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Page-.,.-0 -, 0- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport~Gallipolis,

:Financial ·worries
:dep~ess market
·. ifY.. ELLEN

FREILICH
UPI BusineSs Writer
NEW YORK CUP! ) - Cenlral
ban~ ~flori s ·lo support the dollar
on world currency m arkets
!ailed 10 reassure the financia l
markets lasl week, and l ear of
higher Interest rates weakened
· bonds, boosted gold, and sent
sloek prices lower .
The Dow Jones industria l aver ·
age fell fil.:ili point s.
The Dow rose to !Is fir st close
above 2400 Monday bul su ffered a
44.!ill-polnt ·loss lhe nex t day. 11
eked out an ll-polnt ga in Wedn es. day but fell 3.1 points T hursda y.
On Frida y, it slipped 0.42 .
Losing Issues outnumbered
gal ners 1,456-52:1 among the 2,179
Iss ues that crossed lhe NYSE
Ia pe.

Concern. thai th e Federal Re serve Board will boost i nterest
rates 10 stabilize the dollar
plagued t hr financial markel s all
week .
" I t was a dollar -dr i ven
market. " sai d Gera ld Si mmons,
man aging dl rec lor In lhc lisled
trading departmenl of Smtih
Bar ney. Harr is Upham &amp; Co.
" Wh en the dollar wea kcnr&lt;l , so
did stocks ."
Eugene Peroni Jr., head of
technical analys is at Janney
Montgomery Sco11 In Philadel phia, sai d i n I he next few weeks
the market Is li ke ly locxpericnec
" wild tradin~ gyra tions" wllh
·· Iopslded " specula tion fo&lt;·uscd
In precious metals and nalu ra l
rrsou rcr. stocks.
"Concern about inflation, Interest ra tes and the direction of
the dollar Is puttin g a shor t-term
pall on the market ." Peroni said,
He sa id a ··criti ca l cha nge" in
Investors' views of thosP current s "could pu l us In a corr rcllve t·ycl e th at l ast s into
summPr" and that any ra llies
that otTUI ' will lake place In the
contrx l of a "shor t·ll'rm downward bia s. "
·· Larry Waeht cl. market ana lyst at Prudentlai·Bac hc Set·urltlcs , said the marke ts will be
watching figures on the Febru ·
ary merchandi se tra de clrlicll,
due out Tuesday. Wa cht l'l sa id a
largr deficit figure may fu rl her
weaken the dollar. giving equit y
tnvestor·s a good excuse to take
prollt s.
On lht• Bi g Roa rd , Texaco wa s
th&lt;' most ac ti ve NYSE-IIstrd
lssut'. fal ling fi l&lt;i to :11 J1.. Tht•
•Supreme C'oun ruled 9-0 M onday
that a federal cOurt should not
havr bl ork1•d a Trxas taw th at

Pa., Ohio
landowners
join .forces
ASHLAND. Ohio tUP i i - Ohto
and Pennsylvania landownNs
opposed to ·il proposed natural
ga~ ~ lpc lln e that would cross
their land met for lhl' first lime
and voted to ronsolidat£&gt; thei r
separat £&gt; groups .
The Ohio Landowners i\ ssocla·
lion and Landowners of Pcnnsv l·
vanla Oppo~rd to th(• Plprllnc
formed the Ohlo-Pennsy lva nlq
Landowners Assoc iation ut a
mt&gt;e tlnl( Thu rsday .
The group will co ntinue opposition to a proposal b)' AmC'rlran
Natural Resources Pipeline C'o.
of Detroit and Columbi a Eric
Plpcllnr Corp .. a subsi di ary of
Columbia Gas Sys tems Inc .. to
construct a :10-Inch na tural gas
transmission plpcllm• through II)
Ohio an d nlnt' PPnnsy h·anlit
counties .
Construcl ion of the Erll' Pipeline Sys tem. a .179-miiP pipeline
from Deflan('(' to Clint on Count v.
Pa .. would cost $~1:1 million. The
pipeline would supply 425 million
r uble lPN oi ,Rus a day to the cast
coas t. proponent s say .
La ndowners obj ('('tlo th&lt;· pipt•·
line bft'au se of co ncern over
sa fet y, their prop(•rty va lues and
the environment. tonc£'r n has
also been ral srd that somct hln!l
other than na l\lral ga s could be
transported th1·ough the pipeline
In the future.
" It' s envlronmc nlally damagIng uny when• y ou go," former
pres ident of thf• Ohio group,
L ar ry .rancha r. noted .
He said a full environmental
Impact study should be orderE'CI
by the ~'cdcral F. ncrgy Regula·
tory Commission . He said landownC'rs huve bet•n left with I he
task of tryi ng to find altPr nate
routes for the pipeline as well as
trying to deiPrmtn r the effect th e
pjpeltne would have on larmlund.
Several state · agencies have
employees who ('ould study the
Impact the ptpellnl' on farmland,
bul funds aren ' t available. he
said.
·.. Janchar said a bill Introduced
by State Rep. Ron Amstutz,
R-Wooster, to provide funds for a
study on the effects or pipeline
' construction wa s reeentlypassed
In the Ohio House, and aw~lls
action In the Senate.

required Texaco to post a $12
bi llion bond In Texas cour ts to
appeal a j udgment ·rn favor of
Pennzoll. a ruling that put
pressure on Texaco to settle the
dispute.
UAL followed, soa ring 13\',j to
72'A; amid Intense speculation
that il s shares are being accumulated by . developer Donald
Trump, Conlston Partners and
the Prllzker family of Chicago.
Ea rly in the week , UAL received
a bid from It s pilots union 10 buy
il s United Airlines unit for $4..1
bi llion.
IBM was third. falling 4Y, to
Wi. Th e romput&lt;&gt;r giant Is
scheduled 10 rl'port It s fir st quarter earnings M onday .
In terest rate-sensitive utility
and tel eco mmunica tion s Iss ues
weakened. pressured by rising
Interest rat es. In active trading,
AT&amp;T felll to2:J%, Bell South lost
:1y, 10 :m~ and Pacific Telesis
dropped 1% to 2&gt;\i. . Ccnterior
E nergy slid l% to 20\',j, Southern
C'o. fell 1 lo 2:1% and Publi c
Ser vice of Colorado losl 'l'H to
61)', .
General Motors .iumped 6% to
86. {I s chairm an m l't with securities a n~l ys t s Thu rsday and Friday to brief them on how G. M .
plan s to improve profits.
• Among other blue chips. USX
fell! % ro 27%. Philip Morris slid
l % 10 B9 and Sear s dropped y, to
53Y, .
General Electric l e11 2'% to 107.
It sa id fi rs l-quarter ear nings
rose to $U7 a share from $l.IB in
the yea r -ago period .
Exxon rose Y1 to 90';, , Phillips
Pel ro leum fell1to 1&gt;% and Mobil
slid % to 49. Schlumbl'rger fell 3
to 41 '%aft er rising 4 Y, l as I week.
Alexander' s adva nced 6% to
4R 1h. Donald Trump and Interstate Par tners said they were
holding preliminary discussion s
regardi ng' the possibl e joi nt acqulslion of Alexander 's Inc. for
$47 a share.
Gold mining stocks bucked the
market ' s dow nward direction .
Calla han jumped 10 1(, to .19.
Ncwmont Mining rose 7 to 99Y,
and Asa Lt d. rost· 7 to 69.
Caesars World ro se 2l', to ~2\i. .
ln an att Pm pt lo fend off a hos til&lt;'
takeover offer by it s !a rRest
shareholder , Mar ti n Sosnofl.
Caesars World announced a
major n !ca pltall zatlon pl an Sun day th at would give shareholders
a onHimc, $2o-a-share dividend
plus equity in a res tructured
&lt;'Ompan y.
Broad market i ndexes de&lt;' lincd. Standard &amp; Poor' s 000stork Index fell7 .92 to 292.49 and
lhr Nf'w York Stock Exchange
composllc index lost 4.48 to
Hi:..72.
The number of shar es chang-

Friday's Close:

April10, 1987

2338.78·

Weekly Change:

2440
Down:.51.56
2420
2400
2380
2360
2340
2320
2300
2280
2260
2240
2220
2200 .
2180
2160
2140
2120
2100 .p.;;;
2080+2060
2040
2020
2000
16 30 6 20 6 20
Jan.

Feb.

3

Mar. ·

April

DOW ,JONES AVERAGE -The Dow .Jones average for 30
Industrials dosed the week ending April 10 at 2338. 7R for a weekly
chang&lt;· of down 51.56. (UPI)
l ng hands on I he New York Sluck
Exchange during the week totaled 889.714,200·, compared wit h
~~9 . 479,790 a week earlier and
wtth 7&gt;6.502,6.14 shares traded
rlurlng the sa m e week a year ago.
The Dow tran sport at ion index
fell 1.17 to 950.26. The utilit y
Index dropped 8.98 to 204 ..14.
Prices slid In active trading on
the America n Stock Exchange.
The American Stock Exchange

. April 12, 1987

Leadership ·~purs
business success

Dow Jones Weekly Closings
30 Industrials

'

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W.Va.

index dropped 2.38 to 338.08.
DE'c l ines outpaced·advam·es 513·
281 among the 936 iss ues traded.
Volu me wa s 69,906 ,625 shares.
com pared with 70, 120,465 tas1
week and 71,425,215 durin11 th e
sam e week a year ago.
Blocker Energy led the Amex
actives, down % to 2%. Wickes
followed. losing % to 4%. Echo
Bay Mines was third . riislng l "&gt;i
to 44 %.

By DA\;ID VESEY
·' Hugh Hefner against Bob G~cci ­
UPI Busflless Wrller
one was fou ght as each
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - It magazine tried to one-up the
Jakes mqre lhan being. smMt .• other by showing escalating
experiPnced • .well educated , or amounts of their models ' anat possessing a vision , or having an omy . It is one of the beSt chapters
MBA from a business school, to In a book that is highly rea dable,
survive and prosper In the · Informative and entertaining.
'
predatory world of American
Other chapters cover General
business.
Motors againsl the Japanese,
, All those qualities help, of
People Express' losing .the war
course. but the real key to
against the bi gger, wea lthier
success. according to NBC News
airlines and how Chairman Bill
business correspondent Doug
McGowan of MCI, a small
Ramsey, has been firm , decisive
telephone company, . took on
leadership in the face of
AT&amp;T, one of the largest, most
adversity .
powerful conglomerates in the
Ramsey. in fact , would seem to
world.
prefer the word " generalship" to .
Obviously, not all the battles
leadership, as demonsirated In
are finished, and Ramsey says he
his recently published book,
was lorced to updatE' his manu s" The Corporate Warriors: Six
cript constantly so the pu_bllshed
Classic Cases In American
version would reflect lh&lt;&gt; latest
Business."
developments.
There are plenty or exampies
The leadership styles of execu · of corporate leaders assuming a
tl~ es involved In these business
quasi-military role. Even the
wars varies greatly. Ramsey
language of business is studded
said, but all of the top co rporate
with such words as "takeover
official s are fascinating.
attacks,"
"market invasions"
" These are inler esling people
•
•
"price wars," ''merger maneuv who wield real power," he said,
• ers" and " territory gains."
" forming wealth , building comThe analogies are persuasive.
paanles and creating jobs. ' '
especially when looking al such
Ramsey. said he was rnost
busines s leaders as Lee Iaccoca
Impressed by the chairman or
of Chrysler Corp. and Ross
Coca -Cola, Cuban-born Roberto
PProt, founder of Electronic
Gotzueta.
Data Systems Inc.
He was the author of " the
They may not sPem to be biggest marketing flop" In remodern-da ¥ Pattons, MacAr- cent memory, when Coke r ethurs or Etsenhower s.
placed Its ba ste co la formula
But, says Ramsey: "These are
with a sw&lt;&gt;eter syrup.
men that in spire confidence and
"All thC' r esearch sai d tha t's
a sense of mission" - even If what Coke drinkers wanted,"
their battlefields have little In
Ramsey sa id. But Coca -Cola
common with Gettysburg, Ver- tradit)onalists were outraged,
dun or Okin awa.
and they demanded the old
In his book, Ramsey draws
formula be restored.
exa mples from some of. the most
What did Goizuet a do?
brutal and celebrated corporate
"He wa s willing to admll he
battles.of recent years.
made a mistake and came out
They a1·e Coca -Cola versus with Clas sic Coke," with the
Pepsi, Ted Turne r ' s cable tel evi- original Cok e fo rmu Ia. Ramsey
sion struggle against the giant said. At the same ti me, he kept
commercial networks and Play- the new Coke on the market, and
boy maga z in e again s t It now appears h could be a .big
Pentho.use.
winner In future sa les.
The Pl ay boy - P enthou~.. war-

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39-35-36-31-13-38

•

at y

Vol.36, No.239

•

.

enttne
.

1 Section. 10 P1g01 25 Cento
A Multimadla Inc. Newspaper .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 13, .1987

Copyrighted 1987

Refomi schools earn low m~ks from group
COLUMBUS (l}Pil - Ohio's nine reform
sc hool s, characterized as drab, depressing and
overcrowded , are being criticized by the chair·
man of an Ohio Department of Youth Services
advisory group who says the design of schools
prevent s rehabi litation.
Ross County Juvenile Judge Gerald Radcliffe
says the des ign of the dormitory-style buildings,
coupled ~wilh overcrowding, c~uses severe
problems in trying to treat the problems of y ouths.
"If someone were to ask me whether the stat e
ough t to pour money In those facilities or take the
bulldozers and run them down and build a new
type of facilit y, 1 would say you should strike down

.

about seven out of the nine and start over,"
Radcliffe said.
'
Radcliffe, chairman of the Youth Servi ces
Advisory Council and past pres·ldent or the Ohio
Association of ~uvenlle and Family Court.ludges ,
says only Mohican Youth Center and Maumee
Youth Center are salvageable.
Delaware County Juvenile Court Judge Tom
Louden was so appalled when he toured Buckeye
Youth Center In Columbus tha t he ordered youth s
'
from his district sent home.
He sa id the Training Center lor Yo uth, part of
the Columbus facility, is just as bad. and added

that he would not · se nd teenage felons to the
ce nt ers unless there were no alternat ive.
" H It wa s necesary for them to be placed at
TCY. I would do everything 1 could to find some
ot her way to work with them, " Louden sa id.
Stuart Berry, Delawar e County juve nile court
adml nlstratot·, said the r eform sc hools endanger
many teena ge felons because of overcrowding
and under staffing .
" We don' t feel that the sv stem is effective."
Berry said. "Training C'enl er for Youth and
Buckeye You th Cent er are absolutely the rwo
wo1·st, there's no question about It . They' re

Shultz, Soviets
open arms dialogue
MOSCOW 1UPfl - Secreta ry
of State George Shultz opened
th ree day s of talks focused on
at'ms control today in an atmosph ere strai ned by Am erica n
anger over Soviet spying on the
U.S. E mbassy.
There was a minimum of
protocol at the airpor t and the
Foreign Mlnisi~y guest house
where the t alks were held. Shult z
and Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze go t down to bu si ness soon after the secretary of
state's arr ivaL
Th e two .m en met separa tely
for five minut es. then moved Into
an adjacent m arble co nference
room l or talks with their entire
d ~lega lions -eigh t on the Soviet
side and nine on the American .
Shult z Introduced his aides as
lh!'y'fhed 'i nfo the' orllate· rooln &gt;
and took th eir chai rs around the
long ta ble.
AI the prompting of photograph ers. Shult z and Shevard·
naze reached across lhe table to
shake hands and smiled . But , as
the .Ta ss nell's agency announced. Shultz was In Moscow
for a ·' business v isi t."
Shultz's special pl ane tou ched
down at 10:26 a.m. after a 2'h

hour hop from Helsinki, Finland,
wher.e he spent Sunday prepar'
ing for the highest-level U.S.·
Soviet contacts In five mon,hs .
Shultz emerged from his 'Boe·
in g 707 clutching a clip board and
was greeted by Deputy Foreign
Minister Alexander Bessmert nyk and ,Soviet Ambassador to
Wa shington Yu r l Dubinin .
Without making an ar rival
state'»ent, Shu lt z en tered a
black Chalka limousine and
roared away In a motorcade to
begin the first round o! talks with
Shevardnadze. .
On Tuesday, Shu liz is expectE'CI
to deliver a persona I message
from President Reagan to Sov iet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
H current negotiations on a
trpaJ:,: bannlpg Intermediaterange mts~ lles from Europe
succeed. 11 would clear the way
for a signing ceremeony at a
Wa shington summfl.
However, tensions between the
superpowers Increa sed before
the meeting with t~e furor over
charges of a Soviet espio nage
ca mpaign against the U.S. Embassy. Two Marines have been
accused of allowing Soviet
agents Inside lhe emba ssy In a

Front
runner
to launch ·
•

campa1~

DIPLOMATS MEET- U.S. Setretary of Slate
George Shultz, fell, shook hands today with Soviet
Foreign Minister Edu•rd Sht&gt;vardnadze helore
sex and spying scanaai.
Shult z was to attend an annual
Passover seder at the U.S.
·Embassy tonigh t. A number of
prominent Jewish di ssidents
were inv ited, Including Vladimir
and Marla slepak, who r&lt;&gt;pC'a t edly have been deniE'CI permi ssion to emigrate 10 Israel since
1970. They arp among 11,000
Soviet Jew ish "refuseniks," people dented permi ss ion t o

opening thn•e dayM of lafkH on arm• co~ lrof
propos•ls In Moscow . (UPI)

Cemlgt~ te: ·•

.
· A sen lor oltlrlal noll'd "somr
Shultz said he had a "ver v signs of progress" by Soviet
mov in g, poignant " meeting with authorities In loosening rPS trlcthe Slepaks' tw o sons befor(' tlon~ on Jewish emigration but
leavi ng Washington. He said he sa id more needs to be done.
was given photographs o! the
Kosher mat zo and wine co uple's grandchi ld ren and esssentfals lor the Passover
hopes to be abl e to present them · religiou s feast - were brought to
to the Stepaks. at the seder . Th e Moscow with the Shultz party
Sl epaks have never seen their
bt;cause of the srard ty of such
grandch lldre n.
product s In the Sov iet capitaL

Weapons probe sources claim ·CIA operative lied
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Oliver North. the former Nati onal Secur it y ai de. he had
coordinated . nine ar.ms shipments from a private Am er-Ican
network to Contra rebels In the
spring of 1986. they sa id.
i\1 the lime. CI A officials were
banned by Congress from prov idIng military aid to thC' Contras
but were permUted to sharC'
Intelligence.
Th e sta tion chief's fal se tes tim ony rai ses ques tions as to
whet hN he was " ly in g to prot ect
superiors" who may have authorized the wraporls drops, sources
said.
A special prosecutor lnvestl-

Costa Rica were authorized by
!Ill an Fires. the psrudo ~ y m used
by the hea d of CIA' s Central
American operations . He also
testified to th e Sena te lntC'III gence Committee early thi s yea r
that he had cleared his effor ts In
advance with unnamed super Iors, a source• said.
Fires testified to th e Senate
lntelllgenceCommlltel' last ycu r
that he did not approve Castillo 's
pa r tfcl pallon in the arms drops.
one sourcP 'said. Rut some
committee member s bel ieve th at
Fires " did not di sclose ever ~
th ing 1hat was going on." thi s

gati ng the Iran-Contra arm s
sca ndal Is examining Castillo's
role In pa ssing int elligence and
Instructions to the pri va te American nt&gt;twork In El Salvador as It
prepared to airdrop arms to
rebels In Nicaragua.
In a previous investigation of
Castillo's pro-Contra effort s last
fall , the station chief lied to the
CIA's Inspector general's office
In deny ing lhat he had assisted
with weapons drops, ac ting CIA
director Robert r.a 1es has told
Congress .
Cas tillo ha s told Int elligence
assoel 11tes th at his artlvflles In

Dealer

NEW YORK IUPfl -Texaco
Inc. , In what could be a " master
stroke." stopped the clock In Its.
17-month lega l battl e with Pen- ·
nzolf Co. by tilin g for bankruptcy
protection but the move could
cost Texaco m anagement control over the oil giant' s future .
Texaco's drastic decision to
seek protection under the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code Sunday came
less than 24 hours before the
nation's th ird -largest oil company was to appear In a Texas
appeal s court today to argue Its
case agalnsl Pennzoll.
The hearing over ~ow large a
bond Texaco might have had to
post to continue Its appeals
against the record Sl0.3 billion
judgment won by Pennzoll -was
still scheduled.
Texaco became the largest
U.S. company to file lor bankruptcy when It sought protection
.from Its creditors - namely
Pennzo.ll - under Chapter 11 In
federal court near Its White
Plains, N.Y., headquarlen.
Ranked third In the oil Industry
behind Exxon Corp. and Mobil
Corp.. · Texaco Is the eighth·

largest U.S. company based on
annual sa les o! $.11 billion In 1986
and seventh-largest based on
assets or $34.9 billion.
The Chapter II tiling by
Texaco and two llnanclal subsidiaries, Texaco Capttai Inc. and
Texaco N.V., was expected to
unleasb heavy selling of Texaco
stock today.
The $10.3 billion judgment, the
largest In U.S. legal ·history,
arose from a Texas jury's
decision In 1985 that Texaco
lllegally enticed Getty Oil Co. to
renege on a merger agreement
with Pennzoll. Texaco had purchased Getty for $10.1 billion In

1984.
Texaco said It was forced to tile
!Or bankruptcy because Pennzoll
relutred to agree to a "reasonable" out-of-court settlement and
because of the posslbtllty It would
be required to post an appeals
bond o! more than $1 bliUon.
"This was a mosl difficult,
palnlul and wrenching decision.
for me and the other members of
Texaco's )loard," Texaco Pres I·
dent James Kinnear told a ni!Ws
f

By STEVE GERSTEL
DENVER I UP!) -Gary Hart,
the anti-establishmen t Westernec launching his second
campaign for the White House
today. Is seen as a solid lront; .
runner for the 1988 DemocratJc
nomination prepared to gun
down his challengers on the
Issues and face thl.' voters In ,a
:.0-state shootout. Four year•
after opening his first campaiAn
as a little-known Insurgent !rom
the Rocky Mountains, Hart formally enters the race as a
seasoned veteran of pretldentlal .~
polltlct wtth an expe.rlenceci
sta ff, the prospects of adequatf
financing and a game plan that.
does not end until the 0\lmocr~tt~
convention In Atlanta .
Hart and h·ls wt!e, Le~. dropped
In unannounced at a party
Sunda y ntght for volupteers and
campaign workers. He told theln
he hoped they were not with hfm
"just because we are friends but .
because you share with us a Jove'
of this country and a desire tQ ·
make It better. "

.

:-.ou rcr !iialcl.
Sout·ces sai d th ey had no
r•v ldPni'P to sugges t thai riA
otfl cluls told Ca still o to lie 111 an
lnvcsllgal or with the• prr .&lt;ldrn tlal Tower Commission, whlrh
Issued Its report feb. 21i. The
repor t con tai ns no refrre nC(' to
Cas llllo's ly ing.
"Ca still o at first just repeat,cd
1he official CIA line," one source
sai d.
Th e CIA , following Its lnsjl(•ctor genera l Inquiry last fall,
i ssued a statemenf denying that
any agency officials had partlclpat&lt;&gt;d In I he arms drops.

