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-1

'

Page- D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

·Stock trading surges
up after modest loss

•

·I

.!

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I

. I

By ELLEN FREILICH
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK tUPI ) - The
stock market res umed it s 1987
climb last week after pos ting a
modest 'loss ·the week before.
Trading was active during thP
holiday-short ened period .
The week opened with a s w-gr·
or across-the-board bu y in g as
Individual and lns\itutional investors returned from the Pres!·
dent's Day holiday with a revi ved
appetite for stocks.
The Dow Jones indus tri a l average scored a record one-day ga in
of 54.14 points Tuesday , finishin g
at a record high. The index eked
out a nother high Wednesda y a nd
advanced again Thursday. On
Friday, profit takers gave the
blue-c hip barometer it.s first loss
of the week, but it was a mod es t
one.
·
Analysts said the market spent
the las t part of the week consoll ·
dating Tuesday's spectacular
gain.
For the week, the Dow gai ned

ol. 89 point s, endin g at 2235.24, a
329:point advance since the start
or 19R7.
"Th ere is lillie to suggest that
the market 's advance has run its
co urse ," commented Newton
Zinder , E.F'. Hutton technical
analys t.
In the broader mark et, 1,207
iss ues pos ted gains while 7:!6 had
losses amo ng the 2,177 issues
traded .
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stoc k
index rose 5.79 to 285.48. The New
York Stock Exchange composite
index hi! a new high every day
las t week, rising a total of 3.26to
a r·ecorrl 162 .82.
·
Eugene Peroni Jr .. director or
tec hnical research at .Ja nney.
Montgomery Scott in Philadel phia. said the market spent the
las t part of the week going
through "a rotational correc·
lion." in which investors cashed
in some profits m ade on recent
gain s a nd bought selectively
among issues tha t have per·
formed less exuberantly in 1987.
Peroni recommended thai In·
vestors "pa re down" th eir stock
posi tions for the next couple of
weeks to be ready for what is
likely to be a s hort-lived, but
"sudden. sharp setback" similar
to the plunge the market experienced on Sept. 11 ·12.
Peroni sa id the widening probe
into in sider trading might be
damaging to the sec urities Indu stry , but not to the vit ality of
individual s tocks .
On the trading floor, Navistar
was th e mos t acti veNYSE·Iisted
issue . risi ng l Y, to T~. It sa id
Thursda y it expec ts operating
earnings to increase signficantly
!his yPar.
·
AT&amp;T followed , sl ippin g r;, to

2 :H~.

·

Sears was third, climbin g 5%
PROMOTED - Harry M.
McGuffin Jr. , formerly of
Middleport, has been named
assistant manager at th&lt;•
Mitchell PI ant of the Ohio
Power Co. at Moundsville,
W.Va. McGuffin graduated
from Middleport lllgh Sc hool
In 1964 and received his dcgre&lt;'
In electrical engin..,ring from
Ohio University In 1970. He
was then hired as a pcrfor·
mance engineer at the Mit·
chell plant. He advanced to
control supervisor, perfor·
mance supervl•lng engineer,
plant performance superin·
lendcnt and then operation
superlntendenl In 19KI.
McGuflln, his wife and their
two children, Tabitha, 10, and
Heather, 7, reside at Mounds·
ville. lie Is the son of Dorothy
McGuflln, Pomeroy , and the
late Harry McGuffin. The
Mllchell Plant Is a 1,460,000kllowatt, coal-fired plant
hurnlng 3,5110,000 tons of coal
annually.

Multimedia's
(Continued from D·ll
$:171.8 million. up l1 Pl'IT&lt; 'nt fr nm
$:!.16.:1 million lor 1'18o. Th e
compan.v had a nrtloss for · J1lRI;or
$t7 million, co mpan•d with nr t
earnings of $21.6 million fm· I~ H;, .
Th!' 198ii loss rcs ullcd trnm the
lnt&lt;'resl ex penS&lt;' on 1hf' debt
lnrurt·ed a s 11 result or the
rrca pitalization mcr~e r in !alP
198o.
Interest expens&lt;' for J9Rti to·
taled $1 11.9 million. compa red
with $3b.4 million for 19H!i.
lnterQS I expense for the
Incl ud ed $:J8.1 mil lion o r· th&lt;'
amortization of th eor lgin allssu&lt;•
discount for dcbenturr•s.
Revenues for the fourth qu;r r ter wcr·r $100.4 million, up II
percent. Opera tin ~ ca'h fl ow for
the quarter was $40.:1 milli on. up
14 percent . A net lo" of $2.fi
· million was incurred during thr
fourth quart er of I~RG: co mj.&gt;a r&lt;'d
with a net loss or S6.2 milli on tor
the fourth quarter· of l!lRL
During the fourth quarl&lt;'r of
1986, the company_changrd its
method of accou ntin g for pens ion
r~p!'nse to comp ly with F' lnan clal Accounting Standards Board
Sta tement No. R7. This re, uilrd
In increased Op!'ra tlng profit a nd
operating cas h. fl ow of $1. 5
million for 1986. The first 1hrt'l'
quartNs of 1986 will b~ rPs lalo•d
to reflect approslmatrly $1. .1
million of this lncrras&lt;'.

v,.,,.

LYNN ANGELL
Certified Public

Accountant
Preparing Individual
and luslntu
Tax Returns
MONDAY 9 TO 5
QESDAY 9 TO 5
WEDNESA Y 9 TO 5
THURSDAY 9 TO 5
FRIDAY 9 TO 5 .
EVENINGS ALfiD SATUIDAT
IY APPOIIITMEtn
PHONE 448·8677
444 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS. OH . 1

to 5:n~. Amo ng other retailers,

K·Marl jumped 5"/1 to o9 a nd
Fedrrat eu Department Stores
climbed 7% to 941;,.
.J.C . Penney advanced 9'!, to
94'~. It report ed higher fourth ·
quarter earnings and said it
pla ns to s tart a cable television
s hopping serv ice.
Among blue c hips. IBM

February 22. 1987

Dow Jones Weekly Closings

Cincinnati part of project

30 Industrials
February 20. 1987

BOSTON 1UP!) - Seven cit ·
les, Including Cincil·mati, have
been selected to participate In a
natlonaf project that encourages
potenllal high school dropouts to
remain In school while local
businesses pledge to hire rhem
after graduation, officials said.
''The· business community has
to become more deeply Involved
with the educ ational commun·
ity," said Pierce Quinlan, executive vice president of the Natlona!Allian ce of Business:
"They hav e a direct stake in
the product of the schools,"
Quinlan said. "A nd sc hools will
have to begi n to Improve their
product to make the studen ts
marketable."
The "BuslnessEducation Coinpact" gives at -risk students who
reach pre-determined educa·
Ilona! goals the first chance at
entry-level jobs, said Quinlan.
The program is funded by a
federal grant and is based on the
successful "Boston Compact,"
which has built partners hips
between local businesses a nd
school system s to offer jobs to
youths .
The seven cities participating
In the program are Albuquerque,
N.M., Cincinnati, Louisville, Ky .,
Memphis, Tenn., Indianapolis,
San Diego and Seat tle.
The cities were selected be·
cause they di splayed a history o'f
collaboration between business
and education, have potent ial for

jumped sy, to 139 %, General
Electric dropped 2\1, to 101 ,
Eastman Kodak snapped on 1\IH
to 80, USX rose y. to 24 Y, and
General Motors added :Y, to 76'A.
C~rter - Wallace was the week' s
biggest point-loser, plunging 20\(j
to 126 \(j a ft er E.F. Hutton's drug
analyst lowered her opfnion or
the s tock from attractive to
ne utral. Carter-Wallace had
climbed 51% points over the
three precceding ··weeks amid
optimism about prospects for the
company's Trojan condom sa les.
Other pharmaceutical ma nu facturers attracted bu yers.
Merck climbed 10 to 149\1, and
Squibb rose 14 to 148 \1, on

'

•

As a result of the acquisition
and the settlement of the lawsuit,
the shareholders of Michigan
Sealy will receive an aggregate
consideration
of $48.6Themillion,
subject
to adjustment.
acqui·
si tlon and set tlement are subject
to th e negotiation, execution and
delivery or definitive written
agreements and regu latory approval. I he co mpany sa id.
Michigan Sealy had Sealy·
brand sales of about $12.5 million
in 1986.
The Oh io Mattress Co. Is the
world' s larges t bedding manu·
facturer. Through It s wholly
owned subsidiary , Ohlo-Seali'
Mattress Manufacturing Co., the
co mpany acquired controlling
Interest in Sealy Inc. in De·
cember 1986.

POMEROY:
992 5912

·

GALLIPOliS
414 Second Ave., 2nd floor

446-0166 Mon.-Sot.
CLOSED THURSDAY
Also: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens. Chillicothe, Logan
Monday-Friday

. END

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WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
National Governors' Association
executive committee Is backing
a $1 bililon job-based welfare
reform program that apparently
creates conflict with the White
House regar!llng its funding,
though not Its Intent. "
The welfare plan would require
recipients to ·work or to get job
training in order to receive
benefits, and it calls for a bout
three-quarters of the money to
come from the ledera I
government.
President Reagan also has a
w.~Uan! re(or.m propos~! that
Includes worR' requltehlelits, but
It calls for the federal govern:
ment to provide only 50 percent of
the cost. The governors planned
to meet with Reagan today .
At a formal dinner Sunday
·night, Reagan asked the governors to be " a major part of the
solution" to problems such as
welfare reform. Arkansas Gov.
Bill Clinton, the NGA chairman,
responded: "I hope we can reach
common ground. And T think we

•

enttne

·'

•
1 Section, 8 Pages
26 Cents
A Multimedia In c. Newspapet

conversations, refu sed l o co mm r nl \Vhen prpssed

executive, has been faulted by administration
critics and Reagan support ers alike since the
Iran -Contra scandal broke open In November.
The president ha s stood by hi s man. however,
reportedly even against his wife' s urgings tha t
Regan be dis missed .
"This is th e hardest thing in the world for
Ronald Reagan - to fire anyone." one source
sai d.
Mrs. Reagan, who sou rces confirmed is no
longer speak in g to Regan after the chi ef of staff
" hung up on her twice" during telephone

by reporter' at th e Sunday ni ght banquet .
But conservative politica l co lumnist l.Porge
Will, who has become one or firs t lady's
con fidan ts, said on ABC's "This Week with David
Brinkley" Sunday: " !think Donald Regan will be
go ne before we get together next week ...
Mrs . Reagan, sources sai d, brlicves the chief of
sta ff' s "att itude a nd se lf-interes t arc hurling her
hu sband ." i\s one closc_[r iend pul it, for one man
lo "rob I Reagan 1 of his destiny" is intolerable to
her.

Home State Jury
remains undecided
CINCINNATI 1UP II - A Ha·
milton County jury today co ntinued deliberation s in the trail or
three former Home State Sav ings Bank officia ls acc used of
triggering the biggest bank ing
crisis In Ohio histo ry.
On the third day of deliberat ·
lng, jurors mel for ~''h hours
without reaching a verdict Sun·
da y in the case aga inst former
bank executiv es Marvin Wanner,
Burton Bongard and David
Sc hiebel.
The three arc accu sed of
Illegal ly funnelin g millions of
dollars to an insolvent invest ·
ment firm. tri ggeri ng th e crisis.
The sequester ed jurors were
sc heduled to resume deliberal ·
lng at 9 a.m. today . Because of
the complex financial Is sues
presented in the case. the jury or
six women and six men is
expec ted to take at least anot her
day before reaching verdict s on
Services Secretary Otis
THE BRASS - Gov. Bill
MEETING
the more th an 80 charges agai ns t
Clint an of Arkansas, · center, chairman of the Bowen prior to the start of the governors
eac h defendant.
National Governors Association, spoke with IL•soelatlon winter meeting in Washington Sun·
The tr ial is In it s 14th week.
Secretary of the Labor William Brock, left, and day. (UI'I)
Prosecutors co nt rn d th ai
fprmer
bank Hom e State owner
Of the nine-m ember executive
and assured them the goa ls of "demonstration projects" thai
Warner
a nd fo rmer bank pres ichanging welfare into a jobs include jobs and training as· long committee, only Republican
program is not in di spute.
as basic welfare programs, like Gov. Robert Orr -· of Indiana dents Burton Bongard and Da vid
Aid to Families with Depe ndent dis sented from the commi ttee's Schiebel misapplied $11:! million
welfare reform proposal. which In bank depos it ors ' money in the
"We agree on the goals; we Children, are Included.
will be voted on by all governors summ er or 198.1 via 41 "margin
agree on the means . Now we are
ca lls" - payments alleged lv
in search of agreement on the
Dr. Otis Bowen. t he Health a nd Tuesday . Orr said he dla not made to acco unt for markrl
disagree with the program's $1
means of paying for 11," Da n iels Human Services secre tary who
billion fir st-year cos t but ob· fluctuations - to ESM Govern ·
also spoke to the governors
said.
jected to higher cos ts planned for ment Scc ur llles .
The administration's plan Sunday, noted , "Obviously, the
ESM . of Fori Luuderdale , Flo ..
following yea rs when more peo·
would allow sta tes to choose . money situation has to be a great
collapsed
two yea r s ago. with
pie would be serviced .
welfare programs to put into consideration ."
debts of mol'(' th an $300 million.
including $144 million owed to
Home State in Cin cinn at i. When
Homt' Stair depositors learned of
.the loss. thry began a run on th e
Celeste ta lked politics briefly delegates during the primaries 1984 and is co ns idered the fro nt · bank and it closed in jus t a few
d(l yS .
·
during a news conference Sun- a nd caucuses. The "Super Tues· runner this yea r .
Ho me State 's p ro hlcm s
Celeste expressed skepticism
day at the winter meeting of the day" of Southern primaries Is
drained
a priva l&lt; ' insuran cl' fund
welfare
reform
and
a
t
plans
for
National · Governors' Assocla· unlikely to produce a decisive
and
lrlggrrccl
runs on other
rev
is
ions
in
job
trai
nin
g
prolion. He is the au thor of two leader , he said, a nd ma ny of the
ba
nks
by
worried
depositors.
proposed changes In NGA policy officeholders, who automatical ly grams. A key issue . he sa id, Is to
Gol'
.
Richard
Celes
te
rcal't(•d hv
and is scheduled to tell the quality as delega tes. will be less assure the federal _government
ng
iO
sa
,·Jngs
and
loans unlil
closi
Nuclear Regulatory Commission willing to commit their votes docs not drop financi a l support .
they obtained federal insuran ce.
toda y that It should not dilute early . In 1984 , many of · the
Pr osec utors traced 1he roo" ot'
"
A
ser
ious
rwrlfarrl
rrform
Is
state input on power plant safety. officeholders, dubbed suj)('r·
thai
banking rrisls ba c k to Home
going
to
take
money
in
excess
of
The governor said 11 may be delegates, pledged allegiance to the amount the adminis tra tion State's Investment' with F:SM .
difficult for any Democratic Walter Mondal e before many ha s mentioned ." Celeste ~a ld. They co ntend Home Stat e off! ·
candidate to win a majority of primaries were held .
Hart. of Co lorado, was the but he declined to say what the cia ls knew ESM was lnsoiv(• nl
and that the $1 n million In
runner-up for the nom ination In share should be.

Celeste sees .Hart as presidential front runner
WASHINGTON IUPIJ- Ohio
Gov. Richard Celeste predicts a
long battle for the Democratic
presidential nomination, with
Gary Hart the only contender
who might win a majority of
delegates before the national
convention convenes.
" I would be surprised If we
come to Atiant .. (the convention
site) with a clear victor." Celeste
said. "II we do , It will be Gary
Hart.' '

COLUMBUS IUPll - People infected with the AIDS virus
may be asked to provide the names of the ir sexual partne rs so
warnings can get out to people who may have been exposed to
the disease.
·
The Ohio Department of Health pla ns to use such a program to
stop the spread o'f the di sease by people who may not know they
are Infected, health officials say.
Details of the programs have not been decided, but the
department is asking for federal .money to help pay for lt .
Dr. Thomas Halpin, acting health director , said the project
most likely will focus on contacling women first. Women
Infected with the AIDS virus risk passing it on to their babies. he
said.
AIDS. a fatal viral disease spread through sex and through
blood contact, has affected mostly homosexual and bisex ual
men and drug abusers, but Is spreading Into the heterosex ual
popula lion.
Though the practice Is consistent with the way health
departments have tried to control syphilis and gonorrhea
infections, the AIDS program has been mired In controversy
and only a rew jursidtctions have begun notification programs.
Some national gay rights groups fear that a list of names of
homosexuals who may be Infected ·could be misused . They also
have argued that all gay men should know they are at risk alld
already be taking precautions to avoid Infection. ·
·
"When you're talking about a disease like lhls (being notified
that you might be Infected) causes a lot of trauma." said Mike
Smeltzer, a Columbus Health Department o!llclal.
Some researchers discourage the tracking of sexual partners
of AIDS patients because there Is no cure for AIDS and little
. could be done but tell the partners they should; be tested .

1____.,_._ ·-

.-J

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slf\lllar· questions earlier in the day whe n he
returned to the While House from Camp David;
Md, - but sources said the clamor for Regatl's
resignation finally had moved his staunch est
defender.
" !Reagan) Is ready now," one source told
United Press International. "He wasn't goin g to
force someone out to save his own skin" but It has
" happened In the last three or four weeks. It' s in
his (head) that Regan must go.' '
The chief of staff, often praised for hi s six years
of management as Merrill Lynch &amp; Co.'s top

Victims of AIDS virus may
have to give partners' names

/

'

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• J .,

. Mitchell Daniels. the outgoing
White House political director,
addressed the governors Sunday

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WASH~d:rOI\1 (J.IPI) :... Pressured by his wile
and as.S: ~~{e~'...P·r~sldent Reagan Is reluctantly
readr.,to .u.s~. Wl)tt~ Hquse chief of staff Donald Regan o~r/he'door, sourc!s say, and former aides
are being sounded out as replacements.
Reagan and Regan both attended a forma l
banquet for the nation's governors Sunday night,
but the c hief of staff slipped out before news
reporters were allowed In after the dinner, and the
president deflected questions about ~lm.
Looking unhappy,' Reagan had waved aside

Meigs Medical Building
(across from Veterans Hosp.) .

33 6 S. High SJ., Colurmus, 011.
Local Consultation
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. , ., 't:irl W~!te House.~porler

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

AnORNEY-AT-LAW

~

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. Februa.ry 23. 1987

Copyrighted 1887

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

614-221-0888
L W. CENNAMO

Mo•IIY clear tonight with
lows between 25 and30. Mostly
sunny Tuesday with a high
between ~5 and 50. The proba·
b!lity ol precip itation Is near
,.ero through Tue~day.

027
Lou?
22-2-27·36-9-29

at y

Vol.36, No.204 ·~·-~~ ··-

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prospects fo r their respecllve
a,nti-cholesterol drugs.
ICN Phamaceulicals fell5 % to
17. The Wall Street Journal said
the Food and Drug Adminlslra ·
lion and a House panel are
investigating allega tions that
serious side effe cts from the use
of ICN 's Virazole drug have not
been reported.

Ohio Lolt«'l'\'

MRS girls

long -ter m local fundiog and a
commitment by local businesses
to hire program graduates, Quinlan sa id .

DOW JONES AVERAGE - ' The Dow Jones average ol 30
Industrials closed the week ending Friday at 2235.24 for a weekly
change ol up 51.89. (UPI)

Ohio finn planning purchase
CHICAG O (UP I I - The Ohio
Malt ress Co . Friday announced
that It s wholly owned subsidiary,
Ottio·Sea ly Mattress Manufac·
turing Co., has reached an
agreement in principle to acquire for cas h Sealy Mattress Co.
of Michigan Inc.
Mic hi gan Sca ly, the Detroit·
based Sealy licensee, owns 12
perl'ent of the outstanding stock
of Seal.v Inc. Upon completion of·
th&lt;' acq uisition, Ohio-Sealy's ow net·ship of Sraly wou ld be increased to 94 percent.
Lik e Ohio-Sealy, Mi chigan
Sea ly has been in litigation
agai nst Sealy Inc. all egi ng viola·
lions or the anlitrust laws. Sealy
Inc. wa s recen tly found liable for
$45 mill ion in da ma grs aga inst
Mi chiga n Sealy.

w. va .

Syrian troops pledge
end to Lebanese chaos
the people and the militi a pres BE IRUT . Lebanon t UP ! l ence,
.. Kenaan said on televisio n
Thousands of Syrian troops dug
.Sunday.
" All weapons will be
Into west Beirut today fo r the
fir st time In a decade. vowing 10 co nfiscated .
"We will deal severely wit h
end the worst Moslem viole nce In
three years by .shutting down " nv. violatio n." the intelli gence
militia offices, outlaw ing gu n· c hier said. "The leadership or the
men and taking cont rol of the street bosses Is over. The plan In .
Beirut will not be c ut short ."
Mos lem sector.
Thousa nds of militiamen sai d
The Syrian push Su nd ay ended
three years of Moslem militia far ewell to the streets thai were
control that started with a militia their homes for three years,
revolt Feb. 6, 1984 , a nd cas t west c hanged Into civilia n cloth es, hid
Beirut Into a cycle of lawless· th eir weapons a nd shaved. The
ness, wrecked Its eco nom y a nd Syrians suspect bearded men of
drove off Its foreigners with a being allied wllh Moslem fund a·
m entalist ex tremists .
wave of kldnapplngs.
"We will break bones thi s
The 7,000 Syrians were granted
lime,"
a Syrian officer warned .
shoot·tO·klll authority a nd
sources sa id about
Military
planned to sllut down ali militia
offices today to end the worst 7.000 Syrians and more than 100
lighting between th e nation's tanks were fnvolved In the push
nom inally Syrlan·allied militias to the heart of west Beirut, the
first ma jor Syria n entra~ce Into
In three years.
"There won't be a chance lor the Lebanese capita l since the
any disorder," said Brig. Gen. s ummer of 1976. About 1,200
Ghazl Kenaan , chief ot Syrian Syrian troops have been tn west
military Intelligence In Lebanon. Beirut since July. . ·
The Syrians on Sunday halted .
•'We will deploy In positions to
at
the edge or Beirut to secure the
end the suffering and ordeal o!

