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Page . 10-The Daily S..tinel

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Beautification _ ___.&lt;c...,o,...ntln_u_ed_trom___:.pa...:;ge~1::.)_
eyery four to Jive years. CouncU said !here are no plans
for paving at this tlme.
Pomeroy resident Donald May
thanked councll for street Improvements oo Martin St. He also discuss
needed street llghtlng In that area.
May ~s told that street Ughtlpg
wlll be placed on Martin St. as soon
as til&gt; Installation can be worked
Ol!t with the !X)wer company.
Cnuncllman Bill Young reported
he was in attendance last week at a
Point Pleasant, W.Va. council
meeting, and that Point Pleasant
along with Gallipolis, has entered
Into a suit against Olnsolldated
Communications Group Inc .. which
provides local cable television
service. Young says the suit stems
from Olnsolldated Olmmunlcations' decision to drop WOUB from
Its cable line-up. Young said that
Marty Crawford of 1he cable
company reported that til&gt; company received only a combined
total ri l81etters and calls In JI'Oiest
of dropping WOUB.
Young urges anyone wishing to
protest til&gt; dropping of WOUB to
"call or write" to the cable
company.

Young also reported he has
numbered an additional ~ houses
In tile Wlllls Hill. Pleasant Ridge,
l\Jrlng Ave. areas since the last
meeting of council.
He also reported that park
equipment being made for tile
village by the Meigs HJgh welding
class Is nearly finished. Swing sets
are ready to be picked ~R now he
said.
Olunctlman Larry Wehrung announced that Chuck Mann of
Engineering Associates, Wooster,
will be contacting Clerk·TN!asurer
Jane Walton In the nearfutureto set
up a meeting to discuss EPA
required Improvements to the
village sewer system. Mayor
Seyler suggested the meeting he
held next Monday evening.
Oluncll moved to enter Into an
agreement with a Cleveland firm to
put aU vlllageordlnanoos Into coded
form. The motion passed with !he
stlpulatl:ln that Walton wlll decide
when there Is enough money In the
budget to allow lor the codlflca lion.
Council also discussed purchasIng a · heavy duty mower for the
street department but no action
was, taken In !he matter.

RETIRES -

Alfred (Putt)
LyODS has retired as marshal of

Racine VIllage, a post II! has
held for the past 44 years. He is a
charter member of the Gallla·
Meigs Chapter, Fraternal Honor
of PoUce, having been a
member lor some :ll years and
was recently hooored by tiE
chapler.

ont ued !rom page 11 _ _
Mel•IJ'fiJ. '••--------:.IC:.:.:.:~:.::.:..:.:.:~:...::_
e~

aspect of the program. Powell says
permanent collection containersll to 40 gallons In size and weighing
approximately 100 !X)Unds each
with heavy anchor pins - wm be
dlvkled out to til&gt; communities In
the county lor use In public areas.
Portable lightweight containers
wlll be available through the
JI'Ogram for special events
throughout the county. Pick-up of
the !X)rtable containers wlll be
negotiated from event to event.
Both Powell and Wiard point out
the relationship between economic
development and litter clean-up,

noUng that a "first Impression"
often makes a lasting Impression on
an Industry which may be consider·
lng a move Into an arPa.
Powell also noted that "commun·
lty pride" lncrPases as the results of
litter clean-up become apparent.
Anyone wanting Information rPgardlng the litter program may
contact Powell at his office In the
Ohio Bureau f1 Employment Servl·
ces' building. Union Ave., at

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Kenneth
H. Hager, of Coolville. VFW Post
9m3, has been ap!X)inled by VFW
National Com mander-in-Chief
John S. Straum of Mlnnea!X)lls,
Minn., to serve as a National
Aide-&lt;le-Camp, Recruit lng Class lor

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treatm~nt.

Cooper

ChrylserePlymouth•Dodge, Inc.

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STOP AND SJE All THE FREE
OPTIONS ON THIS MODEL

Two calls were answered bY units
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Monday. At 3: 27
a. m. theTuppersPJalnssquad went
to the State Route 681 residence ci
Geneva Gulhrle who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 5:16 a.m. The Tuppers Plains
unit answered a call lor Edna Lee,
State Route 7, who was also t ak~n to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for

Aeyone with reports of Utter sites,
lllegal dumps or Jitter violators.
should call Levingston at the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department at
992-3371.

Coolville veteran
earns appointment • • •

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S737300

1987

Two emergency runs

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Staum, head of the over two
mlllion member crganlzatbn ci
overseas veterans said, "It Is
because of the tireless efforts of
civic and patriotic minded s lltzens
!Ike Hager that the veterans and
communities the VFW serves have
been affected in a positive

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·,~·~·~·~·L.~·~·-&amp;-·~·~·~·~·~~~~.&amp;-&amp;-&amp; .I• .l~.l~J~.J'~ I

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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer; Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy.

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l986.

.~"!'~on Page Z

Racine VUJilge CwncU has ·apCnunetl au tborlzed. the vUlag&lt;
The clerk was also directed to
proved a request from the Ohio clerk to send a letter to !he owner of send · a letter to the Racine
Department of Transportation de- a vacant trailer ori VIne St. Emergency Squad asking the
signaling State Rt. l2l as a detour requesting that litter he cleanE!d . president of the ll}uad to be at tile
for U.S. Rt.. 33 when the Pomeroy. !rom tiE bt on which the trailer next regular meeting of connell to
Mason Bridge Is closed for repairs.
rests.
discuss Incidents which are of
The request was approved at • Council reminds residents that concern to the VIllage.
Monday night's meeUng of councU. the lawn moWing season Is here and
Hel'b Glboon of the Racine Gas
CouncU met In recessed session at
urges residents to comply with Ol. IS also to be In attendanee·at the
the Shrine Club Park.
moWing ordlnanoos.
next meeting.
· Councilman Bob Beegle said the
bridge may he closed as long as six
months, however, no date for the
closing was given by 0001'.
Beegle caUed the designation "a
formality."
Ann Layne and Rhonda Lyons of
the Firemen's Ladles Auxiliary
were at the meetlngtoaskabout the
lllture use of the firehouse annex.
The Meigs County Head Start
. Center has been housed In the
annex for almost 10 years but Head
Start moved out last week. CouncU
explained that cuts and adjust·
mentswlll havetobemadetomake
up for the lost revenue from Head
Start's rent.
Council said that any outside
groups wanting to use Ill&gt; annex
will have to pay a user's tee,
Plymouth Turismo, ),door hatchback
!X)lntlng out that tax money for the
building must not be used to benefit
private persons or groups.
.
Rules and a fee schedule lor the
annex wm be developed at the next
regular meeting of councll Beegle
said.
Glenn Rizer, street commls·
sloner, requested permission to
"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"
replace tiE bristles on the vUlage's
WE SERVICE WHAT WI 51111
!X)wer street broom at a cost of
about $400. Cnuncll authorized
Rlzer's request slnoo the broom Is
needed to preparB vUiage streets
for chip and seal work.
Councilman Carroll Teaford reported that the lawn and parklng lot
of the Shrine Club Park were
..
399 S. Third Street
cleaned up last Saturday, and that
(Hmi.ER
Middleport, Ohio 45760
~
additional k&gt;vellng and dlsclng wll)
be done before Ill&gt; lawn section of
(6 14 ) 992-6421
1he park Is seeded.

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manner".
"Our programs touch every
citizen in the community, !hey help
the you ng, the old. the VIetnam
veteran, and tiE World War 1
veteran. I am pleased to make this
appointment because I know Comrade Hager will do an outstanding
job for the VFW, the veterans and
commmunlty."

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Bueball roundup on Page 1

Photo 011 Pace 12

Vot.35, No.260

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By JUDY MORGAN
OVP news staff
PT. PLEASANT.:... Appalachian
Wood Products, Inc. today announced plans for expansion into
Mason County.
With the signing of a lease this
morning, Appalachian Wood, a
major manufacturer of waterbeds
that has operated a production
facility in Ravenswood lor lour
years, becomes the first Industry to
locate In the Point Industrial Park,

Point Pleasant.
Company vice president Dave
Cox said the new manufacturing
facility will be placed In production
by July 1 in a ~.OOJ square foot
facility leased from Point Indu strial
P~ rk, formerly the site of Point
Pleasant Malleable Iron.
The plant will employ 65 workers
and will represent a total capital
Investment of approximately half a
million dollars Into the new facility.
Cox said.

Libyan gove~~ent
expels journalists
TRIPOLI, Libya iUPI I - The
Libyan government today ordered
more than 100 A~rlcan and West
European journalists to leave the
country by nightfall, explaining
only that "your mission is over."

The order from the Information
Ministry did not include joumaiisl s
from Canada. Japan or Eas tern
bloc countries- anot!Jer estimated
100.
A mlnlstry slJOkesman refuS&lt;.'&lt;i to
link the action to Britain'sexpulsion
of 21 Libyans Tuesday or to
sanctions impo,S€d against Libya by
th£' Euro p ea n Economic
Community.

2 Sections , 12 Pages

26 Cents

A' Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

of deaths and tn junes to Ohio's
citizens. The new seat belt law goes
Into effect May 26 and enforcement
will begin on July 4.
"Don't wait unlll the seat belt law
hecomes effective,.. Henderson
said . "Start wearing your seat belts
now. It can save your Ufe. The next
time you get Into a car. try wearing
your seat belts. Once you get used to
wearing them . yoo will never know
why you ever drove without them. "

clear first choice. "

our competitive edge. It was
essential that our company grow
and expand Immediately. We could
not have found a better partner fi:Jr
this expansion than Point Pleasant
and Mason County."
The company's Ravenswood
plant will oot shutdown completely,
he said, but 111ll be restructured to
produce companion products for
waterbeds.
The company now employs about
28 workers at its Ravenswood plant
and Cox expects from 10 to 15 of
those employees will transfer to
Point Pleasant. The Point Pleasant

~

Cox added, "In ordertomamtaln

facility will employ about 65
workers, with the capacity to
ex pand production and workforce,
he said.
Appalachian Wood supplies waterbeds to about Ill dealers In six
states, according to President Jack
Hendricks. and operates too lactory outlets, In Ripley and
Charleston.
HendrlckssaidttEmovetoPolnt
Pleasant reptesents an c:.p!X)rtunlty
to cover the company's existing
market trore thoroughly as well as
expand Into additional markets.
Point Industrial Park, formed In

the spring of L9SI when Malleable
Iron was purchased by a group•of
businessmen, Is a ""'en-acre park
with approxlmat~ two acres, or
85,00l&amp;Juare feet, under roof. Since
the purchase, til&gt; facility has
undergone extensive remodeling.
Including re-roofing and painting.
Carroll Casto, president of Point
Industrial Park. sa id while Appaiachian Wood is lhe first firm to
locate In the facility,it "certa inly Is
not going to he the last." He said
Point Industrial Park Is currently In
"serious negotiation" with several
other companies.

~

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pmvldo! a ,.,e an4 nUaltle Jantlm~ place lor UfefiJPt - a heBmpter
ambullllce service 011! o.f Grant H011pltalln Columbus. Meip Coumy
Cmlm.......,r DavW Koblentz spearheaded the bulolng of the II!Uport.
Kobleatz lllld Bob 'l1ltlmpson. (In hard hat) of Assodaled Fabrleators,
are Jn tloo hllckKnJUII.
......... ,

CHANGES BEING MADE - The driveway to tile heUport pltd m
Mulberry Helghls Ill being changed to ellmlllale a steep Incline In the
lonner access road. Workers from ASaodaled FabricatAJrs were busy
Tuesday dozing the new road and pouring concrete to enlar(ltl the pad
itself. The acce;s road will also be paved. The helport was boUt tn

Record low temps sweep across Ohio
spraying water over the crop
helped provide some protection.
. "A5 long as you keep pumping
wa ter, It gives off enough heat to
keep plan ts from freezing."
"A5 1ar as the apple trees, I'm not
sure. They're not In bloom yet. The
cherry trees look pretty much
cooked, " he sa id. "The petals were
wide open and In fu ll bloom.
They're pretty much gone."
"We've got Ice all over," he said .
" Til&gt; Ice looks nice."
The water changes to Ice, which
creates enough heat.
Patterson Fruit Farms In Ches·
terland, about M miles east of
Cleveland, appeared to escape
slgnUica11t damage the strawberry
crop, but apples were in danger.
"The apples, sustained injury,
I'm surP that's !he case. To what
ex tent , we won't be able to tell lor a
couple weeks." said Jim Patterson.
Four helicopters were at work
during the early morning hours at
Lynd Fruit Farm in Pataskala,east
of Ollumbus. The rotating helicopter blades warmed tIF air arid push
It down on the blossoming trees.
"The thing that rea lly hurt us Is
that the apples are ahead of
schedule. Usually we don'! get this
far along Wllil the first week of

By UnHed Press lntematlonal
Record low temperaturPs swept
across Oh io early today. forcing
fruit growers to ta ke extraordinary
measures to protect their crops as
residents wondered wbere the
spring weather had gone.
"It's very unusual to get extreme
temperatures thiS lat e in ApriL By
clipping down In the low 20s.lt rea lly
can hit the crops hard," said Tom
McNutt, Franklin County Ex1ension Agent. " It probably only
happens once In every eight to 10

ye-ars."

LT. DAN HENDERSON
Melgs-Ga!Ua Slate
Patrol Commander

Ohio lottery winnei'!J

In making the announcement,
Cox expressed appreciation to what
he called the "Mason County
industrial development team.
"After narrowing our selection to
fi ve counties," Cox said, "It became
obvious thai the combination of
facilities, available financing and
the tremendous cooperation hetween the mayor. county commls·
sklners, Point Pleasant-Mason
County Chamber of Commerce,
and the Office of Economic Development made Point Pleasant the

Most of the reporters were
housed at Tripoli's AI Kablr Hotel.
"I was having breakfast and t!Fy
told TTK' I had to get out of here,"
said Mike Parry of the London
Daily Express. " I'm~lngtohook a
flight now."
An Italian journalist said, "We're
still trying to find out exactly what
to do."
Journalists sa id tiE order was
delivered politely but l~mly.
Mean while, demonstra tions - an
everyday event in Tripoli - have
been lacking since U.S. warplanes
oomhed the Libyan capital. and
diplomats said that cou ld be a sign
of public dissatisfaction with
Moammar Khadafy .
In London. The Times reported
today that a fiv&lt;"-man military
junta may have divested Khadafy
of exclusive control of the nation In
the aftermath of the U.S. raid.
Western and East-bloc diplomats
said Tuesday unexplained small·
arms fire, explosions and nightly
anti· aircraft fire that punctuated
ihe days after tiE raid were
...,idence of Internal tension.

Extended Foreca8t
Thursday lltrough Saturday
Fair Thunday, with a chance ol
showers Friday and Salurday.
. m~~~s will be In the 'llls each day.
Ovemlght lows wW range from the
mid 3011 to mid ~ early Thursday
ond from the upper 40s to the mJd
:JOB Friday and SatunJay momlnp.

At 5:45 a .m. in Toledo, tlx'
temperature dropped to 21, a
31-year low for the dat e. Meanwhile, record lows wen~ also
recorded of 23 In Columbus at 5:3.1
a.m., 24 In Mansfield at 5:~ a.m.,
and 26 in Dayton all2: 55 a.m.
A 27-degree reading In Cleveland
at 2: 30 a.m. tied the longest
standing record for April 231n Ohio,
set In 1875.
Fruit growers Tuesday called In
helicopters, built bonfires and
burned smudge !X)ts to protect the
crops.
Michael Hoen, wbose west Toledo
orchard and strawberry fields this
morning were covered with Ice
created hy a sprinkler system, said

May," said Lynd Fruit Farm's
Dick Wander, who was Wlcert.aln as
to the extent of the damage.
Grape grower Kl"'l Schuster of
Valley VIneyards In Warren County
In southwestern Ohio summoned
ll!llCO{lters and also buUt bonfires to
protect what remained of his
grapes.
"The cold hit us Wlexpectedly last
night (Monday)," Schuster said f1
1he rocord low temperatures. His
vineyards are between Dayton and
Cincinnati.
"WP lost 15 percent of our crop. "
he said.
Bob Davis of the Hamilton
County Extension Service said,
"The location of the trees !sa factor.
If they're on a hillside wbere they
get good alr drainage, the damage
wlll be less severe. If they'rP In a
!X)Cket where the cold air wUI
remain, It would be tmre severe."
The oold weather forced the
Cincinnati Reds, !he Columbus
Clippers and the Toledo Mud Hens
to ea ll off Tuesday night hascllall
games, but the Cleveland Indians
and Baltimore Orl:lles played In
33-degree temperatures along the
Lake Erk&gt; shore.
"It doesn't feel !Ike spring at all, "
said Denise Terrell ol Cleveland,

adding that she had already put her
winter clothes away. "You don't
know how to come out of the house
from day to day."
But warmer weat!Fr is on the
way. The National Weather Service
said a sharp warming trend would
hegln over Ohio today with highs
climbing In to the 50s. Highs are
expected to reach the 10s In many
parts of the state Thursday.
Ohio strawberry growers said
they were covering their crops with
blankets, and grape grower Ken
Schuster of Valley VIneyards near
Dayton, Ohio, used helicopters and
bunt bonfires to protect what
remained of his grapes.
"The cold hit us unexpectedly,"
Sc huster said of Tuesday's record
low temperaturP of 28degrees. "We .
lost 15 percent of our crop... ·

llliodes brands 1983 deficit .a 'Celeste myth'

CLEVELAND (UPli - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number
701.
PICK-4

7635.

Veterans Memorial
.
CHARGES TVPICAL - A
spokernan for Gov, Richard
Celesle says fonner Gov; James
Rhodes' clalm8 that the btcome
tax hl.ke Wider Celeste were
unneces•ary are typical because
Rhodes won't admit the state
was In flnaoclal bule when he left
of nee. Rhodes left a
mBllon
deftclt according to Celeste's
campaign director, JeriY AWl· tin. (File photo).

Admitted: Wilma Anderson Ra·
cine; Edna Lee, Pomeroy; Helen
Fell, Pomeroy; Todd Lee, Ctester;
Eva Haning, Albany.
Discharged: Cecil Frazier.

Window :vandalized
A display window at the Swisher·
Lohse Drug Store In Pomeroy was
broken out early Tuesday !JIIIrnlng.
· Pomeroy pollee report !hat the
Incident occurred about 1: ~ a.m.lt
remains under lnvespgatlon.

({;)

Mason County gets waterbed pla~t

"We need to use exira caution in

A freeze warning Is in effect for
tonight.
Bemmlng sunny today, with
hlgfis near 40. Clear tonight, with a
record low In tile mid 20s. Sunny
Wednesday, with highs between ~
and 55.
The probability of precipitation Is
near zero through Wednesday.

.
ent1ne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 23, 1986

our driving and he mo1P alert for
children walking, riding bicycles
and other motorized vehicles on
and along our streets and high ways," Henderson said.
The patrol Is also looking to
reduce fatal accidents, he added.
and the public's use ci safety hells
and sea t restraints wUI help. There
were 10 traffic fatalities invest!·
gated bY the patrol In 19&amp;5, and In
eac h one, none of the victims wore
seat hells. This year, Henderson
said. two people have died on the
area's highways and nelt!Fr of
them were wearing seat hell s.
"The year 19~ brings a new seat
hell law to motorists in Ohio,"
H~nderson said. "This law was
enacted to help reduCe liE number

·Weather forecast

.

Shopping spree

Copyrighted 1986

GALLIPOLIS- A reminder that
warm weather Is approaching and
more children will be outside
playing has been issued to area
motorists bY Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the Gallla-Meigs
Post of the Ohio Highwa;&gt; PatroL

A Huntington man was cited by
the state highway patrol for
assured clear distance In a two-car
accident on U.S. 33 Monday.
Troopers sa id Philip W. Smith,
26, was westbound at 8:20 a.m.,
five-tenths of a mile east of the
Athens County line, when he was
unable to stop for a car stopped
ahead driven by Stephanie J .
Houchins. 21. Middleport, and
collkled.
Houchins had reportedly stopped
to allow a dlog to cross the road, the
patrol said. There was slight
damage reported to Houchins'
vehicle.

.

Giants win ~n

Seat belt reminder
given by commander

Cited by patrol

l

Photo 011 Pap 7

e

"Your mission is over. You must
go," til&gt; spokesman said . "If you
don't make your own arrangements. we will maket!Fm lor you ."
He did not elabora te.
Journalists poured into UbYa at
the start of America 's latest
confrontation with Libyan leader
Moammar Khadafy . Many were on
hand when U.S. warplanes bomhed
Tripoli and Benghazi before dawn
on April 15.

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God, ·country awards

.Frustrating decision.

.De,our r,eqtlest gets approl:al

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abo~t

Tuesday, April22, 1986

MENIHOL!OO's: 13 mg."tar".l.Omg. nicotine. FilTER TOO's: 17 mg."tar". 1.2mg. nicoline;
IIV. per cigarette by FTC met!tod.
•

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Mlnlholltlfl bl lnllfel*d-.

'C•It.R,J . III:YNOlD8TOIACCciCO.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP]) Fomier Gov . James A. Rhodes
Tuesday blasted Gov. Richard F .
Celeste's for claiming there was a
budget deficit In 1983, and charged
that Celeste made the clalnn
because "he was hell - bent to
overtax the people."
Rhodes, speaking a l a reception
at Scioto Country Club, said
"Celeste created thls myth as a
smokescreen for an. el(cesslve and
•unnecessaxy 90 percent Income tax
hike.
"Dick Celeste Is a spender. He
cauldn'.t stand having a sljm budget ·
In his first months as governor
because he had too many !X)lltlcal

Gov. John Gilligan. He said when
Celeste took over In 1983, !here were
bills left unpaid "so tile Incoming
goveroor could rot deal with It
without raising taxes. "
Rhodes, wbo Is running against
Sens. Paul Pfeifer and Paul
Glllmor for the Republican guber·
natorial oomlnat!on, said Celeste
admitted til&gt; tax hlke was wrong~
giving taxpayers a rebate in 198!,
bY pro)l061ng a tax cut and bY
signing a budget that cut taxes.

Governor Celeste did what he fie It
was necessary to get tile state In
sound finan cial condition."
Rhodes quoted a Legislative
Budget Office report dated Dec. 31,
1982 as saylngtll!rewould only be a
shortfall If a 00 percent tem!X)rary
Income tax surchar(ltl, lmple·
mented In 1982, were allowed to
ex)ire. He said the report said the
delle!! would he $145 million.
Rhodes charged · that Celeste
could have prevented til&gt; deficit by
extending the surchar(J'.
Austin said the charges are
typical because when Rhodes lett
office In 1970, Ill! state was In !he
hole, and tiE 80lut!on was a state
Income tax Implemented under

debts to pay off with unbid
contracts," Rhodk&gt;s said In a news
release Issued after the reception.
Jerry Austin , Celeste's campaign
director, called the statement
"typical James Rhodes campaign
rhetoric."
Austin said l:loward Collier, the
budget director during the Rhodes'
last term, admltled to Celeste's
transition committee In 1983 that
there was a deficit of at least $250
million.
"Rhodes doesn't want to accept
the responsibility" (that there was
a shortfall at the end of his term),
Austin said. "He always blames It
on someone else. The tact Is tllat

"There's a veryslmplereasonfor
Celeste's trumped·updellclt ligures
and · his confiscatory taxation: It's
because II! was beD-bent to overtax
til&gt; people," Rhodes said.

"BBIIIIon• 111 'n11 ~rNNprlol ~fu~~Wtth200c~u~Mteper~, It per~.

-.

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IIIAS1S C~LESTE AGAIN · .
- GOP gubernatorial candidate
James A. Rhodea has qaln
blasled Richard Celeste's 'Income tax hike of 1983. Rhodes
charses Celeste tnunped-._, II&amp;
flcll ~!lUre&amp; and could have
prevmt.ed the deficit by extadtnc the lacome tax lllll'llluu-p.
(File pbojo).

�).

'The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Wednesday. April 23,' 1986

Comment

'
page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio
WednfiSC!ay, April 23, 1986

·a. ·1gh.t the JiII'St t•IDle _

M~

•

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~

~~

..
I"'T"''...... '-"'T",,..,.....,d,.=o

~v

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.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
j
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manaser

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMm:R ofTh P United Press ! nt f'rn a fl on &lt;:~l, l nlan d Da lly Press Associ a·
tion a nd th f' Anu:&gt;r lcan N~· sp apl'r P u blis htns Associa tion .
LETTE RS OF OF'I NION arf' w eic·o me. Tht"y should be lt-ss tha n DJ words
AlllC'tters a r('subjfflt o Edit ing and mu stlw sig ned with na mt&gt;, address and
wlt'phonf' numb&lt;'r. No unsig ned l c fl (' r .~ will tw published . L ener s should be In
$':ood t as te. addrrssinj! lssuros, not pPrson all tiPs .
ion~ .