.
'•
Hart , his voice hoarse, s.ald If
·each vo lunteer gavl'
hours to
the campaign across the country,
"We will give you a presldenry
you can be proud of. "

zo·

Hurt originally wanted IQ announce his candidacy on lhe front
lawn of his home known as
"Troublesome Gulch" but was
persuaded to go to nearby ~d
Rock, a magnificent park In tht&gt;
Rocky foothills outside Denver.
"We do'n 't need a tot of hoopla
and stuff," campaign manager
Bill Dixon sa id of the event
gea red to the media and closed to
the public. " [t's going to be very

short .''
Dixon sa id Hart did not solicit
advice on the an nouncE'ment,
pointing out that If he canriot
explain lo the voters why he Is
running and why he shou ld be the
next president. "! shouldn't be
running and I shouldn't be
president. "

Bankruptcy action buys time
for 3rd largest oil company

ALL FACTORY REBATES ·AND FACTORY
DISCOUNT PROGRAMS EXTENDED TO
APRIL 30, 1987

$2677 /Month
WITH APPROVED
BANK FINANCING

$9 500

WASHINGTON t UP I 1 - The
CIA station chief i n Costa Rica
lied to thC' 1'owcr Commission in
January about possibly Illegal
arm s shipmt&gt;nts to t.he Con tra s,
perha ps to pro1ect ' superiors ,
sources familiar wit h the probe
say c
Tomas Castillo, the pseudo·
ny m of the CIA officiaL flrsl told
a commission lnvrstiga tor that
he as sisted only wllh six deli ve rIes of non-milit ar y aid In 1986.
which would have been legal, the
sources sai d.
Sui when pressed later tha t
day, Cast illo acknow lcdg&lt;'d that
under thr direction or L t. CoL

;

woefu lly understaffed, they're woelully over crowded. There's nothing going on to Improve and
rehabilitate youth ."
The stal e's ju venile jails have been over·
crowded more than three years. The worst came
early last summer. when 1.950 teenagers wer.e
jammed into buildings Intended for about 1,400 . .
ln Mar ch, the centers had an average dally
population of 1,696.
Yo uth Services Dir ec tor · Geno NatalucciPcrslchettt said the overcrowding has caused
more assault s on teenagers and staff members . ..
The stress, he said, has ca used 1'e!orm school :
C'mployees to take more sick days.

Snow that fell all day Sund~y
and co ntlnu ~d Into the night
failed lo drive Hart Indoors,
although a final decision was irot
expected until just before the the
event begins.
Hart also scheduled a midday
rally In downtown Denver, a
news conference Tuesday and an
opening swing through Texas,
Iowa, P e nn sy lvania and
Ca lifornia .

conference. "However. we had
no choice."
Pennzoll lead altorney Joe .
Jamall fumed: "It Is probably
the most Irresponsible, stupid
corporate action In the history or
the world .
" There was no need !or it."
Texaco said Houston-ba sed
Pennzoll disregarded clghl set.
tlement otters.
"Pen nzoll has placed, Its own
greed above any consideration of
fundamental fairness or th e
publlr weftare," said Kinnear.
accompanied at the news conference by Chairman Alfred
DeCrane.
The Chapter 11 tiling gives
Texaco a chance to reduce the
size ot the Judgment since
Pennzoll Is ·Its largest unsecured
creditor and will have to stand In
line behind secured creditors.
Some legal experts predicted
Pennzoll I'OUld come away with
as Utile as 10 cents on the dollar
because the bankruptcy court Is
not likely to favor lull payment or
the judgment or a rich
settlement.

But New Hampshire, which
gave Hart a stunnlnR upset
victory over W ~lter Mondafc In
1984, was eliminated for "loglsllc
reasons" and his first visit to the
Granite State will come several
days .Iater.
:-.·

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.•

.....

Top-level advl~ers, frk•rlds,
sratl and votu nteers, some wl)q
were with Hart In 1972 when
- was George McGoverQ' s cam: '
palgn manager, streamed Into
Denver lor the event. Hart rested
over the weekend at his home ·
slipping out only lor a prtva.l~ .
fund-raising ••ve nt after Which he
Is expected to have raised about'
$600,00 In his home state alone . ..

he :.

·----

SEEKING PROTECTION - Texaco · Inc ., lhe n•llon'a
third-largest oU oompaay, aanounced Sunday thai It had flied lor
protection under the haakruptey code alter lallflll to resolve II•
$11.3 billion le1al bailie wllh Pennzoll Co. over Getty 011 Co. Shown
above are James Kinnear, left, president, and Allred C. DeCrane
Jr., chairman of the board of Texaco, during a press conference.
(UPI)

•·

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Comnientary
The Daily Sentinel

The

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE IN'fERES'Il! OF TilE

~~

t:S'm~
~v

~TEIGS-MASON

t\REA

rn..-JL.--.1 r"T"''.::;:!d j r=::=J

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pubilsher
PA1' WHI'fEIIEAJ)
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER ofTho Unlte&lt;J Press Int ern at tona l. Inland Dally Press
·Association and thC&gt; Am eric an Newspaper Publflihe rs Association
,

LETI'ERS OF ()PIN JO N au · wclco m(' 1~ () •Jl 1\lld IX' less Ihan 300 wo rds

.Jong. All ll'llen.a resu hj cct to rdltlng and mu ~t h, r 1 rfl .11 th nam e, addres s and
1E'Iephone number No unslgnc-\1 letter ~ will lH 1 l1i1-'H ~J Let ters should be In
'good tas le, addre5slng Is sue;, not ~rsonalllirs.

'compas~ion'

Recently some of our ·bolder
liberals have concluded that the
time is ripe to iaupch a cautious
sort ie or two on behalf of that
once-popular buzzword, "compassion." Maybe It ' ~ sllli a bit too
early to demand increases in the
welfare budget, bui lhe usual
weepers and wa ilers have
clearly decided that a little
consciousness -raisi ng won ' t
hurl.
By coincidence, I recenliy
received a letter fro m a member
of lhe admininstrative staff of a
large East Coast welfare agency .
He Is sickened by what he sees
goi ng on around htm, and I am
go1 ng to share wtlh you a couple

game.____W_it_ua_m~A_.R_us_h_er

of the exail_lpl~s he cites.
I have taken the liberty of
altering enough irrelevant det~ils to protect lhe writer (stnce
he would, of course, be sacked
instantly If his superiors ever
guessed his identit y). Bul his
account is graphic evidence of
the way the taxpayers' money is
being ladled oul by your government in the high • name of
''compassionu:

"We have upwards of 115 case
workers whose job is lo monil or
welfare 'clients.' At any lime,
one can see the majority of these
overburdeni!d case workers sitting at their desks, visiting each
oUter, discussing their kooky

clients Most of thei r 'monitoring' of these clients is done by
phone. not personal visits.
"Speaking of personal visits,
many of the clients refuse to
meet wit h the workers, because
they don't want to waste their
own valuable lime Why can't
these people be told that either
they comply with court orders or
ali aid will he wilhheld until they
do? Mos t often, these cases are
closed out because lhe 'client'
won' t cooperate- but th(AFDC
checks keep roiling in.
''Or take the office whose job Is
to transcribe the dictated report s
of lhe caseworkers. There are
ftve transcrlpllonists. Would you

;Ferguson launches
·race for governor
H_v Ll·:t; LI-:O N,\1(()
LT'I Statt.' huu ~•· H!•Jtnrlt •r

COI. UMR US r!JI' I•- Nut lung .1 go," gt oup of co ncr t.n&lt;•d Clllll ·n'
~

ro mpl ainh to tlw

nc·w ~ r11 ~

Ttwv sa Jd ! h1 · Uh tn I· m

tr

its job

dt.1
orrrr rr' n r,II [ 1 t otr ( 1Jo n Aur n c~· is no t dorng

nrrp

in I hf' .1 utl lf•ncr. \', ,11 ( h rng l lli' PI (J( I •(1(1mgs, WJS
C'llnk . supf' r v isu t ol lH! Unr dl!illh l1J J .., t.r tc A udll ot

•

Th n nl;1c,
·rhonuJ ~ J:

[J fl ('

Fl'r~uson

Thomas Clink was not s u~en · 1 st n g .111\ liquo r audtt s at Ihal hou1
Ra thN , hr w.ts supr• Vh ln g " pi1dst ' of his boss' rmbr)on ic 1 ~90
gub&lt;•l nalonal cam p;il gn
Clink said F• •tgu,;n n " r·r""''lllf'll .t hmll a huge landft li bring
tJianned by Was il' Man agl'r nrn l Itt&lt; 111 Sprnrrr vtlle, Allen Count v
Th at 6.0(){1-arrt• dump h;" h&lt;•cn lll'stT ibrd bv residents as a Mount
TrashmOJl'. u m i lr w id P. J1,2 m 1JC's J(J ng :1nd 12:1 fee l dePp.

O.F. Knlpprn hurg an diCirlo Fc1 guso n. sa id some of tlw ctt t&gt; P"'
fe.1r lhr ldntlflll m&lt;r v &lt;'On l.rm lltil l&lt;' /l!'dl h.' '''il lcr ·suppiles and lhl';
dSkrd lhr auditor· for help
Fc1guson Is assigne&lt;IIJ) law t o b rt 11 P \\a t c i1tlogofm.~ny thtn gs in
Ohio, but one ol lhrm ts nnl lw zo rdous wa ste dfsposui sites.
,
In lhr p.Jsl. Ittl' uuditnr llil' IX'!'II "' cu sNI of fa ll ing behind tn hb
sc hed ule of rf'g ul.ll audit ' and ul .dlnwl11 ~ mo ney lo esca pe. lir
rontlnu CJ ih' r'l"&lt; JUI 'S I" nHnc· prrsomu l r.~ nd f'C[U tpnwn t to iJcrr01 m Iu s
dulles
Rut Kn1pprn 1Jur ~ s.1n lliJihtn g wrong wit h th P ;1\J dllor's offtc·r
lak ing lime to stick lis no' e Int o"'"'"' clumps
.
"One ot the •es pnnsiiJi lllit•s of lhf' itudil or" to l&gt;r co nrNncd ubou t
unylhln g thai is ofr:oncNn tu lh c• cll !le n &lt;'l~r• ''"" " I don' t thin k a n.\
office hoI der is I es I I lr ll' ci b)' Ihe S1&lt;1 I UIt' S a pp 1\ tng I 0 I h.1 I part If' u Ia1
office."
·. \\';!I C·h f01 F'f' JHli ~ O il , f tO III IJj ~ C';\f',•llr•;Jt ,,111 1;.tg(' pn ml, t11 hf'I 'O m l'
· ln C I' f'd ~ l ngly &lt;on r rr nrd ahw n wlw t I!-. llrt 1111' {'\ llll'n ' m tn cl ~ •~ ~ l{]niJ
;~pp! oachrs
\\'li S I(•.

Onr• ul t hoq • J S ~ Ui ·'~ \\Il l

Tlw ~JUd t! or srnds

PX.ll n Jnr1

hl

Ju,,.,. to 'idff l\ d! SIJ( It;, r• ol

IO\J(

s 1111 o 1 \ ' 1 \ 111111 !0 1 of Oh 10 1o Jlf' l 101 m

:uudlt s. und thu s h• · I! us lii s flngr•• on th• pub•· ur ioru l co mmunities.
,ft'rgu son, tn p&lt;~ t tl c ul. ll, lht ~ ( t :1 \ elt·&lt;.:l IIH' qdiC' thoroug h I\ ovrr !hr

. ·ius I 1.\ v&lt;•urs. tnlk ing tn lo•·ut ufll c•,•b .1 11d fu lfi lling

spe~tkl n g

": eng[l gf'mrn ts Hr • ho~ s e'1m puigncd s1&lt;1H WH if' fo u r times
• , From wh ~lt formrr (~0\ . •l.mw -. ,\ HltlHh '"' one£' cai iC'cl 'lht'
ratblnl' s Sf' nl. " t\udll ot FP ru u ~n n ll .l' rlr t;d JC'd J.:now iPCig L• of tllr

'workin gs of Sla te go,·t•rn llH' nl
:J J f' go 111g to hr linl!lg up to !ol ur·t" l'f'd
· Cf' l c~t r . a nd F0rgu ..;o n1 ~ fil st inllnf' 01 .11 ,, .,~ .... 1 IH'
:his p l a r~ fo1 him

: f}(lfllOCTats

;:Letter to the
.. "'

ditor

Some re.~t raint '-'

. i\n ~7 · )'&lt;'ar - ol ci m,tn lt\'ln g nr a1
• Davlon. Oh1o. wu s mau led 10
• Math rrrenliy b)• a ptt hu ll rlog
lhul was r unnin~ loose i\n Ohio
'. lawmaker has sugges ted ou lla\\
: • 1ng pll bulls In Ohio
"Thr\' al'(' u bl'red

I'I J)H I'I

fr m

th&lt;' ordln an &lt;log" Hrf'r nll) · "
iinlr girl was blllcn nnrt ld iir cl bv
a "pet" bu II dog ownr&lt;l bv hr r
parents A Georg ia jur) . ea rl;·
this ye-ar, ('onvletrcl a man nf
~ : m ans laugh1 CI' ~t! H I sPnr lnrn to
:~ p1 iso n for fh 0 ! 'tSll s tnt .llhl\nn g

•' two of his pil hull d o~ s 11&gt; run
- loose und kil l a 4 , e,11 nlcl lm

Cov Rlrh;ull F'
lH.1s C' l111 k holdinl!

IH'I '('ssary

Thost• dog, bil lIt rough 1he c h ii&lt;l' s
IH'clc diHJ &lt;.. rvr rC'd

hls spi ne m two

pi.H' ('S

Ptt bu!J:.. arc used for a nd hd vc

lwt'll b1t•cl for fl gh llng purposes ·
TIH• n.llnf' nlf•ans what It sm s.
TIH '\' :1 rr put in pits a nd uiloii:C&lt;I
to ld l l oil(' o~ nu! hc r or to kill somcoti ll'r ill'l p l ~ss dog . Ali this in Ihe
n.1n 1t' nf spor t They a rc this way
twr·.1 u:-:r•

Ow~~

ar(' bred this way

illJcl t 't~all\ 11 ~ ~ thC' twman \\' tlO II'\

11 f.,ll ll rn&lt;i must be• responsi bl e
'I I"• prl IH1I I dog Is jus lwa illn !! to

~ who wa s ('I' Oss in )l ;~ \'~t &lt;':lllt lot to
: Rei so m f' L'a ndy fro m .1 llt ' rf ll l &gt;il l

I'! 11111' t ill' "(' nl lfga tor tC'Cih down
n11 ... nnwth Jng So me ext\ ('ll\P
11 o.,ttdlrl\1. tl'(' !I&lt;'C'dt'"'d in I C'garcl~:;

•.' . A 12-mcm bC"I

1,1 pit hu ll fl o~=:s

~.

jUI\ . SL\

of !llPm

pel owners. rrlurncci lite ,-~ r ei" ' '-

~·

•

~= Today
•••
.,
.,

in History
n.vlJnitccl l'n·s~ lnt r rnntional

•

Todal.' is Mond a,,-, April 1:\, the 10.1rd day of 1987 wilh 262 to follow.
The moon is fu ll
The morntng st:rrs arc MNrury, \'rnus .•lup iter and Saturn

_.-

The C'vC'nin g star Is Mars.

•',•

Those born 0 11 this dale orr Ulldrl til\• ·'1 1\ 11 or t\t'it•s. They Include
Thomas Jefferson. Ihird preside ttl of till' l' nlied Sill ies. in 1743; Frank
:: Woolworllt, fOttttdrr of Ihe flve -o nd·dittt l' slot es, In 1852: Allred Butls,
; Inventor of lhr ga mr "Scrabble," in 18!19 1~ge88 1: playwright Samuel
~ Beckell in 1906: fiorold Stassen, ro1·mer Minneso ta governot· who
sough! Ihe RcpuiJII c· ~m pres ldenllai nominntlon seve n times, in 1907
• (ago 8()) ; autho r F:ttdorn \Ve il )· in Hl09tage 781. nclor-singer Howard
Keel In 1917 lngr 70) : film dlreclor-proclu rer Sian ley Oonen in 1924
(age 63); actors Bradford Dillman ill 1930 (age 571 and Lyle
Waggon er In 19:1:, (age 52). and playwt·ig hl Lanford Wilson in 19~7
tage50 ).

~·

On !hi~ dale in lttslot y:
In 1934, in the depths ·of the depression, 4.7 million American
families 'w ere reported to be rece iving welfare payments.
In 1964, Sidney Poiticr became the fir st biark man ro win an Oscar
for best actor.
In 1965, Lawrence Bradford Jr. , 16, of N~w York City, started work
• • as the first black page cvt!r lo serve in either chamber of Congress.
: .; · ln 1984, Christopher Wil der, the FBI's " most wanted man ,"
"'~ ai&lt;cfdentally killed himself as pollee moved In to arresl him in New
' ' Hampshire. Wilder was 11 suspect In lhe deaths, rapes and
·.: : disappearances of 11 you ng women In eight states.
"":
In 1986, Pope John Paul II met Rome's Chief Rabbi Ello Toarr at a
'. J~ome synagogue, first papal visit to a .Jewish house or worship.
J

(

believe that those 115 case'workers cannot put out enough
dictation to keep five people busy
on a consistent basis? Two, or at
the most three, are needed; the
lhird person would be on parttime duty.
"One of those five, a clerk/ typi~ t. has spent her four years of
empiovmenl al her desk sleepmg. She falls asleep so easily that
one day she fell asleep at the
wheel of her car and had a
senous accident . She has been
checked oul for narcolepsy, but
the doctor assured her that she
just needs the proper rest at the
proper ttme.
" This woman signs in for work
at 8:15 a.m. and falls asleep by
8:30 a.m. and sleeps on and off
during the day. (Mostly on.) She
is never reprimanded.
"Also, there are a favored few
In the agency who would be going
on leave without PaY if time off
was taken into account. They
sign oul a I noon or 1 p.m. , but
they sign out thai they , have
worked 11ntil the' regular quitting
time. Yes, our president is really
a bum , tsn'l he. for wa nting to
refor m AFDC?

DEAD BffiDIE - Raphael Santana of the New York Mets
(right) hands by the leathers a dead pigeon to Sarah, the ball girl,
as Howard Johnson looks on at Shea Stadium Sunday. Dion James
of the Atlanta Braves hit a fly ball to the outfield and hit tbe hlrd In
flight In the third Inning, killing It accidentally .It Is the first time In
major league history a batted ball struck and killed a bird. Two
runs scored on the play. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
Majors

vote_J_ac_·k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_·_'V_an_A_tt_a

WASHINGTON- Two Republtcan senators braved the wrath
of their co nsll luents lo make
impassioned pleas for President
Reagan in his dramatic but futil e
crron to sustain his veto of the
~R? o billion highway bill. Their
Impromptu eloq uence tn ·the
closed, la sl-mi nule ca ucus or
Re publi ca n members didn ' t
r hangr I he rntncls of any of the 13
GOP reblcs . but II surelv made
them squ 1rm
·
P erhaps tt was the historic
surroundmgs Ihal inspired Sen~
Robert Dok of l&lt;a nsas and Pete
Do menict of "'ew Mexico The
meet ing was held Itt Ihe opulent
old Senate chamber lhal one
1ang wllh lite heated argumen ts
of Daniel Webster. Henry Clay
and J ohn C Ca lh oun . The
vau lted, patnstakingly restored,
sc mi-ei1 cui at room was Ihe
scene of Senator dcba les from
1810 lo 1859, and Ihe subjects I hal
lit cw such memo rable sparks
we n' ba"'' ancl imporlanl the
&lt;i 1rrc1ion th(• young republic
wou lei t akc unci whet her the
Union wou ld sur \ ive al ali
ln such a selling, even an $87.5
hllli on bill was historic sma ll
polaloes ~o r , more accurately ,
pork. But the tension was as

Dole said: "He picked a lol of us
off the street. He made us
chairmen and leaders.''
Then Reagan spoke, calmly,
nol threatening - and without
notes "I didn 't vela lhe bill to
make a point," he said . " I veloed
a bad bilL:' He emphasized his
su pport for an a lternative,
scaled-down version and concluded wilh a plalnlive quest ion:
" How far can l go laying lnlo
Democra ts if we ca.n'l sland
toget her on th is one?"
Three senators look Iheir turns
al lhe podtum lo tell the president. wllhoul rancor. lhal there
was no wa y they could vote to
sustain hi s velo. Pele Wilson of
Californi a was protecting a
whopping $840 mil lion appropria tion fo r construction tn his sla te:
Arlen Specter was determ ined lo
save $670 million for Pennsyivanta. Sen. Larry Pressler, whose
sta le of Soulh Dakota gol oniy$81
mill ion . told Reagan he sincerely
believed the bill was a good one.
Then Pete Domenici of New
York rose. Pausing for effect, he
looked directly at the president
and said: "You're too nice." He
turned lo the president 's chief of
staff. Howard Baker. once a
popular colleague, and repea ted :

grea l In lis ow n way as it was
during the debates over slavery
and states' r ights. Noonepreseryl
was moved lo emulate Sam
Houston, lhe serape-clad Tex.an
who used to divert himself dur ing
less slirring sessions by whiltiing
wooden hearts of pine and tossing
lhem up lo lhe ladies In th e
ga liery .
The pressure on th e recalci tr ant n was enormous , accordtng lo one of the rebels . He said
the lug of loyally lo prcstdc nl and
parly vs. the demands of his
co nstitue nts made him frel spill
m two. " II was an extremely
charged atm osphere," he said
When he spoke lo Ihe president ,
he said. he was mor e nervous
than al any lime \'sinac high
school. "
Wllh Vice President Bush 111
lhc e lega nliy canopied senate
president ' s chair, mino rity
leader Dole led off the debate,
low-keyed bul forceful "Thi s
Issue 'has been totall y politicized ," he said. "I hope we ca n
help Ihe president."
Remi ndin g his colleagues !hal
President Reagan .is responsible
for the Republi can Party's return to hea lth and respectability,

If it works,
The wisdom of lhe adage, "If
something work s, don't fix it ," is

do~'t

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Hr reca lled how, as a minorityparty freshman 14 years ago, he
was assigned loa committee th at
was soon to exptre II made him
feel worthless, he said.
" You made us chairmen," he
told the president. Never in my
wildest dreams did I think th is
would happen." Then he looked
al his colleagues, and said, "This
ought lo be an easv one."
It was afl er D omen i ~ l 's emotional appea l lltal the president
looked around and told the
assembled senators: "I'm begging for your vole."

S.•,.tlt.· w.

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NBA rt&gt;sults

)lhnll~ntll :.

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makers lo confront their mistakes. I believe , however. that if
we are to restore the efficiency
and public performance of both
telephone and airline service, we
should go back to Ma Bell and
back to airline regulation. The
American consumer will ga in In
each case.

Tranl!!artions

\\ all.,., t 'unfi '' IH 't '

l 'nlrio ~ Uh ~it•u
S \ ltnnKI'r '" 1' l' hllurh•!f1hl tl l ~•·rh-.;1 1• II

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r•• tdlo •d rl1hl · handl'f' Kh•hurd ~ltutl• ..
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Ohio
The Daily Sentinel
A DtY~Ioh of Mullht:~edlll. Int ..
PublishNI c-vrrv af1 NMOf•M. Mond av
F'rldav. 111 Cour1 S!. . Pom t'rov. Oh!o. bv th&lt;' Ohi o V.allt'\ Pub·
llshln~ Coml&gt;;inv, Multlml"dl a In c..
Pomt'rov. Ohi o 45769, Ph 99'.2: 215fi S(o..
ro nd r l .i.s~ P'"''a~t' paid at Pom('roy .
Ohio
th roo~th

~erry's World

MPmb('r· Unl lrd PrNH Jntrrnallonal.
In land Dallv Pr£'Ss Associ at Ion ,mrl r hr
Ohio Nrw~Pa_prr As~ fX'Iat ion. National
Advrrt lsl n~ J'{rprrsrntatlvf', Branham
Nf'WspapPr Satrs 7:\3 Third Avrnuf' .

Nt"W York. N£"W York 10017.
POST'MA91'ER Sl&gt;nd addrrss &lt;'hanJZ("'l
to Th£' Dally S('fltlfwl. Ill Court St..
Pomeroy. Ohio 457till.

SVISCRII'TION RATI!8

By Carrier or Motor Rowlt

On e Wrck .............. . ........ ........ $1 . 2~
On e Month .·........................... .$5. 4~
One Yrar ............ ........ . . .. $65 ~

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

•

Dall~·

.... ..... .......... . ........... 25 Crnf!l

Subsrrlbt&gt;r.s not deslrln~ 1o pay thecar·
r1er may rm1lt in advant'f' direct to

Thl' Dally Sentlnet on a 3. 6 or 12 month
ba!l~.

