<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12387" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12387?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T18:22:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43359">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3d5c6ed286769b58864c773295c7984e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6c1d442c477101c05607c209eed68fea</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38884">
                  <text>.

...
,,••

•••

1

.

,
••

t Page..,-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. March 4, 1987

...••
••

?----Local Briefs:·-- Some argue against liability law change
' Bonds forfeited in mayor's court
'

'l

Eleven defendants forfeited bonds and seven others were
fined Tuesday night in thc&gt; co urt of Middlf•port Mayor Fred
Hoffman .
·
Forfeiting bonds were Norris C . De lashmit, Brighton, Tenn.,
$450, posted on a charge of driving while intoxicated; Michael A.
McFadden, Pomeroy, $44, squea ling tires; Wil liam E. Arnold,
Pomeroy, $41; Jackie Johnson, Letart , W.Va., $4.1; Jason T.
Knight , Mason, W.Va , $40; Glenna G. Green, Gallipolis, $40;
George W. Brothers, Pomeroy. S41; David R. Thoma s,
Middleport, $40; Ro land E. Will, Pomeroy, $40, all pos ted on
speeding charges; Eric Priddy . Mlddlc&gt;port, S50, illegal
parking: Ri chard Hall, Middleport , $o0, impropN handling of a
firearm .
Fined were Janet M. Stc&gt;bbins, Bidwell, $1o and costs; Jeffrey
Gil land, Mason, $1:\ and costs; .Ja n icc&gt; C. Stanlc&gt;y, New Haven,
$1:1; Richard L. Gerlach. New Ha vPn, $15 and costs. all on
speeding charges: Brian K . Holly, Midd leport, $10 and cos ts,
squealing tir es: Michael Norris, Pageville, $50 and cos ts,
disorderly conduct; Philip L. Withrow. Shade, $25 and cos ts,
Illegal regi stra I ion : $19 and costs, spe&lt;'ding, and $100 and costs,
fleeing a police officer.

••

'•

Pomeroy mayor fines six
Six defendants wNr fined and four ot hers forfei ted bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Ma.vor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Harry L. Barto n .Jr., Pomeroy, $6:! and costs,
consumi ng alcohol in a motor vc&gt;hicle; Kf' ndell L. Lc&gt;mlev,
Gallipolis Rou te 4, $26:! and costs, i&lt;'aving the scene of an
ac&gt;cident. and Sii.1 and costs. driving under suspension; Neil
Humphrey , Lima, $&gt;1 and and costs. speeding; Garry
Cremc&gt;an s, Rutland. $6:! ami costs, failure to reg ister vehicle,
and $37!\ and costs, drivi ng while in toxica! Pd; Thoma s Stone,
Lo ng Bolt om, $:!75 and costs, clriving whi le int oxicated and S4:1
and costs, left of center; Ricky E. Lunsford, Middleport. $:,0 and
costs, no operator' s lice nse.
Forfeiting bonds were Gay la Haning, Pomet'oy, $49: Belly
VanMatre. Middl eport, $:\0: Lo is Cund iff. Cheshire, $46; Phy llis
McConahey, Pomeroy, $46, all posted on speed ing ch'arges.

Orange tru.~tees meet Thursday
Orange Town sh ip Trustees will hold a special meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the hom&lt;' of Dorothy Ca l awa~. clerk.
Insurance and othrr busin&lt;:'sS will be discussed .

Olive trw;tees schedule meeting
Olive Tow nship Tru stf'es will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m ., at the
ReedsviiiP fire Station.

Scipio trustees to meet Friday
'

Scipio Towns hip Trustees will mt•et Fr id ay, 7 p.m., at the
Pagevi lle Township Building.

•

Free clothing day slat('d Friday
Ga ll ia·Meigs C'ommunit)· Action Agenc.v wil l hold fr~e
cloth ing da,v lor low ·i neom&lt;' persons Friday.! rom 9 a.m. to noon,
at the ag~ n ry's elothing ban k in the old high school building at
Cheshire.

Lodge slate.~ Saturday meeting
Shade River Lod ge No. 4o:l will hold a specia l meeting
Sa turdav , 7 p.m .. with work in l h&lt;' master mason degree.

Country music dance scheduled
A cou ntn· mu &lt;ic dancf&gt; will be held Saturda,v. 8: :1n to 11: :10
a.m .. a tth~ l.ong Rollom C'ommunit~ Building.

'

,
'
~
,•

COLUMBUS tUPI)- A Miami
County woman still bearing the
scars of a painful industria l
accident three years ago urged
state law makers Tuesday to
refrain from changing the law
which permits suits against
defective products.
Melissa Harrod tes tified be·
fore the House Civ il and Com ~
mercla l Law Committee, which
is considering limitations on'
lawsuits against manufacturers .
Harrod exhibited the scars and
'braces she has from ex tensive
injuries sus tained In December
1983 at the St. Regis Corp. In
Troy, Ohio, when she was caught
on part of a high·speed rewind
spindle or a paper laminator.

Ralph R. Waugh
Ralph R Waugh, 72, 641 Krisli
Drive, Bidwell, died Feb. 26 in
Venice Hospital, Venice, Fla ..
following a sudden illness.
Born June 29. 1914, at Swan
Creek in Ga lli a co·unty, son of the
late Wilbur C. and Maude Richi e
Waugh, he was the former owner
and opNalor of the College Hot el
Motel in Rio Grande, retir ing in
1980. He was also the Rio Grande
vi llage marshal for several
yea rs.
At one lime, he owned and
operated a grocery store and was
a former supervisor at Gallipolis
Stat&lt;• Jnst itut!'.
He was a member of the First
Church of God in Gampolis,
Ce nt erv ille Lodge No. :171 ,
f&amp;AM, the Aladdin Temple of
Co lumbus, Ga llipolis 'Shrine
Club, American Legion La ·
fayette Post 27, Vetera ns of
Foreign Wars Pos t 4464, Ancient
and Accepted Scollish Rite,
Valley of Columbus, Clan No. 7,
Southern Oh io Gra nd and Glor ~
ious Order of t he H illbl fly Degree
and the Ga tl ia County Deputy
Sheriff's Assoc iation. He was a
staff sergea nt In the U.S. Army
during World War II.

He was twice marrird, first to
Maude Sw indler Waugh, who
preceded him in deat i) in 1965.
and again to Margaret Davis
Smilh, who survives.
Also surviving are two daugh~
ters, Mrs. Melvin tJ o Ellent
Brown of Ewlngton, and Mrs.
Kenneth t Joan 1 Siders of Galli~
polls; a son, Carl M. Smith of
Middlf'port: nine grandchildren
and three great~grandchi ldren; a

Ohio weather

Thr East em High School Bands wil l prc&gt;sr nt a 7: :10 p.m.
Thursda y conccrt at th e school.
ThP concrt· t will featurf&gt; both .Junior and Senior High Bands
pf&gt;rformlng their &lt;elrctions for thf&gt; District XVII Concer t Band
Co m petit ion. to be held atAihcns High Sehool on lcrida yrvening
and Saturday mor ning.
The high school band will aIS&lt;J f&lt;':l 1ure two s~leelion s b1· sPnior
so lois ts. including trumpl'l solois t. Todd Cl; oy, pla yi ng "A
Trump&lt;' l&lt;'r 's Lullaby" and tuba soloist. .J ~ ff Savrr, play ing
"As lrep In the Del'p."
The public is invitrd to all end both I he co ncert and the district
co mprt ition. Admission is frrr 10 both rvrnts.

South Central Ohio
Mostly clear tonight, wftha low
n&lt;'ar ~0 . Partly cloudy Thursday ,
with highs bet wcen 45 and :\0.
The prohabilltv of precipila·
lion is near zero through
Thursda)'.
Winds will be l 'ariablc ncar Ill
mph tonight.
Ohio E~tcnded Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Fair through the period. Highs
will be in thr 50s Friday, ri sin g
into the 60s Saturday and Sun·
day. Overnight lows will range
from the mid 20s to low :ms early
Fr i da~· . climbing into the 40s
Sat urda v morning and into a
range oi the up(l('r 30s to midd le
iOs earlv Sunday.

•

Meigs Count)· Eml'rgency Ml'dical S.&gt;rvices reports HI ra lls
Tuesda1·.
•Racine at 12:17 a.m. to Bash:~n for Charles RissPIItoVetPrans
• Memorial Hospital : Tuppcrs Plains at o:Ooa .m. to Long Boll om
for Pau l Rav to Vrterans Memorial Hospital : Racine at 7:04
a.m . to Ohio 12i for F:lvira Ba rr to Veterans Mt•morial Hospital;
Middleport at 7::!2 a.m . to Stonewood ApartmPnts for Brad
Hudson to VPterans MPmorial Hospital ; Racine at 9:' o2 a. m. to
Ohio 124 for Rub)' E1·non to VPterans Memorial Hospital:
Tuppers Plains at 10: 17 a.m. to Indian Run Hill for William
HasPIIon to Camden·C'Iark Memoria .l Hospital; Rutland at 12:26
p.m . to Pagetown for ld ;l Young to Vetera ns Mc&gt;moriul
Hospital : Pomcroy at i : :u p.m. to Linr·oln Ht&gt;i ghts for Dawn
.Johnson to Vctcran&gt; Memorial 1-l ospital: Pomero.v at 7: .17 p.m.
to Ewing funer;olliOnw for .lor Hemsley to Vrtera ns Memorial
Hospital: Middlcport at 7: iti p.m . to South Serond Ave. for
Cathy Elias to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

•

NEW 1987 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON .
ASLOW AS

$18650

A MONTH

NO DOWN PAYMENT
'87 TURISMOS or CHAtGERS SLIGHTLY HIGHER
AM-FM Stereo, air conditioning, 7 yr .,
70,000 mile warranty, 60 mos. 9.50% A.
P.R. Local Bank Financing for Qualified
Buyers.
'

GOOD SELECTION

S11 Mtrk Searlu or ICen Rlehar••o•

COOPER
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
395 So. 3rd

MiddlepOrt
992·6421

HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 8 to 6; Sat. 8 to 4

Harrod told the committee St.
Regis since has put a guard
around the offending piece or
equipment that caught her cia·
thing. But she said under the
proposed legislation, she cou ld
have been found at fault, dlmln·
lshlng her. compensation.
"If that (bill ) becomes the law,
what Incentive do the manufac·

Area deaths

EHS band conc(&gt;r/ Thursdav•'

EMS units re.-.pond to 10 calls

She showed the committee the
gr,ease-stained sh~eds of the
sweater which was snared by a
"chuck" on the machine, spin·
nlng her around the shalt,
bouncing her on the floor and
causing her broken ribs, deep
cu ts, and severe burns and knee
Injuries.

Science project
tConti nurd fmm Page 1t
Olympaid with the students with
the 10 top scores in each grade to
receive certificates.
As explained by Bookman, the
purpose of the science day is to
stimulat e interest in sc ience, to
promotc&gt; research, to promote
scientific knowledge, and to
recognize high achievement In
allainlng those objectives.

sister. Mrs. Miriam Saum of
Tucson, Ariz.; and a brother,
Glenn Waugh of Marianna. Fl a.
He was also preceded in death
by three,grandsons.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday
in Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
with the Rev . Paul Voss and the
Rev . Steve Cartwright official·
ing. Burial will be in Swan Creek
Cemetery, Ohio Township.
Friends may ca ll at .the chapel
from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. Thursday.
Masonic services will be conducted at 8 p.m. Thursday in the
chape l by Centcrvillc Lodge No.
371, F&amp;AM.
Militarv gravesidc services
will be performc&gt;d by VFW Post
4464.

Paul

E. Ray

Pau l Eugenc Ray, 66, Long
Bottom. died Tuesday in Vete~
runs Hospital, Pomeroy~
Born Aug. 10, 1920, in Belle,
W.Va., son of the late Birdie and
Chloe Ray .
A retired heavy equipment
operator, he was a World War II
Veteran, having served in the
U.S. Army. He was a member of
the VFW Post 12.14. Coolville.
Three daughters survive:
Brenda C. Elliott, Guysville;
Brenda M. Cunningham. Letart,
W.Va .. and Dianna Kay James,
Stockport; four brothers : Birdie
Jr., Belle, W.Va.; Jack, Detroit,
Bruce and Bob, adtjresses un ~
known; nine grandchildren and
five grea t grandchildren .
Services will be 1 p.m. Fr iday
at Foglesong Funeral Homc&gt; in
Mason wit h Rev. Clyde Fields
officiati ng. Buria l wil l follow in
Zerkle Cemetery.
Friends ma y call at the funera l
home on Thursday from 2-4 and
7·9 p.m.

turers have to make their pro~
duets safe for the innocent people
who have to work around them?"
asked Harrod.
"Let me tell you it Is hard
enough to put your life back
together after serious Injuries
like I have received. Why would
anyone want to make II harder?"
Paul J. Tighe, Brooklyn, Ohio,
who lost his voice to asbestos
cancer, joined the te~tlmony
agillns t the bill.
Tighe, who was compensa ted,
said the bill .would prevent future

.LocaJ ODES

asbestos victims !rom recover·
lng·damages. "Their way would
be closed " he said. \'They're
'
I'
going to be shut out co mpletely.
James A. Lowe, a Cleveland
allorney, acc.ompa nied·Jack Krl,
vanek, Perry, Ohio, bllnded by
hydrochloric acid sprayed in his
face through a defective va lve on
a storage tank.
·
"He Is not here out of greed,"
said Lowe, adding that Krivanek
was compensated. " Hc&gt; is here to
help 1he next person th~l comes
along."

Vrlt'rans Memorial
Tuesdav Admissions - Char·
lotte Eakins, Syracuse; Brad
Hudson, Middleport ; Elvira
Barr, Syracuse; Paul Ray, Long
Bottom; Valer ie Hanstin e.
Pomeroy; Id a Young, Rutland;
Donna Casto, Racine; Linda
.Jarrell, Racine; Charles Price.
Long Boll om.
Tuesday Discharges - Bertha
Zamorano. Robert Parsons.
Joyce Leonard. Ronald Black,
Eht el Hatfield , Janet Venoy,
Paul Searles.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Veterans Memorial Hospital
has contracted with the Medica l
Consultants Imaging Co., based
in Cleveland, for the serv ices of a
mobile CAT !Computerized Ax~
ial Tomography 1 Scanner and
Friday the unit will make its first
visit to the Meigs County facility .
Several local doctors have
schedu led patients for scanning
Friday afternoon before 4 p.m. ,
after which the mobile unit will
be open to the hospital staff and
anyone else Interesting In seeing
the equipment.
The mobile unit will be com ing
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
once or twice a week as needed. It
will be locatcd in southeastern
Ohio and used at th e Oak Hill and
Waverly
_,1 . hospitals as well
. as
li erc&gt;. · · ··-· --By sharing the services of a
single mobile unit, It enables
c&gt;ach hospital to ha ve an economi ~
cal wa,v of using high technology
equipment wit hout the expense
of purchasing units that would
receive onlv part .fimP use . tn
small hospitals.
In talking about the new
service, Walter Scott Luca s.
~.

•••

nurse.

Services will be held at 1: 30
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funera l Home with the Rev .
Steve Nelson officiating. Burial
will be in Beech Grove Cemetery .
Fr iends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7·9p.m . today .
Friends may co nt r ibute to the
Ar thritis Founda tion in his
memory.

Don't Take A Chance.

.

.

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
President Reagan

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

675-4340

omo LOVES
as"'
111 er
America's.Favorite
Hot Dogs and Cold Cuts

2 Sections. 16 Pag es

26 Cent s

A Multim edi a Inc. NewspapOf

A bid from Smith~Ne l son Motors of $352.21 per .
month for 36 month ~, plus a refundable security
deposit of $350, lor a 1987 Pontiac Safari station
wagon, wa s accepted by the commissioners for
use by the county's Childrens Services depart·
ment. Michael Swis her. director of the Meigs
County Department of Human Services recom·
mended Smith-Nelson's bid after reviewing it.
and bids froM Pat Hill Ford and Jim Cobb. The
State Department of Huma n Services will be
paying the lease.
A meeting to discuss the county's participation
in the Buckeye Joln t ~Co unt y Self·lnsurance
program was held this week at the courthouse

wit h all offi ceholders and department heads.
ln Meigs County to explain the program were
Joe Jenkins and Bernard Kinder, of the
self·lnsurarice council. Commiss ioner Richard
Jones said the program was placed In effect
March 3. The commissioners anticipate adopting
a resolution March llto include Meigs County in
the self~ insurance plan.
Scott Lucas and Don Beegle of Veterans
Memorial Hospital reported to the board that
additional parking Is needed In the doctors'
bullding·hospltal vici ni ty. The commissioners
agreed to meet Wedllesday 11 a.m. at the hospital
to discuss the appropria te direction in which to
extend parking facilities .

The med iator who wilt assist in nego tiations for
the county highway department' s union co ntra ct
has not schcdu led &lt;I mcNing date, accord ing to
Phi l Roberts, co unt y enginCC'r. The highway
department co ntract expires midnight March 31.
Ted Warner, highway department superintend·
ent, r eport ed 1hal mat erials for repair of King Hill
Bridge ha ve been received . Warner said highway
workers will probably stu rl the rcpilirs next week
if the weatht•r remain s mild .
In another mallrr rr laled to the highway
departml'nt, Roberts mported h&lt;• lsstillga therlng
estim ates from prin ting co mpanies fo r a new
co unty map.

Ferry
funding
•
receives
Celeste's
blessing

Mobile CAT scan
available at VMH

tContinued from Page 1t
Dr. Manni'ng Daniels, and a
sister, Ruth Daniels, a registered

MULLEN MUSSER

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 5, 1987

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
Bids for a new Meigs Coun ty Sheriff's cruiser
and a lease car for the co unty'.s Children's
Services department were accepted Wednesday
by the Meigs County Commissioners.
The commiss ioners accepted a bid from Jirn
Cobb Chrvrolet-Oidsmobile-Cadillac for a 1987
Caprice four.door sedan with police package, for
·$15,106, less a $5,506 trade· in, for a total cost to the
sheriff of $9,600.
. Cobb assures a IO·week delivery. The commissioners accepted the bid upon recommendation of
Sheriff Howard Frank, who r eviewed Jim Cobb's
bid and a bid from Pa t Hill Ford.

I' •

IDOWNING CHILDS

25·19-1-28·23-5

!;lear tonight, with a low In
the mid 30s. Sunny Friday,
with highs In th e mid 60s. The
llrohahllity of precipitation Is
20 pt•rccnt this afternoon and
ncar zero tonight and Friday.

Commission accepts cruiser, lease car bids

was a very e mot ional

'Services set

Super Louo

at y

Vol. 36. No . 212
. Copyrighted 1987

thin g,'' she said.
The Ohio Civil Service F.m·
ployees Association, represen1 ·
lng the OBES employees, ca lled
for the Ohio General Assembly to
provide stopgap funding the for
the field offices.
Steinbacher did not promote
that idea, saying the s tal e
"bailed us out" in 1986 or the
offices would have been closed
six to 10 months ago.
''The problem is not here wi th
our governor and our lcg isla tors," she sa id . " The problem is
In Washington."
The second round of closings is
schedu led to hit offices in Gallon.
Port Clinton, Chardon, New
Ll'xington. Celi na. Kenton. Cal d·
well, Eas t Liverpool. George·
town and Eaton.
Besides Pomeroy, Phase fll
closings include offices at Co ~
shoc ton, Cadiz, Carrollton, Lon ~
don, McArt hur, McConnelsville
and Millersburg. Ph ase IV in·
eludes Sidney, Upper Sa ndusky,
Van Wett , Waverlv, West Union,
Marysville, Hamilton, Cincln·
nati WI N, Alliance and
Barberton.
Some of the offices in the last
two phases could close earlier if
their leases expire this spr ing,
sai d Steinbacher.
The administrator said 11
states are l1c&gt;ing forced to close92
fed eral l y ~ funded employ ment
serv iees officc&gt;s, and Ohio has 42
of them.

.If There Is A Question

623

•

of pain and energy."
"Our goal is to minimize the
disruption this will ca use our
. clients, our c&gt;mp loyees an d our
wor king partners." said Steinb·
acher, add ing tha t distance to
alternative offices and cost sav ·
ings were the primary criteria
for th e ini tial closings.
Steinbacher said reaction from
office supprvisors ranged from
under standin g to "outright
anger and hurt ."

"II

Daily Number

'

iContimied from Page 1t

ployees w ho have indica ted they
might take early retirement .
"I t is my hope that we :.viii be
able to secure additional funding
In time to deter some of the
schedu led closings," said Ste inb~
acher. "This action does not end
our fight for additional federa l
funds. "
The field offices provide unem ~
ployment benefits and adm inis ~
ter job training and placem ent
programs for the unemployed .
T he first offices to be closed
will be Cleveland Sou th iMaple
Heights), Columbus West, Cincin nati Roselawn, Wilmington,
Fostoria, Barnesville, Wauseon,
Urbana, Niles. Nelsonville. Mas·
sillon and dis trict offices In
Ca nton, Findlay and Chillicothe.
Steinbachc&gt;r said cl aimants
using these offices will have to
travel between five and 20 miles
to other offices. Staff members
not taking earl)! reti rement will
be r~Joca t ed In oth er offices.
Stei nbacher said she does not
anticipate reopening the 14 offi ces becau se th e federal govern·
ment shows no sign of increasi ng
funding In 1988. " I must tell you
candid ly that we don't expect the
picture to improve, " she said.
Steinbacher sa id the decision
about which offices to close were
made with "a lot of thought, a lot

Ohio Lottery
.
.

Southern falls
to Lu.casville
in semifinals
---Page 4

'

••
••
•

administrato r , enthusiastically
described it as another step the
loca l hospita l is taking to provide
loca l residents with the best in
modern medical technology.·
It will save lime and money
and provide a .real convenience
for patient s, while at the same
lime give the hospita l another
service to offer . Lucas said.
No• · patients needing a CAT
Sca n are taken to either Holzer
Medical Center in Galli a County,
or St. Joscph Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
"By having the mobile unit
come here, seriously ill patients
won't have to endure being
tra nspor ted to anot her hospital
for the scanning." Lucas said.
He explained that the CAT
Scanner combines the principles
of x ~ray technology with the
adva nces of comptl'ler ized technology, but unlike x-rays, it
produces a cross·seclion view of
the bod:•. rather than a flal·body
image. It is an invaluable dlag·
nostlc tool which uses low·level
x ~ ray beams to provide an

COMING TO VETERANS - This mobile CAT Scanner comes to Veterans Memorial Hospital on
Friday.
accurate Image of the entire
body, with any organ or tissue
"pictures" In precise detail.
CAT Scanning is an effi cient ,
painless way for a physician to
make an ea rly diagnosis of any
number of Inter nal disorders In a
relatively short time with the
met hod also allowing the physl ~

cian to make complex diagnoses
without having to do exploratory
surgery, accord ing to Lucas.
The mobile CA T Scanner pro·
vides all the features of a
stationary CAT Scanner. Th e
mobile unit requires only 20
minutes to set up and the typical
length of testing for each patient

is 30 minutes . Interpretations of
thc&gt; tes t resu lt s will be made bv
the radiologists at Veterans
Memorial. Hospita l.
The CAT Scan ner Is hou sed In a
van. specifica lly des igned for
tra nsporllng and delivering this
type of service. fl will be
I Continued on Page 12t

Reagan accepts blame for .arms fiasco
WASHINGTON (UP! I - Pres·
· ident Reaga n, accepting blam e
and assuring the nation he has
learned a tough lesson, wants to
"go forward" now that he has
admitted his deals with Iran
beca me a trade of arms for
American hostages.
Without going as far as a public
apology, a contrite Reagan of~
fered one of the most forthcom.
ing presidential speeches In
yea r s Wednesday night with his
12-minute televiscd address to
the nation on the Iran armsContra aid scandal.
Reagan took full responsibility
for the consequences of his
, 1R· month overture to I ran's radi·
cal Is lamic government and for
the scheme to divert profi ts from
the secret arms sales to Nicara ·
guan Contra rebels. And he
admitted for I he first lime his

policy resulted in a swap of arms
for U.S. hostages in Lebanon:
But in his first substantive
comment on the crisis In three
months, Reagan reaffirmed he
had rio prior knowledge of the
possibly criminal Con tra diversion scheme and, fighting 10
res tore his credibility and public
tr ust. urged the nation to help
him gel his wounded presidency
back on track.
" What should happen when
you make a mista ke Is thi s- you
take yo ur knocks: you learn your
lessons and then you move on,"
he sa id. "You put things In
perspective. You pull your cner·
gies together. You change. You
go forward ."
Reaga n said moving ahead " In
no way diminishes the lmpor·
ta nce of the other continuing

investigations" into his wor ~t
crisis, "but the business of our
country and our people must
proceed ."
The president vo iced confl·
dence that the trail of the missing
millions of dollars In arms sa le
profit s will be· traced by two
special comm itt ees In Congress
an d Independent pro secutor
Lawrence Walsh -three lnvrstl·
ga t ions that will keep the sca ndal
In the public eye at least through
the summer .
" I didn't kn ow about any
diversion of funds to the Con ~
tra s," he said. "But as president,
I cannot escape responsibility....
Aspersonallydlstastefulasiflnd
secret bank accounts and dl ·
verted funds, as the Navy would
say, this happened on my
watch .' ·

Heeding the advice of fri,~ nd s
and foes alike. Reagan welcomed
the critical repor t tss.ued last
week by his own pr esiden tia l
Tower Com mission, SP,Caklng of
his "wrenching ordeal while the
board conducted a three· month
review .
" Let's start with thc&gt; most
controversial part," he said. " A
few months ago 1 told the
American people 1 did not trade
arms for hostages. My heart and
my best inten tions stil l tell me
that Is true, butt he facts and thP
evidence tell me it Is not."
The president stuck hy his
Insistence the deals "bega n as a
strategic opening to 1ran," but
admitted the,v "deteriorated lntn
trading arms for hostages....
There are reasons why It hap·
pened, but no excuses . f.t was a
mista ke."

Record Super Lotto jackpot to be split three ways
CLEVELAND iUPII -Ohio's
reco rd $27.7 million jackpot from
Wednesda y's Super Lollo drawing will be split three ways, state
lottery o!flclal s sa id toda y.
Eac h share is worth $9,236,116,
which will be paid in 20 annual
insta llmen ts of $:!69.444, after
!edrra l taxrs.
The six number s drawn wet·e I ,
5, 19, 23, 25 and 28.
An additiona l 829 tickets
matched fi ve of the six numbers
for $441 each, i0,4:\5 tickets had

four correct numbers for $.14
each, and 626,679 ticke ts had
three correct numbers for $3
each.
The drawing ended the second
busiest week of sales for any
game In the 13·year·hlstoryof the
Ohio Loitc&gt;rv. she sa id.
Sales for. th e week reac hed
$22.5 million as the $1 ti ckets
were going at a rate 17,000 a
minu te on Wednesday.
"1 had more lottery ticket sal es
before 10 this morning than what

I usua lly have on an average
da y," sa id Morris Hellman,
owner of Cleveland delL "People
who usually play $1 a week on the
Lotto are spending $30, and
people who usually spend $30 are
spending $100."
Loltery officia ls upgraded the
jackpot to $27.&gt; million Wednes·
day. The jack pot was Init ia lly
pla ced at $20 million, then i't was
upgraded to $2~ million Friday
and $26 million Monday.
The $27.5 million pr ize was the

fourth ·largest jackpot ever In
North America.
The North American record of
$41 million In an August 1985 New
York drawing was split among
t;tree wlnnlng~tlckets,lncludlng a
group of 21 factory workers.
The largest single winner was
Chicago's Michael Wittkowskl ,
who won $40 million In a Sep·
tember 1984 Illinois drawing.
When newspaper carrier Walter Morgan of Cen terville, Ind ..
won a state· record $25 million In

an llpril 19R6, saiC'S totaled just
$17.2 million for the week. The
top week of sales at $25 mi ll ion
was for the $24.6 million Ohio
Lollo ja ckpot August 19!!4 .
Players had the option of
picking th eir own six numbers
from a field of 44, or allowing a
lottery machine to au tomatl ca lly
select their numbers.
"Traditionally Auto Lollu ac ~
counts for abou t 40 pcrcent th~
play and 50 percent of our Super
Lotto winners." Bloomber~ said.

lly NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stull Writer
Gov . Richard Ce leste "hus
given his bll•sslng" to the releasc
of $100,000 tor a fC'rry while the
Pomeroy -Mason Bridge Is closed
for repairs later thi s month,
accord ing to Scali F.llsar, aide to
Sta te Sen. Jan Michael Long,
D ~ C ir c lP vll le .

The Ohio Department ofDevel·
opmen t Is now working to finalize
tran saction dt'lalls, says Ellsar,
who anlll'ipotcs an official an·
nou ncemcn l of thr tran sac tion
"will be forthcoming very soon. "
. Long and loca l com munity
leaders have been worki ng fran ·
tlci! lly the past few weeks to
secure sta te ai d for the ferry
service. And although the funds
havr not been offi ciall y released,
Pomeroy ArC' a ChambC'r of Com·
me ref' Prrs idcnl Bill Nease
repor ts that ferry operator Dar·
rell Rodgrrs of Clinton, Iowa, "is
already on his way to Pomeroy"
with his ferry .
Locally, buslnpss es and lndl·
vldua ls from PomNoy and Ma ·
son have donal&lt;'d approximately
$12,000 of addit iona l monies
ncedf'd to put I he Iowa ferry In
servi ce. II drive for the funds has
been underway sin ce thr
weekend .
Donating to thc proj ect, say~
Nease, an· Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co.. Ba nk One, CitY,
Loan , The Fabric Shop, Crow's
ramily Restaurant, ElbcrfPids
Department Store, .Jim Cobtl
Chov ro l&lt;'t · 0 ld smoblle·Cadlllac,
Krt,ger·s and K &amp; I Jewelers, all
of Pomer oy : Pl'oples Bank,
Point ·Mason Au to Gta", Mason
furniture Co., Dr. Fred R.
Ca rs ~ v. Mr . Irv ing Karr and the
Mason VolunteN rlrl' Depart ·
mPnl , all of Mason
Of the local shore, $6,!liH) Is to
bc placPd in esr row along with
$15,0011 from thl' lorry opera tor,
as as surllnCf' ro M:.~son Mu yor
A~n es Roush that any damages
to Pomcro,l ' Stn'et l rom the
landing to U.S. :1:1 II' ill br· r~ palrPd
oncp IIH· l&lt;'r n Is no longco·
ncrded.
Thf' remain i n ~ $:,,rKJ() wi ll be
paid dlowttv to the operator
when thP ft•rn· goes Into scrvlce.
Betsey 1: I I I in, a devc&gt;topmcnt
specialist wi th ODOD , was In
contact wi th th f' Mrlgs C'ountv
Comml.ss lon&lt;·r' Wr•dncsda\' to
( Conllnurd on Page' 12

i

Finalists, runners-up set for county schools' spelling bee
Following contests In the var~
lous sc hools, fin alists and
runners -up have been named fo r
the annuai Meigs Coun ty Sp~ llln g
Bee to be held at 7: 30 p.m.
Monday i! l the Southern High
Schoollnb Racine.
Donald Dudding, a Southern
High School staff member , will
pronounce thc words for the
contestants and judges will be
Richard Robert s. . Eastern Dis·.
trlct superintendent; Dan Mor·
rls, Meigs Local District superln·
tendent; and Bob Ord, Southern
District superintendent.
All oft he finalists will receive a
certificate of award for repres·

en ling their school In the county
event and a plaque will be
presented to the school attended
by Monday night's first place
winner.
The champion and runner ~ up
Monday will receive awards and
both will represent Meigs County
In the 39th an nua) Herald·
Dispatch Spelling Bee to be held
atlO a.m. on Aprll25 at Marshall
University In Huntington, W.Va.
Planning Monday night 's
county event are John D. Riebel
Sr., Meigs County superintendent of schqols, and Meigs County
school supervisors Russell
Moore and John Costanzo.

The champion of each school
will represent the respective
school Monday with the nmnerup competing In the county event
If the champion .Is not able to
all end.
The champion and runner-up
respectively, of each school lor
the county bee are:
Ches ter Elementary - Eric
Jacks, fifth grader, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Jacks: Joe
Karschnlk. fourth grader, Mr.
and Mrs. Jon Karschnlk.
Eastern Junior High - Su·
zanne Clay, eighth grader, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Clay ; Sherr!
Wolfe, seventh grader.• Mr . and

Mrs. Tim Wolle. Long Bottom.
Theron Durham.
Riverview - Karen Morris,
Meigs Junior High - Raena
sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Eblin, eighth grader, Mr. and
Morris ; Ralph Stewart, sixth Mrs. Gerald Eblin : Lori Pierce,
grader, Sue Rockhold.
eighth grader, Mr. and Mrs .
Tuppers Plains Elementary- Mike Pierce,
Missy Harris, filth grader, Mrs.
Middleport - William Chil·
Shirley Harris; Robert Reed, dress, fourth grade, Tamara
fifth grader, Mrs. Donna Reed.
Childress; Chuck Legar, fourth
Bradbury - Wendy Clark,
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Legar.
Clark; P.J. Chadwell, sixth
Pomeroy- Sandy Morris, fifth
grader, Mr . and Mrs. Paul grader, Mr. and Mrs. William
ChadwelL
Morris; Roger Roush, sixth
Harrisonville - Jennifer Car- grader, Mr . and Mrs. Roger
man, filth grader, Mr. and Mrs. . Roush.
Dennis Carman; Melissa Our·
Rutland - Rachael Hyst&gt;ll,
ham, sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. fifth grader, Mr. and Mrs . Randy

Hysell: Lor r l Bur nrm, fllih
grader, Mrs . Stella Burncm .
Sa lem CcntN Vlrglnl•
Shuler, sixth grader, Mr. aria
Mrs , Da vid Lucas; Cha.• ttty
Swea t, &lt;lxth grader, Wanda
Sweat.
Salisbury - Shell y Smith,
sixth grader . Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Sm ith; Misty Hayman , sixth
grader, Mrs . Dar lene Shain.
Letart - Brandl King, filth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas
King ; Elsie Bu ffington, sixth
grader, Vera Bu ffin gton.
Portland - Crys tal Powell, •
sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
I Continued on Page 121

&gt;

'•

'

' '

�Thursday, March 5, 1987

'
•

The Daily ·Sentinel
lJ I Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-M,\SON AREA

~~

~m~ r"'T""L..L'--.. ~c.~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AliSistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A ME M BER of The United PrPss International, Inland Daily Press
1ssoclation and thC' Americ an Newspaper Publis her s Association.

A day tO remember _______G_eo_r_ge_,R_._P_la_ge_nz_.

It waS for me probably the
most memorabl ~ experience In a
liretlme of ch urchgolrig. It occurred in a Seventh-Day Adv!'n l is t Church.
,
For the fi rs t 35 or 40 minutes
this Saturda y morning service
had been anything but memorable. it had dragged. It wa s eight
minu tes late in starling and the
first six minu tes after that were
given ov!'r to announcements by
the minister.
But aft er th e sermon something happened that has .made
this service Jive in my memory.
We were preparing to receive

· the Lord's Supper when th e
mini ster instructed the men In
the congregation to rellre to one
room downs ta irs and the women
to another room. I followed along
with '30 other men. When we got to
the room , we all stood around in a
circle.
The man next to me asked, "Do
you have someone to serve·you?"
When 1 said no (not knowing what
he was referring to). he said he
would be gl ad to serve me.
"'What are we going to do?'· I
asked .
·
"We ar e going to wash each
other's feet, " he said .

I looked around the room and
saw several palls (llled with
water , some dippers and about 20
wash ba sin s - along with some
towels.
" What do I do?" I sa id .
''I'll gel the water ," said my
partn er . "You t akeoff your shoes
and soc ks and sit down on a
chair."
After 1 re moved my socks, he
knelt down and washed and dr ied
my feet, then I put my socks and
shoes ba ck on and I washed and
dried his fee t. The ot her m en
were doing the same for one
another.

