, bedroom apt tar rtnt . Balle
rent start• t216 . 1 month that
lncludea aH utllltiu. Oeposil
fiQ\Iired of 1200. Contact VII ·
ltgt Manor Apt. Mlddlepon.
814-992-7787. Equal Hou 1ing
Opportunity

Cemp1lte It Bit Foot. tlong
Raccoon Cree~ t2 ,30D. 40x100
ft Secure, petceful, prlvett Cell
114·448· 1171 or 114-448·
4305.

APARTMENTS , mobile hom11.
hou111 . Pt Pl•untendGallipo·
Ill. 11,·448 -8221.

2'h tcnn with mobile home.
ttong Reccoon Cr11k, jutt off
Rt. 218. Owntr moving mutt
.. 11 Call 11 4·318· 1911 before
8 :00PM, or 114-441-8229 If·
ter 8
lot with wtter • tewer for iele
trade. Call 814·245-92158 .

Of

Lotti Chtroltil Hlllt. 300x150
Coli liter B. 114· 248 -8829.
1· 5 ec,..,panialtv wooded loti
n.. r approv.d sub·dtvition. T.P
tnd C Wiler end approved ro.t
to Itch lot Rtuonebty priced,
will finll"'ct with 10 ptreent
down C.ll814-9815·31594.
1 ecre. Seltm Center, County
AGed 1. 10 mlnut• ffom Mint
No. 1 He• eiKtrlc, water, and
t~J!tlctank C.ll814-992·2989
60 1crn, 1mell b1m, tobacco
allotment. mineral r1Qht1, rural
weter. 304-175-312t·. •

36

Reel Eetate
Wanted

Wented to buy ecreage '"kygtr
Cretlt tchool d~t. or Mtigl
County preferebly wtth •ptic
tenk &amp; wtttr ttp . Ce1181 ~-317 0822.

Renlo ls
41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr , Ill Ctrplled, Wlttr &amp;
tr11h peicl t221 mo plu1 dep . 1
mi from hotphel. Ctll81 ~-448 ·
13S..
2 bedroom hou11, 120 Sttte St
Refrig. &amp; stove fumilhtd. 1200
1 month depostt requ1rtd . Ctll
IU -448 02S' .
Nice 3 bdr. houH full benmtnt,
centrel elr, ftnced yard, on At
141 , •326 plue depoth. Cell
81,·882·2818 "'" &amp;.
3 bdr a•• heet. pay your own
utllltiM Cell 11 oi· U8·0131 or
11~·448 - 7437

2 bdr. unfurnilhed houtl ref &amp;
dep rtQu lrld Cell 114 448·
ten .
3 bedroom houH for rent
101160 mobile home for rent
Coli 814·949-242'
HouMforrent. 110DeceturSt. .
can be'"" 5 30 to 7 :00 PM

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

For 1111 or rent. 141170, 3 bdr ,
1'h btth, clo11 to town. Call
S1ol·441 ·71545

Now dlspleylng our new tprlng
modlls in tlnglllnddoubl.wid•
hOr'l'ltl It reduced priOII W•t·
wood Homoo. 8898 Rt. 80 E.•
llrboumllle. W Ve 304· 731·
3818 op., ""'Y dav.

G•ltlpoli• Cell 814-446·4416
1ft1r 7PM

2.4 ecre building lot, county
Wiler, City IChOOII Cell 51 4•
379-28ti5

1978 Parle

c1rp11. 304·175·2811 or 304·
878·8758.

Furnl1hed Apt . 2 bdr , $1'96
mo ., wattr pd . 1138 2nd Av1 ,

One bedroom efficiency aptrt
ment. Fully furnished Two
btdroom ept. recentty remo·
del~ Above Krogen in Porn•
roy Ca ll814·992-8216

2 bdr. unfumllhld, 121110,
Wllhlt 6 drytr hooltup, 'II ml
p..t HMC. Call 614-441 -4319
., 304-878-9780 .

141170. 2

&amp;Court St. lbdr 1Yi b•th, 1260
mo .. plut utUitlel, refertnc11 a.
no pet1. Cllll14·446 ·4928

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

MOBILE HOMES MOVED In·
MJrtd, rtaaonabt• 111tn, Cell
304-878-2338
A~t~tnue ,

2 bed. duplex newly redecoreted
1250 mo Cell 814-448-4570
or814·4.a&amp;·7024 11ic forK1um

1 bedroom l~rtmenl. in Point
Pltuent. Cel11 -304-676·4024.

Furnlthed. clblt, booutiful r•-r12.00 mobile home. 12x215
'"'
vltw, In Kanauga. no city 11xu
bullt·on tun room Call 114- F01tlfl Mobile Homt Park. Call
985 · 4227 ·
8U·448-1802
3
" h
14 x70 mo bnl orne bedroma, 2bedroomlargeprlvatelotl180
totel g11;--Mu1t ..u. Pri01
p1 d
r.tuctd t8500 Call 814-843·
mv.- ue eposit. Gill 614-MB·
l
.:
2.:
23
:
_
1
:_or
::_:l:_1:_
4_:
·«..:.:_
8 ·_:2:_
1:_81:_._ _
8380

porch .wnlng1, 11,1 b1th1, new

Furnlthed ept. . utllltl• Plld.
*235 mo . Ctll 614 448 9244 .

tor. gerqe. Htghltnd Ave . Pt.

a...

12xl0 Ntw Moon with 2 loti.
Air cond.. Ncurlty light• &amp;
buikUng. Jutt ott At 2f8. Call
514 - 245 · 150~9 .....

Pev1ng Cllhl For old qu 1111. ttone
With blue wr1t1ng. toyt &amp; old
furniture Call 614 -367-0138

)art

In Eureka nice, cltln, pen. fum .,
ldultt on tv, no petl, •110 mo
Dop. roq. Coll814-218· 1838 or
11,·288-1281
2· 2 bdr. mobile homes on
Bul~~tille Ad.; t200 mo. plu•
-olt. CoN 814·448·9204.
Trtlllf tor rtnt. rehtnctl end
dtPOitt. ~ PlY utllhi•. 304878·2135.
.

43 Ferme for Rent
34 ac:N cropi-"d.
p111tu,. • tob.cco
Ca11304·S78· 1104.

Var•ety of good floor model·
portable color televi1ion, prices
reuonable Call 614 -448 ·
1149
Anhque 10 piece ttlver tea
•arv1ce $1 000. Pecen Owung
room table, 4 •Ide cha•r• 2 arm
che•r• esoo Cell 114-9928183
00 Fr1clc Sewmlll. w1th lntema·
t1onal tract_o r All rebuilt Wntt
P.O. Box 12 Pomeroy, Ohio
46769.
40 in Belaaw St&amp;el Ba1e P T 0
Dnven, never Ul ed $3000 .
Phone 614-742·2926 or 614
742-2085
TONY ' S GUN REPAIRS , hot dip
reblu11ng, all types of gun1mith
work . f11t eerv1ce. 304·876·
_4 8_ 3_1_·- - - - - - - 1
HALF PRICE! Flnh1ng lf'OW
1ign1 S2991lighted. non·errow
12791 Non lighted 8229 1 Free
lattersl Only few lef1 S&amp;e
locelly 118001423 · 0183 .
any11me
U1ed R -65 ditch Wnch Tr~nd'ler
and 460 John Deere Dour
614 694-7842 Of 694-5006 . .
HAlF PRI CEI Fluhmg arrow
11gn1. &amp;2991 Lighted, no-•rrow
12791 Nonl~ghted 12291 Free
letters! Only few lef1. Sae
locally , 1 · 800 · 423 0183
enytime
'

45 Furnished Rooms

16 horte rkting mower, 42 1nch
cut 304-468 -1643

For rent Sleeping Room1 and
light houae keeping roomt Puk
Centrtl Hotel. Call 614-U6·
07155
"

2 portable color TV $50 etch 1
Exercltflr b•ko t60 Call 304·
676· 2816 tfter 6·00 .

46 Space for Rent

Selrt, new 4 ft. by 18 h
twimming pool. Complete with
top and bottom filii, ladder,
f1ltar 1nd lin ar Price 1600 00
Phone 304· 876·4108

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P~rk.
Route 33, North of Pomlfoy
largtlott Ctll814-992-?479
2 trallw lolt In Portland, ne11
Po1t Office All utilities hook·
up• lvlillble. t70. per month
Coli 81 • -843-6188.
Tttillf IPICII, lmlll children
l«tll)ttd, MWif 1nd w1ter
furnlthed, Locu1t Ad , btck of IC
&amp; K. 304·87&amp;· 1078

Perts tor 1874 lmpela M1nnl!ll·
poh1 Moline tractor 1600 00 .
Ca ll 304-8715-5638 1fter 6 DO.
China c1binet e100 00 Setr' t
preuure can ner $26 00 '73
Tri umph 660 Tiger motorcycle
1500 00 18 inch Chllfl SIIW
tolld l tate t 100 00 Belt Sander
3x21 130 00 Call Reel 304 ·
8715 2872 .