CTPdlt will

Wf'ek.

bP~vPn

No sub&amp;crtptlons by mall prrmltltd In
arl'9s where hOJll(' ClUTier !M!'fVICE' I~

avallatHt

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t3 w..a ............................ 117.29
• w..a ...............................131.06

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'!3 WHi&lt;a ... .........................: ... 118.211

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52 ........................................... . 7.10

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'

Mike Davis three to lead tlie
Alh ielics .
Twins M, Mariners 5
i\ 1 Seai lle, Kirby Pucketl hll
hi s lltird home run In his last
three ga me~ lo power Minnesota.

.,

:•
•:
;.
•'

w1th tw o homr tuns, and Oavr

Hende rso n lt tl a tw o-run blas t to
power the Red Sox .
Orioles 7, lndhms I
At Cleveland, Eddi e Mttt rav
clouted a lhrc'&lt;?·t un ltomt'l' nttd
Eric BPII and Mark Wtiilamson
pitched a combined lhrrl'·hil tcr
to lift Ba ltimot'&lt;' 10 a swrep of a
1hrer -~ame scnes
Royals K. Y ankecs 2
AI "Kansas Cily, Mo ,' .Juan
Beniquez drove' home three run s
wilh a pair of s in ~ies. iifllng the
Royals
At hlt•tk&gt; 7, An~e l s I
AI' Oakla nd C'altf . C11·ncy
Lansford drovc In four run~ and

Congratulations
•

For A
Job Well
Done!!

•TVC Champs
•Sectional AA
Champs
•District AA
· Champs
•Regional AA ·'
Runners· up
•Won 26
[ost I

Mecir cops
WCT crown
DALLAS tUPlt - Miiosiav
Meclr, oneofthequlckesl men in
profc•ssional tennis, outset·ved
and outsmarted .John McE nroc
Sunday lo win thr $67~.00(1 WCT
Fina ls.
McEnroc did not display lh&lt;'
sa me dominan t serve a nd volley
game Ihal allowed him to upscl
lop-sc&lt;'ded StPfan F. db er~ In a
:\ -hOUI , 22 minute Sl' mifinai
mulch Frida y.
In Sunday's ti-0, :\-6, li ~. 6-2
fl nul. Mrclr had lhr('(' aces, his
first of lhc tournam~nl. McEnroe. who h acl1~ against F:dbeq:~.

.....
..•·..-ol.

' ,•

1111 II COlD II
KHOOI'I HIIIOIY

MEIGS L.\Dl' MARAUDEHS - 1\ECliONAJ.ttuNN.; t~~ - UI' - !•'ronI row J, lt, lluc
H4'nderHon, Tamm)' WriKht , ,Jt•nnl ( 'om•h, ,Jod i ·r uylnr und B••lh Ewing-. 2nd flO\\'
1.-R: Ht•ud Cou('h Rnn l.o~un, ·l enni S.wurtz, Wt•nd~ Fry , ,Jenn y Mlllt•r. ·lull ~· Mllh•r,
l\oli.'4Sy Woods, Sht•lly Stnhurt, Amy Snttcrfl cld , mannJtc.'r, Not IIIChlrt•d I~ \\ltJnd .V

•Ranked 6th
In State
AP &amp; UPI

Klo e~, m ana~er .

•SECTIONAl
CHAMPS
• SECTIONAL •
CHAMPS
10 OUT OF
lAST II
YEARS

had none-.·

Merit·. ranked No. ;, put in 7X
percent of his first serves.
MrF.nroc managed just 64 percent Mecir won 60 points on his
fit·st serve, McEnroe 24 .
i\nd most imporlanliv, McEn ·
ro&lt;', who lost his serve jusl once
to Edberg. \\'as brok~n 111 times
by MeC'ir. in lhe first and lhlrd
sri s. Me F:nroc did not win a
set'\ ice game.

•WON 14
lOST 9

Outdoor.~

By .JERRY PICK,RELL
Outdoor Writers AHHn. of
America Distributed By UPI
Fishermen arc as susceptible
to th0 notion that lhc grass is
always gret•ner somew here else
as uny other group They pack up
their equipment and drive somelimes hundreds of miles for a
chance to make a casl In to
prisll"'" waters. This Is often a
successful, a lbeit expensive, way
to ensure a decent catch.
There ar('Oihe.rs. Some of Ihem
are nearly as successful but nol
nearly so rosily. One approach
that is oft en overlooked by even
experienced fishermen Is 10 go
-the opposite direction. That Is ,
fish closer to home, at leas I
figuralively .

carrtereach

·

lh ~ Chi cago Whil e Sox. ro mpicl
ing a three-ga me s\\·ce p wilh Ihe
Tigers ' fourlh r ons erulivc
triumph.
Elsewhere. Boston beat Toron to 8-:1. Baltimore t·ou ted
Clevela nd 7-1. Kan sas C'tly
mauled New York 8-2. O~kla nd
beat Californ ia 7- 1 and Minnesota go I b. Sea l tie 8 5
R-t~d Sox X, Rhw ,Jay~ :J
AI Boston. Don Bavio1 snapped
a 1 for 18 season-openingdroughl

'Fishing holes' may be
better closer to home

I USPS!fl-1111)

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Rt .. l ul ' ' '\'II

deregulation Bul evide nce sugges l ~ 'lha t passengers may be at
greater risk from inadequale
equipment mai'\tenance, and the
possibiiily of midair collisions
seems more likely as the instances of near misses. in the ai r
mount .
fl is never easy for policy

IM:I llt·t rtt H !I~

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Rail huur•• i~ f 'lt•\ d wt d 1
lli•l rnli 7. ( hl1 · a .~;u I
ll:in ..;lll ( II) II, St•ll \ urk !
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drove in fi\'P runs Wtlh his firSt
two homers of Ihe season to
power Ihe Bra ves.
Pirntes 71 Cardinals 4
At Pittsburgh. Jim Mornson
wenl 3 for 4, including his liJOih
career home run. and had lhree
RRI lo help Pirates
Phlllies 9, Cuhs 8
At Phtiadelphia, Glenn Wilso n' s bases- loaded single wilh
one out In the lOth inning gave the
Phlliies lhelr ftrsl victory of Ihe season.
Dodgers 7, Giunt!ii 5
A1 Los Angeles. Pedro Guerrero hil a homer and a doubl &lt;:' lo ·
dr ive in lhree run s and Mike
Marshall collected three singles
and three RBIIo lift Ihe Dodgers.
American Leagur
For 19 year ~ . •Jeff Robinson
dreamed of throwing fastb al ls
past major leaguers. When fi.
nally his opporlunity ml\leria i·
izc'!l Sund ay. he made the wat t
worthwhile.
Robinson, 26, made his maJor
league debut a suc cess, seattcrlhg six hil s over seven innings to
pitch Detroil to a 7- 1 victory over

'""'""'Il ,

I

I

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Baseballs sell for about $8
apiece. bul the one Larry Bowa
picked upSundaywlli be Invaluable to him.
"Thfs -is better than a World
Series bail ," Bowa said a fter the
San Diego Padres defeated the
Cincinnati Reds 5-2 to reward
their rookie manager with his
fir st victory. "'r.here have been
some sleepless nights involved in
getting this ball."
The Padres los I their last eighl
exhibition games and their first
five regular-season games before knocking the Reds from the
unbeaten ranks Sunday.
"These past few da}'s have
been miserabl ~." said Bow a, th e
former Phi Illes shorlslop. " I l's
like a 10.000-pound weigh! has
been laken off my neck. This is
going lo make food taste better
a nd going to make bed feci
better."
·
Steve . Garvey, who singled
Saturday to break an 0 for 14
' slump, provided lhe Padres all
the runs lhey needed with threerun homer in the first.
"The way lhings have been
going," said Garvey, "I l"as n't
too sure lhe ball wasn't going lo .
explode halfway !here.''
Ed Whitson, 1-1, gave up four
hils, lwo runs, struck out five and
walked two over six innings to
record lhe victory. Craig Lefferts pitched perfect sevPnlh and
eighlh innings, and Lance
McCullers worked a perfect
ninfh lo earn his fir sI save.
Reds starte r Guy Hoffman.
obtained from the Cubs in the
off-season , took lhe loss, Cincinnati 's flrsl after four slraighl
victories. The Cinclnnali bullpen
allowed li s first two r un s of lhe
season, snapping a strea k of 19
consecutive scoreless Innings by
Reds relievers.
In other games. Houston
blanked Montrea l 1-0, Atlanta
routed New York12-4. Pittsburgh
pounded St. Louis ~7 -4, Philadelphia outlasted C' hi~ago 9-8 in 10
innings, and Los Angeles edged
San Francisco 7- 5.
Astros I, Expos 0
AI Houston, Bob Kne pper and
two relievers co mbin ed on a
six-hiller and Billy Hatcher
singled home Bill Doran In the
fifth inning 10 lead the und efeated i\slros.
Braves 12, Mets 4
AI New York, Dale Murphy

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Domenici had plen ty of reason
to vote against t..c president. The
5J mph speed limil. repealed by
the bill, was anathema to his
constiiuenls. (In racl. New Mexico became Ihe firs I slale lo rai se
the limit to 65 mph, wilhi n hours
" Ihe htghway
.
after
bill's pa ssage
al lowed II to do so wilhout losing
federal road funds 1
Bul Domenicl was supporllng
the president instead. and he Iold
the president -and Ihe 13 rebel s
- why-. "No one else will say II,
but I will. " he satd "They owe II
lo yo u."

IIi

a.. tMdt•no, 11:(13 p.m

lltou..tun I, Mnnlrt•.tl II
l .n~ r\lll(t•lt •'- i . Stm t ' rantl'"'" l

';You 're too nice "

.t, NT l"huuk•r"'

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fix it _____G_eo_rK_e _M_cG_m_Je_rn

aga inst Ihis move as a senator.
As with telephone se rvice, the
being dra mati zed dally in two Uniled States had airline service .
areas of our national life lhat was performmg very well .
a rllne service and lrlephone Airline routes, rates, schedules,
operations.
safety and overall service were
In an cat lte1 rolumn, l des- all under federal regulation with
CI'Ibed ll•e &lt;iecime in telephone lhe public 's inleresl in mind .
efficiency lhul followed lhe
There were some problems
courl-cnforcd break up of AT&amp;T. with airline reguialion, bu t. as
Prior to Ihis decision- soug h! wilh the telephone industry, the
in federui courl by Ihe anti-trust answer was nol toend regu ialton.
di vision of tim Depa rtment of bul improve it. Instead the
Juslicc - lhc United Stales had airlines -were largely allowed to
Ihe best telephone service in the operate in the tree market. The
world. We we1 e served by a theory was that airline competihig hly experienced and effici ent tion and lhe profit motive were
co rporation that was regu lated.
enough to protect lhe public.
Telephone users had no real
The result has been a scramble
n&lt;.&gt;e&lt;t of anti-lrusl action against by a irllnes to serve major routes.
the telephone company because such as New York to Los Angeles.
service was superb and the Small and medium-size comdanfler of monopoly was guarded munities and rural areas have
against by publlc-regulallon bo· suffered a decline In qualit y
dies. If there were deficiencies , service.
the answer was not to break up
There has also been a painful
lhe telephone compa ny but to deterioration · of on·time deparcha ng e regula I ions or the tures and arrivals. I recentl y
regula tors .
spent half a day at Dulles Airport
In public life we make errors of in Washington, D.C .. Irylngwithjudgment just as we do in pr ivate out success to learn what haplife. But In this case I am proud to pened to a Continental Oight due
have opposed the break of "Ma lo arrive from New York and
Bell," both as a senator and as a take me lo Knoxville. Tenn .. at
witness In the federal cou rt 11:45 a.m.
·
testifying against this move.
The plane llnally arrived three
Telephone users are all too hours behind schedule and took
aware of the present chaos In the oft tor Knoxville shortly before 3
industry: confusion over which p.m. Meanwhile, the gate personservice one Is using, complicated nel were unable to tell the walling
billing, impossible service sna- passengers how late the plane
fus. Nearly every user has a would be, what caused the delays
favorite horror story about cur- or even whether or not the fli ght
rent telephone operators.
would be canceled. As a frequent
fl
yer, I have found many (llgbts
Equally ill-advised was the·
leaving
and arrtvln&amp; an bour or
decision by Congress to end
more'
bebllld
acbedule.
federal regulation ol airlines.
II Ia dlfftcuJt to leam tbe facia
Here again, I consider mysell
forlunate to have led tile fl&amp;ht about air safety In tbe era of

I R !t!o' hln~un k•u.d11 IWrll'!l :J.IJ

.\ prU II - " w.; hl•~n n 2, N\ j,.\IUidt·r ..

East

money."

Squirming over the

•

phla. asp m
N1' l siMOI'fill "' \\ushln~nn

NATION \1. l ,f;,\(,( t:
fh l ln lltod l' r.""' lnll 'f'ftllllun~tl

"You ca n certainly say that I
am a disgruntled employee, but
mo re than that, I am 'l., disgrunlled taxpa yer ' It II' an
absolute sca nd al Adm iltedly a
lot of good can .be done tf lhe
employees are ,expected to work.
If Ihey refuse, Ihen fire them with
ca use. At a minimum . as much
or more could be done wi th half
lhe slaff. Thai half who work
could gel a ni ce salary increase
and sllll save lhe · taxpayers

w ho Ji \' t' nl, al' hazdrdou ~ \\dSif' dumpsllf&gt;S a nd i.lir· fo ulin.l.! C'h rmlc :tl
fa~torlr~ ga the '"d " oloc k li nm II" · Sl,•lc,ilol"e 10 broadcast lh111

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Padres stop Reds; Astros roll on, 1-0

Monday, April13, 1987

Ohio Politics

;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel '
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Most major cities are located
where there is water flowing
througiJ their very hearts. Most
of the people who live In theSe
places look upon Ihe urban rivers
as little more than open sewers.
In a few cases. that's accurate
enoogh. But tn many others, II'sa
misconception,
Industries ~ routinely discharged waste Into the water-

'

ways thai were nearest lhcm .
Somellmes this was done lnnoC('nliy; other times it was a n
eco nomic expedienl done wil h
lillie lhoughl of environmental
impact
There are very few of these
icfl . An increased awareness on
Ihe part of Ihe public and leaders
of industry has reduced such bad ·
actors to social pariahs. Clites
have opted, for obvious reasons.
to locatesewage·treatment facli illes and other such operalions
downstream of the warerways
that rraverse their centers.
The point of all this Is that lhe
water you look across each day
as you sit In an office might be
nearly as clean as lhat you drive
several hours to reach. Sonne
cities, like my home town of
Columbus, have undertaken sur·
veys of the fish population in
lheir downtown wal ers wlih
surprising results. Species ranging from smallmouth bass to
muskle have been found there to
tbe awe of onlookers.
So next time you get the urge to
go fishing , but don,'t have lime to
travel very far, try downtown. Jt
m lght be the besl place a nyway.

•TVC

CHAMPIONS
•3 TVC

CHAMPIONSHIPS
IN A
ROW

..

'.

•WON 19 ··
LOST 3 /

. ,,'
·'

• . lllgh ~du ml
won u.. third ~ tral-111 Tl'( ' till!· I hi ~ \'1•nr. Tlw J11(•tnht •r"' M 1h•·
JIM.~~ ~qtutd ~.trr trront row, rr om l1•fll Rill Hrtttlt• 1r.... f'f!H Kin ~ . lfn••y F.mmn ..J. H.
KltdJCn. SL oU WllllanHI, { lirl" Nmllh and :'ttana~.;t•r :'t11k•· Kl tw~ . St•t~tnd lt 11~ : :\I .Ill·
llll;(lr ·fCH.• Purkt~r , Slflve Mu~Jitl r, ,\11kt• Bartr1u n • .Sf•(J tt r owe•II. UrNtl 81 ~"' II. ll• 11l11lt·
Rf•••kt•r, rli "M!U' HtlWUrd ( no lon~~:• · r wllh (I•Jlm } und C'nlu ·h :\1\• •k ('hllrl~ .
,

ho~ b~t"kc11Jotll t ~ttlll

.

Farnters Bank
~

"Your. Communlly Owned Bank "

•z

' ""

�Page- 4- The .Daily Sentinel

Monday, April13, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mize .Masters·· champ after 140-foot chip .· shot
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
AUGUSTA, Ga . (UP II -With
one . stunning st roke Sunday, a
young boy 's fantasy crys tailzed
Into rea.lily ,
Augusta native Larry Mize
sank a 140-foo l chip shot on the
second hole of a sudMn-death
playoff to ca pture the Masters
champio nship over Australian
Crcg Norman, who bas finished
SI'Cond Of bett er in four Of the Jast
. live major tournaments.

"You have big ·dreams as a
child, and mine came true
today," Mlze said. " I grew up
here. and those who live here
know what this mea ns. Winning
the Masters Is the one tourna·
ment I'd want to win most. I'll
treasure It always.
"To get the green jacket from
Jack Nicklaus and beat two such
great players (Norman and Seve
Ballesteros! In a playoff, it' s
hard to put into words. I've been
trying to think about what to

say."
Mlze finished at .1-under-par
285 by making ~· elgllt-foot
birdie putt on the final regulation
hole. Norman and Ballesteros
both went 3 under with birdies on
the next to last hole: the same sltl&gt;
where Ben Crenshaw lost a share
of the lead with a bogey.
' 'I was pretty nervous standing ·
there with them (Norman and
Baltestrosl." Mlze said. "! Was
happy to be with two of the
greatest players, but I wasn't
Intimidated at all."

Ballesteros dropped out of the
playoff when he three-putted the
!lrst exira hole. arid Mlze's
chances appeared slim • on the
second hole when he missed the
green by 60 !eel.
The 28-year·old Georgian.
whose only previous professional
victory In more than rtve years
on the PGA Tour was In the 1983
Memphis Classic, made that
remarkable chip shot and picked
up a check lor $162,000 to send his
career earnings · past $1.15
mllllon. ,
.
Third-round co-leaders Crenshaw, Roger Maltbie and Jodie
Mudd, who start~&gt;&lt;! out birdieeagle-birdie Sunday, were 1 shot
behind the three playoff partie!·
pants at 286. The next group,
featuring defendh\g champion
Jack Nicklaus and former cham·
pions Tom Watson and Bernhard
Langer ot West Germany, were
another three shots back at 289.
"I had a·good chance to wln the

Montreal
completes
swet:p

•,

1,(\JtKIN ,INJURED - Cincinnati's stMrllng
shortstop, Burry Larkin, grimaces In plan as a
m1•mho•r of Uw Reds' training stall checks his
kn'"' lollowlng a collision 111 second bse with San
Dl•gu o·cntcrflcldcr Sian ,Jefferson In the first

~rkin

golf tournament," said the 47· different situation. That one went
year-old Nicklaus, who was look· six holes. We both parred the first
·lng for a seventh Masters jacket . five and then Larry got Into
"When I saw what It was like out · troubfe at the sixth hole and that
was that."
·
there, I felt they (the leaders!
"I had hoped I might have a
might be backing up."
Norman called the defeat the s·hot' at the Grand Slam this ·
year," said Norman who led
toughest he's ever had.
"I'm more disappointed no~ going Into the final round of all
than In any tournament l ever four or last year's major champlayed," said the British Open pionships.' "! can't do that now
champion who · also ·nnished this year, but I can still win the
. second in last year's Masters . "I other three majors. When Bob
Tway did It to me last year, I had
had my chance to wln lt. That
no more majors to play."
shot ·of Larry 's was so tough, it
Norman and Ballesteros were
made It tougher to lose."
Norman said Mlze' s shot was both 3-under going ln(o the final
more unbelievable than I he one regulation hole Sunday, but
neither could match Mlze's closBob Tway made out of a bunker
birdie.
ing
on the final hole of last summer's
Norman
thought he ha(j the
PGA Championship to hand the
won
when he reached the
playoff
Australian another second-place
green with his approach shot
finish In a major championship.
"I'd rather see someone make after Mlze missed far to the right.
"I figured I'd have no trouble
a freakish shot," Norman sa id,
"than have someone win a getting down In 2 and that Larry
-· tournament because someone would be struggling," he said."!
· couldn't believe it when his ball
else bogeyed."
Norman said that when he beat went into the hole. He coqld stay
Mlze In a playoff In last year's . there three more days and not
Kemper Open, "That was a make that shot again."

..

pkamoto holds on, claims top prize
St\ N nu-:Go 1UP I 1 - Avako
:okamOio atoned for a poor .club
:l'hoire wll h a kr,l ' putt Su nd:.y on
·thr final hole of thr $200,0:Hl
: h:.~·nrrra I namorl Clt~s~\('.
. " I shouldn' l ha vr changed
·dubs.'.' said Oknn1o1o. ll'ho put
:t1l'r 4-lron bark Into l&gt;er bu g and
;pulli'&lt;l aul a thrN• for thr 172-ya rd
·drlvr Into thP wi nd . "That was a
'big mistake'."

and win th r tournameni by a
stroke with a l3·under 275 toial.
Okamoto. 36. who clung to the
lrad a1 Rcrnardo Heights since
Thursday' s opening round, put
hl'r tee shot on the upjl('r tier of
th&lt;• green on the par·3 hole. about
50' feel from rhe pin. She needed
to avoid a bogey that could have
forced a playo!f with King, who
lrallro by a st roke.

: Ttw

Okamoto putted and wa tched
hrr ball roll down the tier and
break to wit bin a foot of the cu p.
King, who was 45 feet away but
on the same level us the hole.
missed badly and lost by a
stroke.
The miss capped a round of 68
thor started with a bang for King
but enQed with disappointment.
She had shot a 6- under· par :lO on
the front side. taklnga ~ · shot lead
over Okamoto wllh birds on the
8th and 9th holes.
· Okamoto had started out at
11· under Sunday and went' to 1J.
under - two strokes ahead o!
King- with a birdie on No. 5.
·'I felt like I could hav11shot a 64
or 65 but the bogey on 10 was a
turnaround point," satd King.
Kl ng dropped her approarh on
10 Into the trap and then J. putted
lor another bogey on 11. dropping
Into a tie with Okamoto at
12,under.
Alter both golfers birdied 14
and went to 13-under, King
bogeyed 16 when her 5-lron
serond shot went Into the gallery
and she failed to chip on to the
green.

would ha\'C' been

'('OSI I)• had Br tsy 1\lng knocked
her tre shot any closer 10 lhr pin .
king. howt'l'l'l'.il'ftlwrsrlf u'long
pull thnt shl' missed. al lowing
bkamolo to vat· out and fini sh
with a round uf ~- undrr·par iO

, MU
'Osu Wms
title
HUNT INGTON. 1\'.Va . tUPi l
- Robert Huxtablr led his Ohio
Stair trammiiiPS ro the title In
thf' M;lrshall Unl\'Crsll;• lnvltafionul J(olf tournumenl Saturdav.
Hu xtub!C' was medalist with. a
~ H; ov~ rth f' !l4 holes of the Guvan
Country Club. Th~ Buckeyes.
firing team score of Bn. b!'at th~
17 otho•r teams.
Miami of Ohio was second with
an 888, foltowro by host Marshall
ar 893, Kentucky at 896, ' Kent
State at 900. Purdue at 905. East
J&lt;entucky al 907. Bowling Green
dl 907, Michigan State at 910,l'vlichigan at 911 , Northern 1111·
riols at 912, Louisville at 919.
Wt&gt;s tern Kentucky at 924, Ohio
University at 925. Akron at 932,
Toledo at 937, Eastern Michigan
a; 950 and Murray State at 975.

J

" Betsy was far left and knowIng that the pressure was on her,
I felt she might not make a
pcrfert shot,' ' said Okamoto,
who won her flrsl LPCA event of
the year. "A l ter the 16th hole, l
thought l r ould win."
Okamoto's lee shot on 17 was a
good sign. The ball l anded six
Inches from the trap. Although
she had Ia sta nd In the sand to
make her second shot. Okamoto
made the green and parred out.