~ LETTERS OF OPIJ\ JCJN &lt;Jff' WC'Icomc. They sh ou ld IX' l ess lhon 300 word s
ll'lnJ': .•All 11:'1 t{&gt;rs ar(' su bj C'C'II o ed I tlng and must b" sig ned v.·Jt h name, addrf'ss and
teleph onf' nu mber. Nfl W1 Signrrl ll.'l ters w!ll b£' publl!) he&lt;l. Lcncrs should IX' In
go?£~ l asH.', addr0sslng

Issues. nol penona lili es.

~ashington Window

Concern touches parent
M_y sor. Todd. while playing
fo r Southern at Meigs
High School Wedn esday even ing
t f'eb. 2ot was inju red . I would
like to com ment on thi s.
I wou ld l ike to th ank Carol.vn
Tripp from Ea stern fo r her hrlp.
C'awlyn is from Ea strrn but she
djdn ' t h&lt;'s lt atr to look at Todd 's
a~kle. Peoplr may go to ba&lt; krl bai! gamrs and root for their
srhools bu t thr man y pcoplr who
ask~d mr abou t Todd provrd to
me thatthry still have the kids at
hea rt .
I would also like to thank Mr.
Da~c Har r is for the co ncern he
hu s for lhr kids ans the job
WM PO has donr announci ng thr
b~ l lgamrs this yea r .
People would not believe thr
peop le who have asked about
Todd The co ncern the kids felt
and the kids w ho have stopped by
the house to check on· Todd's
co ndi tion. I nc'-rr go t bark from
ba s k~tball

A bit. of

Miner.~ville hi.~tory

no ~I O U know wha t year Minr i' S·
ville was fo unded'~ Wh)' wa s it
founded and wh)' named '' Would
vou like 10 t'r&lt;l d th e history of
each of I hP fi ve r hu !'C h~S of 1hi s

tOw n'!
Do ) "OU kn ow the his tory of thr
Dutchtown Sc hool• Want toser a
good picture of this three-room
sc hool house• Would _vou like to
see a picture ol the pupil, , grades
one through four. of the 1!115-16
era : El'&lt;'l.v n St!'wart Luck&lt;•. with
a l arge l'i bbon bow in her hair.
Meigs Count y Clerk of Courts of
many ye;u·s:
Harold Da na
Brown , wit h his hai r· all groomed,
a Pomeroy dentist for about 10
years: Albert Rumml'l Hawsr,
author of "Vinegar Bov'" and
many other religious writings,
that energetic and scholas tic
student and 31 more. all identified. wi th only one In qu es tion?
want to tak e a look at the
te,achcr ? Do you know what
became of th l' school bell?
I

I

1

Pleasa nt V~lley Hos pil al till 1
a.m. Thursda y morning. I went
to Southern High School and
talked to Coach Caldwell thi s
morning (Feb. 26 1. J told Coach
Ca ldwell that I would have comr
up and told him of Todd 's
condition but I was a fraid he
would be In brd. His comment
wa., , ·· t was awak e. I couldn' t
slerp worr yi ng about him ."
Southern fan s, be glad that you
havr coac hes such as Coach
Caldwell and Coach Reeves and
Coach Pullins. I th ink they haVI'
done a hellu va job. So people of
Southern, IPI" s go out and suppor t
our l&lt;'a m and good luck to
Southern. Also to the people of
Southern who showed all the
concern . Todd's ankle was not
broken and he hopes to get ba ck
to play ing before the sPason
ends.
Will io m T. Kimes
Raci ne

·would you like to know how

in any coal mines there have bern

In this town , along the r iver !ront,

and what ty pes? Want to read
about the daring fea t performed
during the building of th e Whil e
Rock Salt Furnace smokes tack ?
Th r mines are gone and scaled,
you have to dig to find them. and
pvrn m~ grandchildren ca n"t
believe that there could have
been a school hou se where it once
stood. The old Welsh and German
Churches are no longer . On ly
their hi story re main s.
Many years of resea rch ha ve
gone Into co mpiling the above
i nform ation for your pleasure,
about 40 yea r s for answer to the
first ques tion . f
You ca n read all about these
hlstorleai events In th e new 1987
Meigs County History Book
about to go to pr int. Have you
ordered yours? If not, It Is not too
la te. Send in your order now.
Learn history about your own
home town . Someone ~as probably written something that will
make you say, " W-e·l-1, I didn't
know that. ··
'VIctor L 'Berger Brown
Pomeroy

my

eyes.

At this point. I could not help
but wonder how the wom!'n (with
th eir more elaborate stocking
getups) were managi ng th is
operation in the ot her room . So I
asked.
I wa s told that many women
just put th eir stockinged ft'{'d into
th e water in the ba sin. The
stocks, I was assured. dry
Then we all we nt ba ck Into the
"I he bread of God" and the " win e
of God" . This is so mething that is
done in Seve nth -Da y Adventist
churches fou r ti mes a year.
T his demonstration of a half a
million member s in the Uni ted
Sta tes is ort hodox in many of its
beliefs, but IS dls t inguis hed from
other churches in two ways .
The Adventi sts worship on
Sa turd ay because they feel thi s Is
the Sabbat h ,ordain ed in the
Bible. Other Christia ns believe
the Sabbath was changed to
Sunday after Christ's resurrec tion , but Adventists disput e this .
They say there is no evidence of
th is in the Bibl e.
The Gospel of John says that
the disci ples. after th e resurrection , ga thered together on "t he
first day of the week. "

was.

Letters to the Editor

When we were finished, we
made a circle aga in and several
of the men gave th anks for what
the Lord had done for them or
they asked for our prayers for
themselves or for somebody in
need .
I ca n' t re member when I hBVP
been so moved by anything that
has gonr on in a church service.
The simplicity w ith which thi s
act of humil ity was carried
through and the unsel fcon sc iou sness of ever yone (with the
exception of me) brou ght tears to

sanctua ry whe1·e we partook of

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHI NGTON I UP! I - The very thought that Sen. Lloy d Bentsrn,
0 -Texas, will have to cal breakfast alone tears at the heart.
No scr ambl ed eggs and lobbyists, no pancakes and PAC directors,
no orange juice and $10.000 checks.
After a week of embarrassing notoriety, the wealthy Texas senator
aban doned his donuts for dollars sc heme under which some 200
Washingt on lobby ists and PAC directors were given the opportunit y
to break bread with him on ce a month for a fi ve- figure campaign
co ntribution.
Retreating as gracefully as possible, Ben t sen canceled the
break fasts and ca lled the idea a ··doozy of-a mi stak e." It certai nly

·'

By GENE CAD DES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI )
Dennis Hopson got some comfortin g words Wednesday ,nigitt
from Herb Williams, the guy
whose Ohio State career scoring
record had just brok en.
"He just told me I was going
to make a lot of money and
congratulation s, " said Hopson ,
whose 15-!oot jumper with 14:31
tell In the game against Florida
International made him the
leading scorer &gt;n Buckeve
history.
·
It was his 29th and 30th poi nts
of the gaine, giving him 2,013 in
his four years at Ohio State,
surpassing the 2.011 the 6-foot-10
Williams scored in his four years,
from 1978 to 1981.
Hopson finished with 36 poin ts
for the game as the Buckeyes
coasted to a 106-70 win over the
Sunblazers .from Miami, Fla.
"I feel grea t," said Hopson,
who earlier in the day wa s
announced as the UP! Big Ten
player of the year in a vote of the
coaches. "I'm going to si t around
and think abou t this a little bit.
I've never broken any record s
before."
But Hopson. a 6-foot -5 senior
forward from Toledo, won't have
long to savor the record because
less than 72 hours away looms
Indiana and the final Big Ten

quickl y.

=D ollars for donuts
comes to an end

What ever hi s intent - and there is no reason to believe that Bent sen
is any greedi er than other senators in pursu it of ca mpai gn moneythe idea had ail the trapp ings of a co lossal ripoff.
Here was Bent se n, the new chairman of the Senate Finance
Commiltee, telling lobbyists and the PAC directors their views would
get special note at th ese not -so- intimat e breakfa sts fo r a $10.000
campaig-n co ntribution .
How could any lobby ist - ce rt ai nly any with client s who have
interest in trade or tax legislat ion- say no? It was, In effect, close to a
holdup.
And why didn' t Bentsen rea lize th at these same people, ali
pol itical ly aware, would make contributions to his 1988 election
ca mpaign, donu ts or no donuts.
Perhaps he was lulled by the precedent of his predecessor as
chairman, Sen. Bob Packwood. R-Ore., who held the sa me kind of
brea kfa sts, probably not as filling, at only $5,000.
To his cr edit. Bentsen called off the breakfa sts, leaving only
ques tioos of judgment on his part and that of his po litic~! advisers.
But where does that leave Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd
who gathered some 200 of the lobbyis ts and PAC directors who were
offered, throug h an aide, a chance to sit down and chat with Byrd on aregular, Infor mal basis? That, too, costs $10,000.
Unlike Bentsen, By rd showed no Inclination to disband this
exclusive club that promises access to the single most powerful
individual In th r Senate for the nex t two years:
Defendin g the pr ac tice. Byrd said he cannot raise the money
needed to run a campaign in his borne state of Wes t Virginia , which is
believable. At the same time, probably no senator Is more s!'cure
poi it ica lly than Byrd.

Hopson sets OSU . scoring
record _ in Buckeyes victory

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 5. 1987

Commentary

Star was under scrutiny
WASHINGTON- Was Yankee
Doodle Dandy a dir ty pinko ra t ?
The FBI's suspicion s that the
late James Cagney was a com munist sympathizer dogged th e
Hol lywood star for years, even
th ough the governmen t co ncl uded as early as 1943 th at there
was no substance to doubt s about
Cagney's pat r lotisll) .
Thi s decision, made the yea r
after Cagney's Oscar-winning
performance as son g-a nd-dance
man George M . Cohan in the
superpa triotic wartim e movie
"Yankee Doodl e Dandy" didn ' t
keep the FBI from repeatedly
dredging up it sold suspicions ,
which dated back to unsubstantiated charges made by anonym ous,tipsters inl938. Whenever the
FBI had occasion to mention
Cagney in m emos and report s,
the vague charge of communist
sy'm pa th y w as sure t o be
mentioned .
Indeed, thi s is a common
theme in m os t of the FBI' s files
on celebrities: we have been
reporting on them for more than
a deca de.
As late as 1968, wh !'n President
John. on asked the FBI for
background information on do-

zens of celebrities who might be
invit ed to the White House, the
burea u r eported that Cagney had
been the subj ect' of a security
investigation . Th e report did not
add "thal allega tion s against th e
movie tough goy had never been
con!lrmed.
The G-men's dar k suspicions
about Cagney are difficult to
fathom . W. C. Lyles, a Para mount producer for 50 years and
a pallbearer at th e star 's fun eral
last year, was astonished wh en
told about hi s lifelong friend' s
recently released FBI tiel by our
associate Stewart Harris.
Lyles sa id Cagney w as one of
the most patriotic America ns he
had' ever know . Indeed , the
producer recalled that Cagney.
who rose from the sidewa lks of
New York to the top of the movie
world , had .been known to shed
tear s during the playing of "The
Star-Spangled Banner."
The FBI''s misgivings abo-ut
Cagney may have beg un in 1935.
when he starred in Warner
Brothers' "G-Men," playing an
FBI agent. An 1terna l memo
indicates that the' Bl declined to
coo perate with W ·ners on the

}ach· Anderson &amp;

movie " because it was inappropriat e". Th is m ay have been due
to Cagney's previous roles as
ga ngsters a nd ha rd -bitten

convicts.
Cagney's actin g abil it y apparenlly go him off the hook thai
time. The film wa s a crit ical
success: an FB1 agent summarized the San Francisco Chron icle's rave review with an Internal
memo: "Th~ picture t'!'m oved all
pret ens e of glamour from th e
publi c enemy, b,ut still mana ged
to create hugel y effective entertainnienl , all on th e ri ght side of
the law. ... The picture gives
Cagney. a for mer public enemy
No. l , a new role as a two-fisted
government agent operating
against criminals."
But these brownie points weren' t enough to prevent an FBI
investigation three ye ars l ater,
aft er unnamed tipsters claimed
that Cagney wa s secretly con tri·
buting $100 a month to th e
Commu nist Part y through an
attorney. The charge w as never
confirmed.
The FBI did conclude that
Cagney donated money to lettuce
st riker&lt; In Salina s, Calif. , and to

}o.~ep h

BELLE CHASSE , La. (NEA l
- With the memory of the 1986
poli tical campaigns fading ra pid ly, it's fashionable to focus on
early maneuvering for the 1988
presidential election - but !irst
there are so me Int riguing, lit tlenoticed 1987 cont ests.
Voters in three sta tes Lou isiana. Missi ssippi and K entucky - elect governors In this
odd-numbered year . The race In
Louisiana Is likely to be especially fa scinating if flambo ya nt
Democratic Gov . Edwin W. Ed wards seeks re-elec'llon .
A politici an characterized as
irreverent by hi s friends and
outrageous by his enemies, Ed wards has twi ce thwarted federal prosecutors who secured
criminal ind ict ments char ging
hlin with fra ud and racketeering .
The first trial ended with a hung
j ury and the second In acquittal.
In a recent stat ewide survey
commi ssioned by the Baton
Rouge Morning Advocate to
ascertain vo ter perceptions of
polillcl ans, Edwards scored near
the bott om, with 59 perce nt of the
re spondent s viewing him
unfavorably.
In r~sponse to another ques tion, 42 percent of those surveyed
thought he was doing a "poor"
job as governor, while another 21
percent classified his perfor-

mance as "not too good."
Nevertheless, some astute observers here believe he has a fair
chance to win another term , In
part because his notoriety will
give him th e advantage o! name
recognition In the large !leld of
Democrat s gubernatorial
contenders.
The leading ca ndidates In that
field are believed to be Rep. W. J.
"Billy" Tauzin, who shares Ed-

wards' Caj un heritage , and Rep.
Buddy Roemer, an articulate
and !ormldable contender whose
fa ther was a senior aide to
Edward s and was conv icted on
feder al criminal charges In 1981.
Bowing out of the race In r ecent
we!'ks · were three potentiall y
strong Republican contender s former Gov. David C. Treen,
former Rep. W. Henson Moore
and Attorney General William J.
Gu ste Jr . Their w ithdrawal
means that Rep. Rober t L.
Livingston will be the lead ing
GOP ca ndidate.
In nelghborhlng Mississippi, a
const itutional am endment approved by th e voters last November makes Incumbent Democrallc Gov. William All ain the
first chief executive in the state's
history eligible to seek a second
lerm .
But that won't help All ain turn
back a primary challenge from
State Auditor Ray Mabus, whose
ceaseless cru sade against corrupt local government has alienated many of the-st ate' s politi c ians but captured th e
Imagination· of Its voters.
Th!' leading Republican ca ndidates, according to the Southern
Political Report, an author itative Washington ba sed newsl etter, are fprmer state party leader
Charles Pickering and businessman Jack Reed .
In Kentucky, Democratic Gov.
Martha Layn e Colltns Is constitu tionally prohibited from seeking
anoth er term . but the probablE&gt;
Democratic field Includes the
lieutenant governor, Steve B ~
shears , and two former governors, Julian Carroll and John
Brown .
Until recently, Republicans
were especially ent husiastic

TUCSON, Ariz. IUP II -Scott
Balles pitched two per!ect Innings and Cory SnydPr homered
to highlight an Intra squad ga me
Wednesda y at th e Cleveland
Indians' spring training camp.
A tram guidl'd by minorleague manager Orlando Gomez
took a 2-0 decis ion over Steve
Swisher, also a manager in the
Indians· orga niza tion . The game
was halted in the top of the l ith
inning after Snyder homered off
Ernie Camacho.
Gomez' team had six hit s.
including Ron Tingley 's RBI
single, while Swisher's squad
was limited to singles by Brook
Jacoby and Tonv Berna zard .
Pltc.hers used . in the game
Included Bailes, Phil Nlekro. Ken
Schrom, Greg Swindell, Tom
Waddell, Dennis L amp and EdVande Berg.

th e Loyalist side in th e Spani sh
Civil War. Agents part ic ularly
questioned Cagney's efforts with
another movi E• gangster, Edward
G. Robinson. to buy the L oya lists
two ambulances. The L oyalists
were helped and eventually dominated by the Soviet Uni on in
the ir fight aga inst Gen. Fran cisco Franco, who was aided by
Adolf Hitler and Be ni to Mussolini. Such Loya list support wa s
subsequently and euphemist!- ·
cal ly labeled by government
Red-hunt ers as "prema ture antl-

l'nltt·d

rr•·~ !&gt;

r;~llnp.

coach . Th r

fini shed

Chippewas

a 20 7

with

OVf11'all

record und 14-2 in t lwconfrrenr·c.

R Ill, CPA

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICE

f.ll1

b 18 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh. 457119

PHONE

614-992-7270
If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
about what they ca11
do for your company
,.- call us. We would
-be happy to visit with
no obligation to you .

ALL-TIME BUCKEYE SCORING LEADER - Ohio State's
Dennis Hopson is congratulated hy Herb Williams tmd awarded
the game ball alter breaking William s' OSU career scoring r ecord
ol 2,011 points In St. John Arena In Columbus Wednesday night.
Hopson went on to tally 36 points during the Buckeyes' 1116-70
victory over Florida lnternationa,rl..l.!~~----------L------------

Littlefield named
honorable mention
Rodney Littlefield, Racine, a
junior . basketba ll player for
Wittenberg University, Spr ingfield , receiv&lt;'d honorable men tion on the Ohio Athletic Co nfere n ce M en' s Ba s k etb a ll
All -Academic Team .
Littlefield' s 25 -game statis tics
place him as the Tigers fourth
leading scorN with an average of
9.3 points per ga me. Witt0nbcrg
compiled a regular season record of 18-7 under th e leaders hip
o! Coach Larry Hunter.
Littlefield · graduated from
Southern High School in 1984. He
is majoring business management at Wittenberg. He is the son
of Daniel and Shirley L;ttt efield,
Racine.
In order to be eligibl e for this
honor, a player must ha ve at
least a 3.00 cu mulative grade
point &lt;JVf•r&lt;:.~g('. bP ar lras.r a

(with flr!tl · pla~· • · uh'!'&lt; und l'lnn-

nt~trti!O

ln..J

In p.:trt•nlllt"'''"' l:
fllllo!O o\ .\ .\

Tt•aru
l'ul nl~
1. K•·th·rlnrc ,\lt t•r 1'!'.!1 1Ifl. I )
~'9';
'!. C'lo•\'dil . •tn~t· pll t:H I I"":! I
~U
:a. Rarht•rtmi (:&amp;1 Jill- '!)
l!lti
I. c ·~•nton MtKinl••,\' (Ill-'!)
1':~
,\. ToiNSuSI . I'r:tnds (Ill-~ I
1~:1
li. lby tun Uunhar tl'- H
I II
~. nnt•lnnan ",'nudu;anl r ) l 117·:11
~ :1
11. C'li'\'tof am d st. l~n11tlu :o. tl'i·:O
Itt

I . l ..nraln St•nlur

till· ~ 1

. . aoz.$199

~~t 1080
WESTLEY'S
CLEANER

~:1

· 1 1'~ 111 1 I l l
1'!. ·~·'' IJu•rP'"'' :19; 1:1.
fll•tn•·n·n .. •k 111 :r;; ~ tl . (llo- 1 llttunl
\ 't•rnun. .\1 1.1~" llhm l';orry. W"rthl nll·
Inn

LIMI T2

N500

WHITE SIDE WAU

.\11

Ill. Warn•n Hardin,; till- '~ 1
!oM•t•nnd l t•n: II . Stuv; \\ :t l~h
1~:

and ('nlum~•~ Brnuk han•n, I! l'lll'h; • 1 ~.
(iL~IIIp~tll&gt;o It 1!1. ,"ildnt•J !I; '!II. l 'lndnnall

ruro·•"'

:\1 1trl;u~ll.
fi~~J&gt; ..

.\ .\
P n lnl~
'?!I~

Tt •anl
1. ntwr lln 1~ 101 1~11-11 )

t.

•

'

!'i''"

(.,~• Mn on

ltl\11• C'! ) 1 ~ .. 111

~ .IIi

:1. (ir•••• n(lr ld Mi· f 'laltl Ill ( '!fi·OJ
t Porhmnuth ( II~~~~~
,J. ( ':lniplw•II 'MI•niOrlal ( l!i· l l

:!:lll

II. "llllstrr 1'ri¥&gt;'U:V tlll-:!1

I '!II
llli

1 : 1~

I~

i . ~lll sunlll-11

~.

llamlh on Radin 117·:11

311

!t 0 :1k Harhur 117-31

IK

II. \ 'an \tlt•rl 110-:IJ
~t' l ' llnd

tt•n: II, Eh·rla

l'a ll~•ll• ·

IIi
II ; It

St•"' funt•nnl olnhn ('ih•nn :111 ; l:t ,\Hn
lo~~k1• ~; II. H .w~~llh• ,h·ado"·hrnnk 1!1:

1=1. (1•11111~14 t~ · Z;~~~t• Tr;.u·•· IIi; IIi.
l'umt'f ll\' Mt•h:" U; li. l'••mhl·r·
\'llh· .
t:O."'l"'"'d

II:

Ill,

rt•lt•r'&gt;lonrN ·"'4•rl nl."fl•·ld . i
('oluml•u .. lli•Sal&lt;'!o II.

I USPS 1111-911111
A Dh·l'4ion of Mulllmedla. IRI',
P u bll~hrd r\'f'r.\' ••fl l"rnoon . M o n da~'

thr oug-h F'rl1l &gt;1.\', 111 CO UI'I Sl. . Po·
m('!'OV. Ohln, b~ · thC' Ohio Vol lry Pub·
li shi n'l! ('om p;•n.v 'Mu l! lmrdl a, Inc..
Potm' ro\·. Ohio .J~7n~ . Ph. 9!t!·215fi. Sr·
rond c~ :.!l.~ po~!iliH' P&lt;~ld tH Pomrrfly .
Ohln.

111 Co urt S1. ,

SURSI'HIPTION HAT&amp;ll
By Carrltr or Motor R4luu·
Onr Y\'f'f'k .. .. ............. ,......... ....... .$1.:!5
Ont' Monrh ................. .. ........... .. Sfi

Onf' Yf'ar ............. ..
SINGLE t'OPV
PRICE

4!'
.. .. :$d5.un

................... .. ........... 25 C1•n t!oi

Subscrlben noI drs irin g I o pay lllC'C'Ilf·

ri rr

m;~ v

AFHR

TUPPERS PLAINS FIFTH GRADE CAPTURES FIRST
PLACE - The Tuppers Plains Filth Grade Basketball Team took
their talent to the Portland Invitational Tournament on Feb. 21
and 22, where they laced and defeated Ripley (33-20); Pomeroy
(37-23)· and Salisbury (36-33) to capture the 1st Place trophy.
Leadln'g scorer lor Tuppers Plains was Randy _Kaylor wllh a total
ol 28 points lor the three games; Wes Arbaugh was second with 24
points; both Pat Newland and Robert Reed contributed 19 point~
apiece; Jamie Wilson posted a total oliO points; Matt Bowen 5,
and Paul VIneyard 1. The well-rounded team also c_aptured second
place at the Eastern Invitational Tournament losing to Po'."eroy
( 41-91) In their bid lor first place.
·

CAR WASH

$7~B~1

rrm ll In a d \'i:tn ('(' tl lrC'l'l ro

Th &lt;' DHii v Sl'ntlnf'l on a .1, nor 12 monlh
ba,q l" . crrdl! ~·ill lw ~I VC'n carrlrr('aCh
Wl'f'k ,

No suh!!rripljons b~· mal!p('r mltl!'d In

arro~

whl"lT' homr carrl('r S('rvl('{' is
av;r llabtl".
Mall S•bflc rtpllont~
lmddr Meip County
13 Wf'£&gt;ks ....... ........... .... ... ...... ... Sl7.29
26 W('Cks ..... .. ...... .. .. . ,... ... ........ . $34.06
!S2 WCC'kS ..... .... ....... : ..... ... .... .... . $66.56
OUtl'lldt Melli Counly
13 Wooks ...... .. .......... ... ........... .. $18.20
~ W&lt;okJ .... .................... ..... .... S.ti.JO
52 W('f'k.~ ., .... ............. ........ ....... $67.60

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
GENErAL RELIEF
UNITED MINE WORKERS
BOILERMAKERS

standards ... and save

48DDD Serlt1

GIS CHARGED
SHOCKS

u wall.

5

!lOGO $01lol

Jl

15

TRW oR

BALL JOINTS

THE TERRAIN TAMER
GAS CHARGED SHOCKS 1---

~ ES441A

To Those 60 and Over
On All Prescriptions

. . .. fflnii . . J. l tMa.M , Mft.fft.

,,....... ..,...

Ol'tfl H itM1 HN f

~----------

----

~:~4 ~19 85

:;

:::-:.·~......

fOU• GUUO
OlU ............. lWl
mo ........ 10Wl0

r tl9 ....... !AllOW

Wl .......!lllOW

sun• tt,o

MIIOMAIK

!UIOIIiiiiO~ fi~D

#341 ......~TWJII FA

I JU .... D11tr•n II

G&amp;J PARTS PLUS AUJOSTORES
GALLIPOLIS

Pr&gt;ur rnor I

SvMIIyii :Mtt 11:.1ftfJttf.liR.
P'JIIICJI.,TIOiilil
PH. m ·lfll
(.
I . MIIft
,.........,,0.

•II, -......

89&lt;

AU CUMATI
t 2t... ..... 1OWJO
IICl ........ tOWCO
0177 .......... 1Wl0

-------SUJISHER LOHSE

.,.... ......

MUFF\.[R S

VALVOLINE MOTOR OILS

10°/o DISCOUNT

(

ARVIN ALUMIN ilEO SfEH MUr r u ;RS I A51
rWI CE AS LON G A~ &lt;"•A LV ANili.D Slr.U

-

limit ll

. ._. . . .......... j

PRICES START AT

*10"

PAID

.:......--~.. . .... .

-=:::-=---1

TRW

P.C.S.
MEDIMET
ADYACARE

REBATE
LIMIT 2

mee1 or
exceed OEM
performance

HEAVY· DUlY
SHOCKS

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

l1 ~ 0

CAR WASH
MITI

MOP

••a•·h: :!11.

The Daily Sentinel

Dall ~·

.

l '.U't: ;1ncl

Ilk)

t o Thr Dal lv :;;rnllne-1.·
Pom rro~. Oh.lo ~~7G9.

" It appears, ma'am, that you have gone a bit
overboard ;n your CALCIUM INTAKE. ..

hcud

·"-·"'"tl floMrd nl ( '~:~llrlu,. ' hu.\'' ba,o.k!'lhi4JI

POSTMASTER: ~ n d :lddre:t!o~ r h arigrs

'

gan to th(.' rpgular S('~lso n rh; l mpionship in his SPrond Y!'&lt;l!' as

lnlt•rnal lunul Ohln

Mf'mbf'r : Un i!NI P T ' I 'S ~ ln Trrn aTional.
In lund D ~• il :• Prt-s ..; i\!-iSOClal lon a nel l hr
Ohl o Nl"w ~ p;l prr A.!&gt;llOC'i &lt;lllon . Nill i on~~ I
Ad\' f'l'll s ln~ Rrpri'SC'nla l iv(', flr a n ha m
NI''W!&gt;:papf'r Sal l'll. 7:t:l Thin! Avf'nut•.
Nw.· Yo rk. Nrw York )()017 .

1(1 lil l llo NtA '"&lt;

TOLEDO, Ohio 1UP! I - The
Mid -American Confrren~Ncws
Media Associ at ion ha s · r.lr ~ t &lt;'d
Char lie Coles of CPnl' I Mtcht·
gan as the mrn·s ba · r tball
coac h ot thr Vf'ar .
Coles diroctcd Contra! Michi-

llh:h

In 1940, the first chairman of
the House Un-American Act ivities Committ ee, Rep. Martin
Dies, D -Texa s, announced that
Cagney (and Humphrey Boga rt
and Frederic March) had never
been communist sympathizers.
Despi te this publi c exonera tion, and th e FBI's own 1943
cl eara nce, th e old c harge s
again st Cagney were dusted off
again In 1958, when Paramount
wa nted to do a TV se ries based on
FBI Director J. Edgar Jioover' s
book , " Persons In Hiding". Cagney had expressed an int erest In
the project, and that was enough
to chill the G-men.
-

~

Carter said he w.ould end his
walkQut and come back to cam·p
"on the spur ~the moment, " and
added that he was working out on
his own. Carter left camp Monday when the Indians renewed
his contract at $250,000. $130,000
less than the minimum he said he
would accept.
Injuries - -Nlekro has ~ blood
blister Irritating a !Inger on his
right hand, but said he has the
problem every spring. Jacoby
was shifted from third to first
base Wednesday to rest a tender
shoulder.
Cleveland's Cactus League opener is Saturday against San
Francisco in Scottsdale, Ariz .

"Bailes and Swindell get the
stars," said Cleveland Manager
Pat Corrales, who scheduled
another intra squad game for this
afternoon. "Bailes in particular
looks much stronger and is
throwing harder than last year.
" It' s pretty ev ident the
pitchers arc way ahead of the
hitters."
In other news. Indians senior
vice president Dan O'B dismissed a report that centerfielder Brett Butler would be
traded to Los Angeles for either
of pitchers Alejando Pena or
Rick Honeycutt as ··complete
nonsense.' '
First ba seman-outfi!'lder Joe

Coles MAC's
Coach-of-Year

C'OLDtftUK."" Ohio ti 'PII - Tht· flnul
J,.~'i

Berry's World·

good shots early and not let th e
crowd get into the game."
OSU guard Curtis Wilson put it
another wa y.
" I think we can get them ,"
Wil son said of the Hoosier s. "1
don't want to be overoonrident,
but they're not God's gift to
basketball. I'm sure the las t
game is in the back of th eir
mind."
Ohio State lost at home to
Indiana, 92-80, with Hopson playing only 10 minutes because a
virus and scoring only 4 point s.
W1111ams, who was celebrating
his 42nd birthday Wednesday,
sa id he didn' t men tion Hopson's
shot at the record .
"He tHopson ) was averaging
29 points per game, " said Williams. "If played his game and we
play!'d our game, he was going to
get it. "
Hopson also sa id he tJied to
Ignore the record and the 29
points he needed to break i t, but
walking around campus during
the day, he was constantly
reminded.
"I came into tonight trying to
play like I've play ed all year," he
said. "'I didn't want to force
anything. If the shot wasn't
there, I wasn't going to take it."
jerry Nash l ed FlU with 16 '
point s, while Carlton Phoenix
and David Banks added 13 each.
Jay Burson scored 15 and Jerry
Francis 12 for ·the Buckeyes.

Prep ratings

fac ism .' '

about the prospective candidacy part y's difficult ies in Louisiana
of attor ney Larry F orgy, an and Mississ ippi, where the Deunusually attractive contender . mocrati c prl_m aries ar e likely to
who headed Pre sident Reagan's be more import ant than the
Kentucky ca mpai gns in 1980 a ~d general elec ti ons because the
1984.
s tr o n ges t can d i da t es ar e
But Forgy recenlly withdrew, Democrats.
citing personal r easons and ReaAlt110ugh a majority of the
gan's sagging popularit y. Repub- South's voters now almost hahitlicans des perate for a credible ually choose Republicans In
substitute have implored Rep. pres idential races and the GOP
Larry J. Hopkins to enter the has made substanti al inroad&gt; at
race·, bu t he has resisted.
the grassroo ts, Democrats st ill
Indeed. the Republican's prob- enj oy an edge in stat!' and loca l
lems In Kentucky re!Ject the races.

game of thl' season .
The out come of Wednesday
night's game was never In doubt
aft er Hopson hit back -to- back
3-point field goals for a 9-4 lead
l ess than three minutes Into thl'
game. Ohio State i!'d 55-28 at
halft !me and by 30 or more point s ,
mos t of the second half.
'
Th!' victory Increased the ·
Buckeyes' record to 19' 11 overall , while th e Sun blazers, ·
coached by forml'r Bowling
Gre!'n State University star Rich
Walker, fell to 7-1S.
"I was very sa tisfied with the
game tonight, " s~id Ohio State
coach Gary Williams, " lool\ing
at the team s we've playl'd the
la st two months . Our players had
some fun tonight.
Florida International Is In a
tra nsition period, trying to move
up and Its tough going on the
road. Tl)ey weren't good enough
tonight, bu t that's what you have
to do.
"This was a game we couldn't
afford to lose." added Williams ,
"although I don't think the win
will have much to do with u;
making the NCAA."
As for Indiana, William s said
the Buckeyes will go into Bloomington w ell -rested and
confident .
"I think our play!'rs honestly
believe they can pla y with any
team in th!' Big ·Ten," said
Williams. "We just have to tak e

Scott Bailes hurls · 2 _p~rfect . rungs

Spear

Campaign '87 __________R_o_be_rt_W_a_lt_e
'rs

The Daily Sentinei - Page - 3

240 Third Awt.
446- ltll

an.

1704 !a1torn
446-4204 .

• I.M. Iii l •JG ,.... Dlity • 1.01, til 7~0 ,. ...
S.l, I ..-. til HIO ,....
s.t. I utt. till 4 ,...

Ooi~

PT. PLEASANT
5t 5 illain lt,

m-112o

POMEROY

26 tl Jo&lt;kiOII ' "· 119 Jlt
675·2731
992·J .-}.···

I • ·• · tit! S100 p.m.

Rou!O 33
77l·l51t

1:00 a.m. tiH S1lO p.m.

