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Page~D-8~The

Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipOlis. Ohio~Polnt'Pieasan~.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. Va ..

April 20. 1.9 86
.,

Meigs ·c.onservation officials say
county has more ihan 30 ·soil types
By Nit'Dooley
SoD c-\oatru!UI
. Melp Olunly
POMEROy -Meigs Cou~ty has
more !ban ll d~rent son types,
each with specific charactB'Istlcs,_
according to Gordon GUmore, SoU
Scientist In MelliS County. Great
dltrerences In aoU cllaracterlstlcs
and properttes can occur mer smrt
distances, GilmOre adds. The aolls
of . Meigs CountY are · presmtly
being Interpreted lind mapped by
Gllrmre and Dean Bottrell of the
u.s,D.A. SoD Cooservatkm Servlre.
Tlte Investigation will 1'1!5ult t1 the
publication ~the MelliS County SoU
Survey.
. The SoU Survey will rontaln a
complete set of soU maps for the

HERD TO GO- 'These Hot.teln cows remalnmg In
lhe mlk production herd of Goorge and Harry Holter
wll be plllg lo slaughter lids week as a pan of lhe
Hollers' Plll'ilclpallon In the &amp;l)venunenl's $1.8 billion

-

-

whole herd buy-out dairy .reduction program. A total
of 14,000 dairy fanners, Including 48t mOhio, and
tlree In Melp Counly, are going out ol production for
the ned nve years.

Ho~

~. roundgpon Paae3

.

cow wetghs a thOu sand pounds, and
most are heavier than that, the row
would sell for $.1Xl. But a good dairy
cow, and I'm heing conserva tlve
here, iS worth $700. Once that bid is
accepted, ho\vever, the ·animal
must go lor slaughter, regardless&lt;t
the price."
Complaints to the subsidized

Wild turkey festival

scheduled May
McARTHUR - Altoough Benjamin Franklin's efforts nearly two
lrundred years ago to get the turkey
declared the national bird were not
successful, there remains great
admiration for the wild turkey.
Vinton Coonty, has bts of turkeys
- wild turkeys, tbat Is - and the
Vinton County Travel and Tourtsm
Committee Is planning the serond
annual Wild Thrkey Festival for
May 2 and 3, l!l!G, on the streets of
the rounty S€8t, McArthur, to
commemorate the esteem In which
many prople oold this Mighty Bird.
Located In southeastern Ohio's
hill country, Vinton County possesses natural scenic beauty and
reSources and qJportunitles tlr
outdoor recreation, many assoctat61 with Lake Alma, Lake Hope,
and Lake Rupert. Springtime Is an
especially lovely time or year In
Vinton County. The !J!od paved
roads at the county's highway
system make drtvlng through the
county to enjoy "Nature at tts Best"
a leisurely experlenCI'.
A "country festival" parade wDI
kick off the second Wild Thrkey
Festival on May 2 at 6: 30 p.m.
through downtown McArtlrur. It
will be followed by a concert
featuring McGuffey Lane, a
nationally-known count ry-rock
band, wrose appearance Is being
. made possible through the courtesy
of the Vinton County National
Bank. This will occur on the stage In
tronl of the courthouse beginning at
8 p.m.
Saturday's events will get underway at to a.m. with lively music on
the stage at the courtoouse. Local
and regional musicians will be
performing throughout the day for
your enjoyment - oountry, bluegrass, old-time, and gospel. Groitps
will Include: Mountain Top Gospel
·singers, Carol Goodman, champion
ftddler Kenny Sidle with Troy
Herdman, Hart Brothers, Sonshine, Country Comer Gang, Revelatbrs, Back-up Stars, Hawkeye
and Mountain Man and Company,
Atkinson Ridge Boys, Roger
McWhorter and Rebound , and

Signup May 5-16
for 10-year proj~t
WASHINGTON. (UPll - A
---- · second round of bidding next month
will give farmers a chance to Idle
highly erodible cropland for a
decade under a far -reaching new
conservatiOn program.
AgrtcUlture Secretary Rlchard
Lyng said Friday farmers will be
able to sign up May 5-16 to begin the
10-year effort either this year or
next year.
The Agriculture Department ac·
cepted only 838,356 acres on IO,JJ'l
farms , Lyng said many bidders
asked "unreallstlcaUy high rompensation," but he pred !cted
farmers will have a better under·
standing of the program during the
second round .
Accepted bids ranged from $5 to
$90 per acre a year. The average
was $41.82.
The plan has a goal of taking 40
mnnon to 45 mutton acres out of
production In gradual Increments.
Called the conservatiOn reserve, It
was Included In the 1985 nve-year
farm Jaw and described as -themost
important conserVation Initiative
since the Great Depression.
O&gt;ngre5s set a minimum goal for
enrolling 5 rnllllon acres this year.
The goverrunent also will pay halt
the cost o1 planting trees or grass on
the Idled land. ·

2~3

Sweet Mountain Sounds. Bring
along a lawn chair to enjoy the
music In comfort.
An Intermission from the music
will occur at 5 p.m. when the Wild
Thrkey Festival Quren Contest wUI
occur ~o select a person to represmt
the festival and county.

Farm flashes

NBA playoffs on Page 5

Photo on Page 10

By United Pl'e8l! lnlemallonal
A possible tornado touched down in a mobile oome
p~rk in northeastern Clark .County Sunday night,
lnJurtng six people and causing extensive damage.
Several mobile homes at the Brookside VIUage
Mobile Home Park near Catawba In Clark County
were damaged, said a spokesman for the Clark
County Sherifl's Department.
Catawba Fire Chief Don Heffner said he believed
the damage was caused by a tornado.
'" All thej rallers just blowed one way- blowed to
the east. Yes, It had to be (a tornado) lhe way It
twisted the traDers up."
·
However, National Weather Service riflclals said
they could not confirm that a lornado hit the area.
They said thedamagecould have been caused by high
winds.
Initially, all residents of the park were evacuated .

into ·Ottawa River

1 Figure of speech
7 Scottish cap
to Satchel
13 London's river
19 Mocked
20 Fuss
21 The sell
22 Caroused
24 Growing out of
two pair of wings of equal length.
25 Thai thing
Ants have a thin waist while the
27 Latin conjunclion
waist of a termite Is thick. If you are
28 Concerning
still oontused, we will send the ,_ 29 Math term
lnsoct to Identification Clinic at
30 Expunge
O.S.U. for the official I.D.
3t Not early
Heaving of allalfa was a serious
32 Above and
problem this spring. Don Myers,
toU&lt;:hlng
Extension Agronomist, suggest
34 Be Indebted
that producers walk their alfalfa
36 Bark cloth·
fields to appraise the degree of
38 Heraldr.y: Qraited
heaving. There Is oo way of
39 ·South:"1
Indian
pressing tbese plants back Into the
40
Bishop:
abbr.
!Ill!.
41 Amanuensis
Cult!packlng merely Increases
44
French article
injury to the plant. In stands where
46
Plunge
heaving has been a problem, a few
47
Perform
days delay In harvest and cutting
48
High mountain
slightly higher may salvage the
49
Weight
ollndia
stand. FertUizlng following this first
50 Foottike part
harvest wlll help In maintaining the
51 Collection Oil acts
plant vigor.
53 NIKIII symbol
Due to several prOblems, seeding
54 ,Teutonic detty
ri alfalla back Into alfaHa to thicken
55 Baker's products
a stand Is usually mt practical.
57 Blushing
·
Severely "heaved" alfalfa fields
58 Beast ol burden
may need to be plantoo to com for a ·
60 Arabian garments
year prtor to seeding back to
61 One
alfalfa.
62 Recommit
64 Penned
The Outstanding Young Tobacco
66 Walks weatlly
Farmer Awards and Recognition
68 Veneration
Program wiD be conducted again
70 Checkered cloth
this year. All active tobacco
72 Artlliciallanguage
farmers under the age of 35 may
73 Mortification
apply. All nominees must receive at
74
Arlicle
lea st 75 percent ri their total income
77
School
ol whales
from farming and must be actively
78
Duty
required
Involved In tobacco production.
80 Barite, e.g.
ApplicatiOns may be picked up
82 Broadca91
from the County Extension Office
83 Spoken
and soould be returned by May 12.
85 Merchant
Call if you would like ar appUcatlon
86 Mariner
or want to oomlnatesomeone. State
87 Pintail duck ·
winner will receive a substantial
88 Electrified
cash prize, a plaque and an expense
particle
paid trip to the awards and
90 Nahoor sheep
Recognition Banquet In VIrginia.
91 Legal mailers

99 Wire measures

101 Changes
104 Finish
105 Gal. ol song
107 Baseball stat.
108 Biller vetch
109 AI'(Or . in Spain
1tO Expected
111 Satdownlo
dinner
112 Hike
114 Roman official

116 Former Broadway
play
117 Airline info.
t t8 Right·hand page
ol a book : abbr.
120 Brad
122 lndl~: poellc
123 Sailors
124 Exists
125 Similar
127 Italian river
129 Guide
131 Vowed
133 Spanish article
134 Therefore
136 Radium symbol
t37 Flap
139 That woman
140 Shoemaker's toot
141 Astan o•
142 Negative prelix
143 Unit ol Siamese
currency
145 Range of
knowledge
147 Part of airplane:
pt.
151 Encountered
152 Music: as wr itt en

153
155
157
158
159
160

Tie
Actor Danson
Lilted wllh ~ver
Church bench
Stupefy
Los Angeles:
abbr.
t81 Guldo"slow note
163 Squander
t65 Sharp repty
167 Mother
168 Sliver symbol
169 Babylonian hero
171 lroquoian Indians
172 Habituate

at y

en tine
/t Section, 10 Pag01

Ohio, Monday, April 21. 1986

because of leaking natural gas, but many of them
were allowed to return home after the gas was shut
off. A Red CrOss official said 23 evacuees spent the
night at nearby Northeastern High School.
The Injured people were taken to Community
Hospital In nearby Springfield. Four were admllted
with multiple Injuries and two others were treated
and released, a hospital nursing supervisor. Th:lse
admitted were In stable condition.
James Lannon, a resident of the park, said te sky
became very dark just before the storm hit about 7
p.m.
"All of sudden it started to rain. The wind was
blowln ' and It sounded like a traln.I had my family lay
down on the noor and It was over just that last. It
lasted only about 30 seronds." said Lannon.
· The sheriff's department spokesman said about tO
bomes In the middle of the park suffered ··extensive

25 COf1tt

A Multimedil Inc. NewiP8Pir

damage," but he was unable to provide a damage
estimate.
Thunderstorms accompanied by hJgh winds also
swept through nearby Union County. causing
property damage and downing utility poles and trees.
Four barns and two houses were damaged and a
tractor trailer was overturned, but there were no
injuries reported, said a Union County Sherlff's
Department spokesman.
The National Weather Sel'lllce Issued a tornado
warning for Crawford and Richland counties late
Sunday, but no twister touchdowns were reported.
A cold front that touchedoffthestormsalso brought
significant amounts of rainfall to many parts of Ohio
Sunday.
Most Na tlonal Weather Service sta lions In the state
recorded an Inch or more of rain during a ZA-hour
period that ended at 7 p.m. Sunday.

Showers posslbl.. mixed with snow were In the
forecast for today.
Temperatures today were expected to drop from
the mid and upper 40s early In the day to the lls or
lower 40s by evening .
Scattered snow flurries were forec ast for eastern
Qhlo tonight, with snow flurries ront!nulng In
northeast Ohioan Tuesday. Lows tonlghl wUI be In the
:!ls, with highs Thesday ranging from the mid JJs to
low40s.
Fair weather Is In the forecast for Wednesday and
Thursday with a chance ofsoowers Frtday. Highs will
be In the upper 40s and the 50s Wednesday, in the 00s
Thursday and in the upper 'titls and 70s on Friday.
Lows w!ll be In the mid :Ills to mid JJs Wednesday , In
the mid 30s to mid 40sThursday andthemld40stolow
50s Friday.

Missing bomber, bodies found
173 Join
175 "" Lohengrin··
heroine
176 Tears
177 Chemical
compound
178 Erase: printing

DOWN
1 Lawmaker

2 Angry
3 Small amouhl
4 Cyprinoid fish
5 Football pos.
6 Redact
7 Tantalum symbol
8 Fruit drink

9 Engine
t 0 Brimless cap
11 Mature
12 Proceed
13 Stumble
t4 That man
t5 Hail!
t6 Simple
t7 Alrican antelope
t8 Poem of six
stanzas
23 Make more

obscure
26 Hurl
29 Remunerates

32
33
35
36
37
40
42
43
45
48
52
56
58
59
60
62
63
65
66

By Unlled Press International
An F -1ll fighter-bomber - the
only U.S. plane lost In last week's
air raid on Libya - was recovered
form the sea off the coast of Libya
and sent to the Soviet UniOn for
technlcallnspectlon, the Al·lttlhad
newspaper reported.
Libya's official Jana news
agency said Libyans were volunteering to serve on suicide squads to
avenge the U.S. raid, and a West
German newspaper reported Libya
was recruiting suicide commandos
In prison and through advertlsments In Europe and the Middle
East.
Al-Ittlhad, published In Abu
· Dhabi In the United Arab Emirates,
quoted Libyan sources Sunday as
saying the missing U.S . .F-111 was
found off the Libyan coast and
salvaged. The newspaper said It
was sent to the Soviet Union.
A Pentagon spokesman said he
had no Information about the
plane's fate and refused to commen! on the Al-lttlhad report .

7t Distend
73 Complications

75 Hasten
76 Belore
79 Cesium symbol
81 That is: abbr .
84 Parcel of land
87 Drunkard
89 Aerie
92 Wild plum
93 Edible seed
94 Emmet
95 Mend with cott on
97 Equallo 100 sq.
meters

98 Lowest po int
99 Pinochle term: pl.
100 Anger
101 Goals
102 Wheat track
t03 Ocean
106 Meadows
109 Undercooked
1t3 Neighbors,
collectively
1t5 At home
116 Clayey earth
119 Choose
121 Condescending

The F-lll. a technologically
advanced plane, Is presumably of

Proved atlractive
Equal
The two of us
Three, In Spain
Native of Mobile
Lighter-than-air
cralts
Ship's
complement
Part ol church
Glossy paint
Mimic
Snake
Traps
More arid
Tiny particles
Macaws
Balance
Couches
Hypothetical
Ioree
Subjecls of
discourse

67 Sudden flights
68 Time gone by
69 Armed conflict

123 Hauls
124 Kind
125 Fillor p1ow1ng
126 Surfeit
128 Shade tree
t30 Ejected. as tava
132 Gatekeepers
133 Dine
134 Locate
135' Fruit
t38 Wager

PICK UP PIECES- Ruby Cooner and her hutlbllnd, Eddie, pick-~

/"

the pieces of what was once their home and heJon&amp;liqtl &amp;UJ!IIaY after a
ldller iomado cut a two mile I!Wath tlrour,lt the 111uthealil seetlon of
Sweetwater, Texas early Saturday. An 117-year WI m~m waaldlled and
9% poople Injured while 1,500 m~ldellls were left homelelis kllhe we81
Texas iown. UPL

141 Evergreen shrub

144 Theron symbol
146 More recent

148 Frock
149 Roman gods
t50 Uncanny
151 Distance measure

t 52 A-U link age
154 Presses for

payment
156 Challenge
!58 Unadulterated
!59 Rat ional
t62 Chinese pagoda
!64 Transgress ·
t66 However
167 Mire
t 70 Indian mulberry
174 Negative prolix

A LINK TO 'QIE PAST- ~Hkllln Ita tndllloaal Wll)'l, lhe
Bob Evan a FUm m.IDUihelll ado provldel a memorable
link to oor rural herilap for )'UUJIIMd old alllr.e. Well illlown tor evenla
sucll as the AD-American WDd Bone 1111d lkno E"Jh4•·~ lllld lhe
International Chlckm FJ.rm1 Mid, the F11n11 welcomes .-ly llO,OII
vlflllors annually ~ elllre In dd.faljoned, EarJ.v American
No admillllon Ia cluu'led.
1100-~re

ae«vlltel.
@ 1986 United Feature Syndical~

request a second strtke If thl' BUd, In a report attrtbuted to
European Community foreign min· Israeli, British and Lebanese Intel II·
isters endorsed powerful measures gence sources, said Libya was
·recruiting suicide commandos
to contain Libyan terrorism .
The Libyan news agency Jana, from Its prisons and was advertismonitored In London. said Sunday Ing overseas lbr mercenaries lbrits
Libyans were cabling Co!. Moam- army.
"People woo committed serious
mar Khadafy volunteerlngtoserve
on suiCide squads "lo destroy crimes are released on the condieverything American" in revenge tion they are wUUng to take part In
suicide missions ootslde Libya,"
for the raid .
Libyan dficlals put the death toll BUd re[)orted.
"Khadafy has a ~w tactic. He Is
from the U.S. altackat 37, including
Khadafy 's adopted 15- month-old hiring mercenaries for terrortst
daughter, but Western diplomats actions through advertisements In
believe as many as 100 pro pie may English, Arab and Moroccan media ," It added.
have been killed.
Repercussions of the U.S. attack
Jana said local Ubyan Peoples
Congresses met across the nat ion forced the evacuation &amp;tnday ri
this weekend to discus&lt;; the "failed, Americans and Britons from Beirut
treacherous Amertcan. aggression and the Sudanese capitaL of Khartoum. Anti-American demonstraagainst Libya ."
The British foreign secretary, Sir
"'The masses confirmed their tiOns were reported throughout
Geoffrey Howe, In a televisiOn complete readiness to confront the Western Eruope.
Interview in London Sunday, Indi- American aggression," Jana said.
More than !lJ pacifists were
cated Britain woold not ruleoutthe "In cables sent to the leader of lhe arrested In a series of antipossibility of allowing U.S. jets to · revolution they confirmed their American demonstrations at miluse Its bases In future strikes readiness to berome suicide squads itary bases In Britain Sunday.
against Libya.
In order to destroy everything Other demonstrations were held In
But he Indica ted the United American."
Belgium. Wesl Germany and
States would he less llkely to
The West German newspaper Spain.
Interest to Soviet weapons experts.
Libya Is a Middle East ally of the
Soviets and an arms recipient.
Al-Jttlhad also reported the bodies of the plane's two crewmen,
Capt. Fernando L. Ribas-Dominici,
33, of Puerto Rlco, and Capt. Paul
F . Lorence, 31, of San Frahclsco,
were recovered and sent to the
Libyan capital Tripoli.
The report on the recovery of the
F-lll- the only plane unaccounted
for alter Thesday's raids on Tripoli
and the port ofBenghazl-cameon
the eve d today's Eureopen
Community foreign ministers
meeting In Luxembourg. The meet·
lng - the second since the U.S.
raids and third In a week - was
called to consider steps to comhal
Libyan terrorism._

McDonald heads Rio BOard of Trustees

look

19 Mislead

.

.

SUNOAY PUZZLER
92 Soak up 93 Gasped for
breath
96 Baseball's Musial

•

· Pomeroy~ Middleport,

New plat books anive

Most local farmers ready to
start planting '86 com crops
By Edward M. .VoDbom
Coumy Extmslon Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLlPOUS - Spring planting
season has started throughout Ohio
with the Ohio crop report estimatIng me per CPnt of Oh.lo oom
acreage planted as or April 13.
Most local farmers are waiting
unttl Ap~ll aJ to begin com planting.
Only 55 percent of the Ohio tobacco
beds were reported seeded. Southern Ohio was reported as.the dryest
area of the state with rainfall
ruM ing at only 47 per cent ri
norma! for the season.
·
The 10 year Conservation Reserve is expected to have another
bid period which will run from May
5 through May l l This Is a new
program of U.S.D.A. this spring
and It is administered by the local
ASC Office. For calculating a bid,
consider alternat!ve useforthe land
and come up with what rental rate
will be necessary to tie up land for
the 10 year period. The top dollar
accepted durtng the prior slgnup
period for our area of Ohio was $10
per acre.
Records of O.S.U. Entomologist
Indicate that over the·last 25 years
the first 10 days of April is the perkld
of time·when termites are swarmIng heavily. Ants swarm too. and a
lot of people can't tell ooe from the
other.
I often have trouble telling the
dlfferetCI'. 'The winged forms are
the reproduct!ves and they are the
ooes that will start new colonies. To
become an Instant expert compare
some of the Insec t features. Ants
have elbowed antennae while antmnae areoot elbowed on termlles.
Ants have two pair of wings of
unequal length while termites have

Wooden Rolls Royce

Twister hits Clark County mobile home park

Landfills leak

ACROSS

Dogs to adopt, .photo on Pap 8

Celtics dump Bulls

Vol.35, No.258
COJ&gt;vrlghted 1888

TOLEDO, Ohlq ~UP!) - A ell)
engineer says Nedo will have to
- - - - - - - take corrective action to stop two
old clly landfills from leaking an
slaughter are coming from the
average
of 00,00! gallons of polluNational Cattlemen's Association
tants
datly
Into the Ottawa River.
who contend that meat on the
Service
Director
Eugene Kasper
market from the dairy cows has
said
the
cleanup
could
cost as much
resulted In over supply and plumas
$15
mUUon
over
a
tO-year
period,
meting beef prices. To solve part &lt;t
although
he
recommended
that
the
that problem, Rlce says, the
city
take
a
shon-term
course
by
government has agreed to buy up
spending
DJ.'l~
to
cover
the
area
quantities &lt;t the meat rorthe armed
with clay and Improve the dikes
forces, school lunch and other
along
the river.
programs to help stabilize the price.
The
money also would cover
Still the charges continue from the
further
testing and varlus landfill
cattlemen.
projects.

GALIJPOUS - New GaiDa
Coonty plat boob have arrived
and are avaDable at the GaDia
SoU and Water eo.-vatrun
Dilltrlct ol&amp;e, ll29 Jaebon Pike,
Room 1)8.{;, GaDipolls Ohio
45831. 'Ole 0081 l!i Sll.
'
.

'

a home

.

e

.Three Meigs. ·~---__:C:.::on=tln:.::ued=fro=m~D-=--2
always been their primary source
of Income.
With the Hollers. RJce explained,
they did not consider loss of lnrome
but only net worth since they
wanted out.
"The dairy cattle going to
slaughter are selling now for about
ll cents. a.pound."
. Rlcesald, "so if a

Looking for

1

age to slip hazards to depth to
bedrOck. The decision on landuse
remains the responsibility of the
property owner.
According to Bottrell, the soil
survey Is neartngthe halfway point.
A1l additional 50,000 acres will be
mapped this year.
The Meigs County Soli Survey is a
cooperative efort of the Meigs
County Commissioners, the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation District and the U.S.D.A. Soli Conservation Sel'\llce. Fo,..more Information, call the Soli Conservation
Service at 002-6357 or 002-6647.

county printed on ~ current aerial
pooto base. Physical, chemical and
mineral characteristics~ the soli In
the county will be Included In the
published survey. Technical and
easy to understand llescrlptlons of
each soli found In the county wDI
heip landowners recognize the sons
m their property. SoU lnterpretatloi!S for various farm and ronfai'IIJ use will help lanwwners
decide the best use for their .land
based on soli type. Recommenda·
lions to overcome llmltatklns &lt;t
certain soUs are also Included.
Umltatlons range from poor drain-

Astros win again .

