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Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

r---

Tuesday, March 17, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local Briefs:-....., Irish gear up for St. Patrick's revelry

Point-Mason chamber banquet off
The annual Point Pleasant -Mason County Chamber of
Co mmerce dinner schedu led for Thursday, March 26, has been
cancelled. according to Steve Carpenter, chamber president.

Pomeroy league sign-up slated
Pomeroy Youth League will have final sign-up Saturday, at
Elberfelds. from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. $9 registration fee and copy of
birth certifi ca te needed.

Jaycees' plan cage tournament
Meigs Count y Jaycees are sponsoring a double elimination
men's bas ketball tou r nament March 28-29 at Meigs High
School. For further information call Rusty Bookman, evenings,
at 992-5298.

Deadline set for tree packets
Friday is the final day to order tree packets and ground cover
plants fro m the Meigs Soli a nd Water Conservation District.
This yea r the district has available single variety packets of
white pine. Norwa y spruce, red pine and Austrian pine. A
backyard packet con ta ining Colorado blue spruce, Resodles
dogwood. lilac . American burning bush and snowberry Is also
available.
Gro und cover plants ava ilable this year include crown vetch,
pachysa ndra, English ivy and periwinkle.
For more Information or to order packets, slop by the Meigs
SWCD office at 221 W. Second St. on the second floor of the
Farmers Bank building, Pomeroy, or phone 992-6647.

Boosters slate walk-a-thon
Meigs High School Band Boosters are sponsoring a 10 mile
walk-a-than to be held April 4 at the high school. The event, to
g&lt;'t underway at 9 a. m., Is open to the public.
Proceeds from the walk-a-than will go towards the purchase
of new band uniform jackets to replace jackets, which are 11
years old. Thus fa r, $9,000 has been raised lor the jackets; $4,000
more is needed.
Students will be knocking door-to-door lor sponsors. Anyone
else Interested in wa lking for the band should call 992-5185 or
992 - ~158 for a sponsor sheet.
Any help given the band wil l be appreciated .
Rain day lor th e walk Is Aprilll.
Boosters are also collecting aluminum cans and RC bottle
ca ps. Anyone wis hin g to give away these items should call the
phone numbers listed above.

EMS units respond to five calls
Five calls were answered by local units on Monday, the Meigs
Count y E mNgency Medical Services reports.
At 10:07 a.m.. Rutland look Elwin Pratter from Meigs Mine II
to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 10: 3.~ a.m., took Gladys
Reeves from Goose Creek Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 2:21 p.m. took Gary Kovach from Meigs
Mine II to O'Bieness Hospital in Athens; Pomeroy at8:51 p.m.
took Hea ther Baxter from Mechanic Street to VPterans
Memorial and at 8:05 p.m., Middleport took Dennis Hart from
the Super America Station to Vetrra ns Memorial.

Court i.~sues marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been Issued in the Meigs County
Probate Court to Donald Franklin Hendricks, Sr., 53, and Mary
E llen Hendr icks, 50, both of Syracuse; Scott Michael Dillon, 23,
and .Julie Elberfeld, 21, both of Pomeroy, a nd Jerry Michael
Atk ins, 37, and Leslle Janette Sheets, 32, both of Pomeroy.

Divorce actions are filed
Thrw divorces and a foreclos ure action have been filed in the
M&lt;' igs County Common Plea s Court.
The Fa rmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. filed a foreclosure action
agai nst Norbert Patrick Neutzllng Jr. , and Anita S. Neutzling,
Lo ng Bottom, asking lor payment on a $17,086 mortgage.
Gross neglect of dut y and extreme cruelly are the charges In
the three di vorce actions flied by Carolyn S. Young, Middleport,
agai nst Ronald M. Young, Gallipolis; Ellen K. Eblin, Coolville,
against J ohnny E . Eblin, Pomeroy, a nd Debra Gallagher
Huffman, Middleport, against Brady M. Huffman, Middleport.
The plalntlll in the latter case seeks custody of two minor
children . Also In the court an action has been flied for the
d issolutio n of the marriage of Donna M. Clay and Mark A. Clay,
both of Svracuse.

Area deaths
; Dorothy L Wright
'

Doroth y L. Patt erson Wright.
67, 11l'l New St., Po meroy, died
Monda y evening at Veterans
Memoria l Hospital followi ng an
extended illness.
Mrs. Wright was born May I,
1919 In Eldm·ado, Kan., a daugh ter of the late Joseph Pa tterson
a nd the l a t ~ Lucie Blackbu rn
Patt erso n Fortney. She was
employed as a nurse's aide at
Laki n State Hos pll a l until her
· retiremenI In 1982.
· Survivi ng are a niece. Retha

Decker, West Columbia, W.Va .,
who was reared in Mrs. Wright' s
home, and two great nephews,
Brian and Bruce Decker, West
Columbia .
Besides her parents, shl:' was
preceded in death by a stepfather, Forrest Fortney and a
hall-brother, Forrest Fortnl:'y .Jr.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home, with
burial to be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday .

Nearly 3,500 police officers
By PAUL WALSH
have drawn parade duty. The
United Press International
Thousands of men in blue officers have orders to confiscate
nationwide hoped to keep the alcohol and arrest drul)ks If
beer-soaked shenanigans to a necessary. The transit police
minimum during today's cele- . have beefed up patrols on the
bration of St. Patrick's Day, a subway line near the parade
green-tinted tip o' the hat to route.
" We will force them to throw
Ireland's patron saint.
In New York, more than 1 their bottles away," Sgt. Peter
million revelers, many decked in Caso, a transit police spokesgreen garb, were expected to line man, said of rowdies. "And those
Fifth Avenue to see 120,000 who are more feisty will get
marchers.

Airlines agree to reschedule
flights from Newark facility
By FRANK T. CSONGOS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
nation's airlines, trying to cut
delays at airports in Atlanta,
Chicago, Dallas, Philadelphia
and Newark, N.J., say shuffling
flight schedules during rush
hours will not solve the problem
for commuters.
But having agreed inonedayol
talks to rejuggle 16 flights in and
out of Newark, airline executives
and Federal Aviation Administration otf.lclals agreed to hold a
second meeting today on arrival
and departure scheduling.

The · probablllly of preclpltatlon Is near zero through
Wednesday.

WASHINGTON !UPI) -The
government, beginning a nationwide information blitz to combat
the spread of AIDS, wlll recommend that tens of thousands of
Americans who received routine
blood transfusions be tested for
the AIDs virus.
The U.S. Public Health Servic e, in a bulletin expected to be
released Thursday, wlll say
physicians shou ld consider offering AIDS tests to people who had
transfusions from 1978 when the
disease first began appearing to
April 1985 when blood banks
began better screening, NBC
News reported.
It also wlll suggest tests are
more Important for those who
received multiple transfusions
and for sexually active recipients
because if infected they would be
more likely to pass the disease
along.

Winds will be from the east
eas t near 10 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecas~
Thursday through Saturday
A chance of rain in the
southwestern part of the state

Admitted - Gladys Reeves,
Albany ; Ivory Bush, Middleport;
Dennis Hart, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Kenneth Dillon,
Ora Sinclair, Dessie Patterson,
Giace Krider, Ethel Hatlield,
Angela Fields, Don Tillis .

•

M. Roy Schwarz, director of
medical education for the American Medical Association in Chi·
cago said on the NBC "Trday"
progcam that a "very , very
small" percentage of the approxImately 34 mlllion to 36 million
Americans who received blood
transfusions between 1978 and
1985 may find themselves in a
" high-risk" situation - people
who received multiple transfusions and live near New York,
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Schwartz said the odds are 0.06
percent that a person would be
found to have the virus. "But I
think If you're a person wh.o had
multiple transfusions, those
numbers don't mean anything.
You ought to know if you are at
risk.''

Estimates of those who received the transfusions and may
have the AIDS virus range from
12,000 to 20,000 people.

Goodyear continuing talks with unions

said. "Adjusting airline schedules wlll not solve thee delay
problem by Itself for lhe simple
reason that airline schedules are
not the major cause of delays.
" To the extent that the government has failed to recognize and
keep pace wlih the growth of air
travel over the years, we ... likely
will continue to experience delays," said Bolger, whose group
represents major domestic
airlines.
Much of the rescheduling focus
is on Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, the world's busiest, and Atlanta's Hartsfield
International Airport, the huge
facility for many of the largest
carriers such as Easlern, Della
and United.
Delays at airports In Dallas
and Philadelphia also Were topics of discussion, but Denver and
Boston, originally proposed by
the government to be studied,
were removed from the agenda.
Ed Faberman, the FAA's deputy counsel, said Ihe government
Is " not looking to freeze schedules at any airport 'l"ith the
exception of O'Hare." He noted
O'Hare is a high-density airport
where the specific number of
departures and arrivals already
Is controlled.
Both the government and the
industry agree bad weather
causes many delays - perhaps
as much as 70 percent of them.
But the FAA maintains that aside
from adverse weather, the chief
cause of delays Is that too ·many
airlines are scheduling too many
fitgllts to popular destinations
during the peak hours.

trick's tradition in the coastal
city.
In Chicago's 32nd annual St.
Patrick's Day Parade, more
than 70 floats, 40 bands and 60
marching units have been chosen
to wind through the city's Loop
business district.
Selected to lead the throngs
were parade queen Shiela
McClowry, 25, the daughter of
two Irish Immigrants, and White
House press secretary James
Brady, the grand marshaL
At the St. Patrlrk's Day Pl)rade
in Kansas City, Mo.. three
skydivers bearing Irish and
American flags have been assigned to signal the start of the
two-mile procession that was
expected to draw 200,000
celebrants.
President Reagan's message
to the nation lor St. Patrick's Day
praised the Irish for their contributions to "civilization throughout the world and for America,"
' 'We all recognize the Irish gift
for the spoken and wrltten word,
for courage, for commitment and
for kindness. Irish men and
women have written some of our
history's most memorable pages
In war and in peace."
Reagan admitted he may be
viewing Irish history through
green·colored glasses. "It's no
secret where my heritage lies
and that's among the green glens
and warm hearts of 'the land of
song and story."'

State official
(Continued from Page I 1
ture to change the legal language
of the dpartment's description to
reflect current changes In its
organizational structure and its
administrative needs. This
means that the legislators wlll
have something on paper to work
from when department administrators go to the s tatehouse to ask
for funds or favorable
legislation.
The department wants an
increase of $5.5 million for Its
1988 budget for local management ol community mental
health services.lt wants the light
for the bill appropriating the
money to be bipartisan, because
"we don't need politicking for
something like this," Knisley
·
said.
"It's a tricky thing to do, to try
and please everyone and still
maintain the 'integrlty of lhe
original bill," she added.

Diamond Crystal ResinGorde

Salt Nuggets On Sale

POINT PLEASANT - Goo- plan was about 30 percent comdyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. officials plete when the pickets went up.
are continuing to meet with Phase I, Involving the installarepresenatlves of construction tion of one of three units, was
trades unions· In an effort to targeted for completion in June,
resolve a situation involving he added. Phase II, involving the
Informational picketing at the addition of two more units, is
631 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEIOY, OHIO
Apple Grov(' plant that halted scheduled to be completed in the
construction there two weeks ago third quarter of 1988.
PHONE 992-3191
today, according to plant managerJ .O. Carver.
r-------------------------------~---------------------------------------------------------------Constructlon craftsmen have
been picketing at the polyester
packaging resin plant, where
ACCOUCOMPUTINTINNQQI
'(.;;li===AUTO
construction began last fall on a
~
ELECTRONICS~
MECHANICS
$50 million expansion and modernization project, since March 3.
Doug Blankenship, business
manager and financial secretary
and treasurer of the Tri-State
c:r
Building and Const ruction
z
\IHO : YOU!
Trades Council. said then that
iS
the purpose of the informational
iil
\IH~T :
PROGR~MS TO DEVELOP YOUR SKILLS THROUGH H~NDS -ON TR~INING
picket was to draw attention to
lt
IN ONE OF I~ PROGRAMS
alleged substandard wages and
the use of out -of-stat e workers fo r
the construction.
\/HERE : THE 1\DULT EDUCATION CENTER
Bids for the construction went
Tri-County Vocational School
out from Goodyear's Akron headSt. Rt. 691, off Rt. 33
quarters to both union and
Nelsonville, OH 45764
non-union firms, according to
753- 3511
Carver, who added that plant
management recommended all
\/HEN : SPRING QUARTER BEGINS APRIL I, 1987
contractors make a "sincere
Most classes are held from 3:00 p.m. to 9:30 p .m. (except
effort" to hire local people lor the
Nursing Assistant and Diversified Medical Occupations work. In fact, Carver pointed out.
9:00a .m. - 3:30p .m. &gt;.
All classes meet Mon . through Thurs .
there are some local people on
the construction crews.
IIHY: TODAY' S JOBS REQUIRE SKILLS - ski I Is which you can acquire
Carver said construction of
through our adult vocational programs . Our instruction
Phase I of Goodyear's expansion
emphasizes a hands-on approach to learning with most of your
classroom time spent In lab or actual Job settings , The
programs are nine 'months In length &lt;except Carpentry12 months, Cosmetology - 18 months, and Nursing 1\sslstant IB weeks&gt; .

For Month of March

·Exceliior Salt Works, Inc.

II

~

(['])==•NOUST~

·Skill Is Strength

*
w
u

Financial ald and/or tuition sub~ldy is available from a variety
of sources: Pet) Grant, VA, Guaranteed Student Loan, Single
Parent/Homemaker Grant and J.T.P.A. &lt;COI!mlnity Action 1\genclesl.

8...

Besides developing your job skil ls, our center offers you the ,
oppor tun I ty to brush up on your Job-seeking sk Ills by
developing your resume, thinking through answers to interview
questions and other activities. 1\ddltional ly, you may register
ui th our Placement Coordinator for Job leads In your ski t'l area.

..,w~

Thursday and Friday, with fair
weather elsewhere. A chance of
rain across the state Saturday.
Highs mos tly will be in the 50s
each day, with overnight lows
mostly In the 30s.

Veterans Memorial

The situation at Newark International Airport was lust the first
of many the government wants
commercial carriers to look at,
and alter making ihe changes
Monday the airlines turned attention to more complex schedules
in Chicago.
But William Bolger, president
of the Air Transport Association,
warned the problem of delays
will not be solved until the
Industry gets more airports,
more air traffic controllers and
better government computers.
"Let there be no mistake," he

Government may urge
tests for AIDS virus

6hio, area weather scene
South Central Ohio
Clear tonight, wllh a low near
.'!0. Mostly sunny Wednesday,
wit h highs between 55 and 60.

summonses."
in Savannah, Ga., an estimated 300,000 revelers were
expected tor the city's 163rd St.
Patrick's Day festivaL Up to 600
law enforcement agents have
Instructions to break up ·any
donnybrooks that might erupt.
Festival . organizers anticipate
family oriented activities will
take the emphasis away from the
drunken binge they say has
become an unfortunate St . Pa-

REMEMBER: AT THE ADULT EIJUCI\TION CENTER , II£ CI'IR£ /\BOUT YOU ~ND ·YOUR FUTURE .
Cal I, write or stop in for further information about
our programs .
JOINS
Slmpeon, a Jl'aduate of Melp
High School and the Melp
IIChool of cotunetolou, has
Joined the staff of Hair Happening In Alhens. She ill the
daughter of Pa1l and lfaaet
Simpson of Rose Htll Road,
· Pomeroy.

Trl -Counlr YoeitlON I Sdlaol as not di!ICrialnatr
In regll'd to riCe, creed, color, ut111n41 or\gln, 'IX or haldl~ .
I = = = O : = D [\A)!===MACHINE '
OCCUP,\TIONS . TJ
TRADES

~~

CIJ
'

Ohio Lottery

W.Va. State
loses in NAJA
tournament
- . Page 6

Daily

046

PICK-4
1566

•

at y

Vol.36, No.221
Copyrightod 1987

Numht·r

Partly cloudy tonight, with
a chance of showers and a low
near 40. Mostly cloudy Thurs·
day , with highs ncar 53. The
prohablllty of precipitation is
30 percent tonight and 20
l&gt;&lt;'rcenl again Thursdny .

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 1 8, 1987

6 SectiOn s, 36 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimed ia Inc. Newspaper

Reagan acts to ease concerns over acid rain
By NORMAN D. Si\NDLER
. WASHINGTON (UP!) .:._A Canadian demand
.for action rather than words has pushed President
.Reagan toward an agreement to increase U.S.
spending on efforts to curb acid rain as the price of
a harmonious trip to Ottawa next month.
·Administration o!!lcials said Tuesday Reaga n
is expected to take steps soo n to expand the U.S.
acid rain program and show the nation is on Its
way to meeting a commitment to spend$2.5 billion
on the problem over five year's.
To do that, he may rearrange existing resources
and ask Congress fo r new funds 10 augment a $350
nillllon, five -year "clean coal" program to
develop technology to reduce pollution from
coal-burning factories and power plants - the
source of the problem plaguing Am!'rica's
northern neighbor.
To further placate the Canadians, the admin istration has considered creallng an advisory panel

-possibly wilh Canadian members- to oversee
the program, and, in the words of one official. "to
show we're moving ahead in good faith."
All in all, said one official, "The Ca nad ians
should be pleased. "
Still to be seen, however, is how Canada reacts.
and whether a promise of man· money indeed
translates into new dollars.
The acid rain program has been the subj ect of a
Cabinet-level rev iew as tlw White House ha s
worked to ensure the success of the Ottawa
meeting Aprll &gt;-6. which comes at a lime of
political trouble for Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney.
The conservative Mulroney won offi ce touting
closer ties with the United States and promising
clout with Reagan, but many Canadians think he
has failed to deliver. Whlle the primary aim of a
stronger U.S. commitment on acid rain would be

to meet Ca nadian demands for ac t ion. th e
polltical boost to Mulroney would be a side
benefi t. If not a seconda ry object ivr.
Another aim would be to ease stra in th at has
co mplicated efforts to resolve nagg ing disputes
over tra de. While . not directly li nked. the tw o
issues are entw ined as sourcC' s of tension in

U.S.-Canadian rel ations.
Reagan and Mu lroney ended their March 1!185
"Shamrock Summ it" In Quebec by ordering a
joint study of aci d rain that later reco mmend ed a
$5 billion U.S. commitment - ha lf from the
government, half from industry - over fivp
years.
Since then Ca nada. whi ch blames cross-border
pollution for half of Its own acid rain problem. has
charged foot -dragg ing by the Unit ed States. In
January, VIce President George Bush was sent to
Ottawa for four hours to hear Mulroney berate the
administration on that matter and trade.

In th e pas t, Reagan has questioned the nature
and scope of the acid rai n threat, Insisting furth er
evidence is needed th at factory, power plant and
autmobi le emissions arc the probl em before
money is pum ped into solutions.
But th at posit ion could be dea lt a blow by an
Environment al Protect ion Agen c~ study sugges tIng .100 lak Ps In th e Northeast wil l become acidic
in the nex t 50 years unl ess so mething Is do ne about
Ihe sulfur dioxide a nd othN fu el-based pollu ta nt s
th at combine with moist ure In the at mosphere to
crra lc ac id rain.
EPA spokes man Cht'lstlan Rice ac knowledged
th at the fi nd ings , if co nfl t·med. could "play a
signifi ca nt role In the ac id rain debate" by
es tabl ishin g a trend of progressive damage.
Stress in g th at th e st udy still nl'&lt;'dscarcful rev iew .
however. hcsald, ''To mak e that judgment allhls
time Is prPmalure."

Phaseout
of Lotto ·
planned
by state

Report says budget
is underfinanced
COLUMBUS (UP!)- A report differences were not iikely to be
by the Legislative Budget Office s lgniflcant.
reportedly shows Gov. Ri chard
"It' s the Legislative Budget
Celeste's proposed $22 blllion Office's job to question and make
budget may be unde r linance~ by an estimate they think is appropas much as $325 mlllion.
riate." Shkurti said. " It' s not
The report is to be released unusual at this point to have
today at a legislative hearing,
large differences."
but it was shown Tuesday to
Celeste already has been criticsevera l lawmakers, who said Its ized by several groups over the
prolections were signiflcantly proposed two- year budget, which
d!flerent than those presented by goes into effect July L Especially
Celeste.
vocal has been the education
Senate Finance Committee lobby, since his proposal would
Chairman Stanley Arona!!, R- freeze spending on education for
Cincinnati, said he believed the the first year and increase i1 by 4
.
difference was about $:),25 l)lj) -__p~ill)i$cal Y.l~llJ.Jllll.9 .
lion, a !lgure- other lawmakers
Any revenue shortage would be
indicated was not inaccurate.
troubling to Riffe, who has said
he will push for a 2 percent
"The information I have, and II increase In education spending
isn't something I'd stand on, is for the flrst year of the budget.
that there could be quite a bit of
Riffe lraditionaliy has-split the
difference (with the Celeste difference between the figures
budget)," said House Speaker submitted by the governor and
Vernal Riffe, D-New Boston. "It the Legislative Budget Offlce as
could be a lot mo re than $100 the amount to be reconciled by
million ."
budget cuts or tax increases. If
William Shkurti , Celeste's the difference is $325 million, that
budget director, who had not would mean about $16~ million
seen the LBO figures, said any would have to be made up.

.. ..,,..,.., - Home economics students of Meigs
High School dld well wllen they took part In the
skill events of the regional rally held at the
Lawrence County Joint Vocational School.
Thirteen students who made the trip to the
competition are pictured and include, front, from
left , Lara Hall, Mayrene Thomas, firsl place in
lhe job application and interviewing event; Sonja
Steele, first place In the coping with crisis
category; Carolyn Elam, first place in the state

second row,
left, Kelly Stewart, Mary
,Joanie
Simpson, ·Melinda K•esee, all four members of
the team, which won second place In the team
competition; Melanie Arnold, second place in the
Illustrated talk division; , hack, from left, Destiny
,Jenkins, Yalonda VanCooney and Amy Brothers.
Instructors are Gloria VanReeth, Karen Facemyer and Becky Cotterill.

Group urges renewal of band director's contract
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A delegatlon representing the
Meigs Local Band Boosters and
headed by President Don Mayer
urged the renewal of the contract
of Lori Klinger, band director,
when the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education met
in regular session Tuesday night.
Questioned by Board President
Robert Snowden as to why the
delegation appeared at last
night's meeting in support of
Klinger, members of the boosters said that they had "heard
rumors" to the effect that Klinger's contract would not be
renewed.
The boosters a lso stated that

the band had two directors in two
consecutive years and expressed
the opinion that the every year
change had hurt the band, which
needs a consistency In directorship to grow . Klinger's one-year
contract Is up for renewal this
spring.
The board gave contracts to
principals inCluding Wendy Ha·
lar, one year; Charles Holliday,
John Lisle and John Mora , two
years. It was pointed out that the
one-year contract to Halar is in
accordance wtth the policy of
issuing two one-year contracts
before two-year contracts are
issued.
Named to the substitute
teachers' list for the remainder

of this school year were Kim berly Batey, Kausar N. Ahmod
and Angela Baker. Resignations
accepted Included those of Mark
E. Null, substitute teac her; Rebecca Windon Cotterill as high
school cheerleader advisor; Fenlon Taylor as ass ista nt varsity
football coach.
Given supplemental contract s
lor the current school year were
Laura Proudfoot, assistant high
school track coach; Kimberly
Batey, girls' reserve softball
coach, and Mike Edwards, junior
high track coach.
Several field trips were approved and Include: Rebecca
Triplett lor the Pomeroy Ele·
mentary School Safety Patrol

trip to Washington , D.C., May
7-10; John W. Blaettnar for seven
student s to att end the state
spring leadership conference for
DECA in Columbu s, March 2728; Carol Crow, Becky Cotterill
and Gordon Fisher lor 12 student s to take part In an Ohio
Office ·Educatio n Assoclaqtlon
competition In Columbus on
March 20-21.
The board approved Aprll 21 as
a parent-teacher conference day
to tie in with th e Easter spring
break and authorized a theft
rid er to th e fleet Insurance on
two-way radios used In school
buses at $4 per radio.
It was agreed to ent er into a
contra ct with .Jim Cobb Chev-

Ex-president, players
gather to mourn Hayes
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Woody
Ha yes, like Richard Nixon.
dared to take risks, and by doing
so he achieved the pinnacle of
success and experienced the
agony of bitter defeats, the
fo rmer president said Tuesday .
" He was never sa tisfied with
success, and he was never
discouraged by failure," Nixon
to ld about 1,000 mourners at a
memorial service for the former
Ohio State University football
coach, who died last week at 74.
Nixon, who led the eulogies a t
the First Community Church in
suburban Marble Cliff, said
Hayes could have quit coaching
In 1969 after his teams had won
two national titles and seven Big
Ten championships.
· "But he wanted to go on," said
Nixon. ''Woody knew there were
risks. If you take-no rtsl&lt;s. yo~
will suffer no defeats. But If you
take no risks, you will wln no
victories. Woody was not one who
would play tt sale. He played to
win .~~

,

Nixon had told the nation when .

he was forced to resign in 1974
that he felt daring to try to
accomplish something was better than not lrylng at all.
Church officials estimated that
more than 400 former Ohio State
players, coaches and family
members were on hand to pay
their respects.
Escorting Nixon to his front
row seat was Jeb · Stuart Ma·
gruder, an aide in the Nixon
White House and now assistant
pastor at First Communlty
Church.
·
The simple altar in the stone
and Umber sanctuary held a
single rosebud and a folded
American !lag behind the famous
Hayes black baseball cap with
the scarlet block "0" on the
front. A solo trumpet played
"Amazing Grace."
A larger memo rial service was
planned lor today in Ohio Sta·
dium , where Hayes · achieved
many of his 205 victories as
Buckeye coach and won or'
shared 13 Big Ten titles and two
· national ch·ampionshlps during a
28-year career.

'

r0let for the leasing of an
automobile lor use In the hi gh
sc hool driver's edu cation progra m. The cost wil l be $4 a day
for a minimum of llvc days a
week, with th e dlstrlctto provide
insura nce coverage. The vehicle
will be replaced after 5,000 mlles.
Membership In the Ameri ca n
Arbitration Assoc iation lor 1978·
88 at a cost of $100 was renewed
and Mike Young, president of the
Pomeroy Youth League, wa s
granted use of Meigs Local
ba seball fi elds lor the upcoming
summer ba seball and softball
programs.
Special sessions were set fo r
Interviewi ng football coaching
(Continued on Page 141

COLUMBUS !UP!i - The
Ohio Lottery Comm ission has
decided to phase out the Ohio
Lotto ga me and replace ft wllh a
seco nd Super Lotto draw ing eac h
week.
The last Ohio Lotto drawing
will be held Aprll 18, lottery
commiss ion spokeswoman Anne
Bloomberg said today .
Aft er that date, th e commiss ion will hold two Super Lott o
d raw ings on Wed nesda ys and
Saturdays each week .
Each drawing will fea tu re a
mlnlnum jackpot of $3 million,
with the jackpot Increasing by at
least $3 mlllion if the Rrand prize
is unclaimed in the previous
dra wing.
Bloomberg sa id the Ohio Lotto
game. whi ch had a minimum top
prize of $1 mllllon , is being
phased out because It "no lon,.er
generates th e kind of excitement
that we wa nt for that type or
game."
In addition, the co mmiss ion is
making other changes In the
twice-weekly Super Lotto game.
Players picking live of the s ix
numbers will win $1,000, while
those picking lour of the numbers
will receive from $50 to $75. T,he
exact amount to be paid to
four-of-six winners has not yet
been dec ided, Bloomberg sa id .
The commission also Is ellml·
natlng payouts to players who
pick three of the numbers. Under
the current ~arne, those tickets
are worth $3 ·each.
David Ga ll, lottery marketing
director, sa id lhe$3 payoffs have
not heen popular with players,
a nd about $1 mllllon of $3 mllilon
In outs tandin g $:! winnings Is
expected to ~o unclaimed.
Gail said olllcials have not
decided wh at to do with the las t
Ohio Lotto jackpot fund s II no one
wins. "We will probably roll It
into the SuJ)('r Lotto game, but
whatever we do we will re turn It
to the players In prizes." he said .
Gail said within three to slx
months of the chan ge he expects'
week ly sal es to Increase about40
percent. Sales in Super Lotto now
average $4 .5 million to $5.5
million a week, and those In Ohio
Lotto, between $3.5 million and
$4.5 million .
The PfCK -4 game, which allows players to be t in a parimu tu el pool on a rour-dlgll drawing,
wUl be expanded from lour to six
nights a week. beglnnln[( Saturday, Gall sa id . Qrawtngs will be
Monday 'through Saturday, he
said.

,SI!:~ROIG WOODY - Former Olllo
Gov. James A. Rhodes, rlaht, spoke with Art
Schlichter, Iarmer Ohio Slate quarterbaek,
moments after a memorial service for Woody

The !irs I week in April, technicians wm begin changing playeractivated lottery terminals to
allow a bet in The Number, the
three-digit game wtth drawings
' Monday through Saturday, Gail
said. Thechange, which will take
Hayes at the Ftrot Community Church · In
about three weeks, will all6w a $1
Columbus Tuesday. Huncll'edo of Hayet1' former
be.-tor to dtvld e his bet Into two
OSU players attended tile service. (UPt)
50-cent wagers.