' WASHINGTON - It seems ait ·
elementary · question: When ·a
federal contract •· is put out for
competitive bids; do au bidders
have an equal chance? The lamentable answer is "no," for In this area
some bidders are more equal than
others. A company that quallfles as
an MBE or D$ Is out tn front with ·
what is known as a set-aside.
An MBE Is a mtnortty business
enterprise. A DBE Is a disadvantaged business en terprtse. Under
various federal laws, 10 percent of
appropriated fuoos must be set
aside for contract awards to them.
It makes no difference If a company
owned by white persons has better
qualifications and submits a lower
bid. Thecontracfgoes to a company
that is owned- at least on paper-

by blacks, Hispanics, Alruts, Orlen·
tals, Indians or other mlnoritles.
Aooupleofweeks ago, the staff of
the U.S . . Commission on Civil
Rights submitted a aratt 'report on
the several set-aside programs.
The dralt foum serlous fault with
the programs ·and recommended
that they he suspended for ayearfo
careful review. When the draft
. report leaked out to the press, a
predictable oowl arose. On Aprtlll,
the oommlsslon decided by a
divided vote to send the report back
for revision. The commission
soould have stuck with the staff.
This report was essentially light the
first time.
The Sl't-aslde programs go back
to an executive order from the
Nlxoo administration In 1969. The

first statute was the Public Works
Employment Act d. 1!177, which
earmarked $40 mUUon rl. a $4 billlon
appropriation tor minority contractnrs. Then came what IS known as
the 8 (a) program under the Small
Business Administration, which
now provides atX&gt;ut $2.7 billion
every year kt awards tn MBEs. In
1982 CongrESS approved the SUrface
Transportation Asslstanre Act,
which sets aside $5.3 billion for
disadvantaged business enter·
prtses. We are oot talking small
potatoes.
What Is wrong with set-asides for
blacks and other minorit!es• Said
the draft report: The programs
"create a new form of dlscrlmtna·
tlon and a new class of victims."
The programs are "unjustifiable"

'

Every time a president undert akes a military mission on his own- and
there have been many since the last declaration of war - Congress is
overcome with a sense of lmpotenre.
,
. This frustration exists even if the operatiOn- the bombing raid on Libya
and the invasion of Grenada are good examples - meets with
overwhelming favor on Capitol Hill.
What grinds is the feeling, shared by some of the top leaders as well as
the shock troops, is that Congress has only the trost limited role ln the
process that leads to the use of America's military power.
· As easy as It Is to forget, the Constitution grants the power of declaring
war to Congress- not to the president. Yet , the United States has not
&lt;leclared war since 1941.
: During a long post-World War If period, which Included the U.N . police
action in Kofl'a and the sending of U.S. Marines ilto Lebanon, Congress
t;lcitly accepted its secondary status - and continued to do so until the
realization sank in that President Johnson duped the Senate and House
with the Gulf of Tonkin resolution.
. That resolution, which was approved unanimously In theHouseandwlth

o~ly two dissenting votes In the Senate, gave Johnson carte blanche

authority to wage war In Vietnam.
' but or that conflict came the War Powers Resolution, drafted to give
Congress a greater say In conduct of military endeavors that fall short of
war. A key provision of the resolution Is that it requires substantive
consultation, In advance, with Congress.

It was not until Monday at about 4 p.m. that congressional leaders from

both parties went to the WhlteHouseandweretoldthata fleet ri.F-lllswas
on Its way from bases in England to bomb targets tn Libya.
·
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole, backed by Lugar, said the
delegation was told early enough so that the planescouldhaveturned hack.
'Olat may be true, logistically, but it Is hard to believe Reagan would have
aborted the mission.

.

· Dole Insists the White House was "substantially" In compliance with the
War Powers Resolution. Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd claims
thio leaders were told - not consulted.
:Certainly, there was no congressional advice Incorporated Into the
decision. The planes were within an hour or so ci the target when the White
lfouse meeting finally ended.
· Yet, the fi'Solution itself is Ill-defined .
·Should Reagan have advised Congress when he made the decision? Who
should have been told• How many sufflce to make consuitatloniegltlmate?
Wpuld there have been an Increased risk ci leaks ? Could a single
congressman, violently opposed to the action, killed the mission by going
public?
: All these questions raise another: Is it possible for a president to truly
cbnsult with Congress before ordering a Libya-type mlsslon? The answer
l~ probably no.
'But he ca n. and pmbably should'have, advise ccongresslonalleaders at
some point before maklng a decision that he plans to deal with Libya, that
theye are several options and that one of the pos.•lbllitles Is a mllitary
st)ike.
:At that point, congressional leaders can give him their advice; he can
weigh It and reach a decision. That would ce11ainly constitute rompUance
wJth the War Powe1·s Act.
·ya thering congressional leaders in the White House as the bombers are
hu~fuing to their targets is rea lly too late to give meaning to the word
consult or to sta.1· within the gu idelines of the resolution .

__ Today in history

tn theOry and "Ineffective" tn
practice. They have led to -"rampant corruption" In the form of
sham companies that Oltenslbly
are rontrolled by blacks but are
covertly owned by whites. One
study touoo that aJ percent of 1,500
MBEs In the 8 (a) program were
tnellgible; an estimated 32 percent
of minorlty beneficiaries under the
Public Works Act were shams or
fronts. In Illinois tt was estimated
that only 40 percent of the rertlfled
DBEs were legitimate llrms. Hall
of the mtnortty contractors .In New
England, Oklahoma and Arkansas
were "Ineligible cr questionable."
The programs are costly. In one
study by the General Accounting
Office, it appeared that mtnortty
contracts on public works projects
were 9 percent higher than low bids
from non-minority companies. On
highway jo'ls, minority bids were
from 10.7 percent to 15 percent
higher, These costs often were
Increased by reason of shoddy
workmanship that had to be done
over by someone else.
There was another oost: The
highway set-asides have led "to
financial hardship and bankruptcy
for a slgnlllcant number of non minority subcontractors." By way
or example, the draft report cited
the ex(l'rlence r1 Southern Seeding
Service of Greensboro, N.C., which
despite "Its ex~Uent record and Its
submission of numerous low bids"
could not get a contract from 1983
through 19135. Warning Lites of
llltnols submitted bids that were 7
percent klwer than bids from
DBEs, but repeatedly losl out.
!Rfenders of the Sl't -asides say
the programs have saved to set
many legitimate minority firms on
their feet , but the draft report found
little evidence to suwort that
assertion. Neither ~ tt demonstrable that a "ripple effect" has
greatly Increased mtnorttyemployment. Proponents make the point
that 98 perrent of all public and
private construction is unaffected
by the SI"Veral programs.

View unchanged ____Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_D_ale_Va_n_A_u_a
WASHINGTON - Anbnoslty
between successive cxrupants ~
the Oval Office Is a fairly common
feature f1 Waslington life. The
lx&gt;stlllty between President Reagan
and former President Jimmy
Carter may be trore acerlic tban
most because of the deep dlflerences In political philosophy that
divide the two men.
Occasionally, the barely sub. merged antipathy bolE Ill the
surface - usually when Reagan
charges that Carter had faDed to do
something dlrlng his term and
Carter denies the charge. There
was great bristling In October 1983,
for example, when Reagan blamed
the suicide bombing of the Maline
baracks In Beirut tJJ Carter JDllcies
that Reagan claimed had wea.
kened the CIA and other
intelligence-gatherlng agendes.
In typewritten notes gjven to us
by Carter's office recently, the
former jJ'esldent lndlgnantly re-

called "when President Reagan
attempted to blame the tragic loss
of rmre than m U.S. Marines in
Lebanon on Presidents Nlxoo, Ford
and me, clalmlng that we had
weakened the tntelligenre agendes
so badly that he could not obtain
adequate Information."
Carter added In his notes: "When
I made a public statement denying
the truth of tlis allegation, he called
me tn say that hls ex(:ianatkln had
been misinterpreted by the jl'ellS. I
repUed that I had observed his
statement on television and had oot
relied oo press tnterpretatklns."
Carter continued; "I asked him
to check the Pentagon records and
he woold ascertain the error of his
frl!juent statement that ooly he had
Increased defense spending. . He
admitted his mlstake and promtsed
oot to make It again. However, he
has continued to make this claim,
00\'Jously knowing that it is not
tJue."

In fact, Reagan criticized
sometling. Therefore, you can't
Carter's defense decisions as recriticize him oo toose things unless
rently as February In a television and untO you know what that
speech - and again drew a protest
Information is."
from Carter.
One reason he said he wasn't
With this background In mind, we surprised by the burdens of the
asked the president recently If he
presidency - and thus more
had 9lnened any of his opinions on
sy~athetlc to Carter - was that
his predecessor. The short answer there Isn't such a vast dllference
Is that he has not.
~tween his job as governor of
Reagan's normally pleasant face California and as president.
hardened noticeably when we
"Over the years we've forgotten
asked - remembering his harsh that once upon a time the ranks of
criticism r1 Carter -In the l!BJ the governors were where you
a~mpalgn: "Has there been an
found jJ'esklents," Reagan went oo.
evolutim In your thinking about "Because rl. governors, the 50
him as yoo 've faced ... some &lt;i the governors, have the jobs that are
same problems? "
closest to approxlmatlng this job of
Reagan prefaced his reply by any JDSitlon tn the country. Cerexpalntng why he had not criticized tainly much more so than anyooe
Carter on some national securtty from a legislative branch."
issues and other -sensitive areas: ''I
Brlngjng him back to his views
have said that there are some . toward Carter since 1981, we asked:
things that yoo have to realize only "So there hasn't necessartly been
the jJ'esident knows. He's the ooly an evolution tn your thinking?"
one that has all the Information on
"No," the president replied.

The only option:--.________Ro_be_rt_w;_a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON - The most
common criticism of President
Reagan's decision to take mnttary
action against Libya - that It wUl
escalate rather than reduce terrorIsm - Is, at best, a product of
unsupportable speculation.
In the days Immediately follow·
lng the air strikes, this city was
awash In predictions from armchair analysts that the United
States had embarked upon a "slide
down a slippery slope" or had
trapped Itself in an "endless spiral"
of violence.
Other favored cliches alluded to ,
the opening of the proverbial "can

of worms" or "Pandora's box" -

indlcallng the air strike almost
certainly would produce dire
consequences.
There Indeed exists the possibilIty that Libyan leader Moarnmar
Khadaty wUI successfully retaliate
against Reagan's Initiative and that
this country would reciprocate with
yet another rouoo of mllltary
reprtsals.
But there is alro the likelihood
that Khadaty will be Intimidated by
'
the unprecedented show of force
and the credible threat of additional
Dn this datee In history: In lll98, the U.S. go~ernment asked for 125,000 action lf he persists In his global
campaign of state-sponsored
v&lt;!lunteers to fight against Spain in Cuba.
Jn 1941, at an "America First" rally In New York City, aviator Charles terrorism.
Indeed, Kluidaty has twice
Lindbergh said "It Is obvious that England Is losing the war." Undbergh
backed
down In recent years when
was Impressed with Hitler's Germany and opposed U.S. entry tntn World
the
French
convincingly II threaWarn.
·
tened
to
take
milltary action if he
In 19ffi, mofl' than aJO U.S. planes struck North Vletriam tn one r1 the
executed
planned
Incurslo~
heaviest raids of the Vietnam War.
against
his
neighbors
tn North
In 1985, Sen. Sam Ervin died at age 88. The North Carolina Democrat
Africa.
directed Senate Watergate Investigation that lee,! tn PJ:esldent Richard
Civlllzed nations no longer deal
Nixon 's resignation.
with terrorism spawned tn the
Middle East by wishing that It wUl
go away. Zealots with no regard for
A tooughttor the day: In "As You Like It," WUJtam Shakespeare wrote · life routinely rely upon exp011ives to
"The fool doth think he Is wise, but lhe 'wise man knows himself to be~ annDIIIate all the oreupants d.
fool.''
..
military barracks, embassies,
Today is Wednesday, Aprtl 23, the l13th day of 1986 with :52 to follow .
. The moon Is approaching its tun phase.
:The morning stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening star Is Venus.
Those born on Jhis date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
English playwright William Shakespeare In 1564, James Buchanan, 15th
prvsldent of the United States, In 1791, Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev
In !891, au thor Vladimir Nabokov In 1B99 (age871, actress-diplomat Shirley
Temple Black ln 1928 (age 58 ), actors Lee Majors In 1940 (age 46) and
Herve Villechalze in 1943 (age 431, and actresses Shirley MacLatneln 1934
(age521 , Sandra IX'&lt;' in 1942 (age44 1andValerte BerttneUIIn 1900 (age26).

\

James
J. Kilpatrick
___;__ _
_
__

Air strike decision
frustrates Congress

That provision was tested In last week's hom bing raid on Libya. Whether
the White House met the requirement Is in question.
~e White House has acknowledged. after great reticence, that Reagan
decided to go the "military route" tn response to Libya's continuing
terrorist acts, specifically the bomblng of a West Berltn discotheque
populated by American soldiers.
· ~n . Richard Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, says he was given an Indication Saturday of a potential action
- :but only after he wrote Secretary or State George Shultz, noting, In
effl'ct, that by the end or the week almost everyone tn Washinglon
suspected an operation was Imminent.

'

nightclubs and commercial
aircraft.
In the aftermath of the milltary
conruct In Southeast Asia, It was
fashionable to SUggi&gt;st that the
United States was humlllated there
because It attempted to fight a
lradltional, conventional war
against an enemy that relied upon
superlor, sophisticated guerrilla
warfare strategies and tactics. &lt;t
Now, oowever, guerrtlla combat
had been joined, If not succeeded,
by another form of warfare tErrorism. The alternatives for
loose for toose umer attack are
either to learn oowto neutralize It cr
to be eventually defeated by it.
Reagan's military strtkesagatnst
Khadaty have hardly been flawless, In great measure because the
president's determination to hwnillate Libya's mercurial leader has
become an obsession.
Khadaty's designation of the
"line of death" across the Gulf d.
SJdra was the invention of a
psyclxlpatlic personality - but
Reagan's response (a high-stakes
gamed. chicken tn the middle of the
Mediterranean Sea I was Wicharac~
terlstically petty and unnecessarily
provocative.
Slmllarly, Reagan's actions and
words have focused ·oo Libya while
Ignoring two other sourre of
state-sponsored terrorism, Iran
and Syria, apparently because they
present less convenient military or
polltlcal targets.
·&gt;The bombing raids hardly attained the "surgical p-eclslon"
boasted rl. by Reagan and Defense
Secretary Caspar \Yetnherger. In
the hours Immediately following
the air strlkes, Weinberger tnslsied
ft was "virtually Impossible" that
sloppy bombing pw1lally destroyed
the FrBlch Embassy tn Tripoli.

Imagine how foolish he must
have t&gt;lt In the ensuing days when
he learned that the Swiss and
Rumanian diplomatic buildings as
well as the residences of the
Austrian, Japanese and Finnish
ambassadors also had been
damaged.
Warfare, however, has never
been Udy. Indeed, the likelihood of
, damage to non-military targets and

d civUtan casualties were among
the many reasons why It must be
the alternative of last resort to
dealing with all other nations.
In Libya's case, however, this
c;ountry began Imposing economic
and poUtlcal sanctions even before
Reagan entered the White House.
Strenuous efforts to convince other
nations to take similar non-military
action had been rejected -and only
one q&gt;tlon remalned .

Giants win again; ·
Mets chi)l'Pirates
By KEVIN KENNEY
second and scored oo Carter's
UPI Sports -Writer
sharp single to left. Keith HernanOn a cold and wet night tn Shea dez doubled' tn two runs In the
Stadium Tuesday, the New York second to make It 3- 0, and Ray
Mets received heartening news Knight hit his fourth oomer of the
about their pllchlng staff.
.
season and second In two games, In
Bob Ojeda, acquired from the the third~· Mitchell's RBI double
lloston Red Sox during the off- made It !Hl and finished 'Kipper.
season, scattered four hits over
New York's lead grewto6-0tn the
seven Innings to help the Mets score · fourth on Rlilael Santana's sacrta 7-1 victory over the Pittsburgh flee fly, and the Mets scored again
Pirates ln a game played tn In the fifth on Carter's sacrifice fly .
45-degree weather and constant
Elsewhere, Houston edged
raln.
Atlanta 3-2, Montreal downed Phi·
The left-hander, making hls Orst ladelphiaS-2, ChlcagobeatSt.i.Duls
National League start, retired 10 · 3-2, and San Franctsco toppled Los
batters In a row after a 49-mlnute Angeles 10-3. San Diego at Ctncln·
rain delay as the Mets won their nat! was postponed because of cold
fifth straight and seventh overall.
weather.
Another plus for the Mets could
Giants 10,1)o~ers 3
come over the long haul of the
At San Francisco, Chnt Davis
pennant race. If Ojeda can continue lipped a two-ru~ double to spark a
to pitch as strongly as he did seven-run ftrsf"lnntng, helpi1!gSan
Tuesday, It would add another solid Francisco extend Its wtnnlngstreak
starter to a staff that Includes Cy to slx games. The Giants, 10-4, are
Young Award winner Dwight off to their best start slnre 1973.
Gooden (24 vlctorles last season), Mike Krukow, 3-0, pitched six
fum Darling (16), Sid Fernandez Innings for the v1ctory, and !Rnnls
(91 and Rick Aguilera (10).
Powell, (}3, took the loss.
Ojeda also singled twice for his
Altros 3, Braves 2
first two hits In the major leagues.
At Atlanta, Alan Ashby belted a
He walked one and struck rut three leadoff homer ln the ninth Inning to
lx&gt;fore yielding to Roger McDowell, lift the Astros. Ashby drilled a 2-2
who finished with two hitless pitch over the right-cent.,- field
lnnlngs. Ojeda said the rain delay fence off losing reliever Duane
Ward, 0 1, for his third mmerun of
was just a mUd inconvenience.
the year. Charlie Kerfeld worked
Ojeda's Clrst start was delayed the· [lnal three Innings of hitless
because the Mets ran into a streak relief to Improve to 2-0.
of ralnouts last week, and the
Expos 8, Phlllles 2
left·hander was glad it's finally out
At Montreal, Ttm Raines and
of the wa:;.
Hubie Brooks each drove In two
The Mets led 3-0 when the game runs to pace the Expos. Andy
was delayed ln the middle of the McGafClgan, 1-0, went 5 2-3 innings
third . Afterplaywasresumed, New for the victnry, and Tim Burke
York scored two more runs off finished tor his second save.
Pirates starter Bob Kipper, 0-1. · Charles Hudson , 1·1, took the loss.
Pittsburgh's run came cit Ojeda
Cubs 3, Cardinals 2
tn the seventh on three singles, with
At Chicago, Ryne Sandberg
• Mike Dlaz driving home Sammy lofted a sacrllice fly in the ninth to
Khalila. Mets manager Dave John- give the Cubs to their first home
son removed Ojeda after the innlng, victory this season. Jay Baller, 1-0,
even though he had thrown only 78 who yielded a two-run triple that
pitches.
enabled St. i.Duls lD tie the score in
New York scored a run in the first the top of the inning, was the
when Kevin Mitchell walked, stole winner. Pat Perry fell to 1·1.

Orioles dump Indians
errors," said Cleveland Manager
CLEVELAND (UPII - When
Pat Corrales. "I guess it was our
Bob Feller was told that several r1
tum tonight. ~r defense must get
the Baltimore and Cleveland playtrore consistent, because we put
ers complained about the 33-degree
Niekro In a hole."
temperatures at gametlme 1'Ues·
With two out In the third, Rlpken
day night, the Hail r1 Farner gave
rtned an 0-1 pitch aver the left-field
his questioner a frosty stare.
fence tor his second homer and a 2-0
"Cold weather's oo exeuse for
Oriole lead .
,
bad baseball," said Feller , now a
Cleveland cut the lead to 2-1 In Its
member of Cleveland's front office
half of the third on Julio Franco's
staff. "Ali you need is a warm
RBI single.
pitcher and a semi-warm catcher
The Orioles jumped to a 4-1
and you· re set.
·
advantage tn the sixth. Dwyer
Feller won 200 games in his
reached on soortstop Franco' s
career. Ken Dixon is 256 victories
error and, ooe out later, Sheets
behind, but he shares the same
slammed his first homer . or the
philosophy .
season.
"You can wear thermals to keep
HaD hit a homer In the seventh to
warm," said Dixon, woo combined
cut the deficit to 4·2 before
with Don Aase on a seven-hitter as
Baltimore added a run In the ninth
the Orioles took a 5-2 victory over
oo Lee Lacy's sacrifice Oy . - the error· prone Indians.
Pat Tabler's double In the fourth
The game was played before an
and Brook Jacoby's single In the
announced crowd of 3,001, most of
ninth extended their respective
whom had left before the wind chill
hittlng streaks to nine games.
dropped to 12 degrees during thP
Indians jJ'esident Peter Bavasi
final three tnntngs.
Dixon. 2-0, allowed seven hit s. defended the decision to play
struck out seven and walked one despite the cold.
Baltimore coach and fonner
over 8 1-3 Innings. Aase registered
Cleveland manager Frank Robinthe final twooots for his fourth save.
Phil Niekro, 1·2, allowed live runs son greeted reporters by repeating,
on seven hits with three walks and · "the weather was l:&gt;r the Birds."
In tonight's series finale, Balli·
three strikeouts over 8 2-3 tnniogs,
more ' wUI send Smtt McGregor
but was victimized by three errors
11·1, 5.11 ERA 1against Cleveland 's
that led to two unearned runs.
Baltimore took a 1·0 lead in the Ken Schrom (2·1, 3.44 ERA I.
second. After Eddie Murray
walked and Fred Lynn singled, Jim
Dwyer forced Murray. Left fielder
Mel· Hall then dropped Sheets'
flyba li tor a two-base error, allowing Lym Ill .ron'.
" (Monday night), their third
baseman (floyd Rayford I had four

Cold weather
postpones game

CINCINNATI (UPll - Recordlow temperatures TUesday forced ..
the Cincinnati Res to postpone their :
games against the San Diego : ·
Padres.
The wind-chill factor was ex pected to have reached the low als
by gametlme.

THE PERFECT
MOTHER'S DAY

GIFT •••
&lt;liVE HER

THE ORIGINAL
MOTHER'S RING
SHOW HER SHE'S
ONE OF.A KIND

111E ERIC SHUFFLE-The Mels'Kevin Mitchell
and Pirates' third baseman Jim Morrison llok lo
third base wnpire Eric Greg I for the m.l a.• he falls to
tbe ground tn 1the fifth Inning at Shea stadium

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Spons Writer
Injuries- one sustained, and one
overcome - were the story of last
night's game between the Detroit
Tigers and Boston Red Sox.
The Tigers lost star outfielder
Kirk Gibson with a badly sprained
ankle, which will probably keep the
slugger out of the lineup 46 weeks .
1b e Red Sox, however, received
another strong performance from
23-year-old right-hander Roger Cle·
mens, woo has returned from
shoulder surgery performed last
August.
Clemens struck out lOand walked
two In 6 2-3 Innings to help the Red·
Sox defeat Detroit 6-4.
Clemens, whose first two majorleague seasons were curta lied by
tnjurtes. Is part of a young staff that
entered Tuesday's game with a
league- leading 2 .~ ERA. Bailon Is
known prlmartly for its offense, but
II its pitchers remain healthy and
consistent, the Red Sox may
challenge ln the East.
Detroit's chances for wlnntng the
East may drop severely with
Gibson out of the lineup. Gibson was
batting .359 wit h three homers
before the lnjury , which occurred
when he slipped golng back to first
on a pick-off attempt in the second

Tuesday night. Mitchell was ruled safe, stealing tlird

lnnlng.
Gibson was taken to Beth Israel
Hospital where x-rays revea led
only a sprain diagnosed by Dr.
David Collon, the Tigers' team
physician.
Boston used home runs by Don
Baylor, his fourth, Rich Gedrnom
and Tony Armas to make a loser r1.
Jack Morris, 2- 2.
In other American League
games, Texas trounced Toronto
10·1, Chicago nipped Milwaukee 5-4,
Baltimore downed Cleveland 5·2,
New York clipped Kansas City 5-1,
Calllornla defeated Oakland 5·1,
and Minnesota thrashed Sea ttle 7·1.
Rangefti 10, Blue Jays 1
At Toronto, rookie light- bander
Bobby Witt scattered three hits
over six innings to re:ord his first
major-league victory , and Gary
Ward drove In four runs wit h a
two-run homer and a two -run single
to power the Rangers. Witt was(). 6
with T\llsa t:l the Texas League In
19ffi.
While Sox ~. Brewers 4
At MD waukee. Harold Baines hit
a three-run home run lo cap a
four-run seventh Inning, lifting the
White Sox, Joel Davis, ,1-0, went
eight Innings to help the White Sox
snap. a four- game Joslng strea k.
Bob James recorded his first save.

Dan ny Darwin, 1-1, took the loss ln
relief.