Tornadoes level ·
Texas community
SWEE1WATER, Texas (UP! )
- National , Guardsmen stood
wa lch today over the ruins of oomes
and businesses blown to tangled
havoc by tornadoos that k!Ued one
persgn. injured 92 and left 1 .~
homeless In a town already gloomy
from fa rm and on losses.
About 600 houses were damaged
and more than halt of those were.
destroyed by the two twlslers that
converged on the town Saturday
morning, causing damages of about
$15 million to $:!l miiUon, Mayor
Rick Rhodes said Sunday.
·
·"This is an eronomlcally depressed area anyway, with oU and
farming. We had a lot of prople
unemployed.'' Rhodes said. ~ This
Is the worst disaster ever In our

who rode rut tbe storm with his wife
and t\IO yoong ehlldren, found little
left to salvage Sunday.
. "I had just got caught up with all
my bills and had bought a
CadUlac," he said. "I don' t have
any Insurance, and somebody even
stole my dog. He was tled up In the
backyard and made it through the
storm, but I think someone came
along and got him."
"Most of the stuff we've found
isn't even ours," said Walker.
While most of tlte streets had
been cleared and debris picked up
by Sunday, there were stU! cars
protruding from homes and a Irash
dumpster In themlddleofone h:mse
that had lost Its roof.
.
'
GObeli Gerst, 47, worked In his
town."
A 7:30 p.m. to 7:00a.m. curfew roo0es5 Irick home, which had a
neighbor's van sticking through Its
was declared for a second day
front
wall.
today and National Guardsmen
"I'm not going to be able to save
ordered In by Gov. Mark White much, but at least I' ve got
patrolled the streets.
Some looting was reponed Satur- Insurance," Gerst said. "We're
day morning !rut no one was lucky to be aUve." ·
The twisters conveflled just
arrested and the plunder stopped
before
touching down about 7 a.m.
when the 115 guardsmen arrived
CST
SabJrday,
ru ttlng a 2- mile
Saturday night. pollee said.
path through the !llutheastern
White toured the wreckage Sun- section ~ the West Texas town,
day. At Sun Village, a musing located 215 miles west of Dallas.
project for the elderly where the . Nlnety·two people were Injured,
body of Henry Earl Tatom;87, was and l5 remained hospitalized Sunfound , White said he was stunned by day night.
More than 100 repairmen worked
the destruction.
"l don't see how anybody could Into the. night Sunday to restore
have lived toough this . It'sas bad as electrical service to lia:ked out
I've seen," he said. "We easily areas of the city, oot5to 111 perre"nt
could have seen 100 to 150 Uves of the city remained wltlnut
service, said Otarles Crain of
lost."
Some 1,500 prople In the town of Texas Electric Service Co.
While promised lo p-ess for a
t2,IXXI were lett homeless.
One of them, 3ohn Walker, 24, federal disaster area declaratkm.

,,

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RIO GRANDE - William C.
McDonald has been appointed
chairman ' of the Rlo Grande
Community College Board of Trustees and Carl G. Dahlberg has been
named vice chalnnan of the RJo
Grande College Board of Trustees.
McDonald, a 1951 RG Cgraduate,
earned his master's · degree In
business from Marshall University
in 1961. ·
Prominent in furthering public
education In southeastern OhiO.
McDonald was a past president of
the Ohio Education Association and
the Ohio Department of Elemen·
tary School Principals. He served
as vice chairman of the Ohio
Teacher's Rl&gt;ttrement System and

as execu tlve secretary of the development. In 1978 he was
Southeast Ohio Education Associa - appointed Ia assistant to the
tion. He was also an officer and president for external affairs.
During his RGC tenure, Dahlberg
member of numerous other profeshas
been Instrumental in Increasing
siOnal organizations.
the
amount
of private and governThe first recipient of the RGC
mental
liUPport
that RGC has
AtWood Achievement Award and
received
over
the
years.
Jackson County's Outstanding CitiDahlberg iS recognized as the
zen In 1981, McDonald was also
architect
of the RGC Free Enlerawarded the Ohio EducatiOn Assopr!se
Program.
Winner of the
ciation Human Relations Award In
Valley
Forge
Honors
Certificate,
1982. He has been the recipient of
the
program
teaches
high
school
many service awards from such
students
about
tlte
worldngs
of the
groups as the Ohio Senate, Ohio
American
economic
system.
The
House &lt;t Representatives, National
program,
held
each
summer
on
Education Association and Ohio
campus, has grown to the point of
Educatkln Association.
Dahlberg joln61 the RGC staff on hosting more tban 100 youths and
July 1, 1900, as vice president of teachers, conege clf!c!als said.

Another one of Dahlberg's
achievements clled by officials was
his obtaining the grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commission
that allowed the construction of the
. James A. Rhodes StudentCommunity Center.

$350,000
sought in
Meigs suit
A $.1i0,00l judgment suit has been
filed tn Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Christina Cooper, a
minor, by her mother, Clarinda
Cooper Theiss, Racine, against
Belknap Inc. , Louisville, Ky .. and
Thomas Theiss. Racine. ·
Tlte action stems from an
accident on April :!l, 1984, In which
the child was Injured while mowing
the family yard. According to the
complaint, the defendant Theis~
ordered the child to mow the yard.
She slipped on the grass. catching
her foot in the mower blade.
The complaint alleges lhat the
accident was caused by the negligence of Theiss, because the rea1'
safety shield guard was not on the
mower.
Plaintiff requests judgment of
$250,00lln joint and several llabl!ty
on all five causes of the action, with
an additional award of punitive
damages of $100,000 fiom Belknap
which made the mower.

Free trash pickup
ends in Middleport

TEACHER HONORED - Ml'l!l. Mae Voq, a
teacher f~r U yetll'l(, 2t of which have been at
Pomeroy Elemelltary School, W118 mnored al a
dinner 'nlunday by lhe Melp l.oall Teachen
Aaloclatlon. J~k Slavbt, ~MOCiatlon vice prealdent,
presented a plaque to Mrs. Young, center, In

rooognltlo!l of her eervtce and upcoot1D1 nilremellt.
Looldnl onla Rep. .Joi)'Dn lla8ter woo 11p0llil on IIChool
lePtlaiJon In educallon. Ben Gerber, from Unl-eerve
alteoded •. A plaque Willi also pre!M!IIted to David
Bowen M UIOCialkil) president for the past year.
J

Middleport mayor Fred Holtman
reports the free pickup of trash In
the vUiage ha s ended. Residents are
urged to not place brush and debris
In the village streets. Such action,
according to Hoffman, causes
problems with the stonn sewers
·and Is against village regulation•.
· The mayor said the village has
crllnances forbidding t~ placing
of delrls In the !treets. Violators
will be cited Into court If t.he
practice continues. Any hauUng
done by the village willbed:lneonly
atlhe usual charge &lt;t $20 per load .
Mayor Hoffman requests the coop. eratlon of residents In maintaining
clean streets throughoutthevlllagc.

�.
The Daily Sentinei-Pege-3

Pomeroy-Middleport: Ohio

:Commentary

,

.

lll Court Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGET!'

Publisher
BOBHOEFUCH

General Manager

D'\LE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of Th e Untied Press International. Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tt on and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than llO words
- long. All letters are subject to ed iting and must be signed with name, address and
· telephOne number. No unstgned letters w!ll be published . Letters should be In
· good taste, address ing Issues, not personalllles.

WASHINGTON -The story Is
told of the Indian chief who ·
measured his patience with pebbles. He marked evecy grievance
by punlng a pebble In his pouch.
When tbe pouch was full, he went to
war. So, too, with Ronald Reagan.
The president's strike against
Libyan targets last Monday was
justified vy every consideration of
prudent national pollcy. It culml·
nated years of provocation by
Moammar Khadafy. It was Immediately triggered by .the terrorist
bombing of a Berlln nightclub on
April 5. Not to have responded with
force would have left an Intolerable
Image of the United States through-

out the world. Reagan did what we
had to do.
We now see ourselves engaged
for the unforeseeable future In what
Defense Secretary Caspar Welrt·
berger descr-Ibed as "a new kind of
war." Many Atn'i\ricans
have
vivid recollections bf World War 1
when battle lines couk! be neattY
drawn acr:oss a map of Frana-.
Most Americans recall the years a
World War II, when conventional
forces were locked in a conven·
tiona I war on land and sea. Evm In
Vietnam, the war was confined to a
small and weU.&lt;Jefined area.
Terrorism Is different. There can
be .no battle llnes, no formal

still

engilgements of combat ships, no
oounterattacks against elusive
guerrillas. ~estlons ol mUitary
tactics and strategy become almost
Irrelevant. Khadaty's next attack
may taU anywhere. The Libyan
IPader Is vlrtllally unconsionable;
he Is Indifferent to the murder or
maiming of elvUians. He could
attack a passenj!l!r k&gt;unge at
O'Hare In Chicago or Stapleton In
Denver; he could leave his bloody
footprints on a spc)rts event at
Yankee Stadium; he oould attempt
some spectacular piece of barba·
rJsm when the Statue of Liberty Is
rededicated next summer. How
doeS one safely defend against

?l
•••

;Rhodes ·reaches
into bag of tricks
. With the prtmary election two weeks away and his Republican
opponents showing signs of life, former Gov. James A. Rhodes Is reaching
lnto his bottomless bag of trtcks to fend them off.
: A poU last week showed that Ohio Senate President Paul E. Glllmor,
RPort Olnton, had closed to just 5 percentage points behind Rhodes In the
Republican gubernatorial prtmary struggle.
: Never mind that the poll was commissioned by the Gutmorcampalgn, It
would generate headlines with the perception that the senator Is making It
il horse race. Rhodes' success depends on squashing that Impression.
~ To take away the headlines, Rhodes hastUy called a press confe1'81ce a; .rare maneuver on his part - to talk about his proposals for tax
te!)uctlons.
• Rliodes proposing tax cuts In an election campaign Is as newsy as the sun
romlng up tomorrow. But Rhodes knew it would be dutifully reported.
because It's the first time he has offered details about what he wwld do If
elected to a fifth four·year term.
: The first thllig'he said he would do Is hand out the 5 percent taxcutthat's
-~enacted by the General Assembly for next Jan. llf tiE ecooomyholds
up. Forget the economy, said Rhodes, the tax cut will be there.
• ·That's the same ldnd of logic that left the state $528 million In the hOle
when Rhodes departed In 1982.
: Rhodes also promised to accelerate business taX breaks, most of which
already had been accelerated by the administratiOn of Gov. Rlchat)l F.
O!leste In a manner that the state could afford.
: The cost of these additional tax breaks? Rhodes said the thriving
~nomy and increased Industrial activity would cover most of It and
tliere'd be a nominal $4D mUIIon to make up. Sure, we've heard-thai tune
6efore, too.
Rhodes has faUen back on his old 1900s gimmick ol promising highway
Interchanges, bypasses and state help with other bng- awaited county
constructk:m projects.
But some people are catching on. One Republican rouncUman In Medina
last week characterized such a promise as "balderdash. He had 16 years to
do lt."
Meanwhile, two potential Republican candidates for president In 1988
visited Columbus last week. both displaying their wares whlle rema!nlng
properly coy about their Intentions.
Rep. Jack Kemp, R·N.Y., and Gen. Alexander Halg said It Is too early to
commit to.the presidential race, and talking about It now would unfairly
upstage President Reagan.
.
Neither, however, was reluctant to discuss Indirectly the shortcomings
of the adrnlnlstration. Both Indicated Improvements can be'made. ·
For example, Kemp said taxes should be further reduced on the
American family, and that the monetary system should be reformed "to
make tbe dollar the unit of accounting."
"Unemployment Is stlll too high, and tax rates are too high," he said.
Halg said Reagan has been too sparing in the use of his veto power, partly
because Congress had loaded up btus with pork.
He talked of "fiscal fiabiness. It's going to be difficult 10 ex(ialn as
Republicans how we managed to double the deficit from $1 trillion to S2
tr!Uton," he said .
Halg also criticized the Gramm-Rudman· Hollings Act as "legislating a
balanced budget In a mindless, a~tomatlc way. NolXldy woold run a
business that way, and you can't run a govenunent that way. It's going to
take the heart and soul out of our defense budget," said the general.
Appearing before the Ohio Petroleum Marketers' Association, Halg
jabbed Vice President George Bush. a potential opponent, for "lobbying to
prop up the oil cartel" In the Mideast, saying It would lead to Increased
dependence on OPEC oil. Halg said the tree market should determine
American oil prices.

'

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lunacy?
The answer,ll seems to~· Is to
mount a truly devastating retalla·
tlon at the next provable and
significant grievance. The reported
attack on a U.S. Coast Guard
communicatiOns !acUity on the
Island of Lalnpedusa may quall1y.
Let us make haste slowly.
Last Monday night's ' attack ·
against Libya was measured. It
was not an "all-rut" response. The
president of course was concerned
with inOictlng physical damage on
Libyan lnstaUatlons, but he was at
least equally con~rned with sym.
oollc and psychological effects. The
object Is to convln&lt;r Khadafy that
-he must pay a heavy price lor his
gruesome fun and games. Next
time that price must be unbearably
large.
By that I rrean to suggest the
mining of Libyan hartlors so
effectively that nothing larl!l!r than
a rowboat moves. Khadafy's oil
fields become a feasible - but
difficult- target. Airfields could he
bombed to rubble. All of this Is
much more easUy said than done;
there would he casualties; there
would be unpredictable reactions
from wr putative allles, from Arab
states and from the Soviet Union.
Ma!t&lt;l\IP retalllatlon to Khadafy's
atrocity wUI be expensive In
every way.
Peaceful alternatives are worse.
What alternatives? Well, It Is said,
we should give diplomacy CJ\C more
tcy. That Is eS&amp;'IItlally what the 12
members ol the European Eco·
nomic Community suggested In
their resolution last week. Our
sunshine friends cherish the naive
ootion that a paper denunciation of
Libyan terrorism, coupled with a
chessboard movement of ambassa·
dors, may persuade Khadafyofthe
error of his ways. The man Is
Immune to clvllzed persuaskm.
Bombs he understands.

Demanding answers __J_a_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_v;_a_n_A_u_a
WASHINGTON - The State
DePartment Is reellng under a
barrage al pointed (Jlestlons from
Sen. Jesse Helms, R·N.C. It wUI
take a task forre to answer all the
smator's Inquiries.
Including followups, Helms has
demanded answers - In writingto more than mt complaints,
rumors and policy questions. The
hapless recipient of the senator's
tnterrogatocy, Ronald L Spiers,
under secretacy of state tlr man·
agement, must also defend himself
personally against a charge that he
allowed "an open · saloon" to
operate at the U.S. Embassy In
Islamabad while he was· ambassa·
dor to Pakistan.
Two thing:~ make the situation
particularly Interesting. Helms Is a
senior mem!Er of the Foreign
Relations Committee, and the
phrasing of many of the (Jlestlons
suggests that he already has a
pretty good Idea what the answers
will be- or had better be. In fact ,
some nfthe questions are almost as
Impossible to answer wltlDut fn .
crimination as the classic: "Have

supplemental package for embassy prepared by the department.
you stopped beating your wife?"
- Helms questioned the need for
The Helms quiz hasn't been sreurity will be spent on new
released, but a copy was slipped to furniture for embassies the depart· Spiers to have six assistant secn'us. Here are some oft he potentially ment plans to buDd, and asks: tarles, and demanded to know how
embarrassing questions the sena.· "Please explain what relationship oftm they traveled tirst class. He
there Is between new office fum!· accused the department of hiring
tor wants Spiers to answer:
- "During yrur tenure as ture for the Department of State wives of senior officials for the
am!Bssador to Pakistan, did the and prot~rtlon against terrorism." $50,0ll post as director· of the
- Helms expressed misgivings Family Liaison Office, and asked
American club serve alcoiDllc
beverages? ... In light of the Islamic at proposed staff Increases at tlr a list of all employees' children ·
fundamentalist objection to the certain embassjfs: "Given the who had gotten summer jobs in the
oonsumptlon of alcoholic hever· threat ct terrorism perceived by the department.
- Helms claimed that Ill percent
ages, did you permit the U,S. -department, please provide justlfl·
Embassy to q&gt;erate an q&gt;en saloon cation for Increasing rather than c1. women Foreign Service oltlcers
and allow visiting airline crews, decreaslrig the size of these mls· were In consular and admlnlstranon.offlclal visitors and Pakistani slons. This justification should tlve jobs Instead of polltlcal ·and ·
nationals to patronize the club? U Include a rountry·by·country threat ecooomlc positiOns, and asked It
assessment and the justification for t~s might explain why so lew
so, why?"
each new position envisioned In the women reach the ambassadorial
level. And he wanted to know why
- Noting that $24 mllllon has proposal."
- "Please provide me with a the Inspector general, required by.
been requested for new furniture,
Helms asked: "Why, tn llght of the complete Ust, by total Income law to report to Congress, has laDed
urgent, desperate need for Jm. rocelved, of all Department of State · to ootlfy the Foreign Relations
proved securtty against terrorist persoMel who earned during the Committee ol a single problem In
threats, did the department con- calendar year 1985 from salary, · six years. "Am I correct to assume
sider new furniture a higher hardship pay, danger pay and that the Inspector general has not
priority than projects to add to oonus awards more than the salacy become aware of such problems,
physical and electronic security?" cl. a United States SE!Iator." Helms abuses or deficiencies durtng a full
Helms also wants to know how ooted that this Information Is six years ...?" Helms asked.
much money from the emergency readily available on W-2 forms

Stand strong -----'-'--------G_eo__..::rg;:_e

_M_cG_ove.:_::_r:..:.=_n.

Letters to the Editor
Hit them where it hurts
I urge you to write or call
Consolidated Cable Station on Its
toll free phone number 1·!00-344·
3331 and COMPLAIN! !! It may do
some good. I've dropped my HBO
and Tier Channels - besides
'

...

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cunlng my but to half - 'I'm not
supporting the garbage channels If
they take o!f one of the best ones.
Hit the cable company where It
hurts - In the pocketbook.
Pat Winebrenner

Appreciates effort

:bn behalf of the RlvervlewP.T.O. extra work and perseverance and
1 :would like to thank Maxine to the many other people who
Whitehead and Martie Baum for helped in any way.
Our operetta was a big success
their long hours of work In
and
was most enjoyable lor the
organizing our operetta. This was
children
as well as their parmts
certainly a case of teachers going
and·grandparen
ts.
over and above the ca II' of duty and
Sue Suttle
they are truly appreciated.
Secretary
Riverside
P.T.O.
A special thanks also tot he rest of
the staff at Riverview for their

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Ever since Ronald Reagan's articulate and promote a sharply
landslide n!-€lectlon win over Wal· dlffermt vision for the nation than
ter Mondale, there have been the reactionary philosophY now
recommendations from some De- emanating from the Reagan White
mocrats and poUtical comrnenta· House.
tors that the Democratic Party
The American people will no!
should move toward a more respect a Democratic leadership
centrist or conservative point of that simply offers a wanned-over
view. -It Is said, for example, that Reaganlsm.
the Democratic Party should stop
Democrats should say "no" to
opposing Increased rnUltary spend- Mr. Reagan's funding of the Contra
lng and new weapol\S In order to be rebels now attacking Nicaragua
perceived as strong on nallonal from their CIA-organized bases tt
defense. • Democrats, they say, Honduras. Mr. Reagan calls them
should be more hard·nosed In "freedom fighters, " but they are,
resisting the claims of the poor or for the most. 'part, a collection of
troubled ciUzens, such as thefamUy mercenaries recruited to sabotage
fanners.
and terrorize the Nicaraguan cltl·
zens who Support their governI disagree with this strategy.
We do need a strong conservative ment. No self-respecting Democrat
polltical party In the United States. slDuld vote for this kind of dirty
But we don't need two.
.
business and cruel meddling in the
Mr. Reagan Is articulating and affairs of an ·tndependent neighbor·
leading the conservative cause lng state.
Democrats should say "oo" to
very effectively. And, to his credit,
he was doing so when his line was Mr. Reagan's Incredibly costly and
not popular.
· dangerous "Star Wars" nonsense.
He stood bravely with preslden· It Is shocking to hear the Demo·
tlal candidate Barry Goldwater In cratic chairman of the House
1964: When Goldwater was snowed Armed Setvlces Committee say
uriler the' sweeping victory of that In order to prove that
President Lyndon Johnson, there Democrats are strong on national
was talk of, If not the Impending defense they not only have to
death of the RepubliCan Party, the support evecy weapons boondoggle
need to move lttoward the center to the Reagan people dream up, they
resurrect lt. But neither Golqwater must find at least .one wea)Xineven
orReaganboughtthatadvlce.They Mr. Reagan opposes and then
continued to stand firmly on their support It as an example of
conse!Vatlve convictions and, lo Demqcratlc leadership. What utter
and behold, they saw their party rubbish lor a supposedly responsl·
wtn fourofthenext five presidential ble member of Congress to suggest!
elections, Including Mr. Reagan's
This mUltacy and polltlcal stra·
two vlctortes.
tegy advice comes at a time when
I do notagreewlth theposltlonsol Polls areshowtngthat a majority of
Mr. Reagan, but I do admire his the American people have nnally
character In staying with his decided they do no want any
convictions.
Increase In mllltary spending, For
Derrocrats must do the same. the Democrats tD support Mr.
America desperately needs a Reagiln'srecklessandlil-concelved
strong Uberal party that will arms spending binge' Is oot only

against tile national Interest; It Is
against pubUc opinion and against
the Interests d. the Democratic
·
Party.
As for the domestic scene,
Democrats urgently need to offer
an alternative agenda calling for a
stronger commitment to a safe
environment, a prosperous agriculture. a growing economy, strong
programs In education and health

.

winning· streak

'

New kind of war _______Ja-:-me---'s-:-J._K_ilpa_t_~ic_k

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Astros. extend

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Porneroy--.Middleport. Ohio
Monday, April21, 1986

care and a red uction In crime .
Standing In the shadow of Mr . .
Reagan or sitting In the mlddle of
the road may sl'l'm llke an easy ·
way to exploit the current Reagan
popularity. But It Is not, I believe,
the path IBck to leadership and
power for the 0ell)9Crats. Being In ·
the middle of the road In fast traffic ·
can be a vecy ha?.ardous place to be.

,.
'DDS CARDINAL IS Our-· Sl. Louis Cardinals
Tom Herr was eaJied out at the plate u Mlllllreal
catdJer Tom Nieto, a fonner Cardinal, holds the baD

Montreal. Herr trted to score on a til by Jack Clark.
Montreal snapped the Cards's wining steak, 2-0
behind ex-Red Jay 'llbbs. UPI.