55 Building Supplies

Merchan di se
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AU CTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St . G•llipolit New &amp; uted
wood·COIIItoval, 6 pc wood LA
1uite U99 , bunk bedt t199 .
tntron recllnsr• 199, new &amp;
ulld bedroom auitet, rang11 ,
New
wring•r wuhert, &amp;
llvingroom tult11 1199-1599,
l1mp1, I ISO buying COli &amp; wood
lloii'M Clll814·446· 31159

•ho•.

LAYNE "S FURNITURE
Sof11 1nd chalrt pr~ced from
t2815 to 1895. Tlblet, 150 ~nd
up to 1125 Hid•e· bedl,t390.
snd up to t650 , tofl btd1
*1415 . Recliner•. 1226 to
1375 , llmp1 from •2a to
*1215. pc dinettaa from $109
to435 . 7pc 11891ndup Wood
tlblt whh 1111 chtin 1285 to
*7415. Detk 1125 up to f376 .
Hutch•, ti5SO . 8111~ bed compl~te whh mttlrtiiM, 1276
lnd up to t3915 Baby bach,
a11 0 Mettre1111 or boa
tpr lngl , full or twin , •63 , firm,
173 . and 183 . OuNn set1,
12215 Bed tram... 120 and
126 .. 10 gun · Gun clbin.-11,
1350 Gil or electric r111gn
U75 Baby m1ttr .. 111. 135 &amp;
145, bed frlm11 •2o. 126, &amp;
UO , king frame t50 . Good
11ltction ot bedroom a~he1,
rockert, mttel cabinet•. heed·
botrd• •38 • up to *66!
U1.t Fum1ture .. Drt111r. &amp; bed,
Trundle bad , metal office dub
3 mil II out Bullville Ad . Optn
9tm to 6pm , Mon. thru Sat.
114-448 -0322
GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Withers, dryer• . refriger1tor1,
r~ngu . Sksgg• Appl11n cu .
Upper Atver Ad buldt Stone
Cr11t Motel. 814·446 -7398
C-·n1Y A 11
I
G
""'
PP 1nce. nc
ood
~~~~ oppllonc" ond ~·
1
•
v
1.
Open BAM to &amp;PM Mon ae
thru
Sot 114-448 -1899. 827 3•d
Ave G1lhpolll. OH

j.Y,ii;:F.;;;;i;;;;:;;-:;;;;;s;::;;;;;;:
I

new Ia u•(ld
quolity fu;,;.
ster n A11e ..

High prlc.. got vou down ?
Check ut out Mollohan Furn e.
Appl Olb1on &amp; Ketvlnator, At 7
North. Galllpoll1 , Oh Ctll 614 445· n u. Crld it IVIiltble to
qualifi.t buyer•
Refrigerltor avocado small 196
rtfrigsrator· white fro11 hti
a150 , ,..fnget'etof 1lde by aide
htrv•t gold 11915, sir condition·
1r1 5,000 BTU •es 11., 1tr
conditfoner 18 .000 BTU 11 SO,
wuh• 1915, dryer 195, electric
rtnge40 In 196, gllrtnget76
Sk8QiiJI Appllencet, Upp• River
Rd . 814·446 -7398 .
G.E. Freaatt, 15 cu.ft , t275 4
eutometic Wllhtrs. 3 eleculc
dryert, 3 g11 r1nu•. 2 tide by
1id1 refriglfatofl Flrea1one
'
Mlddl1tp0rt
.
Plcklnl Ulld Furniture. Good
quality uted fumlturt. Opll'l 9 to
I « call fo' eppo+ntNnt
304-878-1483 or 878-1480.

Bw1ding Materi1ls
Blo cll bnclc, MWer pipes , win·
dows. Untelt, etc Cl•uda Win·
ters. R~ Grande. 0 Call 81•·
246 -6121

S upp llt:s
Llv es lo t: k

&amp;
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
36 W.. t. Jtckton , OhiO
81ol -288-841&amp;1
M1111y Ferguaon, New Holland,
Bush !-log Sel• Ill ServfCI Ower
40 ~ed triCtotl tO d'IOOII from
&amp; oofrl)latt line of new II uted
equipment ltrgett 11lact10n In
S E Ohio
U $

Utility bldg tpl 30'x40'119 ',
16'x8' t liding door &amp; 3' Mrv
door . 15,2615 ertcted Iron
Horte Bldga 1514 ·332·9746
Cult lvetort for Farm111 Cub
trecto r very good cond. Call
814-446·8107 efter 1 DOPM
We will do ell typ• of cuttom
term mtchinary wort: Ctll for
r1t11 814-26.6·6636
Jl11iden ' 1
44e -1e78 .

Lon~~

71

Autos for Sale
I GUESS

1983 Plymouth Aellent 4 dr .,
euto , air, ttereo, crulte. wire
rim1, U,IS99. 1983 Chevy
lmp1l1 4 dr , 1uto. 11r, ttereo,
13,«10 John'• Auto Salet,
DuiiYIIIt Rd .
1983 Mercury Zepher Z-7. auto.
a1r, 11ereo . .-ony. U,499.
John'tAuto Stilt, Bul1vl111 Ad.,
G•lllpoli•. Oh

1984 Pontiac Temp11t Good
work car. USO OO .CIII 814·
24&amp;-8686 .
1983 Dodge Charger, 62,000
millS Alking pr1ce 13200 00
258-1768
72 Ford PU axe. cond , 3 utility
t.d tool bo1111 Ct U 614 -448 ·
9418

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 36 W. Gtllipollt.
Ohio Ctll 114-446· 97n. e\le
614·446-3192 . Up front trtc·
tort wtth werr1nty over 11 ulld
trectort, 1000 toolt.
MIIIIY Ferguton riding llwn
mower. t395. G1rdan tractor
new hrM. "'n• good. w1th
mower 1t11ch mtnt. lllows. dl1c.
cultlv1tor, and herring 1295
Call 814·288-1522
T030 Ferguson tr1C10r exc
cle•n. 11 ,960. New pott hole
digger 1276 New 8 ft •djultl•
ble grader blade 1175 Boom
pole t46 . 1 oonow plow 1195
Clll614 -281· 6622.
175 M111ey Ferguson dletel
13,960 No 12 MetMV Ferguson bller t1 ,295 New 8 ft.
drum mower t1 ,4715 New
rotery tlddtr win rawwer 10 ft.
•a worltlng width •1 ,885 C111
814-298-1122 .

1980 19 ft Prowler 1ir cond .
e11c cond sleept 6. Cell after 6,
814 246-6629 .

19n Chevrolet Camero Rilly
Spo11 . Auto, IDided, fair condition •1200 . 080 Call 114992·3133 or 814 -992-3761
eher 9.00 p m

730 C11e diMtl good rubber 1973 Clldilt•i: Coupe d1 VIlle
good psiflt, clHn, U ,950. 3
boHow Melley Ferguton plo1¥t, Vtry good condition Cll 61• ·
992-2803 or :1&gt;4·89&amp;-31512
•350 9ft tren•port dilc, 1695
6 h Wood• buthhog 1396 C•ll
1984 Plymouth Reli.nce. Auto.
814· 286·M22
PS, PB. aft, AM· FM clock redlo
BN Ford tractor, A-1 condft10n crude oontrol. 12500 Cali
end equll)ment Call 514-266· 61,·992-7'03
liM .
1976 Plymouth Outler Auto. 2
1500 C1ll 814 -992 ·
30 20 John Deere Trtctor. Excel· door
lent condit ion 2 axle• low bov 7403
tr11let C•ll614-992·7ol01
1984 Chevy Ctvtlier AT PS,
PB Low mlln, ntw urtt Mutt
Pole Bulldlng Spec11l. meny IH
to apprtclett Ctll814 -992 ·
colors 1nd 1il:n . call for low 3703
pricet , 614 · 246-9146

••so

1975 Dodg• Dar1
895-JBJB .

For 1ale new horte drawn bob
1l11dge. 1300 00 304 ·896 ·

1973 Mercury 1t1hon w1gon
429 motor V8 , 1695 .00 or bett
offer, call 1t1tr 5 00 304·6762239 .'

RAILROAD TIES · 8 i'l x 10 in 11
9 ft 8in t8 00 P«r til delivered .
8111 S lack 614 ·992 -2269

62 Wanted to Buv

1 ~85 Monte Cerlo, 45,000
fl'llel, loaded, 111ume loen.
304-676 · 71&amp;2

Block , brick. matter and ma IOnry aupplin Mountt ln State
Block, At 33, NtrW Hsven , W.
Ve 304-882·2222

Now buying lhell com or ur
corn . Call forlatnt QUote• River
City F1 rm Supply, 114·446
2985

3430

W~nted .

56

Pets for Sale

Dregonwynd Cattery Kannel
CFA Himtllyen, Pars•an and
Slam•• kitten s. AKC Chow
pup pie• Ntw pupp iM &amp; ldttenl
Call 448 ·3844 after 7PM
Tickfleld Kenn ..• All breed dog
groommg Obed ience tt11nlng
in1truct ion AK C Germ•n wire.
ha1red Po inter puppl"
Cell
614 · 388 8720.
Wanted to buy Fox Hound
puppy . C1ll 714 -637-1843 or
wrile 10862 Teal Or , Garden
Gro11e, CA 92843
M1le Fox Terrier wormed , lholt,
houte brolcen. good dog w ith
ICCIIIOrill, 150. C11181 ~ · 448 ·
2297 .
Rtg ittered
Poodlu
Schn•uzer
No Check•

Cocker Spenfel, Toy
and Mtnla \ ure
puppin Cuh only
C•ll614-992-2607

Ga1ted gokt en Palam1no Geldrng
1400. 304 468 1638 or 468·
1728
S it m ell k1tt1n1
2189

67

304-876 -

Musical
I n"siruine-nts

cfllc.ken•

63

lowery orgen / FiNtl 11 meglc
Genie cords, built 1n tlpeplayer.
3 Yll rl old , $860 Cell 814379 -2774

68

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Milled hay larg1 aquere btlet,
f1 211 . 304-876 6579

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Setd com De~alb 1nd Ken·
worthy. Phone 304-676 -1506
1ftet' 8.00 PM .

Tr" ns11 orl ~11 11 11
71

1972 Chevy 1 'h ton