·--·-·----------------:-•

1

-------

AW i\11'1NCl VERDJC;T Warner. aiHWI', still
awullcd u vcrdld today In his
lrial on chargrs conncded to
tit&lt;• faliur&lt;• nf 11 Cincinnati
~arvin

~avings und loan two years
ago. Warn••r and two olhcr

cxci'Utlves each fn cc more
than XO charges. A llamliton
fQunt .v .iury finished Us third
day of dellheratlon, In lh••
CIL'I! Sunday without r~•achlng
a dl'dston . (l 'l'll
" mar):(in ca ll~" to ESM In th( •
summc&gt;r Of 1 1 1~:1 rf'prCS(•n tcd
llic•g;rl "m isuppliratlon" of bank
fund s.
Warn er . Bongard a nd Sc hiPbci
di,pu ted thai con ten tion , testify
lng !hill th&lt;•y Wf'rl' nrver told by
l' wl on or anyo nl' else thai ESM
wu s lnso lver11. and lhC'V WC'rP

\'lrt lm izeci hv J rraui prrp&lt;'·
tra tr d by ESM offic ial ~ .
They sai d th ev wr rc liM! to bv
l'w ton and oth ~·r I'SM offlclu l.s
but thai the.1· brli&lt;•V&lt;•d th r m .
beca usl' 1hey , wen· friend s and
prrviou s buslnc·s s !run ."iiJ C·Ilons
wrrP SU('Cf'ssful.

The drfrndnn ts " .lid thi s belief
was bo lsl(•rr•rl IJ.v phony audit
n •port s, prrparNI b.v br!Jxod
audi tor .losr l.omrz. that s howed
i'SM ""' financia lly so lid. Ew ·
ton admlttrd hr nrvN told th em
the 11udlt&gt; wPrr' fal sl fl r d.

Syrian lroops move from Shoul
Mountains to Wesl Beirut
LEBANCN

5

·I'

Retugaecamps
m.teo
·..
uPo
'fltoOPS MOVE IN - ThousandH o! Syrian lrnop.' hack&lt;·d lly
t i~nk.• streamed Into Moslem wesl Beirut Sundu.v !nun attempt tn.
crush the bloodiest lighting In three years hetw,..•n Syria's militia
allies. (UPI)
The ar&lt;'a s fit'st sri zed bv t h'
outsk irts and International air·
port and then thrust Into the Syrians were r ontro ll cd b)· th&lt; ·
heart of the Moslem sector, ProgressiV&lt;· Sor·lallst f&gt;artv hu t
taking several areas be lore bed· tanks and tru(•k; latN took up
posit io ns a ro und an Amal
ding down for the ntght.
The Syria n so ldi ers dld not s lronghold
President Am ln Gc mayr l. ·a
encou nter opposition - despit e
last week's lighting between the Maronlte Ca tholi c. call~d th&lt;'
Shiite Amal movement and a n Syrian advan l'l' rrom the Druw ·
alliance of leftists led by the controlled Shouf mountains over '
Druze Moslem Progressive So· looking Beirut " unco nstltu .·
tiona! " and said It was wques r(&gt;(! .
· clallst Party militia.
only by Moslem ministers .
6

I

t,

�Page-2- The Daily Sentinel ·
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio .
.Monctay, February :23; 1987

.Commentary
The ·Daily Sentinel
Ill Cour t Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVQ1ED TO THE INTERES'lll OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
·~

,g~
~v

O"'r\--'-"'T"'

,...,.....,.c:::~ ....

ROBERT L: WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aasla$aat Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

, A MEMBER of The United Press Jnterna Ilona I, Inland Dally Press
A~latlon and the American Newspape r Publishers Association.
•·· LETTERS OF OPINION are w~.:l comc. The-y shoold be less tha n :nl words
10111. Allleotters ar e subJect to editing and m.~st bP signed wllh name, address and
telephone· nUmber. No un signed letters wUI be pu blished. Leiters should be in
good taste, addressing Issues , not personall11es.

Public opinion polls lndlca.te
that the American people are not
greatly Impressed, or eventran·
stently muc h fascinated, by the
Iran icontras revelations. This
reaction Is greatly to thetrcredlt.
These combined De mocratiC·
/ media productions are becom·
lng as stylized as the mating
dance of the whooping cra ne, a nd
only a dullard would fall to notice
th e ritual similarities.
There must, fo r one thing, be a
ne w sensation practically every
day. With the whol e Washington
press corps working overtime to
generate them, th js Is not terri·
bly difficult. A go.od example was

,r.

I

·Don Oberdorfer's breathless re·
part In The Washington !"ost the
other day , to the effect that
Secretary of State Shultz had

("sources say") a "tense'' confrontation with President Reagan In the Oval Office last
)llovember, on ,discovering that
proposed testimony by CIA Dl·
rector William Casey · to the
Senate Intelligence Committee
was "false." The fact that Casey
never actually gave the alleged
proposed testimony was downplayed In the Oberdorfer story,
along with the significant point
that Reagan promptly directed
Attorney General Edwin Meese

to Initiate the lnvestlgatlon that
quickly established the essentlai
facts . .
Ultimately, In the Ideal "scan·
dat," some allegedly criminal
acts ought to be uncovered- else
. why all the hullabaloo? In view of
the tangle of federal legislation
governing the gift or sale of U.S.
arms to foreigners , this surely
ought to be possible In the present
case - though the mas ters of
thes e revels will be disappointed
Indeed If they have to settle for a
highly debatable charge that
Ollie North somehow "unlaw·
fully" encouraged private mil·
ltary aid to the Nicaraguan

~~~.!
we 1~0 f&gt; Aitf&gt;·

wv..!. . 001 1'f.U-.

Brown drops the ball
~n

~

a midwest primary,

:·
By LEE LEONARD
• ..
'
UPI Statehouse Reporter
c9LUMBUS IUPI) - It 's little wonder Iha l a lo t of people don ' t
hav' any con(ldence In the ir government these days.
f'OIItlclans have a nasty ha bll of go ing for the glitzy head lines, ~ut
whf!ll It comes time to pay the bill or take responsibility, they re
noW)Iere to be found.
Tile latest example of somebody looking for a free lunch where
~~~ lsn' t any belongs to Secretary of State Sherrod Brown.
BfOwn wa s In the forefron t of the move to make Ohio part of a
Mld}Vest presidenti al primary to give the Buckeye State more
lnfhwnce on the selection of party nominees for the nation's highes t
offl~, and thu s more c lout In Was hington.
SoUnds reasona ble enough.
Idea was to link Ohio with the Illinois primary In early March,
and)efhaps ge t Minnesota, Wisconsin and other near by sta tes to join
In a•Mtdwes t regional primary.
Bibwn held a tot of press conferences promoting the idea. He called
It ttli Heartland Primary , and sol d it to the Ohio G£&gt;nera t Assembly
las t,ear.
Tiere was one catch. Ohio' s regular· primary is in May. Loca l
poliJ'Ica l pa rt y chairmm like to have time to rec ruit ca ndidat es,
AdYijnctng the primary election would cra mp their s tyle and shorten
the !und· ra tstng period.
ScJ:there would have to be a March presidential pr imary, and then
the ~ormal primary in May .
ADother catch - two primaries would cos t county boards of
t&gt;lec1lons a n extra $5.2 million to set up the voting machines and pay
poll~orkers. Brown 's bill pledged tha t the state would cover the.cos t.
B~ when he made up his 1988·89 budget req uest, Brown drdn t put
any1'1'1oney In for the ex tra cost. He put ple nt y of other money in- a 29
per~ent Increase for 1988 a nd 7,7 percent for 1989. but no money for ,the
'pretidentlal primary.
.
At' a press conference last week, an em barrassed Brow n sard he
"astumed" Gov , Richard F. Celeste would put it In the bud g£&gt;1.
" I didn ' t think it belong£&gt;d in our budget," said Brown, the only state
offi cial In charge of conducting etect'lons.
Where did he think It be longed. in the Department of Na tural
Resources budge t? Or maybe 'the Lottery Commiss ion ? .
.
Brown sa id he thought Celes te would make a s pecia l a ppropria tion
to reimburse the county boards of elections.
But he didn 't, a nd now Celes te a nd others are saying Ohio can't
afford two primar ies and will have to mak e do with one In 1988.
Brown ts betwee n a rock a nd a hard place. If the regular primary Is
moved to March. loca l Democrats will be mad at him. If the
presidentia l primary Is moved bac k to May, he' ll have to kiss th e
Heartland Primary good bye.
So Brown is fever ishly working with legisla ti ve leaders to cover his
own Incom petent miss tep and come up with some money to fund two
primaries.
Gov. Celeste could be of some help In this area. si nce he signed the
bill moving the· president ial primary to March.
The rest of his budget Is propped up with a var iet.v of minor taxes
and fee Increases, For a mere $2.89 fee assessed eac h voter- l ~ss
than the cost of a fa sUood lunch- the expenses oft he primary will be
covered.

'f6t

Letter to the Editor
.Call for

re.~ponsible

ownership

In re~ard to the ongoi ng · breeds wh ich ma.1· be jus t as
controversy regarding pit bu ll da ngerous.
terriers ," one ••xtremety im por·
With th e in creasing number of
ta nt factor mus t be addressed,
sel'rrr or fatal a ttac ks by vicious
resll'\nslble pet ownership.
dogs, it is imperat ive that com·
munities begin to exam ine th eir
Unfortunately. the growmg
present anim al co nt ro l laws. Th••
problem of sevcrt' dog a tt acks is
directly linked to the irrespons l· Humane Socic t;· of the United
States is opposed to bt'('('d spe·
~tllty of pet ow ners a nd or
breeders. Ma ny dogs continue to ct fic bans and/ or regula ti ons.
be bred without rcga.rd to rheit' howPVPI', Pncouragps munirip.altemper ment . Often t im!'s. there lties to assess thei r cur rent
ts no a ttempt eva lu a te the problems and the reasons wh;•
potential aggressiveness of lhf· l'Xisting l.tws arf' inrffC'C'tivC' and
animals nor Is time and co nsider· unenforcea ble. Good regulations
atlon given to soc taliz&lt;' these should recognize that a ny dog
a nimals during a cr itical penod can become da nge rous under the
wmng situa tion a nd mu st include
of their development.
Anothe r link con tributing to stro ng penalties for persons who
allow pNs to roa m free. It Is tim"
1he dog·bltechal n is tha t through·
out the United State~ the pit bull that the bu rden of pu nishment
terrll'r ts bred and trai ned in the stop bei ng placed on th e a nimals
Illegal sport of dogfight mg. Thrs a nd ins t&lt;:&gt;ad on the Irresponsible
factor tn part ic ular has co ntrlb· pet owner who Is the direct ca use
utcd to the Increased numbers of or dangerous Incidents.
Tina Ne lson
pit bulls. especially In urban
Program
Coordinator
areas .
\
Humane
Society of
AlthOugh with rec&lt;:&gt;nt publicity.
the United States
the pit bull has ear ned the
R&lt;:&gt;glonal Office
reputation of the most vicious
Bowling Gre&lt;:&gt; n. Ohio
breed of dogs, there are ot hrr

'roday in history
By United Press lnternallonal
Today Is Monda y, Feb. 2:1. the 54th day of 1987 with 311 to follow.
Tht&gt; moon Is moving toward Its new phase.
The mornlnR s tars are Venus a nd Sa turn .
The I'Venln!l stars are Mercury, Mars a nd Jupiter.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
E nglish diarist Samuel Pepys In 1633: German co mposer Georgo
Frederick Handel in 1685: Meye r Amschcl Rothschild, banker and
foundt'r oi the Rothschild llnanclal dynasty of Europe, In 1743;
manufacturer WI I It am Horlick, originator of malted milk. In 1846:
black writer and phllosoph&lt;:&gt;r W.E .B. DuBois In 1868; film director
VIctor Fleming t "Gone With ThE' Wind ," "The Wizard of Oz"l In
' 1883; journalist Willia m Shirer !"Rise and F'all of the Third Reich" 1
In 191M t age 831, and actor PetE'r Fonda In 1939 (age 48 ).
\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A requ,est to
WASHINGTON - National
Security Adviser Frank Carlucci
has secretly asked Texas blllio·
nalre H. Ross Perot to drop his
Investigation of a top Pentagon
official's links to an organized·
crime figure. Perot had been
asked by President and Mrs.
Reagan to conduct the unofficial
Investigation.
The official, Assistant Defense
Secretary Richard Armitage,
became a subject of controversy
a lter he wrote a letter on behalf
of a VIetnamese woman ~efugee
a rrested for running a gambling
operation tied . to hlgh ·level
organlzed·cr tme figures in the
Wash)ngton , D.C.. area. In the
le tter, writte n to a Virginia court
on Defense Department station·
ery, Armitage asked the court to
"show mercy" to the woman.
Sources told our assoc iate
Corky Johnson and Donald Gold·
berg that Carlucci asked for a
meeting with Perot early this
month. At the meet ing, Ca rlu cci
c ited Armitage's value to the
Pentagon a nd asked Perot to ca ll
off his Inv estigation. Armitage
was one of the few Pentagon

b~ck

contras during the brief period
when Congress was barring the
use of public funds for' that
•
purpose.
What the "scandal" squad is
really after, of course, is Ronald
Reaga n's scalp, and the truly big
news Is that they aren't even
close to getting II . The president' s motives throughout were
depressingly honorable; there
Isn't a scintilla· of evidence that
he knew about the alleged
diversion of some arms saie
proceeds (now down from $30
million to $2 million) to the
contras; and, far from trying to
cover up the facts; President
Reagan quickly ordered his own
attorney · general to Investigate
them, appointed a blue·r,lbbon
commission to review the actions
of the National Security Council,
and then sought and obtained
appolntmept of a sprolallnvesllt
gator to prosecute any criminal
acts that may hav e been
committed.
• ,. .,
That may be why the presl·
dent 's enemies are hanging on
for dear life to the " discrepancy "
between the recollection of
former NSC director Robert
McFarlane, that Reagan orally
approved Israel's Initial sale of
antl·tank missiles to Iran In
August 1985, and the recollection
of practically everybody else In
the White House that Reagan
only gave the go·ahead for s~ch
sa les In January 1986.
Unfortunately for his critics,
nothing much (from the presl·
dent 's stand·point) seems to
hinge on whether he gave his
approval In Augu st or January .
. From McFa rlane 's standpoint,
there is a difference, since If
there was no presidential appro·
val In August , McFarlane was
a ppare nt ly co un tenanci ng a
techn ic ally Ill ega l Israeli sale:

off__.J_ac_k_A_nd_~r_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~_an_A_t_ta

officials who knew about the Ira n tton, the refugee referred to the
arms dea l before It was dis· Pentagon official as a "very good
~ losed. He also served on a
friend ." .
National Security Council anti·
"When I have restaurant In
terrorist committee.
· Arlington (Va .l. he come to m y
Perot has refused Ill discuss restaurant. and eat often ."
any co~versatlons w'tth White O'Rour ke told commission lnves·
House officials concerning ttgators, " He very good friend ,"
Armitage,
O'Rourke said Armitage had
Both Armitage In his official vtstied her home at least "10 or
capacity and Perot as a private 20" times since 1978 for " drink ·
citizen have been . deeply In· tng" and socializing . .
valved In the Issue of American
In his letter to the VIrginia
prisoners of war le ft behind tn cour t, Armitage said he had first
Southeast Asia. As we reported met O'Rourke In Saigon. where
recently, the Reaga ns personally she also had operated a resta u·
asked Perot to look Into allega· rant. In an Interview last year.
lions that the searc h for survlv· Armita ge denied any tmproprtng American POW's had been iety in his friendship with her and
badly mishandled.
said he was unaware of any link
Perot began checking Into between O'Rourke and organized
Armitage's connection with the cri m e ,
Vi etna mese refugee, Nguyet
Neither O'Rourke's testimony
O'Rourke, after we revealed tha t nor Armit age's Int erview was
the now ·defunct President's included in the crime commls·
Commission on Orga nized Crime stan 's published final reports.
Meanwhile. pollee affidavits
had Interrogated Armitage on his
relationship to O' Rourke. No and Internal court records ob·
transcript was ever made of the tal ned by us descr ibed O'Rourke
Armitage Interrogation, but ac· as running a major gambling
cording to a commission trans· operation that handled upward of
crlpt of O'Rourke's conversa· $50.000 a weekend In the VIrginia

suburbS&amp; of Washington. The
operation reportedly Involved a
hlgh·level underworld ga mbler
and loan shark.
While await tng trial on the
gambling charges that prompted
Armitage's plea for leniency ,
O'Rourke and a companion were
arrested fl eeing an Ille gal gam·
bUn g join In Silver Spring, Md.
According to pollee Ill es,
O'Rourke's companion had shot
up the place wit h a semi·
automatic weapon. O'Rourke
served a short jail term on the
original ga mbling charges.
At Perot's request we fur ·
nls hed him documents concern·
ing Armitage's relationship with
O'Rourke. Perot subsequently
told VIce President George Bush
and other high administration
officials that Armit age's conduct
was Inappropriate for someone
in his sensitive position. " What
does It take for a U.S. govern·
merit official to Jose his security
clea rance?" Pe rot asked the vice
president, acco rding to sources.
Footnote: No one could tell us
why Carlucci was so anxious to
intervene on Armitage's behalf.

Focusing on food _______G_eo_rg_e_M_cG_o_ve_rn
A deca de ago, the U.S. Senate
Select Committee on Nutrition
and Human Needs, which I
chaired, issued Its report, " Die·
ta ry Goals for the United
States."
The committee's hearings es·
tabllshed that six of the 10
leading killer diseases In the
United Sta tes were dtet·related.
The committee concluded that
"the eating patterns of this
ce ntury represent as crlt teal a
publlc· hea lth concern as a ny now
before us.''
This was the first comprehen·
slve stat ement Iss ued by the
federal government on risk fac·
tors In our diets.
"A si mple fact Is that our di ets
have changed radically within
the last 50 years, with great and
ofte n very harmful effects on our
health," said. the report. "Too
much fat , too muc h sugar or sa lt,
can be a nd are linked directly to
heart di sease, cancer obesity and
stroke, among other klller dis·
eases." the committee found.
E\efore the first world war,
Americans consumed a higher
percentage of vegetables, fruits
and whole·graln cereal. There
was less fat , sugar and highly
processed foods . In the early
1900s, about 40 percent of the
American diet consisted ofveget·
abies, fruits and gra in prod~ cts.
Today the percentage Is half
that.
In 1976 the average American
consumed 125 pounds of fat and
100 pounds of sugar. Americans
averaged nearly a can of soda a
dally.
The comml ttee report laid out
seven dietary guidelines, which
ca lled on Americans to reduce

their intake of fat. sugar. sa lt and these workshops take a critica l mus t learn to prevent disease
choleste rol and to Increase the look at " Dietary Goats" 10 years through sound eating habits.
late r, to see how Its recommen·
"Since 1975, as a profess ional
per,centage of carbohydra tes vegetables, fruit s and gra in datlons are being tncqrporated in the social·services field , I have
products.
by soclal-servtce professionals seen the Implementation of ex·
Into
their efforts.
tremely poor dietary practices
These goa ts challenged the
Soclal·serv
tces
professionals,
within the confines of numerou s
public to consume tess meat,
eggs, butter, cheese, whole milk like the rest of us, have not agenc ies." observes Erenrtch.
a nd products high In sugar and to gener ally given nutritional con· Let's hope efforts by Friendship
House and others to focus more
rely more on poultry, fish , skim cerns high priority.
If
we
wa
nt
.to
reduce
America's
concern
on thi s challenge will
milk and ma rgarine.
burgeo
ning
medica
l
bills,
we
bear
fruit
.
When the committee's report
first came out. It wasattackedby
livestock producers. egg produc·
ers, dairy Interests and sugar ·
products producers. It was ques·
tl o n ed by so m e h ea lth
professionals. But In a surprls·
tngty short time " Dietary Goals"
has come to be accepted as the
measuring rod for n ational nut rl·
Ilona! standards.
The report was largely en·
dorsed by the surgeon general.ln
1979. It was virtually duplicated
In the di etary recommendations
of the U.S. Department of Agrl·
culture In both the Carter a nd
Reagan admlnlstratlons.lts find·
lngs have been largely confirmed
by the National Institutes of
Health.
Even the major food produc·
ers, farm groups and commer·
clal Interests have largely ac·
cripted the committee's findings.
Friendship House In Washing·
ton, D.C. -a la rge soclal·servlce
agency - Is conducting work·
shops for soelal-servlce workers
to evaluate the Impact and ,
relevance of "Dietary Goals" on
America's poor, aging, disabled
and vulnerable citizens.
Under the direction of Beryl C.
Johnson, Friendship House exec·
" WOW! Reallnteracfive televlsionl"
utive director, and Susan Eren·
ric h, development director,

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3:••
•.-&lt;

Rio Grande undisputed MOC champion=:·

Who cares about.scandal?___w_illia_m_A_._RU.S_h_er

Ohio Politics
•

MQ!,day, February 23, i987

.\~

•' ..,·: ~.

'

'

.

.

'

·~· ,

RIO GRANDE, Ohio tUPI) Se nior guard Mike Smith con·
nected on 14 of 15 free·throw
a tt empts and finished with 25
points to lead Rio Grande to a
102·83 victory over Ohio Domin i·
ca n Sa tur day night In a Mld·Ohio
Conference ga me.
With the victory, Rio Grande,
25-7 overall and ll·:l in the MOC.
clinched the undi sputed teague
title.
Wals h and Rio Gra nde ent ered
conference play Sat urday night
tied fo r the lead. However,
Cedarv ille upset Wals h, 68·66,
knock l·ng the Cavs out of a
co-c ha mpion s hip or t ri ·
championship.

'

•

' ,,

1'

Doug Hoover (30) in Saturday's regularseasonMOC finale at L.yne
Center: Verhoff pumped in 20 markers as the Redmen won, 102-81,
to capture. the 1986-87 Mid-Ohio Conference·ca ge crown.

Meigs girls hit AA.
tourney trail tonight

1\ ~h l an cl6t.

sa id,

" Wt•

Box scorC':

night.

Tu 1·kt•r , .l-1 ·'! ·15;

Thr loss dr oppPd \I'a bh to 21· !I
overall and Ill· ~ in llw MO C, a

"''"' " ""'" ''..

~3of36attempt ror91.7percent .

game. Our shot selectio ns were

gamP b&lt;.~ck

good and we had the right pro pte
at the lin e."