By JOE W.UZZI
UPI Sporis Wrler
The Houston Astros are off to a
fast start, and It could pay off for
them In October.
The Astros, notoriously slow
starters, have bolted out to an 8-3
reeord, thelt best start· after 11
games since theywent9-21n 1972. In
1983, they opened the season 2-10.
By starting quickly, the Astros
won't find themselves fighting so
hard to rebound In the swnmer
months. In recent seasons they
have struggled early, sul'l(ed in tbe
middle months, then ran out of gas
down the -stretch.
Houston 's rookie manager, Hal
Lanier, has had the Astros running
from the start.
"We came wt of spring training
knowing we wanted to be a much
more aggressive team, especially
on the basepaths, and that's what
we've been," Lanier said Sunday
after the Astros defeated the Reds
&amp;4 to extend their winning streak to
five games.
.
Houston's bullpen, which held
Cincinnati to one run and four hits
over the flrlal61·31nnlngs Sunday,
has been very effective.
Mike Madden, 1-0, gave up two
hits and one run over three inning:&gt;
to get the vlctocy. Julio · Solano
yielded two hlts·over 2 2-3 scoreless
Innings, Jeff Calhoun pitched 1-3 of
an Inning, and Charlle Kerfeld
worked the flnall-3 inning to get his
second save.
Saturday, Kerfeld had a25-tnnlng
scoreless streak, which dated back
to last season, snapped.
Phll Gamer, who Sunday hit his
fourth homer of the week , has led
In
the offensive surge with 12 hUts
his last 22 at-bats. With Houston

I.-------------~~
QUALITY I
I . SERVICE I
I
I
1
OIL AND FITD
I
CHANGI
I
I

fourth homer a tre year. Two outs
later, Kevin Bass singled, and Alan 1
Ashby followed with a two-run 1
homer.
1 •NIIW oil tup to II Cl!l· ca,./11
"They got ahead of us. but we I qU, truckl) •New Mopar oil
tumaroull!andcomeupwlththree I fltt. -tCheck ~ld lftel.
runs just like that," Lanier said. I tChack battecy •Special or
"Bu~ that's the kind of thing we've I additional oil lllghtly higher.
been doing lately. And Garner has I
just been unbelli!vable.l don't know I
who else .can be Natkmal League I
Player of the Week."
I
Elsewhere In the NL, New York I
pounded Philadelphia 8-0, Los I
An!~r"les downed Atlanta 7· 3,
Montreal blanked St. Louts 2- 0, and I
San Francisco shut out San Diego I·
4-0. The game between Pittsburgh ' I
and ChiCago was suspmded be· 1
cause of darkness after 13 Innings . 11
with the score tied ll-8.
W I'
Met!i 8, Phillles 0
1
At New York, Sid Fernandez and 1 CLIP AND SAVE
Roger McDowell combined on a 1
two-hitter, and Danny Beep I
cracked a three-run homer to help 1
the Mets complete a sweep of the I
OJ(
three- game series. Fernandez, Hl, I
mTIR
allowed singles to Gary Redus and I
4 CYL Wll
Mike Sclunldt before yielding to I
'
McDowell to start the ninth. Kevin I
6 CYL. URS
Gross fell to (). 2.
I
Dodgers 7, Braves 3
I
:DCIS
At Atlanta, Ken Landreaux went I
I CYL.
Hor 4. with two RBI, and Bob Welch 1
1
WITH THIS AD
scattered nine hits to pace the
Dodgers. Welch, W, struck out I , ,
elghlandwalkedoneforhissecond
complete game. Greg Brock's I
Chrysler-Plymouch
two-run homer helped Los Ailgeies
snap a five- game losing steak. Rick , 1
Dodge
Mahler slipped to 1·3.
Expos 2, Cardnals 0
At Montreal, Tim Wallach
doubled
homeInpinch-runner
Herm
Winningham
the aghth, and
Jay
Tibbs pitched an elght·hltter ti lift
E
! ~

I

SA"IIIOSJ

SPRING REPAIR

$1 295

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$1495

l COOPER

lahl8mlldurbtgthellntlnnlngoiSu;:nda~y~'s~g=ame:.:at:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~tr~at=·t n=g:. : .3-~l,~G~a~rne=r~led=-o=ff-w~lth=h=l=s-the_ _xpos_._ _ _ _ _ _ __j~~=========-

Haa8 posts
third victory

• l'tuh p \1" r'" lm

1'1~ •

By JIM LU'ITRELL
UP! Spons WrMer

Moose Haas has become a hll
with the Oakland A's by stiCking to
the basics.
The veteran right-hander, who
joined Oakland just before the start
of the season, limited the Seattle
Mariners to one run on two hits
while striking out five and walking
two over seven Innings in leading
the A's to a 9-3 vlctocy.
Haas has won all three of his
starts this season for the A's, who
have won lour straight. Matt
Young, 2·1, was the loser.
Dwayne Murphy drove In three
runs and Donnie Hill hit his second
homer of the season to fUel the A's
offense.
Elsewhere, Boston downed Chi·
cage G-2, Baltimore ripped Texas
G-1, New York nipped Milwaukee
54 In 10 lltnlngs, California topped
Minnesota 8-5, and Kansas Oty
defeated Toronto 64. Cleveland at
Detroit was postponed by rain.
Red Sox 6, White Sox 2
At Boston, Mike Brown· threw a
live-hitter over seven Innings to
earn his first vlctocy In nearly two
seasons and help Boston complete a
three-game sweep. Brown, Hl,
earned his first major-league vic·
tocy since May 2, 1984. Floyd
Bannlster,l· 2, suffered the loss.
Orioles 6,
Rangers I
..
At Baltimore. Eddie Murray hit
his third hoine run In the last four
games, and Jim Dwyer added a
solo shot to !Xlwer Baltimore!Stonn
Davis, 1-0, yielded four hits and
struck wt five for the victory. Jose
Guzman, 1·2, was the loser. The
OriOles also placed right-hander
Mike Bod:llcker on the 15-day
disabled list with a slightly tom
llga~¥nt In tbe mlddle finger of his
pltchlitg hand.

Yankoe8 ~. Brewers t

.

At MUwaukee, Dave Winfield
scored from second base on Robin
Yount's Infield error In the lOth
Inning, llftltig New York. Winfield
opened the Inning with a double off
Mark Clear, 0·1. Mike Easler
grounded to first baseman Yount,
who threw wUdly tD Oear, cove(lng
the bag, allowing Winfield to race
home. Dave Righetti, 2-0, worked
the last t"'Oinnlngs for the triumph.

Berry's World

'·

Angel8 8, Twm5
At Anaheim, Calif., Brian Down·
lng's three·run homer highlighted a
four-run ninth Inning and powered
California 10 Its third straight
victory. Terry Forster. 1-0, worked
one Inning In relief of starter Don
Sutton tor the victory. Sutton, who
needs five victories for 300 In his .
career, faDed In his third attempt
this season to notch No. 296. Ron
Davis, H. took the kiss. Royals 8,

SuR« saver
. Carton
Kings
&amp;IDO's
.41.• &gt;11/YllfflblP ill Ml'lllilli.

Blue Jayst

" I'm thinking oftaking up walking, but I'm not
sure how to go about it."

l'

"

·~...

·"

At Toronto, Frank White blasted
a three-run.l!omer to cap a four· run
seventh Inning and lead Kansas
City. Charlie Lelbrandt worked 71-3
Innings to Improve his record to 2-0.
Dan Quisenberry finished up for his
third save. Dennis Lamp, working
In relief of Jim Acker, suffered his
first bss slnoe Aug. 21, 1984.

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

Kings ' IO mg "tar:' 0.8mg nicotine IDO's: 11 mg "ta1:· 0.9m~nicotine av. per cigaratle by fTC method

Mlr's . suggested retail price is Sl 50 less than lull-price brands.

�'..

"

Monday, April 21, 1988

Monday.

Ohio

'

English 1'1111 It In : Z7.2, deleatiaK Gallipolis' Kim
.laney by lllree4enths of a second. MarieCia won lbe
1986 Alrls meet with 108 pomls.

. . . . , , ....... tl

...,...
'

-.

. ~.

·:.." '

••

PORTSMOUTH - Meigs' Marauderettes captured the Ports·
mouth Clay Invitational girls'
softball tournament here Saturday
with an opening 2·1 win over
Piketon and drilled Minford In the
finals, 16-2.
Defending champion and host
Portsmouth Clay, which· has a
premier softball program and has
won the class A state championship
three times in the past six years,
lost the crown to the Marau·
derettes, who were runners-up a
year ago. Clay was upset by
Minford In the first round, but came
back to defeat 'Piketon In the
consolation round.
In the first game against Piketon,
Barb Hattleld and the Red Streaks'
Smith were locked up in a 0-0
deadlock until the sixth. Meigs took
a 1-0 lead In tile sixth when Jodi
Harrtson singled, stole second, and
scored on Shannon Hlndy's two-out
single.
In the seventh and lied 1-1, Meigs
scored the winning run when
Tammy Wright walked, stole second, and scored on Gina Follrod's
single. Piketon staged a rally In
their half of the seventh, but
stranded the tying run at third base.
Hatfield fanned three and walked
one while hurling a two-hitter.
Smith (anned five and walked four
while limiting the Marauderettes to
only four hits, all singles by Hlndy ,
Follrod, Harrison, and Jenni
Couch:

....
'

l

'

t •

•

,: ·. $~X'D~ IN LONG JUMP- Melp' Bnd Robln8oo pl8ced IIIIth In the
liN Jump eveatdurlnl Salurday'slllh •nuaiG&amp;lllpolaBotary Re~

at Rio GJ'JIIIde. ROOJnloM!Ieaped JU. Galllpolls' OlrtiTawoeywmlbe

.evllll db a Jump of 1J.10%, upeeUmc PolnU'Ieaaant'sCiiffSimpldn8,
• ihimeet'slopiiCIIrerwllh 38 points. Sbnpldnnoared lt-91,1. Lopn wm
the boyateam ~lie with 114 points.

Riddled Meigs staff
clobbered in twinbill
· ROCK SPRINGS - With their
top. five pitchers out. a riddled
I~Jelgs pitching staff was clobbered
In lloth ends of a doubleheader by
Ripley, 15-2 and 1&amp;-3, In non-league
baseball action here Saturday.
With sore-anned Mike Bartrum
and Shawn Baker unable to take the
inound. Coach Clltf Kennedy also
)VaS without hurlers Rick Wise,
.·Calle Hendricks, and Jeff Nelson.
·mle were all unable to attend the

...

·JI!IIl"·

·•;Jn.. the first game, Ripley broke

pperi.a 2-0 lead in the fou rth with a
.teye!'-run Inning. The Vlk_lngs
~out 17 hits In the opener, tile
·5ame amount they had In the
: .ug11rcap.
: Mark Corbitt started lor Meigs
mid gave way to Todd Hysell in the
)'OOrth and Rodd Harrison pitched
·the seventh. They fanned four and
wallced six. Phillips and Kay fanned
~and walked.three tlr Ripley.
Mflgs hitters Included a dOUble
by~ Becker and a slngleeacy
by 01nl Kennedy, Harrison,
llaier, Bartrum, Tony Shoemaker,
'
.
~

.

~Douglas claims
?~rd fight victory

• bAs VEGAS, Nev. (UP! I - Ring
Magazine's elghth·ranked heavyweight, James Douglas of Colwn·
bus, Ohio, claimed his 23rd profes·
$klnal vlctocy with a unanimous
el(ht·round decision over journeyRian Dave Jaco of Toledo, Ohio,
t1urlng the weekend.
-~-Douglas

beat Jaco In a bout
pfellmlnacy to Saturday night's
Michael Spinks-Larry Holmes
world heavyweight championship
:light.

and Donnie Fry. Nutter and Jones
had three singles each for Ripley.
Things were much the same In
the second game as Ripley, now
owners of a 10-5 record, scored 11
runs In tile ftfth frame to win big.
Meigs hurlers, Chris Hanning,
Joey Snyder, and Kennedy combined to fan nine and walk Hve
"'hlle Ripley's Charan and
Wa,Ikcr combined lor strike out
seveil and walk five.
Becker ripped a horne run, his
thirp of the season·, for Meigs while
Kennedy, Hanning, Greg Fields,
and Fry all singled ClUE each .
Meigs, now 7-6-1. tlr the season,
travel to Alexander ''tonlght, ~ to
Trlrr\ble Wednesday, oost Logan
Thursday, and travel to Miller
Friday. Coach Clltf Kennedy's
charges are 4-2-lln theTVC, stW In
a challenging Position for tile title.

In the championship game.
Meigs mounted an 18-hit attack
Including lour hits each by Wright
and Hindy.
Other Marauderette hitters Included Harrison with two singles
and a double, a single and double by
Follrod, both Dee Henderson and
Cindy Riffle tripled, Couch had two
singles, and Carol Smith singled
once. Couch was credited with a
standout defensive job at third
base.
Hatfield tanned lour and walked
one In another fine performance.
Minford's Fultz fanned none and
walked five. With the win, Coach

•

-FOR THE SYRACUE AREA
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• Choice of steaming rice
or French fries (or baked
potato after 5 p .m .) • Cock·
tail sauce • Lef11on wedge
•lllastl;.d Grecian bread
-I'I.US-

1

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·2156. Se·

All-You-Care:ro-Eat
Soup, Salad &amp; Fruit Bar! ·

cond class pos tagl' paid at PomE-roy. '
Ohi o.

to The Dally Sent'lncl, lll Court St., I
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!1169.

SVBS&lt;:IIIPTION KATES
I
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1
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wirh every disc or roll of color prinl film
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This Offer Not Valid In Connection With
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...,,

No subscriptions by mall perrrillted ln

·: : With ll seconds lett In the round,
.;;S:Iett hook from Douglas brought a
: dazed look to the fat'&lt;' of Jaco. but he
.; hung on.
·· In tile third and fourth rounds,
'· Douglas again came out aggres·
Sll'ely, but Jaco backed away and
the pace slowed.

THIS WEEK'S

UJNCH FEATURE
Charbroiled Chicken
Served With
Soup, Salad &amp; Fruit Bar
11 a.m.-3 p.m.

month. ·
towns where home carrier service 1!1
available.

Moll Suboc:rlpllono
ln1kle Ohio
1.1 Weeks ............................... ... $1\ .56
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c:r-••
I

By L!Si\ HARRIS
UPI Sports WI'Mer
Underdogs, lncludlng those who
have heard they didn't belong In the
first round of NHL playoffs, now
have designs on the third round.
Through tile opening two- game
hornestands of all four best -of-seven
division finals, no lavortte was able
to sweep, and no learn remained·
undefeated In the playotfs.
The Toronto Mapll' Leafs, getting
their first shutout ol the year and
first of goalie Ken Wregget's NHL
career, beat file St. Louis Blues ~
Sunday to tle the Norris Division
championship series 1-1.
The Calgary Flames, who upset
two-time Stanley Cup champion
Edmonton In Game 1 of the Smythe
title series, fell in overtime 6-5, bur
had the Oilers .on the ropes through
most of the game at Edmonton's
Northiands Coliseum. Oiler Glenn
Anderson scored his second goal r1
the game and sixth of the playoffs 64
seconds Into overtime after Flame
Joe Mullen scored his second of the
night and sixth In postseason play to
force overtime.
Undaunted by the close loss, the
Flames areremlndlngrhar It' snow
a best·Of·flve series, With three to be
played In their Saddledomc home.
The Wales Conference series
resumes tonight with the Patrick
Division's Washington Capitals and
New York Rang~&gt;rs tied 1-1 switchIng to Madison Square Garden for
Game 3, and Montreal traveling to
the Hartford Civ ic · Center to
continue the Adams Division series

PHARMACY
Point Pleasant, W. Va ., Gallipolis, Oh .
Middleport, Oh.

S3.99

against the Whalers.
Maple Leafs 3, Blues 0
At St . Louis, Wregget made 35
saves to md several trends. In
addition to the team and personal
shutout llrsts, rhP victory was
Toronto's first In 14 games ar The
Arena after an 0-11-2 record since
Feb. 17, 1983.
The Blues were shut out for the
first time since May 1, 1900, and St.
Louis goalie Greg Millen faced :r7
shots In losing his ftrst playclf start
In four outlngs this year.
Oilers 6, Flames 5 CYI'
· q.t Edmonton, Alberta, Ander·
son's lateral movement paid off on
the first shot' of overtime. Taking a
short pass from Dave Lumley at the
edge of the net,Anderson cut across
the crease, stopped abruptly. and
backhanded a shot across the grain
as goalie Rejean Lemelin slid
across the crease to follow
Anderson.
Capllah at Rm~rs

AI New York, following Washing·
ton's 8-1 rout In Game 2, the
Capitals are cautioning that a
seven-goal rout Is rnt typical of
their ctlense- and the Rangers are
hoping one· goal production Is not a
reversion to regular-season tlrm.
Canadiens at Whalers

AI Hartford, Conn., while both
reams gor where they are primarily
on hot goa ltenders, Montreat coach
.lean Perron Is anxious to wr a
jump In the first period and
Hartford coach Jack Evans want s
ro ger a jump on Montrea l's
supposed checking line.

Scoreboard ...
~..,'"K4~
Torunlo 6. ..:11nsa" Citv 5
f'k•ttPiand lt. DI~•"Oil t;'

Majors

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AI Philadelphia, rhe 76ers, play·
lng without Moses Malone who
fractured a bone around his right
eye In the regular season, rallied
hehlnd 27 pclnts and 20 rebounds
from Charles Barkley to defeat the
Washington Bullets. Philadelphia
evened It s !!:astern Conferenc:t'
series at 1-1 with a 102-97 trlumoh.
At Denver. missing players tock
a toll on the Nuggets, who fE'll to the
Portland Trail Blazers 108-106. That
Western Conference (4lenlng series
Is tied H
Denver played without starting
center Wayne Cooper, who had a
sprained ankle, and six th man Bill
Hanzlik, who l' hospitalized with a
congenital back problem.
Boston and Mllwaukl.&gt;e can end
their best-of-five series on Ute road
Tuesday. Washington and Portland
will he ar home when their
respective series' resume Tuesday.
Also Tuesday, Atlanta travels to
Detroit, and Houston visits Sacramento with a chance to sweep their
series. Wednesday, the Los Angeles
Lakers visit San Antonio with a
chanre to sweep. Dallas will he
afforded the same opportunity at
Salt Lake City Wednesday.
"He Is rhe most exciting, most
-- awesome player In the game," said
Boston's two-time MVP Larry Bird
of Jordan . "I didn't think anyone
was capable d doing what Michael
has done against us the pasr two
games."
Jordan, who scored 49 points In
Game 1, broke the playctf scoring
mark of ~ set In Boston by Elgln
Baylor of the Los Angeles Lakers In
1962. he hit 22 of 41 soots fr.om 'the
floor, and 19 of 21 free throws.
Bird sc:ored 36 points, and Kevin
McHale finished with 27 for the
Cclttcs. Orlando Woolridge backed
Jordan's offense with :.11 points.
Bucks Ill, Nels !J7
AI Milwaukee, Terry Cummings
scored 13 of his 'IS points In the third
quarter, and Milwaukee' scored ~
of Its 26 fourth-quarter points from

Earnhardt
posts second
straight win

,

Feast.

ll~ !~, =DA~!4_]

POSTMASTER: Send addi'E'Ss changes

(t\.f

Underdogs post
NUL playoff wins

CARRIER NEEDED

BARGAt~ MATINEES SATURilAY
I SUNDAY • ALL SEATS 12.50
~JSStON EIERY TUESD!Y 1! .50

Member: United Pr~s Int erna ti onal,
Inla nd Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper AS!loclat!on . Nallonal
Advertlslng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue ,
New York, New York 10017.

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING
;;.~ 12 EXPS. ROLL.· ~ 1. 99

OUI'STANDING PERFORMANCE - 'l1le Ollcqo Bt.ils' Michael
JOI'dan IOe8 up lor a basket as the Cehl&lt;s' LaJTY Bird attempts to block
him during the lln!t qtwler action of game two of the NBi\ playoffs
Sunday. Jonlatl IICIIred 63 points, however,llo8ton wonlts second game
from the llull8, 135-13lln double overihne. UPI.

A t:atch.

· ~JI

By li\N W~
the free throw line, Mike Gmlnski
Dick Motta said.
points, Including 7 of _tile Bl!121'rs'
• · UPI Sports Writer
led the Nets with 28 points. Sldiley
'l6ers 102, Bullets !J7 '
llnal R p&lt;ilnts. Portland held off a
Players who were supposed to be Moncrief added :JJ for Milwaukee.
At Philadelphia, Barkley scor&lt;&lt;l7 frantic Denver ra'ly In the last 10
missing from action dominated the
Mavericks 113, Jazz 1116
polntsdown the stretch as the76ers, seconds. With rwo seconds lefi
NBA playoffs Sunday.
At Dallas, Aguirre scored the who blew a 17-polnt lead In Game 1. Denver had a chanre to tie as T.R.
Chtef among them was Michael most crucial points Inside the overcame a 92·83 Washington Dunn fed Mike Evans whose
JOrdan, who ff&gt;tumed to action !.our-minute mark as Dallas built a advantage. The Bu llets rteeivec:l 25 off-balance attempt at the buZ2er
against management wishes after 9-polnt lead. Karl Malone of Utah points from Jeff Malone, and 22 W£'nt in and out. ·
:
recovering from a broken left foot hlr for 31 points.
from Gus Williams.
Dunn scored a season-high: 21
suffered three games Into the
"If Mark was only &amp;l perc:t'nl
Nuggets 108, Blazers 106
points for the Nuggets ana Ajex
season. He scored a playoff-rteord tonight I wish he would play &amp;l
At Denver, l&lt;ikl Vandeweghr, a English had ?A . Clyde Orexler;had
63 points against the Boston Celtlcs, percent every night ," Dallas c.oach former Nuggets star, scored .16 22 points for Portland.
but his presence alone was not
enough to stopBost.on, which took a , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - _ : _
2-0 lead In their Eastern Conference
opening round series with a 135·131
double-overtime victory.
At Milwaukee, Darryl Dawldils,
declared by the New Jersey Nets to
be out for the season with a bad
back, made a surprise appearance
Sunday, scoring 10 points. He
played 17 minutes- his most since
Feb. 4- but couldn't rally. the Nets
as they fell to the Milwaukee _Bucks
111·97. Milwaukee leads that East·
ern Conference series 2-0.
At ·Dallas, Mark Aguirre, who
C-41 COLOR PROCESS PRINT FilMS ONlY. GOOD ON FILMS
DROPPED OFF FOR PROCESSING
was questionable for the Mavericks
BETWEEN APRil 21ST AND MAY 3, 1966
game against the Utah Jazz
because of back spasms, scored 27
points and led Dallas to a 113·106
trtumph. Dallas leads that Western
Conference opening round series
··:;;;i;ijl;,
2-0.
,t,ll ~e~r::-:.:-;- :;
- -~
- ·~;;
Among the missing who did not
\L
appear Sunday was the .Jazz's
scoring leader Adrian Dantley, who
was hospitalized Sunday with an
rR
aching back. He Is out fort he ser tas.
AEG.,
MINT,
GEL
ORCONTROL
TAATAA
&lt;

CREST
TOOTHI'It.&amp;STE

Quite

(USPS UJ-Mii

• A minute Into the second round,
,Douglas landed a right uppercut
•::eomlngout of a clench that stunned

'

It's

A DtviiiH ol Multtmecua, •••·

SINGLE COPV
PRICE

.

Johr Arnon's Marauderettes go to
14·1 on the year.
in a TVC game last Friday,
Meigs kept their league record
unblemished In seven games with
an easy 15-0 win over Belpre.
Hatfield, Marla Musser, and Hlndy
combined t.o shutout the Lady
Eagles on one hit .
Hitters for Meigs included Couch
with -two safPrles and one each by
Hatfield, Riffle, Hindy, Smith,
Musser, and Follrod.
The Marauderettes travel to
Alexander t.onlght, go 10 Trimble
Wednesday, and host Logan
Thursday.

GLENVILLE , W.Va. (UP!) Five Ohioans have decided to
attend Glenville College and play
football, says coach Frank VIncent.
The Ohioans are spilt end Todd
Sabin and safety Vincent Stephens
of Massillon Perry High School;
spilt end Jason Campbell of Canton
Tlmken High School; running back
Dale Thomas of North Bend Taylor
High School and tackle Chris Mlze
of Milan Edison.

The Daily Sentinel
Published ~vt"ry atrernixm. Mo~day
through Friday, 111 COurt St. Pome r oy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vallf'y Pub·
llshlng Company / Multimedia . Inc.,

'

Hll..TON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. finished one shot back at 277 along llllliOOne IS gonna run away an~
(UP!) - Fuzzy Zoeller overcame with Nonnan and Maltbl~. Jay ~"
M~ltble par~ hiS first tltree
chronic back pain and a shaky front Haas shot a 7llor a 278 total. Ray
holeS
befOre sinking a birdie to Ue
nine, and rolled In a 12-foot blrdJe Floyd, who shot a 66, tied Tom Kite
Beck
!Qr uie lead at 6-Wlder. An
putt on No. 18 Sunday to avoid a and Ken Green at :m. three strokes
eagi~
at the 528-yard No. 5 lhen
four-way playoff and win the back: I
opened
a
two-stroke advantage tlr
Heritage Classic for the second . Z()eller~ wliOwonatPebble~ach
Maltbie,
who
hadn't finished In the
time In lour years.
· ll, ,weeks ago, began the day at
.
Top
10
thiS
year
In 11 previous
"I'm not the ty.pe of guy who gives 'il:undlir,:with ·a two· stroke lead oo
tournaments.
TWo
tv~s and a ·
~p. and I thrive on the-, competiBeck, Norman and Haas. A
birdie
oo
the
back
side
left him me
tion," Zoeller said after earning double-bogey 6 at the first hole and
sll'lt
short.
$81,00! In hls ninth Tour triumph. a bogey-4 on No. 4left Zoeller at ll
Beck parred every oole on the
"If I'm playing cards with my w~e. at the tum, but he came back to
front
side to stand two shots back at
I want to,wln. l don'tllkeloslng. I'm birdie 11 and 14 to go 7-under and
6-under,
and made a valiant bid to
a very energetic-type individual . pull Into a tie with Beck and
force
a
four-way playdl with a
who enjoys being out there ~en Maltbie.
15-looter
lor birdie on No. 18.
when I'm playing badly."
" I hlt six miserable shots at the
Altoough
he
had to staild there one
A superb 8-lron from 174 yards · first hole, but I didn't let It faze me,"
minute
later
and watCh ZDeller
' out on his second shot on No. 18 satd Zoeller, who moved Into 19th
dance
a
victory
jig with a putter lor
helped the 34-year-old Zoeller deny place on the career money list with
a
partner,
Beck
couldn't complain.
a playoff chance to Greg Nonnan, $1,856,308. "This Is a thinking man's
"It
really
makes
me feel good to
Roger Maltbie and Chip Beck. go~ course wlt~ 18 holes that can
play
up
to
my
capabUitles,"
said
Zoeller's third birdie of the day jump up and bite you.
Beck,
whose
birtlle
putt
on
the
final
gave the )983 Heritage champion a
"The first four holes bit me today. h?i!l served as a guide llr ZoeUer's
par 71 lor the round and a winning
I
started out poorly, no question similar shot. "My hat's t:lf to
rota! cl. S-under Z76.
about
It, but I kept on trucking. This Fuzzy; he ~ad a very_difficult putt,
Beck, who birdied the final oole In
isn't
tile type of rourse where and he needed Ill hit It with good
search of his first PGA vlct~ry,
speed and direction."

