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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

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"

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

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.

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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�3

Ohio

Commentary
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Tuesday. February 24. 1987

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

~m~ rr-L......J._..,...,~d·~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

' MEMBER orThe United Press International. Inland Dally Press
·A
Asspclation and the American Ne\\.spaper Publishers Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION arf&gt; wPI COITlf" ThC"y shoold 1x&gt; less than 300 words
loog. All l etters aresu bjecl to OOitlng and must bP signed with name, address and
telephone number No Wl slg nfd ll'l ters will be publh.hed Lelt('fS should be In

Watching a series of television
programs about the civil rights
movement, In one's living room
In Washington, tells a great deal
about civil rights, about televl·
slon and about Washington.
The series Is "Eyes on the
Prize." a six-parter, now on'PBS.
It covers the civil rights revolution fro m !he 1954 Supremme
Court decision making segregated schooling illegal and ends
In 1965 with the passage of the
Voting Rights Acl. One turbulen1
decade and the stain of legal
segregation was wiped oul.
How did 11 come to pass? Why
then?
First, tne cause was pure, and
people were willing to put their

.•

NBA results

lives on the line.
The riveting documentary lootage shows us the young people
who desegregated schools In
Kansas, Arkansas and Mlsslsslppl. We see the Freedom
Riders riding their buses to make
real the Interstate Commerce
Commlsslon's decision to ban
segregation In Interstate travel.
We see the violence they encoun·
ter. We see the blacks In
Montgomery, Ala., silting In the
back of the bus, moving forw ard.
We see the college students
taking seats at segregated lunch
counters, we see them pounded,
taking the violence, coming back
wl1h more non-violence - and
finally prevalllng.
·

But the evils of segregating
little children, of denying blacks ·
the right to use public bathrooms
or to eat In public places, were
not new. They existed lor centurles. What happened to make so
much change?
Suddenly the reality of segreglion was In our living rooms on a
new machine called television.
The box gave us Milton Berte and
theMickeyMouseCiub -andthe
Incarnation of a monstrous
wrong for us to see for ourselves,
just as we see Ihe very same film
again a quarter century later In
"Eyes on the Prize."
The Impact Is stunning. It Is
one thing to say "segregated
schools" and another to see little

goOd taste. addressing Issues, nol persona li ties

Wcishington Window

Romancing the South
By ARNOLD SA"1SLAK
UPI Senior Editor
W~-5HINGTON (UPI) - Politic ians wear other peoples· hats for
the same reasons political parties select cities for their national
conve ntions. They are try in g 10 send signals.
So just as a candldare who puis on a miner's helmet or construction
hard hat hopes 1ha1 working folks will see him as a kindred spirit. the
Democrats and Republican s both hoped 10 Impart a symbolic
message when they chose. respeclively, A11anra and New Orleans for
their "1988 nomina11ng co nvcnlions
De~oded, the message was : The Sou1h Is vital In the next
presidential elec11on and we aren'Ilaklng Its vole for granted. We are
going to flgh1 for it.
Tbe.reason this message was tn !he form of a sig nal ralher than a
public declaralion that the South is getting special treatmen t this
time Is that political parties ca n't afford to offend two or three other
regions of the country while 1ryi ng to romance one.
There are very good reasons for bo1h par11es to woo the South. First.
Its popularion and etecrora l vole has been Increasing fo r several
generations. Second. nell her party rea lly has esta blished firm, top 10
bottom political control of !he regton
As has been clear at least since Dwtght E isenhower"s 1952 elecrion ,
the South is as likely to suppor1 Republican as Democrattc
presidential candidates.
'And wllh the elect ton of a Republtcan governor In Alabama las t
year and of GOP governors in mosl of the olher Southern stales
earlier, 11 also Is clear 1hr Republicans are making sign ifica nt
Inroads Into wha1 has been Democratic domina lion of lhe reg ion's
state-level politics
So the Democrars are going 10 make a figh1 for what used 1o be their
unchallenged political base and !he Republicans are going to try to
hold or enlarge Iheir South ern gains of the las! few decades.
This effor1 also could affect the selection of the 1988 candidates,
whtch will send a far srronger stgnal 1han where the parries decide to
hold their conven11ons.
The Republicans figu re they can appeal to the Soulh wl1h a
conserva tive from al most any region. although New E ngland-born
VIcE'. President George Bush wtll be cast as a Texan through-and·
Ihrough In his Southern campaigning and Se n. Robert Dole's Kansas
twang may broaden toward a drawl.
Many Democrats. remembering they have n'! won a presidential
election In more !han 40 years without a1 least a border slate
ca ndidat e on the ticker, are looking at po1en11al candidates like
former Gov. Char les Robb of Virginia and Sen Sam Nunn of Georgia
for 1988.
While this goes on. the parties have 10 remember !here are only a
few states in the olher regio ns 1ha11hey can take for granted.
The West has been GOP terrirory in presidential elections for a long
time, but Democrats have had some success In s1a1e politics The
Pacl(tc Coast slates have been in the swing category on both levels
and I~ well worth fi ghting for.
'Fhe Mldwes1 tends to flop back and forth between the par11es,
usually depending on economic condi11ons. And the populous East,
which ranked with th e South as a Democratic stronghold belore
World War II. now Is a major battlelield neit her party ca n allord to
s light.
So the Soulh gels frtcndly signa ls from both par11es for 19881n the
hopelhat for a region that has felt slighted In Ihe past.Ihesymbols or
politiCal love wtll make a difference.
•

BY United Prf!llls International
' Ealtern Conference

'

Atlantic Dlvlalon

Silver Insists that politics had
no part In the Bollinger contract,
and Stevens told us he didn 't
recall even discussing the matter
wllh the lobbyist. "I don't care
where they buy the boat." he
said.
But Bollinger Shipyards has a
lock on Island Class boats, which
are a 20-year-old Brl11sh design.
Bollinger has the U.S. license on
them: In addition. the boats'
blueprints are based on the
me1rlc system, which many
other U.S. shipyards don't use.
Politics or not , documents
oblalned by our associate Corky
Johnson Indicate that the patrol
boats are not Ideal craft for
catching drug smugg lers. Several boats recently delivered
have already undergone extensive hull repairs. " The bows on
the boats are colla psing. It Is sad
we are stuck wllh this thing," a
Coas1 Guard source !old us.
Adm. Paul Yos1 . the Coast
Guard commandant. and Mark
Stanley, Bollinger's vice president, said the hull problems are
easy lo repair. Yost said the
cracks In the hull may have been

caused by running the boats In
heavy seas with too much fuel
aboard. Stanley said he suspected misuse by Coast Guard
crews as the cause of the hull
cracks. but said the shipyard will
repair them at no cost whenever
they occur.
"It Is a heck of a good boa I."
the admiral said. " We are using
It now beyond specl!lcatlons.
Congress did not force this boat
on us. They said get a boat
quickly, and we wanted to get
Involved m the drug (enforce·
ment) business."
The procurement appears to
have been highly unusual, to say
ihe leas!. Our sources Insist that
the Island Class boat was forced
on the Coast Guard.
After the congressional report,
the Coast Guard tried to award
Bollinger a sole-source contract.
An ad - later revised appeared In the government's
Commerce Business Dally announcing the sole-source con·
tract. The Navy, which handles
actual procurement for the Coast
Guard, Insisted on bids.
Because of Its llcensmg arran -

WLPt1 . GB
It m -

Boston

'

Phlla

Negro children braving hatred to
get Into a school building. "Pub·
lie accommodations" Is a sterile
phrase, but seeing Wl\lte toughs
beating up on clean-cut Negro
college students whose only
crime was ordering a sandwich
In a Woolworth store, tells us In
the fiber of our being just how
wrong It allis.
In 1950, only 9 percent of
American homes had television
sets. By 1965 the figure was 93
percent. It was no accident that
the logjam broke apart at just
that time.
And there was Washington,
after a century, galvanized by
~he personal heroism and the
civil wrongs seen on television.
Those pictures transmuted voter
attitudes. And voter attitudes
Influence politicians.
During much of the civil rights
debate it was said "Laws can't
change people's minds." That
Idea has been struck down. In
1959 a Gallup Poll asked: "Would
you yourself have any objection
to sending your children to a
school where a few children are
colored?" Among Sou1hern
whites 72 percent said "Yes,
would object." Just 10 years
la1er.ln 1969, aflerdesegregatlon
was the law of the land, only 21
percent of Southern whites said
"Yes, would object."
This magnificent series of
programs ends, quite wisely,
with the events of 1965, the year
the Voting Rights Act was
passed. That was another clear
issue. Who, In a democracy,
would deny citizens the privllege
of voting?
Aller that. many civil rights
Issues became more complex :
crisscross school busing, affirmative action. quotas .

.11

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41 13
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Monday' II hull.&lt;~

Today in history
By United Pre•s International
Today ts Tuesday, Feb 24, th e 55th da) of !987 wtth 310 Io follow
Thl! moon Is moving toward Its new phase
The morning stars are Venus a nd Sal urn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and .Jupiter.
Those oorn on this day are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Wilhelm Grimm, historian and (with his brothe r Jacob) complier of
"Grtrhm's Fairy Tates." In 1786; painter Winslow Homer In 1836:
John :fhlllip Holland, Inventor of Ihe mod ern submarine, In 1841;
Irish author George Moore In 1852, Adm Ches ter Nlml1 7., World War
II commander of U.S. forces In !he Pacific. m 1885: actress Marjorie
Main In 1890; actors Abc Vlgoda In 1921 tage66) and James Farentlno
In 19 (age 49 ); and the Klenas1 qutntuplets of Libel"ly Corner. N.J ..
In 1970 (age 17) ·

as

On this date In history:
I 1!120 a group of Germans organized Ihe Na1ional Socialist Party.
!or:runn~r of the Nazi Party thatlaler would be led by Adolf Hitle r.

'

~

1\:r~hland

Barhcrhtll -&amp;11, Luui11'1Ute~
BIMt'hPSte-r 58, Bethel Tate U
BowllnKGretn&amp;, ElldKIIJ

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MllnNIIeld

Mas11Uion Perry M, N C11n GlenOak 52
M~tumee 57, Tot lJhhfo)' 19
S Bcn.Taylor&lt;li, Western BrownU
Nupolt'On It, Fremunt Ro11s 35
Stow -NI, Nordonia43
Sy t~a nla Southvlt&gt;w 3"1, To I &amp;:oll 2ll
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Mlnnt'llola ~. Montrt'W 3
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NY Rlln~l'll lt t Rullalo, 1 35 p m
Mlnnt'~ola at Qu"het . 7 .\5 p.m
Edmnnton au Pltt!ihur~~:h. i . :15 p m
Detroit at WB!Ihln~ on i .35 pm.
N\ l!ilanderMaa St Louis, K 35 p.m
Vancouvn a&amp;l Calgar)'. &amp;.l5 p.m
WlnniJN!K ul Los An~~:el~. 10. 35 p m

Transactions

Ohio ('ollt•lft' Balok{'lhll.lliWMtll!&lt;;
MIIUTlilK, lh~)IIOn H
&lt;'ltv eland St 1011., 01-Chtu.-o K5
Murray (Ky) i7. Youn~townSt 6X
Au~tln Pcll)' tTt&gt;nn) 6.1. Akron~
Dellarlt'r 117 , Urhuna 79

Ohio AthJetk Cunfert•ntt' Tuarftt'y
l&lt;lrNI KGund
6%, H1•hlt'lhl&gt;r,; $i

&amp;ldwin-W~~ollar e

College ratings
I1V1t wt&gt;elt'!!. ranldng ( \'ollnK and rt•(.'ord~;
hlL~ed on ~llmes lhrouJiih Sunday nl~:ht
with 15 polnb awa rdrd for llrNI plat P, U
lor lil'CDnd etc )

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6 Purdut• (26-3)
1 GeorJiietown (!I If

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Stillwell to u 1 )'f'llr contratl

KanMM Cit) - Mana~l'r Dlcll How,.-r
rf':'tl,rned and will rt'maln In front nHiet&gt;;
n iUllc&gt;d Bill) Gardnt•r mana~~:tr. namPd
Martlnn lhird ·h1111e eo~ h IUid J11e
..onc-10 ftllll • biiiU~ COII.C h,
MIIWIUikee - Sia:rwd pit c h er~ Dan
Plf'Mat• Blld Vlrt•nt " J&gt;alatloll
PUt.r.hurwh - Sllh" d outfiMdt&gt;r Jop
Onulak, and pllt•herMl.o~~;an Ea~ ley and
Hlpolllo Pcna lo 1-)'f'at conlhub
l:ollf'.(t'
Norttwrn llllnollrl - Nampd .Jay
Sl h11.11lw Qlllrlr11"rh1W.•k fuUhw.•k t'OJW' h
T"u~; · l\rllaJ&amp;on - Flrt•d hllSIWth all
tOIM:h s ..k e LeGrand,
Fool hall
At111.ntaa - Naamed ('harl l's Taylor
puhllc rellllloM dlredor.
Miami - Siii;IM'd ll~~;ht end S.:oU
Glfll4'1mllll, dt!IPn!dvP. hadd..A rryoGriNI n,
~rd Grt'lr; Our11 , dr.1emth r t&gt; nd Hrian
O'Neill und llaehat kPr I' au I Voll'el
Hockey
Nf'w Yllrk J ~ lan~r~; -Ret Ill led rl~r;bl
win~ NeaJ Co111ter from Sprin~flt-ld olttH&gt;

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Amt•rk'lln Hork ey lA'II.~e.
Nrw \ 'orlt Ra&amp;llii:Pr!l - ~nt rl~~:hl wing

Lllnt• Lar.mhcrt In Nrw Haw en of Ilk'
AmerklUI Hockey I.Aoa~e.
Warttdn&amp;tun - Rri• ILII e ~ forwards Boh
( ruwf11rd, .Je ll Vrecnlaw und G11ry
Samp110n from Bln ll'hKmton of Ilifo t\mc-ri
1 an HO&lt;.'kl'y IA&gt;LLI(UI'

Prep scores
Ohlu Hl~r;h St:ltoollbd;ethiLII
MondllY'" itt'lluJIIi
Kl'plar !W!l"on
fhl·~llpt'atk4'
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,\cqulr"d utilit y

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(~ 1 · 7)

11 Florida ( ~ 1

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~62

II lmu t2Hl
9. Pltl!ihur~~;h (tl-5~
10. r\1 Mh11ma (ZI ~ ~
II. Syracul!l' I !'l· ~ ~

College scores

lnlleldrr \\'11.dP Row don from flnclnMtl.
t•ompll.'tlnR last WP t&gt; k '~ trad f thai ~e nt
pile her Guy Hoffman to Ci ncinnati
Clm:lnnall - Slgnf'd J~hortlllop Kurt

THE PLAINS - Great team slretch on four srralgh1 breakabal ance was !he deciding factor . ways. "' comme nted Coach
as Mei~s adva nced 1o the Class Logan.
'Logan added, "Two other keys
AA Sectiona l final s here Monday
was
th e great crowd support and
with a well-played 57-45 win over
our
overall
balance. Our crowd
arch· rival Alexander.
was
so
vocal.
II took !heir's away
The Marauderettes will play a
tbugh New Lex tngtonfive (11 -10) and we had better overall bal·
fo'r the sec tional championship ance than Alexander."
Alexander"s Audra Burke ap·
here Thursday at 8 p.m. Thai
pea
red ready 10 take lh~ game In
clash will follow the6 p.m. upper
her
own hands as the 6-0 senior
bracke1 sectional championship
scored
19 firs! half polnls includbetween Warren Local and
Ing all 10 tn the fi rst period But
Sheridan.
Alexander, which bows ou t Burke picked up her fourth
personal foul with 4, 05lel11n the
with a fine 17-5 mark !hat
Ihird
quarter, had 1o set our a
includes three losses 1o Meigs.
spell,
and managed only 1wo
jumped ahead by as much as six
second
half points. Her 21
points early, bur once Metgs
mar kers was game-high. Casste
grabbed a 14-12 lead on Jenny
Miller's three·poln1 play at !he Wright added 13 for !he Lady
star t of the second penod. Ihe Spartans.
Meigs' largest lead was 1he
MHS lasses were never headed.
final
score while nin e. 24-15. wa s
The outcome was sti ll much
the
biggest
first half gap. Once
doubt until the final minutes
down by nine, Alexander could
when key free throw shooting by
nol narrow !he margin Io less
Meigs put the game on Ice after
than
five. the latest at 47-42 with
Coac h Ron Logan ordered a
3:30
!ell
stallin g offense with three min·
The Marauderel1es hit on 20 of
utes to go and MHS ahead 49-43.
59
field goa l attemprs for 33 per
Jennl Swartz had perhaps Ihe
cent
while dropping 17 of 28 free
greatest game of her career with
throws for 61 per cent. Alexander
18 points a nd seven rebounds,
17 of 25 from Ihe line for 68
was
Including 11 points in the first
per
cent.
Meigs had 32 rebounds
half. Julie Miller ch ipped in with
and
only
10
Iurnovers
15 points and eight rebounds
Box
score:
while Jennl Couch added 13
points and sPven rebounds to go
MEIGS ( ~7 ) - J e nnl Couch ~3· 1 3. .lulh•
Miller J-5- 15, Jenny Miller 2-3-i, ~r cnnl
along with a sufl{'rb lloor game.
"'Jen nl Couch and Jenni Swartz Swarlz 7·4- IK. Tammy Wrlghl 0.1 I, .!oih .... l.v
Stoha.rt 1- 1·3, Dt•e H••nd er~mn o-o-0, MhtsY
played abou1 as well as they can Woods HO. Wendt t ' ry o-o-0 TOO"ALS
play . They shot, rebounded, and 21l-IH7.
1\LEX/\NDER (45J - Audra Burke
passed the ball very well. They
14-5-U, Missy K effer 0..2-2, K:unde Wrl .. ht
(Alexander! tried to take away :1·7· 1:1, Maurey Dl ck~!ll 0.0.0, Chrl~ty
our Inside game. so had ro pop It Daugherty 1·1-3, rum Pi•lt • r~&gt;on2-2-li,lll·ldl
from out side. Our transition Willhum;; U-U·O. TOTAI.S 1... 17 U.
By quart er .. ·
game was also one of Ihe keys. Mt•IR'! .. ....... ....... II Ul 13 l :i - 51
We outscored them 8-0 at one AI E'x ander ... ........ . 10 J:i I ~ 10 - n

Nl!;\\' YOKK (U I'I ) - Top 20 tO II PJtt
hllskelh!UI ratlnlf'i h) United Pre&lt;~~
lntcrnalloml'~; Board ol Coat hc:t~ , with
1\r~;t pl1tcr \'olt&gt;li, n&gt;cord~.l~al polnb and

Te wn
I l'~LV

(.onlt&gt;r~·ntr

Toumamt•nl

....

tlnl Hound
Raldwin·\\'atllllt (' 6t, lfeldl'lllerg 57

Allrrd 121, Srq~·u M1
Rln~amton
Bloom.~hu..,;

st

ll!'i, ElmlrJ&amp; Col K-1

70. Klll'ltow. n 8'!
Bowdoin 71. Bllt~ 7t
Falrflrtd 56, Hoi) Cros.'l M

Hart Mit k 914. C:orUand Sl. 112
Kt&gt;IUI C'ol. tli, Stc~t'DII Tt!rh i l
Kln(11 (;nl. M, NtM Palh !&lt;II 0 J
Lock Hu ton ill, lndll&amp;l'la ( Pa I 71
Ma,; s.a~hu!Wtl!i 61, Duqtlt'~nt· 66
Malnt&gt; Ill, Durtmoulh 71
Norlh~·lllllt'rn 1ti Nl'w Hamp!ihl t(' 61:1
Pill"hurfr;h !4, VIIIWIO\u 113
Rhodr biland ~ St Ronu.-~nlul'l' 51
Rut~~:.

famdrn 71, Phil. Phi\Mnw_.y ;s

( 0'1''

St. Frunl'ls (N l '. ) 87. Monmouth 66
St. Pf'lt•r'~; 89. UUta S7
Su uth
Amt •rlt·an 70, William &amp; Mu) 89
ArkaD!ill!ist. 75, Suulht'rn Ml~!i. TJ
Auhurn91. \1tnderbllt )1.1
1\u~;Un PPa,l' &amp;:1, flkrnn ~
Danld!!On 7'l. \lrll;lnla , ...llltury ti9
E Carolln.t1~. Janlt'" ~tadl.&lt;lon 6lt
Ea!ill'rn K)' Ill , Tf'DDI'Ii~ l' Tf'i'h MO
Fh• lnttorMUonal Mti, N lll i n ol~ 113
Florld11 St. 101. Vlrll:lnht TN•h 7l'l
Frant Ill Marina Rtl, l...and~r 72
Howard 13, South C.ll.rOIIIW St. Ill
Urn rt~lonr 101, Alll'll ~
Mar~hall U, Appala~• hl1111 St. 6! lOTI
Mlddll' Tenn. St. M Mo'rt&gt;ht'lld !-it 71
Murr.1y Sl. 77. l'ounii:Miown St. M
New Orle&amp;UI~ JIB. SW l.oubdJUJu. 1:1
1'10 ('. Wllmlnll:lnn 62. Geor~~:r Ma.-;on 39
South Carol111.1 r.. Mar ~; Hil l 68

Local bowling

IWJ~

slve job losses,"" but NHTSA
acq uiesced to pressure from GM
and Ford. It rolled back the 1986
CAFE s1andard to 26.0 mpg and
subsequently fixed 1he 1987 and
1988 requireme nts a1 !he same
level.
Under Reaga n's leaders hip.
NHTSA also has slashed fu el
economy standards for light
trueks, abandoned annual reports on CAFE standards (t he
last one Issued showed a$3 billion
reduction In crude oil imports In
1980) and decimated the project

"( oal

Gr0\'1' (13, South t•ot nlliO
Rock 1111171, fPtNIII KPnovu I\\ V11J 64
Thurnam l' nl~

es lablished to monitor progress
in the fie ld .
Now, the Presidential Task
Force on Regulatory Relief,
head ed by Vice President Bush,
has called for Ihe abolition of the
office. which already has been
g u t.ted by t he R eaga n
administration.
Chrysler aptly notes the consequences of thai action: "It means
the end of America's energy
policy. We are selling ourselves
up for a third oil shock.'"

C:hMIM 1\.,\A
Glrn F.MJ•II I, Cln Andt&gt;rson S~
\\ arr~n Rll\ 112, \ oun~~:~ Wlllwn $6
l'oun~~:s Chaney 63. Beaver L4H'IIi 36
fh&amp;ll~ A. A
S. Par I~ Grahwn 55, Milton I Inion 4-1
&amp;milton '7!1, Harrill on .J2
RI)OI!Iown 69, S!rutl'ler11 33

II

0

0

"
The Daily Sentinel

()

14~9601

(USPS

A Dl"l'ilon of Multimedia. ln r

Publlshf'd {'VC'rV afternoon Mond av
throu~h Friday, lll Cour1 Sl . Po
m('fOY , OhiO by lhl' Oh io Va ll t'V Pub·
llshin'g Compan v tMultlmrdla, In C' ,
Pom('I'OV , Ohio 45769. Ph . 992 2156. SP

cond &lt;'lass posta£C paid at PomProy.