EASTERN AYE. STORE OPEN SUMDAY .11 :DO A.M. TIU 4:DO P.M.
OFFEIS GoOD THIU 3/10117 AT PAintiPATING PUTS PlUS AUTOSTOIES

MASON

�'
·. I

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. March 5, 1987

Pomeroy- Middltlport. Ohio

•

Valley edges Southern 57-55 In Class A. District opener

By SCOTT WOLF!:
Ironically, Southern did j~st
OVP News Staff
that against the much stronger ,
CHILLICOTHE - The homephysica l giant s that they faced
tow n Southern Tornadoes took
as Coach Cald well' s troops were
the towering Lucasvil le to the
well prepared In counteracting
wire Wednesday evening at Chi I- the Va lley game plan.
llco the High School, however,
Southern shot a steamy hot 48.9
the outcome was not a festive one
percent as they netted 24-of-49 from
as the Indians clai m ed a hard - the floor, and canned 7-11 at t h~
fought 57-55 overtime victory
llne. Southern faoed only a35-l:ldeover the Torn adoes .
flcit In the rebounding department,
Jeff Crabtreee. 6-3. wen t back
a credit to thelrlnsideeffort and de- '
door with just nine seconds retermination. Southern, however ,
malnlng In over time to give Lu - managed only six offensive recasvllle Valley the lead and
bounds in the game.
eventually a berth In the District
· The winners , despite being
Championship tilt.
dogged by the SHS defense, rna Lucasville advances wit h a 16- naged to hit 26-61 for 42 percent,
7 mark, while Southern bows an d 5-7 at the llne.
from further pla y with a fine 14-9
Cra ig Gilland , 6-6 center, led
mark .
an all senior lineup with ga me
Iri an in terv iew Monday even- high honors of 26 points. 6-3 Keith
lng. Southern Coach Howle Ca ld - Hick man hit 10 markers . Alan
well predicted , "We mu st be able · Alley (6-21 netted 8, 5-10 point
to rebound with them. and mu st
guard Jeff Cra btree 6, and 6-1
shoot well early In the game in Ted Godfrey one.
Southern wa s led by a tre order to be In a posi tion to win ."

mendous dual effort from junior
guard David Amburgey and sophomore post man David McMillin with 16 each.
The "David ·&amp; 'D avld" tandem
hit several key buckets, while exhibiting super floor play as well
to l ead the Southern 'offensive
charges. Kenny Turley poured in
14 points, Shannon Riffle netted
4. M att Harr is 3, and Eric Milliro n 2.
After Valley grabbed the openIng tip and mtssed . Southern
meticulously went to work strikIng first blood.on a David Amburgey jumper at the 7:01 mark.
Seconds later - Crabtree tied the
score on a five foot jumper il)skle
the lane. Tornado David McM!Uin
then went to work on a masterf\doffenstve performance. that sparked
the Tornadoes throu~&lt;hout the (lrst
half. Time after time McMillin
would go up for the jumper with' a
hand in his lace. then adjust his shot
for a short )look over the towering

defender.
Southern 's last first period
lead caine on another Amburgey
drive for a 6-4 score. ut Va lley unreeled six unanswered points for
a 10-6 advantage with 2:10 left.
The store was tied at 12-12 at the
period' s conclusion.
Seemingly unstoppable Gilland
netted 8 points In the frame, Incl uding several outside jumpers of
more than 15 feet.
Valley 's offense cen ters on m ismatching the defense players
with outside movement and
screen s, however, Southern continually stopped wi th strategy
forcing- Valley to play an Inside
power game.
The gam e, having been tied
four times alrea dy, was tied on
four other occasions in an exciting second period . Going nipand-tuck most of the way the
game hecame a bit more deliberate, bu t also saw a plaque of tur -

novers by both clubs.
Amburgey hit a long jumper
wit h 5:01 l eft and Kenny Tur ley
hit a 10 foo ter with 3: 49 1eft in the
half, giving SHS a 22:20 lead .
Tied at 22 -22 and 24-24 In the second fr ame. SHS began to domi nate as its defensive pressure
seemlngly took a toll on Valley.
Leading m ost of the frame.
SHS held on to lead 30-28 at the
11,alf.
At one point Southern roared to
a 41-34 lead and had two chances
to go up by rilne. however. failed
to capitalize. Valley called time
out to regroup, but trailed 41 -38
at the end of the ca nto.
In the fi nal round Valley went
ahead 50-45, but corner jumpers
by Turley allowed SHS to keep
stride. At thi s stage Valley took
away Southern 's Inside ga me.
but j umpers by Turley, Riffle,
and a steal 'by McMillin put SHS
back on top 51-50.

Milliron, I·O.t :

-

Amhurgf';o,', i -2- 16; Rifflt•, :!·D·t

Harris,

1-1-3; Turh·~· . i · O.I~ :; ~kft.llllian . 6-H G:
Klm rs. 0.0.0 TOTAL'\ U-'7·55.
\ 'ALLEY lli7l - A.llt•,v. t ·O- K: C'rahlrN•.

:1-0-6:

G illil a nd,

11-.HG: (Oodfr(')', 0·1·1:

llidunan. it-(}.111; MorriJ\1 , !t-0- 6. TOTALS

2&amp;-S.Si.
Bl' QUllrt t• r s:

Soulht•rn ............. l2 Ul II
Vulh•y ................. 12 IG 12

1:!
1:1

2 - 54
~ -57

•

JUMP BALL - Valley 's Craig Gilliland (30)
gets tip on this jump ball during Wednesd.ay

night's Class A District Tournament opener at
Chillicothe. Valley won, 57-55, In overtime.

FIGHT FOR BALL - Southern's Dave McMillian (41 ) and
Valley 's,K elth Hjckman (34) hattie for hall during Wednesday's
Class A District Tournament opener at Chillicothe. Valley won
57-55 in overtime. In foreground is Shannon Riffle ( 15).

531 JACKSON PIKE ·RT.35 WEST '
Phone 448·.as24

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I ·
SUNDAY - Al l SEATS $2 .50
ADMI SSION EVER! TUESDAY $2.50

''

SVAC Standings
Transactions
,•

"Huston at (iuldt•n !'it ali•, Ill: :~41 n.m.
runlund at ~ ·a1Uh •. lll ::m ,, ,m ,

NBA rt&gt;sults
~ .\1' 10 \J\1 ,

NHL re~ults

ti,\0\Kt:TRI\ 1.1. ,\ ,"iSfM .

II~· I n l4•·•1 l 'r• "'~ lnl ••rn.ll ltttud
tJ .~u·u• 4 'unt.•r t·n• ·o·

.\1 1 th~ ''"' '

l)h

Ill 1
I'!
~fi

f 'h ku~ol 1·!:1. lll'l rnll I'! II ! OTt

\lll• u ni. Po· 1111 . 1..\ 4 ll j lpl'r~ IHII
llo11111.• ll .i . l )i •tno•r 111:
I. \ l.akt•r, l:tll. :oit•:lltll' 1:! 1
lluu ..III A Ill". :oia1 r:t nll'nl+! Ill !
TIIII NI: ~\' ' ' c; ,llllt'!'&gt;
S :an ~ ntun l01 al l)t •n\1 '1'. !1::.0 II ·"'·
f lt•\ o·l:tlltl a t l' laoo•nl)o. !t: :lflrt.Ml.

"
I'll II a

""""
""
S\

"!K' !

-

1~1

1:

11 !
li

Ill
·~

l~lun

\t. I. l'r•L.
IJ:alla"
:t" :!II !!til
:t·! :!li Xi'!
I lith
:It '! li .l.i'!
ll uu~ htn '
llt•n \o·r
·! I :IIi . IIIII ,
! I : 1~ ,:IIi:!
S1tn \nl unl
1!1 :1!1 . :1 ·~
~n• · rt am n l
l':ll'lllt · Ill\ t.iun
I. \ l .:•k o · r ~
Iii II
l'11r lland
:1: '!il . ~ 1 :
:111 :111 ,:tllll
~l 'llllk
( ;ultlo•n ~~~
!II :1~ . IIi~
l'hownh
:!'! :IIi . :1~!1
1,.\ l 'lirtt"'
Ill Ill . 1~!1
\\ o·tln• ·• d t~\· ' ..., lk .. ult ,
:'\••11 \ '11 rl. Ill !. l' hll,uh •ltt hl;t ~
\\ :.., hln 1,1 n1111: . Sl'\ol · l l' r"' · ~· Il l
1\n~loUII '!; I . ll :lh lll:i

Wnlt.,. l ' unlo•ro•n•·••
J'ut rkk llh ""inn

Ci ll

ll rtlr
llntrl

"'"'11

.....

Cl'u hr ·

!O K
li 1 1
li 1 r
l ~t ' !

li I 1
l fl' !

"

IIi
I ll
'! :1 I
:II

J. 'I' 1 '1~ . l i F li .\
:lll ~~ ~ ~. Il l '!H I IIII
'!!I

~

II lifi '!"! li '!ill

'! II '!'; Ill l;ti "!~.i '!'.~1
'!II '.,'!I II ~ I '!~~ '!:1 ~

'! I :111 II .i!l "! I'! ·!J!
'! I :1:1 II .U ·! t!l '!II '!
.\ flam .. Ill\ J.,lnn

:u · ·: 1
:u ~li

~

; .1

·m ! t:

R i l W '!O.i
:11 '!II H li~ :! 1:1 '! Ill
'! I :t:\ ~ .'tfi :!Ofi tl!l
·!:1 :1:. fi l~ '! I!' :!U

( am plwll t Ullh•ro •twt•

Ut·tn
.\ Inn ,
( 'hit ·a:
.~ t .

tn•

To riM

l'l )'o . li f ' li .\
'!!+ ·; , ~ RO ~ 11 :!~li
'!K '!II II 61 Hll Uti
'!II '!!! Ill !i'! 'l il: :!,lft

d :CI

I, .,.

'! I '!II I'! till

·m~: 1 11

'! I :11 II .i l ·! tJ :!.\1
~ 111 11110 · Uhl,. lun
.
:v.~ ., . .i ~:J ·!!'1 .1 t!ti
:1 ~ '! .l

li ':ti t Wi '!"!'7
i'hcr)
:t; ::. '! :li !l l ·!:J)!
1 .~ '"
~~ :n j .i i '!l:l 1lK
\ 'nt 'l r
'! it :N 'I 1!1 !'!II '!'i I
\ ·d lndu•d pi:I)·OIIf IN•r l h,
\\o •dn•••ll u,l ·,. l{ • · ~uu,.

\\ nu

.~ \ ll anJ(t ' r ~ ; , S \ ' t ~l : cndo • r ..
4 ' h h · u~:ll :1. \\ l nnlp&lt; · ~ ·~
fo:Cirnnnlun II. \' r~n• ·n u wr .·,

Ht •urn. lhlrd ha.•wmlltl U&lt;ii \ ,, .\ t a .::11dnn
11n d rtlo · hrr ~o Hund.l ' Mrt&lt;r~ and Rl·~r
l)uhit• lot l· y••ar t·untnwt,.,
l"tllhuloitthh a - :-llrnt•d pll •·h••r Mllo:t•
M adllla , ~•~ •rl l"ltl ll li1•n U u~•· ll 14ftd
oulfh •h~ · r

~.

,fl'fl Slomo ·.

l..uul.o. -

SI(TH•d third ha.- •'fllOin
T1•rr.\ l'•· ndltilln: rlhl haM•m••n ,Jim
l.lndl·miln u nd ~tiki- l .all'll a~·•· d to
t·u rMr!lf'l lt•rm!oo.
Turmtlo - ~~~nt • tlrtia• · h t'f"Tllm Ho •n lw.
.Juhn f •·r••tli a nd .Ja hn . Juhlt!&gt;un lo l · ~·, •:• r
r·n nirut•t •.
&amp; .. kr'fh•ll
Phlladt•lrthlu. - ~ I JM•d ' t ·• • nt t• r ~hrk
.\-h • S~&amp; maru : rl'lr•li.'il'd K••ard \\ nrl d R.

...,....
,

( ' nllt•(!•

Snrrio. Il l\ l~inu
~\

f':tlllurnl a- rth·ht•r lh•Wa,.vrn• R11h•P:
mulh•ldH .\ ta r k n,·ul Md ulilltrmun
.lrtl'll .\tlllo ·r a,vo..:d luo·tOQirm•lt;•rnv;,
' ' '" l"nrk IS I. l - Sl &amp;n~•d t•ldt•ht't' Ed

r,..

'i ,, TIOS,\1, HOrKt:\ · l .E.Uil t:

,\ tl a nl lt · Uh r..1o m
" I . , .. ...
flu~tun
II 1.'1 . ~ Ui
:\ ·! '!li .U'!
" ' ltn ,;tn
:1! ·:~ ..i l "!
l'h ilu
Ill II .:lltl
'• 'II l'urk
'• 'II ·l•·r •.l
1.1 1:1 :!~!1
I ""' ral Ill\ l•ln n
:1~ '!II .fil!l
111'11'1111
:1~ ·!J .N:III
\tlunta
.lflll'l nU ko·
:t~ ·!:1 - ~ ti
.11 t6 .HI
( 'hil·:tJ:II
'!II :11 li ~
lnttlc&amp;tl:a
t "l• •l a·lnrl
tl :IIi .:1111
\\t •.,lt•rn C'nnlo•rt•nt·f•

(OVER~Ui

Ra~t·hall

!\l:trtjlll'lll' -

S~t nw rl

Y.llll:un Corti..

011 hlt'lll · tlirr •o ·t ur·~

Mttrl'l"•ad Sllt.ll' - ftat,.kt •lh :lll o·oaat· h
" u.,n t• M:tnl• '1'~1111: nrod .
t 'ntllhull
f hlt'lllll - :'\a mt•d Rill Tllhln \lc·r•
llrt'!&gt;!llll 'nl fttr jll uyo•r
8111
Mt•(; r t&amp;nt• dl1'1'4·11tr nf lUirnlnlstr"J IInn und
T t•d r•htlllp !o III' JI:I III:.~tnr o f rtht,\'t•r

I"'''"''"""'·

nanlr.ll'l\,
1..\ Ruidt Tlo - Sl l[nt•tl \l' id• • rt • • ·~·ll· ,.,
:\lo•n)·n Frrnandt"'. n lthl' ('t' t tn tt J. ;.-·ar

ntntra•·t.

.1

W 'L PF
x-H:m11an Tral'l' .... ....... 16 6 IU~

x-Norlh Gullln .............. l:l

p,,

I&lt;Qt
1126
9 1729 14:!3
~

l~ll

x·Sou,lht'rn ........ ............ 1~
O..k Hill. ...... .... ............ 1:1 K l!ill:i

At f hlll kot ht•
LUI~USI' U I ('-Vall ry

5': Soutbt'fn 55 IOU

Thur.;dav '

Pnrt!iil\ouih Eust \'S. C'rnnk."i\'iii P. 7 p.m.

Frlday'N p;amt•

I :MI~

Cfht... s ,\ J\)
Atlrnntnn

x·KYJtt'l' Crt&gt;dc ............. 10 12
&gt;-Ea•l••rn .. ..... , ............. ,K t3
x·Southwt&gt;Sif'rn ............... X 1:1
x:symmf'S VWit·~· .......... A 17

11641 11H
131m r:w~
Oak IIIII \':-.. So uth Poinl , ~: U p.m .
115i 1:1:15 · Tu&lt;'!oday,J\1!l.r1·h 1t1
1119 1:1:12
C.rl't'n \' s, 1\d ena
x·F'1nl."ih4'&lt;1 St'&lt;L"ion. •
\\'t •dnt'Sda)·, Munh II
(("la..,.s A Toumurilmll
Wh tlr Ouk \' ~. Hunl ingt on Rnsl'i
Wr•dnt os day's m.;uk

PLATI N
t~t~l

IIi

NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS!

of.,.,

N

1

"

,

,-, .., " • 'I
""

"

'"

CHIRlll iiltUN

The West Virginia Route of
The Daily Ser)tinel
WILL BE DELIVERED AS USUAL
during the time the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
is closed for re airs.

:\llnnt''ntu 111 llo'lrn lt , i ;:U p.m.
\\'lnniJll'!.: at ."'I . l,oub:, II: :U p.m.
' "''~ \n ,~:o • l o • .. Ill r'lll jl;nr) .

Time Is Running

Out~Open

Ho·use thru March 7

Here's To Your Good Health
Prices drastically
reduced on all 1986
strHt bikes in stock.

$HADOW·noo

$4898°0
SUGG. RETAil

If you can't get here when the
bridge closes, we mail prescriptions
anytime.

~Be .A Winner

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT

..

I

Open M-F 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Open Sat. 9 .a.m.-5 p.m.

at River Front Honda
433 PIKE ST.

446-2240

season. upset th e Golden Hu rri· former North Carolina assistant · In the final 67 second s of
cane at Tulsa 79-74 in over time in
in his first season as Shockers regulation . Overtime was forced
the conference final. The victory coach . " They (Tulsa 1 were· In It
when Tulsa's Donald Royster
raised Wich ita State's record to before t onight' s game was ever sank an off- l:lalance jump shot
22-10. Conference regu lar-season played.
wttli eight seconds left.
champion Tulsa, which had lost
"We should have been in even
"No one has won back-to- back
just eight home games In the last
if we had lost. We pl.ryed some
Valley titles. " said Tulsa Coach
six years. fell to 22-7 and mu st
good.basketball our last eight or J.D. Bar nett. who won the MVC
await a decision to see If Its ninP games.' '
tournament title last year. "You
reaches the 64 -tea m NCAA field.
Garv Cundiff and Sash&lt;\ Radu - need that hungriness to win. It
"'! thought we were in the nov ich each convert ed 2 1ree disappoint ed us we didn't have
NCAA Tournament before to- throws in the fin al 30 seco nds of
that hungriness."
night,"' said Eddie Fogler, a I overf tme for the Shockers. Wi Tulsa's David Moss scored 36
chita Sla te had lost a 9-polnt lea d points, Including the on ly 4 the
Hurrica ne had In overtime. Cundiff scored 17 for the Shockers .
"We cou ldn 't stop them and
If he mat ches las t year 's fast w ill help. If he doesn't get off to&lt;J
they cou ldn' t stop us," Fogler
start - he wou nd up batti ng .241 f ast sta r t. it won' t doom .Oaksaid. "We've played better dewith 18 homers and CiR RBI - he l and's divi sio nal title hopes.
fense. bu t. not better offense. Th e

Reporters ask Jackson about his age
SCOTISDALE, Ariz . WPl i Reggi.e Jackson bristled at thP
question and looked up in mocked

amazement.
"You· re asking me how it feels
to be going back to Oakland at
age 40," he sa id. "Wel l. how do
you think it feels•"
Reporters have made th at the
No. 1 ques tion at the Oakland A's
trainin g camp site at Scottsda le
Community Coll ege. Forget how
manager Tony LaRussa will
handle the club in his first full
season. Never mind whether
.J oaquin Andujar can find the
form that helped win two pen nants for the St. Louts Card inals.
Jose Canseco's holdout? Small
potatoes compared with Reggie.
Jackson is going back home.
back to where it all began, and
nothing else seems to be as
important.
·•
''l'·m getting more dumb questions thi~ yea r t.han ever before,"
said. Jackson. who ca n alternately welcome or disda in media
interest depending upon his
mOQd. ' Tm here to get in shape
for the season and win some ball
games.
While there i s more than
enough interes t in Jackson' s
every j umping jack. things have
changed. For perhaps the first
time In his ca reer. it Is not going
to be " Reggi e's tea m."
He may still be the magnet that
draws i hc m icrophones and
ca m era light s and should again
be one of the most quoted
ballpla yers in the ga me. but in
what ma y be his final season.
Jackson finds himself In the
sam e position as so m any of his
talented predecessors. He is a
supersta r who will be a part- time
player.
Signed to a one-year contract.
Jackson is going to be at best a
part -time designated hitter .
Even his widely heralded leadership in the cl ubhouse m ay not be
as big a fact or because of the
presence of LaRu ssa and oth er

whipped Michiga n 89·15 and
Purdue dow ned M lc~lga n Stat e

69-5'1.
At A nn Arbor. Mich. !\ en
Norman scored l !l poin ts and
T o n~: Wysi ngcr addf' d 17 to spsrk

Illin ois . 22· 7 O\'f'ra \1 anrl

1 ~- S

in

thf' lr agu(•.
At L:.:il st Lw sin g, Mi ctL , Todd
Mil clte ll scorr d ~0 point s and
Mt•ivin M eCanb added l X tu tH•Ip
Purdm•. 24·:1 overall. rf&gt;maln in
first pla ct in tiH ' ('O nll'r cne&lt;' with
a 1:i·1 r'f'cor·d.
In 1h0 E&lt;'A C Mt•troConft·n ·nC( '

rournamt1 nt .

Loyo la

1

Mel

dumpf'd Sl. F'r;rnl'i s 1Jla . 1 ·; --;

1

!)~I

t\ 1 n a Jtirn OI'fl. J);1Vid ( ; ;lid .\
S('n rr d ·y, poi nt s tn lt •: Jci LO.\ 'OiiJ i11
lt1 c&gt; f irs t round ~ am f' .

Quaker State
Motor Oils
10W30or
10W40
Limit 12

2.48 3.48

Purolator

Purolator

Reg. '3.39
Limit 2

!Reg . 4 .39
llimit 2

OifFIHers

Air Filters

1

vetera ns.
" I think Reggie unders tands
what his role is on this club . But if
there is an attitude problem on
this club, It won' t be Reggie's
fault. it 's going to be mine,"
LaRussa said. "It's a case where
this isn't Reggie's team. It's no
one person' s team. It is a groupo!
players drawn together to try to
win.''
When Jackson broke in wit h
the A's , he emerged as a team
leader. He had as much char isma as power in his bat.
The reputation grew and ·fol lowed him to a bri ef stop in
Baltimore and to the New York
Yankees . Ev&lt;'n with the Califor nia Angels. media and fans al ike
wer&lt;' drawn to Jackson.
Now wltp theA's, Jackson will
be the designated hit ter against
principally rig ht- handed hitters .

4.95

thingtori is favored to make it
three in a row this w&lt;'ekend in th&lt;'
15t h annual girls state high
school gymn astics m eet at Dublin Hi2h School.
w orthin gton. the only school to
win back-to-back titles In the
14-yea r history of the stat e
tournament captured the Ccn'1ra l Distr ici championship last
.yeekcnd and takes the best
district scor e !275.90 1 tnto the
meet.
Cl a~ton Norlhmont, seco nd to
:the Ca rdin als a year ago, won the
Southwest Dis trict tit le and h ~s
"the second best score goin g m
wit h 21o.so
• Six other schools will be
·Qompetlng tor the team cham pionship - Strongsv ille, Toledo
Whitmer, Mentor Lake Cat holic.
~inclnnati Turpin. Austintown
Fitch and Sylva nia Northv lew .
: Nort hmont' s Wend y Hacker.
llls t war's all-around cha mp.
also is back to defend her title.
Hacker. however. finished only
third at the Southwest Dlstrtct
meet . Freshman Nikki Condon.
Hacker's Northmont teammate,
and senior Kim Crawford of Troy
finished ahea d of her In the
southwest.

After mlr's 2.00 rebate
Sate 6.88, Rag. 8.95 H5001 , H5006

5.88
8.88

Roberic

Car&amp;
Truck
Mirrors

After mfr.'o 2.00 rebate
Sate 7.88. Reg . 9.88 H4651 . H4656

Reg. lrom 6.95

2.000FF

Alter mlr.'14.00 rebat e

Sate 12.88, Reg. 16.95 H6054

95¢

Your Cho1ce

2.38

Anco

Rex

Wiper Blades

Gas Caps
Standard or
Locking

Afttr mlr's I .00 rebate
wlpurchaae ol 2
Reg. 4.29. each '

Wiper Blade Refills

Reg. from t.JS

1.000FF

After mh 's 50¢ rebate
Reg . 4.29. pa ir

49.95
69.95
89.95
I BBL

2BBL ·

48BL

•

wllh rebu1ldablc e1changc

24.88

Remanufactured
Starters &amp; Alternators
Moat appllca11ons

Maremont Original
Equipment Stock
Replacement Mufflers
S.OOOFF

Price good with exchange.

1 Year Warranty

1r4.95

Reg. lrom 19.95

Exhaust and Tail Pipes

OPEN 7 DAYS A W_
EEK
Store hoUro: 8 :30a.m. 1o 8 :00p.m. Monday 1hrough Frldoy.
8:30 e.m. 10 6 :00p.m. Solurday and 10:00 a.m. to 6:00p.m. Sunday.

GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631

key wa swe scored the first baket
of ov~rtim e ."
Cundiff hit 2 free t brows with 2!\
seconds left to give Wichita State
a4 -potnt edge. Moss cut it ba ck to
2 point s with his final polntso! th P
night. Wi th 13 seconds IPfl.
Radunovich made 2 free. throws.
Another fou l shot by Wichit a
State's Steve Gr aye r with three
seconds remainin g concl uded th e
scoring.
The Hu rrica ne scored th e last 9
points of reg ulation - 5 coming
from Moss.
" We ju st didn 't get the type of
performan ce we needed in a
championshp game." Ba rnet t
sa id.
In Big Ten games. Illinois

Sale prices in effect March 5, through March 11 . 1987.

DUBLIN. Oh io tUP ii -Two·

SUPER· BUYS ON ALL
1987 STREET BIKES

It's our main concern when filling
prescriptions and advising you about _
over-the-counter drugs . As your pharmacests.
you can rely on us. We're here to help.'

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
Wichita State took the guess work out of It s postseason plans
Wednesday night, earning the
NCAA Tournament berth that
comes with the Missouri Va lley
Confer ence Championsh ip.
As a result. Tulsa must wait for
a decision Sunday by the NCAA's
Selection Committee .
Wichita State, wh ich had won
only four of 12 road games this

tim~ defending champion Wor·

RIVER FRONT HONDA

\\ a-.lalr&amp; Jtinn :II l'hll :atlo •lphha. ; :;u 11 . m .
PIU ..hur~ h lll Tnrnnw, i:: t ~ p.m .

,. _

Worthington
favored in meet

ThnNIIl,l · ., t O:ull• 'i"

B n~tun nl ll :artlnrd . : : :r. 11.111.
:'\o •11 . ln!&gt;! o·~· :11 Ruflal n. i :.l .'o p. m.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5·

Pomeroy . Middleport, Ohio

Wichita State cops MVC crown, berth bid in N(:AA tourney

. With 2: 18 left Gilland hit both
Hds of a one-and-one. Turley
was 'given a chance to tie with 1:28 left. but hit the first of abonus. That came. after Valley had
a cha nce to put the game away, .
but missed with McMillin coming down with the va luable rebound. '
After Turl ey's shol it was
again McMillin with the ,rebound
as SHS ran the clock down to : 09
second s I hen ca lled time for a final play.
Va lley countered with a time
ou t to reset it s defense.
Am burgey forced a shot at the
buzzer after being t'ilple tea med
and the game went Into overtim e.
SHS took the first lead 55-53 on
a bonus free throw by Amburgey,' but Gilland countered with
ari Inside jumper with 1: 38.
SHS again chose to ea t some
time off the clock. but :59 second s got a little anxious as a
cross court pass from Amburgey
to Riffle ws Intercepted. Valley
went for one fina l shot hitting
bread-a nd -bu tler man Gilland .
Pr essured by the defense Gilland
could not get off a shot but found
Crabtree back door for th e gamewinner 57 -55.
Amburgey drove th e length of
the floor, bu t was called for a
charge at the buzzer.
M att Harris, Todd Kimes, Eric
Milliron. and Todd Holtz ended
their careers with a fine season
with Kimes getting a rou nd of applause for his appeara nce In the
game. Kimes ca me off the bench
sever al times to relieve Turley
and McMillin , playing with a lot .
of pain becau se of a sprained
ankle.
Gilland led VHS with 17 re bounds, while McMillin had 14
and Turley 10 for SHS. SHS had 6
steals. 11 turnovers , and ten
foul s.
Valley had 9 steals. 15 turnov ers. 5 assists. and 13 foul s.
SOUTHER!"'i ( .i5)

Thwsday, March 5, 1987

From

4.45

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

From

4.50

Tomeo Jet
Carburetor.
Rebuild Kits
R;g , trom 6.50

2:ooOFF

'

'

'•

�1·'

Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 5, 1987
I

_j .

Tourney .
scores

Meigs girls face Piketon in
'toughest test to date'-Logan

Boys scores
Roy" Hhlu lll.: h St·honl R u~ luolhWI

R:o Unlh•d l'rf'!oo:. lnlt'rl'li.lllunul

\\'•• dnt&lt;s dl.l)' ' ~ T ourmHm•m ltt•M tll!o
l'l ~t&gt;&lt;" !\ .\ ,\
fi n Oak Hill :. 111 , Hlllll llt on li
nn Xavkor lt. fin F.lrlt•r II
lJa:o· ft~ IOn• •i " 'hit 1• ~ I. frn t ••n •lllt•GG

Uuy Dunh tll' til . "'''"' Cl.l rrolll un Ill
fla y l'altt •r!.on 6'i, Ko ·l lt•rl n~: 1\ lh·r 4t!
t'illrlh•ld ;1i, .~lddh• l!n~· n $1
lirO\'I'IWr1

n , ( 'oi F..u .. t m r't!l f

IR

Rot•a \ t&gt;rt·rt ..•k :17, Kt • ll••rin ~e t 'al rmunt

"( 'in

l'unl'll :'thariM li~ . l 'ln Tuq,ln :iii
1 :ua t&lt;h·nUak

~ ll.'o~&lt; Uio n .l lt t · k ~ un ti() , :00

:u

Mquu 7!i, Tt•• •urn!&gt;ot' h 6fi
1'r nl 'tlml'•d ·'1 a dl~ un 6.1, Sidm •\ fil
M' tul~ ~tnrltl :t.i, tndl fl n\:f' rl• •al :1) .
M' al ~h

·l••.,ult /i;l. Kldllio•l tl

lto·\o' r•·

.) lj

': .i. I pp..r \rllnl('l un

Mt'!o lo·n lll o• ." i

"

IIII I

C Ia:.., .\ ,\
( 'In l in•t•nhUI ., n . M'_\·nmlng it
nn For· ·.. t l'a rk 1141, Ht • adin~o: 1:!
.\11•arlnwhroook 1;), l-"ur11-' rw lill
l'il'~ ( !l ft t"u rd li H. l"hlln Ill .
l't•tl •r., huro: Sprlngfl!l 6'!. lt un t ..t oown

.'

' ·st

C lalrwillt• :i:l. SI!'!Jho• n\lllt• ("t•nll'".il
51
l'nlun Lw ·al ;i t;, ,fdlt 'I'Mtn l nl!ln 1:1
\\atrt•n l.rw.tl m. t 't·rl o·ral HodilnK 1;
l'uu ns:-'i lta,H n ~;. b.o · k.~un 1\-liltun

·~ ·

('la,oo, .\
ft • nll• r h u rJ~ lo.l, !l-liltkon l'h ·~~nnl

~;

IAil'W&gt;\illt• \' a l .i~. lt:u·lnt• Stmtlwr n ~o.i

lul l

\

PLACE SECOND - Coming In sec ond In filth grade play was
Tuppers Plains; front row, Wes A·rbaugh, Paul Vineyard, Randy
Kaylor, Buddy Kenpy, Nora Eastman, IVIatthew Tackett, Pat
Newland; back row, Coach Dennis Newlun, Matt Bowen, Ray
Reed, Robert Reed, Ronnie Robinson, Jamie Wilson, Michelle
Murphy'and Wes Arbaugh Sr., assistant coach .

l 'p pt•t SdnttJ \ ' ,tilt •,\ iii, ltid iWII IOOI

"

('ol " •·hrlt·i:i. (;r.tn!l\ lt·" Ill
l.ant·tt~ l ••r

1-' l.,ltt·r :i! . l .lllt•rl) l 'nlun ·.&gt;i

l '!ul l
Ctrdln ~~;t u n ':~. Ea~t Knu~

lili

Girls scores
I."/ . I 1/o '"

1/ r ~

lr

~,

/,,.,,/ Jllr, /,, 1 /.,,!/

Ry I "ll r d l' rt"" 'lol t·rnutlunat
\\t·d-da,\•', TtonrnJulwnl K••,.utb
('Ia,.,, ,, ,, ,,

Au,tintu"'" 1-' 111'11 lfl. lluw land

-1 ~•

.~1 . I ppc&gt;r ,\rlln~o.. un
I'!
II it ha nn a .ifi. !\lnunt \ t·rnon ~: 1
kt•nt Kmt ..I'Hii N'l . Boa rdm a n U
l..1tkt'WU+1d .U , l .ura!n li.ln&amp;: II
\'urth Olm,.lt ·rlll . •: tpi a :U!
l 'llt·a :t:l, C'nllto•ull,\1 :n
Purm11 \ ' :d Fnrt:;t· .'WI. Rr;·.- kw llk :m
l'a rmaltulv ~· anw lift, l'a rma I' 11dtu• .U

, ( nl ftt -.•du-r nfl

· flas., ,\.\
8• ·~ 1t ·y

.ii\,CII• •nl un iQ· l.i
,\k r nn Hnhan Iii. 1\;t\ 11rr•• t' t&gt; lrlt'"-' ·"
IA"ll\ lll..hur~ l .uRrat• :u , Kl n,.mun
Rlldl(l'l' :li
1\ur¥~'U JOI '

"

:li, fun tun C'1•ntrul C tllh

\ 'lo•nrut :vl uiiM·" "

t'tN'flOr1

~G.

,\ ~ htahula

;!:1

· ···"~

l.dlt'IWld ,\ I:L Turun111 :t!t

,.