Meigs
Marauderettes take
,.,.
·Portsmouth· Clay Tournament

..
,.
. .'

'•

I

.

ENGLJ;Jl WINS ZOO MEI'ER D.wl - Melp'
SCephanle Eog!WI (lblrd from left) capCured lbe 210
meier dMb durlnK !lalartky's lllh llllllllll GaRipnlls
Rotary RelaysatStanleyL. Evans F1eJd, Rio Grande.

The Daily Sentinel-Page_. ·1

Jordan cans 63 points in·overtime loss

Zoeller overcomeS back
captures Heritage
4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;ti lll ~ ~Hi

1.2 i7 II Ill ~18.1
11 4.~ 6 17 .3'78
11 :i4 3 ll ,l\1
II 37 6 1.1 ~1
10 37 !I IJ.:l.'ll

NOR'l11 WILKESBORO. N.C.
!UP! l -A yellow flag and quick
crew helped Dale Earnhardt ro his
second straight NASCAR victory
Sunday at Nort h Wilkesboro Speedwa y, although light rain kept him
from runnlng _at full speed.
When Dave Marcls hit the wall
between rums No. 1 and 2 with l!
laps remaining, Earnhardt went to
the pits third In line behind leader
Ricky Rudd and Geoff Bodine.
Earnhm'dt gor back on the track
first with four new tires.
"The crew !(ot me a good ·set of
tires and made a real good stop,"
said Earnhardt, of Kannapolis,
N.C .. who earned $.ll,550 lor his
victory. "They did their part and
put me back on the track In the lead,
and that's what won th&lt;' race."
Rudd , who left the pits second,
wasn't as fortunate on his stop.
"We had 22-second pit stops all
day, but the last one - was 27
seconds," ~said . "We just didn't
get the good pit stop when It counted
and that was the dJtference he·
tween winning and second place."
Rudd stayed on Earnhardt's rear
bumper aU the way to the end, but
could not find an (4lportunlty to pass
him. Bodine finished two steonds In
back a Rudd. Darrell Waltrtp was
fourth and Joe Ruttman lith .
Earnhardt's average winning
speed In tile race slowed by eight
· caution flags- two because of rain
- was 88.417 mph In a Chevrolet.
His two-car length victory In ·the
First Union 400 made him the first
repeat winner d the NASCAR
season. He won tile TranSouth !iOO
· at Darlington, S.C.. last week.
Befd're Sunday, 11 races had been
run wltoout a two-time winner.

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'

'

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 21, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monda~April21,

1986

Forest Run UMW meets
The Forest Ru n United Metoodlst
Women met at the home of Mary
. Nease with Cafuly.n Salser and
Lillian Napper as co-hostesses.
Hilda Yeauger opened the meetIng with May Holter giving devotlons , "Beauty of HPart Cleaning"
and ''.looeph Said to His Bt'Others"

Birthday noted
Charles Grueser , Minersville
Hill, celebrated his birthday on
Thesday. Attending were his child·
ren, Ed Grueser a nd family.
Reynoldsburg, Jon Grueser and
family, Chester, and Becky and
Jim Baker, Fort Worth. Texas.
Thursday Grueser was admltled to
the Holzer Medica l Center.

Training
complete

ADOPI'ION- 'lbb one year old, part malecoDieill being ollered for
adoption at the Meigs County Dog Sheller. There ill a S5adoptlonfee ,..d
aS~ lee lor a 1986 dog llcmse. The sheller Is~ from 9a.m. to 10 a.m.
1111d from 4 ta 5 p.m., Mondays through Sundays.

Sheila Harris. near Mlddlepot1,
has returned from Winona , Minn.,
where she attended a distrtbutor
training program of Watkins, Inc.
Distributors from throughout the
United States and Canada attended
the three day program. A loca l
Watkins representative. Harns
paniclpated in seminars on business management , product man agement, product knowledge. ad venising, record keeping, and
attended plant and city tours as well
as a graduation banquet. Harns
traveled to Minnesota via car. She
has been with Watkins for two and
one-haU years.

Scouts visit WOVE TV
A \'isitto WOUB station in Athens

at the telecommunications building
on the OU campus was made
n'Cently by mem~rs of Cub Scout
Pack 249, Pomeroy.
The scouts toured the building
visiting the recording rooms and
the TV studio, watching the operation as well as several disc jockies
at work.
Cub Master George Wright and
31 rub scouts enjoyed the tnp. Rich
Lewey conducted the tour. The cub
scouts were taken to Athens by
theb· parents. den mothers and

other famUy members.
The annual blue and gold banquet
of the pack was held recently at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
A movie was soown lor the cub
soouts and the Rev. James Corbitt
gave grace preeedlng the dlnner. A
soort talk . on cub scouting and
parent help was given by Meigs
County cub 'scout oommlssloner.
Bob Smith.
Those scouts who had ea!Jled
badges were presented them by
!heir den mothers. Wright presided
at the banquet.

Business
SerVices
t.
~
~
·
~
H
e
l
p
:
~
W
~
a
~
n
:
~
:
~rt·
t.::::~::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::r::::::::::~~~~::~::~:::::::::J:::::::::::::::::1~:::::::::;::::~
......
11

and closed wll h !l'ayer. Officers
gave report.s -and the birthdays of
Mary Nease and Ed ith Sisson were
noted. A letter was read from Nellie
Parker. Twenty-five sick and
shutln calls were reported . Mrs.
Nappet· read "On the Wings of
Prayer" and Sandi Hawley gave
"Legend of the Raindrop."
Edith Sisson was tiP program
,leader using the topic, "Mission at
· the Crossroads" Ot her roo dings
included "Jesus and the Samaritan" , "Jesus is Anointed at Bethany", "The Rich Man." Mrs.
Sisson closed by reading "Come to
the Waters."
Refreshment s were served. Oth·
ers attending were &amp;-tty Black·
wood. Evelyn Hollon, Naomi
Wyatt, Ka thleen Scott. Faye Wiggins, and Erma Roush.

ror
atan

CALl (6141 992.·2104
304 675-1244
Public Notice

years. ,
The Pols !of Aid Election

for five

will be open a1 6:30 o'clock
11th day of February, 1986, A.M. and remain 01&gt;"' lXIIil
there will be a.~bmitted to a 7:30 o'clock P.M.
By O&lt;dor of tho Boord of
vote of the people of satd
Boctiona of Meigs County,
Chester T ownsh~ at a Primary
Ohio .

Evelyn Cllll&lt;. Chair"*'
Jane M. Frymyer
Director
Dated April I, 1986
(41 7. 14, 21, 28, 4tc

TEN MILl UMITATTON
Notice Is hofeby glv1n that ill
pu,..lnCO of o R_,kltlon of
tho Board of Coonty Commil·
Ilion.,. of tho County of
Meigs, Pomeooy, Ohio, _ ...
on tho 29th day of Jonuory ,
t986 . -will be .. to a vote of tho '*'plo of uld
Melga County 11 1 Primary
Eloctlon to be held In tho
Coonty of Meigs, Ohio at tho
ragutar placcos of wting tho·
...,, on Tu-y, tho 6th day
of Mly, 1986. tho qulltion of
tovyi1g a tax. n exceu of tho
t111 milt limitation, lor tho
benallt of Meigs County lor
tho purpooe of providing ctlfO,
maintiiW\ce,

Public Notice

hoopitalizlltion

trlflltrnant Md

of

reoidents of

Meig1 County who are auffer·

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY TN EXCESS OF

poiiU"don.
Said tax being: An additional

ing lromtuben:utolis. ot hoopi-

tolo with which tho Commit·
llionn of Meigs County hiM!

contract.... and support of
tuberculosis clinics, pursuant

to the authority grant'"' in

Section 339.38 of the Ohio

ReviiOd Code .
Said tax being: An addrtional

t.11 of .60 miU to run for five
years. at a rate not exceeding
.60 milia for each one OOIIar of
velua1ion, whictl aiTIJuntl to ,
hundred doUers of valuation

for five yee11.

The Potts for said Election

wiU be op101 11 6:30 o'clock

and remer. opM until

7:30 o'clodc P.M.
By order of tho Bo.-d of

RACINE - Have you been
look ing for acreage w~h a
nice hoose1 This l4 bed·
room_ranch is right for you
and your lamily. 4.11i acre
lot gtves yoo space. Home
has lull basement, finished
family room, nice workshop,
electric 88 heat Make your
appointment $39,000.00.

Elections of Meigs County,

Ohio.
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer

Oated April 1, 1986
(417. 14, 21. 28. 41c

long Bottom, Ohio

Director

-i3 LISA M. KOC", M.S.

r-----::-----'------'--------...1..-----------!--------..J..--------

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

NATIONAL
BABY WEE/I.
SENTINEL'S .

r"" .1.&lt;
• ·f'.. .

0

Sell~rs

lll'andon ScoU Sturgeon
0

birthday .Birth announced

The · 53rd birthday of Hattie E.
Sellers was observed reeently with
a dinner at the homeofEIIeen Polk,
Portland. Ice cream and cake were
served by her daughter, Beverly
Wilson, Middleport .
Attending were her hu sband,
Gerald and daughter, Marla, Aja
McGlothin, Ruth Powell and Gary
Miller. Also presentin g gift s to Mrs.
Sellers were her mother, Sarah
Congo, her sister, Icy Dailey, son,
Terry Powell and family, son,
Lawrence R Powell, Ruth and
Gary Miller, Bev, Aja and Earnesto
Ward.

1

Notice of Election t11 TuloYy
of tho T., Ml

Urnftrtion
Notlcoitohorobygiywlthotln
pu,....,co of o -.lion of
tho a-d of tho ClaMII·
J .... wnMelgi_H_,
Gdlfolo, Ohio. _.ton tho
17th dly of FobiUOI"f, 1986,
thoo'e w11 be .,bmltted ., •
wte of lho people of llid
Mofg1 County at o 1'1111111\'

Dwight and Terri Thoma Sturgeon are announcing the btl1h ·of
their first child, Brandon Scott,
bOrn Feb. 18. He weighed eight
pounds, 13 ounces and was 231nches
long.
·
Maternal grandparents are Guy
and Ellen Thoma of Rutland.
Great-grandparnet are William
and Ida Young of Rutland, Geotila
Thoma of Chester, and the late Ollie
Thoma.
Paternal grandparents are the
lat.e William and Delores Sturgeon.
Verna Sturgeon Is a greatgrandmother.

~oct,

lepcalr Cent«
W, PiUers,
'olithing C:ompoundt, Palnlt
Urett\cN HordMn. (Sold Uncler Whoi ... Gie To All)

Dundee Now Aopl-t Pam For Tru&lt;b And Con

ll!::::f'

-

HARRISONVILLE Meigs
County Men's Fellowship meets
Monday, 7 p.m., at Zion Ch urch rt
Christ for rt'Vival services.
'l'tiDiDAY
CHESHIRE -Cheshire Chapter
OES meets Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.;
rehearsal for officers, r1g11lar
meeting.

CHURCH'
6TH &amp;PALMER ST.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

KYGER - Cheshire Tbwns hlp
tmstees meet Thesday, 6 p.m.,
townhouse, Kyger.
HARRISONVILLE - Senior Citizens Oub meets 7 p.m:Tuesday at I
the Harl1sonvllle Town Hall.
!
RAACINE - Racine Lodge 461

REV. CHARLES SIMON

APRIL 27~30
7:00P.M.

Am. flnll
Account of ShetOn L. a..h,
Adminltttratrill of tho EIUlto

· ESTATE NO. 11,838 Twenty·firll Account of Tho
Huntington Notlonot Bonk
Truet• of the Eetete of

to.tO [Ten oontolloftiCilOne

Volmo W. FoJtor, Deco01ed.
ESTAfE NO . 23,736 Second l'lrtill Account of
Marilyn R. Nowmon, Guerclan of the Eliot• of Erool
Paul Orr.
ESTATE NO. 24,842 -

-

FO&gt;ol and llitotrtludw k ·

Sold tu being: An ...d _

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A.M. . , . , _ . . , . . -

tN 'THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PIIOBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
tn Tho l!olottor of
Sottlemont of Accounts
P.Obete Court
Melga County, Ohio
.
Account11nd vouchor1 of
11 Help

Photos
will be
printed
this size.

THE QUAUIY
PliNY SHOP

RADIATOR
SER~CE

We can repair and re·
core radiltors and

heater cores. We can
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. IUSIHISS PlfONI
(6141 992· 6550
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992· 2198

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Furtituro, Wttltllng

anti Greduotion
StalioM&lt;J, Matnllk
SigM, RuWI• Stamp1,
lusitleu forms,
Copy StrvkH, Etc.
25 5 Mill St., Middfopoot

104 Mulboory Av., Po..roy

992-3345

Here's an opportunity for parents,
grandparents, aupts and uncles or godpa·
rents to have their "baby's' photo appear In
The Sentinel's BABY EDmON, Wednesday, April 30. All babies born between 1981
and 1986 are eligible to have their photos
pu bllshed. Just think how your "baby" will
save and cherish this special edition throughout his or her lifetime.
It's easy to have your photo published.
Just bring or mall it to The Dally Sentinel with
the Information requested In the coupon be·
low, together with $6.00 which Includes the
cost of processing, publication and postage for
safe return by mall. A black-and-white glossy
photo Insures the best reproduction. However,
color photos., Polaroid photos and snaphots
will be accepted. Photos of babies born anywhere will be accepted, too . Send In your baby's
photo today. Deadline for receiving photos Is
Saturday, April 26, 1986.

Trevor Buck
Jon &amp; Tami Buck
Brownell Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Jerod Wood
Ted &amp; Jan1e Wood
No. Second Ave.
Midd leport. Ohio

Deadline for photos is Saturday, April 26, 1986
r----------~--------------------- 1

1

PLEASE PRINT

I

1 Baby's Name .......................... ........... .. .... ..... .
Parent's Name .................... ......... ......... .. ..... .
Street or R.F.D............ ........... ..:................... .
City ............. .... ..... ....................... ......... ........ .
Boy (
) Girl (
)
Phone .......
00 . . . 00 0 . .

Date of Birth ...... .. .... ......... ....... ...... .............. .
NOTE: Photo
of Twins will be handled
as one picture.
'
.
Mail. coupon, baby photos and $6.00 to
Baby Edition, 1ht Doily Sentinel
111 Court Str•t, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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

,.

to Hid .ccouma or to matt·

oro portolnlng to tho oxocu·
tlon of tho trull, not lou
than !Iva days prior to tho
dote at for hoerlng.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common Ploao Court
Prob.l1a Dlvillon
Meigs County, Ohio
141 21 , ltc
Wanted

If you •lin opportunity Ifill co1111s rmly·iiiPIIIOn's
lilltime then you - It to yoruself to investicate.
1. If yoo oro oaood communicator/WHR liN OED.
2. N11t opparanco/HIGHlY IOTIVATED.
3. Aarmllt with ootaoin&amp; porso01t11y.
4 Prllot ovtt 22 (or rtsponsiblol.
1: Hiatt scllooltrtdllllo mlnii1Mlm, withfout y01rs fulllimoworl·
· 111 (sol•) nporl.,co or colloae "'""·
l lust be oot of town &amp; nlghll per w01k.
flltloaof corporotion his immodistoo p.,i11p for 111111lro, professtoOII ul•·oriontod women end men lhlt n"d to eorn
115,000.00 .,d up pot Y"'· {satery plus 111nwnission1. $200.00
pot•tk wttilo lnlrlininaw~h 010tet upans•. cmtlowoneund
01rp. bonlllts.
Rotlil, jlwtlry, cos !IItle. ttl.,hont nlos or morletini/IOichina
blcl&amp;rountf hel,ful. GREAT CAR!fR RE-INIJY OPPOlTUNlYJ
For porsonol iRIIIYiiW coli Joho C. Hotl's offlco TOLL FREE et: l·
100·523·1584, llorldly throup lltursdlybotwttn 1:00 e.m.ond
7:00 p.m. ONLYI Pl1111 coli oo or boforo Thut~dly, April 24th.
tO.E. M/F
'
54 Misc. Merchandite

I.

'•'

'

·.

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

MGM Farni City ·
POMEROY

992·2181 .

10·14-«c

A111111 uIIGC 1111!11 b'

SWEEPER end MWing machine

rllfUir , plrtt. 1nd suppll... Pldl
up tnd dtHvery, D1vit V.cuum

Cleener. one htlf mile up
Georg• CrNk Rd . C.ll 114·
4411 ·02tu .
Vegtllablt pl.ntl; Yklajia end
SwNt Sp1nlth Onion PIMrtl;
flow.r1 in ft1ta. potl and heng·
ing b. .kltl. Cleland Green·
houll, VIne St .. A1tln1 , Ohio .
SINGLES . MHI th1t ~pecial
peqonl Free eppMCitlon. PlrIDnll touch introductions. box
8638 . Cherl..ton . W. V1 .
25302. 1 ·304-727-8434.

4

Giveaway

frH puppi•. IOmt c:ollie to

good homo. 8t4-888-11i91 .

AKC RtQittertd Oobermtn .
Bl.ck • 11n female. 3 yrs. old,

4-16 .'86 tin

BUYING
SHORT STEEL

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

RIDER
SALVAGE

St. Rt. 124, Pomtroy

PH. 992-5468
HOURS: I·S

3/1111 mo.

lOSE DCAVA'IING

CONTRACTING

FREE ESTIMATES

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201
FOUNTAIN'
RESTAURANT
Located in the
Saddlebrook Inn
At. 12, 8 mllu touth of
the Pomeroy· Muon Bridge

Choose from 3 MeatsHom, Chict., or lotlt! Stul
Serwd with 4 VfPtlblos.
salod, dtssort ond drink.

SUNDAY BIJFET
11:30 a.nL to 2t00 p.m.
for $4.95
Chiltlron It &amp; Undor
1/2 Pri&lt;i
5 &amp; Undor FRU
Ou r Specially
WHOLE APPlE PJES
lor $4.50

11

OlAN II ILLS PORTRAIT STUDIOS needs 4trainees fortefe ·
phone sales office man111ers.
You would be; I. Workin&amp; smaller towns-stale wide.
2. Aloy 511 doys por wotl (homo wttkondl ·
ontyl.
"$15,000.00 lnRUII tlrnlna potentill. (sllary plus com·
mission) $200.00 por 1111k llltlle in llllnln&amp;. lotel, tlrll·
foWinctend corporate Mntflts."
If you Itt:
1. Prtfer over 22 (or responsible)
2. HJ&amp;b scl!ool aroduott with full qmo
workllll' (ul•l "porlenco ond/or
COIJIIf dol!'ll.

'

3. C.retr Mlndod/Good Com11unlcolor.
Rllllil, jlwelry, contlt, telaphone Illes « tllltUtlrt&amp;ftlldt·
in&amp; blc~nd helpful. lti.. nken now ffee to trawl .
I
John C. Hall 's office TOIL
lonclly IJhrOil- Thutsdly bet·
call oro Of be·

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

Oil floltl Sorvkt,
La........ ...
Lantl Cloori"'o Po... Soptk
s,,..,~
Houti~~~o
St- &amp; Gro¥11 lloull"'ll
Ellctrkol W..to

1/ 'r'r·,

""''

RES1DENT1AL. COMMERCIAL
'
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
ICortlfloct Eloctriciant
01111 lOSE, Owner

l •1'•'1"''1' ··

CH·:cit/1' rnn 1 End
p,q~~~ ~rrl SP'Url
lO(AHO ON

For A~poinl;l)('nt

Homt 143·5340
4/IJ'K/1...

UGliiiDGE
SIIAil INGIIE Clllnl
Parts • Senko
949-tt"

/•lltitlltlf 01111
01 Change. Shoopen Bledeo

'19.95

Tum

left 11 Mtigl Memory
Gard.-.s, 3 milt off AI. 7 on

t._ right

47169 Eoglo Rldgo Rd .
1·17-Hn

RENT IY MONTH

l1 (

446-8592
llanauga,

Ohio

YOUNG'S

BUYING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

GOLD, SliVER &amp;
&amp; RAil COINS

(~EIKJ

SELLING
(OINS, GOlD &amp; SILVER
WHOLESAif 140.
JEWELRY

PH. 985-3937
AFIEI 5 P.M.

- Addons •n:d-remod.elng
- Roofing i nd Ouner worl&amp;
- Concr•t• wort!
- Plumbing and electrlctl
work

(Frea Eottmo1a1)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-•m or 992-7314

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 fASf
GUYSVILLE, OHIO .
Autl1oriud John D01ro,
New Hollantl, tush Neg
ft11'111 Equipment
Diller

· Ftr111 E••l•11111l
Pert• &amp; Serrlce

0

P.rt Golden Retri.vtr, Plrt h .. h
Setter pupptn .to glv. ewty. 8
woob old . CoR 814-882-38 r4 .
2 rnlxed breed puppln. 1 melt
.nd 1 female. Cell 814 -992-

7424.

'

1-3-'86 tfc

IUGINE .LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

1·2D·«c

..... .,_._
*VINYL SIDING
*ALU. .UM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

VINYL&amp; AllllltUM
Complete Gutter Worl&lt;
Coll)llloto Remodeling
Roofing of all Typoo

New Homes Built

Worked in home are•

"Free Eltimates"

20 yeoro
"Free E1tlmota1"
CAll cowa.

Ph. (6141 843-5425

·

1·12·2 mo.

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860 .
No

Sundoy Calls

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

VINYL &amp; .
AWMINUM SIDING

•1-11tifan
•Storm Doon

•

•Storm Wlndowt

•Aep~ctm.nt~ndo~

•New Roofing

"FilE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH.

iw•tment. C•ll collect 304-

The Down Under A81taurent it
now t8king IIPPiic.tionl for
experi.,.Cid fuM Mf'VIce wei·
....... Awtv in penon w;tll

r•ume of job history. PIMJI, no
phone ells.
Euy A. .mbly Work! 1800.00
100. Gutrente41d PIYm..,t

~

No •perkmct·No teles . DehiiiJ

~a~d aelf·addreiSed sltmped
enw~pe: Elan Vita l -71&amp;, 3418

Enterprite Ad . Ft. Pierce, Fl .

33482.
EASY

ASSEMBLY

WORK!

1714.00 per 100. GutrJnleed
Peyment. No aal81. D1t1i11.
Send stamped envelope: Elen·

5847. 3418 Enterprise. Ft.
Pterce. Fl. 33482 .
Government Jobs. t16 .040 ·
159,230-yr. Now Hiring. Can

1- 80~·887- 11000

for

CUI'Tiflt

EOC1.
tedertlliat.

R-9805

Pallitlons Open : Telephone
Coordinttor. Claims lnvtttlgator. Botrcler of Small Anii'NIII.

ln1ormation Of interview . call
Meigs County Humane Society
Of

514 -992 -

1·800-&amp;12-3819

0

OPENINGS AVAILABLE telling
M1rrl Mac's guarantMd toys~
gifb and ho,.. dacor illems. No
lnv..t"*'lt, delivlt'lng or collecting. Your own hours . Call
30•-876-6768 or 1 ·800-&amp;63-

90n

Part-time. full· tlme reprnentative needld . Education•! Salet.
Call 304 · 882 · 2486 f or

Glau btithroom Jhower cklorl to
~~ ....,. c.. 1514-986·39 42 .

Babysitter nfleded in oor home
for 6 year old g irl in Point
Pleutnl . Fl .. iblt WMkdty
houn, l'lferenc.t rtqUirld . CAll

""l.f'lls· 304·871·

M.,.l 24011 .