Local bowling
Tf'am

THURSDAY SWINGERS
Standlnp u of AprU t

W

Plants Exxon ............ 1......... , . . ... '-3

L

25

Moon('y's Bod,v Shop .......... .... .... 57

31

JM Cain, All y........................ ... 50

38

~~bar('On: Inc............................ 48

.w

Rutland Mlnl" Supply ................ . 40

48
:'JO

.. 0\lannl s Pl z.za ............... ., ....... 42

CO&lt;'hran 's Euon ................ .. ..... 38
[\('('!ric Motor Sf'rviCf' ............ .. ~1

'5 .................. ,.......................... 35
Jordo n Gas Scrvl'r .......... ......... 30

46

51
i\3

58

Giovanni's Plu a, C'ot"n(IV~ Adkins. 4~:
Jordan Gas Scrvlt"P. Jan t Goblt, 370:
Plants E_xxon,•Hazcl Marcum. 48.'); Albaar-

con. lnl' .. Lf&gt;p Bradshaw, 408; Rulland

Mint' Suppl)', Linda Prt€'rson, 462: ~- Rutb
Shotx-. 4"62; Cochran's Ex:.on. Shtila
Matheny, 442; EIPCrrlr Motor Sfrvil"t!',

Rach('l Whllrhalr, 347; Mooney's Body

Sh&lt;Jf,· J~~t Mooney, 522: Joen Cain. Ally .,
Ela n(' n.,van, ol41.
Splits ronv{'rfed: Jovrf' Moon€'\' 3·10·
Kathy Butcher, 5-10. ·
·'
'

· Linescores

,Monday, April13, 1987

her home In
reports were given and hostess
Whitlock, Linda Hubbard, and
gifts were presented to Mrs.
Dorothy Roach. Mrs. Hubbard
Gheen. Doris Wilt received an
also won the door prize. Lynn,
Linda Gheen hosted a recent
annlvNsary gift. •
McKinney will host the April
....,....;.._ _ _ _....;........._ __:.:____jy:!!;~~:!!.!;~~~s!;etr~v!ed~an~d!_.mn.:eeeet!!J. ~..:..--...:-----....,.-

has ffieeting

SCIENCE FAIR- Approd·
mately 70 exhibits were en·
lered by the fourth, flflb, and
sixth graders of the Chester
Elementary School In Its first
science fair staged Friday.
Entries were judged by How·
ard Parker, retired teacher,
,John Costanz~, William Buck·
ley, and Russ Moore, county
. education olfk'e, Gayle Sal·
yer, teacher, Mod George
Stew~rt, electrical enlngeer
with the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. Stewart Is pictured aho.ve
with Sarah Harris, a sixth
grader, whose exhibit on solar
energy, the greenhouse ellect,
look a superior. At right sixth
grader Sherrl Smith received
a superior rating on her
exhibit In Chester's first
science fair Friday. Tilled "A
Sl udy of Bones" the display
showed the ellect.All vitamins,
minerals and proteins on
growth, the substance of bone,
and how hones devt•lop. How·
ard Parker, a retired teacher,
wa.• one o! the judges.

Inning of Sunday's game at Riverfront. Larkin
was carried off the field In a stretcher. The Injury
was later diagnosed as a hyperextended felt knee.
IUPI)

Jefferson said It was nothing 1t could have been more severe
more than a hard slide designed than It was."
to break up a double play.
Neither Cincinnati manager
"I 'm more upset than hurt, " Pete Rose nor San Diego man·
said Larkin. "I was behind the ager Larry Bowa complained
bag on the play. He jumped over about the play.
the bag and hit me In the knee. He
"! don' t think It was a dirty
never slid. If he slid and took me play," said Bowa. "!know Pete
out. fine.
didn't. because Pete played like
''I can see a play like that if It's that ."
in the ninth Inning, but that was
Jefferson , who had led off the
In the first Inning on the second game with a bunt single, took off
hitter," added Larkin . "f 'll be for second when Tony Gwynn hit
jumping toul of the way) from . a bouncer to first baseman Terry
now on."
Francona. Francona threw tQ
Jefferson, who suffered a Larkin. coveri ng second to force
bruised left leg on the play but Jefferson and Larkin was trying
pla yed the entire game and went
to get a throw of! to first to try for
2-!or-4, saw It differently than a double play when he was
Larkin .
·
knocked off his feet by Jel!erson.
" He wa s right on th e bag," said Gwynn was safe al first when
Jefferson. "He didn' t get off lhe Larkin couldn't get the throw
bag. Usually, a shortstop goes to away .
one side or the other. He just
Jefferson's .IJreakup of the
stood !here.
double play turned out to be
" If he's there, he's fair game. Important. The next batter, CarIt' s my job to take him out . ! tried mela Ma rllnez. walked and Steve
to slide directly over the bag. !let Garvey followed wllh a 3- run
up and that 's why I got a bruise. homer.

The Daily Sentinel

====~========================,~~~~~~~:=~~~--~~~~
·~~~5
.Chatter Club ·
Pome~r~oy~.~o~r~nc~e~r~s·...,~~o~a~~ng:es~to~[lfE~~

injured, out 3-10 days

• CINC INNATI tUPI )- Cinrln·
Qall Rl'ds shortstop Barry Larkin
..,II be, ou t or action for up to lO
days beca use of a hy percxlended
IP!t knee he suffcrro In a second
b~Sl' c•olllslon Su nday agai nst the
san Dlrgo Padr·es .
:Larkin. trying to compi('tr a
dou~le pla y In the first Inning of a
:.-2 win by th e Padres, wa s
Injured on a hard slide by rookie
Sta n JC' ffer son.
,
· ··Larkin was l'arrled from the
fl ~l d on 11 strrt r hN and exami ned
by Rrds' tea m physician Dr.
~urTf'll Harding. who diagnosed
the Injury as ii hype rextension of
the lefl knee.
:Reds' train('!' Larry Starr sa id
ii(tel' th&lt;' ga me that Larkin would
hf' out of art ion anywhere ~rom
thn'l' 10 10 days while the Injury
ll('ais.
·_: ·L&lt;H'kln , who was hilling .:!1:1
.t!_liC'I' four gu mes, Wi.I S rcpia{'ed
Jn: Sunday's llnrup by Ku1·1
.Silllwr ll . who went ().for·4.
·; · l . ark ln t·omplalncd lhul Jeffer·
~ " jumped" Into him, but

('IITO r

By ·The Bend

Grange to honor longtime members

I

A program honoring Grange
members of over 2&gt; years has
been planned for Aprll18 at 7: .&gt;0
p.m. by Star Grange 778. accordIng to Patty Dyer, master.
The local grange will be joining
over five thousand local granges
nationwide t'n thr observance of
Grange Week. Aprll19·2&gt;.

SINKS 1411-FOOT CHIP SHOT FOR TITLE - Augusta native
Larry Mlze jumps high ·In the air after sinking breathtaking
140-foot chip shot on the second hole of sudden death Sunday to win
the 51st Masters championship. (UPI)

a

TUEUA VNICHT

ThP Saturday ni ght mPetlng
will be .preeeded at 6: :l0 with a
potluck supper at the Grange hall
on County Road 1 located about
lhrre miles north of Salem
Center.
The purpose of Grange Week Is
to give PVPryone an opport unity

to learn morP about the Gran~r
organization. Its act lvltles and
members.
Grange wrek artlvllles will be
concluded with a county-wide
grange banquet on April24 at the
Salisbury f~ le mrnlar.v School.
Tickets arc available from any
subordlnatC' grange master.

B
'b
I
. I bI
nuuto t tes avatta te

ubrary

line.r:

Super Dream Pill

Guaranteed Weight Loss

SALT lAKE CITY, UTAH Life r.m ..... Authon
AucAtiitll to • re\lllw d clllloCuiAm ·ReNta
Durk
Panan and Sandy Shaw,
"""' filii, here'• ~ are
~ libaut the
IIMII!I watka• ol MIT and I.JClA
~ "'- llriln d lhl ........... intmchtttd tt.e nir·
warld flmoua Dream PI So;atem ede IUbllanca to 1M public in
lor flit, pr~~~~.c Wlid1l 1au tlwi' NIIRY belt Nina book,
futuring Super Ule breams Lte fxlewion.
Much to her
emaaement, while t1king Ltablets: .
"I loll 2S 1111. with a 30 day sutdlo." argirint lor ill baing 6cts Oli a
Mrs. J.N.S., Ft. ~;AI.. be oken loot, 5lndv !ott 25 pollllds
d f.t nl put an $ pounde d firm.
"Laoing I lb. pwr day,•
Mr. J.O'., Piwt...... KY. toned nuc:le in lill \IJIIIhL Accord·
~ to Durk'• calcultrliona, the pi
•rue loll 34 1111. and rm 11illoU!a. • CIUI«&lt;
s.q, 'to iDII 400 linea•
.Mrs. J.K., Garden Grow, C'A.
fat • lhe IIIOUid act. wile
"I haue beon on D...arn Pil 1M one " - lalt - llliJhout ciltiigl
month 01111 /HI
Em.........Gu......
VIII. Mr.. A.D., "'**ko, OK.
Pllce liDIIf anllr ~, I !IOU wt
The s,.qm•, Dlwn PI comnot
*"PPY
birwltwo llllunila# l ._ Cllad rtll.ln
the ~ COIIILI • b a
L•ei._ end L·onill•• wNch ,.. renl of 1111111' JUdy price.
Clll llin.tltel the bact~• ~·
You Clll anllr the Dr.n
lion ol tJQWih tuna&amp; OW
II I daa t 1'1111 lhll .OWih
......... mill be ................

"*" ...,_ .,.,

MONDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - M!'lgs
Local Athleti.c Boosters, 7: :lO
p.m. Monday at the Meigs High
School.
RACINE - Parents of Junior
students will bl&gt; held Monday, 7
p.m., at Souther·n High School, to
discuss preparations for the
Racine -Southern alumni
banquet.

COli··· ... 1_

·=~·~

POMEROY - Disabled AmerIcan Veterans meet Monday, 7
p.m., at the hallln Polll4?roy .
'

.

MIDDLEPORT - Heath Unl·
ted Methodist Church Women
meet at 7: :1! Monday at the
church.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . wlih
. . . . . . . Ltlininl and Lcwritt;itl....
nialta the ~ ....... .,....,
1

BEDFORD - Bedford Town·
ship Truatees meet 7 p.m. Mon·
day at Town Hall.

• • indi
... bt fin end '*v·

POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Education meets 7 p.m.

allii I

-

............. .U.to
-end

•llwll--

•

onwald to open the mcetin~ .
Barbara Grueser and Sheila
Cozart were welcomed Into membership. !I was notC'd that has·
tcsrs for thr Muy omeeting will
be Elsie Sutherland, Ann Col·
burn, Rose FlfC'. · and Angela
Marci nko.
Thr travelln~ Madonna was
won by Jane BcegiP. Dorothy
Thompson gave a demonstration
on making Easter ca ndy and
samples were given to the
members thN·e. Marilyn Poulin
and Teresa Cremeans served
refreshments, assis ted by Olita
Heighton anq Marilyn Meter,
Susie Stewart and F.mma Rad·
ford were contributing hOstesses.

Correction.

99
TOOTHPASTE

BOTTLE OF 50

""'
iJANACIN

39

LAROE-5 OZ. TUBE OR

GEL, TARTAR CONTROL
REGULAR OR TARTAR

oa=

CONTROL

SINGLE OR TWIN PRINT
COLOR FILM DEVILOPit4G
OFFER GOOD ON ItO, 126 135 DISC AND
OTHER C·AI PROCE~S FilMS.
·

•

OFFER GOOD NOW THRU APRtlU, 1987.

Kelly Lea Thompson, junior at
Eastern High School, Is an
alternate to Buckeye Girls State
for the Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, Mlddleporl, not
Drew Webster Posl :J9, Pomeroy,
as was earlier announced .

HERR'S

PRETZELS

CalendarI happenings

5

blqn nl adw foadt 11111111 bt
din • • rtl
Gtowth lbnuw II p
• i'l
peapll up tile 14111 the._

certlflca lion from source of rPC·
ognlzed by National . Library
Scrvlcr for the Blind and Physi ca lly Handicapped.
'
Since librarians are onr of the
recognized sources, you can Jet
the library know If you would be
rllglble and want the cassf.'ttes .
They would then send the order
ln. The materials will be shipped
directly to the recipient.
Tht s Is not a lending program!
All materials are free or charge
and meant to be kept!

MESH CHAIR

OR' VANILLA

'

"*"

~~:7~:.·::

A ~. J .

By Ruth Powers
The Bible Alliance. Inc.. Is
offerln~ frre of cha rgr, The Bible
on audio cassette to persons who
Is of lowvlslon. visually Impaired
or blind .
Thosr who are P.rlnt handl·
capped also qualify. These
cassettes are provided to those
who desire the Scriptures, and
furnish valid certification of
visual Impairment or disability.
Alt that Is needed Is a request
!rom the Individual with a

l*l l'tl S)lfam SW1aplng U.S.

their families. Plans were also
annoulnred for servi ng a dinner
for members of the Meigs Board
of Mental Retardation on Mon·
day, May lf.. Committees will be
announced at the next mffting
by Anna Blackwood ,. president.
A Lenten prayer servirC' was
conducted by Sister .Janet Reck·

1

SEAT
CUSHION
FOR WIRE

•

Catholic Women Club conducts
A reception for new members
was among several artlvlties
planned b,v the Cat hollr Women' s
Club of Sacred Heart Church at a
recent meeting held In the church
social hall.
The recrptlon wll be hc&gt;ld on
April JS. On April 26, mC'mbers
will serve a First Communion
breakfast for the rhlldren and

WIRE.MESH
CHAIR
WHIT~ GRAY

Monday rather than Tuesday.

sonvllle Senior Cit lzens free
blood pressure clinic, 10 a.m. to
· noon Tuesday at town hall;
TUESDAY
POMEROY Bend Area meeting of senior citizens club
Merchants Association meets 8 following lhC' clinic.
a.m. T~esday at Bank One .
CHESTER - Chester Town.
CHESTER - Chester Town· ship Trustees meet 7: .10 p.m.
ship Trustees meeting '7: :lO p.m . Tuesday at the town hall.
Tuesday at Town Hall .
WEDNESDAY •
MORGAN CENTER - ReviSYRACUSE Revival at
Syracuse Nazarene Church. va l at Morgan Center Wesleyan
Tuesday through Sunday eve~ · Church, continuing to April 19,
lng with William Groves, evange· various speakers. Services 7: :lO
·list. Services at 7p.m.; Sunday at p.m.; special singing.
10::10 a.m. and 6 p.m .
REEDSVILLE Revival
POMEROY - Ladies of Jay· through April19 al Eden Untted
mar Golf Club meet at 9 a.m . Brethren Church with Rev. Peter
Martindale of Greenfield.
Tuesday at the clubhouse.

8 OZ, BAG

59&lt;

---

THURSDAY
POMEROY Pomeroy
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce meets
110011 Tul!lday at Pomeroy Trln· · Chapters of Alcoholics Anonymous and Al·Anon will be held
lty Church.
Thursday evening, J p,m., at the
HARRISONVILLE - Harrl- JTPA building In Pomeroy.

•

..

SAVINGS EVERYDAY RITE
IN
EVERY AISLE AT. • • .lr.tTiW
lnl AID ACCII"'I AU MANUFAC'IIIIII'I COUPON$ ~
If lfl(lY! Ill a! Ill UIIIT GU.ImTifS • PIKfS lfff(IIYf Mill 13 TltlU

1917 •!lOT USPOISIIU fOl 11PIIliUPIOCAlllaS

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
201 EAST MAIN STREET
POME.OY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2516

'

.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Mondlly, April 13, 1987

Judge to._ weigh appeal
..
to g~home for Easter holida~
i

CLEAN UP EFFORT Clean-up cr ews
' lran•ler lode chemical from a damaged freight
train tanker car to a lanker truck for r emoval In
Plll•burgh on Sunday. Over 15,000 residents l eft

the Bloomfield section of the city, the site of a
Saturday Conrail freight !rain wreck, for the
clean-up operation. ( UPI)

·:W reck site safe, residents return
By SHEILA MULLAN
PITTSBURGH (UP I) - Thou,:sands of res ident s returned h o m ~
' )Ill er their evacuation due to a
' potential threat from an ov~rturned railroad lanker car
' loaded with a toxic chem ical,
, officials say.
Mayor Richard Caliguiri d ~­
clared an end lo Sund av's cvac u·tlon order after crews removed
~·abo ut 4,()(JO gallons of phospory l
•' chlor ide- a color less liquid that
,: gives off a pungent odor and can
· cause skin burns - from the
overt ur ned tank er ca r .
, Th&lt;· car wa s Involved In the
· d~rallment of two Conrail freight
' trains Sa tu rday afternoon a ton~
a curved sertlon of track In the
) c it y's Bloomfield neighborhood.
' ' T he two train s derail ed when
they passed each other. In all, :14
_·, cars from both trains lr fl the
track. Offlclal s decllnr d los pccu -

late on the cause or the acciden t,
which I s
und er federa l
Inves tigation.
The dera ilment caused the
lanker to overturn and spill an
unspecified amount of phosporyl
chl or ide. also· know n as phosphorous oxychloride. The chem ica l Is used as a chlorlnallng
agen t and In the manufacture of
other chemica l s.
The spill was later sea led, but
no! before offleials evac uated 8!i0
residents wll hl n a 2.!i mile radius
of the acc ident site. T hose people
were al lowed to return home, bul
rarly Sunday a second e¥acuatlon rail wen! out.
Resident s wer e !Old an area
wllhln a half-mile of the sll e
wou ld have to be cleared Sunday
af!Nn oon during attrmps to
right the tanker. However, officials decided to r ight the tanker

Su nday morning and the seco nd
evacuation began in the early
morning hours.
Officia ls evacuated about 1.000
people from their homes and an
es timated 16,000 others left on
their own before the car was
rig hted at abou t 5 a.m .. nea rly 17
hours after t he derailment , said
City Public Safety Director
Glenn Can non.
Ca nnon said he expected clea ·
nup costs, Including overtime for
po lice and rescue workers, to
"reach at least $100,000," and
said the city would blll Conrail.
There were no reports of
serious Injuries in the derailment
and subseq uent operations to
right the l anker.
"I think It was a well coordi·
nated effort," sa id Ra lph Perkraszewsk i of the city publi c
works department.

:Christians
mark
Holy
Week
.

'

•

By ROBERT MA«.;KA V
.JERUSALEM tUPfi - Wa v ln~ palm leaves and si nging_
hymns, Ch r is tians from arou nd
lhc wor ld mm·ked the b!•gi nning
of Holy Week - lhr fina l work
before Easter - by rr·enarl ing
.Jes us's triumphal en t ry Into
Jerusal em .
Thousands of r hr lstian s fr om
·· as far away as lh&lt;• Philippim•s
' Joln!'d th e solemn. yet ('O iorfu l
annual Palm Sunday process ion.
following !he route .Jes us Chri st .
. Is believed to havr 1raveled in to
' thecilv .
..· Holding grrc•n. will ow, · J&gt;;ilm
- lt'aVC's In Iron! of lh!'m, the
pilgrim s walked nmrly 2 miles
. under !hr. hoi sun - from the
· BC'fhfagc Shr ine Ol'&lt;' r !h(• Moun!
of Olives and Into .lcrusu lr m' s
W(l il!'d Old Cil y.
:. A ft•w . l s r&lt;~l'll st&gt;idirrs stood
· nearby. r lflt"s s lung ovt't' 1ht'i r
•' should!•rs, In eas&lt;' of disturban -

rt•s. Pa lest in ia ns anct Israelis
had clashed in recC'nl days.
Pa lm Sund ay ma r ks the slarl
or F:ast c·r week. onr of the most
sacred holidays for Chr islianily.
Ac·co rding lo the New Te sta mPnl. .IC'sus r ode triumphantly
into the ci ty . on l h ~ b"ck of a
donkC'y as his followers placed
palm leaves on the road before
him - a sign or honor- and cried
out, " Hosan na 10 the soh of
Da vid . "
Five days la ter - on Good
Frida y - he was sentenced .to
drath :~nd rrurifl!'d. Then, on the
th ird da;' - Eas ter Sunday - he
rosr I' rom 1he dead.
As tlw Chr istians ga l herPd
arnund I he Brlhfagc sht·ine for ·
!he start oJ !he pi'Ocesslon
Sunday, young Pa lesl lni an boys
and gil' Is hawked pa lm lrnves for
I lsraP li ~ h C'kC I - about6J cent s
- :1nd so ld cans of soda, candy
bar&gt; and IOU VI'S or bread.

Columns of young Pales tinian
boy scout s and girl scouts in
uniform s of va ried colors and
sporting red , green and blue
berets led the procession up the
winding, narrow road toward the
Moun t of Olives.
Next came three all ar boys
wa l ki ng side by side. The boy In
lhl' m iddl e held aloft a large
wooden cross bearing a crown of
thorns and t he two fl anking him
held large palm leaves upright in
front of them .
Following them were priest s.
nuns. · monks , ministers and
Christians of vi rtually every
denomination, singing hymns
and chanting "Hosanna."
" 1t' s just wonderfu l, beautiful, .. sa id Viola Ca rl son of St.
Paul. Minn .. who traveled to
Jcr·usa lcm for Holy Week with
her twin sis ter, Alberta Pe ar son,
also of Sl. Paul. ,and a friend,
Brllc• Zoller of Durham, N. H.

-Six killed by Israeli troops
Ry ROBERT MACKAY
AIR ZEIT, l srar ll -oc&lt;'.upicd
West Rank tUPl ) I sraeli
troops shot and klllrd a Pal&lt;·stl ·
nlan sludr nt and wounded al
::teust five oth er propiC' today In
the Wc•sl Bank. two days after a
firebomb kl llerl a J&gt;rrgna nl I s·

rucll wOma n.
The studrnl wa s klll!'d as
troops fin' d on cl&lt;'m onstrators at
Blr Zell Universit y, north of lh&lt;'
· West Bunk town of Rama l Ia h.
'wttness (•s said. AI least 20
• studrn ts Wl'l'r art·ested.
Witnesses sa w al i&lt;'aSI fi n'
wounded In Rlr Zrlt.
The l sra~li Dcfr ns&lt;' F'orct's
dc•d l nl'd co mmrnt on th e
Incident.
The bodv of lhC' 24-vr:ll··old
·st uden t wu's Iuken to a 'medlc~l
,:cllnlr In Blr Zeit . where a doctor
s&lt;~ ld he had bl'!'n shot l n.thP neck .
, Thl' I sraeli arm;' ordered th ~
, wounded la km to .Jerusalem's
'Had dassah Hospital. where wit nesses told of a youth with a
p~llel wound In the back.
The shOoting ca me hours after
I sr aeli fo r-res arrested dozens of
;:falestinlans and accused th_em
' of being PLO leaders who plottE-d
a wave of Arab unres t In
Israeli-occupied territor ies.
Nine of lhos!' a rrestrd were
placed In adminis trative detcn·

lion fo r six mon!11s, an ar m y
spokc&gt; man said.
"Dozrns of arrests wrre mad»
las! night In Judea . Sa maria I! he
occupied WPSI Fla nk !. and .l erusaiC'm of PLO leaders," the
spokcs num i;al d, referri ng to the
Palestine
Llbrratlon
Organizalfon.

deportation of an Arab news paper editor ln a meeting la st
Nov. 10.
I sraeli Prlme Minister Yll zhak
Shamlr sa id the Cabinet wa s
united In a "desi re to l ake all
necessary m easures" to end
allacks, strike at terroris ts and
prevent repeated Incident s.
· 'ThP .V wrre organizC"rs,
At the same lim e, fresh Arab·
pl:mtwrs and i&lt;'adNs of di slur- Israeli clashes Involving lear
bancrs at the lora! and regional gas, r ubbl:r bullets and bu rning
lr\'el." lw said.
tires broke out Sunday ln the
occupied territory.
An I sraeli army spokesm an
The spokPs man declined to
rlaboratc on the exact number of sai d four Ara bs In Rama il ah
people arres ted or to say If It was were slightly hurl as they were
in respo nse to the firebombing arrested for t hrowing stones at
that killed Ofr a Moses. :1-1. But soldi ers.
About 1.000 people Sund ay
nonr of those arrested were
att
ended a funeral for Moses . An
ll&lt;'lleved responsible for the
unidentified m an, presumed to
a !tack.
Thr spokesman saJd seven of be an Arab, threw a firebomb at
!he arres t!'d werP "prominent the Moses family car Friday as
leaders," Including F'a lsal Hu s- they headt'd home to the Jewish
sein!. fl·om predominantly Arab West Bank settlement .of Al fel
East .Jerusalem. and Mahmoud Menashe. south or the Arab !own
Sa'ld . a former editor of the Eas t of Ka l kilya.
The pregnant woman was
.Jerusalem newspaper AI Fajr.
Hu sselnl. considered a strong trappPd In her Ford Escort and
burned lo death. Her badly
s uppo~t e r of I he PLO. heads an
burned
husband, Avra ham . 8·
eas t Jerusalem research group.
year-old
daughter and 2-year-old
!he Arab Studies Society.
son remain hospila l lzed.
He embarrassed former Soviet
Pollee sa id the attacker has not
diss id ent Anatoly Shcharansky
by seek lng his backing for a been ca ught.
t•ampalgn against the lsra c&gt;li

!Titanic survivors attend memorial -

,
•

By THOMAS F. TROY Jr.