�:Commentary

·Paga-2-The Daily Stmtinel
Potn!iroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Wednaadav. Man:h 18. 1987

Wednesday. March 18, 1987

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern winter athletes .are · honored with banquet Tuesday
0

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

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

~~

fs:m~ ,...,......,___._"""T'".~d. F=t

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A ME MBE R ofThP United Press Int ern ationa l, Inl and Dally Press

Association and the American N!'w spaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF' OPINION arP W('i('()ITh:.' They should be less than 300 words
lnng. All lC' Iters are subjl&gt;c ll o ed lt ing and mu sl bP Signed wl th na mC', address and
tl'IC'p honC' num ber. No W1slg n rd letter!. will be P\'blb.hed. Leners should bf' tn
~ood tast e, addrC'Sslng i fiSUL~. no t rx:rsona ll t i('S .

The rWhite House, revisited __W_t_'ll_ia_m_A_._R_us_h_er
I will be returning, in the weeks
and months ahead, to furth er
aspects of my just-complet ed
trip to sou th e rn Africa . But in my
absence there have been some
signi fican t developments in Wa·
shi nglon that cry out lo r
comment .
The Jong -awa llrd report on the
Tow0r Comm iss ion on 1he co n"

duct of th e Na tional Security
Council in 1he Iran a flair had
much to say !hat was usC'ful
about NSC' procedur es and how to
reform thrm . But it signally
,·dusPd tq assuage the media's
hun ger by lvnr hing President
K&lt;·aga n. /lbout the tx•st the
media cou lei do wIth the report on
!hi s

SCOI'f'

\-\:as

to

TWiSt

commiss ion's ('l'iti cism of

thf'
Rf·~1 -

ga n's fa ilure to monit or th e Iran
operation adequa'tely into an
impressionistic picture of a semi·
senile presiden t blea rily un·
awan• of what was going on his
ow n ad ml~i s tra tio n .
But the Tower Co mmission 's
report did contain shar p cril i·
cis ms of White House Chief of
Staff Donald Regan. for fa iling to
put the options before the presi·
dent and keep them there. These
reasons. plus Regan's unaccountable tn ot to say su icidal) pen·
chant for getting.int o argum ents
wilh Na ncy Reaga n. spelled his
doom. The grand vizier read the
portents, and stepped down.
In rep lacing Rega n with
former Senate m;~jori t y leader

Howard Baker. Reagan opted to
score a short -term ga in at the
price of what may pro ve to be a
long-term Joss. Baker is not only
shrewd but deeply in telligent
twh ic h is not quite the same
thin g), respected by Co ngress
and popular with the media to
boot. because he ha s alwa)•Sbeen
a middle·of·the·road Republican
r ather than a " mo vem ent con:
servat ivr ."

He e:-:c hanged

&lt;.~

negligible c ha nce of wi nning the
1988 presid en ti al nom ina tion fo r
two yea r s of vf'ry cons ider ablP

power in the &lt;'ngi ne room of the
Reagan Whi iP House. and he will
leave his dis tin ctive mark upon

thos&lt;• yea rs.
find that is where the poss ible
long-term loss comes in. Th ere is

The Lighter Side

Close the clothing gap
By DICK WEST
W!ISH INGTON IU Pl i - Wh at's new in the wonderful world of
agricultural research ?

After a ll. as the Smithsonian Institution point s out, tha t Is a subject
that ca n a ffect ·:the clot hf's we wear, the food we eat, the air we
brea the, 1he water wP drink, th P la nd 1hat sustains us and many of 1he
.product s we usc."
A co nfu sed layman might be pardom•d for ask ing. "What else• is
~ t h en''!"

Nei th rr quest ion s hould br hl ilh&lt;' ly dismissed.
Speaking of th e food we cat, the Agricultu re D,·partment report s
·: tha t we ma y be neari ng the time when "geneticists ean
: cus tom-desig n chickens" to, among other things, lay bigger eggs.
Chi ckcns? Yrs, fr iends, not eve n they escape th e long arm of
: gene1ic rPsea rc h.
Until now, alas, only ra ts have handed down viral genes to their
; offspring . But from a la boratory in Michigan co mes word that

Nevertheless. one cannot es·
cape a nagging suspicion that the
Iran co ntroversy broke a year
too soon to serve the Democrats'
ult imale purposes. They cannqt
possibly prolong the whole deal
into 1988, and public attention
will be altogether elsewhere- on
the economy above all - when
the vo ters go to the polls th at
November.

: researcher :-5 have suC'ceeded in inserting in eggs hells a w ea k virus

• tha t has been passed along from one genera tion of chickens to the ·

•

·' next.

