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Ohio -Lottery

Leagues open
.
.
spnng tra1n1ng
down South
- ·Page 3
,-

ffective Thru Sat.. March 14, 1987 Not Responsible For Typographical or Pictoral Frrnr•

.

Daily Number

589
Super Louo
24-31-1440·7-41

JOIN THE SAVINGS DURING OUR

•

ANNIVERSARY
DAIRY LANE

SALE!

BOILED

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,.; ..

~··

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SUPERIOR
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State Rep .. Jolynn Boster said
she Is co ntinu ing her efforts to
es tablish an effective advocacy
office for Appalac hian Ohio
within th e Celes t e
administration.
As a result of her sponsorship,
the Legislature approved House
!Jill 891, mandating the creation
the school and used to purchase play~round
- Mason Elementary PTO. which
of the Ohio Office of Appalachi a.
collects Campbell soup labels which can be equipment . Ot~ers pictured, left to right, are
This office Is seen as the way to
Joyce Brewer, PTO soup label coordinator, and
redeemed lor school supplies and equipment, was
focus state government resour·
Irene Shaw, Mason Elementary principal, and
the winner ol a certlli cate lor 5,000 labels in a
ces on the needs of 28-coun ty
hack, Stephen Barr, Bennett Food Brokerage,
contest sponsored by Wetterau Grocery In Millon ,
region designilted as Appalac h{:reg Mullens, Campbell Soup Co. representallve,
ian Ohio, Boster explained.
W.Va. Here Mindy Kearns ollhe I'T.O ac~cpts the
and Larry Howard, Foodland director of
ccrtillcatc lrom Bob Eastman, Foodland stores
The current orrrce of Appalaoperallons.
owner.ll will be added to other labels collected by
chia, which is part of the
administrative structure of the
state Department of Development. serves·primarily to adminIster funding received fro m the
federal Appalachian Regional
Commiss ion.
As ARC has been diminished in
COLUMBUS IUP!) - Legislafunding and scope, the Depart · tion rais ing Ohio's beer·drinking
ment of Development's Appal· age from 19 to 21 has received a
ac hian office has been reduced in .rocky reception in th e Ohio
size and responsibility, Boster House State Government Comsaid. As a result . the resources of mittee des pite its spo nsor's conthe o!fice are inscff!clent to tention it would sa ve lives.
implement the goals of H.B. 891 .
Rep. Ronald J . Sus ter, D·
"For the Ohio Office of Appala- Cleveland . presented the bill
chia to be an effective advocate Wedne day, saying it would
for the people of southeastern reduce leena ge traffi c deaths
Ohio. it mu st be funded adeand injuries. and con form Ohio's
qua te ly," said Bos ter. D- minimum drinking age with
Ga lllpolls.· "On behalf of the other states.
legisla tors r~prese ntin g the 28
But critics said they resent
Appalachian counties of Ohio, I pressure by the federal governWINNERS IN CAMPBELL'S CONTEST - Syracuse Elemenhave worked to es tablish fundin g ment. whi ch has threatened to
tary
School was second place winner In the Campbell Soup Co.'s
at a reasonable and fair level of begin withholding 5 pl'rcent of
14th
annual
labels lor edu C'oltion promotion with Food land Stores in
$150,000 per year to cover staff highway funds by Oct . 1 from
Ohio and West VIrginia. The program encourages HC hools to save
and all ('Xpenses of operation."
states, including Ohio. which
which can be redeemed lor school aiel• and eq uipment. The
labels
The fundin g mec hanism fo rt he
ha ve a dr inki ng age lower th an
Foodlund
slores program was sponsored by Wetterau Grocery in
Appalachian offi ce, as wel i as
21.
Milton,
W.Va.
Jack Burton, sales representativ e, lor Campbell's,
Ohio's minimum age for drink·
other state government offic~s.
was
at
the
Pomeroy
Foodland store Wednesday to present a
is th ~ biennial budget meas ure.
ing liquor is 21. but the beer·
ccrllll cate worth 10,000 labels to Romora Young, Syracuse label
House Bill 171, currently under
drinking age was ra ised from 18
chairman. Others pictured, left to right, are Larry Howard,
to
19
when
3.2
perce
nt
alcohol
consideratio n by the House Fl ·
director ol operations lor Foodland , Boh Eastman, ow ner, and
1Continu ed on Page 8)
tConllnued on Page 81
,James Lawrence, Syracuse principal.

House Democrats vote
down Contra funding

BOX

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or Spaghetti
2 LB.
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7

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Corn Flakes

Bath Tissue
4 ROLL
PKG

16

Tea Bags
100
CT.

26 Cenu

. 'I'

"

.,

.,

•

·~
....

WASHINGTON tUPii - By
voting to cut of! ail U.S. aid to the
Nicaraguan Co ntra reb els.
House Democra ts are warning
President Reaga n his cherished
program of supporting the guer·
rillas he calls "freedom !igh·
ters" is near dea th.
The 230·196 House approval
Wednesday of a moratorium on
Contra fund ing was neither a
crushing defeat' for Reagan nor a
meaningful development. The
resolution is expected to die in a
Senate filibuster next week, and
leaders of both chambers agree
(hey ca nnot muster the twa·
l'hirds majorities needed to over·
ride a certain veto even If the
measure makes it to Reagan's
desk.
But House Democratic leader
Thomas Foley ol Washington
sa id Wednesday's vole, however
sy mbolic, sends a real message
to the White House loudly a nd
clearly: Congress Is ready to cut
off aid 10 the Contras. as it did in
1984.
Foley said Reaga n is now sure
to.lose his request later1 his year
lor $105 million In new Contra aid

The se lf· in s uranr~ covera!(E"
may be expa nd ed in the future.
A bid of $Hi.!lll!l annually, the
s&lt;Jme as las t yr-a r. from
Down lng·Ch l!ds-Mul lt•n·Mu ssrr
Insuran ce Agency fo r foocl stam J&gt;
ins urance. wa s acct'fMd by the
commiss ioners subject to s tate
ap prova l. . . .
Coon ty E. n gtn~Pr Phil Hober ts
reported that a da le ha~ still not
been se t by a med iator to
negoti ate the hi ghway Mpar l·
ment's un ion co ntract. which
cxp h'es Ma rc h :11 . Ht• ~a id hl' has
n·cetved a letter offtrlai ly ap·
1Co nt in ued on Page Ri

Woody Hayes dies
today at age 7 4 ...,......,...,.....,

Boster
presses
funding
efforts

Critics slam
drinking bill

·
5
9
$
RC Cola

.~••••••1!••$129

P~per

un ive rsity's Coilege of Arts and placed on the institu te's mail ing
Sciences, to provide Ohio Univer- list for addiliona! informu t ion on
sily student s . and faculty with services ava ilable to the co unt y
on· th e-job 'education, Finney th ro ugh the agency.
sa id. The insti tute offers a
in oth er business, the ro mm is·
variety of exper tise designed to , sioners formally adopted a resoimprove government in sou- !utlon jo in ing th e Buckeye .Joint
theas lern Ohio.
Co unt y Self Insurance Program.
In addition to the data ce nt er at a cost of$42.800. A brea kdown
branch of th e institut e. th ere are of the total shows th e Depart
two other branches whi ch focus ment of Human Services payi ng
on economic development and $9,09145; the co unt y engineer.
public adm inistrat ion. In ad di· $9,90.H!i; the health de partment,
tion to standard info rmatio n, th e · $2.038. :l7; E MS, $2, 108.78; TB ,
institute also prov ides low-cos t $.194.30; Car l ~ton School!Mc igs
specialized research.
Industries. $:l,oo2.19; a nd the
The commissioners as ked to be county genera l fund. $15.709. H.

'

Florida
Grapefruit
5 LB. BAG

••

HALF
GAL.

case, would mean more services
for older cit izens. Projections
also reflect where changes could
be made lo alter population
trends.
Projections are based on past
history. migr at ion, bir ths and
dea ths. etc., a nd may change
with eac h new cens us Finney
pointed out .
The institu te has pr~pared
similar booklets for oth er sou·
theas tern Ohio counties. "Our
goal is to see southeas tern Ohio
grow," Finn ey said.
The institute was crea ted in
1982 under the auspices .ol the

'

Treet

3 Section s. 36 Pogos

A Multimedia Inc . Newspap er

.

sketch of the analysis booklet.
Sentinel Stall Writer
Data used in the report wa s
An analysis of local popu lation coll~t ed fro m U.S. Census sourand employment trends was ces, the Ohio Bureau of Employpresented Wednesday to the men! Services, and the Ohio Data
Meigs Count y ·Comm issioners. Users Cent er.
Prepared by the Ins titute for
Among ot her thin gs, th~ana l yLocal Government Administra- · sis projects for Meigs County a
lion and Rural Development, dramatic downward spira l in the
Ohio Universit y, and placed in 0 to 40 age brac ket between the
booklet fo r m, the analysis pro· years 1985 a nd 2010. As Finney
vides baseline data which could pointed e ut, such projections
be usefu l in determining county "are not meant to bring gloom
needs.
a nd doom ," but to give local
Mike Finney, director of the government s an idea of the types
ins titut e's dat a center, gave the of county services to be emphascommissioners a thumbn ail ized in the future, which in this

S9 9Rib. Cottag·e
SLICED
BACON

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Thursday,
March 12 1987
.

By NANCY YOACHAM

14?oq,. $14 ~oq,. $1 3

LIMIT 1 WITH $10.00 or
MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

CUBED BEEF BUCKET STEAKS...... JL ..

91bl.

SLICED

3 LB. CAN

LB.

S4 9

FROZEN

$189
99

$

FROZEN

ent1ne
.

I

Commissioners accept population., job analysis

GALLON

Eggs

Crisco
rtening

$299

'

Lar9e

'

Quatter,s·

Vol.36. No .217
Copyrighted 1987

FOODLAND

,arelist
'

2°/o
Milk

at y

•

Mostly clear tonight, with a
low near 30. Partly cloudy
Friday, with highs In the mid
40s. The probability ol precipitation Is near zero through
Friday .

for fiscall988 and should begin to
push diplomacy, no I weaponry,
to reso lve co nfli cts with Nicaragua's leftist Sandinis ta regime.
" We arc saying that this vote
demonstra tes this is the last
official aid money to be voted by
Congress and It is importa nt for
the administration ... (to) move
to a tra ns ition policy so it will not
lake itself up to the last dollar on
the last day and say we are in a
crisis," Foley sa id .
The resolution approved by the
House calls fo r a suspension of ali
aid to 1he guerril las trying to
overthrow the Soviet· arined and
Cuban· trained Sa ndlnlstas - in·
eluding the !inal $40 million
Installment of the $100 m illion aid
package Congress approved last
year - until there Is a public
accounting of all U.S. and private
aid the rebels have received so
lar.
Reagan holds the ca rds with
his veto power In this case, but
only a s imple majorit y vote in
either chamber wil l be necessary
lo kill the $105 million request
and keep him from even gelling a
chance to veto that measur@.

Contra Resolution
The House voled Wednesday
lo delay the final $40 million

installment of the $I 00 minion
Conlra ,aid package approved
by Congress lasl year.

FOR
230

171R)
213(0)

-

AG*MT
1S6(R)

AID VOTED DOWN - The
House approved a resolution
that would cut oil aid to the
Nlcarapan rebels, a sym·
bollc first step In a Democrat·
promised drl• e lo end all U.S.
flnnanclng of the Contras .
(U PJ)

COLU MB US I UP II - Woody
Hayes. th e lege nd ary and fe isty
Ohio State University foo tball
coac h whose temper nea rly overshadowed his coachin g abii itit•s.
d ied ea rly today. He was 71 .
Rick Ray, OSU's at hl etic direrlor . sa id Ha yes's perso nal physi
ciil n, Dr. Joe Ryan , sa id Hayes
died at his home in Col umbus
ear ly today.
F'or 28 y~ars. Way ne Woodrow
Hil yes wa s Mr. Ohi o Stale
Foot bal l.
Hayes repiilced Wes Fes !~r in
19&gt;1 and surv ived 28 sto rmy
seilsons in a job that had bern
considered "a grav~yard fot·
roachPs. "
However. on the ni ght of D~c .
28. 1978. in the closing minu tes of
Ohi o Stal e's 17·151oss to Clemson
in the Gator Bow l. a fru stra ted
' Hayes sl ugged a Tiger player in
fro nt ol the Buckr•yc bench .
The next morning, Hayes was
re lieved of his dulles by Athletic
Director Hugh Hindm an - a
former linecoach under Hayesendin g a co lorful but co ntrowrslal career.
Th e Gator Bow l incidf'n t was
only one of severa l in which
Hayes was involved over the
years. includ ing co nfron tations
with news men. camera men and
fans a nd th e famo us s ma shing of
a down marker la te in the 1971
Mic hi ga n game.
During hi s 28 years at Ohio
State, Hayes wo n seven outrigh t
Big Ten championships and also
.shared fiv e tit les . His overaii
record at OSU was 205-61·10.
Hayes, a long tIme diab(•t Ic.
suffered " hea rt attack In Ju ne
1974, but by lh ~ lime foo tba ll
season rolled aro und In September, h ~ wa s back on the
sidelines.
A tireless worker, Hayes' daily
schedule usua lly ran from ear ly
morning until late nig ht. srvcn
days a week . He often said of
opposing coac hes. "I hry may
out think me. bu t th ey won't
outwork m ~ .1·
Hayes underwen t gall bladder
surgery in May 1981, and less

•
LEGENn

th an two weeks latN·, had 10 have
a Sf'Cond oprra t ion to r('move a
surgica l sponge that wa.&lt; left In
him .
Hayc•s too k the second opera ·
lion In stride, telli ng th r doctor:
" I don' t kn ow hOw a doctor co uld
make a mistake. I coached for40
yra r s and never made on(.'."

But, th at was Woody Hayes .
Thin gs that wou ld bo ther most
people. didn't fazr him.
After hi s dismissal as coach.
Hayes refu sed to atte nd an Ohio
Statr game for two yea rs. f~ar ing
he wou ld drilw at ten t ion from his
successor, Ear le Flruc(•, a lso a
former assistant and good frie nd.
H~ mad e his first visit " home"
to Ohio Stadium for the Sept. 12.
19Rl , oprnN against Duke. .sil ·
1ing In a prlv."r room In thP press
hox .
Altho ugh he slayecl away from
the game and said he didn' t miss
th e ac tu al coachin g, Hayes did
kt''P in touch wi th his form er
playtn. with whom he lunched
tContlnued on Page R1

Mine owners ink agreements
with union before new talks
"The UMW stands n ·a dy to
CHARLESTON, W.Va. iU PI )
·
barga
in in good fait h l'or non ·
- Display ing a cooper a live
co
ncessionary
co ntra cts that
spirit that makes them stand out
as "enlightened leaders" in th e prov ide the fair meas ure of
industry, four more coa l opera · ~cono ml c justice tllat our
tors have s igned promises to members so rightly deserve a nd.
improve job opportu nities in In return. maintain the stability
advance of upcom ing contract and ever· Increasing produc ti vity
talks wilh the United Mine In the coalfields that have been so
beneficial to the industry."
Workers union.
UMW Vice President Ce('li
Lett ers of intent to en hance job
Roberts
, who accep ted the s igna ·
opportunities lo r union members
tures
of
the
coa l offi cials, sa id the
were signed Wednesday by re·
letters
demonstrate
"a jo in t
presentatlves · ol Pikeville Coa l
Co .. Beckley Coal Mining Co., recog nit io n that coa l min ers who
Scotts Branch Co., and Kanawha have given their entire li ves to
the coal industry deserve loyalty
Coa l Co.
In
return."
UMW President Richard
"
These companies clearly
Trumka said the letters were
identical lo the one Is land Creek realize that lhe tim e has co me to
Co rp. recently signed with the provide a fair measure ol job
opportunity and economic secur·
union.
"These agreements arc lty for their empl oyees and our
further exa mples or the kind of members," he said.
"Their co mmitment to fair and
cooperation that can exist between the coal Industry and lhe just trea lment of · their em·
union." said UMW President ployees marks them as represen·
tatlve and enlightened leaders In
Richard TrumKa.

the Industry."
All of th r minc•s, loeatNI In
WPsl VIr gin!&lt;.~ :nul ('LlS f&lt;\rn Krn

tucky, arP m &lt;Hlll ~l'd by PlckJ rHis
Mather &amp; ('o .. which also holds
an interest In llr·ckl~y Mining
and Scotts llranch .
In the lctt C'rs. the opera tors
prom ised th~t :
- Any uvaiiab l&lt;• jobs at nPwly
acq uired or opt•ncd mines must
be filled fi rst tJycompa ny em·
pioyees . in it Ia ll.Y by 1hose laid ·off
under guidclin~s of the 11!84
agreement sl"nrd by the B!tumi·
nous Coal Operators Associat ion.
11 no f11r! oughrd mlnrr.• arc
avullable, act ivc employees
within the UMW di strict and
co nti guo us di st rict s ma y
trans fer to tose op~ra tlon s .
"UMW members laid off from
Pikeville Coa l Co.. !Ji:ockl ey Min ·
!ng, Sco!ls Bronch and Kan awha
Coal Co. now have pa nel right s,
not just Lo their ow n company's
mines, but to those ol the othN
three companies as well, wi th out
loss of se niority." Roberts sa id .

·,

J

FI!OM

Slate looth11ll co11ch Woody
llay&lt;•s died this morning at hi•
home In Colurnlms 11t the age
of 7~. In his caree r, he won
more than 200 gaml'S. (UI'I) ,

l

•
·'

r'ASSK~

THE SCENE - Forrn&lt;Jr Ohio

'

�Commentary
•

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEI GS-MASON AREA

alh r""'n........_.,..
. •

S~mt9
~v

.-r""E5! c:::::::~. J=J

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher

'

.
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publl.sher/Conlro!lcr

Tourney scores

Drug rules imperilliberty___V_in_cen_t_Ca_rro_ll

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page--;-2-lhe Daily Santi~
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Th~rsday, March 12, 1987

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER ot The United Press Inter national, Inland Dall y Press
AS8octatton and the American Newspaper ~ubllshers Association.

Now we know why goyernment
a nt!·drug campa!gn·s· rarely deliver more than Indigna nt rhe·
tor te and promises. It !s because
those ca mpaign'&gt; that go fur ther
· are likely to tra mple upon our
liberty.
·
Co nsi der th e drug -tes ting
guidelines ann ounced recently
by th e Reaga n admini stra tion.
They Include secur ity measures
more fi ttin g for a home for young
delinquent's.
Upward of a ml!!ion federal
wor kers, most of whom have
done nothing to arouse suspicion,

are to ·be .subject ed to coarse
hum!l!atlo n In the name of
con trol! tng dr ug a buse. Th is Is at
a tim e, mind you, when the per
ca pita consump tton of virtually
every drug except coca ine- bu t
including alcohol, marij uana and
psychede!!cs - has sta b!!ized or
begun to decline.
Even so, legion s of federa l
wor kers are to be ushered into
specified toilet sta!! s, ones that
fl ush blue-colored water only,
after dives ting themselves of.
coa ts, pocketbooks and briefcases. The temperature of their

urine samples wtll · be noted
!mmedlate!y, the better to ca tch
cheaters. Anyone sus pected of
pullin g a fast one will have to
return to the stall - thi s time
und er direct observa tion.
No t even at ' the high noon of
Jimmy Carter d!d bureaucra ts
consider unleashing government
for such a stunt.
Do conservatives rea lly lh!n k
this Is a wav to win votes? Do
t)ley hones tly believe suc h measures serve 1he goa ls of freedom
and s mall government . with
which they so properly Identify ?

(

. Washington Window

Deficit law stymies
authors of budget
By LIN01\ WERFELMAN
Wi\SHINGTON tUPl i - Two congressiona l budget-writing
cqmm!ttees, poised to ·revam p President Reagan's $1 tril!ion
s pendlng 'proposa l. a re bei ng st umped by a ta ngle of numbers a nd a
ca mpaign to find new · meaning in the deficit-cutting la w !hot
regu[ates thei r wor k.
The committees' numbers, as usual. do not match the eco nomic
assumptions and ex pec tations presented by the White House in its
spendin g plan for fi sca l 1988, which begins Oct. 1.
Treas ury Secretary James Baker describes the White House as
on ly s!!ght ly more optimis tic than the Congression al Budget Office In
its forecast of economic grow th ove r th e next yea r.
But som e law ma kers say that optimistic di ffe rence is 'e nough to
.create an impressive budget -c utting challe nge. They also question
' the:adininlstratlon's estimates of the savi ngs like ly to result from Its
controvers ial recommendat ions to se!l cert ai n governm{'nt assets.
many of which have been proposed for sa te before and rejec ted by
Congress .
, The root of their problem is the $26 bl!!!on di ffe rence between thl'
White Ho use and the CBO on exactly how much money the
,governme nt mu st rai se or save to s hrink the federal del!cl tt o lhc$1118
bll!!on required unde r the ba la nced budget taw .
But som e lawm a kers a lso have begun to ques tion the valid tty of the
108 billion defi c it reduction target for fisca l 1988, an d . the
· · compan ying ta r ge ts aimed at gradually e limin ating the de fi c it by
19 1.
'That !s not In th e ca rds, " sa id Rep . Willis Grad ison. R·Ohio. who
has au nc hed a letter-writing ca mpa ign to persuade hi s colleagues to
agree to a new int erpretation of the taw.
Gradi son bases his proposal on the cla im that the orig ina l deficit
reducti on target s were wrong- er roneo usly ca lculated because they
were based on at leas t a $40 b!llion und erestimate of Ihe tota 1de ficit in
1986.
"I have suggest&lt;&gt;d," he wrote in one of his lettNs, "we cou nt down
from where we ac tuol ly were. rather th a n where we th ought we
were.''

House Budget Committ ee Chairma n W!!l!am Gray, D-Pa ., a nd hi s
Sena t(' co unterpart, Lawton Chiles. D-F!il .. have endorsed a t !east
part of Grad ison's proposal - hi s cal l to re place the speci fi c deficit
ta rge ts with a new requirement fm· a co nsis tent redu ction of $:16
bi!llon a year In the total.
Gtadiso n calcula tes tha t the change would pro long the
deficit -red uction process by one yea r. reduci ng th e defici t to ze ro by
fi scal )992.
But his criti cs - Repub lica ns on the House and Senate budge t
comm ittees - di s agree .
"Does a nyone rea lly be lieve that postponing the day of recko ning
will ma ke spending cu ts a ny eas ter'!" demanded seven Republican
memb&lt;'rs of thr Housr committ ee in an answer ing letter toGradison.
Ease !s not necessarily the Issue. Gradl son sa id. whose proposa l
a lso In cl udes a trigger for automat!c budg('t cuts In case the president
and Co ng ress fa!! in initial effort s to develop a more responsive defi cit
reduct ion package of their ow n.
"After all . no o ne yet has a credible pla n for get ti ng th ere," he
wrot e, "even with a ll the blue smoke and mirrors we ca n mu ster. "

Letier to the Editor

a!s control! ed a nd . set their
offen se o n the wrong e nd of the
court. ne ither a 10-seco nd viola·
lion or over and ba ck cal! was
madC".

Twrnl y· onc

srco nd s

ticked off the clock when the
Sher idan player scored a goal
wh ich s hould have been disa!·
lowed or credited to Meigs
co ns idN!ng th e position of the
pla yers jumpin g center.
Th en to accentuate the pighca dincss. the off! cia l refu sed to
c hec k with the off! c!a l sco rer to
rule on the las t second s hot or
admit a n error on the l!p and
restart th e overtime period .
It 'has a lways been my understa nding that those selec ted to
officiate lourna mcnt ga mes
were s upposed to be the best.
After seP !ng thi s ga me a nd some
in the Class "A " Meigs tourney.
il sor t of makes you wonder,
does n't It ?
, Meigs undoubt edly did not play
the best game of the season
Sa turday night an,d you cannot
take a nyt hing away from the
Sherida n team. However, the
Ge neral s ca n be tha nkful that
Sa nt a ca me ea rly this yea r ...
dressed In a striped s hirt.
Jim Soulsby
President.
Meigs Athleti c Boos ters

in hi~tory
-Today
.

By United Press lnlernallonal

Today Is Thursday , March 12, the 71st day of 1987 wtth 294 to follow .
The moon is moving toward Its ful! phase.
·
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus a nd Saturn.
The evening s tars are Mars and Jupit er .
ThOse born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Irish philosopher Bishop George Berkeley In 1685, pioneer au tomaker
Clement Studebaker In 1831.

WASHIN GTON (N EA) - Between 1979 a nd 1984 , the country's economy produced a seeming ly healthy net ga in of 8 ml!!!on
new jobs- but 58 percent of them
paid an appallingly low $7,000 a
yea r or tess.
·
That f!nd lng, the centra! conclus ion In a study commissioned
by the Joint Economic Comm it tee of Congress, has inspired a
re newed debat e over the future
of "The Great America n Jobs
Ma chine."
That's the title of the·congres·
slana! report writt e n by Bos ton
econo mists Barry Bluestone and
Bennett Harrison . They offer this
gloomy yet logical analys ts:
"The ~o n om!c restructuring
of the 1980s - Incl uding the toss
of jobs In the manufacturing
sec to r, the continued growt h of
the se rvice eco nomy a nd the
reorganlzat!"on of work toward
more part - tim~ schedules- ha s
left In Its wake a prol!feration of
!ow-wage jobs.
"If this pattern of development
continues, the stand ard of l!v!ng
of a growing proportion of lhe
America n work force wilt be
s lgnlf!cant!y jeopardized."
Indeed, lhere Is considerable
evidence that employment opportunities ha ve deteriorated
markedly during the 1980s- and
that those who hold !ow-wage
jobs a re among the mo re
fortunate.
In a special survey, the Labor
Department's Bureau of Labor
Stat!sl!cs found that 13.1 m!!!!on
workers lost the!r~obs from 1981
through 1985 because their plants
or companies moved or closed, or
beca use their positions o~ shifts
were a bol!shed.
Thai total !nc!udt'd 5.1 m!I!!on
experienced workers considered
to have been "dislocated," mean-

live in today's highly competitive
global econemy, companies and
their . employees mu st be pre·
pared to meet the chal!enge of
!ntens!fled competi tion In an
eff! cient and humane manner."
The task force call ed for
estab!lshment of a federa l progra m to retrain and re-employ
workers who have been d! s!o·
cated because of offshore competition or new technolop. There
was no consensus,

ho~ever ,

on

how to finance the lnltiat!v e,
es timated to cost $900 m!l!!on

New Jeny

17 .J4 .m

n

2U

.3%3 'l8

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'ltl 37
'l2 10
II 12

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San Anlnnl
Sa~ ramnl

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x·LA I.Jir~
18
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3.1
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32
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:11 .315 Jl•..t
:12 .500 171,.l
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Bartl8'ton 'l l, Slow WMIAitl .l l'lluk 82
Canton McJUnley II, ~u11 Uio n .Jack·

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fl~v e lud HI'IIIIW ~ ts, CII'John Huy :Ill

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Mt'.aor 13, EIK!IId 51
Parm11 70, 1lru•wkk.$1
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Rr11UII :'i

WIIYnt' Trart• 68. Fort ·ll'nnln ~ M
Wynford 75, Man~flf'ldl&gt;lt Pf'l l'rl• i:l

S\' Rll~ l""' :J, lkl~oton t
hl,;~tr:v 6, H~rlfurd 1
Phll udt•lpbht ti, NPw .Jt·r~·y I

( 'I"I'IIU!d

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II

l'anlnn Mt·Kinlf')' 53. Solon 51
AI Mount Vernon
M11nsllt•ld !&gt;M•n lor liD, Gu bUR n11. !iD
fulumhu~o " 'atlt'noontW. War~w Rl\'t•r
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Kl•tlf'rln,; Fulrmo• :12, Bl•aw•rt'fl'f'k
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"
College
scores
follrj!:f' Ba.~ kl'lhall ResuHs
Jl&gt;ill. llllnll.lla\'klltlonal Tournamtnl
F11'111 Round
Sr·hra~kll 7K. Marqul'ttl' 76
&amp;bit' st a lt•Ct. Uhall 11
W11.10hln,;ton !It, Monlllllll Stntt' 90 tOT)
NAIA Tourum1•nt
AI Ku n~o~~ M (' lty, Mo .
Fll'lll Round
(if' Or•t"t own !Ky ) .~; . Mlnn r~o tu ·
Duluth 41i
'l'ff"'('O:' f 'll SU:tll fi' Ot' ~t, Y,;~,ylillld IJiill ,

&lt;'•·nlr.d Mo'a...,h. 116. ..\U3nUt· fhri!OIIIUI I43
Til! lor IInd t 61 !&gt;kl ulhc•rnTt•t•h l&lt;ia I :ill
"' "'ne~~hur J: IPa) lim, Kt•arnt',¥ !o\h.h•

Oklll.l' llf 101, Sorlbl!·ood ln st (Mit•hl 8li
H•waii-HIIn II'!, Ml.~sGUrl S.uUwrn 7!1
Ori' J:On Tl' t'h 67, ~nrlhw PS I~rn ( h'"'a l

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t:am ....