U .OOO.OO . 304 468 -1920 af :
ter 8 p.m.

73

illJ

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

CD Gil Divorce

Autos for Sale
Motorcycles

12 Corvtn•. Call 114-441:
9448 tfter 5:00PM

1----"""'"-----1961 Hondo CR 260 R Race

1974 VW ltetle good cond .
U96 Ctll 814-319·28&amp;5.

Bike Never b.., raced . Brand
nM coodltlon Mu1t _.I Ctll
814-3157·0407

Court

(jJ Barney Miller

7.05 CD Mary Tyler Moore
7:30 U l1l ffi New Newlywed
Game ·

(!) NBA Today
fJl CD WKRP in Ctnctnnati
D m @ Jeopardy

FRANK AND ERNIE

(!) To the Manor Bom

®I Wheel of Fortune

J£RRY'S FR£SH

li) (RI Entertamment To-

night Screen legends K1rk

IF It's Monday, Ripe iF its Tuesday
Soft if if's Wednesday, Mushy iF '
It's Thursday, Moldy If It's Friday

Doug las and Burt l a ncas te r

talk a boul their lates t film ,
'Tough Guys ·

(jJ Bob Newhart

IT

.
'

!'

7 :35 CD Major League Baseball .
Cincmnati at Atlanta
8 ·00 IJ Cil @ Highway to
Heaven Jonathan helps a
strugg ling agem and h1 s ac·
tress

•

daughter

modern -day
story 160 m1n )

m

this

Cinderella

(AI
ffi Butterfly Island Separ·

ated from hi S pa re nts dunng

a boating

acc1de nt oH the

M alav s•an coast a 14-yearold Vietnamese refugee IS

(60 m•n I
(!) Au1o Racing "86. Nos-

Home
Improvements

car Transouth 500 Cove r·
age from Darl ington. South
Carolina (2 hrs )

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un condidon11 lifetime gu1r1n·
tea loctl referencn furni1hed
Free ISI•mate~ Ctll coHect
1-614-237 -0488 dey Of night
Roger• B•tement
Waterproofing

® Ill @I MacGyver ICCI

l

H1rdwood Floort Send1ng 6
ref•n•shk'lg. Parket tnd tounge &amp;
groove Free ntimatft, ref..-tn·
CIS evtil•blt Willll'd Ill 01vld
Bltnktnlhip, 81,·446·0268 or
614 -446 -4047 Commercitl &amp;
retidll'ltlll

M acGyver places h1s l1fe o n
th e hne when he 1s 1mprt
soned m an effort to help a
woman s convic ted brothe '
esc ape (60 m•n )

fJl CD MOVIE : "Elmer Gan
1ry"
0 (!) ®I Ringling Bros.

EEK&amp;MEEK

I HAD A [)\TE. I/J!11-1 A
Rt.LAY RU~£R !A'S!" IJIGHT

and Barnum &amp; Bailey Cir·

ntH

cus ICC) J1m Dale hosts the
116 th e d1t 1on of lh e c •rcus.
featunng 1nternauonal p e r·
formers 10 a vanety o f
stu nts (60 mm )
00
MacNeil-lehrer
Newshour
(!j) National Geographtc

MJDGO

P11ntlng. carpentry. remodeling
17 vttrl e•p ln~Yrac:l . Reuont
bit. Frea e1ttmate1. 8 &amp; W
Conuruction C1ll 514 - 44 ~
8819 "' 114-248-9 .. 8

Special: Realm of the Alii·
gator ICC) The Okefenokee

RON ' S Telev iaion Serv ic e
HouM cell• on RCA , Ou111r
GE Specl•llng m Zenith C1ll
304-578 ·2398 or 614 -o146 ·
2464

swamp. host to many am
mals, 1s the domatn o f the
alhga1or (60 m1n.)ln Stereo

Fetty Tree Trimm1ng. 1tump
ovel Cell 304·675·1331

9·00

~NOLES ' S SERVICE , 111pe·
nencad ctrpenter, electricitn,
melon, p1inter, roofing Unclud ·
ing hot t1r 1pplicetionl 304 ·
675 -2088 or 675· 7368

MY DADONCE:GOfA
TRIP W BIJRBAI)JK ON
' WHEELCF FORTUNE ."

Starkl Tree and Lewn Service.
land iCIPing 304 676 2010

HE ·5AID HE S PLJN ~E
WHEEL. RE&lt;AL l-IARD, AND
HE f"'&lt;EiOfTO LET60...

@ MOVIE. "Take Down '
0 CIJ (jiJ Blacke"s Magic
Ale11 and Leonard .nvestl ·
gate the m urde r of a film

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

producer from 1ns•d e a dead

AND THE "NEXT THII:Ii~ '

HE ~ NEW. HE ~KE
UP IN BW RB.AN K.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

BARNEY
WHY IN
THUNDER DID
THEV GO AN'
START CHOIR

PRACTICE
WITHOUT

ME?
General Hauling

NORTH

iHEY5AY
1

1

E 15 WHAT
WE. MAKE.

11"'

&amp; Friends for a rowdy
party tonigh1 on The
Nashville Ne1work
NASHVILLE

Ad•

Cra1g 1s d elermmed to diS·
cover wh1ch doctor wa s res·
pons1bte for Mrs Hufnage l's
death , wh1le murderess Shtr·
le y Damels returns to the

@ Arthur Hailey"s
IS

al·

tacked by a rap1st wh•le
Dave 1s away from ho m o,
and a wealthy w o man tak es

in ii ftomal e~s 11\i!ff af!Cl she
accidentall y knocks h1m
down w 1th her car (60 m1n )

.,~

....

•'

t K
+A K 10

Vulnerable East-West
Dea ler. South
West

No rtb

Eas t

Soutb

2.

Pass
4+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

tracts for retooltng the bl1mp
for ultra·modern m1htary u se
have healed up competitiOn
b etwee n Goodyea r and Airship lndus tnes .
Justice

James Earl
Jones narrates th1s profile of
Allan Boesak, a minister
who has become a map
poht1cal ttgure 1n the struggle
agam st a parthe 1d 1n South
Afnca

11 :00 0 CIJ NewsCen1er

Pass

Opemng lead • K

and two others. East must sti ll ruff
With that 10 This play by West could
lose a tn ck 1f South had SIX spades ln·
cludmg the 10, mwhtch event declarer
would probably take a finesse agamst
the queen . Yet seven cards 1n decla rer's spade suit JUS! seemed likely, and
West was right to hope that the I 0 was
not among them.

or -.nak•

l nlrn.u • ...

sh,qw
I ~

9 \ ,.,\ ! 1l l lllt '.t

....;m h n).!

In\\ n

hazard

II Lc•g.tl

13 Thoro ugh-

&lt;u 11on

farr
15F'r,mkw.,
14 Art1 s1 s nf·l'd
sPt 1111d

16 Lar~r t r.Lv
18 Statue

2 1 Adtll'

:J4 '- ( lr·,u

lr\11'

nhll l'

:J.l lndl.tn
v. ('1~111
I )a\ ·

... how

161k li' h

17 Fra);(r,uH t' 23 Hornlll'rJ.! ... 35 lllu mnwd
;J7 - lllgh
fl lr11 '
18 ..TPm!H'"I
I tw \1 noll
27 \l ilh
ht·rom('
ro lt&gt;
22 llody nf
19 T.-rry
fra nknl '"" :Hl M1•s lt ·nl
II f I~ '
Jew1sh l,t\o\
Southc·m 28 F,m '''l r
:JI Af l ~ ·tll lil~ t :\9 'Ti wn
24 English
no\·t•l
\l U"&gt;l ~ ~~ ·
32 Pam
n ver
20 Tho~~·

21 ~soun d of
MusH
fl

pt•nplt•

·-

j:(l\'t'!

prese nt

Emhn~

for hf•m
3 Had dmn e r

h-+- +-+--1' -

4 D1ver''
n ecess1t:y

DAD..Y CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's ho" lo work 1t
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

One letter slands for another . In this san.p lc- A IS used
for the three L's, X for the two D's, etc S1n gl e letter&gt;
apostrophes, the length and formati on of 1hr ~ m cl' are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differenl
CRYPTOQUOTE

•

4-16
GSDJ

H Z (,!RM Z

Cf)K

VDIIE

C JDAWXAT

\ I S \A\1

X t

XA

.) s z

"' 1 ~1

II ll Y

Y N A X J K
Z G
s tl 1, Z
Yestenlay's Cryptoquote: IF IT IS MliH f. III.ESo UJ
TO GIVE mAN TO RECEIVE , THEN MOS I t If" I s AHI:
CONTENT TO LET TilE OTHER FELI .(.J\1 ItA\ t·: THE
GREATER BLESSING . - SHAILER MATII EII s
® Girl from U.N.C.L.E
ffi O (!) Ill @@ News
fJl (!) Benny Hill Show
Cl) SCTV
®I Eyewitness News
illl Economics USA Special ,. Edition;

America 's

Embattled Economy Part 2
of 2 Econom1c c nses that
have undermined the publ·
1c · s conf1dence tn the Fed•
era! government s1nce the

m •d - 196 0 ~ r~rt• 1nvest•gated

(60 m1n )

(ij) WK A P 1n C m c1nnatt
11 :30 1J CIJ IS' The Tonight
Show Tor11g ht s gues t 1s
polk.:l u.:corth amsl Fra nk 1f'
Y ,ml-..( 1\dl.
(60 mm) In
S tere o
(!) SportsCent er

(I) WKRP in Cincinnati
fJ) CD 1101 Taxi
0 (!) T J . Hooker

.........

\';"

•

I+
3+

I() llrp• "' l d ie•
1111 kr t11 11 1
I J I ~~. t r .
H :"i ln .!-!' 111

KQNU

lA)

® Allan Boesek: Choosing

....~

+AK 986 5 4

• 10 3

® Mark Russell Comedy

(!) The Battle of the
Blimpo "!CCI The f~rst con·

"
:,

SOUTH

I II\'
7 \('\1'1

!t•.tlun·

5 Sl', t

2