MANY STYI£S OF MOTtER'S
RINGS AVAIABI.E

Twins 7, Milliners I
At Seattle,. rlght-hander Mike
SmithsOQ, 2-2. scattered fou r hits
and struck out seven to lead the
Twlns. ~nnesota benefited from
two Seattle errors in smring four
unearned runs. The Mariners lost
the ir sixth strai ght.

OIDII IIOW BEFOII tHE lUSH

Q!..C!'
212 E. IMin. Pomeroy

SALESPERSON WANTED
DUE TO INCREASED SALES, WE HAVE AN OPENING
FOR A NEW AND USED AUTOMOTIVE
SALESPERSON. AUTOMOTIVE SALES EXPERIENCE
NOT NECESSARY, BUT SALES EXPERIENCE
PREFERRED. SEND RESUME OR APPLY IN PERSON
THURSDAY AND F.RIDAY, BETWEEN 10 A.M. &amp; 12
NOON ONLY.

JIM COBB CHEY.-OLDS.-CAD.
POMEROY, OHIO

CLEARANCE SALE
ON SUPERSETS
SYLVANA 19" DIAGONAl SUPERSET

Model CLE 16 7

S368

ONLY
WITH REMOTE

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to 1l\(' Dally Sentinel. 111 Court St.,
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SUBSCRIPTION R!\.TES
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summer."

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Ohio NewspapPr Associati on. National
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992-2156

M('ml&gt;t'r: Un lt f'd Press Inter na ti onal.
In la nd Dall y Press Associa tion and lh f'

Mall Subtn~ rlptlon s
Inside Ohio
13 We&lt;ks .... .. ............................ $14.56
26 wecks ... ..... .......................... $29.12
52 Ne&lt;ks............... .. ................. $58.24
Outside Ohio
'
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26 Weeks........................ ...... .... $31.20
52 Weeks ............................... .. . $59.80
t~ - ·· "'

or grandchtld rs represented

DAILY SENTINEL

Oh io.

Subscribers not desiring to pa y the carri er may remit ln adva nce direct to
Tht&gt; Dally SentlnE'I on a 3, 6 or 12 month .
basis. Credit wHI be gtv,pn carrter each I
month.
Nn subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service Is:
ava llablc.

mather and lather. Each child

FOR THE SYRACUSE AREA
IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

Publlshf'd PVf'ry afi Prnoon. Monday
1h rough F' rlda y, Ill Court 81.. P omeroy. Ohio , by lhl' Ohi o Va!lry Pub1
llshl n ~ Compa ny/ Mult imed ia'. Inc.,
Pamer~· . Ohio 4S71i9, Ph . 992·2156. Se· ,
cond C"lass pos tage paid a t Po m ~oy,

OnP Weck....... .. ..................... ..... Sl. IO
OnP Month .... ......................... :... $4 .80
Onf' Yea1· ................................. S57.20
SINGLE COPV
PRICE
D:•lly .............. ........... .... .... 25 Ce nt s

The twm bands symbolize

when Keith Hernandez !truckout. Umpire Gregg fell
on the wet ground racing In to call the pay. The Mels
won the chUJer, 7-1. UPI.

c·ARRIER NEEDED

The Daily Sentinel

~ nl('roy.

The ORIG INAL MOTHER 'S
RING is hand c1ahed and
made to order for her alone.

Tigers lose slugger Gibson

I USPS 14!1-961)
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Berry-'s World

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20 LB.

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01 IDA lED

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WITH STEIEO SOUND

APPLES
72 CT.

5/Sl

Ridenour
CHESTfR

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
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915-3307

�Celtics, - ~~c~s,
Rockets
sweep
playoffs
.

ALL WEEK

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CHOICE CUTS OF aEF AND POIII AlE 111. .DTO PIIFIC110N. AND AT FOODLAND, .YOU WilL FIND ACOMPLETE VAllElY UNE OF HOLlY FAIMS GlADE 'A'
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San Fran

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ound Steak ·Sale!
Rou.nd Steak

'nlul'fldQ'I!I G~
Montrre l at Chk.-ago
Phli!Kk'lphJa &lt;II PlttsburJih. nl.l(hl
Nt'W Yin at Sl. Lou ~. niJthl

Drawing To Be Held
Saturday, May 10, 1986

CinCinna ti at Housto n, niS(ht

.......

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1%

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14 !i4 12 19 .~'.!
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12 r¥1 J 14 .350
10 41 ~ 14 .loU

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Obrldll, All
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Nnertc~n

O'Drlm. Tx

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13 e 1~ 19 .422

Jacoby, ( 1' '

1244 9 17.:116

Tabkr, Q(.&gt;V
llobiOOK, Ml

12 44 ti 17 3!6
12 40 7 15 .J'I:I
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Ph ~ . O k
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Nat io nal IPai:IU' - l.A.'Onard . SF', 1~ :

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Ca l'tf'l', NY . W: (&gt;ltiTI"r. Hou und Ha:o-. I'll
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til'd u11h 1 vlrtork'S.

Baseball raiings
RB£ST QUAUTY
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Team Polnili
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Association and dl';trlbJif'd by UPI I !_11'!;1
pJ;o• VOI J'S and I'("'.'Of'ds In pilll'f\ lhi'!&gt;I'SI

39

By ED BURNS

VPI Sportl Writer

.. The Boston Celtlcs, Mtlwau~
Bucks and Hooston Rockets 1111
brushed askleobstacles last night to
romplele sweeps of their best-of·
five opening· round series.
· Michael Jordan stood between
Boston and the Eastern Coolerence
semifinal!i, and the Celtlcs found a
way to end his phenomlnal scorlng
spree. Milwaukee overcame a
trend of losses to the New Jersey
Nets at the Meadowlands; . and
Houston dispelled the myth of a
lucky night tor the Sacramento
Kings and their tans.
In other games, PhDadelphla
defeated Washington 91-86 to take a
2·0 lead In their serles, Detroit
topped Atlanta 1!J6.97 to avert a
sweep, and Denver took a 2·1 series
advantage with a 1J.5.104 vlctoiJ'
over POrtland:
.
The Celtlcs handcuffed Jordan.
who had ~9 points In Game 1 and a

playoff-record 63 polilts Suooay at
Boston, and defeated the Bulls
122-104 at Chicago. Jordan was held
to 13 points by an all·out eHort to
contain him.
Kevin McHale paced Boston with
31 points.
The Celtlcs next meet the wtnner
of the Atlanta -Detroit series.
The Bucks rallied from a 19-poin t
deficit to defeat New Jersey 11Jl.113
and gain their second victory at
East Rutheliord, N.J . In lwo &gt;"ars.
New Jersey led by 19 points In the
first half, siDottng ffi perrent.
Mllwaukee stepped up the delen·
slve pressure and cut the lead to
95-91 after three periods. New
Jersey fell apart tn the final period,
slnOtlng 29 percent as the Bucks
took control.
"We never really gave up," said
Milwaukee's Terry Cummings,
wiD finished with 23 points and 11
rebounds. "I think we all felt real
down about the way we had been

playtng In the first hal!. The Nets
had been playing on emotion, and
the thing about emotion Is that It
drains yoo qutte a bit."
Milwaukee will rexl lace the
winner ct the w ashlngton-Philadel·
phla series.
Houston used an ilslde· outside
comblnatkm from Ralph Sampson
and Lewis Lloyd to ellmtnate the
Sacramento Kings with a 113-98
triumph. The Kings had enjoyed
particular success on '1\lesdays on
their home lloor in the Arco Aren a.
but Sampson and Uoyd tallied 25
points each to silence the Sacra·
mento faithful tor the season .
The Rockets wUI meet thewlnner

of the Denver-Portland se-ies In the

second round.
Two Western Conference series
resume Wednesday. Los An!IJ'ies.
leading 2·0, Is at San Antonlq; and
Dallas, ahead 2-0, Is at Utah.
At Landover, Md, Julius Erving
scored 22 points, and SedaleThreatt
added 8 durlng a 26·7 second-h a~
run, powertng the 76ers over the
Bullets. The hest-ol-flve series
resumes Thursday night al Capital
Centre. The 76ers wercame a
13-point third-quarter deficit and
held Washington to 1 Held goal over
an 11-mlnute stretch ID lead !ll-74
with 6:.29 left in the game.

IIP~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;,;:;;;;:;;;:;;;:;:;::;::;:~

LAST OF THE

Browns sign wide receiver
CLEVELAND (UPI) - For the
second time In five days, the
Cleveland Browns have signed a
top Canadian Football League wide
receiver .
'1\lesday, tlle Browns announced
that Jeff Boyd, who anchored
Winnipeg's wideout corps the last
three years with Winnipeg, has
agreed to a series ollhree one-year
contracts.
Terms were not announced. bul
the total package Is believed to be
worth $600,1KXl. The pacts also
Include Incentive clauses.
Last Friday, Toronto star Terry
Greer signed a lour-year, $1 million
conlract with the Browns. Both
Boyd and Greer were free agents.
Boyd, 28, Is a 6-foot-2,, tro. pound
product of Chapman !Calif. ) College. He was nol drafted IJ!Xln his
gradual ion in 1982, and subsequently was signed and cut by
Minnesota during training camp.
In three years with the Blue
Bombers, Boyd caught191 passes
for 3,452 yards and 33 touchdowns.
Last year, he corraled 76 passes
- two behind CFL leader Greerand totaled 1,:m yards and l5ID's.
Boyd was named a CFL's first·
team All-Star, edging Greer.
Browns head mach

tenhelmer said the CFL tandem ct
Creer and Boyd "promises strong
competition for our training camp

this sununer."
"Boyd Is very much like Creer,"
said lhe coach. "He's gJt rc e(ty
good speed and lalom oow to he
elusive once he gets the ball.
"The addilion of these two
players upgrades oo r receiving
corps."
With Boyd and Creer. the Browns
now have fiv e former CFL players
on their roster. The others are
linebacker Tom Cousineau (signed
In 19821, tight end Harry Holl (198:1)
and safety Felix Wrtght (1985).

r;::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::;::;~~
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SPRING SEASON
Compleleline of Vegelahle &amp; Aowtr
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OPEN DAllY 9-S; SUNDAY 1-S

1986 CHEVY
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FOODIAND

.

PEPPER LOAF ••••••••••••••••• u•• 2.79

F.:.tst and Cotufl"tlu5 ~'1 (llarhl. '!I rtJ rh:
!1. ttll' t Youre;town llbr•Jh ' and Lima

1

CHEESE ...............JA.$2.39

Green Beans
~3 11ACKSON

PIIE ·Rt 3' WEST

BARGAIN HATINEES SATURDAY
' I SUNOAY • ALL SEATS 12.50
AIJM ISSION EVERY TUESOAY $2 .50

oz.

LOAVES

oz.99C

CAN

JIFFY I.S oz. loxu
MUFFIN MIX

4/Sl

•We Reserve The hognt oo Umit Ouontitios • Price~

I OZ.
JAI

$499

ONIONS ...............lll\...89c

2°/o Milk

Ice Milk

99C

HALF
GAlLON

$149

12 OZ. VLASIC ASST. (CIIInk, Polish, Na GartlcJ

EHtcli¥1 Wed., April 23 , thru Sat., April 26, 1916••USDA food Stamps Glodl'( Accepted
.

.

~

..

TURKEY NOODLE SOUP l.,~~~ 89&lt;
16 OZ. lUSH'S GIEAT NOIIIEIII
BEANS.••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• l.~t~l.. 79&lt; \
15 01. DEL MONl'E
SPINACH .....................t.se~}S1.59
15'1• OZ. DEL MONl'l
SLICED PINEAPPLE ...... l~e~.sS1.39
5 OZ. SHIELD DID DOIANI'
BAR SO.P •••••••••••••••••• ltmS1.39
46 OZ. DONALD DUCII PINII
'
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ........SM S1 ~ 14

FAMILY
ENTREES

VIVA

5 FLAVORS - VIVA

Nescaf·e Coffee

·

• Ourb:sr hi(Jirfltffrldill•~~ lrJCfJOn
Rl$pOriJM lllltdlttql LQflf l1fld,. • ~

l LB . NEW YELLOW'

1Olf• OZ. CAMP.lL 'S

. BANQU£T

15.5 OJ
CANS .

Sl,~~OI
Beef Stew

• St~·btlted ~H
wflirtwall • Ail wurtw
{)trformJnce• lmpi'CMd llandling • Grt1t ~

TV DINNERS ...................... S1.29
12 OZ. •11111 MAID
ORANGE JUICE .................. S1.39.
32 OZ. SEA GEM
9
•••••••••••••••

Phone 446· 4524

CLASSIC, BIAVA,
SILICA INSTANT

GREEN
CABBAGE ............. U..... 24c

.STEELER
&amp;GUARDIAN
season

ENGLISH MOUNTAIN

White Bread

16

$

ECIIICH

Ba th, Oti rarh

2-LI. lOX

LUNCH£0N MUT

L';l

1. fl;&gt;llf".'UI ' 1~1 IHh
104
.1. Ak St . V lnr;~·nl ~ ~ ~ 114·21
79
t CAPE t21 tR-.11
6.'i
~. ].QIJlWIJf' Aquln;l.~ t i l ( lJ -()1
iW
6. Indian U1kr• 19-IJ
r,.'i
7 Fal rfli•ld Unilm rl• ri H1
~I
M. C'..rll~k· rl!l l l
~
9. ('00 01-!lirll'l&gt; rb-.l1
r.t
IO.WIImin l'lon t il 19·11
l7
Srrond tm: 11. Madl'lnr fl1 :.! ; 12.
Stf'IJbl'on VIJk• fa lhOIJC' I'll :\'1; l:l. Gilmou r
AC'adm1)' t il ].1; 14 Slf\Jbl'fl\'llk• 111 .'tJ;
1 ~ . 8f&gt;dford f' hant•l Jl; lli. 11i•• l'\apolmn
and Sprtn¢:nro. .n f'ltC'h: lfl. 1111'1 Mlllml

Master Blend
Coffee

1
I
I
I
I

BTLS.

Team.. Polrrt.ol

..-•••1 FOODLAND
I'~ ~ ·ADC, REGULAR

19~.

FOODIAND

1~

.w.

~ •..,.,. York 5. 1\WJJ;&lt;t ~ ril y I
Ca 11tornla ~ . Oi!klaOO I

AIN BRAND

GREEN
CABBAGE

Parlu&gt;r, Cl n

DlaJ;, Cln
Murphy, AtJ

.429

TuOlday':. ~

Mlnnt'!'rOiir

10 35 6 l J .371

~

Bal llmcrr ~. n ·...···land 'l
Tf'xas JO, Toronto 1

$139

Strawberries

fi . ~

li
fi

C11 1C'&lt;JJ:O ~. Mll\l•aukf'(' 4
Boston 6, IJI•troll ~

SPLIT FY

RED RIPE

1~

2

BREASTS
RIPE
CANTALOUPES

. ~i?l

M li 57 1

Mlnn
S.•D II ir

IOU Y FAlliS~
GlADE 'A'

.un -

7 6 .Sill

K('

12 CT.
SQUARE

~

ij

roll

Oak land
' Tt?las

Yellow Onion Sets

" ' L Pet fill

ftl5 ton

Toro nto
Mlwk&gt;t•
WeMCiiU I

104 1 4 19 .463

Smith. StL

&amp;' llj]or

-'MERIK:AN LEAGUE

NY

aahrhpd.

lilly,PIIl

GII:Rln, lX&gt;1
Barn&gt;ll, lbl

1\Uanlil HI t.hi An~k'l, nl¢1 1

llvlml

49C

'

Hoo~ton ll&lt;ni'PP£'1" 3-01 a t Alhmla iSmllh
l oUt . 5:«1 p.m.

11 WINNER PEi STORE)

LB.

NMIOclll L!tll'lf!

Sun
Clnelrmall
rDm.ny Hh, 12:35 p.m.
Philadelphia rCarlt on 1).2 1 ~ ~ Montn'tll
tHcskdh 0.2f. 1:1') p.m.
Sl. Louis iKepslt!rt:' 0-11 ~I Chlca~
tSandl'rson ().ll , :I: a! p.m.
los AnRt'!{'S rVal~ l UI'I ~ 1-1\ ;11 San
~·ruocl!it'C tGam•lls 2-11 . l :11i IJ.m

TENDERIEST USDA CHOICE

......

IAIHII-d nn .1.1 p\al(' &lt;IPJX"llfllflt('!l X 00. ol
~IIITif'S I'OC h lt' &amp;m ha~ playNJI.

W~~~¥'• Gum~~
Dk"RR rHawkim 021 ~~

Phone

99C.

.

Ntow Yvrk 7, Pittsburgh I
San FranC'ISro 10, Loti Anii!'I('S .1
San Dlll[O a t Oncinna!l, ppo:.l.. cold

Register Today To Win!!

8LB.
BAG

Leaders

~

Houstoo J, Alln nta 2

FOR MOTHER'S DAY

Potting Soil

4
6'n

11!4714 -

flooslon
Sa n l&gt;li!O

M.mtn.•a\8, Ph~adelph1 11 2
CMc~ J, St Lou l'l 2

'MICROW.AYE
Address _ _ _ _ _ __ __ .)_
I __

:1
4

on

7 1'700 fl , 4 .5."AA Jl..S
~ 6 .4."6 21,..,
J 1 .DJ ~
.1 1 .Jill 4

Monl l"''l!l

Ptllla
011

J.\t , 4::fi p.m,
Cblcago ISe&amp;vl,. l·~l at Mlliro'aull't'
IWl'gman I). I\, T:00 pm.
Detroll tTanana l ·l l at Boston (H\lntl-11.
7:1i p.m.
Ba\Hl"'''Ire !McGI'CitOf 1-l l Ill Clevl'land
rSr llrom 'l·l \, 7: :1&gt; p,m.
N&lt;W York llta51Tll!i!i{'l1 1·01 I I KaMas
rl ty tLoonurd 2-f\ 1. ll:l'i p.m.
Ou kland t(:tMllrol! 2-11 al CaiiiOrnla tWill
1.J\. IO:l"t p.m.
'J1aandQ'I Gwnea
Ck.'vf'IBnd at NI:W York, nlghl
Sl:'all \l' at O!lk!Bnd, ni Khl

.~-

l

......,.~

Name _______________________

W......SiQ'• Glll'lfll
Tt'XIII JMa!IDII Hllal T( 1'01110 ISti!ba.l\ ,
12::1.\ p.m.
.J
·
Ml~a lBUichl'r0-11 a1Seattk• lMoort'

NAmNAL ur.lGtJE
..,. lJU.d p.,.. lnlemiiiiOMI

C'ncnnll
LA

••
TOASTMASTER

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy- MidOieport, Ohio

Wednesday, Apnl 23. 1986

Pomeroy-Midctleport, Ohio

•Not Responsible For Typographical Errors
'•'

.

I

DILLS .................................·• $1 ~49

111/• 01. DUNCAN HEINZ lEG.

.

CAKE MIXES...................M~A S1.29

16 OZ. am CIOCIIEI IEADY·TO· SIIVE

FROSTiNGS ..................~..... S1.39

30'S JUMIO

·BOUNTY TOWELS •••••••••• rm•••• 99&lt;
12 OZ. AIMOUI
CORN rrr

RIO TIRE
RUTLAND
TIRE SALES EXCHANGE
204 NOIIH ATWOOD
MAIN sr.
IUILAND, 011.
PH, 742-3011

•o GIANDE, OH.
PH. 245-5131

IITIGERPAW

PWs··-~,IDII
• ~':;- • "Y'f •

1'· 14

•

�t ,

I,

, .

•

•

298 SECOND ST.
. ..
•
POMEROY, .QH.
PRICES ·EFFFECTIVE THRU SAT.,~PRIL 26, 1986

$

FRESH PORK BUTT

9
0
Steak/Roast •••~~... 1

•

~

wxm

(

Frver Parts ........... 49
U.S.If.A. CHOICE
.
$ 99
Round Steak •••~~ ••• 1
SUPERIOR
·
.
$ 29
Lunch Meats •••••••• 1
LB.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Chuck Roast •••••••••
Ground Beef .... ~:·... 99(
KAH~'S BEEF or REGULAR
. $
W1eners •••••••••••••L:~. 159
KAHN'S
.
d
B
I
oz.
$1
2
9
\Sl 1ce o ogna •••••
Ll.

12

WIN!
WIN!
WIN!
• ••••• ••••• ••••

12 Years Of ·

Ser"iee To Our
Customers ...
We Would Like
To Show Our
Appreeiation.
SIGN UP
AND.WIN.
NO PURCHASE NECESSAIY

••••••••••••••

1.

PKG.

WHIRLPOOL
CLOTHES
WASHER
DRAWING APRIL 26, 1986

$ 3
Potatoes ......... ~5.~~. 1 9
BROUGHTON
$ 29
2°/o Milk ••••••••• ~~L... 1
U.S. NO. 1 tUSSET

BROUGHTON

(

Cottage Cheese·:::. 99
MR. P
.
.
oz.
·
Frozen
P
PEAK
$ 19
IZZa ••• ,•••••
Pinto Beans .!!:!~.. 1
. GENERAL ELECT~IC . .
$
MORTON • .
$
499
Alarm Clocks ••••••• .
·Pot P1es •••••••!~;... 4/ 1

••••••••••••••

2.
2 MINUTE
SHOP~ING

SPREE
IN OUR STORE
Limit 1 of any item
(No cigarettes or anything
tis• ex•mptecl by law)

••••••••••••••

9.5

ARG·o PEAS
:17

oz.

4/Sl

VELVET FA.LY PACK

'

Umlt I Ptr (ustaiMf
Good Onlr At Powol's S"trmorioot
Olftr bpittl Sat, Apr. 26, 1916

TOILET TIS.SUE
')

I
S

ROL~It~hl.!? ..

o.~, At , ..... ~·•rman t
OHor bpirtl lat. Ajlr•.", 1916

Gocld

Planning session lor May Fellow·
ship Day, a program ot Church
women TJnltro of Meigs County ,
will be held Friday at 1: 30 p.m . at
the Crace Episcopal Church.
The celebration will be beld on
May 2atCraceCburch at n:xm with
those attending to take a sack
lunc!leon. The host church will
furnish dessert and beverage.

Anni_versary
Sale!

·STORE HOURS
Mon. -Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-iO PM

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
12
•

oz.$ 599

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's S.ormarlctt
OHor llir~1 lat.. Apr. 26, 1916

MAXWEll HOUSE

MASTER BLEND COFFEE
. 39

oz.. $6 99

Umit 1 Per Customer
' Good Only At Powell 's s,.ermorbt •
OHor llpires Sat. Apr. 26, 1916

••
•
•••

~

••
s •.

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

"'-~

..•.

7

Reg.

suo · SAl£ $184

Chatter Club
holds meeting

GOO AND COUNTRY AWARDS- 'The llrst God
and Coontry awards lor memben of Cub Scout Pack
2U, Middleport, were presented by Don Vaupan,

••••stant cubnwlter, lA&gt; Keith Darst, center, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jell Darst, Middleport, and David

Aprtl meeting of the Chatter Club
was beld at tbe home of Dottle
Jones with Linda Gheen and Mary
Myers are guests. Officers' reports
were glven and hostess gUts were
glven to Mrs. Jones. A birthday glft
went to Delores Whitlock and
anniversary gilts to Janice Fetty
and Lola Harrison.
A bake sale was held and plans
made for club members to go out
for dinner on Motber' s Day, May 5,
at Sebastians in Parkersburg.
Games were played with prizes
going to Linda Hubbard, Mrs.
Harrison, Ruth Young , and Mrs.
Gheen. Mary Starcher won tbe cloor
prizes. Refreshments were served.
Mrs. Starcher will host tbe May
meeting.

Carmichael, son of Keith and Paula Cannlchael;
Pomeroy. To earn the awards. the two boys worked
with lhelr ministers and youlh counselors exploring
ways In which lhey can best serve lhelr God and
country.

Dorothy Ritchie, state councilor,
talked on several rallies sbe has
attended at the recent mlll'ling of
Dlester Council 323, Daughters of
America held at tl1e haiL
Jo Ann Baum, councilor, presided at the meeting which q&gt;ened
with the pledge, singing of tbe
national antbem, and reading of the
23rd Psalm. The death of Vera
Householder, Perry Council D. of A.
was noted. Hetl'n Wolfe was
reported Ill.
A letter from Mrs. Ritchie and
Helen Taylor, state council secre-

tary, was read. A luncheon for the
past councilors was announced for
Sunday at tl1e University Inn ,
Atbens.
Betty Roush thanked tbe council
for a gift presented to ber at tbe
rally . Next meeting the way s and
means will have a silent auction.
Refrestunents were served by Cora
lleegle, Shl~ley lleegle, Jo Ann
Baum, and Sadie Trussell . Others
attending were Margaret Tutlle,
Mary Showalt er, Etbel Orr,
Thelma Vl'hlte, Olarlotte Grant,
Fern Morris, Everett Grant, Erma

Grange meeting conduaed
Acommunity servlet' project was
outlined by Bunny Kuhl, chairman .
at a recent meeting of the Rock
Springs Grange. Members are to
meet at the springs at 6:30 on April
24 to further dlscu!i&gt;i the project.
Barbara Fry reported on grange
contests noting that Mrs. Kuhl
placed fi rst In the count ry judglng
In ch ildren's dresses. Pat Holl er
gave tbe legislative repori . She said
that agricultu re Is ttl&lt;&gt; largest

industry in the u. S. Several
members from Racine Grange
were presented at the meeting, and
a program of readings and poems
on spring, skits and a contest by
Emma Adams, lecturer of Racine
Grange, were given.
Nancy Radford and Lottie Leo·
nard were reported Ill , A baked
goods auction was held following
the meeting. Refreshments were
served .

Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
William F. Smith of Bradbury were
their son-In-law and daughter, Ted
and Mary Ellen Spires of Deflanre.
While here they also visited his
brother, Emerson Spires, at the
Hillcrest Nursing Home. Saturday
guests of the Smiths were Mr. and
Mrs. WLUiam F . Smith, Jr .. Colum·
bus. The birthday of Mrs. Smith
was observed with a dinner and
shopping trip.

Cleland, Virginia Lee, Ada Bissell,
Mae McPeek. Lora Damewood,
Opal Hollon, Faye Kirkhart, Ruth
Smith, Doris Grueser, Sadie Trus·
sell , Leona Hensley, Goldie Freder·
lck, Jean Frederick, EllzaMh
Hayes, Alta Ballard, Sandy White,
Mary Hayes, Marcia Keller, and
Mary Hayes.

Golden Rule
class meets

Free clothing day set
Free clothing day will be held at
the Salvation Army, Butternut Ave,
Pomeroy, Thursday from 10 a.m
until noon . All area residents in '
need of clothing are welcome to

Members of tbe Golden Rule
Class of tbe Middleport First
Baptist Church spent Thursday
!'Vening visiting members not
regularly attending services along
with ot her members. Going visiting
were June and Manning Kloes,
Jean Thomas, Dale Walburn , tbe
Rev. Earl and Jean Eden, and John
and Glenna ReibeL They later met
at the Kloes home for refreshments, with Mrs. Kloes giving
grace. Plans are beingmadefortbe
-class members to attend revival
services. April 27 ·30, in a group one
evening.

come.

Sarurday dance set
The Grande Square Western
Style Square Dance Club will
sponsor an open dance Saturday
night, 8 to 11 p.m. at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church. Gallipolis. Chad
Johnson will be the caller.

Shade Valley Council conducts meeting
Improvement s at tbe Chester
Mini-Park which is being developed
as a special civic beautification
project were ooted wben tbe Shade
Valley Council of Floral An s met
recently at the rome of Debbie
Weber.
It was noted that Martie and Tim
Baum have erected a Dag pole at
the slte and tha i tD:&gt; spring bulbs
planted last fall are up and going
welL Plans were a lso discu!i&gt;ied for
summer bedding fl owers.
.
BoiX&gt;I I&lt;arr reported that Ihe
seeds ordered for tbe junior garden
cl ub have arrived. The spring
regional meeting held at Eastern
High Schoo.l Saturday was ooted
along with a walk at Lake Catherine
to be beld Wednesday. For roll call
members displ ayed rouse plants

brought for an exchanl\1',. Hand·
outs were given on garden seed
catalogs with a dl scu!i&gt;iion on
qu ality and specialities of eac h.
Betty Dean gave the program on
garden tools made from junk
featuring Items from plastic jugs
and tin cans. Plastic jugs belted to
the waist with tbe front cut out are
good for berry picking, and planters
can be made from an Inverted
oottom less jug with a piece of
plas tic pipe connected to the top to
eliminate bending over to plan t
seeds. She also sugges ted using
.small coffee cans to protect small
trees from wildlife .
Garden therapy ·projects were
discussed, It was noted thar Sheila
Curtis had been named coun ty
contact chai rman , and that the
Meigs County Fair flo wer show

Services set

received a superior rating.

'['h(' Rev. David Farrell, pastor of
the Harrisonville Holiness Church,
and his family have moved Into the
parsonage at Harrisonville. Servi·
ces are currently being held In the
town hall at PagevUie until tbe new
church can be br Ut. On Sunday
services are held at 9: 30 a.m. and
7:30 p.m. and on Wednesday the
services are held at 7: 30 p.m. The
jXJblic is Invited to attend .

Scouts meet
Plans for a trip to Camp Sandy
Bend at Elizabeth, W.Va. at a
recent meeting of Reedsville Troop
1015, During the past month, tbe
girls held a cookout at Forked Run
Lake, visited the Pomeroy Flower
Shop, and took a trtp to !be Center r1
Science and Industry in Columbus.
They also participated In the
junior "sleepover" with activity
winners in the troop being Maranda
Drake, first place; Nicole Kanawalsky, third for fifth grade; and
Jesslce Reiber, first for fourth
grade.

RACINE - Mothers of juniors
and seniors of Southern High School
students are to meet. at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday In the school cafeteria
to plan prom activities this year.
Anyone with a card table to lend for
the prom Is asked to take It to the
Wednesday meeting.
POMEROY - Plans for a
reunion of the Meigs High School
class of 1m will be made at a
meeting to be held Wednesday
night at 7 p.m. In t11e Meigs High
Library. Class members are urged
to artend .

THURSDAY
RACINE - Ladles Auxiliary of
Racine Post 002, American Legion,
will meet at 7:30 Thursday at the
haU. MernbersarerenUndedto glve
pennies for foreign relations along
with Items for a whiteelephant sale.
MIDDLEPORT- Story hou r for
pre-schools wlll be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday at tbe Middleport
Library .
DEXTER - The Women's Fel·
lowshlp of the Meigs County
·Churches of Christ will meet
Thursday at the Dexter Church,
7:30p.m.

nlor Citizens are having a dance
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Scipio Fire
Department The fire department
Is spo!l';oring a dance Friday night.
8 p.m.. al the fire department.
Proceeds from both dances will be
used for tbe new fire department

~

RACINE - Soutbern LDcal
Board of Education wUI meet
Friday. 8 p.m., in the high school
cafeteria .
SYRACUSE- Jitney 9.1pper 5 to
7 p.m. Friday at the Carleton
School, spo!l';Ored by MARC.

OPEN
A

SEARS
CHARGE
TODAY

and 12:ll t.o 2:30 p.m . at the
kindergarten quarters. Parents to
W&lt;e all lmmunizat km papers and
birth certificate of child.

CHUCK WAGON

t

WITH

S1.09
FliES ...........

S1.64

POMEROY, OH.

l\..

PH. 992·2556

oo•~••••o

STOCK#

Mini Boom Box

•.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At the End of the Porneroy•lason Bridge

APRIL24,25,26, 1986

Stereo

Po•rov

~+~+o·t.. ·

\

3 BIG DAYS

SltrtO

YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIYING
RACINE - Registration for
MEIGS COUNTY
kindergarten In Southern Local
School District, Friday, Bll ll a.m.
SINCE 1161
;=:::=:.:_:.:::_::_:::::J.~:::::::::::::::==:J

Speelal of the Yl~ek

ASK
ABOUT
ASEARS
MAINTENANCE
AGREEMENT

CLEARANCE SALE

Dual c-ttt Co,.ad Sttrt0

.

!

z.

992·5272

MAR C. YAM YIA.EN-OWNEI

SPRING

DESCRIPTION

INSURANCE
St~

HARTLEY SHOES

- - - - - - - - Many Items Are 1 Only - - - - - - - - .

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
111 Second

FOUNTAIN

~­

Community calendar / area happening
WEDNESDAY
Rt!I'LAND - Zion Church of
Christ revival continuing with 7
p.m. services each evening through
April 25. Philip H. Ling Sr.,
evangelist.

Lnestyle Furniture is proud '&gt; ·offer Lyon Shaw, the first choice in fine
quality heavy wro111ht iron furniture. Unsurpassed for design and finish durability. Lyon Shaw offers many choices of color of frames and
variety of fabrics, from sea lin' and din inc pieces to accent ard serving
preces ... all hind-wrought wtth total dedication to uncompromisin&amp;
quality that will last a lifetime.

Guest announced

Daughters of America conduct meeting

HARRISONVILLE - Scipio Se...

r- •

Fellowship planning
May observance

12th

limit Quantities

" ·'

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

" Page!....&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

•

.

9 Day 1 Program YHS VCR
Scan Quarta Tuner
1'1'' Color TV
Grill Press
land Saw
hit OiK Sander
1S' Upright Frener
23' Chest FrttHr
10.4' Rtfrigtrlor
14' Almond Refrigerator
14 ' Whitt Rtfrigerlor
1.4, 4 Stage
Memory Microwave
Micro Convtction Own
.5 Microwave
UndtrcabiMI

WAS

NOW

SAVE

91866
92731
'11162
2142
53072

239.99
119.99
219.99
99.99
499.99

119.'19
139.'19
169.99
49.99
. 27'1.99

120.00
50.00
120.00
50.00
220.00

4242
21315
24335
22593
26151
15234
65011
64431
64431

439.99
439.99
359.99
319.99
449.99
539.99
399.99
529.99
519.99

309.99
26'1.99
259.99
219.9'1
329.99
339.99
309.99
409.99
409.99

130.00
170.00
100.00
100.00
120.00
200.00
90.00
120.00
110.00

81162
16951

449.99
39.99

24'1.99
419.'19

200.00
220.00

87461

239.99

139.99

100.00

Above Prices Do Not lnclucM Shipping/ lnatelletion

SEARS
CATALOG MERCHANT
lill and ·Jenelle Haptonstai-OWNEIS
H. 2nd AYE.

992-2171

.DDlEPOIT

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

I Honor roll
Thelounh sbl weoks gradlnfl period lwnir
r~l al tbe M&lt;lp High Scl!ool bas be&lt;ll

· al\nCJJnced. Maldni' a grade at 8 or above In
· allthPir subJects to~nllltlM loth! roll W«t:
' Fres'hmen: Henry Buthanan, Nicole
:Bunch, Danny Carl, Melod1 Csrl, BetliEwtlg,
Da\'ld Edll'l&lt;ln&lt;b, .Stacy Doltal, Clw-Jes
Carsal, Terry Fields, Barbara Fowler, Ada
. King, Cstey Hobltett£1', Jod&gt; LIM!pttxt.
Reith Mattox, Scott Meilal, Manila Nelsal,
Tlrul Romltte. Jared stwt.. Bill Ramey, Tim
~. Kathy Thomas, Rkhard Van~.

Sophon»r•" Am&lt;&gt;

Baker,

David

Am Bailey, Mari!e
&amp;.gt.. Cslll)' Bl..sln~.

Melissa Clay, Jlllaihln Dunn. Charlot1eKan,
Kevin V. KfnC Pa1rtcla McGieo, Soon
Oberhober"' Don11a _ . , Mldlael Roulll.
S11ari1on ,..vtn. Anlela Sloan, Mll'!'l!lle
Thornu, Dlzabotit 'nmltm, Jot '111Us.
Jwtkln: Erin Mdmon, · .-_, Arnold,

J;lorln Brencla
Rooch. Slndalr,
Jadde David
- Smith,
· Oleryi
Roulll.
Morlc
Smltlt. ~. Sleelt,

D1llald Stein, Mlcfielle Stevens, ~J
Stow an, Joclle Wells, Denzil Welsh.
Weny, lllana Wll)lamsm. ·

!Wan Arnold, SaJ.Iy Bailey, Mldlelle Bon'.
Seniors: Be&lt;ky ~. Chrlltlna Black,
lbuo Buldler, Olney Kathy Clonch, Retdl CObb. Dip~ lllllant,
Carnahan, Un Chase, Mal1)' aiDe, T~
Tootl lloczl.
'CinciY Felty,
crem..ns. Gory OtrUu. Aliiril Daw. nm
CbaM Fl.,.1r1d!, Gbta rutrod, Brian
llunl. Hubert · Easat, Lois Eblin,- Laura · Glbbo, Cltarlt'JS Glllunon, Tamml• GI!Uy,
Friley, M&amp;Y Flagg. ""' lkddox, Clr!oRod Haniom, Darren Hayes, Olrlltopbor
1~ Honing, Krllll flanlllg, M0&lt;1y ~.
J&lt;ennody, IIIyan Kl;rn, Brvan H~, SltOrry
lflndy, Otnotlne Hyaell, JuDe
HWUiell. Rodney Klein, Parlcrr Looa. R,y1n
Matu._ Chrlltlna lii&lt;Gbee. April McGrath,
HYJd]. Dlrd llylell, Dawn - · Darla
Klnfl, PhllUo Kina. Susan Kina, Ill KHdlBI.' . Amy Molden, Judith Mowery, l!eYer]y
Kenneth Mc:Cleffan, Judi Me&lt;s. COlena
Napper, Edward Pattersm. Loe - · ·
Mowery, Stev. llllsoer, Sue Pantxts, Ml·
Melissa Primmer. v...... Rll•. Chert
chelle R!lersan, Katll)' Pldum, AJl&amp;ela
Sau1ers, Cynthia Sauters, AM Stet!felod.
Thnclby Sloan, Carol Smllh. Otarrnele
l'k!ru, Scott f'IMoetl. Amy - · flay·
rnond ~- Cllldy Rlt!le, Kenneth Rltcllle,
1\lmer, Mary Whan , Bryan Woo&lt;lyant.
~ lllrclln,ld.

Kelda-- .

Colwnbis were weekend visitors d
Mr. and Mrs. Paul M;EiroySr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul r,fcEiroy, Jeff,
.»ey and Jessica.
Mr, lllltl Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah
Beth d Texas Road were Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Grover, vlslters ot Mr.· anti ·Mrs. · Eugene
Mr. and r.tra, Harley Haning, Mr. Haning and Ronald.
and Mrs. O!cU Gillogly, Helen
Mr. and Mrs. OlarleySmlthwere
Jom!lOn and Henry Eblin enjoyed a !ilnday afternoon visitors ot Mr.
weiner roast and pot luck at the , and Mrs. HarleySmlthofKanauga.
home r:t Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff
Laml:ert of Hemlock Grove Satur- and Mellssa were Tuesday after·
day evening.
noon visitors r:t Mrs. Dorothy
Mr. and Mn. Carl McElroy ot Reeves and Bnan Reeves. Robbie

WedJ'Ietdav. April 23, 1986
ReeVes of Chester '!'as Saturday
visitor.
I
Mrs. Greg Davts, Asbll and
Joshua were &amp;lndaY visitors of
Mrs. J.R. Murphy and~Mrs. J.R. Murphy visited• with
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans 81td
tamlly FridaY evening. .
. Tammy John.90n and Sherry

Wolfe Pen .
happenings

ALL WEEK

ou
O·U ons
Manufacturer's

Am&gt;ld were overnight guests of
Peggy MUillhY last Friday.

Pomeroy-

April 23, 1986

An 111111 nr.i~ "''~ ''' s

.WH0-0-0-0
can help
"'",., ·' , you?