Sl. . J.nuls 111 llosloft. i: 3.) p.m.
(~ll'hN ·II.I I'IU~ur,;h. 1;l;l p.m .
:w K an~ ·nul PhlllUit&gt;lpbla. 'l'::l.l p.m.
f'rldll,f'" G•m j'!oi
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lktllalo at \ 'n nt•OU\t'r, nhchl
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Hill.~

Tolf'do ('entral 87,

:JtiH71112-1 6 ~

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:ttl :w j :}!1 tall 'l!'i3
. U:M 8 39 2111 233

Rostn

~apoleGn-18

Clk&gt;is AAA
At Parma
'l.akl•wood 36, Parnut Holy N~~om1• ~5

~~ :1 ~

·lr

Norlhw rst

Girlll Ohio HI Kill Sc!honl &amp;M lwlhall
8)' Unltf'd Prf'li~ l•lt"f'MIIonal
\l' e dn~d~ ·~ Rt-Kifiil'llll Tnurllllmrnt
R#Mui!M

N,\TIONAL HOfKt:V U : AGUt:
\\' u.lt'!'l f ontt'N'flt•t•
t"aUrM1. DlvMon
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H 21 l 117 'n'l
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w·.~hn ·
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Mc~rn'lott

.Jal·k~on C~ntl'r

8oHtun al l•dhUHl, niJ(hl
Dt•troll at ( 'hlui(O, ni~~;N
Atl llnla 111 Dalhtll, nlj~:hl
StouUit• al 1.,\ C'llpp!' rs, nla:hi

NHL results
I

UhrlchttvUie Clu,\'·

"
".

Frkl~ 's GUnlf!i

0

A.A

Bt'lll'\'111' 511, UppPrSandu!llky-"
fol DfoKUf'!l 67, Col fl'll 14•noh&amp;l .. j
Glrardfll, Lt'll\' kllllm ,. LIIBI'Mt'tel
Uherty II , CortlUicl Lllke'o' klw 52

Jlirw "''rPWy 111 !lit•w Vork, nl~thl

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"

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F.CM ' Up!Otatt• NI'WI Vork
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FrumlnJ!,'hiUll n Colhy !t:l
EC',\r Mt•lrn Nl"·N·J
Old WNithur." Il l. Nol Tr·r·h n
~llllnrlll1 IJtllr Coilt'lll:l' Tuurnu m&lt;•nl

Agent admits giving
cash to OSU athlete
ATLANTA iUPli - A New
York sports agent h~ s admitted
giving cash to col!ege athletes.
reportedly Including Ohio State's
Cr!s Carter and Michigan' s Lo·
renzo Wh!le, in an effort to sign
them as clients, The Atlan ta
Constitution said today.
The NCAA has begun an
investigation into the deal!ngs of
the agent, Norby Wa!le r s, that
could result In some athletes
losing their e!!glb!l!ty and some
t('ams forfeiting ga mes or championships,
copyright s tory In
The Constitution said.
Watters also has com e under
the . scrutiny of the National
Footbal! League Players Assoc!at!on, which says two college
seniors e!!gible for the April 28
draft called the union last week to
report that Watters had threa·
tened to "break their legs" for
firing him.
Walters denies this charge,
according to the Constitution, but

he docs not deny making cash
payments to college footbal! and
basketball players before their
e!!glbillty has expired ·- a
violation of NCAA rules.

a

-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14~9G0)

A Dlvl.&lt;41on of Multln:-edla. Inc.
Publish('(~ C'VC'r y

afl rrnoon. Monday

th roog h Friday. 111 Court S l .. Po-

m(lrov. Ohi o. b:v the Ohio Valley Pub-

Berry's World

llshin'g Co mpany / Mul tlm rd la.

Inc.•

Pomcro~· . Oh io 45769. Ph. 992·2156. S£&gt;·
ro nd ('[[Iss poslage paid a1 Pomero~.

Ohio.
Pres~

Interna tional,
Inland Da ll y Prrss Association and lh('

MrmbN: Unll ('d

I'' '

Ohio N(lw spap('r Association. Nat ional
Advl' rtlsln~ Rl'p rc'sentatlvP. Branham
Ncwspap{'r Sal (IS, 7.13 Thi rd Ave m.1r.
Nl'W York. Nrw York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send addrfoss c han,ef'!l
t o Th e Dally ~('n tlnel. lll Court Sl..

E~;~s:' ~~~li,~~~~~~tl:~~~~

li"omeroy. Ohio 45769.

SUBSCRIPTION KATES
J)y Carrier or Mol rw Route
On r Werk ............................. .. .... $1 .25

Onr Mon lll ..... ....... .............. . ..... $~.4~
Onr Ycar ......................... .. .... .. o$65.tAJ
SINOLE COPV
PRICE

-~· ·

Dell.v ...... .. ........ .. .. .. ............ 25 Ce nl s
Subscr lb('rs not d cslrln~: to pay t ht' car·
rll'r may remll In advan('f' direct to

Thr Dal ly Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basi!;. Cr't&gt;dll wlll lx' glv£'n carrier each
werk.
No subscrlp!lons by mall pPrmltT('d In
ar('tls where homr carrier Sf'fV\Cf Is
avall ablt.-..

Mall Suhocrlptlono
IMide Melp Q)unty

13 Wreks .................................. $17.:
26 We eks ................................. •$34.
52 Week$............. .. ........... .. ...... $ti6.56
Oub.lde Melp Counly

\

By U•M.ed Prflrllllnltrn~~tloul

Wf'dnf'Mdll)' '"' Dl~lrlel Tournamt•nl
fWMUitjj
· CI1W111 AAA

Furt IAra mll! lll, Lod. I ~U~d311

f'hllallelphla 117, fhlntJCO 1011
Milw!luk•'" 115, Wuhlnl{ton 107
Drirolt 107, lndiua !IK
Du.IIM 1.11, St~~IUt' 117
O..nvrr 12t, Utallilll
Golrk&gt;n ~U•I e 121, LA rllpp•r1; Ill
Thunida,\' '" G~ml'll
MIIWIIUkt&gt;e 11.1 Nl'W .Je r ~ey. 7: :40 p.m.
l'ho1•nb Ill fli'niiUid, 7: :to p.m .
Salii\niOIIIo ... Housto•. K! 3fl p.m .
PoriiiUid at LA. Lllkrr~. 10:30 p.m .
Ulah al Sacr•mt•ntn , 10::11 p.m .

,

annually .
S!ml!ar!y , the tas k force was
unable to agree•,upon whether
employers should be required to
give their workers advance
notifica tion of pl ant cloSings or
major la yo ff s as Is already
required In Ca nada ana some
European cou ntries.
If no remed ial measures are
adopt ed, ml!!lon s of additiona l
workers face the bleak prospect
of endangered jobs, stagnat!ng
Income and diminished opportunities for adva ncement.

"OK, suppose we qid stop ,the arms race.
Then how would everybody make a LI)IING ?"

Boy11 Ohio Hl11• Sl'lloul '~~a.otkelhlll

Wt•dn('Sd a)"~ Rl•li utt~
RoM on II&amp;, l'hoenlll IM

1

jobs .
!ncreasl ng!y are co nfronted by a
new phenomenon - management Insistence that they accept
contracts calling for drast!c pay
cuts, reduced benefits and d emanding work rules.
Others - Including 22.6 percent of the men and women who
have gained employment since
1981 - e nd '!P with part -time
jobs, often because they cannot
f!nd full -time work. The proport!on of part -timers In the work
force Increased from 16.9 per cent
In 1980 to 17.4 percent last year.
What can be done to ameliorate
the problem? A Labor Depart·
ment Task Force on Economic
Adjustment and Worker Otslocat!on · recently offered this
conclusion:
''If society Is to remain produc-

at n .S%5 13%

Mllw11ulip
ChlcA«O
lndhum

Loan Insuran ce Corp., which ll!uslra ted by the facts s urro und· of the S&amp;L's oper at ion. and since
guarantees depo s it s up to ing Vernon 's ownership of the
June 1982. the report slates, the
$1 00,1100 per account, a nd has to · Del Mar Beach House, loca ted in
thrift ha s paid $22 .1 million ln
pay off when an S&amp;L fall s. As a De! Ma r, Ca lif. , which was
dividend s to its parents holding
ru le of thumb, theFSLIC'slosses purchased for $2 million and
company 1and thus ind irec tly to
are usually doubl e the a mount of · maintained by Vernon for thE' use
Dixon).
a failed instit ution's negative net ol Don Dixon. Ver non funded the
"In add itio n to the dividends,
wort!]. In Vernon's case, this checking accounts esta blished to
Dixon also rece ived excessive
would mea n about $700 mil!lon to pay various ex penses and furnish
bonu ses based on prof!ls," the
come out of the FSLIC reserve the hou se. Di xo n and his wile
report sta tes. These Included
fund. which is currently arou nd moved Into the house in June1985 $644,637 from one bonus progra m
$1 billion.
.... a nd li ved there unl!l Vernon
and an additiona l $1.1 m!IIion
"Ver non's Imprudent a nd sold the house in December 1986.
unde r a nother.
Ri sky ... Le nding Practices Re· There Is no ·record that Dixon
Footnote: Di xon sa id the ba nk
suit in Vernon's In solvency," a made a !ease payment to Vernon.
board discriminates against "ensection hea d!!ne on the ba nk a lthough he d!d pay th e subsetrepreneuria l" S&amp; L executives
board report states. The lengthy quent owner $7,100 in monthly
and sa id: " I regard it as
document. seen by our associate rent a l payments."
un-America n, Gestapo-like ... a
Michael Blnsteln, Is replete wi!l
In addition, the S&amp;L paid ou t
travesty on America n life." His
a llegations of questi ona ble man- $761.339 in ma intenance and
lavis h perquisites were "created
agement .decison s and dubious ent ertainment expenses for th e
for the furtherin g of tthe S&amp;L's)
business practlces._Here are the beach house. Investigat ors co uld
busi ness," he sa id, as part of an
most shocking:
'lind no board minutes s how ing
" aggress iv e bu s in ess tech- Since Dixon acquired 90.8 a pproval of this arra ngement.
nique." Dixon said he has met
percent ownership of the S&amp;L In
-The S&amp;L 's "aviation departWright only two or three times
early 1982, its top off!cers have me nt" a t one time incl uded fi ve
·a nd has made only modest
had exclusive us e of "non- airpla nes and six pilot s, and an
political contributions to the
earning asse ts of Vernon, lnc !ud· additiona l plane was to be bought
spea ker. He donates to· both
lng luxury a utomobiles, a hunt- In 1988 for $13.5 mil!lon. From · political parties. he sa id .
Ing club, a yacht ; five a irplanes 1984 through 1986, the avia tion
A Wright aide interceded in our
and p!Iots and three beach. department posted losses tot alrepea ted effort s to reach the
houses."
Ing $5.7 mil! ton .
,
speaker . The aide had no com- "The use of corporate assets.
- Hefty -bonuses based on
ment on allega tion s that Wright
by controlli ng persons ca n be "inflated pro fits" were a feature
was tryi ng to protect Vernon
S&amp;L.

!ng that they had held their jobs
for at !eas t three years before
being d!sinlssed . W!thin that
group, 1.7 m!!l lon were subsequently unable to f!nd new
employment.
Among di slo ca ted workers
who obtained new jobs. almost 30
percent slgn!fica nt!y improved
th eir ear nings - but a s l!ghtly
larger proportion was forced to
accept s ubstant!a! pay cu ts.
Perhaps most adversely af·
fected by what some analysts
characterize as "the delndustrla llzatton of America" a re the
2.7 m!!llon b!ue·c91Iar workers
the BLS says have permanently
tos t their tra ditional jobs since
1981 .
'
" We seem to be st uck' somewhere In the neighborhood of 18
m!Illon to 19 m!!llon jobs In
manufacturing and
no one
ex pec ts that number to In·
crease," Bluestone told a seminar held here las t year by the

WL Pel . GB

.a$ IU .'H~ ~ ttl ·" ' 11 \1

•·hton
Pbll. .ph
W"hn~~tn
Nf'W 't'ork
D..trolt

·~
~~1
Shocking track record_.J_ac_'k_A_n_de_.rs_on_&amp;_Jo_se_ph_S_p_ea_r
WASHINGTON - Ho use
Spea ker Jim Wright , D·Texas. Is
trying to protect hI s stale's sickly
savi ngs a nd loan Institution s
from what he considers. hars h
a nd arbitrary enfo rceme nt act ton by the Federal Hom e Loa n
Bank Boa rd .
Accordi ng to a highly conf!den lia ! bank boa rd document. pre·
pared a t the request of the Hou se
Ba nking Commi ttee, one of these
troubled thrift s Is lhe Vernon
Savings and Loan Association,
owned by Donald R. Dixon, a
rea l-es tate developer. At the end
of 1986, the S&amp;L reported some
$1. 35 b!!!lon in assets , bu t about
$1.7 bl!llon In !I ab!!!tles :
According to well-informed
sources In th e f!n ancial commun·
it y, Wright has repeatedly told
Treasury offlc!als th at the Vernon S&amp;L was one of several In the
Sout hwest that had beco me Innocent v!ct!ms of the region 's oil
a nd rea l-estate bust . He urged
tha t th e Vernon Institution be
given time to work out its
problems Instead of being foreclosed by the bank board.
Closing down the Vernon S&amp;L
would be an expensive propos ition for ·the Federai Savings and

Dlvi1lon

Cfontnd Dlv bllo•

job machine ·sputters. ______R_ob_e_rt_W_al_ter_s

'

Santa came early this year
The Kei th Wi sec up account of
the Meigs-Sheridan boys sectiona! basketba ll contest was
ex trem&lt;' ly wc!I -wr!l te n. Th e
com m e nt s by Coach Mick Child s
werr accurat e a nd he is to be
comme nded for his lac k of
vllupera t!on. which could have
cas.ily been includ ed. 1 have no
qualms In that regard .
Firs t. the co mment s of Jhe
orr\cta t scorer confirmed what
evervone In the area (exc lud ing
the·r.PfNee l kn ew ... tha t thrla st
seco nd s hot by Don BerkN was
good a nd shou ld ha vr been
al!owed to stand for a Meigs win.
It also confirmed w ha t I bel ieved
fr om the start o f the co ntes t ...
that t h&lt;• referee's vis ion was, In
so m&lt;&gt; wav , Im paired. Rut aft er
his ruling on the goat. r bPgun to
realize tha t he undoub tedly pos·
sessf'd the best periph eral vision
of anv one In the 48 con tiguous
sMc-,; a nd Ca nada. How else
rwld he have had onr ey&lt;• on the
dock a nd on e on the s hooter·?
£\'en with the disallowing of
the goa l, the game at tha t point
belonged to either team . But then
Jo compound m att ers other
grave errors on the· pa rt of the
officials occurred . The players
we&lt;e positioned wrong for the
ensuing tip and when the Gener·

~tlanUt•

Quite the opposite Is true. Such
work-place tests nurt~re . the
belief !n government as a stern
paterfamilias -:- ·and they undermine ind!v!dua! dignity, too.
·
After a l!, dally relationships
rest on a found a tion of trust and
common respect. · Drug abuse
does plague a few businesses, but
a bla nket drug or polygraph test
ts a demora!!zing accusation of
guilt . It is a lso the equivalent of
tel ling innocent employees they
are children. incapable of , contro lling their lives or meeting
thei r obliga tions.
And employers already possess a re medy for a troublesome
or drug-drowsy worker. They
ca n fire him . The tactic !ss!mple, .
and it req uires the on ly evidence
that shou ld count -poor performance. Best of aU, firing one
person doesn't hum!!iate everyone else.
For some reason, too many
conservatives - and too many
Ame ri ca ns in genera! , for that
matter - forget such simp le
truth s. Pierre DuPont, th e
former Republican governor of
Delaw are who is running for
president, has even urged mandatory drug tests for every
high-school student.
It 's tim e we rejected such
coercive stra tegies for clean
Jiv ing. We s hould think twice, for
exa mple, wh en the baseball
commi ss ioner suggests a plan to
test players for dr ug use four
limes a nnua ll y. That's . what
Peter Ueberroth proposed last
yea r , and ma ny comment at ors
r ushed to ap pl a ud him.
Perhaps those journa!!s ts
'· should put themsel ves In the
players' place.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome, They !t!ould be Jess than llO word s
long, All letter s arcsubjecl toedltlng and rl'l.lst bt&gt; slgnOO with name, address and
telephon e number . No WlSigned lett ers wlll b(' pu blbhed. Letters should 1x&gt; In
goOd tast e, addressin g Issues, not rx:r~onalllles.

NATIONAL IAsKETI..U.I. A.~SCX' .
ly Ufthed Prfllllnt!'l'..aloul
Eulnn Conlf!renc.'f'

13 WPeks .................................. $18.20
26 Weeks ..................... ............. $3~.10
52 WeetuJ ............. .. .. .... ............. S67.60

Ron Logan AP
District Coach
of the Year
Meigs' Ron Logan was selected
the Assoc!ated Press' 1986-87
Class AA District Girls Coach-ofthe- Year Tuesday and several
area girls were named to the
AP's All· District squad.
Logan, a former Pome roy
High Schoo! standou t who began
h!s teaching coaching career at
Gal!!pol!s In the . mid-1970s,
guided the Meigs girls to a
perfect 20-0 campaign and the
Tr!-Valley Athletic Conference
championship.
The Marauderettes (now 25-0)
play In the Class AA" reg!onals
this evening and w!l! battle
Akron Hoban at Musk!ngum
-~Coi!ege In New Corncord.
.
Making the Ai!-D!str!cl AP
Class AA First Team !rom the
Tri-County Area .were Jenny
M!tler, Meigs and Angle Hailey,
Gal!!pol!s.
Second Team honors went to
Jenn! Couc~ •. Meigs.
In Class A select!ons, Kyger
Creek's Renee Ward was Second
'r~am All-District along with
North Gall!a's Jane Campbell.

. KNOCKED OFF BASE - Toronto Blue Jays Lou Thornton,
trying to bunt for a blllle hit, Is knocked olf first base hy Cincinnati's
Terry Francona as pitcher Derek Bolelho runs over to co.v cr.

Thornton

wa.'i out on the play in \\'••dnt'sd ay'., i•xhihHion tilt Ul

Tampa. The Reds won,

~- 6.

(UP()

Cincinnati nips Blue Jays; Tigers top LA
TAMPA , Fla. (UPI J - C!nc!nnatl' s Kurt Sti!!wei! hit hi s
second home run In as many days
Wednesday to lead the Reds loa n
8-6 victory over Toronto In a
spring training game.
StU! we ll's second Inning home
run off Dave Steib evened the
score at 1-1. St!l!we!l, who Is
battling Barry Larkin for the
starting shortstop job. also
singled twice and scored a run .
The Blue J ays rallied for four
runs in the ninth innin g, as Fred
McGriff and Rob Ducey singled
off re!!ever Bl!! Scher rer , and
Greg Myers hit a t h ree~run home
run to make it 8-5.
Two outs later, pinch hitt er
Cecil Fielder homered off
Scherrer to pull Toronto to w!lhln
8-6. Scherrer walked the next
batter before being reli eved by
Rob Dibble. who walked a batter
then ea rned the save by recording the last out.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
tUP! 1 -Ken Griffey went 3 lor 4
with two doubles a nd relieve r
Paul Assenmacher pitched out of
a bases-loaded jam in the sixt h
Inning to help the Atlanta Braves
to a 4-1 triumph over the New
York Yankees.
The Braves scored three ruris
off right -ha nder Ron Romanlck,
one of six pitchers bidding for the
No. 5 spot In the Yankees '
rotation. Roman!ck was rocked
for three hits In two Innings and
h!s spring ERA soared to 9.00.
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (UPli Rook ie third baseman Matt Willi ams and Jeff Leonard each hit a
three-run homer to ra lly the Sa n
Francisco Gia nts to an 8-7
triumph over the Cal!fornla
Angels. '
Leonard cracked his thrf*!· run
homer off re!lever Gary Lu cas In
the sixth Inning to pu!J th e Gia nt s
within 7-5. One inning later,
Williams gave San Francisco the
lead by delivering his three-run
shot off reliever DeWay ne Buice,
who took the loss.
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPTJ Lefl·hander Bud Black, making
h! s first s pring start. threw three
scoreless Innings to help the
Kansas City Royals defeat the
Chicago Whit e Sox 5·2.
Black struck out three and
a!lowed two hits to ga in the
victory. Dan Quisenberr y
, pitched the ninth to earn a save.

Buddy Btancalana drove in tw o
run s and scored anot her for th e
Royals. His fo urth-inning double
drove in Jamie Nelson. In the
eighth , Bianca lana's gro undou t
scored B!ll Peco ta.

ems, who

C.ll' l'

0-6 ln (•x hitJ illon

play.
Slart l:\r Ma rk La ngston ('ar nrd
themos
victory
for aScn
ttlc.homer
Domingo
Ra
ad ded
solo
for
the Mar·Jnrrs . Clrvc land t'P·

a H.HI si nglf'

J) .\ '

1\!'vln M il r hPII.

~~f~~~~~~~~~~~·~

ccived a tw o- run homer fmm

WEST PA LM BEAC H, Fla.
(UP !) - Davey Lopes hit a
two-run homer !n the fi rs t innin g
to ignit e the Hou ston Astros to a n
8-4 victory over the Montrea t
Expos.
The As tros scored five runs
against sta rt er Floyd Youmans
in the second Inning on four hil s.
a walk a nd a n error by f! rst
baseman Dave Engle. You ma ns.
cou nted on by Mo ntrea t to br th e
tea m' s top s ta rter. yie lded s ix
ear ned runs in two Innings.
LAKELAN D. Fla. 1UP II
Ma It Nokes scored from I hi rd
base on a wild ret urn toss to the
pitcher by Los Angeles ca tcher
Steve Reyes wit h two out in the
nin th inning, breaking a lie and
givi ng th e· Detroit Tigers a 7-6
victory over the Dodgers.
Nokes si ngled with two out and
moved to lhi rd on a si ngle by
pinc h-hitter Jeff Hermann . With
Alan Tra mme!l at the plate,
Reyes' lob sailed over pit cher
Ken How e!l a nd No kes sco red.
CHA ND LER. Ariz. I UPI) Joaquin Andujar. mak ing his
f!t·s t start since strai ning a n
elbow ear ly In ca mp, hel d Mil·
wau kee to two hils and one run In
three Innings to help the Oa kland
A's to an 8-2 tr iumph ove r the
Brewers.
B!!! Wegman beca me the fi rs t
Brewers pitcher to go four
Innings this spring, a llowing fou r
hil s and two r un s. He struck out
three.
ST . PETERSBURG. Fla .
tUP li - Andy Van Sly ke ho·
mered. doubled and drove In
three runs to lead the St. Louts
Cardinals lo a 6-2victory over the
Pittsburgh Pira tes.
The home run was the second
of the spring for Van S!yke, who
!s hitting .625 with four RBI In
e ight at-bats. The triumph was
the Ca rdina ls' fifth against no
defeat s In cxhlb!t !on play.
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPTI - Roo-

Ri ck Dempsey a nd a so lo s hot
from J oe Ca rter. hi s th ird homer
ol the spring.
~J I

MESA, Ariz. I UP II - Strvr
Trout pit c hed three prrfrc t in·
nings to pace I hi' Chi cago Cubs to
a 4-ltriumph over the San Diego
Pad res.
Chicago ut il lt.v infielder Luis
Quinones. obt ained in late Janu ary from th e Oakland A's lor Ron
Cey, wa s :1 for 4 with two run s
ba tt ed in . Bob Dcr nlc r and Wad e
Rawdon had the ot her Cubs RB I.
each on s ingles.
Thr onl y Padre run came in lhr
fo urth inning off Dickie No les on

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three
r unBrick
s and Ken
drove
kie firstIn base
man
Phelps pounded a two· run homer
to give the Seattle Mariners a 7-5
victory over the.Cleveland lnd!·

L11t Ch1nee Of The Se11on

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�t"llge-...- 1h6 Uairy ~entiner

1-'omeroy-Mrddleport, Ohio

I

thursday, March 12,

HI~/

Pomeroy-

Georgetown·. wins first NAIA· battle
By JOHN HENDEL
UPI Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPii Abe Lemons saw four different
teams that concerned blm ln the
first round of the 50th NAJA
tournament. and two of them
were his own.
Lemons, the coach of top·
seeded Oklahoma City IOkla.) ,
sat in on I he first game of the
tournament at 9 a .m . Wednesday
to scout Georgetown (Ky.) and
Minnesota · Duluth . Following
Georgetown' s 57·46victory, Lem.
ons said he was impressed.
Tn the s ixth game of the day,
Lemons' Chi efs routed North·
wood In s titute (Mich. I 101 ·66 to
run th eir record to 34·0. This
time. however. Lemons. was
unimpressed.
"We're an average team,"
Lemons said. "We have to play

aggressive .
"We were tentat lve and played
like a team I'd nevC'r seen before.
We're going to have to play a lot
better to win Friday .
"We saw Georgetown play.
They've got good, tough·nosed
kids . It won't be an easy game for
.us, for them maybe , but not us."
Through the first eight first ·
round games, only two seeded
team s - No. 11 Southern Tech
iGa . l a nd No. 12 Kearney State
t Neb. 1 failed to win. Taylor
tfnd.l stopped Southern Tech
65·56 and Waynesburg (Pa.)took
a ]08·104 shoot out wltli Kearney.
There is another full sc hedule
of eig ht first ·round games set for
Thursday. infudlng games In·
volving seven of thr top eight
seeds .' The match between
second·seeded Charleston tS.C . i
and Western State (Colo.) along

With the No. 6 Washburn 1Kan. 1. Simmons scored 26 points, La·
Taylor (Ind.) 65
Cabrlnl !Pa.) game will earn · velle Wilson had 19 and Mu·
Southern Tech (Ga.) 116
most of the attention.
hammed Akbar 18 In the easy
Jim Bushur scored 20 points,
Aside from the up~ets , the wtn.
Including 6 free throws In the
other games Wednesday found
The Chiefs used big runs to do final 52 seconds, to power Taylor,
No. 9 Trevecca Nazarene their damage. Oklahoma City 25· 7. Southern Tech, 27- 7, led
!Tenn. ) eliminating Wayland
turned a 5·5 game Into their own 27·~5 with 2:051eflln the first half
Baptist (Texas) 82·68: No. 10 with an 18-3 run early In the first when Taylor pushed to a 15· 0
Central Washington stopping half and then outscored North· spurt.
Atlantic Christian (N.C.) 86·83;
wood J7.2 over a slx·:nlnute span
Central Washln~on 86
No. 13 Oregon Tech beating
that went Into the second half.
Ailanilc Christian (S.C.) 83 .
Northwestern (Iowa) 67· 63; and
Oklahoma City cruised from
Rodnle Taylor hit for 24 points
No . 15 Hawqlj·Hilo topping Mls·
there.
and Ron vanderSchaaf added 22
sourl Southern 82·79.
Waynesburg (Pa.) 108
to help Central Washington , 29-8.
The appearance of Lemons and
Ke~rney State (Neb.) 104)
survive a late scare from Allan·
the Chiefs was the early hlghllght
Darrln Walls struck for 34 tic Christian (N.C.), 25-9. Treof the tournament. Oklahoma
points to lead the high·powered
vecca N~~Zarene (Tenn.) 82
City just three years ago was an
offense of Waynesburg, 22· 5. The
Wayland Baptist (Texas) 68
NCAA Division l sc hool , but
Yellow Jackets used their Im' Avery Patton scored 24 points
changed to an NAJA affllicatlon
pressive transistlon game to post - 14 In the second half- to lift
for economic reasons.
a run of lH to gain control in the Trevecca Nazarene. 29·3, over
The Chiefs were easily the
first half and stretched the lead Wayland Baptist, 22-11. The
class of the first games of the
to 82·61 with 11: 12ieftln the game Trojans have won 20 straight
tournament. even If Lemons after a 16-5 tear.
games. They now play the winner
. didn't feel that way. David
of today's Rio Grande, Ohlo·St.

you wantit ...
you·ve gotit ...