10.00 IJ CIJ@ St. Elsewhere Dr

for

• 9 743

1 Wo men 's
org

Jmn Hank Wtlliams Jr

10:20 II) MOVIE:' 'Apache"
10:30 CD American Snepshots

: &amp; M Furn iture Manufactunng
14Rt 7, Crqwn City, Oh Call
81 ·256· 1470. catl Eve 814
UB - 3,38 O ld &amp; . 1
Uphostllfed
n w

+ 109761

+ Q J 52

DOWN

poses the absurd1t1es m today's news .
CID Newswatch
[ll) News

PEANUTS

.. 8 6

5 {'cnH I' tl1•1\
6 HU ... "il,tll

•ACROSS
1 fJhorw

c haract l'r

Special Mark Russell ••·

Upholstery

• 10 7

by THOMAS JOSEPH

40 lsn lalt•
41 Cahgu la"s
garment
42 Shahhy
43 Nut

Ho1el ICC) Megan

EAST

WEST
• Q2
9AK Q92
• Q8

~~'Dttl

mals. IS the domam of the
alliga tor ~60 m1n .) ln Stereo

Constitution Grand Prix

K.en • Water Serv•c• Well•
c.••terns, P0011 end waterbedl
filled Call 614-367 -0623 or
814-3677741 Of 304 675 ·
1247

Alter you have played a few thou·
sand bridge deals, you learn that there
are some contracts that just cannot be
defeated. Today's IS one of them However, the challenge here IS m keepmg
the opponents from maktng an overtrick. It may not mean much at rubber
bridge, but in duplicate , where every
trick counts, holding the declarer to
his contract can be the difference be·
tween a good and a bad result West
came to the r~ght conclus1on tn today's
problem, mak1ng the only play to hold
South to 10 tricks.
·· After cashing the king and queen of
hearts, West asked himself what declarer needed for hiS JUmp to three
spades opposite a passed hand - the
A·K of spades certainly, and probably
the A-K of clubs and the diamond kmg
If so. there were no more defenSIVe
tricks coming unless the spade queen
could score a tr~ck Could declarer
have started with seven spades not mcluding the 10-spot' Though unlikely,
that seemed to offer the best chance
Consequently West played a low
heart at trick three. East obligingly
ruffed w1th the 10, and West had promoted h1s queen of trumps for a third
trick If by some chance declarer had
only six spades and East had the I0

swamp, host 10 ma ny am ·

® Ill

•·II·II

+ J3
. J754 ·'
tA J\32
+ 86

By James Jacoby

33 s.-r you
late r
36 " Ra~une"

hospnal slalf (60 m1n I IAI
(!) Auto Ractng '86: IMSA
Atlanta
Journal/

James Bov1 Water SerVICe AIIO
pool a filled Cell 6, 4-256 1 14l
or 614 446 1175 or 614 -44 8 .
7&amp;11

Mowfl•{ • Upholnering 1ervln
trlcountyarea 21 yure. Thobe•~
In furnitur e upholttll'lng. All
=~rk gueranteed wi1it our mod·
shop at Muon Count
F•irgrounds Phone 30ot 87"'y
41154 .
. IJ •

Manufacturing
an extra trick

Special: Realm of the Alii·
ga1or iCC) The Okefenokee

9 ·30 ® Frontier Fan1asy

Good-1 E~ tiVtting, blle menlt.
footer•. duvew1y1, 1ept lc tankl,
land1c1p1ng Call anytime 614 446 45 37 . J1me1 L Oavi1on,
Jr owner

87

James Jacoby

32 \JUihhiP

(60 m1n IIRI

Russell ex·
poses the absurd111es 1n to day 's ne w s

Excavating

Coal hmeuo ne, gre1.1el , 8 ;~
Dell11ered 1 ton and up Jim
tan1er, 304 675 1247 or 67 6
7397
.
.

road beca use she wan1ed 10 do thi SLAY IT ON THE LINE

BRIDGE

AnnoUnced'

room

® M.ark Russell Comedy

CARTER 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gtlhpoll•. Ohio
Phone 814 ·446 ·3888 or 614·
446 4477

85

I Answer

@ 700Ciub
® Ill (HI Dynasty !CCI
0 (!) ®I MOVIE : "To Be

ed1t 1ng

Special Mark

83

Yesterdays

25 Langtuo,;h
26 Luwr hu~
28 Thm
29 Macaw
30 Wlutt'h

bolt-locked

® Na1ional Geographic

1980 Ford van 4 epd, I cyl ..
ctrpl1, low mll~~ge , ltlarp,
U ,299 John ' • Aut o hiM
Bulevlllt Ad
'
For Safe 1979 Jeep CJ -7
hlfdtop. Goodcond1t10n 12500
OBO 614·949· 3030 efter 6:00
pm.

Mac Neil -lehrer

{Answers tomorrow}
FLUTE MARLIN GA LLEY
The hen crosse d over lo I he m1ddle ol 1he

Newshour

Trucks for Sale

19nChevytruck Lowmlleege
1800 Caii814·949-25.W .
'

74

NB Tremor, new tlr11, 6 ft
gredw billie and treller For 111e
or tr~eiorCh"" orGMC truck.
C1ll efter 4 :00pm 814·988 '392

81

82

Bentley F'tg Slit Wedn•dey
April 30th, 7:30PM Fey1t11 1980 Toyota truck 6 t pd .
County Ftlrgroundt Walhlng· AM·FM, btdllner, tow mil••g•.
ton, CH . Selling 150 h11d of uctllent condltton, 13 . 60~
tlemp, OUtoct, Barrow•&amp; giht. Coii814-«I-19U .
Roger Blt'ltley, 3112 RHCI Ad ,
Sllbin•. Oh Cell 1513·1514· 1971 Ford Rtnoer 260, 4 ·WO .
2398
suto, tlr , rtdio, topptr, hiiV'f
dut'l wtnch , U .499. John ' s
Pura bred Ouroc ~trt Roger Auto Salll Bulaville Rd ., Otlli ·
Bentley, Stblne, Oh . Cell &amp;fl· poll1, Oh
!i84-2398 .
1974 lntern1tiontl Serl• 2010
4-H CLUB LAMBS: Ltrgeultt f1fth whnl. single uel Low
t lo n . Suffolkt, Htmpshire mll11ge. 804 guollne angtne
Hulthy, ""ality stock t75 . Cell witl'l updreft Carb Convention•!
1-30·· 773·!5898
cllb, emron 2 tone maroon pelnt.
Excellent condition All origi'lal
AegiltttrMI Polled Hereford bull Priced to All orull et te&amp;oo:
4 veen old, ton MSU Proep tcto~ C1n bt 1een It Old BookrnobUe
!108. McCoy Polled Hereford• bu ilding In upper Pomeroy, or
Gllf'lwood. W Va 304 1576 · Coli 814-982-&amp;687
2449 .
1985 Chevy Plck·up truck P S
1'/J ye• old ttud colt, t75 00 . Pa. v6, auto .. aft beet naoo'
Cell 304-87 5- 15768 1her 6 00 . Only 2000 miles 614 -949 ·
2880

(!) Nightly Business Re·
port
®I Eyewi1ness News

offered ass1stance by a fa ·

1986 Ford lTD, red f01.1r door.
tull'{equopecl, 7.ooomu... take
over peym.,u or 1tll, 304-458·
1722

71 Ford F-100 1.1 ton pickup.
c,ueu -38&amp;-8488

0 (!)@ Wheel of Fortune

m iiV runn•n g a 10unst ca mp

Liveetock

72

mIIJ Jefferson•

Service s

Rotary or clble tool dr1ll1ng
Mo•t wells completed ••medty
Pul11) sale• and 11rvlca 304·
896·3802

M.re 31h yr Ouaner and Pa·
llmeno, medium lizt, good
dlapotltion. gre«~ broke. rtiiO•
n1ble ofier Calll14· 379-2144

M.nutes' 1s featured

•.(,.

ALLEYOOP

1976 Dallun car, IUhl gg ood.
t300 .00. 304--168 -1732 .

buv 20 or 30

A Tf~ ·OfbF

1982 Coechmen pop -up
camper. IIIIPS I IX, IXC cond,
304 876-8292

c.n 614-446-7948

to

Stud pony IIddie II bridle, 180
Coli IH -441 -7941

JUST ARRIVED tweet onion
planlt, end 1l1o cabbage pl1nt1.
Swi1her Implement. Upper Rt
7. 8, 4·448·047!i

59 For Sale or Trade

'73 Volkt wegon. A 1 1hape,
well ctre for , 304 876·8133 .

~'lr~D M~

xxr

I I 1I I

Jumbles ALIVE

CBS News magazine 60

1972 hg ·A·long 18 ft treiler
Very good condthon 11496
C•ll 814-992-8173 or 814·
992-6208

1 9n Plymouth Fury. V 8 , good
body, under 80.000 ori;lnll
millS $1 .800 00, od1ll 304 ·
875-6768 •her 15 00

64 Hay &amp; Grain
We buv. 111ll&amp; tredegu111r1 01le
Sandau Phone 446 ·2049

30.&amp;-

Hf~, l\1a:~APPLE, CA~

(~"fA,

~ulpped .

U76 Tovote Coroll1 good run ·
nlng condition. 1360 or will
negotiltt Ctll 614 448 -1339
or 614·446 -11528

For Sale 1979 Ford T-Blrd Vary
good condition Al10 Motor
cycle Call 814·986· 3931 or
814-986·3839

~ ).}.£

1974 Cemper 1tlf conttintd ,
F1bergta•• boat With 60 HP
E~t~enrud11ngme All lor t1 ,6915
1978 Fl1t t695 Cell814-288·
8622

1984 Ptymouth Atlitnt 4 dr .,
1uto, 23.000 mi.. PS, P9, AC
Call 614-379-2728

1989 Chevrol•tCipr ic•6•.ooo
I CIUII m1le1 Cell 614 -441·
6670

1l

1974 St~r c raft foldout c•mper.
Jleapl B. cofl1)lete w1th liOn,
ice bo11 light•&amp; ••nk. e11c cond ..