Law horn added, "They tO hio

ol IPa~uf' chJmpk&gt;n
Hio G ran dt' . 1 he Redm&lt;'n
el inchcd 1lu· co nfcrf'n cc till( '

on Feb. 25. 1970, (90 percent).
Smith set an individual Rio
. Grand e m ark for fr ee throw

Dominican ) play ed welL Thpy

Saturda.1· night with a 102·X:I
virt or.v O\'f' l' Ohio Dom iniC'an .

ha ve 1o be 1hP most improved

CPdc.~rv il lf'.

percent age, hi tting .933 fro m the
charitY' line. Previous mark was

team in lhe co nfere nce. II was u
fitting wa y for our se nior:s -

·held . by Ron Lambert aga inst
Georgetown , set on Feb. 6, 1971.
a t .928.
Saturday 's effo rt by thr Red ·
men marked the eighth fime this
winter Coa ch Jolin Lawhor n's
qui ntet has hit 100 or more point s.
In final MOC play, th e Redmen

Mike Smith, Joe Ver hoff. a nd
c heerleader Leda Ha mmond to bow out. "
Dr·. Ray Boggs present ed .lor
VNhoff with the gamr ball for hi s
2,000 career points pr io r to the
opening tipoff.
Se nior forward ,Joe Verh off

RQCK SPRINGS - Miller's
Cheryl Doughty scored 24 point s
to lead the Lad y Falcons to a
o1·29 wi n over Sout hern's Lady
Tornadoe In class A sectional
tournament play here Sa turday,
Mil ler, now 8·13 a nd the tour·
ney's number two seeded tea m.
advances to the sectional final s
against Southwes tern (4·15), who
drew ; the fi rst ro und bye, on
Saturday, February 28 at l p.m.
Southern bows ou t the season
with a 6·1.1 mark .
South ern stayed with the Lady
Falcons for two pe r iods, tra iling
23·17 at the hal f after lead ing
12·10 by the first quart er's end,
bul Miller outscored the Lady
Tornado&lt;'s 14·4 during the third
stanza to takeco mrn a nd a t 37·21.
Crys ta l Hill pa ced So uth ern
wit h eight point s while Rachal'l
Re iber finished wi th sev&lt;'n. Mi·
chelle St il es, Val Toth. and
Doughty'
24 wit
six points
Rhon,
da s Toth
cohmpth:nent
ed
.
·
each .
Mtll ~r' outgoatcd Sou the rn 22·
12 and made seven of 1:1 free
throws to4 per cenn while the
Lady Tornadoes could mu ster
tiut five of 16 r:n per cent I at th e
fo ul lin e.
Box scor e:

Rt•i•glt• f).l~lt. Karla S m il\ 1 li·U·U.'I'f1'1' \ U.t

I:!·HB.
By tjuarte•r)o :
Su yUwrn .. .............. ... ! ~
1\tilh•r ... , ................... Ill

I

,:i

H - '! I!

t:t II II - .-,1

Karl A. Keblor, Jr. E.A.
"Enrolled to Practice Before
the Internal Revenue Service."

mc&lt;Jnwhi iP.
proved t o Hi-9 ;.1nd f). A

im ·

tl'i na l

Rand!·

noh Walte·n•,

fH · I:I:

r.:r." ' ~"""" Mtonu.

t n •: ' ""'~ """"'· :1·1·0.9: B•lan

II:Ln·••)'. 1· 0-K: .l nlln Walt t•nc, -1-0.M; Tim
nr :msrum . 1.,. 1.:1.1i: ·l u..tc lh mllton, :!-fl.~ .

, " ' " , ."•· ···"'·'"

uu , •.11 "/J/ cJo _·,
Mlkt• Smith~
.r.w \ 'i•rhoff, 6-2-2-20; Ron
Htolloo , ,.,., "'""' ''""""'' K•y moro•, H
H · U·25:

11 : nuu11 F ugt, I· H I: Mnrt· C:othard.:l-:t·K;
Huh . llu· k~nn , 1-5·1: Kay :-il nglt!l nn. H ·6:
.lu hu Lmnht·ll,-, IJ.'! ·t; .Jell' White•, I·G-2 .

I
'
"
·
I MOC Standings
ThPh-foo t·9 SimPrl y hit a lay up

,,, ,,

/111\/1\ /I 1\

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1- lhw I n 1111 ln d lg:l hlt · phl,\'t 'r , ~1\' NC '
"·a~ fnrnd In forft •ll 11 ~ first t•lght
\ it ·l urit'lo. l IIICI II~ 11111~1 ' wt•re· t "'II \' lt· lorlt ~
11\N Otliu Uuminle ·a11 a nd an ulll l'l' UKllill "l
l ' rh ana.
S:lllll'd a , ··., rl ' !&gt;ol i lb
I t;tl01n Ilk fiK \\ al~h WI
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HIO Cilt/\/'ti' IJI•: I ll'~ tll1in f)uminl n LII l!:t
'IHfln j ~ l'r h:m a 7 1

~JI

JAC!i.SON Ptli.E · Rl 3S WESl
PhOne 446· 45-l.t

..

BARGAIN 14ATIN£ES SATURDAY I
SUNDAY · All SEATS 12 50
ADMI SSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

THURSDAY~

~·RUARY 20 lhru ~
FRJOAY thru

..
...

qUESTION: I have all my W ~2's toaether and have
hsted my item i&gt;ed deductions. I received SIOO in
interest from a saving and loan association but I
have nat received a form 10991ram them. Must I
wait until I get his 10991iolore I cen tile my return?
ANSWER: No it is nat n~Cessary to tile form 1099
with your taK return. The 1099 ~ merely an intorma·
tion statement that tell s you and the IRS the
amount of interest paid on yi)ur account during the
y~r. It is a coed idea to verify theamount with the

..

..

savinas firm in order to ensure that ft agrees with

the amou~t 10110rted to the IRS.

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

H&amp;RBLOCK
IHE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

·
l~~~~~~~~~P~H~~~~~~~~~~~O~H~.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

..

~iii.I.ER CllJ - fht•r.\·1nelu.hty ll·'!·t·t
Still'S :1-0·6, Val 'l'ulh :!· ~·li,
fth ondu Tnth ~ ·:!· fi. Sh•·ll~· Nimons '!·l._t
fllt'rvlllod ~&lt;~ on :!· Hi. TOTAJ ..ioi :!:!· 7-iU .
SOi.JTHf; R~ ('!!H - R:.a daac•l Ut•llt,•r
l\lldu~h·

..

.,

,,

:1· 1·7, Tanuny Til, •l:o!&gt;i 1-ll-'!, lll alli&amp;Simpscm
11· 1· 1, ·l1 ·n11ll t•r t\rnnld HI·'!, .\n gil! Hm~ l h·k

:!·0·-1. l 'rystal Hill :l-·!·K, nawn . Ju h n ~tm
1· 1·:1, Rt •t•ky \t'ln1•hr e•nm•r 1·0-:!, Tnu·c·.\'

In d iLum pull .~ .1!1
Rald~o~ln · WWinc · c •

W

Rio draws Tiffin ·in

('upltul73. :'llcn1nll'nl"n~.1
Htllu ,._..urlhe•r n 1~. ~~~~ ~klnl{lun J·!

" 'll h•p,hc•r r.: li:l. l lltc•rhc •ln H'!