Ad\C'rll sl n ~ R1•p rese ntat lve, Bran ham

New spaper Sa les. 733 Third Avt'nu &lt;'.

0

New York. N!'w York 10017

/)

POSTh1ASTER SPnd addrl'Ss c han'~
t o The Dally Sentinel Ill Cour1 St.

Q

"

Pomero;, Ohio 45769.

0

SUBSCRII'TION RATES
By Carrier or Motor &amp;ut.e

0

Qn(' We(lk . ... .. .
One Mo nth

On(' YPar . . .

. .

.
...

.

$1 25
$54~

.. .... i65.00

S INGLE VOPV

PRICE
Dally .

25

Cen t s

Su bScrlbNS no! dr&gt;Sirlng to pay t h(lcar
rler may r&lt;'mll In adva nCP direct to
The Dally Sf:onl lnt&gt;l on a 3. 6or 12 mont h
bas is Credit will bl· glvf'n corr ltr ea ch

week

HBnn un Tract'- X ........ . 13

avail a bl e

Mall SuMC:rlpU0118
ln1lde Melp Counly

13 Week s... ... . .. . . . ....... $17 29
26 W•eks .. . .. .. .. .
.$.14.06
52 WeelUI.. ...
. .. .. ... . . S66 56
Ou&amp;Ncle MelpCountr

13Weeks . . . ............... 118.20
26 Weeks... ... .. •. . . ....... S35, 10
52 Weeks .. ... .. .... .. ... .... 167.60

"Sonofsgun/ Isn 't that GREAT- THE DOW
DID IT AGAIN!"

PF

PA

I

95!1

K40

94K

829
1H

Snuih~rn .................. 9 5 IO:J'Z
Oak Hill ..... .. .. ... .• .. .... i 6 92'1 1143
Eastern ...... ...., ..........6 K ~ 90~
Kyger Creek ................... s 9 697 . 1~K
Southweste rn ........ . . . A. 10 758 939
Symme-~ Valley ............ .. 1 13
726 905
X·league champion s
Friday's re!ults

Oak Hlll63 EaHtern 52
North GaJIIa 1''7 Southwestern 67
So uth ern 108 Sy mmes Valley '71
Hannan Trace 81 Kncr Creek 42
Saturday'M results
HunHn~on Ros!!l 68 North GaHia U
Ha nnan Trace 84 Ironton Sl. Joe 3K

Phillips took game scormg
honors In a losing cause with 2fi
poln1s Ronnie Christian and
Jimmy S1ewart add ed a dozen
poln1s apiece for the Mount.\ i
neers, 7-23 and 3-13
"Give Appalachian State" lot
of credit ," sa id Ma rshall coac h
Rick Hu cka bay '" They played
very scra ppily and made us work
hard to
tothec hamplcmslhip.
said

coac h Tom Apk c had
rro lly we ll prepared."'
" We strugg led and dtd not
shoo t wrlll n the second half ," Ill'
sa td ·•we got a btg play out of
(ce nt er Tom \ Currv ~11 thC' frPf'
1hrow li ne .1 nd 1hen out o f
D wa~' n c • LNv1s m ovl·rti me
'' Wr' n-. p1 ourlt o beSCrh ..un ps.
hu 1 WC' know wr h ,l\' f' lti Cd iT\ 1h ls
1111 0
lh l'

TIIUIISDAV SWINGERS
Stan dings as of Feb. ~
Team

Plants ExKon

Rutland Mln r Supply
Joe Cai n. All y. , . .
Mooney's

Bod~·

Shop

E lectric Mot or Scr \'lcc

Falcon honored

W

L

26

6

22

10

2Q

t2

19

13

18

14

15

G iov ann i's Pi zza.

17
14
10

22

Coc hran 's Exxon
Albarcon. Inc

H

24

R

2R

Jorda n Ga s ~rv l ce
•5

.

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

18

Jol' Culn Alt y
Et.tlnP Ry.tn 52 1
Rutland Min(' Su pply, Ann a bel Houda
she\t, 4lti . Mooney's Body Shop, Mar ilyn

Browning, 56\l, J ordan · Ca s ~rv lce,
VIvian Saunders..t. 453 Plant s Exxon , Hazel

Marcum. 510· Loch ron's Exxon . Karrie
Stephens . 386.
Vonda Jordan, 433;
Giovanni 's Pl1.za. Gcn!'va Adkins , 482 ;
Alba r ra n. l nl', Le e Brad s haw 411.
Electrk M otor ServlcP. Rach1•l Whllf' hu lr
121 .
200 or betler games Gc"n£&gt;va Adkins.
215: Marsha S ll"'ph ens , 210, Marilyn

•s.

Browning, 202. 203; E l,ll nt' Ry an , 209
Spi lls co nv('rted· Cind y J o n ,.~ . ~ 10
.Toyer Mooney, 3 9·10.

TOLEDO. Ohio 1UP! t -Steve
Mar tenet , a junior forward from
Bowling Green. was named the
Mid · Amerlcan Con fe r e nce
pla ye r of the week Monday.
Mar tenet . 6-foot -6 and a native
of Mansfield , Ohio, scored .15
poln1s. gra bbed 11 rebounds a nd
dished our five assists In a pair of
BG victories last week .
He had 25 poin ts and elghl
rebounds as the Falcons clinched
a MAC tournamen1 berth with a
Wednesday
. Heover
addedBall
10 potnrs
77·75
victory
State
and three rebounds In a 58·56 win
over Miami Salurday
Mart enel was 15 of 22 from the
field and fl w or six from the line
In the two games.

GOES IIIGH FOR REilOUND - Mar, lt.lll Unlv••rsity's J(t&gt;&lt;hu-y
Holden (001 tak es the rebound from 1\p(laladli:on Moun1.llnPers'
Ben Miller (25) in Monday night 's Soutlu-rn ConferNH'&lt;' llnalP at
Boonf1, N. C. Mariihall won, 75-(i9 , in nvt•rlinw and Ul llllh•d with
co- leader Univt•rsily of 1'~ nnP~se t •- rh.lUanooga loss, dainwd 1ht ·
19R7 Southern Confcrf•n&lt;·r r1 •g ul.ar :'"l!';t,un nnwn will! a Ei· l r•·t nrd
(UP!)
.

Local bowling
KING S &amp; QUt: EN'
Stand ln.~:~&gt; for ~ · M· M7

T1•wn

Fl!f'Sid!' I nn
\lrl s£•m un A ~1· n rv
HPRuns

II'

I.

·II
II

.!11

,,,

n

Rlverbo,lt lnrt
WOn lt•ns Loungt •
Doolilflt' Pha rman•
Hollf'y Bros Can st
Hall('ys Gun Sh op

111

C.Hroll Norris Do d ~!'
P,tsqualP El1•c
Vi nton An!IQU(' "
Willis TlrP
l rvl ns Gl a~~
Nd ppt•rs Tr ur k in~
1.\m lth s Ashland
Martin s Con i &amp; S&amp;nnr•

:!II
:!II
~I

I!&lt;

:lli

''""
12
"

.!h

211

Ill
Ill
11

11
'H
:

22
It
•I

53 t JACKSON I'IKE AT J!l WESl
Pnone 446 · 4524

11

BARGAIN MATJN[ ES SATURDAY &amp;

Ill
'12
'12

SUN D~Y • All S[ ATS \ Z 50

~OMI SS I O N E Y~RY

"

·'

TUCS DAY S2 50

FEBRUARY 20 lhru 26
FRIDAY thru TIIURSOAY '

~)/1

'"'

RPRuns t()() k R po !nt ~ ft'om P uvtu nl(·
Elrc lr] ( H l ~.:h for Rt·llurt ~ . B l 1u s~, ll.
11~9· 5rl7 1-l ll! h 101 P liS(JUollP , T Y... nugll
IHM · ~rl . Woott·n ~ Lou tlgt' luok M fr om

Carrnll Norrl ~ Dndgf' Hi g h lm W!)fll/ n ~
K Pridc morC' 223 r1f\.l lll ~ h fr.r L.n'rtlll
No rris , 0 Ju s l u ~ 201 @ I ll!,[lrt,. llr os
Con s! took fi from Duoll lilt• Plw m:wv
H J ~h for Uotl f'V Rros ' n HPi m l nll .lr&gt;r
200·54.1 Hig h to r Do oli tt lf'~. 11 G;~ r l l l, 211'1
P f'('t'l(U ~o n 51~ . Wlllls Tin· tonk I) II 4Jm
NappN1'ru tk!n~ . HlJ,:h iC
II Willi s J) ( '1:-.t o
1sub1 l2!l P Rl1k t• r '}5:1 Wlst•tn nn AJ,!I' nt'\
took M from Smit hs fl ..;h l;tnct HIRh tor

..

PLATI N
fh p fn ~ l t .nu.1ttr
nf ..,,11 " nmur o·no 1

Wlsl'mans, J Wrll(hl , 2lrl . ~:19 ll ig: h for
Sm !ths. K Tackf'll l ~ 40!1 Jl , tll rv~ C.un
Shur. IDIIk 6 from Hlwrh(J.II Inn li l ~o:h fnr
H.tl I'Y S
Lunt', 20.1 1.\ nrown 'J01 II IJ.,:h
fo r RlverOOa l. M May(•s. 20.1 ·1'11: I rvin~

II

c

~lass

took 7 1rom Vlnloni\ntlctuf's l ll ~h I•JJ
D Brown 1!!1 52fi ll lg h lor Vm!nn

Ir vin ~

Antiqu{•s J3 Wocad. [f)4 ')Itt Fln ·~ir l" I nn
took A fr om Mrt r1ln l'hol &amp; Stonf' ll l ~ h for
Flrl'sldr I nn , K Whlll 2~1 ~,7 H tiiJ.(h fr•r
Marl i n ~.

H .l o hn ~cm. l'i7 K Trlppll'll ·1:!2.

..------ - - - - -- --1
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~r;;;;l~·~·;';"~'';·•~'"~·'~-';'';'~;;;;;;J~~~~~~~~~~~~~:.· .•:·.,·. :,
~

•

UNDER • THE • CAR
SERVICES

1

:

•
•

1malleup)

•
•
\

Reflerve Ac tion
(CONFERENCE)

W L PF PA
North Gallla .... ......... 12 2
Southern .. ........ ........... .... 11 3
Eastern .................. . H 8
Oak Hill .. .. . ... .. ..•.... ...... 9 I
Hannan Trllce ............ .K 6
SymmeM Valley ............... ..4 10
Kner Creek................... .. 2 12
Southwestem ............... z 12
Friday' II ret~ulls
SymmetJ Valley 57 Southern 43
Hannan Trace 44 Kner Creek

D Front Wheel Alianment

702 581
643 US
815 57&amp;
l3! IQ!
.ull 584

-179 580

Friday
IAI Melp)

North Gallla u . Croos k\'llle·
Soulhwe.u ern winner U 7: 30.
Satunlll)'
At Soutll Point
Franklin Fumace Grer.n ... I!L

Valley &amp;16 p.m.

S;rmmn

MMelp

Wlnnent of Wedneadaf' •Junee meel81
'7: 30. Two wlnners adunce to Chlll~th e

•
•

•'

&amp;1

Rotate your vehicle tuos , chock
their air pre11ure and bring them
all up 10 recommended pretauro

26

p.m.

I

•

D Tire Rotation

Oak Hill 49 Eastern 42
North Gallla 48 Southwestern 87
Thls 'wedi:'H l'•mes

(CiuH A.ToumunenU)
Tue-.day
Southwettir.:tn vs. Crooldville, 7 p.m.
Wedne!tday
1\tMr.:lp
Eas tern vs. Kner Creek. 1 p.m .
Southern,•. Trimbl e. 8. 45 p.m.
'ntunMiay
At South Point

iI

Align front wheel aottmg all ad ·
juttable angles lo manlJfa ctur·
or's specs . Moat can. Chev·
otles, toe only Part s eM trn Is
noedod .

521 4118
521 513

Hannan Trace n . Ironton St . ,Joe, 7: lO

No subscription s by mall permll!('d In
areas whl're homt' carrll'r serv lct' Is

·

PA

North Gall Ia .•..•. ... . tO 4

United Pr&lt;' !l~ lntt•rnallonal

M('mbcr

Inla nd Da !!v Prpss Associ a l io n a nd I hr
• · Ohio NPwspap!'r Association. National

PF

HannllnTracc .... .. .. ...... l~ :i 1339 l%i3
North Galllu ..... ...... 13 6 1188 1082
Southern .................. ... 12 H 1533 1251
OakHIII .... ........... 12 8 126! 1168
Kyger Creek. ............. ....9 II 1042 1099
Eastern ................... 8 12 1308 121\0
iiouthwet~te rn .................. S 1% 1101 1261
Symm eli Valley .......... ··•• 16 liNn 12'75
(CONFEREN CE)

Ohio

0

0

~~

LltbiiUid

Val 53

()

()

~rerport

!OVERALL)
WL

WL

(I WI~ A

8rld• e porl 611,

Berry's World
0

SVAC Standings

lM'\' a~

time. The two slood at 67-67 at the
end of regulation In a torrid first
half. when Phillips rifled In four
of his (lve 3·polnt goals He fail ed
on only two attempts.
Forward Dwayne Lew is
scored five of his 11 points In the
extra period, and got Marshall
off 1o a quick start wit h a 12-foot
jumper.
Sa nford Killian pulled rhe
Mountaineers even with a goal at
69-69, but Ro&lt;lney Holden sa nk
the front end of a one-and- one
s ituation 1o make it 70-69, In
Marshall"s favor.
After a timeout, the Mountaineers failed 10 respond offens ively, and Lewis then drove In
for a layup, drawln ~ a foul as he
cu r h1s way to the baske1. His
:!-point play put Marshall out
front 73-69. Humphrey compl eted
Ihe scoring by laking a rebound
on a poor shot and si nking both
ends of a one-a nd- one situa tion.
Holden and Skip Henderson
drilled In 15 points to pace
Marshall, whtch fini shed 15·1 In
the league and 22-5 overall
Chattanooga wound up 14 2 In SC
ac tion.

Meigs girls top
Alexander 57-45
in AA toomey

Ohio College

&amp;~~· hill I

Chh: a~

:19

1\sht ~I John 45, Lllwell~lll.- 33
Gf.orll:t'lown 56, Wlllillftl!ihur ~ U
Millon l!!u.stt-rn f2, SIBI&gt;rnard !II
MoJ{adure 63, Akron Elms 2!1
Tlnu111 311, Muume4' Vlll '!6

25 27 M SM Ul 234

Buill

52

Art.hhltld St. Nortllwood 32

NHL results

Bo!itn

Ro"~

Flnlll'ytuwn St . llu.mllton

Alexandt&gt;r U
New LA'xlna1on 64, Nr.lson~U i t&gt; 33
\ul \&gt;lew 50, UUie Miami :16
CIWl!iA

Portland at Ntow York, 'J 30 p m
Atlanta at C hl ca~o. 11:30 p m.
lndl1111a at Mllwauki!e, 11:30 p m.
Sacramento at Ran Antonio, II :111 p m
Hou!lton Ill D~"'"'• 9 p m
Seat tle at Utah. t· :lh p.m
LA Lakefllal Phof'nb , 9:80 p m

Mnlrl

Ro~rs

Mel~ ~1.

THdll)l'~ Ganll'll
at New Jersey, 'J 80 p.m

Adam~;

N~M Rlrhmond U
M.alahar 51, l..n lnf:ton .t9

NallonaJ Trail 53. King~~ :Ill
Kt•adlnK 60, LOYdll.fld 19

Phillldelphla 11:\
Clenland 1119. M' astdn~oal05
Hou11on IU. Oen\er 1011
Dalll\11 121, Uolden Stalt• 95
Suttle IU, LA Cllppen 112

Hrllr

Cla&amp;!l AAA
II, Bellevue 40

Mlddl~&gt;tuwn Mud~l. PrelliL•ShiiWftl'~

Allant~allt

l' oun~(hr9l, l'oun~falvaryll'~

Co\JMTPoWN

Tourtlllment~

jot) '

8o8toq Ill, New ,Jcr!M'!y 111.1

Phlla
N\' 1!.1
N\' R

94, M-'t'!!ll Union!$

Day K'ayiW' &amp;I Trotwood Mlldb;on

!i 19 .848 :VI tl 56&amp; 4%

Houlton

Away from efficiency _____R_ob_er_tw,_a_lle_rs
WASHINGTON tNEA) stoned a 10-year extension that
"Ten years ago." recalls a
would carry the CAFE standards
Chrysler Corp executive, "the
Into the 45-Io-50 mpg range by
public blamed short -sighted
19'.l5.
leadership In Detroit" for the
In explaining !he need 1o
lack of domestic fuel -efficient
extend Ihe taw beyond 1985, the
cars when an energy crisis sent
National Highway Traffic Safety
gasoline prices soaring.
Admlnls1ratlon said Initially:
"The next time," the Chrysler
"If there Is a misjudgment, If
official notes, "the blame will
the consumer does not demand
clearly fall on shortsighted lead- and the auto Industry does not
ership In Washington."
offer the best performance on
Indeed, after six years of fuel economy, the consequences
devising assorted schemes to
are severe Indeed . Today, there
undermine federally man&lt;laled
Is a danger of being lulled Into a
fuel-economy standards, Presi- state of complacency ...
dent Reagan's appointees now
"The underlying issue Is this
want to abolish the program thai country's vulnerability In the
has been responsible for the
face of the uncertain energy
production of efficient cars.
future, which may Include
In the wake of the energy crisis
further severe and unexpected
of 1973, the Energy Polley and disruptions In foreign oil
Conservation Act of 1975 was supplies."
enacted to reduce future qependBut in spring 1981, less than
ence upon Imported crude oil.
three months alter Reagan
Among Its provisions were the moved Into the White House,
Corporate Average Fuel EconNHTSA abruptly terminated the
omy standards that required rule-making procedure nece~
substantial Increases In operat· sary to establish post -1985
lng efllclency .
standards.
Although most automakers
The original law perpetuated
fiercely resisted the Initiative as the 27.5 mpg CAFE standard In
unwarranted government Intru- 1986 and ensuring years, but both
sion, the CAfE standards General Motors and Ford Inrescued the Industry from even sisted they could not meet that
worse devastation than It sui· requirement without slashing
fered during the second energy production of large cars and
crisis of 1979.
laying of! thousands of workers.
Following that oil shock, fuel·
In tact, GM and Ford could
elflclenl Japanese Imports cap- match Chrysler's performance
lured much of the markel for - and meet the original standards,
merly monopolized by the "but they would have to relinquish
domestic auto Industry- but the the large prollts they make on the
CAFE standards. enabled U.S. sale of the Ford Crown Victoria
producers to be at least partially and Grand Marquis, Pontiac
competitive.
Grand Prix, Oldsmobile Cutlass
The law was designed to double Supreme and other oversized,
automobile fuel economy In Its overpriced gasoline-guzzlers .
first decade, peaking at 27.5
Chrysler rightly derided the
miles per gallon In 1985. Those "preposterous scenario of draswho dralted the legislation envl· tic product restrictions and mas·

PeP~ I'M

'

14111

\\LPct GB

Dallas
Utah

gement. though. Bollinger
couldn'1 lose. To get other bids,
the government had to pay the
company $5.5 million for Its
design rights. And If another
builder we re to get the contract,
Bollinger would pick up an
additional $4 million In design
consulting fees.
Ironically, one reason Congress decided to go with an
existing boat wa s to avoid the
cost of designing a new one. Our
Coast Guard sources say they
could have designed a larger,
better patrol boat for about $1
million and saved Ihe $5.5 million
in design costs paid to Bollinger.
Coast Guard engineers aren't
upse1 just over the 16 Island Class
boats already purchased. Congress has ordered the Coas1
Guard to buy 21 more, with an
option for up to 16 beyond that .
The contract was awarded re·
cently to Bollinger.
Footnote: Stanley scoffed at
lhe suggestion that politics go1
Bollinger the contract, pointing
out that this was only the
company's second government
con tract In 35 years.

C'le Rapt C:hr 57, Fairport HArdin~ 5'!

Canlon 'nmkP.tl 3'7, Marllnl!ton $5

WrHil!rn Cenler e nee

~

..

Monday'•lklults
Re~lar Sell!lon
Au~Untown Fltth $1, Beaver Lota.l

Z\;
KV,

Mdwest Division

Det roit

Girl~ Ohio Hl'h Schont Bukethall

1' 38

Detroit
Atlanta
Mlhuukl!
OlluKf!
lndiiUl a
Cleve!Dd

BOONE, N.C. (UP!)- Forget
the coin toss to decide the top
seed In the Southern Conference
tournament this weekend.
Mars hall decided that Monday
night, with a little help from
some friends at The Citadel.
While the Thundering Herd
battled to a 75-69 overtime
decision over Appalachian State,
Marshall"s hottest rival down the
stretch, Tennessee· Chatta ·
nooga, was upended by The
Citadel.
Marshall a nd Chatta nooga entered their season finales In a
virtual tie for first place In Ihe
SC. Had both won, a flip of Ihe
coin would have determined !he
tournament's No.1 see.
" We felt kind of rus1y," admi tted Marshall forward John
Humphrey .
"We had a little trouble getting
up for !he game tontgh1, but II
feels good to be the champions
and we know we have to play lik e
champions to w1n the
tournam ent.'"
Appalachian Srate, led by the
long·dlstance shoo1tn g of Kemp
Phillips, look Marshall in to over

Girls scores

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.