like new Cell 61 4·388-9756
after 8PM.

Mo1or home 1971 K•yot 22'
long 318 Dodge engine, t .. f
cont1ined. 111ry nice, 16,000
Ctll 814-446-2077

1974 VoiUwegon .quare b1ck.
IUIO. 1496 . Ct ll614 -246-5353
1111 3151 dey1, eve• 614 ·246 9838

llOT A?~IW? l.()U

Answer here. "{

As part of the cont1nu1ng
scnes '20 Shows That
Changed Te leiiiSIOn, the

1\1AT T!;N 130GK'"S 4())

&amp; Campers

wagon. auto. 80.000 ml . PS.
PB, AC , nice &amp; clean Cell
814 -379-2721.

BN Ford Ferguton tr1ctor, e11c
cond, 304· 882- 31115

Buildin g m11er itl1, cement .
blocklellsi:zel, ytrd or delivery.
Galhpoli1 Block Co , 1 23'h Pine
St . G•llipol1s Oh1o C1ll 814 ·
4o16 -2783

79 Motorg Homes

need• bat1ery. 1200 CtH 614·
256-8970.

•:~·~::,~;~~~w---------1983 Plymouth R1h1nt station·

equip trector
with 6% fi
bla A good verl•ty
equip . ., seockl

P' I'M

A&amp;AI~ , WATLt; ~ W~E'..,'::;

1976 Dodge chulic 22 ft , fuMy
te.OOO Ctll 114448 1727

72 Pinto good running cond.,

NATUII~

HAS A WAY OF TAKING
CARE OF ITSELF.

All types und &amp;. rebuilt
trenaml11fon•· trantfer CIIU
too Ovordrill'l, front wheel &amp;
rtlf wheel dnve Trtnemiulon
k1t1 &amp; tork converter• All typ•
11r comprtiiOrl 1 10 50 HP , 6
HP 2 1t1ge 11,295 Call 814 ·
379 2220

1982 Camero V-6 • lr, Hop.
good cond C•ll81 4-446·2360

Lee

EVENING

Pl~tt!c

cittern ltate epprvved,
plllttc teptlc ttnb, pl•tic
culvertt, metel culvert• RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jaclt·
oon. Oh. 814-288-5930

by Henr• Arnold and Bob

four ord1nary words.

1981 Yamtht 860 tpaclel. good
cond., 11king t900 Call 114·
448 -0827 after 6PM.

Kewaaak1100 , phone 304·876·
8795

f.n 111

~ · ~~ ~~

Unscramble 111ese four J umbles
one lett~r to eacn square. to for~

WEDNESDAY

Honda Elcpreu. like nM. phone
304 876-2638 .

Refrlglf'ation &amp; Appliance Str·
vice All branda u1ed tppllanctl·
part1 Little'• Aefrig. &amp; Appl
Ch11hire, Oh 61 4 -387·0440 '

j}j}N} f&amp;}\1 ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Television
Viewing

1918 Honda Hewk 400 motor·
cycle with vetter qu ICklilver .
ferring, lugg~~g• riCk II b.c:k
r 11 t, crui1e control, two
hehnet1. excellent oondhktn,
tBDO . Cell 814 · 2~5- 5381 Wttlt
8 :30.

Uvlng room suite, only 9 months
old, movjng, tiOO .OO firm
304·676-3320
'

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 11

Ohio

'16, 1986

Motorcycles

/

/

I

�1 2- The

DAillv

Sentinel

Mayor's Court
Two men were fined $425 on
charges d drlvlngwhlleintOlQc.aled ,
and given three day 1811 sentena&gt;s In the court of Mlddlepor:l Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
Fined and sentenced' on the
charge were Charles W. Baliey,Jr.,
Middleport, and Lewis E. Humph•
rey, Jr., Pomeroy. Humphrey was
also fined $100 aod costs on a charge
of possession of maraj lana.
Others fined In the court were
James R Boyer, Middleport, $18,
speeding; James A. Hess, Middle·
(Xlrt, $1~. speeding; Ronnie Fry,
Middleport, and John Thabet,
Mason, W. Va . $25 and costs,
disorderly manner.
Forfeiting bonds were Diana

I

I

'
I

\

Fields, Milklleport •.KlO on drtvlng
whlle intoxicated, $00, no~rator's
ll~oo . and S50 br failure to
control; Caryl E. Kiser, Gallipolis,
and Cindy Suphln, Middleport, $40
each 011 speeding.
Two people were fined and two
others forfeited bonds In the court d
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night
Fined were Brian Arms, Racine,
$53 and costs, traffic light violation;
and Cllarles Clark, Mason, $100 for
loitering. Forfeiting bonds were
Thomas Fitch, ChPSter, $375 on a
charge of driving while lntoxlcated,
and Tamera Rearick, Rocky Moun·
taln, Mo., $47 speeding,

Chancey rehired

PASSING THROUGH -A converted passenger lraln carried "the
· grealesl show on earth" through Mason County Moodily aflemooa
,euroule to a perfonnance In WheeUng, W.Va. Wlth45can~, Including the
two engines, lite RlngUng Brothers and Bannon lo Bailey Clrws train

call'

l"

Belpre man cit~d · '
following accident
A Belpre man was cited for
hitsklp and changing lanes without
caution In a two·vehicle accident 011
Ohio 7 Tuesday, thl' stall' highway
patrol said.
Georgi' D. Conll'y, 56, reportedly
tr\ed passing a truck driven by
Raymond Fields, 64, New Haven , at
12:15 p.m. and struck Fields'
vehicle In tlle right side, lbe patrol
said.
The accident occurred while both
vehiciPS were southbound, and the
patrol said the vehiciPS were
slightly damaged.

Syracuse rPSidents on Hubbard
St. and on Third St. from Codner's
Exxon to Larry's Grocery arp
asked not to usewatpr from IOa.m.
Thursday to!Oa.m. Friday. Vlllagl'
workers are replacing the water
line.

David Jones

HaJTy Powell

David JonPS, 69, New Haven, died
Monday DOA at Pleasant Valley
HospllaL
He was born March, 20, 1917 In
Monlgompry to the late David and
Melvina Black Jones.
He was self-employed as a
certified public accountant, was a
veteran of the Unlled States Army
in WWII , belonged to the New
Haven Lions Club, the American
Legion Smith·Capehart Fbst 140 of
New Haven, a former town council·
man tt New Haven, and belonged to
the Masonic Lodge l21in Hlllsboro.
SuiVIvlng Is his wlfp Louise Jones
of New Haven; two daughtPrs,
Clara Oram d Virginia Beach, Va ..
and Tammy Goodnlle of NI'W
Haven; two sons; John Jones of
Montgome1y and David L. Jones of
New HavPn; two stepdaughters,
Diane Pauley of St. Albans and
Paula Sayre of Pomeroy; one
stepson, Gary Tucker of Parkers·
burg; nine grandchildren and three
great·grandchlldren.
Funeral services w!U be Thurs·
day at 1 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rl'v .

Harry "Genp" Powell, 45, Buf·
falo, died at his home after a long
Illness.
·
HI' was bam July 10, 1940 in
Racine, Ohio.
He was a form er employee of
ACF of Eleanor, a member of the
Steelwo rkers Union and a
Protest ant
He Is survived by ,his mother,
Mrs. Sadie Barr, West Columbi a;
his wife, Shirley Powell; lour sons,
Christopher Powell, at home, Mar·
vin Powell. Point Pleasant, Cliff
Fbwell, Fort Bragg, N.C. and David
Powell, Buffalo; a stepdaughter,
Judy Francisco, at home; a sister,
Mrs. Brenda Jividen, WI'S! Colum·
bla; and two grandda ughters.
He was preceded In death by his
stepfather, Marvin Barr.
Funeral Sl'rvlces will be Thurs·
day at 2 p.m. at Raynes Fune ral
Home, Buffalo, wit h the Rl'v,
Randy Whaley and the Rev. Wody
Wlllard officiating , Burial will
foUow In Buffalo Memorial Park.
Friends may caU a_t tlle funeral
home Wednesday from 4-9 p.m

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•

a1 y

en tine
1 Sections. 14 Page•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, April17, 1986

TRIPOLI, Libya \UP!) - CoL
Moammar Khadaly surfaced on
television to diSCUSs the U.S. alr
mlds for thl' first time, dispelling
rumors d his overthrow, and
exhorted Libyans to "dance ln \tbe
streets" In defiance of America.
In his 20.minute speech, broad·
cast around midnight Wednesday,
Khadaly castigated President Rea ·
gan for "Issuing orders to homb
children, " and warned Italy and
Spain that Libya would "PScalate
the self· defense (terror) opera·
lions:• against them If tlley aided