SWEEPER end ,.,.-.111 mac:h .. •
rlpalr, p•rtl.· 1nd 11..1pp.W•. Pick
up end HIIYery, Davia V14jUUm
Cl.. ner,- one hllf milt up
Geq•g• Creek Ad . Call 814·

~~~f;~~~~~p CLASSIFIED

448·0294.

. ADS

Mrs. J .R. Murphy and Peggy
visited on Friday with Mr. and MrS.
John Downs, Adam, Ertc and
Dickie of Trimble, Ohio.

9-91 -:21 56
ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E(51
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE No. 1
REVISED 9/ 19/ 86
LEGAL N,OTICE
Punuant to Ohio Revised
Code Section t513 .07 IFI
notice is hereby given of reM

This week yo~r manufacturered products "cents off" coupons are
worth double at Kroger with $10.00 or more purchase. Lu~rted to
manufactured products coupons worth up to and tncludtng 50e
Off. Coupons worth more than 50e are redeemed at fa~e. value
only: limit one coupon for each product purchased . Lom1t one
coffee coupon. No beer, wine or cigarette coupons wdl be double.
Not valid on free coupons, Kroger coupons or retail f_ood store
coupons. The amount refunded can~ot exce~~ the pnce of the
item. You must purchase product in Sizes spec1f1ed on!~ ~oupo~;
This offer applies only to manufactured products. ~ents off
coupons for items we carry. To assure product avatlab1hty for all
our customers , ·only one coupon per shopping family , will be
doubled on any brand item during each store v1stt.

vision to ODNA Permit No.

0-0364. Meigo Mine No. 1.

owned by Southam Ohio

Coal Company, P. 0 . Box
490, Athlno. Ohio· 45701 .
The site is located 1.6 miles
Eaot of Sollm Center adlacent (In 1 Northerly direction! to State Route 124 in
Meigs County, Ohio. More
specifically, the lite occupies portions of Section 8

Meigs County R~order ,
Meigs County Court House,
Second Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio 46789. Wr~tan a&gt;rraa·

pondence concerning the
application may be a~bmit ­
ted to the Division of Recla ·
mation, Fount•in Square,
Building B-3, Columbus,

Ohio 43224. _
14)2. 9. 15, 23. 4tc

Public Notice

Monday 7:00am Thru
Saturday 12:00
Midnight
Sunday 9:00am
Til 10:00pm

LIMIT 4 PLEASE

"AS ADVERnSED ON TV"

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E 151
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE #3
REVISED 3/ 31 / 86
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Ohio Revised

Code Section 1613.07 IFI
nottce is hereby given of revision to ODNR Permit No.
D-0463, Raccoon Mine NO.
3, owne&lt;l by Souttwrn Ohio

Coal Company. P. 0 . 80&gt;1
490. Athena. Ohio 46701 .

The site is located 2 .6 miles
West of Wilkesville adjacent
(in a Southweaterly dlrec ·
tkJn} to State Route 124 in
Vinton County , Ohio . More
specifically, the site occu·

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

pleo portlono of Section 16

and Fractions 24. 30 , and
36 W1 Wilkesville Township.

T. BN .. R.16W .. immediately adjacent (to the e..t) o1
R1ccoon Creek . The de·
scribed ar• Ia contained in

tho Mulga andWilkoo•llle U.
S. Geologico I Survey 7. 6

to lie with hll bid o !*tiflod
dleck"' cothlot'o chock loran
•mount equal to ·fhte per cent
of!Wo bid, but it no ......m more
thonflltythou....tdol... &lt;I I
bond fort., per cent olltll bld.

poylble to tho Dlnc1Dr.
n~~ol apply. on.till
pmper lormto. for quotllllcatiolTI
ol lout 1on doyo prior to till

dote .101 lor openitg bldo it
.ccord•nce with Chapter

6626 Ohio Revlold Code.
Plll\l and opecltlcotiono are
on file in tho DeportmLOit of
TntnotpOIIIItion lfld thl oltlco

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E 151
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE No. 2
REVISED 3/ 31 / 85 '
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursu•nt to Ohio Revised

Coda Section 1513.07 IFI
notice Ia hereby given of revision to ODNR Permit No.

0-0365, Meigo Mine No. 2.
owned by Southlm Ohio
Coal Companv. P. 0 . Box
490. Atheno, Ohio 4670T .
The site ialoceted just South
of the Intersection of County
Roads 27 end 9, epproxlma·
tety 1.1 miles Southeeat of
Point Rock in Meigs County,
Ohio . More specificielly, the
site occupies portions of
Section 26, 26 and 31 in
Columbia township, T.9N .,
R. 16W. The described er• is
contained in the Vales Mills

and Will&lt;eovllle U. 5 . Gao·
logical Surve11 7.5 ninute
quadrangle mapa . A copy of
the application ia available
for public inspection at the

office of thl Meiga County
Recorder.

Meigs

County

Court HouM, Second Straat.
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789, and
VInton County Recorder,
Vinton County Court Hou10,
Mein Street. McArthur, Ohio

45661 . Writton oorr011&gt;0n·

dtnce concerning the appli cation may 'be ..,bmtned to
the Div~ion of Roclamotlon,

Fountein Square. Building B·
3. Columbua. Ohio 43224.
1412. 9. 16, 23, 4tc
Real Estate General

minute quadrangle maps. A

copy of the application il

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CHERRY RC,

RC ..
RC Cola .....

$ 49
Pak

Jimmy· Dean
Pork Sausage

.•

$

49

lb.

av•ilable for public inspec:·
tion at the office of the Vinton County Recorder. Vin·
ton County Court House ,
Main Street,
McArthur,

PEPt&gt;ERONI &amp; SAUSAGE OR
PEPPERONI

Ohio 45651 , •nd Meigo

Nata
.. lina

PIZZ8 ...................... ..

•

County Recorder, Meigs
County Court House, Se·
cond Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

$

46769 . Written correspondence concerning tM appli·
cation may be submitted to
1he Division of Reclamatton, Fountain Square,
Building B-3, Columbus,

22-oz.

Ohio 43224 .
141 2, 9 , 16, 23, 4tc

·Springdale
$
2% Milk .............. ..

49

Gal.

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"
STOKELY 17-0Z. SWEET PEAS, 16-0Z. CUT,
FRENCH STYLE OR SHELLIE GREEN BEANS OR
16-0Z. WHOLE KERNEL. OR CREAM STYLE

SEAL TEST HOMOGENIZED MILK GAL . . $1.89

KROGER

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

c

"-

Stokely
Cut Corn

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"
Hl¢ OFF LABEL

c

Bounty
Towels ................ Single
Roll

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

·Luck's
:Beans ..................... 15-oz. .

For
MIX OR MATCH

Public Notice

9-Lives
Cat Food ............... .

NOTICE TO
CONTR/ICTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio

Director of the Ohio 01!part1"1Wlt of Trenaportation, Columbuo. Ohio , until 10:00
A.M.. Ohio Standord Timo.
improvements in :

PAI:KAGES

Pair

•

Athlno. Gollio . Hocking.
Meigo. Monroe. Morgan, fllo.

ble. Vitton 111d Wuhilgton

Countioo. on - n a ATH-7·
2.06 on s- Routo 7 it

Athlnl County, end v1rious
rout• and oiCiiono it Atheno.

Golla. Hocking. Melgo. Mon·

roe. Morgon. Noble, Vinton

_..,..t ....... motoriolo.
0. 00 feet
Plojeot longth -

Of

0.00 trill. Worlt Length -

or various mile~.
Pa...,.,t Width - wries.
\ierioul

feet

54 Misc . Merchandise

32-CT. LARGE

c

Fresh
Asparagus ............

lb.

49

· SUPfR ABSORBENCY DIAPERS 66-CT. SMALL, 48-CT.
•
MEDIUM OR 32-CT. LARGE BOX . . .•9.49

ADYEATISID JnM POliCY

' .

Each of th ese a dvertis~d items is required to be readily 8\lallable for sale in each Kroger Store, eKcept as
specifically nottffi in this ad . If we do run out of an advertised item, we w~l offer you your choice of a
r.omparable irem, when a'w'ailable, reflecting the same savings or a ralncheck. which will entitle you to
u urchase the advertised item at the acl\lertlsed price withln 30 dav&amp; . Only one 't'&amp;ndor coupon w~l be
accepted per item purchased.

COPYRIGHT 1986 · THE KROGER CO. IT~MS AN[) PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. APRIL 20, THROUGH
SATURDAY, APRIL26, 1986, IN 11ALlll'llltsiP1lMEAO'f
.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALER S.

614-385-7419

Called Calls Ampied

.•
,.,

,,

V1 .

Real Estate General

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
Geo. S. Hobstetter
Broker
NEW USTING -ST. RT. 143
- 2'h acres with nice lhree
bedroom l'h balh~ A·loame
home. Large l!rnily room. ttil·
ify room and slorge bulding.
$32.00000.
UECUTIV£ HOllE - Four
red room , 2 ~ baths. all ce·
dar home. with large INing
room. large family room,
equipped kitchen. full base·
ment Cenlral heat and air,
custom made drapes. Price
reduced. $125,000.00.
RUTLAN 0 - Modern 1anch
home with three bedrooms,
livlhg room . kitchen &lt;r1d dining combination, lull base·
ment, I6'1l2' swimming
pool. PRICE REOUCEO.
NEW LiliA RD. - One acre,
with I ~ story frame.' tlvee
bedroom lxlme, fu! basement. me car garageandstorage bldg. Asking $26.1110.00.
ACREAGE - 50 acres on
State Route 143, with free
gas and minerals. Call for
details.
•'
Velma Nlcinsky, Assoc. ,
Phone 614-742-JI92

Lar;'e n1tur11 011 ha•ter~ Works
Good: Cell 814·992-2440 .

IF NO ANSWlR CAU:

3-24-tlc
Real Estate General

CHESHIRE, OHIO

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENilH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTt SALES &amp;SERVICE
Wa Hto Af•ll Tl•
Sho~ Tlehlelu
H Dalf

CHESTER-985-3307
4/lltln

Real Estate
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-16141·992· 3325

.

NEW LISTING - 148 acr es
1n Bedlo rd Township with 2
old houses, barn &amp; othet
bu1ldmg. All m1nerals in ·
elud ed. $50,000.
NEW LISTING - Old hard·
ware slore lot in Tuppets
Plains on Rl. 7. Good com·
mecial loca lion.
NEW LISTING- 2 story 8
rms.. 4 Brs .• gas r.A. lur·
nace. basement lg. yard.
garden space, Syracuse.
$25,000.
NEAR BURLINGHAM - 4
ac res , more or less. tn lhe
woods . 2 Br., Ira tier , l'h
baths, L.P. gas furnace &lt;11d
buildings. Jusl $16 ,000.
SYRACUSE - 7 tm . ran ch,
family rm. wtth lirepla ce.
carpeting &amp; gatage. In Rus·
tic Hills.
BRADBURY - Good 7 rm .
bri ck. gas lutnace. cook &amp;
bake unils, fireplace. 4 Brs ..
2 po rches, garage &amp; lml
lot. Reduced lo $28 ,000.
SYRACUSE - Want a gar·
den or playground' 2 Br. ,
one floOJ home wrth new
kilchen . new range , new re ·
lrigeralor. washer &amp; dryer.
Asking $39,900.
CHESTER - New ~nyl sid ing, new kilchen. 3 Brs., car·
peting, gas heal. basement.
Nice lot near !h eschool. Ju sl
$30,000.
BUSINESS- Are yoo ambt·
t1ou s iot your future' Good
opportunity plus 4 renlals,
elc. Let's talk on lhis one.
Only $40,000.
Sellinc Problem?
Call 992·3325

Housing
Headquarters

'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16.'86 lfn

· GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Badtan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

POLE BUILDINGS

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotcuns Only
9-30·11

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
DOZER. BACKHOE.
lliENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES.
RECLAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMEN(.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

Wa E. (Bill) SNOUFFER

Sizes Start From 12x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

.

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

Insulated Dog Houses

FEDERAL.;_STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS
PHONE 992-7075

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fi1hin·g Suppllu

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Hare
. IU!IN!SS rHONI

''1-m9.

POMEROY - Small busi ·
ness located in Iown. Garj\ge
and land 1deallor mechan ic.
$10,000.00.
NEW LISTING - IIIOOLE·
PORT - Completely remo·
deled 3 bed room horre . all
in I.~Jod condit ion, lenced in
yatd , many nice features.
$29.900.00.
POIIE ROY -Stately 2 story
home 1n town. 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, I ~ bath s. basemen.I, nice Iron! setl 1ng
porch. $25,900.00.
lANGSVILLE - 6 . ~ ac re
country estale. Barn. sheds,
two ponds. and a nice I !l
slory home 1n good repair .
Elet. heal plu s a wood·
burner for cheap heal.
$43,900.00.
RACINE - Hm yoo been
looking lor acreage wrth a
nice house? This 3-4 bed·
room ranch is right for you
and your family. 4.1» acre
lot gtves you space. Home
has lull basemen !, finished
lamily room, nice workshop,
electric BB heat. Make yoor
appointment $39.000.00.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692

7

Yard Sale

1·20-llc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

····· ·Giilllpiilrs ·........
&amp; Vicinity

- AUTO
CENTER

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Yud S•le Clerk Chap II Ad ."'S-J.
Sat. April 28 . Electric law.n
mower, electric a.wing me ·
chine, craft Items, other iltme .

I lOY, Wool Main Stroot. Pomeroy Ohio.
Phone 614-992-6771

•ln1ulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

'four Compltre Auto lody kepoir Cenr•r
lody fillen, Sarld~»G,." · Poli•hir'lg CoMpound&amp; , Po int&amp;
Ur..t'IOI'Ie HDI\inart. (Sold Under wnolftola To All)

O~JndM

New Reploc1ment Pam For
·

"FRU ESTIMATlS "

·· .. ·.. P.omero·v · ··
--~

Cora

{~fid~ ion

Middleport :.
&amp; Vicinity

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

..

·- .. ·--- ··. -·. ·····-·-. ·· ····--·---

Yerd 1ale in Bradbury Th~Jrade¥,
Frid•v and S1turdey . 10:00 till
3 :00 . Rain ha;~o~a na.~tt d1y.
·

/8 tl

EUGENE LONG

·· ·· "Pt ·Pliiii siiiir-::·:
BUILDING

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYl &amp; ALUMINUM

Complete Gutter Work

"Free Estimates"

INTERIOR

317 N. SKDnd
Middleport, Ohia
COMI\IRCIAL • R£51DENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMATES-

PHONE (614) 992-5009

(6141 843-5425

SPECIAliZING IN WINDOW I. DOOR REPlACEMENT

H1·1 mo.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992·5875 Or
742-3195

11·14-lfc

PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS"'CONSTRUCTION CO.

CAll COlllCT:
Ph.

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

8t Vicinity

·

Flee Merlcetlll Curley'• Enon,j:
mile• out Sand Hill Ro.t. M-v-3
and 4 . For more information c.. ·
304-675-3126 after 5:00 ca(

304:1116-39 15.

.

.

6 famity yard 11le. 2216 MJ.
Vemon Ave., Thursday end
Frld1y, April 24 1nd 25. 8:00
AM to 4 :00 PM .

.

Fl1trock Volunteer Fire Dept ~
Yard Sale, April 25 -28 , Fir&amp;
Houte At . 82 , Food wlll 1»

served ,

HOSPITAL SUPPLIES FOR HOME USE

SAlES &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7283

814-448-3672
TOP CASH Plld for '83 modlt
and n.wer Uled cers. Smltft

•Hospital Beds •WhBel Chairs

Bulck· Pontiac, 191t Etnlfl\
Ave .. G111ipoli1 . Call 814-441,

WE Bill MEDICAR£ AND OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN EliGIIl£

22e2.

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
63 Pino St., Gallipolis
24 Hr.,Servk:e

We Deliver

Wanted ,To Buy

We pay c ..hfor late modal clain
uted cera.
' Jim Mink Ctlev .·Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen

·-

9

-

"t4-

Wantlld junk auto•. C1ll

388-9303.

U1ed mobile home. C1l 114:

448·0175.

-

Buying deily gold, ailvtr cons,

Now location:
168 North l«ond
Middleport, Ohio 4S760

'

814·992 -5908 .

RS: 9:00 A .M.-6:00P.M. Mon. thru Sat.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appoin1ment
1·15.'86 Jln

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

lo1t in Ra cine ar .. , blecl1, tan ,
white Stub-tall Beegle.
An•wera to Chri1ty. C1ll 814 ·
949 -2488
•nd

LoM: Black fem•le Pitt Bull
puppy . In Mtddleport1r11 . Sman
white patch on ch•t. C1ll

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Typeo
Worked in home area
20 rears

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

·'St . 111 . JOJ - A newer J
bed room ranch lxlme, 2
balhs, equipped kitchen , on
apprO!. 2.35 acres. lnckldes
chicken house, ~orage build ·
1n;. garden space. Prtce re·
duted. $31 ,000.00. ·

4 Aooster1. 304·6715 -8620 .

ALL STEEL &amp;

Howard L Writesel

e . Main,._..a.li 1111..;..,1
POMEROY, 0 .

gNtiWIY· C•ll 614 -992-2t79 .

4·22-ttc

6 Lost and Found

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

fEAFORD

Couch 1nd chair. Bldfr•rN. to

367-7560 - 367-7671

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Ttllllllllfle•
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

Giveaway

2 vear old ttmet• Si1m111 cat.
Dt ·CIIWed . Clll 814 -4414472 .

.

Roger Hysell
Garage

.1

Thuisdoy, May 8, 1988, lor

ond Wooltits- Countioo. by
lumiotlli&gt;g ortd lnllotllng railed

Star-Kist Chunk
.Light Tuna ...... :..... s.s-oz

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
S4,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES-S6,000

MONTGONERY
REALTY.

UNIT PRICI! CONTRACT
SNied propoaolo wHl bo
reuM!d at the office of thl

No Nonsense ~:~y -:.~~g:~pan t yhose ............. FREE'

Pamper's
.$
Dianers .................. sox

mtllent loke side and
farmland posturo and
weods. Asking $400 per
acre. For quick salt. Adjactnl Pomtroy.

poplon, excollont
timur, scenic. Wright
St., Pomtray.

Logotl Copy No. 86·ll2

6-oz.

130 ACRES
Huge Owtd. style bam,

h"'

Contract Saleo

$

BUY ONE AT $1.59 GET ONE FREEl

IN OIL OR WATER

-w.

26302 , t -304-727-&amp;434 .

1S o&lt;rts wooded land,

April11. 1986

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"
REGULAR OR SHEER TO WAIST

" AS ADVERTISED 0~ TV"

touch lntroductklns, box

&amp;538 , Chlrluton,

"Tho dolll •• for a&gt;111&gt;lotion
of thll WOfk will bo • toet lonh
in tho bidding propoMI."
Eodl otwl bo roquirld

of the District Deputy
and 16 ond Fractiono1 . 2, 6 · Director.
The Director re~ervw the
and 12 IStctlono 9 ond 151
in Solem Townohip. T.BN .. right to reject ony ond ol bido.
Worr., J . Srrilh,
R.16W .. In tho hollow of
Dlr...,r
Parker Run 1nd ita unnamed
14123.
30
,
3tc
tributaries. The described
area is contained in the Wilkesville and Rutland U. S.
Public Notice

nute quadrangle maps. A
copy of the application is
available for public inspec ·
tion •t the office of the

NEW
SUMMER
HOURS
Open 24
Hours

Poqnd

10n11

4

Geologic•! Survey 7 . 5 mi-

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

SINGLES . MH1 th1t IIP.ci..
p«son l Free epPieetlon. P:•r·

Public Notice

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

U.S. INSPECTED HOLLY FARMS
MIXED FRYER PARTS OR U.S . GRADE A

The Daily

Ohio

16141 992-6550
RISIIINC! PHONE

16141 992-77i4

ROOFING

F~IURf

Ul!l

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

•Waahera •DiahwashBrs
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

!"ARTS and SERVICE

4-5-tlc

· DE~~y CONGO
· WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

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

CJ Cof11lulerized Heari" Ail Selection

z

NEW ...... REPAIR
Gutters ·
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Swim Molds · lrrterpreting Services

.SER~I~E ·
We can repair and re-

core radiato1s and
heate1 cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL-FORD
992-2196

Middl.port, Ohio
1-13-tlc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILL£, OHIO
AolhorizN John Daaro,
Now Holland, lush Hog
Farm lquipmenf
Dealer

Far111 E4ulpMent
Ptl'fl &amp; Sa rvlce

992-~·171 .

f mploy 1111:111
Se rv 1r:es

::z:: licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

'

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

11

UGI.l IIDGE
SMALL ING1111 CINTII
Parts • Sonlce
949-2969

lwlllitelllg 01111

PUSH MoWER TUNEUP

EASV

Oi Change. Sharpen Bjados

119.95
Turn lett at Meig• M•rnory
Gardllfls, 3 mile off Rt . 7 m

l -805-6117-1000 E". R-9805

tor curr.,t federal lilt.

lfto.4A..:..IUIUI~..... ..oll

*VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Hames Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949~2801

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

Addona 1nd remodeling
Roofing and autter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

or 949-2860

992-6215 ar 992 -7314

No Sunday Calls

Pomeroy, Ohio

l -3-'86 ·tfc

'" All

y,., Plltlltt 1/uo

PWS: OHi&lt;J Suppi• &amp;
Furniture, WHiling

anti GraduatiOn
Stationery, Mognlllic

Signs, RuW.or Stamps,
lusineu Form~,
Cojoy Strrku, (lt.

255 MIU St. Mlddloport
t04 Mulloorry Ar., Pp011roy

. "' •. 992·3

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY.
PH. 992-6931
lfhr 5 Coli

742·2027

ROSE DCAVl'IING
IACIIil, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

Oil Fiold Sonl&lt;t,
londoroplng, lol-ls,
lantl (luring, '"""'· Septic
Systorn1, HH•y Houllng.

Stone I Gtortl Hauling
l~&lt;lrkol Wortt
RESIDENTIAL. COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
(Cartifled Electrlciln) .

' DON lOSE, Owner

949-2493

Ho1111 a43-5340

1/21'16/1mo.

WORK I

Government Job1. 111 ,040 •
169,230-yr. Now Hirin g . .Cell

the right

47169 Eagle Ridge Rd.
1·17-Hn

ASSEMBLY

1714.00 per 100. Guartnteed
Pavment. No 11111. Oetlill,.
Send ttamped envelope: Elan·
6847 , 3418 Enttrprill, Ft.
Pierce, Fl. 33482 .
~ '

IP•rt•lncludedl

4-15.'86-lc

Positions Open : TeltPhonl
Coordin•tor. Claims lnvntigetor, Botrder of Smen Animtll.
Melg• County rtskttnt only ...
S.lary negod-"le. For mo,...
Information or interviiiW. c-.
Meigs County Humane So~efr
tt 814 -992- 5427 or 114 -f9{.
2203 .
WANTED: Priot Mtlitery Service,
Memben. The Army G~Jtrd ..,
needs your ••peri.,ce. Join now~
tor a p•rt·tirM }ob with btntfttr
like retirement end lducetion.r
auin•noe . 304· 87&amp; · 3960 or""

t -800· 642 -38t9 .

CLC COINS
BUYING
GOlD, IllVEl &amp;
Cti!RlNCY &amp; RAil COINS

SEUING
COINS, GOLD &amp; SllVU
WHOLESALE 14 1(1.
JEWlUtY

PH, 985·3937
AFTE R 5 P, M,

" -:.

PlrHime, full · timt repr•••t.... •
tive n•eded . Educarionll &amp;811\ .
C•l l 304 · 882 · 2415 tor
.,poW'Itment.

12·

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

Help Wanted

!In

1·17-86·tln

. · RAD.IAT.OR

ring1, j.welry, tterllng Wlfl, a(_(t
coln1, ltrg• cunency. Top :prJ.:o
cet. Ed, BurkaH Barber Shop;
2nd. Ave. Mtddleport, Oh. 114·

LISA 'M. KOCH, M.S.

949-2263
or 949·2969

l n!l!ln

ICUI OUT FOI

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

Situations
Wanted·

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

Bookk"'"' wl1h I ~are • ..,.: ~
to• pnparatlon,
Tol&lt;lng naw cll.,to. llutin-o: :·
tarnw,., lnltkon. rontall.
mlbte r1tn . C11! 11~ - IP2; ..
Z! 18 ..... • '00 p.m .
.
:

rlonoo .,..,.,..

A-.

I hovaveconcv in my honwron •
elderly people. Plonty or oxporian ce and TLC. C1ll •nVUme

614·949·3014,.

Oopondabloy.,do..,.,ce, lowno
mowed. gen••l y•rd wo.l 'k.light

·hMillng. rnanuol labor. BllllltCil

L----.::4·;.~,1·~'86:::;·;.~,1.,::m:,:,:o.;J 814-118 2·2219.

�-

.·

'

LAFF·A·DAY

17 Miscellaneous

44

KIT 'N'
Apartment
for Rent '

Dot10n Tr• Service, free eltimtt•, 304-57&amp; ·2897.
Fum. IPt. 919 2nd. 'Ava. Galli·
P.Oiil. ahare bath. tingle male.
t136 mo., ~ utiUti" p1id. Catl
U8-&lt;14 18 lftar 7pm.

F111.111 w l
,,
21

Furnished spt ., 1 bdr .• 701 4th
Ave ., Oalllpotla. t2315 mo. utll ·
· till paid. C1H •48·4418 after
7pm.

Business
0 ppo rtu n!fY