Not up to par ______J_a_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_o_se..:.__p_h___.:Sp:...._e_ar_
WASHINGTON - Congress
may have foisted off an lnfenor
smuggler-chasing patrol boat on
the Coast Guard. Officials deny
there was any political hanky·
panky and Insist the boat Is a
good one, but there seems to be a
fishy smell to the whole 1hlng.
Here's what we've dug up·
Congress authorized emergency funding several years ago
10 build 16 new Coast Guard
patrol boa1s for use In Its
drug-Interdiction program. But
Ihe boat preferred by the Coast
Guard was disqualified by Ihe
courts on a technicality.
So the contract for the construction of 16 patrol boats was
granted to,Bollinger Shipyards of
Louisiana, which manufactures
110-foot craft known as Island
Class. The company owner, Don
Bollinger, Is state chairman of
Ihe Republic Party, and his
Washington lobbyist , Steven
Sliver, used to be an assistant to
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska. A
Ia ter decision to buy up to 37
more Island Class boats came
out of the Senate Appropriations
subcommittee thai Stevens then
headed.

crown

Marshall captures

Daily Sentinel

'Eyes on the Prize'_______B_e_n_W_at_te_nb_er-=-g

The ·Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Alllilstant Publisher/Controller

Page-2-~

• •

••'