U.S. military efforts.
There was no Indication whether
tlle speech was live or taped, or
from where Khadafy was speaking.
But a reference he made to a large
pro·Libyan rally In Khartoum,
Sudan, earlier Wednesday ap·
peared to Indicate the broadcastIf videotaped - was recorded
sometime Wednesday.
On the day of the bombing, a
French television station showed
footagP without sound It said was
provided by the Libyan govern·
men! after the rald, shoWing
Khadaly speaking with the Soviet

ambassador.
Khadafy's first sta!Pmenl about
lhe bombing touched off celebra·
Uons In the streets, in contrast to
Wednesday's earlier spora dic
machine-gun and arWle1y lire in
lhe capital that fueled rumors of a
coup against the ml'rcurialleader.
"Tum back on the lights,"
Khadaly urged his coun tiymen.
"Dance In the streets. We are not
afraid of America. Start playing
normal mll6ic on the radio ."
About 10 mlnutPS after Khadafy
left the air, electricity snapped back
on In the capital, which had been
blacked outslna&gt;lh1'12·minute U.S.
attack Tuesday- tlle largest U.S,
air strike since the Vil'tnam War.
Traffic snarled In the streets,
horns blared and people leaped
from their cars, dancing. Many
waved green Libyan nags and held
up posters of Khadafy. Otlll'rs
leaned from windows, cheering:
"Down, down U.S A!"
"! think he's great, " said a
white-robed young man hurrying
toward the downtown square. "He
told us to put on the Ughts and we
have."

WASHINGTON iUPli - Eva· .
cuatlon of :m dependents of U.S.
Embassy personnel in the Sudan
has been .ordered by the United
States, amid rising violence ihere,
and Is to begin by the end of the
week, The New York Times
reported today.
NBC NI'WS also reported the
evacuation order Wednesday night,
but State Department spokesmen
Bob Alling, of the Sudan Working ,
Group, and Don Kaufman, of the
Libyan Working Group, today
declined to confirm the reports.
Both saict the situation in the
Sud an was under constant review,
The evacuation order followed
the shooting of a 33·year· old
embassy commu'nicatlons officer,
identified by the TimPS as William
J , Cokals, who wa s shot In 1he head
by an unknown assailant In lhe
Sudanese capit al of Khartoum
Tuesday.
Kaufman, while declinin g to
confirm th£' victim's Identity, said
toda y he was In "guarded, stable
condition " In a hospital In Jidda ,
Saudi Arabia, where he was flown .
Secrl'ta ry of State George Shultz
has '!aid !hal the administration
had no "dlrrct Intelligence" Unklng

the sbooting of Cokals tot he Libyan
regime of Cot Moammar Khadafy,
who Shultz said has madettu·eats In
Khartoum Iii the past ,
However, the TimPS said the
oiiler to evacuate was given out of
concern over an ti·American vlo·
lence there, which It said unidenti·
fled admlnlstralkln officials Wed·
nPSday linked to Libya .
The State Department warned
Americans Wednesday not to travel
to Khart oum because lerrorlsts are
"posing Ule·threatenlng dangers."
The strongly worded travel advi·
sory replaced a milder warning
issued In November.
The new warning said; "i)u£' to
the pn'St'!l l~ in Khartoum of
terrorists posing UfP·threatening
dangers to U.S. citizens, Am~ricans
should not travel to the Sudanese
capit al of Khartoum."
The Sudanese amba ssador to the
Unit ed Stall'S, Orner Sallh Ei ssa,
was recalled to Khartoum Wednesday by his government in protPSI
over the U.S. bombing of targets in
Libya.
Si nre the U.S. bombing raids,
Ihere have been large·scale Suda·
nrsr crmonstratlons against the
United States.

WATER LINE REPlACEMENT- Syracuse residents &lt;it JlllbbSrd
St. and on Thfrd st. from Codner's Exxon to Lan-y's Grooery were
asked not to use water from 10 a.m. Thursday rmmlngto 10 a.m. Friday'

25 Cants

A M.uHimedie Inc . Newtpaper

Elhtltttl1
I'OtiiiOY . Otuo
lll41 hl· liU!

CltMu, UID

Polley rega rding atti'Ddance of
18-year·old student s was reviewed
by th e Eastern Board of Education
at a special Session held WednPSday
night at Eastern High SchooL
Board memhers conceded the
cUI1'ent policy did leave some doubt
about tlle option of 18·year-olds to
sign In and out. A statement of
clarity was presented by Susie
Heines on behalf or the board which
states that "when a student attains
18 years of age, If It Is his or her
chOice to remain In school, then thai
student must abide by thl' school
rules which apply Ia· · other
students."
Principal William Buckley ex·
plalned the new policy to the seniors
and letters had been sent home for
parents to review,
During the meethig, It was voted
to extena tne prPSent building
lnsuranre policy with Downing·
Childs Agency, An appropriation
modification In the amount. of $500
was approved , The money was
changed from purchased servlres
to equipment to provide the money
' to purchase mats for the wall in tbe
gymnasium for the Tuppers Plains
SchooL
' A dona tlon of $500 from Bank One
was acknowledged. On behalf of the
Chester PTO, Rick Martin, Cllester

whUe workers replace the water line In that area. Preparatory work on
Hubbard st. was underway late Wednesday aftermon.

Meigs reviews self-insurance program
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff writer
The problem of the high cost of
liability Insurance Is being ad·
dressed by the Buckeye Joint
County Seif.lnsurance Council.
Meigs County Is a part of that
council, the first of Its kind in Ohio.
Nine other countiPS comprising the
council at this time are Hocking,
Athens, Gallla, Lawrence, Wa·
shington, Jackson, VInton, RDss
and Pike.
Commlssio""r Richard Jones
reported onJhe joint council at the
Wednesday's regu lar session of the
Meigs County Commission. Jones
attended a meet ing of the council
last week in Jackson.
Put1JC)se of the council is to
provide the member cou nt ies with a
self·insurance program for llablity.
· Meigs Cou nty has been without
llabllty Insurance since February.
Said Jones, "The problem of
liability orlglnally began when
sov!'rign Immunity was taken away
from local governments. Soverign
immunity was partially rPStored.
but not totally, in last year's
legislation. The rising cost of
llablity Insura nce can be attrtbuted
to the loss of soverlgn immunity
and to an ever ln creas lng numherd
llabllty clai ms."

JonPS reported all the member
count les were represented at last
week's joint council meeting, ex'
cept Washington , However, Jones
said, Washington County sent a
letter explalnliig why a representa·
liVP could not be prPSPnt and
reaffirming lis intl'rest In the
counciL
Jones salda review Is being made
of all 10 count ies to delermlne the
amount of money each one would
have to pay for seil·insurance. The
money from each county would
then be combined lntoonefund,and
allbough larger counties would be
required to pay more than smaller
ones, each county would draw upon
each other.
Each county wou ld "start out
even," Jones explained, with no
past hi stmy of pending liablity
aclions.
Clerk employed
.Joseph Proteill, of Cleveland, has
tEen hired to serve as ciPrk for the
g10up. After contactin g each
county for pertinent information,
Protelli wiU put tl1e self·insurance
program together and come up