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO . racomnenda that you
do bulln•• with people you
know. tnd NOT to tend money
throuc;t the meil r..wttll vou have
invfttigeted the offering.

Own your own j..n· tp0r11Wipr,
ladin 1pptrel. children•. lerga
lire, petite , corri1Ftt1io!1 JtOra.
maternity. dencewear. acctlto·
rill . Jordach e, Chic, ln. Levi,
lzod . Git.no, Tomboy, Cltvin
Klein , Sergio Valente, Even
Picone, liz Cla iboma. Mambatl

Ga•• 1"•· Haalthtu, ....
1000 others . 813 ,300 t o
Only,

:~!'!~v.:~-;:::-.:.,~~~~f~
op., 116 days . Mr. Sidney

(4041262 4489 .
A

CAREER OPPORTUNITY '

~~

"Your mother slaves over a
hot stove to fix this stuff. It's
. we suffer a I'IttIe,
onIy f alf
tOO."

Ch
Around
The World.
A11Wrlstm111
concept
i1 party
pi.,l 'A
ia ~-----------,----------~
j'
now hirflg erM aupervlsor .
Ground floor opportunity for
shsrp lady. No iniiMtmtnt. Call 31
Homas for Sale
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
ootleet614 ·154·6875 .
Own your own Jean Sportswear, ladiea Apparel,
Ctllld,..,a. Large Slu, Petite,
Combltttion Store. Meteneity ,

Oanceweer. AccenoriN. Jord-

Urge 2 story horne. Full b11•
ment with wood furnac .. nd fuel
oil furnece, carport, picnic ahel·
ter . tfliler hook-up. Approx . 1 ·2
ecr11. In Dexter. ue.5oo . Call

For rant or ~tie nice tot on
Raccoon CrHir.. Water . ..wer,
electric, phone. 186 mo., hawal
trailers only. Call 814· 2158 ·

Paying cAahl Faroldquilta, 1tone
jers with blue wrhlno. toya&amp; old
fumlture . Caii614-307-013B .

Ntw 1 bedroom apartment. Call

6808 ca11 backhoe with lll:ten .
dtble boom and cab. excellent
condition •12.&amp;00. Cell 814 ·
843·0115 .

1 bedroom spt for rent . Batie
rent ttarts 1215 . a month thst
In clude• 1/1 utlliti11 . Depoai1
required of 1200. Conlect VII ·
lage Menor Apt. Middleport.
61~992 - n87 . Equel Housing
Opponunhv.
2 bedroom furnished apartment
tor rent in Middleport . All
utillti11 paid . Call 614·992·
so8•.

1 bedroom furnished epartmtnt .
ldeel for working couple. No
peta. Dtpolit required . Cell

Plnlt Prom Dreu size 7. fuN
length . Call 814-388·936 .

In Middlepon, 7 rooms, 2 blthl,

Cltibome, Member s Only, Geaoline, Heatthtex, over 1,000
o thers. 813 .300 t o 12,,900
hwantory , train in g, tixturaa ,

full b11ement, 1111 hNt, sir
conditioned, well inaulatad. 2
car uar•ge, nice comer lot.
Phone 614 ·992·31586 or 814··

2 la'rge lots with 12x60 M H ~
milt off Rt . 218 , 10 mil• fTom
Gallipolis. Rural wlllf, security
llgttt. building. C.toll 814-2415 5049 8\lelnga.

Small IPirtmtnt tor 1 penon.
On Second St . ln Middleport.
Call 81.a-992·15282. Kay· Cecil.

Quality built 1 1h ttory Tudor
ltyle home on 15 wooded ICfll.
10 minut .. from Point Ple ... nt,
Send Hill Road . •as.ooo.oo.

1 ·6 acrtt,pertlllty wooded lou
nasr 1pprovelt tub·divlslon . T, P.
and C . water and epproved ro.d
to each lot. R...ontbly pric::.d,
will iinance with , 10 ptwcent
down . C•ll814·985·3594 .

30.·896-3383.

HOME OWNERS -Refinence to
low fixed rate. Uae equrtyforany

purpose. Leider Mortgage Co ..

814 -SI2-:.l61 ,
23

Professional
Services

Window Tinting . Auto , conwner·

dtl , midentiaL Free

Call 814-448 -93•8 .

81'tim~tes .

PIANO TUNINCl AND REPAIR ,
r«tlloover your piano 's bl1utiful
tone, c111 tod1y, Wtrdl Key·

bo•d. 304-878-15600
31124.

Of

878-

SHELTON POOL CO. Swim·
mlng Pool St/11 · Installations ·
Repairs. Your friendly pool
builders. Buffllo. W. VI. 304·

REDUCED EXTRA NICE HOME
- 3 bedrooms. ready 10 move
Into. C1ntr1l air, pool-deck,
chtin In k fence, garden plot.
lots of Pfrll. CaH aft• 6 p .m.
1nd weekends. 304·8715·7261 .
4bedroomhou ... 1907N. Maln
St. 2 bedroom houH, 2207 01k
St.. 4 bedro:om houN 2324
Lincoln Ave., Point Pleu1nt, W.
v •. 304·&amp;76-2130.
Nice two story, 4 bedrOom, 2
llvingrooms. /!litchlen, dining,
bath and car port. Racine. Ohio,

f32 .000.00 , 614-247-3622.

50 acres, smtll bam, tobacco
allottnlnt. rNneral rights. rural
wetar, 304·678 -3828 .
BY OWNER - 6 .6 acree. Mt.
Alto on St. Rt. 2, excehnt
building lite with all utilitial,
drivewty . ~eptic: system ,
gerden. utl1ity b1m. fruit trees
and some land1c:aping ,
*19,000. 304-8915·3422 lftlr
15 p.m .
Two lot1 100JI160 Itch. re•·
trlctltd. City wtter. Send Hill
Rold . Rolling Acr11, d .400 .00
eech . 304·876-4210.

1 \Ia story hou11. Flatrock area.

30's. 304-876-4008 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Re nlal s

937-2476 .

Real Estat e

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.

41

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom hou ... ilrepiiCe, 3
m i. lOUth of Gaiiipo iis, 129,900.
C1ll days 114· 448·181! or
even ings 81 4-ol41· 12&lt;14 .
7 rooms &amp; blth, 1 •ere more or
I••· Clf'P~Id throughout. vinyl
aiding U5.000. 12 N. Main St ..
Chethire. C1l1 614 -ol48.3793.
Govtrnment homes from t1 . (U
rep1lrj. Alto dallquent t.a: prop·
erty. Ctll 806-887·8000 ffXI.
GH · 4682 for informltion.
Spacious 4 bedroom in town,
2Vt blth. g1r1ge, • much more .
114.800. Call 814-448·2174
1f1er 6:00 weekdeys.
Llrg• 3 bdr. houM, 3 milt from
town, 2 full bltha, CA. gu t111t,
prlc• reduced. Call 614 -246·

9248 .

2 or 3 bedroom tg . kifch~n &amp;
llvtngroom, g11 ha1t &amp; wood
burning etov., 3 ttor•g• build·
inge . Located 1 city blodl from
n.w cky pool. aero•• atr..tfrom
site of ni'H golf course. Call
8.14· 388·8477 or 614 ·388·
8615 .
3 bdr. in town . good location.
Small down ~ymen t, will ~ti l on
land contract. Cell 614·4487572 til 6 :00 Of 614 ·.W15· 1622
after 6:00.
11h stori ... 4 ·15 bdr s. 2 btthl,
firepl.ce. full b.. a't , 14J~20bldg .
with garage on B.1 screa.
Located i1 Rio Grande. Ct11
614 ·245·5197 sfter 6.
New. never occup ied 3 br. 2 tull
baths. family room. 2 cargaraoe.
No m1 lntenanca. Bricks &amp; vinyl
exterior.CA. Gil heat. lergt
sMdtd lot w -pllflt¥ of prNacy.
Circle Drive ne1r Holzlf Hospi·
tal. All tor 159,000 . 8U·•48·

2987.

J1y Dr. 3 8R . LA . kitchen·
dinini, 11h bath , UT RM. 2 Cit
gerege, gaa heat. CA. 81 4 ·446 ·

3427,

ThrM bedroom home. l arge lot.
Pr ict reduced . Call 814-446 ·

2897.
3 bdr. 1VJ bath, garage. very
nice. near Spr ing Velley PilEI.
•400 mo . plu• tec. ·dep. C1ll
' 614· 446 -9280 · or 304-675 ·
6808 .
Briclt ranch , 3 bd r., 2 bath, 2 c.r
GlfiQI. Extra nice . 1 1h mi . from

HMC . Call 814-448-3493 .

In MiddiiiPOrt. 3 bedroom rtmo·
deled home. Air condllloned,
vinyl aiding . insullted , fancad ·ln
back yerd. norao• building,
cloH to tchools. Show by
appointment only. Call 814·

992 -2012 .
4 bedroom home for 1111. Good
Hunting end good fieh lng . Cen
be negotieted with owntr. Call

814-988-4392 .
Oovernnt~nt Homn from •1 !U
replifl, AIIO d11inquPI tal.

propeny. C'tlll 1-8015·887·15000
E E ~rt . OH-9805 for lnformltlon.
15 rooms, bath . utility gertga,
tluminum tiding, storm win ·
dowt. doors, centrtl heat. air
condition. 814-992 ·5204.
3 bedrooms. 2 full baths.
equipped kitchen, 2 car cafl)Ortl
In Syracuae. Call814 ·992·1285
efter 4 :00.

1.2 year old 0 room houN with
dedi. . above ground pool, 11t1l·

/ita dieh . woodbumll', econornl·
cal to hilt. 2 Plut e cr• next to
Shlda River ForNt. t35 ,000.
Call 614·807·3278 after 1:00

pm .
7 room tiOUN In Ch•tar. Otllo.
Price reduced . •ze.5oO. C111

81··985,-3871 .

1979 141170 Schuh with ••·
panda. 3 bltdroome:, t 'la baths,
firepl1c1, hut pump , declt,
awning, undtrplnnlng . Call 814·
246·66615 .
Mobllt·Menufa c: turtd Homes
For Sill. Contldtr 1 re-claimed
home I *1500 down and ttka over
paymlftta. Oeliwred tr.a. '81
Patriot 14d8 three bedroom.
t187per month . Wa have morll
Mid Ohio F4nencitl SeMce.

800-828-0762 .

1976 Richwood 141t60 2 bt'., 2
battl. Call 81.a-446·48151 or

814-387-0397.

1974 Holly Par1112dll5 &amp; lot. 3
br'a. AC. Very, very nice. Cell
814 · 446 · 4768 efter 15 :30
anytime-weekend•.
14'1:70 M1n1ton new lived in 7
mot ., 11t up in Cha~hira Mobile
Home Perk. C1ll 61.a· 387·

0822.

121160 mobile home. naw
carpet. g11 iurnaca. underpin·
ning . Plnl•llvtumlthed, 16,800
or b•t offer. C1ll 814-256·

3 bdr hom1 In country, Vinton
sru . Watar· trntl furnished ,
1200 mo . 1160 depoah . Call
81.· 388·91588 .
Hou M for ren1 near Mercerville,
nice locetlon, nice yard , good
nlf;hborhood . Aeference • dap·
otit required. Call d1y1 614·
&lt;148·3159 Of 81.· 256·1662 .
Furnished or unfumlahad 3
bedroom · house ior ren1 In
Mlddlepor1 . Call 614 -992 ·

6084,

Cute cottage for ainvl• parson,
iumihted, utiliti .. paid. •&amp;6.00
per Wllk, 3Q.a.&amp;75 -31QQ Of
6715 ·6509 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
Furni1hlld, cable, beautiful river·
view , in Kfnluga. no d1V tiXII .
Fostan MobUe Hom~ Perk. Cell

1977 Holly Park 12x80 CA.
underpinn ing, partly fumiah.:lm
exc. cond. 17 ,1500. Call 814·

For 11141 or rent 1 4x70. 3 bdr.,
Ph bath, close to town. Call

19BO lib11rty 14x64, 2 bed·
roo m, unturft lthed . vinyl undtr·
pinning Included. Must Hll. Ctll

304-773 -6873.

1978 12 '1:80 N11hu1 Mobile
Home in lllCellent condition.
lncludH 1tove: reh~antor. dlehwashtr, 10•14 ttorega build·
ing, 1wning, c onCt'ltesteps, lola
of 11rtt11. Owner moving. Mult
IN to 1ppreclate. Call 1114-592-

6868 anvtl...,,

M081LE HOMES MOVED: lnsur.d, tlnonable rat.. . Cell

304-678-2338

Now displaying our new IPflng
modtll in single and doubiiWicla
home• at rlducld prlotl . Wetl·
wood Homtt , 5891 Rt . 60 E.,
larbounvllle, W. Va. 304-738·
3888 open IYary d.,..
1984, 10x&amp;8 v., Dytla mobil•
honw. 2 bedmom. living room
with tip out. new carpeting end
linoleum. 12 ,000.00 . 304 ·175·

6613 .. 878-2949 ,

814-446-7845 ,

In Eurelllnlce. cletn, PI"· fum.,
ldulu only, no pets. *180 mo.
Oep . ..-q. C•ll814 · 2156 -1636 or

814-288-1291 .

Mobile Home C1ll 814 -448·
0608 ahtr &amp;:00 PM.
2 bedroom, new carpet, AC, In
G1llipoti1. CtU 114 -448· 1409.
2 bedroom mobile home. Near
Racine. Call 81 4 ·992·6868.
2 bedroom tn Syrtc:uu. Fur·
niahlld. Deposit reQuired . C.U

814-982-7880.

Treller tor rant in Tuppeq Pleins
Ohkl. Couplaonty . Will consider
1 child. Telephone 614·887·

3808.

14' a:70 ' mobile home . 3 bed·
rooms. underpenning, applian·
en i'ldudld. NICE, 304-8715·

1418.

43 Farms for Rent
34 ac:re c:roplend, 60 ac:r"
pasture &amp; tobtcco elotment

Coli :.J'-878-5104.

1973 Kerwood, Mid on room.
centrsl a ir, with or without
fum lture . One a cra lend , need
offtt, 304-8715 ·3030 or 87&amp; ·
3431 .

44

1974 .Hollv Park mobllt home,
A· 1 condiUon, central air end
tlltrtl, 30. ·8715 ·3030 Of 875·
:M31 .

JACKSON ESTATES APART-

33.

Farms for Sale

142 tcrll whh hou11. berns. 2
lge. pondl. llmMtone. CaH 814·

248-9248,

By owner. .1 10 a cre farm 11
Oalltar. All high ground. be1utl·
ful home with dual heat. swim·
ming pool. Mult 111. P.O ./. By
owner. 1,4 acre f1tm nltf
Oexttr, 2 barns. modam 3
bedroom hou•, Vlllev Nttlna.

Call 114-742-2177.

7 Kr• whh mobile home, smtM
bam. putura, garden tpiiCI,
privati letting. 3 miM from
Ch"ter. Mu .. Nil, prlcldatanly

t1e,QOO, Cell 814·98&amp;-3828.

Mini f1rm 2.25tcrtl, modtm 15
room hou11 , 350 h. road
frontlge, t mU• from Pt.
PIMNnt, f17,000, CoN batwelll

8-t . 30•·878-72,8.

One bedmom IPI. covenient
lo"tion. 304·875·2•.a1 .

45

White metalttorm door, crollbuck style. 79 -'h" " 36%" ,
fSO .OO. Call 614 -446·0123
lftltf 6 :n P.M.
Hatf Price! Flsahlng arrow signs
12991 Ughted, non·1rrow S2791
Nonlightecl . t2291 Free letters!
Only taw left. S11e locally .
1{800)423-0183, anytime.
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS. hotdlp
rablueing, all typ11 af gunsmith
work, fast service, 304·876-

Furnished Rooms 4831.

For rent ·Siaaping Rooms and
light hou11 keeping rooms. Park
Central Hotel. C1ll 614-448·

0756

46 Spaca for Rent

Tri County Sport Shop, Spring
V1lley PilEI. Gallipolis. Ohio .
GUn s, Arc:herv. Tackle. 614·

448 -2338 .

160.00 . 304-876 -1325.

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

MENTS (Equal Houalng Oppor·
tunityl monthly rent lbrta It
1178 for 1 bedroom and 1212
for 2 btclroom. depoth •200.
IOCI1ed Mer Spring VIUIY PIIZI
end Foodltnd, poot 1nd C1ble TV
aviMible, offloe hou" 11 polli·
ble10 am to4 pmand7 pmto 9
pm Monday· Frklay. Call 614·
448· 27ol&amp; Of l..va m•sege.
Nicely furnllhtd moblla home.
Iff. apt .. central elr end hilt in
city, adults only. Call 814-448·

0338.

2 bdr., '"'r 8iiYir Brktge Plara.
N~ carpMing, Wltll" &amp; ttrlb·

oge paid , Cell814·448-7028 .

Ap1rtmtnt for Nn't. Quality 2
IR, 2 bath apartmel}t In prim•
downtown loctdon with ofl·
..,lltt parldng. Kitch .. iumiehed
wtth rllfrlg .. lilt-ct... ov.,,
OW. gar. dlep.. hookup for
wethtrl drytr. For non -emoldng
tingle or couple. No children or
peu:. Allalectrlc. ln•d• wntar·
/ eew./trNh . Aonayearl...als

roqulood. Coli 8,4-441-1894
tAM 10 8PM.

AUCfiON

SWAIN
FURNITURE 82

304-882 -31120.

8elotitul pink long formal wi1h
white Ieee metching mitts. size
7· 8. Mutt see to tppreclate,

304-882 -2904 .

&amp;

Oiiva St .• Gallipolis. New A used
wood ·caalatow•. 6 pc: wood lR
suite 1399. bunk beds *199 ,
lntron rec:linll"s 199 . new •
ulld bedroom IUitH, ranges,
wringer wPhert , • lho11 . New
INingroom sultn ~ 119·*599 ,
lamps. abo boyiflg coli &amp; wood
IIOVII. Ca/1614· 448· 3169.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sof11 and chlirs priced irom
*2115 . to 1895. Tlbl11, *ISO and
up to •125. Hida·l · beds,U90.
and up to t650 ., .oft beds
•146, Raclintrl, 1226 . to
1375 .. Umpa from 128 . to
*125 . pc. dlnett11 trom *109 ..
to 436. 7pc , *189end up. Wood
tlblt with tilt chlirs U815 to
t745 . D•k *1215 up 10 *376.
Hutch ... 16&amp;0. Sunk bad oom1)4111 with mattrn111. 12715 .
tnd up to nsa . Btbv bed•.
1110 . Mattrusu or bo x
spring•. full or twtn . f83 ., firm.
113. 1nd 183 . Queen Hts.
1226. Bed frame~ . t20 .end
126., 10 gun .
clblneu,
1350. G11 Of 1htctric rang11
137&amp; . Baby m1ttree .... 135 &amp;
146. bed frames UO , U!i . a.
130. king frame UO . GMd
aelaetion of ~room a~itea,
rodcert . metel clblnets. held ·
botrdt ua It up to •o6 .

a....

Used Furniture .. Dre11er, • bed,
Trundle bed, metal oHice dalkl.
3 miles out Buleville Rd . OplWI
9tm to 15pm, Mon. thru Sat.
614-448 -0322

GOOD USEll APPUANCES
W11hera, dryert. ratrigeretors.
rtng11 . Sktggs Applian cu ,
Upper Rhlar Rd . beaide Stone
CtMt Mota/. 814· 448-7398.

County Applience. Inc: . Goo d
used tpplienc:u md TV aeta .
Open 8AM to 6PM . Mon ttlru
S1t. 614-448-1899. 827 3rd .
Ave. Gtlllpolle. OH .
Vall.,. Furniture, n.w • used .
large aection of quality furn i·
tura . 1218 Eutern Ave .,
Gtllipolta.
High pric" got vou down 1
Chedc u• out. Monahan Furn . &amp;
Appl. Gibson &amp; Kelvln1tor, At. 7
North. Gallipolis, Oh. Call 114448 · 7•« . Cred h av•lllble to
quaUflad buyert.
Uaed iumlture. tufa . chalr. iuU
l lze hidt·l ·bed. ~Mn sire mtt·
tr"s end boll springJ, CortMn &amp;
Snvdar Fumlture, 9!5 Second
Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 614 ·448 ·

1171.

Refrigerator frost frllt t715 , 2
refrigerators froat bee white
*150 11.. tldtbysklerefr~er• ·
tor t171S , 30 ln. eltc. reno•
copp.-tone •75. 30 il. ttec .
range gokl 11&amp;0, 40 k't . llec.
t~~nee white 116. Whirtpoot
wa1h1r IllS , OE wt~har hhvy
duty *160, Kenrrore wa•har
small 195. 15 dryart your choice
ea. while they ltat. 3 air
condttlonert IS ,OOO BTU US
ea., 1 8,000- 2 12,000 1ir
conditioner• 112&amp; .... 30 ln . g11
range *75 . Shua• Appllences.
Upper Rivlt !ltd .. 614· 448 ·

•n

739e .

Pickent UHCI Furniture. Good
IJ,IIIIty used fumltura. Opsn 9110
6 or call , ior IPPDinlmtn t.

304-878-MBJ

0&lt;

876-1480,

Automttlc wuher, worb 11 Is,

f25 .00. Phone 304-876-•168

111• 8:30.
UHd Nlng room tulte. phon•

304-878-8099.

VIllage PfaiUcflff, 44 1'41011.
1100.00 ; c•talog price

t171 .00. 30··875 -1320.

Ament Tou ch-Amatlc R1d1r
Atngt, 1200.00 firm. call 304·
n3-&amp;2!5.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
81odt. brick. sewer pipM, win·
dews. lintels, etc. Claude Win·
tan. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614 -

245- 6121 .

Building mtter iala. cement,
bloc:ka all tlltl, yerd or deliwary .
G111ipoli1 Block Co.. 1231,1 Pint
St.. G111ipolit. Ohto Call 014·

448 -2783 .

23 . Wtllbo11dldh11Ntqt. tubea
or 29oz. t1 .39 11 . or by call
11 .26 ...
24 . Pantllng nails • .79 boa:.
PENN ' S WAREHOUSE ·
Welllton .Otl lo 814-384· 31545.
Block, brick. mort~r end m• ·
tonry atppllll', Mounteln State
Block, Rt. 33, New HIVtn , W.

Pets for Sala

Orag9nwvnd C1n.,Y Kennel .
CFA Him111yan , Persian 1nd
Slem•e kltt .. 1. AKC Chow
puppi• . New ~PPIM •ldntns.
Cell 446 ·3844 tf1er 7PM .

57

Musical
Instruments

Magic Teenle Jeanil lDwry
organ. 7 y11r1 old . paid
*1.200 .00 will 1111 U50 .00.
EIIC cond, aiiJOUnds. 304·882·
3794 anytime before 15 :30 or
anytl'!'a efter 9:30.
PIANO FOR SALE. Wanted:
Raaponaible p1rty to ISIU m1
1m111 monthly payments an
IPinl't·console plena. Cln be
..., locelly . Wrtte: !Include
phone number) C...dh Man ~gil',
P. 0 . Box &amp;20. Backlf'l'leytr, Ill

' 82219.
58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

n.,.

1-814-2118 -1271.

SMtdle &amp; work hors• tor aalaor
trade . Call 61•·367·0293.
Polled Hereford Cow with Be..
i1lo Heifer Catf. Call 81 4 · 742·

3114.

(]) Eyewitness News

CAPTAIN EI\,SY
THE

NAME'S I&lt; IBBLE .

1D Good Times
6:30 0 iJJ (HI NBC News
(l) Tho Rifleman
'
(!) Inside the PGA Tour '
CIJ Ill ~ ABC News
fB C1J One Day at e Time
0 Cil @ CBS News
(}) Doctor Who
(I]) Body Electric

lilY NA ME'S EASY, WE'R e

I'M THI: CHIEF OF THIS

THE TECHN ICAL ADVISORS

MINI· BABY PROJ ECT.

FROMM, &lt;EE

IN DU,TRIE9.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Mi11ed hay ilrge *JUare b1ln.
11.25 . 304-675 ·5679.

tvf¥iRin

(H) Jeffereons

Cil Alias

T r ~n spu ri~IIUII

71

F.1r1 11 Supp i11'S
/; [IVi!SIIIL~

61

Farm Equipment

Autos for Sale

1979 Mercury Marquis 4 door ,
,302. IUtO , pDWIIf , AC . good
cl11n c:ondhlon. Call 1514·387·
7217.
82 CheYV C1vtller. 2 dr. suto,

48 ,000 '?'\ .2,800 814-37921182.
)

CROSS &amp; SONS
U .S. 36 Wut. Jaclr;aon. Ohio .

84 Chav.tte Auto. 24.000 mi.

Mllll'f Ferouaon. N-.. Hollen d.
Bush Hog S11• I Service. Over
40 used tractora to dloon hom
• corrp ...elina of new l used
equip nwnt. llfgnt Mlecdon in

78 Fairmont. good cond.
*1200. 17 Chevy plcltup, good
oond . 1700. Call 814-258·

814-218-8481 .

S.E. Ohio.

Utility bldg . tpl.: 30' x40 ' ll:9 ',
16'1!8' sliding door • 3' eerv.
door. ti .21S5 erected. Iron
H0111 Bldgt. 114-332-9741 .
We will do all t'(J*I oi custom
ferm machinery work . Cell for
rat•. 814-268·86315 .

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. 8ft 315 W. ClolllooNa,
Ohio. Call 814-441-9777, 011e.
614-441· 3892. Up front trac·
to" with Wlrrlnty over 7&amp; uead
trsc:tort. 1000 too/e.
M11say Fltl'guson riding llwn
mower, *396. GardM trector
new tlr•. Nnl good. with
mower anschmtnt. plawt. dllc,
cuttivetor, tnd hanlng t29&amp; .
T030 Farguton tractor e11c.
ciNn. I 1 ,960. New post hole
clggar 1275 . NIW' I ft. ad]ust.a·
bit gNdar blad1 1175. Boom
poll 145 . 1 bottow plow 11915.

Cell 814-218-8622 .

1715 M1isev Ferguson diHII
*3,960. No . 12 Mutrt Fe~
IOn balll' 11.2915 . New 8
dNm mowlf tt .4715 . N
rotary t.:ldtr win rowwar 10ft.
li11 working width 11 ,8815 . Call

CIJ

12 ft boat, SMI'I umi V bottom
with 15 hp motor, 304-678 ·

OJ CZJ Jeffersons
0 Cil (HI Wheel o.l Fortune
Cil Nightly Business Report

M02 .

I CAIJ %
79 Motors Homes
8o Campers

1971 Plymouth Duster 318
lu1G. PS, Nns GQod. lookl good
*376. 1870 Ford Mlvetick 8
cyl.. ano. runt · good, lookl
decent •1715 or offer. S11 It
1710 Ch111\am Ave .. G•lllpolie.
1974 Chevy Nova 8 tyl. , run•
e•celitnt, looks IJ)od t650. Call
814·,..8 ·1808 .-.ytlme .
1974 Merc:u,ry Marquis euto
trlnl . Cal/614· 48 ·0810 .

1979 Thundarbird blue with
white wlnyl top, good con d. Call
lfttr O:OOPM . 614-448· 9284 .
187t AMC Pacer UOO. runs
good , Call

814-445 -2824 .

n.~mlng

4848 .

1984 EICOrt GT. PS , PB, AC,

AM·FM, Iow mll~age , tllverwtth
black tpOUart . E11caliant condl·
tkln . Ctll614-992-15747 .
1985 Pontiac Fiero. lotded,
lli:C:itlltnt condition. 18600 . C1ll

814-992-15628 anytime,

Allis Ch1lmera 7030 tractor,
130 ~ . 17,900.00 . Bush Hog.
1t00 disc llkl ntw. 12.500.00 .
Sidert Equlpmtnt Co. 304-8715·

814-992·3703.

1878 Pon1ilc Trtns Am. t Jtc
!)Ond, •ored In winter months.
lalldld wtth extras. 304 ·87 &amp;·

4234 .

... ..,.

a

1918 c.mero. cel befora :Z :OO

PM. 304·876·15610,

1970 Unco., Marie IV , rebuilt
.,gina .,d new battery . Ne•
tome

body

worit.

ious date w h ile Mr. Vargas
decides to res ig n hi s p osi tion at the schoo l.

® MacNeil-Lehrer Nowshou r

Servtces

Til Live from the Met: Lo
Nozze di Figaro (Subtitled)
This ope ra by Moza rt tells
t h e story of the wedd ing of
F1garo an d S usa nna . (3
hrs .. 30 min .) In Ste reo.

Home
Improvements

Hardwood FJoors. Sand ing •
refinishing. Pertn and toungt •
groove. Fr" ntimetM, rwieren·
cea available. Willard • David
Blank.,thlp. 814-44&amp;-0218 or
814 -446·4047 . Commarcltl I
r•identlll.

loh '

&amp;:30 0

'.

1973 Olds 88 , good co"d · no
rust teOO.OO . Cal 304-878-

£kJVt~WlNJSfS

g ate th e murd er o f a fi lm
pro du ce r from in s id e a
loc ke d edit 1ng room. (60
min.) (R).

lO:JI&lt;\ PLAC£

~ MOVIE: 'Ale .:
Tho Lila ol a Child ' (CCI
0 ® ®l MOVIE: 'Th e Sed-

uctio n of Gi na' (A) .

(I) l ive from the Met: Le

9:30

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

~ THE

For the be st time5,

"MAROJS 06E51LJS WEIGHED
355' FOUNDS, HIS HO'.\EMADE'
W INOS DI DN'r WORK ...

'ON iHI5 Cli\Y IN H 15R:RY IN
140 A D, MARCLI5 OBE51U5
TR IED10 FLYO FF THE TOP

'A ND ROMANS FOR MILES
AROOND RAN ABOUT YELLING
'I'ARTHQL!AKE ! EAIW1QLIAKE! ' H

COL055EIJM .

72 Ford PU eKe:. cond ., 3 utility
bed tool box• . Cell 814-44&amp;·
M18 .
19n lA ton Chevy P'cltup,

t12oo. eon 814-448-7837.

1981 Ch.., Dool., 4 whttl
drive, 35,000 mil ... b caiiiRt
condhlon. 304 ·882-2887 .
1979 Dodge 050 Sport, 6
spied, ltandlrd shift. sliding
beellgllle. •unroof. Nnl good.

f2,000 . 304-488 ·1853 .

73

music, and frie'l\dS

*

watch THE WILrn-..
NELSON SPECIAL
NASHVILLE "'
10:00 O ill&lt;Hl Missing Ill : Have

Special

MY COUS IN ZEB GOT HIM
A PLUMB GOOD JOB DOWN
AT TH ' FARMERS' MARKET,

SNUFFY

WHAT
S ORTA
JOB DID

HEGIT ?

HE'S TH '

HEAD 0'
LETTUCE

, 1:30

Vans &amp; 4 W ,D.

goO&lt;Ioond . 304-878 -2010.

East

I9

+
1+
5+

Pa"
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

2

Pa"
Pas.o;
Pass

South

I+

39

4.
6+

Opening lead: • Q

mond and then dra w the opposmg
trumps. The rema ining good hearts
will then take care of the losing diamond and club left in his hand .
Our early lessons taught us about