Mary's Texas contest at 2:45
Central Time Friday.
Georgetown (Ky.) 57
Mlnesota- Dulu ih 46
Keith Currens scored 18 points
and Donald Hanson contrlbut.ed
17 to lift Georgetown !Ky. I over
Minnesota· Duluth, 24-7.
Oregon Tech 67
Northwestern (Iowa) 63
Doc Earl scon!d a pair of late
baskets to stop late Northwest"
ern (Iowa) charges and allow the
13th·seeded Oregon Tech Hus·
tlln' Owls, 33·4, to advance.
Hawail·HIIo 82
Missouri Southern 79
Krls Terrell· hit 2 of his 6 J.
pointers late in the game to allow
the 151h·seeded Hawa ii· Hila
Vulcans, 24·9, to hold off the
Missouri Southern Lio ns, 20· 13.
Terrell scored a ga me· hi gh 22
points.

play. Nebraska · then ran the
clock before Carr collected the
final 2 of his 12 points.
, "We want Brian Carr with the
ball" late in the game, Nee said.
"He shows the poise.''
Marquette Coach Bot;&gt; Duklet
said: "We've had more than our
share of those shots going In late
In the game. Wemadesomeshots
down the stretch."
Bernard Day scored 18 points
for the Cornhuskers, converting
all 8 of his field· goal tries and
both free throws, and also
grabbing 6 rebounds.
.

Smith scored 18 points for
Marquette, which finished its
season 16·13. Kevin Johnson
contributed 16 points, Tom Copa
collected 14 points · and 9 rebounds and David Boone added
12 ~olnts .
Derrick Vlck, who finished
with 14 points, sa nk a lHoot

jumper with 10:27 to play to give
Nebraska a60·58 Tead. Marquette
grabbed a 67-66edgewhenSmith
hit a lO·foot jumper from the left
side with 6:12 left.
Bill Jackman made the second
of 2 free throws to tie the score
67-67 with 5: 391eft. Carr's 3·polnt
basket gave Nebraska a 70·67
lead.
In other llrst·round games,
Washington topped Montana
State 98·90 In overtime, and Boise
State edged Utah 62·61.
At Bozeman, Mont ., Greg HilT
scored 11 of his 26 points In
overtime to Tift Washington, 19· 4.
The Huskies trailed 4().39 at
halftime, but reeled off 12
straight points to start the second
half. Montana State, 21· 8, rallied
to take an 8().78 lead with 14
seconds remaining In regulation
on 2 free throws by Shann Ferch.
Christian Welp of Washington hit
a short jumper with four seconds

left to force overtime. Welp
scored 25 points and Eldridge
Recasner added 18. Ferch' s
· brother, Kral, scored 25 to lead
Montana State.
At Boise, Idaho, Albert Springs
missed 2 free throws with one
second left to allow Boise State to
hold on. Mike Sanor put In a
missed slam· dunk attempt by
guard Chris Childs with 25
seconds to play, giving Boise
State a 62· 59 lead. Fo llowing a
Utah timeout. Chris Fulton con·
verted a layup to bring the Utes
within 62·61 with 13 seconds left.
The Broncos, 22·7, then ca lled
timeout and Eric Hayes was
fouled and missed the front end of
a 1·and·l. Springs grabbed the
rebound and drove the floor
before being fouled . Springs
missed both free throws off the
rim and Boise State rebounded to
seal the outcome.

SLAPS BALL AWAY- Boise State guard Doug Usitalo slaps
hall away from Utah center Mitch Smith in Wednesday night's NIT
opener at Boise. ( UPI)

Marshall and TCU in
NCAA opener today
By ELLIOTT WARNOCK
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI I
Navy hopes 7-foot ·1 Midshipman
David RoiJlnson Is more vlsable
tonight against Michigan In the
NCAA Ea s t Regional than he was
attN Wednesday 's practice
s('ss ions.
Ro binson, the NCAA 's career
leader in blocked shots and the
mos t dominant big ma n In the
college ga me today , ducked
reporters and headed for the
tea m bus Immediately a fter
Wednesda y's practi ce. A Navy
s po kes man s aid Robinson
needed a break from his daily
ro utine• of interviews.
Robi nson leads the nallon In
blocked s hots (4.6 a game). while
averag ing 27.:\ point s and 11.8
rpbounds a game for the 26· 5
Mid shipm en.
"David is clearl y the bes t
player In the college rank s
tod ay," sa id Navy coac h Pete
Herrmann . who had s uggested
his star senior skip Wednesday's
round of Interviews. "Maybe we
tak&lt;' too mu ch adva nt age of hi s
skills. As a team, that can hurt
us. Every team needs to have
several playe rs . six or seven at
least , doing well fo r them to do
well In the tournament."
Navy , thC' Co lonial Athletic
Association champion, carries a
1.3·game winning s trea k Into
tonight's game against 19·11
Michigan, an at·large team out of
the Big 10. The eighth seeded
Middles will count on guard Doug
Wojcik to ha ndl e most of the
perimeter duties, while 6·6 for ·
ward Car l Liebert will help
Robinson stand watch Inside.
Marshall Play,J.ai Noon
Texas Christian, making Its
first NCAA appearance since
1971. Is coming off a 81 · 70 first
round loss to elghth· seeded
Texas A&amp;M In the Southwest
Conference tournament. Th e No.
4 seed Horned Frogs are led by
forward Larry Richard and
guard Carven Hoicombe.

Coach Rick Huckabay' s Mar·
shall Thundering Herd, s~eded
J:lth, has used Its up· tempo style
to win 20 of its last 21 games
behind guard Skip Henderson
121.3 ppg 1 and forward Rodney
Holden IU.9 ppg, 9 rpgl .
Tn tonight's nightcap , No. 3
North Carolina meets 16th·
seeded Pennsylvania . Afternoon
games In the Charlotte sub·
regional match fourth·seeded
Texas Christian , 23·6, against
Southern Conference champion
Marshall. 25·5, and No . 18 Not re·
Dame. 22-7, agains t Ohio Valley
regular·season winner Middle
Tennessee State, 22-6.
Michigan, seeded 9th, finished
fifth In the Big Ten, but claimed a
104 ·68 victory over No. 6 Purdue
to finish the regular season.
"People say we' re an up·and ·
down team . That's jus t not true, "
Mi c higan coach Bill Frieder
said. "II play In the Big 10 against the likes of Indiana, Iowa
and Illinois on the road- you ' re
going to lose some."
Junior guard Gary Grant leads
Michigan's scoring wlth 22.2
points a game, while forward
. Glen Rice contributes 16.6 points
and senior swlngmar\ Antoine
Joubert adds 15.8.
North Carolina Is the region's
top seed as It enters its 13th
straight NCAA tournament, ty·
lng a record set by UCLA from
1967·1979. The 29·3 Tar Heels,
defeated 68·67 by North Carolina
State In the Atlantic Coast
Conference finals, are hoping to
Improve on recent NCAA finishes
by reaching the Final Four for
the firs! time since their cham·
Ions hlp year of 1982.
"We surely aren't looking
ahead, but we shouldn't be
looking back either (at past
NCAAsl." North Caro llna coach
Dean Smith said. "!do want the
players to look back at the N.C.
State game some. It still bugs
me, a.nd I hope It bothers them
some, too . Maybe we'll Jearn
something."

lotte, N.C. today, No. 3· ranked
North Carolina, 29·3, plays Penn,
13·1.1; No. 16 Texas Christian,
23-6, meets Marshall, 25·5; No.l8
Notre Dame, 22·7, faces Middle
Tennessee State, 22· 6; and Navy,
26·5. plays Michigan, 19-11.
Idaho State Coach Jim Boutin
says his Big Sky Conference
champion' s chances of winning
the national Iitle are " 900,000 to
l." He said a key for his team Is
handling UNLV's "94 feet of
pressure defense. With their
pressure, they can take you out of
your offense."
If UNLV and UCLA win their
first two games. they will meet at
Seattle in the regional semlfl·
na ls. Bruins Coach Walt Hazzard
said his team is not overlooking
Central Michigan, winner of the
Mld·Amerlca Conference, for a
s hot at the top-ranked team.
" The name of the game Is you
stop the other team from putting
the ball in the basket and you put
It in the basket," Hazzard said.
'Tm very Impressed with their
(Central Michigan's! program.
We' re not considering anything
else.
" Our players don't pay any
attention to the point spread.
We're concerned about the peo.
pie In front of us. This Is a very
good team we're playing, but we
expect our team to present a

challenge to any opponent ."
: Penn Is not expected.to repres·
ent a challenge to North Carol·
Ina , the top seed In the East. The
Quakers are one of only three
tournament teams without a
winning record . The game re·
presents a rematch of their 72-71
victory over the Tar Heels ln
Raleigh, N.C., during the 1979
tournament, when Penn ad·
vanced to the Final Four.
"I don't mean to sound like I'm
brash or cocky or confident, but I
think we can play with these
guys," Penn center Bruce Lefko·
wltz said. "We don't have the
athletic talent they have by any
stretch of the Imagination, but If
we play within our limitations
and play hard, that's the differ·
ence. We're loose. We have no
pressure on us.''
Alabama· Birmlngham, 21·10,
has the home-court advantage In
the first round of the· Southeast
Regional at Birmingham, Ala.,
and shares the home· state edge
with Alabama, 26-4. The Blazers,
seeded llth, face 21-8 Provl·
dence, and ninth· ranked Alabama opens against 24·5 North
Carolina A&amp;T. In the other
Southeast games Thursday, No.
11 Illinois, 23·7, plays Austin
Peay, 19·11; and co-No. 19 New
Orleans, 25-3, faces Brigham
Young, 2J.10.

FIGHT FOR REBOUND - Boston's Larry Bird (left) and
Phoenix Suns' ,Jeff Hornacek go after rebound during Wednesday

':

~

.. .

...

·•

A. KElLER

ICEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICE
611 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

PHONE

614-992-7270
'i

St. Edwards favored to win wrestling title
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) -Is
this th e year Lakewood St.
Edward's string of Class AAA
stat e high school wrestling titles
co mes to an end• Possible. but
not llkely .
The Eagles, who have won 10
co nsecutive blg· school cham·
pionships, are favored to make It
11 In a row at the golden
anniversary meet beginning to·
day at Ohio State's St. John
Arena.
St. Ed has eight wrestlers
qualified for the meet, ln,cludlng
a couple of thlrd·place finishers

from a year ago in Alan Fried at
112 pounds (981ast year) and Joe
Landolfo at 155.
The coaches picked Bedford
Chane! an!f Columbus Ready 1·2
In Class AA and Cadiz atld
Bridgeport
in ratings
thesameorderlnA
In thei r final
. According
to the number of state qualifiers,
they cou ld be right.
Ca diz has nine wrestlers quailfled for the meet , seven of them
regional champions, while
Bridgeport has eight qualifiers
and four regional champs.
Reed Case of Cadiz was the

98-pound champ last year and ls
30·1 at 112thls year after jumping
two weights. His stiffest chal·
Tenge could come from Liberty
Center's Kyle Kern, third last
at 112.

fi~ir;;;;;;~:::;~~;;~ii~~~~~~l

.'
Here's To Your Good Health

It's our main concern when filling
pre1criptions and advi1ing you about
over-the-counter drugs. As your pharmacists,
you can rely on us. We're here to help.
At H&amp;R Block we know you're
concerned about the most sweeping
t3l! law changes in history. This year
put us on your side. We're pledged to
find you the biggest refund you're
entitled to.

HIR BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

WHAT CAN WE FIND FOR YOU?

618 E. MAIN ST.

Pomeroy. Ohio
Phone 992-3796
Open 9 A.M.-8 P.M.

.

·~::

"Playing Alabama anytime
would be tough, " North Carolina
A&amp;T forward Lee Robinson said .
"But playing them In Alabama is
going to be even tougher .
In the Midwest Regional toda y
at Indianapolis, No . 2 Indiana.
24-4, plays Fairfield. 15·15; Au · ·'"
burn, 17-12, meets San Diego,
24·5; Duke, 22·8, fac&lt;'s Texas
A&amp;M, 17·13: and No. 14 Missour i,
24·9, battles 18·12 Xavier .
Regional play In Syracuse;
Atlanta: Tucson, Ariz.; and
Rosemont, Ill. , is scheduled to
begin Friday.

If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
ab9ut what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
oblliga1tion to you.

walton
receiVes
d
•
Stan, I·ng
. · . ovation·

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Bill Walton received a standing
ova tion half as long as his playing
lime Wednesday night, Boston
Ga rden's reaction to past ac ·
complishments and fut~re
pro
Inmises.
his first appearance of the
season, Waltondidnottakeas hot
and grabbed jus\ 1 rebound In
four minutes in the Celtics'
. 109 victory over the Phoenix
118
Suns.
The veteran center' s me re
presence, however , drew a two·
minut e ovation. With 20 games
remaining before the playoffs.
Celtics fans realize how much he
bolsters Boston's chances of
becoming the first team to repea 1
as NBA champions since they did
it in the 1968·1969 'season.
"As Larry (Bird) said to me,
' How can you be back when you
on ly play four minutes• " · sa id
Walton, who has · been s id elined
since training camp with an
inflamed rigbt foot. "But it's nice
to be back on the team. I hav en't
been with the team for so long
that I just have to ge t my
basketball legs back.
"The biggest !hlng is going 10
be playlllg every day and dealing
with the pain. I've got to learn to
dea l with that everyday·"
Last year . with Walton provid·
ing s ,rong production off the
bench . the Celtlcs raced to the
NBA title. This year, while
Bosto
has received anemic
resen ~ support, other top teams
have tortifled their lineups. In
the Eastern Conference, Milwau·
kee has added j!uard John Lucas
a nd center Jack Slkma, and
Detroit has added forwards Ad·
rian Dantley, John Salley and
Dennis Rodman.
In the Western Conference, the
Los Anj!eles Lak,ers' acquis ition
o f center· forward Mychal
Thompson Is rem in isce nt of
Walton's arrival with the Ce ltlcs
last year .
,
"Bill's ba·skethall sk ills have
never beef\ questioned." s~ ld
Kevin McHale, who led Boston
with 36 points. "Whe n he's
heart hy, hr' 11 help us . Tt was
grea t to see him out ther~ agai n.
We'll need him before it s over ."
The6-fool·ll Walton. 34 ..under·
went exploratory surgery on
Dec . 17 and It was believed he
might not return this year . After
running therapy on beaches in
Los Angles, Walton mad e his
practice return last Friday , and
with 2:30 left In the firs t quarter
Wednesday he played .
"I didn't care if he came back
until playoff time," Bird said.
"But it's a plus that ·he'll have
time now . Tt's tough s itting out
s ix or seven months and trying to
play In a short period of time."
Trailing 96·90 with 8: 36to pla y,
Boston gained control inside and
held the Suns scoreless for 6: 30 to
open a i10· 96 advantage. Pho·
enlx went 0 for 7 from the field
during th at . span, committed 2

Sit.

.

992-2156

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1987 FORD ESCORT
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Drive-Train Warranty.

.

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1985 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
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•

1986 CHEVROLET EUROSPORT.
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
lor public hearing Case No.
87.01 ·EL·EFC, to reYiew
the fuel procurement prac·
ticas and policies of the
Ohio Power Company, the
operation of its Electric Fuel
Component, and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at t :30
p.m. on March t6, 1967 at
City Council Chambers,
218 Cleveland Avenue,
s.w., Canton, Ohio44702.
All interested parties will
be given an oppor1Un"y to
be heard . Further lnforma·
tion may be obtainM by
contacti{IQ the Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Nancy L. Wolpe
Secretary

NOW IN STOCK
BASEBALL CLEATS
TRACK SPIKES
GOLF SHOES

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

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT

.

turnovers and did not gain an
offensive rebound. McHale bad
10 points in the spurt.
' They j~st hit us like a Mack
truck," Phoenix Coach Dick Van
Arsdale said.
Elsewhere, Philadelphia de·
feated Chicago 117·108, Milwa~ ·
kee downed was h'mgt on 115· ·107 ,
Detroit topped Indiana 107·98,
Dallas dumped Sea) tie 1:!0·117,
Denver bea t Utah 122· 116 and
Golden State stopped the LA
Clippers 122·112.
76ers 117, Bulls 108
At Philadel phia.' Crartdes Bakr~·
ley scored 31 pomts an roo 1e
David Wingate reached a career·
high for the sQcond straight game
with 28 to heiOJ the 76ers over·
come a 49·point performance by
Michael Jordan.
.
Bucks 1l5, Bullets 107
At Landover, Md., Sidney
Moncrief hit for 25 points and
former Bullet John Lucas gener·
ated 6 points In the final 25
seconds to allow Milwaukee to
end the Bullets' seven·game
home winning streak.
Pistons 107, Pacers 98
At Indianapolis, Jsiah Thomas
collected 34 points, 11 assists and
9 rebounds to carry Detroit.'
Thomas scored 15 third· period
points as the Pistons took the lead
for good.
Mavericks 130
SuperSonics 117
At Dallas, Mark Aguirre, play·
ing on a strained knee, scored 26
points _ 12 in Dallas' highest·
scoring first quart er ever, 46
points - to lift the Mavericks.
Maverick forward Sam Perkins
was knocked out of the game with
a possible cheekbone fracture In
the third quarter.
Nuggets 122, Jazz 116
At Denver, Darrell Walker
scored a career· high 39 points
and Alex English added 34to lead
the Nuggets . Jt was the first time
in 14 games someone other than
Engflsh led the Nuggets In
scoring.

27 SYCAMORE ST.
Galllpolil, Ohio
Phone 448.0303

N

·'87 FORD ESCORT

Tarkanian: 'You must play great to win'
By LOU RABITO
UP! Sports Writer
Nevada· Las Vegas Coach
Jerry Tarkanian turned prates·
sor Wednesday , offering tips for
reaching the Final Four to 6.1 of
the team s In th e NCAA
Tournament .
Tarkanlan didn' tlosecount; he
mere ly hinted North Carolina
was not In need of his help.
North Carolina is ·"a great ball
. club. Where's their weak spot?"
Tarkanlan said. "!think they can
get to the Final Four and not play
great. All they 've got to do Is play
good.
"I think anybody else who gets
to the Final Four has to play
great. What happens right now is
you've got to get the right bounce
of the basketball, you've got to
have the key call at the right lime
and you've got to be good and
you've got to play real ,well and
you've got to be lucky."
,
Top·ranked UNLV. 3.3' 1, plays
Idaho State, 15-15, today in the
opening round of the NCAA West
Reg iona l at the Oniverslty of
Utah Special E.vents Center.
In today's other Wes t games,
No. 13 UCLA, 24-6, fa ces Central
Michigan 22·7; No. 17 Wyoming,
22·9, m eets Virginia. ·21·9: and
Kansas State, 19·10, far es Geor·
gia. 18·11.
Tn the East Regiona l at Char·

ClASSIR~

'

ELIGIBLE MODELS:

'Huskers nip Marquette, 78-76 ,; ;:rr.,· ... M·~·· ..·- -···:···~·-·By United Press International
Nebraska Coach Danny Nee
says hewantstoreach New York
by staying at home.
The Cornhuskers, on the
strength of Brian Carr's 8·foot
jump shot with one second to
play, advanced to the National
Invitation Tournament Round of
16 with a 78·76 victory over
Marquette.
Nebraska, 18·11 , moves to the
second round, with a game to be
played the first part of next week.
TheNITdoesnotsetbrackets,so
the Cornhuskers' next game •nd
opponent are yet to be decided .
"I think we deserve a home
game based on the attendance,"
Nee said. The Bob Devaney
Sports Center nearly was sold out
with 12,096 spectators
Wednesday .
Tony Smith's 2J.foot 3·point
basket had moved Marquette
. into a 76·76 tie with 27 seconds to

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�Thursday, March 12, 1987

By The Bend

T·he Daily

Sentil].~l 1
.

Thursday, Minch 12, 1987 .:

-~·~···~~~------------~--------------------------~------~--~~--~~~--------~---- ·
In the spotlight:
How to have success
in battle of the bulge..
~·
.
~age-6

~~

.

By Cindy Oliveri
Melg&gt;i county
Extension Agent
March is national nutrition
mo nth. One nut rit ional ba ttle
that many peo pl e fig ht on a da ily
basis is the battle of the sca les.
Th is week " In the Spo tlight"
takes a look at some tip s for
sens ible d ieting. These tec h·
niques are shar ed by Alm a
Sa dda m, e xtension nutritio nist,
The Ohio Sta te Uni vers ity.
Hard as It Is for dieters to face.
th e old advice _ eat Jess.
exe rcise more-· is s till the best
weight contro l r ecommend atio n.
Overweight individu als, once
they decide t6 lose weight , wa nt
an easy - and fas t - solution JO
the proble m. This makes them
vulnerable to weight Joss sca ms,
such as advertisements th a t
cla im s pecia l pill s or dev iS"A
w hich promot e weight loss , or to7
fad diets tha t· pro mise quick
resu lts.
it is no wonder that ques tiona·
· b le wc i ght ~ loss prog ram s sprin g

a

up eons ta nt ly. Overweigh t Is
serious probl em . Her'e in the
United Sta tes. it is estimated that
one out of three In dividuals Is a t
least 20 perce nt over nor m a l
weight. Women are more apt to
be overwei ght tha n men a t a ny
. age, bu t particular ly if middleaged or e lder ly.
To add to the probl e m, we live
in a soc iety tha t ido lizes slim·
ness. We eq uate lea nness with
a ttractiveness, especia lly for fe·
m a les. Studies show a majority
of Amer ican women are con·
cerned abou t we ight co ntrol atid
ma ny are d issatified w ith their
c urrent weight leveL
Wha t's even more importan t is
t h ~ t losing weight a nd m a in la in ing th a t loss is e xtre mely diffi ·
c ult. Most people lose weight only
to rega in It and more. The
success ra te for die te r s is so low
many expert s c la tm that pver·.
wea lght Is a non·curable. chrome
condition.
Don't , however, toss a way the
carrot stic ks a nd head for a. hot

Award presented Center
· The Pomery Hea lth Care Cente r ha s been recognized as
havi ng e arn ed the Buckeye
/\wa rd . hi ghest award presented
by thf' Ohio Hea lth Ca re Assocla·
tion for quality ca re.
The Buckeye Award is pres·
e nted on ly to those Ohio Healt h
Ca re Associa tion me mber homes
taki ng and pass ing a n extensive
review of all serv ices by a team
of nursing home professionals.
Th e survey ('I Xamined a nd eva lu·

a ted the ad minis tration. nu rsing

,;,Ill

$49

Bo•

Li nda Hubbard of Syracuse
hosted a recen t meetin g of the
Chatter Club. · Officers' reports
were g iven and a ba ke sa le he ld
a t the m eeting. Hostess gift s
were
given
to Mrs.
birthda
y gills
were Hubbard
presenteda nd
to
Susie Cle land , Lo ia Harrison,
Donna F'ry, a nd Lynn McKinney.
Refreshment s were served and
games played with prizes go ing

l/2

PRICE
•Earrings·
.•Bracelets
•Chains
•Rings
•Pins
•Necklaces

Savt

N£W 2 PC. U.
LIVING RM. sum

. SJJO

S1999S
uvi•uo

t&lt;tra htavr solMI oa.

to Brenda Bolin, Mary Sta r c he r.
Linda Gheen, and Ms. McKinney. Ru th Young won the door
prize. Ms. Gheen wlll hos t the
next meeting.

r-.;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.;;.;;.;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iijjjiiiiijiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,

DAN'S
EXXON
992-9907

402 East Main

Pomeroy

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SATURDAY 7 A.M.-1 :30 A.M.
SUNDAY 7 A.M. · 11 P.M.

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$19995

Chatter Club conduas meeting

NEW 1987 PLYMOUTH or DODGE

--------

Ia. P&lt;.

Recliner

FLAGS PRESENTED ~ Six arin e~ force v et,rans at Pomeroy
Health Car e Ct• nter receivl'd ,;;mall, individual American flags
from ll.i\. Sed~:wick of tht• Tupper. Plain. Post 905:!. Vdcrans of
Fort•ign \\' ar~ rt•t•t•nlly. Shown providing musi cal ~nt~rtainmrne
durin~ tho• program are Uandy KoP III!•r, l!•rt, and St•dgwitk's son,
Don. The Veterans Administration providt•d the flags.

Par.ron.r reception
conducted in Athem

-

QUEEN

995

Tuesday's mPet ing. Information

.

Moll""

179.95

log. 11Jl,OQ

on the club ma y be obtained by
ra 11 ing 992·2612.