Indi an \ '11l ~ -i ll , Cnnullun \ ' alii
l\1ut•nn t ::t,.h•rn l.'i. l' t•lln" Sprln~"'

't•r ....:lillt.,. 1/1, ) latll'l ra 1:1

Marsh cops
boxing title
l

BAS II. OON. England tUPiiTerry Marsh captured the Int er~
nallonal Boxing Federation Ugh!
welt erwl'ight title before a home
crowd Wednesday nigh!, stop·
ping champion Joe Manley i n the
fir'S I m i nute of the lOth round .
Ma rs h caught the 27 -year-old
from ~ e t ro it with a hard right
shortly before the end of the nl nth
rou nd. Mars h fi nished the as·
sau lt with a lefl -rlght -lell combination thai sent Manley Ia the
ca nvas.
RefNre Randy Newma n. un·
able to hear the bell over th e din
of Mar sh's 6,000 fans, reac hed an
rig hl co unl with Manley standing
in his own cor ner before realizing
1hc· round wa s ov('r.
From th e bell for the lOth.
Mar sh tot·r i nt o Man ley with a
ba r rage of punches that ba cked
the champion agai nst the ropes .
As Manley sl umpl'd toward the
ca n,·as again, the rC' fNee
sl cpped ill' to end the fight.
" I hopl' I his is not a drea m,"
said Marsh. " I am just elated. To
be prrfrctly honest, r don' I have
a win ning spr~c h . I only had a
sperch prepared In case I lost.
" I'd likr to thank Manley for
givi ng me this opportunll y. To
his cJwli l hP hung on well , bu llol
cou ld l!'d h ~ was !her!' for !he
w klng ncar the end ."
Marsh. the former Brit ish and
J·:u ropca n ehampion. raised his
1word 10 2&gt;- 0·1 whilr Manley
rlropped 10 26+ L
Ma nley. giv ing away 2 inches
in heigh! , 4 inches In t·each and
~~~ pounds. made his promised
quick start. But Marsh. fighting
" ' thl' 140-pound llmll . m al chcd
his pace &lt;md regular ly bea t the
r hamplon to the punch.
The America n may ha ve won
!he srcond round. but all the
others wen! 10 Marsh. By the
eigh th round . Manley's legs
weakened and he wa s nellher
quick nor stm ng enough to
maintain hi s smotherin g t actic.
Earlier on thC' card. staged In a
circ us rent 25 miles cas t of
London. Britai n's Mo 'Hussein
look the Commonwea lth llghl ·
wright title (rom Langl on Tl nago
of Zimbabw£'.
Tlnago. reported ellher In his
lair ~Os or early 40s. looked
almost tired al the star t of his
J02nd pro fig ht. With a minute
and a half of the final rou nd
remai ning, Hussein caught him
with a left hook and kn ocked him
out. Tinago , who suffered cuts on
both eyes by the fourth ro und.
was smiling and chatting when
he left the ring.
In other lights, British heavyweight Keith Ferdinand out pointed American Steve Mormino over eight rounds, and
George Collins of Br itain took his
welterweight record Ia 20-0 with
a first-round knockout of Carlos
Fernandez.

Rose feels Reds have
'right blend' this year
By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
T AMPA, Fla. (UP!)- Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose has
oft en preached that the games in
Apr il count as much as baseball 's
September Song.
Unfortunately for !he Reds,
las t season proved him right.
The Reds failed to over co me a
6- 19 start in 1986. but they hope to
use their strong finish as a
springboard to this year's Na tional League Wes t title. Cincin nati ended with an 86-76 mark
and . Rose is counting on the
co ntinued development of sev eral impressive young athletes.
including the talented Eric
Davis.
"When we broke spring training ca mp .last yea r. I thoughf .we
wer e ready to play," says Rose,
\\l hO is no longer on the Reds'
roster as a player. " We didn't
pla y well. bul it's a tribute to our
guys that they didn't quit . We
ca me within 3'/, games of the
· lea d and I think we have the right
blend of vet era ns and youn g
players this yea r ."
Des pile playing sparingly until
June, Davis slammed 27 home
r un s. scored 97 runs and stole 80
bases . He is joined in the outfield
by another promising youngs ter,
Kal Daniels, and vetNan slugger
Dave Parker .
' ·

Barry l,.arkin. who played well
after being recalled fr om the
minors last September. ha s
forged ahead of Kurt Stillwell in
!he shortstop battle. Th e biggest
ques tion on the pilching staff JS
the health of former ace right hander Mario Sol o. recovering
from shoulder surgery,
STRENGTHS - Solid bullpen
led by underpublicized John
franco (29 saves! ; exciting
young talent in Davis , Larkin and
Daniels; exper ience or Parker
and catcher Bo Diaz.
WEAKNESSES - A fi flh star·
ter is needed afler the decision
not to re-s ign free agent John
Denny; Nick Esas ky ( .2.101 needs
more competition lor the first
base job; Daniels Is an unprove n
leadoff hitter.
NEW FACES Reliever
F rank William s was acquired
from the Gi ants for outfielder
Eddie Milner ; rookie pitchers
Pat Parillo and Norm Charlton
are fighting for places on the
roster.
OUTLOOK - The Reds scored
the mos t r uns in the NL Wes Jias t
yea r . but the pitching staff
hur led just 14 co mplete gamessix less than Fernando Valenzuela. Soto's ret urn to form Is vi i a!
bec ause starters Bill Gullickson.
Tom 1Browning and Ted Power
don' t scar e anyone ..

UPJ·crowns mythical
pre-tourney champs
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohi o (UPII
Kettering Aller, Oberlin and
Co lumbus Wehrle officially
wrapped up regular season
championships Wednesday in the
fin al 1987 United Press Int ernational Ohio High School Board of
Coa ches boys basketball rati ngs.
For Weh r le, the coac hes' unanimous choice as the Ohio's No.
1 Class A team. it was the third
consecutive small school Iitle.
The Wolverines alsocaptured lh£&gt;
A tournamen t !ltlr a yea r ago.
Wehrle, coached by Chuck
Kemper and led by 6-foot .:lsenior
guar d E li Brewster, last year's A
player-of- the-year. and a ta l en ted suppor ting cas t. was
awarded all 28 first place voles in
thC' eighth and final week of
ba lloting.
.The Wolverines' 280 poll points
put them 37 ahead of r unnerup
Franklin Fu'r naee Green. which
was voted second on 24 or the 28
ballot s. Both wound up their
reg ular seaso ns with 20-0
reco rds.
Anna, at 19-1 the only ot her
Cla ss A team with less than two
losses. finished third wit h 217,
followed by Bucyrus Wynford
118·21 In fourth with 170 and
Haviland Way ne Trace tl8 -2)
fifth with 130.
Rou nding out the Class A list
wer e Mingo Junction in six th,
fo llowed by Jackson Center,
ApplE' Creek Waynedale, Sebring
McKinley and Indian Valley
South, already eliminated !rom
1ournament play.
Aller, 19-1 during the regular
season with Its only loss a 106-102
double overtime decision to Day ron Dunbar. was awarded 22 of 31
first place votes In the final AAA
balloting. The Knights of Coac h
Joe Petrocelli had a 297-255
margin over Cl eveland St. Joseph, which finished 18-2 and
received two first place votes .
For Alter. It was the second
UP! poll championship. The
Knights also won In 1985.
The next five spots In AAA
remained unchanged, with Bar berton In third , followed by
Canton McKinley, . To ledo St.
Francis, Dunbar a~d Toledo
Woodward In third through

- - -:--,------

By The Bend
Family medicine:

At H&amp;R f!lock we know you 'ro concerned
tax reform will affect you. Our new Tax
: &gt;r«:asterftl sDvice rmvides a written

i

· 1alysis of how you d come out underthe
·w Jaws so you'll know wh~ther yoUr .cax
d d go up or down.

I

Dance club
.
goes vzstttng
'

H•R BLOCK
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

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

Bookmobile service in Meigs"
Count y is provided by the Meigs
County Public Libra r y under
contract wit~ the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
The Meigs Schedule for next
week :
Monda y: Carpenter !Lau ra's
S!orel. 2:55-3: 40: Dexter , 4: 10-

.Open 9 A.M.·6 P.M• .WHkdays: 9 to 5 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

.-------.:_.:....._:...._..J._____________=----------

THURSDAY
ij!JDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter No. 172 Order of Eastern
Star will hold a regular meeting
a! /: 30 p.m . Thursday. Officers
a r~ to wear street dresses.

"HAWTHORNE"

Exceptional comfort in a gracefully
.contoured trimsitional style. With deep
button-tufting and thickly padded back
and seat. To blend with any decor.

POMEROY Cat hol ic
Women's Club will meet Thu r sday at 7: :;o p.m. preceded by
Ma~s at 7 p.m.
ORANGE TWP - Ora nge
Township T rus tees will hold a
spe~ l a l meet ing Thursday. 7
p.m .. at the home of Dorothy
Ca laway. c lerk . In surance and.
a! her bu siness will be discussed.
R•EEDSVILLE- Olive Tow nship Trustees will mecr Thursday:, 6: :JO p .m .. at the Rredsv llle
Fi re Sta tion.

•

STARTS
FRIDAY

'PAGEV ILLE - Scipio Township Tru stees will meet Friday, 7
p.m. , at the Pagev ille Township
Bui ldi ng.
FRIDAY
CHESHIRF. ·- Ga llia- Meigs
Communit y Ac tion Age ncy will
hold free clothing day for low income persons Frid ay from ~
a.m. 10 12 noon. at thr agency's
elo!hlng bank in the old high
sc hool building a! Cheshire.

REG. SS29.00

ALL SLEEPSOFAS ON SALE TOO!

Alfred notes
Sund ay schoo l attendance Feb.
15 was 30; church att endance. 17.
On Feb. 22 Sunday school attendance was 33; chu rch attendance.

Hawaiian luau
Week-End

25.
1 and
,Churc h v isito rs were Ern
· Jody Brooks. New Marshfield ,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Weber.
Shalv n and Sasha. Eagle Ridge.
M~ . and Mrs. Clarence Hender·
son. accompanied Mr. and Mrs.

We inYite you to a Week-end
Winter Getaway at SHAWNEE
LODGE STATE PARK
MARCH 21·29, 1917

~~~~~c~i:~~~sew0~e~~:_r~e~

,.9.1m
"Liberty"

SALE!

Redino·Rocker t~

$289

rog. IS79

SALE!

"Bennington"

Recliner

Settleinlo this handsome detailed contemporary with thick padded back and
·seat cushioning.

$429

Redina-Way® Well RtrUntr
Americ an Traditional charm with the
features ol a genuine La -Z-Boye chair.
Tu"ed winged back, roll arm sand skirt.

·SALE!

rog.'m
" The Dreamer'"

$439

Rerlina-Rocklr® Recliner

COmfort all 'rou nd: double pillow back. Pll·
low arms, .extra thick seat cushions in an
u~ated con1emp01ary stY.Iing. Thts ReciJna-Rockere chau knows how to pamper
Available as a Rech na -Wa~ e wall recliner.

•FrH Parking
itfrH Parking
CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE - OALUPOLIS .
Where cuttomer utlafecllon II aur meln concern.

Answer:

T hPI'f' arr ~Pve ral

point s 10 goo(! ora l hral th .~
fluor idation, regular r heck-ups.
a balanced dirt and dall.v brush·
lng and ft oos lng. Sometlmo:s,
plastic coa tin gs ar c paint ed on
the trrlh to Inhibit too lh decay.
Paren!S can se t the best
exa mple for th eir children by
bru shing and flossi ng dall y.

•

A.P.R.
Financing
Now

·

Available

ON ALL NEW RANGERS AND BRONCO II'S

35TH ANNIVERSARY - David and Florence Warth of
Harllord, W.Va. celebrated their 35th wedding anniversary on
Feb. 22. They were married In 1952 .by the Rev. C.E. Haney. Mr.
and Mrs Warth have II children and IK grandchildren.'

4: 40: Danvi lle Churc h. 5: 15-6;
Rulland Civic Center, 6: 45~ 7:45.
Tuesday: Portland Pos t Of·
lice. 2: 15-.1; Leta rt fa lls, Effie's
Resta uran! . 3: 30-4::10: Rac in e.
bank. 5: lo-6· 15: Syracuse.
across from ball field, 6: .'lQ. 7:30.
Wednesday: Ke no. nor th side
of Keno bridge. 2: 20-l : Oo; Lon g

POMEROY - Meigs County
REACT Team . Inc., will be
celebra ting it s lOth ann iversar)'
at 7: 30 p.m. Fri,day at the Senior
Cit izens Center , Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy .'All tea m members arc
asked to be presenl. The team
was formed on March 6. 1977 with
21 members making up !he
membership for the charter
which is number 38.)7.
POMEROY - Planned Parcnlhood, Mulberry Height s.
Pom Proy, will be closed all day
Friday. The office will r('()pen on
Monday, March 9. a! 8: 30a .m.
Meigs
ROCK SPRI NGS County . Pomona Grange will
meet Friday at I he Rock Springs
Gra nge Hall at 7: 30 p.m. All
officers are req ues ted to dress in
black and white for degree work.
The National Grange sewing
contest wlll be judged and Racine
Grange will serve refres hments.
SATURJ)AY
SHADE - Shade River Lodge
No. 45:l will hold a Spl'cla I
m eeting Sa turday. 7 p.m .. with
work In the mas ter ma son
degree.
LONG BOTTOM - A counlry

--or--

Bottom. posl office, 3: 20-4:05;
Reedsville. Reed's Store. 4: 15-5;
Tuppl'rs Plains. Lodwick's, 6-7;
Chester, across from fire station,
7: 15-8.
OVAL bookmobiles will be
sl acked with 1986 federal income
tax fo rms un til Apri115.

ssoo $600
CASH BACK
CASH BACK
-----

'

Genev ieve Guthrie and Dan
Robi nson.
,
Charlott e Van Meter and Don
Robinson have return ed home
after under going te sts·at Universlty Hospital. Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Michael
and Charlie Whettel, Por tland, .
visited the Poole-Parker home.
February 15. Guests on Feb. 22
were Tony and Joshua Ritter and
Na th an Kaley .

music dance will br held Saturdav. 8:30 to II: 30 a.m., at the
Long B oltom Co mmunit y
Building.
RUTLAND - Rutland Baseball Association w ill meet Saturday. 11 a. m .. at the Rutland Civic
Cent er. All coaches and parents
urged to attend .
RACINE - Th ere will be a
hymn sing at Freedom Gospel
Mission. Bal d Knob. on Salurday
at 7:30 p.m. Special singers will
be "Reflections" from New
Ha ven. W.Va . The public Is
invited .
SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM -George and
Debbi e Pickens. missiona ries to
the I vor y Coast , Africa , will be at
!he Long Bottom United Met hodist Church for Sunday 9: 30a .m.
services . A slide show and
discussion about their work will
be presented.

•l1 mtted Tt me Oller - 24 Month Terms W!lh

Ap pro~ed C u~r11 1

1985 VOLKSWAGEN
JETTA
~ock H 70141.

4 rtm. sedan. Iron! wheel
drive. 4 cyl., aw cond . AMIFM rad~. radial
tir~ bucket"'"~ Jearv.indowdefogger,alloy
wheels.
w~

N~

1985 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

Stock# 74361. 2 door~ v.a. air cond., .nyl
rool. aulo. trans . PS, PB, iXJwer w1n00w1
iXJWer seat. power door OCkS, bll wheeJ, ct UO!!
contra. AM /FM rad1o, ~""' ~pe, rndialliles.
white wans.

WAS

NOW

1985 OLDS.
CUTLASS SUPREME

Stock HI074, 2 dooJS.coupe 6cyl , '" cond .
vmvl roof. auto tTans, PS, PB, power windows,
t1Hwl&gt;!el. cru .., contr~. AM/FM radio. rad"l
tires. whtle walls

WAS

NOW

S7995 $6995 $10,995$999 5 $9595 $8595
1985 BUICK
REGAL

- 1985 OLDS ·
CUTLASS 4 DR.

1986 FORD
F-250

Stock H 108), 2 dooo, hard top, 6 cvL. air
cond., ~nyl roo!, auto. Jrans.. PS. PB.' power
window~ power door k&gt;cks, ~~ wheel. cruise
contm, Mt/FM rad~, rndiallires. white wals.
~
p

~ock i IOn. 4 door~ sedan, 6cyl," ' cond.
vinyl root. auto. trans. PS.PB. I'JWer windows
power door ocks, tiH wheel. cruise conl1~.
AMIFM rad ~. radial Ires. wnte walls

Stock # 75791. 2doors. r. cyl, auto '""' . PS.
PB. AM/FM 1ad10, radJal lies, ~ ton pcku p,
long wide hed. rear slep bumpe~, K3U_I;lei.

~

~

WAS

N~

59595 $8595 S.9595 $859 5 $10,295$929

LONG BOTTOM- George arid
Debbi e Pickens, missionaries to
the Ivory Coast, Africa, will beat
Sunday 9:30 a.m. services at
Long Bo ttom United Methodist
Church. A slide show will be
presented. Everyone wel c,ome.

Wolf Pen community happenings
Mr . and Mrs. Doyl Knapp of
L angsville were· Saturday alternoon viSitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Knapp.
Mr . and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
Langsville were ·saturday evenIng ·visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley D. Smith.
Mrs. Leslie Frank , Sarah Beth
and Matthew Ryan of Texa s
Road were recent v isitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald .

Mr. Kevin Knapp, Michelle
and Amy of Racine were Monday
visitors of Mr . and Mrs. Charley
Smith .
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Holley and
Calvin lee were Sunday v lsllors of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
and Tammy. · ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed of
Hemlock Grove were recent
visitor s of Mr . Guy Sargent and
Jonathan.

Word of Life plans fund raiser

ruarv 14-16. They enjoyl'd tours
Fund raising projects for the
of the Boardwalk and th e beach. Word of Life Church Ministries
Coming back. they ca me through , building fund have been planned.
southern Pennsylvania and spent
· Friday and Saturday a yard
Sunday nigh t at Breezewood.
sa le will be held at the home or
Mr . and Mrs. Ri chard Yost are Janice Davis on State Street In
announci ng the bi r th of a daugh- Alban;·. In the event of rain, the
ter Sara h Ellen, Feb. 16. Great- sal e will be cancelled. On Saturgr;ndparents of Alfred area are
'

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 5
MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
9 TO I
44.6-3045

toothbrush.
Most child ren are able to bru sh
!heir own reel h by age six or
seven. but fl ossing requires even
more coo rdination. Pat·ent s may
have to floss !hei r children' s
teeth until they reach age 10.
Question: What can I do lo
i nsure that my child maintai ns
good dental hea lth•

Don't Miss It! Factory Sponsored!!

'

Community calendar/area hqppenings

BEAT THE
WINTER
BLAHS

c•CI-tMIIIII- J,OO ,.,..
C.CI·OIT 'MI- I l.act """

Quesllon: When should my
c hild sta rt brushing a nd
floss ing?
Answer: Parents should acquaint children with dally dental
ca re as soon as the first baby
teeth appear. You will probably
have to bru sh your child's tee th ,
since most very young children
don't have the dexterity to use a

Bookmobile in Meigs announced route

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH.
27 SYCAMORE ST., GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Clevel and St . I gnatius. which
numbered bolh St. Joseph and
Barber ton among it s 17 v ictim s.
finished eighth , Lorain Senior
ninth and Warren Harding tenth.
Stow Walsh Jesuit, which finished 20-0. the only unbea ten
AAA team. for · some reason
sllp]ied from 8th t o 11th and Ea st
Li verpool, which dropped an
82-80 overtime decision to Cambridge Monday nigh! i n a regular
season make-up game. slipped
from lOth to 12th.
Oberlin, the defending AA
1.ournament champ and 20-0 th is
season, co mpleted it s wire-lowirc !rip at op the ratin gs.
Th e Indians of ·Coach Bob
Wal sh, in wi nning their first poll
Iitie, rece ived 26 ·of 30 firs! place
votes and wound up with 294-256
edge ovrr New Lebanon D.i xle.
which also was 20-0 and spl'nt the
final seven weeks of !he ratings
In the No. 2 position .

SHOAl !lOTI •

home.
Question: Wha I ca n I do to
make m y child's first denial vlsll
a pleasant experience?
Answer: The wa y parenls •
Introduce thei r children to the
dentist Is most Impor tant. You
should tell your child that the
dentist is a tooth ca re " helper"
w ho is concerned about your
child 's dental health.
If you are nervous about this
first vis it, try to hide your
feelings from your child. Instead
of saying, "Now this Isn't going to
hurt ," try to present the trip In a
positive manner. Make that first
trip to the den ti st an adventure,
not a chore.

'

Twelve co uples of the Belles ·
and Bea us WeSi rrn Style Square .
Dance Club attended the AI hens
Al lemandffs dance over the
wee kend. The group won the
atlmdance banner. Kei th Rip·peto was ca ller for the evening
with three clubs reprcscnled .
Going from here were Dana
and Berni ce Hoffman. Ray and
Susan Oliver, Jim and Don na
Nelson.' Bill and Noam i King.
Dan and Karen Meadows. Roy
and Pat Holt er. Jim Slew art and .
Sa ll.v Savage, John Ridenour and
Ja nel Werry, Homer and Shirley
Rclt , Lynn and Clara Burroughs,
Virgil and Katherine Windon.
and Dale and Marlene Harr ison.

s~v enlh .

Fnturing: Hawaiian lufftt and Spt&lt;ial
Hawaiian floor Show f•aturing John
CNiho, lhaola Hud, and Karltnt Ctridon.
Tht tnltrt•iMrt •• notin tt.waiions
ftrmtrly with Alolla Airli"" ond han
prornottd Howaii througll tht frH world
wla Hawaiian tnftftainmtnt.
PER PERSON BARGAIN PRICE 159.00
Departing .la&lt;kron •d Golllpails
Coot locludos
...'"""rip MOttrcooch tran~partation
'laturolay night loofaioc!
•Satunlar night LuaU lt'nntr
• !jlt&lt;lai llawolian show
'!vncloy morning brtakfott [choiu of
mtrllt~ lho Included

Begin dental care ea~ly life to prevent problems

By Gall Payne, D.D.S.
staff and -help them accept
Clinical Research
dentistry as a natural routine for
mainlalnjng good oral health .
Administrator
Ohio University College
Question: What will happl'n
of Osteopathic Medicine
during the first visit to the
Question: We j ust ceiebral ed dentist ?
Answer: The first visit Is
my child 's first birthday, and my
pfdia trician said It 's lime for tailored to th e child 's age and
baby's first I rip to the denti st. needs. For ve ry young chlldren .
Isn't thi s early for my child 's !he den list will try to make them
firs! check-up?
H omfortable with the visil. Thi s
Answer: Docto rs and dentlsl s · may include a ·quick exa m
agree th ai children should have disguised as cou nting the teeth
I heir teeth checked between thei r and a r ide in the dentist's chai r.
For older children, the vi sit
fi rst and third birth&lt;,lays. T he
Pa rlier children visit a dentist. may include a more thorough
!he bett er th e ch~ nces of prevent - check-up with X-rays. a cleaning
ing dental problems.
and a lluoride treatment . The
This first visit will also ac- den ti st will di sc uss with you how
quainl children with !he dental to care for you child 's teeth at

Mario Soto tosses
batting, practice
1 ow

Thursday, March 5, 1987

Page- 7

Among the Piketon returnees a year ago.
THE PLAINS - A pair of
The talent doesn't stop there,
defending district champions,
are a pair of 1,000 .point career
Meigs and Piketon, square off
scorers in 5-6 senior Andrea however, as guards Jennl Couch
Purpero and 6-0 senior Susan and Tammy Wr ight both are
tonight at Athens High School in
·the girls class AA district semlRo~rts. Roberts has also pulled excellent ball-handlers. Couch
down over 700' career rebounds has played Impressively the
!lnals in whal has all indications
and is the main weapon In a entire tournament and seems to
of a truly great match-up.
have the knack for coming up
Both Meigs (23-0) and Piketon
well-armed Piketon arsenaL
with that something extra when
(20- ~l won district crowns a year
"They put on tremendous the game's on the line. Wright
ago and each was ousted In the
pressure
wlth their man-to -man
normally isn't a big scorer, but
regional semi-finals. Meigs lost
defense
.
We're
taller, but they' re leads the fast break with speed,
to Germantown Valley View
while Pi·ket on lost to Cincinnati quicker . We have to beat their ball-handling, and a great passFinneyt own, who won the re· pressure and can't let them run. ing eye.
The fifth starter and quickest
gional crown and was the sta te This will be our toughest les t of
the
year."
said
Meigs
coach
Ron
player, Jenni Swartz, could be
r unner-up to Miller sburg Wes t
Logan.
the key to a M eigs win. Swartz is
Holmes .
The Marau derettes have some a tenacious defensi ve player,
The Lady Red Streaks, who
big guns of their own, and no usually scores in doubl e figures,
have a 15 game winning streak,
return all five star ters from last doubt .will be Piketon's toughest and will be needed sorely to
counter som e of Plk~ton' s
year while the Marauderettes challenge this year.
'
twin-towers'
twinMeigs'
quickness.
have four· back. Actually Mei gs
sisters
Julie
and
Jenny
Miller
All live Meigs starters are
~ ...r.etur ns all fi ve of their starters
are
dead-eye
shooters
both
seniors
except Wright , a junior.
during tournament play as !henat
6-1
around
the
paint.
And
Coming
off the Meigs bench
senior guard Jodi Harrison had
(Jenny!
and
6-0
(Julie),
the
two
includes
Shelly
Stobart, Wendy
to set out due to sickness.
M
arauderettes
provide
unDee
Henderson,
Missy
Fry,
Piketon has defeated Manchesdaunted
rebounding
strength.
Woods. Beth Ewing, and Jodi
ter 80-32, Ironlon 84-26, and
s~lecUons
Both'
were
all-district
Taylor.
Gallipolis 73-54. Meigs has ousted
Alexander 57-45, New Lexington r-------,-----------~----58-38, and Rock Hill 64-31. The 8
p.m. game tonight follows the
Sheridan-Southeastern game at 6
p.m . The two winneFs will play
Sa turday at 2 p.m. for the district
championship and a ber th in the
regional tournament at Musklngum College. ·

TAMPA , Fla . (UP!) - Cincinnati Reds pitcher Mario Solo
threw to batter s Wednesday for
the first time since undergoing
shoulder surgery six months ago
and said he felt great.
" There was no pain," So to said
after throwing half-and threequarter s speed in 10 minutes of
batting practice. " I think I'm
right where.I want Ia be. I 'd like
to be able to plch an Inning In a
game In about a week."
Solo, theace oftheReds'sta ffa
few years ago, suffered through a
5-10 season last yea r and underwent shoulder surgery Aug. 23.

The Daily Sentinel

day from 12 noon to 8 p.m. a
spaghetti dinner will be held at
the trailer behind the Word of
Life Church, Burlingham. Th e
menu will lpclude spaghetti,
salad, ga rlic bread, and pie and
the cost will be'$3.50 for adult s,
and $1.75 for chlldren.

Hospital az:txiliary has meeting

.A soup sale has been set for
M arch!Jat!Oa.m .ln the lobbyof
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital by
the Wom en' s Auxiliary . Orders
m ay be telephoned to Betty
Imboden, 992-7298, Betty Christo. pherson, 9092-6258; Mary Rumfield, 992-3680, and Mildred
Withee, 992-3623.
At ' las t week 's meeting Ellen

Deaver was wel co med as a new
member. It was noted that
sever al member s are being
trained to work In extended care
and urgent care departments at
the hospital.
.
Refreshments wer e served by
Louise Bearhs aod Janice Da- .
nlels with Nellie Borgan and
Bonnie Conde con t rl butln ~.

1984 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

1985 DODGE
COLT

1984 FORD
BRONCO II

Stock H72091, 2 doors, coupe, 4cyl., AMIFM
llldio. radial tires. buck!! seal•

Stock H74331. 2door• 4 wheel drive. 6 cyl.,
PS. PB. AM/ FM radio, rndial twes, bucket seats.

WAS

.

N~

$39'95 $2995

57995$69

WAS

N~

$8995 $7695 S9995 $8995
1983 RENAULT
ALLIANCE D.L.

c

Stoc11 H68881. 4 den~ !011111, V-8. air cond ..
linyl roof, oulo lnln~, PS. Pa ~ wildow~
~ c rtJIIfil den k&gt;cks. till wlleel. cruise
~. Mt/FM radio, stereo tape, radi~ tires,
while wals,
WAS
flOW

flOW

WAS

Stock i 74731 .2 dooo. hard lop, coupe V·R.
air cor&lt;! .. auto ~ans. PS. PB. tin wheel. crurse
control, AM/FM radio. radial ltl£5, while wans.
I&gt;Jck~ seal&lt;.

Stock H 75!10 I. 4 doors. ~ont wheel drive. 4
cyl , air cond.. auto. tran• , PS, PB. riM/FM
radio, rndiat !Wes,wllile wals.

WAS

Ntll¥

DATS.UN
280Z .
Stock i 7458 1, 2 door• couoe. an cood , I'S.
PB. power Windows.

j)OOeJ door ocks. rift
wt-eef. e&lt;uJSe ron!l~. AM/FM 1adio. ~er10
fl!le, radial ties. bucket seats. reM window
rlelOIIf!et, sunroof · f.top.
WAS
.
flOW

$4995$3995 $9495 $849

�•'
·i

•

Page- 8 - The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.Thursday, March 5, 198J.:

Beta Sigma Phi chapter meets
A program on ~ hild development was given by Norma
Torres, R.N. of t he Meigs County
Health Department at last
week's meet ing of Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapt er, Beta Sigma
Phi Sororit y.
Ms. Torres ta lked about
the
,.

·.

var ious organizations available
in the country which can help
with developmental dlsabllltles
and showed a video tape on child
development.
Ma idie Mora and Shi rley Beegle were hostesses lor the meetIng held at the Grace Episcopal
Parish House. Others attending
were .Jane Walton. president ;
Reva Vaughan, Ruby Baer ,
Donna Jones, Clarice Krautter,
Norma Custer, Rosie Sisson,
Joan Corder, Ann Rupe, and
Eleanor Thomas.

[!emisylvania Jed all other states in
lottery revenues lor the fiscal year
1984 with a total sa)es of about $1.2
billion, followed by Illinois ($912 million). New York ($890 million) and
New Jersey ($848 million).

.~

'..

/

'/ '

Megan Elaine Garnes

Garnes birth
NEW PASTOR- The Rev . han L . Myers is new pastor of the
Wesleyan Bihh• Holiness Church. His wife is pietured here with
him.

C,hurch gets new pastor, name
The form er M idd lepon Independent Holi ness Chu rch, Inc,.
located at 7o Pearl Street.
Middleport . ha s changed its
name by vo te oil he membership
to the Wes leyan Bible· Holinc•ss
Church of Middleport , Ohio. Inc.
The church voted to affiliate
with the national orga ni ze~ ! ion of
---tt1t
litr- Wesleya n Bible Holiness
Chu re h, In c. whose ht•adquarter s
are ·JocaiNI in Frank lin County,

Orrs town. Pa .
New ly-elected pastor el the
church is th e Rev. Iva n L. Myers,
New Have n, W. Va . and Margaret McDaniel is the board
secretary. The Rev. and M rs.
Myers have a daughter, Mrs.
Reba Clonch, and a son, Gary
Myers. both ol Gallipolis. T hey
have four gr andch ildren. Th e
new pa stor invites the public to
worship at the chu rch.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Garnes, 4:JO:!O
Pomery Pike, Pomcrov announce the birth of a daughter,
Mega n Elaine, on .Jan 28 at the
Holzer MPdical Cen ter. Th~
infa nt weighed seven pounds, 14
ounc es and was 21 inches long.
Pa ternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Garnes, Salem
Center, and the pater nal gr ea tgrandpa rent is Pearl Garnes,
Wilkesv ille. Malt'rnal gra ndparent s are Mr. and Mrs. Gene
M itch, and maternal grea tgr andfather is John Terrell .
Pomeroy

•

•

.

•.

Tips
J. ~"'"' sirloin
DelicKJus, UKUIR~,
-.l..:.....s-..-..• ., _ _,~
' srrr)/hered in Ofii{JfiS IJIII.lTIIUYUVVft.,. ~

~ bokal{XJfoto andso/adbuffet with 1rJt w.getobks,
llrolrJt rDJPS andfnrit.

St. Rt. 143 Just off St. Rt. 7
Presents The

CROSSOVER BAND
FRI. &amp; SAt
MAR. 6th &amp; 7th
and

MAR. 13th &amp; 14th

Aff.lilfr.Cft.Eol

Include! Salad Buffet Willi Hot .
Spot• (aW·~u-can-eat) a~d bake&lt;~
P!JiaiO. cannot be ~~ with other .

d soounl$. Tax not1nci. C.UIIIft
IHdlwlllyJIIrl'IIID.

I

""'""'EROSA #1&amp;l
PLu
, 111, I"URU

Is slightl y handicapped.''
Bill and Sandy alrt'ady have a
r,-year -old dau ghter, but want
anolh&lt;'r baby, Kon ieczka sa id.
Adoption ag&lt;'ncles told 1hem
th ey would be low on the list
bc&gt;cau se I hey have a chi ld and
also quotra fe es of up to $19,000,
he said .
"So, they decided they'd try
$125 on an ad bench and $2,000 or
so on medica l expenses ." Konirczka sa Id.
Under Il linois law , the co uple
ca n pa y the hospital and the
ob!' trtrl&lt;' ia n, bur ca n m .1k1· n11

payments to the baby' s mother.
he said.
Tlckel giveaway draws angry
crowd : WORCESTER. Mass. Monty Hall would have been
proud of the people who don_ned
zany outfit s attempting to win
frPe trips from Con ti nental Airlines, which was giv ing away
ti c k ~ls to apologize to th e city
and It s residents.
In a scene rcminscent of " Let' s
Make a Deal, " Conlinenl al Alr IJnes randomly handed out 100
tick ets Wednesday to m ake
amends for misspelling the city' s

name.
Mort' than 100 people gathered
in front of City Hall. where they
pushed, shoved and tr ied l o grab
tickets fro m one another. So m&lt;'
people In th e crowd dressed up In
cost umes , hoping to attract the
att en tion o f th e air lin e
employees .
Continental , whic h reccnlly
bega n ser ving Worces ter Airport. announced the giveaway
las t month after distributing
tim etables that spelled the ci ty's
nam e in correc tl y as
" Worchcster ...

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

Meigs County's Oldest Flori ~ t

352 E. Main St., Pomeroy, 0~.
PH. 992-2644
"Oju·" lmilrrt t&gt; d -

fVf't'(•r

Dupliral&lt;•d "

HEADQUARTERS BEAUTY SALON

Spring Speetaeular
PAUL MITCHEll'S AWAPUHI PERM
(Contains oil natural ingredients madt from the Awapuhi Ginger plant
found in Hawaii)

REG. S42.SO

SALE

$32SO .

LADY FINGER NAIL TIPS
Have the Nails you Always Wanted, Like Cured To Lost
PROFESSIONAL $ SOO
MANICURE.. .......

PAMPER YOURSELF WITH A THERMAL FACIAL
Activated Heat Penetrating Facial That Giv11 You R11ults Allor A Single

REG. 522.00

Trea~~~ $1 500

12 TANNING SESSIONS

IN OUR SCA WOLF TANNING BED

$3500

Dtln ALittle Pleee Futther attd Co111e See Ut At

HEADQUARTERS BEAUTY SALON
43918 Forest· l•n Rd.

Potneroy
992-6311

Deann Denny, Jeanne Pauley, Debbie Jones and
Connie Aldridge

11 AM .t PM MOl •Sat
Ca 1be ·sed wllh ottle; dill· •

co:r:fs T~ nOIIncl. CoiiPOII IOfll

far

· rtysllt.

:;"~-~~~ltiNI!outn.

mn

•udu Vllltlllllll3115111 . 117~ma
- -- -

-

.•

......;.--

POffDEIIOSA
PLu
VIIWifiiii3/14J8l 125

tUM-4 Pll Mon.-Sit.

•

offer excl. tulce, beer and
~ne . cannot btl used With o\111!1

...

dlscoilnls. Tax not mel.CouPo•
goMtofiiiW,.rfJ. slrt.

At,.nltiPIII"'•Hit!Mtl·

"' POIIDERDSA PLu
m

Tbere'a a family faellng at Pondei'OIIa."

•:z

iii

=-=po=l\IDER=-=-:08=-=-A~

COVER CHARGE
Must Be 21

~

··~

-'

~;~m VIIW\IIItl13114117
..
·- - - - - - - ,
lpecltloltlr II flll'tlclpl(mgStui~MeMIIIIIIJ

Uppl'r Ri w•r Rd.-RI. i , Gnlllpoli11
{So. or !-ilh1t&gt;r Rrid~.. Pluzu}

C 198? Pr:rderosa. Inc .

-·
•

•

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Scientists see bright future in medicine
.

By GAYLE YOUNG
UPI Science Writer
NEW YORK (UPIJ. - Leading
scientists predict by the turn of
· the century Americans will see
an AIDS vacci ne,' the demise of
psychoanalysis and smoking and
more frequent use ·of fal se bo~y
parts - but the common cold Is
around to stay.
The prediction s were Included
In a survey of 227 scientists,
conducted by Louis Harris and
Associates last yea r and r eleased
at a news conference Wednesday, that Included six Nobel
Laureates and other leading
researchers In the fi elds of
ca nc er. nutrition a nd
biotechnology .
The pollsters asked I he scientIs ts what medi cal advances the

POMEROY AREA
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION
SALE

.

future holds, and most of them
answered optimistically. saying
America will pro b a b I y become
a "smokeless" society where
people eat less, exercise more
an d live an average of 10 years
longer than they do today.
"Of 'course scientists are always optimistic. We wouldn 't be
scientists If we weren't ," said
Nobel Laureat e Dr. James Wat son of the Cold Spr ings Harbor
Laboratory in New York. "But I
think the report is fal: ly
realistic."
Watson . who shared the 1962
Nobel Prize in Medicine with two
other scientists for discovering
the structu re of DNA, said he
believes scientists will be able to
cure a number of diseases In the

future becau se they ar e now
discovering the respon sible
genes.
"We are lea rning so much
about diseases not caused by
germs," Wat son sai d. :·Perhaps
we can do lor Alzheimer's what Is
now possible lor ar terial

sclerosis,' '
A major ity of the researchers
agreed, saying cures lor some
for ms of ca nce r are even within
their grasp.
" We are learn ing about the
ca ncer cell at a rata that Is
almost' alarming," Na ti ona l
Cancer Institute Director Dr.
Vincent DeVIta said in his
res pon se to the survey las t yea r ,
accordin g to the report.
"If there i s a cancer cell
headquartt'r s somewherP they

should be frightened out of their
wits, becausewe a redolngl~ln gs
that nobody wo uld have predicted 10 years ago."
The ,researchers sai d they
expect a sale and effective AIDS
vaccine by the end of the century
and, perhaps, a cure the following decade. However, they said
the disease will probably have
struck at least '1 million Americans by that lime.
A few other sobering pred ictions were included In the report.
Th ere will be little progress In
the light against some forms of
cancer , malnutr ition will continue to stalk the Third Wo r ld and
no one wil l come up with a way to
prevent the co mmon co ld. the
scientists predicted .

FRIDAy I ·MARCH 6 th
AND
SATURDAY, MARCH 7th

-Don 'I Mi11 Thlt Sale//

Britain allows sale of anti-AIDS drug
.