·There a lso is good news on tho boll weevil front . Researchers sa.v
are joining forces with co tt on farmers to eradica Ie that notorious
pest. But lhr word from boll wecvi l hislorians is not so encouraging.
Accord ing to anot her press release, the Insect first invaded U.S.
. crops in 1892 by crossing the Rio Gra nde from Mexico.
The Agriculture Department says bOll weevils "first ('I'OSSCd !he·
• river from Mexico near Brownsv ille, Texas, and had infested 85
percent of th e co tton bPI! by 1922."
, My native state has have been catching the blame for a lot of things
• lhC'se days - fa ll ing gasoline prices, under handed payments to
·; college athletes and, now . boll weevils. We Texans should be gettin g
; inured Ia it. Next . someone will be claiming Pandora 's Box was first
·, opened near Sa n Ant onio.
·;· If boll weevils had ent ered th e United States fart her ups tream,
· ncar, say, the Big Bend National Park, we Texa ns could take it belt cr.
Then. we would sh ift thi&gt;· blame to the federal governmen t.
... specifically the park service. and forget it.
; Hea ring that boll weevils fi rst crossed the Rio Grande near
:. Brownsv il le is almos t as bad as lea rning this is the year lor 17-year
·; loc usts to appear agai n.
· Yet. we are assured in a news release prepared by the National
:; Geograp hic Society. a new vis ilation is "unerringly predklable" this
·; spring.
&gt; It says "countl ess mill ions of them wil l emerge from the ground in
:. the Northweas tern qu ar ter of the United States between mid -May
·' and early June."
&gt; · Presumably, the other three quarters. including Brownsville, wi ll
. be spared.
..
· An ent omologis t is quoted as say ing the young loc~sts, which the
:. Geograph ic· refers to as cicadas. " will climb up tree trunks. fence
:· pos ts, weed s lalks and oth er convenient vert!cle objects," incl uding.
-; presumbly, cotton plant s.
· However, hr ass ures us they "don't ea t anything," an d I tilkethat to
· include cott on bolls. So 1he nation should be better off than if the
:. insects emu lai r d we!backs.

~~~~
ffJ1

1hey

,•
•0

: ~ Letter

to the Editor

0 0

Community support i'i prai.sed

-0

.·.·

-: · Thr Rutland VolunteC'r f' irr

machln&lt;' lor th e annual ox r.o:J st.
We would aiso li ke to thank
Lonnie and Wanda Nea l of
Bictwcll lor donal ing lh&lt;&gt;i r timr

..N

A man in harmony____J_a(__,·k_A_
_ n_d_er_s_m_l_&amp;_D_a_le_Va_n_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - American · Muna a! Hussein (Hu ssein's De·
diplomacy has clearly fail ed to sire) . They also div orced, bu t
bring peace to the Middle East have remained fr iend s.
through the judicious upply of
Wife No. 3 was Alia Toukan. a
arms to friendly go vernments. so metim e stewardess a nd the U.
But one American "export" has S.·cd ucated daught er of a promi ·
at least brought inner peace to an nent Jordanian fam ily. Hussein
importa nt Arab ruler , King Hus- has described Alia as hi s fi rst
sein of Jordan.
true love, and she was the first to
Queen Ni:tor, the former Lisa bear the title of queen. Site diPd
Haiaby, Is the Amerlca n·born in a 1977 hel icopter crash, a nd
fourth wife of the 51-year·old Jor- the kin g was inconsolable.
danian monarch. A smile lighting
After her death, Hussein paid
his lace, Hussein gave this suc- little att ention to affair s of state.
cinct view of his 9-year·old marri · In fact, his depression was so ex·
age during a recent Interview treme that th ere was talk of his
with Dale Van Alt a In Amman: " I fath er. who had bee n forced to
am happy. In harmony."
give up th e throne because of in·
Hussein's ma rita l contentment sa nit y.
was a long time coming. When he
It wa s
Lisa Halaby who
was 19, he was married briefl y to bi'Ought him out of his depres a distant
cousin·, Egyptian sion. A bond , blue-eyed , Prince·
Sherifa Dina Abdel Hamid, seven ton-eq uca ted woman of 27, she
yea rs his senior. Alt er their di· was working as a designer for the
vorce, she married a Palestinian Royal J ordanian Airlines. Alia
commando and follower of Yasir tnamcd for Hu ssei n's oldest
Arafat. the Pa lestine Liberation daughter\. She Is th e daughter of
Organizati on leader and frequent Na jeeb Halaby, former head of
enemy of Hussein.
the Federal Aviation Admin·
Hussein 's second wife was a istration and chairma n of Pan
Brit ish officer's daughter, Toni Americ·an World Airways.
Gard iner. whom he renamed

~· Today

0

-

in history

t

Hussein and his future queen
mr t whpn hf'r advice was solic-

ited for an unfinislred guest pa l·
ace, and th ey found th ey had
such common rnthusiasms as
fl ying, fast cars. saili ng and sk i·
ing. Hussein pro posed after 10
wePks. and thriy Wf'rfl m arried in
June 1978. The ceremony was Is·
Ia mie. and she was given a new
name, Queen Noor a l Hussein
1Light of Hu ssein 1.
The queen has described her
transform a ti on from American
to Arabia n as a respo nse to a
" mystical" pull by her father's
Syrian ances try over th e Scand!·
navian heritage of he r mother's
side. She oo nvet·trd to Islam and
bega n stud ying classical Arable.
The king ca lls her curren t co m·
ma nd of the language "very
good."
Attempting to describe his
wife's tr·ansforma ti on , Hussein
said, "She hes n' t cha nged in
terms of a ll the quaJ!IiC'S she a!·
ways possessed." Bul he said she
is "diffe rent in all th at she's try·
lng to do to serve" her adopted
co untry.

Hussein spoke of his idy llic, al·
most ordinary family life. " We
Jove lo spend as much time as we
can with the c hildren , watching
them grow and develop," he
said. They are doing "very, very
well, thank you," and he Is proud
of th em all - "very much so."
He has three children by Queen
Noor and seve n from his earlier
marriages fthe oldest son is two
years older th an the queen.)
"We enj oy the sea, and go to
Aqaba whenever possible," Hus•
sein sa id. And they play lenni~ ;
which his wife taught him. "W
e.
get a Jol of videos 1cassettes$. ~ :
he said, and they "sometime-s
watch movies." The king said he
also reads a lot , from serious
books to light f!cllon- "something to distrac t me."
•The roya l couple also shares
another Interest: ham radio. The
queen's designation Is "Juliet
Yankee One" - a fitting name
for th e transplanted American
who has brought fulllllment to
her roya l Romeo, regardless ol
the occasional strains In their
two countries' relationship.

Where U.S., Israel differ _ _ _Ge___;org:.:.__e_Mc_Go_ve_rn

Israel's birth In 1948, States even considered it . In·
:. Drpartment A u xilia r ~' wou ld li ke
when it was warm ly embraced deed, the first suggestions for
: · to thank all the bus inrss peoplr in
by the Tru man administration. U.S. arms sa les came from the
·· Rutla nd for helping us onrr
until th e present day, the Unit ed Israelis. who told Reagan ofli·
: . agt~in.
and se rvices as an auctioneer.
Slalcs has main tained an unu su· da is this was one way of securing
We apprecia te C\'Pryo nC''s help ally intense i·eiationshlp with this the release of American
:: T hl' do nt~ tions we w&lt;.'rc givrn
Jewish sta te.
-: fo'r our priva l(' auct ion helped us a nd suppot'l.
hos tages.
This "special relationship" is
:; to raisr over $625. Thr• monc.v wi ll
Kfmberly Willford
Aux iliary secretary based in considerable pa rt on the
Israel has an In teres t to ar ms
:· be usrd to pu rchase an irf' crram
Holocaust. in which six million sales In Iran not on ly beca use it Is
.Jews were des troyed at the a lu crati ve business, but beca use
hands of Adolf Hitler. America ns the Israelis wish to use Iran to
have responded with co mpass ion weaken. II not destroy, Iraq- an
for the suffering and vu lnerabll· Ara b state that Israel sees as an
By Unit ed Press International
lt y of the Jews.
enemy .
. . Toda y is Wednesday. March 18. the 77t h day of 1987 with 288 to
Israel shares much of the
Clearly .a n Iranian victory over
·: follow.
American democratic political Iraq !S not In the best In terests of
:· : The moon Is moving toward its las t quarter.
philosophy and a common rell· the Unit ed Stat es. If Iraq were to
:' ; The morning sta rs arc Met·cury, Venus and Saturn . ·
gion with many Americans.
fall before the fanatical forces of
.· • The evening stars arc Mars and ,fuplter.
Beyond this. a large Jewish the Ayatollah Khqmelni,, there
: : Those born on !his date arc under the sign of Pisces. They in clude population in the United States as would be little to stop th em from
;. .flohn C. Ca lhoun, the fi rst U.S. vice president to res ign that offi ce, In well as well-orga nized and well· sweeping across Persian Gulf oil
• ·17R2; Gmver Clevela nd, 24t h president of the United States in 18.17;
funded political action groups states arid taking over more than
Russian composer Nikolai Rimsky·Korsakov in ISH; German have made a strong case for half of the world's oil reserves. I!
. engineer Rudolf Diesel, Inventor of the engine that bears his name, In American support of Israeli that were to happen. the aya tol·
:1858; British Prime Minis ter Neville Chamberlain In 1869;
interests.
lah would be In a position to
:Clairvoya nt and therapist Edgar Cayce in 1877; racecar driver Andy
The United States has reacted squeeze the West and Japan with
'Granat elllln 1923 (age 641: authors George Plimpton In 1927 I age 6111 to these common bonds by one "oil weapon ."
tinct John Updike in 19:12 (age 5.1\: and Michael Reaga n. Pres ident
offering Is rael a major part ollts
While Israel may be willing to
• Reagan 's eldest son, In 1946(age 41).
fo reign ass is tance program . furth er alienate the Arab world,
:
Year after year, Israel has been we obviously cannot. due to our
.: On this date in history:
the largest single reclplent of heavy economic, strategic and
:
In 1922. Mahat ma Ga ndhi was se ntenced to six years In prison lor u.s. economic and military ald. cultural interests In the Arab
In addition, Am erican citizens states.
civil disobedience against the British rulers of India.
:
In 1937. a natural gas explosion ala public sc hool in New London,
have Invested. heavily In Israel!
The divergence of Israeli·
Texas. killed 410 people. most of them children .
bonds and relief efforts.
American interests Is also seen In
,
In 1962, Fra nce an d Algeria signed a cease-lire agreement ending a
Recently, however, events reference to South Africa. The
'.·seven-year civil war and bringing Independence to the North Africa n hav.e reminded us that Israel ahd apartheid system of official
:. country.
the United States someUmes · racism practiced by the South
•:' In 1965, a Soviet cos mon aut beca me the firs t person to take a "walk have conflicting policy goals.
African government Is anathema
: · l n space."
.
II Is clear to vlrt¥aliy every to Americans. For the United
:· . In 1986. candldat &lt;&gt;S of ultraconservative Lyndon LaRouche Jr. , , American that the Reagan ad· States to embrace such a govern·
• scored upsets in Illinois' Democratic primary, winning lieutenant ministration made a disastrous ment not only does violence to
: governor arid secretary of state candidacies over party regulars ' mistake In selling arms to Iran. our own tradition of civil rights, it
' bac ked by gubernatorial hopeful Adlai Stevenson III.
Yet the Tower Commission Re· Is an al!ront to our black citizens
•
port documents t)lat Israel, for and to the entire African
A thought for the day : Grover C l evela n~'s motto as president was,
Its own purposes, was selling continent.
• "Public office Is a public trust."
Israel, on the other hand. has
arms to Iran before the United
0

simply no denying President
Reagan's own personal commit·
ment to conservative principles.
But it will be difficult lor him lo
co ntinue to impose an outspok·
enly conset·vative agenda on a
fractious Democra tic Congress
when his own chief of staff is
privately cool to that agenda and
in a position to argue tha t it would
be counterp roductive to press it .
That was the state of play when
1he pr&lt;&gt;Side nt went before the
nation on television. His enemies
ought to know by now that the
presidenl is never better than
when he is pitching himself out of
a tight corner, and on this
occasion he outdid himself. It Is
temptin g to muse that some
dramatic political "home run" ano lh&lt;•r Grenada. if one could be
found ~ would now restore
almost completely the sense of
mas tery, of initiat ive, of leader·
ship that the Iran controversy so
gravely undermined.
But unless somes uchgalvaniz·
ing event occurs, we are doomed
to eight or nin e months of
debilitating congress ional in·
quir ies int o the lran /Contras
flap. punct uated by occasiona l
mini-sensa ti ons as this or that
hitherto undisclosed detail of the
affair comes to light. Th e media
will treal each of these as the
moral eqivalent of Teapot Dome.
and proclaim a new the end of th e
Reaga n presidency in everything
but name.

r i'Om

mainlained a clos&lt;' relationship
wi th Sout h Aft•ica .. including
sell ing arms to Pretot·ia and
encouraging large Sou th African
Invest ments in Isra el.
Jonathan .Jay Pollard, a U.S.
Navy inlel!igcncc ana lys t who
was ca ught deliver ing a iarf(e
volume of intelligence informa·
tlon to th e Israeli embassy in
Washington. has now bee n sent ·

enced to life Imprisonment. What
has not been so highly publicized
is that Pollard was employed by
high· ra nkin g Israeli officials and
was cooperating with others at
th e Israeli embassy.
This latest episode reminds us
th at while we share common
In terests with Israel, we must not
forget that Israel Is a sovereign
nation with its own agenda.

BY SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Staff Writer
EAST MEIGS - Members of
the boys' and girls' winter sports
teams al Eastern High School
were honored with a colorful
awards ceremony and deliciou s
pot luck dinner here Tuesday
evening at Eastern Hi gh School.
High Sc hool principal Dan
Apllng gave the welcoming address and served as master of
ceremony. while F:as tern Local
superintendent Ri chard R,obert s
gave the Invoca ti on.
.Jill Holter. booster preside nt.
gave a brief message to those
pa re nt s and students in
attendan ce.

Award present ations were in·
itiated by Si!lly Caldwell. junior
high r heerleading advisor, "fol·
lowed by se nior high honors by
Ca rolyn Tripp..Delani Baker and
Missy Caldwell were honored as
senior cheerleaders.
Special Cheerleadlng honors
went to Larissa Long, Most
Ability; Missy Ca laway, Most
Spirit; and Dec Baker, Most
Devotion .
Next sevent h grade bas ketball
awards were presented by Bob
Lang, followed by the eighth
grade awards given by Coach
Ron Hill. Coac h C.D. Mclntvre
then recognized' memi;&gt;crs ol.the
.Jr. High gir ls basketball squad.

Boys' r&lt;&gt;Serve coach Don El·
chlnger next ho.nored members
o( the junior vars ity basketball
squad ' which enjoyed a line
1986-87 season.
Boys' varsity coach Dennis
Eich in ger th e n honored
members of his 1986· 87 varslly
squad, which finished the year at
8-13. Ed Collins; Brent Norton,
and Todd Wilson were honored as
se niors.
Ed Collins was nam ed as Best
defe nsive ·pla yer and Best rc·
bounder; Jeff Caldwell, Most
Assists and Best Free throw
perce ntage; and Brent Norton,
th e Bryce Buckley lltl percent
award.

Girls' mentor Pam Douthill
made presentations to members
of the varsity and reserve girls'
sq uads. Receiving senior recognlllon were Tanya Savoy, Lesa
Rucker, Arlene Ritchie. Patty
Durst, Erica Kessinger. and
Tara Woods.
·
Ton ya Savoy was named Best
defensive player and Best free
throw shooter, whil e Lesa
Rucker was named Most lm·
proved and Bes t Rebo under.
Following Is a list of all those
honor.ed:

,Junior High Chrt•rh•udt• r!!~ - i th Grudt• :
Mlc hdh• i.atUJtht~r)·, Tln;l Omnolly , .' \mJ
Wt•lls, t.:11rrh• G illilan. IUh (Oradt• : Slwrr)·

LaudrrmUI,

Hl,;h !khooiC 'httorh•ad&lt;' rs- ., .V . Squad:

Dt•hhl(! BrookN, Amy Murphy. Oonrm
C'urtl-1. Till' II Mllrrls , l'lllnd~ Wl'lls. Var~ l y
Squad ; Lari ssa l ..o ng, J'k&gt; luniBnkM'. Ml!t~.S )'
fa laway, Lori Rurkt•, Ruth SuUt•t, A ~·

Mnru, .Juynt• Rll l" hlt•. /\my Shrlvt•t!'l,
S p ed !&amp;~ Award!&lt;! Ahllil)', l.arissu
Lonx; Spirit, Mi ssy fuhtWil.l': Ot•vollotl,
Ort' Baker.
Sliitl!'ltlchan s- Vnr!'illy Hoy~ and (Jirb :

.Jodi Sc hlll'kl'l , ,\nn Hul'l!.l••y ,

,Junior

the tournament finals. His goal
was to run Ron Moore and Larry
Bryson out of Ihe game.
"The game plan was prett y
much what we did every game,"
Chipm an sa id . "We w ere really
looking lo brea k, but we want ed
to take it to them. We want pd to
mak e their big guys run and tire
them out. "
As a result Bryson fouled out
with 9: :i5 to go and Moore was
disq ualifi ed with 4:42 to pla y
after scor ing 18 points -10under
his average - lea ving West
Virginia State, 31-4 , lacki ng
depth In the middle.
Because the foul trouble kept
Wes t Virginia State' s key people
on the bench, Washburn was able
to survive a 7-mlnut e drought In
which th e lchabods scored just I
po int. West Virgi nia State cu t a

Kuy .. -

St•' t•nlh (Jradc :

Rod Newsom.,, ,John Hni!Oiflliwr . Bill~·
" 't!ll'i, Phillip \\'ood!O, Brian 1'1 ,ylor. ("hrl.,
H111i. WPS ltultt•r, Tim BI ~M· II. fo~ i~hth

Grlldt•: Mlk t• Wh•·•~'''· ·l lt:-.on llaJ;t ,•r ,
Randy 1\toorf', MIE·kt'l ' Hauf'r , Mall
t"inlaw , t\11run " 'lhwn.
Hl~h SdwoJ Ru.vs - ·luninr \ "un •tl) :

Sa\· n~· . Mlkt• t"rruo.l , Kt•n fnldwd l.
Tom Mtlrrl sst·y, llan Trlplt, ( 'h ad Shw lu.lr .

!&gt;ihuun

C'hri... l..am•t'. " 'adt· Mc· l)ut•t•n . \ 'ar'll!'! Ed

\ ':tr... l1~· fllrl .. - 'fllll,\ :1 S11\' !l~' . IA·~a
H.tu·kt ·r. ,\r\t·rw HI! , lth '. I' a ll .\' llurst .
r\1.-lan!.&gt; 1\lomkin. Tara Wtl tKb , Erln l
K, •..,..,t•n.L: t'r . 1\tomUJ;t'l" - l ~t t'l H:tkt•r'.
~ 1wdoll ''" artb - l~.t · ... t ll; • lt'fl ~t·, 1'nn,v
!'111\' H)": :\ l u-.1 llllltrnH'd, IA'i'»:l ltudu·r:
1\tn... l Hdllmml .... l.t•.., :t ICm·kt•r ouul lk•!o l
Frt 'l' ThrH\.\ . 1'nn.\ ·' Sa\tt.\ .

Murph:.·• .-\m:v Mt~ lz gar.

TAMPA , Fla. I UPI) - Cincinnati Reds fir st ha." """n ilikk
Esasky will ht• out four to six wee ks lwt•a u..-.t' nl a llrokt•n wris t

suffered when hit by a pitch In a dimly Ill stadhnn .
Esa.,ky was hit on the right wrist hy a plh'h lhrown h,v I&gt;oug
Sisk olthr• New York Mo•ts in tht• ninth Inning of a ganw In St.
Petersburg's AI Lang Stadium Monday night.
Shortly hclore Esa.,ky came to hat , a hank of lights in tho•

611-49 defidt to 61·60 with 9:30 to

shot

advantage bac k to ll.

stadium wt•nt out and lh(' horn e plah• an•a was nul

Me ier. th e tournament's mos t
va luable player. sa nk two
baskets and Su mler added
anot her to key an 8·2 run that
gave Washburn a 69-62 lead wl!h
0
.5: 51 t 0 g.
"When there were six or seven
minutes left in the game, 1 could•

Carse, trying to co ntrol his
comment s, did have a complaint .
He pointed out that lor th e second
consecutiv e night , Was hbu rn' s
opponents werr awarded ju st

bright as usual.
"It was a little dark and I w•c• staying In (lite ltattr•r's hox)
longer to so•c tho• hall." said Esasky. "I saw tlw Itildt. hut It ko•pt
coming inside.
"The lighting had an o•fll'l'l. Wlwn a whnh• " '•·linn uf light.,

see
handwriting
...
sa idthe
Wes
t VIrginia on
Stathtee wall
Coach
Craig Ca rse. "We needed to do a
better job, but we were pre·
ve nt ed from pla ying t by the
officia l ing\.1 would have liked to
have seen wha l kind of ga me Ron
Moore would have had had they
let him pla y. He was on a tear."
West Virginia St ate pulled
within 76·72 with 1:21 to go, but
Sumler, the smallest player on
the court at o·foot ·8, hit a short

to pu sh the lrhabods'

Esasky out 4-6 weeks

go.

ain't working."
Severa l Reds pitchers said it is , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
comforting to know Bell Is at
third base swooping up practi·
The Daily Sentinel
call y every ground ball that
comes his way and so me no other
(USPS 145-ltll)
player would snare.
t\ Division of Mulllmedla. In c.
"You are prett y confident
Publishl&gt;d f'V rory afl ('r noon, Monda,v
when someone hit s a ground ball
lhrough Frid ay, 111 Co u rt St., P&lt;J.
over there," pitcher John Franco
mroroy. Ohln. by the Ohio Vall ry Pub·
said. "Someof the playsl'veseen
l!shing Company; Mulllmrd !a, Inc. ,
Pomcrov . Ohio 457ti9, Ph . 992-2156. Se·
him make, I co uldn' t believe."
cond r l.iss postagr paid at Pomrroy ,
"The guy can hit it as hard as
Ohio.
he wa nts towa rd third and il' s
Member : Unlll'd Prrss lniE'rnallonal ,
going to be an out." pitcher Rob
Inland Da lly Press Associ alton a nd t hP
Murphy said. "Anything within
Oh io New ~Pa pf' r Associ at ion . Nat ional
Advrrl Isi ng Repf'(&gt;St'ntat lve, Bran ham
10 feet of him is an out."
NPWspap£"r Sal£'5, 7.13 Thlr.d A ve-nue,
Philadelphia'~ Mike Schmidt
Nt&gt;W York. Npw York 10017
won the National League Gold
POS'ThfAfflR: S(ond addrrs.~ ch an~PS
Glove at third base last year, a
to Thr Dailv Srnllnel. '111 Co urt St.,
cho ice th at ran kled some Reds.
Pomeroy. Oh,lo 45769.

three free throws opportunities .

goes out, it makt•s a diffl'rt..'n&lt;'f'. Befnr••

something to 1Reds' .o•cond haseman) J(on Oes h•r "'"'"t not
going up thrro•. But th('Y (the umpirr•s ) dt•t·ido•d Ihr·y wanto•d to

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THURSDAY, MARCH 19
FROM 9:00 TO 12:00 (Noon)

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At Rio Grande School ot Technology you can
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lt1817by Nf:Af"':

to hut I had ,..,nid

By Carrier or Motor Route

THE STRANGE CASE
OF THE MISSING
CONTRA MONEY

-- --

as

Washburn was :n of 59 Monda y
and Tuesda y while t~ei r Oppo·

Berry's World

\

guin~

ru •arl.~

rin;e;n;•s;w~e~re~6~fo~r~(~i.~~--=~~f~ln~ls~·lit~th~e~.g~··~UI;te;··~";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~

Bell only doubter of his abilities
. TAMP A, Fla . iU PI J - As a
six-time Gold Glove winner,
Reds third basrman Buddy
BPII 's status as one of lh&lt;"
premier fielders in baseba ll is
well esta bl is hed -except in his
' own mind .
Usually. long after other play ·
ers ha ve abandoned spring train ·
ing fi elds for the go lf course or
other loca l attractions, Bell ca n
be found on the field taking ex tra
ground balls or rxtra batting
practice.
"I enjoy doing that a'nd I
continue to work at !I beca use I
want to get be tt er at it ." the 16·
·year vetera n sa id of his pro·
longed workouts. "I want to
continue to play this ga me. !love
the game. and let' s face it , this

Hl~th

Mlkl' NI'WIIllld, 1\tlkt• !iimlth, .lt•ff Ourst ,

Washburn nips West Virginia State for
50th NAJA title; Georgetown loses 79-69
By ,JOHN HENDEL
UPI Sports Writer
KAN SAS CITY, Mo. !UP!) Washburn challenged the heart
of the Virginia Stat e lineup and
raced away with 50th NAJA
tournamen l championship.
Tom Meier scored 22 point s
and Bobby Sumler a dd ed 18
point s and 12 assists Tusday.
night to lift Ihe lchabods to a 79· 77
victory over the Yellow Jacket s
in the NAJA fin als. The vic tory
was th e 22 nd in a row fo r
Washburn. which ended th e year
at 35·4.
In thr consolation ga me. Cen·
tra l Wa shin gton defeated Geo r·
getown, Ky., 79-69 for th ird place
honors.
Was hburn Coac h Rob Chipman
stuck to the fast-brea k strategy
that. carried the Kan sas tea m to

('hap·

Drlg~r.S.

i\n.~tlt•

Andr Pu.. fh•land,

An~ll'

man, Tamm)' Kt•nnt-d)' , Ay Mur a, l.R!&gt;oa

( 'nil ln ... Hrt•nl So rt un, Tudd \\'il~'&gt;nn, ·It'll
C:~ hho,t•ll, B~·u n l&gt;u rst. ,\Ji t•n 1'rlpp , Murk
( ir iHin , Tunt• llt·ndrb., Mlkt• Mllrlln.
Manou:rr - Flo.vll IUdPtumr.
~ '~'&gt; I l)•lt'IIS I\'t'
Spf'da.l t\ Witrd~ l"ht)' t·r ~ Ed t:ollln ...; Must ,\ ssbaM., •Jt•lf
l 'a ltl\.\'1'11: i\1n.'it KdNlund&gt;i. F:d ('olllnN;
Rl's l t "rt•t• 1'1lr o""'· ,jl'ff l" llldwl•ll : Bryer
Bm·kit')" r\wnrd, Urt•nt ~ur tqn .
,
,hmlur lll,;h ( ;1 rb - Suuum t• fluy , 1 o hy
IIIII. SIE' IIh!tnl t•I; llrtlnt•r , 'l'llf:ln,\' (iMrd nf' r ,
T ;th :tl ha l'hlllip ~'&gt;, ~tldw llt· Mllholtrll.
1\lolll t·lt t\thun .... Edna J)rl~ lt·"· .Julh•Rllflt •,
,\mlrt·a l(.u ck hnld .
.lunlor \'ur ... il .\" - ,\m) IIII Jtllr, ~1;ar~·
l'11rkt•r, ,JI•nny Cn ~dt·r .l · . 'J'r\,. ha !'\!Wnt•t•r,
Tt·rPSII l.nmht••·t. t\rHiwr ~ hnt·t .

'

·-

~~·

Daphne DillardSecretarial Science
"I came to Rio Grande
because of the strong
courses they olfflr In word
processing and business and
office ed~ation. And the
scholarship ITIO/l8y I've
received has mede my
educalion very aflordabla."
Prepare tor tne office of the
future at Alas achoot of
secretarial science. Learn
word proeeasing, machine
transcription. electronic
typewriting and cornpulers.

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2ro•54~

�Page- 4- The .Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 18, 1987 ..
•

Wednetday, March 18, 1987

Scherrer hopes this will be his year in majors

•

Scoreboard
NBA results
ft..t.~KF.TIALI. 1\."i~ · .
By l lnlled Pr.&gt;slllnll• rn~alh~nlll

NATIO!I\ ,\L

1-:u~o lf'r n (" nnll•nnt·t•

AqiUltk- Dll'._kl•
M' I.
l'i IK
~ ~
~ .11
'a) tJ
\~ If

\ · lk•~lon
Phlllldlph

M'Mhn«tn
Nt•w York
~I' W Jt'rll)'

l't·t. ( II\
. 7tl -

.;'S-17 11• r
. ~1

ltt .1

r.

.:lt7

- ~~ 2!1

ft•nlnd Dl~ll41on
4~

li:-Ot•troll
x-J\Uanlll

w

.lllll\ -

14 u

.677

h

4:1 ~:.. .fi:r.
:1~ :tl .1!1:1
:n :u .-171
'.!5 11 . :.111~

Mllwa111Ju.
{"hh·....

Indl""•
f'lt•\"t.fnd

~~

Dh,._kt•
M" I. Pt1 . tiR
H ·!:1 lOIIi :n ·!9 ..i4&lt; li' ~

...rmna.~
thh
H1mo;tnn

:u :n ..u:t "

lh•n\'t'r
~n r\ntunl

SAVE UP TO

~

:tK

tt

~~

pitcher who hopes to ca tch on · good outing. The Rr ds will be
wiih the Reds agai n thi s year.
walc hing hi m closely in the final
. The only spr ing tra in ing da1·s of spring training to deter·
Scherr er co uld r es t easy was
m inr ,l ust how rel ia ble he mi ght
1984. when he had a pit ching spot be.
loc ked up with th e Reds. Thi s
Th r bad per formance was last
year Sc herrer is in l he Reds'
wrPk aga inst the T oronto Blur
r amp as a non-roster inv iH•e.
. Jay~
when, in onr inn ing.
So far. Scher r er has had a very
Sc herrer gavr up four run s on
bad per for man ce' and a ve r y

TAMPA, Fla. tUPI)- For Bil l
· Scherrer, It' s ju st a r outine
spring tr ainin g - which ·mean s
he ha s no idea II he's going to
make a m ajor lea gue team.
" Eleven years I've been going
lo spring tra ining and th ey've all
been the sam e - only one &gt;•ear
did I have the team m ade." said
the former Ci ncinnati Reds

.m u

.:lilt JMI ,
Satl"ramnt
~~ 14 .: Ill~ ~~ .
Put"ifh· l)h•io\kt•
x-1, ,\ l..kr.;
~~ 1-1 . '2lt~ Portland
..o ~ .m 11
S.•aUk•
:1-1 3:1 .:wti IM
Uolden !;U
;t~ :1:1 .J!It 1!1
Ptwt'IIIX
2-1 lfl
~'' ·t
Li\fllppr~
II .12 .I'U :1~
x-dl,.•ht•d playulf t-. •rl h.

.:m

·

Low Priced Supermarket

~LA ~kn~.

wi1en Sc herrrr a ll ow('(\ no run s

lt•m s in l h(' pdS ! with r !g hl ·
llandrd hiltf•rs . "I think I prove-d
to P t•l t• jRPds' mana~&lt; ' r PPtC
Ho!'irl that I C'ttn g('l ri~ h t ­
ll ander s out ."

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EOtBINT

a

GROUND CHUCK......Ib. $ 49 3 lbs. or mon

0f'ft\"l'f at Pbllltdt~phla . nl~~;ht
Mll~· autwt• Ill Allantu, nljj;hl

.
'

wa ~

;~ddNIIhr •

Beef

S.•atllt• 111 BII!Ol~n. nl,;hl

NPW

got IQ brlif·, ·r · l hat

lf'fl ,hanc!Pr whQ has .lwd prub-

and ju st two hil s in lhrre i nnings .
" I w i:ls th rowin g mos l l~· fa st balls," sa id Scher r er. " I had
good pop on it. I think ,. ll rn l Ric&lt;·

10::10 p.m.

1ltunld~t,,· '~

" I \'&lt;~

big. big gam&lt;' for rr11 ·."

FRESH LEAN

("lt-vt•IIUid Ill, Nt•w .Jt·r ~'.\' Ill
Ilt•M·t•r 1:1:1, :\:t·~· l "ttrk Ill
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Mllwu•kt•f' 12.1. Roslun Ill
DIIIIUio 11-1. ('hh·IIR:O !MI
fiollk•n st11tt• al Ufalt. nl~~:ht
Portland 1:1-1, L,\ l'llpp•h 1 ~:1
San ,\ntonlo lOll. Sl\t'fllm ..nlo lOA
Wt•dnt'Sdll)' 's fi.unu'!o
Mllwuulu&gt;l' at R~loll. &lt;:at p.m .
,\tllml.ultt l'hlllldt·lphlu. 7; .11 p.m.
f)t•O\"I'f Ill ("I!'H'hllld, 1::\ll p.m.
N1•w ·. lt•rllt')" "' llt•lroil , 7: :1111 p.m .
Huu!4on at Ph&lt;wnb: , 11::111 p.m.

l"luh

and those guy" wt·rr shof·k('d

EASTMAN'S,,, Your Independently Owned

Tut· ~"" '"' Rl·sulh

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE*

fou r hit s. Includin g a pair of
homr runs.
Th e good show ing was this
wrrk ilgai nSI th&lt;' Boston Rrd Sox

:tt1
l'!' ·t
131 1

\\"t·.~lt•rn ( 'unlrrt'ftt·t•
Mldw~t

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,\t llu .\·tun
t "ttrl 1-AII"IIIIlit• li!l, ·lltt " k~lltl ( "t&gt;fth'l" H
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l'hlra,ru 1S 1. 1 \"JI, ·" llwau kt• t• 111
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1-'111. tnl
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\'lillt' UU\,'f I, ~fut• ht••· 'l

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~ . Lu•l" 111 PIII!Wiurllh. 1:!1:i p.nt.
11111·11.~ 1111 1\lrQnlo. 1: :1.~ p.n1.
Nf'lll" ·lt• r~w)' at M'lnnlp~,;. Kl :U p.m.
Ttuu.tlll)' '" lillomt 'ft
MI••'!Otllll. .a 1111111• !dJhl
N\' llll•*'" 1&amp;1 Pl-4rnll , alahl

SEE YOUR DODGE DEALER FOR DETAILS NOW. OiRVSLER MOTORS:
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COOPER

160z.

$ ~~43

BLUE
VALLEY
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!ICOfe!;

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More Addi

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NrM&gt;· \'urll (,\1 . 1 l', ul t ' lurlda at St.
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l'ltlladt•lphl;t ,,._ t\lunl" 'lll otl M" t ~ l
l'_.m H••at ·h, 1-"la
sun Ill•'"" \ "N. Onklund Ml l'ltrH•nb..

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MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE
Diet or Regular

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DODGE RAM 0150 PICKUP

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r\tlalllll VII. Kulllmun· 141 Mlnml
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Tur9111u \h . l'llf..tlurah at l'll!'l"ln H!.-11,

DODGE DAKOTA

Kol\y forms

Cottage
Cheese

King Size

Ht•,.ult,.

flndnnuU t ftt.,.hm lll~l
Ualll!ind ·1, l "allftmaln ·~
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White Bread

Chilled Juice

6ft(

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2001;
LOAF

7:

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MIIACLE WHIP

Salad Dressing
32ol.
lor

$ 59
•

.
LIMIT QUANTITIES •PRICES EFFECTIVE WED ., MAR . 18, 1987 THRU SAT.. MAR . 21, 1987
•USDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED
•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
•NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRO.RS

·~#"#I

....'
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Transactions
"-t•NII

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE
395 So. 31D
992-6421
MIDDLEPOIT

Nrw l 'url (NI .) - Ht•WiioiARi'lll ltOrtrtll&gt;li'r pltc-tltthl T11m ft•rftM 11nd ftfth

•

II

HOUIS: MON.-FII. B TO 6; SAT. B TO 4

ISIK"hlollll&amp;ll In 111M mllftr-lloapc&gt; 1'16ftiJ•

•skrthlll
1'11\IWMIIII.-.o - AIIPM*'f'. rt-r\'f' t'I'A·
tt&gt;r Mllr\·• " 't&gt;hiiH \1&gt;1 lnvlnl t• luh ~
181'lintr• forwutl·uard Dudlil'y

Rn41ey.

..•
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~

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...,..,. - "...,...,d '"'Pfdkl• .,

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hlllilfothllllut•h ll.rvl')" Py111• r .

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• •• I

�Wednesday, March 1.8. 1987

l"age- b- I tie Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 18, 1987

Reeth top coach .

Pullie, Kenney share topAA
honors; Meigs girls honored
By GENE rA DD ES
Ul'l Sports Writ&lt;•r
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPl i
Wellsville' s Vicki Pullie and
..Jackie Kenney of Nor th Lima
South Range hea d up the 1987
United Pre;s International Clas s
1\1\ gtrls all -Ohio basketbal l
tC'am .
Pullil' dJHI 1-{ (·mH.·~' were St:·
lectcd to s llM(' the AA player of
t he year hunor il ff Pr the two
se niors dominated th e balloting
by coac hes . fro m around the
stat!'. combi ning for :n of I he 52
vote s cast.
Ml•igs .J uiiP Miller rf'Ceived
Sp('clal MPnl ion Uni ted Pr·ess
lnrl'l'nationa l All -Ohio. Tea mma w Julie• Mil ler was among
those on th e Honorable Mention
U PI All-Ohio lis!.
Th&lt;' h l&lt;&gt;o t Pullie, a first tea m

stl cr lion l&lt;Js t

~rason .

averaged

20.5 puin l s an d 12.5 rebounds per
gam&lt;· in )palling her Wellsvi lle
team to a 20 -0 regular season and
on in10 th i s Wl'l'k's sta t£:' tourna·
m Pnl .-,r mifina ls.

i\n outstanding athlete•. Pullie,
also wit h a :I.R9 gr ade point
avt--.1e~ge. has won rhc A/\ sta te
l ong jump IIIIP thf' past two
yPar.r;.
" Hrr ma in asset i.&lt; her quicknr&lt;s ann her abilit y to r un the
floor,.. sa id Wel lsv ille Coach
Ran ely You ng. " Recau se of her
s izr. \'.'r ha\'f' to play her a t
CP n1&lt;-r. bu 1 sl1 e bri ngs up the floor
again~! thC' prl' ... S. You name it
and she c;tn do il. She is
fund amentull.v

vrry

iJ

sound

bu skcl bal l plu\w."
Pul liP. a .'{·,Yi..'m· regula r , set a

new sc hool !'(•cord wi th 1.199
poin ts go ing int o th e tour nament

sem ifinals. brea king the old
m ar k held by her cou sin , Pam
Pul l ie. ·
"She definitely is a one in a

lifetime at hlete," sa id Young." !
thou ght · Pam wa s somet hing
special and she was. Then Vi cki
ca m e along and wiped out all her
reco rds.
"She's also the ultimate tea m
player," You ng sa id of Pullle,
who has yet 10 select a co llege
from among Ohio State, Ohio
Universi ty. Stanford . Georgetown. I ndiana and Pi tt. "We've
always preached that Indiv idual
goa ts will be reached if the tea m
is success ful. I guess this honor
proves that out. "
The 5-foot -11 Kenney led Sou lh
Ran ge to an 18·2 regular seaso n,
all hough a broken foot ended her
career afler 17 regular season
games.
Kenney, who already has
signed to aflend Old Dominion,
averaged 33 points and 10 rebounds per game 1hi s season,
hillin g 82 percent of her free
throws and 58.4 perce nt from the
field. Incl uded among the many
school reco rds she holds is most
career points {1,829 ) and sin gle
game scoring 155).
"She' .s just an out standing
at hlete," sa id South Range"
Coach Alett a Roberts. "She has
out standing leapin g abilit y {34·
inch vertical lea p!. shoots a true
j ump shot and has exceptional
speed and quickness. Besides,
she just loves the ga me. "
Kenney, who was on the UP!
Class A fi rs t ream a year ago, is a
4-yea r starter for Roberts.
"From the fir st time I saw her,
I kn ew," sa id Roberts. "She j ust
had that abi lity ."
Despit e Kenney's .13-point average, Robert s, too. stressed her
star' s unselfishness.
"She's probably the mos t unselfis h player we had, .. she said.
"We rode her all year to take

exhibiHon win Tu esdu.v over the

Boston Red Sox.
Truiling .1-2 go ing into the
· ninth. Paul O'Nei ll sta rted the
Reds' rall y wilh a one-out sin gle.
Barry L arki n. ru nn i ng for
O'Neill, stole second and scored
the t.vi ng run on a sin gle by Ron
Oester.

,

Ma x Venable singled Oes tcr to
third. Oester stole second and
Ll oyd McClendon was Intentionally wa lked ro load the bas es.
.Jones followed w ith a gam ew in ning .&lt;Ingle to deep right cent er off John Leis ter .
Boston had taken a 3-2 lea d in
the lop of the ninth on Gl en
Hoffman 's sin gle and Danny
Shaeffer's RBI do"ble.
Ro b Murphy, th e fourth Clncin -

I

Local bowling
.
NITE OWLS !Skyline Lane)
FEBRURAY 21. I!R7

T.EAM
Pt!i.
Wh J.J il'V's UsC'd Cars &amp; Aul o Parts ...... llfJ
Galln'v Hulr Art s .... ..... .... .. .... ..... .. 106

Scar~.:.Pom£1r'O.
V 1 Middlcport ............ IO!'i
Phurmucy Norlh .... ..... ..................... 104

Pt~ y m· Trucking ........ ........ ........ .. .... .. . HH
Jlrl1 Mi nk 's ChPvrolt•I·Oldsmobilf's ..... 102
KurNKud ......................... ..96
. Jf'ffrr~ TrucklnJZ &amp; Excava1 l n~ Co ....... 91

HIGH TEAM SERIES: P31 Hill Ford
1743:
Rod's Wrrckrr S.rvlco 1673:

Woody'!i Rollers 1581.
IND. HIGH SERIES (Men): Ron Smit h
495: Rod Walkrr 469: Te-rry ~lden abel
4fi7.

IND. HIGH SERIES !Women&gt; : Trrrl

Whtlman ~36 : Dt.&gt;bb!r NraS(' -430: Joa n
Banks &lt;1 19.

TEAMHIGH GAME : ParHIIIFord sn:

Woody'~ Rollrrs 574: Pat Hi l l Ford 562.

Duk••Trucklng ........ ..
.......... ...... 91
.l's EX&gt;on .
.. ................... .. !lll

IND. HIGH GAME !Men \: Ron Smllh
179: Rod Walker t77: Ron Smlrh 167.

Km ;1r1.... ... .. ........... .. .... ................... P.CI
qultk ]{Ir k ' s ... ., .................................. 7FI
Hlo Min i Mar l ................................ .. .fi9

Nf'a sc 1fi7: T l'rrl Whitman 162;

!NO Hl t. H C:AMF: : Vk k:o-• Blla nd 1R9;
.JanC'I Duffv tShh'lf'y Sul li vJ n 1M3: I)('bbl£'
Th oma s 178.
JND Hlr.H SEil:lE:S : Df. hbl(' Thomas
4tli , ,Ju n••t Duffy 46R: VIcky Bllund 400.
TEAM HI GH GAME: Pa yn£' Truck in ,ll
f.GR: .Jim Min k's Ch£'vrol£'1 ·01ds mobll£'

~&lt;;~;F.~l~? ~~~~~s t~RlES:

Jim Mink's

Clwvrol l'l Oldsmobl lf' IMJ:J ; Pa yn£' TruC'k·

I n~ tl~rr, : Quick Rick's 17!14 .
MARCH 4, 198'7
Wh a l rv· ~ UsNI Cal'S &amp; Aul D Pa rT s ... ... lUI
Pii\ 111' Tru('l\ lng......... ... .... ......... ... ... .. llO

IND. HIGH GAME IWomf'nl : Dc&gt;bblf'

Banks H\1 .

Joa n

EARLY WEDNESDAY MIXED
MARCH 4, 1987

PtA:
Shammy's Carry·Ou t .... ... ... .... ... .. ........ 62
J . D. Drll llnK ... .. ........... ...............:....... 39

.J .A.R. Co nstructlon .. .. ............ ............. 3S

~~,~~~~~~~~~;c~~go~~.~ .1 ~::::::: : :::::J~

TOnv's Ca rrry Oul

22

TEAM HIGH s £'Ri'ES:" Siia·m·m y~s·:i00s;
TEAM HIGH GAME: Shammy's 722.
IND. HIGH SERIES: Larry Sa}'re 662.
Ray Roash 660: Pat Ca rs n t~uy Smith

Sr&gt;:'II·~ - Pu mPI'Q~' Middlropor1. .......... ... 109

519, [)(&gt;b l Ht'nsley

Gu 111'1 • Hair Al·ts ..
... HM\
Ph;t rrn ,1 cv [': Mth ....... .. :.. .. ..
.. .... Hlfi
Ku l ~ Ku.rl ............... ., .. .. ... ....... ... VW
,Jim Mink'~ Clw v loiPI · Olrl.~ m nhl lr .. ... 1!l&lt;l
,J' o.; Lomn
. · ..... !»!
Oukr Trur ki nc. ........... ... ..... .. ......... .... 97
.JH!t·r~ TruC'k in,e: &amp; F:x&lt;'av&lt;H i n~ C'o ...... !ti
Kmarr .
.. ... ~11
Qui&lt;"k Hi •·k ·, ...
. .... ..... - ... ... Rll

IND. HIC H GAME : Ray Roach 247, Larry
Sayre 242; [)(&gt; bl Henslt&gt;y 183. Belly Smllh·
/ Pa t Ca rson lKl.
MARCH 11. 1987

1

nt .

Sha mmy's Carry-Out .. ........ .. ... ... .. .. .... 68

J.D. Drllllng ....................... .... ........ ... .45
J .A.R. Constructi on .. .. ... .. .. ................. 40
Sayrr's Small En~ln(' Repalr ............... :W
Tony's Carry -OUI .................................:tO

Rt~ ~~~~~~~~~~~: G.~Mi~·=· K:~&lt;·· A·~d~;.~o·n ·2·1~~ M~~~~r~~~~r~:~JEk···;:o·~ y~s·ca;:~~

.I:Jnl'l Duffv

1 ~ 1 : Cla r!t'P KPnm'tlv

1-II CH IND . ~E R I ES: (' lartrc·

HlO.

Wes t Holmes ' 108-game overall winning streak was snapped
In the regional semifinals by
Pullle's Wellsville team .
The 6-foot Morris, a first
Ieamer last .vea r , heads up this
year 's second tea m with her 19
point s per game average.
Joining Morris on the second
squad were seniors Kristen
Risch of Tipp City Tippecanoe,
another state tournam ent participant; and' Kelly Berens of Milton
Union, along with juniors Shelly
Carroll of Martins Ferry and
Stacy Niedbalski of Genoa . Niedbalski averaged 29 point s per
gamC' and Carroll 28.
The thir d team eonsls tedoft wo
seniors. Lau ra Reding of Granville and Diane Butcher of Wes t
Muskingum ; two juniors, Dec
Dec Lawler of Copley and Amy
Cherubini of Utica; and a lone
sophomore, Carol Madsen of
Cinci nnati Reading.
The 6-foot Madsen was the
lea ding scorer on that squad at
22.1.

k('nnC'd y

' TEAM
: ,)'s
xxo ('l
n 684
511;
.lilnl.'lHIGH.
Duff yGA
&lt;194;MEBrr
nda F:Hlck
474.;
Wh;tlC'v 's Usf'd Cars &amp; Auln Pilrls 6&lt;12:
Wh niP'v 's l '~{'{t Cars g. Aulo Pam 6.10.
TF: 1\M IIICH SEH JF.~ : Wh ;Jll'y' s Used,

nati pitcher. wor ked the las t two
innings t o get the win .
CHANDLER, Ariz . I UP! I Glen n Braggs hit a three-run
home ru n and Teddy Higuera
allowed one run over 31-3 innings
Tuesday to help the Milwaukee
Brewers beat the Seatt le Mariners 7-4 in a Cactus League game.
Higuera , making his second
sta rt since ending a 12-day
contract holdou t, pitched three
scoreless Innings befor e yielding
a r un In the fourth when John
Moses walked and Rich Renteria
doubled. Higuera was pulled
after walking Ken Phelps later in
the inning, throwing a IOta( of 52.
pitches in the game. The left hander gave up two hit s. walked
three an d struck out three.
Robin Yount COllected a double

Van Reet h, a long·tlme boys'
coach before taking over the
West Holmes girl s team four'
years ago, led the Knights to 108.
consecu tive wins, Including·
three unbeaten (28·0) state
championship teams before los-.
ing last week to Wellsville In this.
year regional tournament semlfl-:
nals , his first loss as a girls'·
coach.

7

(Honorable Mention)

Fonner President Nixon
pays Woody Hayes tribute

Van Ree th received 23 of the 51,
votes cast by fellow AA coaches :
from around th e slate to win
comfortably over Wellsville' s,
Randy Young, a distant second;
with 8 votes, and Tom Rettig of,
Tipp City Tippecanoe, third with:

COLUMBU S, Ohio (UPI) Former President Richard
Nixon said a fearless attitude
made Woody Hayes a successful

Two other coaches r ecei ved
more than one vote. Ron Logan of'
Pomeroy Meigs and Jim Murray ;
of Springfield Northeastern.

•

~

Kurt liiHO.

TP ttm f1- l1broun1 1)(1a1Prs ...... ....... ...... ~
l - Po mf' l . HP ;~lth Carl' CC' nt. .... 4

FORT MYERS. Fla. !UP! I -

.. e 10 save
"'he
um
·
I
;If/ I (011\e Ill
is NO · &gt; cnoose
-&gt;av anu
tuu ' 01'. gold
~ouT I !rom the
(avonte }\rtCarved

.......

ADVERTISED ITEM PDLICY

: E~cn ol 1hM&amp; adwel1i!Wid he ms is required 10
btl re adily hailable lor salv in vacll Kroger

; Store. e•cert as spe.cilrc111y noted in this ad. II

All tnterested p&amp;l'tloe
wW be given an oppor- .
tunlty to be hee.rd. Fur·
ther tn!ormat!on may be
obtained by contacting
the Comm!aa!on.

'

hUs('man
fi ve un ·
10 c.t 6 1
O\'rr lh C'

C l ~vrland

Indians.
Randv Kut cher added two lUll
as San F'ranrisco beat Clrvo land
for lhf' fourth ti-m r in a~ rnany
ga mes I his spr in g.

ST.

Pf.TF.RSI1URG.

F l;L

1

, we do run out of an adve111!ifld 11om. w~ w~l '-..

-·------··-·

, oHe r you . wour cho•ce . of a comparable •tem,

\-

1

when ava•lable. rellec11ng the same sav.ngs or

a raiiiChttc k whi~;h w~l

&amp;lllitle YOI.I 10 PllrChEr.&gt;t! ....

~i~n~~dJO~~';!. ~~~Y :~;nv~:Odo~11 ~~:'ot~~ ~
' be •ccepted per i1em ()urch asvd.

.

• COPYRIGHT 1987 · THE KROGER
: CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, ·
THROUGH SATURDAY. MARCH ~
'

21 1987 ~ IN POIEIIOYAJIID GALliPOm STORES.

'

.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLO
. TO DEALERS.

ONLY

30
DAYS

UFTI

Start Buildi~
Your IRA Today
.

.

-

'

'

.

You hove unlil Aprl11, 1817, II&gt; -.t yaur IRA, llld
- · ............. , • •. Delwlilf _
...
vour lnOIII\' to f10N IMW. llld ycu'l .-,.., 1111n1
1m~ on your IRA un11 you bpgln wllhlti1M1ng lAndo.
Wont 111 loom IIIOIW! Juot ..... 10 ...
•

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"THE BETTER BANK"
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Second Street

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1

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REGULAR OR UN SALTED

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On the purchase of anew
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:Kroger
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LOCATED ACROSS FROM THE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT COURT STREET ENTRANCE.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OH!O
BY: Nancy L. Wolpe,
Beoret&amp;ry