taking finesses. Now that we are expert, we've learned bow to a void them.

13 Remodel
15 One (Fr.)
t6 Hipster

2 Porcelain
ware
3 Poe bird
4 Gynt's
mother
5 By the
hundred

18 Resident

6 Conve rsa-

0 1JJ@ Tonight Show In

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample 'A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words a re all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQIJOTE

WILL SiOF"
A CLOCKII

News Nighllino
1D Trapper J o h~ , M.D.
12:00 CD Best ol Groucho
(!) Major League Basebell's Grea1ost Hits: The

ET O
E0 D I L

S ix ties

® Enlertalnment Tonight

QI O P G

Judg e Rei nho ld di scusse s
his ro le in th e up co ming co·

7397.

·..

•

........
..,,.
'

"""''&lt;.

.' '

p

S T G Z

z y p

V X

ET O

VZG

1\ II 0 . Z
p X I.

G p

Q T S 1\ II XV T X li

O PN PXZ D XQP

® MOVIE: 'Lofs Do It ,

QY DOU P G
GVSSTXli
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: t'ORCf.S RATII EH THAN
MEN ARE STILL DOING MOi&gt;'TOF OU R PI.A~N I Nl; FOR
US. - E.B. GEORGE

. Again'

Ill ~ E.Ye on Hollywood
1 2:30 I) (]) lUI Leta Night with

PEANUTS

zy

mod y, '011 Bear.

fB C1J Rawhide
- J

0

4-23

Ill ~ ABC

-rHE 11MES...

(&amp;ol)

ny

Pan lhN "

derer. t70 mi n.[ (A[.

WHEN

your life!
34 Engli sh
river
361 ncli nalion
39 You (Ger.)
41 Walerfall

co-ta.ar
U Allow
45 Sluggish
DAILY CRYPTOQVCYI'ES - Here's bow to work it :

(fiJ Newswatch

'I'OU~FACE

251'rai n
attendant
26 Verbatim ,
271cc cream
specialty
291Arnbkin's

rnrecas1

S tacy
pl aces her lif e in d anger
w hen she goes undercove r
in an e ff o rt to catc h a mu r·

rr~ NOT
eASY KE!::F"IN6
A8REA'3TOF

32 Vlbranl

f3 "Pin k

fB CII ®l Taxi
Q CID T.J . Hooker

SNAKE!!

23 Burn

24 Pub order .33 Not on

40 - drab
42 Weather

Cl) WKRP in C incin nati

Coal, limuton1. gravel, et c.
Delivered 1 ton and up . Jim
l.tniiJ, 304-8715 -1247 or 8715·

~1154 .

Pass

Nortb

as a
space shot

Ste reo .

Jemea Boys Wa1ar Service . A/10
pools filled . Cel/61 4 ·2&amp;6-1141
or 814· 446 · 1175 or 614 -Ut.

1918 Ford *.4 ton, 4 wheat drive. ' Mowrey's Upl'lolattrlng aarvlng
tri counly are 121 ytera . Theb11t
atendard shift, U ,OOO. 304·
In furnitu re uphol11trlng. All
otiSB-18153.
work gutranteed vilh our modern shop at MIIOfl County
'79 Chevy. 4 whetl drfvl.
loldld. '18 JMII. 4 wholl drlva, Fa irgrounds. Phone 304 ·8715·

WHI

DOWN
I Call off,

(!) SportsCen1er

General Hauling

A &amp; M Furn iture Menuf.acturlng ,
St. A1 . 7, C'own Clty. Oh. C1ll
814· 2156· 1.a7o , Clll Eve. 114·
••8 · 3431 . Old • new
Uphoattred .

Vulnerable; Easi-West
Dealer: North

god

@ Eyew itness News
(j]) WKRP in Cincinnati

Good · 1 hca11at ing , b11am enh,
tooter~ , drivew•v•. 11ptlc tankl.
ltndscaplng . C•ll anytime 814 ·
448· 4537, J1m11 l . Devison.
Jr. owner.

1a33,

+H

38 Su&lt;:&lt;'in c t

10:30 CD American Snapshots
(!) NBA Today
1 1:00 0 IJJ NewsCenlor
(l) Girl from U.N.C.LE.
Cii NFL Films
liD 0 Cil Ill @ llll News
fB CII Bonny Hill Show

BARNEY

Excavating

1163 Sec. AYI., GaiUpolll .
8,4· 44(1-7833 or 814· 448 ·

+K Q 81
9 A 53
t A962

Indian
36 Flying
mamm al
37 Sea

fB CII Jimmy Swaggart

'·' ,,

Ca me'

446 -4477

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

SOUTH

scrap
3 1 Unmi ti,::atPcl
35 Colorado

,0:25 ([) MOVIE: 'Su ppose They
Gave a War and Nobody

Cor. Founh 1nd Pine
Glllpo li1, Oh io
Phone 814· 448-3818 or t14 ·

. Upholstery

t K8 7 3
+Q! 7 5

scarf

ID News

AND HEATING

B7

• 10 5
9 Q 10 8

30 Table

Y ou Seen This Perso n?
David Birn ey and Meredi t h
Ba:d er-Bi rney host lh is
look at the searc h fOJ miss·
1n g indi 11ldu a ls . (60 m in .)

....

12.7

Trucks for Sale

EAST

WEST
• J 72
99 2
t Q J 10 I
+K 9 6 2

lion
19 PennMt
7 Lubricant
21 Chinese
8 Empower
pagoda
II Hold back
2211ill
14 Prepare
dweller
17 Where23 Slipped
thou?
24 Separating 20 Capture (sL)
27Wee
28 Labor
29 f eather

Th is ope ra by Moz art tells
t he sto ry o f the wed d ing of
Fi g a ro and Sus an na . (3
hrs., 30 mi n.) In S tereo.

Plumbing
8o Heating

Ken ' s Weter Service. Well,
cisterns, poo l l ~ and wetlrbedl
filled. Call 814·387·0823 or
814· 367·7741 Of 304-t715 ·

+ A 10 3

of (suff.)

Nozze di Figaro (Subtitled[

Richard and Sont. lnteJkH' and
e xterior Pllnting end wallpaper·
lng , phon• 304-875 ·71.a7. AI·
chard 0 . PurchiM.

19815 Manta.Catlo, 15 ,000 plus
mllu , loaded , MIUIIII loan.

ACROSS
I Squabble
6 British
miler
9 Pursue
10 Red deer
12 ·or Man

@ 700 Club

898 -3802

2408 ,

9KJ761
• 5

by THOMAS JOSEPH

iJl Ill

RINGLES ' S SERVICE . expa·
rienCid Cl!1111'1ter. elactridan.
mNOn, ptlnter. roofing llnclud·
lng hot tlr lpplicatlon ) 304·
878 -208B or 875·7318 .

791 1.

Hl-H

tiHOII \Uw(

[g) @ 81eck e's Mag ic
A le• and leona rd in vesti·

tiS 11-lE R:liJD WHER£ 1H£ RRSr BIG
BAm£ WUJe:w ~v~ MJD

'71 Tovot• for ule . 1800 .00,

:.l4·878·75U.

@' Tough Cookies

0

9:00

304-878-2398 Of 814·4•1·
2484 .

85

®

Cl iff uses Dan ny's plu s h
co nd omi ni um to pro tect a
s tre et m fo rme r a ft e r a
fa il ed drug bust.

RON ' S Te levision Serwlca .
Hou11 cells on RCA. Quarar.
GE. Specllllng In Zentth . Cth

82

NORTH
+A 9 6 3

@ MOVIE: 'Cetlow'
8:20 (]] MOVIE: 'Journey to Shi-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1700.00.

:ll4-1Pi71-2!1 11 .

Horse'

0 ® ®l Fas1 Times Stacy
disappears o n a my s te r·

83

62, Wanted to Buy

t800. Coli 8,•·441-4447 of
t14·446-i782 .

IZI••~

'78 Chevrolet 4 ~or seden. e•c
cond, 304· 1115-1296 .

72

.YearUna Ch.allill bull. 100 lb .,

fB ClJ MOVIE: 'Dea1h Rides

THAVSS-4 ·2 )

CARTER'S PLUMBING

6 whole ultra terrein vlhicle,
good candttton . 304·882-2887 .

:.l4-882-2388 .

11114-23&amp;8.

(AI.

:11187 '

1984 Chevy C1v1Htr . AT, PS,
PB, radio. Clean, tlw mlln. Ctll

304-878·7582.

Pure brtd DUJIX bo. .. Roger
Bentley. Sabine, Oh. Csll 513·

Mac Gyver b attles a huge
co lony o f a nts mar au d ing
throug h a d en s e Sot~th
Am er ica n JUn g le. (60 min.)

Fetty Tr" Trimming, ltui'T'fl
removal . Ca/1304-67&amp;. 1331 .

Pole Building Special, many
co tDrt and lirn , c•ll for low
pric• . 614·245 ·9146.

Livestock

Q) To Be Announced
00 Ill (j]) Ma cGyvor (CCI

101,-&lt;, ft. truck camptr all •If
contained , ahowtr, commode
and rafrlgeretor. 304- 882·

Rotary or cable tool drtlllng.
Most wtlll c:omplattd 11madey.
Plln'1) 11111 end ..,....ca. 304 ·

63

.6'~\

f6800 . Call 814-742-2184 ,

1977 Buict. Regal . 19715 Chev·
roltt Blanr. Call 814· 448 ·

Now buying sh•ll cam or ••
com. C1llfDrla*t quotea. River
City Farm Suppty, 514· 4482986 ,

Hea ven (CC} Jo nat han a nd
Mark t ra ve l b ack in time to
he lp s ave Ma rk' s g ra nd fath er's fa rm fr om re p os sess ion . (60 mi n.) (A) .

1980 {28 ft .l cemp• by Skyline.
Complatelv nlf · conta lned .

•aeo. Call 814-281-8278.

lntam•UonaiH1y Iller No . 1515T,

-

1978 Palonino tan! camplt.
Slaaps 8 . .SOD. Call 614-8117·
34 70 1Uer 8:00 .

730 C111 dl•el good rubber.
good pelnt, c:llln . ~12,1150 . 3
b:lttow MIINY Flrouton plow1.
*3150. 9ft. tren~PQrtdilc. t515 .
6 h . Woods buohho9 e398. Call

Rolli. -44-885-3874,

1D Bob Newhart
8:00 0 (2) llll Highway to

=-\ ---

992-8208.

•

When South bid three hearts, he was
simply looking for the best game con·
tract. When North cue-bid the club
ace, it was easy for South to show the
diamond ace. North then moved closer
to slam by jumping to live spades.
South now accepted the invitation
with his bid of six .
Six spades was not that great a contract. For starters, a bad split in either
spades or hearts would be tough to
handle. Undaunted, the declarer won
the diamond ace and ruffed a diamond, came to the ace of hearts and
ruffed another diamond, and then
pulled trumps. Next came a finesse of
the heart jack. When that lost, the defenders cashed the diamond king to set
the hand.
The declarer made the right play if
the contract were seven spades, but in
six he can afford to sacrifice a heart
trick early, before trumps are pulled.
It's oertainly right to ruff a diamond
at trick two. Then, when declarer
plays a heart, he should play·!ow from
both hands. If the hea rt suit divides 32, there is now no need for the heart
finesse. Whatever the defenders return, South will come to his hand with
the heart ace, lrump one more dia-

To the Manor Born

night Emmy Award w inne r
di s cus ses her latest te levis io n proj e cts.

I Tbof&lt; A BAP HoP
/ ON THE:' ASi~OiV~F.

'

®

(I) [2) Entertainment To-

I _se;_~t&gt;

Lose one early
to keep control
By Jame1 Jacoby

® Wheel of Fortune

FRANK AND ERNIE

James Jacoby

fjJ ([1 WKRP in Cincinnati

0 Cil @ Jeopardy

1972 Tea ·A·l.ong 18 ft. ualler.
Very good condition. 11498 .
Call 6,4·992 ·6173 or IU ·

814 -288-11822.

Alli1 Chli~r 2 row 3 point
no· tlll lli•ner, dry fertil izer end
lnsact attachtment, demon•• ·
tor u ,aoo.oo. Alia Chalmer1 4
row puN no· tlll, dry fertilizer.
lnaec1 attacfl.-nnt. 11 .900 .00.
AHII Ch1l~t1 4 mw pul no · till.
78 Nrlll. ,., ~Ita. dry fertilizer
16 .500.00 . Allis Chllrntra 8
row dry flrtlliltt, hydraulic
marlcera. lnHCt and hwbimdt
attachment *1 ,800.00 . C1H
Model YO g11 beckho. . nd end
Iueder , ub , ""Y IL~od.
te . ISOO.OO . Intemation•IIIOO 0
detail mzer hydreuttc blade and
wenc:tt fl.800.00. Kaeftr SarvtceC'!l\"· PolntPIHIIntRiply

IE (!}) Divorce Court
ID Barney Millar
7:30 0 1JJ (I) New Newlywed
Finals

614-288 ·1858 .

Starkt Tr.. 1nd lawn SaMce,
landscaping. 304·576·201 0 .

Oeuu trectot. parte and III'Vice
at the bllt JWict. Sklar• Equ ip·
mant Co. 304·"6·7421 .

-r1'-\0i'Vt.Y:&gt; Wfrn TI\IXL

BRIDGE

our

Game
@ NHL Hockey: Divisional

18ft. Tag · l · longcamperfort~le
or •ada tor pickup truck . C1il

Un t ondltlonel lifetime guartn·
tM . locel rli~rW~cet furnlehad.
frta 11tlmetas. Cell collect
1-814 · 237 ·0.t88, day or night
Roger• B111ment
W1terproot1ng.

GUISE SOCIAL Bf\&lt;;JK ER

Answer: What you m ight do when you go to the loot
doctor- BARE YOUR " SOLE"

(j]J MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh-

41822 .

1977 · C1maro ,

7421 ,

C€10'Aif.IL'I...AS Letlb 1&gt;6
rn~ lni'T M'f'h i»&gt; WJf'~--~

1974 Camper self con .. lnld.
FibtrQIIII bolt with 50 HP
Evenrude engine. All for •1 ,811.
1978 Fiat 18915 . Call814-288·

Good

814 -288-8622,

' -- - - - --, ,--

001111~

1974 Stlrcrtft toldout camper,
tlaep1 8, co,.lete with ltowe,
lea bo11. l'ghts • sink. a• c. cond..
like new . Call 81.a·388·97115

B1

II )

(Answers tomorrowl

' I Jumbles: CABLE

® Eyewitness News

.

Mike's Auto Sal• Monday·
' Friday 9·5. Saturday 9-12 . Call
814 .... 8-2800 Salnmen· Mark
Searl ... 1980 Plymouth Horizon
4-Dr., 4 -cyl. , auto. 11996.
1978 Ptymouth Horizon 4-cyt ..
4 111111c1 •1896. 1882 Chevy
Chl\lette 2-0r.. 4 -cyt.. 4 speed
121500. 1978 Ch...,., Camero,
runs good . t2895 . 1980 Chevv
Chatlon 4·cyl., tutu . •2195.

r xx :r I

med_y. 'Off Beat'

f3 ,000 814 -379-2882 .

1487.

lorm Ihe surprise answer , as sug·

gested by the above ca rtoon

Yesterdays

Entertainment Ton ight
Judg e Re inhold discusse s
hi s role in t he upcom ing co-

1478, Call 814-742-2877,

Now arrange the c1rcled tell ers to

Prlnranswerhere:

Smith and Jones

See King 12 ft . Semi-V wtth
pedtttl.l 11111 . Werds Tilt
Trsller, trolling motor end more.

WHAT A PER'SON
M IGHT &amp;0 INI O
UN"-ESS HE SHIFI:5
FOR' H IMSELF .
"

1

7:00 G (]) PM Magazine

.tter &amp;PM.

Anantlon .,.. Fermarall Get
your Dekalb s•d corn in G1llia
Co . from Tim M111ie . C1ll
814· ... 6-4307.

-1 I

1

(I]) Hatha Y!llla

64 Hay 8t Grain

Gem• GrtenhouM. Latlrt. W.
V1. 30•·895·3400 , flaWifllnd
vegetlble pltn11 now tvlllllbla,
whol•ala and rltlll .

Roger B1ntloy, 3112 Rlld Rd ..
Sabino, Oh. Cell 813·814Rat Tarrier pups, wormed , 2391.

Chow-chow puppilllilver btu•.
AKC
chtmplon blood Un•.
b . ptdiCJrHt. Stud service.

Livestock

Di1count pricH. Apple trill
$11 .150, YWIS *12.150. MepJel · Steel com Dektlb end Ktn·
t8 .50 , Dogwood 18.10 . Azelln 'Minhy. Phone 304 ·8715 · 1505
18.95 . 2 mi . Nor1h of Bridge
814-448-9648. Open 4:00 til oltOf 8:00 PM.
Dark.

Clrovo. CA 92843.

614-268-1487.

63

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Bentley Pig 1111. Wednltdlly
April lOth , 7:30PM. Fayette
Wan'tecl to' buy Fo• Hound County Felrgrounds. Waahktg·
puppy. Call 714·1537· 1843 or ton , CH. ll~k\g 1&amp;0 h•d oi
wrlta 10882 Till Dr.. Garden · Hamp, Dll'oCI, &amp;arrow• • glltl.

fl.,dard size. elto Aultrelian
. Blue Healer, female,. 2 yr.

fB crJ Dlffrent Strokes
Cil 3-2-1, Contact-(CC)

(!) SportsCenter

v • . 304-882-2222 .
56

_,_
I ZVCAR
rJ
I TELEEB I
rJ rJ
~-·- --

(I} Mazda SportsLook

8PM. 814-3117-0818.

75

3020 John 0111'1 Tractor. Excellent condttlon. 2 uiM low boy
tral1ar. Cl/1114·992 ·7401.

' 6gol poll.

Cil llJ Cil Ill ~ &lt;Hl News

oond , 304·87&amp;·6433.

door IN!nell W·ful
glut 78 " hgt . 34 " wide 1%
thick 139.96 .
11 . Oct1gonal window W·
stained lead.t gl111 tl59 .91 11.
12. Clur ecryNc aheets 080 .nd
126 gege aeveral lire• big
IIVingt.
13 . Plvwood htndy panel•
62 "1ong 18 " wide'h thick •.7&amp;·
1 1 .00aa.
14 . M11onit1 primed horirontal
ea:tlfio r s'ding 16 'x18 "x 7-16
16 . 8 ·grtdl marble wanity tops
ctlo ic:eslzea in atoc:k. f20 .00ea.
a . 4 ' ~· t reated pine lattice
* 14 .96 .. .
17 . K-lu• brick end ltonered and
tan. rag . *8 .99 ctn now *1 .150
end •1 .99 ctn.
18 . EKterlor key doorklt::k lllurrinum finish t2 .99ea.
19 . Good uted B· 2 bulb light
comphlte w-bulbl 115 .00ea.
20 . WOOd ·MIIOnita·btt hroom
paneling 4 ' •8' pe *4 .99 to
t9 .95 el.
21 . Preflnithed end mfin~
door and window end til typn at
trim atartiflg at •1 .00 tor B' pc .
22 . Aluminum mobile home and
bem rootcoeting w·fiber Mgal.
123 .915 100 gal end up 120.915

1983 Honda XR 200 dirt bike,
lli:C . cond . Cll/814·441·7015 .

1980 Kaw111ld LTD 1000. Exc

Call 814-288·8622 .

120.00aq ,

(I) Green Acree

814 -9118 -3907 .

Save Builders Supplies Surplus .
Clo1eouts. Salvage.
1. Prehung tteel insultted 8 or 8
panel door.. 89 .96.
2. Prflhung atHI inaullt~ door
1nd glass 9Ute or ,lite 11215.96 .
3. Ooublesldellteentrance door
Hts Yt glut &amp;lite *398 .
4 , Single side/Itt entranoe door
nts v, thermal glaH $299.95 .
6 . Commerciel doublaantrsnca
set brown tlllluminum 1699.
8 . Double aidalltn antrlfloe 111
wood ~ panel Y.r glut wdecorlthla trim 1299.9&amp; .
7 . Prthung interio r door~ all
Iilii and · flnish11 B grid•
t29 .95 ...
8 . Pehung Interior 8 panel pine
door 's all 1ires 181 grad11.
189.96 ...
9 . Thtwmal lniU~ t ed gla11 pan·
els 76"' hg t. 32" w,id a 139 .9&amp;

•10.•• Wood

814 -448-0122 liter 4.

accounts or you 're
in trouble

MERIN
I.. I I . ..

6:00 G (2) NowsContor

1978 Honda 380 for Hie. low
mileage. t400 or bnt oUar. Call

HALF PRICE/I Flashing '"ow
1igns 1299/llghted . non·arrow
12791 Nonllghted 12291 Free
letterat Only fi'H taft. See
locally . 1 (8 00142 3 . 016 3 .
1nytime .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Plrk.
Route 33, Nonh of Pomeroy. 1 ~-'---.,----.,-.,-­
Large lot• . Call 61•·992-7479. 8 diamond wr1p around ring
gutrd. ooly owm 3 months,
Trailer lots tor rent on Tounahip 1300.00 . 304-876-4496.
Road 87. School bUI, weter.
electric , tel6phona. 1 mile from Riding lawn mower. good con d.
Memorial Glrdens Cemetery. 91 Burdette Addn .
Call M1rion RIYnoldt 11 814·
988-4329.
16 ,000 btu window 1ir cond.
UO.OO. Two betge oolored
bucklt 11ets for '815 Ford

3br"-Evtna Heights: Oepoait &amp;
reitrtnCII reQUired. BIICkburn
Rllltv-814-448·0008.

814-448-1802 .

1984 Ov1rtand Ptrlt. 14x70, like
new . Total alec:., consktartruck
on 1r1d1. •18,000. Call 614446·1724 anytime.

lis. 814-446-9221 ,

28 " contole color TV , 11/clng
*60 . Exercise bike UO . C1ll
614 · 246-6070 bafora 2PM.

Two formals, size 11 and 9· 10,

eto•.

246·6120.

APARTMENTS, mobile hornea.
hou .... Pt. Pl1111nt ~.od Gellipo·

Houses for Rant

WEST, GALUPOLI&amp;. RT 38, A~nl. 111M, lend contrtct. 3br' •
PHONE 814-448·7274 .
Rodney Village II; 2 br'a·Eurelct;
31

For rent 1 bedroom furnial'led
apertmant. Call 814-992·5434
or 303·882· 2661.

•

one IIIII• to 8ICh SQUI:tre, 10 fOfm
four ordinary IIJ'OI'ds.

EVENING . .

1986 VI' 1100 Sh .. ow. low
mile.age, exc:. cond . Clal after

0

Color TV 's all lhiPII end Iilii .
C•/1814 · 446 -1149 .
Motorirad tread mill. axcellant
condition, •1500. Cll/614·446 ·
3674 .

Sergio Valente, Evan Picone. Liz

22 Money to Loan

Tendv 1000 hOme co.,.,uter.
equipped whh colored monitor,
printer, IBM CO"l)ltlble, und
1pprox. 12 houn, over 12.10.0
lnwested. will tlcrltict for
11 ,600. Call 614·446 -4171
efter 6PM .
'

l bedroom 1p1rtment It 402l-1
Twenty Fourth St .• Point Pte•·
11nt . Call1 ·304·1115·4024.

1218,

q

i}j}j}Nf fj)iJ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ · by Henr i Arnold a nd Bob lee
Unscramble these fow Jumbles,
Better get some new

WEDNESDAY

.

n

The

Television
Viewing

1982 Hoftdi CB· 710, 2820
miles. wtth lxtr11 . t1450 Call

e.

2 bdr. utiUti11 partially fum .,
*176 mo . Csn 30•·876·5288
or 304-675·6104 ..

DICK

Motofeycles

8:30.

:.l&lt;l-878·1799.

Refrigerttlon 8t AppHenct Str·
vice. All brtndl asld appllanott ·
pertJ. Uttla't Aefrig.
Appl .,
Cheshire. Oh 614-387-0440 .

814-742-2832 .

4228 .

or

Furnished Apt . 2 bdr.. 8195
mo .. water pd . 1136 2nd. Ave ..
G11lipollt. Call 614 -446 ·•410
1fter 7PM.

tdle, Ctlic, LM, Levi, lzod.
Oittno, To~oy , Calvin Kltln,

992 -2880,

Elactrolu" wacc:wm clun•s,
A· 1 condltlon ·attlchments .
Avtilable •t - t72-.00 . Cuh or
terms arrenged . C1ll 614 -2415 ·

6 Court St . 3 bdr. 1 ~ btth , •no
mo ., plus utilities, refaNnCII &amp;
no pets, Call 814 · ~48 · 4921 .

81.·992·2937.

g rand opening etc . Cen open 15
d1v1 . Mr. Loughlin (6121888-

Coli 814-288-p251 .

9118

Pomiiroy-Middleport.
Ohio
.

1978 Honde Hawk 400 motor·
cycle· with Vlttll" QUk:kallver
ferrlng. 1uoa11e r1dt • b1ck
tilt , crulu control , two
helmets, 1 excellent condition,
•100 . Cell 814-2415·15316 until

Callah'"' ' U.tad nra Shop. Oytr
UJOO tir... "'" 12 , 13, 14 , 115,
18, 16 .8 . a mil• out Rt. 218 .

Pl11tlc cletem 111te approved ,
pl11tic septic tan~• : plutfc
culv11r11, metel c:utwrts. RON
EVANS ENTERMISES. Jack ·
son. Oh. 814 · 28&amp;·15930 .

114-448-0390 .

74

54 -Miac . Merchandi1e

.

,t/ednaaday,

Wednesday, April 23, 198i

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page 1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

David Letterman To night's
gu ests are U sa Bonet.
Jerrv S ei "fe ld and Li nco ln

Burnham. (60

min.[ In

S tereo .

CIJ

Bill Cosby Show
Cii Arabian Monthly
® 1\BC News Nighll lne
CU SCTV
Ol ~ New s

@ MOVIE: 'Cast a Giant

Shadow'
1 2:4D llJ I]) MOVIE : 'The Millione ire'

12:50 (I) .MOVIE : 'The Smug-

DXL

ltrt'

' 1:00

[; y IJ s p '

Shot'
® CBS News Nigh1wotch
2:30 (!) SportsCenter
2:55 (I) MOVIE : 'Hunchback of

~ Dobie Qllllo

(J.) Tennis Magazine

CIJ Archie Bunker's Place
fB (!I Wild, Wild Wao,
Ill Cl2l CNN News

N otre Dame'

3:00 (l) MOVI E: Whtiel of f or.

1:30 (l) Fa1her Knows Bast
(!) NBA Today
CIJ News
2:00 (I) 700 Cl'!)&gt;
C!l Mazda Sportalook
Ill C!1 MOVIE: 'Warning

t u ne'
(]) Te nni s : Su nkist WTA
W om en' s Cham tJ ion shiDS
Sa mil 1nals
c o mp etit io n
fr o m Am elia Island , Flo r·

ida. (2 hrs.[

••

�Page-12-The

Sentinel

23. 1986

U.S. supporter

Bonds· approved
for se\\'er project~
GALLIPOLIS - The sale r1 $2.4
million in bond anticipation notes
will allow Gallipolis to proceed with
construction r1 a secondary selVage
treatment plant, officials said
Tuesday after the Galllpolls City
Commission approved an emergency ordinance issuing the notes.
The notes, bearing a 5.6 percent
Interest rate, will mature Aug. 25.
At that time the commission must
renew the notes at the then-current
Interest rate. By then, explained
Commission Pr£&gt;Sident Richard '
Moore, the city will have demonstrated to the Farmers Home
Administration It has the funding on
hand to build the plant .
FmHA wUI be the lender on the
project, officials said. Sale of the
notes will generate $2,470,000 to get
construction under way. A secondary sewage plant has been
trdered to he in place In Gallipolis
by the rummer of 1988.
The new plant, an addition to the
present sewag,e plant, will refine
the city's sewage discharge, Moore
said. He added that the city has
asked for contracts to he let In lJ
days, a lthough an ex ten sion is
possible.
"We have decided to go with a
Farmers Home b an over a ioan
from the Ohio Water Development
Authority I:J&gt;cause there is a 1!-I
pereent differrnee In til&gt; interest

under fire again ·

rate," Moore said. "We have
chosen the lowest rate of Interest to
help oot the sewage cilstomer
charge,"
The oommlsslon, meeting In
special sesSion, eni:J&gt;red a 1~ -hour
executive session to discuss the
notes with WIWarn C. Elliott o!The
Ohio Company, wlich sold the
notes, and Owen March ct. the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency.
The commission took oo further ·
action alter going back btto open
session.
Elliott said the city stands to
benefit from issuing notl'S to
tl.nana&gt; the project rati:J&gt;r than
bonds. He said notes are helpful
durtng a construction phase, he
added.
"I think the Interest rate environment is favorable," Elliott said.
· "Federal law stlll allows a city to
keep earnings on reinvestment.
The city will reinvest at a higher
interest rate to cover Its payments
on the roles and wUI realize a small
return. The net effect f; positive."
SHOPPING SPREE WINNER -Kathy Doidge, Pomeroy, was the
The commission also approved
winner of tile $!110 !!hopping spree of Qark's Jewelry Store, held In
two emer~ncy resolutions that
observance ol the store's sixth anniversary In Pomeroy. Mrs. Doidge,
Interim City Manager Paul J.
pictured wkh Joe Clark, selected an add-a-bead necklace as part of her
Knotts referred to as "housekeepmerchandlle. Winner In the Gallipolis siQre for the llllnlversary
ing" with FmHA. The resolutions
~aston was BeUy Jo Carter.
authorized Knolls to sign an
assurance agreement and an equal
cpportunlty agreement with the
agency.

J

$256 per month," Ocasek said.
"These retirees were living below
the poverty level."
The · legislation ,adds S50 per
month.to the pensions of police and
firefighters wbo retired before Feb.
28, 1984 and are receiving less than
$13,000 per year bt benefits.
"This bill Is especially Important
since these retirees receive no
periodic cost-of- living incree.se,
and have had no lncrease fornee. rly
five years," Ocasek said.

Meigs County happenings ...

WILLIAMSON, W.Va. -As far
as the coal industry goes, the nation
and the eastern coal-producing
stall'S might as well be "Brigadoon," the mythical Scottish village
which came to llfeonlyonce a year.

f

Gillmor will appear at meeting '