LONDON (UP)) -Brit ain has
approved the sale of the AIDSlighting drug AZT. which slows
the r eproduction process of the
deadly virus and allows some of
it s victims to live longer ..
The drug is still awaiting
government approva l for prescription use in the United States.
The Brilfsh Health Depart ment announced Wednesday il
had licensed the Wellcome Foundation to distribute and sell AZT
in Britain following a recommendation by its Commlltee on
Safety of Medicine.
"The licensing authorit y- the
Health Department - has now
granted the produ ct license, and

the Wellcome Foundation is free
to market the dr ug in _thi s
country." a Heal th Department
spokeswoman said.
"It is how up to the co mpany to
decide when and how to make the
drug available,'' she said.
The company has said it hopes
to produ ce enough AZT by May to
help 10,000 victims worldwide.
The drug, to be sold in Brit ain
under the name Retrovir, is
likely to cost about $195 per 100
pills.
Last September, the U. S. Public Health Service decla red AZT,
short lor azidothymidin e, to be
the first drug th at seems to hold

promise lor some viet ims of
AIDS. or acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
But Dr. Robert Windom , ass istant U.S. hea l th secretar y, ca utioned that the exper imental drug
is not a cure fo r AIDS. which
des troys the bod y's diseasefi ghting capabilitY:
A specia l advisory panel to the
Food and Drug Adm inistration
recommended in Ja nuary that
the drug be licensed for sale In
the United States. The FDA has
not made a final decis ion but
most authoritie s expec t
approv al.
AZT was developed for AIDS
by Burroughs Wellcome Co., of

We've over bought at Empire.
We need to turn our excess
inventory into cash to pay our
bills. We want to make 1987
our best year ever. This may be
the biggest Furniture Sale the
Tri-County and surrounding area
has ever seen. Over $1 ,000,000
in name brand furniture over
flowing our 30,000 sq. ft.
showroom and our warehouses
that are stocked to the ceilings.
We've had the deals
for over 74 years.

By STEVE HAGEY
JERUSALEM tUPI I - Lawyer s for accused Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk ar e picking
apart the testimony of aging
Holocaust survivors , trying to
p~:_ovc their memories are no
longer good enough to positively
identify him as the death ca mp
guard "Ivan the Ter rible."
The defense highlighted contradlctions Wednesday in the
testimony of Trebllnka death
camp surv ivors who have idenlllied Demjanjuk, a reti red Cleveland autoworker, as the br uta l
g\iard \ vho tormented Jews on
I' tlielr
iO'.'dle In the gas
chambers.
Defense attorney Mark O'Connor repeatedly disputed proseculion wllnt'ss Gustav Boraks. R6.
to show his recollection s of the
camp, where he was forced to
work as a barber, contradict the
testimony of oth er former Treb- /
llnka Inmates as well as his own
earlier accounts.
O'Connor found Instances in
which the plump. white-haired
Boraks had troub)e rememberlng numbers. loca tions and other
details of his stay at Treblln ka.
O'Connor also noted dlscrepan cies in Boraks' testimony about
the color of the death camp
guards' uniforms . Th e wllnes s
sa id they were green. whileother
survivor s said black.
The chief defense attorney also
found contradictions in Boraks'
efforts to identify Demjanjuk in a
set of photograph s. Boraks also

O:aY'

400110 OFF

lOO's OF YARDS
STRIPES &amp;PLAIDS

.

Research Triangle Park, N.C., a
branch of the British-based co mpany of the same name and a
corporate r elation of th e Wellcome Foundation.
The drug Inter feres with reverse transcrlptase, an enzyme
used by th e AIDS virus to
reproduce itself.
Patients receiving AZT In a
U.S. study had a d~a m atlca lly
lower death rate. In addition,
some symptoms such as fun gal
Infection receded. However, the
dr ug also causes anemia.
Researchers have sa id they do
not know how long the dr ug can
prolong pa tients' lives .

'

LARGE GROUP CALICOS

ONLY

BIG TABLE SPECIAL
Buy One Yard-Get One
ALL

$198

FREE

BUTTERICK PATTERNS THIS MONTH
$199 (Special Order)

ALL SIMPLICITY PATTERNS ...................... $1,99
Co1e tee at II o1r •••locatio• - We thl•k yoa
wlllllke oar 1ewlook!

Defense picks_apart
Treblinka testimony

Quirks in the news
Bench ad gels great r esponse:
CHICAGO 1 UP ! I - The ad
appeared on a bu s bench. but il
didn't promote a currency ex change, a hair salo n or a
res taura nt . It carried a plea from
a couple who wa nt to adop t a
baby .
"I've be&lt;'n del uged." Allorncy
Michael Konieczka said Wednesday afiN an app£'arance by the
couple. idcn t ilird on ly as Bill and
Sa ndy of a wcstN n Chicago
suburb. on "Good Morning
America."
He said about200women, some
of them offerin g to be surrogate
mothers and som e t&lt;'enago gir ls
who are already pregna nt, have
responded since the adver ti sement was placed three months
ago on a bench near Union
Station .
The ad said: "We can provide
lots of love and securit y; all
medica l ann lega l expenses
pa id."
Th e coup le is looki ng for a
while or Hi spanic baby, Ko~
nieczka said .
" II doesn't even have to be&gt; a
healthy baby ," he said. " Th ey
ar e wi ll ing to accept a child who

.

..

r ~T;,;-auiiTilfif:Lr' .-1::
I -~ :
I $'"9 I wllhJiotSpo('_
$~9 I $~9 H
2
I /Or f · II
IBemage
I '
I
I
I
1·
"'"""-"'-· "
1

MIZWAY TAVERN

The annual report of -the U.S. Com~
mission of Pensions for 1874 not~&amp;
that "with the death of Daniel T. Bji
keman, of Freddom. Cattaraug~s·
County. NY. April 5, 1868, the last of·
pensioned soldiers of the revoluliO~'
passed away." ·
·l

,
.
••

Salisbury School
Spelling Bee held
The Salisbury Elementary
spell ing bee winner wa s sixth
grade, Shelley Smith, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Pearl Smith.
Runner- up was six th grad&lt;'r,
Misty Hayman, dau ghter of Mrs.
Darlene Shain.
Smith will
represent the school at the
county spel ling bee which will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Monday ai th~
Southern High School in Racine.

Last r~volulionary

Lollery milliQJts

Thwsclay, March 5, 1987

110 W. MAIN

contradic ted himself several
times as he test i fied in the thi rd
week of Demj anj uk's dea th penalty tria l.
O'Connor has argued that if
Trebli nka survivors cannot
clearly remember what happened in the camp 45 years ago,
their reliability as witnesses
a g a in s t D e m j a n j u k i s
ques tionable.
Demjanjuk, 66, was a Soviet
soldier captured by Nazi troops
in 1942. He says he wa s never in
Treblinka but was a prisoner lor
most of World War ll, alter which
he obtained U.S. citizenship and
became an autoworker in Ohio.
He was extradited to Israel last
year.
A three-judge panel Is presiding over the non-jury tr ial
aga inst the Ukrainian-born Dem·
janjuk. who says he was arrested
in a case of mistaken Identity.
If convic ted In Israel's fi rst
war crimes tr ial since the Adolf
Eichmann ca se in 1961, Demjanjuk could be hanged, as Eichmann was after admitting hewas
the ar chitect of Hitler's "Finaf
Solution."
Two other Trebllnka survivors
have testified they are sure
Demjanjuk is "I van the Terribl e." Boraks also Identified Demjanjuk but his testimony seemed
confused and tentative.
Boraks said his life wa s spared
at the camp- where more than
850,000 Jews wer e executed beca use he was a bar ber and the

110 Welt Majn. Pomeroy
992·2284

POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS

Sale

FRI.-SAT.
MARCH 6th-7th

TESTIMONY CONTINUES - Gustav Boraks, age 86, a
Trehlinka death camp survivor, idenllfles plclures of "Ivan the
Tt•rrihl e," while prosecutor Michael Shaded looks on, during the
trial ol John Demjanjuk. Boraks was a barber In Treblinka where
he cut women 's hair hefore they went to the gas chamber. (UPI)
knew they wer e going to die"
after going through the ca mp
"barber shop."
"They were afraid to enter ,"
he sa id . " But I va n took a bayonet
and forced them ln . He pushed
them Into the barbc&gt;r shop. They
were in ju red and blood flowed,
and pieces of flesh were cut off."

Nazis needed someone to crop off
the victims ' hair. which they
·used to slu ff pill ow s and
fu r ni1ure.

Customer
•Appreciation

r

Bora ks, wh o sai d he lost
sever al r elatives In Trebllnka,
told how the women " cr ied and
tore at their hair because they

Cossiga to meet on crisis today
Democrats to hand over the
By JOHN PHILLIPS
ROME (UPII - President primr minister's job to them this
Francesco Cosslga· arra nged to mon th. .
The Socialists said Wednesday
meet today wit h veteran politicians to seek their advice on they disapproved of Christian
resolving a gov&lt;'rnment cri sis Democrat plans to present vetetriggered by the resignation of ra n statesman Giullo Andreotti
Socialist Prime Minister Bellino as their ca ndidate to lead the
next government .
Craxl.
Deputy party lea der Claudio
Cossiga. a Christian DemoMartelli told reporters the Socialcrat, Is to meet with former
Ists
will recommend a ca ndidate
presidents Giuseppe Sar agat .
other
than Andreotti, the68 -yearGiova nni Leone and Sandra
old
foreign
minister and fivePer tinl today as well as Senate
tim
e
prim
e
minister,
during the
President Amintore Fan fanl and
consultations
with
Cossiga.
Chamber of Deputies President
Nllde Iotti.
Christian Democrat Party SeCosslga then will begin consultation s wit h delegat ions from the cretary Clrlaco De Mila said
competing parties. First he wi ll neither he nor party president
meet wit h leaders of the domi- Arnal da Forlanl, deputy premier
nant Christian Democrats and In the outgoing Craxi coalition,
later with th e Communists. So- are suitable caooldates.
Th e government cr isis, which
cialists and representatives of
the neo· fascis t Italia n Social
Movement .
Cosslga Is expected to meet
with the remaining party deleg a·
CH ICAGO (UP il Cook
lions Friday before naming a
prime minister delegate to at - County Hospital's decision to
tempt to form a new government . limit the dulles of a doctor with
Craxl remains In office In a AIDS Is the reason polle e were
relucta nt to remove the body of
caretaker capacit y.
Craxl resigned Tuesday after an AIDS patient who apparently
31(, years in power, canceling an . co mmitted suicide, a health
agreement with the Christian authorily charged.
"This is the fi rst of many bitter
fruits" to be reaped from the
recent decision of· the Cook
County board, which rej ected
medical evidence suggesting the
doctor, could safely treat patlents, said Dr. Quentin Young,
former head of the hospital' s
house staff assoclatloh.

I

govrrnment in the crucial
months of elect ion campaigns.
As his time In office ra n out ,
however, Craxl began balking at
the idea of what It alians dubbed
"Ia staffeta"- or pass ing of the
baton to a Chr istian Dem ocrat.
Saying there had been nothing
" automati c or obligatory" about
the accord, Crax l decided to
foment a full -fledged government crisis by resig ning.
In this way, the Christian
Democrat who will succeed
Craxl will have to win the support
of each of his coa lition partners
In order to be named prime
minister .
If Craxl's Socialists refu se to
support Andreotti or some other
Christian Democrat candidate,
the alternative would be early
elections, which most par ties
hope to avoid.

brewed lor several weeks, invo lves a stru ggle between the
Christian Democrats and Craxl's
Socialists. without whose support
the coalition could not clai m a
parliamentary majority .
Craxi , 53, became It aly's first
Socialist prlmt&gt; minister Aug. 4,
1983, with the support of the
Chr istian Democrats. When his
first government fell on June 27,
the Christian Democrat s allowed
him to return to the helm of an
almost Identical government.
. But Cra xl' s res urrection was
ba sed on an understandin g that
by the end of this month, he would
turn over the prime minister's
office to a'Chrlslian Democrat .
Chris tia n Democrats, fearing
Socialist galn_
s at the polls If
Craxi remained In office until the
nex t scheduled elections In June
1988, wa nted to be running the

·Hospital .to blame for fear: polic~
Young, now president of the
Health and Medi cine Polley
Research Group. said the dec!·
slon led unwarranted public
fears abou t AIDS and led to the
Incident ea r ly Wednesday followlng the death of George Wynne,
an AIDS patient.
Wy nne, 38. wa s found hanging
by a bed sheet from overhead
metal ra llln~s late Tuesday
night, and efforts to r evive him
were unsuccessful, said hospllal
spokesman Dennis ~ ulllvan .
When police arrived to remove
the body, they refu sed until
hospit al personnel put him in a

I

body bag, Sulliva n said. Officers
who tra nsported th e bod y wore
surgical gloves, masks and
gowns.
Heal th aulhoritles have said
the viru s that causes AIDS Is
tra nsmitted only through blood
and semen. either through lntimate sexual contact, blood tran sfu sions or the sharing of contamlnated needles.
·
However, Young linked the
police fears to the recent county
board decision, which wa_s opposed by several medica l groups
and is being appealed by lhe
physician alfected.

•

POMEROY
992-20~4

GAlLIPOliS
446-2691

' '

•

•VISA
•MASTERCARD
•DISCOVER
•LAYAWAY

�'

Thursday. March 5, 1987

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. March 5, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

!

Pomero Area
ere ants--·-

20°/o OFF

ug ome1

DAN~S .
WE THANK YOU, OUR CUSTOMERS, .FOR YOUR
PATRONAGE OYER THE YEARS. YOU ARE OUR
MOST VALUED ASSET.

STOREWIDE

'

.Marguerlte. Shoes
MIDDLE SHOE STORE IN THE MIDDLE BLOCK

2 5°/o OFF ALL JEANS

Flexsteel SofTouch
Wall Recliners

ru

Friday, arch 6

LEE
LEVI
CHIC
SUNSET BLUES
GASOLINE
TODDLERS

BOYS
GIRLS
STUDENTS
MEN'S
JR.
MISSES
WOMEN'S
FRIDAY, MARCH 6 &amp; SATURDAY,

·OUM

AND

1/2 OFF

Saturday, March 7

.

i' l

..

/

•'

•'

CHAPMAN SHOE'S

·'''

,,•••'

FLEXSTEEI~ #Hf....

2.
DAYS
ONLY

FilE U'HOLSTERED FURNITURE

·:·

.~

I

....,'
.
..'

•FREE DELIVERY

.-.

'

..

108 W. Main

•
....
•

.'
.,

of POMEROY
'

EMPIRE FURNITURE
.

·

992-3307

' \

.•,

Pomeroy, OH.

·'•

~•
.•
.•

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAYS
THANK-YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE

A

:..._ CULTURED
~ Pearls

';'
••
•
~

.•

"---.-/

C~stomer ·Appreciation

•

•

•
"•

•••

'•
.'"

•'•

0/o
20OFF

•
•

••••
••
•

"''•
~

LARGE GROUP ·

$999

.

WOMEN'S
SHOES
·
NATURALIZER, HUSHPUPPY (Sizes Broken)
ALL OTHER WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES

20°/o
' OFF
.

ALL MEN'S

·. DINGO BOOTS

20°/o
'OFF

HARTLEY SHOES ·
MAn C. VANVRANKEN ·OWNER .

•
21 0 East Main

•

614-992.5272
Pomeroy

•

woMEN's

LITTLE GIRLS'

LITTLE GIRLS'

MEN'S 522.95 WRANGLER

SPRING· BLOUSES
Beautiful spring prints and pastel colors .

PANTY SALE

SPRING DRESS SALE
Our ne"Y Spring Collection of little girls'

WESTERN
DENIMto SHIRTS
Neck sizes
Sleeve lengths

••

•
•

..•

LOTS OF OTHER Gin
ITEMS TO CHOOSE
FROM
•Pendants •Bracelets
•Earrings ·•Class Rings

·•
••

.•'
•
..l••

.

:t
...

ALL

•

S~L£\

30°/o
" OFF
212 EAST MAIN
P.OMEIOY
992-3715
•

unLE BOYS'

, .~.

·- ..

.. .

'··-

·

SALE

S( 0.00

14'/• 20.
32 to 36 inc hes. True Western styles.

TO $46.00

SPECIAL/
MEN'S

DRESS
SLACKS
New colors and basic
colors in sizes 29 to 60.
Pick your favorite shade
in your style and save.
'Hubbard slacks
included.

515.95
521.95
529.95
S34. 9S

SL6CKS...... 512.77
SLACK$ ...... 117.47
SLACKS ...... S23.87
SLACKS ...... 527.61

s1.85 WINTUK

RED HEART
YARN
Big color selection. 3%
ounce skeins. Made by
Coats and Clark

TO

'$14~
WOMEN'S

BERKLINE
RECLINERS

·WiNTER
DRESSES
*28 to '32 Dresses
Clearance *8.00
*34 to '38 Dresses
Clearance '10:00
1 40 to '•48 Dresses
· Clearance '12.00

.

-

PLAYTEX

SLIP SALE
FULL SLIPS, HALF SLIPS, CAMISOLES
•Beige. white. black and navy .
•Nylon or poly/ cotton bland
•Sizes: S to XXL and 32 to 52
REG. S5.25 TO S14.00 ·

Sale

$4 20 $112°

CHILDREN'S

WHIRLPOOL

TO

lNG JACKETS

JEANS JACKETS, NYLON
JACKETS W/FLEECE LINING,
REVERSIBLE JACKETS and
HOODED STYLES.
Solids and Prints
Linle Girls Sires: 3 to 24 mos.,
2 to 14
Little boys Sires: 1 2 to 24 mos ..
2 to 7
REG. s11.00 TO 136.00

$8 79
$

SKEIN

Fins/ Cls~tsn~s/

79

RCA
TV SPECIALS
19... DIA. COLOR TY
. ONLY
6600

$2

25" DIAG. CONSOLE
COLOR TY
ONLY

$48800

25" DIAG. REMOTE CONSOLE
ONLY

$58900

20°/o OFF SALE
ENTIRE STOCK OF PLA YTEX PRODUCTS
IN(LUDING 18 HR., SUPPORT CAN BE
BEAUTIFUL, NOBODY'S PERFECT, CROSS
YOUR HEART AND MORE

Stock Up Now And Save 20%!

APPLIANCE
SALE
Evaty Whirlpool Appliance
in stock is reduced for this
spacial sales event.
- Automatic Washers
- Electric Dryers
- Gas Ranges
- Electric Ranges
- Chest Freezers
- Refrigerators
- Trash Compactors
- Dishwashers

~

METAL
CABINETS

BASE CABINETS - CHINA
CABINETS • UTILITY .
CABINETS - WARDROBES

On Sale
Now!

Flt~sl C(lltsn~s/

DEVON
SPORTSWEAR
S18.00 to S24.00
Clearance $5 °0
S26.00 to 136.00
Cleoranct 580°
Reg. '38.00 to su.oo
Clearance 512°0
Reg. sso.oo to S72.00

(learanct

°

51 5 0

-

SUPREME
MOWER

19... Cut
Cast Aluminum Deck
Recoil Start
Two·Yaor Limited
Warranty
- Reg. S3S9.9S

SAVE

$40°0

Now$31995

This
Big
Event
2
DAYS
ONLY

.

Friday :
&amp;

-'

Saturday:
.

'

flb11ielde

9:30 to 5:00
MON.-SAT.

SAVINGS

LADIES'

SALE

During

$8 29 $3 818

New Shipment/

$9 59

STORE HOURS

ALL DIAMONDS

.

9s(

REG.

Rompers, libs and 2 pc. Short Sets.
BUY NOW - SAVE PLENTY
SIZES NB to 24 Mos .. 2 to 7
58.50 TIES ...... ,................ Sole S6.5 5
· Sole Prices
S1 0.00 TIES......:.... ,......... Sale 57.50
: Start At Only
.
'
512.50 TIES..................... Sale 59.35
_ _ _ _ _...,.,..__.,.-51.-,;;..,;;.
Sole S10.00

Sole Prices Start At Only

c..
30°/o
dtelers .

dresses is raduc&amp;d for this weekend sale .
Sizes NB to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 8x, 7 to 14.

·sPRING
OUTFITS
!~~~~~nd~l~!vo!.~~~i~.
. Knit Play Suits, Dressy 3 pc. Suits, 1 pc.
Four·in· hand and ready tied ties.

WALL-AWAY
RECLINERS and
· ROCK-0-LOUNGERS

STO"E RINGS

'

Sole Priced
From Only

SALE Sl Q09 TO $2 379

••

'

BRIEFS, HIPHUGGERS, BIKINIS AND
RHUMBA PANTIES
Nylon and Cotton in sizes 1 to 14 .

Quality name brands include Laura Mae
and Judy Bond.
MISSY &amp; EXTRA SIZES
REG. S12.00 to S28.00

•••

Sale

TENNIS
SHOES
AUTRY, ADIDAS, CONVERSE, FOOTJOY.

Newt

'