304·116·321. llfUr 1:00PM .

I pll'l CoUia doga, 304-175-

15093.

Large ctl•t type hHzer. n88d1

gu. 304-&amp;75-290&amp;.

7

Yard Sale

·· .....Pf'Pieiiaii·n c ··
8t Vicini1Y
A• Martletll! Curlev 's bxon. 2
mKn out Send Hill Rold . May 3
and 4 . Will taka tnd want

12

1 7 Miscellaneous
Oot10n Tree Service. free llti·
met•. 304-576-2897 .

Fm ancial

1:00 ct11304-e75·3ttl .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cuh for.,,, model clean
ua.t cert.
Jim Mink Chev.· Okls Inc.
BHI Gen. John ton
&amp;1•· ...1 · 3&amp;72
TOP CASH ~ld for '83 model
and nMif utad cart. S milh
Buick-Pontiac. ,911 £11t.-n
A•. Oampolis. Cll 114 -446 2212 .

Wlf'ltld jurtk auto1. Call &amp;1 4 -

388·9303.

Buyi'lg daity gold . silver coi"'l.
rings, jewelry, II:.,Hng Wllrl, okl
colna. lerga currtncy. Top prl·
c•. Ed. BurUtt Barber Shop.

2nd. Avo. Mlcldloport, Oh. &amp;14·
992-3471.
UMCI fllh tqUidumtndiCCIIIO ·

ritl.

Situations
Wanted

Wanted to do · odd jobs, lawn
. mowing .,date. Ctll304-876 11 69 rfter 4 pm. Ask for
Brenden .

contlgnmenta, tor maN Information can 304·171 -3121 aft•

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTTC.E I
THE OHIO VALI,EV

PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do bulin•t with ptopla you
know, 1nd NOT to .-.d monev
throuW1 the mall un til you hrn
inv•tig1t.t the offering.

HOME OWNERS·R&lt;finonce to
low find rete. Uteequtlyfor any
purpo1e. lnder Mongtge Co ..

61 4-592-3011 .
23

Professional
Services

Window Tint'"g , Auto, co nvn&amp;r·
cial. r•idential . Free flatimstet .

Ctll14·t49·2903.

Colllt4-4ol8-9348.
PIANO TUNiNG ANO REPAIR .

f III!IIIVIIII'Iil

redllc:ov1r your pl.,o't beautiful
tone, cell today. Wsrcil Key.
boll'd. 304· 1516· 5600 Of 675-

11

Help Wanted

31124 .

SHELTON POOL CO . , Swimmlng Pool Stltl - lntflllations .
Rep air. . Your friend ly pool
bc.lilders. Buffalo . W. Ve . 304·

937-2-476.
Avla1ion Jobl, mHhtnlcs jobs,
llactrtcl.-. ~ 111 ... I~ W®lct
like to ._m thetetf • - Goodl
We'l provldt trllnrtg along wfth

who un PHI o,r tens and are
wMIIngtouloctta. A high IChool

614·843•5191

Wonderful in·ho:ne CIJMr. No

IIPpointment .

7006.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Ph.

Hou• of Uoyd now hif'ing
.,petVIIOrt 10 ldvtrti... hirtlnd

good home. Cell 814 · 992-

Call:'

Oh.

motheu.

1 fern.le4 month old brown httf

Shep•d, htllf Ooberm~n . S.·
rious ctlftn onty. CtU 814· 992-

Residential &amp; Commercial

Racine,

Oru m Job for

t•cher•. PlltY 1'1111 deelert.

needs your e~~:perience . J oin now

1*-tjOhrltringgoodpoy

992-5875 Or
742-31

:;:.;:!;.

tor s part·tlme )ob whh benefits
like r.tirement and lducational
. .lttanCI. 304-1575-3950 or

Sim from 6'x6'
Up to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Hou&amp;K

FOR AU YOUR
·WIRING NEEDS

P .O. Box BOt. J1cldon, Oh

45840. Doodllnoforoppllcanu:
Equol Opporlunty

WANTED: Pr io r Military Service
M embefl. The Army Guerd

Sizes Start From 121!6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS..

Eby, BuckoyoCommumtySooviCQ,

Malt full btoodltd ·Golden Ae·
tretver. two vura old . Cell

4-15.'86-lc

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

&amp;PM Frk11y· ISPM SundfiY; S•·

lory: IUO hour.
S .. d reiUITII lndlutinv which
pooltM&gt;" opplying fo• • ., Robin

2003 .

Sl!fV ICI!.\

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

:w

houro-wool!: lhro In, wookonds:

11 1514·992-5427

Pomeroy, Ohio

4-1-' 86-1 mo.

~2~·':s~':\'r.Hou,...,..oorr.,

4472 .

5x10, 10x10, 10x24

CLC COINS

PUSH MOWER JUN£UP
(Partt lncludldJ

SPACE?
CONVENIENT
notAGE UNITS

Cull

742-2057

,, l ( ;

NEED STORAGE

Monag•li•ing On Pr..lstJ
OUTSIDE STO.AGI AYAIUIII

MAIN ST.. RUTlA ND

949-2493

Help Wanted

AnENIION: WOMEN AND MEN
POITIAIT SALES- TRAVEL

DUGAN'S

lAC!. . 01110

~~l;'~1~s:t:T.~~~ ~~~.:.:

Salary negot iable. For more

2 ye., old temtle Sltm•• cat.
De -clewed . Cell 114· 448-

PH. 949-28~1
or 949•2860
Day or Night

""oo'

738-6330.

7458.

NO SUNDAY CAllS .

poolitons
roqutro • htgh
dlllroo.
volld driwr't •-• ond good
d•tvlna
record:
•olf
motlvotod
ond .....
......aood
pooblom -oillv.,a skills. good
wri... goldlo,goodlntert&gt;_..
, ..,. and good houllkNPina
liiHto. Abll11v" worll unM&gt;poo·
"""' nlodod: upoolonco tn
working wtth c»Mton with men·
"' r01ar&lt;101ion .,d dOYIIoomon·
ulllltbUMioo jX'olorrod.
Ill Co"'""'nlty Soovlco Wookoro

m1nau• toy demont lrltor t .

3 Announcements

814-911&amp;-3925

312/Hn

1/ 28/ ttn

J&amp;F
DOZER, BACKHOE.
mENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS II SEWER UNES ,
RECLAMATION. PONDS ,
SPRING DEVElOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
• DIRT

Any . peraon ~ttrelted
mev file written exc.ptiona

. AnENIION: WOMEN AND MEN
: Slll$ MANAGEMENT IIAINEES

Nathaniel and ian Lehew
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Lehew
Pomeroy, Ohio

:

6 month old i emele Cocker
Sptn iel puppy to give eway 10

7:30 o'afodl P.M.
Unle11 excoptiono ora fll·
l1w onfer of tho of Od thore10, IOid · OOCOUnll
Ellollonl of Melgl County, will be lor hoorlrig beloro
Ohio.
· Aid Court on tho 23rd day
Ew1¥ft C1oolc, Ct.oittl•t of Moy, 198B, otwhlchtlmo
J.,. M. Ftymyor Mid oocciunto will be conoid·
·
OirectDr •Ill 1nd continued lrom doy
o..t Aptlt, ,...
10 day until finally dlopoMCI
1417, 14,21,21, 410
of.
Public Notice

llplty Offlct
For Hours
0._
3
372• 5709

CUSTOM BtnlT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At leasan..,le Pricos"

aount of Chrlltlna Grun•.
Tho Pall !of 111t1 Bet*"' 1 Adminlatrolfill of tho Estate
,.. be Clflln at 8:30
of Hermon Andrew Gru••·
~or:1w

MIDDLEPORT- OAPSE Chapter 17 meets at Meigs Junior High
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., for l'IE'Ctlon of
ctftcers.

REVI~AL
FIRST
BAPTIST

current

Roger Hysell
Garage

.,d D-•

COOiod.

of

TOP SOIL .
FILL DIRT

PH. 304·675·2441
BEND AliA CAU

1314.

Public Notic a
.the following no mod fiducl·
arleo hove bean tiled In
tho Probata Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, lor opproYII
.,d Mttlemont:
ESTATE NO . 24,1188 Final llild Distributive Ac·
count of •mard V, Fo.itz,
Executor of tho Ellote of
Donoldaon E. Flory, Deo..ud.
ESTATE NO. 23,073 Final 011d Dlotributlve Account of Joe M. BoNn, Ex•
cutor of tho Ettoto of E•le
B. Ruuoll, DICNud.
ESTATE NO . 24.ee8 Final end Olotrlbutlva AccountofGenoGroto, ExiCu·
•r of tho Ellote of Jean S.
Thlenel, DICNMCI.
ESTATE NO. 24.780 -

of May, 1. . ., tho"' d

• the · purpo11

Bashan Building

ttPIIf
RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

-

Mon.·Witi.·ThurL 3·5 pftl
T.... 6:30-1; FrL 1·2 pftl
s.tunlar t0-11o30 om
LAIGE AIIIMAI &amp;
SIIIGEIY IY APPI.

good home only. Call 614 -448 -

of Gladys L. Golden, De·

rio

. RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATRUTI SAl£$ &amp;SERVICE
1ft HtrJ ~ Fill Tl•
S~tt T11hlel11

~ ·
J

to be n tho
County of Mofgo. Ohio II tho
- • - . . . _ of ~ tho;;:;:-;,~. lho 8th
•fwrtntlotooc. i n - of tho
1111 d
lrnftrtion, lor tho
of Melgl County for

F&amp;AM meet in special session
Tuesday, 7:~ p.m., for annual
inspection. Work will be in the EA
degree.

WEDNESDAY
RlJI'LAND - Zion Church of
Christ reviva l ~gins 10:30 a.m.
services on Suntiay and cont inuing
with 7 p.m. services each evening
through April ~. Philip H. Ling Sr.,
evangelist.

I!JllOI

n E-

Calendar / happening
MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Registration lor
kindergarten at Cheshlre-Kyger
Elementary will be Monday, Sa.m.
to 3 p.m. Bring birth certificate and
shots record.

.

Public' Notice

WE-DNESDAY,·
PRIL 30, 1986

,:.J

Hallie Sellers

.

BABY EDITION

·~H
'

A rH'·

GUN SHOOT

=~~~:l~IA

Weal Main Street, Pomeroy
Phone 614-992·6771

GRAVEL • SAND

Evenings 8o Sundey By Appointment
1·15-'86tln

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AN.DSERVICE
HEADQUARTERS fOR

. AUTO
CENTER

Pomeroy, Oh.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

.-.uun&lt;&gt; 9 :00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Mon. thru Sat.

Htnry E. Clef1nd. Jr.

992·6191
Jtltl Trussell ..... 9t9-2660
Dottit Tutner ..... 992-5692
•

Sytamore St.,

PHONE 992·7075

8'13 tin

-~·
SIIAil •-al HOlliS

fPEe/Al/ZINI IN WINOOW I. ODOR REIIAeE/IIENT

INCOME TAX RETURNS
107

305 ,_...._ .,,,,

PHONE (614) 992-5009

FE~ERAL-STATE

:t Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Paul (, ShOckey, DVM
Pl. PlEASANT OfFICI.

'

-FREE ESfiMATtS-

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER

tZ:

{Sooltf'!"'lon

Mld•leport, Ohio

""SIDEN.nAL
COMMERCIAL • ""

:U Hr. Service

FREE HEARING TESI'S WEDNESDAYS
0 Co~erizad H611rillg Air Selecijon
z Swim Molds • Interpretina Se!Vices

Sand,._,.

317 11. Secon•

" PIM St. Gallpolit -

We Deliver

2-20-tfn

.

a·ANKS' CONSTRUCTION co.

BOWMAN'S HO• CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY

PH. 949-2649

'four Complete A11to

,.

WE Ill .DICAII AND OTHER INSURANCE
CAIIIEIS WIIN BIGIIII

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

lANGSVILLE - 6.35 acre
country estate. Barn, sheds,
two ponds, and a nice 111
stoty home in good repair.
Elec. heat plus a woodburner for cheap heal.
$43,!Kl0.00.

.0.05 (fivocentsl for01chono

A.M.

Contractinil S.rwice
!free Ettl~n~~tnl

-z

REMODELING
INTERIOR' PAINTING
.
EXTERIOR

Out of Town Customm CIJI Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheal Chain~

and

NEW LISTING - IlDDLE·
PORT - Complete~ femodeled 3 bedroom home. all
in IJ!od condition, lenced in
yafd, many nice features.
$29,!Kl0.00.
'
POMEROY- Stately 2 stofy
home in town. 7 moms, 3
bedroom~ I II baths, base·
ment, nice front setllng
porch. $25,!Kl0.00. ·

Public Notice

614 • 446, • 7283

.IOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VODINAIIAN
CUNIC

ERAL REPAIR

Fo.
HOME USE
.
.

SAlES &amp; RENTALS

Complete Building

POMEROY - Small
ness located in tow&lt;nn~.~;~rtl
and land ideal form
1.
$10,000.00.

"WE HAVE HEAP.INQ AIO$"

\lllluation. which amounts to
.0.10 [Ten contt)for ooch ona
hundred dollars of vaklation

Election to be held fl the
County of Meigs. Ohio at the
n3gular places of wting the·
rein, on Tuesday. the 6dl day
of May. 1986. 1he question of
levying a tax. in excess of 1he
ten mill limrta1ion, for the
benefit of Chester Township
for the purpose of prevention.
control. and abatement of air

bedroom ranch horne. 2
baths, equipped ~tchen, on
approx . 2.35 acres. Includes
chicken hoose, stll'age wild·
ing, garden Sll.!Ce. Price reduca:1.1Jl,OOO.OO.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

years. at a rate not exceedilg
1.0 mWis for ooch one dol• ol

Notice is hereby given that i'l
punsuance of a Resolution of
the Board of Trustaas of the
Township of Chester. Meigs
County. Ohio. passed on tho

-.912·2nt
_
~ST. RT. 143 - A·newef 3

HOSPITAL

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
'

"

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

tax of 1.0 mill to run lor M

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TEN MILL UMITATTON

'F&gt;=!':~o. .

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. -Inc.

Public Notice

Public Notice

The Daily Sentinet- Page- 7

Pomeroy...:. Middleport, ·Ohio

Hou11 Pain ting, indoo r or out·
ctJor. reesonlble pricat. Phoni

304-B?e-1242 or 814-992-

11103.

end I'ICIIU._ , . . .. We wam
ll)·nonnnM appNcamt eae11-

a

In

Hec~l

(1004 ptoyolcot oondMion

dlpiDIN Of OEO II roqulrod. Coli
toM fr• In Ohio' 1·800-282·

31

Eslale

Homes for Sale

1384. Mon .-Thu rt .• 9am-2pm.

Government ~bl t16.040 ~
•1511 ,230 , . ow ·hiring . Call
10&amp;-•7· 00 ut. R-4662 for
CUrftnt fMtrllli.-.

4 bfldroom houH. firap htc:e. 3
mi.southofGaiUpolls, 129 ,900.
Cell days 614·446·161 !5 or
evenlngl614·446·1244 .

mr·H33
INa.

7 room1 &amp; bath. 1 Kta more
I••·
cerpettd th'foughout. vinyl
lidtng t26 .000. 12 N. Main St ..

Federal, ••te end dvtal NMca

~bt

now ......... in

"' hiD. ool •011
Ooo1. t201 .

e •" In .;hh

eldefly
cooldng and light
keep~,. Care for s_,l
. OU1 o town· rt~ktence .
nNd rut 1ppty. Mul'l
good rlftreno... Send
retumt to Boll C 19. ure Po int
PIMNnt Aeglttir, 200 Meln St ..
Point Pleaunt, W. "•·
a.by skt• neld.t Hender10n
••· teuble hoUq; phone

304-e71·4ol3tl.

Of

Ch•hira. Cal 114·441-3793.
Qov.rnment hom. from t1 . IU
repair). AIIO dei\QUt1'11 tl.ll prop-

erty, Call 801 ·187-tooO ext.
QH-4182 for lnfofmltlon .
Spacious 4 bedroom In tow n.
2 1/3 bath , garage. &amp; much mora.
•64. 800 . Call 614·446 -2 174
af1 er 5:0Q weekdays.
6 acres. 3 br. brick home,
located In Kyglf Crltk Sehool
District •41 .000. Cell 814·

387·7238 .

�.

•'

.

LAFF-A-DAY
.
SWAIN .
AUCTION • FURNRURE U
Ollwo It, Qllllpolo. 11.. 1 ·

!'
'

lAIIt I lldr....... 3-""'"
-.I
full-~ CA. t•-.
........... Coii .II4-Z41-

_... -.-

t241.

,.-..~ . . . . . . pc WOQd

oulta 1311.

._...... -. .....
-

bum...
·t ' o
- i l y -build"'"·
........
11om
""'city pool, lctOa ltrMtfrom
lltl of MW gotf OOUI'II. Cel
lt4 -:lll-1477 .. lt4-311·
Bit I .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
lolrio on~ ollolro prlood fr&lt;&gt;m
•211. to·..lt, Tobloo.IIO •d
up to ot21. Hldo-o·boolo,l380.
and up to 1810.. oolo bode
t141, RtaNntn. 1221. to
•371.. Lampo """' 421 . to
f121. pc. dlnott•-hom 1108 ..
to431.7pc.fllhr~dup.WOod
tablo w_lth olx chllrl 1211 .,
1741. Dook 1121 up .. 1371.
Hutoll ... IIJO, Sunk bod oom-

3 bdr. In town. good locotlon.
Smiii~PIYmtnt, wll ... oi'l
land contract. Col 114-441. 1 oo et• ••1 tl22
7172 Ill
' "' · - •
""" 1:00.
tv. ........ 4·1 ...... 2 -~
,
finp~ICI, ~lbiM't, 14•20bldg.

r:.,.f':'R.:"o!!t..~i

• ·
e ..... ,..._
~~
.........
. ~. -~-:..:~·
~_

- - - - -- - - 2 - 1
Now. ocouplod 3 br, lu
blthl,flmlfvroom.2ciro-gt.
No mlintenlllat. artckl • •,

h•~

2117.

p1eta witt~ matb

m:~
.JS:
'" &lt;3.&gt; .
.._ ro ;

114·241-ll87 - • ·

-rHo~-

"H
32

S.nle •Ute. 3 BR renall, 2
boll&gt;. llroploco. aorooo. DMirl-

blo Oolllpollo .... Wolk to
ochool or town. Hilltop vlow.
Calll14-441·038 I 1ft• I ·
Thr .. bodi'OOrn llorno. Lorvolot.
Price IOduold . Col 814-441211 7 -

42

Mobile Homea
for Sale

11 4-811-4382 ·

1873 Kerwood, odd on room.

FOR RENT WITH OPTION TO
BUY. 14o70, 3 -.om rno1111o
...... olttlng on 1 lot rNdy to

,1874 Hotly Parle mobile horN.
A-t tondhlon. cont ... olr ond

c.ntnl air, with or witllout
futnlture. One 1cre 1. . . nlld

oflor, 304-871-3030 or 171·
3431 .

utroo. 304-171 ·3030 or t7t343t .

move Into. 1221 .00 dowil
UOO.OO month. 304-712-

43 Farms for Rent
._.
land IO ICNI
:;_:,:",c':Hc~ alotnwnt.
Coll304-171-1104.

44

r.:'O:l .

1 room wldl t.th an Ne!Min Rd.
Autlond. Out ol ~lgh ·
0.101 • -· R - to rnoYI into.
Col U
114·742·
2007.

Wll._

12 .,.., okll lOOm hOu• wtth
deck. abovl ground pool, llttl·

lito-· -rllumw, ....,.... _
,..,. to hoot. 2 Pluo • - -Ito
Shodo Rhror Foroot. 131,000.
Coiii14-H7·3271- 1:00
pm.

-·---·"""'"'
otory llo- Full.._

a

Mini I""" 2 _21 ..,., - .
room houM. 310 lt. """
flontogo. 8 ml• 11om Pt.
PI-nt 117 000 Col Ira1:8. 304-571-7218.
,.36

L

•- A

otl ..

c11111ge

Lot at Chorollil HilL 300•150.
Col- 8, 114-241-11128.
Lot, 4 mil• from Holl:•. 4'AI
with ..,... tonk • w0_11
. ....,. Call 11~1-3131 or

114 ••a .... .-.
-- -~-.
t·l oc-.portlolly woodod loti
.-opprollld-dhllllon. T.P.
ONIC . -orlllldoppra...tr&lt;IOd
00 --~ lot •

~

-

,.._,
wHI~·
flrtonoo· "· wllll· ~
10
-

-··CoM 114-MS-3184.

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS (E1f111 H-g 0 - tunltyl ntonthly ront otorto II
' 171 for; 1 MdtoOII'I end ' 212

krr 2 llod.,.m, -~~~ UOO.
locotod -aprlngVolloyPIIu
ond Foollond,poollndCobloTV
noHoblo. olllco •--,.
,_, • polllblotO,..to4pmond7P"'to8
P"' Mondoy-Frlcloy, Colt 114·
+'1 · 2741 or I - m • -Nlolly fumlltltld moblla hoiM,
eft. tpt.• centnll air and he.. In
~ 1y Coli lt 4·-•• 1 .
c11y·• du.won.
0331.

Fum . opt. 118 2nd. Avo. Oollpolio. ohoro botil, olnglo mole,
lt31 mo .. utllllloo pold. Col
441·4411 ott• 7pm.

c.

2 bdr .. n•r Silv. - · Ptou.
NICI cerptting, water l
ItO pold. Clllt14-441· 21.
AIIOrlmont tvr - t. 0uo111v 2
IR . 2 borh _.,_,in prirno
downtown *-t&amp;on with off-!&gt;Irking. Kitch., ~mllllod
with rolrlg., oolf.cl- ovon,
DW. .... dlop.. hoo..p far
Wlll't•l clryer. For non·emoldng
olniilo or couple. No dolldron or
pea., Alle~. lnduclta'IIM11r·

/ MW,/trllh. A Oftl'ftlr ......

- " "· Coil lt4-441-t184
BAM to IPM. .
Fumlohod • .. t bdr.. 701 4th
Ave .. Galllpoh. t231 mo. utltd• ,....
-~. Col 411-4411 7 pm.

11 .,,., located In A•tlend on
leec:hafoVII Rd. N.w . . Mid oil
well, 11 mln•ll rightt.. ucelant
hunting , ucludtd 1r11 .

8 Counlt. 3bdr. 1\tbetlt, e210

7 "'"m houMin Chao.... Ohio.
Prloo - fa I •100. Col
t14-811·3871 .

f14,000. CoH 114-812·380t
8:00 pm.

mo., wltlr

au.lnt okllr home on Vine &amp;1. in

Rodno. 3 bodroo- botil.livlnl!

roem. dlltlng room, n.., ldtch1111,

1111011-ln-.
WIIIItiP•'· curtelat
. Price:
431,000 . Phono: 114-84t-

2Mo.

10 ecNI, 1rn1U bem. toblicco
.not:nwnt. mineral rlahta. rural

w -. 304-171-31121.

oc-.

Oulllty ...,.h 1V. otory Tudor t18.000. 304-881-3422 ltylo llomo on I - - I p.m .
10 nWnu• from Poill't P4-...nt.
lond HIR Rood. 111.000.00.
304-·1·3313 .

Nlot twa ttory. 4 bedroom, 2

F-.. .

30'1. 304-171-4001.

32

'Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 bedroom, RIW t:wpM. AC. kl

Golllpollo, Cllllt4·441-t408.

Fumlollod or ·untumllllod 3
bedroom hoUII for rent Ht
Mlddlopor!- Coli 114·812·
1014.
ACT NOWI I tO.S por cant APR

NEW AND USED MOilLE
HOMES KEII!L'I QUALITY.
MOilLE HOME SALEI. 4 MI.
WElT. GAWPOUI. liT H .
PHONE tt4·441-7274.

oaj

tl71 14•70 Schult will!
pondo, 3 bodroo- t \11 botho
......... hoot pump. ........
owlllno. underpinning. Col 114241-1111.