CHRYSLER
Dodge

l t09 . ~l

95
69Spring

·

11 birthda y recepton honoring
Margaret P a r sons, R utland, was
held Marc h 6 at the Ohlq
Universit y Inn . Athe ns.
Former s tude nts a nd friends
attended t he event . Professor
Cosmos Pletersc, teac her a nd
ora tor of Ohio University , shared
severa l lite r a ry works throughoui the a fternoon. Pleterse m ad e
a spec ial presentallon to o/[rs.
Parsons of a book of poetry
wri tten by her daught e r , Ja ne,
who writes under the name of Jo
Marga re t McKenzie.
Cards. flowers, a nd gift s were
given to Mrs. Par so ns at the
observanc e.

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
992-6421

'POPS, CHIPS, MILK, BREAD, LUNCH
MEATS, ICE CREAM, CIGARETTES,
TOABCCO
SELF SERVE GAS
•

•CONVENIENT PARKING

COOPER
395 So. 3rd

town, Is Inviting everyone to
attend Sunday 6 p.m . se rvice
w it h Rev. F'rank Salyers, pastor.
For Information ca ll 992·5970.

CHESTER - Sha de River
Lodge 453, Chester. will hold a
regu lar meetin g 7::10 p.m . T hursday. Refres hme nt s will be
served.

Dan ce
.POMEROY - The Senior
Citize ns Dance Club wi ll have a
dance on Ft•!day , March 13t h. a t
the Center. The Bend River Boys
wil l provide the music. Admls·
slon Is $1.0&lt;1 and those a !le nding
are to take snack s fo r the
refrps i'tme nt table.

necessary.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Aglow
Chapter will meet Thursday, 7
p.m ., a t the senior c it ize ns
center. Robert Sha ckelford wilt
s peak. Reservation s necessa ry.
POMEROY - Rock Spr in gs
Grange will m eet Thursday at
.7:30 p.m . at the hall. Th ere w111
be a program and refreshme nts
will be served.
RACINE - Souther n Band
Boos te rs w111 meet Thursday,

'

7:30p.m ., In the high sc hool ba nd
room. Parent s of a ll ba nd s tu ~
de nt s In the distr ict a re urged to
attend.

Bible school
SOUTH BETHEL - South
Be thel New Tes ta me nt Church
will be having Bible Sc hoo l the
firs t Su nday of every month a t 6
p.m .

Soup sail'
P OMEROY- Women' s Auxil ·
Jary of Vetora ns Me mor ia l Hos·
pit a! w ll l have a soup sale F'rlday
in t he lobby of the hospita L The
sa le w ll l begi n a t JO a .m .

Se rvices set
PAC ETOWN - Morn lng St ar
Un ited Baptist Chu rc h. Page·

Miller birth
itg.

JEWELRY

Vi cki Ferrell was the top loser
and Sharon Thackl'r. the runn er·
up, a t this week's mee tin g of
TO PS OH 1456 held a t Rutla nd .
The c lub me mbers hip reported
a net loss Ior th e week. Pla ns
wen· made for new offi cers to be
r lt'Cted on ·Marc h 24 with the
fun ny mon ey a uct ion to be held a t

;

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Aglow
Chapter will meet Thursday, 7
p.m., at the se nior citizens center
in Pom eroy. Robert Shackelford
will speak. Reservations are

Ryan Mitchell Miller

95 Mollnu

B" Spring IS9 .9S

COMPLETE STOCK Of

TOPS meets

sultaht from OVAL; Eric Anderthe legislature to serve the public
son, Ex tens ion Consultant from
libraries In the Southeast Ohio.
OVAL; Chap Parsons. Ohio Ll· Currently OVAL member librar·
br.ary ' Association's Executive
les Include, Athens, Hocking,
Director: William Crowley, from
Ja ckson (Wellston &amp; Jackson ),
Sta te Library a~d Floyd Diek· Lawren c e, Me igs, Plckaway ,
man, also from Sta te Library.
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton
Gov . Ri c hard F . Celeste' s Cou nty.
proposed budget submitted to t he
The committee agreed to the
legislature ha s deleted the con· following : The OVAL Director
llnued fu nding for the (OVAL l
will prepare Informa tion packets
Regional System.
for eac h of the member library
As Shirley Mills Fis her , ex· Boards and for th eir represent a·
plalned " the de letion of OVAL' s · lives to the leg islature. Th e
s tate funding will have a nega- member libr ary Boards wil l be
tive hnpact upon OVAL 's books· .. conta cting their representatives
by·mali and Bookmobile pro· in the legis Ia lure.
g rams. She also noted that t he
OVAL and the member .Jibra ry
Int e rlibrary Loan program Is Boards are hoping that they have
e ntire ly financed with s tate fri ends In the co mmunity · that
funds .
will also support th e continued
OVAL, was created In 1972 by funding of OVAL.

TWIN

itg. '14.~l

in v ar iou~ a rea S 0 f aUI 0 m C'C h ftn· r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~
irs, cos me tology, clcet ronks ,
hand ca lcul ator and we lding
· Ta king pa rt were Gary Curtis.
•
a ut o mecha nics; .Julie Hysell ,
cos metology; Dave Capeha r t.
welding; Da ve Smith. e lectro n·
Jc s; John Sisso n , hand

By Rut~ Powers
Monday, March 9, the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries system's
Ad Hoc Leglslat!ve committee
met to address the threat to the
funding of the regional system.
Atten~tng that meeting wa s,
Ruth Powers, Meigs County
· Director, Jennifer Thompson,
Director of Chliiicothe·Ross Ll ·
'.brary, Emmaline Rleed, Trus·
tees from Chillicothe-Ross ;
Terry Cook , Director of Ports . mouth Library; Marga ret Reid,
Director of Briggs Lawren ce
Library; Jim Knight, Trustee of
Athens County; Roxie Underwood, Trustee from Jackson City
. Library; Harold Felton, Trust ee
from Vinton County; Fred Good,
Trustee from Logan-Hocking;
Harold Cooper, Trustee from
Pike County; Shirley Mill s
Fisher, Dlrectror of OVAL;
. Gewnyth
Children's Con·

Off
20°/o-50°/o
EVERYTHING

lig Lone ·

ca lcula tor.
,John Sisson took firs t place and
a go ld me da l; while Jupe, H ~se11
a nd Dave Sm ith go t second place
and recP ivPd sil ver m edals . Th ry
wil l co mpete in the s ta te VlCi\
ski 1ls co ntes t to be hrld on April
24 and 2o a t Columbu s.

CalendarI happenings

OVAL funding meeting topic

Blowing all high Pfices Away!

..

We lsh is now, hom e from the
hos pita l. T he a nnu a l dinner will
be held in May with the place to
be a nnou ced la te r .
i\1 the Apr il meeting at th e
hom e of Iva Powell, the memor·
ia l se rvicC' for dPcease d
me mbers will be hel d .
Ca ke and coffee we re ser ved .

•

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Windy March Sale

a nd dietary service, ac tivities
and phys ical faci lities of the
Cent er for excell e nce as well as
com pliance with fede r a l nursing
home sta nd ards.
Pome roy Hea lrh Care Ce nter.
367o9 Rocksprings Roa d. Pome·
roy. is a 100 bed· fac ilit y offer ing
r es ide nt s sk illed a nd intermediate nurs ing ser vices. it has
been serv ing the needs of the
elder ly of Pom eroy. Me igs and
s urrounding areas fo r the past
seven year s.

VICA places in contest
StudPnts of Me igs Hi g h Sc hool
participa ted inthereglonal VICA
!Voca ti ona l a nd In d ust rial Clubs
of America 1 s kl11 s co mpetition at
Columbu s Tec hnica l ln s tilul e
an d Paul C. Hays Voca tional
CentN in Columbu s .
Th ey compet ed with 22 sc hool s

.,..

Highly sedentary Individuals
from c hicken; reduce egg Intake That's quite a bit of exercise for a ;
ga in weight on small food in·
to four per week .
few minutes' enjoyment.
takes . Activltity not only uses up
Weight control is a complex
ener gy , but some researchers
problem . Researchers are trying
•
belleve that exercise e levates
to find answers to some weight
metaboli c rate even after the
control my steries. They are
activity ends. In some s tudies,
investigating the Influence of
exercise seem s to reduce appe·
heredity, way s to e levate meta·
tite. Most health profess ionals
bolic ra te, and the re la tions hip
today feel that a successful
between exer cise and a ppetit e
weight· los s a nd maintenance
regu lation. But they have not yet
FLORIST
program rnust Include a more
found a magic p&lt;)tion to sa fely
active life st yle.
melt away unwant ed pounds.
Meigs County's Oldest Ftori&gt;t
Do n' t tempt you rself with
DID YOU KNOW THAT .. .It
foods. Some stud ies s how human
takes two hours of walking, 82
352 E. Main St., Pomeroy, 0!1.
be in gs may have a biological minutes of bicycling, 67 minu tes
Pit. 992-2644
pre ference for food with a hig h of jogging or one hour of
"Often lmiraled- Never
e nergy densit y, which generall y swimm ing, to work off th e
Duplicated"
means foods hig.h in fa t. Other ca lories in a piece of pe&lt;;a n p ie ,
StUdieS ShOW We tend to ea t more r~on:.e;·S;i;Xt;h;;
Of;;a;;DI;'n;e;J;·n;Ch;e;;p;ie;.~;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;~"
when a wider va rie ty ol foods is
available at one time.
E liminate high calor ie food s,
par ticular ly fat ·laden sna c ks
from yourhomesand workp lacc.
Keep diet meals simple. Too
m any foods . even low calolie
ones, offered at a meal ma y
tempt you to overea t.
Reduce fat intake. Use low fat
m ea ts , dairy products a rid salad
dress ings; tr im away excess fat
from meats; remove lhe s kin

(udge sund ae. Here are some
ways to deal with a weight
problem:
Don;t reduce ca lor ie intake too
much . At very low ca lorie levels,
your body tends to become s uper
e ffi cient in e nergy use. Noi only
does we ight ··loss slow , but the
body regains weight qu ickly
whe n norm a l eating 'Is resumed .
A good we ight ·control d iet
s hould contai n no Jess th a n 1,200
ca lor ies. per day for women and
1,500 to 2. 000 calories per day for
m en. Some dieters find It h e lpfu l
to keep a food dia r y for several
days to ca lcu late tlwir c urrent
ca lorie intake. Cutting that in·
ta ke In half may be e noug h to
star t a we ight lOSS Without a
sense of good depriva ti on as lon g
as it doesn ' t fa il below the
minimum sugges ted.
Don't try to lose weight too
quickly. A r apid weight loss ca n
a ffect your health. Fas ting, for
example, s hoo uld never be done
wit hout medical s upervis ion. In
addition , weigh t qu ickly lost
seems to be quickly regained. A
one to two pound Joss per week is
a sa fe Joss leveL
Don't jus t sit there - move!

Eight and Forty has meeting
The spr in g pou vior to be held in
Co lu mbu s on Apr il :t a nd 4 was
an nounced at Monday night's
meet ing of th e Meigs Coun ty
Sa lon 710. E: ight a nd Forty, he ld
a t the hom e of R hoda Hackcll .
.J ulia Hysell re ported that she
had placPd sc hola r s lllp informa·
t ion at Ve terans Me morial Has·
piaL II was noted tha t Cat her ine

l;

Library lines:

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Middleport

P~mou/fi~~....~H~O~U-R;S~:M. on~.--F~ri.•B•t•o•6•;•Sa•t•
.
. s_.to•4._......

HAND CAR WASHES
lniide and Out

~

Call for Appointment

OWNED &amp; OPERATED BY DAN AND VANESSA SIDWELL

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Miller
are announcing the Nov.l6 birth
of their first child, a son, Ryan
Michael, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. . He · weighed nin e
pounds. one ounce and was 20
inches long .
'
Maternal grandparents are
Sharon Rous h, Syracuse, and
Wayne Russell, Portland. Mater·
nal great . grandparents are
Freda Ferguson, Portland, Mr .
and Mrs . Bill Russell, Pom eroy,
and the ma tern a l great -great ·
grandparents are Mr. a nd Mrs.
Roy Proffitt, Portla nd. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Malcolm Mille r , Middleport.
Paternal great ·grandparents are
. Mr. and Mrs . Gall Miller, Middle·
port, and Thelma Hawley,
Syracuse.

ACDelco
OiiFiHers
Reg. 3.95 Limit 2

Valvoline

Motor Oils

¢

Xi Gamma Mu
holds meeting
"l•\¥'r ~fflcters ~ w~rt.Lelected at
the recent meeting of the XI
Gamma Epsilon Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi held at the Senior
Citizens Center.
Elected were Patty Pickens,
president; Debbie Hauber, vice
presidnt ; Darla Staats, record·
lng secret ary; Jenny Smith,
treasurer; Linda Faulk, corres:
ponding secretary; Janelle Hap·
tonstall. parlamentarlan; Vicki
Auit, historian and photographer; Nancy Hill. City Council Rrpres entative, and Ba rb
Math ews a nd Carol Crow,
service.
A donation was made to the
Cancer Society In th ~ nam e of
Libby Sayre, a m ember of the XI
Ga mma Mu Chapter. Hos tesses
were Ms•. Mathew s a nd Judy
. Gibbs .

10W30 or 10W40
E-yday Law P~co

FourGard 5W30
Reg. 1.09 Limit 12

Llmltt2

Dura Power Batteries

ACDelco

44.88
59.88

AirFIHers

Reg.69.88

Delu•e 011 Spout

Reg. 4.95 Limit 2

60 M~nth Warranty

Your Choice

Reg.54.95

1.88

Pfawsstrap
011 Filter Wrench

72 Month Warranty

Reg. 2.88, #7N9tl
Reg. 2.88, #e4HJ07

Sale prices good with exchange.

Your Cholet

1.99

Do-lt
Yourself

Eagle One

Tip

Mag Cleaner 12 oz.
Rog. 2.118,110t0012

Faclorv Mag Cleaner, 12 oz.
Rog. 2.118,11020012

Wire Wheel Cleaner, 12 oz.
Rog. 2.118,11040012

Wax your car alleasftwlce
a year to enhance your
cor'ollniohandlrriprove
Its resale value .

2.88

Ahlf mtr'a 2.00 ...0.11

Rain Dance
UquldorP..te
Car IIIIa•
Reg. US
10241N,0245N

4.88 uto prtct

Your Choice

- 2.00 mlr'o reblto

2.88

Garden club
has meeting

Tire Cleaner, 24 oz.
Rog. 3.911, #1 060024

Tire Dressing, 12 oz.

'

Mrs. Sandy Vanoster was
speaker and demonstrator at the .
open meeting of the Shade Valley
Council .of Floral Arts and the
Chester .Garden Club held last
week at the Chester United
MethOdist Church . '
The owner·operator of Sandy's
Plants and Gift Shop In Belpre, '
Mrs. Vano.ster displa yed a var·
Jety of arrangements including
an unusual wreath· made of
coconut peel with silk spring
flowers, drift wood which Is
gaining in popularity In desjgns, '
a nd wicker basket piece;{ She
also showed the group how fo
make professional looking bows.
Sheila Curtis reminded the
gardeners of the upcoming meetIng to be held on March 18 from 10
a.m to 3 p.m. at the Athens .
Falrgounds. One of the speakers
will be Melanie Stelhem who will
a\so give demonstrations ·on
making contrived flowers. At the
spring regional meeting of the
Ohio Associallon of Garden Clubs
to be held on April 25 at
McAr.thur, Betty Dean of both the
Shade Valley and Chester Clubs
will be the afternoon speaker.
Also annolnced was, the regional board meeting to be held
on Aprllll at the Chester United
Met hodist Church with a ll club
presidents, county contact and
regional chairman to attend.
Twenty·nlne door prizes were
awarded during the evening.
Mrs . Vanoster gave the wicker .
basket of flower s which will go to
Ada Holter for a sunshine gift.
Finger foods we re served by
Joan Francis. Jenny Machlr,
Eleanor Knight , and Maidie
Mora .

•

ACDelco

Reg. 3.118. #t080012

1.8,8

1 Gallon
Gas Cans
• Rog. 2.95

11.88

Jef.X

Power
Washer
Rog.14.95, J·100

J.a!!..~~~~
Pfasticofor
Custom Carpeted
Floor Mats
Reg .18.95

14,88 uto price
mfr'1

7.88

Pfews
Grease Gun
Alf.10.95, #30-121

,....:...:......---=,
- 2.00 rtbato

VOUr C:Oit

12.88 ;u., ·~~~

39.88

LelraFront
lndC.overs
Rog.« .95

OPEN 7 DAYS A weEK
Stort hourt: 8 :30 o.m. to 8 :00p.m. Mondoy through Friday,
8:30a.m. to 8:00p.m. 81turday ond 10:00 o.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sunday.

Sale prices in effect March 12, Through March 18,1987

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis,.Ohio

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Local Briefs:----.
. Church of God will begi n at 6 p.m. Instead of 7 p.m. This new
time schj'dule will con tinue each Sunday.

Southern-Racine alumni Jete set
'

The Southern-Raci ne Al umni Dinner will be held May 23 at
6; 30 p.m. Anyone Interes ted In .contact ing their classma tes.
please ca ll Joyce Quillen at 949-2493 from g a.m . to 4 p.m .. or at
. 949-2695 after 5 p.m.

White Shrine chapter to meet
Mary Shrin e ·37 of White Shrine of .Jerusalum will meet
F riday, 8 p.m., at the masonic temple in Pomo:'roy .

Youth leagues schedule sign-ups
Middleport Youth League s ign-up will be March 14 and 21
from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Middleport Village Hall.
Registratipn fee $9 and a copy of birth cer tifica te required.
Syracuse Youth League sign-up will be Sa turd ay from 10a.m.
to noon at Syracuse Elementary . Registrat ion $12. Copy of birth
certificate required.
Pomeroy Youth League sign-up will be Saturday on the
second fl oor of Elber!elds . Registration $9. Copy of birth
certificate required.
Raci ne Ball Association wjll sign-up March 14 and 21 from 10
a.m. to noon at Southern Kindergarten. Registration $10.

Area church slates Bible study
So uth Bet hel New Testament Chu rc h will have Bible· School
the •irst S unday of every month at 6 p.m.

Firemen to host Saturday dance
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department Is sponsoring a dance at
Syracuse E lementa ry School this ·Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m.,
with music by Midnite Express. Admission $2. EvNyOnf
welcome.
·

. Chicken noodle dinner Friday
Middl epo rt Unit ed PeQtecos ta l Church Is sponsoring a
chicken noodle dinner Friday from ll a.m. to 2 p.m. Eat at the
church or call992· :1824 for delivery. Dinners a re $3.50 each and
in ad dition to the chick en nood les, Include green beans ,
coles law, roll and choir€' of pie.

:: Bass fishermen plan meeting
Att ention bass fishermen . There will be an orga nizat ional
meeting of the Bass Cl ub Sa turday. 7 p.m. at the grange hall on
the Mei gs Coun.t,y Fairgrou nds.

Bond hearing planned for suspect
A bond hearing for No rma .J . Perry, 28. Point P leasa nt,
charged with fir st -degree murder In the death of Fred
Facemire, 42, Poi nt Pleasa nt , is sched uled for later this week,
accordi ng to Mason Count y Circ uit Judge Clarence Watt.
Facemire was shot and killed early Sunday a ft er an a pparent
dom estic dispute , Point Pleasa nt said.
·

Meigs board OKs club formation
At a special meeting Wednesday night , members oft he Meigs
Loca l Sc hool District Board of Education approved the
formation of the Meigs Hi gh School Student Club and facult y
member, Eleanor McKelvey , was named to se rve as sponsor of
the new club.
The club is a uthorized to use a distr ict sc hool bus to attend
gi rls' tournam ent ga mes .

'

Squad.s respond to Jour calls
Four· ca lls were answered by local unit s Wednesday. the
Meigs Count y Emergency Medica l Services reports.
· ·
At 11 :04 a. m., Middleport took Gladys Tuckerman fr om Ohio
143 to Vet et·a ns Memorial Hospi tal; Middleport at 12:20 p.m.
took Bud Da rs t of Cheshi re to Vetera ns Memorial ; Racln ~ and
Bashan depart men ts a nswered a structural fire ca ll a t th e
TNry Bell residence on the Ba ld Knob·S!Iversville Road at 4:32
p.m. and Midd leport at 10 p.m. took Rl~k Johnson from Village
Manor Apanmcn ts to Vetera ns Memorial.

Final registration scheduled
Fi nal registrat ion for signup for the summer league softball,
baseball a nd !·ball program for boys and girls of the Syracuse
Youth League will be held from 10 a .m. to 12 noon Saturday at
the Syracuse E lement ary School. The fee Is $12 and a copy of
birth cer liflcates of registrant s will be req uired.

Critics slam

!COntinued from Page ])

was eliminated In 1982. The
next year. Ohio voters defea ted a
proposal to raise th r beer··
drlnklng ·age to 21.
" We should restore-the drink·
!rig age to 21 to save lives, not to
save dollars,'' said Sustrt', who
told his colleagues he agr.ees
them that It' s "federal blac k·
mail" to withhold highway funds .
.: ·Drunk driving is the No. 1
killer of people und er 21... said
Suster. adding th at 198.1 fi gures
[rom the Ohio Depar tment of
Highway, Safety show that drivers aged 16 to 20caused accide nts
roo
' sultlng In 1:!5 deat hs and 5.200
inluries.
Rep . Dan le i T roy. D·
Willowick. c ited the p o ~ular vote
In 1983 which retained the lower
!leer-drinking age.
susrer argued th at the negative vote was caused by a
!Je(&gt;r

~ter

crowd ed ballot and a free·
spending beer lobby which put
misinformation on te levision.
"Every poll we'v€' ever seen
shows overwh elm ingly that 75,
perce nt of the people favor
raising the drinking age," he
said.

W o o d y H a y e s _..:.;(C:.:o.:::.nt.:::.ln_ue_d._rr_om_P_ag_e_1l_ _

Area deaths

Church servi!:es to start early
~ Beginning this Sunday, the evening services at Rutland

Thursday. March 12. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Millard R. Ball
~

Millard R. Ball, 77, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom, died Wednesday at Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
He was born in Virgi.nla, a son
of the la!e Andrew Jackso n and
Ciearsic Wr ight Ball. He was a
coal miner for 40 years and
ret ired from the Allied Chemical
Dye Co .. Harwood Mine, Harwood, W.Va . He was a member of
the El k Ridge Co mmunit y
Chu rc h and the United Mine
Wor kers of Ame rica.
Surviving are fo ur so ns. Ha·
raid and Donald, both of Coium·
bus; Rona ld W. Ball, Jefferson.
and Douglas of Deep Water,
W.Va .; fo ur daugh ters. Helen
Ca r ver . Sev ierville, Tenn. ;
Joyce Ba ll and Rosa lea Whl·
t lock. Cleve lan d ; Brenda
Hauber, Long Bottom; 27 gra nd·
children, 40 great-grandchildren
and one great -great-grandchild.
Bes ides his paren ts. he was
preceded ·in death by his wif,e,
Rosa. on Nov. 19. 1985 .
and
a gra duat e of Shade .
Hi gh Sc
hool.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. ment
Saturday at the White Funeral
He was a memberoftheAthens
Count
y Fair Board, Lodi Grange,
Hbme in Coolville with Rev.
Ll oyd Gibbson officiating. Burial · severa l horse associations, and
will be in Sa nd Hill Cemetery. was a 25-ycar 4-H advisor.
Friends may call at the funeral
Su rvivors, in addition to his
home from 2·4 and 7·9 p.m. fat her. include his wife, Be u la ~
Friday and until time of services Swartz Meeks; four sons, Karl
on Sa turday.
Meeks, of Poi nt Pleasa nt, W.Va ..
Kennet h Meeks, of Shade. Kriss
Gladys L Miller
Meeks. of Coolville. a nd Kelly .
Meeks. of Seville: a stepmother,
Gladys L. Miller. 81. of Rt. I, Bernice Meeks, of Rout e 5,
Middleport, died early Wednes· Athens; and five gran1ichildren.
day morni ng at Pleasa nt Valley
Bes ides his mother. he was
Nursing Center.
preceded In deat h by one broth er.
Born Dec. 14, 1905 in West Vern L. Mee ks.
Virginia, she was a daught er of
Services will be Sa tu rday, I
the late Harry and Matilda p.m.. at the Hughes F uneral
Kin ser Miller. She was a retired Home, 168 Morris Ave .. Athens,
civil service employee and with Rev. Ted Foster officia ting.
worked for the U.S. Army at the Bur.lal will be In Burson Ce me·
Pentagon.
tery, Shade. Friends may call at
Survivors include one s ister. the funeral home from 2·4 a nd 6·9
p.m. Friday.
·
Pearl M. Bunc&lt;&gt;, and one brother.
C o m m i s s i o n e r s ,continued rrom Page
point lng a factfl nder , but depend ·
lng on the success of the med ia~
tor. a factfinder may . not be
needed.
Olive Township Trustees Ew·
rett Schultz and C h es t e~ Wells
were a t the meeting to ask fo r
Robe rt s· ass istance in mattbrs
concerning the opening of one
road. and writing a description of
another.
Ted Warner , highway depart ·
ment superintend ant , repor ted
that repai rs arc underway 'to
King Hili Bridge.
The comm.issio ners approved

becoming coach at his alma
mater because "he would ha ve
made a great coach."

frequently .
" I had enough of that ," he said
Har ry Miller, both of Middleport, of coaching. "I don't miss th a t a t
and several nieces and nephew s. all and I've always been able to
Besides her parent s, she was ad just. I still get to" se~ a lot of
preceded in dea th by four broth· kids. My door Is always open."
ers, Ear l, Denver, Leon and
Hayes, · a historia n and an
Hu bert Miller, and two sis ters, ad mirer of Gen. George Patton.
Dessle Mattu and Minnie Brown. spent much of his ti me In recent
Services will be 3: :lO P·"l· years traveling the country mak·
Saturday at Rawlings-Coats· lng speeches and working on his
Blower Funeral Home with Pas· fou rth book in what he called his
tor J ohn Wright officiating. Bur· . "t hird ·career."
iai wi ll be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Ches hire. Friends
"f figure every man has three
may call a t the funeral home careers during his life," sa id
from 7·9 p.m. friday .
Hayes. " My fi rst was being in the
Stanley B. Meeks
Navy, then came coachi ng and
now I'm giving_ speeches and
Stanley B. tShorty) Meeks, 51. writing books."
of Rou te 5, Athens, died We dnes·
A staunch Republica n, Hayes
day at Ohio State Universit y was a frie nd of many nationa l
Hos pitals. Columbus, following a political figure s, Including Pres i·
brief illness. .
dents Richard Nixon and Gera ld
He was born In Athens Coun· Ford, a (iirmer football captain
ty's Lodi Township, to Dawsmi at the Universit y of Michigan ,
W. Meeks, of Route 5, Athens, Ohio State' s bitter enemy.
and the la te Mary G. Douglas
Hayes often said he was glad
Meeks. He was a foreman a t the Fo rd went into politics instead
Athens Count y Hig-hway Depart·

•

Hayes, born on Feb. 14, 1913 at
Clift on, Ohio, grew up In Newcomerstown. He was a 1935 graduate of Denison U niversity , where
he played footba ll and baseball.
Follow ing two high school
coaching jobs' a nd a five-year
stin t in the Navy during World
war II, Hayes returned to
Denison as its head footb all
coach. Three years later, he went
to Ml ami University, where he
stayed two yea rs until being
hired by Ohio St ate.
Hayes was many things to
many people. Some hated him,
but many more loved the man,
who spent many hours helping
th ose in n eed , without
recogn iHon.
,
While the controversial side of
Hayes was 1ve)l known 'to -sports
fan s, the other side wa s known
only to those close to him.