, I

~~~~~~~,~~~ ~

NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

ALL WOMEN'S

MIDDLEPORT

Special Sale Prices For All Our ~alued Customers
Thanks For Your Patrona

'

•'

. ..,... ......

·

290 NORTH SECOND

'

.,
I

WITH EACH SHOE PURCHASE SELECT A
FOOTWORKS OR TENNESSEE MAXI BAG
OF YOUR CHOICE- 1f2 PRICE

MARCH 7 ONLY

$299 95
'

1/2 Price Spring Bag Sale

STONEWASHED
BLEACHED
PREWASHED

.

..

,,

SKET~H

NO LAYAWAYS

RECLINERS

CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION DAYS

FOOTWORKS
CONNIE
NATURALIZER
FOOT THRILLS

BASIC
·FASHION

ON FLEXSTEEL
STARTING AT

,.'""//~

LY FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

•

.THANK YOU ALL!!

•. •
IBCIS lOR

.

.

·Customer Appreeiation

•

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,llllllllf DMitl

fll41 , / :KFt

CKAIGt CAl li

.. .

.

'

.'

�Page~ 12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

March 5, 1.987

Thursday, March 5, 1987

Senrices held for western star-~"·

•
-----Local Briefs:----, Fair board ann.ounces '87 attractions
Bloodmobile to visit, MHS
•

An American Red Cross bloodmobile will be at M eigs High
School. Rock Spri ngs, from 9 a.m . to 2 p.m . Monday.
High sc hool b lood mobile visits supply II percent of the blood
collected by the Red Cross. Mor e than 60 regional_ hospit~ ls in
Wes t Virginia. Ken tuc ky and Ohio use bl ood and bl ood products
for vict ims of life t hreate ning accidents. ca ncer patients.
s ur~ica l patie nts. premature babi es and ot hers.
Res ident s between 17 and 68. who weigh at least 110 pound s
and a re in good hea lth . arc invited to join the Meigs Hi gh School
stud ent s as donors on Monday

Board changes meeting time
Th e Mr1 gs Coun ty Board of Educa tion has changed the time of
its regu lar meetin g Tu f'sday evening. Normally, the board
would meet a t 7 p.m . HowevN, due to an At hens meeting, the
gi'Dup will still meet Tuesday eveni ng butt he sess ion will sta r t
at 9: :10 p.m.

Nonprofit firm aids gas users
Th e Salva tion Army and Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency ann oun ce 1hat monrv is now ava ilabl e from the Citizens
. Energy Corp. to ass ist Columbi a Gas of Ohio c ustomer s wi th
their home heat i n ~ bills.
Perso ns needin g hf&gt;a l ass ista nce should co nt act CAA al
:167-7:!41 or 992-6629 to m ake an appointment.
Citizens J·: nergy Co rp ., a nonprofi t energy compa ny, is
coo pera ting wit h Co lumbi a Gas distribution co rnpanies.to ass ist
low-i ncome Co lumbia Gas customers to meet their ener gy
needs. The Salva tion Arm .\' was selected to act as the fisca l
age n t to admi nister t he progra m

HEAP emergency money available
Gallia-Mcigs Communit y Ac tion Agency i s ann ounci ng that
mon ey is sti l l a\'ailab lr ' throug h the H EAP emergency
ass is t'anrr pr ogr am to ass ist low income Ohioans experiencing
emergency situations with thei r hom e h&lt;'aling bill s.
In order to be el igibl e, the tota l house hold inco me must be
wit h in 1&gt;0 perc('nf of tho fed eral ly -esta bli shed poverty incom e
guidelines.
F:mcrgcnc.v HEA IJ ca n provide up to $200 in a one-time
paym ent i f a house hold's hea tin g source has been di sconnected,
is un der the t hreat of disconn ection. or has a 10-da y or less bulk
fuel supply. Applica nts with PUCO -re lated energy companies
mus t enroll in the percenta ge of income pay men t plan to be
eli gib le for em er g('ncy ass i stance.
App lica t ions for HEAP arc bei ng accepted by CAA through
Apr il 10. App li ca tions ar r bring takl'n at the main office in
Ches hire. the Galli a Co unt y Outreach offic·e. :120 J ackson Pi ke .
and the Mr igs Count y Outreac h office in lhP co urthouse at
Pomeroy. 1\o appli ca tions will b&lt;' ta k en at the cent ra l offici' in
Ches hi r e on Wedn esdays or Friday s. Th ose need ing more
informa tion m av ca ll 44fi-06ll or 31ii- 7:!11 in Gallia Coun ty , or
992·5605 or 992-6629 in M eigs County.

EMS unit.~ answer eight calls
Me igs Co unt y Em~r~ency Med ica l Services report s eight
ca lls Wednes dav .
Syracuse at 1'1:1!i a.m . transported Steve Randolph from an
aut o accident on Ohio 124, Min ersv ill e. to Ve tera ns Memorial
Hos p ital : Pom eroy at 2: 17 p.m . to Long Holl ow Road for
Norman IVC'ye rsmlll er to Vetera ns Me mort al Hospt ta l;
Rutla nd at 2: .1R p. m . to Long Stree t for Gene VanMeter to
Veteran s Mem oria l Hospita l; Pomeroy at 4:46p.m . to Pomeroy
Hea lth Ca r e Cen te r lor BPssle Patterson to Veter ans Memori al
Hospllal; Syracuse Fire Depart ment at !i · :!7 p.m . to a brush fire
in Svrac use: Aaro n Drummer ..John Rc nti ey and Car leton
Drummer Wl'l'&lt;' tr!'a tcd at the scene: Syracu se at 6:20 p.m . to
F.ag ic Ridg&lt;' Road for Freda Mi i lN to lil' tera ns Memoria l
Hos pit al ; Pomero:&gt; at 9:08 p.m . to Ohio 7 for Ke lly Lee to
Veterans M(•moria l Hos pit al; Syracuse' at 10:44 p.m . to Co llege
Road for. Tim Compson to Vl' terans M emori al Hospital.

Free clothing day slated Friday
Ca ll ia -Meigs Communit y Ac tion Agency will hold fr ee
cloth ing day for low -Income persons F r iday. 9 a.m. to_ noon. at
the agency's clo th ing ban k in lh&lt;' old hi g h sc hool buildin g at
Ches hire.

Scipio trust ees meet Frida-y
Scipio Tow nship T r us tees will mrct Fri day, i p.m .. at the
Pa gev llle Tow nship Building.

Card application&lt;; being accepted
F:dit h Reiser will be at the Racine Depar tment Store Fr id ay to
aecep t applica t Ions for t.hP Golden Buc keye Ca rd . Acco rding to
present plans. Mrs . Reiser w ill be at th r depar tment stor e each
F rid ay un til furth rr notice.

Grandstand attractions for th e
1987 Meigs County Fair were
announc ed Monday night w hen
the fair board ml't in regular

session.
Events for this year's fair,
Aug. 18-22, will include the
Demolition Derby on Tues day ,
Aug. 18; The Challengers on
Wednesday, Aug. 19, with lhe
group changing costumes to
present a second show as the
Grea t Pretenders; The Florida
Boys. a gospel group, ·on Thurs day: . the Ron RigsbY. Band on
Frida y an(! B litzkreig on
Sa turday .
The program ming lor lhe h\ ll
stage is now underway and
indiv idu al s and groups wishing
lo appea r there ar e to contact
Mr s. Wallace' Br adford, fair
board secr et ary.

Ferry funding
determin e i f the commissioners
would administer the stat E-'s
money for the ferry- a routine
procE-dure In these types ~ f state
to county flnanc ia,l dea lings. Th e
commissioners agreed to administer the funds.
. ·
Tom Closser of the BuckeyeHills· Hocking Valley 'Regional
Developm ent Di strict also conta cted the co mmissioner s Weilnes day in regar.d to · ODOD' s
funding for the project. Closser
asked th e commissioners, to
submit a for mal letter of request
to th e sla te for the funding,
however. il was dec ided that a
letter written by Commissioner
Richard .Jones to the governor on
Jan . 22 requesting-s tale assisl anc&lt;'. would suffice.
In his letter to the gove rnor.
Jones &lt;'s timated tha t 50 percent
of Meigs County' s bu siness

During the meeting presided
over by William Radford ; president, the board m ade plans for it s
new commerci al building, wl) ich
will be located betwee n the coon
hunters building and the ju nior
fair building at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds . .
A discuss ion was held on the
movi ng of a log cabi n from the
property of Jay Ha ll to the
fairgrounds. Som e of the logs of
the structure have deteriorated
and replacement logs must be
secured. The cabin will also be
given a new r oo f . A committee
was n arned to head the moving
and renova tion of the structure. Donations will be needed to
co mplete the pr oj ect and alrea dy
some contr ibutions have been
r eceived. Donations of antiques
for the ca bin will al so be

Area deaths

PatriNa Vie Da y, 2-month-old
daughter of .John H . and Shir ley
Chu tes Day, Hockingpor t , dted
Wed~esday at l he St J~s~~h
Hos ptta i m Par kersburg, VI. ·
Surviving b~s id es the parent s
are a brother. Michael, and a
sister, Christine, both at horne:
m aternal grandparents, Olis and
Vi e Chutes, Hocki ngport; paternal gra ndpar ents , Martin and
Joyce Day, A marillo, Texas:
_ t_c_on_,,_
·n_ue_d_f_ro_m_P_ag_e_l_l_ _ t hree uncles, Michae l Chu tes.
Hockingport : Mark and Gary
Day , Amarillo; an aunt, Sherne
comes fr om West Virginia. In
Billings, Amarillo; mat ernal
addi tion, Jones poin ted out tot he
great-grandparents, Alfred and
governor at that · time that
Zett a Milam, Little Hocking, and
hundreds of Ohio res ident s work
Clar en and Lottie Chutes. Hockat Wes t Virginia plants, in c lud i ng p o rt;
pate rnal gr.eating Philip Sporn and Mountai grandpar ents. John and Sadt e
neer power plan Is. and hundreds
Cubbison, Coo lville; paternal
of Wes t Vi r ginian s are employed
great -grandmot her. Cl ara Day ,
. by Mei gs County 's l arges t emWells ton .
ployer , sOu thern OhiQ Coal Co.
She was preceded i n deat h by
A f erry serv ice dur ing the
Darr e ll Day, pa te r na l
es tima ted four-mo nth closing of
grandfather .
the bridge will elimi nate 20-mile
Serv ices will be 1:30 p.m.
dr ives to ei th er Ravenswood ,
Sunday at the White Fun eral
W.Va. or Gall ipolis t o cross the
Hom e.in 'Coolville with Rev. J eff
r iver .
B urdsa ll offici ating. Burial will
The $100.000 wh ic h is to be
be in Wea therby Cemetery.
released by the sta te will be used
Friends may ca ll at the fu nera l
to meet a U.S. Army Corps ol
hom e after 2 p.m . F r iday,
E ngineer s' req ues t for profec:
lion for the corps' ow ned Mason,
W.Va . landing. Th e corps is
accepting the mon ey i n lieu of a
per formance bond .

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges March 4- Thoma s
Bailey, Heat her Cumbo, Mrs,
Gr egory Davison and daught er ,
Fleet a Dials. Ike Fox, Margaret
Higgins, Shaw n Johnson , Joseph
Jones. Melissa Kincaid. Dorothy
M cCo rmic k. Lavina M.J:!!.!ge. Harold Mor gan, Elizabeth "M yer s,
Paulette Northup. Audrey Pa tfPrson. Anthony Richards, Patri ci a Sharp, Sally ShipkQs.k y, Matthew Spragile, Olive Starcher,
Diana Stephens, Virginia Stro th ,
Donald Syrus, Connie T hacker.
T r icia Thompson.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Ridgeway. daught er , Jackson.

SCaOL.~(C':...:o.;.;.nt~in;.:ue:.:d:...:f:...:ro:.:.:m:...:P:...:a:=gc.:..e.:. :11_ __

operated by r (•gistcrpd x- ray
tec hno logists and assista n ts
!rom Medical Consultant s Im agIng Co. Thr va n Is hral &lt;'d and
a lr -conditlonrd for co m fo!'l and
has a lift with safe t\' rai ls to
eleva te t he pa ti ent from the
ground into the va n.

On ~'r id ay wh en the m obi le
unit eo mes to Meigs Count y . it
wil l br parked at the fo rmer
emergency room entrance at the
rear of 1he hospital. Lucas invi tes
t he public to view th r equip ment
after l p.m . as it m akes Its first

vis it here.

Finalists, runners-up
tContinued from Page 1 t
Powr ll : Eddie Harris. six th
grader . E rn l's f H ar r is and Sara h
· M ahlman.
Raci ne _ Michal'! \ 'a nMetrr,
fifth grader. Mr. and M rs. Ro)·
Va nM e ter : .l&lt;'rrmy Northup.
. fifth grader. Mr . and M rs . .Tohn
Northup.

Su uthern .Junior High - Not··
man Matson. ei ghth gr ader. Mr.
and Mrs. Kennet h Mal son:
Shan&lt;' Circ le. seventh grader ,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ci rcle.
Syracuse - Angi&lt;' Mills, six th
grader, M r . and M rs. Horman
Mill s;
Ke v in Arnott, sixth
grader . M rs . J lnna Arnott and
.John Arnott .

Ohio, area weather scene
•
South Central Ohio
1
Clear tonight , wl~ ~dlow in ~~
mid 3()s. SufinY60 r ay, w
highs In the mid s. .
The probability or prec lplt alion Is 20 percent l~is ~f~;rn~~
and n ea r ze ro
on g
.
Friday ·
Winds will be ! rom I he south at
.10 to 20 mph tonight.
Ohio E~tenCled Forecast

1

\.

Saturday through Monday
Fair Saturday and Sunda y,
with a cha nce oi shower s In the
nor thern part of the state Manday Hi ghs will be in the 60s
Sal~rday and Sunday and ranglng from I he mid 50s to the mid
60s Mond ay . Overnight lows will
be in the middle or upper 30s
ear ly Sa turday, and mostly in the
40s Sunda y a nd Monda y
mornings.

COL UMBUS. Ohio (UP!)
The demand for hogs is relatively
sta ble, thanks to a 10 percent
drop in pr ices and a 5 percent
Jump in production during
January. ·
Agricultural eco nomists at
Ohio State U niver sity say prices
should show traditional Increases in February but proba·
bly will not reach $50 per
hundredweight until late spring.
Increases in production were
due lo higher average ~'{eights
and Increased January market Ings, which resultell from producers holding animals off the
mark et to shift Income (rom 1986
to 1987.

Veteran~;

Memorial

Wednesday Admissions - Lois
Poo ler , Reedsville: Billy McDaniel, • CUlton, W.Va .; Robert
Burke, Tuppers Plains: Herbert
I nscoe, Pomeroy; Paul VanMeter. Rutland ; Flossie Prunty,
Bidwell: · Bessie Patt~uon.
Pomeroy; Freda Miller , Racine;
Trlna Mays. Pomeroy .
Wednesda y . Discharges Dano Lon gstreth , Donna Cas to.

......
--···-·· .. ................ "'"" ....
.~ ..0-···· . . . . . . . . ..

Cl ... _ , , ... , .......... _ , . _ .......

~

.......

Dn

IOOJI O UO~H ·

·~· ·~

IHC~ I I'UIUI;AfiO~

I I &lt;1(10 M I IT YII(IJ,Y

OWONti OU OIO'I~
1 Hu~u••

,...,.,.

•1111110 "'ltiA
IUNOIO PIO!I

IOOP M

MO~On

'"'n•flo••

'""'
&gt;00 P '"
M '"""'0"'
UI OOv

the office of Bernard V. Fultz

at 111 Vz W. Second Street,

Pomeroy, O~io. for the sale
of the Elmer Young, Sr. real
estate. The real estate is
situated on Eagle Ridge
Roed in Chester Townahip,
approximately 3A mile southeast of ~ . R . 7 . The-real estate consists of a one story,
2-bedroom home with bath,
approximately 6.75 acres of
real estate by Deed descrip·
tion .
,
The undeuig11ed reserves
all rights to reject anv and all
bids and all bids are subject
to the approval of Probate
C.urt of Mtiigs Countv . An vane interested may call
992-2186 for an appoint ·
ment to see the property .
Offers will be received until

a.m. on March 13.

1 987: All interested parties
mav be present at the date
and time of the sale and bid
competitively for the property .
John Mora, Administrator
of the Estate of
Elmer Young, Sr .

.

ste'p 1 of the Meigs County
House,
Pomeroy .
Ohkl, the following de ~
scribed real estate :
Situated in 1he Village of
Pomeroy. County of Meigs
and State of Ohio: '
Parcel No. 1 : being com·
manly known as 130 State
Street and having Dean for·
marly owned by 'Irene Kelly,
Carl Ebersbach · and Ernest

Eborsboch .
leing Lots Numbered 155
· end 155·'- ' in Dabney's Ad ·
· . dition to the Village of Po , meroy, Ohiu.

DEED ' Vo -

. lume 284, Page 263, Meit!s
County Deed Rtcords. Th•s
Parcel
appraised
at

$3,300.00.
Parcel No. 2 : being com·
manly known as 126 State
Street and having been for merly owned Dy Cliffo~d
Mung, et al ., Gilbert _S~II ·
ling and Walter A . Swilling.

1 Card of Thanks

MEIGS MARAUDER

The family of
MARY JANE VOLL
wishes to thank all
the neighbors end
friends, and the
Rev . J . E . Hossler,
for his comforting
words . Than~s to
the D actors,
Nurses and Staff
of Veterans .
Memorial Hospital .
May God Bless
You!

•

JUNIORS' COTTON SKIRTS
SALE $1 O~O
REG. S13.99
ONE GROUP LADIES' -SIZES 8-20

STRETCH PULL-ON PANTS
Reg. 57.99
SALE $5 99

ONE GROUP

BABY BLANKETS
REG. $7.99
SALE$ 5 99

BATH TOWELS

REG.
lATH TOWEL .............................. S3.29
HAND TOWEL ................................ 2.59
WASH ClOTH ................................. 1.29

QUILTED PRINT

PAUL VOLL

. .....
· -····
-·-........

llew Homes Built
" Frae Estimates"

PH. 949·2860
Or

:~=~-::::.::.!.~'

"-w.. o~ To Da

._
... _,_
.
...........
.
.......
_
..
"-•-·o-.,..
.,
__
n---..•- ::::::·;:,::,,:11-0••

ginnng at the northwest
corner of Calherine Rein hart's lot; thence north 86
deg. west G5 feet; thence
south 71 deg . west 60 feet
to a stone; thence south 3
deg. west 150 feet: . the nce
east to Catherine Re.nhart' s
Southwest corner: thence
north 16 deg . east 170 feet
to the place of beginning,
W2)

'o
Elberfeld by deed dated No-

Southwest corner of Benjamin F. Biggs' lot. opposite
Catharine Reinhart' s house;
th ence North 86 deg. West
83 f eet to a stake; thence
North 16 deg . Ea sl 98 feet
to the center of the Run;
th ence along the run South
80 d6g. East 82 feet to Benj amin F. Biggs ' line; thence

43, Pege'589 oflhe Record s
REFERENCE DEED ' Volume 283, Page 597. Volume 286 , Page 205 and Vo-

REFERENCE DEED ' . Volume 288. Page 887 and Volume 290, Page 451, Meigs

Said real estata is to be

All of Lot 102 in V. B. Horton's Addition to Coalport
now Pomeroy, lying east of
the right of way for I.C.H.
No. 7, Secrion Pomeroy,
and more fully described as
follows:
Beginning at the northea sl
corner of said Lot 102:
thence west along the north
line of said lot a distan ce of
about 66 feet to the east line
of said Highway No . 7 ;
thence south along said
highway to the soutb line of
said Lot 1 02 ; I hence east
along the south line of said
lot about 41 feet to the
southeast corner of said lot;
thence nonh along the east
line of said Lot 102 a dis ·
tance of aboul 66 feet to lhti
place of beginning.

of Deeds in Meigs County,

Ohio.

lume 290-l.Page 451 , M ei gs
County DAd Record s.
This parcel appraised at

$600.00.

appraised valu a.
Said sale is subject to approval Dy the Common Pl eas
Coup , Meig s County, Ohio.
Howard E. Frank, Sheriff
of Meigs County, Ohiq
App'roved:
Fred W. Crow. Anorney for

614-992·34116

l-11-tln

l-4·1 mo.

FARMERS BANK AND
SAVIN(;S CO .. Plaintiff.
(315 . 12, 19. 3tc

ACTION
TOWING

Bob Barton, Owner

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

614-992-7537

2·11-1 mo. pd .

2-5--86-tln

FOR SALE

NOTICE OF SALE
Offers will De received until 3 :00P .M. on the 20th day
of March, 1987, at lhe
Mayor's office, 237 Race
Street, Middleport. O~io,
for the sale of the followmg
described real estate. to ·wit :
Real estate si tuated along
Route 7 and is a portion of

100ft.

X

100ft.

Hartinger Parkway
Middleport
·Zone- Commercial

Lot 327 No. 052. The Vil-

lage acquired title to said
rea l estate by deed recorded
in Volume 227, Page 857,
Meigs County Oaeds Re·
cord s.
Sale of sai d real estate was
authori zed by Ordinance

Call"992-3005

1987. The Village reserves
tlle right to reject any and all
bids . The sale is pursuant ~o
Section 721 .03 of the Oh1 o
Revis8 d Code.
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
Village of Middleport

(CUI OUT FOR fUTURE USEI

or 992·6167

.·

Colho doy l ust :;tmn uo Hyli tJII

Run Rt.l
2927

614 992

Ruwnrd

FOU ND C;~h co CAl ! Jtlll1(1 to hn\lu
FOUND k11y s llmd Hntl Mum
SlrlJ tt ls . s uo ll1 Pntttl Pl uuwn l
A uuis lcr O ll tcH

Yard Sule

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
Bu ildi n{l 502 Second, Sflt thru
Sat , Noxt ·Wt!Omun Ag!Jru:v
Wa sh or , dr yur . w ringur tv llO
w o5 hm d uublu ttJbs . olnctrk &amp;
go s nmgns . tnhl o. c hnlrt. . clo
thmg, ntrtlq uos.. mnny rt orn s l

Pt Pleasant

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

&amp;

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

1124 Eost Moin St.
Pomeroy
HOURS: Tu r.·Wttd.. frL
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR.
Alto Trantmlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Bw- Chonu or Appointment

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

Feb. 5. 12. 19, 26: Mar. 5,
12

985-3561
All Makes

•Wa shers •Di1hwashar1
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

PARTS and SERVICE
Htk

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
.MAKING HAMMERED LAW SHADES.

9

Wan ted To Buy

t-.27-1 mo.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

TOP CASH p ard to r '83 modnl
and nowflr u sod cnrs S mt th
Bui c k-Po nl iac. 19 11 Eu utm
Ave ., G11 11ipvlrs Ca ll 6 14 -4 4 6

2282

BOGGS

J.R.'s REPAIRS

We PII Vcash lor lulu mo del r: lttnn
used Cllll
Jim Mink ChtlV ·Oith In c
Bill Gtmn J nhrrsor1

U. S. RT. 50

EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Electronic Organs

Authorired John o.. re,
New Holland, Bush Hog
form Equip111fnt

Mobile service

Deuler

614-843-5248

Farm Equipmenl

Used M obile Homos C11 ll 6 14
44 6 · 0175 .

Buvm u d ruly gold . silvur co in s,
rings . inwnlry. storltno wHrc , old
coi n s , l~~ro e currencv Top PI!
cos Ed Btrrk llll BIH bor Shop
2f1d Av11 Mrddl oport, Oh , 6 l4 ·.
992 - 3476

Employmenl
Services

Parts &amp; Sarvloa

REASONAILE • RIUAIIE
8-20-'86 ttn

1-3-'86 tic
11

SIZE 23X30X007

2s(

y ord Snlo lor Brownm 1 roop_
27 62 . M ur ch 4 thnl 6, 8 00 \Ill
5 00 . FtrSI Stttlfl l

6 14 446 ·3672

t 179-87 adopted Jan. 26,

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

" At Reasonable Prices "

PH. 949-2193
or 949-2756

Pl. 949-2801
or 949-2860

John

K. ltnh

Owner/Medtenic

CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

1-!·'17-l ....

Help Wanted

CLOSE OUT

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Truck . auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding .
(All makes &amp; models!

V ici nity

Sunday: I p.m.. 7 p.m.

6-17-tf c

A EPS NEEDED

ON

For busln11n 11 ccoun11 . Full
T1m11. UIO,OOO· tBO .OOO ·PII'rt
Ti m e. S12 ,000· 5 18 ,000 · No

•KELVINATOR

Selling, ropftftl busmoss Set
you r own hours Trnining pro

•ZENITH

CUSTOM BUlLT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN
•GIBSON
•SATELLITE SALES
&amp; SERVICE

virlnd Call
M F . tlnm

1 612 938 6870.
ro Spm tCen tllll

S t 11nd1Hd 'J tmo)
AV ON S11ll A von· M alle 40%
Call 61 4 ·446 · 3J68

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALIS
l -16·86-tfn

CHESTER - 985-3307
2127 / lin

On Jl ondn bht. urnb1tious punfln
with pl e unnt pr:Hion&amp;lity for
lntur11nce ofl• c11 Mull be pro lt
clent i n m11th, 8r twplng Send
re1ume to ; Bo• 1 100 c/o
Gallipoli1 Dally Tribune. 826
fh lrd Avenuo. Gll llrfiOitl , OM

46831 .

GUN SHOOT

Happy Ads

6

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PLUMIING &amp; HEATING
161 North Second
Middlsport, Ohio 45760

Bashan

SALES &amp; SERVICE
P'oy Your Coble &amp;
Phone Bills Here
, IUSINISS PHONE

&amp; lncM iiVfl progr11ms

Gntnl
e&amp;rnmg llOittnltlll. For POIIOOIII
inHtr\ltfrW w r ltfl , Mt 01\HIUI·
O ist . Mur Carll ul 801 T 2 0~
Gellipfllll Doily 1rlbunft, A:26
Thhd At.~e Oelllp oll~ . OH 456l1

Building

Good wr th Peop le/ P~•t vo ur

1•1en11 lo w or k E11rn flOOd • U
selling Avon Call 614 4:48
2166

Faclory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

16Ul 991 -USO

IIIIIINCI PHONE

t0-8-lfn

(6141 991 -7754
1 1 ?11111 ~

fume 290. Page 451. Moigo

FOR SAlE

County Deed Recorde .
Thit Parcel appraited at

.

BINGO

Parcel No . 5; being commonly known as 651 Os·
borne Street having been
formerly owned bv Ricky
Icenhower. Lillie M . Hauck
and Eunice Gtrauss. at al ..
end Harvey Y.:oodard.
The following premites
to-wit: Being a pan of Frac·

IAGIII CLUI- POMIROY. Oti.
lliUII,, 7 1'11- 11 6,1$

HAPPY
18th
BIRTHDAY,

tlon No. 17. Section No. 2.

Charlie Sargent' s
CHRISTMAS
TR EE FARM at
Alfred , Oh .. 4 mi.
W . of Tuppers
Plain s on St . At .
681 .
A good opportunity for

an ambitious fam ily .
Priced on inspect ion.
Call for Appointment

For Lease

Summ er jot&gt; llppll c• tron s bHing
ICCtpl fld by l ht G1lllpo h1 All ·
cr&amp;allon Oept . tor th11 l ollowmy
Certified lileyuard: Cftr tif iMI
W . S .I : C1thi 01 / CI11rk . Dn~tdllnl!l
for 11ppllcntiont Is M 11rc l'\ 2J.
Apply AI 618 Secnnn A vf!nue

E0 E

9115·4167
49

HBJ IAI UIIInCt; F1rn1 Unit Suttk
..11!11 rtlp . tn GAIIia ,&amp;
1urr ounding count in . Uni~ul!
mArket ing IYIIAm. Many ltlttlt ·

lng

ing IICCOun tt . Com trllny hmlfllh l

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

We Cetry Fl1hing Su pptlel

lume 281!1, Page 181 andVo·

CLOSED SUNDAY

--------..,-"
lo st Yello w . 111n anrl ~hrh J ls mnll

7

10-8-Uc

Roger Hysell
Garage

2-5-87-1 mo.

REFERENCE DEED : Volume 132, Page 186, Volume 287, Pogo 779, Vo-

OPEII OM SATM~

loti · M Ale dog .. wiro h an , blac h &amp;
grey . l o st 1:1round Cl11r k chapel
C h ~ u ch . Woi9 h11 25 lli5. Attwnrd
offornd An swnu to ttamo
Wh t!!h ors Cull 614 · 388 8798

Public Notice

estate bordering said lot
which was owned by Sarah
A . Kohler at tha time of her
decease. ·

oGRAVEL
•SAND
•MASON SAN~D
•SEPTIC GRAVEL
.r=ILL DIRT
•TOP SOIL
II'EIIIIONMY-FRIMY. 8 A.l .-5 P.M.

Lost and Found

----·---

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Lessons start

Annou nc 1:mc nIs

lc ·
OOVf.RNMEN J JOBS

t16.040 869 .230 yr Now Htr-

ing

Call 806· 687 6000 E • t
A- 9A05 for curr11n1 l fldi'!rllllttt .

Th" Mr1•gi lout School D111ttict
••llkll '" ' mdtYtduel tv pwviri n
tmme tutoring to 11 uudnnt w ho
live• in thll Pomeroy nrnl! Th11
lwmll t ti!Orrng Uttvi C'll "'"' to be
providl!d liviJ 15 1 h()llfl Pfr r Wllllk
The h o mt~ tut or wtll hn Cfutlfifld
attn a lemftlliary lbac h11r a nd-or
e sptlctf lc le11rnlnt;~ d lub•lit l e~
t uctl or In th11 SUtfl
Ohio,
Pet1o n1 lnutrl!llt ed In thl1 poti·
lion ahould contu t R Ch•rhtt
Ho!ltday , Melgt Loc•l Diuu~.t o r of
Sp!tcilrl Educetion , 6 14- 742·
31 13 (S11Iom C11 n1 e; EIIIITUJnltry
Sc hoon

or

AVON , no IIIIV!Ct Ctltrge. 0p4n

FnnneriV Mason County Sand &amp; urave

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

6

614-985 416 2

3-4-1 mo.

"All you need to know
to make your ownquill1
and feel proud!"

for more information &lt;all:

mises, a strip ten feet wide

895-3800

Rat Ttmior puppiHS , 304 676 ·
1 506

Found NorwogHm Ftk Htw nd Dog tn Tuppnu Pllttll~ Call

949-9070 or
949-2045

QUILTING
LESSONS

PH. 992-9949

off the southerly side of said
LotNo. 102 , extending from
Fronl Street back to I.C.H.
No . 7.

Letart. W. Va.

2 fumule h~l l BOt11Jies puppi131 .
304· 676 -257 1 .

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
-----·---. Ffl h. 17 , m ul11 Golrhlll
USED TIRES
R atrtevor . oo
Ad
S 100 rownrd C11 ll . IJroon Ktnq
&amp; BATTERIES
614-99 2 7029

.

MARCH 16 &amp; 17

the above described pre·

Rt. 33

7559

K trl!I ~ IJU•Y

190 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

SAVE AND EXCEPT from

52,000.00. .

Pen Doberma n t e m~lo ('log.
good w1tch dog, 304 · 675 ·

los t ·w hti O unv olotlll co ut ;ttr1ttl!J
mon ey Socond Avu noar fuu
hyd11111 1 ~c r uu h u m C11 rl' s Shoo
S t o ro Re wmd Cn tl 614 388 ·
8649 ur 614 · 44 6 471 1.

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

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

54 Misc. Merchandise

ONLY

992· 7738 aitar 4 :00 and alh fo r
M ike o r Oebble.

t:o ~ r

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Parcel No. 4 : being com·
West Front Street, located
near lhe Mason Bridge ap·
proach, having been form·
erty owned by John H.
Koehler, Sarah Koehler and
Lawrence D. Hartinger .

Free to good home . 1 yr old

female dog; Halt Airdale, hllf
G•rman Sh'apherd . Call 6 14·

0" Tow,,h;p Rood014 2

llo Sunday Calls

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Setvices

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

" as individua l parc~l s .
sold
Sale of said real estate to
be for not less lhin two
thirds (2 / 3) ttte aforesaid

$6000.00.

monty known aa 541 West
Main Street and / or 541

Giveaway

Located 2 Mi. E. ot Pagovllle

8-t31fn

South 16 dog . West 90 feel
to the place of beginning .
EXCEPTING
therefrom
the coal and otfler minerals
underlying the aforesaid
premi.ses and th e. ri gflt .to
mine the same Without In·
cumbranc e to the surface,
and all ways and right s ot
way along any mineral seam
underlying said premises are
also hereby e.Kcepted from
this conveyance.
Being the same prem ises
conveyed to Christian Buck
by George Day and wife Dy
deed dated April 19, 1 875,
and recorded in Volum e No .

other minerals in the premises and the right to mine
the same, without incumbrance to the surface and all
ways and rights of way
along said mineral seam are
hereby reserved to V. B. Horton and S. W . Pomeroy.lheir
heirs end assigns forever.

County Deed Records .
This Par"el appraised at

4

Publi c Notice

vember 1 , 1869, at the

Township 2. Range 13: be-

f:

13

ll tiiOII S, 304·675 40 )5

County Deed Re cords . This
parcel
appraised
at
. Parcel No . 3: Being commonly known as 652 Osborne Street and having
been formerly owned by
Clifford Icenhower, Richard
Eblin , Harrv and Iva Carpen·
ter and John and Jane Leifheit.
Being South of Union
Avenue and East of the tram
road across the ravine, in
Fraction 17. Section 20.

J:

::::.:!:.!1-.-.
..,
..,.

..,_,,

949•2801

n

Ll.l Licensed Clinical Audiologist

•~•••-

REFERENCE DEED: Volume 279. Page 959, Meigs

&amp; IAA~L•.INC.

SAl£ TICKET PRICE
STORE
HOURS
9:30 to s·
Monday thru
Saturday

SIDING CO.

KELLY

ODD LOT SOCKS
1f2 OFF.

·

Flattened Alurn. Cons
26' lb.
Clean Sheet Co1t Alum.
25 ' to 2q• lb.
U1 COPPER ............... 42'
GOPPER ............... J2&lt;
Irony Aluminum
5 to 18' lb.
SCIPIO RECYCLING

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

n -~-•flflll ·•

Public Notice

$4,600.00.

zCJ

Town No. 2. and Range No.

ONE TABLE OF.

.

BISSELL

PAf HIll FORO

ALSO all the adjacent real

HOODED SWEATSHIRTS
REG. S18.99 SALE $1400

ONE GROUP - SOLID COLORS - SIZE 3·13

1/Ct

•VINYl SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•&amp;tOWN IN
INSULATION

heater cores . We can
also acid boil and roll
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

11- 1..........

u-......,••••

EXCEPTING the coal and

ty, Ohio 1 hereDv offer fo.r
sale at 10:00 A .M . on Apnl

___.,

1 3, lying on the west branch
of Sugar Run , described as
follows :
Beginning at the South
West corn er of a lot of lend
deeded by V . B. Horton and
S. W. Pome roy
Frede rick

one-half
acre, more or less.

CIK.Irt

Reg. Sl7. 99 Shirl! ....................... Now slS.OO
Reg 519.~9 .................................... Now S13.50

can repair and recore radi' ators and

___
·-n·--·-·-·-···--•-c-.·-··==u.....,_,._,
-_=.::::.r_
--·
_ .

aN-&lt;:I.T-.
_.. .. .,..1•- •••_,

William Price .
Being Lots No. 1 59 and
158 in lhe C. W. OaDnev's
Addition to said Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio.

containing

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF 'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
, FARMERS BANK AND
' SAVINGS COMPANY,
221 West Second Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PLAINTIFF
- VS .GEDRGE STITT, et al ..
DEFENDANTS
Case Number 86-CV-261
As Sheriff of Meigs Coun-

~EFERENCE

.... _
·-·...
•·-e-.

,_
........, =:::;:·.::
,

:o.:·~:t.

and Margaret Mae Price and

10 1987, A.O.. onthefront

&amp; MEN'S

We

R.ADIATOR
SERVICE

,..n--·-••

lll-·-~~
l .... _

Public Notice

Offers will be received at

COMPLETES - Mike Marlin or 37900 State Route 7,
Pomeroy, has successlully
completed a course in auctioneering at the Midwest School
of Auctioneering at Madriver
Mountain, Bellelontaine. He
graduat ed Feh. 13 and will
take his exam I nation In Columbus In the near luturc.

~-~
~-·
1--I.Mt'"'1- Yoool lolt_ .. .......

OtoOO

M 1...(:111 0tfll

LEGAL NOTICE

11 : oo~

ltl .all

~·7-"""''
Ml - ~ . . ,
lOI - II'"ie'

100 0 M ll&gt;UD&amp;T
1 "" ' M

Public Notice

NEW E.A. HIDEAWAY BEDS

•

.,, 00

~=~·

Public Notice

SOLD IN IllS ONLY

oa •"'

Qlllll

C/ouified p ase1 covet' rhe
f allowi"8 1e/ephone exchansu...

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

(3) 4, 5. 6. 8. 9.
10, 11 . 12·. Btc

EA. PC.

on oo

1J -_ l
o-,
.. _

,

'.

She attend ed Board Baptist
Churr h.
Surviv ing are two sons. Harry
W. of Let art and Char les M elvin
of Genoa, Ill. ; two daught er s.
[)(,r othy E . McDermott of Mount
Alt o, W.Va., and Ha zel R. Smith
of New Haven, W.Va .; three
sis ter s, Vella Gerlac h of L etart,
Estella Rector of Carrollton, and
Hazel L andino of Fontana :
Ca l if. ; 12 grandchildren and ll
grea t -gra ndl'h!ldren.
Service., will be Sat urday at 2
p.m. in the Foglesong Funeral
Home. Ma so n, W.Va .. with the
Rev. Dick Tennant officiating.
Burial wil l be in Soard Cem etery. F r iend s may call a t .the
fun era l home from 3·5 and 7-9
p.m . F r iday.

.$499s

10 Do"

.• ..,,.., :,..,, ,....,...., .... .,,..,,........... I C -

....._,"!'

-0.

not

"00)
11100

... -~

·-··~oo ·
' 1 _ ............ ~ .....

c....... _,

II··

lO III

&gt;IIIII
nlac

._.

__

'"" ''"~'' """

n .a *011111

MOO

.. 00
Nil!

o ..0111'H

""............. . . ., - .............
f&lt;M ..,,.,.,., •..,_
..........
,u,.,._-...,. c"""""'ll(l'"'
........
................. _
. ....,_
.........

CQO'O [)t O&lt;" ""

SAVE 125.00

WESTERN DENIM SHIRTS
Demand for hogs
reported stable

0·11-DI

IDA..

lDAf l
IOAOI

Senti

Business
Services
r~::::~~~;;:=~~========~;:;;~;;;;:;;;;;;;.;;-

-

·-.........
........
-.............................
_ ·---·-- . ...
...........
.
RATES

OO U~If·

ENCLOSED TABLES
WITH

WOMEN'S SIZES 30-40; MEN'S SIZES 14'12· 17'12

Mobile CAT

YO itu.CI'AN AD CAlL 992·2156
IIONO&amp;Y tht~o~ fatOAY I A.M.· to S P.M.
I Ul. Urttil NOON 5.UUROAY
ClOSED SUNDl'Y

Re tha A . Br ooks , 80, Letart,
W.Va .• died Tuesday at Pleasant
Va lley Hospital.
Born March 3, 1907. in Jackson
County. W.Va .. she was llie
daughter ol the late Charl es and
Bertha F lower s Howell .
Her hu sband, William A.
Brooks, preceded her in dea th in
1982.

20°/o-50°/o
Off
EVERYTHING

.

kn ew life
a finer
ter" Iinnever
m y whole
thancharacRandy
Scot!," Graham sai d of his
longtime friend . " He was a
humble man. He didn ' t wa nt togo
paradi ng around like so many
former fi lm sta r s. as he could
have donil, from tal k show to talk
show and that sort of t'hing.
" He didn't wan t to have every
little detail of his life splas hed on
the screen," Graham said.

Retha A. Brooks

Blowing all high Prices Away!

T he patrol said Doles was le ft
of ce nt er on County Road 23 and
Goodard struck an embankmen t
when the acc ident occ urred.
Two M eigs r esidents were
involved in a head-on co lli sion on
Ohio 124 Wednesday.
Stephen L. Randolph . 28, of
R aci ne, was wes tbo und, about a
mile eas t of U.S. 33, when Jerry
L. Wolfe, 21. also of Racine,
reportedly coll ided with Randolph' s vehi c le.

in terv iews.

.

992·2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Wiridy March Sale

'Randolph was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi tal for trea tment or min or inju r ies. His 1979
Chevy Caprice suffered heavy
·
damage.
Wolfe, w hose .Chevy C-20 susta ined m oderate damage, wa s
ci ted for assured cle ar dista nce
ahead. Randolph was cited for
failu re to wear a seat belt.

89 was buried at his r eq ues t in
th~ fa mily ce metery olot.