WILMINGTON, Del. {UPII : :-N ine survivors of th.e Tllanic
'sinking got togelher after 75
years and heard "Nearer M y
God To Thee" played again at a
memorial service for the 1,500
victims ol the worst accide nt In
maritime his lory.
~ ·: :nte hymn was played bY. the
.Tf;lanlc's orchestra to calm pas·

.,

sengers the night the "unsinkable" ship was sinking In the
North Atlantic on Its malden
voyage from Southampton, Engl an d. l o New York.
Each of the survivors attendIn!( the memorial service Sunday
lost relatives aboard the Titanic,
the bigges t and most luxur iou s
passenger ship of tts time. Edith

Brown Halsman, 90, of Sou·
thampton , was 15 when her
father kissed her and her mother
goodbye as they boarded a
lifeboat and sa id he would see
I hem In New York. She remembered the elega ntly dressed
musicians performing to ca lm
the fearful passengers scram·
bllng Into the ship's too few :
lifeboats.

By LORI SANTOS
WASHINGTON tUJ&gt;IJ -John
Hi nckley Jr., con!lned to a
mental hospital since he shot
President Reagan live years ago,
Is asking a federal judge to lei
him leave for the first time on an
unescorled vis it for 'Easter .
Hlncklry was expected to at tend a hearing In federal cour t
today before U.S. DlslrlcJ Judge
Barrington Parker, who ls cart·
slderlng the request, which Is
suJ1ported by lhe hospital · and
opposed by th ~ governmenJ .
If .P arker approves the April 19
visll with his parents. if would be
the firs! time Hinckley, ·31, has
been allowed to leave St. Elizabeths Hospital without an escort
si nce a jury found hlm not guflty
by reason of Insanit y in 1982.
Parker , who presided over
Hinckley's cr iminal trial, was
ask ed to deny the governmen t
access to certain unspecified
docum ents and property of
Hin ck ley's. an d look the reques t
under consideration.
In cour t filings last week. ·
Hinckley 's lawyers indicated the
proposed Easter visil to an

undisclosed location· could be a
forerunner to a request for
Hinckley's permanent release
from the hospital. His doctors
argu e the visit is beneficial and
therapeutic and that he has
"Improved considerably."
The court r ecords said Hinckley has not r eceived antipsychotic medica tion sin ce October
and "that the hospital believes he
" does not pose a danger to
him sel f or other~· if - gi ven
permission to make'! he tr ip.
But a copy of part of a Iefier by
Hinckley, filed Saturday as evidence by the governm ent for
today's hearing, revealed he
planned II! escape from I he
mental hospital .
"Mr. Hinckley's correspon·
dence after his admissio n in 1982
reflects his serious int ention to ·
escape and provoke another to
v iolence," U.S. Allorney Joseph
DIGenova said [n his filing.
fn · the letter, whi ch court
officials said was writterHn 1982
or 198.1, HInckley tells a friend
" Penny" of lhree options:
-"Mail m e the .38 sperial ln a
package." he wrote, sayi ng It

11/londay, April 13. 1987

was "the only way I could escape
alone."
-He asked th e friend to fly to
New Haven, where actress Jodi
Foster was attending school and
" kill her your self.." Hlnf kley' s
trial showed he tried · to· kill
Reaga n 'to get Fosler's altetftlon .
-The third option was for thl'
friend to hij ack a jel loWashlng- •
ton and demand that Foster and.'
Hinck ley be brought to the
airport, where "we eould go
anyplace we want. "
Hinckley shot Reagan, White
House press .secretary James
Brady, a Secret Service agent
and a District of Columbia police
officer outside the Washinglon
Hilton on March 30, 1981.
He was tried on charges of
try ing to assassinale the pres ident and acqullted by reason of
insanity on June 21. 1982, follow Ing a sensa tional trial that
sparked a new call for r eform of
I he insanity defense. - ·
Brady's wife, Sarah Brady,
and .the Secret Service fli ed
affidavits saying he co ntinues to
present a threat to the president
and Brady.

10 PUQ AI At Ull "1-1156

*• r.uv ·a ......,. s r.a

JIOIIDAY

• .... o,li 110011 .._ ,
OOV:I SIMNT

·._-·-_,_"'
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• .•

unprecedent ed ex posure fo r
their message ca lling for a
speedy return to democratic
rule.
His visit to Chile was marred
by violence at a papal mass for
nearly 1 million people, when
lefllst youths stoned unarmed
po llee. Seventy-fi ve pollee officer s a nd 150 spectators wer e
Injured when riot pollee entered
the park to end the demonstra tion with tear gas and waler

cannons.
The trip'also commemorated a
198.'i border dispute trea ty mediated by the Vatican between
Chile and Argentina.

• .•

111-•

,_...
•»-• ••.•
........................

-·

Ill..

. ..•

maps and lOUr books WOrth·a!
least $15.00 per lrip!
For More about
AAA Memberships
Call For Details

8

GAlLIPOLIS

Tra&amp;el
360 2ncl

bo.

446·0699
'----~ OTAO:..;'~---­
Gallipolis

.-------------L------------

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. In,.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
\\WE HAVE HEARINC AIDS"

Jn a meeting later with Arge nllna 's mostly conservatlve bl·

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

PURE
DOMINO

SUGAR

$149
ASST.

BOUNTY
TOWELS

68&lt;

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
CJ SWim Molds • Interpreting Services

~--

_c_..

u......., ••
·-·--

FASHION
PATTERNS
FREE OFFER

to 28. Flalv dress with
flanged shoulders, efastl·
cized waist, obi sash. ·
Size 12 takes :w. yards
of 60-lnch fabric.
Each pattern $3.25 plus

75e postage/handling.

(12·14), M (t6·18), L
(20-22), XL (24·26). Flng·
ertlp lenglh version
Included . Long cape,
Size S takes 4 yds. 60-ln.
Public Notice

~.Y. 181ide!U IQI sales lal.j

Send Ill:

Meigs County. OhiO, on the
16th day of May, 1987, at
10:00 a.m., tha following

fllldwlll

The Daily Sentinel
iUI Natll.m 8W, Woodlldt,

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
w!Mtn you order one of the
$2.95 booka islad below.

13S-Ools and Clolhel

Add St .~ lo&lt;·poo11g0-.g.

FASHION
PATTER" NS
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
ISSUE OF BONDS
NOTICE .is hereby g iven
that in pursuance of a Re ·
solution of the Board of adu cation lJf the Southern local
School Diatrict.
Recine,
Ohio, paned on the 16th
day of Fabrua,Y.1987 , there
will be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Board of
Education- Southern LoCal
School District at the Special Election to be held in
Southern Local School District, Racine, Ohio, at there·
gular place• of Yoting thereIn, on Tuesday , the 6th day
of May, 1987, the question
of issuing banda of nid
Southern
local School
Board in the emounl of one
hundred and fifty thouaand
dollara 1$160.000.001 for
the purpose of improving,
reconsuucting , renovation.
remod e ling, furniahing , and
equipping building and fa·
cilitiea as proYided by law .
The Mllimum number of
years during which tuCh
bonds are to run it 10 years.
The eatlmtted average td·
ditional till rite amounts to
$0.04 for each one hundred
dollars of valuatien. which ia
.40 mills for each one dollar
of valuation. in axceu of the
ten mill limitation. as certified by the County Auditor.
Tha Poll• of said Elect ion
will open at 6:30 o 'clock A.
.M . and remain open until
7:30 o'c lock P.M. of said
day.
Bv Order of the
Board of Electiont,
of Meigs County, Ohio
~ Jane M . Frymeyer, Director
Dated Feb. 17. 1987
14113, 20. 27; (51 4. 4tc

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Tho foMowin9 described
item will H off8fed for public oote to tho highest bidder
• on the 24th dil'/ of April,
1987, ot ten o'clocll A.M .
1979 Plymouth 4 OR H/ 8
ML~ Horiron,
Sor. #ML44A9D400684
Terms of Sale: Caah
Soflor'ruorvos the right to
bid and tho ri1jht to reject
anv and all bids . Prior to the
date of Hie, arrangements

be macll to inapect thlt

merchondiM!&gt;V cotfino 192 •
2171 between tho houro of
9 a.m. ond I p.m.
(4) 13. 1tc

Public Notice
NOTICE

OF SALE
Bv virtue of Ml Ordor of
• a.te iooiJed out of tho
• ComtftOI' Pilla Coun of
Melp CountY. Ohio, in tho

- o f DiomOnd Sovlnp.
L.aan Cornpony. Plolntiff.
... lnot Joyce ... ...... ot

.... 'anent
Dell·-·
.._.. •••••·

... Ju

lrpGII

•

....... c.. No. 18-CY-1t7
1n oold

Ph. 992-3537
4 -8-' 87- , mo .
Flot~l

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

Bouquet

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Mo1on, W.

SUGAR RUN

FLOWERS FOR

ASHLAND

. All

NEW IDEAS

190 MULBERRY AVE.

c:oun.• wt1 """tor

cated at 56 South Second,
Middleport, Ohio 46760;
Situate in the Village of
Middleport, County of
Meigs and State of Ohio.
Being on the West s ide of
Second Street between Mill
and New Street:r and more
particularly described as
follows :
Beginning at the sou·
theaat corner of lot 1 19;
thence North on said lot, 84
feet , more or le11, along
Section Street; thenca running due Weat a distance of
106 feat. more or loll. to the
property aold to J .N. Rathburn Sdns by Mary Hayman;

PH. 992·9949

!04-773-1575
Afftr 5
614-742-2191

Owner

thence running due south a
distance of 88 feet , more or
leaa, thence running due
Eaat one hundred six feet ,
mora or len, to the place of

beginning .
Reference Daed: Volume

218, Page 671 , Meigs
County Deed Recorda .
APPRAISED AT
&amp;23.600 .00. Tha real estate
cannot be sold for less than
two-third s the appralted
value .
TERMS OF SALE: CASH .
Howard E. Frank
Shariff of
Meigs County, Ohio
1416 . 13, 20; 3tc

E,Mei&lt;•W..
POME~OY,O .

992·2259 '
NEW LISTING -

2 un1t

apartment building 1n Mid dleport . Ready to mowe into.
3 bedroom unils should rent
lor 200 plus each. Owner
wants $19,900.00 .

NEW LISTING - Beaul tlul
home with a beaultful wlew!
3 bedrooms. full basement,
l ~ baths. All quality con·
slruclton . Ftonl. porch , lire·
place. Cape Cod destgn.
Call for your ~howing.

$54,900.00.
NEW LISTING -St. Rt 325
- .3 lo .4 mrles hontage
on SR 325. 25 Acres, more
or less, city water. All minerals excepl coal. Three
sides of property a&lt;e lenced..
$13,200.00.

RACINE -

Newer ranch

home on acorner kit Spacious
living room. beaWful fireplace,
large modern kilchen, 3
bedrooms, basement MUST

SEE! $47,500.00

.
CLOSE TO TOWN -

This
older home needs some re·
pa11 feat01es 29 acres and
free gas .. to the house.
$19,500.00.
SYRACUSE - Nice ranch
w1!h colonial porch, large
I1W1ng 100m w1lh iireplace. 3
bedrooms, II+ car garage,
patio and central air. L.lrge

lot. $39.900.00.

.

Htnry £. Cit land Jr.

992-6191
Jean TrusHII .....949-2660 .
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692

A

Olfice................ 992·U59
.

.

YOUNG'S

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BISSELL

- Addona and rem odeling

- Roofing and gutter work

SIDING CO.

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
~ork •

New Homes Built
"Free Eltimatea"

' !Free Eatlmat.. l

PH. 949·2160
or 949-2101
No Sundoy Callt ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

ar

16141991-7754
1 118 / H~

,

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
EUGENE LONG
AWMINUM

VINYL &amp;

Complate Remodeling

Roofing of all Types
Complete Gutter Work
Worked in home aree ·
20 yeara

" Free Ettimates''

CAll COllECT:

Ph. (614) 143-5425

992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15·'86·1C

l· fl ·tfn

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

•ln1ulation
•Storm Ooora
•Storm Windows
•Repla cement Windows
•New Roofing

"FREE ESTIMATES','

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

3-11-'87-1 mo.

'

3·11·17·1 mo.

3-27·2 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

GUN SHOOT

992.-3410

Bashan Building

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
~

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
10·1-tfn

FREE LANCE
35MM i
PHOTOGIAPHER

VHS HOME RECORDER
Trarufln 3Smm I 110 Poti·
lift Slider oo YHI Yidto fopt
•Wedd ings
•Graduations
•Valuables
•In s . Claims

•Speciel Events

CAll 7 DAYS A WEll

Electronic Organs

Mobile service

614·143-.5241
tlASOIWU • I£UAIU

8-20. '116 tfn

or

985-3564

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Aulhorhod ~. D•rt,
Now Holland, lush Hog
farm (quiprntnt

Ooaltr

·f•r• E~·l~•••t
Pert• &amp;Se,.let

TWIN MATTIESS/IOXSPRIHG ............ 591.11

FUll MA nRESS/IOXSPIING ...........:5148.11
CHESTS ........... t49.95 RECUHERS..... S99.95
~NETTE/4 CHAIIS ............................. S99.95
12 Months Free Financing
4· 7·'87 ·1 mo .

1~~------~====~IL.----------------------~~~~~~

fest with

Giveaway

..•.,.

Co111e I• u4 Su Before
~

1-2-'17-l ....

ACTION
TOWING
949·9070 or
949-2045

3·4· 1 mo.

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR

2 St. Bernard and German
Shtphetd pupa 6mo. old Ph.

49835 St. It, 124

Racine,

Ohio

45771

949-3088 Bus.
949·2606 Home
All Mak11 &amp; Madtls

24 HR. SERVICE

3-17-l mo . pd .

5 to 18&lt; lb.
SCIPIO IECYCLING
Located 2 MI. E. o~ Pa;ev111a
On To'lllnlhlp Ro•d •U2

614-992·3466

+

HEATING &amp; COOliNG
cOftii'IWclal urMu.

' BINGO

IAGIIS CIUI - ,OMUOY, 011.
THUll.&gt; I I'M - II l•ll

lnstollotien of ductw11k &amp;
humictifitrs , furnata, hHI
pumpt, •d air nnditionint

CALL

SPECIAL :
HEIL - Packlge air
condillonlng for mobile
or modular homes . 2'h
or 3 ton un its inatalled
on pad &amp; ready to cool.
Price: f1 089 .96 ptu• to•.
4· 11- '87· 1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, 'o0111roy Ohio

' AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tu•••lttlo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6· I7-lfc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can rep~ir and re·
core radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Lk, IOtl•fl .... tll t/11

l'ttiiK ttiVIfiD

BISSELL

BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At Reosenablt Prit:tt "

Yo"'ng male do g. Par1 Beagle.
Good with kids . Cell 614·986·
4216 evenlnga.

841 -0091 EXT. 302&amp;. 7 daya.
CALL NOW .
.

Sean Kenm ore hee vy dut~
wuher , does not work, 30 4882· 2636 .

130,000 plus Income? lnsu·

Mixe d Breed PuJJples, famele,
304 -67 5- 4828 .

6 Lost and Found
F,O UNO: Elk Hound or husky
lype dog , along Tom -Glenn Rd .
Ph. 6t4 -388-9034 .

Lost : 32nd OegretMiso nlcr!ng.
Middlep ort. Reward . Ctll 614·
992 -3759.

7

Yard Sale

.......Giil1Tpolis........
&amp; Vicinity
Pttt Vinton School tur n left on
Mt . Tabor v.ml. 1urn right. 4
Ftmlly Btby &amp; girls clorhtt ,
bedspre1d1, lot misc. 9·&amp; April
14 -1&amp; -18.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash lor late model clean

uted cera.
Jim Mink Chtv.-Oidt In c.
Bill Qeni!l J o hnson
814-448-3672
TOP CASH p1 ld for '83 model

end newer u11d c:trl. Smith
Buick· Pontiac. 191 1 Eutern
Ave .. G1lllpollt . C1ll 814 · 448 ·
2282.

Dump Truck, alngtil a·l-. 10ft
bed. &amp;·speed, Z· apeed i'eer end,
low mllea;e. Call 114 ·1e38e32.
A good utad twlng 111 Ph .
6t4 -44&amp;-721 I or 446-79tt .

Buying dillY gold, tll.,.r cofna,
rings , jewelry, nerllng ware, old
eoin t , larg e currency. Top prlcu. Ed lurketl Btrber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh . 614·
992 - ~ 476 .

Buying junk ctrl . C11t atttr 5:00
pm . Call 614-992 -5848.

lillllillyllll'lll

Sl' I 'J II. 1: ',

11

Help Wanted

Miring! Governm tn t lobs-you r
• •ea. t1&amp; ,000· 188,000.

time a11embly work; electronica, crafts. Othert . Info 504·

Are vou interested In

eer~lng

ran ee Agency Available. 81nd
Re su m11 or c:.ll for appointment.
NATIONWIDE INSUAA~CE .
P.O. 8o1t 1079. Marl1tta . Oh.
45750 , 614- 374 · 8246 . An
equal oppo r1un lt y em~over .
EMT. LPN or AN to perform
inaurance exams. Experienced.
Part Ume posltlon with tlexltiil·
11¥. Send r81ume to PMI , P.O.
BoJt 370, Ounber, WMtV Irgin)a.
25e04 .

AVon Aepretentatlve w1nted.
Sell to Jrlend 1nd retauv..·~ or
take 1 territory . Frlt basic kit.
Cell OU -992· 7180.
Area tupervltor. SharP. 1r'nbl·
Uou1 women n8eded to.hlrt ilnd
tr~ln dtmonttfato rt . Unututl
qu ellty , glflt end decoration title.
Work from your home. Wt~l~
paycheck, bonua, h lpt . F~ee
trtlnlng. Free umple kit. no
lnvutm en t . For detallt oeU
collect 61 4 ·854·158715.
EXCElLENT WAGES For tptrl
lime 111embly work; trectrg~·
let , craht. Othert .• Info IICJ41
141 · 0091 : ext . 3187. 7 day1 .
AVON , no servloe charge , open
terrltorlet, phone 304 -I?IS. ,
U29.

Etrn extra money In the Army
National Gu1rd . 304· 87115 ·38150
•1 1 -800·842· 36t9 .
tor colle;e. Call the Army
Natlontl Gu1rd for FREE lnfor-

mltlon p ac ket . 1 ·800· 1:\2 ·
Je1&amp;.

•

Someo ne to elttn 1nd othtr
misc . chorea for aummer. 30487&amp; ·6834.
Fedtfll, Stat e, end.Civll Servh:a
Jobet1e.707to e59,t48 yHr,
now hiring. Call Job line 1· 518·
3611extF ·1980torlet lnag, _2 4
tus.
'

12

..

Situations
W111ted

Htve room In Prlvete Care HOIJ"'I•
for 2 elderly petlente. AIPOI!JII·
ble rttll . 15 yr. e11perlence.
Sptcltl dlelt . GPOd Cart. Clll
814p266·81109 .
:
Need someone to •••ell ~rt
lea10n1 to prlmtry 101 atudlflt.
Aet•enCQ ,.quirtd. M1U h1 c..-e
of Qelllpollt Dally Tribune. Boa
T-0317, 825 Third -. ve. Otlllpo·
llo, Ohio 46 83t .
Room In my home foreldeti'(,Or
htndlclppad perton . Oopd
m1111 tnd tendtrlovlng c.re. Ph.
814 -388 -ee81 .

Vlr;lnl•'• Ptrson•l Care Home
h11 Ytcanay fOr eld•ly people.
24 houn cart, 20 y..rt ••~e­
ritnce. Re ..onlble rat .. . Cell
tnyllml, 614· 949·3014 .

Phone

call refundebl1, 102 ·1 38 -888 5.

Tour Guidet. Don montY motl·
'lite you1 Satary to ttlrl•
CommiJIIont· Bonut. hnt11tlc
oppottunl1y 10 urn. 1800·
tt ,OOO. wk . M1ny company
benefils-edvancement, mtnaga·
ment potitiont l'llillble. Ctll
Sue tor Interview. 614 ·28e ·
6421 . No t Jult a Job .
Ttlevlsion Adverdtlng· Nttd
hlfh enerP't' penon for the
Gtlllpolis. aflt, PoJIIbl e fuhlft
m~nagement opportunltv. BIN
a. co mmiulon. Experltnel In
.Advtrlltlng 8ahtl pr~f.,red . Ph,
304 ·622-0304.

PHARMACIST
Plet111nt Vlllev Hospitll. Pvlnt
Plt11ant, W 'V 11 It In nted of 1
full·tlme 111ft phtrmaclu . Th e
hotph.l l hat 1 new mOdttn
ph.,m•cy whh up -to ·dlfe pharmlcy fhnurn 1nd tervlces.
Plaeunt Valley Hoeplt1l It 1
laltdlnu hoaplttl In t he ern In
alfvicet • th::ilitlea. Growth
opportunltl81 1r1 erccellent tor '
phtrm.cltt looking to lhe future .
Call Richard Eddy. Olraetor of
Phermacy 11 trea code 304671· 4340 eat . 280 for an
inttrYIIW'-

NO SUNDAY CAllS

SMALL ENGINE

Lady eomp1nlon fortld•fv l1dy.
room ~mt bolfd, Pt . PlaHant
eto• to town. Send resume to
8o1t T-eeet In ctre ot Gallipolis
Otily Tribune, 126 Third Awt.,
Gelllpolil, Oh 41eJ1 .

REPAIR

Mtke e~t1ra money 11111 Avon

PH. 949-2801

or 949-2860
Day or

Nlghl

4-16·1i·1fn

Authorlllll Service
&amp; Parts
8rlg91 &amp; Stranon
Tecumseh
Weed Eatar
Homellte
Jocobton

Middleport, Ohio

992-6611

-.

lor spare

EX CELLENT WAGES

Pa11· tlme ultt rep . f or Ohio ll'!d
W.'V t , muttl-purpo N product
line, prlmarlty John Deera. Mutt
be reputable member ot com·
munltY' with lg rlcullurtl b1Ck·
Qround. Training provided.
Commlt1lon plus ott'l., bentflte.
Contact Mr. Adlclns,. Aar aeon
Inc ., 614-446-0.715 . .. ,

PAT HUL FORD
1·13-tfc

Government ' J obs . t17.tDOt60,97S per" year. Now hltfng.
Catl 1-61 9·666-6613
1t1tt.
04440H for cu rTent federal list.

Will c1ra for eldtrl~ lacty- In my
homo. Coli 814-912-8838.
Will do house cletnlng. mQw
yarda, etc . Reft ren c .. Fur·
nletled . 304·876· 7186.

16

Schools
I nstrllction

aJ,.

Retrtln Now . Southetalern
lne11 Coli~ •· Ca ll 814 ·44'&amp;.
4367 .

18 Wanted to Do
home own era ~ It
spring cleaning tlmt, need htfp7
tt 10 e111 Ollltbum Clttnlng
Service &amp;14-388·9027. A UtO•
ntble Rttea. Reference• .on
requett.
Attention

Mllu ra Christian man. Grout)dt,
lctllplng. hllndvMtn. end lawn·
care Ph . &amp;14 -4i4e.2750.

VALLEY LUMBEI
&amp; SUPPLY

992-2198

0 . for Info . 24 hrt .

Female pupplea. Call 614·256t888 .