lb ldPihc•rJ: ~1. Ohlu U l'" h',\',111

~~~

,\llc •,~~; bt • n,''

District ·22 tourney

1l' :1) f.l, Ohc•rlln 71i
fh •nbun/11. C'a~c· RPl'Pr\t' tt:l

\\'tlliMc·r·U Kl•n,·u n 110
( 'c• diU'\'IIIf' ~. \\' nl.~ h till
)hltiiM'Ii!l. :\It \'t•rnon !\'a1. ti l

1.

Uiu I Irun de· !Ht Ohio ll unlhli• 'illl

~:1

T1Uin 71!. t 'rlmna 71
Andc•r,&gt;jtn (Jml\ l!t nl~tfltu n ll:l
fo1ntii LI,l ' !1!1. \\ ll mlnr.::tnn ~ .i

U.vkt• K:t, l"olnl l' ~o~ rli II';~) 67
' l)t•fhlll \'1' Ill!, :\l k h·Ht•:triNcrn li:!

~AKE IT A.RULE...

USE WANT ADS. •·
ARANDY
.
TOOL
•

The Daily Sentinel
(US I'~

Numher eight Dyke plays al numher one Findlay and No. 7
Tiffin plays at No.2 Rlo ·Grande at 7:30p.m. Thursday In ftr.t
round play of lhc 1987 District 2'l NAJA playoffs.
·
In other District 22 playoff games determined Sunday. No. 6
Malone will play al No.3 Wals h and No, 5 De ltanc!' plays at No.~
Cedarville on·Thursday . •
Winner of I he Findlay-Dyke game will play th• • Cedarvill e·
Defiance winner and the winner of the Tiffin· Rio G rand•• gam e
will hattie the winner of the Walsh-Malone game on Monday,
March· 2. Finals will be held Thursday, March 5. Winner will
advance lo KansiL~ City, Mo., for a.• year's District 22
rcpresenlatlvc.
Tickets for Thursday's post·season game may he purchased
at Lyne ('.enter.
, , '
The Rio Grand e women will hattlt• Malone College at 7: :!0
p.ni. ai'·Lyne Center Tutosday in flr.t round play of I he Wom en's
Dis tri ct 22 playoff.•.

J.l ti-9tiiH

,\ Di\1 L-.lun ul o'VIull lnwd la. hit '.
Pu bl ishnl ow r~· afl f'rnoon. M111HI:I\
F r tfla~ · .
m rro~· . Ohi q. I)~

lh rnu.t;h

Ill r nur·t St .. P1l·
lht· Ohln V,lll t'\' r u h·
fishin g CniJlpcmv Mulrim1'11la. lnt·..

Pomf'r o~· . Ohio .j :1'ili~ . Ph . 'l~2· 21~h Sp.
m nd d us~ pns ta gl' paltl ;rl fl(lmr-n &gt;\',

Ohio.

~...

'

'

Mr-mb r t•: Unllr•d Pr· N'~ dnt1 •rnatic tn :1l .
1n l:mrl D:\1 r v PrPss A :-o~ t 'ICl a1ton an !It h~ '
Ohio Nt•wsPnp rr Ass()(·lq tl on t'&lt;~! Irma I
Advrrt lsln,a: Rr•prNH' nt a f, l\'t' . Branh :rm
N{'\.l.·spapPr S:tlc-s. 7:rl 'thi rd Avrnur- .

.

]'J{"\4' Yo r k. Nrw Ynrk HI01i.t .

.

POSTMASTER : ~·nd addn &gt;s~ dl :lii.gto:tn Thr

Lawhorn

Miller defeats SHS
girls in A tournament

THE PLAINS - Th e unde· mus.t star t f as t ~r if they ca n
Ce aled Meigs Maraud erett ,•s t20· kn ock off their arc h·rivals from
0) hit the tourname nt trait
Albany a third time.
tonig ht a t At hens High Sc hool in
'We \nu st get off to a bett er
the girls class AA sectiona l star t tha n in the first two games.
against a . powerful Alexander
In those ga mes . we scored a tota l
Lady Sparta n five !17· 41 .
of 13 point s com bined In the first
Aiexander thumped winless qu·art er, We didn' t shot well
Belpre (0·211 56·15 in first round eit her · !(•me t27 per cent a t
action last Thu rsday while Coac h A texa n ~er and :m per cent at
Ron Loga n's Maraud erettes had Meigs ) ·while Ale;xa nd er shot 60
a fi rst round bye. The Alexander~ per cent at Meigs and outre·
Meigs game at 8 p.m . follows a 6 bounded us by eight. but we st il l
p.m . game, Nelsonv ille · Yo rk !7· won. On the other hand , Alex·
131·Sherldan i8·9i. The two ander must wonder what they
winners will meet for the sec· have to do in order to bea t us ,'
tiona! champio nship on Thurs· comment ed Logan .
day, February 28 at 8 p.m.
Alexa nder, whose four losses
Th e Maraud &amp;rettes a nd Lady include the two to Me igs,
Spa r tans have met twice th is Federa i·Hocki ng, an d Athens,
year and both were won by the are · Jed by three · returning
MHS lasses in the final seconds. star ters from ·last vear's·· 18· 4
At Al~xa nde r. Me igs won .17'36 · squad. 6·0 Audra ·Burke. 5·8
on Julie Miller field goal with Christy Daughert y. a nd 5·8Missy
Kee fer. Ot her starters on the tall
three seconds left. Later at
Meigs, MHS putted out a 47·45 Alexander five will be5·8.Maure:v
· decision on .1 eriny Miller's two Dicken and 5·9 Kassle Wright.
free throw s wlth '12 ~eco nds left.
Th e Marauderettes , · who
tn both gam&lt;:&gt;s . Meigs ad trailed moved to 6th place In last week's
'AP class 'AA sta te ranklngs , are
by 10 points ea rly In the gall)e.
Coac h Logan feels h is charges · slated to start 5·5 junior Tammy
· Wr ight arid 5·6 senior Jenny
Couc h at gua rds, 6·0 sen ior Juli e
Ohio scores
Miller a nd 5·8 senior Jenny
Olilu rnll• •l:'t' R:1.~ j(l'lhall Kt'!&lt;tull:o.
Swartz
at forwards, and fi.1
Oh lu Stott• Ill\, .~ lnnt'!&gt;olu ";":I
senior ,Jenny Mi ller a t center.
Hnwii•JI: 1; rt•t•n ~~. ~II ami ~fi
~~ · nt ~ tuh · ll t. Tul•·••• '77
,
The Me igs bench consists of
CHtlullnh· 711, \\'•-slt•r n ~111'1tl\J
( 'lt"'t'hllld KI Ill. Ct•ntn&amp;l Mlt•ll HI I
juniors 5·7Shelly Stobart. 5·10
llll)'tnn .~ . 1\tur •l•~ ·ll!· li
·
We
ndy Fry, 5·4 Dee Henderson.
X u\·lt •r Ill , Oml H.uiM'r l!. ':':I I ~U I I
,\krnn 71i. .\111rmy i'l tuto • ti6
and sophomores 5·11 Missy
1\nMin l 'l'll,\' IIIIi. \ ' nun ~o.o:-t uw n i'il H9
Woods , Beth Ewing, and .J od i
"'rl~hi. St l it Sttrinl&lt; .\rhur 1)111'11 1 iB
Taylor.
,\11-rt·,,·hurst tl'11 1116, C'••nl nal St 71!
Murii •Uu 7~ .

Coach

to push Cedarville a hea d 65·64 a t
the : 22 mark a nd returned lo seat
Wa lsh's fat e wit h a pair of free
thr ows with eight second s
rcm~ .in i n g.
.
.·
'
Mrke F'r eem~n and Edd ie
Wakc!Jc ld contnbutcd 14 points
apiece for Cedarvill e, while
Dav id Yeag!'r added 10.
Wa lsh. whi ch led by 15 early In
the game and 34·29 at th~ ~a\!6
was pated by Mike Slk?r a s
poi nt s a nd Allen Wa lker s 14. .
In o th ~r MOC games ... rt was.
Malonr 1&gt;9. Mt Vernon Nazarene
r;~ and TH!Iry, 7~. Urbana 71.

we re a c hamplonsftip ca Iibn•
team ton ight and dom inated the

a new Lyne Cent er n•co rd . The

VERH~F;F PRJVt:S -l!lo Grande' s Joe Verhoff fak es a pass ~o
outside, then drives Inside for a layup against Ohio Dominican s

The · Redmen outrebounded
OD, 36·12. Verhoff picked off 10.
Bob Walters had four for the
Panthers. The v isi tors shot :l4 of
61 fro m th e fi eld fo r 56 perce nt. At
the lin e they were 10 of 14 for 71
percent . Both teams had 1o
tur novers. Rio had 22 as sists. OD
20. Raymore had se ven for the
wr'nners, Ra ndy Tuck er had
sevenfor Ohi oDominica n.

added 20 points for Rio Gr~ nd r
Rio, while Ron Rininger and
AnthonyR aymore ro ntrtbu ted12
a nd 11 , resp('('t ivo ty .
The bcn r h pla yed wdl, (JC·
co unting for 2R of the wrnncr'
points.
Ohio Domini can. 6·21 and 5·9.
was pa ced by point guard Rand y
Tuckrr 's 15 poin ts and forward
Bob Wall r rs' J:l.
·
Cc darvillt• ti~ .. \\'al' h 66
CANTO N - Cr ntN Don Si ·
merl yscort'ti !nurofh is l li potn r&lt;
In the !rn a! 22 sPco nd s to rgnrt &lt;'
Cedarvill e to a tiR·Iili upsl'r of
Wal sh in an importan t Mid·Ohi o
Confprcnr(• gnmP Sa t urda v

The Redmen beat Ohio Domini·
ca n at the free·t~row lin e, hitting
old mark.was set agains1l3rbana

,,

wre tops In both tea m offense a nd
field goa t percentage this yea r .
Sa turd ay, the Redm en con·
nected for 3:1 of 54 for 61 p&lt;:&gt;rc£&gt;nt
from the field. includi ng th ree of
four th rl'l'·point attem pt s.

oa rlv

SPntinf'L 11 1 f i\UI'I ~1 ..
~· ~1!.

Pomrm.' '· Oh.lo ~ !i7n!L

~·

'

St r B.~! ' RII'TIO N RATf:s
R:v ('urriN or Mol or Rontl'

·

One' Wf't'k....................................\1 .11
On r Monlh ... .. ........ .. ....... ..... S:CA~
Onf' Yf ·~ r r ..................
.. ..... ~~. f('l
HINGLE (OP\'

PRICE
Dally .. ..... ....... ........... .......... 25C('m s
Subsrrlb£'r!l no1 drs Ir· l n~ 1o pt~ ,\' r he •t•arr!N may rf'rnll In ad\ 13n('(' dhw·t 10
Th r Dallv Sf'ntlm~ on a .1. n or 12 m onth
basi~. C r'r d !! will he' f;!'IVPTI I'Otrrhor ra«; h

wrrk.

' .

.

NOT.ICE

3 IN · 1 RESTAURANT
IN POMEROY

Will Be Closed
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
FEB. 24 &amp; 25
FOR REMODELING

No subscrlpl!ons by m :rll prr·m fn('(] In
a rra~ whrrr hom'' t•nrrlrt :q"&gt;rvl cf' Is

See you at ,

tJ\'allablt•.

Mall Suhscrlptlon"'
Inside Meigs Counly

13 Wf' ('ks .................................. S17 .29
2fi Wrrks ... ....... ....... ................. S-14.06

52 \\'(' ('ks ........... ............ ... ..... ... $66. ~
OulMdi! Mt•lgH Counly
,
13 Wr rk,: ...............................,. $1 8.20
26 Weok, ........... ............. ......... m .ro
52 Wt• rk."&gt; .................................. $67.60

The Dairy Isle
In Middleport
•ll

••

I

•

DEALERS

3.7'/o OR SJOOO

ANNUAL PIRCENTAGE
RAft FINANCING'

CASH BACK••

ON ClltYSLER

LeBARON GTS

.'

PREMIUM

3.T1~us

ANNUAl. I'IICINTAGI
IAfl PINANCINO'

$600 $900
01

CASH BACK . • CASH BACK ''

"''

ON PLYMOUTH
REUANT ~

... ''•
'

. "'
..,

~ ~
7/70 PROTECTION PLAN
~ '
ON EVERY N1W 1917 AMBICAN·MI CAR Ate TRUCK ~

PLUS, GET CHRYSLER'S NEW

• 7 years/70,000 miles, whichever comes first, on e ngine and powertrain .
• 7 years/100,000 miles, wh ic hever comes first, against outer b ody rust -through .

.,
,,
'

"

See ljmiled warranty al dealer, ReWidian' opply

I

.:

'

S&amp; US TODAY FOR ALL KINDS OF SUPER SAVINGS!

COOPER
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
399 So. 3rd

.

992 -642l

Middleport

.

'

'
-.
' 'f'
, ' ;II

'Financing for qualified reloil buyers through Chrysler Credit Corporation on new deoler s!Q(k , Other ro ..1
ore available a1length of controd increases. Dealer contribution may a fled final pr ice. See dealer for
details. "Cosh bock to retail buyer1 and leuees on new dealer stock. Offen ••dude oil Vista Wagons
and any Colli witlr Special Value ~ckagn

. .·1

�•
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Page--4- The Daily Sentinel

..-

)~stem,

Scoreboard ...
Akron at Au1dln P1•a,y
at llllnots·fllkaKO

Big lO

fii'YI'IIIII~ ~~

Rt· (.;n ll f'd l'r.""" lnlt•rrlll.liorod

Dt'fiiArlt't. at UrhiUia

Tf~N

l 'onll'rtntt· ,\II 0M ml.,.

W I.
II
II
10
9

l'1·t .
\\' L Pd
I .!a-' 't3 2 . MQ
~ 1\Ui
'ttl :1 .!!tit
I .7ll ~:t I 113 1
I .682 1!:1 6 .'M
' 8 .r.ot IK !t .ll64i
II fi . il71
17 !I .6.1:1

lndiMa
l"lr rdtw
lo~~o a

111\nol'"
fthlo Stat•·

Mlt·hl,can
Mh·h st.

$!1 . 3~7

ltlll . lll
~ U .:m
12 IIi . .&amp;2~
lil!l .U8

~ It

MiDIM'!iOht

Wl"t'oft!dn
Nflr lhWN II'rll

. IU
2 1:1 . 13J
Ill .M

MIO-AMERU ",\N f "fl NFERE!IITt:
12 2 . ~7 IK i .'l'lfl
II ~ .il:J ii ; .71111
~ fi . .111
I ~ 1:1 .4111
Ohlnl "
1 1 .300 I~ II .31Jt
Wi~ ll· r•Mkh
i i .511U lle ll . .floll
MIIUIII
~ II .12ft 1:!: I'! .W
t:.t.~ l l• rnMkh
ti II . 1 ~ II II .a-ttl

C'••ntnal Mil·•
Kt•nt-Stall•
ft'llo•ll•.: t&gt;rl'l'n

I II '!~li II l'l .:1'!11
:1 II .'l U 1U I ~ .:1/!,\

Hall Sllll l'
Tohtn

OHIO liTHLF.TJ{' f 'ONFEHEM't:
Our.rtwoln
14 ! .111S 20 1 . ~~;13
1\"lltt•nttrr.:
12 I .7.'18 Ill j .i'!O
M111ddn~m
II 5 .IIAA U 10 .1100
f :1pll.ul
II 5 .tillll 1111 .:otifi
Ohln 1'\;rt.hrn
It I .ii!a II II .5611
Mount IJna&amp;n
5 II .:11:1 I'! 1:! . ~It
M11rWt111

RahH\':IIlarr
Ht•ldrlht•r,;

5 11 .:11:1 II II . I-III
t U .IU K Jj .:t!O
:.! 1-1 l t5 1 I ~ .'ll\0

!'I:ORTH f0.4.ST
,\THI.F.TK ' fONFER.:NfF.

Oh ln R"l'!ilt'fu•
r\lll•jtlw•ny
· Ut• nl ~nn
k r n.)'on

II
10
li
I

I .817 Ill 7 .7!11
\! .Kl:llll
fl .300 U
II .33:1 I\!
.m 11

j

8 .166
ll . UU

1:1 .Mfl

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s

fa:w Rl·srr\'1'
Otu·rlln

3
.'lSO K 17
.1 It ,U fl 3 ·~1 .:lllfl

11

.:m
.:wt

MID-OHIO C'ONn;RENI 'fo:
fonfl'fl'lll 'l' !ill G11m1os
W I. Pl'l . \1' L l' t•t.
Rl11 fOrunrk•
II 3 .71111 Z3 7 .'n!l

K'Jdsh
Mlllom·
u -,TIIfl•

10 1 .7118 21 &amp;

:roo

It I .-:-69 11 It .SIHI
li 7 .16'! Hi It .ii71
n -Urhllnll
ii II .:~3 1117 .393
Ottlu l)ontlnlt•llf1
ii &amp; .:1.11 6 :tt .'l'U
l"••dun111•·
fl II .l'lt Ill ~ .it!l
- ·Mt \'rroon N~W Z I'! . Ita ~'!I .an
• - lnt · lud• ·~ II fo rfdh•d II:IYHf'!&gt;
u - dtN'!i _oot _lnd•• ...RIIf urdlty nlxht

Girls scores
Glrl!i OMe Hl~ll S.·Mollllllli&lt;f'fllall
~·rdllf 'li ft#Mtdtli

·~lllrS.•1111on

Br•a\'1 '"-'l'l'l'k Ill, Jo'~~olrhnrn :U
1J11111 Sr j.\, V11n \\'l•rl ~
TourMm••nh
n ... ~ ,\li!\
1\k.r But'lll••l 711, likr Jo: llti :u
( 'htTdl M, ( 'ln1'1trpln't7
( 'In \\'ttlw'•w 3'J, I"In M•·r·~ ;oil
nn hrt'"' Park tl , l ',.l•'t'uln ~
C"ln ..,.•tnnft, ( "h• Purt ~· II- Marl.,. I&amp;
c·,,t S )II. f; row purl
f ollllartley 47, Whll#h.llll33
fo l M'llllt'I'JUin :iii, Hllll11rd Ill
( 'ol WWNtland 15, f:rov1• flly ~t

"''"'''! I:n

C'lllt'rc•dw:rolt M. fnl Mllnln M
( 'nllntlp!Min(' &amp;II, { 'Ill ,IM:n-frllnll U

\~ .

Ollt•rlwln P,!:II--1, It· '!), ':::utp.m.
Ohio \'ortlwrn (ll-11, 111-li) \ '!&lt;.. Mu .~ kl n ­
II:Urn 11~ 10. 11 -!11, 'l: :w p.m.
Mount Union ( 12- 1:1, iJ.. II J at Wiii P niM · r ~
flll-7. U-11. ~ : 30 p. m.
Capital t U-11 , II - ~ I al Marl1•1111 I II -H. :'I-

J.'rid~ , t '••h
OM ' Tvurnt•y ~ SI' rnllinab

Conferenc('
Patr ick Division
W I. T 1'1&lt;. GF G~
31 18 I 79 243 177
ti 25 II 62 :ZOti 199
25 11 ' 311 2SG m

I~

22 !&gt;liO H 219217
2:1 :n 5 51 200 269
Adam~ 01 \'L•'ilon
HrUr ,
:11 U G Gi 107 20~
Mntri
29 25 M 6G 20M 191
80!410
29 26 :i 63 '?21 201
Quht•
23 :10 ' 5~ 197 lilt
Dufll
_, :11 6 50 201 ~ I
famphell ronh•r ence
Norrl10 Dlv lsion

1m~- .ll'f h'f'o4tn :I. 1lpp C' It~- Rt ·tlwl :1.1
Ml!oo~I,,J IIII,I'II , , al
Nl' " .' llarni ".'11

n.

Hlt·hn n1 nd Hb ~. C'l•· Hl:. l.u lh 1&lt;::11
lt~t :.slult , Ml'l'llwllri'l hu r.: :1!1
S fhur lt..,lon HE lit. Trl C'n N J I
\ 'n ..uilll'll ••· Huu:qon ~I
\' t • lluwSp rln~ '1'1. X1 •nl a M"llliun :lll

ft,\...,IIIE'fJ\,\1.1. ,\ SstH ·
By \ 'nltr•d Pr#'!&gt;i~ hUt•rrulltJAII.I

~liTIO~ ,\L

t:ll~l••rn fttn l• • rt • nt ·~·

.\lhllllk- Dl\'bo6on
\\ I. P11 . flR
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tn II -" ' Ph lhldt• lphhl
:u t t .:i ii '

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,.,.. filii

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ftto11ull ..

\h lltlhltfl . . likr.'lt V ~~ M M
.\l;r 1\o•nn..,l' '-'· ,\ltr •·lrt•!ilono•.U
\lh•·n· ·a . ,\lto:rmndl•r ~ 1
H a rl ~ · rlllft ,11.1, Maplt• Hlst!
R1a • · ~

IU Y Ill, MonriN'\•LIIt• li
C~tnhrl d .-t• 111, \to' urr~• n l .p• · ~ a
( ':rm (lht•ll ( '11 I Ky J ill , f'in ll u.-h,.., tt
C"l n l:ro •t•nhlll U. t •tn Rut·nn :\i
1'11 • IJtnlllill Jrl'le, ( "ii•Y I'Iilnd Mb iii tol l
f'nl \ , :r d ~~~. l)uhfln 3:1
l 'nldiOo:tl•" 77, \'••r!l-lllllt•" 10
I nr.I -Hi!lhOft il.\. Btufll nn ;, t
• 411.1 ,1 w- .~~-· it TruhUMJII .\latll~nl1

t: lin n~

lilt, ~~~~~~ ~ lh•lrl ( 'ltr IIi
t:t.1rl.l ~~. l.nrnln SmUll\ '""' fi '!
M an!~

""L 111'11·r· ..

li :r lll(lull!o "'Ml Plt•u..unt i\\ \ "I .U

lla rnlltttn 71, 1-Aion :r:
llullllllft TI'IM'I' Ill, I rnntnn S t ..l nt• ;~
111,-k,,•lllt• -J:l, il lrJ·kr r II
llol~ .d•· M , P11lrk •k U1•nry li
II "JW'IIo'l'l .. l.elllllil n
Tllfln l 'nh1•rt

r..

lntll ,tnM l)t •al ~i. l ll!ln Ut•al :\:1

.lnlln..,junl6' Norlh rhiKI' 13. -lnl1n ~h1\o\n

•:d\o\·ar d 7~. Cl lhn11ur lit·Md

1:1
i.IIU II Sr J7, Oliuw:•·Hiandurf :,,j
l.nr .tln ('Ill h ~ J, Sandu~k.t' !oil Mur )' I\
l.th , ~ Olt fh•ur t' urk ~~
:\larlllrtiW. jJ. Se-nt~ ' II t: t:l
'IHrlt•n rl rllllllnt IMJ, Rld l•• ll:d•• Ii i
'lar fln~e • 7't. Huntl4 uM n l~
~l• • ntor C'br ,W, llt•rll :ll!ll' 4' hr :.t
~ll llt• r ( ' lly 81, ,\ ,w '"'I I h• :\ 1
l l.tli Uarhor ~7. Ch•no:&amp; n
fh'I ' (AII lit rll.rh 1.'1, 1.111111 ( "('II'! I ut i
Uht•kO ;t, S'llo'll.lllnn ,;
lhl o~ lllt•

H, f•l•ndHU• t lru\••~~
I'• ·UIS\Idlt• !J:t, " 'IW!IMIII U
1'111•'" 11. ~t Mur'"" :n
Ha1•to!Md ( ILyJ 11. N•'"-" lln!.lun Ml

l!u .~~lllll. ( '•\'IRat.on ~
i'lundUMt,\' "11. r1 flinton U
~ll nduliky rf'rkiMC, NQrwllh :U
Sl diW')' F•lrl11wA 11. \\ Uhl'rt)'·

l'lllrll'ftl

"

11Mrll Ill, f"!l ... nl a l 17
Tel \l'liMmff' "11, Tt-.1 f't •nl :\11
To I Jolt ,fa. . .. Tol " 'Dttd'llo'a rd .'WI
Tol ~arlllt. DfolphO" !\1 .l11hn'" ~
I Jhrlt•hKYIIIf' flit.)' moM 11:1, Nt•IOo 1... 1111 711
" ' a\'rrty •· R~»~.o~!tt:
" 'IQ'III' Tr~t~.·r
DrlpMs ,frftr rMtn

•t
;:a.

"

\to'oosh·r !H. N ('•niMI Hoo \'f'r 1.1
7.11111'JWIII~II. Mtlfll'tl• II
hnnnolllt• ( 'lit 'ft. N
( 'hr Ill
Tou,...mrnh
( ' hiA!I AA.
f~trll• k· n, Brlttir4'11k 4n
Dll)' Oab·ood It, lln KM S.'l

""*'

This week's games
OIJ,.(flltra:r .... kt'thldl ~k hf'dllll'

M.MQ.Frh U
MIAmi aJ DaJie• '

'

~~t

:u 2'!

fhlt•ll,;D

211 "!l .l UI

llldl1111 ll

2; "n .:will '
~ I :1:1 .:JM! ll

111 1 ~

" t P1 ·1. 1: a
l4 I ~ .fiU -

Ou ll ; ~~

311 tl ..'Mlll I
"' '!I .~~ .11-1
~:1 l l . 1~ II ' ·:
,,. l3 :1.\'1 I)!,
17 38 .:1'.!1 1 ~ •

t 't :1h
llt~u :.tnn

lli•nnr

S;m 1\ni!JIIill
S;wr!UIU•nlr•
l.r\

l' 1uollh· Uh·l!olun
II 1:1 .7:\9

l.~lto •l'l'o

l'oi1 11U1d

:11 '! I . ti l ~ "71 1

Onldt •n Sl:.tlo•
S.•III U••

·;. '!!+ . I~~ U
'! fi '!II . 1~1 U
'!'~ :1"! .lit; 19
!I •'! . lit :111• 1

l'lr ,.t•n!Jo;
1.,\ ('lippt•r..

SaiUnlll.\"' " Ho • ,.uH:~o
Ill, !'I: I•~&amp;· \ 'nrklUi
0•1rnll. tnt, A.lh..ll ll ti

.,.,.II

ol• · r~•)'

'·

11!':, finldl•n statt• 111 IUT )
Nuu...ton t l , l'lah Ml
R...._ton 121, S~n ,\ntonln 11:1
MU~&amp;·auk••t • I IS, l'hn, • n l~ Uti
~aU il' 110, " ' ""' hln__.on!l:l
Sundll,)' ' ~

1.,\

Lakrn.

li t,

overall

W

IIU

SOuthwestf'm ..

3

n

4

15

Hannan Tr1u:r... .........

II

13

0

17

CANDY
BARS
MilK CHOCOLATE MilK

POWELL'S

CHOCOLATE WITH AlMONDS
SPECIAl DARK, MR. GOODBAR
OR KRACKEl

CASH

SHAVE
CREAM

JACKPOT

REG.~

7::811

SENSITIVE SKill!
11 OZ. CAIQ

WIN
EACH WEEK

NNEN

49

JACKPOT

$725

ORAL I
TOOTH
BRUSH

S25

19

CASH PRIZE

sso
CASH PRIZE

,\tltiRta a1 Chh •llJ:o. nl~li
lndltmll at Milw11ukt'l'. nl~hl
~ilunmrnto

at S11n ,\ntonlo.

nl ~ht

. , Plans for spo nsoring a first aid
·; · class thls spr ing were made
;: ;.when the Eleanor Ci rcle met at
: : thr Heath United Methodist
'- ': bu rc h.

OR TARTAR CONTROl
REG. OR GEt-0 OZ. PUMP

19'

JACKPOT

GENERIC .
DRUGS COULD
SAVE YOU

LAST WEEK'S WINNERS

·uP

Hou,...lln :n Denvrr. nla:hl
St•utU.-· 111 IJt~th . nlxhl
1,,\ l.ak1T:r~ Mll"hm·nh , nl~hl

Sunday's scores
t:.a~ t
lll'l)r~•oto~&amp;n ':~.

S.)' rlll'thl' 71
N••W Han•l'!'hl rf' i&amp;, \ 'f'rmon l
MUII11m11 13, A.mlwrlil. 1111

~

8olllh
Mi•rnpltiA !41 • .\11, l..oll bi\•lllt• ~~
1
\ 1r.. ..a. 7t. Nnrlh ('arallna St . IU

\1'11kf' Forr111 iS.

M~ryl1111d

Ill

M'f!il Vlrltnlall-l , !;I, ·ftl!lrp h'~ Ill

DrPaul

~.

Mlchll'lll
(iror .. IITt••·h 11
KIIMiilwi'MI

Sou thern Mrthodt!ll ,., Ha u ..11on 1:1

"'I'l

I

l'itiUIIord 1411, C•llrornlll HI
l 'I 'L,\ It t 0rTifUII 11

Transactions
Ho ckey
Nrw York Ranlfl: etM - C~tlled up
rl«hl wln« Ron TalakowMid from
N~w Ha~r.11 ol the Amerl,c an

Hockey Leape IUid rl~ht wlna: •lay
Ca11f1eld from Flint of the Jnterna·
ti011AI Hockey Uape.

$25
NORMAN HAROLD

~ro

ON

---WINNING NUMBERS
.

••

•n•

::::

:;:

Clauified pa,e• t'lWII!r 1he
followi n8' t elepllo l'lt eniUIA!"'···
- c•. r~

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~::::•;!~i1:o'...

Business Services
J.R.'s REPAIRS

Computerized Hearing Aid St!lectiOil

TVs, Antennas
Satell;te Sales
Installation
Servi"

~ Swim Molds · lnterpreling Services

-~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

I: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

~

614-843-5248
REASONABlE · RlliAilE
8-20· '86 tin

NEXT

PRESCRIPTION

'

ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOR
COMPLETE DETAILS!

POSTED IN THE STORE
SUNDAY 10 A.M.
(Must come in and claim
prize by following
Saturday, 10 P.M.NO WINNING NUMBER
GIVEN OVER THE PHONE)
If Any Prize Is Not
Claimed In The Allotted
Time, The Prize Will Be
Included In The Next '
Week's $100 Cash Prize
Jackpot.

RITE

RITE
AID

1110 PURCHASE "'ECESSAIY·
\

Charlie Sargent's
CHRISTMAS
TREE FARM at
Alfred, Oh .. 4 mi.
W. of Tuppers
Plains on St . Rt .

- 681 ..

A good opportunity for
ah ambitious family .

Pri ced on inspection .

Call

for Appointment

985-4167

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET

'
POMEROY,
OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586
\

: ~. The churc h roof fund was
r discussed and the class took on a
: :·· specia l projecl of selling dish
#· i elothes with proceeds to go into
• ; ' that fund . Bl'tty Fult z opened the
. ' . meeting wlt h a reading from
Proverbs, "A Friend loveth at All
Tlmes ."

Dorothy Hawk, Cleo Smith, Erma Mrs. Opal Wickham rece ntly
Cleland, Ethel Orr, Lora Dame- visited in Columbus wllh Mrs.
wood, Inzy Newell and Bonnle Firn Gaul.
Landers by Opal Wickham and