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n

a reques t from Scott Lucas.
administra tor of Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospita l, to extend parking
fa cilit ies be hind the medical
building ac ross fro m the hospl·
tal. Th e new par king is to be used
by employees only, and s hould
free- up pa rking areas closer to
the hospital for use by visitors.

1 10 West Main, Pomeroy

992-2284

. .--------,

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Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly clear tonight , with a low
near :lO. Part ly cloud y Friday.
wi th highs in the mid 40s .
The probability of prec iplta·
tlo n is near zero through Friday.
Winds will be light and north·
erly tonight.

Family medicine:

Bunny Kuhl took firs t, Rose
Barrows, second and third .
There were. 50 entries. Janet
Koblentz, Esther Mays , and
Cindy Oliveri were the judges.
The annual Grange banquet
was announced lor Apri124 at the
Salisbury School. ·7: 15 p.m. with
Donald Elliott, state master, as
the speaker.
Opal Dyer, youth chairma n,

reported on !lability Insurance.
Eldon Barrows, legislative chair·
man, reported on the legislative
meeting which he and Arthur
Crabtree and Ray Midkiff at tended at the Friend ly Hills .. ,
Camp on Jan. n
l'
Racine Grange served refres hments to.. the 36 grangers
attending.

By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
BOSTON (UP!) - Tile most
commonly used brands of birth
control pills appear to sharply
cut the risk of ovarian cancer,
with the benefits beginning
within a year and lasting long
after use ends, the largest study
of Its kind has found .
Oral contraceptives appear to
cut the risk for ovarian cancer by
at leas t 40 percent, the federal
Centers for Disease Control in
Atlanta said Wednesday In a
study published in The New
England Journal of Medicine.
·'This is very strong confirma·
Han of something that had been
suspected for quite some time,"
said Dr. Nancy C. Lee, who wrote
the paper.
- 'The 'study, tfie ' largest ever
conducted and the first to exa m·
ine a variety of commonly used
pills, Involved .more than 4,000·
women in ·eight areas

nationwide.
Overall, women who had used
the pill had about a 40 percent
lower risk for ovarian cancer,
even If they had only used the pill
for between three and six months
or had stopped taking the pill up
to 15 years earlier.
The protective value Increased
the longer women had been using
the pill.
Women who had used the pill
lor five to nine yea rs had a risk
reduced by about 60 percent
while those who had used the pill
for 10 years or more had a risk
reduced by about 80 percent, th e
study found .
Based on the findings, the
researchers believe the use of
oral contraceptives prevents
some 1,700 cases ol ovarian
cancer each year. As more
women who have been taking the
pill reach their 60s, that number
should Increase, Lee said.
Doctors are uncertain exactly

ON

LESSONS

against the X-ray fil m for a few
seconds. This short procedure
may . be u.ncomfort able, but It
should not be palnlul.
Another myth about mammography is that Is exposes women
to excess ive radi ation. Overwhelming evidence sugges ts that
little radiation takes. place dur·
lng this test. The benefit s of early
detectio n of breast cancer
greatly outweigh the minima l
risks of radiation.
Question: · If I have regular
m a mmo gra ms , can I ski p
monthly sell-examinations?
Answer: Mammography Is not
meant to replace breast examl·
nations by you and your doctor.
Rather, mammography is In·
tended to enhance other forms of
breast cancer detection.
Even under the best circumstances, mammography will
miss about 10 to 15 percent of
breast lumps. Thus, l! Is essenti a l
that you supplement mammograms with monthly breast self:
examina tion s and regular visits
to your physicia n to prevent
serious Injury fr om breas t
ca ncer.

yoo

"All
n01d to ~now
to mo.k t your own quilts
and feel proitdl"

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
RIVERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy
HOURS: Tut.·Wed.·Frl.
t 1 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sundayo1 p.m.•7 p.m.
By

Chane~ or

Appointmtnl

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

3-2·1 mo.

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

614-992-7537

CHESTER-985·3307
21 27/ ffn

2·11 ·1 mo. pd.

BOGGS

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST

Bashan Building

GUYSVIllE, OHIO

EVERY

Authorized John Deere,

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

,Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Ser~lee

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Sho1guns Only
10-8-ttn

1·3·'86 tic

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

BINGO

EAGLES CLUI-POMIROY, OH.
THURt,l

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

-___.........--1-.
--. _It-•.........
·._-··A
,_- ____

No winner Wednesday ·

CLOSED SUNNY'

....... .
........ ,..
......
r.::..., , IO_..,.,....,,.,.._
"'IIJC'II

CLEVELAND !UP)) -There
was no winner of Ohio's Super
Lot to jackpot Wednesday nig ht,
Increasing the grand prize to at
leas t $7 mi llion for next week' s
drawing.
No playe r picked a ll six of the
numbers drawn, a lotte ry commissio n spokesman said today.
The winni ng numbers were 7, 14,
24, 31. 40 and 41.
Although th e top prize went
unclaimed. there were 156 players who picked five of the
numbers to win $553 eac h. Also,
6.401 players selected four of the
nu mbers , wi nning $55 ap iece.
There were 112,222 tickets sold
that listed three of the numbers.
Those tickets are worth $3 each.

'

__ __
"--'=

_
...
.,... l ............,_

,_

=:::::=
.'t':'!."l:::
.,.
. . ... ::::.:? ::-:
.........................
~~=·

~=·

-.,_:':':!?;_c..,,..
..... " "__
" t - 101

...
.,..
__,.. _____............
'""'"

'"'"
llloArt

,.~

1-

..
.,._.

...

• ••

••••

• .. _.

til.
Itt•

.... .•
.....

.,,_.
IU.

Also Traumlulu
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-ltc
(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Complete Remodeling
R90fl~9 of all Typeo

985-3561
All Maku

Complete Gutter Work
Worited in home area ·
20 years
"Free Estimates"

CALl COUICT:

Ph. (6141 843-S42S

' 3-9-'87-2 mo. pd.

Cludfied P•P• """er lh1
folbJVlilllll!lepluJ- uelt.a!lfl!l ...

·- - - .. -

::::~:::r..:.:.•:-.":": .~...:: li&gt;t Do•
COO" DUDU~I ·

-P•••-•

•~~t to••~.vt•

111..... ~., "'""''

r.OO-"''APIO

l llfOO I ¥ •IH•

.o oo .. ....,o••
• "roooo ••
--o••

Public Notice

__

===~-

·~·-..
a::;;;;;;a
...,._

====·--

Public Notice

Public Notice
deodoct by V. 8. Horton and

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
tN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT

parcel
opproloed
at the right of way for I.C.H.
$4,600.00.
No. 7, Section Pomeroy,
Porctl No. 3: Being com· and more fully described as
monty known •• 162 Oo· followo:
borne Strut lnd hovlng
Beginning It the nonhaast
comor of told Lot 102:

~!:'J~~= ~~~~~YNgHtO =r.:Or::~~~w!~~~ho~

Veterans Memorial

SAVINGS COMPANY.
221 Wtll Second Slreol
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
, PLAINTIFF

Admit ted - Charles Pr ice.
Long Bottom; Bud Darst, Che·
shire; Scott Pierce, Mason,
W.Va . .
Discharged - Trlcla Stanley,
Pa ul VanMeter, E ugla Johnson,
William Adkins, Ivan Wood, Jack
Miller.

- VS.-

·t 1
0 EORGE STITT
DEF;NDANTS

thence weat elo"fl the north

Eblin, Harry ond fvo Corpen· line of Nkt lot 1 dlttlnce of
tor ond John ond Jono Loll· about 66 feet to the
line
of told Highway No. 7;
hoil.
Being South of Union thenet~ aouth 1long Hid
Avenue 1nd Ettt at the tr1m hlghwoy to lho aoulh fino of

•••t

ro1d 1crosa the ravine, in

utd Lot 1 02; thence east
along the aouth line of seid

Fraction 17. Section 20.
c 110 Number 81-CV-211 Townohlp 2. Roneo 13; bo· lot oboul 47 foot to tho
At Sheriff of Meigs Coun· gin.,. ol tho northwott eouthe11t comer of 11ld lot;

• ty. Ohio 1 hereby offer for

corner of C1thwlne Rein·

tole ot10o00 A.M. on April horl'a lot; lhonco north 86
10, 1987, A.O.. onthofronl dog. weal 65 fee1: lhonco
....,. of lht Molgt County lOUth 71 dog. WHI eo fool

Court

!nrool ond having been tor·

EXCEPTING lho coolond

rMriY owned by Irene Kelly, other mlntrlll in the . pre·

Cori Ebortboch ond Ernotl mloea end tho right to mlno

REFERENCE DEEO; Vo·
1 mo 284 1'11go 263, Molgt
Countv DMct Atcprdt. Tllli
Poicot
opprolood
111
U ..3oo.oo.
,

P~rcel No. 2 : btin9 com-

.RENT TOP.

v

GUN AT THE FOLLOWING TAPE OUTLETS

CHESHIRE
FOOD SHOP
CIISllllr 0110

llnLE DAN'S
EXXON

420 EASY MAIN..

'·

POMEIOY r OHIO

mooty known II 128 Stoll
Strool ond hll'llng bo~n for·
r1y ownod by Clifford
Mo g 11 ol Ollbot'l &amp;wit·
r~".~a Woller A. swHIIng,
ond Morgorot Moo Price on&lt;!
Wlllom Prlco.
Bolng Loll No. 159 ond
118 In tho C. W. Dobnoy'o
Addition IO told Vlflogo of
Po
Ohto
:e~r:~·ENCE. DEEO: Vo·
lumo 278, Pogo 959, Meigo
Counw Doed Aecordo. _TIIIo

83 feet to 1 stake; thence

North 16 dog. Eool 98 foot

14th. 1987. at10:00a.m.. •

public sale will be hekf at
1OS Union Avenue . Pom·
e rov. Ohio, to sell for ca sh
the following collaterJI :

t 979 Cadiffoc

Brougham Fleetwood

SS# 6869899190529
The Farmers Bank and
Savi ngs Company, P'o m·
eroy, Ohio , reserves the
right to bid at this sale, and
to withdraw the abOve colla·
teral prior to tale . Further,
the Farmers Bank and Sav-

EXCEPTING

thorefrom

the. COli and other mlnerale

miMI. a strip ten fHt wide

estate bordering teid lot
whk:h wes owned by Sareh
A. Kolller et the time of her

cumbrance to the surface.

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
USED TIRES
&amp; BATTERIES

992-2186 for on oppoinl·

·

4-15 ' 86-lc

•VINYL SIDING

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSEll
SIDING CO.
New Homtt Built
" Free Eotimotos"

Servit~
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-843-5248
REASONAILE · REIIAIU
8·10·'86 tin

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYl &amp;

AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation

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

" FREE ESnMATIS"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

of tho E11o1o of
Etmor Young. Sr.

26&lt; lb.

Clean Sheet (oil Alum.
25&lt; to 29&lt;lb.
n1 COPPER ............... 42•
#2 COPPER ............... 32•
Irony Aluminum
S to 18' lb.

3·11-'87·1 mo.

131 4. 6. e. 8 . 9,
10. 11 , 12, 81c

·4-1 mo .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

PH. 992-2772

3·1 1·87·1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Being tho tome promloot
convoyed 10 Chrllllon Buck
by Goorgo Dov end wllo bv
deed doled April t 9, 1875.

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

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
oul radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992 ·2 196

Middleport, Ohio
1·13-rfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rea1anablt Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

end recorded In Volume No.

43. Pogo 688 oflho Rocordt
of Dildo In Molgo Counw.
Ohio.
REFERENCE OEEO: Vo·
lumo 283, Pogo 587, Vo·
lumo 288. Pogo 20hnd Vo·
tumo290, Poto411 . Molga
County Dood Rocordt.
Thlt parcel appr1i11d at

11100.00.

Said ml estate is to be
told 11 Individual percela ..
Sele of nid rtll 11tet• to
be for not lets than two

third~ (213) tho aforaaold
opproltlld voluo.
Sold tole lo aubjoet to op·
provo! by tho Common P1111
Court. Molgo Counw. Ohio.
Howard E. Fronk, Shorlff
. ot Meigo ·county, Ohio
ApproVId:
.
Frod W.: Crow. Alldmoy tor
FAAMEII. BANK ANO
SAVINGS CO .. PlolntiH .
1315, 12, 18, 3to

z
-"
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Offers will be received un·

:t

1113:00 P.M. ontho201hdoy
of March. 1987, ol tho
Moyor't office. 237 Rooo
Slr~ol, Mldd~port, Ohio,
for lho solo of tho lollowlng

!!!:

deteribed reel "tete. to· wlt :
Real estate sltueted etono
Aotlle 7 end 11 1 portion of

304-875·6661 .
Lost and
· Black Labradore 1vr. old:
IV k im&lt;v o f Neig hborh ood Ad . if
614 . 448· 3488 .

Los t 2 rnelo dogt . 1 Beegl e. 2
vr1 old, tD r1. btnck. whit e. 1
Bri iUlny Sp~ n i~l , 10 month old,
Orange, whitd·. Latt teen H,.rrl-.
&amp;o rwille area. C11 tl Glen Kennedy

614·742·2133 .
LOST bl11ck IHi d w hit e fen111ht
hou11d, Feb 16 . Ponllu C hu rch
11i c rnity . rew a rd , 304 · 882 ·

3328

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
FlE:A MARK ET

l ou for ron1 Rt . 326 tnn ween
Sou thwo&amp; u nn Hio h S c hool &amp;
Ato Gulnde .

CRI I

Jun M i nk C hev.· O ida In c.
Bitt G o no .John son

&amp;14· 446· 3672

TOP CASH paid !01 '83 mo del •
nn1f nownt u sed cars . Smlttl•h
8 111 Ck ·Po ntiu c. 1911 Eastnrn •
Av a.. Gn lhp olls . Ca ll 61 4 · 446· :

2282

Used Mobile Hom es Ph 6 14· •
446 0175
10 . 1 2 HP Ridonn lawn Mow m '
Ph . 446· 6589 ult tlt 6pm
;
Buyino dnily nold. t iiWH tol n a,
rings. jewelr y , st erling w 1uo . o td
euins. lnr go currency. Top pri·
Cfl~ Ed 8mkntt Bn t het Shop.
2nd Ave Middlepor t. Oh 6 14·

•

•
•
:

•

992 ·3476 .
8 h pick up 10p pn1 wanunt Ca ll •
6 14 · 949 · 2013
'

Walllod Pwo Brud NorW IIf]iBn :
Elk Hound . Cnll 614 · 992· 7603.

Empioymenl

Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON So li Avon Mnk11 40% .
Ciltt 614 . 4 46 3358
OabvsitiM n ood ud lo t 6yr old
!rum 8nm tn 12 noon Mo n h t. ·
Ca 1t 614 · 446· 21&amp;3

'

Mat u ro w o nHHl to c nrn lor two ,
smntt childr un in my homo in ·
Gnllipollt
to 4t&gt;rll WllUic · I
dAya Se nd r11m 1u. addr nu. ·
phone nurnbur an d lis r ot ri!IIH '
nncn&amp; to P 0
Ur.u 493 . ·
Galh['lo lil , O H 4 5031

earn

Pelt · T 1rno Bahvsrll u• ntHtdlld I'll

614-256 · 1786
f&gt;nrt ·l ornu Jltlr so n wnniOtl for ·
rnndic:al otll ce CollttCIIOM lllu1 ·
liUno,at o lfr co w o rk Sfrnd Au - .
Humo ' lo G11lhp o h!1 D11ily Trih ·
Ullfl. 826 lhmt A vtt , Bt111
T. 6896 . Gall ipo li s, Qhw 46631

1 0 Pooplll NttUd Ud

$300 l'or Wonk
Now c ompBn'JI neod1 to tr11in.
mu &amp;t bft doptmdnbtu lL honnll
For ~ur so nat tn ter111nw Ca ll 6 14·
446· 746 1. 1 OA M· 4PM
Loca l Floor C111e Cn lltflr now
hirin{l Accnunt R u ttr elont~t l l v ea
to t how our produ r.h Hnd
1ervlcet . 8300,00 JIUr Wlt&amp;lc,
p11id training progr nm lind cOm ·
pnnv b11nefl !l. No tU['Iftrlonca
n11c•uary. Mull h11v1• c or 11nd ha
n&amp;ll l In appunrllll tll Ca lt 6 14. '
446 7 441 for an ln tnnllttW
Wtmted: Ha lntylist . rn11lo o r
female. 1 yflnr 611 pOrlanco pr rr·
lerutd but not no c ttUI'trY Sto Jl in
t1 293 S . 2n d. Miildlfi JlOr l. o r
Cat! 014 · 9 92· 2660
AVON , no 1ervleo chilli/ft . opn n
lllrri l oritU . 11 honu 304 -616

1-129.

Housewtl o. Urllndrno thf~r , ttrnim
high lludetlll UIIHi 4 lo 8 hom11
income plu s bonu1o1, 50 ""lldCd
to tlllcft ordart by phonu r6111rl
lldvllrlllin(l prom o tion . tiny enr1
IIVtlllinw 1hift1 avartnbtu tllmpo r.
No ll• ptulnncfl nf'lcfltlllry
W11111 11lr'l App ly In par1on et 2'32 •
M11in S t , Thu"dav . Mnrch 12

'" Y.·

belwtnm 9 .00 and 7 00.
Need piiOPIII for ligh t tl ellvtry , '"
drt~ls ne•tlv .
have tran•po rT nrlon, know Pt .
Pt naun l Afftl Apply in P«&lt;fiOn,
2 32 M1ln S t .. Thuttday, Maret,
12, bet ween 9 .00· 7 :0 0

COO orders. mutt

REPS NE EDED lo r hualr1 en
t r:countt. Futltirmr. 180,000 ·
p1rt tim a ' 1 2. 000.
&amp;18. 000 No tolling , repe11t
busineu . Set your own houi-t.
Training pr o vld.,d. Call 1 . &amp;1 2'.
938· 6870 . M· F. 8ttm to 6pm
( c~tn u nt Uflnd,.rd t lmt~J

eeo.ooo.

MOM AND OAD · l tt t ua p~ty lor
yow c hild ' • eoll~e educatlqn .
Th 11 Army Ntllon•l Oun rd c•n
provide: un 10 . 18.000 In
ethr Ctltion anlltll r'ICt Ca ll 1 ·
800· 6 42 38 19 for h ee htformll!··

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avettue, Boil 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

A1my N allon •l Gutrd racrul~m
for an interview

Ellpftflenced ~ •moral o!Uc 11, •5 •
d•v• w euk. wrttlt Bo11 1 1, Pt . Pit
RBgisHtr. 200 M ain St ., Point
Ple111n t , W. Y1. 26650.
'

B-13 tin

12

Lot 327 No. 012. Tho VHtogo IC(fuirod IIIIo IO 11id
rool oo1111 by dHd recorded
in Vplumo 227. Pogo 117,
Molga County Dildo flo·

An nnunct~ 111 enl s
.'LUMijNtj &amp; HEATING
161 Norlh Second

cords.

Mitltloport, Ohio 4SHO

Sa'le of Nld reel nttte Wll
authorized by Ordln1nce

3 Announcements

SALES &amp; SERVI&lt;E

I I 78·87

odopled Jon. 21.
1987. Tho Vlllogo rooonr11
the right 10 rojocl ony ond ott
bktt. Tho ~~~ It puriUont to
Stcllon 721 .03 ot tho Ohio
Roviood Cocto.

~aUroa cl tlu and cut down tree.

liOn PICk'fl or con11c1 ynur toctl

w licensed Clinical Audiologist

NOTICE OF SALE

,

.PAT HILL FORD

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds · Interpreting SeNices

Public Notice

814-992-8123

992-3410

end ell Ways end rightl of
wey elong 1nr, minerelseem
underlying ,n d premlees ere
1110 hereby excepted from
this convayance.

Black and tan Coon Hound tO

g ood homll'. Female, rBIJI•terecf,
Colt

SCIPIO RECYCLING

FREE ESTIMATES

992-6211 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation

Road in Ch11tar Townthip,
approximately-% mile south·
e11t of S. R. 7 . The real estlti conaists of a one story,
2· bedroom home with bath ,
apprOXimltely 8 . 75 ICrll Of
real estate by Deed descrlp·
tion .
I
The under.(gned reserves
all rlghtt to raiect any and all
bids and ell bids are subject
to the approval of Probate
Court ot Meigs County. An·
yone lntere1ted miy call

ICBI
Flattened Alum. Cons

V. C. YOUNG Ill

J.R.'s REPAIRS

oltuoltd on Eagle Rldgo

crtp

POlE STYlE or
CONVENTIONAl

3·ll·tln

Offen will be received at
the office of Bernard V. Fultz
at 111 '12 W. Second Street,
PorTte,oy, Ohio, for the sale
of ttle Elmer Young, Sr. real
ealate. The real lltltl It

to the piece of beginning.

John K. Benh

worlc
j Free Estimates)

Public Notice

may be present 1t the d1te
and time of the ule en4 bid
competitively for the prop ·
erty.
John Mora. Admlnlstretor

80 dog. Eotl 82 loot to Bonia min F. Biggs' line; thence
South 1B dog. Weal 90 loot

- Concrete worlc

- Plumbing and ehtctrleat

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls

LEGAL NOTICE

Giveaway

Owner/Me~hanic
1-2·' 87· 3 mo.

614-992-3466

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and guu er -work

that on Saturd&amp;y. March

to the canter of the Run:
thence elong the run South

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756

PARTS und SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hortbv given

ment to set the propeny.
Offers will bo rocolvod until
11 :00 a.m. on March 13.
1987. All interested p1rtl11

mine the tame without In·

dOCMH.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
lumo 132, Pogo 186, Volume 287, Pogo 779, Vo·
lumo288.Pogo181ondVo·
ton ond 8. W. Pomorov. their tumo 290, flint 451. Moigo
holrt ond ooolant forevor.
County Oootl. !!tcordo.
REfEAENC! OEED: Vo·
Thlo Porco! opprolaed 11
lum~ 211, Pogo 817ondVo·
12,000.00.
lumo 290. Pogo 451 , Molgt
PI&lt;CII No. 5: bolng com·
County o ..d Recordl.
monty known 11 1&amp;1 Oo·
Tlllo Porco! oppr- ot borne StrMI having been
fo.-ty owned by Ricky
.•eooo.oo. .
P..or No. 4. bofng com- lconhowor. Utllo M. Houck
monty' known 11 841 Wo11 ond Eunice 81rou11, 111 ol ..
Moln StrMI ond / or 541 ond Horvoy Wooclwd.
Tho following promltot
WOOl Fr~nl Blrtel. locotod
noor thf• Moton Briclto IP· lo·wlt: Being o port of Froc·
pr-. hovlng form- lion No. 17, Boollon No. 2,
orty ewnod by John H. Town No. 2, ond Rongo No.
Koohtor, Sortll Koehtor ond 13,1yfnt on tho woot bronch
Lowrenco D. Hordngor.
of 8-r Run. dotcrlbod ol '
At! of Lo11021n V. 8. HM· lollowo:
lloglnnlng of tho South
~"!,' p:=~~n t~':n~::~ Witt
corner of ._tot of land
·

Ebe bach
. the UfM, without lncumbr~rng Lo! 1 Nu.,bered 1 &amp;I ance to the ~urface and all
o~d 1ea.&gt;.\ In Dobnoy'a Ad· woyt ond nghll ~f woy
dition to the vm 1g 1 of Po· 1long uld mlner1l Nam ere
meroy Ohio
Mroby roHtvod 10 V. B. Hor·

thence North 86 dog. West

tenoe of about &amp;&amp; feet to the
ptoco of beginning.

off tho southerly tldo of ooid
Lot No. 102. oxlondlng trom
From SlrMI bock to l.C.H.
No. 7.
ALSO ott lhoodjoconl root

monty known ei 130 Stitt ecre, mor• or leaa.

C1tharlna Reinhtrt's house;

fino of ..ld lot 1 02 o dlt·

Southwool corner; thence
north 1B dog. Hll 170 fHI
to tho ptoco of beginning,
containing one-holt 11'11

·
Ohio,
scribed rul ettlte:
Sttutlod In tho Vlllogo ot
Pomeroy, County of Mtigt
and Stole of Ohio:
Porco! No. 1, being com·

Southwett corner of Ben·

jamln F. Biggs' lot, opposite

undortyl119 tho oforooold
promiHo tnd tho rlghl to

SAVE AND EXCEPT from
tho obovo doacrlbod pro·

j

Elborlotd by dood dOled No·
vembor t, 1889, at Ihe

thence north 1long the eatt

Pomeroy, to I stone; thence lOuth 3
•·
folio
1
de dtg. weat 1&amp;0 feet; thence
1 •~
• w ng
· toll to Cothorino Rolnhorl' t

HouM.

S . W. Pomerov to Frederick

Truck, auto . &amp;
heayy eq uipm ent
repairs and welding .
(All makes &amp; mod els)

l oc11tnd 2 Mi. E. o f Panevill o
On Town5hlp Road #142

YOUNG'S

;:-:

·--·-u--·-·-

ae ••

1
1\0110 ..
1111•• 111110~110.0¥

IIII,M l iii/OID•l
• I Df' M Flo.&lt;l¥

Public Notice

... ·;:::.
·-·
·H
--·-. ..
·--""-·.,

liAr MI GIIII'\IItMI:AliD~

""'·'""u.-..,,. ~

-

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

•Washert •Dis hwas hers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
4. :1·ttc

Public Notice

___ .

Bob Borton, Owner
2-1··86-tfn

3-4-1 mo.

EUGENE LONG
VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM

.,
,
'11-,.,..... _

PH. 992-9949

949-9070 or
949-2045

nw

·-····--

T90 MUlBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

ACTION
TOWING

13111 , 12, 13, 3tc

RATE I

.,.JIICIIIM .... .ollill ... . . . .

6:45

At. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

right to•reject any or all bids
submitted .
Further. the above colla·
teral will ba sold In the con·
dition it is in with no eKpreased or implied warren·
ties given .
fO PlAU AI AO CAll "2-2116
.0.AY tin fltUY I ia tt 5 P.M.
I A.&amp; u.ti1 NOON ~TUIDAf

SUGAR
. RUN
ASHLAND

•SATELLITE SALES
&amp; SERVICE

For II'!Ort informatian call:

4

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

•GIBSON '

lessons start

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

how blrt.h control pills protect
aga inst ovarian ca ncer. But they
believe It may have something to
do with the pill suppressi ng
ovulation and the activity of the
pituitary gla nd.
Lee sa id the findings should
reassure the estimated 8.4 mil·
lion America n women who are
taking the pill and could encour·
age others to begin using the
form of contraception.