r r rors b!' thi rd
William :-; int o.
r·un's C' n rou tr
Lcagu0 vi(' l ory

~

1

Jabulo~s

collectton.

pair of
Edd ie
f'J rncd
Cactus

1U P I &gt; - The Hous ton Astros
pou ncled rormrr teamma te Bill
n awle\' for nlnl' runs i n three
Innings to pos1 a 10-0 triumph
over !he S1. Louis Cardinal s.
Bob KnrppCI' and l hi'ee r~ ll ev ·
crs hold the Cardi nals to lh rcr
hits as St. Louis lost for onl y the
second tim&lt;' in 11 exhibition
gamrs.
No n-roster fli\ 1 bascmiln
&lt;; ll1 1lll Cur prnl cr amassed two
cl\lubiC's. two si ng IPs iJild two RBI
for !he Astros . Tprr\' Puhl had
1hl'f'r hil s and drovP In two run~

Pound

,._..c,_
~­

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public UUI!tles Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for publlc hearing Case
No. 67-02·EL·EFC, to
review the fue l procure·
men\
practices
and
pollc!es of Columbus and
Southern Oh!o Electric
Company, the oper&amp;t!on
o! Its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and related mat.ters. Thts hearing Is
scheduled to begin e.t
10:00 a.m. on March 23,
1987. at the offices or the
Publlo Ututt!es Commls·
Blon, 160 East Broad
Street, COlumbus, Ohio
43266·0673.

TU CSON, Ariz . !U PI ! - .lose
Uribe lin£&gt;d a lh rr&lt;•-run triplPa nd
thf' Sa n F ra ncisco converted J

HERRUD ROYAL CROWN
14-17-LB. AVG . WHOLE

.....,.._

$1 QQOO Off

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Team ti- Worl(h 'o.; R11i1Pr ~ ................ l
T&lt;'am :1-P:II Hill F'ord ............. It I(" I 2
Tt'am 4-Rod' s WrC'tkrr SNVIC'C' ... lli£'1 2

walked and went ro second on a
two·ou t wa l k ro Mike Harl.
Wor thington singled to left to
scor e Gulll'tTez .
Bob Sebra pitched th P fi rst fi,c
innings for the Expos. allowing
three hils and no I'Uns. Mike
Flanagan wen t the first stx for
Baltimore. allowi ng nine hil s and
two r un s.

Buddy Bian c;tl ana &lt;'On ll'ibui N1
two hits and tw o RBI to ! ~a d lh ~
Kansas Ci tv Roya l s to an 8· 2
tr iumph over rhe.Tcxas Rangers .
Bi anca lana leads the Royals
with eight RB I. eq ualing hi s total
for last season.
Dannv Tar tabu ll slam med a
three-run homer for the Hoyals
off loseo· f.d Correa. Lcfl · handl'r
Danny Jilck son pitched fiv&lt;'
score less innings, the lo nges t
outing by a, Roya ls starter th is
spr ing. ro parn I he victory .

~:r:2t

Carlo &amp; Autn Pnrt s IRX:l; J' s Exxon 1881 :

Kul

Gu tierrez

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham

., ·"'~•'d..l!==~=======6:7:5-:ll:2!::=====J73.~55~!4~=~
l~~~;~"l;l»·~ll~m-~·lm~•~om~,.~,~"~

r;;••~Mj~~~~~~---;;;;;;;;;~

.Tackir

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

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

lui!

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

scorP 6-6.

•

dt&gt;~~oljlhf!d funtral

111

MIAMI 1UP II -Rookie th ird
basem an Craig Worthint on delivered a run-scoring single with
two outln the ninth inning, giv in g
the Baltimore Or iol&lt;'s- a 7-(i
victory over the Montreal Expos.
With one out in the ninth , Ri ck
Burleson hll a home run off losing

pilcheo· Rob DeYoung to lie !he

HAVE YOU TAKEN YOUR
IRA 0-EDUCTION 1

Tu Mton d. lw•utlfull y
artii Rtlft:,'~ ·h1u•

the Whit e Sox. who ha \'e los t
seven of tlie ir l ast eight gam es.
Whil e Sox starter Ri chard
Dolson was the loser, giving up
four runs in five innings.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

arm Up To
inter Savings
ith.Our

r~w:i":··=·::::::::::::::============::=~

REMEMBER
WITH fLOWERS '
,

7.

you will suffer no defeats. But if
you take no risks, you will win no
victories. Woody was not one who
would play It safe. He played to

A rosebud and a folded America n flag - dra ped behind the
famous Hayes black bas eball cap
that had the scarlet block "0" on
the front- was on the altar in the
stonc·and· timber sanctuary.
A larger memorial service is
planned for Wednesday in Ohio
Stadium.
Nixon. an avid football fan,
sa id the Incident ending Hayes'
career in Dec ember 1978 punching a Clemson pla yer In the·
Gator Bowl. resu lt ing in a line for
Hayes- "would have crushed an
ordinary man . But Woody was no
ordi nary man ."
Ha yes achieved 20:i victories
as Buckeyes coach and won or
shared 13 Big Ten titles and 1wo
national c hampionships during a
28-year career.
Nixon said Ha yes could have
qu it coaching In 1969 after his
team s had won twonationaltitlt&gt;s
and
s ·e'v c n ·, B i g T e n
champions hips.
"Bu t he wa nted to go on,"
Nixon suid. " Woody knew there
were r isks . If you take no risks.
r;:~::::::::;::;:::;:;;;;~~

SAR.ASOTA. Fla. 1UP II Mookie Wilson trip1ed 1wiC'e and
page

JULffi MILLER

(Special Mention)

a memorial 1service for the
former Ohio State football coach,
wno died last week at age 74.
Hayes was eulogized by Nixon
and Ohio State President Edward Jennings al the First
Communit y Church in suburban
Marble Cli ff. Escor ting Nixon to
his front ·row seat was Jeb Stua~t
Magruder , an aide to Nixon in the
White House and now assi stan t
pastor at the church.

crac ked a solo homer for the
Brewers. Ken Phelps homered
f
Se Ule th fifth str I hi
or
a
• e
ag
ga me in which h~ has hom ered.

Continued on

JENNY MILLER

coach.
college
football
"He wa
s never
sa tisfied with
success and he was never discouraged by failure," Nixon told
about 1,000 mourners Tuesday at

and two singl es. and Rob De&lt;:'r

MESA . Ariz. iUPII - Shawon
Dunston cracked a three·r un
home run In the fifth inning to
carry the Chicago Cubs to a 4-3
v ict ory over the San Diego
Padres.
Padres starter Ed Whitson
cruised through th e Cubs ' order
for four Innings, striking out
eight. Bur In the fift h, Keith
Moreland walked and JodyDavls
singled. Dunston then homered
to left field. Manny Trillo drove
in the fourth Cubs r un , with an
elghth·lnnlng double off Craig
L effert s.

scored a pai_r of r uns, and Darry l
Stra wbeHy hit a two- run homer
to power the New York Mets to a
6-3 triumph over the Chicago
Whit e·Sox.
Wilson contributed three hits to
make a winner of starter Rick
Aguilera, who worked five In·
nlngs and allowed four hits and
one r un. Ivan Calderon hit his
second home run of 1he spring for
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII - Millersburg West Holmes' Jack ;
Van Reeth , for the fourth year In ·
a row, ha s been voted the United
Press International girls Class _
AA coach of the year.

more shot s."
Joh'llng the co-players ot the
year on the all -Ohio first team,
consisting of all seniors, were
Lima Bath's Kristen Holt, Lee
Ann M yers of Millersburg West
Holmes and Jennifer Radosevic
of Springfield Kenton Ridge.
Th e 5-foo t·8 Holt averaged 21.5
point s per game In leading Bath
to a 19-1 regular season. She also
will be in th is week end's semifinals at St. John Arena.
Radosevic, at 5-foot -8. averaged 17.1 point s per game for
Kenton Ridge, while Myers , who
averaged 15 points per game,
joined wit h second team per former Ti na Morris to pa ce West
Holmes to Its fourth co nsecutive
20-0 regular season.

Out 1950: TEAM HIGH GAME: Tony's
Carrv.Qu l 706.
.

Contlmied from page 6

•

Reds defeat Boston nine, 4-3
TAM P/\. F la. I UP!! ~ Tracy
.Jones sna pped a 3-3 lie with a
ninth inn ing ba ses- loaded single
to lift the C'inelnnali Reds a 4-.l

'Reds ...

.

.

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

J.zoo9

Brtn~

843

'

This Ad

Go Krogering
'

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
·.Wednesday, March 18, 1987
Page- 8 :

has meeting
Plans for an Easier egg hunt on
April 12 at the home of Barbara
Logan ·were made when lhe
Mothers of Twins mel Monday
night at Shoney's in Point
~Pleasant.

' The group discussed the possi·hillty of affiliating with the
.National Twins Club. Members
:)lttendii 'g were Dwila Sayre,
~!Cvans, W.Va .; Barbara Logan,
,;.\Jbany 1 Shelly Smith, Ashton,
":W.Va. Fonda Thomas , Reeds :.vllle; Eloise Drenner, Linda
~Faulk ·and Janet Eblin, Poine•ro y_, a nd Deb! Gilmore,
~lddlepor/ .
.:.. Anyone Interested In joining
:Jhe club is asked lo conlacl either
•Mrs . Faulk, 992-2475 or Mrs.
: Thomas, 667-6836.

We

The Right To
limit Quantities

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MAR. 21, 1987

P
rayer
breakfast
'
;:;isA conducted
breakfast was ht• ld
pra~er
~ unday at I he
:!!f Chrl~l as

HOVV
-.-, . GOVERNOR' S AWAIUl F'OI! EXfELLE,.CE- Tara llumph:~ reys, P om t• roy, no t on I)' r~·ct•iw•d a ~ UJ Wr iflr ra nn ~ nn lwr wd cell

·: hattf•ry stience projL•d al til(' Mt•igs .(unior High St houl Sl'icnn •
... I&gt;ay Tuesday, hut a l ~u f('ft•ivt •d tlu• Gnw•rnor 's t\ward for
·: ~:xtt.• llen t(' In ('lll'fJ;",\ ' rt•st•nrr·h. ll on 1\sh was tlllf ' or St'V (•ral ,judgt.-s.

•

'

SUPERIOR AWARD - Jennifer Taylor, Pomeroy, took a
superior rating for her sCience •••p••rlmt•nt on how light and color
affects growth. She used celephane cnn es to cover the pots. Steve
Powell, left , and Larry Kt•nnedy, DDS judged the eighth gradt•r's
pro jed. It Is one of eight which will compel•• at lht• April i I distril'l
contest at Ohio Unlverslly.
·

:?cience Day conducted for junior highs
:

of ~ighl Meigs
~un i or High School sludent s
ieceiv ing &lt;.1 suprr ior r&lt;Jtin g on
{ hPI I' projects 'J l Sricn('f· lluv
'T uesday wi ll go inl n dist ricl
Comprtition ~~~ Oh io U n i\-' l'rsi l ~·
on April 11.
: The e ight st udc·n ls h;l\·in g the
'Superior pro j ~r l s \\'NP Kutllv
Perr inf', Tara Humphr&lt;'y s, .Ju·
ion Smilh, .lrnni fer Ta ylor, .lill
'Taylor, .John F:vans, Susan Hou ·
e hins and !'lanny Folmer.
;_ C:ov·crnor's Awards Jor F:xcTI·
"tencC' wcrc also prf'~-.· niPd to
Th~

prnj ~cls

...Humphrrys. C'n&lt;•r gy c·o ns(' J"VC:I ·

(ion proj~e t : .Jill Tay lor. ~nvi r on ·
.men ta l rcs~arrh, and Houch ins.
wgrleuliu rc and folXI rrs!'UI'('h.
•: The nearly R(J projeet s whic h
.wrn• displa y~d Ja.s l nigh! at a

and famil) ' to v·ipw were judged
b.v .John Coslanzo. Rill Burkl&lt;'y ,
and l~us.s Moore. of lhr Meigs
C'o unlv Boa rd nf F:du,.at ion of1icP: Str.vr Powel l, Mrigs Coun1 .v

l. i li N Cant rol supcn· isor: I. a lT.I'
K P nn ~dy, DDS, loca l dentist , a nd
flon Ash, Oh io Power.
.IPsse Va ll and Ruslv Bookm:.~ n ,
sriC'ncr trarhrrs. had
eha rgt• of S('iPnc~ Day which is
hfl ld in t·oopr rati on w i1 h lh r Oh io
Acacli·my of Se iPnrP. l'rowcls
werP judg('(l on t h(' ba sis or
ori gina li t~· and rrra t h· it~' . cia ril y
Of PXprrssion, US(' or lhl' Scif'n -

li fic mclhod, ond know lo ·dge
:tch lPw•d.
1-:xtPI Ic:nl ralings wrn l to l\f'n
VanM ;tt rr, KristC'n Sl&lt;.l\.\'lf'r,

Tcrcs&lt;o Dr-cm . Scali J1t·in k!'1',

:ic ir nre ope n hnust• for p&lt;:tf'(\nr...;

-

...

,M i k ~

I.P ml f'~··.
F" t·y m y~r.

D&lt;.~vid

M oldrn. StPvr R. Mar l in, Sandra

Amy Rou sh, .Jodi
Tillis. Kip G ru rs~r . an d Mar)·
Slei n.
Ratings of good went to .lenni
W~tT)' , S l r phani~ Waik&lt;·r. Am)'
Wagnrr. Hea ther Si nger. T~ t T) '
R~ u! N ,
RPsa Hal'l'iS, Hurl
Krnnroy, Robbif' Hawk . Ca nd v
H&lt;tnison, S t ~p h a ni f' Banks . .Ia ·
son Wrl ghl, Monl f' S11·i ndrl i.
Shr lbv Napper. Eric Prtrrson.
Shaw n Lipsco mb. Tnmm)' l.&lt;t ne.

l.a nd aker. AngPia Kl l'in. Bobbie
Hoffman. T&lt;tmm)' Hall~\' . D..L
i'lrl'man. Kev in Ha gg-_v. MikP
Fi nk, Truci l&lt;ll is. Slep hunie
Bat'!'C'Il. April C:roVPr.
.
0 1hNs rat ln gs of good werP
Ch uck Smith . Shannon Rus sell.
F"orrst Qualls . .\ np•la Lark ins.
Cath)· l.ambrrt . l&lt;ell)· .John son.
Bill H) ' S~I i. F:ri(' Hcl'k, Cro ff
Coga r. Krblf'n Stan iP.v·. l!illv·

Ha~' f'S,

.Jacks . Carolyn Filrhpa ·
ll'lrk. C hu s~ CIP iand, Kal ina
As hbur n.
,\ Jso n·•·•·iv·ing good ralings
wprr- Sht•lly l'ullins. Spring
Reed. Mic hele Mall h~ws, Bridg~l l l.amlx•rl. \' an Klrin. Pam
Haggy, Kri sta Chudwell . Brenda
Wrighl. Miss.v Nelson. Tina

:~

-:; RUTLAND - ThP Rulland
f ire Department Auxll iar)' will
:m!'Cl at 7 p.m. Wcdnf'sdav al lh&lt;·
;f)re sial ion.
.....

&gt;.

---

'· HARRJSONVILLF: - Order of
:_r.asl ern Star, pasl ma trons.
}larrisonvlll(• f'hapl~r 2:\!i, will
·in&lt;•t•! Wedn~s du y, 7::111 tl.m .. ul
:Xhf' home of Donna Ne lso n.
"·

TIIURSili\ \ '
&gt; CH F.STf&lt;H - Shadc flivc•r
-Lodgl.' 4~&gt;:1, C'h~slcr , will mr~l
1 hu rsday. 7 p.m .. to work in lh~
f.C and MM D~gref's . flf'frf'Sh·
'111Cnls will be s~ ri' Pd .

""~ POMF:flOY

- Mf'igs Co unt~;
£haplf'r Al coholics Anon)·mous
~· Ill me~! Thu rsdav, 7 p.m .. &lt;~lth~

.

Warner building on West Second
Si.. which hou ses lhr Com muni!)•
Acl ion A g~ nC)'.
flOCK SPR INGS - Rock
SJlrings B~mr Hra llh Club wi ll
m«'PI Thu rsday a1 th('
H~l f'n

h om~

of

Blarkslon.

MIDDLEPORT - Midd lepol'l
Child Co nsrrva lion L~ague will
me~l all;: :10 p.m. Thursday wil h
a poll urk dinnPr . Husband's
n ighl will b~ observed .

RUTLAND- Rutland Church
of God is havlng a gospol sing
Saturda)·, ldO p.m . Evrr)·onr
welcome.
Final siRn·up
POMEROY- Pomerov You lh
Lcagu0 wi ll have fina l .sign-up
Satu rday , al E l bf'rf~ lds, from 10
a.m. 10 1 p.m. $9 rrgistralio n f~~

Amt.~n da

kuns.

CANDY
CLASSES

Mold0n . i\my:

Mighl , Shane• Phillips. Sl or~y
You ng. Trac" Rowe, Mia n·Au g
us line. Shannon Sroll , K&lt;'llv·
Mm ci nko. Kim F.11 ing. anrl An·
gic l·: ll iol.
Su l brac l or~·

10 A.M. til 3 P.M.
Every Hour on the Hour
Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat.
March 19-20· 21
Trained Staff To
Assist You...
PH. 992-6910

ralings wC'n l to

Eric Good~. Ku rl iss English.
Kd l_v· Smilh . Tim Ha ll . Ho11·ard
Gro v·cs. Mi chuC'i Call . Ro iJbi ~
Fields. Vir gi n"' Bovd . Sl ac~y
Slwn k, AmbPr F:blin. Lee• Cacll r ,
Str-vr M. Ma rlin. Trucv· F:bli n.
Pum Wha le)·. Donald l'lodson.

OHIO VALLEY
BULK FOODS

Lo r i Pit ·rce .. Jc.nn i PPylon. [)rr l'k
Millf'r .. luunilil Crr•rn . .lim Ca r
pPntrr. Tinn Arnrtt . &lt;Jn!l Clu is
lin &lt;.~ Barrrll .

POMEROY, OHIO

.------------...1..-----------

DEPARTMENT STORE

l.

&lt;·
WEDNESDA \'
;.: HARRISONV ILLF: - Mission
'J!ry service 10 b&lt;&gt; he ld al 7: :mp.m.
~rdnesda y al the Arlhur F:blin
..:rslde nce, Ha rrisonv ilir Roud,
:):!'i!h Rev . Sl rv~Sk~ll~l spl.'a kin g.

M t ss~·

Hrown.

Leach. Oarci Wolfe·..lcan~ ll e
McDonald, Barbar;o Donahue.
Ric ha rd Workma n, Curl is l'la l·
ion, Troy Gibc•a ul , Tro)· Ya n-

RUTLAND

Community calendar/area happening.r

"·.

"1-.

CJ·~· s t al

Kerr.

Amy Warlh . Brian Smith . Kcnn)·
Rey nolds. .lim Hysell. .John
Gorbv. Randi Corsi. Car l &lt;~ Seidt •·
nabei. Kim Osborn!'. Chris
Nrrcr. J a me.v l. illll.'. Sean Wal·
ion. Krvin Ta ylor. Ri chat·d Pry ion, F: rlca Elias, Bell y Wilhrow.
l.&lt;'lgh Myers. Raerl a Eblin. Mike
Va n Meier. Aa ron Sheets. R)·an
Lori

COMPAIUNG VOUIME- Davt• Frymyrr Of Darwin receiving . -·
a n ('Xt: l'llenf rating for hi!:i projt.•d comparing tht• difft•rt:'ncr in
volumfl hetwt•t•n gas a nd liquid .

and copy of bit·th

r~rtificale

Phone 742-2 100

nrcd~d .

Baskl'thall
POMF:ROY - M~igs Counly
.Jaycees m·~ spon sor ing a doubliei lm ina lion m~n' s baskclbull
t our n am~nl M;orch28-29a t M~ig s
High SchooL For fu rlh~ r informal ion ca ll Rust)· Bookman,
ev~nin gs, at 9!l2- :i~9~ .

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAL MAR. 21 1987
I·LB. CRISPY SERVE

Bacon .....••.•••••••.••.••••••~~~~.•..••. S129
SUPERIOR LUNCH MEAT
Breakfast Ham .........~t........ $197
Homemade Ham Salad ••••L,•... 89(

Jumbo Bologna ••••••• ~···~~·.. S1.79
SMITHFIElD
SHREDDED ......$2.29 lb.
'led Ham ..•..•..•••••.•~••... Sliced $229

" dinnf'r and var\c l y show this

Friday e\'C•ning. Dinner serving'
from o to 7: :m. Vuric ty show al
7::111.
SATURDA\'
RACINF: - Therr will Jx&gt; a
hymn sing l,.rlda.v. slarllng at 7
p.m .. al l"dlow ship Church in

16 OZ. SCHllDD'l

10 ll.

Margarine

Baking Potatoes ..... s1.89

Quarters .......................SJ(

S lB. MAISH RIO •

KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SLICE

Grapefruit ............... S2.29

Amer. Prot. Cheese .... s1n

Ra ci nP. E v&lt;•r.v onr \\'l'lr om{'.

HIW GREIN

OHIO COlBY

~

Head Lettu'e .........~~; .. S9c

:~f!eath ·uMW meeting held
...

A hlstm·v of th•• Unill•&lt;l Mt•lho- lng wllh a pia no pr!'ludc'. a fl ~r
-ilist Womrn and il s mission which Mrs. l"ull z wl'icomC'd lhr
•,:PI'Ogram was give n bv Mrs. mrmlxTs and gucsls. Devotions
:.Eilza bl' lh . Jeff~rs, di stl'iC'l pr rs i b,v Mrs. Byc•r wrrr takr n from
1lrn1. a l las l week's &lt;'ombined the 41Hh Psalms a nd to ld of lh~
~ecting of th ~ Hmih Uni ted life of .John New lon. aulhor of
:)lelhodist Wom~n and th&lt;• !-:Ira /\ma zin g Grac~ . Members sang
lhe hymn a nd Mrs. Byer had a
-!lor Cirrir al lhf' churrh .
c
=" Mrs. Jeffers r~l &lt;l!f'd how lh&lt;' los ing pra yrr .
Th&lt;• F:lra nor Ci rel ~ voled to
jrganizal ion was slartrd by dght
~om~ n in 1Rtm a nd th en.shP wa s dona led $000 on Ihe roof projccl.
loinro by Mt·s . .Jaunlla Co l ~ for,, Sh&lt;' noted lhat dis h ciolhcs m·c·
'-kit porlra,v·ing a l l'ar h ~r. lsa for su le and thai the $1 procrrds
~llr Sloburn. who rsJa bl is hNI a will go lo lhr roof fund .
/\n Easf(lr bazaiJI' was un J('hoo l In lndla and a doc tor.
noun
c!'d, as was Jhc April i
~lara Swain, who servrrl womc•n
wedding
or .Julie By~r al lhe
Jn India and in 1H71 obt;lin rd
:ijround fl'Om lhr Arabs for " chu n·h . A shower for her will be
'l!ospllai. Mrs. J~ffer s ask rd h(•id Su nday at the t•hu n·h.
Tht• annuairummagc sa le was
:members 10 savr C'amphrll so up
announced
for May. Also a n·
.~be i s for lhe Redbird Mis sio n.
nou
ncrd
was
Ihe relreat a1 Ca mp
~h e diSil)ayed a pra y~ r ca lr ndar.
O!l~rlx&gt;in
on
Ma y 1 and 2.
... Betty F'ultz, El~ano r Ch·cJr
fl ~f r es hmcnl s eanyl ng ou t• ~
fireslden l. thanked Mt·s . .lrffrrs
SJ.
Palrirk Day's theme Wl'l'e
:tnd Mrs. Cole for I hel l' pt·ese nlaserved
by Mrs. Bycr, M arg~ .
~on and presrnlro lhl'm wit h
Blak&lt;'.
and
Pal Philson wl!h
~ns.
F:
mll)·
Sprague
ro nlribullng.
'tDonna Byer
openC'd thC' meet ·
'

Boil in the Bag ............. 2 FoR 98(
8 OZ. REAME'S
Noodles ....•.....••.••••••••.• r~~•...... 79(

~·

.

Diamond Crystal ResinGord®

Salt Nuggets On Sale
For Month of

II OZ. CAMPBELL'S

IS OZ. POST

Raisin Bran •••••••••.•••~~~ ....... S1. 99

638 EAST MAIN .ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992·3891

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I

Apricot Halves ........'!.~••••••• S1. 19
211.4 OZ. CAN
Tang Drinks ••.•..•••••l.A.R.. •••••• S2.99
20 1• OZ. HUNT'S BIG JOHN'S
Beans &amp; Fixins .•••••••~~~ .•••••• $1. 19
6 OZ. HUNT'S
·Tomato Paste .........~~~ •.•••..•••• 49(
1

'MIIYClWiN•
• . . . . CAICI

OAMO.Q.Coo&gt;/1..

~~fr~::X aDaspecQuial birthday with a luscious taste

' een• Frozen Happy Birthday
Coke Is rich with· goodJlry
things like thick dark fudge and
~sp ~~~e Crtrlch with creamy chocolate and vanilla
IY """""'• sat serve layers. Bring home
a Dairy Queen• frozen cake for the
next birthday In yw life.

.........,.t

Oair4

Queen

M~rch

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.

oz. DEl MONTE

20 OZ. THANK YOU

Apple Pie Filling .....~~~ ....•.• S1.29
I b OZ. ARGO

Corn Starch ............·.~~ ...••..•••• 69&lt;
4 1• OZ. UNDERWOOD
Chunky Chicken ••••••~~~ ••••••• $1.09
1

24 OZ. DINTY MOORE

DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER
700 NORTH SUOND
MMDDLEPORT
992-3322

Beef Stew ...............~~~ •...... S1.99
'

4 ROLL PKG. WHITE CLOUD- WITH 12• OFF

Ti

••••••••••

Steaks/Roasts .•• !·· $1 09
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Chuck Roast ......~. $119
BUCKET
$ 199
Cube Steak .....•• ~~.
BARS BULK
$ 39
Chopped Ham....... 1

has meeting ·
The annual Founder's Day
aJnner and progra m to be held on
April :JO al the Sportsman Inn.
Athens, was di sc ussed al lhr
recent meellng of lhe Xi Ga mma
Mu Chapler of Bela Sigma Phi
Sorority held at I he home of Mrs.
(1.. R. Knight, sponsor.
: Maurlsha Nelson presided al
the moeting wilh lhc annual
convention lobe held In Ma.v lx&gt;lg
announced. A report given on
service prolects including food
and ot her asslsla nce given Ia the
lair Libby Sayr~ and her family .
A recipe auclio n was sci for I he
:J'i1arc h 24 meeting. Atlhat same
:tneeling new officers and Ihe girl
~Qf lhe year will be ~l ec ted .
·Members are planned lo begin
"work soo n on lh~ Meigs Counly
:Fair adverlislng program .
:-; Rulh . R iffle served
· efres hments.

~uxiliary

makes
donations
_,

....

.
.
·: A conlribulion was made lo !h(•
:Miles or Pe nn l~s for I he prison('rs
war and missing in aclion at
i)le recf'nl m('eling of lhe Middil'·
pori Child Conserva lion Leagu~
~held al Dale's Smorgasbord.
.·• Mrs. Margarel Bow les pn·) ided at lhe mee ting wh ic h was
Hosted by.Mrs. Ann rtle .Johnson.
")'he news bullrlln from Cal hl'·
rin&lt;' Curl. Eig hlh Dls lr irl pres I·
denI , leiling or upcoming rl'rnls
In lhe dislrlcl was read a nd
officers' reports wer~ give n.
. Co pies of lhe r~visrd conslilu·
lion were ordered for mrmb!'rs.
and annua l dues were paid.
Lellrrs of endors&lt;'mrnl for
~ary Moose. Juncllon Cily, Unil
376, and Ellen Rough!. Pomrro,v
Unit :l!l, as candldal&lt;'s fordl slricl
pr~sident to Jx&gt; electt'd in June
were read. Mrs .. Johnson in thr
absence of Mrs. Lucille Saunders
made th e co mmunily service
report, commenlln g on safety.
ci('anup wee k, spccia l programs
to be promoled by lh~ Auxi liary

LB

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••••••• 39&lt;
LB.

COLUMBIA

Sliced Bacon ••••••••• 79&lt;
12 OZ. PKG.

FALTER CHUNK

Bologna ...'......... ~••• 19&lt;
HOMEMADE
_
$l 0_9
LB.

Sand. Spread .••••••

.

or

Cauliflowe-r.•••••••E:•• 99(
PARKAY

Margarine .•.•••••. ;·••• 39&lt;

~pits.

Beef Soup ••...•••.••••••• 2 cANs S1.39
17

FRESH PORK BUTT

Xi Gamma Mu

•

ECKRIDGE

FRIDA\'
CHES HTR F:- C'h~shirr · Kygrr
F: J~m~n l ary School is sponsoring

Bradbury Church
a kickoff to a
.prepara)ion time for I he upcom :tng revival, March 27-29.
: ·: Services of the reviva l wil be
•held at 7:30p.m. on March 27 and
~8 and 10:30 on March 29 with
'Tim Milchell, Johns I own. Pa. to
be the evangelisl. His wife.
Teresa, will be I he song leader.
Atl endin g were John and Marlha Wright and children. Jessica
and Eiizabe!h, Larry and Paula
Haynes, Kristi and Mall, Tina
Riffle, Dan and Karen Meadows,
Elisha Meadows. Denver and
Oma Nelson, Wilbur and Edil h
Wright, Bob King, Bill and
Noami King, and Kalhy Johnson.
•
Jessica and Derek.

· Mrs. Ar nold Ric hards tl•ad
/rom The Firing Line aboul I he
fmmi gratlon reform a nd co nlrol
4:1:1 of 1986, noling thai an all-lim('
!'('COrd of appreh""sion of illega l
aliens In !he U. S. was set In 198~.
· Round-robi n ca rd was signed
for Mrs. Hulda Gordon a nd
r.imily on !he dea!h of her
l\'llsband. Rudolph.
·· Lula Hamplon rf'ad from lhe
Nalional Leglslallve . Bulle! In
aooul resolullons passed by lhe
America n Legion a! Its 681h
~onven'lion held In Cinclnnall.
She said the resolutions supjlorled May 30 as lhe Memorial
Day observance, the exte~s lon of
lbe Veterans -Job Training Act,
mUilary aid 10 Tlawan , Soulh
Korea, Turkey and El Sa lvador.
iilatlonal Fa mily Week, Voice of
Amer ica, and the Korean War
Memorial. By resolullon . the
Legion opposed dismantling of
the V. A. home loan program ,
and transfer of veterans programs fr om lh e V. A.
Admlnlstrallon.
:;Mrs. Boles asked to chairme n
~ prepa re report forms. A
prayer for peace. singing of
~ America" and remarks by the
president closed the meeting.
l.!!rs. Lorene Goggins will be
hostess for the April meeting.

BROUGHTON

Cottage Cheese •••• 99&lt;

-

.

24

oz.

HANGING ROCK GRADE A

.Crackers •.•••••••••• ~••• 79&lt;
CAMPBELL'S

Veg. Soup •••••••••• 3/Sl
10.5

oz.

Ex.-Lg. Eggs •••••••••• 59&lt;·
DOZEN

FRESH BAKERY

$'149
D0 nuts •••••••••••••••••
DOZEN

�'
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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOI't, Ohio

Wednuday, March 18,

1$81~ :J

March 18. 1987

N~.!f.,.~li•a!!?~!?.?.: .!.~.roc~!~.~., -~~'" ~~~£2,~ E'!~!.~~~J~~~~I!,m~!).'~·:

LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Actor
Charlton Heston appeared at a
screening of an anti-abortion
film that he narrates, and accused thenewsmedlaoffatllngto
Inform the public that abortion Is

."'the
ultimate
act of violence."
"Eclipse
of Reason,"
an eight minute film by Dr. Bernard
Nathanson whose 1985 film. "SI·
lent Scream," was denounced by
pro-abortion groups as slmplls·
tic, Is Intended to fill the
Information gap, Heston said
Tuesday .
"! cannot Imagine anyone
seeing this film and at the very
least not -re-examining his or her

conference.

Th e film, even more graphic

than Its predecessor. shows a
4 ~ -month-old fetu s through a
flberoptlc camera apparently
being dismembered with forceps
during
abortion.
The an
film
was unveiled by
anti-abortion groups In January,
and Is scheduled to be distributed
to television stations throughout
the country . Heston acknowledged the fllm may be "too
graphic" for some people. but
urged the networks to show II.
Heston urged the news media,
which he charged has "failed

horrors of abortion, to use the
film io promote better-Informed
public debate about "the ultlmate act of violence."
Pro-choice advocates are
. upget by what they say Is Its

against second·trlm~ster abor· .
lions, and It won't work because
It factors out the woman,"
Passman said. ''You never hear
the woman's story, and that's
outrageous because there are

calculated
shocka small
value,percenespe- sis,
pregnant
teenagers,
mlsdiagnoclally since only
a variety
of reasons.
tage of abortions are performed
"The film also Ignores the fact
at such a late stage.
that the vast majority of abor"The anti-choice movement !Ions, 90 percent, are done In the
with Its first movie tried to sway first trimester, 5 percent In the
the public against first-trimester first four weeks."
abortions and didn' t succeed,"
It contains Interviews with
said Jo Ellen Passman, execu- women who had abortions who
live director of the California knew little about the procedure
Abortion Rights Action League. and thus were emotionally devas"Now they have another gory

who stopped performing abortlons alter changing their moral
views on the Issue.
Nathanson, a New York gyne·
cologlst wt10 said he supervised
more than 75,000 abortions be·

"Studies have shown that be·
tween 10 and 15 percent of AIDS
patients have been diagnosed
through clinical rather than
laboratory methods and they
aren't Included In our AIDS
figures ." Dondero said.
"We've gotten a lot of Input
through clinical physicians who
deal a lot with AIDS and also
through public health specialist s
In heavy AIDS areas and we've
determined that. basically. a lot
more people out there have AIDS
than are now counted In the
official number."
Dondero said the revised definition of AIDS could increase the
number of reported AIDS cases
in the United States by 20
percent .
"This doesn 't mean there Is
suddenly going to be X-number
more people suddenly having
AIDS." he said. "It's just that
then• are more people our there
with AIDS than we officially
count because of our current
definition of the disease."
The new definition would add
6,500 cases of acquired Immune

Bullets and cheesecake
make top-selling video
DIEGO (UPII - A
company that has made two
bes t-selling videotapes demonstrating 20 kinds of machine gun.&lt;
Is now producing a third video
featuring scantily clad models
fi ring the weapons .
The hourlong videotapes.
which sell for $49.95, are advertised In paramilitary magazines,
sa id Lenny Magill. ownpr of
Lenny Ma !(ill Productions, a San
Diego video production firm.
Magill said orders for the.
videos have comE' from all over
the world, lncludln!( Europe.
Japa n and South Africa . The
FBI, the CIA and the Bureau of
Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms
have also ordered copies.
"We even had an order from
the Russian Embassy In Washington," he said Tuesday.
SAN

Bleak market fails
to sway steelmaker
PITTSBURGH 1UP!) - Six
weeks after ending a recordlength labor dispute. USX Corp.
Is Inching toward profits even
th ough It fa ces a diminished steel
market. company officials say.
" Basically. we're coming back
llkC' we hoped we would." USX
spokes man Ernie Glenn said
Tuesday. "The order book is
where w e thought It might be at
this pain!. "
A six-month labor dispute idled
USX steel opr rallons and about
21 .000 steel workers In nine states
du ring the longes t work stoppage
In American steel industry history. The dispute ended .Tan. 31
when the United Ste&lt;'lworkers
union and USX reached a contract settlement.

Twenty types of machine guns
are demonstrated In the videos,
in which a narrator gives his tori·
cal information about the wea·
pons. their calibers and overall
performance.
Also Included are Instructions
for dismantling some of the
newer weapons. Magill said his
company grossed about $450,000
la st year, largely from sales of
the videos, which are marketed
nationally by a firm he owns
called Mall Order VIdeo.
The tapes are called "Rock ·N'
Roll 1" and "Rock 'N ' Roll 2."
The term "Rock ' N' Roll" Is
slang, referring to the motion of
the weapons when fired.
Magill said the third tape
featurln!( scantily clad women
pulling the triggers Is now under
production.
"Based on how the first video
said. we anticipate total gross
sales of a million dollars or more
this year," he said.

deficiency syndrome to the32,825
cases reported to the CDC as of
Monday. a spokesman said.
The revised definition will
Include two more diseases known
to be associated with the AIDS
virus Infection - the Dementia '
complex, a deteriorating Infection of the brain. and the wasting
syndrome. a chronic duration-of
fevers. diarrhea and appreciable
weight loss In people with AIDS
virus Infection.

l
t

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A dinner and variety show sponsored by Cheshlre-Kyger,
Elementary School will be held Friday, March 27, at the school.
The program had been set for this 'Friday but was rescheduled,
according to a school spokesperson.
Dinner will be 6-6:30 p.m., with good food prices charged,
accordh\g to the spokesperson. The menu Includes soup beans
and ham, _beef bar beque sandwiches, cole slaw, corn bread , pie,
cake and coffee.
.'J'he v,~rlely show begins at 7:30p.m. Admission for the show
Is ',50 CE:t~js for students and $1 for adults.

i
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Murph1.1s MART

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All-c1unty band concert slated

20 portrait package contains:
2.:..8x10's, 3-5x7's, 15 wallet size

The sixth annual Meigs All-County Band Festival Concert will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Meigs Jllgh School
Auditorium.
More than 50 students from Eastern, Meigs and Southern
High School were-chosen for membership through audition to
·this year's band and students will rehearse all day on Saturday
prior to -the concert.
Guest ' conductor for this year's festival will be Daniel F.
!1awrockl' who retired last year from the school system at
!leynoldsburg after producing one of the state's most
outstanding bands. For the past 18 years his bands have
rl&gt;celved ,superior ratings at the state band contest ." He Is
currentl~ .on the music facully at Ohio State University
suJ&gt;ervlslng student teachers.
'
· : Music selected for this Saturday's concert Includes: Scenario
1JY Jarded Spears; Three Pieces for Band by Bela Bartok; Ye
aanks and Braser of Bonnie Doon by Percy Grainger;
selections fro!TI The Sound of Music by Richard Rodgers;
Festlvo by Vaclaw Nelyhbel; Blue Tango by Leroy Anderson
and the Washington Post March by John Philip Sousa .
The directors of the three Meigs County high schools are
working towards staging a successful concert and Invited the
public to attend the free musical event.

see deposit at sitting. balance on delivery, poses 011' selection.
Groups $1.00 each extra person this package. Limit 5 subjects.

*NEWI .. Bontls 8x10 with parents or grandparents

r.OORA BONUS-8x10 Porlnll ol

. .

I parenl(a) 1nd1or grandpnnt(a) •llkln
ane or more children wllllllte
I wllll
. I ..
pun:haae of our $12.88
Janes Studios, Lid. The I Present tbla coup an IG
t · Tom
exclusive VIP Club company. I sitting. Limit ana

CORN DOG '

aar1~1lt

54&lt;
WITH FliES......$ 1.09

L-----

Babies tbru adults.

MARCH 19 THIU 22

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Thursday
10 am-1 pm
2 pm-6 pm

"At tiM IIIII ef tht ,_,.y-llason lrilltt
POMEROY, 011.
PH. 992-2556

~oa+~••••o

Friday
10 am-1 pm

Saturday
10 am~ l pm

2 pm·l pm

2 pm-6 pm

'

Meigs Countlans - both Democrats and Republicans - are
lnylted t,o attend and to testify at a public hearing being held In
Athens Thursday by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles Task Force.
-The tl\sk1force Is revieWing the way license plates and driver's
licenses ar,:- distributed and some suggestions have been that In
the future all Ohioans may have to go through Columbus to.
secure these.
Governor Celeste appointed the task force to review the
current SYstem and to make administrative and legislative
recomm1'datlons to Improve service - eliminating lines
wheneve possible - and to take the politics out of the
appoint ent of deputy registrars.
The Tnursday hearing will be from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Morrison
Elementary School Audllorlum, 793 W. Union St., Athens.

I

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We
use

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Ta$~1 force hearing Thursday

NG PORTRAIT PACKAG
a super value-only $12.88 ~

The most common opportunistic Infection attacking AIDS
victims Is pneumocystls carinll
pneumonia, a parasitic infection
of the lungs. Of the 32.825 AIDS
cases, 21,203 of them have or did
have that Infection.
The second most . common
opportunistic Infection is Kaposi's sarcoma. a tumor of the
blood vessel walls. Of the more
than 32,000 AIDS vtcllms, 4,326
have or had that disease.

Speelal of the Week

~

C-K reslates dinner-variety show

"

~+....._..+o·o·

\

News in Brief:

f

f~fo~r~e~h~
e~c~h~a~ng~e~d~h~l~s~v~le~w~s~
~·
produced
the new film and Its, ~t~h~a~ns~o~n~l~s~a~·~~~~s~w~ho

Government wants to redefine AIDS
By JOE PARHAM
ATLANTA (UP! 1 - Federal
health officials , saying statistics
show 10 percent of AIDS cases go
unreport.,d, proposed a new
definition of the deadly disease
that will cause the number of
reported AIDS cases to Increase
sharply.
The revised definition Is contingent on th e reactions of state
health dl'partments. epidemiologists and other health-watch
organizations. but a spokesman
for the national Centers fo r
Disease Control said the proposal
Is common with new diseases.
"We hope this expanded definl·
lion will be adopted for national
reporting purposes by the Coun·
ell of State and Territorial
Epidemiologists at their May
meeting in Santa F.,, N. M., " said
Or. Tim Dondero, chief of the
s urveillance and evaluation
branch of the AII)S program at
the CDC.
The CDC currenlly excludes
people who have been diagnosed
by phys icians as having AIDS.
bu t who ha ve not been diagnosed
with a laborat ory biopsy res!.

He has been called a sensation-~
allst by pro-choice advocates.·
Do_uglas Gould, a vice president:
for the Planned Parenthoo!l;
Federation of America, tolJI;
Newsweek magazine that Nl!·'

Sunday

•
•

t1 am-S pm

•

••

-·

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA, GALLIPOUS

Stock sale could
raise $1.7 billion

Business Services

.. .. ............ .....
...
·-__.... ..... ..... ..................
"Ani

'"""" .,, WM01 If·· WOfiOI tt-•... 11101•
'"'"
......
. .•
,.OA.. 011..
,., ..
...•

..

...

THERE'SN
AGAS

____
-----·-

COVI!r

· FASHION
PATTERNS
'

(_

,.

I

,.....,

'

..

'
'

.

l-.

,.......;_., ,~~~ /IJ/11

The Daily Sentit)BI

..

~,._. /'\~

H Nor1lilm 8nd., WGodllttt;
NY t1377. Print NIN, Addllu,
~.

·•'

•

Slit, Pllllm Numblr.

FREE OFFER
3 Crall Books (value $8.85)
when you Older one of the
$2.95 boola! listed below.

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I
SUNDAY • All SEATS $Z.SD
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 .50

t1 t-ttallpln Crochet
t1s-£uy ~Crochet
117-M of Need1epoint
t3s-llols and Clalhn

ta lhru ft

FRIDAY thru THtlRSOAY !

LIJ-- .

.

included. Size M trumpet
flare takes 1 'It yards .
60-ln. fabric.
Each pattern' $3.~5 plus
75t postage/handling.
(N.Y.residel'ls arl! sales laJ I
Stnd to:
Aeldirllllt

"

/.~.-

(

Add$1.05tor~ .

81ol-4-t8 -3172

•lnsuletlon

lashan lulkling

•Storm Doors
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Window•
•New Roofing

EVElY

JAMES KEESEE
PH.

•'

'--~~~'l_J/

Factory Choke

You'll also save on maintenance,
since a gas furnace needs very littl.e
attention to keep operating quietly
and efficiently. So you can expect it
to keep comfort up, upkeep down.
For more information, check
with your heating dealer about modern high-efficiency gas heating. It
can mean the start of a warm, longlasting relationship.

,

" 't

like to think evtry9ne for their kind·
ntSF to me while IWIS I
patient at Veterans lie·

... 1•
•

.

1

•
l

10-1-Hn

mo(lal Hospital. Thanks
,n the nurses. doc·
tori. to those who sent
car\ls. flowers aQd tho.se
who visited me. Spectal
thailks ta the ministers

j

to

l
l
I

•

-·

l

.. !
'

'

.'

I•

wllli offlnd pra;ers on

..'

• GRACE KRIDER

I

my'behalf.

I

I

""
. ...

2

•

11.1 Licensed Clinical Audiologist

:z::

!

jn Memoriam

•

Lovlnt lleJIIOIY of

I
J
~

•

COWMBIAGAS

l

•
••'
'
'•

M. Roush
passed away

t

''

1986.

.f

Y~ priiiiiCt

I

'I

.

Jll,

YOtfWn tilt kind at (1111011
Yowi.ICMd - ..~ frilnda

' ,.

·-IGrlll

'

,.., niutd ~ tilt Fatttily"

.

'
•

is 11111 near

Youtlm rttntlna with us

'

d•'
'
'
'•""~

Autot for Sele

•

I

Don't Take-A Chance.

71

,

•

r

Elllttl,

1t1d

FOR SALE

LUIUIJ C. for

$2.500.00 - 1973
flettwoocl Bnlu&amp;ltall,
ntwty Plinlld. IIIW tim

purchlsed in 1916.
PrOjlllly IMintlitlld
0¥11 the Jllll, avotl

runnltt cantlltion, I

fatlily owntd.
Fred W. Crow
992 ·5132 • day

CLOSE OUT

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

Oil

SUGAR RUN ·
ASHLAND
I90 MULBERRY AVE.
POIEIOT, OH.
lob lorton,

992-2562 • nllftl

AW

Complete· Remode~ing
Rooting oft!! Typeo
Complete Gutter Work
Worked In home area

lt. 124, P-roy Ohio

Pollll!'oy

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alu Tr•mtltllll
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

HOUR!: Tuo.·Wid.•frl.
II a.m. fa 7 ,.m.
Sunday: I p.m.-7 p.m.
ly Ch""'' w Appoiol-1

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
USED TIRES
&amp; BATTERIES
ACTION
TOWING
949-9070 or
949-2045
3-4-1 mo.

BINGO

UGLII CLUI-rOMIIOT, OH.

t;··~

TMUIL7 Pl-11 6tU

RADIATOR
SERVICE

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

'ood

Third

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915·3561
·Au M•h•

Allllllllll r: t: 1111: nl s

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-UlS or 992-7314
Po1111roy, Ohio

•Drv•• •Freuen

•Reng11

•Refrlger1ton

PARTS end SERVICE

4·5·1~

MARCH 20

•rlkl

0 ALtiMINUM

SALE$ &amp; SEIYICE

O..tl• ........,.;,

v....,.1-11-t ....

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Farm lqoipmont

!lew loMIIkliH
"Fret btlmtttt"

hr• E••lt•••t

PH. 949·1160
or 949-2101

,......

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

·Real E1tate

·

lleS...r.y c.h

1,:1-'16 tfc

A1cln• Gun Shootsponsor.S by
Atclnt Gun Club. bt~ Sundey,
MglnRing at 1:00 p.m. F1otory
Chok•. 1 2 gu...1 1hotgun1.

Ctnttt April4, 1:00 to t :OO p.m.
T1bl• ...m.ue.oo. Adm. t2.11o.
For mort lnformltlon or ublt
rtnltl cell 114· 742-2233.
Control your w•oht-Tlke "N•w
Shept Diet Pl1n" tnd Hydro
Wet• P411t. Fruth Ph•macy.

4

Glveewey

P..-t Pit bull&amp; Dobwm•n. M•l•.

INSJUnON

Authorltttl Wtn Dttro,
Now w.r, ...... Hog

TEAFORD

SIDING

*ILOWH IN

U. S; RT. SO EAST
GUYSYIUE. OHIO

For Herb1l lif• c~l Mari1 et
441-3131 101m . to Spm or
441· 2200 lfttJIJpm.

eg.mM'If In Denwer 13031 771 ·

7723 Colloot.

Wtnled: Hl lrtty'lltt. m.. t Of
f.mlll•. , ye• ••pefllnct&gt; , .
f•rM but not niiOIPtry . ltop In
et lhNr lllulion1, 283 Iouth
a.oonct. lhHf ltkttlont. 213
Iouth l•ound, Middl_,ort, Oh.

114-192-2550 .

AIRUNE8 NOW HtRJNO. Filth!
Atterldtntt, Tr•v.t At..,lt, M•·
duwtlct, Cu1tom1r llf'Viot. Uetlngt. Stltrllt tO tl()t( , Entry
Jov• potHiooo. Coli 101·117·
1000 Eu. A-1805.

Go.,..-nment JoiM. 1\1,040 ·
tll, 230 Y~·- ~ow hiring . C1l
101-817-1000 E&lt;t. R-1808 Ia&lt;
currtnt f..:llftllltt .
Grill Cookt-Waltren... l•nd
rMum• to The Deity &amp;.ntlnal,
loa 729 K. Pomtrer;. Ohio.

*VINYl SIDING

BOGGS

Gllllpollt, Oh

AnENDANT NEEDED: Will
trlln. lallt'Y
YIOIIIont.
U~t• ln. Rttpon to C1H Men·

Gun &amp;how tt Rutltnd Civic

•WIIhtrt •OIIhwothtrl

A~t• - ·

45131 ,

l&lt;UT OUT fOR fUTURE U!ll

4·15-'86-lc

Service ReprettntttiY• tt Ben•
tici•l. , Your skillt • ••p.ri.-.a.
will m1h you an lmportent pert
of S.ntfidal'• ctyn1mlc operl·
Uon. Wt hl'lt 1n lmmt&lt;Mttt
opportunity for 1 well ·
org~nlr•d . 1tll-motlvat.d lndl·
vktu1l lnletMtH In ct.vak)p6nQ 1
tift., In contumtr flnenoltl
••vic•• jConaumwkJ1n1, homt
.ceulty lin", lnti.Htnee tllet,
crHit Clfdl. • gen•r1l off\01
edmlnltirttton). The IUCC...tul
candid.te mu1t •nJoy chall-.lng work. potMII good com·
munlcltion tkllla I. have the
ebllhy to 1bt0fb • .,ply com·
prllh ..livt tr1inlng progr1m1 to
perform tUC:CHifulty In cr.Ut,
Ultt, cOIIK1iont • adiYtiNttfl•
tlon. Take thlt opportunitY' to
join the praf•!Uonlll •Yff et
8•neUclll. W• oH" 1n •ttr1etiv•
ttanlno MIIM'V • compr.t.tntlvt
tt.nefh• p1ckege. For prompt
con•kl••tlon, pi••• cd Ouene
Clttwonhy. 441-2711 •nllf\.
cill, Sllvlf Bridge Pttn . Equal
OpportunHy Employ•r M·F.

Gllllpoll1 D•ll'f' Trfbun.. 121

1-13-tfc

Addont end r~ellng
Roofing 1nd gun• worll
Concrtt• work
Plumbing •nd .4ectrlcll
wa&lt;k

40~ .

Ctll 814-"1-33&amp;8.

M•n to work in .-vl~g~~~ltltk»n•
DIPlOe. Mutt hiYt mKhtnlcll
tblllty • hiYI
ttflftnCN .
WrHttoloxT· 721 Canofth•

3 Announcement•

-

11 Help Wanted

1180.

992·2196

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I tltjiiiiVIIII:III
Si:rv11.1:"

B1k• : Ptrt-tlme. Mutt bt d•
p~dab\1 . E IIJMrltnct pr.t•rtd.
For lnttrvltw Pt!. 114-441-

Middleport, Ohio

YOUNG'S

Hou" or trailet on l1nd contfllct.
C11i 814·742· 2339 tfttr &amp;:00
p.m .

IN. 41302.

PAT HILL FORD

10.8-tfc

Buying d1ily gold. 1llv•r coin•.
ring•. jewelry, lt..-llng wer•. old
coln1. l1rge curr•ncy. Top pt'l·
cea. Ed 8ur .. ln lerb« Shop,
2nd. Ave , Middltl)ort. Oh . 114·
912· 3471 .

8 ..1 ,..,morl1i WrNthl during
Mty on contlgnmanl. Mutt h.,.
outtldt dlaplty trtl whh good
tr1Hic • p•rklng. Wrltl Gu•rd·
ian, AA 10. Box 143. Mund•.

We can repair and re·
core. radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tank$.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Pottery end Glftt,
Bird Betht. Outtldo
Verd Ootlt, Jetut
Stetu11, Virgin Miry
&amp; Angelo for Ver&lt;IJ
end Grevn.

&amp; montht old. Call
11&amp;2 .

eu."l·

FrH mtlt Angor• Hemet., to
good home only Ph. 114-UI·

1314,

Send rockt to give ewey . Ctll

114-112-5073 .

3·11-«n

W• are now ec~~:~~ptlng 11ppMc•
tlol\1 for cllhl••· hp«ltnct
whh public p~..r~tr.cl . Apply at
VM~ghlflt Cardinal M1rc:h 11·
23.
AVON , no t.rvlee chwge, open
ltrrltorllt , phon• 304-1'111 ·

1429.

REPI NEEDED tor bulin"'
eccount1, Fullllm•, fiO,OOO·
eeo,ooo. pm lim• 112,000·
a11.000. No Mlllng, repttt
butlnMt. IM .,our own hourt.
Tralnktg ptovldH . Clfl 1·11 2·
131· •170, M·F, lolft'l to lpm
(central tttndtrd tlmt).
VERTANI·PRtOR SERVICE ·

21 e E. 2nd St.

11 month old mete Cotllt pup,

Phone

3Qf-112-3231 .

1·18141·892·3325
2.5 ACRES - 5 rm. home,
bath, 2 brs, carpeting, storm
wdws. &amp; drs.. gas heat at
wellhead price at Sumner.
$25,000.
MIDDLEPORT · - 5 rm.
home. lg. lamily rm. down,
utility hookups, lg. porch.
- ~~~fila. &amp; 2 lois. Now