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
Margaret Christy.
spent a co uple of days in WesterRece nt visitors of Mr. and Mrs . vllle with Dr. and Mrs. Blll y AI·
Erroli Conroy were Mr. and Mrs. len, Kati e and Bobby.
Geo rge E. Conroy and Wlllard
Audrey Rowan, Lydia Berry
Long, Akron.
and Pat Brownrigg, Belpre,
Mr. a nd Mrs. Homer Blggs, vtslted on Monday with their uncle
Uniontown, were guests of hls Denzel Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Christy
slster, Bonnie La nders.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elchln· vlslted in Columbus, Saturday,
ger and Susie and Mlss Laura J. with Mr. and Mrs . VIrgil Wood .
Eichinger, Columbus, were weekend guests of Mrs . Opal Elchln·
ger . On Sunday a famlly dlnner
was held ln honor of Susie's 18th
birthday..
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ronald Clay aJild

Parcel, Bedfbrd.
Flora Holsinger to William D.
Durst, Martha A. Durst, Parcels,
Olive.
Anna L. Dalley to Elson Ray
Dailey, Parcels, Lebanon.
Carl H. Platter, Jr., Kay Platter
to James B. Thomas, eta!., Darla
N. Thomas: John R. Thomas.
Cheryl L. Thomas, Parcels, Mid·
dleport Village.
George Todd, Mildred Todd.
. Vanessa Todd to Mildred Todd,
Parcel, Lebanon .
Willard Jeffers, dec'd, to Au·
drla Jeffers nks Audrla Arnold. "
Anita L. Casto, Delores M. Beach,
Willard R. Jeffers, Affidavit, Sui·
ton.

refreshments with a red table
covering and a cent erpiece of
hearts and roses .
Hostesses were Grace John·
son, Billie Jo Kraw sczyn, and
Twila Childs. Others atlendlng
were Stephanie Alexa nder,
Donna Byer•. Helen Byer. Jeann~
Anne Bradbury, Scotty Hayes,
Na ncy and Jessica Ca le, Mary
Wise, and Margie Blake.

Heart Sunday noted

Last Sunday was "Heart Sun·
Devotions were given by VIcki day " a t at the Rutland Church of
Houchins 011 "Love One God. Attendance was 142 and
Another" and Emma K. Clat · there were 15 couples who
worthy led th ~ program on participated In a ceremony to
" Love." She brought out the renew thelr vows ..
lmportance_p lovlng your neigh· · Each co uple received a certlll·
bor and recognling that everyone · cate a nd had th eir pictures taken
Is your nelg'hbor. She read the, under an .arc hwa y lined with Ivy
hymn, "Reach Out and Touch."
and topped wlth two white doves.
The valenti ne theme was car- • A brldal bouquet was provided
rled out ln th e decorations and for " the bride."

Community cqlendarj happenings
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Count y
POMEORY - Inte rnational
Litter
Grant Advisory Board will
" Order of Jobs Daughters wlll
meet
at
7:30p.m. Monday at the
hold a council meetlng Monday, 7
·Litter
Control
offi ce, OBES of·
p.m ., followed by a regular
!lee, Unlon Ave. , Pomeroy.
meeting at 7:30. '

POMEROY - Xl Gamma Mu
Sorority wlll meet Tuesday, 7:30
: p.m., at the home of Mrs. Evelyn
· Knight.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

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

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
MOTOR VEHICLE
DEALERS
Sealed bids will be re ·
ceived by the Meigs County
Board of Commi11ioners in
their office lo cated in the
Courthouse , Second Street ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 467~9 until
12 noon on the 4th day of

POMEROY - Womens Auxll·
lary of Veterans ~emorlal Hos·
pltal will meet Tuesday, 2 p.m.,
ln th e hospital conference room.
A sllent auction wlll be held.
MeetlnJ planned
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Youth League organizational
meeting' wlll be held Thursday, 7
p.m., at village hall.

opened by the Clerk of said
Board and reed aloud fonhe
leasing of en automobile
fore the Children 's S ervices
Div isi on of the Meig s
County Department of Hu ·
nfen Sen~ices .
Specifir:ations for 11id au·

tomoblle may be obtained
from the Cltdrk of the Board
of Meigs County Commit·
Jloners between the hours of
8:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.,
Monday through Fridly .
The Commtasioners are
bound by Federall~w which

work

!Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992 -1314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15.'86·10

prohibits contracting lrom

an eatlblishment that they
or 1 family member may
have a financial interest ln.

The Commluio ners re·
••rv• the right to reject any

end all bldt and/ or accept
the bait bid for tho Intended
purpoH.
Mory .Hobottttor,

Clerk

Meigs County Commlnionero
12116, 23 , 2tc

NOTICE TO
VE~tCL E

DEALERS
Seated b ids will be re·
ceived by the Meigs County
Board of Commiuioners in
their office located in the
Courthouse, Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769 until
12 noon on March 4, 1987 .
a nd opened at 1:30 P.M. on
March 4 for the following
vehicle :
1987 4 -door Sedan . full
size automobile, suitable for
police use .
Specifications t or sai d au ·
tomobile may be obtained
from the Clerk o f the Board
of Meigs County Commis ·
sioners between the hours of

8:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M .
Monday through Friday .
The Commissioners re·
serve t he right to reject any
and a' bids and / or accept
the beat bit for the intended
purpose .
Hob&amp;tetter. Clerk
Mei gs County Commisaion·
Mary

t21 16. 23 , 2tc

Public Notice

2·11 · 1 mo pd .

RAOIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
healer cores. We can
also aci d boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

CHESTER-985-3307
4/ 1/tln

APPROXIMATELY 136 ac&lt;es
of vacant land. Secluded and
pnvate Excellent home s1te or
hu ntmg land. Up to 30 acres
hay land. WANT $45.000 00.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

MINERSVILE - Mini -farm
- ApproXIm ately 6 aCfi!S
w•lh a 2 bedroo mnocety rr
mod eled home w1th tots of
cab.net space. baon. mdk
house, lrU!t lree s. iencong
and a good p,artlen space
MAK E OffER $12.000 00.
MIDDLEPORT - Stately home
on a good street La rge lol and
many Jeatures Great tocat10n.
greal style, greal des•gn. Must
be seen $42,500.00.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ... . 992·169&lt;
Office ............ .. 992·2259

AW

992 ·2196 '
Middleport. Ohio

1-13-lfc

UDNALL
·
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
161 Norrh Se~ond
J
Middleport, Ohio 45160 ,.

SALES &amp; SERVICE 1:

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

W11 Crurv Fi1hing SuiJphe!J '

P~y

'

Your Cable t!o

t'hon e Bills Horc
BUIINIII PHONI
lbt41 991· !150

;fiiDINCI PHONE
' ' 14 1 997-7714

4·16-86 -lfn

"

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transrnlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6·17·tfc

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck,

auto, &amp;
h ea vy e quipment

repairs and welding .
models!

PH. 949-2893

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

or 949-2756

190 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

Jahn K. S.nh

PH. 992·9949

·Owner /Mechanic
t-2·'"·1mo.

Bah 'Barton, Owner

2-5..86-ttn

lhl3 Meigs Cou nty Probate

Court ,

c ..e No.

26.407.

Harold Hawk, of BoK 269.
Tuppers Plains, OH . 45783.
was appo inted Execulor of
' the estate of Hazel E. Hawk,
deceased. lete of ttte Village
of M iddl eport , Me i g s
County, Ohio .
Proba te Judge

OF FIDUCIARY
On February 11 , 1987, in

PAT HILL FORD

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

!All makes t!o

Robert E. Buck.

E T

Shop Teehniolu
on Dutt
RIDENOUR
TV .&amp; APPLIANCE

NEW liSTING - Racin eAtwo bedroom hou se on a
good slr eet. Large lot and
block building. This house 11
aff ord able al $13.000.00

NOTICE OF

Le nn K. Nessehoad. Clerk
12}16, 23: 13)2 . 3tc

54 Misc . Merchandise

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
SIZE 23X30X007

ONLY

, 14-992-7537

•GIBSON. RIFRIGIRATOR
•SATHtiTI SAlES &amp; SERVICI
We Have AFull Tlmt

- Roof ing and gutter work
- Conc r ete wo rk
- Plumbing and electrical

APPOINTM N

for more information (011:

• SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

- Addon s and remodeling

.,.

MARCH 16 &amp; 17

WE ARE YOUR SAlES
AND SERVICE
.HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
• SYLVANIA

1\m y Louk,

,..--------------1

lessons start

10-8-lfn

POMEROV - The ta m1ly
room 1s tust oil the k•lchen
and near th e large rear deck
Excellenl ne1ghborhood lor
k1ds. Large tol, 2 baths. ap proXImately 5 acoes. cenfl at
a.. $30,000.00.

Amy Louks, Long Bottom.
Meigs County's Ju nior Miss , wi ll
go to Mount Vernon Friday for
the official welcoming ceremo·
nles starting her week-long stay
for the Ohio Junior Miss Scholar·
ship Program. She wi ll partie·
-lpate ln numerous program act I·
vltles and rehearsals during th e
week prior to th e fi nals ons lage
of the Knox Coun ty Memorial
Building, Feb. 27 and 28 . More
tha n·$10 ,000 In ash and $50,000 In
scholarships arc being offered In
the program . The state winner
takes part In lhe national eve nl
at Mobile, Ala . In June.
'

"All you need to know
to moke your own quilts
and leel proud! "

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

CARPENTER
SERVICE

MOTOR

QUILTING
LESSONS

THURI.J 'M - 18 0•41

. EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

YOUNG'S

]uni~r Miss
begins events

BINGO

!AGtiS CtUB- POMIROl , OH.

· Bashan Building

POMEROY AREA - 10
acres close to !own w1th a 2
car garage. and a niCely re·
mod eled 3 bedr oom home
Newfu rnace. newhot wa le~
·tank. etc Here •s whal you
have been took mg lor at
$42,900.00

March , '1987. and at 2 P.M.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Salisbury PTO
meels Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.. at
· Salisbury School. Special fa ·
-: thers' , night. Speakers · will be
Rev. Bob Smlth on boy scouting,
and Kathy Prlce qn glr l scouting.

GUN SHOOT

'

i: Eleanor Circle meets

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
REG. OR GEl·4.5 OZ. PUMP

SlOO

By Clarice Allen
President Betty Newell presided
at the Auxiliary meeting held Wed·
nesday evening at the firehouse.
The meeting opened with prayer
and pledge to the nag. Roll call
was answered by each giving a
'; special remembrance of Febrary.
• Secreary's report was given by
Paula Wood and the treasurer's
report by Opal Hollon. Committee
. reports were given and cards were
,signed for the sick and shut-Ins of
. • the community. Card money was
·, :collected and bills were paid. Several poems concerning February
. were read. Refreshments were
:served to those named and Marcia
·Keller, Clarice Allen, Clara Con·
roY,. Opal Eichinger, Bl'tty Hawk,

p.arcel, Meigs.
Loulse Folmer, dec. to William
·L. Folmer , affidavit, Salisbury .
Kat hr yn Reeve s, All a n
· Reeves, John Mitch, Cecili a
Mitch: Freda Mitch bv Atty.-In·
Fact. to Charles Grueser, Ruby
,Grueser. lot 301. Sutton :
: Thomas A. Gaspers, Debra A. to
·John C. Hensley, Barbara S. Hensley, Part Lpt , Tuppers Plalns.
Roland E. Neu tzllng , dec'd .,
Helen G. Neutzll ng, Affidavit,
, Pomeroy Village .
•: Reva F. McKen zie to James E.
:· McKenzie. Reva F. McKenzie.

DEO.Mrefi

THIS WEEK'S

LET'S DO IT AGAIN- It was Dusty B. Smith's older brother,
Frederick ,J. Smith Jr., an airborne officer wlth the U.S. Army,
who convinced hlm that parachuting might be worth a try. Dusty,
at lellln front, inadc a tandem jump with an experienced jumper,
ln rear. His brother, at rlght, jumped lreelalllrom the same plan&lt;·.

_
Chester
community
happenings
.

Loret ta M. Wriston to Robert

SPEED

'

THE LANDlNG - ·What a
relief for Dusty B. Smith when
he made the ground safely
from 10,000 feet, aided by an
experienced jumper at Ft.
lfragg, N .c:

f':. Deibler. Dortha W. Deibler.

p: m.

Dt'll \"f'r Ill Hnu~on . rt:31t p.m.
rNIIw.ut Goldrnl'illltt•. tn::wp.n1.
1.1\ f'llppl'nlllt ii(•attlt•. IO::Ja p.m.
Tul'l!d~ 's (iamt"'
Dt•troli 'at Nrll··ll·rKry . nll(ht
1
l ortilalld11t Nr'llo' \ 'ork . nl•hl

--···

~

Property transfers

p.m.

l~llud l' lphlll 11.1 ,\rlantu , 7::11'1

WITH

ALOt, LIME
OR fOR

IO't, fii'HI!Utd8K

lndlllftll lfl:l. ~~ · ranu• ntn lilt
Ortrolt It!. Nt•w \ 'nrt. 11 0
Ponland I'U, Mllwau~1 · 12fl
Mllnd lt,\''ioo t :um~~
NI'V.' o lt •r~',)' ,. ~. Bo!~tnn at H:trlfurd ,

~-

FOR SALE

111'1'1
f'hii'II.~O

~ _ ,, ...,,,,..,.,
., ,.. ..,, a......,. _ , _ _

t o•~•

...
::::

-

__

..·· ~--··. . .

RATU

,..
,,., . .
...,..- . . ··--...
-111 ··'""'''
'""

•o•..

L

CASH PRIZE

Kl••ult.•
Phll•do•lpl!lu

tLo•·· .. · ·- ......... _, .. ...

................
'"......."' ... ........ .........
_ . . .........
. . . .........................
'...."".::'7....:.--··
--. ...!:'.:i...... .~':':... ~:.:.:-r ~:-:.·
!':.:.::·:~
.-. .-"'""'"'""'""'"
. ........
,._. .........
. .... ......_
.... ..!... .......

2-5·87-1 mo.

l 'nnh•r••nt·l•

lb.ll ~tH

'" ll&lt;·Ua .\11, ~nrch'llo tlo4n~

' "'~ ' '"'"IIIMII f'l4

. i(~

M iht&gt;'ll llk ~· ·

MtdV.•'!&lt;I llh•f,.i!)A

Jtco ... lllf ~·~~~"

·"

t9
.:-m
Ill :!1
:J)I .'!!K 'U
t:l :19 .2.1• '!4i
l'o·nt ru l Uh t.. lun
:1.1 " .lia 3'! '-" .iiU 3

\\ j• ~t. · rn

u...\- 11hlu lll~h ~ - horn J\a!oo ...'lhnll

league

W

L

-

Ml•e•n

Call 992·3005
or 992-6167

tu' 1

( '141\'1"111111

HERE THEY COME Jumping tandem style, Dusty
B. Smith, formerly of Melp
·County, now In Texas, makes
his first parachute Jump in a
special harness w!lh j\n experienced Jurnpi!,., _

CIOSID SUNDAY

Zone -Commerci11l

CASH.

,

NBA results

Boy!! scores

,.

a (OT )

Buflalo ~. Hartford 3
PUt.oobuqh -1, NY Kan.-ers 2
WaNhlnKton 3, (.'alaary 2
Detroit 2, Chl ca,;:o 2 CTtt)
Vant'OUvtr 3, Toronto :!
Monda)' '!li Gamt
MlnneMota at Montreal, 7: :15 p.m.

,_. ,NI'ill' \ ·nrlt

(

When the Frederick J. Smiths, the younger son made a ''tandem
of Middleport, went to Fort jump" fr&lt;il11 10,000 feet, strapped
Bragg, N.C. to visit their parach· In a special harness with an
utist son, Frederick J. Smith Jr. , enlisted parachute Inspector.
an airborne army officer, they The older son, in his own gear,
never expected their younger jumped from th e same plane.
son, Dusty B. Smith, an electrical
And although the younger so n
technician in Texas, would also jumped fi rs t, it was ih ~older son
"take the piunge."
who hit th e ground first beca use
The younger son had no sooner he did it "freelall. "
met hls parents in North Carolina
Mea nwhile, Dad was on the
fo r the family reunion, than his ground holding hls breath. Mom
older brother talked hlm lnto wouldn't even come to the jump
trying parachu ling- fo r the fir st site. ·
tlme.
The Smiths spent lou r days
According to Dad, who wasn't . vlsltlng 1~ Nor th Carolina.
altogether ln favor of the ldea,

ra fllACI AM lD Ull ·tn.2116
MONDAY tltru PIIDAY I Ul. ta I f'.M.
I A.M. Un!il NOON SATUIDAY

lOOft.x 100ft.
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport

Ptbib
Nw ,Jr

N\' b;JanderM 7, New ,Jt•r~t~ ! )' 0
I~

'···
../,$ '. ··,' i·J.:\. :',,b ,;tf":,ll

FOR SALE

211 ~ ~ ~~ 203 ~2!J

Ws hn

Phlllldelphla I , Lol'i An~tt"le; 2
Sund11y'"" Result!J
Wlnnlpfl ~. Edmontm 2

Rot kh"' tl. M4 Utoy Ll•llm 1111 1-t
lludlord ~. Trlll410
("t•duv llll' It, frwtldln-Monr!ll' :111

.

HOCKEY LEAG UE

\\'~ties

NY R

•

Oak Hill .................... . l 3 1 1 5 . a
Kyger Creek ... ...... .. .. . 11
3 14
I
Symme.o~. Valley ......... . 1 1 3 1 1 8
Easlern ................... .. 6
7
6 13
Southern .............. ..... . 6
8
6 14
North Gallla ............ .. 5
9
5 15

NHL results

!'it. Loul"' -1. Qut•hf'l'

n ....~ ''

t'ro ·d••rl•·litrN'A 77,

TEAM

Nrw ,Jt•r,..-y 6. PIU!!bu!'R'h ;;
(' hl c:l.-o 6, Hartford :1
Rt1 ~t ion I, Minnesota 0

R11H'nna 17. "arr••n H:ardiAJ:" K
l 'ptM•r ,\ rtlnxt~n U f 'oiii1•S:d t'- 11
\1'1"'11•rvlll1• M112, f ul t~ast nmor 1:1
( ' 111M 1
\/i
I 'In ( ",\PF. SL 4'In l•dl:m Hill :til
f"ln Sl I 'r ~ ul11 tll. Rla!ll'ht•!it ••r .1i
t: 4'llntun 617. N lt••d Tay ~~r II
t :lyrlll ( '11tlt :U, Mc• dhw Rut•li••JI' 31
Tlp p f'ky )A, "'•lh•lontalm•:1:1
Wt•lllnxto~t -I-I . IU al'lr; Rh· '!"!
~ Mymlllllll !);1. M'••M1•rn Rro'l't n 1:1

~IIWd-.v' ll

1

Ohlu Sial•• al l' unlu r
Buwllmt Gr1•t•n atlHllo Uol\'t'r"lli)
( '••ntr.-1 Mh·h at Kt•ot SIDI1 •
Tuh•du at MIIUill
South ( 'a rollfta illll " lndn~~o ll
To ill'liOn Sl~&amp;ll• (M:d ) at IJa)· ton
\\"lf'it·· Grrrn I•)' Ml &lt;'le\'eiiU1d Slatt•
Alihlll.lld lit M ert:y hun~l !1'11)
f&lt;Arlhlun (lnd)al Ce nt "'! st
&lt;lulooy ut Wrlxht !&gt;ilah•
Olit ' Tourll(O)' (F in&lt;~.l li I
l'lo"('J\(' Tournf'y (t 'lnal,. )

Phlla
Nl' lsi

Mankin 2, and Spencer ·2. The
winners had 4 steals, 7 ass!sts
and 18 turnovers.
To!lya Savoy had a good floor .·
game .with 4 assists and· two
steals.
,,
Eastern, now.7·13, plays Kyger
Creek' Saturday at 3 p.m. at
Meigs Hlgh School ln the Sec·
·Ilona! Finals.
·•

SOtrrHERN VALLEY
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE

-n

S11lunhcy , t' t•h 'lll

N ~TIO:IiU

vllle closed the gap to 26-20 at the final round, Crooksville eclipsed
conclusion of the third frame.
the Eagle lead to one at 35·34 and ·
Eastern, who had played a had the ball under Its own basket
co ntrol game wlth deliberate with just ; 02 seconds remalnlnl!,
execution, closed the game with b'\t ·falling to get off a flnal shot.
18 turnovers, however, elght of
.EHS )llt 9·34 !rom the field al)'d
those ca me In ' the final four •17-25 at the ' llne,' while Crooks.
minutes to give Coach Pam ville netted 14 of 38 and 6·13 . EHS '
Douthitt a scare.
had 28 rebduhds, led by Rucker's
Outscoring EHS 14·9 In the ll ,'f Durst wlth 8, · Rltcble 7,

Family has high-flying
adventure ·at Ft Bragg

,,

S\'AC GIRLS

NY btlandt.•r!'4 6, Montreal a

(i a hllllllll 711, l)l'l llWllfl,' l1;1

ern, 51-29.
·•
Eastern was led by senior
forward Lesa Rucker, who tal·
lied 13 , points and elevert re·
bounds to lead the Eaglettes to
victory. 'Senior point gu·ard To·
nya Savoy netted 9 polnts, Patty
Durst 6, Melanie Mankln 4, Trlsh
Spencer 2, and Arlene Ritchie 1.
Amy Smith paced the Ceram·
ics with 14 markers, .Julie
Murphy 8, Danya Williams 6,
Jenny Allen 4, and Sta cy Daw·
kins 2.
Eastern Coach Pam Douthitt
stated, "tonight was one of our
best team performances. We
played hard and played good
defense the (l rst half. Overall , I
was very pleased with the
game."
Crooksvllle took an opening
period lead of 6·5, but good
defense and a determined often·
s lve effort gave Eastern a 15-611ft
in the second ca nto, boosting the
locals to a 20-12 advantage at the
half.
At one point EHS h'ad built up a
ten point lead. how ever. Crooks·

ll L j: :W p.m.
Thur.&gt;ida,f , f1•h t4i
\'urth••rn K••niiJ..' k.y ut ,\~ihlunll
Nfi\(' Tourm')' ( !Wmlfinul ~ )

Sato rd:~)l 's Re~m tts

IJuhlin 1~ M11r1Dn H11rdht _~; :12
Falrnrl• 41, Mil lord U

..

C'•• ••l rul Sl.ah• 111 l.inruln ( Mo 1
M' 1'4nf'M1~· , Ft• h 'l5
Oh io !&gt;ilalt• a lllllnol ~
\\• 'llh•rr~ :'•Uc·h al Bowllna Gn•t•n
Kent ~tu tr at :'&lt;.' 1~&lt;.,.11
~laml at ElliooU•rn Mlt·h
Ohiii iJnh·l'riooii ,Vll l Crntrul ,\'lif·h
Ru.ll Stull• at Tnll'do
l.oul~\· lll eal ( ' lndnnall
\to' ri ~ hl ~ t au• Ill IP-t' l. WlQ'ftl'
fiA(" Toul'ftl'y Qu ~t.rtr rlinal ioo
Ht • ld l' lhf'r~ - Baldwin· \\' ~t.lli!t" l'
ll-"iniH' r

m

Rl d ~r

Howklnd 11!1, Flrl• U
Kr nt Homoc'\'1'11 111. \I'W'rrn Rl'l-&gt; :It '
LukMI-'Uod I 1. l.uruln :r.
Lltnt'lll•h•r 11. Miami Tr:wr :1.11
l.oraln tun~~: U. f'h• ( 't•nt C"ath .11
Mary!i\'llh• .1i. M'atltJn:. M1•m Ill
Ml \-'1•rnon ..:1. fnl Rrook.huw·n :tl
~~·w Phll11 H . l&gt;nwr 30 ~ot t
Nl.,.·a rk :11. \\lrnhln.:fon 211
Nil'" U. Kill •.,, Ml
Cb. turd Tali11w11nd11 JJ~. ( 'in 011klllll~
l'h· lll'rln~ o n ,,t H1·.wnold:.hurx

Ohio i\lhltof: lt• ( ~ onlt'ff'D I'I' Tourni 'Y
tHII, · n IJ iU RuldWIIl\h.ll ~tot:t&gt; (~ 17, ~· I-ll. i : :10 p.m.
1'\lt'!&lt;iday, F1•h '! I
Uhlo Uornlnkun at "'llm ln~o n
Ht•ldt• lt~t•r~t

K' L T Pis, GF GA
Dl'l rt
26 2~ 9 GJ 196 205
Mnnl'l
25 27 i 57 22:i21i
Ch h·~
'l3 29 9 55 :z2:! 2-13
St. Los
22 27 10 ~ 199 2'21
Torn I
23 32 fi :\2 209 237
sm.vtht• Dlvl:o;Jon
Edm
:J.II 17 !J .Ill 2.111 tfl7
Wnn
33 '12 ti 7! 21R 205
Clgry
a~ 25 2 10 2:111
L" 1\n
'l-1 tM 7 55 2~U9
Vntvr
19 35 t1 -IG 203 %-15

•t

( "111 Nnrlllland 1~. fol
C'niiJndt&lt;ft u, l'ol \1'111

The Daily Sentinel- Page- '

Februlily 23, 1987

Kyger Creek girls .advance in Class A .tourney

By Scoll Wolfe