1htlowwt
. . . . ,..
.....,.....
to - · -.lluyort.
·
Why

pay-.-you-own

"" ............ of ...........
- - .,_""" llow. Till

STATE HOME CEIITEII, 1·14
Nitro hit. 304-711· 01Bt,
OPEN EVERY DAY.

42

MobUe H omea
for Rent

ltO.OOO whh. Col 114-2418210.
•

,_
.......
~·-"""
.•. o......
MobMt·M•Mtf~eturM

Homu

....., ..o o - o n d • • --'It
Polllot14all ................
1117 110' -111. Woh- ,_.
Mid Olllo Flnooolol ·
100-UI·07t2. '
1171 R-ood 14•10 211r.. 2
botll. Coli 114-441-&lt;MII or
114·317.0JI7.

......

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

1110 -

14.4. 2 pinning lnoludld. Mull . .. Coli
30I-77HI73.

MOilLE HO-I MOVED: InnuaRibll m-. c.ll
304·171·2331

lUrid;

--

.,_...

bedroom Jpt . NC~ntly r.mo~-- Above K - In Pomo-

"'Y· Col 114-812·1211

niilroom fum..._ .,..,,....,
for ' "ilnNn Mkldleport. AD

utWIIIII !&gt;lid. Coli 114-8821014.
t bodroom optrtrnont 11 402V.
TwonlV Fourtli It, P - Pl. .
lint. CoWt-304·111·4024.
1 bed mom fumilllld l,.,.rnMit.
ldMI tor WOt1dng eoup... No
p«o. Dopolh ,_Ired. CoM

8t4-882-2537 . •
APARTMENTI, mollilo .,.,_,
hou. .. Pt. P.... nt 1ftd Oallipo.
Ill. 114-441·1221 .
One t.lroom IPt. cownilnt

locotion. 304-175-2411 .

411
Fqr

FumiiiM!d Roorna
rent . . . . . . .

"ooms and

Ught hoUII lk-.Mnl roonu;. P...

Clfttrol Hotel . .Col 114-441·
0711.
Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBIL!""'"' Porte.
Routa 33. North of Po-.y.
"-loU. CoM 114-882-7471.

~iof"w:o .wiir': ..:.

onytl-.

..........

48

till VMIIUfl Colli- coli- CA -~lmln

t4o70 - ·· 2 lldr., 2 lui
........ loti 'o f · - u1111ty
""'"'- AC- Colll14-441·1241

.

1 t.droom apt. for rent. a.1c
rent ltartt 1211. 1 month thlt

One bedroom .tfidlfiCV IPfln·
mont. Fully tumlohod. T-

c-11
• · _..-.
..,_ ,.,... ...... plot. 41

otory 11ouoo.

2 bdr. 1111-. t99 mo. Coli
304-111·1t04.

4200. Contoot VII·
love Mo- Apt. MIIWI_..
114-8U-nl7. Equal Houolng
Opportunity.
.

chlln
Hou•• for Rent
Loll ol ..,,., Coli ll1or 5 p.m.
.... - -· 304·1711-725t . 2 Wr. unfumilhed hou• r.t. a
411odroomllou•t807N. MIIn dop roqulrod. Coli 114·441·
lt. 2 llodroom hou•. 2207 Doll ...1 .
St.. 4 bod- houoo 2324
Uoooln A .... Pokll Pl_.nt, W.
v•. 304·875-2130.

m

pd . 11312nd. Aw.,

Ollllpollo. CoN 114-441-4411
oft• 7PM.

._,.... of

REDUCED EXTRA NICE HOME
- 3 bldroome. rqdy ., mow

uz.ooo.oo. 114·247· 3122 .

F - Apt. 2 bdr.. lt88

building lite wkh Ill udld-.

and some landiCiplng ,

llvlngooo-. kltdllon. ~
both Mil oar port. R-o, Ohio,

mo., plua utlld•. NftNnc:. a
no Pill. Cal 114·-MI·4121.

BY OWN£R - 1.1
MI.
AIIO on St. Rt. 2, ........
driveway. aeptlc IVItlm,
~. ulllty bom, fruit -

For . . ..or rtnt. 14a70, 3 bdr••

2 trill• kttt In Portt.nd. nw
POll Oftloo. AM utlhlol hook-

1V. - · clo"
114-441-71411.

Coli II 4·143-1181.

to - . ..

Col

In e...., 11ioe. cleen. pert. fum .,
lllulto onlY. no PilL 1110 mo.
Dop. "'I· Collf~,2H· 1f31or

:::.;..":t38a.;; ::1. ·-·
~....

-a.

..~~...

.........

UMd F~ii,;;;;::·p;,;;;.,, Uod.
Truhdle bid, metll offlclclllkt.
3 rnlloo out lulov. . R~ . Open
Bom 10 lpm M0r1 -N lot
114-441-0322

' ••

0000 USED APPLI•NCES
W•Mn. dry.,., r.trigf.t .tofl.
range1. "kaiQI App1J1nce1,
Uppor R1vor Rd. booldl ltonl
C-t Motol. 114·441·7381 .
Coun!y •-•-co Inc Oood
tiled
~ TV llta.
Oplll iiAM to IPM; Mon thN
.... 114-441-ttH. 127 3rd.
Auo. Golllpo~ OH.
Voloy fumhure, MW l wid .
Large IICtion of qualhy fuml·
turo. t2tt Eutorn Avo..
OIJIIpollt.

quollllld lluyort.

oil fumiCe, ~- ~ lhlltW, II'.... hook-up.
x. 1·2
ac:M;. In Dexter. U8.
. Clll
114·742-2132.

Into•

1371.
Boby
m- · 125,
ns ••
Ml, bod
"""•
120.

High pr1- got you downl
c - . , . ..._ Mollohan F.... •
A 1 ohon•Kohrlnllrl At 7
pp . Oollpollo,
. Oh. Colli
r, .4North,
448-7444. CIOdk ovoloblo to

Apartment
for Rent

Ferma for S•le

70•tOOiot. 1V.otoryhouM.3to
411odroo .... d-ooh•.deublo
rona• otouo. fuly ...,....... 142 10,_ will! hou•. - . 2
wood ond cool IMrmlng · lao. ponclo, N......o. Col'tt 4 CioN to - · ond llo-1.. t4S-B248 .
128.100. Coll14·812·1010.
By owner. 110 acrw hlrm It
a ........., H-lrom l1 IU Doxtor. All high 9"'Und. -~
ropoirl . Aloo - . . ,... tu 1111 ~,.~dull~ - - ·
Coii1-IIOI-U7-IOOO
-~
-•
mint -1. Muot - - P.O.I. ly
· 0 ·. .01 -·lntormotlon
""
· owner.
114 ecn farm n.. .
Doator, 2 b o n l l . - 3
1 ,.._ boll!, utllty , _ . . bodroom hou•• ....., - g.
lhr.;,.,m tiding, otorm win- Clll814-742-21n.
-~ dooro. control h - olr
CHditlon. 114-882-15204.
7ac,.wtthmobflthome, ..,.N
·
MUST SEU:. HouM. t 7 ac:r.. born,
privl;tl ,_,.,.,
-*~~· gonion
3 millfrom
oxtroo on outoklrto ol Rutlond. c ........ Muot olll. prloodotonly
WM1nogotloto. 11 4 -74 2-3001. 111,000. Col el4·118-3121.

lAIIt 2

ond. up to nH. Boby bodo.
n t 0 . Mottro1111 or bo•
opringo,lullor-.113 .. 11rrn.
t73. enct 113. QUNA Hta,'·
1221. lod _lromOI, fZO.Iftd
t21 .• 10 gun . Gun c:lb.-.lte.
1310. Gu or .eltc1rlc ,.,.. .

.,.;N;.:;

2221.

33

.3 bod"'"nw. 2 lui bottiL
· ... lppodldfchon.2-eorport.
In lyra.-. CoRI14·812·nll
·-"'" 4:00.
J Good tot. 3 bedroom. in Po,..
~lj&gt;y. Cof11011d. A.C.. -odollll,
....... I 110' cant llnonco,
·•21.100. Colll4·812·2102.

Mobile Homea
for Rant

18114. 10•11 von Dwt&lt;• mobllo
.,.. ., 2 bldroo
_
rn. IMnt room
wtth tip out n- cerpedng .nd
linoleum. 12.000.00. 304-4111·
1113 orl71-2141.

" - · • - with ...... Call

.

f&lt;ov:;~ ,,,
~
d ar?"

d
ow was your ay, e .

lri MkldflltOrt. 3 bedroom rtmO·
dolod ....... A~ condltlonod. 1tl4 M...lon .......
vloyloldlng. lnoulltld. loncod-ln lo,.tod on lot 4 of 2 C'o T...._
bool vont. 010'*11 .,._,, Pori!. eo,. Conley. eon•l olr,
cto.. 10 achootl. Show tJw dla:hw81h•, _D...,OII, aot.
appolnt....,t- onty. Cell 114· with m._ingchalrandtablll.
ti2·20tZ .
vlnytoll-ondrnotlloto,..o
bu~lng. cauo•-•71-8101.
4 bodroom llo . . tot Mia. H111tlng end ...~ llohlng. Con

i

,~._5

II, tJ715 .

~;;;::;~;;~;;;;:;:~T;;~~;;~;;~~=1'30·
kingoftromo
110. .,Oood
Hloctlon
bod.,.m
110 ,,

Joy Dr. 3 BR. LR. khchondinlna. tYt botil, UT RM, 2..
- ·.. v• t.n CA. &amp;1•·448·
3427

:
·
•
:

-

up~

•v.IW»i•. e70. ,_ month.

Trolor lotolar ,.., '"'Tounolllp
R9od 17. -~ bul, WIIW, .
· tol-o. t mllolrom
. M._w
Cl·-·· c - ..
Coli Roynoldl II 114111-4321.

Uood lumkUro. oolo. ollolr, lui
- hldo-o-bod. olzo nt·
..~ bo• rprtngo. Corbin •
Snyder Fumhun. N8 Seoond

Aw.. Ollltlpollo. Col 114-441t 171
· '

40 i'lc* NDflt Etectric R•ge.

f71 . 401nchFrialdolroEiootric
Rlftgo. 110 _ lloih aood oondl·
tlon . Whirlpool Automlllc
tll. Nlodo ropolr.
Aluminum IIOfm door wkh
...
- . 131. M - Elootric
Drywr,MO.N'..ttmmorrepeW.
AU n1co .......,,. lftd aood
- · Clllll4·882·7711.

w.......

, _1 Uood Fumlturo. Oood
-'ltyUHdlum..,ro. Op., 8 to
1 or coli "" -lrrimont.
304-1171-1483 or 178-1410.

&amp;4 Miac. M8rchendlae

810\fe,_,.,.......,r, livlnl rOom
...... d,..., ond bod. tll4
l'lymoutll. 114·:145· .

•1417• .

wo-.
&amp;II

Building Supplle•

Rofria-lon • APIIIInOI

S"-

'llfloe. All lnndl uHd IPPUiniDIS·

...,... Llftlo'o R - . • Appl..
c .......... 011114· 317-0140.

P8YinJ:IIfll For old qulta.ltone
Jon
bluowrltlng,tovo•old
lumlturw. Coll14· 317·0131 .

CloorM&gt;ryllco-OIOon~t25
big 11""'1"·

y••
_,, *•
3·. Plywood handy

Plfttll
82"kJng11"wWa~tJrtk:te.7111 .00 01 • 14. -he prihorlaontll tltttrlor siding
11'x11"x7· 11 f20.00oq . tl .
B-aroda morlllo vonlty "'""
cholcoolz•lnotock. •zo.oo ...
11. 4'a8' .._~o~~ pine llnloo
114.- ... 17. K-lu• --~
w- ond
-orodMdton ..... 411 .• Cirl
now 11.10 od lt .88 ctn. tl.
Erctorlor lloy
lhrmnum
llnloh 12.-. 11. Oood8·2 bulb llghtoornploto w·bul&gt;o
fti :OOH. 20. WOod-M-Ilob.throom Pl"flllrlt 4 ' xl' pc
.4.88 to 11.81 oo. 21 · l'folln·
lohld lftd u n l l n - - ood
window Ond o1
of trim
rtln Ill •t 11 ·00 r B' pc. 22 ·
Ita
Aluminum rnolrlo lro . . . ond
-root cootlnJ · -llgol.
123.81 100 vol•d up 120.11
lgol poll. 23. W e - odho.W.qt:tubNOr21•-*1 .JI•.
CH' by cue t1 a
.. · 21C ·
·
PanlllngMIIIe.1tbox
. Ptr~n 'l .
Wlrohou•Wolloton.Ohlo 114·
384·3141 .
RAILRDAOnEI . lin. xtO in. x
lll.lln.•B.OOIIOfllodollvorlll .
111 a-114·•2·2281.
·
, Biooll, llrlck. mortor and ...
10ftfY 1Upphl. Mour1taln St•
lllor:ll. Ri. 13. N- - . . . W.
Vo. 304-112-2222.

-all

'l::i

Pete

for Sale

T l - K-Ilo. All- dog
.,..,.,,_ Obod""oo vllnilg
iii!Nctlon. AKC Oormon wlroIIIIIOd Polntor pupploo. Col
114-311-1720.
W1nttcl to buy Foa Hound
puppy. CoM 714·137· 1143 or
wrftl 10182 Tee! Dr., 01rdan
010110, CA 82143 .
Rat Ttrrllr pup1, wormed,
ltltlclarcl lilt, aM Aultflltlft
llull H....,, female. 2 yr.

N""

Ea.

ldiaf'lll, &amp;1Ud IIIMct.

1·1t · ZD·127t .

I ft. pool tlblt, 'WI lnd'l tll1t1
bottom, complete Mf: of b1l1.
otlo1lo • rock. Ping pong roblo
top to lit. con oft• 1 114·441-

1713.

M.....,. Ferguson tewn mowtr.
31 -lnoll ""'· hydro·ototlc ......
1 HP. eno.. blade. can •iter 1
114·441-1713.

67

Mualcel

..,.,dot.

1874 Sllrll'olt loldout cornpor.
tiHPI 8 . co ... ~. with nove,

1171 Iuick lelabre .t· dr, one
owner. loldld. new tlr11 .

llloo now. Col 114 -318-1711
oltoriPM.

......

1874 eon.or ooll oontolnod .
Flbort~. .• boot whh 50 HP

-· ..__

UOOO . tl83 Chovy h4
ohortbool. .... 1t.700 ......

.........,

tin Thunderbird. PS, PB, AC.
l"od oond. 12t00. Coli 114· ·
&lt;141-11124.
1873 C.,rl v-8 fDr ule Of trade

tor IDCC or blggar clrt bl••· csn
114· 317,7110;

1878 Ch-.. no Not. good
tlrel, aood Interior. 1utom1tk:
.,.,.,..,..,. ••oo c.u 11•·
&lt;148·8110.
71 Falrmo,.t , good cond .
I 1200. 117 Chouy pickup. OOOd
oond. 1700. Col lt4-211·
..17.

Now

71 Plymouth Yollro Wogon.
Auto. Low ........ 1100. Col
814·· 2-7403.

Buy

theH corn or • •

buytng

cor~~ . Calforl.._t~OIIIi.

Rlwr

City Fom lupply~ 4-44t·
2188.

'

Wontod to buy 20 or 30
dllokono. Cllll14·441·7841.

83

liveltock

tin Plymouth Fury 3 .

~­

dlbJt work Clr. MOO . C.l

114-742 ·21n.

1171 Dodge Dort 1410. 304·
·1· 3131.
1g88 Ford LTD lOCI loorr.door.
luly oqulppod.1.ooo mil•. rll&lt;o
O'ifW .-yment1 or MI. 30•..al·
1722.

s .. d pony llddlo • brldlo. . .a _ l"od oondhlon. 304-112-2117.
Cllllt4-441· 7141.
71 CorwtU, good ccwulltlon.

a

C0¥11'.

...-

• . lt4-318-8133.

•

1874 Holly,_. 1h81. lot . 3

114· 448 -4718 otter 1 •30
lftYiime· MIIriends.

ten rov-A-Lona 18 11. trlllor.
Vary good condition. •14tl .
Coli 114·•2·1173 or 814·
·2· 1201.

1112 Coachman pop · up
-'liP• lbl. axe cond:

otmP•.
304-175-1282.

68

FtUit

a Veget1blea

Polled Hettlord Cow wtth e...
lolo H - CoW. Cll1114· 74231 t4.

84

H1y

a Grein

Mlrlod hoy 11,.. ~oro boloo,
11 .21. 304-17d·ll · .

69

Nl Tr1ctor. new 1irw, 8 ft.
,,..., btade end triMer. For ultl

81

Home

I mprovementa

cati ons · are escapes into

t:M. Locll ,.,..,.._ fumilhed.

nature and the past (60
min .)
Ill (j}) Hardcastle and
McCormick ICC) When
Hardcastle
judges
a

Coli-

beauty pageant. a f riQh·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondldonlll Mf.Cime pran-

-1011-.

1-114-237·0411. ~ .. Ot' night.'
Rogers

W..... roollng.

l11emant
.

H.-ood Floorw. Bonding •
- - .. Portcotond-·

OfOOWI· ,,.. erimlt•. ..........
Cll •~•. WiMerd • David

111...... 114-441·0211 .or
8t4·441-1047. c ............
........1111.

::t"'t."''=~ 10~~~4831.

,r

•'IIII I'"

t\- l I v I

'

t I JI

Fetty y,.. Trlmmkl.g. ltUmp

llndoooplne . 304-171 -20tO.

Aobfy or cllble tool drlline.

Farm Equipment

on~ · lnd
Rlchonl psindng
tlterior
and • ...,..,.,.

In-

log , phono 304·171-7147. Rl-chonl D. Purch-.
•·

82

Jr ii'\IJIIII.illilll

Cor. Fourth end Pint

011....1~ -0hlo
Pllono 11 4·&lt;141-3818 .. 81 4·
441 ·4477

83

71

Autoa for S•le

1112 Collllnl V·l, olr, 1-0&gt;p,
good--Coll14·441·2310.
'
.

rnoto~
1171 Honclo Howk cyclo "'"' - . . . . luggogocontrol.
rod! • bod!
r111.··crul11
two

Excavating

86

ABalTMY 6 Tl.JDY'
O::THEBIRD5
IN THE &lt;JUNE;l.E6
OF

-"'--'\

CALLI~

IT "THE L.A6T
TIME !SAW .

AARROT5.'

./

BRAZ.IL .

/

BARNEY
YOU AN'OL BULLET
ARE THICKER'N
MOILAS!;ES, SNUFFY

VEP·· HE
FOLLERS ME
EVER'WHAR
I GO. PARSON

SAV, OL' BULLET··
WfN DON'T 'fOU
FOLLER SNUFFY
TO CHURCH ONE
OF THESE
SUNDAYS?

General Hauling,·

.. 114-441·1171 .. 114-441·
7911 .

fMIOd. Col 114 -317·0123 or
814 · 317-n4t or 304-1711247.

R • M Fumhuro Monulocturi"tt.
~~ Ill, 7, Crown CMy, Dh. Coli
. 114· 211·1470, olllt Ew . 114··
· 441 · 3431 . Old • now
Uphootorod.
: : - --:-:-:-:--:--:---:Mowrey'• Uph......lng ""'""

trl-ntyorot2tyo.,.. Tho bolt
In lllmhuro upllolotorlng. AU

wott. .,arlfttllld viiJt our mod·

· tm

shop It Muon COUnty

' F....,..,.~, . Pllono 304·171·
1

411~.

The lateai country
videos ond hotte11
muelc on
VIDEOCOUNTRY.
NASHVILLE

PEANUTS
TELL 'IOU WHAT I'LL. DO ...

i FINISH COLLEGE

. AJOB.I'll TRVTO
SEHP YOU A LITTLE, OKAV ?

·~

(J I

rJ
WHAT A P~ONMI&amp;M,­

. , TOWBES~

~AV!

(J I

X)

tDOOMIN±
J r J

'1t1 e! 1111 0~1:1!~
'TO l!li..OW OUi" AL. L.
iHOSI! CANC'IJ!5 ON
HIS l!lllm'PA'!' CAl&lt;'! .
Now airange the c.;irc led lellers to
!orm .lhe sUrprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

1

a ( X1 I )-[ 1 XI I XJ
(An swers tomorrow)

,
Saturday s

I Jumbles: PEACE

LUCIO OROWSV ENMITY
,
Answer: "When the rain I ai ls , does •t ever get up
aga lnT-"YES, IN 'OEW' TIME"

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Sam replays
a slam

NORTH

1·11·11

+10%
• Q 10 8 3
tA K90
• ... 86

By James Jacoby
Terence Reese and Martin Hoffman
have collaborated on a new book,
"Play It Again , Sam," which has an in,
teresting approach to both enterb!in·
ing ·the reader and improving his
bridge. There are 6S deals, each high·
lighting a reasonable line of play or
defense taken by one player. Then the
correct play is pointed out by that
player's partner. See wha t you think of
declarer's effort today .
South won dummy 's ace of dia·
munds and ruffed a diamond. Then he
played the A-K of hearts a nd finessed
1he 10. He threw club on dummy's
heart queen and then cashed the dia·
mond king, throwing a spade. Next
came the A·K· Q of spades. When that
suit failed to split, declarer played a
fourth spade, won by East. West,
meanwhile, blanked his club king to
keep a top diamond (lhe nine of dia·
monds w.S still in dummy), hut declarer was unaware of the club situa·
lion. He threw dummy's diamond on
that fourth spade and when East returned the club jack. he put up the
queen. ThJ! result - down one. That
seemed a noble effort, bu t North gently remonstrated ," All you had to do af·
ter pic king up tr,umps was duck a

EAST
+JUS

WEST
tu
S4
• Q J 10 8 7
+K2

.2

"J9

t643

+Jl0 74 3

SOUTH
eAKQ76
• AK 76

t2
+Q 9 s
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

a

w...

Nortll

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2t
t•

Pass

s•

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • Q

spade all around. If spades divide J.IO
worse than f · 2, you end up with ~ 2

tricks."

'

The book is $7.95 plus $1 shipping.
You can write to Devyn Press, U I
Thierman Lane, Louisville, KY fOZ~ ,
or outside Ke ntucky use 1-800·1~
1598 for credit-card orders.

~etdtW".at
br-lHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
2 Sprightly
3 Dog's n&amp;nf'
I Billiard
shot
4 Pay dirt
6 Fetter
5 Swre offic ial
II Plato's
6 Sp&lt;Jtless
market7 Chinese
place
dy nasty
8 Emme t
12 Weapon
13 "Separate
9 Frost
Tab les'
10 ~aurs uncle
star
17 Mi nusc ule
14 Register in 20 Genesis
15 "This pla.-e
Ho use'
2 1 Stewart
o r Steiger
(1954 song)
16 Milkf!Sh
22 Crele
18 Poetical
moun tain
adverb
23 Opposed to
19 No name 24 ~:ntrancebrand
way
24 Wo w!
26 Perched
25 Extinct
bird
26 Planelary
29 Auto slyle
30 Mini'

27 "-to a
35 Wrath
36 Venerate
Skylark '
28 "Diamo nd 39 Lard
40 Gold
(S p.)
29 Ballast
41 Decay
item
31 Pape r bail 42 Candlenul
tree
33 Kin gly
34 Devilfish 44 Hadly

entrance
31 Pallid
32 Navigation
device
34 Lambkin's

cry
37 "J'he Couple'
381ncl udl ng
39Raid
43 Ganth ling
~am 4 '

45 Redolence
46 Chanf«'
47 Comp lete
48 Showiness

DOWN
I Kayak
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES - Here's how to work It : .
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter s tands for another. In this sample A is used
fo r the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single letters ,
apostrophes , the length and formatio~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

....

CRYPTOQUOTES
4·21

KHJ

U AIK OC I' A

D S A

D N

H

. ,·

\ICZ -A ,

".
• ••

Ill NowaCenter

CD®Texl

~

Z N N II

ilD Eyawltneas News
[!) Nowtwotch
(j]) WKRP In Cincinnati
1 1:30 8 ill III The Bell of Cer·
san Ton lghl's guests are
Candice Bergen, Tim Reid
and George Carl. JBO min.)
(R), In S1ereo. ·
@ SporuCenter
()) WKRP In Cincinnati

I

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

I·-·
.I r (J
........- --..