Standard Tire Rims

At H&amp;R Block we know you're concerned
tax reform will aHea you. Out new Tax
~~~~;~i~t:~~
serv1ce p111Vides a written
' of how you d come out under the
so you"ll kllOw whether your tax
1lll&lt;&gt;uta 110 up or down.

l

IT'S AVAILABLE
WHETHER WE PREPARE YOUR RETURN OR NOT.

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH.
27 SYCAMORE ST., GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Open 9 A.M.·6 P.M. W11kdays: 9 to S Sat.

D Wheel Balance
balanci ng
Qulc~ .

accurate

of

your tires Moat vehlcln. tta n·

$300
per

d•rd tire rim1 .

whul

'

.

D, Replacement Brake Shoe/Pad
Call or come In for estimate on
vour panlcular need a.

'', '

. ...

..
POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO " •..•
1

., ' ' .

600 E. MAIN ST.

APPOINTMENTS AYIILAILE

POMEROY

992-2094

Dltlrltl.

"

,,

" ..... t

I

I'

I

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday. Feb'ruary 24, 1987

'~ Southwestern, Crooksville open play in Class A Sectional
ROCK SPRINGS - Tonight
: the Southwestern Highlander s
: open Sectional Tournament play
'. at Me igs High School against the
· Crooksville Ceramics In the first
.: of first-round games at 7 p.m.
; Other first round games will be
. · held on Wednesday when East·
:· ern fa ces Kyger Creek tn the
· opener at 7 p.m. and Trimble
: faces Southern In the nightcap at
.• 8: 45.
:. Finals for the upper bracket
·. will be held Friday at 7:30
.: bewteen North Gall Ia a nd
:- Soul hwe s ter n -C rook s vlll e
· winner, while the winners in
Wednesday's games meet In the
: lower bracket final s Saturday
: evening at 7: 30.
The Eas tern Eagles of Coach
·• Dennis Eichinger finished the
·' regular season at 8· 12, losing

~

several close encoun ters a long 6·0 Allen Tripp have anchored
the way Inc luding two games to the post for the Eagles, giving
SVAC darkhorse Kyger Creek.
.EHS a much Improved Inside
In th e two earlier meetings game.
Kyger Creek won both games . .
Brent Norton and Todd Wilson
Eastern has been led by junior add some strength off the bench
guard Jeff Ca ldwell, who has for the Eagles.
averaged over 18.5 points per
Eastern will be facing a much
ga me. The junior guard is a good Improved Kyger Creek club of
ballha ndle r as well as potent Coach Scou · Stemple, who has
outside shooter.
deve loped a sense of pride this
Senior le ader Ed Collins has year at the KC camp.
sta bilized the Eastern offense
The Bobcats are led by a strong
with steady Inside games a nd Inside game consisting of Billy
excellent ballhandllng trails . Loveday, Mike Bradbury and
Brya n Durst, Mark Griffin, and Tim Gordon. Chad Leach has
Tony Hendrix add the outside been going strong at guard .
shooting dimension and s trength
In the nightcap, Southern, 12·8,
to the Eastern club.
has been the sleeper In thi s year's
Allhough lacking In height , regular season and hopes to be
Eastern 's outside shooting and the prince of this year's sectional
qu ic kness have proven to be live tournament. The Tornadoes
or die assets. 6·2 Mike Martin a nd have scored 100 or more points In
their last four games and 90 or
more In their last six games since
shifting basically to a run and
gun offense. Southern has been
Steel men Coach Dale Reichart a Jed by the sharp-shooti ng of
junior guard David Amburgey
member of that squad.
who has averaged 18.2 points.
Monroev ille, the Class A state Postman Kenny Turley has aver·
champ ju st three years ago, won aged 13.9 points per game as well
lis first gam e of the season as l ead ing th e t ea m In
Friday night alter 16 consecutive rebounding.
One asset of the Tornadoes Is
losses, s:J-52 over Ashland Ma·
pleton. " I feel like Jim Valvano that seven players average over
(Of North Carolina Sla te ) when 7 points per game to add to the
he won the NCAA Tourna ment." team philosophy. Shannon Riffle
sa id Monroeville Coac h Tim has averaged 8.6 per game, Todd
Kimes 8.5, Dave McMillin 7.8,
Laird.

High school notes...

By GENE CADDES
UP I Sports Writer
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!i
· Ohio high school basketball not es
·: from around the state:
: : Lorain Senior won its first
= j3uckeye Conference basketball
• title In 31 years wlth a 48-46 win
: · i:.ver E lyria Fr iday night thanks
-: IG a reserve player. Tony Robin·
~ sbn. a 6-foot -3 sophomore who
· had played three quarters In the
: plghl's junior vars ity game, hit a
pa Ir nds
af free
Ihrows
w II h ftoutor
:- seco
left In
the contes
: provid e the margin of victory.
-· An Elyria win would have
three· way lie for the
·: created
. title between Lorain , which fin·
· . l ~ hed with an 11 ·1 league mark.
Lora in Admiral King, which
wound up at 10·2 and Elyria,
: which d ropped to 9·3. Senior's
last Iitle came in 1956. with

:Plan benefil event
· · Tonight in Char les W. Hayman
gy mnasium In Racine, the South·
er n Athle tic Boosters will be
hosting a fund raising event for
.se nior Matt Harris who will
· trave l to Europe for a ba sketball
:· · exhibition Aprll10-20. At 6:30 the
: fdur loca l six th gra de tea ms will
choose and eac h play one half.
)"h ll e later on In the evening. the
Southern tea ms of the "Seven·
lies" will face the "Eighties" .

:: Final TVC girls
. standinb'S
Gir l,.; T \ '( '

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Harris, Milliron, and Kimes
a lso provide senor leadership,
while Kimes and McMillin have
performed well at the post as well
as being quality rebounders .
Southern has scad 1532 points
on the season for a .76.6 average
while giving up 1257 points, a 62.8
average. Meanwhile, Trimble
compares with 1113 offensively
(55. 6) and 1261 defe nsively
(63.0) .
Southern has been shooting a
warm 51 percent from the fi eld
and 66 perce nt at the line while
grabbing 36 rebounds per game.
In Its last six games Southern has
averaged 34 free throws per
game.
While Southern is an upbeat
team. young Trimble (5- 15) relies on a more pattern oriented
half cou rt game. Trimble has
good size, rebounds well, and is a
strong, physica l club.
Due to Its size and bulk.
Trimble is not considered to be a
quick team. It plays a 2·3 zone or
1-2·2 zone .exclusively and only
presses when behind.
Most likely Trimble will have
to play a controlled game.

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WE CAN HELP MAKE YOUR WISHES COME TRUE!·
AS A CARRIER FOR THE DAILY SENTINEL YOU CAN EARN THE
MONEY TO BUY YOUR WISHES
OR
YOU MAY WIN YOUR WISHES IN ONE OF OUR
CARRIER CONTESTS.
IF YOU ARE BETWEEN THE AGES OF 11 AND 18

CALL 992-2156
AND SAY "I WISH I COULD BE A CARRIER"

THE DAILY SENTINEL
. '' YOUR HOMETOWN N£WSPAPEF"

.l

By BOB HOEFLICH .
Sentinel Staff Writer
Did you see
Well, I d!dn' t
either but Ruth
Young tells me
that she and her
family observed ·
a large blue and
while balloon,
decorated with a
star, in the sky behind the Young
home on Route 124 near the
Church of God. Ruth says thai 11
appeared that someone cou ld
have been riding in the balloon
which was spotted between 8 and
8:30 a .'m. Sunday.
Refunders out there In Meigs
County.need a bit of help.
Helen Hicks says that a refund
pro·gram Is underway and th at
participants must answer sev·
era! questions regarding the
Miss U.S. A. Pageant. The han ·
gup question is which contestant
wore the best slate costume?
Former r·es ldentsEdgar J . anq
Sharon Ritchie Hartung will
observe lht&gt;ir 25th wedding anni·
versary 0:1 March 2:
They were married at the
Chesler Methodist Church by
Rev. Robert Card. Both are
graduates of Eastern High
School. Edgar works as a n FBI
agent and Sharon is a registered
nurse working in obstetrics.
They hav e a son. Jed. Ca rds may
be sent to them at 32720 Green·
wood Court, Avon Lake, Ohio
44012.
Did one of the you ladles get the
wrong coal when you left the Blue
and Gold Banq uet at the Senior
Ci tizens Center last Thursday
night? If so, Ann Ma s h would be
happy to hear from you. When
she got rea dy to leave, hPr coat
was gone but a very similar all
weather coat was left so she wore

that. However, Ann.would like to
·exchange coats. Hers was a bit
shorter than the one that was left
at the center. She knows It's just
a case of "m istaken Identity."
You can call Ann at 992· 7656.
In an earlier column, II was
noted that J .R. Kitchen Is one of
the area basketball players se·
lected ·for the All-Star Team to
play In Belgium, Holland, and
West Germany In April. Each
player must have $1,595 to make
the trip and those who want to
help in J .R.'s direction can
contact Fenton Taylor at 992·
2158, or Pat Kitchen. whose
number was Incorrectly listed
ea rlier. 11 Is 992·6212.
Jay Warner of Middleport Is
confined to Provld£&gt;nce Hospital
In Cincinnati recuperating from
the second hlp transplant opera ·
lion. Jay will get cards at the
hospital, Room 614, 2446 Kipling
Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 45239.
Si nce there are many students
at Meigs High enroiled In voca·
Ilona! training programs, I did
want to mention that credits
earned In vocational ellucalion
classes may be applied to college
degree programs at Rio Grande
College and ~ommunlty College.
With spring approaching, bike·
a· thons are in fort he benefit of St.
Jude Chlldren:s Research Hospl·
tal founded by entertainer Danny
Thomas. The hospital combats
ca tastrophic diseases which a f·
filet children.
Sheila Westfall will chair a
blke·a·lhon In the Reedsville
area and Crystal Richmond will
c hair a similar eve nt In Rutland
for the hospital's benefit.
It might be o.k. to jump to
conclusions but sometimes that
ca n make for a pretty bumpy
landing. Do keep smiling.

Cindy Denney

· POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Sorority will meet Tues da~· . 7:30
p.m .. atthehomeofMrs . Evelyn
Knight.
POMEROY - Meigs Coun ty
Litter Grant Advisory Board will
rneel at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Litter Control office. OBES of·
flee, Uni on Ave .. Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Womens Auxiliary of Veterans Memo ria l Hospital will meet Tuesday, 2 p.m ..
In the hospital conference room .
A silent auction will be he ld.
\\'EDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Public di s·
as ter service meeting Wednesday. 7:30p.m .. at the Middlcporl
American Legion hall. Speakers
will be Richard Lockha~t. Dep. ut y Director of Disaster Services
·. of Ohio, Charles Lega r Sr., Meigs
County director of disas ter servl ·
ces: and Robert Byer. Meigs
Emergl'ncy Medical Services
· directo r.
POMEROY
Wildwood
. Garden Club meets 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday,
Grueser.

home

of

Doris

HOBSON - Mi ssionary night
will be observed Wednesday,
7: 30 p.m., Hobson Church of
Christ In Christian Union . The
Rev. Odell · Manley will be
speaker. The Rev. Thereon Our·
ham. pastor. invites' the public .

Rupert Shrader, Frankfort , Ky ..
By NeUte Parker
Sunday School attendance Feb. visited the PooJe,Parker home
1 was 30; church attendance. 19. · Feb. 6. Mr. Schrader also visited
On Feb. 8 Sunday School atten· other relatives and friend s In the
dance was 34; church attendance, area, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bar·
ker, ·Icy Taylor, Cecil Caldwell,
28.
Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Williams.
Church visitors Included SteMartha Elliott visited Gene·
phen St. Clair, Lancaster; Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Weber, Shannon, vleve Guthrie at Crestview Ma·
Shalyn and Sasha, Eagle Ridge; • nor, Lancaster.
Nathan Kaley, Tony and Joshua
Marie Williams and Evelyn Car·
Ritter
visited Mr. and Mrs . .foe
roll, Guysville.
Poole
and
Will, Feb. 8.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Findling
Osle
Henderson
Is visiting Mr.
of Athens called on Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs . Sherman Henderson .
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Sargent
Carl Findling.
are
vacationing In Florida .
Lester Keaton returned hom e
Bob
Burke had the misfortune
after undergoing surgery at Unlv·
to
break
hi s fool Feb. 11.
ers!ty Hospital, Columbus. He Is
making a satisfactory reeov~ry .

A spaghetti dinner preceded
tHe recent meeting of lh&lt;' Bertha
M. Sayre Missionary Society
held reeenliv in the fellowshp
room of the Racine First Baptist
Church.
The dinner was served by the
Ruth Clrci&lt;' to the 22 members
and five guests attending. The
Rev. Steve Deaver talked to the
group on missions a nd the
upeoming America for Christ

p.m. Thursday at the hall.
HARRISONVILLE - Sci pio
Senior Citizens are to meet at the
Scipio Fire House for their
regular monthly meeting Thursday, 7 p.m . Members are to tak e
refreshm ent s to the meeting.

RUTLAND
Rutland
Friendly Garden Club meets
Wednesday at the home of
Margaret Edwards. The Rev.
William Mlddleswarth will show
slides of flowers .
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will serve the canteen at
the Red Cross Bloodmobile at the
Se nior Citizens Center. 1-5:30
p.m . Wednesday.

MIDDLEPORT- Eva ngeline
Chapter, Order of 'the Eas tern
Star, will have a public soup
dinner , 11 a.m.-6:30p.m. Friday,
In the basement of th e Masonic
Temple; eat In or take out .

THURSDAY
POMEROY -Preceptor Beta
Beta chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m., at Grace Episcopal
Church parish house.

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department and Auxiliary's
family fun night will be held at
the fire house Saturday begin·
n!ng with a 6::10 p.m . potluck
dinner.

RACINE - Racl ne American
Legion Auxllary will meet at 7:30

Rummage sale
FOREST RUN - A rummage
sale will be held on March 3 and 4
at the Forest Run United Metho·
dlst Ch~rch basement , 9 a.m. to 3
p.m.

Parents Without Partners meets
The Mid -Ohio Valley Chapt er c all Marilyn Marenchin, 109
of Parents without Partners Inc. Clar k St., Marietta, 614-373·1103;
will ha ve two open hou ses during Jane Rader. 70719th St., Vien na,
Ma rch to ·acq uain t the public W.Va .. 304 -295- ~15. or Wanda
with the work of the group.
Buckley ..304-422·0655 .
The first will be he ld on Ma rch
Emphas is of the program Is on
8 fr·o m 3 lo 5 p.m . at the Vienn a mutual support, learning and
Public Llbrarv, 23rd Strecl, and growing, family fun, and sharing
River Roa d,' VIenna. W.Va .. answers to problems. The chapwhile tlle second one will be held
ter Is dedicated to the welfare of
on March 18 fr om 7: :m to 9: :m a ll single parents and their
p.m. at the Was hington r ounty children. Me mbership Is open to
Career C&lt;'nter, SR 676. just wes t a ny single parent of at leas t one
of Martel ta .
living child, rega rdless of cus·
For furth er In forma tion on the tody arrangement s .
program, res id ents are Invited to

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·~3!~2

Prayer was the theme of the
prog ra m presented at the recent
,· meeting of the Chester United
Methodist Women held at the .
church.
•
Denise Mora and Marilyn
·: · Spencer conducted the meet in g
·: which opened with group si nging
'of "What a Friend We Ha ve In
Jes~s." Clarice Allen at the
plano. Theme of the program
was " Hear Us Wh en We Pray." ·
Scripture was from Matthew 6
and Luke 11.
·
Readings on prayer were given
by several members wlthempha·
sis on the Importance of prayer In
our personal and community
Jives, the power of faithful
prayer, the prayer as a way of
Increasing understanding, and

I he appreelalion which God has
for people who think, who work,
and who praye r.
After a time of quiet prayer,
the group gave the Lord ' sPrayer
In· unison. Questions on prayer
were discussed and the program
c losed with singing "I've Found
the Answer ."
Mrs. Mora conducted the meet·
tng with 17 members. answering
roll call.
The treasurer's boOk was au·
dlted , a thank·you note was read
from the Gay Gaul family , annd
another from Betty Lou Moore
thanking th~ UMW for a donation
In behalf of her husband. A total
of 75 sick calls were reported and
cards were sent to several.
shu tins.

The Corner of General Hartinger
Parkway and Pearl Street
In Middleport
STORE HOURS: 8 AM to 10 PM 7 Days a Week

992-3471 .

Missionary society meets

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Square dance
Friday, 8· 11 p.m ., sponsored by
the Senior Citizens Sq uare Dance
Club, at the center. Music Is by
the Ohio River Bend Boys and
those attending are to bring
snacks for the snack tab!&lt;'.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Youth League organizational
meeting will be held Thursday, 7
p .m ., at village hall.

Seventeen -year -old Cy nthia
tC!ndy) Denney. of Depot St.,
Rutland, Is a state finalist In te h
Miss American Coed Pagea nt, to
be held April 17·18 at the Hya tt
Regency Hot el, Cincinnati.
Miss Denney Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Searls, of
Rutland, and James Thomas
Denney, of Gallipolis, and the
granddaughter of Mr. a nd Mrs .
Paul Tope, Gallipolis.
Sponsors for Miss Denn y Me
.'Chris Haye, Nelson Jones, Faceroyer Lumber, Doczts Pick and
Shovel, Farmers Bank and Sav ·
lngs Company, Headquarters
B&lt;~auty Salon and Shear fiiu s ions
Beauty Salon.

Alfred community notes

For lh&lt;' children, Parents with·
out Partners op&lt;'ns th e door to
low-cost family fun, educa tiona l
events to build self·es lcem ,
fri ends hip with other childre n
from single parent homes, com·
panlonshlp and guidance of ca r·
lng adults. For the parents
Involved the emphas is Is on
friendship, unders tanding and
caring, group support, sharing,
educationa l program, social ac·
livilles with others who have
s imilar Int e res ts and personal
growth.

Chester UMW meeting topic prayer

'
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Finalist named ·

Have you seen it too?

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Sa lisbury PTO
meets Tu es day, 7:30 p.m .. at
Salisbury School. Special fa ·
!hers' nl ghi. Speakers will be
Rev. Bob Smit~ on boy scouting,
and Kat hy P r ice on gir l scouting.

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Community calendar/area happenings

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POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-5432

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a

McClelland Is a 5·10 guard and
good ballh a ndler. the bread-and·
butter of the THS defense Is
bulky junior forward Jeff Kuhns,
a 6·2 220 pounder, who joins Chris
Karns, a 185 pound 6·2 senior .
Both are excellent rebounders.
6·1 Scott Shamharl rounds out
the starling five. Other key
me mbers are on-a nd-off starters
Bill Sayre and Tom Shiffl et.
Although Trimble finished 8th
in the TVC, it is the only Class
"A" sc hool in the tough league.
Actio n hegins at 7 p.m.

slowing the tempo with a half
court offense, and depend on li s
t remendous reboundin g
strength.
The Tomcats rely heavily on
seven dlfferenl players. includ·
ln g two freshmen guards in J eff
Holbert a nd Rhan McClell and .
Holbert Is a 5-8 speedster, who is
very qui c ~ and " does not play
like a fres hm an" accordin g to
Coac h Howie Ca ldwell. Holbert,
having the stamina of a veteran
is compa r able to Dallas Tibbs of
Symmes VAlley .

Eric Milliron 7, a nd Matt Harris

Ohio

Mrs . Mora a nnounced the 55th
wedding an niversary at her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs .
Allen Eichinger, and the 54th
anniversary of Mr . and Mrs .
Fred Smith.

offering to be ta.ken in Mar ch.
Barbara Gheen presided at the
meeting us ing "Serve th e Lord
with Gladness" as her devotional
topic. Emma Adams reported on
While Cross and read a letter
from the Nelhbo rhood Minis·
lrles . Speela l mis sionaries are
Bonnie Rose Whil e and the Rev
a nd Mrs. Gordon Bottcmili&lt;•r.
Florence Adams had the love
gift program entit led " Light Out
of Darkness." The mother·
daughter· banquet wa s d ls cussrd
with plans to be coinpiPted later.
Grella Simpson had th e c losi ng
prayer .

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ADDITIONAL CARlONI

Church of
Christ youth
has meeting
Teens of the Pome roy Church
of Christ , meetin g every S"nday
eveni ng at 7 p.m at thr church.
212 W. Main St.. have brcn
Involved in a variety of activities
over the winter .
In December they wrot e their
ow n Christm as play. directi ng
and producing it, and prcparl'd
holiday boxes for cook iPs • ·hic h
they made to take to the elderl y
and s hutlns of th e churc h. In
Janu ary they a tt ended the ml s·
slonary program by Gro rge
Pickens. Long Bott om. He and
his wife a nd family arc m iss ion aries to the Ivory Coast, Africa .
The group also attended an
all ·nlght bowling pa rty at th &lt;•
Skyll nr Lanes , sponsored hy th e
Gallipolis Chri stian Youth. Also
attending were youth from Mid ·
dleporl and Ja ckson. Ohio. and
Russell, Ky. In February th&lt;'
teen s joined the Bradbur.v yo uth
for a roller skat rng party, and a rc
now planning a skating party.
Junior and senior· hi gh youth
are Invited to att end the m!'&lt;'t·
logs . Now active are Trrry
Fie lds , Da vid Buchanan . Tim
Wells, James Brumfield. Steve
Brumfield. Shannon Sco tt a nd
Chr is Alkire.

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LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case No .
87.01-EL·EFC, to review
the fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of the
Ohio Power Company, the
operation of ns Electric fuel
Component, and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at t :30
p.m. on March t6. 1987 at
City Council Chambers.
218 Cleveland Avenue.
SW., Canton, Ohio 4-4702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity to
be heard. Further information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Nancy L. Woipe
Secretary

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
"OmiNI YOU TIIRE SIIELY"

LOWEST PIICES ON PASSENGEI CARS
AND UGHT .TIUCI niES
*AUGI•n *FIIOIT liD WOII
*IAm.IS *ftll IIPA.
LOCATED: MAIN ST .. RUTLAND:' OHIO
OPEN: 8·8 MON.-SAT.; 8·8 FRI.
PH. 742-3088
M11tll' Card 1114 VIta Welcome

•

'

•PEPSI LITE
•DIET PEPSI
FREE

...

�Page- 6-The

Sentinel

·;~uxiliary

.

• Ohio

24, 1987

meeting held

'"" Captain D' s !Ish dinner was
:;t:.J\.

i ,&amp;ft for March 29 as a special fund
,,.m1slng proj ect for the Rutland
- f'ire Department' s Auxiliary at a
r~cent
m ee ting held at the
firehouse.
Advance sa le t ickc ts will be
$4.25 adult and $2.50 c hildren.
Kimber ly B irchfield is In char ge
of the distr ibution of the ti ckets .
M embers were reminded to
prepare posters and take to the
family fun night on Sat urday at
the firehouse . At t he fun night,
honorar y mPmbers will be in -

.

Mid-Atlantic region buried
under nearly 2 feet of snow

vited. Lonnie Neal will be the
aucti oneer for Items being co n·
tri but ed. Members were re·
minded that tables arc to be set
up T hursday at 7:30.
It was noted that members hip
is open and that so meone In the
fire depar tment is not a prerequi·
site for mem bers hlp. Marie
Birchfirld brought the traveli ng
prizes which were won by Mrs.
Wi llford and Opal Dyer. Ms.
Dyer wit fu r nish the one for
M arc h. The flower fund was
co ll ec t ed.
·

Marybelle Wa rner, Mr . Naomi
Wyatt, Mrs. Mary Nease, Mr.
Mars ha Arnold. Mr . and Mrs .
Ted Ru ssell, M ichael and Renee,
Mr . and M r. T erry Varney,
Jenny, B r idget and Amy, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Nease and Jacob.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hauber and
B rittany , Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jen kins, Kimberly and Rochelle ,
th e Rev. Steve Nelson, Mrs.
Roma Sayre and Kimberly, Mrs.
Lind a Hamm, Chr is and Ph illip,
Mr·s. Imogene Dillard, Selena
and Chas ity.

Drummer, Bi ll Ea kins, Heat her
M c Ph ail , and Ra y Proffitt J r.,
Ray Proffitt Sr. i s the coach.
Cheer lea der s ar e Bethany
Bass, Valeri&lt;' Connolly, Jennifer
Cross, Serena Davis, Kimberly
Jenkin s. T am ara Hayma n, An·
!(ie Mills. an d Angie Swi ger.
Chee rlr.ad ing advisor is Lura
Swiger and Brid get Cross Is the
m ascot. Helping wit h the party
and pro viding refr e~ hm e nt s
wer e Jeannie Connolly , Phyllis
Cross. Brenda Davis, Faith Ha y ·
man, Rose A nn Jenkins. Mary
McPhail, Sheila Proffitt , and
La ur~t

Sw iger .

(irueser birthday is celebrated
Th e fi fth bir thd ay of .Jessica
rraniellP Grueser was observed
rece ntlv w ith two parties at the
born e of his parents , Cary and
Debbi r G rueser, Frank R oa d,
Pomeroy.
: All ell ding the fi rst party werr
Mr. and Mrs. Da vi d Grur ser,
grandpa r ent s, Mr. and Mrs.
James Ca r leton and Jess ica's
sis ter. Andrea. A Teddy Ruxpin

Ca ke and ice crea m wcrC' served.

T he ca ke was a gift from her
gra ndparents.
At the second party were Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Har tenba ch,
grandparen ts, Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Hartenbach, Margaret