BISSELL
BUILDERS

PW.NG &amp; HEAnNG

*""'

161 North
Ml •• t,trt, Ohie 4S760

CUSTOM IUILT

HOMES &amp; GAUGES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wo c•.., Flohlng

"At ...1011akl1 Prict1"

lu~

Pty Your Ceblt &amp;

' PH. 949·2101

Phone Billa Here

or 949-2160

iOCKSPRINGS - Good 2
story 7 rm. home on old 33.
T.P. water, hot air lurnace, 2
baths, lovely birch kitchen.
prate and tg. lot $41,000.
100 ACRES - Rivertrontage, tractor land, old barn
and house on Rt. 124 near
Rtcine. T.P. waler and free
gas lor heat. $70.000.
RACINE - ilood 6 rm.
lrame home on one lloor. 3
bedrooms and level lot nell
to the school. Insulated.
woodburner &amp; carpetin&amp;Aikinl just $2~.000.
HAVING A
SELLIIIG PIOIUM

IUSIIIIS!-

m-m•

........
...,. PttM

"'"' m-m•
I !11/lln

'BLOWN
INSUUTION

flalttllttl Alunt. CIM

.

26' ..
Claatt Shell Cast Alum.
25 1 .. 291 • •

CUSTOM IUILT
GAUGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENnONAL

'

FlEE ESTIIARS

PH.

99~!·27

#1
I

8 Lott end Found
FOUND: 2 Largt m..t biiCII
dOQI Ph, 81 4·441·0124,
RIWtNI: For r~•um of rtddtth

un 1yr. old malt Chow Ph.

114-251 -1333.

'

LOIT wry trraatl brow.. f.m .. t
a . .glt In vicinity Ch.. tnul
fUdgt·Tumbleton Aun, RE ·
WA .. D, D•nnlt Routh, Jo.t.

111-0041.

V.,d Sate

....... P.om·ero'Y" .........
Middleport
8t VIcinity

coma............42•

#2 CDmR---··· ...-32•

Thw. Fri. 1 ... 1lftmMttonHyittt

""" "d- Tovo. btlrl h..,,,

lrOIIf AllfttittUm
Ste11••.

woment clothtt . 114· 112·
1171.

14oiotd Z lilt. ! . ol ......lle

Yllrd otlo 11001 1.-y
11Chool. FYfl'lhure. tooll, a.tt.~

SCIPIO BCYCUNG
0•

"""

.,u

OOUid 'f'OU UH •n IAirl t1QO,OQ

or mor~ , "ch month?Tht Arm.,
N1t~n" Ou•rd/rowidM ••c.t· ..
lent ~efltt 1n gooct p1y. Try . ,.
on• rtlll' whh us. 304-671· :

3980 .. 1-800-142-3119.

7

CALL 992·3125

tdq-.1.111• I.

l -9-'17-! mo. pd.

6-17-tlc

:Eb...

Good lat• modtl und til-et
chopplf. Two row corn hud.
Alao ne•d gDOd fald grinder.
Both muu be In '111"1 good
condition 1nd reatonabl• prlc•.
Ph . 614·493· 2401 or if busy
&amp;14-493· 2&amp;91!1

AVON. S•ll Av011·M•k•

Ph. (6141143-5425

Roger Hysell
Garage

1124 East Main St.

RI-OPINS

f I•

CAll COllECT:

2/27/tfn

St. lt. 114. Syr•oH .

•

20 yNn
"Free Eetimataa' '

CHESTER-915-3307

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
RIVERINE ANTIQUES

Fill dirt w1ntM call 814-742-

2381 .

EUGENE LONG
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

PH. 992-9949

-·--

)j.,,l .11111

Tob•cco totmtnt will PlY 40
c•nta 1 pound Ph. &amp;14-388·
8514,

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

*KELYINATOR
*ZENITH
dYLVANIA
*SPEED QUEEN
*GIBSON
*SAIELLITE SALES
&amp; SERVICE

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Um.E liD lAIN

,

John IC. hnh
Owner /fhchanlc

1·1·'17-J . ..

JO'S

Henry E. Cltltnd Jr.
992-6191
·Jtlll T11111tll ..... Mt-26&amp;0
DoHit Turn• ..... 992·5UZ
0111~ ................ 992·2259 .

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756

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

lFrto E111motMI

NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- Remodeled home on
High Street, up to 3
bedrooms wtth bath. Large
deck area with River View .
Would make a nice home or
great rental . WANT
$17.500.00.

Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding.
JAil makeo &amp; modelol

-

3·17·1fn

, NEW LISTING - In Pomeroy, Really nice 3 bedroom
home. Front sitting porch,
part basement. Call lor your
showing. $19,500.00.

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

24 HI. SEIVICE

NEW LISTING- Rutland Nice ranee tyr home on a
level lot.
bedrooms,
equjpped kitchen, all in
goo(! condijion. $33.500.00.

IUSONAIU • II£UAIU
8·20-'86 tfn

12 Gouge Shatguna Only

Old•r 20·25 fl . P.uii-Typt
Ctmpw . Ruaonably Priced. Ptl .

814-288-1522.

614-843-5248

z

AI ..... &amp;latltls

NEW LISTING - Approximately 80 acres ol vacant
ground near Racine. All
mineral rights, has produc·
ing Oil &amp;Gu well at present
30 + acres level lor many
potential uses. Call Today!
$32.00000.

Mobile service

Computerized H•rilll Aid Selection
· c:J Swim llolds · lnterpretina Setvices

949-3018 lui.
949-2606 Home

NEW LISTING - Free gas
plus royatties are good but
approximately 90 acres with
a nice 3 bedroom house is
better. Secluded and scenic
make this the best! located
near Rt 33 in Salisbury
School District, this home
· has been remodeled, insulated, vinyl sidinR. modern
kitchen. Barn &amp; storage
cellar. 2 ponds. $53,000.00.

U111d Mobil• Hom• Ph. 114·

048-0175.

poundtt•· C1il 814·
2151-1112 or 448· 1431.

ladH, Ohio 45771
.I!Woool
POMEr(OY, 0.
992-2259 ..

2282.

Tob~eco

49135 St. Rt. 124

E.