JNPNUL

(]) lnalde Ba1tblll
([) National Geographic
Explorer
CIJ III CIJ Ill (j}) (j]) New.•
~ ~nny Hill Show

Upholatery

11 ~3 .

'!!'•"·

(I) Olrl from U.N.C.LE.

Lanl•. 304·875-t247 or 171·
7317.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 t83 loc. Avo.. OoOipoNo.
814 ·411 ·7833 or 114-441.

BE ASI-\A'VED

OF~6E:LF.

11:00 e

Coel. llm•1one, grwel, etc.
Dtillvered 1 ton 1nd up . Jim

'"'""IN

YQJQJ5HTTO

*

Ken' • W1ter lervloe. Wills,
cilt8n'll. pooh ~ and Wlt1rbed1

87

sion to McCormick. (60
min.) lA).
8 :30 II ill (j]) 227 Mary and
Sandra
compete
over
which will be the better
piano player after three
weeks of instructi on by
Ro se . (R). In Stereo.
9:00 II ill (j]) Talavislon Academy Hall of Fame Seven
televis ion pioneers, including Steve Allen , Jackie
Gleason and Walt Disney.
are inducted into th e Tel evisiOn Academy Mall of
Fame . (2 hrs.)
700 Club
U CIJ ® Kale &amp; Allie A
charming English profess or brings roman ce into AI·
li e's life . (R) .
I)) [!) American Play·
houee: A Fluh of OrHn
iCC) A s me ll1own reporter
becomes caught in t he
middle of a battle between
conservationists and d eval·
(2-hrs.)
Ill (j}) MOVIE: 'Something
Abou1 Amalia' (CC) (R) .
9:30
CIJ ® Newhart (CC)
Dick secretly t utors larry
while Joanna l igh1s the
inn 's downgrading by a
tou rist ration RUide. (R) .
1 0:00 Cil Hordotatle and McCormick (CCI When Hardcastle judges a beauty pa geant. a frighten ~ d young
contestant makes a surprising
confession
to
McCormick. (60 min.) (A) .
D ® 1lD Cagney &amp; lacey
Cagney and Lacey atte mp1
to avert a possible fraud
when two contestants both
claim a lottery prize . (60
min.) lA).
(j]) News
1D:30 (I) Children of the Brokenhaartod
@ Booton Marathon High·
li hU
~Wild, Wild World of Animala

m·

J1mn Boy• Wat• S..-vlc1. Also •
pool1 fiHid . C1ll 814 ·288 ·1 141

1---------

1---------*· - ·

!WI

I'M WRITING A BCac:

Oood·1 Eacll'llfailng. biHments.
loo,_, drt-oy~ ooptlo link~

a 4 W.O .

74 M otorcyclea

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Plumbing

CARTER'S PLUMBINO
ANDHEAnNO

contestant

m

a H11tlng

73

1871 Ford ~ ton. 4 whool drive.
llondonl lhllt. 12,000. 304·
411· tl83.

I JUST &lt;Ml'T SEEM lO
~~~~
~~w CiJ roREaJ PmiR'S

r-.1. Coli 304·175-1 331 .

..... .... 0 - ond lion·
_..hy. Pilon• 304·175-1101
oltori:OO PM.

V1n1

DID '-tCU E.VER 1Hl~ Ci
RU~~II\6 fOR.ll-IE. SEIJAlt?

OE. - - In 21ftlth. Col .
304·171· 2381 or 114 -441· .
241.4.

171-2081 .. ~1 -7311 . _

young

makes a surprising confes-

O~MDr,

tl71 Dodgo 010 lport. a landacaplng. Call 1nytime 814·
rplld. lllftdor~ ohllt. olldlng 441·4137, J""• L. Dovloon.
back~ ..... IUnroof, runa good, . Jr. own•.
12,000. - - · ·· til! .

h

Reduce ufs end fan with

81

1111 Chou Dooley 4 whool
31,000 ...... ........
condition. 304·112·2117.

tened

EEK&amp;MEEK

A6N'8 Teie•l•ion ler• lce .
Hou• Call on RCA.

Attention ,,.. FarmeraU Get
your Dekllb IIMI com In Gille
Co. from TIM Mlull. Cal
114·44t-4307.

ortrldolotChou. orOMCINOit.
Coli oltw 4:00pm. 114·111·
4312.
I

p.m.

'11 OMC t 01n pickup ..,,,,
s.c. oond. Sl"-•2·3238 or
304-882-2111 .

For Sale or Trade

1878 Dodge 4a4. 7 indl Itt.
a gumbomudd.n, off rd.
llghll, ollronw- M300or
trldt for trtn..lm or Z-21 of
equ1f value. Call 814· 448·
0312.

ttr 8

I I(N(JW!

OH,SEVEN ~

STAYS GOOD!

ti77Chovytruck. L-mlloogo.
liDO. C.K 114·141· 21141.

1812 Chewy 1 'All ton,
12.000.110 . 304·4111·1120 .,.

ALLEYOOP
TH ' WEATH E I&gt;.

Pump • • end llfYice, 304-

11n 'lj ton Chevy plr:llup,
.,200. CoM 114·411·7137.

!hefts.
·
(}) Fathar Murphy
()) fll CIJ@ Mystery of AI
Capone'a Vaulto One altho
most exciting events of our
times, when the contents of
vaults owned by AI Capone
are revealed. (2 hrs .)
CJ CIJ III Scarecrow end
Mre. King Amanda and Lee
attempt to stop a security
leak involving the possible
priva1e files of J . Edgar
Hoover. (60 min.) (A).
(]) MacNeil-lehrer Newshour
CiD Pride of Piece: Building
the American D&lt;eom: A•
aorta: Poradlso Reclaimed
(CC) Today·s American va-

EIGHT PAYS, IF

- - Polr al blym,..,-ood41o. bridlo •11-ohhch . Col
114-441-.2222.

· yoortln . . . . 2 yr.

begins to suspect Matthew

in a series of neighborhood

10'11: ft. tNck Cltnptr I ll left

loldwln .,..., doublok .....rd,
naada •me r~p~lr, 1300.00 .
304-171-1121.

""'· -

@ Bob Nowhort
7:36 ([) Major laagua Baeeblll:
Houston at Atlanta
9:00 e CIJ!BJ You Again? Hen ry

oont.in... lhow•. commode
and refrlgerltor , 304-112·
2117.

ltlrkt Tr11 and lawn SIMce,

Ford F-100whh-. Col
114·411-41 II .

" Starting Over".

\

1171 P1..,mlno tent camp1r.

r(EN!NQ

8:00 elll N.WaCentllr
(}) OrMn Acree
@ Mezda ~rtolook
CIJ Ill CIJ Ill IDI.(j]) Newo
8 CD Dllfrei11 Stroke•
I)) 3·2·1 . Contllct (CC)
® ~yewltnesa News
(lD Hethe Yoga
@ Ooocl Tim••
8:06 (I) Sale at Home in S1oreo.
8:30 e Ill !BJ NBC News
(}) Ttio Rifleman
@ Outdoor life
C1J Ill (j}) ABC Newo
811 CD One Day ot a Time
Ill C1J ilD CBS News
I)) Doctor Who
CiD Body Electric
_.
@ JilleriOill
8:3&amp; · ([) Gunomoke
7:00 e ill PM Magezino
(}) Alias Smith and Jones
@ SportaCentllr
CIJ Entertolnmen1 Tonight
Screen legends Kirk Doug·
las and Burt Lancaster talk
about their latest f ilm ,
'To".ll_h Guys'.
f11 CZJ Jelflr10ns
D C1J (j]) Wheel of Fonuna
I)) Nightly Business Report
® Eyewitness News
CiD MacNeil-lehrer Nawsh·
our
Ill (j}) Divorce Court
1]]1 Bemey Miller
7:30 II ill CIJ Now Newlywed
Game
@ NHL Hockey: Divisional
Finals
fll CD WKRP in Cincinnati
II Cil (j]) Jeopardy
Cil Buttorllieo
liD Wheel at Fonune
Ill (j}) Entarteinment Tonight Stefanie Powe rs
talks about her new series,

P.OO&lt;J!i?AM.

• - • 1. f800. Coli 814-81734 70 oltor 1:00.

72

n

.I. parJri (&lt;NOW·- IT
MUST Eft= .SoME- #CINP OF
Affi~MAiiVf! AGT'ION

br'o. AC. V-v. _., nice. CoM

ltltion Wlltlrl . 304·•1·11H.

•ono.• tl Rx22110dlllt"'-- Col
114·Z41·1187.

FRANK AND ERNIE

lhoWtr, Hlf·

tub •

Pure Duroc booro. Rogor
lontley, loblno. Oh. Col lt3·
•4-:tiiB.

•-r •

..

23 11t 11. tovol trollor. AC, TV

ant.W.e. IWning, ..,.,. tlrt

- · · ,....... ....... (InclUdIng .... ... opplicatlonl 304·

72 Ford PU ea:c. cond .• 3 utility
bid tool bona. C1ll eu ....e.

~FJ LOW~ BIDe~;

-

181-3102

_;_;.-~---

•

114· 245-1128.

RINOLES'I SERVICE . "'P'·
rlonood Clrpoll..,, IIICiridon.

Aov. POA m.... roody ., krol.

10 f!EAUZE lllAT ~ #?£
Tl{J(ll;;~ 01= ~p~ ~
11-l Q.IEi 0 1' 11-1~ 1\U~...

... .AND &lt;.ACH WI) f!.U'i
ClJG (&lt;_; 'St!PI'I.IEiD 811

1180 18 fl. Prollll4• air cond:
ooc. oond . • ..,. 1. Call oft• I.

~

Sale

'3fCY

CoU 114·&lt;141-2077 .

nobloollor. Cllll14· 371·2t44 .

fot

~V~

contained. v.-y nice. 11.000.

llmeno, m_.._.m · lilt,

OMC 2ton V-1 .,llnl 1100.
tl71 lubonr 4 - - drtvo

B!iWTO?, DID 'ltV

Motor ho . . t171 Koyot 22'
long. 318 Dodgo ""'"'"· Nil

Mare 3"h yr. Outwt• and Pa·

TtUckt

~~~~~~~;;u;;-;;"{~~"~1/ 1

qea. Colll14·211-.

1871 C· O Fr.ht Lin•. Cu~
mini tnlllne. 3i ,..,., I IIPtlld

-lrld.

-oil. """

1171 Flot
lll22.

R-rld . 11.000. Col oltor 7
p.m. 304-171·1711.

1183 Plymoutllllollont 114· 211-1281 .
- k "Tho Qon,..tlon" 11oto
_.., , - · 10,000 mi., Pl .
. ........
--·
·
M_, County hlltory ond ~
CROll • 80NI
Pl. AC. nloo • cloon. Col hoi-.
1100. eou
lt4·MI ·8311
unta
, _ 120. pluo 13.00 , . . u .a . 31 Woot. J...._, Ohio. 114-111· 2721 .
1:30.
..... llondllntt. L-OMioplo 114-215-1411 .
Wolitllorg, t1J8t ltont Avo. M•"!!' F-oon, H-d. 1814 ,..,._., Rolloid 4 df ..
N.E. H - . Ohio 41132 .
l,.httogloloo·l-.0 - ..... 23,0001111 .. Pl. PI, AC;
Mobh Homo Coli 114-441·
10 - - t o ..._lnlm Collt4·111· 2721.
OIIOB -1:00PM.
'
Lilh1bluowltlll-.promdr•o. •
lito o f - • ulld
t to311od_llo,.nwLikln _.,nloo. llu7. MO. 304·171- oqulprnont. l.orgoot -lon In 1171 - r y Mlftlull4 dotlr, 1112 Hondo Cl· 710. 2820
2 ' t oom moble home. N..,
31tl.
.
I.E . Ohio.
302. - · po-, AC, aood ...... ...... 11410' Col
Rodino. Coli lt4·882·1111.
- n oondMion. CoN 114·!1117· 114·448·0122 or
21 "old
4.
........... dotl. " " - Ulod lrrlcb. tOe - · 304- · Udllty bldg. opl.: 30'a&lt;IO'o8". 72t7.
2 bedroom ~ lyqcu•. Fur• -304-171·2011.
,..... ....... - r . 3' ......
- · IJOO,DO ronvo. 411·1111.
1114 CR 10 will!- - l h
. . . . tiOO. 1171 CR 210
door. e .211 oroctM. l"'n 12 Chewy Co...._. 2
-114·812-7110.
· Doooolt
Cd
rrt County lport lhoo, lprln 1 • H- licit•· 114·132·1741.
e ,ooo rn1. 12.100 114· 371· 1700•.Colll14· 317·'7180. _
812.
Voloy l'luo. Oolllpoh, Ohio. :
-:---:--:--::-=-:-- -·
11U Hondo CR410 M-.y·
· GIMO. -ory. T-.. 114· · · Wo wM do oil of .,..... i -- - - -- - - - 441·2331.
t... -!nary -"'· Cill for 14 AutO. 24.000 mi.
all. Good - · ·· CoM 114. - · 114·81·•31.
·13,000 114-111·•12·
81·tZ02.
lor• 4 - t o r - - ..
Furnllltod 3 bodroom ~~~­
...,. .. W - ond dryer. No 111 Houaehold Gooda don 1200. HMVY._Io lor II · Jlvld•'• Fo&lt;m !411lpmont 114- ttn Pilto. Rune good, UOO. 1183 1u1u111 RM 1121. Wotor
qt. 131.: ...._ o1oo . ..,..., 441·11711. lprtna on ••
pott. CoM 114-14t·2213.
1711. CoHit4·21f· · - · oo""loto- top ..d.
11.: , _ ..,... • .... ·t.ona
v - hov ColorodTV,
.70.
1700. Colll14·141·2101.
LiWint room ..... arily t montho 110.: 11- ....,.,. 12" · lqllip. whh llll-olngovolloT- for - poy· ~~~oncl .... ........ 1100.00 l~m. 11., tO" 44. A&amp;ato - - llo. A voiod vorloiY of ulld. 11.11 Horloon TC3 1110 !Cow-l ~TO tiioo. be
......... 304...... r 02 . 304·175-4113.
........ it...,...,
111-2131.
304·171-1310.
.
12100 114·411·8380.
. - · 104-171·1413.

-·-for

boa. lght• a sink, uc.cohd .•

Evenrude anglne. AI tor •1 .111 .

Cllllt4-448-7011 .

m...,

Went~ to

lq~

Fonder Squire &amp;trot gulll&lt;. honl
lholl . - UIO.oo. Muolc hll
HD130 bJboo Imp hood, ....
oond. uoo. H - 12 otrlna
gultor will! cooo 110. 304-•23231.

TONY'S OUN R-EPAIRS. llold:J!

liOiiooo Tobloto and E·Vrp "w•
......... I'Ntl) Phormocy.

ttn Com..., LT. PS. PI, AC.
Coli Mon .·Fri.. 8-1. 114·4111173.

11n a.-~ot co,_ Holly
For horwl drown bob Sport. A.. o. loodod, lolr - 1olld. •300.00. 304·•1 ·3430. tlon . n2oo. 010 . Col 114·
•2·3113 or 114-812·3711
Allll Ch-.. 7030 ••etor, olllt
1:00 p.m.
130 ..,, f7,100.00. luoh Hog.
tiOO - · .-.12.100.00. tl14 E-rt QT. Pl. Pl. AC.
Sidon E411lpmontCo. 304·171AM·FM.Iowmlloogo. ollvorwhh
742t .
I:Mck IP061... Eacellent condi·
Oeutl tractor, part~ lftd HrVICI lion . Cllll14-812·1747.
ot tllo
lid., Equip~.
. 71 Volb Wovon Rrrbbh. 4
mont Co· 4 · 17• ·••21 ·
oplod . 1110. Coli lt4•882·
7403.

82

empers

Moet wet11 compltttd aamtdtv.

n.,

tl71 D~oPioll·up .•
. -. Two 210 gol. tuol on
tanb, t21. ·tech . P.l1tfurm
- · 110. 114-lil:3383~

..

1411 .

40 ln. - · ltolll••· P.T.O.
Driven. nov• - 13000.
Pilon• 114-742-2825 .. 114·
742· 2011.

Uti! Ughtld, IIOn-o,...wiZ?II
Nonllg- U2tl F"' llllorol
OnlY tow loll. BH locally.
t11001423-0113, onytlrno.

•· C

• •

,

*•

=:oo-==-~=::-79 Motors Homet

2381 .

tlon, Nll . l14-411·8300

Hlllf Prlotl Flahing arrow llaRI

• '"'

1871 Muotonv C -. PS. Pl.
Auto trMI., 302 VI , 18,000
...,.. rnlloo. Alldng 12t81. Col
----Forgu-plowo. l14·448-t7:14
........_
f310. 'ttt..... opondlot:. llll.
Ill. W.............. 1318. Col
Mln'o A... • - MondiVlt4-211-1122 .
Fridoy 1·1. IIOrnloy 1·12. Col
IN Ford troctor. A· 1 oondhlon 114·411· 2100 1-mon·M. .
•d oqulp . .nt. Coli 114-251- I~ 1t80P-ti!Horllon
4-0r.. 4 -cyl.. outo. 11811.
1111.
1171 Plymoutll Horloon 4-oyl..
1810 Lont It 0 4a4 14 HP , h . 4 rpood 111tl. 1112 Cllovy
Ch-• 2·Dr.. 4-cyl ..4 op..l
...nd. 114·:141-8117.
fZIOO. 11711 Cltouy Cornoro.
1020 .1o11n o- ,.,...,r. eaoo~­ Nftl good . •211t. tiiO Chouy
...,,""""Mion . 2 oxloolow boy Chlllon .. cyl., outo. 12111.
trollor. Col eu-882-7401 .
11 It tNe you c~n buy JHpe fof
144. lll"'"th tho U.S. govom·
luldlnt lpoclol.
montI Got tllot- todorl Col
ootora Mel
0111 for low 1·312-742-t142
Eat. 40 ••.
..- . 114-245-1141.

llontlly30th,
Plfl 7:30PM.
- · WodnOidoy
April
Foyotto
Ccxrnty Folng-o. Woohlng••· CH , lolling 110 hood of
HIIIIP, Ourocs. Benowa l ath•.
Ro ... llontloy. 3112 Rlodllcl ..
Sabino. Oh. Coli 113-114·

I nltrum~~nta

oa. . . Clllrome lkltoh• teb5e.•
wkl• Hck ch•rs. Good concn-

lollcl Ollt door. 31x70o1~ .
U28. Excollont condhlon. 403
l.rroloy lt. Pornoroy. Col lt4·
tl2·2111 . .

u

730 C.o d - good r v -.
good point. . . . n. 12.810. 3

good
dfiPOittion , ,..., bro-lo fUIO·

ldel 1-row 310 ' oom

""""· Coll14-41t-2111.

A to .._ S 1

71

I who• uhr1 .,..., Whide,

Cllow-c:how pupplol- bluo.
AKCfi. chlftiPion blood linN.

2 11434 I ·PIY •octar tir•. 1
pick•. tU Jdhn DMro 4 ·
bo&lt;tto"' ,....., plow. Allin ai&gt;od

t71 M - F_... dloool
13,11110. No. 12 Mu., Forguoon •t,281. Now I lt.
chum mow• *1.471. N. .
--wit-10ft.
... - · wldtll ., .Ill. Coli
114·211·1122 .

IN DU,TR!E j;-

peru (not Meck•ll call 3(M.

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

T030 Fe..,..n 1rector uo.

~AVYA~PMoKEE

171·2137.

-:-7

114·2111·1417.

.

·

~
· ',•, ~.-$.

..... tt .•o. Now pool lrolo
dltt• 1271. N- Ill. odju ....
blo grid• lolodo 1171. 8oom
polo MI. t lrottow plow n 81.
Collt14-211-1122.

IN THE liAME
OF A LA~TI~6
' . PAJCTNE'R5HIP
" ~ETWEEN THE

1874 Chov Vogo, UO.OO, lor

bo";d41co.

pon.tall color televielon, prlc.
reasonable . Clll 114-441·

P
bodroom ..
Coli-11•4·411-0314
.. n lor -

~

...
, lnMI. 8Prth~
or I ponol.
doorol
81.81_. 2.
...,
ln.ullted door ll'ld at-• IMte or 81 F
E I
1111o 1121 .81. 3 . bouii!O """
·
arm qu pment
1110 "'''"""" door ..,, v. ~~~IIIIo 1311. 4. lllnglo oldJIM'I FARM EQUIPMENT
tntrance door •u lot thermal CENTER.
31 W. Oollpolo.
aiMo o288.11. I . Conwnordol Ohio. eoH IR
114·448-17n
. ....
douiH entf8ftiiM 1M: brawn all
Up """' . ...
Mumlnum till. I. Double 114-411·31't2.
tld!lhN ontroiloo • wood 11t tora wfth .-rranty owr 11 UHd
ponoiYtglooow--ollvotrlm . ........ 1000 tooll.
129t.H. 7. Prthj'l.,luwlor
MP-r Fergu10n riding a.wn
doort eH Ill• lnd
...._ I
t:JII. Olrdtn trector
grldM 111.81 H. 8. Thermo! nwtr.
ttra NM good. wfttl
ln.,lotod alloo ponolo 71" hgt. new
32" wldol31.81 • . tO. WOod mo_.attaohment. ~1.dlto.
•d holrlnt f281 .
--olow-luHglooo71"hgt. culll-r,
34" wlde146 thklt e31.N.11. Coii814-211-M22.

Vorloly "' good floor lftlclol-

1t41.

llr• . 1210. Clll 114-441·

: GeltipollllloclCo.,123V.Pht
St.. GeN....~ Ohio CoN lt4·~1-27113.
.

llodod glooo 118.81 ••. t2.

CAPTAIN EASY

.23.

luHdlng (llatlflllo, oonnt.

Ocblgonal ftdow w-IUintd

a

Auto Peru
Acceaaorlea

Fl¥1 blacll cilarnond ET unMuv
mag whMII with two nsw 70

blocU llolon. yordor dollvory.

mi._

Womon 25 lndl blcycl~ E•col·
lent -Mion 110. eon 114182-2428.

76

lulldlnl::llriolo
Block,
, .w• ••· wi\ ·
-~ lntolo. 110. Ciardi Win·
torL, Rio Oronclo. o . eon 114241·112t .

•....1c1..........
. s.,~~a~
'"""'~
Clo-11,
t . Prohu"!f

__

~
- THATSCRAMBLEDWORDOAME_

.\!:!J ~~ ~

unseratnble !Mae four Jumbles.
one lett er io each square, 10 lorm
fou_r Dfdinary 'IIIOtd ~.

4/21/86

lbo. lui IIOoiJtlono. 1171,00.
304-·2· 3311 .
.

king 1111 with holtor:
coli.. tablo. bathroom oink.
304-773-004.

~

Vl~wing .

'11 loot bolt wll&amp;ho ..,.. , '80

Couah and chllr, blown tweed;

Cllllhon'o Uood Tin llllop . o 1,000t"'-,olz•12.t3,14, 11.
out At. 2tl.
11. 18.1. I
Coli t14-25t-1211 .

"-tic cidem 11ate approvlld,
piiOIIc toou. lll•ic
cutftrt1. IMbt cu-..1. RON
EVANS ENTERPR.EI, Jock·
oon. Oh. 114-211-1830.

ur·

'71 Toyoll Collco OT. 4 •""·
2110 · Mrplo A.... 304-~1·
4Dt4 .

--do

68

Etectrokla W.CCWm . . . ..
A - 1 condltlon-•ttectlmenta .
Avolloblo ot f72 .00. C•h ot
'"'"'" or
- 30._171-1788.
- Coll114-241·
lt11

s..

ftfl\lNlfi&gt;_Yt

Television

M71 . Cllll14•742·2877. •: .

•

Colllf4' 441· 3188 .

SeNiti and
Motors for Sale ·

TraMer. trolllnt .notor and more.

boolo 1111.

•tt. .MW

711

The Dally

12 lt. lornl;ll jor!th
ptcflttl 's•ts. W1rdi • Tilt . ,

....