with the initial costs to each county.
Once completed, the program
will he managed by Soutll'astPrn
Ohio Management Consultants
Inc .. Ironton.

Attendance policy
clarified at EHS

cond Street. Pomeroy, Ohio

46769 . Wrinen corretpon·

We Specialize in the
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.

:.eport, photos on Page 10

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Evacuation underway

oo+~••••o
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minute quadrangle maps. A
copy of tho oppticolion il

the Dtvlsion Of
ation,
Fountain

New fann technique

Libyan leader,
Khadafy rips
Reagan, U.S.

FOR FUN ON
THE RUN!

'

"At the End of the Poiiiii'OJ·Moson Bridge
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2556

6619,

Vol. 36, No.256
Copyrightod 1986

Rain likely today and tonight,
with highs today In the mid 40s and
lows tonight in th upper 30s. Mostly
cloudy Thursday, with highs Iii the
mid 50s.
The probability of precipllatlon is
60 percent today and tonight and 20
percent Thursday.
Friday through Sunday
Fair Friday, with rain likely
Saturday and Sunday, Highs wlll be
in the 60s each day, with overnight
lows In the 40s.

+----.. + o·L.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

County Court Houae, Se-

To replace waterline

:

Weather forecast
Richard Tennant rlficlatlng, Burial
will follow In SunrisP Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may caU at lbe funeral
home on Wednesday from 2·4 and
7·9 p.m.

.

r--:=:::::==:;:::===:-1

Pursu1nt to Ohio .Revised
Code Section 1513 .07 tfl
notice is hereby giv., of re·
vision to OONR Permit No.
D· 0483, Recc&lt;&gt;on·MinoNO.
3, owned by Souihlrn Ohio
C.,.! Compi!j
· y, P. 0 . Box
' 480.'\tl~ !Dtiio· 46701 '
The 11t,e 11 Cited 2 .6 miles
Welt of Wilkesville edjl;cent
(in 1 Southwesterly direction) to Stoto Route t 24 in
Vinton County. Ohio. More
specifically, the lite occu·
pies portion• ot Section 1 5
and Froctlona 24, 30, .,d
38 in Wll&lt;ol'lille Townahip,
T. 8N .. R.t8W .. lmmodia·
toly odjocont Ito tho Eelltl ol
Roccoon c....k. Tho do·
scribed •r• is containld in
the Mulga ondWllktl'lllle U,
S, Goological Survey 7. 6

Bloodmobile visit on Page 9

·

e

traveled slowly through Mason 1111d Harllord, giving local residents a
ch1111ce for alook..,ee. A few elephant legs could even be spied through
low barred windows. Come Ju~. lite cirrus wUI be In Columbus.

requests aU contrlbutJons be made
to the Mason Rl'scue Squad.
Funeral arrangements werl'
handled by lbe Foglesong FUneral
Home,

~

Emergency runs

Admissions.. Mary Oark, Middle·
port; Lonnie Hall, Vinton; Robert
Qualls, Middleport; Thelma
GruPSPr, Pomeroy; Carrte Moore,
Pomeroy,
Dlscharges ..Tracy Rowe,
George Greene, Lonnie HalL

See Page 3 .

Story on Page 5

Area deaths

SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE #3
REVISED 3 / 31 / 86
LEGAL NOTICE

104 units of blood

Spraying concerns

I
iContlnued from page 1)
School's competency based educa·
'
Marshall University In conjunction lion program requirements on an
wilh the yParbook.
Individual basis",
Supt. Dan E. Morris was autho"lnterventJon activities or experll.ed to designate one volunteer to riences provided to stud!'Dts wbo Hazel Winebrenner
'
assist coachPS In sprtng sports fall to meet minimum levels of
Hazel E. Winebrenner, 53, West
Including varsity and resprve base- acceptable performance on com·
Columbia, died Sunday at Pleasant
ball, rPSPrve and varsity softball
petency tests shall be provided Valley Hospital.
and high school track,
according to pupil needs."
She was born Dec. 2, !932 in
Endorses levy
The additions tie In with stat!' Glouster, Ohio, to the late William
The board went on record as , mandated testing which takes and Alice Shanner Thorp.
endorsing a .5 of one mill tubercula· place In the schools.
Surviving Is one daughter, Rita J ,
sis levy to be voted upon In May for
Supt.
Morris
reported
on
pro·
Hreha
of Nashport ,; one son,
thP county, Supt. Morrts com·
gress
!Eing
made
011 the coUeclion
William
P. Winebrenner II of
mented that the Meigs Local
of students names who should be Waterford; four sisters, Barbara
District does receive numerous
recognized for outstanding perfor- Kinney and LouisP Allen, both of
servlcPS from lbe local tuberculosis
mance In varklus fields tt endeavor Ravenna; Clara Rambo cr Crooks·
program. Receipt of the North
lndicatliig
that it will probably be ville,; and EvelynSmithofFiorida;
Cenl ral Assocla\!On of CollegPS and
June
before
tl1e llst is completed. four brothers, Tom of Crooksville;
Schools accreditation of Melg High
He
Indicated
that there are many Bobby of Alfred; Car l of Thorn·
School for the 198:H!6 year was
students
faUing
In the area of ville; and Frank of Diamond, six
acknowledged. The report lndi·
recognllion,
The
board has not grandsons.
cated that students are getting a
decided
what
form
the recognition
Graveside services will IE Sun·
"quality program of education".
of these students ivUJ take.
day at 4 p.m. at tlle West Columbia
Committees appolnled
AI lbe suggestion of Carol - HIIICemeterywil htheRev.George
Board President Snowden ap. Ohlinger, a teacher, It was agreed Hoschar officiating.
pointed committees frotn the board
to send letters to Consolidated
There will be no calling hours.
who wUI function to work with tlle Communications, Inc., Point Plea·
In lieu of flowers the fam ily
every day problems of the district sant, protesting lbe removal of
'
but will nollniPrfere with the dutiPS
channel
WOUB,
Athens,
from
the
of the administration. Named were cable television service provided by
lpO IS
Snowden and Rupe, ·· transports·
the company and It was agreed that
tion; Vaughan and Snowden, board
(Continued from page 11
the board will discuss tbe malt!'r at
policy; Rupe and Powell, flnana&gt;;
more depth durtng lbe May tan! thai you continuP the se1vice
Barton and Vaughan, buildings and meeting.
here and to people In West
grounds; Powell and Barton, public
JamPS Souls by, prPSident of tlle Virginia," she told Crawford .
relations.
Meigs Athiellc Boosters, reported
City So licitor !))uglas Cowles
The board Incorporated two
that plans for the erection of a Pmphaslzed that Ga llipolis haas a
additions Into board policy which 40x100 metal buDding, given the
ron-exclusive oonlract with Consol·
state:
district by Board Member !dated and the way is open for
"Ha ndicapped students as de· Vaughan, has been "stonewalled"
fined In Ohio's Rules for lbe slna&gt; last fall by the state, the another 'cable qJeralor to co"'pete
Education of Handicapped Child· architect and lite contractor. The with Consolidaled,
A motion to join Point Pleasant in
ren may be exempted from partJcl· boosters borrowed money for the
its
legal move against Consolidated
patlon In or from tlle Meigs Local project and nothing is happening,
was made by Saunders and se·
Souisby staled. It was agreed to conded by Commissioner G. Ri·
hold a meeting next week with key chard Brown. It passed unanim·
Meigs County Emergency Medi· personnel I nclud lng board