•·••&amp;·

(6141915·4222

Airline jobs f17,747to fl/3 1 4~9
year. now hiring! Clll J o bllne

- - - - - - - - ·lc-

M1ture p~tson only to beby tit
2yr. old lrfour home, all3thlfts.
Centtnlry area Ph. 6,
941&amp;. 2 ·8 P.M.

All w•~ guDrenlttd.

ht. 1449.

24 hn.

&amp;t4-266 -1408.

,., ,"

Flatltntd Alum. Cans
26' lb.
Clean Shoet Cost Alum.
25 ' to 29' lb.
#1 COPP£1 ............... 42 1
#2 COPP£R ............... 32 1
Irony Aluminum ·

Government Jobs. 118 ,040 ·
859 ,230 yr. Now Nrlng. Cell
806 -887-1!5000 EXt. R-9805 for
'current federal !lat.

t - 6181.469 -3535 Ext, A · 1385

Puppies to 1 good home Call
246-919 3 before 9am or after
4pm.

J. 17 ·1 fttO .

USED TIRES
&amp; BATTERIES

Th ird Ave.. Gallipolis, OH
4563t '

call refundable . (602)838-8J85

St. It, 124, Syrarute

Pottery and Gifts.
Bird Baths , Ouulde
Yard Dolls , Jeaua
Statues, Virgin Mary
8o Angels for Yards
and Graves .

Please mall hand wriUen rett(me
10 box T-3221 , clf'e of the
Ga1UpoU1 Oaity Tribune, 826

Hlringl Government joba·yOur

Male .dog part Lebradore part
Goldll!ln Retriever needs a home
in th e cOunuy Ph . 614-4469638 ,

POM

1· 3·'86 tfc

101 W. •I•, p....,oy, Ohio
PH. 992-3307

and

Reeeptloniat wiiued. Profe;ai onal Htting. Office skills ap·
preciited. Melurlty en 111et .

area.·1 1'6 , 000. · 868, OOO._JII.h"bne

36532 BAILEY RD .

• / &amp;/ 1 mo. f.

EMPIRE FURNITURE

•

985-4176

992.7632

•

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Salet
lnstalation
Service

VARIOUS PAITERNS
AND WOOD SPECIES

Truck. auto. &amp;
he.avy equipment
repairs and welding.
(All makes &amp; models[

lorl!lftotloi ond smoil

J.R.'s REPAIRS

CUSTOM:
*PLANING
'JOINTING
* MOLDING

Factory Choko
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

10·8-lfc

4-~11&lt;

B&amp;B
WOODWORKS

We'll
Us1d

PH. 992-2772

•Wathltrl •Di•hw•ahers
•Range•
•Refrigerators
•Oryera •Freerera
PARTS and SERVICE

3·2·1 mo.

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE'

St. Rt . 33, Pamoroy, OH.

985-3561
All M1ktt

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

FREE ESTIMATES

446-2 200 After. 6pm.

OLD ORIENTAL AUQB
WANTED. Any till or condition.
C1ll toll tree 1·800·433· 7847 .

John I. Btntl
Owner I Mtchanic

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE .

Pomeroy
HOURI , luo.-Wed.- fri.
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Iunday• I p.m.- 7 p.m.
By (hanu or Appointment

RE-OPENS
MARCH 20

AlUMINUM SIDING

IUNEUPS to TRANSMISSION

ICUT OUT FOR FUTUIE USII

East Main Sf.

VINYL &amp;

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

1124

JO'S
LlnLE lED BARN

Automotive Repair
&amp; Service

Sell You A
Car or Fi1
Your Old One

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SElL
RIVERINE ANTIQUES,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION·

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

CAll 992·7403 Apt.

For Harb.t Life call Merle et
448-3i3t 10am. to 6pm . or

3·9-'87·2 mo . pd.

PURl &amp; BARBARA
VAN M!TlR

POMEROY, OH.
Bob

OCCASIONS

lands and tenemltllts, lO-

NY um. Pllnllllml. AddNu.
~ Silt, Pillm IU~ber.

fNI';'

1 IUIINIII PHON!

550 Page St., Middleport

~
41:22-Miases Sizes S

161 North lttand
Middloport, Ohio 45760

IIIIOINCI PHON!

II Til

4121-Misses Slzea 12

PlUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

16141992-6550

aro

3 Announcement•

GoBete Tablets and E-Vap ''wa ter pillt". Fruttl Pharmaoy.....J

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

We Carry F)shing Supplies
Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

t lructure work. Cell «514-3 88·

96t6.

4

SALES &amp; SERVICE

3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
when you order one of the
$2.95 books listed below.

Must have tool•• be el:!le to, do

u.l Licensed Clinical Audiologist
::t
.

:!:

"!''

Help Wente~

Experlenud b9dy ~tn .nellded
to build ulveged CIIJI or tr11uks .

Reduce sate

~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S ..

::m= .:\.. '

11

z.

8-13tfn

Public Notice

S Ll. lAG

"'----Bi:!to:.;:........_ . _

Clwi/led pqe1 c:our llae
J.XIowin' l ele,:thontt ~ciNnp• ...
-c.. ....

-~ --m:=.

117-Art of N11~t

AUTO TRAVEL
SERVICES
.
Personalized Trip planning,

-

:u.......

"""

Ill..

·· ~-·

__ .._

=- ,. .
·--··--'
"'- . ·-·:::t.::z·-.. __ ......

__
..... ..........
--··--·-

.........

.. o.o..

~~::-·

111-tlalrpln Crochet
115-&amp;ly Alppie Crochet

It P!IYI To Belong •••

..

-

Bus.iness
Services
lr.:::::::::c::::::::::~

V:::t;..-

..... ot11111tom"-ofllle
cou~M
In Pomwov.
I

'

I Nit
INI'f

l o~ed opposition political groups

.(

The Daily Sentinei- Page"77

•

Pope concludes Chilean tour
ROME tYPI) ,... Pope John shops, who have been criticized
Paul IT, returning home from his for keeping too low a profile on
two-week South American tour, human r ights Issues, the pope
described the unpreceden led vio- praised them for their "selfless
lence thai marred a papal m ass effort s 10 save lives."
In Chile as brutal and a "very
He said the bishops, preferring
primitive provocation ."
quiet diplomacy over out spoken
Speaking with reporte,rs flying opposlllon to . the governm ent,
back to the Va tica n, John Paul had Issued "severe document s"
praised l he vast majorit y of condemning violence and urging
Chilea ns at th e Santiago mass reconr lllaflon when Argentina
April 2 for showing "greal was rui&lt;'d by the milit ar y from
dignity, maturity and eq ulli · 1976 to 198.l.
brium" in respondi ng to the
vlolen·r e.
On Saturday, addressing a
" I was Impressed by the rally of youths from around the
dignlly of the people at t he mass world , the pope diverted from hi s
in facing the provocation t hai we prepared remarks lo call for "no
lived," he said. "The parllcl- more kldnaplngs and disappearpa nts behaved wit h great dignit y ances" In Argentina .
and equilibrium. I was very
An estimated 9,000 people
disappeared after bC'ing kidhappy with this visit.
" 11 was a demons tration of .napped and t orturedbyparamlli·
j;reat eq uilibrium, maturity, of tary squads durlnj; anti-lefllst
great dignity, becau se ·It wa s a repression in the 1970s. Seven top
very base and very primitive, military and police officials,
very prlmltivP provocatlon." hP including five former junta
members. have been sentenced
sa t'd .
Saying he per sonally fell no to prison fo r order ing th e
fr ar, he descr ibed the vio lence as kidnapln gs.
"an orga nized action, a viol ent
action. a brut al action ."
The pope's comments coun·
The pope landed at Ciampino tered cr illcism by Nobel Peace
Airport after a 1J.hour fli ght laurea te Adolfo Perez Esquivel
from Buenos Aires on an Aeroll· that his weeklong tour of Argen ·
neas Argent in as Boeing 747 je- tina had been llffle more than a
11iner . A hel icopter took him to " tourism t rip". Perez Esquivel
thr Vatican where he went critic ized th e pontiff for failing to
immedlaiC'ly to pray before the meet with human rlghl s organl lomb of Sl. Peter In St. Peter's zat lon s during hi s vis it.
Basilica.
In Chile, the pope also was
The 66-ycar-old pontiff. who careful to avoid direct crillcism
handled hectic sc hed ules In Uru· of the 13-year milit ary regime led
gua y, Chile and i\rgenfina with by President A ugusto Pinbchel.
only a few signs of fatigue, Bu t John Paul' s presence al·
celr brated o Pa lm Sunday m ass
on the last day of his vlsil wit h
more than 000,000 faithful on a
downtown Buenos Aires aven ue.
II wa s the largC'sl crowd John
Paul had seen in Argentina.
Sunday's mass was believed to
be the firs t time a pope celebrated Palm Sunday outside the
Vatican si nce the 14th c!'ntury,
when a series of French popes
resided in Avignon, France,
durin g a period of political and
eccl esiast ical tu rmoil In Italy.

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

ll···••rt, 011.

3 -20-

Product•. Ctn e1rn up to 60'4
prdftt Ph. e14-448·· 21 ISS .

Will bllwtit evening• &amp;

ktndl Call614 -l7B•2510

w••·

Plan aheld tor tummer child
care. Agi!lt 4 -8 . Re no neblt
rttet. lel'oli!l name•nd number at
814·992 ·3540.
Work wanted mowing. odd jobt,
light hauling, Meigl, Qelll• •nd
Muo n Counties . 614· 992 ·
5689.

-

Will do batr-ithll ng In my tlomt
any shift or daya. 304 -17&amp;.

t98B.

21

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUifL18H -

tNO CO. recommtndt thlt you
do buslnna ' wllh people vou
NOT to send m o ney

1 -~~~~m~a~H~un~tH~y!~~h=•:•
lht off• ing .

Be1ul:y Shop for r1nt or le...- on
perc~nlag•. loelttd on s, , At .

No t•ptrlenel ftteatll~ . Mu"
be I'Jtil1bl1 for lmmtdiata employment. Houri 1pm till tOpm,
UOO.OO per we" . Call MondiV
Of Tu etdl'f: 101m to 4pm for
p~tton .. lnttr~a~ltw . Ph. e1•·
448-8 t48 .

7. Ph. 614-281-9378.

GOVERNMENT J081 .
117,100-110.171 p• yr. Now

Ho metown pertonal Clie. Have
veomcv tor 1dult Cite. Profet .
lional employe .. In 3 worklftg
ohlho. C•ll 814·H2 -IIIt or
814 -849 -2927 .

23

~.

Profeaalonal
Services
•

hliino. C•H 1· 11t·515-1Dt3
•1 . J04310H torcuNtn1 ftC1er11
1111. 24 hn.

•

�\

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel
23

Pqmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF~A-DAY

Professional
Services

63

" A Uttle Oetlgn" , interior de-

56

Antiques

Old Orlentll Rw..ps Wanied l Any
tize -.'or ·eoiltiA'lbn. c ·ell toll free

lign butineu for people on
limited budget. Independently
owned. 304-876 -6636 .

1-800-433-7847.

2 wood burning cook stoves. 2
fill ltoves. metal ice bOll.

304-e7&amp;·2508.

Real Es tat e
31

64 Misc. Merchandise

Homas for Sale

Callahan's U1ed Tiro Shop. Ovar
1,000tirel.sizts12, 13, 14, 16,
18, 16.5. 8 miiH out At. 218.
Call 814· ~68·6261 .

New JBR 2 car garage, brick
front, front porcl), nice lot.

e

miles Soutl'l of Gallipolis
047,600. Ph . 614-446-8038.

For Sale By Owner: Selling due
to Health ~ 2.80 Acre•. 6rm.
house. old atone fireplace, furnace wood burner. buih In oven,
range, 3 rentel units rented year
round. nice income. And 2.35
11cres. 4 apartments, 6 over night
or weekly rooms all furnithed
plut ~oblle heme lot wllh septic
.. tank. Both priced to sell I U.S. 50
Mate!. McAnhur, Ohio Ph.
614 -596-6906 .
For ule by owner : 2 I tory house
in Midcllepon overloDking park.
30 yr. guarnteed vinyle siding,
w-w carpet. 1 1h -bath, unique
woodwork. 614-992-5126 .
Government homos from $1.
IU
·••P•I•l Delinquent tax p•op-

arty. Repoueuions. Call 806-

Pl11tic cistern 1tata approved.
planic 1eptie tankl, plattic
culverts. mttll culvert•. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack·
IM, Oh. 814 · 286 · 69~0 .

-

Berrel game table ,;ith emboiled Bll!ckgammon &amp; cfleta
board with 4 barrel chairs 1500,
Al10 Ping Pong table $76 .00
Call 814-446-3934.

li·IJ

"You blundered at dinner
tonight, Kevin. You shouldn't
waste a perfectly good tern.,_
pe' f tantru m on a '}QUSy p'ece
I
fb
l' "

Q

' Sela on all Troybiht and mowel'$
in ttock. Ralnchecb accepted.
17 to 22 aff. Agracon In c.,
Gallipalla. Ohio 614· 446 -0476

7 '12 Snow Blade with lighu, , 211
Hwp. Synem to fit Ch11vy 14 ton
or 4 -whoel drive &amp;660 . Ptl.

e14-44e-3682.

rOCCO J.

---------- j-----------+-----------1
887-6000 ht . GH .- 9806 tor
currant repo list .

2 b1tdroom house in Cllho,n .
Price reduced from t16.000 to

11 4.000. Phone 1-304-773-

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

44

A partment
for Rent

55~ 4 .

3 BA .. racreation toom, kitchen ,
dining roDm, large front and
back porch. 8x10 wooden building. yard with chain link fence.
Aultic Hills. Syracuae. Ohio.
614 -949 -2910 between 9 4p.m. 614 -992 -58e&amp;aher4:00
p.m.

33 ecre1 : 3 mile~ we1t of HMC,
near raute 35 . Call 614-4468221 after 8.
Building IO\ , 326ft. frontage on
Rt .7 . 1.3 acres. *2900, firm .
Call 814·992· 6732 or 814992 -15587 or 814·992-7871 ,

House fro 1ale. rent or Ieese. Two
story. Rutlnnd area. Call Joan
SteWart 614-742-2421 ,
large beautiful 58R home. 47
wooded acre• . Mei8• local,
Cherry Ridge. 44.90 .00 Call

e14 -992-71eO

Furnithed &amp; unfurni1hed apts .•
11150.00 and up, reference• Ph .
304-876-7738 or 304 -876 6104 A-1 Real Ettate.

Rent a ls

41

Houses for Rent

7 rooms , bath 1/J, llou111 in
Chester. Ohio. Price reduced
from $27.000 to *26.000.
Phone 614-986 -3571 .

3 bdr . ranch. Rodney Village II,
*286 mo . plus deposit Referen ce• reqoitl!d . C1ll Blackburn
R111ty 6,4 -44-1-0008.

Brick llome. Anderto n windows,
3 Bit 2 bath. lireplace, wood·
burner , llot water base board
hoat , air.laundry. double garage.
B(lf8en patio. fully equipped
kitchen. ba1ement. 4.87 acres,
tractor and equipment. Baahan

Furnished one bedroom cottage
all newl'l redecorated. Only large
enough tor one or two adults. No
pelt . Aaf. 8t dep. requhlld. Ca ll
814-446-254-3 .

Rd. e14-949-20ee.

OlstresHd owner. Must sell.
Nlcit 3 bedroom flame in Po me·
roy.. Unbelillll'able prioe. Cell
614-992 ·3187 .
6 1oo m. batt-., util it y, garage.
central heat. A.C., storm windows and door~ . 6, 4 -992 -

5204.

Allumable loan. 3 bedrooms, ,
b1th . family room with wood
bur'ner, eat In kitchen , centralalr,
11h IIJYel acret. mu1t sell relooat ing. call after 4 :00. 304-B?IS-

Unfurnished houae. 38R , Rod·
nay Vlllege II . t276. Ph. 4-46·
4418 after7PM .

3 BR , livingroom , large kitchen ,
single garage, utility room, on
AI. 311 3mi. from HMC. With
option tO buy . Ph. 614-446-

7358.

Nice 3 bedroom located: Rodney
Village II. 300mo. plut utllities.
Dapotit ne11d11d. Ph. 388·8624
after 3pm.
6 room hous8 2BR , nice y1rd
located at Rodney on 588. No
pets and deposit required Ph .

4450.

e14-44e-22ee.

An.111ious to Sell, reduced price, 3
badrooma. 2 lull bath1. built In
kilchen , central air. barn, pond.
trailer pad. 8.3 acral. Aaaumablo
loin. phone 304 ·875-2885 .

4 rooma, beth, ell newp1int, nice
and clean. Deposit and reference
required. 1 or 2 children. 814-

Just few minutes from town. six
acret. Nic-e 3 bedroom house,
b1111ment, 1nd c.,-port, 304-

e75·3030.

3 bedroom•. 2 car garage,
baaement, 1 1cre lot. lllur miles
hom Point Pleaunt. priced in
mld·tilt iet. Call 304-876 -683&amp; .

4926 .

New apartment: completely
furn . Ret. 8t Oep. 1 or 2 edultt
only. Call 614· 44&amp; ~ 0338 .
Gracious living . 1 ond 2 bedroom apartment• at Village
M11nor and Riverside Aptrl·
ment1 in Middleport . From
t216. including utllltla•. Call

e14·992-7787 . EOH.

2 bltdroomhou... gar11ge, 1236.
plus utllitlel. Mt. V"'non Ave.
Rafennee &amp; depotlt required.

304-e7S-2S51 .

2 bedroom houae, a-c. Mt.
Vernon Ave. *250. plut ulllitles.
Ref. &amp; Oep. 304 -876-2661 .

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms lor rent. day. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 814446-9716. Rent atlow••*120
month.
Furnished room. f140. Utilit ies
paid . Shere bath. Single malo.
919 SeCond. Gallipolit. Call
448·4418 aher 7pm.

Officii Space for Rent. Ellcellent
for AHornevt. Accountent, etc.
CION to Court House. Call
Wlteman Real Estate Agency.

e14-44S-3e44.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Aout11 33 , Nortll of Pomeroy.
Aenul trailers. Call 614-992 ·
7479,
Spi!Ciout Mabile Home lott tor
r11nt. large recreation and picnic
area, fr .. lot give 1w1y. 304·
875-3073 after 15 :00 PM.

42 Mobile Homes
for Ren1

for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOME~ KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.

WEST, QALLIPOUS , AT 35
PHONE 614 -448-7274 .
1966 Skylln11. 471110 . 82400.
Cftll614 -44&amp;-0390.
1972 Flnmin{lo 12x86 3BR, 1 'h
hath. tot11leloct, CA . 8x10 deck
&amp; 3•6 rleck . underpinning, l Ome
lurni1hing1 , A1king U99S .OO

Ph. e1 4-245-9647.

1975 Governor U11170 JBA .,
1 \-:a Bat hi. All electric, IIIia new

09.996 Ph. 614-399-9360

1983 Uberty Moblh1 Home.
12x6 6 total fllecul e. neelhtnt
condition t7 ,600. Ca ll 614-

379·2227

1 982 M11n1ion on beautiful
riverfrm'l!lot in Mlrldl l!port . Tottl
rtll!culc, AC , two large bed·
raonn anc1 m11nv eJttrllll. Ca ll
&amp;14 -992 -3348 .
, 984 SkvUnn mobile home
H1170. Ioiii 11lectrlc. 2118 txtllrior wall1, 2 br, 1 b1th with
gatdln tub. 11. don . 304-&amp;76 ·

e3&amp;7.

198&amp; Champion mobile ho me. 3
bedrooms, e"ceplionalty nice.
*17.900. Finan cing avellabla,

304-e76-44eO.

a84 Schult . 3 bedroom1. IOtll
electric. tllltll, phone304 -675 5376 after 4:00PM .
1011 16 lraller. walls and Gei llng
1olid wood. good 1hape. washer
1md d,., , ldt1l fo1 renter , pick
up payment I e&amp;3 .00 or PlY off
balance U .2 84 .53. 304-882 ·

332e.

33

14d6 2 BR trailer. &amp;m i. from
town on 218 . large prN'ate lot
with industrial type play ground
equipment. UOOmo. Ph. 1114-

266·1393.

2 bedroom trailer for rent in
Syracuta. Mu tt apply in person.
614· 992· 2728 .
2 bedroom trailer in country.
*200 per month . Get and water
Inc luded . 81 4-742 · 2110.
Mobile home for rent n..r
Cheshlte, 3 btdrooms. Call
614 -387-7148 .
141180. 2 bedroom. ell electric-,
furnished . Ulll&amp;. Plus depotit
end ut iiiUet . Call 814· 992·

7479.

1973 Fre4Htom. 14it70, 3 bed·
room1, ttove. refrigerator. cur·
11lns. *7600 . Cell 614 -992·
7479 .
Mobil!! home• for r11nt lttrtlniJ
•176 .00 tnd up . 304· 448 ·

0&amp;08

2 bedroomt. lOtti tlectrlc, 1ir
cond. ~ mile out S•nd Hill Road.
Phone 30• ·875-3834.
Mobll11 home for rent , 2 bed·
room•. deposit requlled, you pey
utilltl11t. phone 304·-875-2536.
14"70 mobile home, partlelly
furnished, c:antral air, elo111 to
tchoolt. ho1plttl and 11ore1.
Phone 304·6715 -5789 ahl!r · •
p.m.

44

Apartment
for Ren1

6 room unfurnlahtd apt . C111
e14 -992-5.U4 o r 304· 882-

2&amp;58.

Farms for Sale

3 room fum lthed IPI for rent.
C11ll 814-992 -5434 or 304-

882-254&amp;.
9 YJ Ac-re•· Modern house, btrn,
hunlln9. Borders Wtyne Forrest
U9 .000. Ltnd Contr11ct• qullll·
fled buyer Ph . 614·379· 2 144.
20 t cre farm Hannan Tnce
•ROid, Glenwood, W. V1. for
mort Information call 304 · 773 51 18 or 773·6 1 86 aftet" 6 :00.
183 IC,.S - 1.3 mlt11 o ff St . Rt.
87. 1981 14x70, 3 bedroom
mobile home, largt machlnerv.
ctttle thtd. 36 acres . puture.
35 acre• meadow, balance
timber. 2 ponds, springs, cron
tanctd. Must relocate, 304·

895-3050.

34

Business
Buildings

APARTMENTS. rnobllt homtl,
hou"'· Pt. Pltanntand Gllllpollt. 614-U0 -8221 .
Small 1 bedroom furn lth.ci apt.
t215., Include• hut &amp; water.
R-tferencn&amp; dtpo•1~304 · 87S -

2S51.

5 room lpartment , VIand St . Pt.
Pl. Gu and w11er paid. Dtpotit
required. Furnithtd optional.
Call IVInlngt 304 ·898·3450,

&amp;7&amp;·6104 .•

AKC Registere d Chltluahul
pup1. 6wks. old Catl 'l1,-«8·

Groom and Supply Shop· Ptt
Grooming . All breeds . .. All
stylet.·JulieWebb Ptl. 814-4460231 . '
Purebrl!d Pitt Bull Puppin Ph .

eu-3ee-933e.

Register11d Great Dane, female,
!Hack whh 'white blaze. 2 1h
old. Pay for vet b/11· 8100. Call
614-448-1364.

litter.·696-1317.
CaH 814· 593·8469
614
·

57

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

e2

Olive St .. Gtlllpolla. New &amp; u1ed
Wood ·COIIItovet, 8 pc WOOd lR
suite t399. bunk bids *199,
recline" new &amp; used bedroom
suite~ . wringer Wt1her1, &amp;
shoes. New llvlngroom 1uitas
'199·*599. lamp1. Call 814-

PIANO

24ft . above gro und pool
firm Ph, 614· 448-8728.

•sao.