Tour,nament victory over the
ROCK SPRINGS- Outscoring Crooksville Ceramics hereSatur·
Crooksville 15·6 In the second · day evening at Meigs High
perlod, the Eastern Eaglettes School. In the first two games
girls' basketball team chalked up Kyger Creek defeated North
a 35-34 Class "A" Sectional Gallla and Miller humbled South·

Bill

Mon~y.

Pomeroy.,.-,Middleport, Ohio ,

2s(

EACH

USES FOR AlUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
,MAKING HAMMERED lANI' SHADES.
CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAilY SENTINEl Til 3 P.M.

· •ViNYl SIOI,NG
*AlUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
N1w Nom11 Built
"Freo Estlmatu"

PH. 949-2160
or 949-21101
Na Sunday Calls
3-11-ttn

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 UST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Aolhorind John DHro,
New Holland, lush Hog
form lquipmont
Doalor

firM E••lp111111t
P1rh &amp; Service

1·3-'86 lfc

f(Ur OUT FOR IUIURI Ul£1

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All M••••

•W~tshors

•Dishwa5ht:•s

•Ranges

•R efr igerator s
•OryEus • Freeze rr;

PARTS and

SERVIC E
4

!)

I'!

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JU.ST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
L--------~io~-·~·twtcu

•

• ••

�Pomerov-Middl.,art. Ohin .

February l:f, 1987
Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Anr11runc 1: ment s

LAFF·A·DAY

3 Announcements
Aacme Gun Shoot sponsored by
Rtclne_Oun Club. Every Sundav.
begtnnmg at 1 tOO p m Factory

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

~. bd;.

all utlhti• !)lid except
alec , furn or unfurn.. tiC
deposit required Convenient
locat ion Call 814-446· 8568 or

Choke. 12 guage shotgun•
Avon Open ~OUie, Monday Feb.

614·44e-4778.

16, at Jim • Carpe1 Outlet in
Hertford, 6-9pm Pubh c mvited.
refrettlmentt, door pnzea wary

2 bdr fullv furnished adults only,

ulll paid Cell614-446-4110

hour. everything ttler e 1h price.
B nng fr•enda &amp; ullativas

N• ce semi-prrvatelot. w•th 2 BR

4

trtuler furntthed Water paid ,
large glassed In porch Very nice,

Giveaway

986-3884

AKC rtiQI!Itered femala Samoyed

142B

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for leta model clean
used cars
Jtm Mtnlc Chev -Oids Inc
Btll Gen e John1on
614· 446-3672
TOP CASH patd for '83 model
end newer used cars Smtth
Buick-Ponttac, 1 9t1 Eutern
Ave. Gellipoha Cell 614-446-

2282

Uud Mobile Homu Ph 814-

446·0176

Top pncet patd for stending
t1mber cell after 6 pm Ph 614·
446-7524
Buytn!J daily gold, 11!11er coma,
rlnga, jewelry, JterUng ware. old
coms. large currency Top pri·
cea Ed Burkett Barber Shop
2nd Ave Middl epo rt , Oh 614:

992·3476

"You're living in the past, sir.
We closed that loophole
years ago!"
j,fi~~;;;~;;;~;;r~~r~;:;;:;:::;:;;:;:;::::::::i
11

Help Wanted

Em plo yment
Help Wanted

Dec k Handa lmmedtalt open·
.nga tor deck hands, lint
handlers, mechanics, weldare.
other trades. E~~:cellant bem!lftts
package melud11 on the JOb
training. world treval and a great
paycheck . Applicants should be
17-24. in good physical condl
tlon. htgh school greduates able
to pan security background
investtgat1on . Call toll free m
Otuo 1-B00-282· 1384 , Mon ·
Thurs 9am·2pm.
Wanted Rhythm Player or Steala
Guitar Player need11d for Country Band Preler at lean 26 to 40
yr old Prefer someone who
si ngs. needed immediatly Call
614 · 245-9316

TOUR GUIDES
OEEfHANO RESORT· f'teaunt
working conditions. Meny com pany benefits. Management posulon• ava1labla. UOO-t41SO
Bt·wtekly For eppolntment ,
286· 6421 . eak for Frankie
RETAIL SECURITY. In local
store. Store Detective, start at
t3 65 per flour . Trammg Progum &amp; Equipment Included
Send background informe11on
..vlth Phone No To : fishers B1g
Wheel47. 1138 U S 23 South,
Delaware. Ohio 430115 AnN ·
Mike Fronckowlak. 0 l.P M No
phone calla pleue

IMMEDIATE
full -time posttlons Qualified
Mental Retardttion Professional
Ctrtil•ed QMRPor ellgthle to be
certified Bechetora d~tgrH rt·
qulred Prefered areas ol m-ior:
Social Work,. Edueetlon, Thttt·
peutlc Rtcr..tion, Rthabdita·
t1on Counaellng. Send Rtlume
to P.O. Box 744, Athtnl. Ohio
45701 or call 814· 693·8074
between 1 to 4pm, M-f

SOCIAL WORKER
Imm ed iate full -time poslllo n
must pouen 1 mlntmum of 1
BSW from an tccredited school
ot Soctal Work. 1yrs. tKperitnce
in • htlfth ctre uttlng, and
co mputer skills tre prefentd.
Send resu me to P 0 Box 744.
Athens, Oh10 4ti701 Or Call

614 693-8074

Person to set up appc:~intments
by telephone from own home In
Gallipolis Area Name• alrflldy
furn ished Good and easy money
Call 614 -992-3187

12

Situations
Wanted

388·8633

0600 00 Ph 61 4·256·6609

Care for elderly female, bed or
wlleelcheir petcent in 't1Y home
Hne experience 304-675 2073 anytime

15

Schools
Instruction

43e7
16

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

Good used porteble and floor
model color t11 's Ph 6 H · 446-

1149.

1 4x70 Fleetwood 2 Bdr , 2 full
ba1h1, total elec Prte:e negotta·
ble Call efter 4 weekdtY•.
anyttme weekends 614-388-

8633

1971 Commodo re 12x66. 2
Bdr.. partly furnished, wood
burntng atova Ph 614-388·

9B04

1972 2 bedroom Mobile Home
Oakbrook 14x70. LA
e~tpendo , 3BR. 2 bath. woodburner. AC S12.600 or beat
oHer Must tell call 614-3791981

26B7.

18 Wanted to Do

Trucks for Sale

•.

WA'( IT'5

........~u LA JJ!.I.t..,
CUAIO(A&lt;;

.

EYEN!NQ

12.1 &amp;0 00 Ph. 2B6·6522

''

l

!'

446-3169

•
~
2-2 8

that Eddie is going 10 murder
hiS

2 bedroom, furntahed New
Haven Caii304-B82-2466
Mobile Hom e for rent near
Cheah~re Call614-367-7t48

about her upcomtng film ,

"Outrageous Fortune"

K &amp; K Mob1le Hom11, 2 and 3
bedroom mobtle homea, 304·

'

1976 N11hua 12• 65, 2 bdr .
jarge btth. 11e~ good cond
S6600 or but offer Call 614·

Jeep CJ&amp; .. V-8. 4 new ••
ntw .brakea , 49, 000 mllea,
t2,8Do 00 Wlllconaidarplckup

4926.

1 Bedroom bas•c rent 8176 00
plu1 electric Also r&amp;quired a
8200 00 security depo11t CON·
TACT Jackson Ettaltl Dep t. Ph
446 -3997 Equal Ho us.ng
Opportuntty
2 Bedroom apt. nice carpatmg,
water patd washer &amp; dryer
hook-up stove. refri!J furnished
avatltbl e Jen 1. 1987 Ph

814-446-7026

Furnishtd &amp; unfurncthed apts,
8150 00 and up, referen ces Ph.
304 · 876 -7738 or 304-676·
61 04 A-1 Real Estate
Furnished apartment, next door
lo l1brery One professional adult
onlv Perking Call 614-446

0444

1973 Ktrkwood 12~~~:66 . 1 OJ 2
bedroom . New carpal , furnace,
hot water halter S7800. 814-

Bu1ld to suit porches. pettus and
out bulldmgs and all exterior
ceJptntry and acme lnteriDr
Expenenced Call 614 -448 ·

992-2464

Oakwood Apt 1 bedroo m unit.
1tove Ill refrigerator furnished
No pets Call 614-446-2065
afler 5pm

3376

Private duty nursing 6yr. e~tp•
rience Ph 814-446 ·8396. or

B14-245·5612

Want to do babytitting in my
home Call614-388-8114
Piano lntons 1n your hom e.

304-675·1379

.

I will do beby sitting in my home
or yours, 304-675-7230

3000

Business
Opponunity

I NOTICE 1
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO recommtndt thtt you
do business with ptople yo u
know. and NOT to send money
through the m11l until you h.ve
Investigated the off~~rin!J.

FREE BROCHURE ! Openwith1n
three weeks your \lery own top
brand apparel note Ladl"
Childrens. Large l tZe , pe11te o;
combinttion stort Regul• price
or ofl· pflce A1k ebout our new
S13 99 l1d in clothmg store
119,975 includn Inventory. tha·
turas, tn·store treinmg, 1upplies
and much mora. Call 1nytime

1·90.·765-4111
23

Professional
Services

Ptano &amp; organ le110n1 Mary
Lucat. Call 614-446· 9787 or
614·446·4426 .

Real
31

10•65 Kro!)f Eldoredo 2 bed-· 2 bedroom ri'oltr \lltw apar1ment
rooms. leundry, gts heat. ra1sed Equipped kitchen, trash pickup
ce1hng with sky llghta, underpin· Ideal for 2 par11n to share
nmg , aohd osk In tenor, Mutt see e•penctt Call614-992-6539.
to tpprtciete. ExctUtnt condi·
t1on 83600. Call 614-992- Gracious living 1 and 2 bed·
room •pnrtmenta at Vtllage
2763.
Mahor and Riverside Apart1973 Arlington, 12x515 2 bed· ments In Middleport From
rooma. 83000 Call 814-992- 82115 ln cludmg utilities. Call
614-982-7787 EOH
6654

K a. K Mobile Homes. Inc. new
and used hom11 mrting at
84,400.00 snd up 304· 876·

Fin ancia l
21

.,--'------A

'81 Commodore. 1 4x45. like
new hved 1n only 6 months ,
payoff. Phone 304· 882-3864

E s t ~te

Very nice1981 Patriot 14K70. 2
br. 1 'li bath. 1 0A20 porch.
underptnning Milton Rouah.

304-S96-3378

33

Farms for Sale

614·245 924B

32 acres 4 mllas out11de c1ty
Umita Co r y 7 room, 1 atory
home Popular Addison school
d11trtct Fishing pond, b•n a. out
buildings Cell McGuire Realtor
Co .. 1402 fourth Ave. Hunting·
ton, WV 26701 or cltl304-629·

6033
34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings lor Ieese
Oowntown PI Pleuant Stores,
officii. ~ - One Real Estate
Cerol Veager. Broker Ctll 304-

I :6:-7_6_
·5_1_0_6_:-:-:-:---One room school lodge epprox
28x32, on Clay Chap" Ad
Central htat 6 AC 100 amp
electric bo" · 9670 efficiency gas
furnace. dtop ctthng. pentltd &amp;
carpet. Call 446· 8308 ot 675·

614-246-9248

614·678-2513

Compllrlely remodtled 2 bed·
roo ms. baument, everyttllnt:l
new 2312 Medison Ave •

614-992·7671 .

5 room unfurn11htd aper1ment
Call 614· 992-5434 or 304·

882·2666

APARTMENTS. mobil e homn,
houaes. Pt. Plea1antand Gallipo
Ill. 614-448-8221

2026

54 Misc. Merchandise
SS Ruger Rephawk 41 Mag.
Asktng 8300 00 Ph . 614-388-

9924.

410 H P Bolen• Garden Tractor
Hydraulic lift. Wheal welgh11,
d11c plow Mower snow blade.
81 ,400 00 Cell after 5pm Ph.

614-446·2914

12 Ga . 3m Magnum Shotgun•
36" full choke, 3 shot t12&amp;.oo
Ph

614·379·2835

Kendall Wood - Colli Sto\le,
ftreplace insert or tret tt1nd1ng
like new Ph. 814-446-8594
Baby crib with mattrtll ••eel·

lent condttion Ph

9110

814· 246·

Untden Sattehte System Ph.

61 4-245·6294.

Miud hardwood alaba S12 per
bundle. Containing appro• 11!J
tona. FOB Ohio Pallat Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio Cell 614-992-

6461

12 ft tettlhte dish All remott
control Good •• new. Call
8\l&amp;ntngl 614·992· 5181 Muat
sell
Firewood for sale UO, ,big
ptck-up load. dtU\Itred Call
614-742 -3194 or 614-742-

2076

17 fl

Conseuion Tra1lor .

&amp;76·2648•• 676·6783

Tony's Gun Repalra. hot rebtut·
mg Open 9 00 AM to 7 .00 PM .
Call304· 675· 4831 .

45

Herballfe lndependant Oial. Ctlt
me f or product Mon-Fr1 9· 3
Glorie Grete 30ot ·882· 3, 62.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Slaeping Room s and
light house keeping rooma Park
Central HflUII Call 614-446-,

0766

Rooms for rent , day week
mon th Gtllta Hotel Call 614·
446-971 6 Rentulow11t120
month

46 Space for Rent
Offtce Space for Re nt Excellent
lor Attorneys, Accountant, etc
Cloae t o Court House Coli
Wiseman Reel Estate Ag ency

614-446-3644

Three room ofli ce. OTW Galhpo·
lia. newly remodeled 8 300 00 a
month, tnclude s all utll1tlas Ph

7479

47 Wanted to Rent
tiDu se In country, prefer leon,
Arbu cllle area Reasonable rent
Will tl" up if necesurv 304·

676-53e2

Rcnla ls

lewn mower, t40 Walnut co·
lored stereo. S45 Blond dre11er
w1th mtrror, 826 Kerosene
heater, f45 Twin sized box
spriniJI. 820 Cell 614-448-

Two bedroom apt, phone 304·

773-802•

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Ashton building lots, mobUe
hom" permiUtd, Clyde Bowen,

STOP-LOOK· SAVE

Mollohan furniture &amp; Applian ·
c•. Rt 7 North Gallipol11, Ohto
Ph 814-446-7444. 6pc. Wood
Uvlng Room Suite *399 00 .

Haven 304-882-3267 or 304·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 North of Pomeroy
Ranta\ trailers Call 814-992·

Lot for tale 1 acre plus Neal
Pomeroy At 7 Cell 814 9926732 or 814· 992· 7671

Uaed sofas , cha•rs. recliner•. and
beddtng of varioua sizes Cotbtn
&amp; Snyder Furniture, 956 Stc:&lt;tnd
Ave Ph. 814·4"6· 1171 .

02600 Coli 614·992·7830

614·4•6·1647

J• 304·67&amp;·2336

Two bedroo m house, living
room, dtn ing •oom, kitchen.
bet h, full bestment. double c•
gerage on approalm .. ety 1 2
acres on Rose Htll, Pomeroy.
Owner mus1 sell. Re .. oneble
offer wtll be con1idered Phone:

2 BR. l. apt. Syracuse t135
month pJu• utilit111 Depostt
required ' 814 - 992 - ~732 or

3099.

Homes for Sale

614·446·3870.

2 bedroom. furnished or unfur·
nlshed apartment on Sprmg Ave
Largt patio. Call814-992· 6886
after' e.oo p m.

Two bedroom fumlahed apt New
30 acre farm hn good home,
lerge b1rn and large pond. So 1th
Western School Oiatnct Ph

Uud Furniture wood ttble • 2
benches. beds. dresaer. wood
wardrobe. 3 mlle1 out Bulaville
Rd. Open 9AM to 5PM, Mon
thru Sat 614-446 -,0322

0338

Unfurn11tled apt -4 rooms. bath
Centrally located 1 or 2 adults
No pe1s Referen ces, Secunty
depo11t required Call 614· 446-

Ch1ef Wood, wood burner and
load of wood, S 150 00 304·

576 2704

Model 94 Winchester Clasic
30-30 8450 20" Homehta
Xl·12 chain sa w t100 Call

304· 773·5303.

Baby Grand plano . good conditton f1 25 .. Twin beds 2 at
S10 00 eactl , Sw1vel rocking
chatr S10 ; Oak dresser, thtH
drawera with crecktd Tennftsee
pmk marble top •315. Call afler 6
p m 304-676-6763
FTER ~ P M'
3 -pi eee ltving room 1u1te
S2 00. 00 Saw ing msctltne
526 00 Good Condition. 304-

'&gt;---- -

676-2941 .

land Esttttl lbthind •mary)
corner lot. vmyl siding, ha.e:
pump with centr1l atr, large
kitchen incl 1tove, rtfrigerat~r.
dlthwllhar, laundry room, Iota
mora Mid 40's, cell 304 -676 ·
7127 evenings or 875-1 186

M b'l H
rocoivod by Mmh 18, 1987. 32
0 I e omes
Applicants should und r"um11
for Sale

1---------1983 Nt~hwt 14 ~~:7 0 71121 tx ·
pando aitutttd on 4 ~ ecres
Send Hill Road. thrH bedroom
total electric, central tir, tully
equipped lllltohltfl, gwdtt~ , tub.
two water bed• ~ two porehM
10x12 buHdtng, Hptlc 11\d WI•
tlf". PrieN to tall Shown by
1.,0intment Set'lous lnqulriM

only.

304-&amp;7&amp;·8~28

8 00 and 10.00 pm.

bot-n

65 Building Supplies

Double bed. complete, firm
Sealy " Clean " t 300 00 Two
nfMI30 tn interspring msure11e1
$26 00 and $30.00 304.· 876-

3B2B.

010.95 ••· 141 4'x1o·x'll" ply·

wood, t11.96 te. (15) 4'•B'xW'
Luen plywood. tiS.89 ••· (II
4'x8' all wood paneling. Woodgreina &amp; prints. t7.95 ea.
S•conds 15.99. (7) M1111onltt
Marlite planka 11" wide 96''
long paneling T&amp;O. Second•
S1 60 •• t814'd' Merhte blth
panel embossed In 4"x4" block
t7.96 and S8.95 ••· 191 4'a8'
Foil feced foam iAiulation boerd.
!W' thick 84.99 e11 ('.4"· •6.19)
(1 " · t8 .5911101 t1!8" Vanity with
marble top 8179.15 1 (11) 30"
Vanity witfl m11rble top S79 liS.
l121 5 piece high t:IIOII tub
enclosure kit U9.9&amp;. (131 15'
tempered glut sliding tub
doors, elumln!Jm flni1h, U9.94
or $39.95 with purch ... of tub
1141 Single door mtd. ceb.
plutlc box, t1tinltss steel
freme . 819 96 ••· (Hi) 1 1nd 2
piece fibtrglns lub end showltf'
comblnetton. Colors 6 whha
S129 .96 to t199.95 ee IS
percent discount on 2 piece 6
up (1,8) 4 plect solid olk tow_.
barHt •1t.95. (17)Prefinlthtd
oak bruce flooring %"x2'h''
Random lengtha•1 .915sq,ft. 10
c t n up S1 715 tq. ft . 20 1q. ft.
pr c t n. j181 Prehung at tel
insulettd doors *19.95 1a. j19)
Pine panel doon f39.96 to
169.915 8 grtdft, 1201 Double
sldtlight entrMce doors lh gl...
1!J panel. ··neB. liS ea C2fl 8 '
Double entrance doon. YJ gltll
1!J paneU349.91S. (22) Prahuno
Interior doors, flnlttltd &amp; unfln·
lshecl. Choice sizes. •34.95 ••
(231 Wood a. plastic shutters
from 31" to 80" 89.915 to
128 96 pr (24) Ill Wood ICtHn
doora . •12 915 u
1251
1'!.'' "38" x80" wh1te Jtorm
doors, msulated foam filled
t89.95. {281 Courttartop plaatic
10 cent• sq ft {27) VInyl aiding
trim 6 colors (12' J channel
t11 .1S01 (10' in11de COfntf
t3.001 110' outside corner

84 001 1281 12"x12" plain

white calling tilt 2&amp; ctnts ••· or
64 piece ctn S1 e 50 1211
24" •48" ecouatictl embo11ed
f1re rni1tant calling penels
S2 36 •• 1301 Clo1aout whiff
ceUing grldaf12' meln tee $1 .60
81 1 14' ttl 60 cent• at. I PtMI 'I
Warehoute W..ltton, Ohio.
&amp;U-380·3646 Open 8·5. I
doyo
Bulldtng Materiels
Block. brick. sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels. etc. Cltude W•n·
ten. Rio Granda, 0 Call 614-

246-5121 .

Concrete blocks ell airta yerd or
delivery Muon tthd. Glllipolls
Block Co , 123 YJ Pint St ..
Gtlllpolis, Ohio Cell 614· 446-

2783.
56

livestock

RegiStered Quarttt' HorN born
8· 17-81 Orullo. good bloodline

1'11. &amp;14-379·2143

for stle· 18 month old femelt
Morgen.Qutrtar horse Colorboy. Coli e14·985·42•2 oft"'

500.

Lerg..a round baln of hiiY, will
d.UV.r e115 a bale. Call 814441-1052 efltt' 5

nt.

1978 Chevy Malibu Cla1t1e
11 ,800 00. 1974. Ford Rtn•

1984 Ford Eacort Wagon, AT,
PS. and air S2.81SO.OO Ph.

2B&amp;-e622.

79' Plymouth Voltirt, Bcyl .
4-door, PS. automat1ctransml1·
lion. AC . Priced to sell. Cal
between 8 to 9pm. Ph. 814-

448-3123. .

1985 Plymouth Ouater, 6·
tPNd. AC 17,000 mdn, nice
clean cer Ph 114· 379-2726.
1984 Dodge Anta. auto air
Cath pntt t2,799.00, Johns
Auto Sal•. Bulwilla Ad
1980 Ford Crown VIctoria, V-8
good condition 12,500.00 or
but off• Ph 81ot-446-4fi30

441-93281111• 8pm

1985YJ Mercury Lynx Sport.
AC, Stereo. cloth interior lherp
14,660 00 negotltblt. mwttlfll

1915 Olds Cutlass. AM -FM
Ctuata, V-6 , bledt:. E•cellent
condition Ph. 814-245-6841
after 4~m .

30~ · 675 · 2191 .

f .11111

Suppl11~~;

(; liVI'!-lll!.k

19n Ford Grtneda 82&amp;0.00

Ph 114·441·2303.

1980 Ford Mustang. 4 cyi ..
Mlto. n 400. Good condition
Call 114· 448·7879 or 114·

·41·9121
61 Farm Equipment

t285 mo plu• depoSit. Reftftn·
cea requlr... Call 814·446·

1981 Olds Cutllst. lmaeuttte
concUrion. New 11rt1 endohrome
whtl41, AM· FM CIIIMita and

AC. Allldng 03200. 81•·992·
2010 John Deere di•el trtctor- 1568.
plowo, disc 13110. Now ldoo

8 room hs on 50 acres at Eureka
1200 t month 6 room hs. 7&amp;

Of"e Bounce mo.., t415. Lite
model 224T John Deere .,.._
812115. Hay wegon UOO C.ll

acre farm · Mtl on County Call

304-875-6104

114-211-8822.

1181 Mercury Lyrt" G.L. tuto
trlnwnieMon, power .tearing,
A C. Many mat'l tltras. 114-

317-7780
CROSS l SONS
1178 Chevrolet Mont• C.,lo,
U5. 35
Jodi.... Ohio. body good, now polnl. 1976
11.·281-&amp;ql .
ChwroiOI Coprlco. goOd condl·
MetMY Fergu10n, New Holland, lion Col 814-112·8722 llflor
Bush Hog Stl• a Service Ov1r
40 uted lrtctors ta choou from s:oo .....~ng •.

Btaut1 lul 3 btdroom house In
Svracu11. Fun kitchen, lerge
lawn. Contact diYI 114·992·
8298 or ntghts 114-187- 3786.

w....

In Middleport, 2 bedroom house
UOO. per month plus utith:i•.
Reference• end 1ecurlty deposit
required No petl. Kitchen stove
furntshtd . C1ll 814· 992· 1018

6 complete line of nfM 6 utld
equipment. Urg.a Hlectlon in

I .E. Ohio.

2 a tory, 7 rtKtrn lloutt for rent in
Danville, Ohio 11h b.. ll Call

477 New Holend 7ft. Hty Bine.lika new for f2,100.00. v.,.
milt' Round Ill• 4xlft. baltt,
used 1 auaon Call 114-318-

614·7·2-2307.

91132.

Whhe F~rm TrtctOf'l, Belt Price
In Aree. 8klsrt Equlpmtm: Co.

'"Grandpa's aslaep. I'm leaving these lor
the looth fairy ...

1174 Dodp lpoclol Ed~lon . 4
doar, low mil till•· fOOd 09n11i·
- · t12QQ. Coli 114·192·
1111.
'73 Novo. 33.000 mil•. I cyl.
A,,,l, • door, seoond ownw,
r·blk top. e1 110.00. 30478·8384.
1110 OldoOoftoll "oyolt. V·l.

l

PI , " · tlr, CNite, AM·FM,

Hond...n. W. Yo. JOO.I7l·
-178·1021.
· n .100.oo. 3047421 .

You

fOR oB.s-ERVATION,
THI:Y ~fALL.y M!?AN l'i!
7:36
8·00

••

Used GM transmilllons All J *"
lnter,..lly intpected &amp; gutran·
teed Also ford &amp; Chrysler. Cell 7'7;

. '

..,
' •

Services
Home
Improvements

81

comes Morgan Bnttany,
John Denver, Jonathan
Wtnters , Howard Keel, M1ss
Tahlt1 and M1ss Amenca,

.
'....
.
••

614-448·0916

Susan Akon to the South Pa·
Clllc !&amp;lands of Tah111 and
Moorea. 160 mon.lln S1ereo
()) Fother Murphy
(JJ Ill (JJ MacGyvor (CCI
MacGyver is plunged 1nto a
deadly CIA operation by a
man he had long thoughl
deed. [60 min I
e C!J MOVIE: 'BrNkhNrt

.
•

' ... 1

.,

.'

'
'
·• · ''

BASEMENT

.

"

Pet~'

r»'•

rDl Keto &amp; Allie ICC)
Kate plsvs Cupod for Louos

EEK &amp; MEEK

HEY.
I~

and a woman who' has a
crush on h1m

Wonderworks: Little
PrlnceSI (CCI After bo1ng

A (!J.N
IJJ~HIOOlDO, D.C..
~·s

(ll)