cal Service reports two . call'!. members and an attorney togetthe ously, with Commissioner Hugh H.
Tuesday; Middleport fire depatt · -project back oo track, The building Graham Jr. absenL
Cowles pointed out that suits will
ment atl2: 04 a.m. to Village Manor will be located near the high school.
Apartments where smoke was The reports of Treasurer Jane Fry have to be Hied In Ohio and West
Virginla .. .
showing at the Charles Wayland were approved by the board. "
"! can'! believe they !Consoli·
rPSidence; Mlddleportatl2:10a.m .
dated I wUI!et I hat happen," Cowles
to Village Ma11or Apartments for
Public Notice
said late-. "It will cost them in
Kathy Jones to Veterans Memortal
money and In goodwilL"
Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:09p.m. to
1~ Plum St, for Thelma GruPSPr to
ADDENDUM TO PART t
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
ITEM E i61
Ohio lollery numbers
Veterans Memorial

Baseball roundups

elementary principal, asked the
hoard ot provide half of the cost for
a new lena&gt; at the playground. He
said that the total cost has been set
at SIWO, not Including. the concrete
for setting the posts. No action was
taken on the matter at last night's
meeting.
Principal Buckley requested
hoard approval for [l'Ofesslonal
leave for the footbaU coaches, Don
Eichinger, RDn HUI ani! Mike
Douglas to attend football clinics at
West Virginia University, AprU lB • hto!!fll!l"'c~..and 19. Approval was given with the
stipulation that costs not exceed
$150.
.
The need for establlshing a time
llmit on board meetings was
discussed with 10:30 p.m. being set,
subject to review at a later time.
FoUowing the meeting, the board
moved Into executive session· with
the principals for the p~rpo~ of
reviewing and discussing personnel
whose contracts are up for renewal,
Attending were Martin, Buckley
and Wendy Halar, principals;
AWARD PRESENTED - Harry Lyons, Sr., a deputy sheriff fn
Eloise Boston, clerk·treasurer; and
Meigs County, right, receives an engraved plaque on behalf of his
board members, Kathy Manicke,
father, Alfred (Putt) Lyons on his retirement. Alfred Lyons !lel'ved as
Jim Caldwell, Jim Smith, Susie
Radne marshal for 44 years and Is achal1er memher,(30 years) In the
Heines, and RDger GauL
GaWa•Meigs Fraternal Order liPoHce 911. Presenting the plaque, left, Is
Next meetlngwUI be hek1April23 · Ray Manley, secretary-treasurer of the GalBa·Meigs Fralernal Order
with the beginning Ume being
of Pollee. Harry LytliL'I, Sr..,ls president d the two.county poUce liflcer
organization,
changed from 7 to 7:30 p.m.

Such a self·lnsurance program
would have to be approved by the
state department of Insurance and
a pobllc meeting In the matter Is to
be beld this week In Lawrence
County he reported.
Onre compieled, the program
wtll IE managed by Southeastern
Ohio Management Consultants
Inc., Ironton.
The plan Is expected to be ready
for implementation by the end of
May.
Not yet commltled
.
. As explained by JoDPS, all hough,
Meigs, by resolution, Is a member
of the joint council, lhe county is rot
committed to participate In the
actual Insurance program.
It may also be possible for
counties lo "pick up sections" oft he
Insurance program, wiiiDut taking
the whole package.
A minimum numberdfiveofthe
counties In the joint council will

need to particlpatl' in the SPit·
Insurance in order to make the

program suCCPSsful Jones believes.
It Is expected !hat for the first
three years, each county's annual
premium wiU remain the same.
After that , the premium will be
based on paslliabllty claims and on
Income from lnvPSimenls made
through the· se lf. Jn s ur ance
program.
If a county has a hist01y oflimlled
liablity claims, the self·lnsuranre
premium could decrease. A bad
record or claims could cause thP
premium to tiS!'.
Jones sald he was impressed with
the Information gathere&lt;l at last
week's meeting and sees "real
posslbllt!PS" In the proposed
program.
"Sell·lnsurana&gt; Is something
MPigs County has to look at," he
added, "I'm just not sure wc'U have
enough money to be a part"

Carryout owner files
request for· licenses
A new appUcallon lor a Cl·C2
license from tlle Ohio Department
of Liquor Control has been filed by
Kl'nneth Lindon Black, doing bus!·
ness as D&amp;B Quick Stop on RL HJin
Salisbury Township. ThP applica·
lion was reported We&lt;jnesday by
the Meigs County Commission, The
license would be Jor the carry out
only of beer and certain pre·
packaged mixed drinks.
In March, the ODLC denied a
license requPSt for the same
establishment from Daniel Edward
Rairden. ODLC based the denial
upon testimony given at an earlll'r
hearing In Meigs Cou nty, stating
the business Is located on a
dangerous Intersection and traffic
to and from the business would
Increase that danger since the
locallon of the buslnPSS Is In a
rPSidenllal heighhorbood , The rul·
lng also stated the buslnPSS would
- Interfere with pobllc decency,
sobriety and good order and would
add ' to a litter problem at nearby
Wesleyan Holiness Church: and
that Ralrden misrepresented a
material fact In applying for the
permit

Anyone wishing to object to lbe
Issuance of a license to Black should
submit ttnse objections to the
Meigs County Commission no later
than noon on May 2. Any objections
must be forwarded to lbe stat!' by
May 9,

Also, ODLC has set a hearing on
the transfer of ownership on a Dl,
02 and D3 liceDSP to Timothy C.
Adams, Salisbury Township , doing
business as Five Fblnts Bar, for
April 24, 11 a.m., at the Meigs
County Courthouse.
. In other business, the commls·
sian renewed a coni ract with the
ATEK company for the courthouSI'
computer system which has been In
operation for some time In both 1he
auditor's and trea surer's offices.
Commissioners have plans to
expand the system as rmncy
allows, to lncludProunty budgetary
and payroll information, and possl·
bly county highway department
Information .
A represent at ivefrom ATF:K told
the commission !hat th~ prNomt
courthouse system could he ,.,.
panded to hold :JJ.:lO users.
Permission was given bv 1h&lt;•
board for Colum bia Gas to install
piping aCfOSS Count y Roads J7 and
2.18 In Bedford Township, with 1Jw&gt;
sttpulatlon thm th£' casings be
vented. Piping on.17 will be Ins! a lied
by the boling TTII'Ihod. On 2]! the
pipe will bc installed by the
trenching met hod.
An animal claim was granted bY
the commiss ion to Hay ward His·
selt , Long Bottom, for the loss of 111
Rhode Island Red hens and one
rooster. He as attowed $2 eac h lot
the hell!l and $3 for the rooster.

Man enters.guilty plea
Thomas Lee King Jr., 21, Middle-the signature of Ray Clark, Midd leport, this momlng pleaded guUty In port, on a $225 check.
Meigs CountyCommonPieasCourt King faces a possible penalty of
to a charge of forgery .
six, 12 or lB months In prison and a
The charge, contained In a bill of fine of up to$2500, according to Paul
Information, rPSuited from an Gl'rard, special investigator for the
Incident which occurred March IC prosecutor's office.
In Middleport In which King forged

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