TOP CASH ptld tor '83 modM
11nd n!M'er ulfld Clft. Smith
Buldi-Pontl1c, 191 1 E..t.-n
A.ve.. Gelllpolla . C1il 114·441·

Electronic Organs

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

"fifE ESTIMARS"

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR

Real Estate General

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Salts
Installation
Service

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

992-3410

NEW LISTING - Here is a
really nice home thai is
priced to sell - owners
have left area and need a
buyer. 3 bedrooms. usuabie
basement. Deck, even a
small garden area. Bargain
$27,500.00.

~

Winter after winter, a highefficiency gas furnace will be a real
friend to you-and your budget. It'll
give you the warmth that keeps your
whole house cozy. And you can depend on it to save you money. A riew
high-efficiency model uses . up to
30% less energy. And with today's
lower gas costs, you'll be heating
your home for less.

===£5:.am:E.

Wanted To Buy .

WtPIYC•thforlltlmodllciHn
Jim Mink Chev.·Oidalnc.
8111 G•n• Johnaon

' t

'

-,I

-

flu
followint ••lephoM am...,.•...

Clui}i•d pqfl

__ _

9

r========:;r;:=======;r;:=======~ used c••·
J&amp;L BLOWN
GUN SHOOT J.R.'s REPAIRS,
INSULATION

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - A
Wharton School of Business
professor says the long-awaited
Conrail public stock offering,
which could come as early as
next week, should benefit from
the strong stock prlc~s currently
on Wall Street.
Conrail, the 85 percent
government -owned freight r;lil
company, has estimated Its In·
ttlal stock offering of almost 58.8
million shares will be at $26 to $29
per share, up from $22 to $26 per
share mentioned In a prospectus
last month.
The sale could raise as much as
$1.5 billion to$1.7billlon, as much
as $400 million more than earlier
estimates, officials said .
"It looks like a presale correction," professor W. Bruce Allert,
a professor of public policy at the
University or Pennsylvania's
Wharton School, said Tuesday.
" But the real market correction
will be wMn It hits the market. "
Conrail and Goldman, Sachs &amp;
Co. declined to comment on the
reasons for the Increased stock
estimate, which was Issued
Monday .
Goldman, the ' lead stock underwriter, said the sale could
occurr as early as next week.
Last year. Congress set a goal
of $2 billion for Conrail - $1.7
billion from the sale of stock and
$300 million In cash from the
company . Conrail officials paid
the government $200 million last
November.
Allen said $2 billion was a
reasonable price for the company. However, he said hard
economic times have hit the coal,
steel and automobile Industries
on which the lrelght · rail company Is heavily dependent.
Allen said Conrail could have
decided to Increase the stock
price because of a strong market
or because of pressure from
Congress, or both.
"This Is a good time to come
out because the market has been
very strong," he said.

..

'

The

RUSS MOOR£

.r--....:..._------l

M&amp;lfCit

Ohio

tllayclt , riding l1wn
J -11-17. Tllurldl\' llftd ,

•·•-

:

X·R.., Ttchnlden far local doc·
tort oHic• . IHd retuml to loa
P.13. h'l Clfl Pt. Pltttlnt
Rteltttr. 200 Ml4n II. Pt.
Pl• ...nl. WV.
lmmactlttt opening, C.rtlfiH Of
CtrtHIH Eli911M A•ephltory
Th"'PY Ttchnlel~n . 32 h" futl
tlml, ••fM'Itnc.d required .. he
..lt~ry· frlngt blnMht. ContHI
OlrKior of Perunnel Pit•.,..
Veil., HoepiUI, v.._., Drive,
Point PINtant, W. 1/1. 21110,

30f·l71·43&lt;10. E.E.O.E.
ADMIIIIQN UOREIENTA •
TIVE. Outgolftt, ~•tt~le Ptf'·
ton with good communication
lkHit, nMded lo dtv*" ·•
m•k.t new liN nuremg tiCIIhy.

'-'......... lo public -lng •

end back9fOUnd In rMraet._,. ar
oocl~

wiHk

~

htlpluL Oooltton •

tvtlllble lmmldlMity. COMHIhoo 111..., oiMI
A(lply to .
oonfkltnct w~ r-.urn•, Ml_.y
hll1ary •nd r.terenoe lmM•
dittolv to: Oolm-... " tlf, loa C·13.
w. '~•· ,

'*'-·

21110.

"·Ph..

....,.••• Hlr- coo .......
mutt .... n•ly. hew tfMt-

porltllo~.

Ojllllpollt · -

........ ""··

· ...

jlo&gt;l:

'""'lo · ,.
230 """"' II .. O.P.. 1:00 AM 'J.',
1 :00 PM . A1k for Mr .
W-11-

&gt;

�Pege-1~-The
11

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-M"

·LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wanted

44

II!AKE II!ORE II!ONEYI
Elrn Wllldy comml11iona with
our profitable Une of Advertitlng
Calenders, Pent. Capt end

2 bedroom apt in Point pteasant Deposit required. H~d
acctPttd. 448-2200 evening•

J1cktt1. Helpful ul• ide•. •
ToU-Fr.. Me ...ge Center and
oth• great ... ling tools. All
white being your own bou. No
Investment. No collectlona. Full
Of Part Time. Our 78th year
Write· Kevkl Peaka. NEWTON
MFG. COMPANY , Dept. E755.
Newton, Iowa 60208

12

Need

FOt' rent Sleeping Rooms end
light houae k~~tping rooma. Park
Central Hotel Call 614·4460756.
Room1 for r11nt , day week
month Galli• Hotel Call 814446-9716 . ~en111 tow 11 e1 :Zo
month.

Situations
Wanted
mature

For Rent Eff•ciency siMptng
rooms Call 304· 773-6661.

dependable

Room and board for workmg or
elderly person. or 1INp1ng room.
304· 676-7727

woman to live-in the montl'l of
April. 1 week to look after 2
teenage children. Husband II
Wife mu 11 be out of town. light
cooking &amp; tlou~twork Mutt
hi'Vt car Call anvt•me tor
lntMView, good pay, n1ca home

46 Space for Rent

Ph &amp;14-446· 6147

"I hate to think of growing
up and working for some
. 1'"
grr.

Som110ne to liva in whh disabled
middle aged wom&amp;n . Call 614

367-7·t66

15

Schools
Instruction

Retra.n Now Southeastern Bus·
ine11 College can 614 -446·

Apartment
for Rent

..___________,___________-!
r"'

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Off•ct Space for Rent Excellent
for Anorneys Accountent, etc
Close to Court House Call
W1aeman Real Estate Agency.
614-446· 3644

1 B Wanted to Do

Went to do babya•ttmg 1n my

home Have references Fenced
in ytrd Ph . 614· 446 · 9566 or
446·4426.
Hu1band and wife. yard work.
Cit&amp; for elderly Pomt Pleasant
area. 304· 67fi 4880

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends that you
do buslne" with people you
know, and NOT to aend money
through the mail until you have
invHtigeled the offer~ng

DELTA INCOMES, INC Rt 1
Box 441 -A, Slidell, louis1ana
70461 . 504-841 -8871
Buaine11 for sale, Tenn1ng bed
buasine11 In downtown Point
Pleuent. Equipped w•th two
Kl1fsun Wolff tanning beds. Will
tell buaine11 or beds Ce ll
304· 676-4072 .
Own your own jon-sportswear,
lldiu apparel , clllldrens maternity, larga 1izn. petite.
dancewear-aerobtc or acceSio·
riM store Jordache. Chic, Lee
Le•·ll. lzod . G11ano, Mens, C1lvtn
Klein, Sergio Valente, Evan
Picone. liz Claiborne, Members
Only, Gltollne, Healthtex over
1 , 000 others e14 . 800 lo
•28, 900 in'olentory, training
fixturu , grand opening etc Can
open 16 days.• Mr. Sidney
{404)262 -4489
23

Professional
Services

JuHa's Per1onal Care Mome has
opening for elderly pllienu. 24
hour c•e. f1mity buslnesl 11nce
1 9&amp;9. 30·-773-6873

Rea l Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr .. 2 baths, gas lleat. cental
lit, 1 8x38 inground pooL excel·
lent neighborhood near Holzer in
city tchools $61.500 Call
eu.. u&amp; -3961 .
By owner· Good S11rttr hoult 3
BR, city schools, gat heat.
wmdow AC, fenced yard . hard·
wood floors. 1 car g~rage Call
614- U8· 1171 or 614· 448·
4306.
Mult sell newly remodeled 1bdr.
tlomt netr new swimm•ng pool·
Gallipotlt . Sacrifice price
•18, 900 Call 614· 446-2539
3 bedroom, 1 batll, utility, large
lll!chen. Single car glrage· consider renting Cell 614-446·
1358
What 1 B~rgeinl 2 slory llouse:
Rern&lt;ldelld. totally rew1red , m·
sulated . brand new hot water
heltet 2 or 3 BR 's low heating
bill I. very nice lot. garage with 2
oulbulldinge All for only
120,000. Or best offer. Ph.
610-246-9378
By Owner : 2.80 acres. 6 room
haute with old stone f~replece ,
tumace, wood burner. built In
oven. range. 3 ~ental units,
rented ye•r round. Nice Income.
U7,900 00. And 2 3&amp; acres, 4
ept1. 6 Overnight or weellly
rooms ell furnished plut mobile
flame lot with septic tanll .
t17,600 00 U.S 80 Motel,
McArthur. Ohio Ph . 598· 6906

NEW AND USED MOBILE
MOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. AT 35
PHONE 614-446· 7274 .

2 bdr , all utillttes pa1d except
alec , futn or unfurn , aec
depotlt requ1rtd Convenient
locat1on Call 614· 446·855B or
614-446-4178

1966 Sllyline 47.:10 '52400
Call 614 -446-0390.

2 bdr fully turn1sf1ed edults only,
util pa1d Call 614-446·4110 .

12.:65 Nesttua. 2 BR , Iarge t..th
Must see &amp; make offer Call
614· 446-7687.

In Eureka excetlent shape 2 Bdr
w1th expando Responc1ble
adult• only No pets U25mo
Deposit required Pll 614-2456863

1 972 Castle 14x66 With 1982
Expando 12.:20 fireplace, can ·
ual 111r, 2 baths. 2 storage
bUildings Must sell Ptt 245
5884 after 5pm
Double w1de 24.:52 new win
dow5, new counter tops, new
carpet Pnce Reduced. Ph 614
256-9393
1976 fUtiVal 28R, 2 lull baths,
master batluoom with garden
tub and show off to side. n&amp;w
carpet. new vmyl, concrete
steps. under ptnmng. mettl
building Set up on rented lot
Alklng pr1ct 88,600 00 Ph
614-245-9472 after lipm
1982 Mansion 14x66, 2 large
BA all alec. Set up on beautiful
riverfront lot Ready to move
into With everything you need
614-992-3348 atter 61'm or
anyttme on weekends
1972 Elcona 1 2x60 2 bedroom,
furnished . ~eady lo move
14900 OBO 614·592-376B
even1ng t or 614 · 985 ·4227
weallenda
K &amp; K Mob1le Homes , Inc, new
and u1ed home• startmg e1
14,400 00 end up. 304~ 675 ·
3000.
1971 Mob1le Mome 12x65 Kirk·
wood. partly r8modeled 304
173· 6873
1972 Kingwood 1 2d5, 2 bed·
room mobile home with central
a1r. built in wat btr. refrigerator,
stove. dinnatte, new carpet.
11tt1ng on rented lot can be left or
moved. Priced e&amp;.OOO 00 304773-6202.

1980 Windsor, 14x70, 3 bedroom•. 1 Y2 batha. lotal electric.
air cond . porch. must move.
Must Sell, 812.000 00 304896· 3046
1977 mob ile heme. 12d0, all
electric. S6.600.00. 304-576·
2809

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial bu•ldmgt tor lease
Downtown Pt Pleasant Stores.
ofli ctt. A-One Real Estate
Carol Yeager. Broker. C1ll 304·
676-6106.
FOR SALE·'h 5000 SQUARE
FOOT MEDICAl BUILDING . PT.
CLINIC 708 VIANO ST PT
PLEASANT . FOR DETAILS ,
CALl 305·8•7-3740.
35 Lots

8o

Acreage

Two Ac res Land M·l td ..lly
located 1/t mi. N Porter Hwy.
160 Co. Water well , septic.
fru it treat. Hn 3bdr Mobile
Home, fuel 011 tank. el~&amp;etric.
concrete run
awnings All
114.900 Land $10 900 Call
513-731 -2107
19.000.00 2'1:! Acres on Rio
Centerpoint Rd 1 mite from Rio
Grande . Clear level front.
woode. Ph 814-446-3805eftar
6pm.
For sate· 12.5 ICfBI 19500.
Scipio TWP .. Meigs Co At. 2 ,
Albany. Oh1o. Phone 698-6427
after 6:00p m
Acre loti for sale. tlOOO. and
up Will help finance . Cell
61•·992-7481 , 614-992-23a8
or 614-992-3543.
A1htan bulldlna lots. mobile
homet permitted, Clyde Dowen,
Jr. 304· 676 -2336.

For die by owntr 2 storv flouN
In Middleport overlookmg park.
30 yr guarnteed vinyle siding,
w·W carptl, 1 'h bath, unique
woodwork . 614-982 ·5126

Rental s

Government hom" from I 1.
fU·ttptir) DeHnquent tax prop·
arty. Repolltl ..ons, Call 805·
887-lfOOO 1E11t GH .-9806 for
cur,.,t rii)O list.
Compl.rety' remodeled two biHI·
room houN wtth baHmtnt.
80•1150 tot. 2312 Medlaon Ave
Woukt mtke IICCIIIent 8tlrt.,
home or rental property. Ateo, a
new 11telll1e eysUm
U1 ,500 .00 . 304 -175-1477
10:00 10 1 :00 or af11f' 8:00PM
304-372· 9970.
HouM for salt or ,..nt ,..w
Htven. rent t1150.DO monthly,
304-112· 2U4.

Furnished 2 bdr . AC, beautiful
nver view m Kanaug1 HUD
eccepted Foster Mob•le Home
Park Call 614-446-1602
1 mile out of c1ty hm1ts on
688 Ph 614 -446-6483

~~

12x60 2BR Mob1le Home lo·
cated 1 m1le DUt Clark-Chapel
Rd N1ce yard. garden spece.
children accepted Ph 61.4 -446·
3697 Or 246· 6223
1985 Mobile Home 14x70, on
St. Rt . 143. S230. g11s tncludad.
Call 614-992 -6449
- - - -- -- - - lc2 bedroom furnished. 1 child. No
pets S1 50 par mDnth New
Haven 304-882-2466
2 bedroom trailer. couples. ,
amatl chtld, loculi Ad , Rt 1.
Pomt Pteaunt, 304-675-1076
Mob•le homes tor rent startmg
•116 00 and up 614 -446 ·
0608.
2 bedroom Sand Hill Road
304-675-3834 .
2 bedroom mobile home. furnished. $200 00 per mont" plus
ut•hties. phone 30•·676·6512.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1986 Holly Park. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, 304-876·7298.

6 rooms. bath and basement, In
Pomeroy . You can lletlthlt one
Must 1ell. Phone 614· 992 ·
7412

Hou11 for ..le In Middleport .
Moving . mult 1111 Alklng
$18 .000 . Currently ftnttd .
114· 895· 3885
..:_- - - - - , . . : : - - ·lc New Log Home tnd 7 acres on
Mile Hill Rd , Aacine. 3 bed·
room. btth, ba11men1, garage,
torc8d eir wood tnd cot! furr'IICI 80 parcent complete.
Asking •&amp;0.000 Su Vonnie Of
Jim Ptlrelnger on Mile Hill Rd.
Recine or cell 814· 247·4292.

2bdr. Mobile Home. Plants
Subdlvhion Bulav ille Rd
8176 OOmo Ph 614· 446 ·
4564 1fter 6pm.

1 Bedroom blsie rent • 178.00
plus electric. Al1o r~qutred a
•200.00 security depoalt. CON ·
lACT Jackaon Estate• Dept. Ph
446 · 3997 Equal Housing
OppDrtunity .
Furnilhed &amp; unfurnished apts ,
f1 60 00 and up. references Ph.
304-675-7738 or 304-876·
61 04 A· 1 Reel Estate
15 Court Street, 2 BR. 1VJ
bllhl. w/ w carpet, complete
modern kitchen, gas heat, well
insulated , wired for phone •
cable tv, spacious, psrlling in
rear, palto, S376/ mo. plus
ulihties. Depoait. References
required. No pets, Call814-446·
4926
5 Court Street, large 3 BR , 1 1h
beth. complete k•tchen. gas
he1t, pltk in rear. overlook ctty
park &amp; river t2fi0/ mo plua
utihtiea , depoSit, reference• requlrftd No pet• Great for 21 3
11ngles Ca11614-446-4926.
Furntshed Efficiency $150
Utilitia• pd. Smgle. Share bath .
607 2nd, Gallipoli1 Call 4464416 afler 7pm.

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Wa1hers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Apphancet ,
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel 61 4·446· 7398
lAYNE 'S

FU~NITURE

Sofas and cha1r1 pnced from
e396 to 8996. Tables $50 and
up to 8126 Hide-a-beds 1390
to $696 Recliners 8226 to
U76 Lamp• $28 to 8125.
Dinettes 8109 and up to S496
Wood table w-6 cha~rs &amp;286 to
8796 Duk 8100 up to 8375
Mulchet e400 1nd up . Bunk
beds complete w-mattreues
$296 and up to 1!1396. Baby bed5
S1 10 &amp; 1176. Mattreasasorbox
springs full or twin •&amp;3. firm
$13 . and e83 Queen aetl 8226.
King S360. 4 drawer chest $66
Dressers 889. Gun cabinets 8,
10, 12gun Guoreleetr~crenge
U75 Baby mattresses S36 &amp;
e45, Bed frame• 820. 130 I
King frame •so Good select1n
of bedroom suitet, metal ca·
bmetl, headboards $30 end up
to 865
Ultd furnilure . wood table a. 2
benches, beds , dresaer, wood
wardrobe. 3 miles out Bulavllle
Rd. Open 9AM to 5PM , Man
lhru Sat. 614· 446-0322.
STOP-LOOK-SAVE
Mollohan furniture 6 Applian·
cos, Rt ' 7 Norttt Gallipolis, OhiD
Ph 614-446-7444 6pc Wood
Llvmg Room Su1te t399.00.
Good used portable &amp; floor
model color TV 's Call614-446·
1149.
Moving mu1t sell furniture. 3pc
BR su1te. sofa. coffee a. end
teblu Ph . 614-448-0388 or
245-6288 afler 4pm.
Sofa, cha1r, 2 end tables. 2
tamps, eoffee table Ph 614·
446-7683 .
50sq yardt carpet with pad.
Light beige, good c:ond1tion. Ph.
614-446 -2100 .
13 0 cu ft Kelvinator refrigerator. extra good cond. f60.00.
304-676 -4828

740 2nd Ave. 1 BA . •186 ,
Deposit required. Call614 -4484222 between 9S.5.

64 Misc . MiJchandise
Callahan '• Used Tire Shop Over
1,000tirel, lllBI12, 13. 14, 16,
16, 16 6 8 milet out At . 218
Call 614 · 266 ·6251 .

1 BR . ground &amp;or apartment
All utilities paid Near McDo·
nalds . Call 814-446-7026.
New ap1rtment completely
turn. Ref. a Oep 1 or 2 adults
only. Cell 814-446·0338.

Plutic cistern 11111 approved,
plasl•c aept•c tanka. plaatic
cul'olerts. matal culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jeck·
son, Oh. 614-288·6930.

Furnithed efficiency, pr~vate
bath 8176 00 Ut1lltite Plld,
920 4th 1ve , Gallipolis Ph.
446-4418 etter 7pm

Swimming Pools •999. New
leftover 1986 model pools
Huge 161124 foot swim lttt, 4
feet deep. Includes deck. fence,
filter and warranty. Financing
erranged. instellatlon available
Call 24 hours 1 ·800-346-0946.

Spaclous2bdr. •pt., C. A.. water
paid. Near P1u1 Hut. Gallipolis
Ph. 514·441·7026
NIC~e 2 bedroom apt Stove &amp;.
refrfgeretor &amp; Wlter furnitned
4 V, miles hom Gtltlpolil .
S21 0 00 1 month. 160.00 dep·
osit . No Pets Ph. 1514-4488038.

Triple cleaned whita oatt 41n.
schedue 40 pipe. along w1th
1SOOib crust! 41n. pipe. Found
11 Bidwell Cettt Feed Store Ph.
814· 388·96a8.

Houses for Rent

3 bdr ranch, Rodney VIllage 11,
U85 mo plus deposit Aeteren·
cet required. Call Blackburn
Realty 81•·448-0008.
8 room ht on &amp;0 acres at Eureka.
1250 • month . 6 room ht. 715
1cre flfm -Mason County . C1ll
304-676-&amp;104
3 bdr. ha . 2 mlln from HMC . No
pett. U95 month . e100 dtP·
o111. Ca11614 -448-3817
Nice 2 BR 1 Y, bathl. geragt
Three milts from Holzers Rt.
180. Ph. 814· 446-2783 Day
time or 448·2861 Eveninga.
2BR 8 mil" out of Pt. llte111nt.
For anformatlon call 81 4 -444·
4602.
3 bedroom unfumlthld llouat
for rent. Security dtpOtlt and
reflrtnC:Q rtQulr.d. 81 4 -912·
7701 .
Two ~room houN, Mt. Ver·
non Ave., rtfrtnt.a and d..,oa.H
r~qulr..t 304-87&amp;· 2151 .

1pr nice green drapes 1 44x92 ',

•

J ·1t

Cl '"'..,lOlA.~~~e

Tony's Gun Replltl, hot reblue ing Open 9 00 AM to 7 ·00 PM
Call 304-675-4631
2 hosp1tel beds complete with
mattress. 2 hospital beds With
out mattresses. Gu cook 5tove
304· 773· 5873 .
SIGNS Htlf prtcel Save 55 per
centll Flashing anow sign5
82991 lighted, non-arrow 82B91
Unlighted 5249• Free letttt"sl
SH locally 1(8001423-0163.
anytime
Twin size beds Wltfl headboards,
frames . bo.: sprmgs and mel·
trassu. 840 00 each, 304 6751091 .
'
Rougtl Lumber $160 .00 per
thoutand by the bundle or 20C a
board fool . Walker Wrecker,
304· 676-4412. 8:30 to 6.00.
Mon tllru Fri.
55 Building Supplies
Budding Materiels
Block. brick, sewer pipe1, w1n·
dowt. lintels, etc. Cleude Wtn·
ters, A1o Grande, 0 Call 814246-5121
Concrete blocks ell sizes yard or
delivery ~aaon und Gattipoll1
Block Co , 123Ya Pme St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614·4U·
27B3
B1g 2 DR Ruttic home butlt on
your lot. e1 L996 &amp; up. Cell
1-614-888-7311
Building Tru11n 22ft , 24h ,
28ft , 28ft , 40ft., &amp; tome naw
battl tubs 8&amp;.8 Surplus Supply,
St. Rt. 160 Porter, Ol11o Ph.
&amp;14-446 -8772 .
Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan. Pe,.ian and
Siamese kittens AKC Chow
pupplas. Ntw Chow puppiu.
Call 61 4 · 446 ·3844 after 7PM .
Groom &amp; Supply 1hop Pel
groommg, ell slylel, all breedt.
Julie Wabb. Call 614 ·4460231 .
Wanted AKC Reg•stered Miniature Oachsund tor llud ser'oiiCt.
Ph . 614-682-6731 .
AKC Registered red male Toy
Dachshund puppiM , 6 weekt
old. Ftrst shola &amp; wormed Ph.
814-448-7920
Aegl1tered Lebrador Retmtver
pups. Yellows end blacks. Own
female and male Ctll evenmgs
814·992 · 6181
AKC registered Vorksh iru.
Wormed and thots. Ready to go.
304·876·4387
59 For Sale or Trade
4 Block Stwmill. 1978 Dodge
Pick-Up . 1979 H1rtey Oavid1on
Full Orau. Ph 614-U3· 2603.

Far111 Suppli1:s
liv~olnck

61 Farm Equipment
2010 John D&amp;ere diesel trectorplows. disc 83960 New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower S496 Late
model 224T John Deere baler
•1295 H11y wagon 1300. Call
814-286· 6622.
CROSS &amp; SONS
U S . 36 West. Jackson, Oh•o
614·288·8451 '
Meuey Ferguson. New Molland,
Bush Hog Sale• 81 Ser'o11C8. Over
~0 used tractou to choo1t from
It complete line ol new • used
equipment Largest selection in
S E Ohio.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SA 36 W Gallipolis.
O~io Cell 614· 446-9777, eve .
614·446-3692 Up fronl tree·
tors With warranty o'olor 40 u10d
tractors. 1000 toots
Jiv1den Farm Equ1p. 614-4461875 Special Sale on our new
Kiotl tractor! Up to S3000 off on
Vermeer hay equ•pt Roundbalers , mowers. mower conditions, reket. teddert, &amp; a
complete line of bale handling a.
feed1ng acces Grinder-mixera,
wagons. rotarv cunera, blades.
discs. cultivators. plows. seeders , pott dr~ven , wood tp!ittersgates, headgates. truckracks, truck·bedt. trailera.
sprayers. feed· bunks, llvettockwatet"s Ia wtteelhono lawn &amp;
garden equip Used Equip 1
round-balers. tome of these
balen require allow as 36 llorse
power lraclortl Mowing machines, rakes , tedders,
IQutre-balers. Used tractors,
discs,, plowt. tobacco-tettart.
wagons , harrow. bushog,
grav•tY·Wtgon, Lime·tpreeders.
cutlditloner a. f1ay-bine1 Used
Wheelhorse lawn mower. located 1 mile off 218 on Ingalls
Rd.
John Deere 3010 with loader
S4.8&amp;0 00 12fl transport disc
1496 00 AC no tilt planter
$1.560.00 3 Bottom John
Deere Plow $396 .00 Cell 614286-6622

6 Bottom Semi-mounted plows
•450.00 300 gallon sprayer
outfit t296 .00. Sft. pull - ~pe
bulh hog 1460.00 8ft . rottrv
peeker •160.00 Ph. 614· 286·
6622 .
'
Oliver 66 Trtctor w1th mowing
m~lne. 2 row oliver plenter a
new idaa manure tpreader
n .B60.00 firm Ph. 6U ·286·
&amp;622
36 M•tsey Ferguton Diesel
Tractor •2B60. New 6ft. Grader
Blade 6175 New Post Hole
O•(Hier $275. Ph 61~· 286 ·
6522
1 Mechemctllransptanter. 3 pt
hitch, 3 wheel rake. Call 614·
696-1244.
Maney ferguson 135, 1972 Ot
74 model. naw tires, in good
condition. phone 304 -1576·
2615.
.
Small double section diac•nd 18
inch tingle btam 'plow • 1 36 00
for all, 30•· 895· 3430.
White 16 hp •4 . 960 . 00 .
MARCH ONLY. Sidefl Equip·
mtnt, Henderson, W. Va. 304·
676· 7421
62 Wanted to Buy

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn Call forl1testquotes River
City Ftrm Supply. 014-4.462986.
Livestock

Ouroc 80if'l Bred just like tile
botra WI ltlt.d 11 tht Ohio
Tntatlon that gained over 2 .•
lbt. per day . Roger Bentley,
Sabina, pH. 513·584·2398.

Autos for Sale

1984 Dodge Colt Clean no rust
02.895 00 1S82 Chovv Cit·
ation PS . PB, A1r e1,495.00 Ph
814· 288 · 8622
1976 Gremlin, good running
cond1t1on. Georg11 car. 8cyl.,
nuto. AC. 5900 DO Ph 614·
388-9960
1961 Dodge Lancer4-dr .. 6cyl ..
3-speed, alandard shift on floor
All f1ctory equipment. ~uns
good UOO.OO Ph. 614· 388·
9960
1982 Dodge O•plomat, auto. atr,
AM . w~re nms. Ctll1 price
12.299.00 Johns Auto Sales,
Bullville Rd G111ipolis
1976 Chevy Impala S376 . 1976
Plymouth Arrow $350 . 1956
Bu1ck Special 1325 00 Ph
614···6-3969
19•0 Dodge Bu•ln•s Coupe
All original . excellent condition.
Needs sDme repatrs, Extra parts
included
Selling Price
14.000.00 Ph. 614-388-8620
1984 Escon 54.000 miles,
AM · FM cauene. 4· speed
02. 600.00 ph 614· 379· 2742.
1985 Ford F-260 4x4, V-8, PS .
PB. AM ·FM Cessatta. Low m1·
leage excollen1 condition Ptt
814-379-2441 after 5pm.

'71 Thunderb~rd e660 00 Pll
614-446-4439.
1983 Pontiac Grand Prix : PS .
PB. air, new tires. U ,B&amp;O.OO.
1981 Cemaro· Aallywhaelt, PS,
PB. $2,950.00 ftrm . Ph . 614·
286-8622 .