1reated like a pnnceas , Sara
f1nds herself penntle11 when

"

All typn carpenter &amp; concrete
work: Interior, tAterior. remo·
doling, painting, roofing, free
tt11imat•. Call 814-448-1174

her falhor does. (60 m1n.1
@ MOVIE: ·M•A•&amp;•H'
8:06 Cll MOVIE: 'Min Without
a SUr'

8:30

..

,: ;
,

.....,
'

" ''

'

RON'S Television Serviee .
House calls on RCA , Outltr.
GE . Speclallng •n Zenith Call

~ORTY

.••
,, ~

304·676·2398 or 814· 446·

,.,..

2464.

Feuy Tree Trimming, atump
rtmGval. Ctll 304- &amp;75-1331

"

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

HIDINGEVQ&lt;
THERE, NASTY.

•

AINGLES 'S SERVICE . tape·
rlenctd cerpenter, electrician,
mHon, painter. roofmg (ln clutf.
lng hot ttr apphettiOnl 304-

-:-- -· r

875·208B •• e75·7147.

-r·

B95·3B02

Sterkl Tree and lawn Servlc:e.
Hedgea , ahrubs . bu 1 h11
trimmed, landacaplng, stump
tnd leaf removal. 304-5762842 OJ 578· 2010.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.,,

. -~'
•

I.. .. .,, .

~" ..w'• ,_,, ,.,

:L-- - - - - - -···

~

l.(.o., o

I

•I

~ ........

. -· . - ..J_'}

' '

AN' 'THEY
CALLED YOU
NAMES?

. '.
---------- .. ,
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Ill

MOVIE . 'Love
Among Thieveo' (CCI
(JJ Visible Targot
00 g (jj) Nowhort ICCI

' IN&lt;Il'J

IHEY CALLED ME
A DADBURN

(CCI

perienced by a 14-year·old
boy growing up '" 1930s
Harlem. Paul Winfield. Alfra
Woodard. Oliv1a Cole and
Ruby Dee s1ar (90 mon.IIAI
9:30 (!) College Boskotball:
Purdue at lllinolo 12 h" I
live.
@ D rDl Cavanaugh•
Pop 's brother . the owner of
the Cavanaugh Construction
Co ._2ays a vis1t.

CKEAT!!

10 00 e (!] Odd Couple
(JJ
Mac:Noii·Lehror
NIWihour
[JI
Cogney &amp; Llc:oy
(CCI Chrie and Mary Btlh In·

e [])

\/Bitlgate a business that

doad pooplo. 160 min I
10:011 (I) MOVIE: "Tho F~r Coon·
try•
10:30 ()) Children of the Brokon
H.-cl
(I) Columbuo MIA
e CD INN Nowe
[j]) N.-wetch

~
-·- ,

"'

we '' erson .•

®N.-

....
We ta r Hauli ng .....,.,
Jttscm able rat es • m m ed 1 at ~ ~ ..
2.000 gallon delivery , Claterns. ~~~
pools, ,wen etc. ca ll 304-576- ~ ·:l
2919
' •••

11 :00

,..
..

,
Ken W
"::

Wettr hauling. Formerly
Wheaton• now John's Water · • ·
Service Same prlcea. phon!
304· 576-2919 or 676-2464
~ ~
v

•'

Rl M
. Custom Couches and

~

Reupholttery , St. Rt 7. Crown ·
City, Oh 114· 261-1470, Eve
11•·441· 3431 . Open dalty 9 to
4:30, Set 9 .30 to, ·30 Okt &amp;
new Uphosttred

."'

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ill CllD CIJ ® e (jj) rJ11
(IJ Htrdcootle lnd McCor·

tlouse coal, ltmastone and ~ ~ ~
gravel Deli11ertd 1 ton and up, ·• , .
Jim Lan ier, 304 ·875-1247 or N·-"' '
876· 7397.
• f'o •·

Upholstery

BARAED

I;
~ =~R=O~A~L~S=:;I

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SOUND

TRAYEL5 ONE MILE
IN FIVE SECOND5 11

AU.Itl&amp;MT, 1&amp;1140
LIFT TMI! UP OFF

MAN JELL\'?! .

midi
• CD M•A•S•H
(JJ Tho Pllnlt Elnh !CCI
Potomill minlrol rooourc11
lhlt tcienlitll oro oxplo&lt;lng
baneath the IN and in outer
'!lltf l&lt;lftlturtd. 1110 rnin.l
llll ONie &amp; Ruby: TWhlte HorNo A woman
thought to bo dold 1urn1 out
IO bi olive
11 :30. ill rJII .... of c.Tonlghfo ptlt "" J1m01
Gornet, Anllt Moffit and
Barry Oiamond 160 min IIRI
In S11&lt;110.
·
m8...,.UC.ntor •
I]) el]) ABC NIWt VIIW·
- POint: Fiction, FICt and the
'rlilored Truth Live .
eCDTui
&lt;II® MIQnum. P.l.

'"On the westside of town 1can
get thluult cleaned lor $21eu,"
yelled the man. '"Is lhat 10,'"
smiled the cleaner, .. and how
much for the- -?"

I0

1-6,.-,1.::...-TI....:.TI:.:....:;I;.....:=--rl::7-1

Complefe lh e chuckle Quoled
by f1lllng tn the m1u mg words
L _.J._..L.-.1..-.J.L........L.--1
you deve lop from step No 3 below.

I
YESIEIDA Y'S S(IAM·IITS ANSWERS
Jackll- Abalh - Knoll - Enigma - GO BACK
Two old gentaeat on tiM porch remembering their growing·
up yeart. '"Yep." agreed one man, "home Ia a plact you grow
up and leave and then grow old and want to GO BACK to."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Everyone's
blind spot

NORTH
• Q 62

2-11-17

'Q

t ~ KJ 3
·~Q 752

By Jameo Jacoby
When you have nothing but wmners
outside of the trump su1t, you will
probably feel an inexorable urge to
draw trumps Immediately Thai IS a
good plan as tar as il goes 8uL 11 you
firsl ask yourself what the defenders
are trying to do. you may be able to
block their strategy.
When lclday 's deal was played at a
recent tournament. those dec larers
who won the opening diamond lead
and immediately played trumps met
an early demise. East won the spade
ace and returned a diamond. When
West got on lead with his spade kmg,
he led a heart to his partner's ace and
got a diamond ruff to set the contract
One declarer played a heart right
away. but East won , returned a dia·
mond and played a lh1rd d1amond for
the ruff after wmmng the spade ace.
At another table declarer tned to
a~01d the third·round diamond ruff by
taking a club finesse That resulted m
down two.
The obvious play seemed to stnke
everyone's blind spot. Of course 11 wa s
right to lead a heart at the second
trick. After East led the second dia mond , all that was required wa s lor
declarer to wm that d1amond in his
hand and play the K-J of hearts, diS·
carding both d1 amonds from dummy.

EAST

WEST

·~
'~ 9 8'

IK 74
'10 7 6 3 2

U8

• 7642

+K 8 4 3

+J 10 9

SOUTH
• J 10 9 85 3

'K

J4
• Q 10 '

+B

Vulnerabl e: Both
Dealer No1-th
WeJI

North

East

1

Pa,.
Pa"'

+

2+

Pass

Pas.,

3+

Pass

Pa ss , Pass

So•I~

I+
2+

••

Pa~s

. •·-

Opemng lead t 9

1...-----------...J

Now declarer can lead the jack o'
spa des from h1 s hand with Impunity
The lh1rd d1amond cannot be ruffed by
West. si nce it will be overrulled by the
dummy's queen of trumps
A new book by James Jacoby and his
fath er, the late Os wald Jacoby. is now
available at bookstores. It is "J•colly
on Card Games, " pub/Jshed by Pharos
Books

ti~u•"•"
by
THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

2 ll ctW,UI.III

I I II H' ol Ill• •
I h tlli I II II "
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fll ..,l p l! l
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DOWN
I fo.;l.llld
lll',lf l .l'V It •

DAII. \' CR YPTOQlJOTES - Hcre•s how t" ~ &lt;~rk II ·

cla1m1 to send mes11ge1 to

I
' '"
Jemes
1Boys Wat er Service Also ' ~.
poolsftlled Call614· 256 '1141 ' -" '
or 614· 448·1176 or 61• ·446- •
7911
--?

••

An adap111ion of

James Baldwin·s semtal.ltobtographical storv tha t
centers on the co nfUcls ex-

CSNIF -SNIF )

_lo:m-:e::-C.~ol:-1:61::·~·.'44
::._6~·:._7:._4::
04:__ :~

Mowrey's Upholtttrlng terving
triCGuntylrN22yeau Th e bett
In fumttura upholstering. Call
30_4 · 175 - 4154 fo r free
t1t1metes.

(IJ

Joanna tells" 01ck he s 10 a
rut because he never does
anything spontaneous
[j]) Americon Ployhouao

General ~auling ~:..

Dllltrd Water Serv1ce Pools
~istern 1, Wellt Del1very Any~

87
'

A CROWN.

(90min I

I
···~· 1.,

Cor Fourth and Ptne
, Gallipoh( Oh1o
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446-4471
.

85

CALL THAT rHINGr

f#

."'

who have relatives miSSing.

I'D KARDL.Y

:--, --,--...,--,-/

'

Rotary or cabin tool drilling
Most well a compltled semeday.
Pump 11lea and service 304-

82

HEAD TI-\AT Wr:AR5
A CROWN."

I.

(iii My Slater Sam

is bemg done for famthe s

'' UN5A-5Y LIE51HE

I KNOW YOu'RE

®•

ICC) Aller spillllng up woth
hll wife. J.D. moves 1n w1th
Sam and Paui
9:00 8 [l) (jJ) MOVIE: "Perry
Maoon: Tho Cllll of tho
Lost Love· (CCI In Stereo
()) 700 Club
(JJ M.f.A.· We Can Keep
You Forever Focus on what

~ '·

Room addhtona, eleeuical, roOting, liding, plumb1ng Excellent
ref•encn Call 614-317·0.12

choro ••oo oo Coli 614·448·
9219.
"
1973 VolksYigon Super Bettie.
'"cellent condition 81.500.00
Cell 814-241 -1187 betwun
5-Spm .

THEY'~E HOLPINt;

.•

··-

PRICE'S REDUCEO

WHE:'N THE'( .SAY

••'
••

4·6·0294

923• .

Gf:T A LOAI&gt; oF

''

Tra spu rto t n

1986 Ford Thunderbnd. one
own•. must 11111. Call 814-245·

7:05
7·30

THIS GOWN-- .. .

.,.

Autos for Sale

FRANK AND ERNEST

•

'

MacNeil-lehrer
Now1hour
D II2l [jJ) Wheel of Fortune
rD Barney Miller
(I) Sanford and Son
II [l) (JJ New Newlywed
Gam a
(J) College Basketball: Villanova a1 Pitttburgh 12
hrs.l Live
g C!l Too Clou lor Com·
fort
Ill (JJ Judge
Cll College B11ketball:
Marohall et Appelachian
Stoto 190 mon I
@ Wheel of Fortune
D (jj) @ Jeopardy
rD Jeflorsona
Cll Honeymooners
II [l) ilJ) From Tahi1i, Bob
Hope's Tropical Comedy
Special Bob Hope wei·
[jJ)

'ftl

;

WATERPROOFING
;:
Uncondttion~ hftlime guaran· ,.. , .
Ml)ltd hay for Nit. t1 . 26 ptr ·tee. Local ref•encn tumlahtd • 1!19
bile. Call 814-192-3709.
free ntimattt. Call collect .... "'r'
1·814-237·0488. day or night.
Drfad shetled com t4 ISO pBf R o g e r 1 B a s a m e n t . ~ ~
ew1 Ground 18.00 per cwt
.-. ;~~ '
Ground whh mol 111ft SIS . 75 per Waterproofing "
cwt 304-458-1031
SWEEPER end 1ewing machine
repair. parts, end s upplias. Pick •' I'
up and deiNery. Oa\111 Vacuum
'
11
10
Cleaner. one hall milt up
.
'
Gtora• Creek Rd . Call 614·

1981 Oi..il Rabbit. 4-speed,
AM·fM 81.,110 Clllette, sunroof. IIS,OOO min. Cell 614·

L•kt new ,

•

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1062.

Boxer Pups Ph 814· 246· 6114.

59 For Sale or Trade

'
•• •

16'11 ft . Gleltron Ski Boat. 19n
MercufY 17&amp; HPrecenlly ntbuilt. '
'3800. 014-992-15437 after IS ,
p.m.
~

Want to trede large round bel•
of hey for cattle Ph 614·4e·

71

@ News

••

Boats and
Motors for Sale

76

work on 1he Ca1hedral of St
John the Otvtne .

" ,.•'
•

75

sumpt1on of construc11on

I•

1988 Honda CR80, e•ctlltnt
condition Ph. 61 ,._446-0964.
-

84 Hay &amp; Grain

1974 Plymouth Duster 2 •door.
htrd top. new motor good
conditton, good tlrft. Excefltnt
worlt c• SJ&amp;O.OO. Ph. &amp;14·
441-1641 call 1nytime.

02&amp; 00 304·17&amp;·&amp;809.

f981 V1m1ha Tri-Z. 250 and VZ
2150 E•cellent condition Call
614-448·9710 efter 6pm.

Standing At Stud. AQHA Pala·
mino Stallion. 15 1 hand• Reg·
ittered MarH e100 614-94924151S wanings.

Drtgonwynd ClttltfY Kennel.
CFA Hlmeleyan. Penian and
Siemfte k1tten1 AKC Chow
puppie1 Cell 114-446-3844
lfter 7PM

Stearns and Foster. dtlu11tlunfil

0300.00

63

1'11 814·448·0382

3 bdr. ranch. Rodney Vtllage II.

•480.

Pets for Sale

Want to buy canopy bed, dresser
ot ches t. 304·676· 3638

mattre u

62 Wanted to Buy

Buildmg Suppli•. Cloaeouts·
Buyo1.111-Surplua (1)4'"8'x~ ·· Now buying ahtll corn or ew
Vel low pine rough stwed T 1-11 · corn. Call for ltttlt quotn. River
siding. e10.99 •• 25 pc up Cily Fo'"' Supply. 61•-40e09 99 121 •·•B'x'll'' Yellow pine 2986.
rougtl aewtd T 1· 1 1 11dlng.
05 99 ••· 26 pc up e4.89. 131
4 ' x8'~~:l.4" T&amp;O plywood ,

Houses for Rent

2 b.clroom home, 94 Burdltta
Addition, ltO\It and rtfrig•etor
lnc llHttd Reuorttbltrent. Good
loctlion Conttct Clllaenl Nt·
donal Trult Otp1 304-878-

r
r

-"''-

-

Shepherd puppies. no pepers,

t21 ,600 00 304·&amp;78·6•77 o• OOOB.
- - - - - - DONE
304·372&gt;9970,

1----------3 bedroom ranchtr. Meadow·

________

SNAFU 1M by Bruce Beattie
41

0

I

. ;3;04:·;5:7~&amp;:-2:9:5=3 ' ::
.... '
~tru~pk=on;t,.~do~
74 Motorcycles ...;"""
- · '·

Apartment
for Rent

44e-7887.

676-2981

,e..

·n

I

eCD M"A"S"H
D (JJ Pooplo·s Coort
Cll High Wire A portrall of
loghlrope walker Philippa Pe·
1010s he prepares for a 1962
walk celebrating lhe re·

0

'·
I',.

WOlD
UMI

~y

wife.

6:30 II [l) iliJ NBC Newo
(!) Action Outdooro with
Juliuo Boros
(I) Ill (JJ ABC Newe
e CD Hogen• 1 Heroes
(I) Doctor Who
®l II (jj) CBS Newo
(jj) Reading Rainbow
@ WKRP in Clnclnnoti
6·35 CI) DowntoEorthlnStereo.
7 00 II [l) PM Magulne
I]) Horde11de and McCormick
(J) SponoCanttr
(I) Entertllinmont Tonight
ET talks 10 Bene Modler

1986 Mob1le Home 14x70, on
St At 143 S230, gaamcludecl
Call614-992-5449

2 BR, 15 Court St. Carpeted
K1t chen turn 8350-month. Plus
utlhtutt. deposit Ca11814-448-

6:00 II Ill Cll II Cll 00 ID (jj) iliJ
New•
()) Big Volley
C!l Mudl Sportol.ook
• CD Jefferson•
(JJ Squore One TV (CCI
[jJ) Secret City
@ Facto of Life
6·05 (I) New Leave It 10 B&amp;IVtr
Aller much eavesdropping.
Ol1ver becomes convinced

2698

44

2/23/87

t

I

'::~~t:~' S©\\~lA-L&amp;t-trs·
14Md
CLAY I . POUAN
0 fou
Rearrange leiter~ of the
r scrambled words be·
low ro form four simple words

"Srei.L~D...

2 bedroom mobile home for rant
Ad Ults on ly Celt 614 -992·

Roofing. Patnting, amall plumb·
mg and carpetry JObs Re111ona·
ble, Free Estamatas Ph 304·

Apph cntions being eccapted for
london Pool Mtnager Send
reaume, complete wHh reference to Clerk Ja mce Lawton.
Village of Syracuse Syrecuae.
Ohio 46779 Deadline for apply ing.' Mar ch 1987.

800·642-381B

14.1170 Fleetwood 3 Bdr ., 2 full
baths. tolel tlec L1ke new . price
negotiable. Call after 4 week·
d-vs. anytime weekaends. 614-

$6,600 00 Ph 814-446·4841

3 bedro~ma clou to town, 2
bath• l•replace, centre! air.
range &amp; oven. City Schools Ph

The Army Nation ti Gutrd needs
both non-prior tnd prior "'llltary
t.vh:e ~ndtvldyals Join now for
• pwt-tlmt jo b wtth full time
b4nefiu. Eduutlontl mon~
evtlltble. 304·175·3910 or 1·

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 35
PHONE 614-446·7274

3BB-B633

3 bedroom redecoreted P1triot
Village . Will help finance
•29.600 Call 614-446· 1340 or

to: Me1gs County ' &amp;oard of
Mental Ret~rdatlon. P.O. Box
307. Syrecuse. Ohio 46779.
AU n Lee Wedemllyer ,
Superintendent

'

1981 Mazda TruCk. no ruat

negotiable. Call after 4 week-

Sales-per1on needed at local c•
dealer, no experience necauary.
Send resume to P 0 BoK 7290
Pomeroy, Ohio

HabilitatiOn Spec•alilt II wented
Must have uperlence in wo,king
with adult• who h8'&lt;1e 1evare,
profound rtterdatlon and deve l·
opmenttl dlllbthties Mu l l hf'ol e
• 0 M A P. certificate and 1
Habilitatio n Speetahat II Cer1ifi ·
cett issued bv the Ohio DtP¥1·
ment oi Menu1l f'eterdation and
Developmental Olubilitles .
Matttrt Degree prefened but
not required SallltY commensuratee w1th qualific1tlon1. Benetita Include medical, llebllity
tn 1 uren ce PEAS : tick leave ;
p.,.0n11i daya, vacation. lilt
iflaurence, educational rnimbur·
sement. uaff recr11ation ftclli·
tifllndprogram Hourure8 :00
A.r.t .· 4 00 P M., 12 · month
poai1ton Februa ry 23, 1917 Is
potting date Rtaumn rrMAI1 ba

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

days, 1nytime weekenda 614-

looktn!J for rest home for your
lo\le one? large room with bath,
hot meals. tv, extras t400 00 .

-'-- - - - - - - ·lcGOVERNMENT JOB S .
116,040-S59,230 yr. Now Hlr·
ing Call 805·887· 6000 Ext.
R-9806 for current federal hat.

72

batl'11, total elec L1ke new, pnce

Serm1:s
11

Olive St .• Qalhpolla. New&amp;uted
wood-coalatovea, I pc wood LR
eulle 8399, bunk beds 8199
recliners new &amp; used bedrooM
suites, wringer Wllhlrt, &amp;
aho111 New llvlngroom IUitH
8199-8599, lamps Call 514·

14x70 Fleetwood 3 bdr , 2 full

WANTED TO BUY - Engmeand
automatiC tnnaminion for
1982 Fcrtbird Phone 304-876

3698.

8·00 PM.

'50UIJO 11-le

CJ.U~IJIA ...

675-3000

Re1ram Now . Southeaattrn Busmall Coll&amp;ge Call 614-446·

Wanted t o buy standtn!J ttmber
Collect call 11ccepted we pay
cash 814 742 -2328

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12

IT~oces~·r

?ACJ!A~Je.~TO

11\e cAPHOI.. OF

Ph 6144462496

to good hom e, phone304-675-

&amp;2 N Phone 304 &amp;75 2111

1971. Buick Regal t700 00
Phone a04-8715 · 1888 after

fp,ij DO 'b\) 1'11!WJ~

2 Bedroom mobtle hom e for
rent Shoutrtng Rid ge .
t200 OOmo 175 00 deposit

304-773-9122

FOUND, menss unglauea, prescrtptlon Ste1aon frames on Rt

,''.

6863

Blue T1ck 2 years ol d Good dog

lost m v•cm •ty af Rt 1 and Rt
218 Ph 614-446 -7163

61 Household Goods

'

In Eureka &amp;llcellent shape 2 Bdr
wtth l!tlcpando Res~onctbte
adults only No pets S226mo
Oepot tt reqUifed Ph 614·245-

3 adult mal e cats and 1 male
Ieinen to g1ve away Ca ll 614-

Reward for • black Chow Chow.

Autos for Sale

71

KIT 'N' CAIILYLE ®by Lerry Wrlg~t

Television
Viewing

Call614· 446-3158 .

992-6071

Lost and Found

Merclianrlr sr·

LOSER

qUiet n&amp;Jghborhod. Sec dep. &amp;
ref required Centenary &amp;rea

3 yr . old amall. m1xed breed male
dog to good home Ca II 614-

6

Monday, February 23, 1987-.. i .

·The

'

~

.\XYDLBAAXR
IJLONGFEI..t.OW
One letter stands for anolhcr. In ttus s'""P''' ,\ 1s used
lor lhe lhree l.. 's, X for the tw o O's, ctr So n ~ I~ letters ,
apostrophes, the length and fonnat1on of th1• wrord' are all
hints. Each day lbe code letters are different
CRYPTOQ UOTF.S
2·2!1
1/ I I I

f i l i i)

T Y r;

f: I'

YIJ

1)~:

./ I 4

II I:
S f: M T

&lt;:Y IJXIIKT

1;\I !J r lll
1/

o

I

I N

K M ~~ II t: T
M I' Z I ' 1-: II r·
Y.. t.rday•a Ceyptoquou: UN I.ESS YCJ I. TI&lt;Y TIIIJO,
SOMETHING llEY(If\11) WIIAT YOU IIA VE AI .REAIIY
MASTERW, YO U WILL NEVF.R GROW. - ANO:\
[j]) Thlt Old H0t111 [CCI.
e (It Simon &amp; Simon Rick

and A.J. delve ln1o 1he
world of eexual ourrogatel
when lhey invo ot1ga1 o the
murder of a redia poycllolo·
gill's lllilllnl . 170 min I
(~I.

12:00 (IJ Burna &amp; Allen
C!l One on One
• C1.) Rowhldt
(JJ SCTV
12 : 0~ (IJ Natlonol O.OVri!Phic
E~r
•
12:30 e (})(Ill t.tt Night wlttt
DIIVid Lottermon

.,

�'
Pomeroy-Middleport, ·Ohio

Page-8-The Oaily Sentinel

Monday, February 23, 1987

,..--------Local Briefs:----------.·Clinic appointments _ available·~:
Middleport at 2:18p.m. to South Third Street for Robert Lewis
Jr. to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at7: 09 p.m. toMul~rry
Avenue for Ada Hoc ~ to Veterans M&lt;&gt;morlal Hospital, later to
Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 9:09 p·.m. to Sixth 'Street for
Johnny Evans to Holzer Medical Center.

. Squads answer 16 weekend calls
• Meigs County Emergency Medical &amp;rvlres reports six ralls
Saturday an(! 10 calls Sunday.
Saturday at 12:04 a.m., Pomeroy to Condor Street for Hazel
Grate to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 2:03 p.m. to
Chester Road for Clarence Lee who was treated but not
transportP&lt;I; Syracuse at 3:28 p.m. to Minersville for Harold
Davis to Holzer.Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4:31 p.m . to Union
Ave nue lor Edna Leach to Veterans Memorial Hospital; RarinP
at 5:28 p.m. to Blind Hollow Road for Robert Parsons to
VeteransMemorialHospital; Pomeroyat7:09p.m.toPomeroy
Health Care Center for Harry Shain to Ve terans Memorial
Hospital.
Sunday at 3:08 a.m .. Racine to Ohio 338 fo r Ralph Webb to
Veterans Me morial Hospital; Syracuse at 7:22 a.m. to Sixth
Street lor HaliiP Cross to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 9:06a.m. to Main Street for Chester Carson to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 10:17 a.m. to Langsville for Curtis
Barrett who was dead on arrival; Middleport at 10:27 a.m. to
Maple Street for Roy Searles to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 12:13 p.m . to Cheshire for Martha Stewart to
Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 12:24 p.m. to Worchester
Street for Mary Vall to Veterans Memorial Hospital;

Church slates missionary night
Missionary night at Hobson Church of Christ In Christian
Union will be Wedn esday, 7:30 p.m .. with Rev. Odell Manley
speaking. Pastor Theron Durham Invites the public.

Nine appointments are still
available for a cancer scree.ntng
clinic to be held from 3 to 6 p.m.
Friday at tlie Meigs County
Department of Health.
Dr. E.S. VIllanueva is the
volunteer examining physician
tor the clinic ' which Is being
sponsored py the Meigs County
Cancer Society. Friday 's clinic Is

open to bOth men and women: Early detection Is being
stressed in the treatment of
cancer. Persons wishing to
attend the clinic are to call the
health department at 992-6626.
Only 20" persons cal! be handled
during the three hours of clinic
operations.

JOHN
WADE
M~ D I
.
A.
.
.
'
VETE.RANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

S
h l
[l
. c 00 names top spe er

I

Champlion speller at Meigs Junior High School is eighth
grader Raena Eblin, daughter of Gerald and Linda Eblin
Pomeroy. Runner-up Is eighth grader Lori Pierce, daughter ol
Kathy and Mike Pierce, Middleport. ·
Eblin correct ly spelled ninetieth, alter It was missed by