Ru ssel l and Dorothy Har tenb·
ac h. Sendi ng ca rds and gift s
were Da na, Kate, and Jan
Holler, Wilma Blackburn, and
Norma Goodwin.

Ruth Circle meets at church
~ A donal io n of $20 was made to
t.he State Mi ss ions Project, fo r
the purc hase of a pr intin g press
for I3urma . by the Ruth Circle at
4 recent meeting hel d i n the
fellowshi p room of the Racine
First Ba ptist Chu re h.
· Members enjoyed a d inn er
precedin g the meeting. Mary
Kay Yost presided at the meeting

w hich opened with a reading and
pra yer.
Martha Lou Beegle, Geraldine
Cleland and Barbara Gheen were
appoint ed to the nomin ating
committee. Each m ember rea d a
poem or gave a short story about
love. Pat Smith had the closing
prayer .

COLLMBIA PK:TURES AU:SENTS A BRIAN GRAZER/~ES KEACH/FROSTBACKS PQODUCTKlN
A MARK L. LESTER ntM JOHN CANDY EUGENE lEW RClBERT LOGGIA
"ARMED AND CIA.NGEROUS" KEI\f\ETH M:MU.AN MEG RYAN
~.:J::rt~ MAJJRI(E \111--i!TE --::~'::; DAVV L. SNYDER
~ ;~~FRED SCHIJ..ER A sc '••••: HAROLD RA!viiS &amp;PETER TOROKVEI
"-::' BRIAN GRAZER &amp; HARCX.D RAMIS &amp;JAMES KEKH -· .. ~ BRIAN GRAZER AND JAMES KEACH
""'~ MARKL LESTER
B ta

e

~ ~~tt.~~W!ti'IU;;;.w....nor ...~.oo ~~..9-l'.""t Wl(lll~~.

~~;~~

Q ..!~!$,;~. I~Jlf::~:=~=~~~

•t;

I

VHS

...... ij . ~~;~!~

JAMFS
ELIZABETH
DEMI
WWE MOORE BELUSID PERKINS

ROB

.

1

MRS. BONNIE MILLER

Miller birthday
Mrs. Bonni e Miller of Middl e·
por t was honored with a sur prise
part y on Jan . 30 in observa nce of
her ROth birthday anniversary .
Gift s were presented to her and
a bir·thday ca ke was served with
ice c rea m and beverages. At ·
lending were Betty Dill. Jean
No ra Jordan .
Sc hoo nove r.
Sharon and Dick Fol mer . Linda
Foster. Cathy a nd Cortney Scar·
ber ry, Richard, Rober ta, and
Ri chi e Di ll.

TRI.ffi'AR PICfURES PRESENTS
VHS
AN ARNOLD STIEFELA~'D BRE'ITIOKEN PRODUCfiON
hi·fl
hi-fi
OF AFILM BY EDWARD ZWICK
STEREO
STEREO
ROB WWE "ABOUT LAST NIGHT ..."
DEMI MOORE JAMES BELUSHI ELIZABETH PERKINS
~I'll ARNOLD STIEFEL"""rul":; MlLES GOODMAN ,,,~,.:.~r:~ BONES HOWE

Beta

I

BASIC CABLE COMPETELY INSTALLED

. iiiE •

SECTION 1
POLICE:
Chief: t Month thou 6 Month&amp;
- •t4,000.00
After 6
montho- 16, t63 .20
PATROLMEN: (Mu&amp;t hove
schooling) Regular · Per
Hours;

1 Month

Thru 8 Month&amp;

or Without E!'perience -

4.86

IR-.!"J"::~I.

DllP• t

...

s

Order Today!
CALL 675-3398

'

CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS
' 1460 JEFFERSON BLVD.

POINT PLEASANT, WV.

IN OHIO CALL 1·800-344·3331

.,

'.

IUfiO&amp; &lt; OOOI&amp;
I""OIOnoa.. o
1IUfODA&gt;
010&amp;&lt;0&amp;010
oooto

Without

Exporlenco - 4.86
With Experience - 6.24
DISPATCHERS; Regular 1
Month thru· 6 montha

Aft!:~ Months -

:'
'
'

'
·,..
'

ALL AVAILABLE AT

3 .89
Extra
Dispatcher ... .... ....... 3.&amp;1

METER PERSON : ·

IDEO TOU H

Between Village Pharmacy and The Added 1ouch

271 North Second

992-3462

.•

Middl

'•

"'
i

•

Month&amp; - 3.61
After 3 Months -

3.61

WATER OFFICE :
,::tellt / 8ookkeepeo:

.

SIZE 23X30X007

2s(

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAI'tl' SHADES.
•
CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

4 .16

1 Month thru 6 Months-

3.61
After 8 month&amp; - 3.89
CLERK - Boord of Public
Affeira : Per

month -

Clu.•ifit d pll~f!l W l 't r l h ~
/11/lowmK lflll• phnnt&gt; l!xrholl l!'f'l . .

:; :~='1~-:"

,.

~~ ---·­

11--

,. _,
_ _ &gt;v ac.o,...

.. _
·-·_:-·
··-c
"',_Oj ..._

.

-

,

,,

family
who

and
sent

friends ·
flowers,

food or helped in any
way. A very · special
thanks to the neigh·
bors
in the Joppa
Community, White's
Funeral Home, Bruce
Fisher, and also his
many friends and van
drivers at the Senior
Citizens Center in Po·

meray; Pallbearers AI·
len Milhone, Marvin
Taylor,
Joe Rosen ,
Paul Holsinger. Char·
les
Bailey, Jr. and
Brenda Holsinger during the death of our
loved one. " He will be
sadly missed by alt ."
The Harley (Rinkl
Linthicum Family

!1 - W-Oo Do

u - a ,,. , ,_, .., ...,

1&lt; 1- W&lt; .... ...

·-· -----·
---·-·-..
,.

1 -- ··-

~ -~-·

11---.o-....

!011--Cooo,
""'""'
..
Oio

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._

~ :::::

port , Oh•o 45760 ,
respectively:
Parcel One . All of that part
of lot No . 283 in said Village
of Pomeroy , extending back
170 feet , to within 10 f oRI of
the base of the rocks or chff.
being 66 teet wide along the
street , e11.cepting th e hmd in
front ot said lot
Excepting _mineral s as previously res erv ed.
Ref erence Deed: Volume

TERMS OF SALE : Ca!h
o n delivery of deed . SUb)ect
to accrued 1987 real estate
ta)(eS

121 17. 24. 13i 3tc
Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE

Volume

By wtue o f an Alia s Order
of Sale issued out of th e
Common Pleas Co1Jrt of
M eigs County , Ohi o. in t ho
case of ThtJ Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co .. F'laintiff , vs
Hillard Conley , et al .. Defendant s, upon a judgment
therein rend ered, being Case
No. 86 -CV ·S in sa1d Court. I
will offer for sale , at the hont
door of the Courtho use in
Pomeroy , Meigs County,
Ohio , on th e 27th day of
March. 1987, at 1 0 ·20 a.m .,
th e foll owing l and s and
t en e m e nt s. lo c at ed at
41371 State Route 33,
Shade. Ohio . 45775
Situate in the Townsh1p of
Bedford , County of Meig s
and Stat e of Ohio, to-wit :
In Ohio Company '11 Purchase. beginni ng four !4)
rods west of th o c reek which
runs into Shade River in the
Village of · Birmingham : in
the western part of Sectio n
17, Town 3 , Range 13 it
being the southwest corn er
of a lot deeded to William
Judson by leroy Jones:
thence north t o a stake
where a line running eAst will
just mi ss th e northwest
corner of th e barn; then ce
east to a creek. then ce in a
southerly direct ion down the
creek to the south lin e of said
lo t. th ence we st 4 rod s tothu
pl ace of begmnmg, con tai ning one acre , mor e Of' less
Als o the
tra ct of

2897 , Pag e 187. Meigs

17.

260, Page 153, Deed Re·
cords
Ohio.

of

M e1gs

County ,

EXCEPTING AND RE ·
SERVING. the follow1ng
real estate situat e d in lot
NO . 283. Pomeroy Village.
described as follows: Begin
46 feet ofl the front or
southerly end of that part of
Lot No. 283 now owned by
Thomas l. Goett and Marjo rie Goett . descr ibed in deed
recorded in Volume 239,
Page 397, Meigs County
Deed Records . Being a lot
66 feet along East Main
Street, and 45 feet back,
Subject t o o right of way
reserved' by M arjorie Goett.
Reference Deed : Volume

260, Pag e 155. Deed Re·
cord s

of

Mei gs

Cou nty .

Ohio .
Parcel Tw o: Being the east
one half of lot No . 305 ond a
parcel of land 17 'h feet by
seventy feel oft the northeast corn er of lot No. 303
in lower Pomeroy , now
incorporated into the Vill age
of Middleport , Ohio .
Being in Its entirety o
parcel of land 70 feet on
Locust Street and C)( t ending
at that width 91 'h feet along
the alley and being all th e
real estate now ow ned by
Harry R . Barnes out of lots
No . 305 and 303.
Ref erence Deed ; Volum e

153, Page 43; Volume 210 ,
Page

449 :

and

Deed Records ,

Business Services
EAGLE RIDGE.
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto, f!o
heavy equipment
repairs and welding .
jAil makes f!o modelsl

PH. 949-2893
or 949-27$6
John II. Bentz
Owner/Mechanic

1-2&gt;'81·3 mo.

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wa Carry Fiahing Supplies

·

.

·· ~ --·

· -- ..

: :::::'.::.::'1••

:.-,::

0~10 Company 's Purchase,
in Township of Bt3dford ,
Meig s Count y. Ohio, begin·
ning at a stak e 1 50 rods
w e11 t of the southwest
corner of land deeded by W .
C. Hayes to leroy Jonea ;
thon co west ten rods to !J
corner , th ence south to a
stake; wher e an east line will
just miss th e northwest
corner of the barn owMd by
M ar ietta Ewing , th ence east
the east lin e. th ence north to
1he pl ace of begi nning. Wit nessed by o bla ck wolnut
tree 12 inches in diameter
bear1no north 47 degrees
eas t by the mHgnotic needle,
127 link s d ist ant. being in
the wes t PMt o f said Section
17. Town 3 , Runge 13 nnd
contmning 1/ 4 of an acre.
more or less.
Reference D eed : Volutne

arans Memorial and all

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Hare
· IUIINES! PHONE
1614) 992 ·6ll0
RESIDEN&lt;I PHONE
16141 992-7154
1 1~ "·1

ICUI OUT lOA FUTURE USEJ

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SALES &amp;
U. S. RT.

Authorized John Dem.
New Holland, lush Heg

All Mahs

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•RefrigerBtors
•Dryers •Freelers

PARTS and SERVICE

ttr_

LADY RACHELS
PALM RIAOER &amp; AD VII OR
Tul\s
1tHI'

pil~l
(i•vn~

IHI"WIII lu
·uhHP on

lovf'

rTiiillllloJI'

r w~~

If Y'l\1 Mt~ rrrdliiJ•PY

&lt;trH!

IJtJ~I

Mid d II' 1 ki••JW Y..illch
Wit', It• !11111 r·r·lf'l' HI lor
ndvHI' (),.,,, 11·~11 wlilrt·r1
1/IIIU! yu11 ' ' " ' I I ' l'i ill··l'llft l

W.ly

302

WP~I Un10n ~fhPm

Ph lq4.7848

$5 OFF

SERVICE

SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

985-3561

4~

BOGGS

Woth Th11 Ad
: 26 I mo

Form Equipment
Dealer

Ftr111 Equipment
Parts &amp; Smlce

258. Page 699 . Melg•
County Deed Reco rda.

APPRAISED

ca nnot be sol d for le ss than
two -third s (2 / 3 1 th e BP ·
pra ised value

TERMS OF SALE: Cuh
on delivery of deed Subject
to acc rued 1987 real es tate
taxes

Howord E. Frank ,
Shnriff of M eigs County,
Ohio

t2i 17. 24; !31 3, 3tc

Business
Services
'VINYL SIDING
'AlUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Ntw Homts Built
" Free Estimates "

PH. 949·2860
or 949·2801
No Sunday Calls
!·I 1·\ln

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

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

1·3.'86 lfc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also TrusllllniDn
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
6-IHic

AT

$5 ,000 .00 . Tho real nstate

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SliGAR RUN
ASHLAND
1'10 MULBERRY AVE.

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-9949
Bob Borton, Owner .

2-5.. 86·tfn

RADIATOR
SERVICE
Public Notice

Meig&amp; County, Ohio, 46772.
Roben E. Buck,

We can repair and re ·
core radiators and
healer cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middlaport, Ohio
1-13-lfc

FOR SAlE

Probate Judge
lena K. Ne11elroad, Clerk

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

t2 124; 131 J, 10 3tc
Public Notice

'

.
•

•

681 .

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed bid propollll wiU be
received by the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department up to
the hour of 12;00 P.M. on tho
23rd dey of Mtrch, fO&lt; tho

Clark of Cemetery Recorda

home 1pperetua, compJate
with cob ond chlllio, fire
- I I U I body, ond equipmont 11 coiled for in tho llpOCl-

- 60.00

~

Parcel One being appr aised
at $12,000.00, and Parc el
Two being appra1sed at
$12.000.00 The real estat e
cannot be sold for loss than
two-th irds [2 / 3 ) t he ap praised value .

THANK YOU
Thanks goes ta the
Tuppers Plains Squad
Workers, Emergency
Room People at Vet·

146.00
Secretory to Mayor - 4.32
CEMETERY: 1 Month thru 3
Mooth1 - 3.61
After 3 Month&amp; - 3.89
That thl1 Ordinance it her·
ebv declared to be •n amer·
genc::y ordinance for thalm·

~

H·IIoo·-

cated at 830 E. Main Sueet ,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769, and
963 locust Street, Middle ·

1 Card of Thanks

Donald Gordon Yeet8f', deCtlled. tete of Reedsville,

1 Month thru 3

. .......,--······" ...................... ...
··-···-·"···

~-·

NOTICE OF SALE

10:15 o.m ., the following
lands and tenements, lo -

Water

Superintendent

' ''"

...
oo
-00

Public Notice

day of March. 1987, at

beth Street, Belpre, Ohio,
46714, wa1 oppointed Ad· ·
ministretri• of the ettete ot

- 4 .70
Laborers -

, ,..

_..........
.·-:::::.;::,-r_
1. ._----..
-.. . .. ·t!.__.-·
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··-··--···-·--·"-"'
--·'
-·--··
...
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_
_
,,_
___
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·::-'=:-.:.--:"'--·..·. .-.--··-··
_,....._...
•...·---u
..... -.. __. _
-........ ., ::::-'·-.,

Public Notice

No. 86·CV-196 in said

Month&amp; - 3.6t
After 12 Month&amp; - 3.89
WATER and SEWER :

Aa:ls~~nt

" C.
"'
•
Ill 00

"

""'"'

111 00

·-·-·-.."_
---.. -·

,_

Public Notice

Court , I will offer for sale, at
the front door of the Court
House in Pomer oy, Meigs
County, Ohio, on the 27th

lornorrow."

Superintendent -

"

""'
"0011

Public Notice

jorie Fetty, et al ., Defend·
ants . upon a judgment the rein rendered, being Case

Coun, C11o No. 26427. Rose

1 Month thru 3 Months -

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
ONLY

-

"'"'

ot ot

10&amp;..

It o-••

I IOOMfll

'I "
"0
' "M' 'OO&lt;h&amp;&lt;
"""'"''
1)0

One. Athena , NA. Plointltf!,
vs. Marjorie Goett nka Mar·

For· Meyer Dairy, however,
Meyer declared , "The cr isis ha s
ended. All of our produc ts wi ll be
a vallabiP for pu rc h ase

Month thru 3

11 011

11&lt;&gt;0&amp;M
• JOI)OM
J 01) 0 M 1Ut iD&amp;t
lOll OM WtD I&lt;I OOU

By virtue of an Alias Order
of Sale issued out of the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County. Ohio. in the
case of The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company and Bank

M . Zim-nermen, 1802 Elitl·

Patrolmen ~

54 Misc . Merchandise

VCR SALES •VCR RENTALS •VCR TAPE RENTALS • .1 HR. FILM PROCESSING
•Plus 1st Month Service Charge

'-

MOIOPUO_.,I~

lll!;~a-1'

After 5 Years - 6.75

ID-U
ID&amp;&gt;I

DAY llr!IM

.. f Oft ( II&gt;U 0&amp; .. 0

On February 18, 1987, in
the Meigl County Probate

htra

AATES
0 10•0000, ••. • •oo ..........,01

0 UIU C 0 11()~
1&amp;1U~0"'
MO~ O &amp;r

(00 &gt;"01 &amp;1\ll!ot

more.''

3 .89

_ , ...

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

Street Supervisor - 6 .36
Alliltlnt
Superviaor -

After 6 Months -

.......

c•..,.. ......

After 1 Vear thru 6 Ye1rs and / or 1026 Houn - 6 .46

•

OHer Expires
February 28

ONLY

(

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Months and / or

C 1NIS T'i ·Stir Plclurn. Inc All Rigtltl R...,-vlld

FOR

-·........
·.........
·....-·-----·_
---............_,....

,,.,.., ............
............
.. ,......................... . . .....,....'"""'.
...........
.............. . .._.
.., , . ., . . .

·-. ,, .......................

After 12 Months - 4.06
STREET:

6

.
.,,_
,....,., ..,.,. .. '"

OIO ..M .. ;i ,,, . . . _

signifies where the letters or his
first name 1Deli f all in the
alphabet ," said Dinan .
After the letters were r eceived,
the dairy recalled ali Its produ cts
from stores In Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky and the Food and Drug
Administration began test ing
samples . No pol son was found.
"The milk i s sa fe for consump·
lion, " said James Sim mons o[
the FDA .
However, Simm ons sa id he
expec ts publicit y about th e
threat to tr igger similar tbrea ts
agai nst ot her products.
"Ther e will be co py-ca ts, " he
sa id . "The patll"rn when these
things happen is that th er e are

Public Notice

"'~' G~••••

.r,....,
.,,• ..., - a,,.._, _,.,..., ... ,•..,,..,.,,,_, ..

1026 Hours thru 12
Month&amp; - 6.24

After

ORDINANCE #662

"''""HARRY KERAMIDAS '"ilk~ IDA RANDOM ,
..:JI£l"~ ANDREW DINTENFASS "''""""..., ,.,,':'3),!'10: DAVID MAMET
nu.-.~TIM KAZURINSKY &amp;DENISE DeCLUE
·~'IVJASON BREIT &amp;STUARI' OKEN .."""V EDWARD ZWICK
I
ISOU~ilmiACK AVAILABLE ONEill AMIJII~ RECORDS A~'D.CAS'!tTTES I ,m'liK KllJ:\S£ · tu

La st Friday, t ' ·dairy , the
Ci nci nnati Public - Chool System
(w hi ch uses Meyer produc ts), a
television station and a ra dio
station received letters stating
that Meyer produ cts had l)een
poisoned.
The only signature on the
letters were the numbers "4·5·
12."
"Carter advised that he signed
eac h of t he letters '4·5· 12' which

Public Notice

An Ordinance to delete all
wage and ulary ordinances
and fix salaries and wages O:f
the Village of Pomerov . •

CD ~·

returned to Georgla to race a
lengthy sentence.
Officials said the suspect told
them he had no complaint about
Meyer Dairy Co. products and
had not actually poisoned any of
th em. Dairy presiden t David
Meyer said the suspect appar·
ently picked out his firm · to
threat en simply beca use he was
familiar with t he dairy's pro·
du cts served at the j ai l.

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP)) - A Ha·
milton County jail inmate ha s
been charged with threaten ing to
polson dairy products . Although
no polson was found, th e dai ry
had r ecalled ali Its product s from
stor es this pas t weekend to be
safe.
Del Eugene Carter, 30, of
Cornelia, Ga., being held in jail
on a charge of aggr avated
robbery and escape from Ceor·
gia a uthorill e~. wa s charged
Monday with communica tin g
false information about a consu·
mer product. if convicted , Carter
could be sentenced up to five
year s in prison and fined $25,000.
FBI agent Terry Dinan said the
suspect told authorities his mo·
tive for mailin g threatening
lett ers from jail was "notoriety"
and his goal was to remain In
loca l custody to avoid being

Public Notice

-·

!All .Good Things Must End
'

._,., ..,-

FBI charges Ohio inmate in dairy
tampering threat; products recalled

Property
transfers
Delores M . Beac h, Michael
Beach. Willard R. Jeffers, Ger ·
a-Id Arnold, Audrla Ar nold to
l(n ll a L. Cas to, 100 A ., Sutton.
· Glen T . Ragan, dec' d., to Doris
E. Raga n. Glen M . Ragan. :Roger
L. 'Ragan, Donna C. Galba ch,
Ba rbara .J . Hat field , Cert. of
T·ransfer, Col umbi a.
Glen M . Raga n. Brend a Ra·
gan, Roger L. Ra gan, Donna C.
C:a ivac h. Si mon Gaivac h, Bar·
t1)!l'll J . H atfield. Foster Hatfield
to Doris E. Ragan . 12 A., Co l·
umbia .
Elizabe th Keller to Worl ey A.
Ri ft•. Paul a A Rife. 9.92 A .. Ru t·
land .
Ernest P. VIneyard, Wilma J.
Vinl'yarcl 10 Tcr:ry E . Kaylor.
Linda F . Ka y lor, 1 A ., Ora nge.
:R,1charcl W. Thoma s, dec' d ., to
Olady s E. T hom as, Affidavit ,
c hester.
1
:Elbert T. Cains. Rebecca R.
9 1ns to Kenneth B . Young,
' Betty L. You ng, Gregory A . WI·
n~bre nn e r. Paige Winebrenner,
Lot. Pom eroy VIllage.

I'O~•t•l•

mJ

Party given sixth graders
A party honoring the Syracuse
sixth grade basket ball tea m and
ch&lt;wleaders wa s held rece ntly
!it "the school. The tea m defea ted
the Portland Sc hool lo win the
Southern Grade School tour na·
mcnt at the Hacinc Jun ior Hi gh
SC hoo l, a nd also took fir st place
in . the Eastern Gra de Sc hoo l
ro urnamen1 defeati ng Tuppers
Plai ns.
The sixt h gra de cheerleaders
placed t hird in the cheerleading
competition at Tuppers Pl ains.
Members ol the ball tea m are
Mar k Allen. K.C. Arnott, &lt;John
Bent ley. John Chan ey. Aaron

• A.M. Until NOON s.uumu
ClOUI 5UNDAY

By JANICE KALMAR
United Press International
A huge storm swept into the
Rockies . today with heavy snow
and high winds while the nation 's
capital struggled with wides.
pread power outages from a
soggy snowstorm that burled the
mid·Atlantlc region Iinder nearly
2 feet of snow.
Although the Eastern snowstorm had moved off the Atlantic
.Coast by Monday afternoon , tens
of thousands of residents of
,Washington , D.C., and Its Mary·
land and Virginia suburbs were
waiting for power to be restored
•to their homes ear ly today.
Shelters were opened to ac·
:Commodate, many of the est!·
·mated 36,600 customers who
·spent a second night without
~:.:'JsNOW
SHOWERS
power. However, authorities re·
FRONTS: wwarm WCold
-Static "Occluded
ported few people took advan·
tage of the offer.
1 WEATHER !\tAP - Snow wlll be widespread (l.Ver much ol the I
"We just wanted to offer some
Great Basin and the Rockies. Showers and thundershower.; will
'type of option to people, said
extend lrom Southern CaUfornla across the desert Southwest.
Roger Langley, a spokesman for
Snow will be scattered over the northern half ol the Plains,
the Montgomery County (Md. )
changing to rain over Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and the
Office of Information. "We know
middle Mississippi Valley. Showers and thunderstorms will extend
it's rough being without heat or
lrom east Texas across Louisiana and Mississippi. Snowshowers
electricity."
wUIIInger across northern New England. Winds wUI be strong and
AI it s peak, the storm knocked
gusty over much ol the southwestern quarter olthe country.
out power to nearly 400,000
customers In the Northeast ,
and 4 inches at Pine Valley , Utah. nington. Pa.; 20 Inches In Valley
Travelers advisories ext ended Forge, Pa. ; 19 inches In Miller s,
forced scores of schools and
from the Sierra Nevada of Md.; and 16 inches at Owings
universities to cancel classes and
California to Idaho and from Mills, Md ., and Alloway, N.J.
grounded flights at airports In
The snow, which turned slu shy
southwest Colorado to northwest
Washington, Philadelphia and
as
temperat ures climbed Into 40s
New Mexico. Forecasters said up
New Jersey.
to 8 inches of snow was possible in by afternoon, created havoc for
To the west, a massive storm
the southwest mountains of rush · hour commuter s and
moved into the Rockies today
caused many traffic accident s.
Colorado.
after dumping 18 inches of snow
In Washingt on, D .C., where 11
Gale warnings were pOsted
near Lake Tahoe, Nev. , and
inches
of snow fell, non · essential
along the California coast, while
dropping hailstones In the San
workers were given
government
travelers advisories for winds
Franclso Bay area on Monday.
The blustery storm created
were issued in southern Callfor· the day off. Washington 's Dulles
nla and southern Nevada. Winds and Na tional airport s were
near blizzard conditions in sou th·
up to 50 mph howled through closed overnight but reopened
central Montana, where up to a
Mond ay morning.
coastal and mountain areas in
foot of snow fell Monday , the
Th e snow also affected air
National Weather Service said . , souther n California Monda y
service and government emnight.
Winter storm war nings were
The storm was blamed ..for a ployees in Philadelphia and New
issued today in the mountains of
Jer sey. Schools were closed
small plane crash in Anza , Calif .,
southern Idaho, south-central
Monday In the Virglnlas, Pen·
Monday
that
killed
four
pe&lt;ipl
e.
Montana, the eastern slopes of
The plane took off from Lake nsyivanla, Maryland, NeW York ,
the Wyoming Wind Riv er Range,
Riverside Airport in " misera- New Jersey and the Washington
and portions of Nevada, Utah,
area .
ble" weather and crashed into an
Arizona, and the Sierra Nevada
Pow er outages a ffect ed nearly
apple orchard 8 miles away, said
and Owens Valley of Ca ii[ornia.
Sue O'Donnell, a Department of 150,000 customers in the Wa ·
Up to 15 Inches of snow was
shlngton area, 110,000 customers
Fore stry di sp atc her. Snow
expected In some areas, the
served ; by Baltimore Ga s &amp;
mixed
with
rain
was
falling
at
the
weather service said.
Electric Co.; 53,000 other custo·
Lander, Wyo., was hit with 13 lime of the crash, she said.
mers in the Vir·ginlas and M ary·
Snowfall amounts from the
Inches of snow Monday- 4 Iii one
hour - and 6 inches [ell at Cedar Eastern storm Included 231nches land : 56,000 customer s in New
Jer sey and
10.000 i n
City, Utah. Other snowfall totals In Coatesville, Pa.; 22 Inches In
Philadelphia.
Pa.
;
21
Inches
In
Dow
·
Exton,
included 5 inches at Reno, Nev .,

Valentine breakfast given
Heart an&lt;.l cupids decorated the
basement of the Fore's! Run
United Me thod ist Chu rch for a
·valenti ne brea kfast.
:· t he A lp ha Omega Class served
the break fa st with Roma Sayre
and Rose An n .J pnki ns handl in g
the decorat ing. Kenny Wiggi ns
had th&lt;' openi ng prayer.
Atten din g wpre M r. and Mrs.
Al fred Yeauger, Mr. and M r s.
Qere Yeauger. Mr. and Mrs.
Vern al Fl lackwood. Mr. and Mrs.
Kenn y Wi ggi ns. Mr s. Kalhic'cn
Scott . Mrs. Mary K . Rou,h. Mrs.

TO 'UU AH AD CAll992-21U
MONDAY thn FIIOAY I A.M. 10 S I'.JII.

furnishing ol one 111 mobllo

flcationo thlt Clrt bo plclted
up II tho Pomorov \lllago
Hell. Bid propoul1 mull bo

mediate pr-rvotlon of tho
public 11fttv in 101d Vllltao
ot Pomeroy ond oholl toko. &amp;Ubmittod to tho following
elfoct Jonuory 24. 1887 ond •ddrau;
bt In forco from ond liter
vmou• of
Pomeroy Fire Dept.
thot dote.
PASSED: thi1 18th doy ol
320 Moln St.
Pomeroy. OH. 45789
Ftbtuory, 1987.
Rlchord
Seyler, Moyor
Tho VIII avo h11 tho right to
Vllltflll of Pomttoy, Oh. acc::ept or reject any or ell
ATTEST: Jono Welton
bid&amp;.
JANE WALTON
Cltrk/ T,...uror
CLERK/ TREASURER
ACCEPTEO: thlo 18th dey
of Fobruory, I 987.
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
121 24; 131 3, 2tc
121 24; (31 3, 10 3tc

o.

,.

A good opportunity lor

..

an ambitious family .
Priced on inspection .

Call fo• Appointment

985·4167

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Iathan Building

EVERY
·sAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
foctory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-l·«n

QUILTING
LESSONS
" All you need lo know
to moho your own quilts
and lui proud! "
Lenoits start

MARCH 16 &amp; 17
For mare infarmotlon call:

614·992-7537
2· 11 ·1 mo. pd.

Cl

z

-

Compulerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

•

a: LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

~

X

z'

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 4-46-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue , Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
lin

•

.•

•

�i·iu~-~~~;,r.·n·u~~-~·~"~u;~~u;"~'T~;o;·~·:u~··;~~·--~~~~~-;~~~----------~~~r~~~·~·~e~to;y~=nn~ta~a~IT!eiponiii'~o~ni~i.iiffiiiiiiiT~::~~~::~~~~==::~----~1~u:es::da~Yr·~~;e:b:nu~a;rv:,:Z:4;:·~··;~~a~'=~·· ·
LAFF-A-DAY

An nou nee menls

41

HousasforRant

3 Announcements

3 bdr rtnch. Aodnev VIllage II,
t286 mo plut depotlt. Refeer-

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Racine Gun Club, Every Sunday,
bfginnlfflJ at 1 00 p m Factory
Choke, 12 guage shotguns

Realty 814-448-0008

encea r111qu1red

42 Mobile Homes
· for Rant

Avon Open House, Monday fab,
16, at Jim's Carpet Outlet 1n
Hartford, 6·9pm . Public 11'\VIleQ,
refruhments, door pme 1 11 very
hour, everything thete 'h JUice
8nng friend• &amp; relat 1ve 1

4

2 bdt , all utllltlfiS pa1d ucept
elec , fum or unturn , sec
deposit requtred Convement
locat1on. Call 614-446·8558 or
614-446-4778

Giveaway

2 bdr fully fumtshadadults only,
ul!l. pa1d Call 814-446-4110

Fr!Ht l~rewood on tl'la grou nd
behind the a~rpon . Ca ll 814

In Eureka excellent thape 2 Bdr
with expando Ae1pon c1ble
adults only No pets 1225mo
Oepostt raqwred Ph 614 2466863

446-9636

3 yr, old small m1ufd breed male
dog to good home Call 614
992 6071

2 bedroom mobile hom e for rent
Adults only Call 614 -992

3 adult male cats and 1 male
ltttten to g1va away Call 614
985-3884

2598

AKC registered femaleSamoyed
to good home, phone :104-675
1428

5

Lost and Found

FOUND Mu1.ed breed brown
puppy waa11ng brown collar
Found-vlctnlt'P' of Sartord School
Ad and 141 Ca ll 614 446
4977
Found black and w hit e male
pup py m Bradbury Ca ll 614·
992-5065
FOUND mens !lung lasses, pres
crrplton Stetson frames or. Rt
62 N Phona 304 87S 27 11

l

"But, Your Honor, I was

1986 Mob1la Home 14x70, on
St Rt 143 $230. gastncluded
Call 614-992·5449

rushing home to watch the

Mobile Home tor rent near
Chesh1Ht Call614-367-7148

People's Court!"

3 bedmom, '"'"''"••· w11he•

month $100
: : :::::.::::;:::r;;:;;::;:;:;:;,:::;:;====:l•nddryer.
awning.deposit
air 8210 Call
per
614-992 7479

16

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

Good uJJed ponable e nd tloor
model colo r tv's Ph 614 446

1149

Wa nte d To Buy

We poy

cash for late model clean
usad cars
J1m Mmk Chev Olds Inc
811l Gene J ohnso n
614-446-3672

Roofmg. Painting small plumb·
mg a nd carpetry JObs Reason a·
ble Free Estamates Ph 304·
576-2961
Pr~vate

TOP CAS H patd for 'B3 model
and n8\llll:!r used cars Smllh
Butck· Po nt1 ac, 1911 Eastern
Ave , Gall1p 0l1a Ce ll 614 4462282
Us itd Mob1lo Homes Ph 614·
446 -0175

duty nursmg 5yr ex pa
nen ce Ph 614 -446-8396 or
6 14 245 6512
Wan t to do bebys1tt1ng 1n my
hom e Ce ii614- 38B· 8114
W1ll take care of elderly persons
m then hom e 20 Ye•r• ex per~ence Call 614 446-2590

Top pnces paHt for standmg

t1mber callll fter 5pm Ph 614
446· 7524

P1ano leasons m your home,
304 · 675· 1379

WA NT ED TO BUY - Engmund
automa11c transm1uion for
1982 F1reb1rd Phone 304 876·

I will do baby Sitting 1n my home

or yours , 304 875 7230

3698

Employmenl
SerVICes
11

Help Want,ed

Financial
2.1

Business

Opportunity

E•cellent In come for part ttm e
!lome asse mbly work For mfo
Cnll 3 1 2· 741 8400 e•t 313

I NOTICE I

Wonted Rhythm Player or Steele
Gwta r Player needed for Coun
trv Band. Prefer at least 25t o 40
y_ r old Prfrle r someone who
smgs. needed 1mmedmtly Cell
614-246-9316

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBliSH·
lN G CO recommends that you
d(l buamess w1th people you
know. and NOT to send monev
through th e mail un111 you have
1nvest1gated the offenng

TOUR GUIDES
DEER LAND RESORT· Pleuant
worktng condit ion• Many com·
p11ny benefits Management po
s1 t1ons Rvadable 1300-8450
8 1 weekly For 111pp01ntmant,
286· 6421 as k lor Frank111

EARN 20
On $6,000 00 m les s than a
yea r. Local 8usmeu Man wants
one lnvelter only Re payment
enured by 3rd part'l for details
mqu~r e
Box T-1003 Care Of
Galhpohs Dally Trtbune. 826
Thud AVftnu e Gal hpoh s, Oh1o
456 3 1

RETAIL SECURITY In local
stortt St ore Detect1ve start at
&amp;3 65 per hour TrmmnJJ Pro
~ram &amp; Eq111pm ant Included
Se11d background rnformat1on
w1th Phone No To . F1sher1 B1g
Wheal47 , t136U .S 23South.
Delaware, Otuo 43015 AnN
M1ke Franckowiak , 0 l P M No
ph one cells please
IMM ED IATE
Full time poSition s Ouahfted
Mental RetardatiOn Prole111onal
Ctlrltfted OMAP or ellgable 10 be
cert1f1ad Bachelors degree requi red Prefared araa1 of ma,or,
Soc1nl Work Edumat1on, Thera
petJII C Rucrea tmn, Rah11b1hta·
liOn Counseling Sand Re1uma
to P 0 BoK 744, Athens, Oh io
45701 or call 614-593·8074
Det waen 1 to 4pm M-F
SOC IA L WORKER
lmme dJai D lull uma pos1110n
must possau a min1mum of a
DSW lrom an accrethted achool
ol So ctal Wo rk 1 yrs e~panenc:e
1n a health cara setting, end
computer sk1ll t are preferred
Send resume to P 0 Box 744,
Ath ens, Ohio 45701 Oc Call
6 14-593-8074
Pe non to set up appomtments
by lelephone from own home tn
Gallipolis Area Name• already
lurm ahed Good a nd eaty money
Call 614 -992 3187
Wnnted occas1 onal bahy1itter
lor 8 mo old and 5 yr old Call
6 14 388-9733 .
REPS N EEOEO

Fm busmess a cco unts Fu ll
Tr me, S60 000 -180,000 Pa rt
l 1m a S,2 000- 8 1B ,OOO · No
Selhng repeat butinau Set
vour own hours Traming pro
v1 dad Call 1-1512 -938 ·6870
M·F Bam to 5pm !Cen tral
Standa rd T1me)
- -- - - - - - lcG OVER N MENT JOS S
S16 040· 659. 230 yr Now Hir
1ng, Call 806-687-6000 Ext
R-9805 for current federal hst
S11los per•on nOflded nt local cnr
dealer, no e~ p e r1an c e naceuary
Se nd resume to P 0 Box 7290
Pomeroy, Ohto
Applications bamg a cceptad tor
l ondon Pool Manager Send
resume, complete wllh reler·
encfl to Clerk Jan•ce lawson
Vtllage ol Syracuse. Syracuse,
Ohio 46779 Deadline for app ly·
mg Marc h, 1987
The Army Nat1onal Ouard needs
both ru&gt;n pr1or and prior mihtarv
serv1ce mdiv1dual1 . Jom now for
a part-ttme )Ob w ith full time
benefits Eductt io n&amp;l monay
available 304-875 · 3960 or 1·
800· 642-3619
AVON, no sarv1ce ctlarge open
t err it o ries , phone 304 -675 ·
14 29

12

Situations
Wanted

Lookmg tot rest home tor your
love one 7 Large room with bath
hot moalt, tv. exnas 1400 00 ·
1600.00 Ph 6 14 251 6ti09
Home care Have room for
elderly lady ln my homt. State
Ucen5ed 1600 per month
Morna cooking, loving care Call
fl 14 742 -2292 .

Schools
Instruction

K &amp; K Mob1le

~ames,

2 and 3
bedroom mobtle homes. 304·

for Sale
14x 70 Fhtetwood 3 Bdr , 2 lull
baths , totsleiec L1ke nfi'N, Qm::e
negotiable Call altar 4 weak·
day s, enyt1me week~ends 614·
388- 863:1

44

14x. 70 Flee twood 2 Bdr . 21ull
baths, total eloc PrtC8 nego11a·
ble Call a her 4 weekdays.
snytime weekend• 614· 3888833

2 BR , 15 Coun St Carpeted
K1tchen fum 1350-monlh Plus
utilities depos•t Call 614-446

1971 Commodore 12~66 , 2
Bdr . partly furmshed, wood
burnmg stove Ph 614·388·
9804
1981 Oakbrook 14x70 , lR
axpando , 3BR 2 bath, woodburner AC S12 500 or best
oHer Mus I 11!111 call 614-379·

2587
1976 Nashua 12 x66 2 bdt ,
large bath, lffl•Y good ca nd
86600 or bell o ffer Call 614446- 7687
Double w1da 24x62 new window s. new counter tops, new
carpet Ph 614- 266-9393
1973 Kukwood 1 2x.65 1 or 2
bedroom New carpet, furnace,
hot water heater 1 7BOO 814992 -2454
1Ox66 Kropf Eldorado 2 bedroom s. laundry gas heat ra11ed
ce1ling with sky lights underpmnmg, sol1d oak uuenor Must see
to apprec1ate EJ:c:ellenl co ndition &amp;3600. Call 614 -992
2753
1980 Ltberty 2 bedroom, a ll
electric, furn1shed &amp;7750 W1ll
co n~udar lrada Call 614· 992
7479
Commodor e. 14x45 . l1ke
new twed 1n only 8 months,
payoff Phone 304 882 3'654

'81

K &amp; K Mob1l fl Ho mea, Inc, new
and used hom es startmg at
$4 ,400.00 and up 304-675·

3000
Very mce19131 Patriot 1b7D, 2
br, 1 V1 bath, 1 0J:20 porch,
underpmnms Mtlton Roush

304-e95 ·3378

23

Professional
Services

P1ano &amp; organ lessons. Mary
lucaa C all 614· 446-9787 or
61!_-446-4426

Real Estale
31

Homes for Sale

3 bedroom• close to town 2
baths , f ireplace. c entral a ~r .
rang e &amp; oven City Schools Ptl
614-245-9248
9 yr bnck ranch 3 Bdr , 2 baths
full basement, 2-car attached
garage heat pump-cent ral 11r
fu ll-appllanced kitchen , Ctty
Schools Call 245-9548
Two bedroom hou se. lt'lllng
room, dimng room kttchen
bath full basement, double car
garage on approximalei'P' 1 2
acres on Rose H1H, Pomeroy
Owner must u lt Reesonabla
offer w1U be constdered Phone
614 878 -2613
6 roome and bath m Pomeroy
with basement and ttteplace No
rea1onable oHflr re tused Mu st
11111 Phone 614-992-7462
2 houses at Hobso n One 4
rooms and bath, ba!l&amp;ment On a
6 rooms and bath, large lot,
garage Both for S19.000 See
Marvin or Juanita Little or call
614· 992 ·9985 dav•
Buick 6 cyhnder l}ngm e, rebuilt
los, lhan 20,000 miles in Bu1 ck
Sk .,.h awk . Body good, frame IS
bad. Sell complete t5 00 Sail

614-992 -2839
Completely remodeled 2 bed
rooms, basement , averythmg
new 23 12 Mad1 10n Av e ,
' $21 500 .00. 304-675-6477 or

304 -372-9970
3 bedroom ran chet, Meadow
land Es latas (bahmd armory)
corner lot. vm'P'I •tding heal
pump w1 th Gentral str, large
k1tchen inc! ltova. refr igerator.
d11hwasher, lau ndry room . lots
mor e M•d 40's call 304 -676
7127 evenmg1 or 676-1186
For sale or rent 4 bedroom
house baaemenl, carpon. New
Haven, 304 81!2 2564
An• iout to 111111 11 Reduced price! I
3 bedroom 2 full baths, bullt·m
k11chen. central air, barn. pond.
8 111 a cres. Rl 2 North Poln1
Pleasant, Pat and Butch Green
lea, 304-87fi-288fi
By owner. t 11.1 story farm l'louu.
2 car gartga. barn, 30 acres 1n
Leon. 304 458-1071.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x70 Fleetwood 3 bd r . 2 full
baths, total alec Llka nftW, price
negotiable Call aft..- 4 weak·
days , anytime weMands. 814·

388- 8633.
NEW AND USEO M081LE

15

32 Mobile Homes

675-3000

18 Wanted to Do
9

CaH Blackburn

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITV
MOBIL E HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST, GALUPOLIS. RT 3&amp;
PHONE 814-448· ?274 .

R etr&amp;~n

Now SouthHitttn Businas&amp; College. Call &amp;14 44&amp; ·

1972 2 bedroom Mobile Home

4367

15.500.00 Ph 614-441· 4841 .

1980 Windsor, 14x70. 3 bed·
rooms. 1V:! baths tot al electr1c.
a1r cond porch, mutt m ove,
$12.000.00 304 · 896 3048 .
895-368-:1
1977 Mobile home, 12x60, all
elec tr1c, S8 tiOO 00. 304- 676·
2809
1983 N11hua with expando. 3
bedroom•. central 11r, many
e11trat. w1U sell with or wit hout
land, 304-678 -6828 between
6·00 and 10 00 PM

33

Farms for Sale

Apartment
for Rent

4926
1 Bedroom baltc rent 8176 00
plus electric Alto raqu1red 8
1200 00 soounty deposit CON
TACT Jackson Estates Dept Ph
446 - 3997 Equal Hou s mg
Opportunity
2 Bedroom apt nice carpeltng,
water patd, washar &amp; dryer
book up, slo'\18, reln{l turmshed
available Jan 1, 1987 Ph
614-446· 7026
Furntshed &amp; unfurnished apu .
8160 00 and up, relllfences Ph
304-675-7738 or 304-676
5104 A·1 Raal Estate
Furnished apartmant. next door
to hbrary One prolessional adult
only. Parkmg Call 814-446
0338
Unfurn11hed apt · 4 rooms, bath
Centrally loceted 1 or 2 adults
No pets References, Security
deposrt requ1r ed Call614-4460444.
Oakwood Apt 1 bedroom unit,
stove &amp; refrigerator turntshed
No pets Call 814 446-2055
after 6pm
Garage apartment furmshed
$175 00 plus electr1etty Secur·
1ty depos1t required Adults only
Call 614· 446-6296
2 bedroom nver v1ew apartment
Equ1pped k1tch en trash ptcku p
Ideal for 2 patt111 to ahara
expences Call 614-992-6539
Grac1ou1 l1v1ng 1 and 2 bed·
room apertmen11 •t \ltllag e
Manor and Rl'lll!ltaide Apartments m Middleport from
&amp;215 including utilities Call
&amp;U-992 7787 EOH
2 bedroom , furnished or unfut·
ntshed apartment on Spnng Ave
Llrge pat10 Cell614 ·992· 6886
after 8 00 p m
2 BR apt Syracuse S136
month plus uttllttea Depos it
requtrad . 614 · 992 · 5732 or
614· 992· 7671
5 room unlurmshed apartm ent
Call 614-992-5434 or 304
882 2666
APARTMENTS mobtle homes
houtet Pt Pleasant and Galllpo.
lis 614-448·8221
Two bad room lurmshad apt New
Haven 304-882 3267 or 304·

773 ·5024.
30 acre farm llall good hom e.
large barn and large pond South
Western School D11h1ct Ph
614- 246 9248
32 ecrea 4 miltt ouUtde city
Umlts Co1v 7 room, 1 story
home Popular Addison school
district F11hing pond, barn &amp; out
building s Call McG uire Realtor
Co . 1402 Fourth A'lle Huntmg·
ton , WV 26701 or call 304· 529·

6033

34

Business
Buildings

]

Two bedroom apt, phone 304
675 · 2548or 675· 5783

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleepmg Room t and
light hou1e keep1ng room1. Park
Central Hotel Call 614-4460756
Rooma lor rent. day week
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614·
446 -9715 Rant as low •• S120
month

46 Space for Rent

Co mm &amp;rclal build1ng1 for Ieete
Downtown P1 Plea1tnt StOfet,
oft1ce1 A One Rul Estate
Carol Yeager, Broker Cell 304
676· 5106
One room school lodge approx
281132. on Clav Chapel Rd
Ce ntral he at &amp; AC 100 amp
elactnc ho• 9670 eft1 C1ency gas
furnace, drop cethng, paneled &amp;
carpet Call 446-6308 ot 675 ·

3099

36 lots &amp; Acreage
Lot for aale 1 acre plu1. Near
Pomeroy Ftt 7 Call 614-992
6732 or 614 992· 7671
Ashton bu1lding loll, mobtle
hom es permitted . Clyd118owen.
Jr. 304-676·2338

51 Household Goods

I---~'::::::-:::-~---

I

SWAIN

Houses for Rant

8 room hson 50 acres at Eureka
1200 1 month 6 room hs 75
acra tarm -Masan County Call

304· 1175·&amp;104.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washert. dryen, rafr1g1rators,
rangas Skaggs Appl1ancet.
Upper Rtver Rd betide Stone
Crest Motal 614· 446-7398

Sofas and chant priced from
$396 to 1995 Tables 150 and
up 10 1126 H1de-a ·beds 1390
to $596 Aetllnera S226 to
$375 Limps UB too 1126
Omettas 1109 and up 10 •495
Wood tabla w-6 chairt 1286 to
$796 De1k 1100 up to •375
Hutches $400 and up Bunk
beds complete w· matlreues
1296 and up to •396 . Baby beds
$110&amp; 1176.MattrUallorbox
springs full or twin 183. firm
$73, and 883 Oueenaetsl225,
Ktng 8360 4 drawer che1t 165
Drasurs $89 Gun cabinets 8,
1 0, 12 gun Gas or electnc range
1376 Baboj mattrHIH $36 &amp;
845 Bed lrames $20. 130 &amp;
K1ng fr ame $50 Good stllectin
of bedroom suttes. metal cabinets, headbo•ds $30 end up
to $86
Used Furmture wood table Ill 2
benches, beds. dresser , wood
wardrobe 3 m1las out Bulhllle
Rd Open 9AM to 5PM. Mon
thru Sat 614·446-0322
Used sofas. cha~ra rechnMa , and
beddmg of '\far10us srua Corbin
&amp; Snyder furntture, 966 Second
Ave Ph 614-446 · 1171
STOP-LOOK-SAVE

Mollohan Furmture &amp; Appliances, At 7 North Galhpolis, Ohio
PI'!' 614 · 446-7444. 6pc Wood
l1ving Room Suita $399 00
Lawn mower, $40 Walnut CO·
lorad stereo, 146 Blond dresser
w1th mnror, S25 Kerosene
heater. 145 Twm stzed box
sprtngs, $20 Call 614-4462025

54 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan' s Used T1re Shop Over
1.000 tlrllll. IIJel 12. 13. 14, , 5,
16. t6 6 8 miles out At 218
Call 614-258-8251
Pi u llc ctstern stale approved,
plastiC sept1c tanks , plast1c
culveru. metal culverta RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son 011 614-286-5930
SS Ruger Aflphawk 41 Mag
Asktng S 300 00 Ph 614-388-

9924
12 Ga, 3m Magnum Shotgun.
38" full choke, 3 shot $126 00
Ph 614-379-2835
Kendall Wood • Coal Stove,
ftreplace Insert or free standifl(t
hke new Ph 614·446 · 6694
Baby c rib Wtlh mattresa excellent co nd1t10n Ph 614 246-

9110.
Umden Sattahte System Ph
6t4-246 6294
OP Multt· Posttton We1ght Bench
witt. leg curl plus 1101bs ot
we ights. like new $60.00 Call
614-446-6606 anyt•me
Dav1son s Lan dscap1ng Pink &amp;
Wh1te Dogwoods. Flowanng
Ctabtraes. Shade Trees end
Conf1r1 Can be planted now tor
th11 spnng Ph 614-256· 1427.
16H Ulllaty oe..Trall&amp;d, dual a11le,
solid tloor CIJII 614-388 9802
Fuel Oil Tank hold s 100 gallon ml
875 00 Ph 614 -446· 2491 and
leave men age
M1xed hardwo od,1laba 112 Plr
bundle Conta•nmg appro~~: 1 'h
toni FOB Ohto Pallet Co
Pomeroy, Oh10 Call614 -9926461
12 ft 1atllhte dtsh All remote
control Good as new Cell
evenmgs 614 992-6 181 Mus1
sell
F~rewood fo r 1ale
t30 , big
p1ck-up lo ad, dell'\lered Call
614 742-3194 or 614-7422076

Tony' s Gun Repa1rs hot rebluemg, Opan 9 00 AM to 7 00 PM ,
Call 3P4· 676 463 1

Banatt sola, loveseat, c hair,
green floral . Ktng wood-coal
burner, 4 yn old seldom uaed
304 675-6932 after 4 30
Chu:~ f Wood, wood burner and
load of wood, 1160 00 304·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Rou te 33, North of Pomeroy
Rental trailers Call 814 992
7479.

576 -2704

4 7 Wanted to Rent

Mod el 94 Wmches ter C la:uc
:10 30 U 50 20 " Homelite
XL 12 c heln saw t100. Call
304-77,3 -5303
Double bad. completa, flrm
Sealy " Clean" $300.00 Two
new 30m mtersprmg mattrestes
S25 00 and 130 00 304-675-

3828 .

'

Want to buy canopy bed, drener
or chelt, 304-875-3638

9832.

Stearns and Fottlr. deluxe king
mattreu sat Like new .
$3~.00 304-675-2191 .

'86 Toyota, 4 wheel dnve, ex.tra
cllb, loaded, 5 year transfer-able

Whtte Farm Tr~ctors . Best Price
11'1 Area, Stders Eqmpment Co,
Handarson, W. Va 304-876·

warranty. $9.500 00. 304· 8823780 or 304-773 ·5868

4480.

FIR~~ vou·~~ fi~I~H
T~AT KltCHE~ GIIELF 'J'OU

"'I"

;! ,,

55 Building Supplies
62 Wanted to Buy
Bwlding Supplies CloseoutsBuyouta-Surplua (1)4'x8'a% "
Yellow pine rough sawed T 1-1 1
std mg $f0.99 ea. 25 pc. up
19 99 1214'x8 'x:W' Vellow p1ne
rougl'l sawed T 1-11 sidmg
$5 99 ea 26 pc up 14 99 (3)
4'x8'x JA'' T&amp;G plywood,
S10.95 ea. (4) 4 ' x10'x1At• ' ptywood, S16 95 ee (5) 4'x8'x~ · ·
luan plywood. $5.99 ee 161
4'x.8 ' all wood panahng Wood·
grams I prmts 17 95 e•
Stconda $6 .99. (7) Masonite
Marlhe plenkt 16" wide 98 "
long paneling T.G. Secondt
11 60 ea (814' x:8' Marllte beth
panel emboiSed 1n 4"x:4" block
17 96 and t8 96 ee 191 4'x.8'
Fo1t fectd foam lnaul.tion board.
(%"thick $4 99 II) (~" · $6 . 99)
11' ' -$6. 591 (10) 48' ' Vanity with
marble top $179 9&amp; (11) 30 "
Vanity )'Vith marble top 179 95.
(12) 5 pteca high gloss tub
enclo1ure ktt 129 95 (131 6 '
tempered glut slidmg tub
doon. aluminum finish. S49.94
or 139 96 w1th purcha11 of tub.
(14) Single door med. ceb.
plattlc box , stain leu steel
frame $19.95 aa. (16)1 and 2
piece llbergl111 tub end 1hower
combination Colors • whtte.
812996 to 81999&amp; ea 6
percent dnlcount on 2 p1ece lk
up (18) 4 piece aohd oak towet
bar Itt. $19.96 . (17) Praflnithed
oak bruce floortng %"x2%:"
Random lengtht$1 .9&amp;tq ft. 10
ctnupl1 .75sq ft 20sq ft
pr c t .n (1 8} Prehung tteet
insulated doors 189 9&amp; ea (191
Pme panel doon 139.96 to
S69 96 B. gradee (20) Dauble
sideltght entrance doott %: Qlau
v, panel $299.96 ea. {2f) 6'
Ooubla ent rance doors , Yl glatt
Vr panel.l349.9fi. (22) Prehung
mter1or doon, lin11hed &amp; unfm ished Choice sire&amp;. U4. 95 ea.
(23) Wood &amp; plattlc thuttert
from 31" to 80" 19 95 to
$26 96 Pf (2 41 all wood sCrBitn
doors. $12 96 aa (26)
1'14'x36 " JC80 " white ttorm
doors. tnsulated foem fillad
S89 96 1281 Countertop platt1c
60 cents sq It (271 Vinyl siding
tnm 6 colors (12' J channel
$1 1. 50) (1 0' tnstde corner
$3.00 ) (10' outstde corner
$4..00) 1281 12"x12 " plain
whtte ceihflO tile 28 cents ea or
64 PIIICe ctn 116 50. (29)
24"x48" 8COUI11Cal embolled
tire resis tant ce1hng panela
$2.36 ea. 130) Closeout white
ceiling gridtl12' mem tee t1 .60
ea) (4 ' tee 60 ce ntue.) Penn 's
Warenou1e Wellston . Ohio.
614-384-3845 Open 8-5. 6
days
8uild1ng Matartalt
Block. brick. sewflf pipes, win
doW's , hntels. ate Claude Wm·
tars, Rio Grande. 0 Call 6~4·
245-5121
Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
dahvarv Mason sand Gallipolis
Block Co . 123Yz Pme St •
Galhpol11. Ohio Call 614-446·
2783

56

Pats for Sale

Oragonwynd Canery Kennel.
CFA Htmalayan , Perstan and
Siamese k1ttens , AKC Chow
pupp1e1 Call 614-446· 3844
after 7PM
Boxer Pups Ph 814· 245-5114.
Shephard puppies, no papers,
126 00 304-675-6809,

59 For Sale or Trade
2% acres and Mobtle Home,
rurel water. prtced lo sell W1ll
separate. in Vinton area Ph
614· 388-8861

fmn
&amp;

Sup pl1 1~'

LIVI~ollll:k

2010 John Deere dillel tractor·
plows. dttc: t3960 New Idea
DyneBoun(:emowerU96. Lite
mode\ 2241 John 0.1tfe bal.11296. Hay wagon 1300. Call
814-281-8622

Now buytng shall corn or ear
corn. Call forlatett quote• River
City Farm Supply, 614-446·
2985

83

Livestock

Standing At Stud. AOHA Pall·
mino Stallion. 1 6 1 hands Reg·
11tered Meres 8100 614-9492466 evenings
For sale. 18 month old lemale
Morg•n-Quarter hor1e Colorbay. Call 614· 985-4242 after
6 00

Hay &amp; Grain

Motorcycles

'Abrade - Fetal - Solar - Curdle - CAB FARE
"On the west side of town I can 9etthi1 su11 cleaned f~· $2
less," yelled the man. "lath at so,' smiled lho cleaner. 'and
how much ftlf the CAB FARE?"

live

Cll Entertainment Tonlght

5'TARTEI,l, \YOt-l'f I'OUI

A VISit With Faye Dunaway 10
Europe on the set of her upcomtng ABC-TV mov1e,

TransporlaiiOn
71

Autos for Sale

1 986 Ford Thunderbird, one
owner, must sell Call 814 246·
9234

•' I'

'

Boats and
Motors for Sale

..

pm

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Used GM transm1ts10ns All
internally m1pected &amp; guaranteed Also Ford &amp; Chryalar Call
614-446-0966

'·
:•
,•
.....

81

MscNoii-Lohrer

e

awards , featured from the
Shrine Aud1tonum 1n Los

Angeles. CA 13 hrs I L1ve In

,.

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.,
'

Stereo
[jj) Nova: Hole In the Sky

.

{CC) ScientiSt exam1ne a
strange hole 1n the earth' s
ozone layer that IS about the
s1ze of the U01ted States Is
11 natural or was •t caused by
mah~made freon gases? ~60
m1n)

'"'

SWEEPER and sawing mach1ne
riii!Btr, parts, and supplies Ptck
up and dehvery, Oa'\111 Vacuum
Claaner, ona half mila up
Georges Creek Rd Call 614·

.

'· '

446-0294

'

'

In the Heart' iCC)
(]) 700 Club
(J) Iii Cll Moonlighllng
iCC)\60 m1n I
(J) Victory at Sea
[jj) Frontline· Nazi Connection iCC) Clear eVIdence

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ELVINEY'S
TOOK UP

TH' RFICKEf
PITCH IN'
OUT YONDER ,
H055 SHOES
MAW?

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

AN'

Cor Founn end Pm e
Galhpohs. Oh1o
Phonl! 614 -446 -3888 or 614 ·
446 4477

,,''

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General Hauling

Ll

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BRIDGE

Mowray's Uphol.tlring 1erving
trl coun1y erea 22 yeart The Wist
In turnkurt uphottterlng. Call
304 · 176 · 41 54 for free
ettlmates.

{60 min I

SHE JUST MADE
H~R FUST

RINGER

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PEANUTS
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'IOU KNOW HOW l-l161-l
TO BUILD A 140U5E?

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Ill CD Odd Couple

[jj) Nowowatch
10:16 (jj Now•
10:30 Cll Celtibrity Chefs
1!11 CD INN Nowo
[jj) In the flee of Terrorism: Protecting s Free So-

ldenteties 11re uncov-

goes undercover II

~

maMJ

stripper lo build evldtnce on
drug dealers at a n•ghtclub
110 min.) (R) .
11 :45
Cll Gil Tonight Show
Tonighfo guest 11 muoiclan
Leon Rodbono. (60 min.) In

a

I]) IMidt lht POA Tour
(J) Jefferlonl

... .
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1D 1Di M19num, P.t.
liD Oreal O.Cialona
etJIT.J. -Romano

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EAST

WEST

exerc1sed a reasonable
amount of skill woth today 's deal But
he overlooked one key tache. Follow
the play and see if you can detect hiS
error.
South took dummy 's A·K of clubs
and came to his hand with the ace of
hearts to ruff a club. Since it was likely that he would lose two trump !rocks,
he rightly dec1ded to try for a trock
with the king of d~amonds When he
led the jack of diamonds, East won the
ace and played another club Although
South rulled in his hand, West did not
take hos qu~n of t'1lmps. Instead,
West Jettisoned the queen of hearts.
Declarer now took his best shot by
playing the kong of spades, since either
defender might have held the lone
queen of trumps East took the spade
ace and led a heart, whoch West ruffed
low, and West still had the queen ol
spades lor the setting trick.
Declarer's thinking was good up to a
point. But he lost the contract because
he dtd not take hos second hearllrock
earlier. Suppose he cashes both the ace