1978 Dodge Diplomat.
8500.00, 1979 Suzull• 426 ,
0600.00. 30.· 676-7603.

1985 Grand AM LE. 13.000
miln. one owner. garage kept
304-876· 2369 .
'84 Camero Z28. T·tops, PS , PB,
low mlleege. 304-876-8382 .
1981 Cheve't te. auto. air. brand
naw radial t~res , n•ct clean
interior. exc running cond, 304675· 1604
1979 Monza Chev V-11, auto.
PS, PB, AM ·FM radio Clllltta.
nearlv new tiru, liking
s1 ,250 oo. 3o•-773·fiB75.
' 79 BUIA Skyltrk, 6 cycle, air,
$1 .800.00. 304 ·676·2549.
1980 Olds Oelt188 Royale, V-8,
PB. PS. eir. cruill. AM ·FM.
good cond , 304-675-1028.
1973 Chevrolet good work car.
best oflltf, can be seen 191 N.
Perk Drive. 304-875-11582.

72

CAPTAIN EASY
I THINI&lt; THE5E

MIGHT WANT TO U~f THO~E
SIIAKE~ AGAIN.

2 Aiding Hon.. &amp; 1 Ponr bftdla
&amp; saddle. Ph. 814-245-1492.

Hay

8o

Grain

Appro1lml'le 1,1500 belea ml•ed
hey fo( Mit. Flrtt and MCOnd
cutting in b•n. t1 .25 per bait.
Call 87&amp;- 3417 •ft•r 8 p.m.
Dried eh..lld corn •4.80 per
cwt. Ground t&amp;.OO I * cwt .
Ground with molatMI tl.71 I *
' CW'I. 304· 411·1031 .

8o36
7:00

Accessories

Utld S. Rebuilt Tr~nsmlliion•. "·
All internllty maptettd • au• ..
ranteed. lnstallttion and pick·UP
tvalleble. Ptt 1~-446· 0988,

~Al I"!

TAKE!!&gt; TO
IT TIIESE DA'I!&gt;~ I'lL ltlL
IT TAmlDM.,KE IT'

BUDGETTransmiulont : UsM:J.
Rebuilt All1ypes torque convtr·
ttrt • tranrftr cues EngiM
overhaul kita . Alliton Trenamlaaion Perts &amp; CVC Jointt. Qua·
ranteed. will deliver, cnh &amp;
carry or inatall Cell 614-3792220 or 268·5677.
Auto part• for ule. Radio, A C.•
glass, and othlf plrts for 1977
Cordobe. 30• ·773-5651.
79 Motors Homes
8o Campers

7:05
7:30

17' Banner Cemper excellent .
condltlon •1200.00 Ph. 614·
.46·0063

- - - .I.

1986 Foxtirt cemper, 28 h .
loaded with extrea. 30•-8711423

THINf&lt;

{VISTAMO~PHOSIS I.S

5STTII'IG IN X: HAVe:' AN U~GEE
81

Home
Improvements

1985 GMC Sierra Classic 'IJ ton
piclrl up. w1th topper . Show room
condition . 14 ,000 miles .
•10,600 Contact John lyons.
Racine. Oh10. 614-949-2933.
1988 Dodge Ram Charger
jlookl like Blazer). Red and
white, low miles, AM -FM
ceuettt radio . power windows
and door locllt, cruilt, tih, 4x4.
wlndlhietd aun vltor. lighted
running boards Must sell. new
car ordered Clll614-742-221 1
before 6:00 1nd 614-992·15784
after 5 :00 end Ilk for Oeve,
'04 Ctlwy pickup with msulated
topper. 30•·876-3802.
Vans

8o 4 W . O .

1973Fotd1 ton\lan . NewtirH,
breket . Tr1nemiulon oom·
pletely rebuilt. Good running
vehicle •1 .000.00 Ph. 814388· 9960
1983 Full! Sire Ford Bronco,
10,000 actual mil•. hcellent
condition . XLT P1ck1ge
18, 9915.00 Ph. 814-441-7441
or &amp;14-446-1421
1978 Jeep CJ -7 . excellent con·
ditlon t1 ,1500.00 Ph. IU-1148·
4841
1991 Chevy o\x.J!lton, maroon,
3&amp;0 4- opHd, &amp;&amp;.000 mll01 Ph
614·445·1527.
1980 Dodge Ven V100 Auto,
PS, P8. 304· 882· 2488.

7:36
8:00

TO HANG GiLl De.

-·

BASEMENT
. WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Hfettme guar•'l·'
tee. LOCII rBIIWfltlc.l furniahed.
Free eatiml'tes. Call co116ct" •
1· 814·237·0488, diV or night ' 1.
Rogers Basement '
Wat.,proofing.
......

......._.,'

I ·

·.

ALLEY OOP

.-

SWEEPER tnd ..wing mtchlri'a ::
repair. parts, end suppli•. Pil*~~...
up 1nd ~Ivery, Davit Vacuum ~
Cleaner, one httf mile up 1
Georges Creek Ad. CaM 814· '
44&amp;-0294.
'

*

·'
All typu c•ptntlf • 'concrete
work· Interior, e1terlor, remo- .,
deling, painting, roofing, trH ..
Mtimates. Cllll14·441·1174. ·

EEK &amp; MEEK
~IPIT

AINGLES'S SERVICE, tXPt·
rlenctd ctrpenter. el.c:trician, ,
maaon. peinlar. roofing (includ· ·'
~ng hot tar appllcaUonl 304876· 2088 or 876· 7147.
Rolary or cable tool drilling
Mon wella complectd umedey . •.
Pump uln and lllfVice. 30._
895-3802
Gllvamzed ~orrugatld culvert, - ~·
12 .36 ft .. up. AllliHI. Finlngt
Fabrication Day&amp; night delivery·"
within 150 milt~ . WUI not be
undersold. 304-925-5211
Concrete flnl•h. parldng lots,
baaamente · any size job Senior
Citizen Dl•count, 014-988·
4464

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHAT DID 't'U.l
WATCH ON TV
LAST

Nl6i-IT"&lt;

f NEVE'R KNOW WHEN
HE '5 PUTTING- ME' ON.

A "TWO-HOLJR SPE"CLAL ON
PBS CALU:D "NACRAME
FOR THE MA'55ES."

Starka TrN and Lawn Service.
Greener ltwnt t"at is Weed and
Pelt FrH, Uquld M g,.ndular
applicetion-trae and thrub tOO
Stump remo-..11 anywh•• without lawn dam ega. For complete
tree and lewn care ca11304-5762842 or 176-2903 .
Plumbing
&amp; Heating .

CARTER'S PLUII!81NG
AND HEATING
Cor. ~ourth tnd Pine I
Galllpoiit, Ohio
Phone 614-44&amp;-3888 or &amp;14- ·
446-4477

Oll··SMELL THAT
BEAUTIFUL

AROMEY !!
I WONDER WHAT
LOWEEZY'5

General Hauling

..

COOKIN'"?

Dilllfd Water Slll''ollce· Poolt, ~
Sisterns, Weill Dtti'olery Anv· - t.
1 • ..
time Call 614-4:48 · 7404.

~J-om-.-,-:a=-o-r-o'::W:-o-to-r-=s-.rv-lc-e.""'A-Io,,d:~
..
l)oott tilled Cell614· 2155-1141.- ~
or 814· 448·1116 or 114-"18·. \
791 1
f . ;o.c,
~.

J &amp; J Water Service. Slaternt, ""'
wells, twimming pool1 Ph '. •
IU-246-9285
Watfenon ' • Water . Haull~g . :
reason1ble rates, Immediate .
2.000 gallon dellvtry, ciltlrnt. ~ ·
poolt. well. etc. caR 304·1178-. '
2919.
------------------~ ~.
HouM coal, lim11tone. and
gravel D•Uver~ 1 ton and up1
Jim U.niM, 304-675-1247 o(
675-7397.
'
Form•ly Ken Whealons Now
John's Water Strvic:e. Sem•
Prlcu 1.000 or 2.000 gl;11 '
Hfvice. 304·1571-22•8.
'

~;;;;:::=··:·.·
87

Upholstery

1979 CJI Joop: FII..,glou H.T.,
big Rldloltlroo. now ....,IH 3110.
300 HP angine UIOO. 1810
King Ctb Oattun 4JI4. New
12.150 radllll. roll ber with
llghtt, sunroof 111d olh• IXtrla.
•noo 614-912-65&amp;1 ott•
8o00 p.m.

1R &amp; M Custom Couchn and 1
R•upholstery, St. At. 7. Crown· t
Chy, Oh. &amp;14·211·147il, Evo. :
614· 448-3431 . Open dally It to 1
4:30. a .. 9 :30 to 1:30 . Old
1
new Uphotttftld.
'

'73 Chevy Bla.taf. 327 au,to·
m1tlc., ttllv wh ..... •1 .200 00,
phono 304· 411·1101.

In fumlturt upholat.nng. tal :

a

=-~-::-~---·
ll!..,roy'o Ui&gt;l!olotoring HN1t1t •
tticountyaroza.,.,,., TlttMft "

304 · 178 -,1&amp;4 for hee ~ •
eatlmltn.
., •

..

.

''
~

I]) Mlnnolll On Mlnnolll :
Llza Remembers Her
Famous Dad-VIncent
WPBY

•••

mer Hammer heads for los

Fetty Tree Trimming, etump
'"'OVII . Ctll304-1576-1331.

.

(!) Mardo Sportalook
Ell CD Jefforoono
I]) Square One TV ICC)
lill 3-2· t. Contact (C Ci.
(JJJ Facts of lifo
(]) Beverly Hlllblllloo
IJ {l) 1111 NBC News
(!) Inside tho PGA Tour
CIJ Cl CIJ ABC News
fJI CD Hogon·s Heroes
I]) Doctor Who
® Cll (!JI CBS Nowo
lilJ Newton'&amp; Apple ICC)
(jJ) WKRP In Cincinno11
(]) Andy Griffith
1J {l) PM Maguina
CII Hardcaotlo and McCor·
mlck
(!) SportaContor
CIJ Entortolnmon1 Tonight
John, Anjelica and Tony
Huston are 'oil Sited on the
set of their new frlm. '"The
Dead ".
f11 CD M'A'S"H
0 I]) People'&amp; Court
I]) Wonderful World of
Disney: Davy Crockett's
Keelboat Race Wily riller·
man Mike Fink (Jell York)
cons Da11y (Fess Parker)
and his SidekiCk Georg1e
(Buddy Ebsen) mto racmg
h1m down the Mississippi
to New Orleans. (60 min .)
®News
lill MacNa•I·Lahrer Newsh·
our
Cll (jJ) 1111 Wheel of Fortune
(jJ) Berney Miller
Ill Sanford and Son
1J {l) C1J Newlywed Goma
(!) NHL Hockey: Teams to
Be Announced (3 hrs)
(liVe)
Ell CD Too Clo. . lor Comfort
D I]) Judge
® Whool of Fortune
Cll (jJ) !HI Joopardy
(j] Jolloraono
(]) Honeymooners
II {l) 1111 Highway to
Heaven ICC) A reckless
yot..mg man and an unmar·
rted, pregnant teenager
learn a lesson about love
and
responsibility . (60
min )lin St6reo)
CII Bril!l 'Em Back Alive
C1J D CIJ Perfect Strangers
ICC) An a1ling Larry jeoparizes his dream date when
he takes an overdose of
Balki"s homemade remedy
lor the common cold . IRI
fll CD MOVIE

Llza Romombero Vincente
ltza Minnelli recounts the
life and work of her father,
ftlmmaker Vincente Minnelli. 12 hrs.)
liD Cll (jJ) Now Mlko Hom-

RON ' S Ttlevltlon Service .
House cells on RCA, Ou&amp;a~r,
GE Specialing in Zenith. Call ·
304· 676· 2398 or 814-446· ·
2464.
.

B5

PUliLU

- - , - - - - - Edlred

.

PEANUTS

PARSON !!
BRINGS
HERE?

WHAT

YOU OVER

! WAS
HEAVENLY

Angeles to tn vesttgate the
murder of a theatrical man~er (60 min.)
[tll MOVIE: 'Tho Groat Sen·
tin!'
8:05 I]) MOVIE: 'The Spoilers·
8 :30 C1J 0 C1J Harry (CCI The
Army inform s Harry ,that he
has been AWOL for O'oler
twanty_1ears .
9 :00 1J I]) lUI Night Court A pa ternity su.t name s Dan as
' tho father of a precOCIOU S
1 0-year-old
CII 700 Club
CIJ Ill CIJ Dynooty iCC)
Krystle atks Sarah to move
mto the mans1on , McVane
continues to blackmail
Adam. and a millionaire
throws a gala party for Alexis. {60 min .)
® Cll (lli Magnum, P.l.
Magnum's Pul itzer-Pr ize·
wmnmg aunt arr ives in Ha·
waii (60 mm.)
9:30 II I]) 1111 Tortellls (In
Stereo)
[l) Celobrt11ng a Jozz Ma•
ter: Tholonloua Sphtrt
Monk Dizzy Gillespie and
Herbie Hancock are among
the musician s jointng hosta
Bill Cosby and Dobbie AI·
len in this tribute to jazz
great Theloniu&amp; Monk . (90
mm.)
9 :60 (]) MOVIE: 'Coboblanco'
10:00 IJI])1111 GrHd end Power
on Wall Strttt
CIJ D CIJ Arthur Htllty'a
Hotoi(CC) (60 m in)
fJI CD Odd Couple
I]) MocNoii-Lohror Nowohour
® Cll (lli Houston Knlgh11
PREMIERE (60 m in .)
10:30 CII Amorlcan Snopeholl
(!) - Auto Aoolng: Figure
Eight Wo~d Champlonohlp
(60 min i(A)
fJI (1) INN Nowa
(JJJ Nowa
1 1 :00 II llJ CIJ D CIJ liD Cll (lll
1111 Nowa
CII Hordcoltle and McCormick
fJI (1) M'A'6'H
CIJ Kate • Anna McGarr!·
gil In Concort wi1h Lindt
Aondltodt • Morie Muldaur Linda Ronstad1 per·
lcrmo hor '70o hit 'Hoan
like a Wheel."' wrinon by
Keto and Anna McGorrlglo.
as stte and Marla' Muldaur
join the ainger-aongwriter
titters at a club perform·
once in Rochaltor, N.V. (60
min .)
·- .
1 1 :30 8 I]) [I) Tonight Show
Scheduled: ec1or Alan
Thlcko. boxer Mer'&lt;Oiouo
Morvin Hogler. fOO min.) (In
Storoo)
C!l SportaCinter
CIJ WKAP In Cincinnati
•mroxl
CIJ ABC Newt Nlghtllnt
ICC).
®I)) Magnum, P .l.
• 1121 Addo~y Addorly
steps inlo action when an
Army reunion 't
annual
'war gamet' mantu-.ers
turn dlldly aerloul. (70
min .IIAI

e

~.

CLAY I . POLLAN - --

-

WOlD
OAMI
--

0 four

~eorrange

lette rs of the
scrombled wo rd1 below lo farm fou r simp le wo r~s .

I

II llJ CIJ Ill CIJ liD Cll (!JI
1111 NtWI
CII Big Volley

I]) [j) Mlnnelll on Minnolli:

Tree &amp; ltUfi1P remov11. Chain ·
link fences . Stone. mulch. fill
1had... thrubt. ezaliM . Dons
landscapn Ph . 814-441·88U.

B2

73

CANNIBA~~ 'i::="-1'

Trucks for Sale

2 Quarter Horte Meres $326.00
IICh Ph. 814· 268-8364.

c:-:-:------:---:--:-,-

Hay for tall. C•ll 81 •.$92870.
- - - - - - -· lcHay for sale Squ•rt beln.
•1 .25 IICh. Ph. 985-39 • .\ Or
985· 3907.

"I've never done a Rorechach test
like this before."

71

1980 Pontile Bonneville
Brougham. power sletring ,
power brakes, AM -FM ·CI radio.
tilt wtteel. 74.000 miles, excellent condition . 304-676-3694
after 6 p.m

Large round balnoltt'l. e1o.oo
IICh. Will deiNtr Call 14-446·
1052 after lpm.

APARTMENTS. mobile hom•,
houMI. Pl. PIMient 1nd Olltlpollo. 614-441-1221 .

Transpurlalwn

Gravely Tractor, electric start .
8-speed w1th attachments. Ph
&amp;U-446-4149

64

2 Mdtoom apartm.,l in New
Heven. W Ve. C.ll 814-182 7481 or 304· 112·3111 .

DtKalb S. Kenworthy Seed
Corn, W L 312 llfalte. Phone
304-87&amp;-150'8 after 7 p m .

'64 T-Bird convertiable '85
O,unebuggy :\04-675-2454 or
875· 1869

11 yrs Aaue Gliding, :iOil-876·
8169 .

Myrtle Beach Condo Ftantal. 2
bedroome, 2 batha. •l•r,o 8,
furnished compllle with I nens,
t•mi• courtl. lndoor·outdoor,
poota, 11una, ataam room, restturtnt. No IMU·e•celltnt rete1
Phone 814· 42:3·1817.

8:05
6:30

Auto Parts

&amp;

Fertilizer

Late Model 180 Massev Ferguson Tractor $3,960 00 Number
12 M111ey ftJguson Baler
&amp;1 ,150 00 Massey Ferguson
Hay Reike $400 00 !501 Ford
Mowing Mach1ne $450.00 Cell
81.· 286 -8522.

Pig1 for 1111 t36 .00. 1 wkl old,
male and female, wormed, cas·
trtt•d and non-cattrlted. 304·
878·4688.

large 2 bedroom apartment In
Mlddlepon, wether end dry•
hookup, pertlaUy turnlthed. Pay
own utilities t1815 . per month .
Ctll 614-992-2381 d.y-1 Of
614· 992· 2&amp;08 evening•

8o

1981 Dalsun 200 SX $2796
1973 Plymoutfl e526. 1984
Honda Arrow 1228 Ph 814·
367·0641

61 Farm Equipment

Graciou1 living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartmentt at \IU\ege
Manor and Rivetaidt Apartmenta in Middleport . From
•216 . induding utilltln. Call
614· 992 ·n87 EOH.
'

65 Seed

Ford tractor with busfl hog,
gr1der blade, plows, d11c, cuttivetor &amp; draw bar 82 ,500 00
Call814· 286· 6622

63

Utility Bldg Spl. 30' 1140' x9 ',
18•8 OverheMI door. Service
Door. t&amp;333 Erected Iron
Horst Bldga. 614· 332-9746