Paul E. Glllmor, president of the
Ohio Senate and Repiibjtcan candidate for the nominatiOn to run for
governor, will be in Meigs County
Thursday night.
Giltmor wlll be guest r1 the Meigs
County Republican Women's Oub
which Is not only Inviting all
Republicans, mPn and women of
the county, but also Republicans of
the area to attend. This is expected

S~ial

meeting called

A special meeting of the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development Dlstrct executive committee has heen ca lled by Henry\..
Kunze, president, for Tuesday at
6:30p.m. at the Sportsman on State
Route 56, Athens. Purpose of the
meeting Is for discussion and
. possible action on a contract with
the City of Athens for administration of an urban development action
grant, as well as discussion and
possible action on a cooperative
program with the Greater Law -rence County Area Chamber of
Commerce concerning procurement and government contracts.

Money taken in B&amp;E
Pomeroy Police are investigating and breaking and entering at
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Police said that a panel was
removed from a rear door to gain
entrance and that two glass panels
were broken out of other doors to
gain entrance into the offices. An
undetermined amount of changr
was stolen. The breaking and
entering was discovered Wednesday morning.

r' s only appearance in
to beG
the are .
meeting wlll be held at
The
7:30 p. . the Meigs High School
Refreshments will be
cafeter
al, dlstlict and state
served.
candidates will also be

~f:

a

~ Emergency

squads

answer five calls
Meigs County Emergt&gt;ncy Medical Service reports five calls
Tuesday; Tuppers Plains at 12:55
a .m. to Long Bottom for · Dora
Pierce to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 3:44p.m. to
Reedsville lor Roxie Reed to St.
Joseph's Hospital; Racine at 3:53
p.m. to Bashan Rrl. for Shirley Ann
Evans-to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 7:13p.m. to McCumber
Rd. for Belinda Bailey to Veterans
Memorial Hospital : Tuppers
Plains at 9:52 p.m. to Tuppers
Plains for Freda Casto to Holzer
Medical Center.

Free clothing day
Free Clothing·Day wUI be held at
the Salvation Army, Pomeroy,
Thursday from 10 a.m. un til noon .
All area residents In need of
clothing are welcome to come.

1

$1424.$2174

25°/o OFF

SPRING TOPS
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Sl!tnday 8 :30 to 4

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POMIIOY. 0 ..

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh!o, Thursday, April 24,

2 Sec1ions. 16 Pages

198~

26 Cents

A' Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohio's fruit crop
hurt by cold spell
Some Letart area truck farmers
who planted early tomatoes lost as
many as 50,(XXlyoung plants as the
result of the freezing temperatures
this week. ·
At one point Wednesday morning
temperatures at one farm were
recorded at 26 degrees and while
' temperatures did not drop that low
overnight Wednesday, It was still
cold enough to damage the tomato
plant~.

Several Letart area truck
farmers reported that they had rot
yet put In their toma to plants so had
no problem with the overnight
freezes . Cabbage plants are out but
farmers reported that they are
strong enough to weather low
temperatures.
_
AttheAdamsfarm.ll,OOOtomato
plants were saved !rom the·freeze
apparonUy through the use of an
lrrtgatlon system with water being
used all night both on Tuesday and
Wednesday. However, using the
lrrtgation system at the Harrts
Farm and Greenhouse in the
Portland area did not tum the trick

on tomato plants. The lee rulldupon
the plants caused through use of the
Irrigation system caused the approximate 7,000 tomato plants to
break and die . The Irrigation
system used m the strawberries at
the farm, however, was successfuL
It was reported tha t !llmetomato
growers raise extra plants In '
anticipation of problems with
spring planting so that they have a
reserve If something goes wrong .
Those who have planted and lost
their plants this week rut do not
have a reserve can secure new
plants from Southern mark!&gt; IS.
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
United Press lntematlonal
Fruit growers In northeast and
east central Ohio worked throughout the night to protect their crops
from the cold weather while
growers In other parts of the state
tried to assess damage from the
previous nights.
An early assessment from Wednesday's record low temperatures
In the :.lli was that the apple crop,

the state's most Important fruit
crop at an estimated UJ million,
was hard hit.
"About25to30percentQfthet~tal

apple crop appears to be lost," said
Blake Gerber, executive director of
the Ohio Fruit Growers Soflety.
He said southern Ohio was. hit
harder than northern Ohio.
"Some growers were wiped out."
he said of the early reports from
south of Interstate 70.
· Losing one fourth of a UJ million
crop would mean a loss of $7.5
mllUon to the state's economy.
"The hardest part Is havin g
employees wbose jobs may be
affected by the frost, which will
reduce the amount of work lor !rem
at harvest time," said Marlene
MacQueen, whose famlly owns
MacQueen's Orchard In the Toledo
suburb of Holland.
Growers tried hard to protect
their crops, with some renting
helicopters from as far away as
Indian~ . to push warm air down on
the bloosomlng trees and plants.

PLAN'DNG PROJEcr - To help heaullfy the
Main St. business section of Pomeroy, 30 Dowering
crabapple trees were planted between the street and
the river parking tOts Wednesday. The trees were

. LOCATING IN PARK __: Appalachian Wood
Products Inc., a major manufacturer of watei'beds,
has leased Ire fonner Point Pleasant Malleable Iron
plant In the Point Industrial Park in Point Pleasant.

The move lo Poh Plel111811t from Appataehlan's
Ravmswootl, W.Va., lacllKy loi expected lo create 611
jobs, company and Mason County development
ofOclals said today.

Employment of certllicated and
classllled personnel highlighted
Wednesday's monthly meeting of
the Eastern Local Board of
Education.
Conti nulng contracts were
awarded teachers, Richard
Chambers, Dennis E lchln~r. Rita
Lincicome, and Arch Rose and
George Gaga!.
Given five-year contracts were
Joseph Bailey, Pam Douthitt, John
Perine, Patricia Shrlvers, Betty
Stivers, Janice Weber, and Ralph
Wigal. Three-year contracts went
to Scott Wolle, Carolyn Trtpp, and
Reheeea Eichinger. Issued twoyear contracts were William
Blaine, Carol Brewer, Mary Jo
Buckley, Patrtcla Chapman, Kim berly Conldl; Rebecca Edwards,
Ron Hlll, Kay Long, Cindy Pitzer,
Debbie Pratt, Mary Price, Karen
Probe{!, Valerie Ransbottom,
Frances Thomas, and Mike Wlll .
Pending federal hindlng and
class enrollment, the contract of
VIcky Layne, reading teacher, was
not renewed. She will he rehired
when fund s are available.

purchased by Pomeroy merchants and the vUiage
and the "Pomeroy ·Area Merchants Association joined
to plant them. Here Brure Teaford gets a hand from
Glenna Rununelln planting one ol the trees.

~-- -

~

r.

By NANCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel stall writer
Progr£&gt;Ss of the proposed access
road from U.S. 33 to Carper's
Nursery was discussed at Wednes·
· day's weekly meeting fo the Meigs
County Commission.
Bedford Township businessman
George Carper alter ded Wednesday's ll'le&lt;'tlng to find out why the
proposed access road Is still on the
back burner after more than a year.
He wanted to know If the project
could be expedited.
County Engineer' Phil Roberts

presented designs for the road and
then arranged by telephone for a
meeting next Monday at the county
~:arage with Tom Hedrick, and
possibly Grorge Dougan, from the
Ohio Department of Transportation' s Marietta office.
Carper Is anxious lor the pro]t:el
to move forward, because once the
road is llnlshed, he anticipates
expansion of his nursery lxl siness.
Carper's Nursery decreased In
busln£&gt;Ss and employment when
construction of the U.S. 33 1our lane
cut the business oU from the main

highway.
,
Alter years, a cost-sharing arrangement between the state and
Carper was finally worked out to
cover the costs of txJUdlng an access
road.
Dog complaint
In other developments, Syracuse
resident Bill Hayes complained
that his dog had been lllegally
adopted out of the county dog
shelter.
Andrea Batey, dog warden. and
Fred Crow III, prosecu ting attorney, were at the meeting also.

nz

By United Press International
James A. Rhodes' opponents for
the Republican gubernatorial nomInation used a· talking statue and a
fairy 's costume'" Wednesday to
underscore themselvl'S as alternatives to Rhodes and try to tighten up
the three-way ·primary election
contest:
State Sen. Paul Pl~lfer employed
a campaign assistant dressed In a
white leotard and pink ballet skirt,
with stardust and wand to attempt
to discredit as "fatrytales" the polls
showing himself far behind.
Ohio Senate President Paul
Glllmor previewed his latest JO.
second television spot announcements showing a talklng statue of
Rhodes saying It Is happy on the
' Statehouse lawn and recommends
!hal Glllmor move Into !lie governor's office.

Glllmor also labeled as "absurd"
a !XJll released earlier this week
showing Rhodes capturing 55 percent of the registered Republicans
who plan to vote In the May 6
prtmary .
Rhodes campaigned In Belmont
and Trumbull counties, and did not
participate In the pre-election
spoofing.
Pfeifer, who trails the lleld In
polls Issued by the other two
Republlcahs, discredited the other
surveys, saying they have not
released all data, they have not
allowed pollsters to answer questions or they have selected samples
they knew would produce favorable
figures .
•
In a Glllmor poll released last
week, Rhodes had 35 percent to ·
GUlmor's 30 percent and Pfeifer
had oilly 7. The remainder were

Also receiving non-renewal notices were two library aidl'S, Margaret Coug~home and Judy Wolle
pending federal funding.
Due to lack of certification,
non-renewal notices were Issued to
four people who assisted in various
athletic fields. Non-renewed were
'Debra Lee, Beth Ritchie, Don
Jackson and Debbie Lee In volleyball . The contract of Jaml'S Wilhelm as marching band director
was not renewed. Mary Baum's
resignation as cheerleader advisor
was also aceepted. Keith Weber, a
malnlenanre employeP, received a
two-year contract.
Supplemental c0ntracts were
Issued as follows:
Athletic director, Dennis Eichinger; boys track, Dennis Eichinger;
girls' track, Ralph Wigal; boys'
basketball, Dennis Elchln~r; junior varsity basketball, Don Elchln·
ger; assis tant basketball, Scott
Wolle; head girls' basketball, Pam
Douthitt; volleyball, Pam Douthitt;
junior high football, Grorge Gagai
and Mike Douglas; special education supervisor, Mary Price; head

teacher, Riverview Elementary,
Grace Weber; co-varsity football,
Ron Hill and Don Eichinger;
seventh grade advisor, J&lt;jm Conidi; ,
eighth grade advisor, Scott Wolfe;
transportation director, Arch Rose;
federal and state program coordinator, James Huff; senior class
advisors', James Huff and Thomas
Kelly; junior class advisors, Don
Eichinger and Rita Lincicome;
sophomore class advisor, Arch
Rose; freshman class advisor,
Grorge Gaga!; National Honor
Society, Sue Arnold; flag and
majorette corps, Valorie Ransbot·
tom; audio visual, Thomas Kelly, .
play advisor, Carolyn Tripp, English chairperson, Carolyn Tripp,
Math chairperson, Nancy Larklns;
Social Studies chairperson, Arch
Rose; student council advisor, Joe
Bailey; elementary mu sic, Maxine
Whitehead; Sr. high advisor, Valerte Ransbottom; yearbook advisor, Scott Wolle; baseball, Scott
Wolfe and girls' softball, Pam
Douthitt.
In other matters, the board
(Continued on page 6)

• •
•
COIID...,.DISSIOn SeSSIOn

Hayes' dog was put In ~arantine
for 14 days at the county dogshelter
after the animal bit a Syracuse
woman. At the time, the dog was
picked up by Batey , a Hayl'S' wife
signed a release form allowing the
dog warden to either adopt out the
dog or have It put to slEep. After the
quara ntine period was over, the dog
warden adopted out the animal.
Hayes, who works out of the area,
returned home and wanted his dog
back.
Hayl'S presented registration
papers to the commissioners to

Pfeifer, Gillmor discredit Rhodes' poll

APRIL 27-30
7:00P.M.

THE PIOFESSIONAL SERVICE FOI A
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS

Vol.36, No.261
Copyrighted 1986

at y

Access road progress discussed at

lrx1~r"'1 lmur ~

- Payroll Processing
-Fpderal &amp; State Reports
- Profit &amp; loss Statements
-Financial Statements

e

•

An.
Pomtroy, OH.

The tradition continues.
The 1986 Fleetwood Brougham.

llttn.., l tl..t • th tr,willlorl,ll \II !'

OUR SERVICES INCLUDE ·

Page

7 CADILLACS IN STOCK

Hf'n •\ ,,, ,u rh,tr gPr, 1!11lH' t' lt lultvt'
)II'•• ' h y H'nl,llf'llllA IHll' 10 Ill lr,l!lt·

PH. (614) 992-7270

In the Sj'JO&amp;IIplt oo Page 7

Wt Accept All Majer Credit Cards &amp; Wlro flowon Everywhere.

rn 11Of \l(

. 618 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEAOY,OHI045769

Cholesterol

NBA
playoffs
Re.,Ort"on
s
·
·

POMEROY FLOWERBuHemut
SHOP

l'.lt h

1 GIOUP . .'S

Paaes2.3

Eastern board hires staff ·

6TH &amp; PALMER ST.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING

Photos on Page 6

•Corsages •Boutonnien •No•gays

RE~I~AL
FIRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

Color contest winners·

Baseball·. roundups

Flowers add that special
touch to any prom. And
we'll individualize the flowers with your outfit and personality.

and oosts. trallic light violation;
Mose J . Block. Logan, W. Va., $46
and oosts, speed ing, and Phillip
Shoemak er, Langsville, $375 and
costs, driving under the Influence.
Forfeiting bonds were James
Watterson, Columbus, $43, assured
clear distance: Herbert H. Brooks,
Tecumseh, Mich., $46, speeding;
Lisa Thorne, New Haven, W. Va.,
$44 , speeding, and Gary Howard,
Pomeroy, $43, stop sign vio lation.

$22 9 5 &amp; $29 99

CHIC CO-OIDIIIA1ES

290 SECOND' AVE.

The U.S. exiXJrted about ~
million tons last year, he said, but a
drop In Canadian purchases "will
deOate our modest overseas gains"
for years to come.
"Our friends overseas," Katllc
claimed, cry for production sta bility and ex !Wlded port facilities,
"then don't send the boats."
He sai d "they buy coal from
countries against whom the U.S.
Navy defends their shipping."
He also claimed that Canadians
"yell 'ac id rain' but do not have a
single 'scrubber' on a power plant
stack and do not require catalytic converters on their automobiles.
"They may well want clea n air
and relief from acid rain. Who I
doesn't? Once we know the real
causes and the most efficient
solution, the problem will disappear," he said.
Katllc said "Ire Canad ians really
want to peddle their excess electrtcal power - and any cost burden
they can put on U.S. power plants
gives them a direct selling edge."

TENNIS SHOES

Plum. Berry, Blue • White

asso1111 n. wr.

$19 91 ~~SIT

Four defendants were fined and
four others forfeited bonds in the
oourt of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night .
Fined were Herold Binion, ChandlervUle, $48 and costs, speeding;
Christopher Crabbe, Columrue, :lli3

Sunny today, wit~ highs between
55 and 60. Oear ton ight, with a low
between li and40. Sunny Thursday,
with highs in the low 70s.
Extended F~ast
Friday lhrouih Sunday
Fair Fr~, wkh a chanre ol
showers s.larday .a lair again
Sunday. III&amp;IB wW be In the 'lOs
Friday and ntnglng from the mid
60s to tile mid 70s Salunlay and
Sunday. Ovemlchllows wlll range
from the mid 40s to low liOs through
the perkld.

PASTEL FLORAL DENIM
GIRLS 2 SLIM TO LADIES 13 JR. ''- . ..

t LAIGE GIOUP IAD.S

One defendant forfeited a bond
and three others were lined In thP
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Charles M. Canter, SyracuSl',
forlelted a $00 bond on a charge d.
failure to control a vehicle, and a
$llO bond posted on a charge of
leaving the scene of an accident.
Fined were Charles F. Ohlinger
and Mike Dorst, both of Middleport,
$25 and costs ee.ch on disorderly
conduct c har~s. and Richard
Warnecke, Cheshire, $16 and costs,
Sjll'edlng.

Admissions--Dora Pierce, Long
Bottom; Belinda Bailey, Dexter.
Discharges--Jellrey McKinney,
Vermont Marklns, Harold Triplett.

LEE CASUALS

•Coconut ·Bon-Bons
•Peanut Butter Cups
•Fudge
•Chocolate Covered Cherries
•Turtles

Court

Weather forecast

25°/o OFF

WEDNESOAY thru SAIURDA Y

Mayo~'s-

Veterans Memorial

"JEAN OF THE WEEK"

NOW

"We wake up once a year, hear
explanations of coal's problems,
listen to advk:e, agree to take
action, then lapse back into
slumber," said J.E. "Jack" Kallic,
senior vice president and head of
the fuel supply department of
American E~t rtc Power Service
Corp.
Speaking here before the Tug
Valley Mining Institute, Katlic said
that many of the problems he cited
publicly as chairman of the West
VIrginia Coal Association in 1982
are still prevalent today, although
more have been added.
As an example, he noted that coal
exports have fallen precipitously
since 1982, adding that 1981 and 1982
will be the hlghl'SI export years of
the century.

They asked for details of the
military cooperation ·agreement
between Britain and the United
States.
The U.S. Air Foree operates from
a strtngof alrbasesacrosssouthern
England under an agrEement
dating back more than lJ yfars to
the days when Winston Churchill
was prtme minister.
The precise consultation arran- ·
gements have remained secret
despite periodic calls for them to be
publlsred. The most recent outcry
occurred when U.S. cruise missiles
were deployed at the Greenham
Common alrbase In 1984.
Two days alter the Libya raid, a
plot to blow up an El A! jumbo jet
with rrore than liO people aboard
was foiled In a last-minute securtty
check at Heathrow airport .
A Palestinian, NezarHindawt;li,
appeared In court briefly Tuesday
charged with plotting to blowup the
plane and with conspiracy to
murder his pregnant Irish girlfriend . Hlndawl apparently tricked
her into carrying a .oog packed with
explosives onto tre flight, promisIng her they would meet up In Tel
Aviv to he married.

NOW FEATURING ALINE OF
DELICIOUS HOMEMADE CANDY

A.E.P. executive
outlines problems

Bill raises retirees' pensions
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!\ -Gov.
Richard F. Celeste Tuesday signed
a blll raising the pensions of most
. retired pollee and firefighters by 1JQ
per month.
The biU also gives widows and
children of the pensioners between
$54 and $25 more per month, said
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D-Northfield,
sponsor of the bill.
"Some retirees were receivbtg as
little as $2!6 per month and the
widows were receiving as Httle as

LONDON (UP!) - Prime Minister Margaret Thatch,er call)e under
renewed attack fol" ~uppottjljgJbe.
U.S. raid on Libya because Britain '
apparently had no say over the
weapons U.S. planes carried on the
bombing mission.
Thatcher was challenged In
Parliament Tuesday about the use
of cluster bombs by the Americans.
Television film reports from Ll~ya
Indicated the bombs - designed
prtmarlly to kUl people - were
used In the U.S. raid on Benghlizl.
The bombing raid was earned
out by U.S. F-111 fighters flying
from Britain. Thatcher said that,
whlle British permission was required for use of the bases in
launching the attack, " It Isforthem
to choose the weapons to secure the
defeat of those targets within the
target permissions we gave."
A string of opinion polls showed
about two-thirds of the British
public disapproved of the U.S. raid
on Libya aild Brltain'ssupport role .
Opposltlon Labor Party IXJliilclans expressed concern Tuesday·
about Britain's coni rol over deployment of U.S. weapons - including
nuclear weapons kept in Britain.

undecided or had no response. 12-foot statue of Rhodes, with Ups
Glllmor said the poll proved he was · moving, saying that "statues I:J&gt;Iong . on the Statehouse lawn,
closing the gap on Rhodes.
On Monday, Rhodes released the Gillmor belongs In the governor's
results ct. a Market Opinion Re- offtee."
"This Is Jim Rhodes' sta tue
search poll sbowbtg the former
governor wlth 55 percent, Glllmor talking ," the script begins. "I like It
with 18 and Pfeifer with 12. Fifteen out here. People still look up to me.
percent of those polled were But I'm worried that won't last. I
undecided.
know that Jim Rhodes Isn 't up to
Pfeifer, poking fun at polls another four years as governor. In
commissioned by the other candi- filet, his last term was far from his
dates, said he has tried to be tJ:&gt;st. From where I stand , Paul
straightforward In the campaign by Glllmor makes more sense."
dealing with Issues.
"We are trying to draw a
Pfeifer accused Rhodrs ct. polling
comparison
between Paul Glllrnor
people who illready support him
and GUtmor of interpreting data In and Jim Rrodes, In a light way,"
said Gillmor.
his favor.
GU!mor also t~ Issue with a
One d. GUtmor's JO.second spots,
to be aired in Oeveland, Columbus, Rhodes statement of Tuesday that
Cincinnati, ·Dayton, Toledo and "there·was no deficit" when he left
Youngstown, shows the bronze, office In January 1983.

show he Is the only legal owner of
the animal.
After baking at the registration,
Crow advised the commission and
Batey that the animal would have to
be returned to Hayes. Before the
animal Is returned , Hayes must pay
the boarding and reclaim fees
amounting to ~.50 Crow explained. The oounty must retmruse
the adoptlQn fee to the prople who
adopted the dog he added .
To prevent futu re misunderstandings, Crow advised that a
person signing a release form
should certify that he or she Is the
legal dog o\11ler.

Batey agrEed that this wou ld
prevent. problems.
An animal claim from the
Langsville area was denied by the
board due to the dog w&lt;~rden's
determination tha t the kill was not
reported wit hin the required 72bour time limit.
CoDectlon supervisor
Hired yestcrda"· by the boa:·d to
fill -the position of Utter collection
supervisor though the county's 19ffi
litter grant from the Ohio Depart.
ment r1 Natura l Resources was
Bernard Gilkey. With the hiring of
GilkeY. the county's Utter program
(Continu('(l on page 61

for
.
.
-. .
VISff SET - Ohio Senate President and Republican Gubemalorlal
candidate wm be the guest speaker a&amp; the Meigs County ~ubllcan
Women's Club lnlllltlng Thnr!rday night a&amp; Meigs High School. This l!r
expected to be GU!mor's only appearanre mthis area. Local, district
and !!tate GQP candldales wlll also be pr0rml.

•

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