TRANSMISSIONS

•KELVINATOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN

MARCH 16 &amp; 17

•

Breast cancer and the risk

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
pinhead before you can discern It
Assistant Professor
yourself. However, mammoof Family Medicine
grams can locate cancers much
Ohio University College.
smaller than, this.
· Question: How often should I
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: Both mY mother aqd have a mammogram
sister have-had breast cancer.Js performed?
this condition widespread ~
:
Answer: The Am erica n
Answer: Breast cancer is t)le Cancer Society has guidelines
most common cancer among that recommend when you
women in the Western World . It should begin having ma mma·
Is also the most common cause of grams and how often you should
death lor women between ages 40 have them . Women age 35 to 40
and 45. Each woman In · the should haye a single mammo·
United States has a one in 11 gram performed to determine If
chance of developing breast they're at risk lor breast cancer.
cancer during her lifetime. ·
Females age 40 and older should
Research shows that the most get a mammogram every one or
effective way to conttol br~ast two years. Women who have a
cancer Is to detect· Ii early. high risk of ca ncer should have
Breast examinations . can be more frequent mammograms.
Despite these guidelines, less
performed manually by women
than
20 percent of women over
and their physicians and by
age 35 have had even one test.
machine in a procedure calle~
mammography .
One reason why women resist
mammography is because of the
Of the lhree, mammography Is
the most accurate way to detect · myths thai persist about it.
One such myth Is that mammobreast cancer. Mammograms
graphy
Is a painful procedure.
ca n find breas t lumps ljefore
During a mammogram, the
women and their. physicians
breast must be gently lifted away
notice them. A breast lump must
from the chest wall and held
be about the size of a ,large

Business Services
r.:::.:::.:===::.:==;-r::::::::=====T,========j
CL.OSE OUT
AUTQMf\TJ(
QUILTING

ings Company reserves the

presses

(Continued from Page 11
nattce and Appropriations
co mmittee.
Boster said she has con !acted
a nd worked with the gover nor's
staff. House Speaker Vernal G.
Rille Jr. and State Rep. William
E:. Hlnlg. 0 -New Philadelphia,
finance committee chairman, In
her;ettorts to secure fuAdlng for
the office.

Pomona Grange judges sewing contest
The ~atlonal grange sewing
contest was judged at the recent
mkttng of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange ·heid recently at
the Rock Springs Grange hall.
Elizabeth Jordan had charge
ol the judging with the winners
being Ann Lambert, first, Jane
Lewellyn, second, and Pauline
Eynon, third. In another class,

The Daily

Ohio

Pill cuts ovarian cancer risk

WE NOW HAVE A SELECTION OF
USED SEWING MACHINES
STARTING AT

Th~.WSday, March 12, 1987

Wt Cerry

I

Frod Hoffrnon. MOVOfl
Vtlloeo o1 Mid.._.
Fob. 6. 12. 18, 26; Mor. I , ·
12 .

Fl1~lng

8ul)pltu

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone BUt• Here
MINIS! 'IIONE

(6141 tu.mo
llflllfNCI 1'110111
16141 tti-77S4
tmnlft

Atdnt Gun S hoot 1ponsoted by
Recine Gun Cklb. E\ltry Sundtv.
btglnnlng 11 1 :00 P:m . Fec tory
Chokt, 12 gutgt thGtguns .

&amp;om tone to drt¥1 kldfley di .. ytlt
pltiem to Huntington occ•lon·
elly. fOf' lnformttlon ctll 30•·

17&amp;·3091.

Situations
Wanted

•

- - - ----.;· :
H&amp;vn ronm find ho11rd for olderlv
PtiiOn R. .tOn•ble, 814 · 992 .'

8022

�r-aye-1v-1 ne Oa11y

~m1ne1

LAFF-A-DAY

1B Wanted to Do

46 Space for Rent

Steve Hawley' s Trash Service:
Reasonable ratas -15 per month,

Space for rent. trailer spacel,
loeun Rd. At. 1. Point Pleasant,

A~fallible tor .elderly day care
while shopping; tttc. in my home.
Call for information 304- nJ-

304·675-1076.

5217.

49

For leaae

Want to lease tobacco &amp;llot·
ments Ptt .814- 388-8514.

F1nancial

Merchandise
Business
Opportunity
51 Household Goods
! NOTICE I

THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH -

SWAIN
AUCTION l!o FURNITURE 62

vou

do business with people vou
know. and NOT to send money
~hrou~h the mail 111'11i1 you have
tnvesttgated the oHerin9.

"It's going to be such a relief
not having to be nice to you
all the time."

Ow~

your own 813 .99 one pric&amp;
Do11gner Shoe Store A reta il
ic&amp; normally
unbelievable
quality
lprhoe•
pricedtorfrom
a19 1~;:;;~;:;;;:;;~~~~T~;:;;:;;;::;:;====1

IO 860 Over 160 boand names
~ 60 styles. 814, 800 to 826,900

mventory, training , fixture 1,
g rand open ing. Can combine
with over 1000 brands of
apparel, acceuory. dancewear·
aerobic. childran 1 shop. Cen
open 15 days. Mr. LOU{It'llin
612 -888-6556 .
OwnyCiurown S13. 99 one price
shoe store . A retail price unbelievable for quality shces normally priced from &amp;19 to $60.
Over 160 brand names 250
~tyles . 814,800 to S26.900
tnventCiry. training. fiKtures .
grand opening . Can combVte
with over 1,000 brands of
apparel, accessory, dancewear·
aerobic. childrens shop. Can
open 15 days. Mr. Keenan

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

14K66, 2 bedrooms, 1'h bath,
undeqrinning . Roof. wind breaker built on , Small building,
patio and awning. One acre,
Taus Rd. 614-9B6-360B.
1975. 12a60 mobile home for
sale. S2600 . OBO . Call 614·
992-6941 or 614-992· 3522 .
'81 Commodore, 14a45. like
new lived in only 6 months.
payoff. Phone 304-882·3654.
K &amp; K Mobile Home1. Inc, new
and used homes 1tanlng et
14,400.00 and up 304-675 -

1306)695-8267.

3000.

23

1977 Cameron. 1 2K60 mobile
tJome, total al&amp;ctric, 2 bed·
room1 , ucell&amp;nt condilion ,
make OffBf. 304-676 -2266 or
675-2631 , .,k for Ric:k.

Professional
Services

Julia's Personal Care Home has
opening for elderly patients, 24
hour care, family butineu tince

1959. 304· 773·5873.

New 141170 Skyline mobile
tJome, phone 304-675 -6357.
1.979 Holty&amp;ark, 14x70, 2 bed·
room1. Morris at8feo, record
player. Btrad tape, gun cabinet,

304-575-7979.

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

3 bedrooms CICite to town , 2
battlt, fireplace, central air,
range A oven. City Sctlools Ph.
614 -246-924B
3 bdr., 2 baths. gas t'ieat, cental
air, 1611.36 inground pool, excel·
lent neighborhood near Holzer In
city schools . &amp;81 ,600 . Call

614-446.3961

To be moved or dem 6li1hed·
large 2 atory frame hs. located at
35 East South St. Jackson, OH ,
Make oHer to Holzer Clinic

1971 Mobile Home 121166 Kirk·
wood. partly remodeled . 304·

773·6873.
33

30 acre farm has good home,
lsrge barn and large pond, South
Western School District Ph.

614-246-9248

66% acre flfm , 201168 double
w1de, 3 bedroom. 2 b1Chs, 2
ponds. 2 barns. Iota outbuild·
ings, 24a50 machine shed, new
fence1 , leon an'a 304-468-

1812.

34

614-446-5186.

Browner· Good Starter house. 3
BR, city schools, gas heat,
window AC. f1mcad yard, hard·
wood floors. 1 car garage. Call
614 -446-1171 or 614-446·

4305.

1646 lincoln Heights, Pomeroy,
2bdr.. Immediate posseuion
S9 ,600.00 Ph . 614-992-3749
or 614-992-3602 No Sunday
c alls .
Must sell newly romod&amp;led 1 bdr.
t"lome near new swimming pool·
Gallipolis . Sscrillce price
t1B.900 Call 614 -446· 2639.
3 bedroom, 1 bath, utility, larg11
kitchen . Single car garag&amp;· consider renting . Cell 614-446·

1358.

12w.86 L.arga Bath, good condi·
t ion Ph . 6814 -446-7187.

2 bedroom with bath and
c•port. located on a nice lot In
Rutland. A1hing $13,000. Call
814-742- 2093 or 814 -742 ·

Farms for Sale

Business
Buildings

10:00 to S:OO or ahar 8 :00PM

304·372·9970.

Priced reduced. 3 bedroom
hou11, J im Hill Road, 304-676·
3073. 5 PM to 9 PM .
Owner will finance. 3 bedroom.
2 baths. dinn ing room, family
room, centrel air. one ecre.
garage, 2 outbuildings. 304·

895·3466.

Sale or rent , New Haven, 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace,
garege. tJS.OOO.OO or 8275.00
month plu1 depo1it. 304 -273-

2471 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S OUALITV
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35.

35 lots 8o Acreage
36 aero• for sale. Horse Cave.
Racine, Ohio. 88500. 614 -949-

2128.

A1hton building Iota. mobile
home• pl!lrmitted. Clyde Bowen,
Jr. 304 -676-2338.
2 acre lot. drilled well. letart,

304-896-3554.

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch. Rodnev Village II .
1285 mo. plus deposit. Referen·
cea required . C1ll Bl1ckburn
Realty 814-446-0008.
8 room hi on 150 1eret at Eureka.
S260 a mon1h. 6 room h1. 76
acre tarm-Ma1on County. Call
304-676-15104 .
4 BR , 1'h bath, L.R Rd., dep.
required. 8260 par month. Ctll
614-446· 4222 between 9&amp;6.
2 BR hou1e. located- 62 Mill
Creek. tUO month, 175 dep·
oait . Call 614-446-3B70.
3 bdr. hs . 2 m iles from HMC . No
pets . 8196 month. •100 dep·
osit . Call 614-445-3817 .
, Btdroom Houu cltan. large
storage building. No pets. In
Galllpollt 1160.00 plus depo1it.

Ph. 614·448-2143.

Beautiful 3 bedroom house in
Syraculfl Full kitchen , l&amp;rge
lawn. Contact daya 614·992·
6298 or night• 614-667- 3785 .

2 bdr . fullv turni1htd adult• only,
utll. paid. C.ll 814· 441-4110.

814-446-7687.

1872 C11tle 14.&amp;5 with 1982
Eapando 12a20. FlrepiiCI. cent ral 111'. 2 bathl, 2 norage
bulldlnga. Mu1t sell Ph 246·
6184 1tter 5pm.
1961 Ragent 12~~:60 . Hutt by
natural gu Ph. 614·446·2607.
Double wkte 24a62 new win ·
dow1. n~~W counter tops. n.w
carp-':. Price AtdYetd, Ph . 814-

256·9393.

In Eu,.ka ••callent 1hape 2 Bdr.
wilt"l upando . Re1ponclble
adult• onfot . No peta. 8225mo.
Oapo1it required Ph. 814· 246·

5883

2 Bck . unfurn. 12~~:60Hollypark.
WD hook-up . O.poslt • ref.
required. Half milt pllt Holrtr.
Call 114·«8·4381 Or 304·

876-8780.

2bdr. Mobllt Home. Plants
Subdlvi1lon . Bul.vUia Ad .

0175.00mo. Ph. 814-446·

4684 tfttf lpm.
1982 Mention 14111115. 2 ltrgt
BA . aU elac:. Set up on buutitul ' -19815 Mobile Home. 14a70, on
riverfront tot. AttdV to move St . Rt. 143. t230, J••includad.
Into with .... erythlng you need . C•ll 614-992-8449.
.
014-992-3348 after 5pm or
tnytlmt on wHbndt.
3 bedrooma, furnl1had, wall"tltl',
dryer , air. U10. per month plut
1910 Llbtfly. 2 btdrooma, Ill d•potlt and utiliti•. Cell 814·
electric, furnlthed. t1710. Call 992-7479.

814·992· 7478.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom basic rent 8176 .00
plus electric. Alao required a
8200.00 security deposit . CONTACT, Jack1on Ettetet Dept. Ph
446 - 3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Furnished &amp; unfurnishad &amp;pta.,
t160.00 and up , references Ph.
304-676-7738 Of 304· 6766104 A-1 Reel Estate.
16 Court Street. 2 BR , 1Vz
baths. w / w carpet, complate
modern .kitchen. gal heet, well
inaul&amp;ted, wired for phone &amp;
cable tv, 1pacious perking in
rear. patio. 8376/ mo. plus
utilitiet . Depoait. Reforances
required. No pets. Ca11614-446-

4926.

6 Court Street, large 3 BR. 1 1h
bath. complete kitchen, gas
heat, park in rear. overlollk citv
park &amp; river. $260 / mo. plus
utllitiet. deposit, refer&amp;nce• required. No pe11 . Great for 2/ 3
single• . Call614· 446·4926.

Furni1hed Efficiency . auo.
Utilities pd. Single. Shere bath.
607 2nd, GaUipolil. Call 446·
4416 after 7pm.
740 2nd Ave., 1 BR, 8186 ,
Dt~po•it required. Call614-446·
4222 between 9&amp;5.

Newlv bullt 2-bdr. apt. eacellent
locatiOn furnished kltc:hen . Rei.
&amp; Deposit Ph. 614-446-1250
after 6pm .
Very nlce one bedroom spt .
Central Air. hardwood floora, &amp;
garsga. RafMencas &amp; deposit
required. Pt"l . 614-446-4159 .
1 bdr. unfurni1hed 1pt. rear of
HMC . No pets. 81 69.00mo,
•100.00 depoait Ph . 614·446·

3617

Unfurnished 6 room. 1 hmily.
Refrigerator and Stove. Refer·
anca end deposit t260.00 Plus
· utilities. No petl. Call 614-446 ·

3788.

Furnist"led efficiency. privata
bath. t1 76.00 UtiUtin psid,
920 4th ave., Gallipoli1 Ph.
446-4416 after 7pm .
Gr:~ cious

living. 1 and 2 bed ·
room apartments at VIllage
Msnor and Rivertide Apart·
menta In Middleport. From
1215. including utilhiet . Call

614·992·7787. EOH.

Large 2 bedroom apartment in
Middleport, W!l&amp;hltl' and dryer
hookup, paniallv h.trni•hed. Pay
own utilltlel. 1186. per month.
Call 614 ·992· 2381 days or
614· 992-2509 evening1.
Mynle Beach Condo Aentsl. 2
bedroom•, 2 baths. sleep• 6.
furnished complete wilh linens,
tenni• court1, Indoor-outdoor,
pool•. uuna, 1team room. res·
tauranl . No pett-excall1111t rsta1.
Phone 6U-423-B817.
APARTMENTS, mobile home1,
houtH. Pt . Plee11nt and Gtlllpo·
lia. 614-448-8221 .

Countv APflliance. Inc. Good
used appllancea and TV seta.
Open 8AM to 6PM . Mon ttJru
Sat. 614·446·1699, 827 3rd.
Ave. Gsllipolil, OH .
Valley Furniture, new &amp; Uled.
large section of quail~ lurni·
ture . 1216 Eutern Ave ,
Galtipolil .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa1hers, dr,terl, refrigerators,
rangas . . Skagg1 Appliances,
Upper Rtver Rd. beside Stonn
Crest Motel. 614· 446-7398.

Sotu an~ chain priced from
8395 to 1996. Tables 160 and
up to 8126. Hide·a· bed&amp; $390
to $696. Racllnert 8226 to
8~76 . Lamps 128 to 8126.
D1nettes 8109 and up to 84915.
Wood table w-6 chalra 8286 to
8796. Detk 1100 up to 1375.
Hutch81 $400 and up. Bunk
bed• comphrte w-manreues
1296 and up to a396 . Baby beds
a110 &amp; 8176. MattrellesorbOII
1prlng1 full or twin &amp;63. firm
S?3. and $B3 . OueenJetaS226,
Kmg 8350. 4 drawer chest S66 .
Dress~ SB9 . Gun cabinet• 8.
10, 12gun. Gas or electric range
8375. Baby manre11e1 836 B.
8~6 . Bad frames 820. UO &amp;
Ktng frame S60. Good selettin
o~ bedroom suites, metal ca·
bm&amp;ts, headboard• 830 and up
to 1815 .
U18d Furniture: wood table &amp; 2
benches, beds. dres1er, wood
wardrobe. 3 miles out Bulavllle
Rd. Open 9AM to 6PM, Mon.
thru Sat. 614-446-0322.

STOP· LOOK-SAVE
Mollohan Furniture &amp; Applian·
en, Rt. 7 North Gattipolil , Ohio
Ph. 614-446- 7444. 6pc. Wood
Living Room Suite 8399 .00.
Good u1ed portable &amp; · fklor
model color TV's. Call614-446·
1149
Oold sofa, $40. Microwave,
160. 3 recliners, C&amp;ll614-992-

3974.

New Maytag wrainger wuher.
phone 304-676-6367.

53

Antiques

Antique Monarch coal &amp; wolld
range-a1 OOO· Beat Offer.. Antique hall tree-1600-Bett Offer.

Coli 814-379-2852.

54 Misc. Merchandise

•

1992 Ho,dt CX 500 Custom.
hctllent condhion Ph . • 614·

388·8836.

Pla1th: cittern state approved
ple&amp;tic septic tanks , plettiC
culvens, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack·
lOR, Oh. 614· 286·6930.
2 hydraulic chair~ , eKcellent
condition UO.OO each. 1 tiJIIOn
hair dryer 850 .00 Call614 -446·

8821 .

Firewood, t35 . pickup load.
delivered. Call 614-742-2075
or 614-742-3194 1nytlme.

"

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block, brick, 1ewer pipes, Win ·
dows, lintel1, etc . Claude Win·
ten, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614·
245-6121 .
Concrete blocks all sizes verd or
delivery. Mason •and. Gallipolil
Block Co.. 123112 Pine St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614-448·

61 Farm Equipment

1-814·886-7311 .

56

CROSS l!o SONS

U.S. 35 W•t. Jacklon, Ohio.

614·288·8451 .

Malley Ferguson. New Holllf'ld.
Bush Hog Saln &amp; Service. Ov11r
40 uud tractors to choose from
&amp; complett lint of new &amp; uted
equipment. Largttt Hlactlon in

S.E. Ohio.
JIM"S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SA 35 W. Galllpoli1,
Ohio. C111 614-44&amp;-9n7. en.
614·448·31592 . Up front tree·
tora with warranty over 40 uaed
tractors, 1 000 toola.
Utility Bldg. Spl : 30'x40'x9',
16•8 Overhead door. Servlee
Door. t6333 Erecttd. Iron
Horse Bldg1. 614·332-9745.

John DBBfll 3010 wittt loadM
14,650.00. 12fl. trantport dlac
1495.00. AC no tiH planter
$1,650.00. 3 Bo«om John
Oeera Plow t396.00 Call 614·
286-8622.

0231 .

Super A, Ftrmall with cultiva·
Reglateted female long-haired tou. Very good condition. Allit
Dachshund . Ph . 614 - 446 - Chamlen G whh cultivators.

_9_4_1_2·- - - - - - - - l v..., good. Coll614-949-2013.
RegiUered labrador Retritver 1 let eech of 12tnd 14 inch 3 pt.
pups. Yellow• and blecka. Own plowa. Call614-949· 2013.
femsle and male. Call evenings
814· 992-5181.
B ft. used Brush Hog, 3 pt. 4 h .,
almost new Brush Hog, 3 pl . Call
4 AKC Regiltered Cocket SPI· 814-949-2013.
niel puppies. 4 week• old. 3 burt
colored. 1 champagna. Shots. Set of m... lslld•in stock racka
Call 614· 992-7719.
to lit B ft. pickup bed. Call

814-949-2013.

AKC registered Pomeranian
puppies. Himalayan 1nd Persian 1 Mechenical tran1pltnttt', 3 pt.
kittens CFA registered. Phone hitch. 3 wheel r11k11. Call 614·

304·896-3958.

696-1244.

59 For Sale or Trade

White Farm Tractort, 881t Price
In Arta, Sidert Equipmtnt Co,
Hendlt'IOn, W. Va. 304·676·

4 Block Sewmill. 1978 Dodile
Pick· Up. 1979 Herlev Davidson
Full Dresa . Ph. 614-843-2503.

Fm1:

7421.

Triple cleaned white oet1. 41n.
schedue 40 pipe. along with
15001b. cruth 41n. pipe. Found
at Bidwell Cath Feed Store Ph,

One bedroom apt in Hender1on.
phone 304-675-1972.

2o Cubic ft . Freezer 1200.
6-apnd bike t!SO .OO. Hobart
WeldiN' 1100. 260. Yamtha
t2SO.OO. XL 100 Honda 1100.
Large window air conditioner
1200. 12rt. alluminum boat
040.00 Ph. 614-245-9248.

a.

1976 Gremlin, ~ood running
condition. Georg•• car, Bcyl .,
auto, AC. 1900.00 Ph . 614-

388·9950.'

Now buying 1hell corn or ear
com. C.llforlltettquot... River
Cltv Farm Supply, 614·446·

1981 Dodge Uncer 4-dt., 8cyl ..
3-tpeed. ttand•d 1hift on floor.
All ftctory equipment. Runs

good 0200.00 Ph. 614-3889950

1971 Chevelle 360 Auto. New
paint red with black 1trlpn
Sport hood, new tlrn, good
ShiiM plut 1970 Chevelle part1
Oood front end. All for

livestock

S1blno. OH. 513·684·2391.

Ovtro

Pllint mern. Proven In ple•ure

hahor. Coli 304-765- 7eR9.

2 Quarter HorN Mtrll Ph.
AppalooN bay mare14 yrs, 14
hind, 1200.00. lly mare 11
yro, 18 ·hind. 0800.00. 8oth
mart 1ft gentle and broke. C.ll
304· 111·31541 or 304 ·1715:

4614.
64

1978 Thundarblrd. Air. cruiu.
tilt. Engine. lransmluion and
brakes recenlly rebulh . 11000

C11i 614-985-...3.

1981 Old1 Cutlet~ . lmacultte
condition . AC , new tires .
chroma whHia. Atldng t3200.

Coli 614-992-5107.

For rant IUMfMng Room1 and
light house kMping rooma. Park
Central Hotel . Cell 614-441·

0758.

Hond• 760. 304·882-2442.

'84 T-llrd conwrtltbla. '815
OunMuftV. 304-8715· 2414.
1978 Chavam, meka an oHer,

304-182·2918.

72

Trucks for Sale

1978 LT 9000 Ford. 1978

Btnaon Tandem dump treilfl'.
Mut1 1111 lmmldla1ely. Call

Evo"o 81 4-387·0641.

1985 Chevy C-10 auto, eir,
oruiM, AM-FM Tape, dualttnkl.
Cuh prk:a 17, 999.00. Johna
Auto Seln. BuiiViUt Rd., Gam-

polio. OH .

1872 Ford 4~~:4. 1981 Chevette

Ph . 114-266-1941 or814·268·

Hay &amp; Grain

~

Cil Great Moments from

·

'

Nova The best segments
from the last 14 seasons of
the science series Nova are
featured . 12 hrs.)

® 1D CW Wizard A robot

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Uncondldonal Nfetime guarentH. local references furnished.
Fru estim.tes . Call collect
1·614· 237-0488. dey or night.
Rogers Basement
W•terproofing.

responsible for 1he dee1h of
a scientist. 160 min.)
l1lJ Lawrence W1lk: Talevi·
sion'a Music Man 190 min.)
@ Runaway with the Rich
and Famous 12 hrs.)
8:05 ([) MOVIE: 'The Birds"
8:30 IICIJ@ Family Ties iCC)

EEK &amp; ~EEK

•

AlelC begins questioning his
own existence after the accidental deat~ of a close

friend . 160 min.lln Stereo
9:00 (]) 700 Club
(!) NCAA Toumament Tonight
(]) 0 (]) Colby* iCC) Ja-

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repK. periL end supplift, PI&lt;*
up tnd dtlivery, Davis Vacuum
Cl11ner . on' )Jell mile up
Geol'f .. Creek ltd. Call 614·

son brings a surprise guest
to dinner. Scott leam8 about

448·0294.

All typea carpentBf &amp; concrete
work: lnt•ior, e~~:terior, remo·
dating, painting, roofing, free
Htimlt81. Ctll$14· «6· 8174 .

his real mo1her and Sable
hatches a plan 10 allow Mon·
ice to keep her son. 160
min.)
@ Ill@ Simon &amp; Simon

RON ' S Televitlon Service .
Houaa calla on RCA. Quazar.
GE. Spacialing in Zenith. Call

A.J.' s former fiancee is
found in Me)(ico, drugged
and suffering from amnesia.

O.Kalb • Klnworthy Sold
Com. W L 312 alfalfa, Phone
304-6715· 11508 afltr 7 p.m.

f r illl ~ PIIrl.illllll
Autos for Sale

Clo1n. Call 814-216·6122.
1114 Ch..., Chw«U~. 2 dr.. 4

1pd.• AM, wlfa rima. Cath price
•2419. John't Auto Sal•.
Bulevltlt Rd.. GltNpotia.

Sttrka Tree and Lawn Service.
Hedgn, ct"lrub• . bushes
trimmed, landscaping, stump
end leal removal. 304-676-

Plumbing
8o Heating

Coli 114·841·2013.

Cor. Founh 1nd Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614· 448-liBB or 614·
448 -4477

1978 C30 Chevy ton truck.
42,400 actual mil• whh rn•
chonlco bid. 4 •Plod. 360

85

General H

11n MOtlll Carlo 1 owo•fll'ld
c-Ion utuna noo.oo. Ph.
114-448·4724 oltor 8pm.

RJ~TTO.

COLO. ..

Sherlock

YOIIIdl *1.000.00 Ph. 814311·1910.
1177 Ford Cuatomlzect Van,

son from schooL he learns

1ha1 the German maa1er is
also miss ing . (60 min .)
10:00 II CD @ LA. Law Kuzak 's
client mysteriously refuses a

large settlement while St·

e ..., ... - .....

fuentes a1tampts to w in a

dog-biting case. (60 min.)
IR) In St6roo.
()) II ill 20/20 (CC) (60

BARNEY

min.J

fll CD Odd Couple
IN

TIMJDERA110t-J
CANt DO
IHI\T

?

oa.111.00 Ph. 814-44&amp;-7441
0&lt;814-.... 8421

Limntont, lind and gr•vel
deli\lertd, phone 304 · 67&amp; .

Motorcycles

ITwol 1118 4 wh-.. llko
now. (Ooo) 300 Kow .. 02300.
IOMI 230 •••·· nooo. 84-

Mowrev'• Upholstering serving
trl count yarn 22 yeafl. The bett
In fumlture uphollttring. Call
304·675 · 41154 for hee
..tlmatt1.
·

t-------....,.--74

na.Mn

new Upflo•terad.