Duct Insulation 411100 t30.00,
Double Oven Avocado hpPan
Elee1ric Range 8100.00, 24'6hp, Huffy Riding Mawer
8160.00 Ph. 814· 448-9749 .
Industrial sewing machina. For
aewiniJ drapet . upholatary .
$160. Ni ce B drawer desk.
S120. Call 814-446-3783 IVI!n·
ing•.
Kenmore washer and dryer
8,26. Norga wnh er and dryer
S160. Refrigerator 886 . Call
614-742·2362 .
Eureha uprigttt tweaper. Black
and Decker work mete bench.
Exercite bicycle. 614 -9 49 1
zcun after 6;00.
1 bookca.e bod and matc tlin{l
dresser with mirror $100. 660
gal. tank wit h hoso and valve,
Tony's Gun Repairs, hoi reblueing . Open 9 :00AM to 7:00PM .
Call 304·675·4831 .
Surplu1 denim. rental, army,
Carhtrt clothing. Sam Somerville'• Ea1t Ravenswood. Fri.
Sat, Sun, 12:00 till 8 :00 PM .
304· 273-6865 .
Porteble 40'' xB ' Iightod chang eable letter tign. *299.00. Free
delivery. Free lettera. AAA
Signs. 1· 304-626-4934.

e75-5e99.

Used underpenn ing for ule. S2
per thHt wh ile quantity lnu. K
&amp; K Mobile HOmes, In c. 304 -

e75·3000.

Aman a 211, central air cond.
good cond, S426 ,00. 304-675 -

6373.

WlnchetUir 30•30, S1 20. 304 6715· 6719.

Vtllt¥ Furniture, new &amp; u1ed.
L1rge taction ol qUality furni ture . 1216 Eastern Av11 .,
Gtllipolis,
GOOD

USED

APPW\NCES

W11flers, drylfl, rehigMatort,
nngu . Skaggs Applianc .. .
Upper River Ad. bnide Stona
Crett Molal. 614-441· 7398.
LAYNE ' S FURNITURf

Sofat and chal,.. priced from
13915 to 19915 . Ttbln $150 •nd
up to *1215. Htde-e-bedt t390
to *696 . R•clintrt t225 to
U75. Ltmps na to *1211 ,
Dlntttet *109 and up to t4915 .
Wood !able w· 8 chain Ul&amp; to
t79&amp;. O.ak f100 up to f378 .
Hutctlu "00 and up , lunli
bedt compltt• w· mattrnAI
*2915 and up to t39t5 . BJbybedt
t 110 &amp; t175. Mattreuesor bo11
lptlngt full or twin til, firm
t73, 1nd tel. Outen 1111 d2e.
Kin-g tl&amp;O. ' dflwer chnt tel5 .
Dtllllfl 189 . Gun clbin.ts 1.
,0, Ugun. GasoreiKt,lcrange
t3715. Baby mattrHtts t35 &amp;
•4&amp;. Bed itamtt t20, no &amp;
King frtrne 160. Good "lectin
o• bedroom tultet, mttal 101.
blnatt, 1\41adbo..-dt 130 and up
10 1815.
U1ed Furnitur•: wood table • 2
bench.. . bedl, &amp; dr""'· 3
mMe1 out Bultvlllt Rd. Open
9AM to &amp;PM, Mon. thru S.t.

SALE

Piano for sale! Responsible party
wanted to assume small monthly
payments on plano. See locally.
Call credit manager 1-800-447·

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables ·

8 &amp; S Produc e now open at our
new location 1313 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, acrou from Pizza
Hut . Big 1elaction Quality Fruits
and Vegetables . OPEN
EVERYDAY,

59 For Sale or Trade
1968 City Aluminum Dump
Trailer lOft. 1974 Dodge 0 · 800
Oiasel log Truck. G ·Model Pre·
ntice Knuckleboom loadar with
ca b &amp; power unit · Oieul.
Mounted on Tandom Ford 16ft.
Pup Ttailor . 24ft . Stareraft
Ca mper sleep• 6, fu lly equiped
FFC Saw-Buck. Montgomery
Ward wood splitter like new.
Troy Built Tltl11r. 1977· 0 -100
Dodge Truck 60,000 actual
miles, runs good Call614· 388·
9031 Evanings.
1978 Cllevy, and work pony for
Sill&amp; or trade Ph . 61 4 -266· 1528.

Far111 Supplies
&amp; Livestock

CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S. 35 West. Jackson, Ohio.
614·288-6461 .
Masaey Ferguson. New Holland,
Bu1h Hog Salet 6 SMvice. Over
40 uud tractora to clloo1e from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment . Largett selection In
s.e. Ohio.
JIM ' S FARM

EQUIP,MENT

56 Building Supplies

2783.

Special Buildlr1g Truu S•le

12ft .. 19h .. 27ft., 22ft., 24h ..
28ft .. 28ft., 38h. 99 c&amp;nll per
foot . 8 &amp; D Surplot Supplle•. St .

:~·4 . ~:~.'a~i2~er,

Ohio

Ph .

Ready mb concrete 1111d all
concrete aupplie1. Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Suppliea,

304-773-5234.

56

Pets for Sale

Pony fm sale. Enremely genlle.

Bldg. Spl: 30' 1140' x9',
0\lerhead door. Service
16333 Erected. Iron
Bldgs . 814-332-9745.

800 Ford lrtctor with frail
mower . New Holland S1ler,
Ma n Ferg R a ike &amp; wagon.
Running glafl t3 960. Ph . 614-

28e·6522.

3010 John Deeft Tractor with
loader t4360. John Deere Plow
S300. J ohn Deere Tran1port
Dltc S600. John Deere 2150
gallon aprayer t276 . Ph. 814·

2ee-e622 .

Round Hay Baler maket BOOib.
Btlatt1&amp;00. 501 Ford Mowing
Mechlne 8360. Mechanlctl Tobacco Settar f360 . Pric" are
firm . Ph. 614· 256-12015 .
New John Deere agricultural
and eontumer products d"ler·
1hlp now open in Oallipollt.
Equipment on ditpl1y. Order
now and Ava. Agracon Inc ..
Gallipolit. Ohio 614-446· 047&amp;.
(Formerly Swl1her Imp. Co.I
Grtvflly Tractort and attach·
man11 and "'o tnow blade, duel
whe~~lt and ro1ory plow Ptl.

1100. eU-992-7&amp;74.

814-446 -4149,

AKC registered Yotilthire ler·
t11r, 11 Willis old. t2:26 .00.
304·175-4317.

1963 Ale• Chambers Trtctor
lower &amp; Plowt t1000. 3hp.
lru1heutter tor *76 . 1978
Gravely needt repaired •200.
AMF Hp. riding mower 1126 ,
Ph. &amp;14-367·7813,

AKC Ponuu la n puppl11 •or
Euter. Call304·196-3921.

SNAFU®by Bruce Beattie

Molohan Furniture • Apt&gt;Wan·
ett. At. 7 Nonh Gelllpolls, Ohio

Co untry Living. 1 IR fum 'td
apt. AC. WMher and dryM, no
childran or pelt. rt1f • dep
rtq 'td. Calll14-992-2107. af·
ter 8PM .
.

Unftnn lohod Apt. HiR , 241

J•. 300 - 571 - ~338 .

Call 114·448-4222 Iehnen

9-5..
(

11 cu ft ColdiiKM refriaerttor,

.,.5.00. Col ~-111 -l052.

oeu.

-Van111t 4 W.O.

1951 Wlllys P. U. Truek, new
tirel4· wheel drive *950.00 Ph.

81•-u&amp;-36S2.

'85 Dodge Osytona, one owner,
gr11t cond, UO,OOO.OO cost
wHI all 07,500.00. 304-112·

3715.

74

19815 H•rltv Spor1tter Chopped
with tpringer front end. For 11le
or tradt 1950.00 Ph. 814· 446 ·

3682.

Hondo Robol whh wlndohlold.
covtr, .. sty bar. Vfl/ly nl041
u&amp;o.oo Ph. &amp;14-U0-3582.
1815 Honde Shadow 500. whh
2 hlllmett, ktw miiMgt. exetl·
, 910 Hert.y Davktton Sportttet'

UOOO. Ph. 814-387-7813.

1: 30om. tol: ~.

L-. 2·
. . . I Ull I OOIIIIIIlioh " '·
114-448-0MS., o041-1771.
1H1 lulolt ft....

Pruning, mowing&amp; ttumpremo·
val. Stona, mutch. fill, fence• .
evergreens. 111aliet, radodren·
drons. Don's Landscapes Ph .

614-445-9646.

..

Rotary or cable toQI drilling.
MCIII well• completed ume day .
Pump tllet and tervica. 304-

e95-3e02

Callaft11r I , 114-441-4-?8.8.

EEK &amp; MEEK
SKIMPY MEAlS ...
OB~ !=RI(t,")

(r;...,

-: ~

'ij)'\

1111 Honda Aeftu 200 CC .
Won on raffle tlcllet. 111 actual
mn... t1 5115 ,..... Asking

0175. Coli 114·«6-1407.

MIDEAST BUILDERS, concrttll
and new home contracton,
Malon, W. Va . 304· 773-9684
or New Haven, W.Va . 304·882·
2346. Painl. wallpap11r, heme
repairs. fireplace•. chimney•.
brick, atone, patiot. blocll, tidew•llc and drfVtwaye.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
qiRL.5 W5ED10"""'-KE
ME FE:!"L. SICK "TO
MY6TOMPCH ...

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

plans. Q

1!11 Lorry King LI&gt;OI In deplh

BUT THEY
CON 1TANYMOI&lt;E .

MAYBE I 've 6Ll1L.T
/.JPAN iMMUNITY

TO THEM.

•

&amp;433.

Hand•

JC" 210, tood cond. cllll

304-e11·3193 Of e?S-5829
o"" 5:00PM.
Moo-. 1t75 Hondo 750.
IJIC cond, 304-171·5101.

76

Bo111 1nd
Motors for Sela

•

, ...._.

lejo 1101-. 11 foot,

poww .-..., ttakll-

-~-.
-....-.
AM-FM
c
ltw.
1111 . - .

ttO.IOO.DO. Celll¥11*+117-

•131., doraHJ-2720.

IMI'EIIIAI. IIIAIUNE IIIIC. 1ooto

-

.,

entertainers who give

everylhlng 1hey've got to
perform tor a special
audience and 1he Kids who
give all to live life to it's
fullest
10:30 (]) Cancer Todly
1H1 Nowo
10:41 ill Wo11d ol Audubon
Specilllt: Common Ground
Farming and Wlldllte. jNA)
11 :00)
11:011 (]) Htrdelltlllncl

BARNEY

MAW!!

Rttid~Utl or commMcial wiring. New tervic• or repalrt.
UcenMd electricitn. E1tlmate
frM. Ridenour Eleoctrical, 304·

SOME

VARMINT &lt;5TOLE
BOSSIE OUT OF

SHE AIN'T
STOLE, PAW

Tt-l' BARN

General Hauling

McCormick

Dillard Water S..-vlce: Pools,
Cilterns. Welta. Delivery Any· •
1ime. Ctll 114. 446-11110•-No
Sundav ctllt.

• CZl ()) •

t14-246·9285.·

-

Wlttlrton · a Water Hauling.
rttsonable r•tn , immtdiltl
2, 000 gatlon dtli'lttY, cilttrnt.
poolt, wolt, etc. call 304-571· ' 1 •
2919.
~·

.

'

..

-;;:::::;:~==- .

~t,·

Chy. o~ . "•·255-1470, e,.. .
114·440-:WJI. Open daily 9 to
•:30, Set. 1:30 to 1;30. Old l

''

!.rt

11:30 G (Z) IIJIIIHI of Coroon
(]) SporttCenllr (L)
(I) WAKP In ClnctnnaU
e (I) Nlghtllna Q
III COuntry E•prne
tml Magnum, P.l.
([!) Thla Old Houu Q
a Sportl Tonlgh1 Mlton
packed sports hightlghll with
Nick Charfas and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
'Simon and limon' ,
Cll ~ Night Town hires
Rick and AJ 10 find out wny
he wu ptJIItd from a case.

•=

'

PEANUTS

'
AND l CAN SEE

THE SENIOR TEES ••

(R)

® Magnum, P.l. Basket
• Case
.-(1) Lele Show etarrlng
.lcitn Rivera
11:41 (I) National Ooogr~phlc

To handle his problam with a
:;t.
5 I . I
department store. my friend WRIII
e letter addressed to the com·
1_ _ . _
.--~------, puter and not the praeldenr. In no
G N E WI 0
time his problem--.
~,.--,_1,;;,..-,lr"'-,lr"'r.la,;;,..r.l':-1
Complete the chuckle qvotod

I
.

.

:.....;..:...;,l
r

.

.

•

_

I0

12:00(]) il!omallld AHtn

i/P::&amp;

..

(!) ICTV (0:30)

([l)llgnOff

'

".,'
•\

......

'

.'' .

•I

...

by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

'

,,

r1

.. ·1

., .
I

.•••'

YESTEiiDAY'S SCIAM·UTS ANSWEiS

,,.

H) '

RSvfne ..., Fluke - Mound - Theirs - UNDER FiVE
,, The lui santanca on a guaranlee statement for a flashlight:
The abova guarantae doae not cover shark bite baar attack
or children UNDER FIVE."
'

' :.1 '

•
• "'
,. ,
r _______;·=:..•---':-'-'-i'·n

BRIDGE

NORTH

·,-..
.•••.

• Q J 10 6 2

If you're going to "bid ;em up,"
"
'AK7
you'd better be able to "play t~em up."
t752
,! •
After North's raise to three hearts,
•Q s
South was well-advised to consider
EAST
slam. After East's diamond overcall, WEST
4oK7
South's A-.Q-10 had taken on the trick·
I
__ _3
" i"t
winning capability of A-K-Q. In addl- ' • : 8 3 2
+KJ9884
lion, South had a secondary lit with +K J 9 6 a 2
4o A 10 6 I
·"
partner's opening-bid suit. But investi'
gating slam by cue·bldding would
SOUTH
have been more prudent than blasting
.A95
'•
'QJtO&amp;al
with key-card Blackwood. When I
•
t AQ 10
North's response to the lour no-trump
+7
inquiry showed that he did have two
t.
key cards (In this instance, the A·K of
Vulnerable: Neither
1.:
hearts), South bid slam with cheerful ·
Dealer: North
•j '
optimism.
North Ea1t
The three of diamonds lead was, an Weat
I.
2+
obvious singleton but posed no great
'• '
3'
PaS9
•'
threat. In fact , prospects were not bad PaS9
Pass
5 ••
Pasa
for the contract. East was likely to Pass
.. '
Pan
Pass
J _,. ,
have the spade king for his overcall. so
•res()Onse to key-card Blackwood
,,,
if the hearts were splitting no worse
than 3·1, declarer could draw trum~s
Opening lead: 3
ending In dummy, take the spade fl.
· nesse (twice if necessary) and then win spades, South now ran off all bl@ ~·;
another diamond finesse to make the trumps and cashed his ace of apad11. .
contract. This plan shredded when It East was forced to keep two- dia• ·•
turned out that West held atl lour monds. If he came ·down to the biN\;,
hearts. So declarer played three ace of clubs, he would be thrown In to•
hearts ending in dummy, led the queen lea d away from his diamonds. If he got
of spades lor a finesse and played a rid of the club ace, declarer woul\1, :
second spade to his hand,. Unfortunate- lead up to dummy's queen, and West:.
ly the king of spades was not doubleton woul~ have to win the club kine and r ·
with East. Having won the nine of give up to dummy.
''' ·

:8

,

·,, l

,,

...

+

'.

-·•• •

-

CiM~•"•~'

.,.. "'
•

.., THOMAS JOSEPH

AClOSS

•11 1

II Singer

I Swedish

LaBelle

rock

' • ,II

. '.

group 6 Powdered
5 Idolatrous
lava
10 Limpid
7 Senator

12 In unison
Albert 13 FJeld event 8 Celebes ox
U Greek
9 Salamander
letter
11 Rest
16 Actor
14 Talk
Morita
wildly
Yesterday's Answer
17 Devour
18 Bit of
18 Halr-care
color
28 Apiece
37 Bathtub
product
19 Sing
28 Written
shape
20 Don't!
20 Put on
account 88 Verne
23 Pile
make-up 80 Gravitate
character
27 Solitary
21 Yale
32 Scale
891rish
28 Grazing
student
down
islands
ground
22 One of 33 African
41 Town
29 Cherry
the Trinity fox
near
variety
24 Scope
34 Offal
Arnhem
30 Proffer
26 Mature 315 Utah city 42 Anger
31 Choose_
33 Japanese
park
36 Yoko -

..~

..

.,,,.'

..

;

.,
.t~ :

..

'

••,

37"-

Clear Day"
40 Handvm1an's

..... '

..

...•• •

tool

43 Leather ·
type

•t " •
.II

,.

44 Stage
production
·45 Wheat
variety
46 College
In N.C.

r-

• t

•c•

....

,,

' ''
' ~·

DOWN
' 1. ,

1 Yearn
2 Calfs cry
3 Old pulplt
4 Old Dutch

.'.

''II ..

'•! •

"•

-''
•
' II •

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

..' .

CRYPTOQUOTES
4-18

....

'

'tJ •

'

'' .

-ri

11/' h

,fl t.&lt;

' " l j "'

B P WT

G p

K G

J p 0
•

FHJSVWSQ

WRWJ

T W W X

: ,,.•

G VHG

J p 0 [

"'•"t

V H T

KUGP

ij

J I' 0 [

FHJ!PZZ

'GO!UW B

IWSWKFG

y P I

., ..

Ptople

~"'

~~o r •.,

BW" BOS

!lljlioror

lll~IR)

...,...---=__ ,,2 ......11.w.v. ----}111.

•m M·a·s·H

.

A a M Cuttom Couches and
Rtupt\olltery. St. At. 7. Crown

([!)

repoits on world economics
and flnoncial news with Lou
Dobbs. 10:30)

HpuM coli, Nmfttone, and t •
erevet. Deliver-ed 1 ton and up. : ~
Jim Lanllf. 304-675 · 1247 or

Upholstery

Ill

,j

R0 F A L .

Clotijlel
a ~Ina Current

.

1700 .., LM..

..,

r
.

IIIIIoblly -

Will haul tn,thing hom 2 ton to
8 ton. AtiiOnlblt di!N. Call '
614· 441 · 4801• Morning or
evening.

87

.,,

GrMtnl Hila The Thirties (T)

.

171-7397.

(I)

..

H

,,•.:

•a
o New•
(]) Majof League llaseblll'•

a R Wa1er Sarvice. 1--tome
c-isterna. wells. pool• filled. :
formerly Jamn Boy• Wtter.
Stme rat11. Cell 304-875 - ~ ~

et1• ,_ ....... ltawarL

..

•••

II lilT ....... . .

&amp; Refrigeration

__
..
--fvll-.. . . .
-u--.
-··--c..--.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
........_.... ...
1911
"'ower,

slorles. It :00)
Ill (1) A Vory Spoetol Arte
Story Special aboul

J .J . W1t1r Service. Swimming , ::
pools, cis1erm I well1. Call -. '

cond. ••so.oo. 304·137·2343.

inle,.tews with lop
newsmaKers and celebrities.
1:30 I!Jl 111 ~ Doolgnlng Women
Avary lucrative commission
brings problems of Integrity.
10:00 illl Ill~ Wtl117th CBS
News prlmetlmt magazine.
I!]) Evening NtWI A wrap up
of today's news and a lOOk
ahead to tomorrow's news

I:;;8;4:=~E~I:i';c=t=r~l·c=a;l==::.

0370.

Nazareth, Part 2' NBC

excluded from everyone's

Cor. Fourth and Pine
O.llipolis. Ohio
Ptlont 114-446· 3888 or 614-

1HO K1wtuki LTD·t ,OOO. Ex-

sen.

manager wna n Panl runs tor
class treasurer. Q
9:00 Ill 700 Club
0 CZl 1!11 MOVIE: 'Jeouo of

their IIvas. r;1
I!Jl 1111!11 Newha~ On a long
weekend , Michael finds he Is

il-l&lt;

R

••c

Sam becomes a campa ign

parents freeze her out of

2842 ., 676-2903.

1114 Honda 1150 Nitht Hawb,
'"' then 2.1 DO mil...
con d.
f1 ,100.00 . Phone 304-1715·

cam pout.
Cil NBA Baoketball
I!Jl (I) 1121 My Slotor Sam

Monday Night 11 the Movl..
!iJRIIII (I) MOVIE: 'lnfldiiHy'
ABC Mondoy Nlghl Movie Q
(!) ([!) American Playhoule
After Ellzabelh elopes, her

Starkt Trea and Lewn Service.
Greener lewm thtt is Weed and
Pest Free, liquid or gr1ndular
•ppjication -trl!e and 1hrub too.
Stump removal enywhert with·
out lawn damage. For completi
tree end lawn care call304-676 ·

86

poignant 111 mof Julie Tullis's
climb up K2.
I!Jl Ill ~ WhaU Nightmare,
Cha~te Brown Snoopy gets a
whole new perspective on
wha1 he previously

strikes when Valerie musters
her sons for a weekend

Concrete fini1h, parking Iota.
basementt • any tile job. Senior
Citizen Discount, Rit;::k Garfield.
61 4 -985·4464.

440·4477

proves deadly. (R) Q

III Adventure This Is a

life among lhe luxuries of
Peanutland when he go8s to
the Arctic. Q
llJl Wonderworka Old Jewish
fermer adopts boy 10
preserve his herltege in
World War II. C
1!11 Prfmenewa Wrap ups ot
the day's world n6ws and In
deptH fealure reports. (1 :00)
0) (1) We Love Lucy
8:05 ill Betwaen Qamos
8:30 0 (2) l!1l Valerie Disaster

304-676-2398 o• 874-446-

82

-

excursion in the wilderness

considered a normal dog 's

RON ' S Talevi1lon Service .
House calls on RCA. Ouaztr,
GE . Speclaling In Zenith. Call

1884 Honda V-30 Megna

1 972 Buidl. new trent. s.. at
701 Fourtfl A'4n~. Apt. 5.

tl10b: ,h, 114···1-7112

work: Interior, uterior, remo deling. painting . roofing, free
estimetes. C811814· 446-6174.

875·17SI.

1500cc) 5400 mlleo. 01800.

E"C:::ONOM"(

R~P~f!fENTATIVE.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

200 Honde Twin Star, good

04800. Coli &amp;14·2•6·6681.

.)e~vu:.e

Motorcycles

cellent Condition . 304·171 -

Air. E - - - Actuol·
...... U .482, - -

''Wt dan't nead I food proc Ill 01, Hlrrial,
the glrb8ga Clllpoaal workl jullllna...

73

1980 Trant·Am low miltt. Nice
automobile, excellent eond.

, *··

Peld. Ph. 448-U11 eftw7PM.

Athton buNdlng lott. mobile
homn ptrmltted, Ctyde Bowen.

5522.

1111110-. 4-whMI
1llt _ . , . PS,
...... Mel Windt 1. R. . . and

Ph. 814-«1·74••.

Dinino t - ond chotln. UOO.
C.H f14·742 -2113- 1:00
740 Sacond Av• · 1 8R , p.m.
0185.00mo. Dopoo~ _..., 1- : - - - - - - - - - -

1983 ChiYy C.veliw. 2-door.
red with grey velour Interior.
Super sharp outtide. Extra cte.n
intidt f3260 . Ph . 614-281·

1171 O•ancl Prla UZOO. 7t77
Fani ltotion w_.. •soo Ph.
11·---··7717.

Jtcklon Pilit. t210 UtllitiM

36 Lola lit Acreage

Autos for Sale

............. "'""· 02100. 1975
U711.·Ph.114-UI-2103.
vw
---· .. _

SwiWI Rocliltn f100.00 MoMo·
htn FumltYI't In Kenaug1. Ohio

&amp;

lont cond. Ph. 814-U&amp;-9184.

71

I.'M
/~ANte, )bu{&lt;

2&amp;01.

1973 Ford F-100, witll topper.

•

t-\1,

Galvanizld corrugated cu l..,ert.
82.36 ft .• up. All 1ize1. Fittings.
304-576-78e9.
Fabrication. Day It night delivery
. within 160 miln. Will not be
68 Chevy pickup. 30,-875- und8ft1lld. 304-926· 5211 .

19815 ChiVy 5·10 maxi cab. V-6
auto, tilt. eir. phone 304· 1715·
5376 •fttr 4 :00 PM.

1111 lulclr: Skytn. automatic,

ChMt of OtiWMI· 4 drtw«
t41.
l·dr~ eMit tll.t15.