and the kong of hearts belore rufhng
. his losing club. Now the defenders w1ll
not be able to lake more than the ace
or diamonds and two trump lrtcks (the

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Dealer· South
WHt

Norlb

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Pass

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3+
Pass

PaM
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

+ 10

Opentng lead

ace and queen), and there woll be no
way lor West to take a tmk w1lh a low
trump by rulling declarer's king or
hearts
A new book by James Jacoby and his .
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, is now
available at bookstores. It Is "Jaroby
on Card Games," publtshcd by Pharos
Books

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
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Naztrnova
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Yesterday'8 Answer

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12:05 Cl) 8CTV

12:20 (I) MOVIE: 'The Boy W~h
Or- Hllr'
12:30 Cl) lltlt of Groucho

(]) 1988 Women'a Kemper Open Hlg~Ughtl -

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LPLNPHA -S VM G X~
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Yeoterday'o Cryptoqoaote: HIE AEST WAY TO GET
RID OF YOUR OUTIES IS TO DISC UAJlc;E TllEM . AUTHOR UNKNOWN

a (J) Talea of the Unex-

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ABC NIOWI Nlthtllne
iCC)
Iii (J) More Rial People
®I McCloud
(j)) MOVIE: 'TI11141fkler'
(J)

12:40 l (jJ) MOVI~: '~Hiwk'
12:45 Cll illl Late
With
Oevld Lettormon 01119ht'a
guest is Berbers Walttro.
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33 S•• o~ (Fr I
34 Vandal

get of an unwant ed 'panner·
sh1p' w1th a reputed Ch1 cago
~n~ler (60 mrn I

!-U-11

• ; 4
• 10 8 6 4 3
• J 10 7 4

Declarer

31 Pmol·
n•adN\

Stereo .

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Atlantic City, NJ 12 hrs I

12:00 Cl) Burnt • Allen

......,
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By James Jacoby

Live
(J) MOVIE: 'The Purple
Plain'
10:00 (J)
(J) Jack and Mike

IC'C).

......' .

NORTH

m Top Rank BoXIng from

9:30

together.
11 :15 D Cll illl NIW11
11 :20 (J) Treck and Field: Brlatol
Myera/llltella TriCk Moot
160 min)
11 :30 (]) 8portoCenter
(J) WKRP In Clnclnnllli
D (!) Toxl
Q (J) ABC N.W1 Nightllne

,.

Just inches away
from the goal

:IO'IJwell&lt;•r
m ( ~ u ff )

ered, the twfns are reunited,
and the lovers are brought

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......

R • M Cu.tom Couch" and
Reupholstery , St Rt 7, Crown
Cl1.,.. Oh. 614-268· 1470, Eve.
114· 448· 3438. Open dally 9 to
4:30. Sit. 9 ·30 lo 1:30. Old &amp;
nM Uphostet'ed

~ace program

cily 160 m1n I
11 .00 Cll Hardcaotlo and McCormick
(J) D CD 00 8 il1l Nowo
D ill M•A•s•H
11 :1 0 (J) The Shllk..peoro Hour
Hoot..t by Walter Met·
thou: Twelfth Night H1d·

r Ytt~ '
Wat er haullng, Formerly Ken 'Jf!ora'
_,,
Wheaton s now John' s Water •V•'
Servu::e Same prl ce1 , phon11 • ' "lrl '
304-576· 2919 or 5?6·2484

Upholstery

I

cietY Panelists d1scuss a
poss1ble attack at the fie· •
t1onal airport of Metropolis
1n an 1mag1nary western U S

'

87

ENCYCLDPED£A
ON.

a

Plumbing

876 -7397

10 PLJTIWY'

iCC) Moke becomes !he tar-

&amp; Heating

Hou se coal limMtone, and
grl'll~ Deltvt rld 1 1on and up
Jim L..mer. 304-876 · t247 or

\

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

:.' I

Starks Tree and lawn SaNtee
Hedges, s hrubs bu s hes
trimmed hmdtcapmg, stump
and leal removal, 304-676·
2842 or 576·2903

WHY IX) 'raJ
""'IlEA TV
SET?

show3 that rules and re-.
cords were bent and
changed to allow German
sc1enusts wnh Naz1 Connections 1nto the Uniled States
durmg the heyday of the

9:05 C1J NBA Basketball: Houo·
ton Rockets at Denver
Nuggell (2 hrs 15 m1n I

,''. .'

896-3802

Watt er so n's Wa t er Haulmg ,
reasonabl e rates , tmm ed iate
2.000 gallon dehvery, C11terns .
pools. well etc call 304-576·
2919

I

..,,'

Rotary or cable tool drtlhng
Most walla co mpleted 1amed11V
Pump sales and tefVice. 304-

James Boys Water Servtce Also
pool s flll ed Call6 14·266 ·1141
or 614-446-1175 or 6 14-4467911
•

r DON'T
'MOONLISHTING'1
WATCH
ANY
"f?dJ\IILY THiS"&lt;
CFTH&amp;\'1 .
"NIGHTWJRT''&lt;!-

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,.

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , axpe·
rienced carpenter, alactr1cian .
m11on. painter. roofing (mclud·
lng hot tar apj)licattonl 304·
875 -2088 or 675-7147

Dillard Water Ser'111ce Pools.
Siatarns Wells Oel1very Anytime Call 614 446-7404

rn

twes when he plays Cup1d
for h1s brother Ben
9:00 D Cll @ MOVIE· 'Places

Fetty Tree Trtmming, stump
remo va l Call 304 -875 1331

82

1Di MOVIE: 'foul Ptay'

Cousteau'a RadiiCOV·
ory of the Wo~d: Legacy of
Cortez 160 m•n I
' 8:30 (J) Iii CD Growing Paino
iCC) Mike has ulterior mo8:05

·'

1978 Chtwrolet Monte Carlo,
body good. new plint. 1976
Chevrolet Caprice. good cond•·
don Call 614-992-6722 after
8 00 twenings

40Jitod. 71.000mll•.mltood
"''· 304·171·3141

1!11 CD MOVIE: 'Telelon'

29th Annual
Gram my Awards Billy Crys-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncoMhttonal lifetime guarant". Local referenc" lurn11hed
Free estimate• Call collect
1-614 237 0488, dey or nlghl
Rogers Basement
Waterproofmg.

85

·n Chevy Novoa. 4S cylauto. PS.

~t- nch-quick scheme

tal hosts the annual mus1c

1981 Mercurv Lyn x G L auto.
ttantmlsslon. power steering.
A C Many mora exttal. 81 4 ·
367 -7750

5086,

pr1s on. Tony 's father-In-law
tells Tony about h1s latest

GOOD HE!I.VENS!

Home
Improvements

2464.

'?8 Ch ....roltt K-15 BIIZer, good
cond, 304-876-3348 or 875-

fend1ng a military student
framed for the murder of h1s
lieutenant , Matlock uncovers a consp1racy between

Newshour
(jJ
(jJ)

1984 Dodge Anee, auto a tr
Cash pr1ce $2,798 00, John a
Auto Sale1, 8ulav1lla Rd

19110 Oldt Delte 88 Royale. V-8.
PS. PB, air, cruiH, AM-FM.
good cond, U ,800 00. 304·
17&amp;-1026
. , . , - - - - - - - -- - 1976 Buick Regal 1700 00.
Phone 304 · 8715· 1888 after

Judge
®I Wheel of Fortune
e (lJI @ Jeopardy
IDI Jellorsono
7:36 CD Honeymooners
8:00 DClllliJ Matlock Wh•le de·
(J)

(J)

RON 'S Tele'lliston Service
House calls on RCA Quazar.
GE Speciahng m Zenith Call
304 -576- 2398 or 614-446

676 ·5384

0

~

1985 Plymouth Duner , 5 speed. AC 17,'000 mllas, nice
clean c ar P" 614 379· 2726

'73 Nova, 33 ,000 mi11111, 6 eyt,
A,P,S, 4 door, second owner,
gr-blk top, I 1 .960.00 304·

fort

ALLEY OOP

,,
.....' .

Ph 614-388-9621

1974 Dodge Spectal Edition 4
door, low mileage, good condi·
tlon. 41200. Call 814-992·
8131

IDI Barney Miller
7:05 Cil Sanford and Son
7:30 D Cil Cll New Newlywed
Game
1111 CD Too Close lor Com·

four officers. 160 mm I Part 2
of 2, In Stereo
(]) Hell Town
Cll lil CD Who's tho Boos?
ICC) After h1s release from

•

Services

AS

.I PON 'T HAVE To
I
!..IVE !He~e.

'·'·

286-6522

1981 2·28 Ctmaro, red&amp; blade
interior. PS. PB. air, tilt wheel.
cruiSe, AM -FM ca11 etta Ph .
614· 388·9802

IN ToUGH WITH
~E'AL.ITY, AS L.ONG

-..

~­

"' ·

Mulltns Home Imp rovements ;..~
Vmyt &amp; Alum Stding &amp; Soff1t
Free attrmatH !Wilham Mullins)

1974 Dodge Challenger Over
600 in motor New Cam. 4
barrell carburetor. headers , 4
new t1ras, on keystones whh air
shocks NeM11 some body work
$800 00 Call614 388-9668.

PsYCtiiATRY
.,

..,,

1984 Ford Escort Wagon, AT.
PS , and a1r S2,B50 00 Ph.

1980 Ford Mustang. 4 cyl.
auto S1400 Good condiuon
Call 614-446 7679 or 814448· 9526

I PoN'j MINP SI::ING

'•

,.

Room addhion1. electrical. root·
lng, 11dlng, plumbing Excellent' ,
raferen cea Ca ll 814-367-0412

Ph 614-446-2303

,.
'

,.'
,.
,.,,

1973 Volktvagon Super Beetle,
e•cellent condition $1,500 00
Call 614-246-9187 between
6 9pm

1977 Ford Granad a S260 00

FRANK AND ERNEST

'

18VJft GlastronSki8oet. 1977
Mercury 176 HP recenlly rebuilt
$:1800 614-992-5437 after 5

AU tlPet carpenter &amp; concrete
work· lntertor, ••tenor, ramo· '·
dallng, pemtlng. roofmg. free
estimates . Call614-446·6174 , "

1986 Old1 Cutlan. AM -FM
Cassata, V-6. black Excellent
condition Pf1 614-245-6841
after 4pm

Gl (jJ) il§J Wheel of Fortune

...

1978 Chev.,. Malibu Clas11c
t1 4500 00 1974 Ford Ran·
chero UOO 00 Call 614· 446·
9219

1985YI Mercury Lyme Sport.
AC , Stereo, cloth 1nt erior sharp
54 660 00 negotiable, mu at 11111
Ph 614-446-0362 .

News hour

'

":I

I •,~~

Want to trade large round baln
of hay for cattle Ph 614·461052

Dried shelled corn •4.50 per
cwt Ground ea 00 per cwt
GroundwHhmol~tset•&amp; 75per
cwt 304-468-1031 .

,.,,

1983 HondaV-46 Magna, a~~:cal ­
lent condttton, very low mtleage
with ex:tru Ph' 614·367-0883

large round bales of hay S10 00
eactl W1ll del1ver Call 814-4481052 after 6pm

Mtxe d hay tor sale 11 26 per
bala. Call614 · 992-3709.

1!11 CD M•A•s•H
Iii (J) Poople'o Cburt ,
())MOVIE: 'Monkey's Uncle' Part 1
®I News
[jj)
MacNeil-Lehrer

.,.

1986 Vamaha Tr1-Z, 260 and YZ '
250 Excellem condttion Call
614-446-9710 efter 6pm

Registered Quarter Hone born
5-17-8&amp; Grullo, good bloodhne
Ph 614 379·2143

19715 3800 Ford Tractor with
plow. tl.250.00 New Hollend
Hay Ill" t785 .00. MF Alke 11n FkiiMrd, good cond. one
·~85 00 Cotl 814-218·8122 .
ownar. covtNd, nOt drlvtn for 2
yura . 100.000 mllet.
110 Maule Ferguson Dl..e 11 ,000 00. aher 5:00. 304Tractor 2300hra. U.tao.oo 171-3711 .
Oft . Pull Type luah Hog
1410.00 300 gal . lpreyerwtth 11nVolkawlt• Dash11, 4cyl,

20ft. boomo U81.00 Ph. 281·
1122.

74

75

64

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM·LITS ANSWERS

"Casanova" .

PI, AM· FM, Keyetone Magt,
••dill tlrn, 304-882·2825.

"Boy! Think of the money we're about to
save In legalleasl" '

:r..

new bnket. 49 .000 mil H. • 1
12,800 00 Wlllconliderplckup 'lf'if'f.sr
truck on trade, 304-678· 2953
'i!V'

7421 .

Ohio. Calt 814·441-&amp;n7, IY•.
814-448-3092 Up front trac·
tors with warr.nty oVerlO Uted
tractors, 1000 toolt.

f"

------~---- ·'77 Jeep CJ5, V-8, 4 new tires, i. "'tl..,,

6.00 PM

Ho~o~•• In Chester, 5 rooma and
bath.· Ciotetolchool. $180
month plus deposit. Call 6 4 ·
98&amp;· 4300 end I 14-992-7252.

.

477 New Holland 7ft Hay Bine.
like new for 12,100 00 Vermeer Round Baler 4x6ft bales,
Uled 1 ••••on Call a14· 388-

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SA 35 W Oatllpotlo,

2story. ?room houseforrent ln
Oanvllle, Ohio 1 1-11 b11h. Call
614- 742 2347

IDI WKRP in Cincinnati
6:36 CD Andy Griffith
7:00 D Cll PM Magazine
Cll Herdcaotle and McCor·
mlck
I]) NHL Hockey: Edmon·
ton Oilers at Pittsburgh
Penguins 12 hrs , 30 mon)

, .,....

17 fl . Conseuion Tra1lor
12600. Call614-992 ·7830

U S lS Wtst. Jeckton. Ohio .
814-281-0461
Massey Ferguson, New Holland.
Ruth Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over
40 uud tractors to chooae from '
• eompltteline of new &amp; used
equipment largett llltctlon k\
S E Ohio.

In Mlddlepon 2 bedroom hou1e
4200 par month pl us utilll tel
Reference• and security deposit
required No pata kitchen stove
furn istlad. Call 814· 992·6018

peer pressure to use drugs
and With h1s problems at
home

1979 Ford Bronco, PS, AC, ", ~
lock-out hubs, AM-FM ca11ene. ~
excellem cond1t1on. Ph. 614· " r-~ 446-6892.
-~"il

51 Farm Equipmef)t

CROSS • SONS

Beeutllul 3 bedroom houte In
Syr•cuae full kit chen, larg6
lawn. Contact dmy1 614 -992·
6298 or nights 814-667-3786

Cll a CD ABC News
Ill CD Hogan's Heroea
()) MOVIE: 'Doctor Who·
O..th to the Dalaks'
®liD (jJ) CBS News
[jj) Perl&lt;lno Family Trocy
helps Matt deal w•th the

~;:~~::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~ ~----------~~~ ~~~
t:d'\.
54 Misc. Merchandise

UP R0 D

l])~rtac.nter

1978 ChtNy Slazer very good ~.:f
condition. low mileage Ph 814- ,.~ _..
2415-5002.
io!~, ,---

61 Farm Equipment

Bruce Beattie

•·
,,, '

1986 Yamaha MOTO 4·226,
dual actton transmiuion wtth
"'
raverse Low usage, ex.cellant ,.. '"' ~1
cond1t1on 11,750 00 Ph 6 14· 1 1~:!·
448-s9n
~~

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

'

2 bedroom home, 84 8urdet1e
Addition. IIOV. and r..rlllltS tor
l n cl ud~ . Rauonablerant. Good
lo cation Contact Chllene Na·
donal Truu Dept 304-67&amp;·

N•w•

Cll Big Valley
C!lMudaSportaLook
l!llill Jtflorsono
()) Square One :rv iCC)
[jj) Secret City
IDI Facta of Life
6:06 Cil Beverly Hlllblllloo
6:30 D Cll illl NBC Nawo

1(/1._ ,

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

'•

8:00 BCll CD Ill CD llJ ID (l)Hlll

cond, good thipl, 304-676- ~o;..:• .
3478
r
•

73

"·

DR E GR I

EVENING

:::c:::--'-~----- 1•~ ·
'79 Chevy Luv, 4 wheal drNe, air ~$ :

Valley Furniture, new &amp; used
Large 18ction of quality ftnni·
lura 1218 Eaatern Ave ,
Gallipolis

Three room office. DTW Ga llipo
lis, newly remodeled 1300 00 a
month, includes all ut1Ul1 es Ph
614· 446 1847

fil

2/Z4/87

1989 ChMI'y ptckup truck 400t.,
~mglne. euto. PS , real good 'f'AI:
1hape, •1 .400.00 or best offer, ~
304-676-4426
~­

County Appltanca, Inc Good
used applllncH and 1V aell
Open SAM to 8PM Mon tlnu
Sat. 6,.·448-1899, 627 Jrd
A'\fe Galltpojis, OH .

tt!e
be-

low to form lour ••mp le words

1988 Ford Ranger 4x4 20.000
mdes. New tlrH tnd ryn Sharp.
814-689 · 3381

Rentals
41

Rearrange liners of
0 four
scrambled words

1972 Ford good cond1tlon
'525 00 Ph . 1114-388-9869.

wood -co.lttovll, 6 pc wood LR
1u1te 8399, bunk beds $19p.
recliner• new &amp; u"d bedroom
IUII&amp;I, wringer wuhtrt, &amp;
shoes New livlngroom tu1tu
$199-1699, ltmpt. Call 814·
446-3169

Herb alife lndependanl Dlsl Call
me for product Mon-Fr1 9 3
Glon a Grate 304-882 · 3162

SNAFU'M

...

1981 Mazdt Truck, no rutt.
02,150.00 Ph 288-6622

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Ol•ve St., Gtllipolit New &amp; used

Off1ce Space for Rent Excellent
for Attorneys, Acco untant, etc
Closa to Court House Call
W1seman Real Estate Agency
614· 446-3844

House tn country , prafer leon.
Arbuckle area Raasonable rent
W1ll f1 11. up tf necessary , 304
675· 6382

72 TruckaforSala ~ :-:-:-:--:-:----'----:-

KIT'N'CARLYLE ®byl.llrryWrlght

.' .".
'

--'
'

.

• )1 , 1

'

' ..

�•
•

'

Porneroy-Midd~port. Ohio

Page-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

..---Local Briefs:-Two drivers ticketed by patrol
Two drivers were cited Monday for no seatbel1 by the
Ga ilia·Meigs Post or the Ohio Highway Patrol in a two-car
accident on Ohio 143.
Troopers said Richard E. Vaughan, 69, Pomeroy, was
northbound at 10 a.m., two-tenths of a mile north of0hlo7, when
he started to make a left turn. A northbound car behind him
driven by Donna J. Grate, 52, Pomeroy, started to pass
Vaughan and reportedly struck Vaughan's car in the left side.
Vaughan's car was moderately damaged and the Grate
vehicle was slightly damaged, the patrol said.

EMS units answer five calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday ; Pomeroy at 4:23a.m. to East Mai n Street for Brad
Young to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at10: 12 a.m.
treated Richard Vaughan and Donna Grate at an auto accident
on Ohio 143; Racine at 10:19 a.m. to Broadway Street for Ben
Philson to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 7:24p.m. treated
Angela Harmon at an auto accident on Salem Street;
Middleport Fire DDepartment at 5:42 p.m. to a vehicle !Ire on
Turkey Run Road.

Church sponsors dinner Friday
Soup beans with ham dinners will be served Friday at Our
Lady of Loretta Chu rch, Tuppers Philns. Serving w!ll be from 4
to 7 p.m . and dinners will Include cole slaw, corn bread, tea or
co ffee. Adults $2.50. Children under 12, $1.50. Pie and cake
avai lable.

Fellowship sets Thursday meeting
Meigs County Church of Christ Women 's Fellowship will meet
Thurs\lay, 7:30p.m., at Bradford Church of Christ. Program on
ceramics will be presented by Katherine Evans.

Missionaries slated to speak
Rhond a and Ken Harless, missionaries from Mexico, w!ll be
guests at a specia l Sunday 7:30p.m. service at Hobson Church
of Christ in Christ ian Union.

Regan hanging tough
•
tn
arms controversy
advance. The president, In two
By HELEN THOMAS
interviews with the Tower board,
UPI White House Reporter
reportedly changed his story
WASHINGTO N (UPI)
from
McFarlane's version to
Hanging tough, Wlilte House
chief of staff Donald Regan Is Regan's after consulting with his
resisting overwhelming pressure chief of staff.
News reports persisted Mon·
to resign at this point unless he is
day
night that Regan, a 68-year·
asked directly by President
old
Marine
veteran whose tenac·
Reagan, aides say.
lty
Is
well
known,
Is now hanging
"That Is between Mr . Regan
In
only
until
the
To.wer
report Is
and the president, " an aide to the
chief of staff said Monday, noting Issued and absorbed - hoping
there had been no such request the president will clear him of
from Reagan. who has waved off any blame In a speech Reagan Is
all questions regarding his staff expected to make within a few
and operations with an adman· days of the commission report.
Rep. Dick Cheney, R-Wyo.,
lshment to walt for the Tower
said today that up to now he has
Commission report.
That report, from the preslden· "retrained from urging" Re·
tlal panelled by former Republi· gan's depar ture, " But It seems to
can Sen. JohnToweerofTexas, is me we've reac hed a point where
due Thursday- and the pressure he has to ask himself whether or
on Regan Is expected to escalate. not his continued presence
Thechiefofstaffis likely to draw serves the president or not and 11
sharp criticism in the panel's seems to m ~ that It's lncreas·
review of National Security ingly evident thai the conclusion
Council operations In the Iran· Is that he Is not and then he will ,
In fact, need to step down In the
Contra scandal.
Indeed, leaks ·and hlnls indl· near future."
Asked on the "CBS Morning
cate that none of the president's
News"
If "near future" means a
aides nor the president himself
matter
of days, Cheney, who
will escape criticism In the
served
as
President Ford's chief
, report. Herbert Hetu, the Tower
board's spokesman, told repor· of stall, said, "I think so. The key
ters Monday lhe document will thing to remember here Is It's not
a question of guilt or Innocence:
"name names."
'
'
of whose
Regan's role has drawn the ll's a basic' question
expendable.
And,
of
course,
the
most focus In his dispute with
form er national security adviser chief or staff Is expendable and
Rober! McFar lane about the president lsn'l."
whel her Reagan gave approval · The Washington Post reported
In August 1985 for the first today that Regan, at a meeting
shipmen t of U.S. arms to Iran he called Monday with the
president and top political advis·
from Israeli stockpiles.
In sworn testimony. Regan has ers, said he would decide about
said no such approval was given resigning after the Tower report
and McFarlane has maintained Is Issued. At the same meeting,
the shipment was authorized In Reagan was urged to acl swiftly
upon receiving the report to show
that he Is In command.
Many of Reagan's associates
and
his wife, Nancy, believe that
South Central Ohio
In
the
wake ol lhe Iran·Contra
Increasing cloudiness tonight ,
crisis
he
must Install a new White
with a low near 30. Mostly cloudy
House
manager
to revitalize the
Wednesday, with highs In the
battered administration for Its
upper 40s.
remaining
two years.
The probability of preelp lta·
Regan,
often
praised for his
lion is near zero lonlght and 20
management
of
Merrill
Lynch &amp;
percent Wed nesday.
Co.
before
joining
the
Reagan
Winds will be Ugh! and varia·
administration 1\S treasury se·
ble tonight
·
cretary,
has beer\ faulted for
Ohio E.tended Forecast
a
one-man show since he
running
Thursday through Saturday
came
to
the White House In
Fair Thursday, with a chance
Reagan's
second
term.
of rain Friday and Saturday .
A
source
said
Sunday that
Highs will range from the upper
30s to the upper 40s Thursday, Reagan, having defended his
and In lhe 40s Friday and chief of staff since the scandal
Saturday. Overnight lows will be broke In November , has reluc·
tantiy concluded that "Regan
between 25 and 35.
must go."

Ohio weather

Ferry service

IContlnu!lll from Page 1)

quick response from the highway
department.
Rogers said he needs commit·
men! on the service by Wednes·
day. If the service Is wan led, he
will forward a contract for
review and signing. The contract
would Involve Pomeroy, Mason
and Rogers, and would ensure
that no other ferry could operat e
between Pomeroy . and Mason
during the life ot the contract.
Rogers antlclp&lt;ltes fares at $2
per car to Include all passengers,
$1 for motorcycles and bicycles

and 50 cents for walking traffic.
Weight embargoes . for heavy
truck traffic, excepting emer·
gency vehicles and school buses,
Is being considered.
Rogers told Long earlier thai
he could have his ferry · In
Pomeroy by March 16, depend·
ing on how soon an operating
co ntract Is finalized.
Ohio Department of Transpor·
tallon officials have pinpointed
closure of the brlqge to March 9
or 16.

..

Tuesday. ~ebrua

Area deaths
Eloise S. Eardley

the New Haven United Melhodlst
Church and the Live Wire Class.
Eloise S. Eardley, 67, McCoy
Surviving are three daughters,
Avenue, E;asl Liverpool , fo r- Mrs. Jack (Banela) Hunter,
merly of Meigs Cou nt y, died Feb. l'lerkeley Springs, W.Va., Mrs.
5 In the East Liverpool Cit~ Harry (Sylvia ) Pahlstrom, Co·
Hospital following a lengthy lumbus, and Mrs . William
illness.
(Mary I Shirk, GulfBreeze,Fia.;
Mrs. Eardley was born at one daughter-In-law, Maxine
Urbana on June 14, 1919, a Miller, New Haven;. nine grand·
daughter of Edith King of Ches- children, 10 great-grandchildren
ter and the late Edward King. and one great-great-grandson. .
Services will be 11 a.m. Wed·
Formerly of Meigs County, she
graduated from Chester High nesday In the New Haven United
School In 1938.
Methodist Church with the Rev.
A homemaker, Mrs. Eardley Is John Campbell, the Rev. William
survived in addition lo her DeMoss and the Rev. Doyle
mother ,' by hH husband, Robert Payne officiating. Burial will be
V. Eardley Sr.; a daughter, Mary In Red Hill Cemetery, Red Hill,
Kathryn Oppy . Dayton; three W.Va. There will be no visitation.
sons, Robert V. Eardley Jr., The bo&lt;;Jy will lie In state one hour
Georgia: William Eardley, Lout· prior to services at the church.
In lieu of flowers, the family
siana, and Ronald Eardley,
Wellsville; two brothers . Cecil 0. suggests contributions to I he
King, Bidwell, and Charles F. New Haven United Methodist
King, Moundsville, W.Va.; five . Church or lhe New Haven LJ.
sisters, Inez Brehm, Island Lake, brary Fund.
Ill.; Geneva Leonard, Millwood,
Funeral arrangements are
W.Va.; Mabel King, Chester; under the direetion of the Fogle·
Lela Windon, Long Boltom, and song Funeral Home, Mason,
Donna WhlleofTampa , Fla. Five W.Va.
grandchildren and several nle·
ces and nephews also survive.
Besides her father, she was El ood E. Bo
preceded In death liy two broth·
W
wers
ers, Franklin and Babby Dale.
Elwood E. Bowers, 71, .34820
Services were held at 2 p.m.
State
Route 7, Pomeroy, a
Monday , Feb. 9, at the Martin
well·
known
retired Pomeroy busFuneral Home In Eas t Liverpool
inessman,
died
Monday evening
with the Rev . Jeffrey Mathews
St.
Joseph
Hospital
In Parkers·
at
officiating. Burial was in Colum·
burg
,
W.Va.
blana Memorial Park Cemelery.
Mr .. Bowers operated a res tau·
rant on East Main Street in
Infant Ban-en
Pomeroy for many years and In
hi!! retirement operated an ap·
Curtis L. Barrett, six-week-old plia nce repair shop at his Route 7
son of Keith Wayne and Nancy home.
Marlene Gibbs Barrett, Langs·
He was born April 26, 1915 In
ville, died Sunday at home.
Dayton, a son of Carrie Law He was born Jan. 9. 1987, In rence of Oakland, Calif. , and the
Point Pleasant.
late Ernest Bowers. He was
Surviving in addition to his reared in Pomeroy by the late
parents are a brother , Troy Jacob and Edith Ament.
Wayne Barrett, al home; mater·
Mr. Bowers was a member of
nal grandparents, Thomas and
the
Pomeroy Church of Christ,
Delores Gibbs, Hartford, W.Va.;
paternal grandparents, William where he served as a deacon. He
and Eva Anderson, Hartford ; was a veteran of World War II
greal-grandparenls, Ben and Do· and a member of the C.B. Radio
rothy Barrell, Langsville, Helen Club.
Surviving In addition to his
Anderson, Point Pl easant ,
mother
are his wife, Eileen;
W.Va., and Eloise Owens,
three daughters and sons-in-law.
Zanesville.
Janet
and Ed Venoy, Pomeroy;
Services will be Wednesday al
Shlrle'y
and David Bumgardner.
1:30 p.m. at Father's House
Middleport;
Peggy and Danny
Church, Hartford , wllh the Rev .
Brl
c
kles
.
Middleport ; a
Clyde Fields and the Rev . Sa ~
muel Anderson officiating. Bur'· dau ghter-In-law, Chris Whea·
ial will be In Graham Cemetery. lley, Logan; hal!·brothers, Ern·