ICC) K6ren 1ries to be
fr iendly wi1h her new neigh·
bor and Ben islired by Greg.
160 min.)
@News
t 0:30 (]) Bill Cotby Show
eCDINN News
l1lJ Louis Auktyur·1 1987
lnvntmont Gu"'- A look

t 0:36 ([) MOVIE: 'Po~ho'
1t:OO BCDIIJD(])®a(l)IGII
Ne~s .
(]) Hardcastle and McCor• mick
eCDM*A'S'H
Ill Mechlnl..i Unlversa
@ Honttmoonere
1t :30 8 CD flll Tonl9h1 Show
Tonigh1" 1 gu1111 oro Donny
DeVito ond 4-year-old spell·
lng whiz Rohan Varevade·
kor . (60 min.) In Sllfeo.
CD 8porttCIIl WKAP in ~lnclnnMI
tl)Tul

Hou•e coal. llmestona o~nd
QriYet Dtlivtt'ed 1 ton e~d up.
Jim Lanitr, 304-875-1247 or
l:-:17_6_·7_3~97.___·_ _ _

City, Oh. 814-268-1470. Eve.
814·446·3438. Open d1lly 9 to
4:30. Sot. 9:30 to 1:30. Old &amp;

MacNeil-Lehrer

Newahour ·
@ 18 lUI Knoll Landing

payer and Investor can max-~""
im lze finances under the
new tax law. IflO min.)

ru1onable ratea. immediate
2.000 gallon delivery , elllern 1,
pools. well, etc . call 30•·676-

R • M Cu1tom Couchn end
Reupholstery, St . Rt. 7, Crown

())

at ways the average tax-

Jam11 Boyt Water Service. Also

Upholstery

iCC) ·

1he abduc1ion of a duke "s

Dillard Water Ser~ice: Poolt,
Si1terns. Wtll1. Delivery Any·
time. Call 814- 448· 7404.

87

Holmoa

When Holmes investigates

2819.
1873 Ford 1 Ton Van. New tlrH,
Prlkll - Trantmlulon com ·
pl.,.ty ..atult. Good running

College Basketball:
198 7 NCAA Tournament

l1lJ Myatery: The Return of

1119 ChiiVI' pldwp. block. pool• filled . Call 814 -258-1141
01.100.00. 1884 Kowoukl, or 614· 441·1 175 or 614-446·
KOX2oo. Nlo now. 01. 150.00. 7811 .
Coii304·878·7B89.
Watterson · • Wattr Hauling,
Vane &amp; 4 W.O.

Stereo.
(!)

Firs1 Round (2 hrs .t live.

COAT.

114· 843· 5340.

U.780.00 I'll. 814-448·8031. '

·
- - - - P h. 114·211·
1!14 momlnge or luftdtYt.

5LJPF05ED
llJ F-EEL THE

I"
Bl;llng

1HO C.dNioc 4-Dr. Sod1n.
Cl.-, mutt ... to appredltt.

H._.

I PROaABLY

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

FOf Rent : EHioi.,.C¥ tletplng
rooms. Call 304· 773-6811 ,

1982 Yolk:::'::"" Sclrocco
mt111,
oondltlon but

BECAUeE THEY
GROW AN E:XTRATl11CK WINTER

HOW

1113.

1113 Full Bile Ford Bronco,
10,000 eotual 'mil•. EJtCellent.
condition . XLT Package

w"*'· C•lll14-448·7380.

DOCi6 AREN'T

898·3802

Ford 1 Ton. 4-apeed. V·8. Ph.

motO&lt;. Pllonl514-1149·2493or

160 min.)
.
9:30 ,II CD ® , Cheers ICC) In

Aottry or table tool tk"illing.
Moat wells completed same d•vPump alii• and service. 304-

Piolc-Up, good contNdon. 1877

btd. 3 tpd., V&amp;. Runt good, 1
IlUI• rough. Flnt 011100. buyo H.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
~--------~----

AINGLES 'S SERVICE, expe·
rlenclld carpenter, eltc1rlcien,
ma1on, painter. roofing [includIng hot tlr application) 304878-2088 or 678· 7147.

B2

11M Chwy, thrH querter tori
pickup, 380 engine, IUtO, PS,
Pl. 33.000 mil•. exc oond.
11.000.00. 304·812·2138.

a.

614·446·

Fetty Tree Trlminlng, ltump
removal. Call 304-675-1331 .

198B Chevl'y Pick·U'/. no rust,

1982 F1 00 Ford plcloup long

66 Seed &amp; Fertlllzar

00

2842 or 678-2903.

Mlald hay for 1111. Round bel•.

Coll814-246·6117.

304-576-2398
2464.

1974 Chtvroltt, .Oaod oond.
C.M 814·441·1122.

.

160 min .)

Home
Improvements

8874.

114·448·8201 or 814·441·

Wheel of Fortune
GliUI @Jeopardy
@ Jeffersons
7:35 ® Honeymooners
8:00 D CII@ Cosby Show iCC)
AI Cliff"s 501h birthday
party, Cla ir becomes upset
@

created by Simon may be

4230.

178-2720.

fort

0 ())Judge

f!l CD MOVIE: 'The For-

IV•

ForMieorttldt.1977LTDFord
Station Wagon. 1980 Chwy
Impel•. Call after 5 :00. 304·

f!l CD Too Close for Com·

Cil 0 ()) Our World iCC)

Services
B1

'80 AMC Spirit, 8 t;:¥1. 4 apeed,
air, •1 .000.00 or belt offfH'.

·

mula '

1978 Olds Cuttus Brougham. 2
door. 280 V-8, 7&amp;,000 miles,

02.2110.00. 304•876·4853

Game

(]) Daktari

1981 O!d• Omega, 4 door, auto
trantmllliOI'I, PS, PB, air, AM ·
FM casMttt, new tirH, 304·

175·3841 .

@ Barney Miller
7:06 ([)Sanford and Son
7:30 D CII ()) New Newlywed

when he invites a friend who
divorced a friend of hers
years earlier. In Stereo.

. '·

0283.

goodcondHion niiOPh . 114- ~_3;_1_9.:.0·------448·1338 or 114·448·1628. 1·

814·446-3844.

T~UNfC .

1972 Cobra camper. fully
equipp&amp;d. 27ft. Call 614-446·

Room• lor rent, day. wttk.
month. Gellla Hottl. Call 814448-971 &amp;. Rent aalow ast120
month.

Office Spece for Atnt. hetlltn•
lor Attorney•. Accountant. ttc.
Close to Cowrt Houet. Call
Wlteman Rt.! htatt A9111cy,

IN iHE:

ALLEY OOP

1171 lu0ok A•gol. P8. Pl. Tlh
wh..,, elr. coM., cruiM. lntmtd.

46 Space for Rent

COUf&lt;.SE J: HAVE=
A WINP.SHIE"L-l&gt; WIPER.
li~ SOMEWHeRE

2989 or 576-2372.

1984 Ford Etcorl wegon: Pl.
auto.. Pl. air, UIIO. Extfll'

Furnished Rooms

--- Of

5:00.

Camper trailer compl&amp;tely
equipped. , ac:relandwithltptic
tank and water well. 304 · 676·

~.:,'

y A N I TE

Several elderly people wert
remembering the 'good ol' days'.
"Now," mumbled one, "If 1
woman slls at a spinning wh"l
she's probably in a - -."