A telegra m from Pres ident
Reagan ca lled Sco tt "one of
Hollywood's fi nest talents."
The 15- mlnu te serv ice atten ded by 25 family members
Wednesday was as quiet as I he
life of the film legend . a privat e
m a n who r are l y g r a nted

anyt ime on Saturday , and un til
one hour precedihg the services
on Sund ay.

Infant Day ·

Patrol tickets · GaUia resident
A Galli a County man was
involved in a two-car accident
with a Crawford County ' ma n
Wednesda y.
Paul Goodard. 5:l. Patriot, and
Delmas C. Doles, 30, Galion,
wE-r e in an acc ident on Count y
Road 23. 3. 1 miles west of Ohio
325 in Meigs County at 3: 30p.m. ,
accordi ng to the Ga illa-M elgs
Pos t of the Oh io Highway Patrol.
Goodard. driving a 1977 Buick
Ce nturv was cited with !allure to
use a 's~a t belt by the Patrol.
Do les, dr ivi ng a 1977 Ford
Econoline. was ci ted for fa ilure
to yiPld.

CHARLOITE, N.C. tUPi l Randolph Scott , the gunsllngin g
hero of three decades of West erns, was eulogized as "a man of
tremendous character" in a
private graves ide serv ice condurte~ by €va ngellst Billy
Graham .
Scott . who died of nat ural
causes Monday at his home in
Bever tv Hills. Ca lif., at the age of

Service and the fair board will
co-sponsor the shaw which will .
· i nclude three cla sses and a
minimum of 10 ex hibit s will be
needed for the even I.

r eceived .
Th e board has
agreed to have a hay show this
year, the show having been
dropped .from f a ir events ear Iter ·
The Meigs . Soil Conservation

The

Ohio

3 Announcements

FOR LEASE
4500 SQ. FT.

COMMERCIAL
BUILDING

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addont tnd rtm odellng
- Root ing 1nd gutttt work

4

- Concrttt wonc
- Plumbing 11nd tlewic•l

F•m•i• pu ppv·whllt wfth black

work

IDEAl RET All
STORE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

701 2ND AYE.

. ,••JJS

GALLIPOLIS

A•clnt Qun Shoot IPOnlortd by
Rtelnt Oul'l Club. Every S1.1nday .
btgfnnlnt~~ '' 1:00 p.m. feC1ory
Choke, 12 gu1ge 1hotgun1.

jFrq Eotlmot.,)
llr

t92-7314

r-oy, .Ohio

4-15·'86-tc

tan ltoriu . ph one 304 · 87&amp; ·
1429.
VETERANS PR IOR SERVICE •
Cl)vld you uu 1n •~tra t1 00 00
or more otch mornh l Tho Army
Nelionel Guerd provide• OIICel·
llflt benefit• end goOd PlY Try
one y~tiH with u1 . 304· 61~ ·

3960

Giveaway

faca. C•ll &amp;,-4· 448-3073 eft•

0&lt;

1·800-S42-3&amp;t 9

N•eded b 1byaitt1r ft:tr 2 c ttll dren,
1 :16 AM until4!15. four den. If
lntnrnted 304 ·882 ·2427 11tar

5.

• :30 pm

Wooden pJIIo ll on Hrti &lt; OMt.
ftrlt·Hrw bllll. jnqulre kt ptr·
•on et O.lllpoll• DIHy Tribune

Ren1 htt lrallar
married co• • in

Ofllco ,

8U Third All'•nue,

Golllpollo.

1pece

for

country in

"ctl~e fot looking efter el ·
ll&lt;f¥, 304 ·773· 5&amp;33 Mon
lhru Fr18:00· 5:00.

dertv

·I&lt;- 1; , _ - - - - - - - - - - - -

�!I

Page 14 The Dail Sentin-el
12

Situations
Wanted

54 Misc. Merchandise

Merchandise

LAFF-A·DAY

51 Household Goods

love one7 Large room w1th bath

hot mealt , tv extraa $400 00 -

$600 00 Ph 614-266 6609.

. AUCTION

:":,~~NITURE

62

Oliva St .• Galhpohs, New &amp; used
WDOd coal stoves, 6 pc wood LA
auite t 399. bunk beda 8199.
recliners new &amp; used bedroom

Schools
Instruction

suite. . . wringer 'washers, &amp;

shoes

Retuun Now Southeaste rn Bu s
tness College Call 614 -446
4367

1 B Wanted to Do
Roofmg , Pamtmg small plumb
1ng and (;arpu try tobs Reason a
bl e, Free Es tam ates Ph 304·
676·296 1

)5

"My wife needs a facelift."

Wellm an 's Pamttng Res1dent1a1
Commerical . lndustrtel , Brush
Roll Sp ray Pamt1ng Sandblast·
mg Work Guaranteed Free
Es t1mates Ca ll 614 245-5662
Will take care of elder ly 1n th etr
home. I No 11ve inal Elcpenenced
Rel1ablt1 Ca11Anyllm&amp;614 · 388-

9822

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1976 K~rkwood, 14•70. 3 bed
room 2 baths, newly remodeled. lnt;:ludess carpet1ng,
$8 ,500 00 m best offer 304-

2 bedroom 1n Syracuse S 160
per month, depos•t requi red
You pay utilit1ea Ca\1614· 992·
7680 or 614 992-6236

773 6873

Mobile home. phones614-446·

W1ll do hou se clean mg· Have
Ref&amp;renca Call 614 388-9931
Steve Haw ley s Trash Serv1ce
Reasonable ra1 e1 t5 per month.
good dependable serv•ce Call

614 446-0234

Financial
21

Ce ram•c busmess large K1ln,
200 plus molds end some stock
6 14· 99 2·3229
Own your own 113 99onepr.ce
detl{lntlt shoe store A reta1l
prtce un believable for Quality
Shoes normally pnced from Sl 9
to S60 Over 160 brand names
260 styles. S14.800 to 826.900
inve nt ory. tratntng, fixtures.
gra nd upenmg Ca n combme
w1th over 1.000 brands of
apparel. accesso ry. dancewear·
aerobic. ch1ldrena shop. can
open 16 davs Mr loughhn

1612)866 -4228
23

33

Professional
Services

Flot Rate phon e serv1ce gNes
you unl1mit1ed long d11tance
calling Businesa or personal

614 266-1772.

Farms for Sale

30 acre farm ha• good home,
large barn and large pond South
Western School D1st nct Ph
614-245-9248

34

Business
Buildings

Commer1cial buildings for lea1e
Downtown Pt Pleaunt Stores,
offices A One Real Estate
Carol Vaager, Broker Call 304·
675-5106

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

614·245-9248

3 8R Windtor mobile home.
Awn ings Plus 2 acres. 12 'fruit
trees. county watnr, 1eptic, ideal
location 1/ , mile N Porter· Hwy.
160 1 14,900 Call 513 731 2107 Ctn 'tl
3 bdr . 2 baths. gas heat, cental

111r, 16 •36 lngrou nd pool ettcellent neighborhood near Hol~:er in
clty school• t61 .500 Call
614· 446-396 1
Two bedroom house living
room din1ng room , kitchen.
bat h, tull basemen t. double c•
garage on approJCimttely 1 2
acres on Rose Hill, Pometoy
Ow ner must sell Reesonable
oHer will be considered Phone·

614-678·2613.
6 rooms snd' bath In Pomeroy
with basement end tireplac:e No
reasonable offer refuted . Must
se ll Phone 614-992·7462
6 room house wtth bath 1 'h
acre s, at lntertection 143 and
7 Turn !left. first green house

614·992 7463
2 bedroom with bl th and
carport l ocated on a ni ce lot in
Rutland Asking t 13 ,000. Call
614 · 74 2-2093 or 614-742 ·

2367.

Completely remodeled two bed·
room house w1th basement.
6011. 160 lot. 2312 Madison Ave
Would make excellent starter
tlome or rental property Also, 1
n ew u1e ll i te a y att m
t2 1 500 00 304-676 -5477
1 O·OO to 6 :00 or after 8:00PM

304-372-9970

llnfurn1shtd ept ·4 room s. bath .
Centrally located. 1 or 2 adults.
No pet1 References. Security
depos1t requ1red Call 614-4460444

100 acres on Gr1mm Rd .
Portland mall route, minerals
with free gas, gOOd bUtldtng
sites. hunteu paradise 1400 per
acre Phone 814-843-6185 attflr 10 00 p m. or e arly morn1ng
87 49 acret with mtneralt on Rt
338, 1 '.t. mil e below Raven swood Br1dge 66 acres level,
good location with great polll·
blll11es Phone 614· 843-6186
after 1O·OO p m
Ashton bu1ldlng loti. mob1le
hom81 pemutted, Clyde Bowen,

Rr. nt als
41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr rtnch , Rodney V1llage II
S285 mo. plut depos1t. Reteren·
ces requued C•ll Blackburn
Realty 614-446-0008.
8 room ha on 50 acres at Eureka
8200 a month 6 room lls 75
acre farm-Muon County. Call

304·675·6104.

4 BR . 1 Y, bath. L R.Rd .. dep

required. t260 par mon th . Call
614-446· 4222 botwuen 98.6.
Unfurn 641 Th ird Ave. 1226
plua deposit WatOf paid Call

614 266-6338

In t own-Vin e St : Refrigerator
d11ilwllher. new carpet. n1 ce
backyard. t260 / mo Call 814

446·9364.

3 BR, 1n country, V1nton ~rea , 2
Children . Water &amp; trllh turn 'e d
1115 t1000ep Call814-388·

968&amp;

3 BR , hou!e In ctty, A/ C,
12?5 / month Dep required
Call 614.446- 1134
Hou ts for rent on Teus Road
Call 614 446-0758
2 BR houae, lo cated· 62 Mill
Creek •1 50 month, US depoait Call 814- 446-3870
1 bd r , very clean large storage
bulld1ng In Gallipolis No pets
•1e0 month plul daposit . Cell

614-44&amp;-2143

N1 ce 3 BR -lg yatd, city 1chool
dimic:t Kanauga Cat1814-446·
7473.

House tor rent in Pomeroy, I 100
per month, 11 is Call9· 1 1 p.m

2 bedroom, Mt

House tor rent in Danville 1 y,
blth. 7 rooms. Call 6U· 742·

2347.

Vernon Ave
S236 month Rtfttence and
deposit Call Mrs. Buxton 304·

676·2651

Cute 2 room cottaQt with bath,
furn11htd, utllitl" p1id, t66.00
week, 1100 00 daposit re·
quired 304· 675· 3100 or 876·

6609.

NEW AND USED MOBILE 42 Mobile Homes
HOM ES KESSEL"$ OUAUTY
for Rent
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. OALUPOLIS. RT 35
PHONE 514·44&amp;·7274

e.

K Mob1le Homes, In~. new
•nd used homn atart1na 11
, 4 ,400.00 ancl up. 304 -676 ·
I(

3000.

1 983 Nashua with e~~:pendo . 3
bltdt'OOml, c.ntrll 1lr, .m•nv
utras. will sell whh Ot Without
land. 304-171· 5821 botweB"

e.OO 1nd 10,00 PM.

2 bdr .. all ut illtin Plld except
elec . turn or unfurn sec.
deposit required Convenient
lbcetlon. Call 814· 441· 8651 or

814-448·477e.

2 bdr fullyfwrntthed adults onlv.
utU . p1id. Call 814· 448 ·4110
In Eureka excellent 1hape 2 Bdr.
with upando. A11ponc lble
adult1 only. No pets. t225mo.
Depo1it required Ph 814- 2~6 -

8863
Houn trai\ar for rent Ref &amp;
dap. required Call 814-317·

7298.
1 981 Sc:hultJ. total electric.
central 11r. 3 bedrooms. 1 'II
baths. whh otras 304·875-

6969 1ftlf e,30 PM

5 Court Street. large 3 BR. 1 'h
bath. compl&amp;te h1tchen. gas
heat. park m rear. overlook City
park &amp;"' rrver. U60 / mo. plus
Ut1lit1ea, deposit, r8t'Brencu reQuired. No pets. Great for 2 / 3
singles . Call 814· 446-4926 .

Furnished Efficiency . 1150
lltthtiu pd Stngle. Share bath .
607 2nd, Gallipolis Call 4464416 after 7pm
Upsta1n apt. 2 bdr., p11rtly
furn1shed Ut1hties paid Adults
onlv. Deposit . Call 614 4461457 attar 4pm
Furn.'ed efticiencv apartment
Carpeted throughout . single
worktng P•rson only Call 814 -

446·4607 0' 446-2802.

740 2nd Ave., 1 BR , t 185.
Deposit required Call614-448 ·
4222 between 9&amp;5
1 BR . 9round floor apartment
All utilities paid Near McDonald• Call 814 -441-7025
New apartment : completely
turn Ref. &amp; Dep 1 or 2 adults
only Call 814-448 0338
Gracious living 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at VIllage
Manor and A1vars ide Apartmenu tn Middleport From
1215 1ncludino utilities Call

614 -992 -77e7 EOH

1 bedroom furnished apt In
Mlddlepor1 All utilitiet paid
82 10 month plus deposit Un·
furn11hed •200 614-992 -

6783

Apt · Furnished Very nice
Beautiful view 1275 per month
or 176 week Oh10 River Camp
Grounds Radne 614· 949 ·

2626

Nice 4 room. 1% bath apt 1n
Bradbury. Cal\614·992· 3312
APARTMENTS . mobile homes,
hou111 Pt. Pleaa1n11nd GllliPO·
IIt. 614-446-8221
Two bedroom fu1ni1hed apt New
Haven, 304-882 · 3267 or 304·

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room• and
light hou1e keeping rooms. Park
Centrat Ho1eL Call 614-446-

0766

Rooms for rent, dsy week
month Gallla Hotel Call 614446-971&amp; Rentas low11t120
month
For Rent · Efficiency 11eeping
room1 Csll 304-773-5851 .

Sofas and chatrs priced from
S396 to 8995 Tables 860 and
up to $126 . Hldt·a·beda $390
to 8596 Re cliners $225 16
5375 l.almps &amp;28 to 1126.
DtnaHet 8109 and up to 8496.
Wood table w-6 chaira U86lo
*795 Desk 8100 up to $376.
Hutches 8400 and up Bunk
beds c omplete w-mattreaaas
1296 and up to t396 Baby beds
&amp;110 a. 8175 Mattretseeorbox
s ~:~rings full or twm $63. firm
$73, and $8 3 Queen sets 8226.
K1ng 9360 4 drawer c hest 166.
Dressers 889 Gun cabmets B.
10. 12 gun Gas oralectnc range
1$375 Baby mattresses 836 &amp;
846 Bed frames 820. 830 St
K1ng fr1me 850 Good aelectm
of bedroom su1tes. metll ca
binets. headboards $30 and up
to 865
Used Furntture wood tabte 8t 2
benches. beds, dresser. wood
wardrobe 3 miles out Bulav1lle
Rd Open 9AM to 6PM. Mon
thru Sat 614·446·0322

STOP·LOOK·SAVE
Mollohan Furn1ture lit Apphan ces. At 7 North Gall1poha, Oh1o
Ph 614 ·4•6·7444 6pc. Wood
livi ng Room Su1te 8399.00

Mesh satillita d1ah and suneo
and recl1ner Call after 5 00 PM,

304-675 -5968

Rad1o Shack' model 12 word
processor with scrtpllt and
accessories, 1860. IBM model
75 electric typewriter, 8400
304 - 875 - 1360 . Mondey
through Friday , 9-4
NBw one man saw mill, portable
hi pressure wash er and sand
blaster New 14.1170 Skyline
mobile home, new Maytag wringer washer Phone 304·675-

6357

Gunn e Sax design prom dre1ses.
one long and one tea length.
s11es 3 and 5, both pink and
white satm. 145 00. worn o~~tee .

304-675-6489

Beigh brown tlmal love seat,
good cond, $66.00. Call aftM

4 00 PM 304 e75-6943

Brown plaid couc h. loveseat,
chatr, $100 00, good cond,

304-773·9f38

Rem mgton 243 model 700, 3x9
scope, $300.00 Phone 304-

773-5566

7398

6 p1ece llvmg room su1te. good
co nd1t1on Call614-446-121 or

61 4·388· 9065

Pla1d couch for sale. Excellent
cond1t1on A1km g $40 Call
614-446-6445
House full ot furn iture. Good
conditton Ca\1614-446-8266
Loveuat for sale Good cond1
tton 860. Call 1514-446· 9441
Gold Fng1daire refrigerat orfreeter . Coppertone eloctnc
range With double oven Both
excellent cond1tion Gas
Humphrey Space Heater. 400
BTU Call614·992-3337
Maple twtn beds w1th lmans.
new warranty on mattress sets

304·675-2252.
53

Antiques

Antiqu e Monarch co•l &amp; wood
rang e- nooo Boat Offer .. An·
tique hall tree $500· Best Otter

Call 614-379 2862.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan 's ll ltd T1re Shop . Over
1,000 ttres, slzes12. 1 3, 14, 15,
16 16 5 8 m1lesout Rt 218.
Call 614·256-6251 .
Plastic c11te m ate te apprO\I'ed.
plastic sept•&lt;: tanks. plasti c
culven s. metal culve rts. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jlc:l&lt;son. Oh 814-288 -6930
2 hydrauliC chaits. excellent
condttlon e40.00 Bach. 1 1alon
ttalr dryer tso.oo Call 614-446-

6621

16 It Utihty Trailer. dualule.
sohd floor Call 614-388-9802
Close out sale on 1986 White
sewing machtne-equipped to
zig·zag. monogrem, over caat,
mend. hen1mlng. makes buttom
wholat, dern1 . tewt on button•
• mora. Th"e machines are new
with a 10 year warranty. Suggested price Ia t329.95 now

only t98.96. C1ll 1-614-3854&amp;35 lor fret d•liverv
Swimming Pools t999. New
leftover 1986 mDdet pools
Huge 115x24 toot 1wim ara1. 4
feet deep. lncludet deck, fence,
flft1r and warranty. Financing
arranged, ln1tallation available
Call24 houn1 -800-346· 0946
Elaatric•lly operated ho1pltal
bed, wheiH chair, lib new, and
bedside commoda chair. Call

Concrete blocks all Silts yard or
delivery. M11on sand Gall1pohs
Block Co , 1 23'/:t Pine St ..
Galllpohl, Ohio Call 614· 446-

2763.

B1g 2 BR Rustle home bu111 on
your lot $11 ,995 &amp; up. Call

1·614 -8e6-7311
56

Pets for Sale

Dragonw ynd Cattef"11 Kennel
CFA H1malay1n. Pers1an and
Siamese k1ttens AKC Chow
puppies New Chow puppies.
Call 61 4-•46-3844 after 7PM

0231

RegiJtered labrador Retrtever
pups Yellows 1nd blacks Own
female and male Call eventngs

Male Cocker Spamel Reg Tt1ree
vr old 8uff Vary n1 ce 1260

614·949·2526

Purebred S1 ameu Kitten• Call
evening• 614·992 ·3192

t1&amp;0 / mo · 81Ch· t100 Dep ,
w1ter paid~Clll614-446· 3888,
afttr I 440·441 1.
1981 MobUt Momt. 14J1170, on
St. At. 143. t230. 1111 included

Clll614·992-5449.

CROSS &amp; SONS
ll S 36 West, Jackson, Oh1o

614-2e6-6461

Mltltey Ferguson, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over
40 uted tractors to choose from
&amp; complete tine of new &amp; uatcl
tqutpment Largest selection i'n
S E Ol'uo

JIM"S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SA 36 W. Gallipolis.
Ohio Call 814-446-9777, eve
614-448· 3692 Up front tree·
tors w1th warranty over 40 uttd
tractors, 1000 tools
Coming Soon. New progre"1vt
John Deere Agriculture Dealership in Gallipolis Watch for
opemng announcement
360 International dieset tractor
w1th front end loader $2760 2
bottom plowt U60 3000 Ford
tractor w1th plowt &amp; disc

&amp;3950 Call 814·2e8·6522.

477 New Holland 7ft Hey bind.
like new for 12.800. Vet'meer
Round baler 4Jt5f1 bales. used 1
teuon Call &amp;U-388-9832
4 row John Deer planter, fer11112:e

&amp; hme spreader·1 0 ft ., grtvity

bed, tractor tires · si~:e 1 B 4·
341634 mounted on nms Clll

e14-446-2614

185001\vertractor Runsgood.
good t1res &amp; paint. with plows. 4
row corn !)tenter. *3650. Call
340 lntern1tion•l tractor PS,
live power, l1ve hydraulics, with
lnternation•l mowing machtne
New Holland baler U460 Call

614·286·6522

Cub· Plow, culttVator. mower
looks and runs like new 614-

992-5803

Whh:e Farm.Tractort, Best Price
in Area, Siders Equipment Co,
Henderson. W Vt 304· 676·

7421

New two row mechincal IO·
bacco transplanter with 300 gel
tank . 81,100 00. 304-676 ·

62 Wanted to Buy

Musical
Instruments

PIANO AND ORGAN WAREHOUSE SALE. SUNOAV ONLY.

noon till 6 ·00, Pied Piper Warehouse. 1330 Commerce Ava.
Huntington, W Va. New pianos
upto40 pet"centoH II Everything
at wholepla prlcell liquidation
prices on used motchandiaell
Top name Instruments For
directions c1ll toll frH W. Va.

1-Bn0-642-3445 o' NOHNKY
1-800-624-3498

F,11111
&amp;

Su ppl1 1~s

liV I!SI IICk

Now buying sttell corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotes. River
Cily F1rm Supply, 614-446-

29e6

63

Livestock

Ouroc Boars Bred just like the
boars we tested at the· Ohio
Testation that Qalned over 2 B
lbs per day Roger Bentley,
Sabma, OH 513-684 ·2398
5 yr Quarter Horsa mlre· Hes
bHn thown. Call 614· 266-

9364

'

367·7456.

Chtrolais. Hereford. Angus.
Hereford St"''· grlin fed 90
days Helves • Quarters. 11 .26
1 ve• old bl•ck bull, approx.
1000 lbt . Wilbur Robinson

614·985· 3829
3892.

RCA Disc pltyer. lnduatrial Shop
Vac It acc"sorlet, banding tool•
including. cutter. ba~;tder &amp;. cart.
log chains It wooden ' dollies.
Pie••• call 814-241-9113.

0'

614·985·

1.400 to 1.600 lbl. 304·875·
4478.
Hay &amp; Grain ·

64

Urge round bal81 othey. t10.00
ueh Will dlllv"' Clll 814·446·
1052 1f11r 5pm.
Approximltl 1,500 b.... mixed
hey for sate, flrtt and SKOnd
cutting In bern, t1 .2tS per bale

f rdnsportatlllll
71

Autos for Sale

cruiM. AM·FM ClllllfO. Ph.
614·318-9eD2 .

1916 Iuick Spocl•l t400. 1978
Ch..., lmp•l• t400. 1978 Plv·
mouth Arrow t400, or wHI ....

•II 3 for t1000. Cell 814·441·

.'

3919.

1184 Plymouth Reliant. 4 apd .,

814-UB-1647.

AM / FM. low mll-1. C.1h

Price Ulll. John's Auto Bill•.

18' x48 ' 51~ lldg.-747 Third
Avenue. 3 phase power, 12 ft .
overh1ad door, concret1 ltoor.

lultlvllo Ad .. O.lllpoK1. OH.

1184 Chevy Chtvette. 2 • ..
avto .• AM·FM tttpt. Extra nice.

C•II614 -44S·Z312.

318·1731 1f11&lt;1PM.

3059

1962 Chevrolet BiiCIVne 2 door
1edan, 8 cylindar,standari:lahift,
68,000 actual miles. 614-985·
4308, uk for Jim

1979 Ford Wagon Runs good
t1000. located Ohio River
Camp Grounds, Racine. 814·

949-2526.

1986 Dodge Aam Ch•ger, low
mlleagB, AM -FM cas•tt• ate·
reo, running board, sun v1sor.
emaculate condition Mu•t sell.
Call before 5 :00 61•-742 2211 , after &amp; 00 61•· 992 ·

5784
.. m~99n

"I don'l exerclse?l What about lhose leg
lilts t do when you vacuum!"

1977 Nomad camper, 19112 ft.
Air, awning, dual akle. aelf·
contained . Call 614-448-1838
after Spm

has changed from romantic
themes to pohuc al themes
Ill CD M'A'S'H
0 (])People's Court
IJ) Wonderful World of
Disney: Cherokee Trail

1972 Cobra camper, fully
equipped, 2? ft Call 614-446-

02e3

Based on the Lou1s L' Amou r
book , a young witlow struggles fo r acceptance 1n a

18 ft Monitor Camping trailor.
Excellent condition, $1900.

FRANK AND ERNEST·

small western town (60
m1n I
@ News
l]j)
MacNeil-lehrer
Newshour
lil ill! @ Wheel of Fortune
@ Barney Miller
7:05 ([) Sanford and Son
7:30 0 Cll ()) New Newlywed
Game
.(!) College Basketball· At·
Iantic Tan Conference

•

. ;r:.'p THIN[c You•p

Ser vrc es
B1

U3

Home
Improvements

PIS'GU,S"~l?

WITH Sclf'JG

Tournamen1 {2 hrs ) ltve

A foo~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOnal Nfetime guarantee loc11 references furnished
Free estimates Call collect
1-61•· 237· 0488, diiV or mght
Rogers Be t ement
Waterproofing.

$I NNe~.
\&gt;&lt;AI/E.$ 3 -)

SWEE.PER and sawing machine
repair, pltrts, and tuppli81. Pick
up 1nd delNtry, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m1le up
Georg" Creek Rd Call &amp;1•·

YES, :r DID.
DOC! MIND IF I
HI\V~ AWORO

446·029'

fil CD College Basketball:
·Atlantic Tan Conference
Tournamenl F•nals 12 hrs I
0 CI) Judge
@ Wheal of Fortune
Ill ill! @ Jeopardy
@
Collage Basketball:
Miami at Notre Dame 12
hrs I
7 36 ([) Honeymooners
8:00 D Cll (lll Cosby Show !CCI
Young Thea ts tn s ptre d to
take flying lessons after a
World War II lighter polot
speaks at hts school In
Stereo

WITH YOU?

All types carpenter 6 concrete
work: lnteriOf', extenor, ramo·
dtllng, patnt ing, rooftng, free
tst1met". Call614~ 446 - 6174

(]) Oaklari,Ciarence the
Uonhearted
([) Women's College Bas·
ketball: Indiana at Ohio
State 12 hrs I
0 CD Our World I CCI Stories from the fall o f 1961 1n·
elude the bulldmg of the Ber·

1988 Ford Escort 1tation
wagon, 4 dr., AT, AC. PS. PB.
AM -FM stereoonly1 ,900mll•.
1983 Ch1111ette, 4 spaad. good
cond. caB after 8 00 PM . 304·

1981 ChiiVette. runs, drkresand
looks good, $1 .000 00 304·

676·3044.

'76 Dodge Aspen station
w1gon, new dres. good runntng
cond. t600 DO Phone 304-

773-&amp;&amp;85.

1980 Olds Delta88 Royale, V-8,
PS, PB, air, cruiaa, AM -FM,
good cond. U .800.00 30~ -

675-1025.

1980 Cordov• . t1 . &amp;oo .oo.

3D4-e76-3385.

TrH &amp; Stump removal, ch1in
Unk fencet, mowing, ahruba,
ttone. mulch, fill. gravel. Don 's
lendscap" 614·446-9846

lm Wall, the f1rst Peace
Corps volunteers and and
Roger Mans' attempt to

EEK &amp; MEEK

break Babe Rulh·s smgle
season home-run re cord
(60 m•n l
(])
MacNeil-lehrer

RON'S Television Servi ce .
liouse calls on RCA . Qua~:ar,
GE. Specialing tn Zenith Call

Newshour

®l Ill ill! Wizard A fnghten -

3n4-57&amp;· 2398 o' 614·446·
2464.

lng dream sends Stmon and
Alex to T1bet to rescue an
old frtend from a secluded

Fettv Tree Tumm1ng, stump
removal Call 304· 675· 1331

lamasery. where a ruthless

enemy awaits them 160
min.IIRI
l]j) The Planet Earth (CCI

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . uperienced carpenter. eltctridan.
m11on, painter, rooting (includIng hot tar applicettonJ 304-

The global consequences of
a 'nu clear w1nter' and an 'ul·
travtolet spnng' are diS-

,676·2088 •• 675·7147.

Trucks for Sale

1973 Ford F-100 Truck. 3 speed
standard. Runs good. Body fair.
Good work truck. •360. Cell
304·875· 1 91 1 IMinings.
1979 Chnrolat p/ u, 4114. V· B.
Auto.. PS / PB, SRW. Exc. Cond.

t36nD. C•lle14-44S·4053.

1 977 Chwy C-1 0, new tires.
new c•b.. brown &amp;. tan. runs
good. Good 1hape Call 814
448-3200 after 6.

Rotary or cable tOot drilling.
Molt wells completed sarne day.
Pump seiM and service 304-

8062

1982 Chevy pickup, h1gh ml·
leage, axe. cond. t3,500.00,

phone 614·317-7757.

cussed (60 mm I IRI

8:05 Cil MOVIE: 'Cepe Fear·

895·3802 .

8:30 U Cil@ Family Tiea (CCI
Skippy fall s tn love w1th one
ol Mallory s fr~ends In

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Stlrkt Tr.. 1nd Uvtn StMct.
Hadgu , shrubs, bushes
trimmed, landscaping, stump
and leef remov11. 304-&amp;76-

WHERE'RE
'tOLl qQINq,

2842 0' 575·2903.
82

ROBBI E~

I OON T REf\'\ EJ\o\BER ...

MAGNESIA 15 WHEN

I THINK r'VEE;OT
MAt:!NE51A.

'raJ CAN'T REM 611\BER
A NYTH ING.

WE q ET 16'1\ ALL
IN TH IS

NEIGHBCRHOOD.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

73

Vans &amp;

1973 Ford Vlt'l . Ec:onoUne 300.
'.4 ton. 35.000 acual milts
North Clrolifte van . New tirn
end battery. Mull'" to eppr•
cilte. One block east ot Racine

llmiU on R1. 124. t1300.

1979 Ch.. y C· 1D. bleck. 4
whetl drive, 250 engine, plus
tour 111116 llras, phone 304888·3150.
'84. S10 Bluer. excellent condition. I 1pd. AM ·FM c•stttt.

AC. lftlf &amp;.30 Cell 304·175·
1738.

1975 Oodg• v... a cvl. 3· -·
good "'•· taoo.oo. Phona
304·171·3193.

1978 Dodtlo ..._, Wegon.
1a.ooo '""•· body fllr. flOOd
Nnning cond. t1.800.00 304·
878·1284.

448-4477

Saga tntervt ews George I( is·
11akowsky on his four lt~es

Russ1an emigre, A-bomb de·
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

WOULD YOU
CHOP ME SOME
KINDLIN ' WOOD,

0 I Electric . Retidentia l.
Commerical Wmng . Free
Inspection- Free Estimates.
Work GuarantHd. C•ll 814-

448 -2223
85

TATER?

"" origlnll, IIO!IIInllhod, ....

mP- 11718. Col 11•·2111·

Plrtl. 87.000 - · .....
te&amp;OO. C111 614-DI·IIlD.

or eenlnp· l1 4 · 251·

uo•

laM

MAW!! HAVE
YOU GONE
BANANAS?

WOULD YOU CHOP
N\E SOME
DUN '
WOOD?

YOU HAVE

GONE

BANANAS!!

(((

General Hauling

Dill~rd Water Service Po~s.
Ststerns, Wells. Delivery Anytime. Call 8 14· 446· 7404.

James Boys Water S1rv1ce. Also
pools filled Call81•·256-1141
or 814·446-1176 or 814-441 -

7911

Watterson 's Water H1ulmg .
reuonabl e r.tea, Immediate
2,000 gallon dehvery , cisterns~
pool s, well, etc call 304· 571-

2919

Hou• coal, limestone, end
gravel Delivered 1 ton and up
Jim Lanier, 304-676-1247 or
1715-7397..
Water heullng. Formerlv ICtn
Wheaton• now John' s Weter
Service S1m1,. prices, phon•
304 · 576- 2919~..

576·2414 . • .

1

UmHtona. und lnd gravel
del ivered , phone 304-675 ·

3190

PEANUTS
Upholstery

I DON'T WANT TO~-\EAR
ANV MORE COMPLAIN lNG
ABOUT A LITTLE SNOW
ON T~ E GROUND !

City. Oh &amp;14·251·1470. Eve

814-"'6·3431. Open daily 9 to
4 3D. &amp;lt. 9.30 to 1,30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.
Mowrey' 1 llpholatltt'ing aarving
tri county 1r11 22 yea,. The bau
In tumtturt uphotlt•ring Cl11
304·87&amp; · 41&amp;4 for fret
eatlmet".

mtn)

G (iii Simon &amp; Simon
R1ck becomes e motton ally
overwhelmed by ht s htdd8n
VI e tnam memones when a
@l

war buddy .s senselessly
murdered by a street gang
(60 m1n.1
l]j) Myotory: Return r of
Sherlock Holmao Holmes
investigates the mysterlous
diuppearance of buainesaman Neville Sl Cla11 who
was last seen tn an opium
don. !60 m1n.)
9:30 D (]) ·111 Nigh! Court In
Sweo.
CII Top Rank Boxing 12
hrs I Uva
• CD College Batketball'
SEC Tournament Quanar·
fonals . (2 hrs.!
@ Hog~n'a He10e1
10:00 D Cill.lJJ L.A. Lew A loves·
1ck Kuzak disrupts Grace
Van Owen's wedding,
Becker falls tOr a sekv

R &amp; M Custom Couches li nd
Raupholaterv. St. Rt 7. Crawn

1113 Hond• 710 Shadow. Low

stgner , sc1ence adv1ser to
Pre stdent Etsenhower and
antinuclear actiVISt
(60

BARNEY

Motorcycl81

1140 Dodgl lulln- Coup1.

1Il 700 Club
0 (]) Colbys (CCI Jason
and Francesca are town

Jeff"s. !60 m1n I
()) Nova: Confapiona of 1
Woaponaer (CCI Hosl Carl

Cor Fourth and Pine
O.lllpolla, Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or 614-

B7

7ZI8

Cil @ Cheers !CCI In

Stereo.

mnQ·s secret and Jason is
distressed by a dec•s•on of

CARTER "$ PLUMBING
AND HEATING

4 W . O.

1971 Jup. oood oh1pa. Sit of
ground tt8wt tires 11.15. like

D

val M1les learns of Chan·

84

1980 Dodge 0-50. 4x4 pickup,
4 cvl.. 5 spd., AC, New tires.
Ntw peint . EK. cond. Call

St ereo

9.00

apan by an unekpected am -

1977Toyota, 6 spHd, t&amp;OO.OO

304-176-3044.

the
be ·

' r-+W. . ;E•..:B:...,;H,;..-:rE_R.--1

. I I II I I

I~

r t1I

i

E R y L F , .!

I I I I"
1

.

~~

~

.~

.

·•

The students complained about
cold classroom&amp; The thermostat
was computer-controlled. so one
student chattered, "So lhrow
another computer - the - ."

I
.5,. . .,r.6,...;r. . : "T"-...,Ir-rl-1 0
~ 1 1 1

•

A

I

T I E NN Y

Complete 1he chuc kle quo1ed
by f, ll,ng m lhe m~~ ~·ng words
L...J._.L_L......l-...1..--J. you deYe lop l rom step No 3 below

PRI NI NUMB ERED LETTER S IN
~
tH ESE SQUARES
A
V

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

-

YESTERDAY'S $(RAM-lETS ANSWEIS
Occult - Perch - Fable - Bright - CAR£ a LOT
The young lady was crying on her mother's shoulder
"Remember dear." con"sol&amp;d tne mom. "You can be hurt on·
ly 1f you CARE a LOT."

'·
'

'

'

TH IS IS SPR!N6

TRAINING!

AiolD MAv&amp;E
ANOT~ER Feu S~OT 1

screenwriter and Kelsey
urgea Markowiu 10 lobby
for a panoership in I he firm .
(80 min IIRI In Swao
(]) 0 ()) 20/20 !CCI A •e·
port on poss1b!e problems
wi1hin the Son An1onio . TX
pollee force is scheduled.
(60 min.)

CD Fronillne: Dftperllety

6eeld119 Bilby !CCI The joy
end the heartbreok ol edop·
lion through lawyart and pri·
veta agencies are the focus
of tonlghf 1 program.
IBi 8 (BI Knott Lendl119
ICCI Convinc:ed lhit Jean
het cauood Ben ·1 dell h. on
obtelood Valene VOWI to
evan lhe tcoro, while Gary
miaoos hi• _wedding end Jill

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

A revealing
play

• 10 G 2

By James Jacoby

+K J R-;

NORTII

3'

il

+A B 74

tJ 3

Although some of the work mtrcp1d
declarers do w1th their heads m fi gur ing out the locatiOn of missing high
cards is worthy of Sherlock Holmes.
many times even Inspector Clouseau
would eaSily get the right answer On e
easy rule to remember os thiS. When·
ever you can afford to do so w1thout
risk, force out high cards that you
must lose m any event, like aces. be·
fore attackmg the suits where you
hav e to do some guesswork
On the thud round of hearts, East
tnes to wm the queen, but you ruff On
these deals, get into the habit of count·
mg high cards. Because East ra~ sed to
two hearts, he should have about 5·9
htgh-card pomts The unseen ca rds at
th1s pomt are the club and d1amond
aces and the diamond queen East IS
likely to have one of the aces, smce
only two red queens would probably
not be worth a response to his part·
ner's opening bid So you draw trumps
and then play the club queen When
West shows up with the club ace, play
h1s partner for the other ace. There is
a further r~ason why thiS 1s goOd play.
When you came in with a two-spade
bid, openmg bidder.West passed. Very
likely he would have competed With a
three·heart bid w1th three aces and a
king
If the defenders had wanted to be

WEST

liA ST
• 5:1

•AK 85&lt;
• Q8 7

.Q9 7

+A 9 2

+ &gt;I J

+• os

tA9tl52
SOUTH

+ KQJ92

.J 3
t K 10 4
+Q 10 s
Vulnerable: Neither
Dea ler West
Wes1

North

East

Pass

Pas.'i
3+

2 ,.
Pass

••

'

Pass
Openmg lead " K

nasty. West cou ld have underled hiS
hearts to the East queen at trick two
Now a low d1amond back would have
placed declarer m th e positiOn of hav ing to guess before know1n g wh1ch defend er had started With the clu b at-c.

A new book by James Jacoby and hi-'
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, 1s now
available al bookstores It is '"Jacoby
on C.&gt;rd Gam-., ·• published by Pharos
Books. .

6i~·'6by THOMAS JOSEPH
38 Musical
s1gn
39 Mature

ACROSS
I Moslem
IItie
4 i.OW ·
pltCtlt'd
8 Uwr

DOWN
I Old·
woman tsh

a}(am

2 rind

9 Seems

1rouhlt •
II Snack
(sl )
12 FiniSh
14 - Wlulm'Y 3 Rt•Vf'rPIH.'I'
4 nlurred
U Wf!sl or
~ Top-11otch
Clark1•
6
Tu rf
16 Rcceril
7
Sw1
mming
(pr~• fix )
:1u
natun•l
17 Proffer
8 En cnura~t ·
19 Operas
Merriman I 0 Furtive
20 Sanet1fio•d 13 Part nf
··r;wrw··
21 We(• one
22 Flctrayed
23 ··- il&lt;'al "
( 19H I fil m)
24 Fren ch

VeNterday's Answe r
U S1·on ·,
21\ Strln~wd
in (' ants
111."1ru nwnt
i 8 lla1 i&lt;&gt;n
28 Dragoons
21 llull 1Sp ) weapon
22 Old sail 29 Brim
23 II flrn
3 1 MIIllis
~OUJ1d

34 Ki ckt•r 's

24 Caponr

gadw·1
35 Kiw1

f1~atun •

1-rr-+++-

seapo rl

25 Sonom
Indian
26 Crow &lt;ry
27 SlreJSand
song
30 0 klahoma
City

31 Sa.~'Y
n;sponse
(sl )
32 Table L
33 Decayed
36 Marital
symbol
36 Gaggle
members

37 Forrne~;~;:Ft~~:i;

DAILVC

AXVDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

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

VX B

M II

A!IW IB V

YNAB I OF' Itll

NA

RB NAOI B

VM

UF MflV

...0 I ll
P

VM

XOT II

FM I"X FII
ZM il

I,JXIlVX!I

XUi.l. Z

Ml

F: M V

AXO(,J
Yeote rday'o Cryptoquote l EAT WITH TilE RICH,
BUT GO TO THE Pl.AY WITII THE I'OOR . W!IO AilE
r APAIILE OF ,lOY - !.OGAN 1'. SMITH
~,

confronts Abby. (60 min.!
Clli N_e_ch
@ N10:20 (])MOVIE: 'Anz!o'
10:30 CD 8111 Colby Show
Clll Tony Brown' a Journal

•

•

Browne tells why ht s mustc

1980, Z-28. 350 T-top M1ny
e~~tras . 304· 876-&amp;392 after

1184 ford E_,
1'1.
auto.. Pl. air, t2110: Extra

Cl.., C.ll 614·ZII·1122.

home.gerden space on good
road tow1rcl Huntington, rant

Stnger /songwrtter Jackson

1878 Chryt;ler Cordoba. Good
body, good work car 11!100 Call
after 8 p.m 614-1593-7390

1911 Monda CB 710K . Pur·
ch81ed niiW' In 1111 Alltua'
mlleag•370. E~eeiiMtt aondl·
tlon. 11300. c.n 614·448·

-11'1!''

WANTED TO RENT 3 bllkoom

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Self contained camper Sleeps
six. w1th awning . Located at
Oh1o RivBr Camp Ground1,
Racine. t1000. 614-949-2&amp;28.

j••

47 Wanted to Rent

taD 00. C1ll 304·882·2529

AMX 1977 Northern born but
southern bred No rult • 1500
ORO. Mutt 1811 C1ll 614-742-

1110 Chw.tte. motor
r•
buill. locty, A-on1. C. I 114·

7471.

7

Four 14 inch Rally Wheels ,vft)l :'·
ultd SBR lire• hom Cutl•s all .

614·992-6783.

t2991. John'• Auto Ill•,
8ul- Ad. Qllllpollt. OH.
''74

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Plfk.
Route 33. North of Pom•oy.
Atntll trail••· Call 814· 992-

undl&lt; t1 60.0D. 304 -676 ·
5391.

$17no. Cell 814·992·6&amp;48 af·

solve the mystery of 1he
school locker 1h1ef
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
6 35 ([) Andy Griffith
7.00 D Cll PM Magazine
(]) Hardcaslla and McCor·
mick
(!) SportsCantar
Cil Entertainment Tonight

X-11.
ort&amp;OOforwholeclr.
Cad _....
Parts for
1980 Chevy Cttllion

tar 15·00 p m

now. Clll614·388·9701.

614-216·6822

Three room office. OTW Oatilpolls, ntwlv r.-nodMed. UOO 00 I
month. inctudn all utilities. Ph.

1980 Camero. VB. air. auto

H•y t1 .25 bill. C~l 304-175·
3987 1ft~&lt; 6 OD.

1984 Old1 Cullan Si.,. CL.
loadad with extraa . Superctun,
•4810. •1100 book value. Call

.'

1975 Buick 2 DR , auto , PS,
V-6, good mileage Call 614·
448 . 74.02 -leave name &amp;
number

1984 Chevrolet 4X4 Pickup.
lhonbod. 305 IUtO. ovonkNI.
PS. P8. till. AM ·FM . E•c..IOt
condition. C.ll 448-1217.

Z- 28

Office Space for flltnt. EliCtlltnt
tor Ahorntyl, Ae~countant. etc.
Close to Court HouH. C.ll
WIHmlfl Rtal Ettatl Agenc:y.

1978 Chevy Chevette. e3SO or
best offer Call 614-258 -8270,

I 1 4-367· 71540.

~=========:.1::::::::::=====~ Interior.
1981
Cam.-o, r..t &amp;. black
Pl. Pl. air. tHf whNI,
SNAFU

446-4171 .

Cill 304-175-4800 b l t -

814-2e6-8622.

TM

1 974 VolkiWagen-good cond ..
plus1973 Volkswagen for parts
t900 or beat offer Call 614·

lock are ass1s ted by th e
plant world when th ey try t o

~Le~o~o:_'-:o-a:-bb-:-ie-:6:-1::4-·::99::-2_· 53_8_1:',:-.
'.;

1977 Dodge p/ u truck, fair
cond. t?OO Call 814-441·

Registered Polled Hereford BuM.
4 veer• old. approxlmace weight

814·245·9495.

2010 j ohn Deere diesel tractorplows, dltc 13950. New Idee
Dyne Bounoa mower •~a&amp; Late
model 224T John Dt•e biter
t 1295. Hey wagon UOO. C. II

1810.

72