Friends may call at the Fogle· est Bowers Jr., Kenneth Bowers
and Joseph Bowers; and half
song Funeral Home, Mason, sisters,
Ada Rowe, Carol Wolfe,
W.Va., from 7., p.m. Tuesda y.
Joyce Sauters, Sandra Baer,
Donna Bowers, Nedra Larvln,
Rev. A.B. Miller
Kay Profflll and Karen Haines.
· Ten grandchildren, live great·
The Rev . Achsah B. Miller, 92, grandchildren and several nieNew Haven , W.Va., died Monday ces and nephews also survive.
at home.
Besides his father, he was
Born Oct . 22,1894. in Summers- preceded in death by a son,
ville, W.Va. , she was the daVgh- Danny Bowers, and a daughler,
ter of the late Albert and Orilla Sue Annelle Bowers.
O'Dell McClung.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thurs·
She was preceded in death by day at the Ewing Funeral Home
her husband. the Rev . Ha rry with Mr. Don Seevers officiating.
Miller, and lwo sons, Paul and Burial will be in Miles Cemetery,
Harry L. Miller.
Ru tland. Friends may call at the
She was a relired United funeral home from 2·4 and 7-9
Melhodlst minister, a member of p.m. Wednesday.

Moslem gunmen Withdraw
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI\ Hundreds of Druze Moslem gun·
men withdrew from wesl Beirut
today and pro-Iranian militia· ·
men burned down their barracks
rather than hand it over to Syrian
troops who entered the capital to
halt bloody fighting in the Mas·
lem seetor.
Members of !he fundamental·
ist Shiite Moslem Hezbollah
group set fire to their Fathallah
barracks In the Basta neighbor·
hood , and local commander Hajj
Mustafa said his men were
reacting against lhe Syrian
deployment.
An estimated 7,000 Syrian
lroops have closed at least 54
mllllla strongholds across west
Beirut since their deployment
Monday.
Hezbollah was excluded from
negotiallons that led to the
Syrian lnlerventlon In fightin g
between the Shiite Amal militia
and leftist forces led by I he Druze
Progressive Socialist Party . Hez·
boilah leaders have condemned
the Syrian moves, saying they
cleared lhe way for a U.S-backed
Israeli attack on Lebanon.
Po lice sources have specu Ia ted
that some of the 28 Westerners
taken hostages In Lebanon al
some point had been held at the
Fathallah barracks. Those cap·
lives Include eight Americans.
Hezbollah, or the Party of God.
has repeatedly denied holding
any Wester n hostages. The main
bases for Amal and Hezbollah
are In the clty!l-southern suburbs
and Syrians have not yet ven·
tured Into them.
Reporters who toured the city
said Syrian soldiers, backed by
two T-54 tanks, replaced 300
Druze Progressive Socialist
Party militiamen outside the
Soviet Embassy. Oth.er units
prepared to deploy around the
abandoned U.S. Embassy annex

on the Beirut waterfront .
Th e Druze militiamen headed
to ca mps east of the capital in the
Shouf mountains, firing mac hine
guns and rocket-propelled gre·
nades Into the air as they passed
a Syrian army checkpoint at
Khalde. 9 miles south of Beirut,
the reporters said.
The Syrians earlier look over
key mllllla slronghoids, lnciud·
lng the 40-story Murr Tower- a
Shiite Amal fortress- and Jal El
Bahr , an unfinished high-rise
building which Druze militiamen
used as their main base In west
Beirut.
Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenaan, head
or Syrian ar my intelligence in
Lebanon, said late Monday that
the Syrian force will shut down
militia oftlces after the militia·
men are evacuated and their
weapons confiscated.

Ill,

KEBUI
BUSINESS SERVICE
611 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

PHONE

614-992·7270
you would care to
,m••t a CPA an~ talk
aD•DU1 what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
no obligation to you.

•'

24, 198

Village receives&gt;IContl~uedfrom Page 1:

'

....

village could use the value of land ordinance as recommended by '~
.involved as well as things like the Ohio Department' of Natural :
volunteer labor to count on its 50 Resources , necessary so that ;
percent share, Borda stated. flood Insurance can be purchased.
'
Title of land, however, on by resident s.
Cab
I
e
issue
ariseS
,
,
:
which Improvements are made
Council Presidenl Dewey Hor·;
mus1 be vested In . !he United
ton
agai n voiced complaints,
States an~ then all lands required
Cable Communications ,
against
for operation arid maintenance of
Inc.
for
replacing a Columbu~l
the area are leased to tile
station
on
channel6 with the QVC~
non-federal sponsor, such · as .
m
e
r
c
h
a
n d I s e s e II I n g•
Middleport VIllage, on a long·
'
'
term basts . The opera tion arid · program ming.
He commended Councilman:
Maintenance becomes the re·
Gilmore
for making arrange- '
sponslbllity of the town and the
ments
for
subscribers to secure:
area must be available for public
converlors
so that they can again:
use.
Columbus station cin,•
receive
lhe
Dredging discouraged
·
Borda was discouraging to their sets.
The
company
sent
a
vaq
from
;
Middleport officials as to the
possibility of dredging, under a which convertors were. to 'be ··
corps program, taking place at dis tributed from the Foodland j
the present marina, to clear the parking lot two days last week.:
channel of slit so that the facility However, the company ran out of·•
convertors ·on 'the first day. ;
could be used by power boals.
The present emphasis In boat Gilmore said lliat names were'
launching facilities Is now !hat taken and the subscribers V{iiC
they be built on the main stem, get the convertors at a later lime. :
Mayor Hoffman said thai a '
the. Ohio River In this Instance,
Is still planned with a '
meeting
while the emphasis when the
marina was built was conslruc· cable television teehnlcalan to ,
lion of the facilities along tribu· discuss alternatives the village •
!aries and not on the main stem . might have In replacing services
Borda suggested that Middle· for cable television as provided
port offlcli!IS send along a letter by Consolidated
of interest to the corps along wllh Communications.
At the suggestion gf Council·
a preliminary design af what the
man
James Clatworthy, co uncil
I own has In mind for projects.
passed
a resolution naming .
Councilman Bob Gilmore said
Meigs
High
School basketball ,
he has difficulty with the corps'
Kllchen
as Its first
player
J.R.
original Involvement In the pres·
ent marina as a boat launching goodwill ambassador to Holland, ,
.
facility and the present policy of Belglm and Germany .
The
resolution
congra
tulates
:
not providing any help In dred g·
Kitchen
for
being
named
to
the:
lng the water so that the facility .
All-Star team which will be ·
can be used lor power boats.
making
the trip to play basket · .
Borda said that the cost of
dredging at the marina has been bali In April. Clatworthy pointed ·
estimated at $125,000 In 1977, and oul that Kitchen will have to ra ise .
attoday's prices, would probably $1,595 to make the trip and sa id ,
that anyone wishing to help can ·
cost about $200,000.
contacl
Fenton Taylor al Meigs:
Council gave I he third reading
to an ordinance for lhe sale of a High School or Mrs. Pat Kitchen. :
Upon the recommendation of
lot near lhe Gllberl Service
Councilmen
Sallerfleld and Wli· .'
Station below Middleport and
adopted the ordinance. The first liam Walters, l1 was agreed to
reading was given to a flood pian proceed on the tnstallallon of a
new street light at the corner of.
Sixth Avenue and Williams '
Street. Present for the meeting in ·
addition to the five council :
members and Mayor Hoffman;
was Clerk Jon Buck.
TOLEDO (UPI) - Alton Coleman and Debra Brown, who
authorities believe were responsible for killing eight people
during a three-month crime
spree, will nol face I rial on their
Toledo charges, officials said.
A Lucas County Common
Pleas judge agreed Monday to
dismissed all four aggravated
murder charges against Aiton
Coleman and Debra Brown.
Judge Robert Christiansen approved a prosecutor's motion
dismissing the murder charges
and an aggravated l)urglary
charge thai slem from the July
You just won't find a
1984, slaying of a Toledo woman
I
better value for your in·
and her daughter.
Prosecutor Anthony Pizza said
surance premium dollar
the two already face four death
than a Homeowners
penalty sentences and that pro·
policy from the State
ceedlng with the Toledo cases
would nol accomplish anything
Auto Companies. As an
further. ·
independent agency re·
"There's no advanlage of alpresenting Slate Aulo,
lowing lhe case logo forward. 11
will only delay Imposition of lhe
we offer lruly outstand·
other penalties ," Pizza said.
ing protecbon packages
The Toledo charges were refor hOuses, apartments
tained as a backup to olher Ohio
and condominium
charges : Coleman was convicted...,..;:~
for the murders of Marlene
Waiters of Norwood and Toney
Story of Cincinnati, Pizza said.

Ohio judge
drops charges

Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Robert
Durst, Portland; Dora Smith,
Pomeroy .
·
Monday Discharges - Flora
Gibson, Middleport; Clara
Young, Racine; Belva Fisher,
Racine; Avis Frecker. Racine.

-

State Auto
ln..,_

........

Write yourself
a loan or a line.
Our Equity Money SeJVice gives you two great ways
to get cash. You can borrow a one-time amount with
a fixed repayment schedule, or set up a revolving
line of cre~it- the choice is yours.
So if you're looking for the best borrowing
·
bargain, unlock the cash value of the equity you've
built up in your home. Ask about an Equity Money
SeJVice line or loan {lt your nearest BANK ONE
•
office, or call us at 992-2133 or at
1-800-824-6954.

--

BANKE.ONE.
,..!Mo uw.
""' 1/toWMd

&amp;.\HIC Ot;l, A1~l"' l, fiCA
AI~ OfltCI ~ ,I)IC

Ohio LoUt&gt;r)'

Rio mentor·
named coach
of the year
-Page 3

'

Daily Number
733
PICK-4

2945

•

at y

Vol. 36, l\lo. 206
.Copyrighted 1987

Partly cloudy tonight, wllh
a low helween 30 and 35.
Mostly cloudy Thursday, wllh
high$ between 110 and 55. The
probability of precipitation I•
near zero through Thursday.

en tine

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 25, 1987

2 Sections. 14 Pag es

26 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc. New spaper

Reagan optimistic as report's release looms
WASHINGTON (UP!) :._ Wi th a report faulting
his conduct of the Iran arms affair just a day
away, President Reagan's mood Is "upbeat and
determined," his chief spokesman says.
Reagan has tried to stay silent on all aspects of
I he Iran arms-Contra aid scandal unttr after the
detailed' report by his special Tower Commission
Is released Thursday and has said liltle even
regarding his own frame of mind.
But without being asked Tuesday, chief
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater tried to erase any
impression left last week by news reports that
Nancy Reagan had taken over the scheduling of
her husband to keep him from overexertion.
"There ltave been no restrictions (on his

' schedule) for acouple weeks now ... particula rly
from the first lady," Fitzwater said. "The
president Is In excellent health."
Laler, asserting the pres ident's worst political
crisis "takes up very little of our lime In the dally
affairs of the White House," Fitzwater said: "The
president's mood Is very high, upbeat and
determined .... I think I he president Is In a very
·. good mood."
Reagan for weeks has waved off questions
about the Iran-Contra scandal on grou nds that the
· panel he appointed under fo rmer Sen. John
Tower, R·Texas, will answer many of them. But
he came close to a cruclai one Tuesday when he
suggested he simply cannot remember il he gave

Cruise missile test renews
faith in key defense weapon
VANCOUVER, British Colum·
bla (UP II - The reputation of
the U.S. air-launched cruise
missile program , tarnished by
past failures, was given a boost
with the suceessful completion of
,a 1,500-miie test flight across
northwestern Canada.
But in Ca nada, queslions re·
main regarding the propr iety of
testing a key weapon of the U.S.
Strategic Air Command 's arse·
nal on Canadian soil.
Tuesday, an Air Force B-52
bomber launched one of the
20·foo1-long missiles high over
the Beaufort Sea, north of 1he
Arctic Circle.
At 500 mph, the ra dar-evas ive
missile zigzagged along a 1,500·
·mile corridor for four hours
1&gt;!1fore parachutln ~..to a soft
landing at ' the Prhnrose Lake
test range on lhe Alberta·
Saskalchewan border .
It was the seventh test of the

cigar-shaped weapon over Cana·
dian territory In the past three
years and the first since las!
winler, when the c'rash of two
missiles caused a public outcry
loud enough to force lhe Cana·
dian governmenlto suspend U.S .
tesl righls .
"We're very pleased with the
success of this mission," said
Maj . Fred,Harrop, an Air Force
spokesman. "Last , year, lhe
missile's reputation was · de·
famed unjustly. The miss ile's
accuracy is uncanny.
''If you' can imagine It as a
football, we can put 11 through
goal posts," Harrop said. "The
problems last year were not with
th~ missile. They were human
mistakes."
111 ~~.B,'l. __CJlll&lt;tda signed a
five-year treaty allowing six
tests each winter. That treaty
wilt soon be extended for another
five years despite opinion polls

showing mosl Canadians oppose
lhe tests .
Every cruise test provoked
demonslratlons across Canada
by church and labor groups.
Even the opposition Liberal
Party, In power when the 1983
test treat y wa s signed, has called
for the suspension of the tests.
The protes ts drawing the most
attention have been the highly
publicized stunts by the Green·
peace environmental group.
This year, a handful of Green·
peac.e protes ters snowshoed sev·
eral miles Into the test range,
hoping to disru pt the test as the
cruise mlssle landed. After hik·
lng overnightlnlo the wilderness,
the protesters failed to locate the
landing area.
Duri~Jt
previou s p rO I£~ls.
Greenpeace has atte mpted to
blockade the tesl ran ge and catch
the low-flying missiles wllh a
giant net. Those attempts also
failed .

prior approval in August 1985 for the firs!
shipment of U.S. arms to Iran from Israeli
stockpiles.
Asked if he was upset with reports his memory
Is faulty on such a major foreign policy point.
Reagan respo~ded to journalists at a picture·
taking session with black economists In the
Cabinet Room :
"I'd like to ask one q,uestlon of everybody.
Everybody that can remember whal they were
doing on August SUi of 1985, raise your hand."
When rro one did, he said, "I think It 's possible to
forget. Nobody' s raised any hands."
Questions about Reagan' s recollection have
centered on reports that he gave conflicling

U.S. Cruise missile launch

answers on the prior approva l question in two
Interviews with the Tower Commission, fir st
saying he did give an OK and la ter saying he did
not.
Sou rces told United Press International early
today that Reagan followed up those confl icting
responses with a letter 10 the Tower board las t
week , and The Wash ington Post said he wrote that
he " honestly had no reco llectio n" of when he
approved the arms deal "and may have al lowed
myself lo be lnllu enccd by the reco llection of
others."
Fllzwaler dismissed as "ou lrageous" and
" nonsense" any suggesllo n Reagan . 76, Is losing
his memory .
•North Pole

Pickets
protest
at mine
in Gallia

I

Arctic~n

1

Missio paraclliMS loa soli
tanding at thel'tllllo £II
I
I
'

LltltTttllllnge.

'

I

:•

Edmonton.

'

. ,,.

'

•;
UNITED STATES

LAUNCH CARRIED OUT - A U.S. Air Force 8 ·52 homber
launched an unarmed U.S. Cruise missile Tuesday on a 1,1!00-mlle
journey across Canada's frozen northwest, despite efforts nl
Grecnpeacc proteslers to scuttle the tesl flight. ( UPI)

State·may need more money
to aid highway bond revenue
COLUMBUS !UP! l
A
member of the committee hear·
lng a resolution to sell $1.8 billion
worth of bonds to repair and
replace highwa ys, bridges and
other parts of the infrastructure
concluded that !he resolution
may need to be supplemenled by
the proceeds from lucky loltery
numl;lers.
"Looks to me like we've got to
have somebody hit !he lotlery,"
said Sen. Ben Gaeth, R·Defiance,
after an environmental engineer
testified before the Senate High·
ways, Transportation and Local
Government Committee Tues·
da y on drinking and waste water
needs.
The resolution would place an
Issue on the November ballot to
amend the Ohio Constltulion lo
allow the stat e to tssue$1 .8 billion
In general obJ.Igallon bonds : If
voters approve the amendmenl,

up to $180 mHlion In bonds could
Other witnesses agreed that
be Iss ued each year for 10 years. the need Is greater than what
The bonds would be tax exempt. could be addressed by the bond
The money would be used lo money .
provide matching funds forcoun·
The problem of deteriorating
lies, townships and cities to build highways and bridges In dlsre·
or Improve highways, bridges, pair Isn't going to go away In 10
water lreatmenl systems and years. said John Callahan. dlrec·
other facilities.
tor of legislative affairs for the
George Haggand, chairman of Ohio Contraclors Associa tion .
the Ohio Environmental Protec· "Bul llhe resolution) Is a good
tion Agency's Infras tructu re way to address It today ,"
Task Force , laid the committee
Representatives of the Ohio
that the task force 's study shows Municipal League and the Ohio
Ohio wHI need an es timated $9 County Commissioners Associa ·
billion over the next10 to15years lion also spoke In favor of lhe
to meet toda y's standards ol resolution.
waste water and drinking water
Columbus real estate devel·
treatment.
oper Jim Rya n told I he commit ·
Haggand said the estlmale tee 'he opposes the resolution
does not include money for solid because Its current language
and hazardous waste manage- does not restrict the use of the
ment, and he said Ohio cannot bond money to exclus ively public
rely on lhe federal government projects.
for much assistance.

Lawmakers seeking funds
for Ohio job service
WASHINGTON t UP! ) - Ohio congressmen are hopeful
Congress will appropriate money to cover a shortfa ll In funding
for the Ohio Bu rea u of Employment Services, bul help may not
be available before some OBES offices are closed.
The congressmen met Tuesday will! Gov. Richard Celes te
and sta te legislators to discuss the problem and wha t can be
done on I he federa l level.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohio, said he Is optimistic
Congress will add $103 million to a supplement appropriallon
bill, The money would take care of Ohio and oth er states that
also are crimped by funding shortages.
Ohio needs about $15 million. co ngressmen said.
"The prospects of getting lhe problem solved before offlc&lt;'
closings are grim because offices are going to be closed next
week," Metzenbaum sa id.
Reps. Bob McEwen, R·Ohlo, and Donald Pease. 0 -0hlo, said
the meeting also discussed the possiblllly of changi ng program
formulas . There have been complaints that Ohio Is being doubly
hurt beca use It faces office closures but alsogets'only 70percen1
or the money col lected for assistance to jobless workers.
Metzenbaum said the money could be taken !rom a $1 billion
surplus In a fund for admlnlslratlon or unemployment
programs.
"It lOBES opera tions) really Is what it (the money) ought to
be used for, " Metzenbaum said.

VI NTON - A lempo rary restraining order issued Tuesday by
Gallla County Common Pleas
Judge Donald Andrew Cox has
restricted Informational picket ·
lng by United Mine Workers of
America members at the en·
trance to the Merco Mining Co.
facilit y near VI nton.
The mine has been the site of a
picket line since Monday .
r Htr Parsons, president of
UMW ' Local 1957 at Raccoon
Min e No. :1 of the Meigs Mines
complex. said it was his under·
standi ng that the picket line was
up protesllng layoffs at the
non ·union mine.
Parsons said It 's been reported
that the layoffs were ordered
because some of 21 employees
working underground at Merco
sought UMW representation lor
pay and safety concerns al the
mine. Approximalely 12 employees working In I he mine were
furlou ghed F rlday.
Members of Locals 1957,1886a1
Meigs Mine No. 2 and 1890 at
Meigs Nine No. 1 have been on
the line lo show support for I he
employees. Parsons said.
Attorneys for Merco, based in
Moxahala , Ohio, flied motions
for an injunction and a temper·
ary restraining order Tuesday .
The latter motion was granted by
Cox.
Merco attornrys charged thai
the picket s ha ve allegedly
blocked the mine . entra nce on
Sherman Hartsook Road In »un·
tlngton Township and "threatened. In tim idated . harassed qnd
coerced" people entering and
leaving lhe mine. according to
lhe motion.
Cox 's order has directed
pickets to erase any threatening
ac tivity and ha s limit ed picket ·
log to more I han two a t the mine
entrance.
"The only reason we' re therrls
for an Informational picket, "
Parsons said. " We're not thcrr to
ICant lnucd on Pa ge 14 1

North files lawsuit
to stop special counsel

Racine water operator
will need certification

WASHINGTON IUPI) - lnde·
pendent federa l prosecutor Lawrence Walsh Is committed to a
court baltle with Lt. Col. Oliver
North, vowing to fight a lawsuit
by the fired White House aide
that would slop Walsh's criminal
Investigation of the Iran-Contra
scandal.
North's defense tactic, tiled
Tuesday at U.S. Distr lcl Court in
Washington, argues t11e law ·
under which Walsh was ap·
pointed Is unconstitutional because separation of government
powers gives the president sole
authorlly to appoint proseeutors
In cases Involving offenses
against the United States.

Racine VIllage Council learned
In a Monday recessed session of a
requirement from the Ohio Envlronmenlal Protective Agency
t~al starting In 1988, a certified
operator must be in charge at the
village waier sys~m .
Council members learned or
the req uirement from an EPA
letter regarding a reeent lnspec·
lion of the village water works.
Glenn Rizer Is to lake the test
tor certification In June.

The suit asks the court to enjoin
Walsh from continuing his crlml·
nal Inquiry and to stop Attorney
General Edwin Meese from
aiding the Independent counsel's
office. Both Walsh and Meese
were named as defendants.
In a siatement TUesday, Walsh

defended the law's constitution·
alit!' and said he would fight
North In court
"The Independent counsel sta·
tute has received exte~slve and
careful study and we are satls·
fled of Its constitutionality ,"
Walsh said. "We shall, of course,
oppose the action."
Walsh was ~ppolnted by a
special three·judge federal court
created under the 1978 Ethics In
Government Act, a law passed In
the aftermath of ~he Watergate
scandal. Brendan Sullivan, an
attorney for North from the
prom,lnenl Wa~hington law firm
of Williams &amp; Connolly, argued in
court papers that only preslden·
tlal appointees may prosecute
offenses against the United
States.
Philip Lacovara, a former
Watergate proseeutor, said In an
Interview North's lawsuit has
merit because It t.s "based on
some constitutional principles
that are quite well· established."

SUIIIECI' OF SPECULATION ...!. Fawn Ball, rip&amp;, former
aecreiary lo Ll. Col. Oliver Norlh, ud her attoraey, Plato
Cacherls, spoke wltll reporters Tuetday Ia WulllnjJioa. Hall hu
become the subjed of •peculation Ia coanedlon wllh her alle1ed
role in the Iran-Contra affatr. (UP I)

A bill from the sheriff' s depart·
men! regarding jail fees for a
prisoner In February 1986, has
been reeelved and was 41acua~
by council. The village clerk has
been authorized to contact the
state auditor's office to deter·
m!M how to pay Ilie 1986 bill wUh
1987 funds .
The Shrine Club Park Board
met reeently to plan the roof and
lighting lor the park stage.
Estimates for materials al-e less
than $500. The committee plans
•

to pay for thr matt• rla ls wl rll

u

SOOO donat ion for the park fro m

lh&lt;' Dave Dilc•s charity golf
tou: nam unt. The park board is
cou.1tlng on vo lu nteer carpcnt tn
to help with thl' project.
Dat es tor free summer •haws
at the park wrrr a lso set fol'tw lrc
a month, beginning In Ma y.
Street Commissio ner Rizer r·r ·
ported that thr c·ytlnder on lhc·
backhoe has been rf'palred. Rc
pairs were also made to two
ca tch basins, and when the
wealher clea rs. Rizer plan s 10
repair a. ca tch basin on Main
Street across from the bus
garaae.
In other action , council au tho·
rlzl!d purchase or two tires for the
~ cruiter, and discussed
.,. IMw clen-11p. A committee of
COIIIICII members was organized
to c1nvass the village and make a
list of locations thai need to be
cleaned up.
Tbe next council meeting wilt
be Monday, March 2, at 7 p.m. ·
i

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              <text>February 24, 1987</text>
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      <name>king</name>
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      <name>miller</name>
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