I

~~~-y~-.,.~..;.:.TI',...,I,-='-TI--i C)
L-~-.JL..L-.1-.JL.J yov

Complete the chuckle quoted

~Y hlling in the missing words
fr om step No. 3 below.

de ~e l op

f9 PRINT

I

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

I'

J3

t•

I'

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWE~

YESTE!IDAY'$ SCIAM-lElS ANSWJ.IS
Island - Facet - Pouch - Breech - CI-(~ES
. Grandpa gave out lhla advice to all of hi9 family. "Tempt•
11ons, unlike opportunities. will always give ""U second
CHANCES."
'"
.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

l-IE SAID TO 6ET OFF
THE 60LF COIJR5E, AND
SlOP MARC~IN6 THROU6H
ALL THE SAND tRAPS ~

AND THE CLU6HOOSE
151./'T FORT ZINDERNEVF!

It's. a good idea to be economical
with your cards, but il"s also important to watch for those times when you
musl play with abandon. throwing
your high cards away.
The lead against three hearts wa s a
low spade. East took the ace. and de·
clarer assumed it was likely that \\'est
would hold the heart king. (Wesl needed some strength to bid vulnerable,
and apparently he did not hold A·K of
clubs or he might ·have led a high club.)
So declarer played low on the ace of
spades. If East continued spades. de.darer would win and play A-Q of
hearts. If West hac the king, maybe he
would not know to switch to clubs. Declarer might then be able to get to
dummy with a heart and throw . two
clubs on the diamond ace and spade
queen . Alas, East played a club at
t•ick two and the. defenders quickly
tO?k three cl~b tr1cks. Still obsessed
With the notion that West held the
heart kmg, South !ned Lo drop that
card by playing out the a~e . No luck.
l)eclarer lailed to credit West w1th
moklng a dangerous overcall. He
should not let that bid cajole him into
the wrong play in trumps. And so at
trick one, when the spade ace comes
up, he should simply unblock the king.
Look whal happens. The defense takes
three club tricks, but now. when West

bill Coveroge of lhe weal
region .NCAA ohampionehip
Hrtt round game is fet.IUred
from .Sail Lake Cily. OT. 12
hro. , 30 min.) Live.
t1J Meanum. P.l.
12:00 Ill lu1'!11 • Allen
CD .Well Sporuloak
()) ABC Newt Nlghlllne
(CC) .

e tl) Riwlllde

•s

.K 9 2

• Q 9 52
+A Q2

• 86 43

+K J 10
SOUTH

+K 5

• AQJ

10 53

tK
+7543

Vulnerable: East-WesL
Dealer: SouLh
Wesl

Nortb

Ea11

+

2'
Pass

2+

1

Pass

I.

Sooth

,,

Pass

Opening lead: +4

plays a diamond , declarer can win the
ace, lhrowing his lone king under It.
He can successfully finesse against
the heart king and then get back to
dummy with the spade queen to take
another heart fin esse. And that will be
nine tricks.
A new book by James Jacoby and his
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, is now
available at bookstores. It is ··Jacoby
on Card Games, " published by Ph1ros
Books.

DOWN
I Except
2 Athlfst
a Apiary
4 Asian river

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Htrt'l howiD worllll:
AXYDLBAAXR
ltLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
llinta. Each day the code letters are different.

.. ...

CRYPTOQUOTE
3-12

GXE.IR

BMUt·

EAST
+A&amp; 3

48 Arab
republic

iCC).
()) Mechlnlcal Unlversa
()I College

WEST
+J9842

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 '1"he - ·
I Sir,
(Patty
in India
McComack
6 Dutch
film)
cheese
8 Gage
I 0 Spanish
best seller
province 7 Refonner ,
II Restrict
Dorothea 13 Expressive 8 Between
14 Banish
8 1,760 yards
YHterday's Anawer
15 Dutch city I 2 Golf gadgeL
18 Misdeed 17 "- De23 Chew the 34 Faucel
18 Sandra Lovely'
.
35 Rumanian
19 Be
19 Sea
25 Ump'ocall ci ty
punished
monster
26 Mature
36 Resonance
(sl.)
In a
27 German 38 Disfigure
Zl Fearless
1001 film
article
39 Before
ones
20 Hitch cock 's 29 VIllain 's
(Lat.)
24 Highway
"Strangers
nemesis 40 Egypt. Rod
28 Oscar
on a - '
31 Wawrfall 42 60 sees.
or Emmy 21 Fodder
44 Chemical
29 Appraise 22
ending
30 Safecracker
31 Linger
32 Hunter
of myth
34 Make lace
37 Scope
38 Lamb's cry
41 Redolence
43 Liz Taylor
film
45 Fright
48 Combine
47 Tooth (Fr.)

AYX

(II •

1-ll-17

~IM.f.. ":td

e

D ([)ABC New&amp; Nlghlllne

PEANUTS

NORTH
• Q 10 7
• 764
t A J 10 7
+9 8 6

By James Jacoby

arifil@ Wheel of Fortune

992-3888.

For Mle: 1979 Oldl Cutlatt
Supreme. 614-992-3739.

73

45

Newshour

FRANK AND ERNEST'

1977 Pontiec Gran Prix for
partl. Garden tiller. Call 614·

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

.

I.

Toss kings away
in heads-up play

(!)MOVIE: "The Incredible
Journey' Part 2.
@ News
l1lJ
MecNeil ·Lehrer

446·8201 or 614·U6·81 13

Large round bal•ol h.,-, 110.00
each. Wil deliv• Call814-441·
1052 1her Spm.

71

0 ()) People's Court

814-247·3281 .

1983 Austin -Healy Sprite
Sponster. Aunt. needs work
boot offor Ph. 614·446·1639.

I

I. • I.

m CD M·A·s·H

U18d auto parts . Chevy, Ford
end Chry1ler PfOducts. Pdhone

876-6892.

--r.A.:....:;R,...:B:...,::O_X:;--ll
·1

A vi sit witt~ Patti LaBelle 1n
Philadelphia clothing
store she and her husband
own .

Auto part1 fOf tale. Radio. A.C.,
glall, and other parts for 1977
Cordoba. 304-773-6651 .

1978 Ford LTD 2, claan . 1981
Monti Carlo 66.000ml. runs
good. 1970 Chevelle V-8. 4 lpHd. good gondltion Ph. 814·

r

I

th e

Uted GM tranamiuiona. All
internally in1pected &amp; guaranteed. Also Ford &amp; Chrysler Call

Lite '70 Chevy pick up beet
outside good, 860.00. 304-

good condition . 198 1 ·10 4x4

Rd.

Auto Parts

•·•PHd.
01.700.00 Ph. 614·446·4514.

I

· Firsl Round . (2 hrs .t Liv e.
CIJ Entertainment Tonight

8o Accessories

Truck topper 6 ft fibBfglan .
S1 &amp;0.00. 304-676-1974 after

I

Basketball :
1987 NCAA Tournament

11n UncotnContlntnttl.1981

DuroC Bo•n. Bri'd jull like the
bMra wt1 tntlld 11 the Ohio
Testation thet galnad over 2 .1
lbt. per Uy. Aog• Bentlt¥.

&amp;

mick
G) College

614-446-0966.

62 Wanted to Buy

614·258·9314.

614-448-8113

76

1971 Chtvy tmP..t. 4 door.
euto, tiOO or bat off•. c•t
after 2 PM. 304-BB2·2418.

340 International tractor: PS.
live pow&amp;r, live hydrtullet, with
international mowing machine.
New HoMand baler 12460. C•ll

6w. 12 Tandem Trailer. 4a24
Swimming Pool with all tcoes·
sorles. Ph. 814-448 -8201 or

1982 Ford Multang GT 302
4-IPted mike offar, vert' good
condition Ph. 246· 6680 Nights.

614-286-6822

304-878-3073. 6 ~M to 9 PM.

Public Notice. CIOMOUI 1alt on
1986 White 1ewlng mtchin&amp;s.
Equipped to alg 119. monogram,
overcall, mending 81 hemming.
MaktJii button holes, dwns, 1twa
on buttons &amp; more. Th111
mechine• are ntw with a 10 ¥8tr
warrantv. Sug. prlc• f329 .9&amp;
now only 898 ,96. Call 1-814386· 4636 for free delivery.

Jividen Farm Equip. 814-446·
187!5. Special Sale on our new
Kiolltraotorl Up to 13000 off on
VetmMr hay equip! Round·
bal•rs , mowars. mower ·
conditiona. rakes, tadden;, &amp; a
complete !Ina of bela handling 6
feeding ecce~ . , Grlnder-ml11.8rt,
wagont, rotary cuntr~. bled•.
dittl, cultivetort, plowt. sttd·
ert . post driven , wood ·
•Piittarqatn, headg.tes, truck·
racks , lruck -btdt, trelltu,
spraytf'l, fetd·bunkl . livettock·
water•
wh ... hOrtt lawn a
g•den equip. U1ad 'Equip. 7
round· belltl"', some .of theaa
baltr1 raquireeslow ae 38 horae
power. tnctortl Mowing·
machinll. rtktl, teddtrt.
,quare-baltrl, Usad triiM:ton.
diiCI, plowl, tobecco·Ht:Ws,
wagon1, harrow , buthog ,
gravlty·WIIgon, Um•tprttdtrl,
cutldltionlt'
1\ay·binll. Uttd
WhtelhOfat lawn mow•. Lo·
catad 1 mile off 218 on lng .. ls

8642.

lent condHion. 304·273-4211.

Top quality: 3 • 4 yr: old

614·286-6622.

02.896.00. 1982 ChOYY Cll·

Ii

NUCHH

1-r-1;,....;-I...-llT"""""-il

Part 1.

6:35 ® Andy Griffith
7:00 IICIJ PM Magazine
IJ) Hardcastle and McCor -

15 ft Tri-Hull, 70 hp Chrysler
with tilt trailer and accessories,
che11J, after 6 :00 call 304-675·

ation PS. PB,Atri1.496.00Ph.

1984 Corwtta, chercotl and
allver, load11d, 117 ,900. 00.

61 Farm Equipment

814-288-6522.

1984, Dodge Colt Clean no rust

oltor 8:00 clll304·675·6542.

2186.

2010 John Deere dlea.! tractor·
plowt, diK 83960. New Idea
Dvne Bounce mower •496. Late
modal 224T John De•• beler
U 295. Hey wagon t300. Call

C1ll 814-446-8898

New Hollend 477 hay bhader,
Gthl 915 Grindtr ml•er whh 21"
mill Flotltlon tlrtt. Both axctl·

63

Boats and
Motors for Sal a

anlnga or days c1ll 304-676·

Supplil''

&amp; LJvt: slo ck

;::::==:;::==

;3:3;:0:p:m;
;
.

1888 Plymouth Turi1mo
a4,800.00. 1986 El Camino

19158 Chrysler lm'periel good

Ford Tractor with bush hog,
grtder blade, plow•. di1c. cuhi·
vetor • dr1w bar. 82,600.00
Dra{lonwynd Cattery Kennel. Call 614-286-6522
CFA Himalayan. Pertian and
Siamese kitten•. AKC Chow lite Model 180 Maney Fergu·
puppie1. New Chow puppie1. son Trae1or t3,960.00. Number
Call 614-446-3844 after 7PM . 12 Melley Farguton Baler
81, 160.00. MIIMV FtrtUIOn
Groom &amp; Supply shop. Ptlt Hay Raike t400.00. 501 Ford
grooming, all styles, all breed1. Mowing Machin11 t4150.00 Call
Julie Webb. Call 814 · 446· 814-286-8522.

4387.

Autos for Sale

ohopo *850.00 Coli 614-3889669.

Pets for Sale

Bar &amp;: 2 Bar Stoola. 1 pc. of
C1rp11t 12x13 Ph. 814· 4416-

71

75

2783.

Big 2 BR Rultic home built on
your lot . $1 1.995 &amp; up . Call

~

t450.00. 304-676-1229 eher

Model 94 Winche~ter cta11aic
30· 30 1260.00. 20 inch Hom•
lite chain sew 8100.00. Call
304· 773-5303.

3382

8:05 ® Beverly Hillbillies
8:30" D liJ @ NBC News
(!) NCAA Tournament
Tonight
()) 0 ()) ABC News
f!l CD Hogan's Heroes
III Doctor Who
@ GliUI CBS News
l1lJ To Be Announced.
@ WKRP in Cincinnati

~=========:;::;::=========~ -tin
Honda
XL126,
e~~:c cond.,
lot• of
utra
accessories

1860 Oliver tractor: Runs good.
good llre1 &amp; ptlnt. with plowa, 4
row corn pltnter. e3660. Clll

446·8933.

2988.

1088.

614-288·6622.

Used Coppertone Electric Re·
frlgerator 1J1nd Stovt Ph . 614·

1988 Honda 200X. 3 wheeler,
new cond. 81600. Ph. 304-675·

1984 Honda CR 600. axe cond,
low uuge, a860.00: 304-4158-

Prom dresses Gunne Su., pink
and wl'lite aati,n, Red Taffeta
white lace. size 7 . 304· 896·

Sherlock Jones &amp; Proctor
Watson: Case of the Un·
fair Science Fair When
Teddy ts accused of wreck·
ing several science fair en·
tries, Sherlock Bnd Bryan investigate .
@ Facts of Life

0

Tony' s Gun Repairt. hot reblueing. Open 9 :00AM to 7 :00PM .
Call 30,· 676·4631 ,

2 hospital beds complete with
mattrest. 2 hospital bedl witt..
out mattre11e1. Gu cook stove .
304· 773-6873 .

• CD Jefte!Sons

Cil Square One TV !CCI.
l1lJ Real Adventures ol

1973 Sportster. Completty rebuilt. 12600. 614-742-2249.

1983 CR126 Honda, e~tcelt&amp;nt
condition. a7oo.. 304 -468·
1996. Cell after 6 p.m.

TAHAMS

News
(l) Big Valley

2013.

Duncan Phvffe table and chair1.
Loveseat end matching rocker.
All excellent . 814-992-6898.

Good
u18d
baby bed complete.
playpen.
304-876-21524.

6:00 II CIJ ())II (])®J IDCW IW

1983 Honda Ody11ey. Eac:ellent
condition. t760. Call 614-949·

0

Swimming Pools t999 . New
l~ftovar 19B6 modal pool1.
Huge 115a24 toot swim area, 4
fHt detP. lncludtl deck. fence,
filter and warranty. Financing
arranged, inttallatlon evailabte.
Call24 hour•1 ·B00-346-0946.

614·388·9688.

773·5024.

0

I

EVENING

$676. Coll614-992-7268.

0

Rearrange letters bf the
0 tour
scrambled wbrds be·

3/1 ~/87

1983 Kawuaki LTD 750,
11378. 1981 Honda &amp;OOXR.

0

S©~~lA-~t~s·

TIIAT DAILY
runue
- - - - - - ldltod br ClAY a. rOIIAN
low to form four simple words.

246·9629.

Miud hardwood 1hib1. t12 . per
bundle. Contain~ng appro11.. 1 y,
ton• . FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 814 ·992·
6481 .
•

.........

11

The

Television
Viewing

"

One 1986 KLF 186 Bayou
Kawaukl4·wheeler. 12mo. old.
atklng a1 ,400.00. One 1988
125 Honda 4 -wheeler 17mo.
old, esldng 1$50.00. Call 614-

"Pool Tabla a100.00. Hotpoint
Washer &amp; Dryer a100.00. Studio Couch Black Vinyl t76 .00.
Quaur TV 23in.. Odeuy Geme
• Cartridgea 1100.00. Roto
Tiller Bolltl'ls 876 .00 Ph . 614·
446-0946.

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Ovtr
1,000 tire1. llres 12, 13, 14, 115.
16, 16.6 . 8 mil" out Rt . 218.
Call&amp;14·266·6251 .

Two bedroom furnished sptNew
Haven. 304·882· 3267 or 304·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

12a64 Na1hua. 2 BR, large bath.
Mu1t sea &amp; make offer. C1ll

- - -- - - -- --

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

FOOT MEDICAL BUILDING . PT.
CLINIC. 708 VIANO ST. ~T . Efficiency apt . &amp;: trailer na111 to
PLEASANT. FOR DETAILS. Rlo Grande Collage Ph . 614·
CALL305·847-3740.
446·8883 Of 614·448·1323.

Coli 614-U0-0390.

1H6 Skyline. 47a10. t240D.

Mobile homet for rent starting
$176 .00 and up. 614· 446·
0608.

FOR SALF-111 5000 SQUARE

2 bdr .. all utilities paid eacept
elec.. turn. or unfurn,. tee.
depo•it ' required. Conv1111lent
location Ctll 614-446-BSSB or
614-446-4778.

PHONE 614· 446· 7274.

2 bedroom trailer. coupln 1
smell child. locust Rd., Rt. 1.
Point Pleasant, 304-675-1076.

New apartment : completely
turn . Ref. &amp; Oep. 1 or 2 1dult1
onty. Call614· 446-0338.

875-5106.

7462.

121 .500 .00 . 304-675-5477

8200 . p11r month plus utilities
and depo11t. 2 children BIIOWed.
Call 614-667-3487.

1 BR . ground floor apartment .
All utilities paid. Near McOo·
nelda. Caii614-446-702S .

8 rooms, bath and basement. in
Po meroy. Yllu can steal this one.
Must 111tl . Pttone 614 -992 -

Cllmpletelv remodeled two bed·
room hou1e with basement.
60a150 kn , 2312 Mo~dison Ave.
Would mahe exOIIent nartfn
home o r rental property. Alao, a
· new satell ite IYitem .

3 bedrooms in TuppMa Plains .

Commercial buildings for lea~a.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Stores,
office1 . A-One Real E1t1te.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304·

2367.

For said by ownar: 2 1tory houu
in Middleport overloohing parh,
30 yr. guarntaed vinyle 1lding,
W · W carpet, 1 YJ bath, unique
woodwork. 814· 992 -6126 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Olive St ., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood-coal stoves, 8 pc wood LA
suite ·t 399 , bunk bedl 8199
reclinBf'l new &amp; used bedroom
•uites. wringer wut"lert. &amp;
shoes. New livingroom ~uitea
1199-$599. lamps. Call 814448-3,69 .

OhiO

Motorcycles

BORN LOSER

7479.

good dependable t Mvl ce. Call
614-367-0234.

31

1nurtdliy~ March 12, 1987
74

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

81dg.·747 Third
Avenue. 3 phasa Power, 12 ft . 2. Quih• done by Lldi• Aida
overttetd door, concrete floor . ' Group. Regular Sil:a· Farmen
Wrtnch Panern t125.00. King
Coli 614·448-2362.
Si,ze· Shadow Bo• In , Mim
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park, Qreen, White and Lavandtr,
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy. *15o.po. Ph. 937·2681 o•
Rental tralleu. CaH ' &amp;14·992· 468-1997.

'

ING CO . reco mmends that

54 Misc. Merchandise

18' ~~:48 ' Stt~

Plastic Cisterns, Septic Tanb,
culvertt ttate appro\l&amp;d &amp; metal
· c ulverts. Ron hant Enterpriset.
Jackson , Oh 614-286· 5930.

21

'

Thursday. March 1 ;.(, ll:ltS/

t'omeroy Mlddlepor1, Ohio

MEJ

XOB .IXRRNTO

T 0

y X .J

TO

AYX

y X J

MEVX

NR

N C IIT .IAEOA

C TJX

AYE O

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V

W E V I'

z ~T

A V X R.

Q E Z X

VE .J O XP N X
Yeoterday'e Ceyptilquote: TiiAT Wlllt:H IS NOT

0000 FO~ TilE SWARM, NEiniER IS IT 0000 FOR
THE JlEE. - MARCUS AURELI US

. '.

..

�•
Page- 12-·· The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. March 12, 1987

. Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.----·Ohio Briefs:-----. Lawmakers study service sub~idy cuts
Church considers Cleveland move
CLEVELAND IUPil ~ The United Church of Christ's
ocatlon committee has discussed the proposal to ,move Its
wadq uarters from New York Cit y to St. Louis or Cleveland, a
move that wou ld create about :lOo jobs.
The headq uarters of the church formed by the merger of two
&gt;fits factions 30 years ago In Clevela nd have been in New Yo rk
r uy since 1963. but church officials are now co nsidering moving
o a centra lly loca ted city with lower cos ts, a chu rch
, pckeswoman said.
The Un ited Church of Chr ist' s locati on commi ttee may make
a slle recommenda tion Saturday, but a fin al dec ision wil l not be
made un ti l the Ge neral Synod meNs in Cleveland,the last week
of June. the spokeswoman.sa id.
The spokeswoman said re location of the headquar-ters wo uld
add 3011 jobs to Clevela nd or St. Louis.

Judge limits market picket Line
YOUNGSTOWN I UP ! 1 - A Trumbull County judge has
limited the number of people who ca n protest outside a new
Giant Eagle supermarket in suburban Youngstown.
i\s many as 50 peo ple, representing a variety of labor unions .
des cended on the store Tuesday to protest the lack of union
represent ation at the Gia nt Eagle store in Li berty.
At the request of store management . Tru mbull County
Common Pleas J udge Robert Nader issued an order limi ting the
num ber of pickets to six and prohibit ing the protes ters from
interfering wit h shoppers.
No prOblems were repor ted Wedn esday morn ing.
The demo nstration Tu esday was orga nized by Loca i88Uo! the
Unit ed F'ood and Commercial Workers union. ''hic h represe nt s
wo rkers who have been striking the nearby Boardm an Giant
Eag le lor the past li ve months.
The Gian t Eagle stores arc operated by the Retai l Mat·kets
Co. Labor contrac ts at 12 ot her RM C-ow ned stores ex pi re nex t
month .

C

II

Ohio Turnpik e usage increases
BER F.A t UP I I - Some 1.2 millio n vehi cles used the Ohio
Tu rn pike in February, a n increase of 12 percent fro m 1.1 mi ll ion
ve hicles in Februa ry 1 9H6.~he Tu rnpike Commiss ion reported
Wed ncsda~' ·

About 71 percent of the vehicles using the nort hern Ohio
highw"y las t month W!'re passenger cars, compared with 69
P&lt;'ITPnt in February 1986.
Tho Tu rnpi ke Commis?ion co llected $4 .9 million in tolls, up
from $1 .7 million du ring the same pN iod in 1986.
An addi tional $900,000 was collected through service station
and restaurant revenue, and ot her sources.

,

·

Infant
inherits

sumers, insurers , hea lth car e
provic:fcrs and employers purchasing coverage, would study
inpatient services and coverage
llmitatlons, among other things.
It wpuld Issue · an Interim
report to the General Assembly
by October and a final report by
Dec. 31.
TheJiouse will now take up the
resolution.
The House adopted and sent to
the Senate bills:
- Making reciprocal agreements with other states regarding par king spaces reserved fo~
the handicapped.
..
- Designating the bridge carrying Ohio 209 over Wills Creek In
' Guernsey County as "Veterans
Memorial Bridge" and the ·
bridge taking Ohio 541 over the
,Tu scarawas, Muskingum and
Walhonding Rivers In Coshocton
, as "Three Rivers Veterans Mem·,Or!al Bridge."
Both chambers adjourned for
the week.

Pomeroy Area Merchants Association
_ _jMERCHANT MEMBERSHIP S75.00
_ _ NON-MERCHANT MEMBERSHIP SJ5.00
NAME - - - - - - - - -- - - ---'ADDRESS - - - -- - - - - - - - - Mail to or stop at the bank . Thank you.

"GIVE YO UR HEART TO POMEROY"
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE UNDERWAY -The Pomeroy Area
Merchants Association, organized in mld-1984, is conducting a
membership drive. The organization has worked to promote
Pomeroy with style shows, midnight madness sales, sidewalk
sales, cleanup programs, business window displays, arts and
crafts shows on Court Street, the observance ol Christmas In
October, a Christmas season open house and has participated in
Heritage Days. All interested Individuals and business houses are
asked to join the active group by complellng the accompanying
form and sending it with a dues payment to Joan Wolle,
secretary-treasurer, P.O. Box 586, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or by
leaving their payment at the bank. Meetings ol the group are held
on the second Tuesday of each month.
·

CANNON ROYAL FAMILY

MAKE-UP
SALE
•Faie Powder •Lip Stick

TOWEL SALE

AIDS

By ,JEANNE REAI,.L
AKRON lUPl i - An infa nt
di agnosed as having AIDS Is one
of the first Ohio victims kn own to
have inheri ted the disease,
heal th officia ls say.
Officials at Children's Hosp it al
Medical Cente r reported Wed ·
ncsday that a six-month-old girl
has been di ag nosed as having
co ngenital acq uired' immune de·
ficle ncy sy nd ro me. which des·
trays the body's abi lit y to fi ght
in fection.
The disease is spread th rough
body fluids such as saliva, sperm
and bl ood and most oft en Is
transm itted sexuall.v. Homosexuals. hemophiliacs and chronic
dr ug abusers w ho u se un s t crli z~d
sy n nges are co nsidered high
risks to co ntrac t the disease.
Hospital officials said Wednes·
day t h~ in fa nt was In satisfactory
co ndition. Cit y health off icials
said the victi m and her paren ts
wPr~ from nor theas t Ohio but not
Summit Coun ty.
E l ~vc n Summit Counl v res ide nt s. all adu lt s. have been
diag nosed a shav ln g AID S.
Another live adult s have tested
pcsilive for the AIDS anti body,
sa id Don Maso n. an epidemiologis t with the cit y health depart·
me nt. Across the sta te, 46 of BB
counties have reported at least
one ca.~e of AIDS. said Grrl
Rousculp, a health edu ca tor with
the AIDS unit of the state hea lth
depart ment.
Reco rds thro ugh Jan. 22 show
the Cleveland a rea leads the
s tat~ In the num ber or repor ted
cases wi th BB In Cuya hoga
Co un ty. Other counties wllh
large numbers of AIDS cases are
Fran klin . ~; Ham ilt on, 25:
Mo nt gomery, 21; Sta rk, ltJ; Lu ·
cas. 8; and Mahonlng. :i.
Fre~ . anonymous tests that
show whether a person has been
exposed to the AIDS antibody are
avai lable at eight counseling and
tes ting sites across the state.
Mason said mos t people who
hav~ been exposed to the AIDS
antibody will tes t pcsitlve wi th in
three weeks to three months
after the exposure.
Since 198:i, about 9,900 tes ts
have been per formed . but some
people may have been Jes ted
more than once, Rousculp sa id.
So far, nea r ly 1,400 people have ·
tested positive for th e antibody.
Between .10 percen t a nd ;;o
percent of those people are likely
to develop full-blown AIDS, and
about 62 percenf of those vic tims
wi ll di e within fi ve to seven
years. Rousc ul p sa id . Of the 304
reported cases In Ohio, 188
victims already have died.
Only one AIDS victim under 13
years old had been reported in
the January records, which date
back to 1981. That case was not
congenital, Rousculp said. Three
teenagers were among th e 304
cases.

decision late las t year, broadened the sales tax exempt ion fo r
manufact uring materials and
equipment . The new law will
return the exemption to its
former dimensions and establish
a special committee tb stud y the
exemption.
The ~na te adopte&lt;:l a resolution establishin g a 19- member
task force to determine whether
private health care services and
lnsura'nce plans adequately
cover treat ment of acoholism,
drug dependency and mental
health disorders. Sen. Da vid L.
Hobson, R-Sprlng!leld, sa id stu·
dies show only 19 percent of
people diagnosed as mentally ill
are receiving treatment. One
reason, he , said, is Jack of
insurance coverage.
Hobson said employers would
save money If employees were
able to receive treatment fo r
emotional disorders and chemical a buse.
The task fo rce, includin g con-

By 'GRETEL WIKLE
Celes te's proposed budget.
COLU MBUS-(UPI) -A searc h
"I'm looking for $27 million,"
is on for abo ut $27 million lor sad subcommit tee chairman
state social Services subsid ies Ray Miller, D-Columbus.
eli min ated in t-Ile- adm inistraFor 9peners. Miller said about
tio n's biennial budget.
$350.000 could be generated over
The House Fi nance Subcom: the two- year budget per.iod by ·
mi ltee· on human services eliminating the Commission on
wrestled Wednesday with a prob- Spanish Speaking Affairs.
lem created when the state
" I wish they would h av~
im plemented a new fo rmu la for acco mpll s ~ e d so m e thin g .
dis tributing Title XX federal They've had five directors In 10
money for day-ca re and other years, " Miller said . "It 's fru stra ting that something like th at
soc ia l ser v ices.
The resu lt of the new fo rmu la exis ts and they are not doing
was less social services money anything. "
for l"rger counties . Law maker's
The committee also is consld·
replaced some of those funds erlng cutting the $13 million
with $21 mill ion in the 1986-87 appropriatio n for the the Ohio
biennium, but there is no renewal Veteran's Chlldren;s Home in
'
of that money in Gov. Richard F. Xenia .
" We're not suggesting that
ollege president they are not doing a good job,"
Rep. Joan Lawrence, R-Galena ,
ca s for daveslment said. "It's just a school that was
found ed after the Civil War and
OBE RLI N iUPl i - Oberlin probably has outli ved It s
College pres ident S. Frederi ck · usefu !ness."
La wrence sa id there are about
Starr says he will recommend to
the sc hool's trustees that the 200 children who live at the home,
college totally dives t its holdings but only about 70 percent are
in companies doing business in children of veterans. She said
officials of the home have had to
South Africa.
In a lett er to students, staff and recruit children.
fac ult y members Wednesday. · Rep. Robert Jaskulski, DStarr said such a move would Brecksvtlle, wants to add two
meet the demands of the delerlo· prov isions to the budget that deal
ra ti ng situation in the racially with AIDS. Neither would rediv ided cou ntry, and would be a quire an appropriation ..
Ja s kulsk i' s a me ndm ent s
logical extens ion of Oberlin 's
would require the departments of
co mm itment to rac ial equality.
mental
health, developmental
Starr's rec omm end a t io n
disa
bil
ities
and rehabilitation
differs from the school's current
corrections
to evaluate the
and
South African policy which ts to
extent
and
seriousness
of AIDS at
refrai n from inves ting in comand
report
the
their
facilities
panies that epgage in un fair
fi ndings to the Legislature.
labo r prac tices In South Africa.
Meanwhile. the House conOf Oberlin's $2112 million encurred
in Senate amendment s
dowment. $l.1.R millio n is insent
to the governor a bill
and
vested in companies that do
revising
the
definition of manubusiness in South Africa.
Th e college announced las t facturing lo r the purpose of
wee k that Anglican Archbishop co llecting th e state sales ta x.
Financial ex perts have es tiDesmond Tu tu of South Africa
mated
the legis lation could save
will be the featured speaker at
the
sta
te
up to $164 million a year.
Oberlin 's commencement ceThe Ohio Supreme Court. in a
remony May 25.

•uquid Make-up •Eyt Shadow
•Blush
•MaKara
•Foundation
•Lotions
Creme

Thick, absorbent Cannan towels in an array of colors and designs.
15.49 Both Towel.. .... Only 14.37
13.59 Hand Towel.,.., Only 12.87
11,99 Wash Cloth.-... Only 11.57 .

REG . ' 2.66, TO ' 12.96

Sale

$198
\.

NEW SPRIN9

BOYS' KNIT

LlnLE GIRLS

SPRING
SHIRT SALE

TOPS
Knit shirts, T-back tops, bicycle
tops, ond ,blouses.

Hurry in and san on new
Spring stylt1 and colors,

Beautiful spring colors in sizes
12 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X
and 7 Ia 14.
·

Sale indudts all knit shirts.
Sizet I to 18.

Sale Priced

$5 10 to

WRANGLER

SALE- MEN'S

100% cotton
prewashed denim
metro jeans.

KNIT
SHIRTS

RCA Video

REMOtE CONUOL

CASSETTE
RECORDER

RCA 19" DIAGONAL XL·1 Od

COLOR TV

Great new looks for spring!
Hot prints and 1olors.
Men's Sizes S to 4XL
REG. 56.95 TO 522.95

Waist Size 30 to 42
REG. '19.95

Sale Priced

Great ~alue

$5 90

S1Q99

to

$1950

•Infrared Remote

•2 Program /

Sutar Buy

2 Wk. Timer

ONLY$299

$339°0

PRE-SEASON

WOMEN'S

JPI!LUll! EUREKA

UPIIIOHT WITH

UNIFORM

HEAPLIOHT
Lilt 'l iU~

SALE

.

IAI.I

INTRODUCTORY OfFER* S79CJCI

~

SJ2 ....... Sale S9.S9 ,.:;.,
S18 ..... Sale S14.39 ...)i'l
'23 ..... Sale SJ4.49
' $24 ..... Sale S27.19

SALE DATES
FRIDAY, MAR. 13
SATURDAY, MAR. 14
9:30 TO 5:00

ssos

$1360

JEANS
SALE

Two-day Salt prim on our
entirt stock of Crest and
Guild uniforms.
Choost slocks, dress styles,
skirts ond jackots.
Sins 6 to 20 ond 14'1• to
26 11!.

Sale Prim Start
At.Only

Swimsuit
Sale

Ont and two
suns by
S.a Fashions of
California.
Hawaiian prints
and solid colors.
layaways
piO&lt;t

Welcome
Miuy Silts

-.....

Erl'lfotdtltlii!Jp(UIII

la·lll I IIIII
)I ·.U C 511111
:1-tiO $1~ -

fwiPI s-1 $eft CloD-

,..«Je

f'""$11 .... SIIIIt~~..m

~reo INC"''

..

"'",

Sil l)

mill
1 1~111

.... . .
....

it•
•••

ELBERFELDS
POMEIOY

'

6 to 20
Extra Si111
40 to 46

Stll Prl~''
Frtllt

owlg

$2037

LlffiE BOYS'

Spring
Tops
Took tops,
blcydo shirts,
shirts and knit
polo shirts.
Prints, solids
and stripes.
Uttlt

loyl

Sizos
12 to 24 mos.
ond 2to 7.

Stl• Ptlett
$tttl

At

$465

CHAIGI tARO

Ohio Lott••n•

Meigs girls
post victory

Daily Number

•
•
Inovertime
-Page 4

261

PICK-4
8122

-·

11.------=--~~~~~~~~--

•

•

enttne

at y
Vol. 36, No.218
'Copyrighted
.
1987

U

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. March 13, 1987

Mostly cloudy tonight, with
a low near 30. Mostly doudy
Saturday, with a chance ol
rain and highs in th e mid 50s.
The probahllity of precipitation I• 20 percent tonight ulid
40 percent Saturday.
·

2 Sect ions. 14 Pages

26 Cenu.

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

leader urges probe into mine safety

By GEORGE LOBSENZ
.
_WASHINGTON (UPIJ - Mine Safety and
Health Administration officials have acknowledged lax enforcement of safety rules by some of .
the agency's field managers and vowed to
Improve their performance.
However, United Mine Workers President
Richard Trumka says misconduct is so wldespread throughout the agency that only the
appointment of a special prosecutor can ensure a
thorough house-cleaning.
Trumka said the prosecutor was needed to take
action on allegations made by 11 former and
current MSHA Inspectors earlier this week that
agency managers have gone soft on enforcement .
The inspectors said top MSHA officials have
weakened safety rules at the behest of indust ry
while field managers have winked at dangerous
conditions In mines, sometimes overruling safety

violations cited by inspectors. .
"We have to find out how fa r the industry has
gotten Its hooks Into this agency, " Trumka told
the Senate Labor and Hul'!)an Resources Commit ·
tee Thursday. "We need a special prosecutor to ...
bring down the curtain oh this era of nonenforcement."
Commit!'* Chairman Edward Kennedy, DMass., reacted cautiously lo Trumka's call for a
special prosecutor, saying the limited nature of
such a probe would not provide the deep- seated
changes needed In the agency. Instead, he said
MSHA officials had to carry out a long-term
program of Improvements.
In their first response to the allegations, top
MS!lA olflclals acknowledged changes were
needed because enforcement was "not uniform"
among MSHA regional offices .

Alan McMillan, ac ting chief of the age ncy .
conceded some regional manage1·s had nol acted
properly and vowed to Institute a system where
MSHA supervisors would have to explain their
enfo rcement decisions.
He also pledged to review recent reg ulatory
changes that Trumka and some former MSHA
safety experts say have lessened safeguards for
miners.
Kennedy praised McMillan's sta tements. but
said they appeared- to be a "panicked rrsponsc" to
his commit lee's in vestigat ion.
· "What this agency needs is struct ural •·cform,
not paper policies." he sa id . " Men arc dead
becau se this agency Is deficient . More miners will
die unless this agency Is reformed."
As th e first step in such reform. Kennedy sa id hr
would push for leg islation th at would set up an
Independent review board to Investiga te mine

accidents. He co ntended MSHA had a con!llcl of
interes t In Inves tigat ing aceldent s In wh ic h
agency misconduct might be Jdvolved .
In test imony before thecommit tee Wedn esday,
former and curre nt federa l mine Inspectors, mos t
from MSHA off ices overset'lng mines In Kentucky, Wes t Virginia. Tennessee and Virginia,
provi ded a lit any of Incident s In which MSHA
superv isors went easy on law-brea king mine
operators.
The Inspectors sa id their effort s to force mine
operators to correct bl atant sa fety violations
were rcpeatcdly ovrrr ull•d by reg ional MSHA
managers.
When acc ident s occurred. th&lt;• Inspectors said
mine opera tor s often were let off the hook by
MSHA managers who sq uas hed Inves tigations
and refused to seek criminal prosecutio n.

American ·arms negotiators
offer verification measures
WASHINGTON !UPII - The
Reagan administration has proposed strict meas ures for ensu rIng the Soviet Union does not
cheat on a medium-range missile
agreement, Including on-site Inspection of military bases and
factories.
The proposals were J!UI on the
table Thursday at nuclear arms
control talks In Geneva, where
verification Is thought tQ be a
major roadblock to an agreement eliminatin g superpower
medium-range nuclear missiles
from Europe.
State Department spokesman
Charles -Redman announced the
aelielbpment and went Into unusual public detail about the
proposal~, which Include having
U.S. and Soviet- Inspectors at
each side's military bases, factories, storage facilities and other
Installations.
Pentagon hardliners reportedly resisted what they considered "Intrusive" verl!lcatlon
with Soviet Inspectors at U.S.
military Installations.
But even Richard Perle, the
leading voice In that vein who
announced Thursday his plans) o
resign as an assistant defense
secretary, said the United States

has "far more to gain ... than we was unable to say whether that
would lose' '·from mutual on-site would be conducted by personnel
Inspection .
or technical mea ns.
In recent weeks. Soviet offi"I think this Is a non-Issue,"
Perle said. "We're not about to cials have Pl\blicly embraced the
gi ve Sov iet Inspectors blueprints principle o! on-site inspection.
for the Interior design of a Redman noted "public prounce·
ments that appear promising"
proprietary weapons system."
Another administration offi- but said th e Soviets have not
cial agreed , sayin g privately, made "concrete proposals In
"You have to put up with a · Geneva ."
The U.S. propsals were "devecertain amount of Intrusion to
rna ke sure the agreement Is loped In close consulta tion
among NATO allies,'" Redman
kept ."
The U.S. proposal s combine said, five of which would have to
monitoring by satellites, lnfor· accept Sov·let Inspectors at milmation exchange and personnel Itary bases that house U.S.
lnspec,t lon. Included Is a provi- missiles. He said he did not know
sion for "short-no!lce Inspec- whether . legislation . would be
tions" of the other side's needed to permit Soviet Inspections · at private American
facilities.
Inspectors would visit such factories.
Negotiations were revitalized
facilities for an Initial count of
medium-range missiles ~nd then after Soviet leader Mikhail Gorto verify destruction o! missiles bachev announced Feb ..28 he no
and confirm the agreement Is longer was Insisting an agreebeing kept. About 100 inspectors ment be tied to limits on the U.S.
from each side would be In- "Star Wars" anti-missile pro·
volved, said Kenneth Adelman, gram, the Strategic Defense
director of tl]e U.S. Arms Control 1nl!latlve.
Negotiators arc working from
and Disarmament Agency.
The American offer also pro- an agreement In principle by
vides for "permanent monitor- President Reagan and Gorba·
Ing" of "certain critical U.S. and chev at I heir October summit in
Soviet facilities," but Redman Reykjavik, Icel and .

County
awarded

CDBG
funding

ARMS POLJCYMAKER QUITS - A!ISista_nt Secretary . of
Defense Richard Perle announced his resignation at a press
conference in Washington Thursday. Perle, whose tough stance
toward the Soviet Union as the Pentagon's chic! arms control
policy maker has earned him crilicism in some quarter•, will he
leaving his post In the spring. (UPI)

Panel chief- identifies $50 million in budget cuts
COLUM!JUS (UP1i- Preliminary hearings on Gov. Richard
F. Celeste's budget ha ve con·
eluded with the chairman of one
of tht&gt; Ohio House Finance
subcommittees saying his panel
has ldentlfte~ more than $50
million that can be trimmed from
some state agencies.
Majority De.rnocrals - amid
rumors that the budget ma y be
underfunded - gathered behind
Closed doors to hear about those
savings and to set spend,lng
;Priorities. Minority Republicans,
-meanwhile, presented an alter·
:native budgt&gt;t Thursday which Is
leaner by $60 million than Celeste's $22 billion outlay.
Democrats appa rently will be
working to cut some ar-eas to add

to education and other programs.
But Celeste cautioned that II
will be a tight budget that
requires self-discipline. He said
the state will have to follow
through with Medicaid constraints and legislat ion to lm·
prove child support collections,
wh ich saves $60 million.
"There's no question we have
to do some things differently to
realize those savings," he said
addin g that he believes the
proposed budget is balanced.
Re p. F r ed Deering, D·
Monroev ille, subcommitt ee
chairman , said he has submitted
a report on the budget bill
recommendin g restor ation of the
state meat Inspection program
and abou t $24 million cut from

I ransporlat ion .

The execut!,•e bu dget eliminated the state meat Inspection
program, and cut money used to
a!tract federal money for public
tra.nsportatlon.
Republicans said their budget
would direct $280 million more
toward education, restore the
state meat Inspection program
aqd eliminate general reltef for
a61e-bodled recipients und er age
30.
Deering said his subcommitt ee
Identified ':In excess of $50
mlllton" tha t could be "ex·
tracted," Including fund s within
the departments of development
and commerce.
Deering's subcommittee held

its last hear ing Thursday, con·
elud ing testimony from representatives of the Ohio Supreme
Court, the Court of Claims, Ohio
judiciary system and the Office
of Budget and Manage ment.
Those dopartmcnt s tes tified last.
Deerin g said. because th ei r
budgets genera lly were accept a·
ble as pr esented by the
admlnlst ration .
Deering said the subcomm it·
tee Is In the process of presenting
It s recommendations to Fin ance
Committee Chairman William
Hlnlg, D-New Philadelphia.
About $6 mil lion would be
needed to restore the state mea t
Inspection prog ram, according
to Deering.
Under the adm inistration's

pla n, federal mea t inspectors
would take over all meat lnspeC'tion In Ohio. Wh lie the Office of
Budget and Management says
cutting the program would res ull
In a $6 million savin gs over two
years, state meat pac kNs and
Inspectors appealed to th e sub·.
com mittee to restore the proposed cut. •
They said the savings would tx·
lost bccau s~ sta t r- ln spcct~d
slaughler houscs proba bl y would
have to lay off employees due to
the added cost of mootin g f&lt;'dCra l
reg ula! ions.
Deerin g also said the $12
million cut from publtc transpor.
tat lo n gr ants will be at leas t
partially res tored.

3 firefighters die
in warehouse blaze

'
house, and two o)hers
were
. DETROIT iUPI J - Three
!lre!lghters were killed and 11 trapped und ~ r burning rubbl e In
were Injured In an arson blaze one ol the other buildings.
The downtawn area was
that started In an abandoned
choked
with thick, black smoke
warehouie and · spread to two
downtown
tra!flc was
and
other downtown buildings, J"agat least 125
snarled
Thursday
as
lhg for 11 hours before It was
ttrellghters worked 11 hours to
controlled early today.
control
the five-alarm blaze.
Investigators said vagrants
"The fire was very small when
had been living in the warehouse .
they got there, and then It just
which had been fell vacant in the exploded In their laces, " said
downtown area lor Jour years. An
adjacent paper company and Senior Fire Chief Jack Stelzer.
· The blaze started at 3 . p.m.
another abandoned building
Thursday. About ~ workers at
were also destroyed.
the paper company were safely
"What you see here Is. th e evacuated before their structure
result o! an abandonment ol a was engulfed In names.
major city," said Mayor Cole·.
Early today, !lames were still
man A. Young. "Beyond ques- visible at the site where Lts.
tion, It's the worst tragedy ever David Lau , a 31-year veteran,
to befall the Detroit Fire and Paul Schlmeck, a 24-year
Department. "
veteran , and trial firefighter
One of the ltre!lghters killed Larry McDonald Jr., 24, were
· was chased by flames from a k!lled.
fourth-floor window o! the ware-

JNII'EKNO - Delrolt ftreflplen watch u tbe
wall el an abandoned warehouee cruheo to the

vound Tlturllday 'during a live-alarm blaze.
(UP I)

•

The Meigs Count y Commls·
ston ers have received formal
state approval lor this year' s
$91.700 Communit y Development
Block Gra nt lor the county.
All CD BG projects included In
the gra nt proposal we re approved as submitted for total
amount s applied fo r.
Pro jects Included In this yea r's
funding Include Mid dleport Vil lage, $J6.5c&gt;2. for acq uisit ion and
tearing down or lhe Empire
Furniture Buildin g; Pomeroy
Village, S8.000 fo r handica p
ramps on sidewalks; Chester
Fire De pa rtm ent . $8,300 fo r fir e
hydrant s In the Keno area;
Pomeroy Fi re Departm ent.
$10,500 for fi re protection equip·
ment ; Ru tland Fire Depar tment.
$9,500 for a rescue truck;
TuppNs Plai ns EMS, $15, !XXJ for
an addition to the fir e depart ·
ment to house th e squad; Sc ipio
Township Fi re Departm ent .:
$8,000 for fire protection equip·
ment; and Sutton Township,
$8,678 to pave Mile Hill Road.
Adm inistra tion cosis Included
In th e total amount to $9,170.
Next step In th e grant process
Is prepara tion of envi ronmental
assessments by Kim Shields, the
co unt y's director of develop·
ment. Funds may be re leased
once the assessment s have
cleared Ohio Department of
Development rev iew.

Lawsuit
•
IS filed
in death
at jail
A wrongfu I deat h ac t ion tor $4
mill io n ~ a s h&lt;'en lliro In M~lgs
Co ui11 y Common Pleas Court by
Helen Mae MrCicllen. l.angsvlllc. admi nis tra tor of thcrstatr
ol Robert .Jo" Stewa rt, aga inst
Acui'C Ca rr i\mrrlta ln r ., Louis·
ville. Ky.; Acu te Carr Am(•rl&lt;'a
Inc., Hu nlln~ton . W.Va.; nr.
Je nn y Tse n ~ . lluntln gto n.
W.Va.; and V&lt;·trr;tns Mr morla i
Hos pit al. Pom .. roy.
According to th ~ romplain t. on
March 10, 19H~&gt;. Stewarl. thr
decaased, was Involved in a
on!'·ve hlch• aCl'id&lt;•nt In M ~ l gs
Count y. Slewart was' taken to
Veterans Memoria l li ospltal by
the Slate H l gh wa~· Patrol, whrr~
he waR arr r ndrd In the em£&gt;r·
gency room by Dr. T se n ~ . who
allel!edly· misdiag nosed his co n·
dillon. He was rc lrased rrom the
hospital and taken to thr Mri~s
Count y Jail.
Th£&gt; nex t dav . he was tak£'n
back to the hOs.pltal by EMS and
aga in trea tro and allegedly mls ·
dl agnQscd by Tseng and ,rnt
back to th e jail.
Later that day. Stewar t, aged
27, ~led at the lul l.
Plaintiff allrges that Stewur t's
~ C ontinu e d on PaRe 101
'I

I

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