8 :00

13

Daily Sentinel

S@\\~lA-~£tfS«

TIIAT DAILY

EVENING

t

1976 Centennial Sttr Craft aki ·
boet, 161Ja ft. 70 hp Mercury
motor. firtt c1111 cond,
12,700.00. 304-713·6881 .

~~~:;~;;~~=~:;~~~~;;~~~~~ 76

The

Television
Viewing

1986 AinkerV·Heul, 170hpi·O. ·
MerCt"uiaar engine. 18 ft miiM" '
end accenorlft, 304-15715· 7127 :
eveninga.

Prom gown (shown m Seven·
teen). Stze 7 , pastel jblue, pink ,
while) Call 614-949-2481

&amp;

BORN LOSER

I

P1t group ltving room suit f300
614-992-3937

56

.

26ft C.bln Cruiser on 3 ule
trtller 84600 or when go" In ..
weter rn May •6500. Ph .
448-1528 or 446·1339

Sign1 . Half pme! Save 56
percent.II Flastling arrow signs
S2991 lighted, non -arrow 82881
Unlighted $2491 Free letters!
See locally . 1-800-423-0163.
anytime

t-

n:~-so24.

'

Ohio

76 ,
Boatl and
1 Motqrs for Sale

Unfurmshed 1 bedroom apt like I ::::::::::::::::::::.E~~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~
new thru out. Heat furnished .
1st floor ptNate and quiet.
0286 oomo . Coli 114 ·• 4 • ·
4607 or 448· 2002.

Two bedroom fumlthtd IPI New
Hevtn, 304-812· 3217 Of 304·

'

Pair of men• size 10 clogging
shoes. Ph . 614-246-6645.

SNAFUTM by Bruce Beattie

41

'

1981 :Ytmlhl 185 S1teft blkt.
mint cond. low mlltiQt.. bought
now ;~ 1915, noo.oo. 304·
461·1088

NCR Cestt Regitter 10 depart·
ment 2yrt . old 8200 00 Ph.
614-379-2607

Mixed hardwood slabt t 1 2. per
bundle Contt•n•"ii approx 1 1h
tons. FOB Oh10 Pellet Co
Pomeroy, Otlio Call 814 -9926461

Valley Furniture. new S. uttd
lArge section of quality furni
ture 1216 E:asteJn Ave ..
Gall•polll

l\!lj)~orcyclea

March 18. 1987

1981 Ki*•Mki CSR 2150. Ex·
aallenJ: cqnd. 1.000 1ctual.rftilt1.
t700. Coli 114-441·4414.

20 cUbic ft. freezer 1175 AC
welder 176. 260 Vemahl•226.
weigllt bench with weights. Ph.
614-446-6784.

Speco for rent trai ler spaces.
Locust ~d. At 1, Pomt Pleasant.
304-676-107&amp;.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sen
Open SAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat. 614-446-1899 627 3rd
Ave Galhpolis. OH

If

81 Ho~' lJIIvttWirtglnllfatltl.
Burgun~· !/900d cond , f1300 .
Coli l14;f41· 93U.

New, lehover 1986 model
pool1 . Huge 161124 fool ew1m
erea, 4 feet deep. Includes deck.
fence, filter Ill warranty. Finane·
ing amlnged. lnatllletlon avail&amp;·
ble Call 24 hour• · 1· 800-346·
0948
$o.tldtamp
1,000 tt ctterry lumber. Call
1fter8pm 614· 266-1372.

$6,000.00 Investment Gems. 2
Diamonds. 1 Ruby. Taking
82 ,500 00 lOti Pf'l 614-446·
3806 after 6pm

SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 62
Olive St . Gallipolis. New 6 u1ed
wood -coalstoves, 6 pc wood LR
IUIIB S399. bunk beds e199.
recliners nRW &amp; used bedroom
1uites. wringer washers . &amp;
1hoe1. New l1v1ngroom suites
$199 t699, lamps. C11ll 614·
446-3169.

.

'

COUNT~Y MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy
Rental trailen Call 614-9927479

51 Household Goods

y, Mad,118. 1987
74

DIGITAL
COMPUTER
Equipment for Ale
(3) Digital 11 -23 with AX60
612KBond TK261&amp;1 VT 100 131
LA 120 Prlntera. Under Dig1t1l
SerVice Agreement. Call 814- ,
448-4119 11k tor Jackie or
Robert.

18' •48' Steel Bldg .. 747 Third
phaseconcrete
power. 12
ft .
Avenue. 3door.
overhead
fklor
C•ll 814 -448 -2382.

Merchandise

KIT 'N' CARLYL£ ®by Llrry Wright

54 Misc. Merc!landise

Cebbege
Patoh
twtn 1441192'.
spread with1
1pr white
1hNrs
sham. 1 Holly Hobby twin IPfBid
with oham e. canoov. s2 rdo.
dark green cerpelmg. Ph. 61•·
446-0766 .

4387

Wed

Ohio

TUBNOT

I' I I I

r

Il

EBOVA
r----r:l,;--;r-1'T--1.,-;:--11'

I

",.:.T_R,_I:.,:L:.....:E;---il• =~;

rs

Here' s something 10 think
about department: Have you ever
seen a TV station Interrupt a
regularly-scheduled comme rc ial

I 1I I

1,

6

..-~-------....,,
to
ILONVI

I

18•

I

I ~

bring you a · -

e

··7

Comp le te •he ctl uckle q uorcd
by ld l1ng 11'1 tho r'rllj ~•ng wo1d3
'--l.--..L..--L....-1---..L.--' you davelop !tom step No 3 below
7

1.

•

e
•

•

•

•

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARE S
UN SCRAMBLE fOR
ANSWER

YESTEIDA Y'$ SCRAM-lEn ANSWERS
Pretty - EAT THEM

Thorax - Fault - Mouse -

Philosopher lo student: '"Man does nollive by words alone
despite the facl lhat sometimes he has 10 EAT THEM "
'

BRIDGE

~

NORTH

1M M7

+ Qs

James Jacoby

• A .I S
1 850:1

+ R«H 2

Guard against
a forcing defense

'K

By James Jac oby

.J9

E•sr

WF.,T

+1

tA

•

4 'I 2

+

K 10
+ i.JICI I

~. 3

.1

SOlJTII
. A. K.l \0 1111

Maybe you ca ll tt b~ another na me.
but you sure ly know th e forcmg de fe n se The defende rs play a su1t tha t
forces declarer to ruff. As th ey wm
tricks , they continue to play that s u1t,
shortenmg declarer 's trump length
Eventually one of them winds up w1th
more trumps than declarer , and th e

Vulnerabl e . Nc1t ht•r
D ea ler. Smn h
Wes t

defenders wm more trick s than otherwise But a declarer can orte n counter Pass
this defense with some strategy of h1s Pass
own.
Pass
When South made an mv1tattonal
jump to thre e s pades. North ha d a
close decaswn Although he ha d only
seven high -ca rd points, he did ha ve the
queen m h1 s partner's suit, and an ace
somehmes 1s wQrth even more than
four points . So he bid fo ur spades, not
knowing that three no -trump would be
easy
Decla rer took hi S ace of hearts and
ptcked up trumps. Unfortunately one
defender held four spades. On the ftrs l
diamond le ad, We st won and c onunued
hearts. rufled by dec larer . Anothe r di ·
amond. anothe r heart, and decl a rer
was out of trumps He playe d a third
diamond, hoping agains t hope that the
de fender with th e last h 1gh diamond
would hold no more hearts No s uc h
luck. West had he ld e nough hearts so

!)

• Q4 :ll

109 86
Q J

North

Easl

I NT

l 'a~s

4+

Snuth

I+
"I +

I 'ass

O pening lea d " I 0

'-- - - - - - -- - - --..J
th a i he was abl e lo l a ke t he scttmg
tri c k .
The w1 n nm~ t ac t1 c 1s for decla r e r t o
pl ay
diamonds
bel o n·
dra wmg
trumps He ca n ruff t wo br a rts, a s be·
fore . but whe n he i&gt;l ays t he thtrcl dtamond, won by Wes t , il will no lo nger
help lhe de fe nd ers 10 pla y s till anothe r
hearl . Declare r will simply ru ff with
ihc s p a d e queen . whic h 1s st1ll in dun1·
my, a nd lhe n pic k up I he ou Lsta nd i ng
trumps Th a t wtll bc Ill tr 1cks , and
well pl ayed

•.,,.r

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Hasten
1 Affected
5

3 First

of scie nce
5 Typewriter

of beef

10 Take a

part

missus,

11

lady

4 Branch

cough
Grade

6 Exasperate
7 Marsh

old style
Tiny piece

elder

Lack
8 Opera s ite
13 Taste
9 Before
14 Seeing red II W.W.J
16 Resolve
plane
12

18 Donkey
21

15

"They Call
the Wind

"

22 Stairway
post
24 English

Yesterday's Answer
20 Louver
21 Medi e val
w e apon

Inlet (Sp .) 23 C hic

32 Mosl~ m
princ·p

33 S oul

( f' r .)

34 C olor

16 Janssen
or Hume

27 LanRuage
of the

35 Pianist
Tatum

17 Eat into
18 Cognizant

gyps ie s
28 Exclude

37 Old note
38 Mongre l

n~ov~e~l!3~9~~;--.

1"'9_cur.t-r:-"""Tr-31 Zola

river

25 Pelee
product

26 Autumnal
pressing

28Cap

29 Dutch
township

30 Asian
donkey

32 City In
33

Iraq
Cossack
leader

36 'Spoon "
40 Yacht basin
41 Hint
42 Foyer
43 Deserve
DOWN

1 Wheat bristle L-1.--l..--l...J..-

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's "how to work it :

3118

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the leilgth and formation of the words are all
hint.!. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

3·18

R B V

0

XNA

0 E II

L 0 A A

AOPB . Yetterday't

X M H H

U M M R

VMEPDB

Q NR R

LDFRN

U M I
DA

XR
0

AZIOA

Cl')')ltoqaote: PUBLI C O PINI O N ISJUST

WHAT

PEOPLE

lNG . -

SOURCE UNKNOWN

THINK

I

&lt;YniER PEOPLE ARE THINK·

•

�,_

14-The

Sentinel

March 18, 1987

.....--Local Briefs:-----.

Racine .couple is indicted

Court (lccepts bond forfeitures
Six defendants forfeited bonds and a srvcnth wa s fined in th e
court or. Pomeroy Ma.v or Richard Seyler Tucsda;· night.
Forfeiting were VI ctor Counts, Syracuse, $51; Paul Goodnitc,
Letart, W.Va ., $47; Dallas A. Hi l l. Ra einc, $.'i1; P;wl Wilson.
Racine, $44, all posted on spef'ding charges; Lance Herman .
Middleport, $6:!, no operator' s licm se, and .John McKenzi£' ,
Pomeroy, $4:1, improper buc·king, Fined $210 and cos ts on
charges of assa ult and pett y theft wa s Robert Riffle. Pomeroy .

Accident yields citation
Three vehicles werP damaged and one· dri v&lt;'r wa s ci ted as 1he
result of two acciden ts In Pomerov Tut&gt;sdav .
PomC'roy PolicC' Silid (.1 V(IO 1rUV(' ]ing eC!s l on WC'St Main
Stre&lt;'t. about midnight and driVl'n bv lia r rv L. Barton,
Pomeroy , struck a Utilit y pole \\hen brakes on the vehirlr
locked. There wen• modera l e damage&gt;s.
At R:47 a.m . on Pleasrr's Restaurant parking lot, a truck
driven b~ Clift on MoiPs , Chrshi rr, baeked int o a parked car
owned by Richa rd A. Emer son, Columbu s. ThP rr wpn• lighl
damages to both vr hiciPs and Moles wu s ci ted on an improper
backing charge.

Middleport mayor fines seven
Thirteen dclcndant s for fcil &lt;•d bonds and seven ol hc'rs wprc
fined Tuesday night in the court of Middleport Ma yor F twl
Hoffman .
·
For feiting bonds wrrP Larry fl. . Crimm Sr .. Mason, W.Va ..
$450. driving whi iP intoxicated: Timothy s. Compson , Mason,
$4!\U driving while intnxir&lt;~ l e d : $:&gt;1 1. spc&lt;'din g, and $100,
possession ol' mari juan&lt;t: Richard Friley , Pomeroy, ~Ui .
disorderly m"nnc•r; Mi ldr ed I. Robinson, Middleport, $411:
Charles E . Ba tt en. Ma son, S~l ; Lori 11 . Chapman . Mason, $41:
.Joseph C. ()uivey, Pomeroy, $40; Doro thy T . Hill, Clin ton, Ky ..
$40: Cha r les H. At hey, .Jackson, Mo., $51; Chrislophc·r Pavne.
New llaven, W.Va., $4!\; Hf' rbert G. Slon&lt;·. Ga llipolis, $41: .Jerr'
D. Swar tz. Middlepor! . $4:!, &lt;~II postl'd on speeding charges';
,James W. Morris, Middleport , $:,o, foi lurr to have vehicle undl'l'
eon I rot.
Fined werP Mark A . ShPcl s. Ga llipolis, $19 and cos ts,
spPedi ng: Ra y mond f.ilchfirld , Syr&lt;tc·usr, $:ill and cos ts, drivi ng
undN suspension, und $17 and costs, speeding : Paul D.
Saunders, l.on g Rollom. and Ca rol A. Frelf'(' h, Campbell, $10
rach, running a rPrl light ; i\ nthon y Seylrr. Mason, $50 und costs
eaph on two co unt s of disorder! ; · manner, and $:ill and cos ts,
open con tainer: .l&lt;tnr B. l(a lc\ iff. Rrrdsvillc, and Stcve·n w.
Fife. Middleporl, rach $1!\ and cos ts. speed ing.

EMS unit.s' respond to nine call.~
Mr lgs County 1-:mPrgrn&lt;'., . Mrd icu I Services reports ninr ca lis
Tuesday : Middleport at 1:-ili ;t. m to Br(•e·h Street for Donald
Martin to VeiPrans MPmoriul Hospital; TuppNs Plains at :!: :!6
a.m. transported .lacki&lt;' Duvall 10 Camden·Ciil rk Memorial
Hospital: Rutland al 12: :,6 p.m. to Loop Roa d for Edith Sear irs
to Pl easa nt Valle;' Hospital ; Raf'i ne at 7:111 p.m. tran spor ted
Charles Beeg le to Holzer Medical Center: Middleport at 7:2:i
a.m. to Hartinger Parkw a;' for Ala Stewart who wa s treated but
not tran sported; Racine Firr DrpartmPnt at 4: 2'i p.m. to a
bru sh fire on Sm ith Ridge Road; Columbia Township Fit·e
Departmen t to a rhimne; · firr at the Mar~ Norrtin residence on
Township Road 7; Ru tland Fir e Department at 10: 14 p.m. to an
auto fire at Langsv ille.

Fugitive surrenders to .~heri.ff
Athens Mrntal Hra llh Center esca pr c' .Jimmi(• .Jude. charged
In M eigs County in January l~Rii with rape, turned himself in to
Meigs Count;· Sheriff Howard F1unk about 1: 40 a.m .
Wcdnrsduy mor ning.
•ludr has bern atlargr from thr Alhrns facility si nce Sept . !i .
He W&lt;ts In Al hrns b;· cour t order from Meigs Count y for
psyrhiatrk eva luation.
·
He will appear Thursday morning in Mr\gs C'oun tv Common
Pleas Court before Judge Charl es Knight.
·

Group urges

coxen 'Funeral Home of Point
Pleasant.

Karl fl..1·an Jordan , infant son
of Jam es Lester Jordan- and
Melissa ·Rollins Jordan ol Leon ,
W.Va .. died Sunday In the ·oh io
Sta te U niv~rs lt y Hospit al, Co·
lumbus, shortly after birth.
Survivors includP one brother .
J a m ~s .Jordan, Leon: maternal
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
MPivin Rollins of Leon: maternal
grcaf.grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. E unice Rollins of L&lt;'nn, and
Mrs. Margaret Stephens of Leon :
pat rr nal grandparen ts, Mr. and
Mrs. .James .Jordan Sr. of Mount
.\ It o, W.Va.; pa tf' rnal greal·
grandpa rpnt s. Mr . and Mr. Evere tt Shears of ParkPrsburg,
W.Va .. and Mrs. Myrtle Jordan
of Mount Alto.
He was preceded in dea th bv
his paterna l great ·grandfather,
Clyde .Jordan .
Graveside riles will be ob·
sPrved on Saturday at 11 a.m.
with the Rev . Homer Stc&gt;phens
officiating. Arrangements arr
under thr direction of th e Wil·

Joseph Hemsley
Joseph Hemsley. 82. Parker s·
burg, W.Va .. formerly. ol Syra·
cuse, died Monday at Ca mden·
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
He was born .Jan. 25, 1905, a son
of the late Joseph and Maggie
Hemsley .
·
Surviving are a son and
daughter · in·law , Larrv and
Sharon Hemsley of Ha.milton:
two grandsons, Travis and Trc·
vis Hem sley; a niece, Mary
Donna Davis , Minersville, and
two nephews, Jimmy Joe Hemsley and Rollle Hemsley , both of
Hemlock Grove.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Emma, and two b~others, Rollle
and Douglas.
Services will be held at 2: 30
p.m. Thursday at the Franklin
Funeral Home in Parkersburg,
where friends may call after :;
p.m. on Wednes dav. Burial will
be in Parkersburg .·

An action b.1· Tom Rue. Middle·
port. against Cooper Chrysler·
Ply mouth-Dodge Inc., Middle•·
port. rt•questing damages for
alleged br each of contract. ha s
bern settled in Meigs Count y
Common Pl ras Court.
.ludg(' Charles Knight ha s
directed verdi('! in favor of the
dt,fendanl in a second cause of
uct ion which alleged consumer
fraud, an&lt;I in favor of the plaintiff
on lhr issue of damages, exrl ud·
ln g inl&lt;' rest.

Tu esday Admissions - Tho·
mas Parker . Pomerov: Alberta
Edwards, Reedsville: Il&lt;'ron
Paul Howery , Albany; Ma ry
Bonecut ter, Middleport : Charles
Lemley. Pomeroy : Hu g h
McPhail, Syracuse.
Tuesday Discharges - None.

Dam ages are lo be paid to lh£'
plaintiff in the amount of
$1:i,29:1.1xl. Th e court submittr d

South ('c•ntrul Ohio
Par tly cloud)' toni ght . wilh "
rhunc(' or showrrs and a low nPar
40. Mosll.v cloudy Thu rsda .v, with
hi ghs nc-ar :);,.

IN SEVERAL COLORS

DAR to meet
The Return .Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daught ers of the A mer·
lean Revo lution will mrrt Satu r·
da y, I;:llJ p.m .. at Heath Metho·
dist Church in Middleport.
The program, "A Belief th e
Expansion of the United Sta tes of
America E ncouraged Christian
Waldschmidt to Establish a
Home In the Nort hwes t Teni·
tory," will be givrn by Mrs.
Clydr J . Ingels, Waldschmidt
Housr Tru stee.

Presentation slated
A gospel film, "A Father, A
Son. A Three·Milr Run ," will be
present ed Sunday , 7::10 p.m., at
th e Moun t Her mon United
Brethren Church .
A free-will
offerbeing
for Thr
thl'
one·hOU
I' film will
taken.

INSURANCE
111 S.Cond St., ,_,.,

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
Just where an additiona l $6,625
'to Gallla -Melgs Community Ac·
lion Agency could bes I be pu I to
use was discussed Wednesday by
the Meigs County Commissioners and Sidney Edwards, dlrec·
tor' of Gallia·Meigs CAA.
The additional federal funding
through the Emergency Food
and Shelter Program m ay be
used for food or in CAA's HEAP
program to assist low income
hou seholds in paying heating
bills.
CAA still has comm odities in
the food program . so Edwards
felt the money would be most
beneficial in the HEAP program
where It could provide a "se~ond
helping hand" for 44 low-I ncome
M ~IKS' . pouscholds experiencing
difficulty paying-heating bills. If
the money Is not used In HEAP by
Sept . 15, It can then be trans·
!erred back to the emergency
food program .
Edwards said CAA ha s
handled more food and heat
cases this year than ever before.
The comm issioners approved
Edwards' suggestion to use the
money In HEAP.
Edwards, along with .Joan
Culp, apprised the commission·
ers of changes which may be
expected In the JTPA !Job
Training Program Acll summer
youth program .
The 10-week program will be
smaller this yea r in the Gallja·,
Meigs areas. due to nationwide
efforts to streamline the pro·
gram . Al so this year. remedial
education wlll be offered for th e
first time for JTPA participant s
ages 14-21. JTPA representati ves
are now vi siting schools through·
out the county explaining the
program.
Altogether In Meigs County,
JTPA amounts to abou t $300,000,
which Includes the summer pro·
gram, the educational program,
a program for older workers and
basic JTPA.
It Is the combined effort s of
CAA and the Pomeroy office of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services which make JTPA
success ful In Meigs County . Culp
reported that In the past two
years, JTPA has met or exceeded all !Xlrformance goa ls In
the county, and expects to do the
same this year.
Edwards said he hopes It does
not become necessa ry for the
state to close Pomeroy 's OBES
office, but If that would happen,
JTPA services would somehow
still be provided.
The commissioners have rr·
celved a IN te r from Meigs
County Common Pl eas Judge
Charles Knight requesting the

As a March Special We Will Deduct SJ.OO AYd.
Off already low price son sales over 30 sq. yd.
992-7059

·@Jinaue lJTlnnr C!Intttrittg
STATE ROUTE t2&lt;t, lOX 4ll70
MINERSVILLE, OHIO 45771
(6t4J m-1ost

'

r.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:~

r;==========:;l
ID.OWNING CHIDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

SQ. YD.

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:00 to 6:00

•ROTO-TILLERS •GARDEN SEEDERS
•BULK GARDEN SEED
•GRASS SEEDS •ONION SETS
•PACKAGED FLOWER and
VEGETABLE SEED

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1168

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

PAT· HILL FORD INC.

or
*a

PUSH, PULL OR DRAG

That's the way we are at City Loan
Bank. Up front, fair, plain talking. So call
City Loan Bank. Get the money you need
today, without getting payments you'll regret
tomorrow

(!)
,.,._
LIHDI"

YES, YOU PUSH, PULL OR DRAG YOUR CAR INTO
PAT HILL FORD AND WE WILL GIVE YOU Sl,OOO OR
MORE T.ADE·IN VALUE ON ANY OF OUR FINE
LATE MODEL USED CARS.

Pat Hill F.ord Inc.

Pomeroy: 116 E. Main St., 992-217L

461 S. 3R.D

.

.

.MIDDLEPORT

~2196

•

chair man of the House Finance Committee, to
which the LBO report ed, said the Democrats, in
preparing a .substitu te budg et for the committee
nex t week, will split th~ difference In the
estimates of the LBO and the Office of Budget and
Management, whic h authored Celeste' s budge1.
"Between the two of them. we ought to be real
close (to the correct fi guret ," said Hinig.
Hinig said split ting the difference means
finding $150 million . He sa id tha t figure ma y be
even lower If th e Celes te administration can ba ck
up its projected savings in the area of health car e
costs.
Denn is Morga n, director of th e LBO, th e fiscal

hiring of an additiona l employee
in the Bureau of Support.
Knight stated in his letter that
it would be necessary for him "to
add an ad ditional employee of
the secretarial nature" to the
Bureau of Support, due to "the
advent of new laws affecting the
Bureau of Support and their
r elated requirements for a multi·
tude of forms and records to be
main ta in ted."
Kni ght plan s for former count.v
employee Donna Boyd to com·
mence work in the new position
on March .10. Although the hiring
of Boyd will requi re additional
funds in the judge' s budget , he
said he could see " no alternative
but to order the employment."
The commissioners' r esponse
to the letter wa s that before
ta kin g any action to find addl·
Ilona! money for lh~ position, the
judge should meet with them to
outline specifics in the job, such
1Coni inued on Page 81

3 Sectio ns. 16 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia In c. N ew spapef

lntersw te tel ephone call s and com mPrcial avia ·
lion fuel, proba bly wllllwv P to he kepi.
The chairman Indi cated cut s will be made In
cer tain areas In order to add monc.v to tllC' human
servlc&lt;'S outlay, whi ch includes we lfare bcnrflls ,
heal th r are for the indigent and child suppor l . lle
said the Democra ts also would l ike to add sam&lt;'

res ear ch arm of the General Assembly, sa id the
Cel es te adminlstral io n underes tim ated welfare
caseloads and health ca re co sts by $2:18 million
and overestimated revenues by $60 million.
"We've had differ ences lik e this before,"
shru gged William J. Shku r l i, direclorofthe OBM .
Shkurtl said the differ ence be tween th e tw o
agen cies' proj ections represents only 1.0 percent
of the total budget .
Hlnig said he expect s the money will be t·aised
without resorti ng to any nrw or lncn•ascd tax&lt;•s
b e~o nd those ca lled for by Celeste. But he also
said the taxes and fees recommended hv C'cleste ,
Including controversial taxes on cigarett es.

money for primar y and secondary sehool s, whiC'h
rrcelvc virtua!Jy no inrr('a SC' thr first Y(' ar under

the C&lt;•leste plan.
Morga n sa id th e I. BO pruj cf' ICd " sluggish"
grow th in lhr

eeono m~-,:

over the next tw o :vr;:H·s.

co mparrd with the OHM 's "modC&gt;r,JI C'"
prediction.

~ rowth

Arnericctn legio~

r

:

•

GIFf PRESENTED - Ellen Rought, president ol the Ladles
Auxiliary, presented Richard W. Russell, commander ol Drew
Webster Post 39, A!!.'er.i,!'.!l,nJ&amp;.glo'!, wlth .&lt;!.gllt l!I.Jl!.QJ!~Y. IIJII!l.!!!l: ••
auxiliary· at the annual post birthday party held Tuesday ni~:ht. A
dinner was sened to memhers and guests and !Wught and Russell
introduced guests, officer' and past presidents and comman ders.
A skit was presented by the auxiliary following the program.

LIFE ME~tBER - GeorKe Ncsselroad , !ell, post mcmht•r.•hlp
chairman, presented a life mc rnh~rHhlp to pr&lt;!Sf'tlt •·ornrnunder
JUchard W. Russell at the annuul hirthday party of Drew Wt•hsl&lt;!r
Post :19, llt'ld Tu••,duy night at the post home. Frank Vaughan wt"
named Legionnaire of the Year.

Arms deal panels get limited House approves hike
immunity for 2 top witnesses in U.S. speed limit
•

WASHINCTON 1UPIJ -With
a dea l complete on how to get
testimony from the two cent ral
figures in th e Iran-Cont ra sca n·
dal , congress ional investigators
expect action soon to force the
hand of another reluctant major
wit ness.
The selec t House and Senate
co mmittees investiga ting th e
scandal announced an arra ng~­
ment W&lt;'dnesday for seeking
limited immunity from prosecu·
tlon for Rear Adm. John Po index ·
ter and Lt. Co l. Oliver North, who
lost their Whit e House jobs In the
furor , and hear ing th eir publi c
tesllmony sometime after June
15.
At the same time. the Senate
panel voted to begin civil con·
tempt proceedings agai nst re·
tired Maj. Gen. Richard Secord
for refusing to gran! access to
Swiss bank accoun ts deemed
Important in te lling the full story
of the sal e of U.S . arm s to fra n
and the scheme to divert profit s
to the Nicaraguan Contra rebel s.
Lea der s of both panels also
announced their joint hearings
would beg in May 5 and sa id their
probes would focus on three
aspects - military aid to the ·
rebel s, the arms sa les, and the
question of "as signment of
responsibility."
The two \nvestiga llons virtu ·
ally will merge, both committee
chairmen added, and eventually

Repairs to damage discovered during a routine
Inspection last week at the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam will necessitate a three-week shutdown of
the main Jock, accordlnt:: to David Ba yard , public
affairs officer for the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers' Huntington District .
Bayard said the chamber was closed on March
14, and repair fleets arrived Monday morning.
Since then. delays In river traffic have cost
$97,800, Bayard said, adding he anticipates that
figure to Increase rapidly .
Wednesday morning's report from the facility
showed seven tows -with 29 lockages walling
upriver from the locks at Hogsett, and three tows
with 11 lockages walling downriver.
Bayard blamed the damage on old age.
"Gallipolis Is 50 year s old," he said. "It Is due for

• CommercW C~lr COf!lP&gt;Iny

":zJ.9'1 Annual Pm:cnCIIc Rile

Partly c~tonlght, with
a low nea;~;;~·s~nny Friday ,
with high' hetw••rn 55 and GO.
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is nt•ar zt•ro tonight and

ANGRY ACCUSATION Assistant Senate Republican
leader Alan Simp,on of Wyom·
lng accused White House
reporters of doing "a 'adlstlc
little disservice to your country" by a.~klng President
Reagan questions about Iran
lor the sqle purpose of "•li&lt;k·
lng It In his gazoo. " (UP I)
could even produce a single final
report later this year.
Both commit tees voted Wed·
nesday to grant Immunity to six
addtt lona I minor witnesses be·

l ieved involved in lhP Contra end
of th e sca ndal and thP monry
tra il - br inging lhP number of
those with lega l prot ection so far
to 10. No ne of them approaches
Poindexter or Nor th In
Importance.
Independent prosecu tor Law ·
renee Walsh asked the comm it ·
tees la st week 10 wall 90 days
ix'fore gr anting any immunity to
Poind exter, who resigned as
national security adviser whrn
the Cont ra di version schr mr was
revealed Nov. 25. or to North,
who was fired the same da y from
the National Sr c urit~· Council
staff.
Wal sh. looking in to crimina l
wrongdoing, feared an early
Immunity gra nt could damage
potential crimin al prosecu tions.
Limited immunit y protects a
witness from being prosecuted
on evidence provided under the
agreement.
It forces a witness to testify,
however. and both Poindexter
and North hav e frustrated lnves·
llgators at this point by Invoking
Fifth Amendment r ight s against
self·lncrlmlnatlon and refusing
to discuss th e scandal.
Under the agreement an·
nounced Wednesday , neit her
man will testify publicly until
after June 15 but co ngressional
Investigators will be able to
Interview Poindexter privately
alter May 2.

WASHINGTON tUP f ! Hou se members, by approv·
lng

l.l

m easure gra nting stat f"s

l hl' r ight to ra ise thr .~ peed
limit to lio mph on rura l
lnter slalr highway s, " wi ll
ha ve IJiood on their hands"
from :t, CiOO deat hs In fi ve
years. cr il\cs war n.
But suppo r ter s say tnr pub·
l lc is a clear winner in thr
217·206 vote Wednesday that
marked the first lime I he
House has approved a fas ter
sp&lt;•rd limll since th e oo mph
spred limit wa s enacted dur·
Ing 1h•• 197 ~ Arab oil embargo.
T h(' Sena te, spu rred by.
wrstern·stale lawmakers, ap·
proved ea riiN this year by'!
2· 10·1 margin a stal e·optlon fi:J
mph speed limit on rural
inlf' rsta tes. which compr ise
about 72 percent of the na·
lion's 42,50().mile lnlerstale
system 1hat lies outside urban·
!zed areas of at leas t 51J,Il00
people.
Because of a compromise
worked out In a co nferenn•
eommlt tee, the Senate mu st
vote' once again on th e mra surr, but II Is expected to pass
easily within a few days and
go 10 Presid ent fl.£&gt;3gan for his
signa ture.

The speed li mit Increase Is
par t of a fi vr ·.vear. SAA.fi
billion highwa y and mass
transit author ization bill thai

thr HousP pa ssc 'd hy an
overwhelm ing 407·17 margin
Wednesda y and lhal lhl' ~ ·
nair also Is exf)I'Ci ed 10 pu ss
('a sll y .
Thr package pr ov lde•s $70,7
bill ion for a var iety of federal
and local road and h r ld~r
pro)C&lt;'h, fu nds hi g hwa y
safel y prog r&lt;tm s and aulho·
r lws spending of $1 7.9 billion
for mass transit ovrr five
yr;.1rs. It al so providPs monev
for complrting l he nallon;s
lnll'rstatC' svs tr m bv fiscal
19!12.
.
.
Reag;m , who ; upport s thr
speed limil im: rcoJSI', ha ~
lh rca trnC'd to veto thr\ ov.-.ra l l
highway pa ckag e as a budgf'l
bu stf'r. flul with lhc spepd
limi t ls., u&lt;· df'(·idr d, both the
House and Senal r expect 10
must••r lhP l wo·thi rds maj or!·
tics n!'f.'dr d Ia OV('/'1' \dr I he '
prf"sld fln!' s Vi1 1() or thC1 undf'r'·
lying bill.
In d r bul i n ~ thr h l~ h w uv
pac kag e, mos t " ' the• att ention
and r motlon waJ-. ~ pr nt on tht'
sprrd lim it vn l&lt;'. Sl;clps cur ·
renly :Jrt' ;dlnwN! tc rul:-of'

l hr lr spl•e•cl iim lls but rl ., k
losing crl tlc;c l fr rl r ra l hl ~ h·
way doll;cr, II lh&lt;•y do.
" Tht' Amt' l' i(';J ppo pll" !-.un ·

won." 'a id Sr·n. Ste•vr Sv mm,.
R Jdah n, sponsor of I)H~ s t:ll r ·
opl! o n ln t'l'l':l "'' '·

Shutdown at Gallipolis L &amp; D expected to l~st 3 weeks

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
.SEE RICK TOLLIVER, J.R. PIERCE or PAT HILL

Member FDIC

en tine

Added funding will
aid HEAP program

DuPONT 'STAINMASTER CARPET

lh&lt;• !lOs C'a&lt;'h du .v. H'ilh O\'Prnigh1
lows brtwc•en :;;, and m

The probabilit;· of pt·ecipila ·
tlon is :«t perc&lt;'nl tonigh t and 211
perc&lt;'nl again Thursday .
Winds will diminish lo 10 to l o
mph tonight.
Ohio Extcnd&lt;•d Fort•ca•t
Friday throu~h Sunday
Fair Frida~ · . with ;:1 chance· of

399 so. ro.

SEVERAL PATTERNS OF VINYL

roJ in in th1· soul hf'rn pa r t or th('
!-;!atr S;JturdJ~· and a('I'OSS the'
sta tr on Sunda:-·. Highs will br In

Super Louo
I0-22-6-41-24-31

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 19, 1987

COLUMBUS (UP!i - Majority Democr.a tic
leaders and •fiscal experts In the Ohio House of
Representatives huddled In private today, looking
tor $150 'mllllon to balance the 1988·89 state budget
plan .
They Indicated the money will be realized
through spending cuts and transfers, and not
through additional taxes .
The budget revision was necessitated by a
report, delivered Wednesday by the Leg islalivP
Budget Office, tha t Gov. Richard F . Celeste's
proposed $22 billion ou flay Is underfunded by $298
million according to the latest economic
forecasts.
Rep. William E. Hinig, D-New Philadelphi a,

OUTDOOR CARPET &amp; GRASS

$3 98

756

....

Lawmakers scramble to balance state budget

992-2156

AT

Daily Numht•r

a1 y

Vol.36, No.222
·copyrighted 1987

~1~
·~
SUNNY

•

at

IF INTERESTED, PLEASE .CALL
THE DAILY SENTINEL

STARTING AT$

·Ohio Lottery

Reds bomb
Houston in
exhibition play
-Page 3

FOR LINCOLN HEIGH.TS
POMEROY

Ohio, area weather scene
'

-

According to_ Paul Gerard,
investigator for Meigs Counti
Prosecuting Attorney Frederic)(
Crow Ill, Mrs. Pridemore con sented to a search of the couple' S:
residence and property andd ~pu :
ties co nfiscated marijuana in.
pot s and in the ground an&lt;{
cul·marij uana co ncealed In var·
ious rooms of the house.
:
Cultivation of marijuana, a!t
charged In the indictment, is afourth·degree felony and carrieS:
a maximum possible penalty
18 months In prison and a fine up
10 $2 ,500.
.'
:
Arraignmen t will be in the next
few days in Meigs Coun ty Com;
mon Plea s Court before Judgq
Charles Knight .
..

CARRIER NEEDED

the issue of interest to an
eight -man j urv which found th e
plaintiff to be' en titled to Interest
of $2,112.46.
The suit stemmed from a sa l('s
agreem&lt;&gt;nt entered into bv Rue
and the defendant on Sept. 25,
19R5.
In oiher court matlrrs. a
foreclosure action has been filed
against Charles Humphreys, Mi·
ami, Fla ., rt al, by Diamond
Savings &amp; Loan , Findlay .
II rc 'strainlnt:: order ha s been
issued by the cour t agai nst fh('
defrndant in the case of Debra
Gal lag her Huffman aga in st
Brad.v M . Huffman.

pending lit igation.
Att ending the meeting were·
Superintendent Dan E . Morris:
Ass ista nt Superintendent .James
Ca rpent er: Treas urer .Jane
Wagner and board members ,
Snowden, Robert Barton, Larry
fl.u pr. Ri chard Vaughan and
Larry Powell.

At City Loan Bank, we tell you right up
front how low your monthly payments will be.
And along with your low payments, we give ·
you plenty
AMOUNT TERM ~Z,~~
of time to
repay, and
13,000 48 month s 97.64'
we don't ask
$4,000 48 month $130.19'
for one bit
$5,000 48 month $157.26"
ofcollateral.
$6,000 48month $188.72"
We'll
Otbcr omounl1 ond """'~so olllitabl&lt;.
even take
your application right over the phone. And
give you an answer fast, usually in just 24
hours.

Veterans Mt&gt;morial

Lawsuit is settled in court

l'hurrh is located In the Texas
Communit y , just off County
Road 82 on Wickham Road.
Everyone welco me.

!Cont inued from Page I t

discuss personnel, finances anrl
position applica nt s an&lt;J for an
appeal hearing of a &lt;'Ustodlan on
the board's iniPnl to consider
dismi ssa l. Both meet ings arr
expected to he rxrc ut ivr sr s·
slons . The board moved into
cxccu t ive session aI the close of
Tuesday night 's open session to

Infant JonJan

The Meigs County grand jury,
which met Tuesday in It s first
session of the January term,
returned an indictment charging
a Meigs County couplr with
cultivation of marijuana .
Rick and Cathy Pridemore. of
Sayre Hill Road, Racine, ur e
accused of cutlivating !growing
and/ or possess ing 1 ma r ijuana in
October 1981i.

\e

I

(

·t

renovation. It requires constant maintenance and
repa ir; something's alwa ys going."
The damage Involves an eye bar, the part oft he
hinge mechanism that holds the gateori and !halls
held In a rec~ssed lock wall by two metal braces
ex tending six feet Into the wall .
During last week's Inspection, It was discovered
that the upper brace was cracked, Bayard said.
"Upon removal of the eye bar and examination of
the mechanism. It was later noted that the lower
bra ce had structurally deteriorated to the point
where It will have to be completely removed to
Include chipping away the concret e which
anchors II to the lock wall," he added, describing
the process as similar to pulling out a tooth.
"A lot of those mechanisms have reached the

end of their useful life, " he said .
He added that much of th e11me required for th e
repair will be devoted to physica ll y chipping away
the co ncrete, and for newly set co ncrete to cure to
the proper load-beating strengt h to provide
anchorage for an SO-ton ga te.
During the shutdown of the main lock. the
300-foot long auxiliary lock will be used. Bayard
expressed hope that tow s will use extreme ca ution
when locking through because "an accident In the
auxiliary chamber would close the river down."
The locks were closed for repair last summer
because of an accident, and Bayard says
accidents are eommon during this time of year
because of high water and lhe difficulty of
navigation.

Constru c· llon Is scheduled In IJP~ in thi s tall on
the Corps ' $350 mill ion con stru cti on and rrn nva·
lion project . The plan calls for th r co nstruction of
a new 1.200·foot·by·I OIJ.Ioo t IOI' k and an auxlll arv
600·fOOI·by·llO·IOot Ch(lmhcr In a bypass ru n ~ !
adjacent to the current facllll y, as well as
rehabilitation of the 50·year·old dam.
The present lOCks at Galllpotis arc li(J(t an (t
feet long. Beca use modern tow s art· longer , the
dams create congested river 1raffle. The locks
also sll In a ix'nd , wh 'rr currents and
maneu veri ng problems contribute to a htgh rate
or acc ident s, according to the cor ps.
Bayard said the damage discovered l ast week
underscores the need for the long·awallcd
construction.
'

:mo

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