Pierce. She then spelled nodule correctly to win.
Pronouncer for the Meigs' spelling bee was Mrs. Jeanne
Bowen, reading and spelling teacher. Judges were Mrs.
Suzanne Weaver and Mrs. Carla Saelens, reading and spelling
teachers.
The county spelling bee, in which Eblin will participate, will
be Monday . 7:30p.m. at Southern High School.
·

•

"'·

EAR
"NOSE &amp;
THROAT
·, . I
' .
GENERAL ALLERGIST
A
tt
"WE HAVE HEARING , /D~

•

Marshall netsconference
-Page 3

-...-.

•

'

"

11

CALL (614) 992-21 04
( 3.04) 675·1244

Vol.36, No.205

,

•

can Electric Power Corp. has
agreed to assist the project by
towing the ferry, free of charge,
730 miles from Cairo, Ill., to
Pomeroy. Long said AEP will
need a letter from the state
requesting their assistance, but
he foresees no problem getting
the formal letter of request for
the private company.
Clinton, Iowa, where the ferry
is docked, Is 530 miles up the
Mississippi River from Cairo.
making the entire trip about 1,300
miles.
The main concern of the corps
of e~ineers has been the pur·
chase of a $100,000 performance
bond to guarantee repairs to the
Mason landing. should II be
damaged by the ferry service.
However, Rogers is confident
that special rigging, which he
would anchor to both· the Pomeroy and Mason ramps, would
protect the landings from
damage.
At the end of each rig, which
would be anchored to the lower
ends of the ramps, is a mecha·
nism which clamps onto the prow
of the ferry as It lands. This
buckling procedure holds the
bOat straight in the water until a
release Is pressed, and would
eliminate the problem of operat·

In law allowing faith healing

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio: .
Mostly clear tonight wilh lows
between 25 and :10.
Mostly sunny Tuesday with u
high between 45 and 50.
The probability of preclplta·
tlon Is near zero through
Tuesday.
Winds will be light and varia·
ble tonight.
Ohio Extended Foree &amp;.!II
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesda y through Fri·
day. Lows will range between 15
and 2:i Wednesday and Thursday
and In th&lt;' 20s Friday . Highs will
be In the 30s Wednt'sday and
Thursday and between 35 and 45
-Friday.

.

Make yopr deposit now .
for the maximum tax ,·beneflt-.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPII - Health.
child welfare and legal organlza·
tions paraded before a state
legislative subcommittee Monday. seeking elimination of a
loophole In the child neglect law
th~t permits faith healing with· .
out medical·attention.
But Christian Scientists told
tile House Health and Retirement subcommittee the proposal
would result In enforced medi cal
treatment and thus violate their
religious tenets .
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Paul Jones. D·Ravenna, chair·
man of the subcommittee, Is
aimed at stopping child deaths
among groups that practice faith
healing and refuse medical
treatment.
A Celina couple is awaiting a
verdict on charges of child
endangerment In Mercer County
Common Pleas Court In connec·
tton with the death last April of
their 23-month old daughter.
"Children should receive a
minimum standard of care, even

.

-t-~&gt; ,~(~,,

~t··-~.
'~."'

r'l'!"'tif)lf .,.. ..,~

"("'•eo . .... c, ·•

Veterans Memorial

...

*
We still think you should have an

jury trial cancelled .

.'

~

li •

•

.,

ifyou want acomfortable retirement.

BANKElJNEM
Ten thousand people who care.

A jury called In the Meigs
County Court for Tuesday has
been dncelled anbd jurors are
not to report.

Anlllllil,. ot BANCONE CORPORATION
Columbut. Ohio fHmbtf FDIC

Substantial penalty for early withdrawal.

CINCINNATI iUPii -A new
poll shows that If the Ohio
Democratic and Republican pre·
sidential primaries were conducted today the winners would
be Gary Hart and George Bush.
And, if the presidential election
was today,_ the winner In Ohio
would be Hart .
The Ohio Poll, conducted by
the University of Cincinnati's
Institute for Polley Research,
showed Monday that Hart Is a
runaway leader over Jesse Jackson and Bush Is a moderate
leader over Bob Dole.
Hart, who won the Ohio Democratic presidential primary In
1984, was the choice of 32 percent
of Democrats and Independents
surveyed for the 1988
nomination.
·
Jackson was picked by 7
percent, Mario Cuomo, who last
week said he wouldn't seek the
nomination, was the choice of 5
percent, and Bill Bradley and
Lee Iacocca each drew the
sup!iort of 3 percent.

••
••

violates their religious
beliefs," said John Murphy of the
Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys As·
soclatlon, which strongly supports Jones's bill.
"This provides a balance be·
tween children's rights and rell·
gious freedom," said Kay Keller
of the Ohio Council of Churches.
"The children deserve equal
protection under the law,"
agreed Robert McCallum of the
League Against Child Abuse.
Also testifying for the biB were
Dorothy Fiorino of the Ohio
Nurses Association and Jan
Flory of the Ohio Department of
Human Services.
Benson A. Wolman. executive
director of the American Civil
Liberties Union of Ohio, noted the
"competing constitullonal Interests" of the proponents and
opponents.
Wolman said his organization
comes down on the side of
endangered children who cannot
protect themselves. "Everybody
has a right to freedom of faith, to
the limits of where it does not
hurt other prople," he said.
H it

Meese standing by
previous testimony

Poll says Hart, Bush
top presidential timber
-~

•

26 Cenl!

A Multimedi a Inc. Newspaper

By BOB IIOEFLJCII
Sen lind Sli1fl Wrlt"r
Middlepor t Village has been
awarded grant s totaling $68.469
to be used lor public transporta l ion In 1987, Mayo r F"red Hollman
rt'ported Monday night wh en
Middleport Village Cou11 ci l met
In regu tar session .
Middleport Village serves as
th&lt;' administrative agent lor the
cu rre nt public transportation
system. which is the Blue Streak
Cab Co. The services of the
com
pany ha ve bee n used far·
MUST WORK FAST- Time Is running out to
financial obligations of providing the service, and
more 1hun was originally ex secure an operating contract to provide ferry
to lake a good look at the Pomeroy and Mason
pected
when th e public tran sporservice between Pomeroy and Mason while the
landings. With Rogers In Pomeroy arc Bill Nease,
tation
plan
was inau~urated .
Pomeroy-Mason bridge Is closed for repairs.
at left, president of Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Mayor
Hoffman
repor ted last
Clinton, Iowa ferry operator, Darrell Rogers, at
Commerce, and Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler,
night
that
thr
village
has been
right, was in Pomeroy Monday to discuss
center.
approved lor a federa l grant of
$:l!J,840 lor th e system; $t:l,889 In
state
funds and an additional
ing against the strong current on that a ny damages to Pomeroy U.S. Se n. Robert Byrd . D·W.Va ..
$1[&gt;.100
In stat c lu nds lor servi ces
the Pomeroy side. If anchors are Street from the ferry to U.S. 3:1 two weeks ago asking lor finan to
the
handl
cappNI bringing the
placed high enough on th e will be repaired.
cial assistance lor the ferry . She gra nd total for 19R7 to thc$68.469
landings, the rig will raise and
Long said AEP officials are received a reply from th e S&lt;&gt; nalower with the level of th e water, trying to set up a meeti ng with tor, who agreed to check into flgu rr.
Mayor Hoffman also reported
thus solving the problem of the offices of West Virginia Gov . financing possibilities. but has
that
plans for thp new nursing
operating during high water.
Arch Moore and the West Virgi- heard nothing furthe r.
home
in the town are moving on
But even with protective rigs, nia Department of Highways to
Roush also called the DOH to sc hcdu lr• wIth the officia l ground·
the corps is still requiring the see if they would be willing to ask if they would accept res ponperformance bond.
commit money from their state s lbllt y lor Pomeroy Stre&lt;&gt;t during breaking probabl y to be held In
In addition to the performance to guarantee Pomeroy Street thr time a ferry would be In April.
Upon th e reco mmendation of
bond, $21.600 must be assured to repairs.
operation. and Is expt?Ctl ng a Councilman .J ack Sa ltcrlic ld .
Mason VIllage as a guarantee
Roush reported she wrpte to
!Continued on Page 101
cou ncil gave '"e llr,, t readi ng to
an ordinance providing for In·
creases In the salaries of the
mayor and the cler k-treasurer.
The salary of th r tow n' s mayor
under the new ordinance will be
$6,1XJO and th e clerk's sa tan· will
\x• $".000 annuall y.
·
Cos
t·.
s
harlng
discussed
WASHINGTON iUP l t -Attorney General Edwin Mrcse Is
WI!Uam Evans, a Christian
Ben Borda of th e U.S. Army
standing
by his testimony In the Iran-Contra scandal In
Science practitioner and the
.Lorps
at Engtmws met with
response to word that the special prosecutor In the case Is
group's lobbyist In Columbus,
council
to discuss possible cost ·
examining whether he misled Congress or hcl]ll'd doctor a
said Jones's bill would stifle his
sharing
proJ:[ram s lor not only
chronology to protect President Reagan.
religion's practice because It
expanding
thr marina fa ci lity
Meese asserted Monday that his testimony to th!' Scnat!'
would exert au tslde pressure on
but
also
thr
developm ent of bOat
Intelligence Committee In December about when Reagan
the faith healing process .
lau
nching
la&lt;·illtles
along the ,
approved the covert shipment of U.S. weapons to Iran merely
"Hea ling through prayer
Ohio Hlvt•r, probably near the
reiterated what other officials had told him.
should be given a reasonable
village-ow nc•d Dave Diles Park
"What I was reporting to the committee was what had been
opportunity, ·and mPdlcal care
wh&lt;"r&lt;" th e town owns the rivertold to me during the course of my preliminary Inquiry 1111
should not be mandated, " said
bank arra.
November," Meese sa id In an Interview while att&lt;&gt; nd lng a
Evans .
Borda said that cost - s harln~
conference of federal prosecutors In Tucson, Ariz .
"I don' t think this bill bans
money
through the corps Is
" I myself was testify ing as to Information received rather
spiritual treatment." sa id Rep.
available on ly through programs
than as to any conclusions I had made.'' he ex pla ined .
James Davis, R·St.Marys, a
whi ch develop new fa cllllles or
A spokes man also told reporters the at torncy general had no
member of the subcommittee. "I
&lt;&gt;xpand
exist ing ones . Fu nd s lor
part In compiling an Inaccurate White House chronology of the
think It merely says you must
such
programs
arc oh a low
operation prepared before Reagan's Nov . 19 news r·onferrnc&lt;' to
have medical help."
priority
sc
hedule
at the present
obscure the president's ro le in the affair.
Marcia Helmholz of Cincln·
lime. Vorda said. but he recom"The attorney general was aware that th!'rc was a chronology
natl, a Christian Scientist, said
mended that the vlllagr send a
being prepared but that It was Inadequate, " said spokesman
hospitals and doclorsc.an offer no
lett
er to the Co rps Indica ting It s
Terry Eastland. "That's why he went to Reagan and urged that
guarantee of a cure.
Int
erest
In developing a
the fact -finding review be instigated."
"The practice of med icine Is
program
.
Meese began a preliminary Inquiry Into thr Ira n arm.&lt;deals
not an exacl science," said
Such leiters of lntl'rcst from
Nov.
20. emerging five days later with a public revelation of th!'
Helmholz. " We wouldn't need
communities cou ld raise the
sc heme to divert millions of dollars In profits fr om the sa les to
graveyards if It were."
priority level of rost shari ng
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
Helmholz said Jones 's bill
funds on such projects, Vorda
The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Lawrence
would set up the medical pratesIndicated .
Walsh. the Independent federal prosecutor In the case, Is
. slon as the only guarantee of the
While thl' progJ·ams ar~ carexamining whether Meese helped prepare the chronology and If
safety and welfare of children.
ried
out on a 50·50 basi,, lhf'
he misled Congress on when the arms sa les were approved.
!Continued on Pagr 111 1

seek.. end to loophole~·

•

This could be the worst year ever to put off opening or adding to your
1986 IRA. Because every working American who contributes to a 1986 IRA
before the tax-filing deadline is guaranteed a full IRA deduction ... a
benefit some people may lose on 1987 IRAs.
So beforeApril15,-1987, deposit as much as you can in your
1986 IRA. And do it as soon as you can! That way you'll give your money
that much more time to grow.
. ·

1 Section. 10 PaAel

Village
•
receives
•
transit
funding

-

Groups

Ticket nels prize

Saturday Admissions - Belva
Fisher, Racine; Ed na Leach.
Pomeroy; Robert Parsons. Ra·
cine; Lois Hubbard, Pomeroy;
Harry Shain, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges- Geral·
dine Sexton.
Sunday Admissions - Ralph
Webb, Racin e; Roy Searles,
Middleport ; Mary Voll,
Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges - Betty
Pooler, Frank Wolford; Ruby
Frl~k. George Black. Robert
Canaday,

Ferry service
pact hinges on
.
commitmenl

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
By mid-week, Meigs and Mason County residents · should
know If ferry service will be
available while the PomeroyMason bridge is closed for
repairs.
Clinton, Iowa ferry operator
Darrell Rogers and his wife were
in Pomeroy Monday morning to
view the ferry landings and
discuss a contract to provide the
service.
Mr. and Mrs. Rogers met with
Bill Nease, president of the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce, Ron Kyger of the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, Stale
Sen. Jan Michael Long, DCircleville, Pomeroy Mayor Rl chard Seyler and Mason Mayor
Agnes Roush.
Long was present lor the
meeting to gather specific finan cia I Information, which 'he will
relay to Gov. Richard Celeste.
Long met with the governor last
week to request state aid for the
ferry service. and was told then
that more definite financial fig·
ures were needed before state
money could be committed.
To help defray Initial expenses
If an operating contract Is
_ w~r~~d _'?Ut )'lith l_,togers, Amerl·

•

CLEVELAND tUPil - The
winning Ohio Loltery Lotto
numbers dr aw n Saturday pro·
duced onr gra nd prize jackpot
winner.
Lottery officials said the win·
nlng numbers - 2, 9, 22. 27. 29 and
.1~ - were drawn following total
sales of $3,263,404. The total prize
pa yout is $2,117,922.
The jackpot winner will be
eligible to collect $1. 209,1:!6

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. February 24, 1987

Copvrighted 1987

Increasing c.loudlness to-·
night, with a low near 30.
Mostly cloudy Wednesday,
wllh highs In the upper 40s.
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is near zero tonight and 20
percent Wednesday .

•'

•

•

at y

,,

.

Pomeroy Vi II age funds as ol
Jan. 31 totaled $184,448-07. reports Village Clerk-Treasurer
Jan e Walton.
Receipts. disbursements and
the end of the month balance,
respectively, In eac h all he funds
making up the total Include:
safety, $211, $2L98, $7,397.71;
street, $8,970.31, $8,789.51,
$4,074.51; state highway, $128.20,
no disbursements, $1,525. 16; fi re.
$U50, $1,596,89, $705.fJ6; cemetery, $576.46, $519.82. $171.82:
Water, $18,977.69, $14,478.96,
$82,2.14.09; sewer. $7,054.70.
$1.1,891.68, $2,007.05; guaranty
meter, $300, $:150, Sll,6.37.50;
utillly, no recPipts, $4,986.39,
$22,644. 75; sa le of building,
$382.45, $.182.45, $.19; perpetual
care, no receipts, no disbursements, $4,815 .89; cemetery en·
dowment , no receipts, no dlsbur·
se ment s. $17,825.)6; pollee
pension. no receipts. no disburse·
ments, $723.:l4; building fund.·
$117.~5 .
no dlsbursem&lt;&gt;nts,
$378.80; recrea tion fund, no rt'·
celpts, no dl sbursemPnts,
$866. 73; bond retirement, no
receipts, no disbursement s,
'$7,674.12; revenue sharing, no
receipts. no disbursements.
$3,059.10; pcrmlsslvr tax, no
receipts. $830.05. $2.131.09.
Receipts lor the month tota!Pd
$60,750.54 while dlsbursem&lt;'nts
·amounted to $68,788.69.

5.158

'

. A:.:oTJIEJ\ lVlo:-JEY sou ·TIO\ FI\OM B:\NI\ 0:-n·:.

Villagt&gt; funds outlined

Daily Number
433
•
PICK-4

'champion~hip

~--:--:--:-;::==============================~:=.1-----------__.....;. :'
Schools get funds
·'
:;
Meigs County's three local
school districts have received
$557,67,1.18 as their portion of the
February State School Foundation Subsidy payment after deductions for employee and
teachers retirement.
Of tho total, Eastern Local
received $121,184 .98; Meigs Local, $.114,966.26, and Southern
Local, $121,521 .94 and there was
an allotment of $28,983.79 to the
Meig s Co unty Board of
Education.
Total money distributed in the
entire stat e in subsidy funds
amounted to $164,157,152.65. according to Stafe Auditor Thomas
W. Ferguson.

Ohio Lotterv•

Eleven percent rejected all
candidates mentioned In the
survey arid said they preferred
"someone else." Thirty-eight
percent Indicated they had no
preference at this time.
"Hart's got an enormous lead
In Ohio," said poll director AI
Tuchfarber. He said while It's
possible that preferences will
change as the primary draws
nearer, "It's not clear at all
where Hart is going to have any
strong opposition In Ohio at this
point."
Among Republicans and Independents, Bush was the favorite
of 27 percent. while Dole was
second with 16 percent. Howard
Baker and Jack Kemp each had 8
percent, Pat Robertson 3 percent
and Paul LaJtalt 2 percent. Seven
percent preferred "someone
else" and 30 percent · indicated
they hadn't decided yet.
When top Democratic and
Republican choices were pitted
against each other, Hart led Bush
49 percent to 34 percent and Hart
led Dole 50 percent to 33 percent.

1
··-.

Jurors reportedly split
in Home State verdict

PINT FOR PINT - Tille 111111 at Ibe lliairy Que&lt;!n Bruletr , N1~rlll
Second Aveaue, Middleport, polola up a 1peelal promotion for a

villi by the Amerlcu Red CI'OIII Bloodmobile on Wed1esday. Tho
bloodmobile will he at the Melp Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Hetc~la, Pomeroy, from 1 to 5:30p.m., and blood donon1 wUI be
gtvea a cerllflcate which they cutrade for a pint of Dairy Queen
t~e cream at the Middleport establilhment.

"••··---·-·-

-

··-·

)

CINCINNATI (UP ii - Amid
reports they were split, a jury
resumed deliberations today on
whet her three form er Home
State Savings Bank executives
were criminally liable In the
biggest banking crisis In Ohio
history .
The Hamilton Co unt y Common
Pleas Court jury, which dellber·
ated briefly last Friday and ail
day Saturday. Sunday and Mon·
day, gave no Indication of how
close It might be to a verdict.
However. court officials said
there may be a split. since the
jurors have been laking their
meals at separate tables- eight
at one and lour at lhe other.
Judge Richard Niehaus sa id
jurors already have requested
Italian food for lonlght , which
may Indicate they are nowhere
near reaching a verdict.
When the case went to the jury
late last week, court officials had.
said they expected It would take
jurors several days to wade
through volumes of documents

-- -· --,---

and eva lu;J 1f' wN·k~ ur tPstlmon v

In the thref'-month tr ial. The lurv
must return verdlc·t s In mor'c
I han 2!i0 r h"rgr·s
Th e six -man . ,fx -woman jur v
Is deliberat ing thf' lat e of rorme.r
Home State Sav ings Ba nk own('r
Marvin Warnc·r and ex -bank
presid e nt .~ Bu rton Bongard and
David Sc hlf'bei.
Each delrndunt Is charg"(·d
with 41 c-o unt s ol misa pplica tion
of bank fund s and 41 counts of
violat ing a rc•so lutlon bv the
bank 's board of director s.
Warner and Schiebel also ar"
accused of misrepresenting t"he
bank's II nan ri a I stat us In si:'CkinR
to sell Securiti es.
·
·
Prosecutors contend that all
thretj, delenda nrs misapplied $11,1
million In depositors' money In
the summ er of 1983 to ESM
Government Securities. Both
Home State and ESM collpaslxl
two years ago, with ESM sufft!r&lt;'
l·ng a $300 million loss and Home
State losing $144 million.
. .. ·

----

~

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