9.00 1m and 4·00 pm

61 Farm -Equipment

1977 Toyota Corolla, auto , AC.
new motor. in good cond , 1976
Chevy pickup Call 614-446-

e75-5574.

lb. Clll304·937·2900

57

Autos for Sale

Rear ra nge letters of
0 four
scrambled word!

Witness Bryan and Sher-

304-875-5286

One Chtrolail Bull. Cell 814·

Beagle pups, S45 00 each.

l"P T!LL YA TO
K!EP'EM ON.

5,30

English Senar bird dog. has
papers • 100 Call 614·992-

304·675·2076.

71

614·286·6522

Top quality. 3 6 4 yr. old Overo
Paint merH Proven in plauure
&amp; hiller C1\l 304· 76&amp;· 7689

46 Space for Rent

614·441·3844.

61 Farm Equipment

AKC Bassett puppies Only 3
leh Tri-colored s 12 6 each.
Phone 61 4 ·667·6967.

7312

YA HAD ?HIR.T?,

A P&amp;AL'? A DEAL . YOU ~RIIIG
US COCA LoAVo,, WE GIVE YOU
HUMAN SACRIFICE?.

Auto perts for tale. Radio, A C ,
glast. and other perta tor 197,7
Cordoba. 304-n l-5651 .

614·992·61 81 .

AKC Reg11tered M1n1ature
Schnau1er puppies Also Regtstered Cocker Spaniel pups. No
checks Call 614-992· 2607.

6:00 D Cll (]) 0 Cil GID GHUI@
New a
(]) Big Valley
(!) Mazda Sponslook
q) CD Jaffersons
Cil Square One TV !CCI
(ill Secret Cily
@ Facts of lifQ
6'05 ([) Beverly Hillbillies
6:30 0 Clll.lJJ NBC News
(!) Speedweek
Cil l!l Cil ABC News
Ill CD Hogan"s Heroes ·
Cil Doctor Who
®l lil ill! CBS News '
l]j) Real Advns. of Sherlock
Jones and Proctor Wal ·
son: Cue of lha Wilted

1978. 350ChBVyengme '4bbl
etrb. end new headers. t3150
Cell 814-446-3978·1Sk for Ed

1286

Groom S. Supply shop Pet
groom1ng, all styl es. ell breeds
J ulie Webb Call 614·446·

OkAY, OKAY.. IF

614' 446·0966.

~==========:1~::=~~=:;:::;:;~

Edllod br ClAY R ,OIIAN

low to form four slrnple words

Auto Parts

Uttd OM tranamitllont All
int«nllly inspected 6 gu~r•n·
teed. Also FOrd &amp; Chrvtler Call

Tony's Gun Repairs , t\ot reblueing . Open 9 :00AM to 7 00 PM
Call 304-676-4631

S@ \lei\ lA- &lt;Z -etrss

'::~:~:~'

WORD

lAM I

J/5/87

. &amp; Accessories

esn. can 614 992-3974

Whirlpool washer S75. Kenmore
55 Building Supplies
Wa~her 895 Meytag wringer
washer S95 Refrigerator fro stfree S96 Rtfrtgerator side by
side 895 Electr1c range 30 mch
Butldmg Matertals
896 Electricrange38 inch S96
Block, briCk, sewer p1pes. wtnGas range 30 mch S95 Dryer·
dows, llnteh1, etc Claude WtnKenmore S96. Skaggs Applian- • tars, R1o Grande. 0 Call 614·
ces Upper Rtver Rd. 614·446246·6121

2 tw1n beds, wtth box s prings 8t
mattress 2 matc hing bed
spreads, $200. Call 614-2666505 after 6 PM

76

Uke new, hide-a- bed, ear1h
tones 1100. Microwave, new,

Merbalife Independent D1st Call
me for product Mon-Fri 9 -3
Gloria Grate 304,882 -3152

'-'.__.A.....~

.,

16 tt. Terry Baas boat with
Evenrude power tltt engine,
drive on trei1er. depth find•r,
trolling motor. 30•-176- ~884
oflor 5,00 PM

28n5

7220.

.88 ··Holly p.,k··. 14.SO. 3 2 . 2 BR moblla homes .
bedrooms. 2 beth•. 304· 875 ·

4926.

Unfurn ished garage IPtrtment
2316 Mt Vernon Adults Only
No Peu . 304·875·1 065

Sale or r&amp;n t New Haven , 3
bedroom• . 2 baths. lirepl1ct.
garage. t38,000.DO or 1275 00
monlh plus depOSit. 304-273·
2471

'81 Commodort. 14.1145. like
new lived in onty 6 montha,
payoff. Phone 304-882 -3854.

15 Court Street, 2 HR . 1Ya
baths. w / w carpet. complete
modern k1tchen. ga&amp; heat, well
m1ulated, w1red lor phone 81
cable tv. spac10u1 parking in
rear , patto. 8375/ mo. plus
ut1litlts, Deposit, Referen ces
required No peta. Call614-446 -

773-5024

514·992·6791

1988 Skyline 47•10 t2700
Call 814·446·0390

1 Bedroom basic rent 1176 00
plus electnc Also requited a
1200 00 security dep011t CON TACT Jackson Estates Dept. Ph
446 - 3997 Equal Hou s 1ng
OpportUnity

89000 2 5 ecru on RIO ·
Centerpoint Ad 1 m1le from R10
Grande Clear. level front.
woods Call 614·446-3806 af·
ter 6pm

GOVERNMENT HOMES ·from
11 00 lll repair! Also tu dalinquttnt and for eelo1urt proper·
ties. For In to . call (refundsblel
1-315-733-8082 ext. G 673

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Apartment
for Rent

Furf'lllhed &amp; unfurntthed apta ..
S150 00 and up, references Ph .
304· 675-7738 or 304· 676 6104 A-1 Real Estate.

Homes for Sale

3 bedrooms clo1e to town . 2
bath•. fireplace. central atr,
range &amp; oven C1ty Schools Ph.

2 bedroom tra1ler tor rent With
add on 1nd garage. 3 miles from
Pt. Pleasant on At. 2 N 82 00
plus ut1hties end deposit 304·
676 -3248 after 7 :00 p m

2\? acrea of bottom land
Approx 6 mtles south of Eureka
oH Old Rt. 7 Good hom e sit&amp;
Call614-266- 1774

Rea l Estale
Small hou se- f111e m1l es from
Gall1poha AC S. carpet S1000
down 1213 a month Call
6 14 256-1216 after 5

3834.

44

J• 304·676·2336

31

060e.

2 bedroom mob1le home %mile
out Send Hill Ad 304· 675 ·

Bu siness
Opportunity

I NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lN G CO recommands that vou
tJo busmess with people vou
know. and NOT to send money
throug h the me1l unhl you hwe
mvest1gated the oHertng

for 8300. Qrand new Setalex
quilt box sptmg• •nd m1ttr"'
plu• frame Cott &amp;200 , wtll sell
for e1 00 Eldon Walburn, 380 S
Third, Middleport 614· 992·

Washers, dryers. refngera tors,
ra nges Skagg:s Applian ces.
llpper R1ver Rd beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446 -7398

Boats and
Motors for Sale

M'{ ~fP5 1\:LL Ml:: 10
'&gt;fi.AF(; up AIJD e!ND M'F).~Lf."

EVENING

12 ft 11tellite d1sh. All remote
contro l Good 11 new Call
even1nQs 614-992· 6181 . Mult
sell

County Appliance, Inc Good
u.ed appliances and TV lets
Open BAM to &amp;PM Mon thru
Sat 614·446 1699 , 627 3rd
Ave. G1lltpol1s, OH

LAYNE 'S FllRNITURE

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

75

6461

4 Un1royat Laredo LTSR rad•ala.
ST23586R16 on 8 hole wheels.
Latsofmllet left $80 . ..chorall

HEa, 00 ocw£R. I'M
lo.LL MI)(I::D UP.

motorcvc1e, cell

Television
Viewing

15

The Daily

Ohio

BORN LOSER

304-675-4040

Mhttd hardwood alaba. t12 per

446-3169.

Thursday, March 5, 1987

Motorcycles

1~81 , ICX~20

New livingroom suite•

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

W111 do sewmg m my hom e Now
takmg order:s for Prom dresses
Call 614 2 56 1989

74

bundle Contelning approx. 1 1/2
tont FOB Ohio Pallet Co
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 61 4-892·

8199- •699 , lamps Call 614-

Valley Furniture. new &amp; used.
large sect1on of quality furniture 1216 Eastern Ave ,
Gallipolis

Plast•c C1sterns. SeptiC Tanks
culverts state appro11ed &amp; meta l
culverts Ron Evens Enterprises
Jackso n, Oh 614 286 -5930

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Couctt. chatr, baby bed, riding
mowers C1ll 814 - 387~ 0369

looking for rest homo lar your

15

Tl\ursday, March 5, 1987-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

11 ,oo G (])CD llJ CD lEI D (l)liiJl
.Nowo
()) Hardcao11o end McCor.
mick
CD Mech1nlcal Unlver~
I '

�•

••

•

•

Page- 16- The Daily Sentinel

Lawmaker introduces
anti-AIDS legislation
B.v GRETEL WIKLE
require that someone who
COL UMBUS tUPI I - A bill &lt; tes ts positive for syphilis
rcqu ir lng people who wa nt to
would ha ve Ia prove he or she
get married to be ti'Sted for
is cured of the disea se before
AIDS and syphilis before their
the license could be issued.
marriage license is iss ued
Bu t if either tes ts positive for
would hr lp control thr sprea d
AIDS, only notification would
be required.
of the diseases, th e bill's
· sponsor sa id.
The bill wou ld help prevent
Rep . John Stoz ich. R·
the couple from passing ei th er
Fi ndlay. told the House Heal th
disease to children, Stozlch
and Retirement Committee
sai d. Both diseases ca n be
Wednesday th at the test would
transmitted to children during
pregnan cy.
be co nducted by a doctor who
" Th is bill Is not directed at
would be requ ir ed to noti fy a
marriage license appli ca nt if
any particular walk of li fe.
I 'm lodking a! it from public
the test is posi tive. An appli·
ca nt cou ld nol br denied a welfare," Stozich sai d. "I feel
I AIDS) i s quite a scare and il
license if th&lt;' tes t is posit ive.
Stoz ich said his. bill also
would be nice if we could
figure one way to slow It
would re-implcmen t a tes t for
syph ilis th ul has not bern a down."
Members of the committee
requ irement fo r a marriage
license since 1981. Th e tes t for req uested informat ion on the
syphili s hPi ped con trol the laws per tain ing to AIDS and
spread of th at sexually tran s- marriage licenses in other
mitted di sease. Stozich sa id. sta tes. Rep. Judy Sheer er , D·
Shaker Heights, wondered if
but lhr requirement was re·
moved beca use so few cases
people could get around the
-law by going to a bord ering
were fo und .
Stoz ich sa id th e in formation sta te for a rparrlage license.
would be part of a confidential
Another member of the
medical rrcord . but wou ld be committ ee asked Stozich to
re l eascd t o th e oth er find out if ot her sta tes have
implemented similar requireappli ca nt.
He sa id l he bill would ment s for marriage licenses .

Credit card interest rates under study
COLUMBUS tUPli - .Th e
sponsor of one of three bills
att empt ing- to tie credit ca rd
Interest r ates to the prime
lending rate sa id the m easure
would protect co nsumers .
House Financial ll!Stitutions
Committee Chairman Ronald
Sus ter. D-Ci evel and, referred
the bills to a subco mmittee
Wedn esday after hearing tes timony from the sponsor of each bill .
Th e bills spec ify the maximum
credit car d interest rate at either
3, 4 oro percentage points above
the prime rate, which is set by the
Federal Reserve Board. The
measures allow the rates to
fluctua te with the prime, but
could on ly change twi ce a year .
Rep. Robert E. Hagan, D·
Madison, sponsor of one of the
bills, sa id the legisl·ation is
designed to prevenl cons umer
exploitatio n. His bill would set
th e ra te at 4 percent age points
above the prime.
"As long as there is a permission there will always be peopl e
who will exploit." Hagan sa id.
" We (should ) try to limit the
amount of explo ita tion .': ..

"This was a

mar n~-lous

cxam-

pJr of responsible legislation and
coopera tion by thr leadership of
both par t les." she said, adding
ther e should be no loss to the
sta te once the bill is signed.
Th e Ohio Supreme Court had
broaden ed the exemption last
December. rulin g that any th ing
"essentia l to thP manufacturing

process·· is lax exempt . Pr ior
law had exempt ed only materials
~ nd equipm ent used directly in
the manufacturi ng process.
ThP Department of Taxation
pointed out thr court -approved
defi nition would cxPmp t ca rt s

Teachers slate
strike deadline
AVO N LAKE tUP l t - A strike
deadline has been Sft by the Avon
La ke Ed ucation Association for
March 17. but ra nk and file
tra&lt;"hers, working under an ex tend ed cont rac t , must stlll vo te
whether t o .~a l k off their jobs.
A st rike in the Lorain Count y
sc hool district wou ld al fl•ct 2.i70
students at six schools.
An assocla t ion spokesman sa id
at Issue in the bargain ing dispute
is salary. insuran ce ben efit s and
co ni ract dura tion.
Trachprs havr been working
unMr an ex tended co nt rac t since
.Ja n. 1, Th r cx tl·nsio n ex pires
March 1:,.
The spokesman sa id the dis·
t riel's 15.1 t car hers arr sc hedu lrd
to vote March 1t) on whether to
strik e.
Associa ti on negotiator s met
wi th thr board Tu esday . More
bargai ning sessions arc scheduled fo r March IZand March 15 .
The spokesman sai d vo ter s In
the school cli str i&lt;"l approved a
levy in excess of five mills las t
yea r .

and hoists used to tr ansport raw
material s to the produ ction line,
and facili ties used to store
fini she d pr od uct s befo r e
shipment.
Sen. Richard H. Finan, RCincinnati, who canied the tax
bill on the Sena te floor, sa id loca·I
governments and transit au thor ities would lose s:JO mlllion a year
if the broadened exemption were
allowed to stand.
"We are fra nkly los ing money
ev.ery da y," sa id Finan In urging
his colleagues to act qulc~ly .
Th e legislation was negotiated
among the Taxation Department
an d business groups including
the Ohio Manufact urer s Assaria·
tion and the Ohio Cha mber of
Commerce.
It also creates a committee to
further study the machinery and
equipment sales. tax exemptions
and to recommend any revisions
by nex t Jan . 1.
The Senate also un animously
passed and sent to the House a
bill des igned to cut down on auto
theft by making the titling of lunk
cars more difficult.
Sen. Gary C. Suhadolnik . RParma Height s, expl ai ned th at.
stolen cars, stripped of thei r
parts. ca n be junked, re- titled,
reassembl ed with spare part s
and resold at a profit.
The House pa ssed, 78-20. a bill
allow ing sc hools to resear ch the
need for latchkey programs, and
pay da yca re bu sinesses to oper·
ate them . Sc hool boards could set
up the programs In build ings not
used for othct· activilies alter
school.
Rep. Pa ul Jones, D-Ra ve nna,
said the bill per mits school
boards to opera tP and use school
fu nds for program s conducted
oulslde of regul~r school hours.
T he programs would have to be
designed for school age children
of parent s who work .
Jones said the programs would
help single parent s and co uld
help cut down the number of fires
stuted by un sup er vi se d
children.
The Senate was to reconvene
today at 11 a.m. The Hou se
adjourned for the week.

Ohio law allows Interest rates
as high as 25 percent, Hagan
said, adding that most department stores charge 21 per cent.
The prime rate has been 7.5
percent for several months.
The companion bills ar e spansored by Rep. Ronald Mottl,
D-Parma, and Rep. John Bara,
D-Elyria.
s bill would
set
the
ra te atMottl'
3 percenta
ge points
above the prim e rate, and Bar a's
bill would make the maximum 5
percentage points above the
prime.
"They all have the same

EWING'S RADIATOR
SERVIeE
..Our Prices Won't
Boil You"
COMPLETE ·

RAOIATOII REPAIR
Now &amp; Reatnd~ioned
RadiatOR-Cores
CALL·

(Formerly Mason County Sand &amp; Gravel) '
Rt. 33
Letart, W. Va.
•GRAVEL
•SAND
•MASON SAND
•SEPTIC GRAVEL
•'FILL DIRT
•TOP SOIL

OPEN ON SATURDAY

• AMfFM Stereo

Save when you buy preferred equipment

package 230A that includes:

• Power Steermg
• Digit al Clock
• And Other Items

Cassette

• Speed Cont rol

• AMIFM Stereo
Cassette

• Power Lock Group

• Tinted Glass

• Tilt Wheel
., Power lock Group

• Styled Road Wheels

• Remote Control
Mirrors

Suggested Retail Price
$848 7.00
Package Discount
647.00
Cash Bock
600.00
Dealer Discount
245.00
Delivered Price
$699 5.00
(Only Tax and Title Extra] .·

Suggested Retail Price
$9243.00
Package Discount
735.00
Cash Back
600.00
Dealer Discount
158.00
Delivered Price
$7750.00
(Only Tax and Title Extra)

(2) 1986 MERCURY
COUGARS

V-6, auto. ·trans., tilt wheal, speed
control, AM/FM Stereo, power win·
dows, rear defroster.
(Remaining factory Warranty)

Suggested Retail Price
$10,831 .00
Package Discount
911.00
Cash Back
600.00
Dealer Discount
300.00
Delivered Price
$9020.00
(Only Tax and Title Extral

c·o. FACTORY SALE CARS
1986 -MERCURY
SABLE

1986 FORD
T-BIRD

V-6, auto. rans.; power seats, power V-6, Auto. trans., tilt wheel, speed
locks, power windows, power an· control, .rear defroster, power win· .
tenna, 3 speed control, tilt wheel, rear dows.
·
defrost.
(Remaining Factory Warranty)
(Remaining factory Warranty!

See Us For
•SEED POTATOES •FRESH PRODUCE
•FERTILIZER
•ONION SETS
•FULL LINE OF GARDEN SUPPLIES

APR

APR

APR
-

We Will Fill ~our
Propane Tanks.

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
SEE: RICK TOLLIVER, J. R. PIERCE or PAT

~ILL

OPEN 9-6 MON .-SAT.-SUNDAY 12-5

MAIN STREET MARKET
&amp; GREENHOUSE
808 West Main

..!'om troy

.

461 S. 3RD

992·6036
•

.

MIDDLEPORT

992·2196
•· ..

2 Sec1ions, 14 Pag os

26 Cents

A Mullimud ia Inc . N ~w s paper

Th e pres ident al so depicted the Sov iet offer.
which would ban such missil es from Europe, as
vindica tion of his ow n "zero option" proposal of
November 1981. whi ch he recalled being' ·greeted
with a great deal of skeptici sm."
A Soviet draft trea ty, lik&lt;• a counteroffer
presented In Geneva Wednesday bv th e U.S. side,
would limit the superpowers to 100 warh.ea ds on
missiles In Soviet Asia and the Unit ed States. U.S .
forces, If deployed at all, likely would be in
Alaska.
" This is a gr ea t moment of hope for all mankind
- hope, yes, for th is agrl'ement, hope for other
agreement s as well , a~ree m e nt s that Increase our
secur ity and strengthen the foundation of peace,"
Reagan said .
Acknowledging th e obs tac les that remain -

ag reement on adequate vN iflca tion procedures
and a me.a ns to pave th(' way to red uct Ions in

shorter-range missiles as w elt - the president
sa id the Sovie ts soft ened their position In the INF
talks In response to press ure !ro m thr Unit ed
States and It s all ies.
An ear lier round of Geneva nego tiations ended
with a Soviet wa lko ut In late 1!18.1. correspo nding
with the deployment of U S. med i um - ran~P
mi ss iles under a NATO plan to co unter th e
presence of tripl e-wa rhea d SS-20. miss iles.
"The flam&lt;' of th at hope burns today bec ause we
d idn 't gi ve in at the firs t signs of a Sovie t publ ic
re lation s ca mpaign ," Reaga n sa id . "We and our
allies did not and will no! let ourse lves br
pressured int o an agreemen t. I will not let thr
hope for real pPace sl ip by ...

·Additional area businesses
contribute to ferry funding

CLEVELAND I UP II -A Fort
Wayn e, Ind., co~pl e and a
suburban Cleveland couple, both
who decided to make a ra re
lottery play because of the record
jackpot, claimed two of the three
shares of the $27 .7 million prize.
The third share of Wednes·
day's jackpot - the fourth
largest In North American lot ·
tery history - wa s not claimed
. Thursday, lottery officials said.
The holder of the ticket has one
year to claim the prize.

when you choose this plan.
• 5-Speed Manual
• Air Conditioning

where he wants to co nsign his wors t crisis.
" We 've spent enough time in th e las t few
months on inside Wa shington politics. " he said In
re ference to the scandal that has dominated
hea dlines in the nation' s capi ta l.
" So far as I 'm co nc.erned, the American people
sent me here to do a job, and there are just tw o
years left to get it done, and par t of that job is to
strengthen the foundati ons of world peace, " he
told the publishers.
Reagan hailed as a "great breakth rough" a
Soviet decision to separa te thc issue of his " Star
Wars" anti-missile pl an, the Strategic Defen se
Initiative, from an agreem'ent on medium-range
missiles in E urope. SDI disputes scuttled
Reagan' s October summit with Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev In Iceland.

2 couples
step out
to claim
jackpot ···

0i
..
3•9 70 A. P.R.

Save when you buy preferred equipment

Ohio, Friday, March 6, 1987

'

FORD TEMPO

package 240A that includes:
• 2.3L EFt 5-Speed
• Styled Road Wheels

Pomeroy- Middl~port,

WASHINGTON (UPII - President Reagan
called his arms negotiators to the Whit e House
today for strategic planning and a pep talk,
having told the nation the superpowers are at "a
great moment of hope for all mankind" on arms
control.
Reagan summoned negotia tors Max Kampelman, Maynard Glitman and Ronald Lehman for
lunch to give them new t"n struction s for the
Geneva talks and to send them to repor ters to pla y
up a subject -world peace- he hopes will erase
the stain of the Iran-Contra scandal from his
presidency .
"I've never felt so optimistic about the
prospects for success In this area than I do today,"
Reagan told visiting newspaper publishers
Thursday after a statement that made it clear

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY. 8 A.M.-5 PM.

when you choose this plan.

Transa)(!e

• Interval Wipers
• Tinted Glass

Vot.36 . No.213

.Copyrighted 1987

en tine

Clear tonight, with a low In
tht• lowt•r 40s. Mostly sunny
Saturday , with highs between
65 and 70. The probability of
prf clpitatlon . Is near zero
through Saturday.

Reagan directs attention to arms control talks

895-3800

3.9o/o A.P.R.

Save when you buy preferred equ ipment

• AM/FM Stereo

at y

SAND &amp; GRA~EL, INC.

$1492°0*

package 294A that_inctudes:
• t.9L EF1 4-Cylinder
• 4-Speed Manual

6367

•

Each share is worth $9,236,116.
or 20-annual, after-federal -tax
payments of $369,444.
The two winners who redeemed their tickets were Ralph
and Pat Pokorny of Parma, and
Howard and Donna Hooven of
Fort Wayne, Ind .
Another 829 ticket s matched
live of the six numbers drawn for
$441 each; 40,455 tickets matched
four numbers for ·$34 each and
626,679 ticket s matched three
numbers for $3 each.

when you choose this plan.

PICK-4-

KELL1

FORD MUSTANG LX

3.9°/o A.P.R.

Daily Number
773

r~~~~~~i;j;~~~;iti~~~~~~~ii;ii~~~~~·,

GET 3.9% ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE PWS UP TO $600 CASH BACK.

FORD ESCORT GL

Ohio Lotkry

MHS girls
going for all
the marbles
-Page 4

general guidelines." Suste r said . ,,pposing argument Is that th(
" That is to do something about mat·ketplace shoul~ determine;
lowering the interest rate by what r ates apply. f
,
making it closer to· th e prim e."
Suster sa (d the bills w()uld,
Thou gh he said he has not
apply to department stores;·
decided on whether he supports .. r egular c h&lt;~rge cards such as
the bill, he said ty ing interest Visa or MasterCard and revolv:
rates to the prim e rate would be ing credit permitted by oil
good for consumers , but the
companies.
-;

67s:n93
L~ ~!.'=.!.~ • Po!t ~e:ant

FORD MOTOR

WE WILL RE-OPEN FOR THE SEASON
MARCH 6th

'

PAT HILL FORD
VAWE
BETTER THAN EVER!

Bill narrows exemption
for manufacturing tax
By LEE LEONARD
UP I Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS IUPI) -A nar·
rowed manufacturing sales tax
exemption which could save the
sta te an es timated $164 million a
yea r Is on i ts wa y to the desk of
Gov . Richard F . Cclestt•.
· The Oh io Se nate unanimously
approved the House- passed bill
Tuesday. It will take effect
Immediat ely upon signature by
the governor.
Sta te Tax Co mm issio ner
Joanne Li mbach cxpressed r elief when notifiPd the bill had
passed.

Thursday, March 5,' 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Numbers I, 5, 19. 23, 25 and 28
were drawn from the field of 44 .
"I was a positive wreck," said
Pat Pokorny, 49 who saw the
drawing on telev ision and then
went upstairs to tell her husband
Ralph, 53.
The Parma couple did not tell
many people about winning until
going to the lottery office Thur sday . Th ey said they got only
th ree hours sleep alter puttin g
the ticket under the bread box for
the night.
That was not the case. however, for the Hooven's, both of
whom are 30.
Their quiet evening turned Into
numer ous telephone calls to
friends during the night night
belore they drove to a regional
lottery office in Toledo.
"We were In bed ready to call It
a night. We were watching the
late news," said Donna Hooven.
"My husband got up and looked
at the ticket s and said, 'Don na,
we won." '
The couple had never played
the Ohio Lottery .

~L

Seve r al of her Po me roy Middl eport -M ason businesses
and individu als have donated
money to meet the loca l share of
funds needed to put a ferry
serv ice In operation during the
upcoming c losure of th e
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
These" names should have been
included In a list o! contribut or s
whi ch was published in yes ter·
day's Dally Sentinel . but were
unin tentionally omit ted.

i =,' (

'*~'~'

.' ,,

Th e add itional co ntr ibu tors to
the approximate $12,000 local
sh4re of funding were Central

Syracuse seeking
manager for pool
By KATIE CROW
fined to owner' s proper ly. the
Sentinel Correspondent
mayor noted.
Applications are still being
In other business, it wa,~
accepted for the position of decided to hire Bob Jeffers to
manager at London Pool. It was install a culver t on Ru stle Hil ls.
Davi d Lawson wa s nam ed to
announced last night at a meet·
ing of Syracuse Vi llage Council .
direc t General Re lief workers in
Persons Interi'Sted are to send
their dally dulles for th e village.
a resume, along with references,
Council agreed to part icipate
to Clerk Janice Lawson, Syra· in Cl ean Up Ohio Week !rom
r use, Ohio 45779. Deadline i s April 27 th rough Ma y 2. The
Meigs Count y Office o! Litt er
March 31.
Pollee Chief Jim Connolly Control will be able to provide
announced th at th e curfew, for some aupport to vo lun teer
persons under 18 years of age,
groups.
has been changed from 9 p.m.
Litter Control will have ava lla·
until 10 p.m . and will remain at bi e for groups involved 30-ga lion
garbage bags, promotional pos·
!he 10 o'clock hour until Nov. 1.
Youngsters under 18 must be off ters and participation awards.
A !tending the meeting wer e
the street s by 10 p.m.
·
Gl
en Cundiff, Jim Hill, Bill
Mayor Eber Pickens warned
Arno tt and Kathryn Crow, coun·
residents that they mJst comply
with an ordinance in regard to ell members, Mayor Pickens,
dogs running loose within th e Janice Lawson, cl erk-treasurer,
Pollee Chief Connolly and Dav id
village. All dogs mu st be conLaw son.

WASHINGTON 1UP! I -The nation' s civil ian unemployment
rate In February held steady for a third straight month at 6. 7
percent, the 'Labor Department said today, surprising
economists who predicted -a higher jobl ess rate.
Ci vilian employmen t - after adjustments for the season rose by 371,000 to total 111.38 million. the Bureau of Labor
Statistics reported. Most of the gains were In services and at
stores.
An estima ted 7.97 million people were out of work, down from
February's 8.02 million.
Today's report gives the Reagan administration reason to
smile after a string of genera lly gloomy I¥!Onomlc Indicators.
The 6.7 percent civilian unemployment is the best showing
since the 6.3 percent rate recorded from January through
March 1980, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said.
The figure Is ca lled the civilian unemployment rate because It
excludE'S military personnel living in the United States. When
those people are faCtored trito the labor force, the overall
percentage drops to 6.6 percent, a figure that also has gone
unchanged for three months. •
The average workweek for non-supervisory worker s away
from the farni grew 0.2 hours to 35 hours, again seasonally
adjusted. The weekly manufacturln·g workweek rose 0.3 hours
to 41. 2 hours- the longest such week at the nation's lactor les
since November 1966.

''

that response from local buslnesst•s to the requ es ts for financial assi stance "were very
good ."
Of the loca l share. $6,600 will be
placed in t•scrow with $15,000
from the Clinton. Iowa ferry
operator who Is already on hts
way to Pomeroy with his ferry.
This $2Uill0 will stand as a
guarant ee th at any damag es to
Pomeroy Street In Mason will be
repaired once !he ferry Is no
longer needed.
The remaini ng $5,000 wlll be
paid dlrccllv to the operator
when the ferry goes Int o service.

Boxing commission considers
TV as new revenue source

PEANUTS FOR BOOKS - March is line-free month at th e
Meigs Libraries and Instead of having to pay a line for overdue
books, you'll be rewarded . The Peanut Growers Association, In
observance of National Peanut Month, has donated 500 bags of
peanuts to the libraries. Anyone bringing In an overdue hook will
be given a bag of peanuts. Here with the peanuts are Madhu
Malhotra, left, and Ruth Powers, librarian.

U.S. jobless rate steady

Tru st Co., WMPO Rad io. Meigs
Count y 'Engineer Philip Roberts,
Smith-Nel son Mot or s. H &amp; R
Block . Ca r ter Plumbing and
Heatin g. Gravely Trac tor Sales,
Grueser Plumbing and Hea tin g,
Dairy Queen, f!awlln gs -Coa tsBiower F uneral Home. Bob's
Mark et, Fogleso ng Funera l
Home and Ingels' Furniturre.
A drive for these loca l funds
bega n this pa st weeke nd and
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com·
merce President Bill Nease and
Pomeroy Councilman Bruce
Reed re ~ orte d earlier this week

COLUMBUS (UP! i - T he
Ohio Boxing Commission says It
would like lo offer fight cards on
closed-circui t theater television
to Improve Its sagg ing finances.
Carol Parisi, administrative
assistant to the co mmi ssion. told
an Ohio House Finance subeom·
mlttee Thursday th e commi ssion
wou ld · also like to get Into
regulati n g profess io n a l
wrestling.
But Parisi had little to say
wh en Rep. Larry W. Manahan.
R-Def lance, asked "what I , as a
taxpayer, wou ld get In the way of
services H the Boxing Commls·
sion regulat ed wrestling."
"You would get a good show,"
she answered.

Pari si said fees fro m licensing
boxers, trainers, handlers and
promoters brought In only $14.000
In 1986. while expendllures to·
taled $62,000. She sa id Inco me
could be trip led by addi ng
wrestl ing to the com mi ssion' s
j urisdic tion. And using pa y TV .
Parisi sai d, even more money
could be reallzed .
Parisi said only 12 to l o
professional boxing matches
were staged In Oh io las ! year .
She said license fees have not
been raised In four years .
" It's been consider&lt;'!!." she
said, " but at th is time they (th e
commissioners 1 th ought It was
un a f fordab l e t o th e

participant s."
Parisi said f&lt;!es could not be
Increased by any more than 25
percent a t one time.
The co mmission has asked for
$6.1.122 In llsca l l988. a cut of 4.6
percent In It s ex l stl n ~ genera l
revenue approprl at Ion, and
$67.355 In 1989.
T.he co mmission plans to close
Its Columbus office and co nsOII·
date oper ations In Youngs town .
That brou ~ ht an obj ec tion by
Rep. Joa n W. Lawrence. R·
Ga lena. but Par isi sa id mo st of
Oh io's boxing event s are held In
northeas tern Ohio and !he co mmi ssion needs to be nea rby to
regulate th em .

Middleport man gets jail sentence
Mike T. Manley, 23, Middle·
port, was handed an 18-month
sentence in the Chllllcothe Cor·
rectlonal Facility when he appeared before Judge Charles H.
Knight In the Meigs Cou nly
Common Pleas Cour t Friday to
enter a vo lunt ary plea of guilty to
two count s of brea king and
entering.
The charges were co nta !ned In
a bill of Informatio n prepared by
the offi ce of Prosec uting Att ar·
ney · Fred W. Crow III and

resulted from sepa r ate Incident s
which occur red In F ebruary.
Paul Gerard. Inves tiga tor for
the prosec utor's office. reports
that the first brea k-In occurred
on Feb. 12 at the Frank Broderick
res idence, at which time severa l
guns and knives and vario us
Items of jewelry were taken.
Douglas Free man, 19, also of
Middleport, was an accom pli ce
In tha t break-ln. He earlier
entered a plea of gu ilt y and was
given an 18- month prison sent·

ence. Th e second Incident was a
brea k-In on Feb. l4 at th e Fra nc!~
Hudson residence on Rutl and
St reel In Middleport.
The Inves tigatio n of the brea k·
Ins Inclu drd off icers !rom l fic
Mlddlrport Pollee DcpHtmcnt.
the Meigs rount v Sheriff's Dr·
par tment and l nvestlgu tor Pa ul
Ger ard.
Man!('y Is " rrpea t ofl en drr.
according to c;erard. who report s
th at thr Middlt•ptll"l mun was
• i ConllnuPd on Paf((' 10 1

Heck's files for bankruptcy protection
CHARLESTON. W.Va . IUPII
- Hounded by financi al worries
that led to thecloslngo f 29stores,
the discount chai n, Heck 's Inc.,
has sought protection from It s
creditors In a Chapter 11 bank·
rupty petition over Its Inability to
make payment s on $50 million In
short-term loans.
II approved by a bankruptcy
judge, the application In U.S.
District Court would allow the
Nitro-based fir m to reorgan ize
while shielded from creditors.
Just before the bankruptcy
filing was made Thursda y, trad·
lng of Heck's stock on the New
York Stock Exchange was
halted .
The firm' s wholl y-ow ned
wholesale subsidiaries, as well
as Its M aloney's subsidiary and
discount drug stores are not
Included (n the filing for bank·
rupt cy, the company sa id .

I

Recently, Heck's announced
the clos ing of 29 sto res, eight of
them in West Virginia, and
others sprea d throughout Ohto,
Kentucky, Tennessee, Indi ana,
Pennsylvania, Maryland, Vlrgl·
nla and North Carolina.
''The firm 's top 20 creditors
were listed In the papers flied,"
William K. Bragg Jr. , general
counsel and assistant secretary
for Heck's, said . He said banks
are owed $50 million , and I 'm not
sure what other creditors are
owed.
" We are not co ntemplati ng
more closings or layo!fs now .
This filing shou ld allow us to
stabilize the situation and res tock stores with merchandise.
Ot her closures and red uctions
are still being Implemented."
Bragg wa s not sure whether
Heck's would r efinance to obtain

capita l.
In addition to the demand for
loan repayment , shortages of
merchandise were developing
beca use of reaction by suppliers
to " the breakdown In bank
support. " Bragg sa id .
Bragg said the firm and It s
Investment banker will co ntinue
to explore the possibility of
selling all or parts of the fi rm.
Only Monday , Heck's an·
nounced the Feb. 28 termination
ol Its cred it agreemen t with It s
bank lending group. and said no
new agreement was reached .
Demand lor payment had been
made by certain banks, lhe
Heck's announcem ent said.
Robert Toussle, a New York
Investor who owns 7 percent of
Heck's stock and who had sought
a buyout , flied several sta tements with the Securities and
E xchange Comm ission on Mon-

'

day, he said .
One leit er disclosed the res l g·
nation s of two 11oard membl•rs,
unannounced by Heck's until
Thursday . Res igning were Cha·
r lcs B. GMes .Jr. and Walt er B .
Dial Jr., members of th e boa rd of
directors of Charles ton Na tional
Bank which Is one of Heck's
cred!tors .
Fred Haddad , a founder and
form er chief executive officer of
lieck' s, al so Is a member of th e
Charleston National Board of
Directors .
Ga tes sa id th e bank did not
attempt to back out of a credit
arrangem ent.
Toussle tr ied to have Heck 's
stopped from closing the stor ies
until a study Is made. The
Investor ca lled the closure plan
hastily conceived and "a waste of
va lu"abl e assets."

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="131">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2709">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38886">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38885">
              <text>March 5, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1772">
      <name>brooks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="861">
      <name>day</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="198">
      <name>howell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