YIM bldtOGm JUIIM, ·. Fll'lgH.
-.--oro.•ollo•• Now
- ..... .,!too ·UII-1181,

_

.........
cA.w-pi.,IY
o.. ~H-.!'!·
'"'"
-IIIOiortt
C
Y1
..,...
tol. AI to.- 111.000. 114·441-

burl-

1ntron . ~M~nn

lltd oom .lg. _.... •

,.... ...

'

.

'

"31 H~a for l•le

z•'3

Monday, April 21, 1986

Pomeroy-Midd!IAQ_rt_.
Ohio
.
'
.

Page-8- Th&amp; Daily S811ti1!81 .

; ,.

CIJ Aomln(l1on StMie
Laure and Remington lind
them1elves In foriegn espionage when 1hey go un·
dercover to learn ~ho has

BC O SNMD

F M K .S

E.f ill CAJ D

I A Q Z • C .I I E A K 0 C N .I

Z . F .

...

K NII PL
y.,.terday'o Cl')'ptoqnote: NA111RE MAKF.S IIOYS
AND GIRLS LOVELY TO LOOK UPON SO T HF.Y CAN BE
TOLERATED UN11L THEY ACQUIRE SOME SENSE . L. PHELPS

w:

been ste a ling th ei r c lient's
design ooi:rets. (70 min.)
(A).
CIJ Austin City limits:
Tommy Wynatte I John
ConiH
[!) This Old HouH (CC)
.. (jJ) ABC l'ltwl Nlghtllne
@ Trepper John, M.D.
12:00 Cil Beot of Oroucho
(]) Major lugue
11111'1 GrH1011 Hlte: Ba . .
boll's Unolllcial Hlndbook

aa..

([) Entertainment Tonight
Scree n legends Ki rk Do ugl as and Bu rt

l ancaster talk

about th ei r latest fil m.
'Tou!!h Guys'.
fJ) CD Rawhide
Ill (j}) Eya on Hollywood
12:30 e ill !I~ Late Night with
Devld letterman Tonlghfs
gues t is Ric h Ha11,(60 min .)
·'
In Ste re o.
(I) Bill Cosby Show

· ...

.. '

�Monday,April21, 1986

Two treated

after wreck
Two Masoo County women were
Injured In a two-vehicle accident at
Thppers Plains early Sunday, the
state hlghway patrol said . .The
accident remains under lnvestlga·
lion, troopers said.
The patrol said an unknown
vehicle reportedly pulled from Ohio
681 ooto Ohio 7 at 6: 25 a.m. Into the
path t1 a southbound car driven by
.ilerntce Bays, 47, Rt. 1, Point
Pleasant, causing Bays tostrtkethe
other car In the left front. •
R£Portlng Injury were Bays and
a pasaenger, Carla Coles, 28, Point
Pleasant. Both were taken to
Holzer Medical Center by emer·
~ pemnnel. They were both
·treated and released for mild
contusions, a hospital spokesperson

APRIL SPREE DF SIVII&amp;S

Boston
·Marathon
..

Scholarship winners

PhoWs, report on Page 4

!ltory,

.Library lines
.
Column on Pqe 5

1

Area death

1

Emmett Davis

MAKE rr YOURSELF- U your heart beats for a

son

retired operating englneerw ho works with wood as a
retirement hobby, copied his )YOOden RoDs from a
magazine photo.

IIA&gt;Il&lt;; Royce, you might copy Charles P. BaUey,

Flatwoods &amp;ad, Pomeroy, who cr eated a'l'epBca In
gll&lt;;terlng cedar. Not having a pattern, l!aUey, a

Emergency squads
answer five calls
Meigs County Emergency Medica l Service 1-eport s five calls over
the weekend; two on Saturday and
three on Sunday.
On SatUiday, Syracuse at 1:03
a. m. to Minersville lor Marie Rizer
to Pleasant Va lley Hospital; Mid·
dtepon at 1:00 p.m. to 967 South
Third for Pauline Taylor to Plea sant Valley Hosptiat.
Sunda y, lfr 16 a.m., Tuppers
Plains transported Edna Walker to
Veterans Memor ial Hos pilal ;
Tuppers Plainsat6:09p.m. treated
but did not transpor1 Louise Poley;
At6:26p.m ,.PomeroyandTuppers
Plains were called to an auto
accident at tile intersec tion of Rts. 7
and 681; Pomeroy transported
Ojrta Coles and Bernice Bays from
the acc ident to· Holzer Mroical
Center; Tuppers Plains transported Tanya Savo and Gloria
Wheeler from the accident to St.
Joseph's Hospital.

WWiam E . Brown, 53, of Harts·
vllle, S.C., died Sunday evening at

Veterans Memorial

Meets Tuesday

Sa turday Admissions .. James
Hayr&lt;'s, Middleport; Mabel JOIU1·
son, Clifton, W.Va .; Jolul Call, Long
Bottom; Cec'l Frazier, Middleport .
Saturday Discharges--Juanita
Jenkins, Arlene Taylor, Thelma
Grueser. Jennie Bass.
Sunday Ad miss Io ns-- E dn a
Walker, Springfield; Willis An· .
thony, Middleport.
Sund ay · Dischar ges .. Ja mes
Haynes.

The Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Sheila
Curtis .
The Auxiliary of Veterans Mem·
oriai Hospital will meet at 1: 30p.m.
·tUesday in the conference room.

Meets tonight

Carolyn Sue Payne, Cheshire,
and Kenneth Harry Payne. Pomeroy. have !Ued tor a dissolution of
thr lr marriage in Meigs County
Common Pleas Cou11.

ltacine Vlltage council will meet
in recessed session tonight iMonday), 7 p.m., at the Shrine Club
Park buDding.

Exempt From
Federal Taxes

Weather forecast
Occasional rain today, with ,
temperatures falling Into the low
405. Showers or snow flurries likely
tonight, with a low In the mid :lis.
Variable cloudiness Tuesday, with
blgbs betwren 40 and 45.

Exteacled Foreclllt
WeE 1 17 lluoulh Frld~
F* WedMIMI•y IIIICilbunday,
wllh a cblace of llllowen Friday .
.... wll bela lbe. Wemeaday, .

IOIZEII
CltDIC£
Of
14- OZ. Sill
CIOII,
011 u oz. COlD
CIIAII

NIM
3.99 RETAIL

349
t.:OREAL:

TilE-IFF

IIUEUP IEIICMI cumtS

z•·s

MEMIEI' OF

EXCHANGE

r - - - - - - - - - --l..---------,----------------1

SERVI~tTJIR®

Spring

1m'S

I RILL

".

CASSrmlllft
ftlllmllti!WIE
AlliSIS

Exferk&amp;
Latex no•
House

Pailt

ExterkX
Oil Base
1-Wse

&amp;:,,~

~

Interior Latex
Semi-Gloss
Paint, mfr. list
price $12.99

Exterior Latex
Flat House
Paint, mfr. list
-price $10.99

Exterior Oil
Base House
Paint, mfr.. list
price $13.99

~,.g.

mWton, bad the six numbers drawn

In Saturday's Ohio Lotto, state
lotterY otflclals say.
The. two winners will receive ,
their shareS In ai annual payments.

~-:;;;:;j
Lottery oltlclals bad not deter-

mJned how many tickets bad lour
and' five t1 the correct numbers.

999oanon _ f299Galkln 1299Gallon

1399Gallon.

Best Interior Latex
Wall o•coratlon,
mfr. sug.list $16.99

Best Exterlorlatex
Gloss Houae Paint,
mfr. sug. list $21 .99

Best Interior Latex
Best Exterior Latex
Satin Gloss Enamel, Flat House Paint,
mfr. sug.list $19.49
mfr. sug. lis_
t $19.99

1------------:-----------=----=-------=------l

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
405 N. 2ND AVE.

2tl
SERIUITS

FWIRDOI"III

5!!" 8!! 7!! 9!!
Interior Latex
Flat Wall
Paint, mfr. list
price $8.99

99

NIM

&amp;Trim

•to

Two

at y

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pogoo 25 Cent•
A Muhimedlo Inc. N-apa,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, April 22, 1986

MIDDLEPOIT

992-3748
.

CONVENIENT OFf THE STIEn PAlliNG

litter
program
outlined
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff writer
Representatives from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
were in Pomeroy Monday to
discuss aspects or Meigs County's
$76,096 litter grant for 1986.
According to Mary Wiard, chief
of ODNR's Office of Litter Prevention and Recycling, Meigs Is in the
Drs! year of the " Implementation
phase" of its litter program.
Since the Implementation phase
usually lasts about three years,
Wiard says the county is likely to
funded for two more years after
1986. "The program ts intended to
be on-going," she adds.
After three yea rs, the county's
lUter program would enter the
continuation pha se and funding
from tile state would be reduced,
perhaps as much as 50 percent.
If the litter program is tben
expected to run at the same
capacity as before the reduction,
local funding would have to aug·
m ent the state funding.
yet, Meigs' 1986 program will
not be In tuU operation untll a Utter
collection supervisor Is hired by the
Meigs County Commission. Steve
Powell, program director, expects
this position may be filled by
Wednesday's regu lar meeting of
the commission.
In addition to program director
and collection supervisor, the ooly
other paid position allowed by the
grant's guidelines is that of enforce·
menl otneer. Dan Levingston.
assumed his duties as enforcement
officer on March 1, He works 35
hours per week.
'
Levingston Is a commissioned
deputy sheriff, but he is not on the
sheriff's payroll.
Levingston reports he has 1'1'cetved numerous complaints of
Utter areas In Meigs County. some
of which are on priva te pmjJPrty.
He says many of the problem areas
on private property "have already
been cleaned up."
Attmugh Lev ingston has not yet
cited anyone for Uttering. he say she
will when necessar y.
Anyone cited for llt tering would
be required to appear in Meigs
County Cou11 before Judge Patrick
O'Brien and could be ftned up to a
maximum of $500.
Levingston qualifies lor tile Job
Training Program Aot iJTPA 1
through the Gallia-Melgs Community Action Agency . This means that
a portiOn of his sa lary can be
refullded to the county through
SfPA. thu s making litter grant
oollars go fat1her.
•
Powell says ·he hopes that
someone who qualifies for JTPA
wUI also be hired for the collection
supervisor's positiOn, thu s extend·
lng grant dollars even more.
Powell Is also making attempts to
link tbe lltter p!pgram with others,
such as the county extension office
In order to extend his budget.
Regarding actual Utter clean-up,
Powell says volunteers from local
civic groups such as Jaycees, 4-H,
and hoy and girl scouts, will be
organll.ed to pick-up littered areas.
Summer youth and litter corps
workers wilt clea n-up utegal dump
sites. General relief workers are
also to be used to clean up dump
sites.
Use of coun ty and township
trucks to hau l Utter wUI be
negotiat.ed as needed PoWI'II said.
Following clean-up, area garden
clubs and conservation leagues wUI
be oontacted about planting trees to
Improve the cleanro area and
thereby eliminate the probabllty of
that area agaln becoming a dumpIng site.
•
Another main aspect of the litter
program Is education.
A curriculum Is being prepared
by Jolul Cootanzo, of the county
bOard of education, to be used In the
•fail In the three school distrtcts.
Containment Is another major
(Continued on page !OJ

as

INVESTMENT SECUIITIES

Wednellday momln1,
llle mid
Ihe ll!ld
411 early 'Dunday IIIICI from the
!Nil 4811 to ~ low • Friday

each worth more Iban $1.7

3.69 VAWE

SWENEY CARTWRIGHT .&amp; CO.

lbe • Tllunday IIIICI raDPnl from '
lbe . , . . . . to lbe ,.,. Friday.
O.ailllfiM ._ wll be In lbe mid or

Two share iackpot

119

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small private burial of hl~ daugbter's remainS.
· Marvin Resnik of Akron, Ohio,
says the family expects to get the
remains sometime next month,
thus closing one chapter In the
tragedy of the space shuttle .
explosion.

CLEVELAND (11Pl) -

311

HUAIOII
UNSUimD

Ohio Bonds are free of state
in&lt;omt taxes for Ohio rnidonh

NEW YORK (UPIJ- The father

ticketS,

12 oz.
IIOW

SURE
IE.ImiT

MUNICIPAL BONDS

Ask to wed
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs Count y Probate
Court to Raymond Warren Kimes.
23, Clifton Co., N.Y., and Regina
Rene Lee. 18, Meigs County.

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of Challen~r astronaut Judith
Resnik says he bas made plans for a

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To end maiTiage

Plans private burial

IIIPI!I' •

IYUITI

Happenings in ,Meigs County

WUliam E. Brown

.

•

P&amp;«e 10

Meigs'

Emmett Davis, 81. of Rt. 681,
Darwin, dted Saturday at Veterans
Memortai Hospital after a brh&gt;f
illness.
Born In Mann, W.Va., Mr. Davis
was a
of the late Alex and Avie
Johnson Davis. He was a retired
bus drtver and fireman.
Surviving are his wife. Sophia
Shockley Davis; two daugbters,
Juanita Jenkins of Darwin and
Naomi Powell rl. AmarUlo, Tx.;
lour grandsons; two granddaugh·
ters; nine great grandsons and two
great granddaughters; fotU" brothi&gt;rs, Eugene Davis of Huntington,
W.Va., Paul Davis of Weston,
W.Va ., Jesse Davis of Salt Rock,
W.Va. and Alex (Budl Davis of
Clarksburg, W.Va.; one sister, Mrs.
Harold (Bernice) Jolulson, Salt
JWck, W.Va.
.
In addition to his parents, he was
preceded In death by a brother,
Clark; a daughter, Mrs. Betty
Hawkins; an Infant daughter ; and
five grandchlldren.
Services wlll be 1 p.m. Tuesday at
Blgony-Jordan Furrral Home in
Albany with Rev. David Curfman
officiating. Burtal will be In Miller
Cemetery In Lawrence County.
Filends may call at the fu neral
home after 2 p.m. Monday.

RJchland Memorial Hospital in
Columbia, S.C.
Born Sept. 19, 19:rl at Laurel Cliff,
he was retired from the U.S. Air
FOI'Cl' and was a veteran of the
Korean "and VIet Nam Wars. He
was a mernberofthemasontc lodge
aitd the 4th St. Baptist Church In
Hartsville.
SurvlvOI'S Include his wife, Rutil;
a 90n and daugbter·ln·law, Randy
and Shannon Brown; another son,
Bill Brown; his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Frick of Pomeroy; a
brother, Robert E . Frick t1 Michl·
gan; 'three sisters, Linda Pullins
and Paula HaD, both of Pomeroy,
andJerrt Ball of J acksonville, Fla.;
several aunts and uncles Including
Qorotlzy . Clark and VIrgil (Boi
~wn. both of Pomeroy; and
riumerous nleces aitd ·nephews In
ihe local area.
'Arran~ments are pending from
Brown-Pennington-Atkins Funeral
Horne, HartsvWe, S.C.

Photo

Vot.36, No .269
Copyrighted 1986

on•Page 8

Lawman
retires
on

.

e

Said.

photos

ltiUI alita
DOC 011 CAl
COWlS

NOW

•

Child dies
following
accident

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.
tllc actual buUdozlng. Buck Hall L~ sho"n working Saturday. althoup
wet weather has put the dozing on hold, work will continue and grass wW
be planted as sooo as the weather clears. Park equlpmenl wW also be

EXCAVATION UNDERWAY - Work has begun lor a recreation
area on the land between Ebenezer St. IUid Monkey Run In Pomeroy.
The vlllage announced AprU 7 that It Is Ieasbtg the land from local
buslnessmM, Jay HaD for $1 a year. HaD is donating the excavation
work fort he park area with his brothers. Buck HaU andJerr:v HaD doing

installed In Ute near future and park committee, made up of village
residents, has been fonned to continue the planning of recreational
facllltles within the village.

Pomeroy-Mason bridge repair
may close structure 6 months
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel correspondent
Syracuse Village Counclllearned
Monday night that the PomeroyMa son Bridge will be closed tills
summer for repair for an estimated
six months.
Mayor Ebcr Pickens presented a
letter from the Ohio Department ri
Highways informing council that
the br idge would be closed. It was
notro that the deck wUI be replaced
along with a pier.
State Route 124. through Sy ra·
cuse. was designated as one of the
detour routes to the new bridge at
Ravenswood.
The state wUI maintain alternate

cerning problems with Cable TV.
Council has been very displeased
with cable teception and the fact
that the cable system is dropping
WOUB.
Crow t6l(l''c(fancil to draw up a
resolution for in vestigation con·
cerni ng llreach or contrac t and to
join ct her villages in a possible suit
if necessary.
A tetter was also received fi·om
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
asking .if SyracuS&lt;' Village offiCials
would be int erested in attending a
meet ing of representatives from ali
area communities t.o discuss problems and possible ac tion which
could be taken conceming theca ble
sr1v ice. Council expressed interest
in attending such a mee ting and will
notify Mayor Hoffman of Its desire
to attend.
Self·lnsuran re p-ogram
Council also Nreived a Jetter
from Sou theastern 'Ohio Manage·
ment Consultants, Inc.. Ironton
regarding a joint-&lt;.'Ounty seUinsu rance program.
The forming ol the joint-county
self-insurance program stems from
the lacl tha t vil lages In Ohio are
currently having difficulty in obtaining insurance to cover liability
of the village. it s officers and
employes. Also, a village Is now
required. by the new sovereign

routes and do what repair Is
nlo'Cessary after the detours are no
longer necessary. No date was
given as to when repair would
begin .
Mayor Pickens sa id· he cailro
ODOT at Marietta and he was
informro that the bridge would only
he closed for three months. How·
ever . the Information In the letter
gave an estimatro six months.
Pickens was asked ~ one lane
traffic could be malntainro. Ac·
cording to the mayor, the bridge is
not wlde enough to accomoda te
traffic and equ ipment.
Meeting with council was village
solicitor, Frroerick Crow 111 , ron·

Efforts underway
to promote levy
By KEVIN KELLY

.

OVP staff writer
With an ello'Ction In two weeks,
backers of the one-mUI mental
health levy campaign are consoU·
dating efforts to alert the public loa
stronger mental health program in
the area.
Plans for a telephone campaign
and postcard distri bution were
discussed during Monday's meet·
ing of the Ga llla-Jackson·Melgs &amp;18
Mental Health Board.
Fonner Board President Ro·
berta Holzer told the board teie·
phone techniques were discussed at
a recent levy campaign meeting.
Plans are being fommlatect for the
distribution of leaflets, airing of
radio spot endorsements and con'tactlng area ministers.
Officials said it may be likely the
postcard distribution rriay be done
more heavily In Meigs County and
telephone contact •• may be done
prtrnarlly in Gallla County.
The levy is expectro to help the
hoard develop an umbrella of
mental health services to the
community, ranging from programs at Woodland Centers Inc. to
senior citizens activ ities in all three
counties.
648 board director Dr. Romola
Hopkins .said that In light of
dwindling federal funding, the levy
money wUI assist rural mental
health boards ~tabllsh programs.
The government didn't Intend to
continue fUnding Indefinitely , she
said.
.The board su bcon~racts with
sever al service agenCies In the
three counties. U the levy passes
May 6, It wlll generate a total of
$861,!0l. Gallla County, with !Is
~

larger Indu strial baS&lt;'. will provide
the Uon's share at $459,!0l. while
Meigs County will co·nttibut e
$189,000 from its tax b~ and
Jackson County, $213,000.
Tl,le levy money, Hopkins said, Is
meant to provide "a stable S&lt;'t of
community S&lt;'rvlces addressi ng
pmblems.' '
In other action, the 648 board
reviewro a list of funding requests
for fiscal year 1987 from ar ea
agencies subcontracting with tile
board and approved prPlimlnary
amou nts it will provide to the
programs, based on carryover and
availability of federal and state
funq s, Hopkins ex plal~ro .
Jackson County Board on Aging
re:Juested $12,700 and will get
$6,1XXJ; Gallla County Board OJ!
Aging requested $7,2M and wUI
receive $6,!0l; Jackson County
Cl1Ud Development Center was
granted Its full req uest for $9,100;
Rio Grande Community Educa·
Uonat Counseling Center wilt get
$18,1XXJ, $2,000 less than Its request;
and Woodland Centers, which
r.e:juested $1,267,486, wUI get
$1,117,486. The board Is negotiating
wi\)1 three arm alcoholism and
drinking problem treatment cen·
ters on funding.
Hopkins said final action on loose
amounts won't be taken until May.
Hopkins told . tile board Us
application for residential funds tor
the establishment of crisis beds and
admlnlstratkin of the HUD apart·
ments at Racine was accepted by
the government. The hoard must
oow submit a proposal, she said.
" It's Interesting that there were
turn downs In the state. but we were
oot one of. them," Hopkins said.

immunity bill, to idemnlfy Its
employes against most UahUity.
Council expressed Interest In join·
ing the council.
Council. In other bu siness. hired
the lollowing as fuil time life·
b'llards:
Sherr! Sisson, 'JTaci
Hubbard, Scott McPhail and Dald
Deem. l-lirro as part time guards
were Michl King, Annette Cardone
and Sue Fry . Meeting with council
to review ap plications lorlifegu " rd
duty was Marty Morarlty. pool
manager.
Mayor Pickens and Gene Imboden, fire chief, told council that
the fire truck tha t has been
refurbished wut be picked up today.
trnooden reportro tilat the truck
will he lis ted with the state as a
recertified vehicle.
Jim Hill. councilm an , extended
thanks to members of the health
department for Its assistance In
helping council wit h sanitation
problems within the village.
Council asks that if &lt;11yone knows
of any. existing problems that have
not been eliminated to please ootl!y
council.
Mending In addition to those
named were Glen Cundiff, Jack
WUliams, BUt Arnott, Ernie Slssion,
and Kathryn Crow, council
members, Janice Lawson, clerk,
and Jean Hall.

QUARTER FINALS - Four seniors of the Meigs
IUgh School Quiz Team are In the quarter finals of the
llonor Society compelltk&gt;n lor smlor studenll! of
teams In the areaiUid wW beseeri In that competition
at 6 p.m . Saturdjly on Channel 15 TV, WfAP,
~

J

Cynthia Marie Hensley, J.8.
month-old daughter of Charles
Eugene Hensley and Laura Dar·
lene Hensley, Tuppers Plains, died
Monday evening In the emergency
room at St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, w. Va. of injuries
suffered when she was run over by
a truck.
Witnesses Indicated to Meigs
County Sheriff Howard E . Frank,
Deputy Kenny Klein, and Paul
Gerard, Investiga tor !or the Prosec·
utor's office that the father acclden·
tally struck the child as he backed
up the truck shortly after 6 p.m.
Tuppers Plains squad members
attempted to resusitate the chUd
before transporting her to St.
Joseph's Hospital.
Dr. James Conde, Meigs Coonty
coroner, was ootlfled. While In
contact with hospital personnel, he
was advised that the chUd died as a
result of a massive head Injury. No
autopsy was ordered.

Beautification
effort begins
Combined efforts between Pomeroy VIllage and the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce are under·
way to beaulify the downtown area
of the village. Thirty flowering crab
trees have been purchase(! by local
merchants and wUI be planted
along Main Street as soon as
weather permits. Vlllage strEet
workers will do the planting.
Sandy lannarelli, representing
the merchant's association, was at
Monday night 's meeting thanking
council tor permitting the trees to
be planted and for donating the
labOr to do the planting.
lannarelll asked council If an
ordinance would be needed to deal
wlth vandals who might harm the
trees, however, Mayor Richard
· Seyler said the village already has
an such an ordinance.
Jolul Koebel oft he Columbia Gas
Co. made a " routine" visit to SEe If
councU had any problems to report
and to assure council that gas rates
would not he raised In 1986. A
moratorium on raising gas rates Is
now In efflo'Ct due to a ruling hy the
Public Utllltles Commission of
Ohio, Koebel said.
Koebel suggested ·that council
give the gas company prior notice
when street resurfacing Is planned
for the village, thereby allowing the
company time to conduct a "leakage survey."
.,
The gas company conducts leak·
age surveys In business districts oo
a yearly basis, Koebel said, but
surveys residential areas onlv
(Continued on page 10)

Parkel'l!burg. 'The four team inembers defeated
Waterford IUid Fort Fry to earn their way Into the
quarter ftnal competilioiL 'The group Includes. front, I
tor, Gary Colemall; Fady Advisor Rita !Iavin, Soall
Pullins; back, Jan Dunt and '11m Sloan.

'

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