1918 Chevy pick up, 3 tpeed,
painted. a ll good cond ,
*1 .100.00 or bftt off•. Cat!

• •

All types carpenter &amp; concretll

RINGLES'S SERVICE. expe·
rienced carpentl!r, ell!ctrieian,
mason, p1inter, rooflntl (lnclud·
ing hot tar epp/ICetion} 304·
676· 2098 or &amp;76· 7147.

992-5882.

&lt;:::::&gt;

446-0294.

19&amp;8 GMC Huvy duty ton 'h
truek. t760. 16ft. Hat bed. Call

Full blooded Simmenu.lbuM, son
ol Signal. 4 yn old. 2,000 lbl,
phone 304·895-3491.

Tr,mspurlollun

FRANK AND ERNEST·

SWEEPER and •ewing machine
repair, parts, and tupplias. Pick
up !!Ad delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mila up
Georges Creek Rd. Cell 61 4 ·

Fetty Tree Trimming. 1tump
removal. Call 304-875-1331 .

30.·17&amp;-e466.
19eO MOdal Cevay ,Pick-Up
t1800. or b.. t offer Ph. 304·
e75-756&amp;.

Stanford Seed Corn, 1tt pltce ih
Vlrgini1 Nationtl Corn Growert
Cont111t, from 2,000 entriet.
Test .w.lghtt to 82 lb. From
154.00 1* btg, Call Andy Sigler
for more detalle, Morgan's
Woodlawn Farm, Pliny, R1. 36,
evenings 304-875-1288 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Oe32.

2 Gelding hors•. 1, 3 ye..- old
trotter, Morgan breeding, 1
standard 3 yeer old. Reuonebly
priced. 814-992 -738,.

Sead corn lor ule. DeK.Ib and
Kenwarthy, 304--875-,608.

Home
Improvements

2464 .

19n Ford Coullt' pick-up truck.
_. eyl. 6 1peed, has late modal
motor . Et:cellent condition .
t111150. 114-992-6388 or 814·

Regi•tered Amerlctn Sed ·
dlebred Hartel lor Mit. 3
m•re' 1, 1 •fielding, good .,.ood·
line• Call 114-44e-9840 after
6pm call 2511 -848, .

Saed oa11, f«1illzer end gr1u
18eds. ACME Super BrusMUn..fof Multfflofl, Rote. Found at
Bidwell Cath Feed Store Call
814-388 -9&amp;88 for letest Pflc•.

81

1981 Ford Pick-Up good condl·
tlon, high mileage t2600 or belt
reatcJnable offer. Ph. 614· 367·

&amp;14-388-9336.

9 Holatein Haiftta. 7 Grtdes &amp; 2
regittered. Will calf in May. Call
814· 474-7283 attar 7PM .

11•·f4S -7019.

lMng Room Sut1et *118.15·
•too

1976 Dodge, auto tranlmiulon,
rona good 1700 or best offer.
19" 400 1uto transmluion for
a Chevy aaklng f76 .00 Ph.
814-388-9326 call after 6pm.

Good •election of Duror tnd
Blacklin11 boart. Roger BentiiY
Sabina, Oh Ph. 613·584· 2398.
Alto remember Bentltv PIIJ Sale
April 29, W•hington Court
Houu Fairground• 7 :30 P01 -

1110 Toycri1 Station W110n.
lrrKMCUiett1 IUIO, lir. *2100 or
belt off•. Mutt be lOki Ph.

, 81.·4·4&amp;·1149.

1986 Chevy C-10, auto, air,
crulte, dualtankt U999 . Johnt
Auto Stlet. Bulavllle Rd. Gllli·
pollt, Ohio.

11296 Ph. 61.·28e-e522

814-112-7437 tftOI' &amp;PM.

livlno AOOffl Suite&gt; t3t9 .00.

1530.

2 Harse uud trailer wi1h new
tirea, good pain1 , raactyU lor uu

11,1500 . -. Good IIOI&lt;t Ph.

Ph. 81•·UI-7U•. $po. WoOd

Trucks· for Sale

Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill~ 1!1J Wheel ol Fortune
® Bamey Mitior
Ill (1) M'A'S'H
7:30 Gill Cll Newlywed Game
(]) Major League Ba~tblll'a
Greeteot Hlto t 983 All Slar
Game
Ill (I) Judge
tml Wheel ol Fortune
I!]) Crooallre 10:30)
Ill 1121 l!1l Joopordyl
® Major Leagua Booeball
Ill (1) Too Ctooe for Comlon
8:00 Ill Father Murphy
0 (2) 1!11 ALF Brian
proclaims that there are t I
rather than 9 planets.
(]) College Booeball
11) liJ (I) MacOyver
MacGyver's heng gliding

Services

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local reference• lutnlthed.
Free e1timatu. Call cOIII!ct
76 ChiVy Malibu, body rough, 1· 614-237· 0488, day ot night.
good mechanictl condition . Rog!Jr• Basement
304-87&amp;-2609.
Waterproofing.

MACK Tractor '78, dbl. frem••
'78 Benton 30' x88" dump. 95%
rubber OYflrtll. Ready to work.
Will tell al!parately. 614· 268·

Duroc Boart. Bred jult like the
boar~ we tetted at the Ohio
Test11tlon that gained over 2.6
lba. per day. Roger Bentley,
Sebina, OH . 613·684-2398 .

and financial news with Lou

e7&amp;-6066.

72

Livestock

1918 lincoln T~wna Car.
thadow blue whh umao• roof.
bcelltnt condltl~n. loaded,

STOP, LOOK·SAVE

Furnlth4td upatlif.s, 2 rooms •
l:iath, utllitl" turnlthed , tiNn.
No pett. Adulta. Call614·441·

Want to Ieese tobtcco Maton or
Putnam County, ca ll Andy
Sigll!r, Morg•n•t Woodland
Farm, 304-676-1286 eveninga.

'

23Y2 ft . Prowler camping trail8r,
good condition. 304· 675-19115
e\lenin91.

1979 Muttang 6 .0 liter engine,
good cond, 304·676 · 5760,
8:00· 6:00 aher 8 :00 cell 304-

29e6.

66 Seed lit Fertilizer

992-2921 .

82,896 .00 ll•m.' 304-876·
48)9.

· Now buying ahell corn or eer
corn. Ctil for IJtestquotet. Rivllf
City Farm Supply, 614· 4-t6-

2 Atgi1tered J•nev• and one
bull calf. 304-578-2060. C.lt
anytime.

Alunl truck topper for 6 ft. bed,
small truck. •1s0 . Ca ll 6,4.

•

1979 Trant Am, engine tnd
transml•aion ,.built, new clutch,
pr11nure plate and throw out
.b earing. Needa painted

e14-986-3368.

1981 Camato lerlinttta Sport
Coupe red with 1xtra It ripe plilg.
Aur ~uver, tltt, eir, •M·FM.
auto with overdrivt, T.P.I. fuet
lnleet:lan. *10,500 Will take
truck trade ln. Ph. 614· 317·

rI,:~::::::::::::;;:;;:;;;;.,L:::::::::::::::::::::~

814-44&amp;-0322.

Stve It Plf'IOn• Fumll.u,.
1411 Ettlem Awnue
8-m SuhM U88·0800

•

2 Pure bred Chester Whita 'Sows
1160 eaeh. Junior fair and FFA
pig• *75 .00 e•ch. Prlcll ere
firm Ph. 614 -268·1285.

2010 John Deere diotaltractorplows, disc $39&amp;0. New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower *496. Late
model 224T John Deere baler
S1295. Hey wagon UOO. Call
614· 286-8622.

24&amp;-9293.

tlon. 11600. e14-949-2537.

Gra\lely Convertible Trac1or with
electric ttarter. 40 inch mower,
rototiller. sulky and PTO . Cell

Cl 1NIH.,~-!Iollttl
0..1ribo.IWd .., iollA. 1&lt;111

condition
. 8896.
2268 aft11r
6:00 . Call614· 992 - ...._

1981 Chevette. E11cellentcondi·

126&amp;.

61 Farm Equipment

camp11r. Sle&amp;pt 4 adulu . ln good

21 ft . 1974 Pull type camp...
Self-contained. Good condition.
Cell 814-742-2124 or 614-

614-742-3154 o• e1•·9926e8&amp;.

4yr . old Simmenul Bull
11000.00 1'1.1yr. old Herf..-d
Bull t&amp;OO.OO. YeerlingHer..-ferd
Angut croll Bull *'150.00.
Price• are firm· Ph. 614-268·

Utility
16x8
Door.
Horte

Concrete bloCkI all sizes yard or
delivery. Muon und. 'Gallipollt
Block Co., H3 1h Pine St .,
GalllpoU•. Ollio Call 614· 446-

1985 Thundtrbird "Eitn·.
Lo1dld. V6, 60,000 ae1u11
mil ... *8800 or will ftade fOt' 83
or 84 Cutlas or Z28. Cl!ll

Utility Building , 301140119 .
84816. lncludet; 1 lllx9 sliding
door. 3 ft . 0 in. ste~ walk door,
29 ga. painted steel ·tiding. 29
ga. Galvalume roofing, 20. y11r
w•rrant'Y. Complete construe·
tlan . Post·Freme Builden.
Athen1 . Ohio. 814-692·2937.

63

New woodsplittat, runs off
tractor'• hydrtullc system . 3 pt.
hitc h 8326, Alto 197, ChllYy
pickup, 1JJ ton, 30? engi ne wfth
flalbed. t400. Call 304- BBZ ·

Building Mtteritll
Block. brick, sewer pipet, win dow•. llntelt. etc . Claude Win ter•. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614246 -1121 .

.

62 Wanted to Buy

CENTER . SR 35 W . Gallipolis,
Ohio. Call 614· 446· 9177. eve.
614 ·41116 -3692. Up front trac·
ton wilh warranty over 40 u11ed
tra ctort. 1000 tools.

332e.

3 pm e1~-3e7 - 0423.

York. (0:30)
® WKRP In Cincinnati
Ill (1) Hogan's Heroea
7:00 Ill Hardcaatle and
McConnlck
G CZl PM Magulno
(]) SportoConter (L)
11) Enlertalnment Tonlghl
Ill (I) People's Court
III ([!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NeweHour (1 :00)
I!Jltjewa
1!11 Monoyllne Cu~rent
reports on world econom ics

.,.,--,--------1&lt;-

Autos for Sale

1978 Buick Regal. PS. PO, tilt
wheel. 1it. cond .• cruise. intmed.
wipers. ·c~ll 81 4·446· 7390.

42e6.

e679.

3 bedroom uta. living room set
with coffee II end teble, lazy
Boy vibrating recliner. dinnet1e
tet·6 chtirt: Litton microwflve,
I!Xerclte treadmill. layton pop
up campe r. 10,000 btu air
conditioner, 3 bar stools . 304-

~OR

71

1 y11ar old Troy-Built rototiller. 8
horse KohiM motor with electric
start plu• accet~oritl , Call after

Wnnted: Responsible party to
assume small monthly payments
on piano. See locallv. Call credit
manager Ph. 1-800-447-4266.

Ktnmore upright freezer, 16.9
cu bic foot. f226 . 304 -&amp;75 -

440·3169.

County Applianc•. In c. Good
used appliance~ and TV 11111.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Stt . 814-448-1899. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipollt. OH .

61 Farm Equipment

Musical
Instruments

lowBry FIBsta Organ, 2 key·
other Items. Cell 6t4-446 -' board•. built in tape player, 2
sets o l booh, eerphonetet. A-,
Cub Cadet 682 Hydro nhp. condit ion New 82696- Now
lewn tra ctor $2,900 . Ph. 614- S795 Ph. 614-379-2774.

8600.00, 304-675-447&amp;.

51 Household Goods

or~~~;~~;:~~~~~~~=~~~~~;~~

..•
...

Ill (I) llll Ill ~

anchored live from New

SV2 ft . El Oor11do slide-in ttuck

0 '"7 _,.MU.~nc:

(I)

U)NIWI
(]) SportaLook IT)
III Square One TV Q
([!) R..dlng Rainbow
®Facta ol LHt
IIH!l Jeffarsooo
6:30 G (Z) i!1J NBC Nightly Newa
(]) Action OutdoorS with
Jullut 8ortio IT)
11) Ill (I) ABC Ntwo Q
III Nightly BuelnHI Repon
llll ., ~ CBS Nowa
([!) Socrel City 0
1!11 ShowBiz Today News ol
the entertainment world is

· lc-

Wfjb'W[

...

lOw to form fa:~Jr simple Words.

MON., APRIL 13 •

., CZl

&amp; 'Campers

~--

'·

QReo.ro,ge leff"s of tho
four ltrambltd words be--

EVENING
8:00 (])Big Valley

_7 9 Motors Ho"'es

.,e.,.

Quality Rottweil&amp;r puppi", Sea
both parents and pup from lut

•

Auto Parts
lit Accessories

Used &amp; R~built Transmiuion1. ',
All il)ternelly in1pected &amp; gua - 1 '
ranteed. lnstallati~n and pick·up 1
available. Call 814-446-0966 . ·,:

Hamiter set up-includes tanktop , water bottle. 1 lb food &amp;
free ham1ter. 88 .00 Call 81 .. .
446-1364.

----.;_~- .ldiltd ~,

Vl' e.wt'ng

BU.OGET Trantmiationa: Used&amp;
Rllbuilt . All typu torque converters 8t trantfer caaes. Engine •
ovtrhtul kit1. Alliton Trantmit· :
sion Pent &amp; CVC Joints: Gua• ..,
r~nteed, will delivat. c11h &amp; ""
carry Or ins'-11 Call 814·379·
222Q or 1· 304· 876-6758.

77e6.

3224.

Setfl above ground swimming
pool, 18 tt , with allaccessoria!i,

For Nile good uMd ftoor modtl
and pon1btt color TV' t Ph.

1519.

Commttclal bUilding• fot lette.
Downtown Pt . Plt..tnt. Storti.
otflets. A·Ont Atal Ettltt.
Carol Yttglf', Broker. Call 30' ·

Merchamlise

S peciou• 2bdr. •Pt., C. A., wtter
Plid. N.. r Piru Hut, Otllipolla.

Ph. 81.·441·7025.

76

wooden chairs . . porcl'l swing,

1 1hp. Sear~ Mower 8575 .00
Ph. 614-446-2076 Evenings.

Motorls for Sale

E..ter Bunniet pure bred N•
thertand Dwarfs. Great for 4-H
C1ll 6,4-441-0BO&lt;e after 4pm.

The· Daily Serl~ntel ~pa~le-·9

POinerQy- Middleport Ohio .

~B~O~R;N~Lf0~S;ER;-~~--------------------------~---r~1f~e1lle-V~i~8~i-0-0--,----=,=~~=~=.~=e~@=.==;=~=;==;===;;~ ;

76 . &amp;oats and

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

13. J 987

Monday.

1987

1iJI7 Skiffcreft. 21' h . cebln
cruiHr. 110 HP. M.,c-.,
Inboard-Outboard Drift. trMt•.
lull mooring cOv•. ucrlfice for
quick ~ele. Call81 4·992· 7371.

Nice refrig8fator. bed complete,
rocker, couch. \linyl recliner. 6

060. 614-992-7680.

46 Space for Ren1

992-3090 . .

32 Mobile Homes

Hi Court Street. 2 DR , 11fl
baths . w / w carpel, complete
modern kitchen, ga1 heat, well
Insulated. wired for phone &amp;
cable tv. 1p1clous, parking in
r11r. pat io, f375 / mo. ' plus
utllltiet. Oepotlt, References
rl!quired . No pets . Calt614-446·

Pets for Sale

April1~.

Dragonwynd Caffery Ktnn-'.
CFA Himalayan, Perslen and
Slam~~~e kittena. AKC Chow
puppi11. New Chow wpl)in.
Calll14-441 -38. . after 7P~ .

379-2745.
1 Bedroom b11ic rent 8176.00
plut ele&lt;:tric. Alto required a
1200.00 ~ecurity depotit. CON·
TACT: Jackton E1tate1 Dept. Ph
448 -3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.

Monday.

GKPUT? - TPOISW
OUQUPCU
·veet.erday's C.:ryptoquote: WHEN I THOUGHT l HAD
BEEN LEARNING HOW TO LIVE, I HAD ONLY BEEN
LEARNING HOW. TO DIE. - LEONARDO DA VINCI

"

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...

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�.i Page- 10- The

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Daily Sentinel

r--_.......
.• Local

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Briefs:-....., ·Reagan

Good Friday services scheduled

Annual Middleport Community Good Friday services wlll be
held at the First P resbyteria n Church at7: 30 p.m., Friday with
Rev . Gil bert Cra ig, pastor of the Mount Moriah Baptist Church,
presenting the medit ation.
•
Mrs . .Ju ne Kloes of the Middleport First B-aptist Church will
direrr co mbined choirs In specla l'l:;i'ster music. The service will
end wit h lhP Ten Stations of the Ctqss.
·

Me ig~ staff attend me~ ting
Nlnr,&gt; representa ti ves of the Me igs Local Sc hool District
att end ed the Mid-South east Qhlo Chapter I t reading) meeting
hl'id for Chap iN I reacher.s at the Holiday Inn ar Marietta.
Spea ker was Dr. Maxi ne Smit h of the Columbus P.u bljc
Schoo l.
All&lt;'ndlng fr om Meigs Local were .Jon! .Je ffers and .Ja net
Hoffman, Po meroy: Mary Bra uer. Middleport: Eliza bet h
Story. Middl eport and Bradbury; Linda Stanley, Harrisonville;
Kim Ohllng&lt;·r. Hur la nd; Chery l Lightfritz, Sa lem Cent er;
Bar bara Math ews , Sa lis bury, a nd Wendy Hal ar, Meigs Local
•
Chapt er I Program Director.
TP n school ellstr ier s participate in the inservicc program held
evNy spring and fa ll.

Quarrel result.~ in arrest of 2
A qua rrci lha·f mig ht hav£' ended In tragedy ended instead in
the arrest of two Pomeroy men.
Mt'igs Count y Sheriff Howard Fra nk and several depu ties
wc·rc ca lled ea rly Sunda y evenin g to the Cicatus Arnett
res idence on Sm ith l1oad, off Ohio 143. where an arg um ent was
raki ng place between Arnett and his son-In-law, Dale Ca ll.
Wh en Dep ur.v Don Snyder ent ered the residence, he foun~
Arn&lt;·tt had a loaded 12-ga uge shotgun In his possess ion. Arnett
res is ted briefl y bC'fore putt ing the gun down and being placed In
t·ustody. Arm• tt was charged with hav ing a wea pon whi le
lntoxlc·atcd .
,
Cal l was chargPd wlrh obstructi ng off icial business a nd
rPs istlng arrest .

Both men were lodgrd Sund ay night In the Meigs Count y .fai l
and w•·n' ro have Iheir Initial cou rt appeara nces today in Me igs
Cou nt y Cou rt brfore .Judge Pat rick O'Brien.
The shotgun and one oth er gun were co nfi scat ed b)·
au thor itiPs to bp held for ev ldenrf' .

Pomeroy I'MS was ca lled to the scene IJ ur nei ther Arnell nor
Cal l rl'q ulrrd treatment. There was ex tensive glass damage to
the rC'sldrnl'e as a J'Cs ulr of the al terca tion the sht'rl ff repor ts.

EMS units re.'ipond to 8 calls
Mc·lgs Cou nty EmC'rgcncy Medica l Srrvlres reports eig ht
ca lls over tho wl'rkend: fi ve on Sa tu rday and th ree on Sunday.
Sut uJ·day at 10:4!\ a.m .. Pomeroy to VlllagP Gree n
Apar tment s fo1 Rra nd.v Fortun&lt;' to O'Blencss Memor ial
Hosplla l; Ha clnc at :1: J:l p. m. to Hill Road for Opal Cumm ins to
Pleasan t Va iiPy li ospitul; Pomeroy at 4: 12 p.m. to Ohio 1 4~ fo r
.lane Ra tcliff to Vrll' ra ns Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at
Ill: 4!i p.m . to Ohio 248 for John Lascar to Vete rans Memori al
Hospita l: Pomeroy a r 10:42 p.m. to Mulberry Avenue fo r
Cat hcr lm· Oliwr to Vt'tera ns Memorial Hos pll al.
Sunclay a t !l: :,1 a . m .. Racine to Elm Street for Els ie Circle to
Vetera ns Memo rial Hos pital: Po meroy at 4 p.m. to th o
Pomeroy Hrallh Car(' Cen tc•r for Dale Roush to Vetera ns
Mrmorlal Hospita l: Syrae use at o: :14 p.m. ro MlnersviliP fo r
H" rold Davis tu Holzer Medica l Center.

Service plan.~ cla.m~s in May
Thl' Meigs Cou nty Emergency Medi cal Services will sponsor
Its second ann ua l regional f:MS sc hool on Sunday, May :1, at
Meigs Hlgll Sc hool.
Th is )'Par's sc hool Is In need of old, no longer used. farm
equ ipmen t ll'orn pieker, tractor, etc. I . Th is l'q uipmcnr will be
· used duri ng rhr faPm ex rrlca lion class . The equ ipment will be
cui apa rt IJ;· t h ~ various tools used ro free someone from a far m
acclde nr.
MPigs Count y fit'&lt;' and F: MS pNsonnPI arc urged to send thPi r
rrsc rva rions in ro the F:MS main office. Box 74A, Pomrro~, prior
·" ro 1\pril 21 to ins ure drsired classes . A $15 rrg lst rarion fee Is
II&lt;'C'rssary for all ou t-of-count.v EMS me mbers.
Thrrr will ll&lt;' a$!&gt; charge to Me igs Co unt y personn el if the)·
wish to oat at th&lt;' school.l.unch Is brl ng' providNI by the Meigs
Arh i&lt;' t ic Boosh'rs and a lll utl£'h reserva tions must be In by April
2~ .

aides use break to .plot strategy
Democratic Congress fo r the
first time, will ma ke "leaderShip" the issue !n forthcoming
battles over spending, trade and
any Democratic tax proposals.
One aide noted gleefully the
dlfflcully Democrats are having
In ar riving .at a single posillon on
trad e restricllons and said Reaga n will try to paint the Demo,
era tic Congress as spendthrift a job made e'asirr by a unified
GOP minor ity in .both chambers.
The officials said Baker' s new
policy of mak ing the president
ava ila ble to the news media on a
frequent and less contentious
bas is Is something Reaga n is
"comforta ble" with as a way of
selling his message of budget
reform.
Ailhougn he · has had two
spendin g vetoes overridden,
Reagan's strong bu t un successful lobbying sent the rig ht 'message to Cong ress -'- th at he Is
willing to fight. the aides said.

Columb ia Toll'nshlp Boarcl of Trustees will haiti a spc'rial
nJOt•ling Wodncsdav, 7: :!II p.m.. at lhC' firr sta tion.

Flamf' Fellom~hip .~lat e.-. ·"peakl'r
Anl(ie Compernollc, of Cleveland. Ohi o Stare overse&lt;'r for
!~ l ame F"cl lowship. will be spca ki ng Friday evening, G::UI p.m ..
foi· the Fla mo F!'i lowshlp chapter meeting ut Dale's
Smorgasbord, Ca llipolls. Public Invited.

SCOTTSDA LE, Ariz. 1UP II Ersk ine Caldwell, one of the
world 's mos t widely rea d authors
who outraged many fellow Southerners with such earthy novels
as "Tobacco Road" and "God's
Li tt le Arrc," died du ring th e
weekend aft er a long battle with
lu ng ca ncer. He was 8:!.
Caldwel l. whose books were
tra ns la ted Int o more tha n 40
la nguages a nd sold more th an 80
million co pies, died Satu rday
night at his Paradise Va lley
home· near Scorrsdale.
A spokes man said in keeping
wit h a family req uest for privacy, derails of Caldwe ll's deat h
and interment will not be disclosed. But it was known Caldwell, a heavy smoker, had
severa l operations fo r lung

"

the years and

recc i v r d

(1Xf£&gt; n s i vc

the champion best-seller a nd sti ll
ranks lOth on the a ll- t i m~ fiction
list. despite hav ing been banned
in Boston and rev iled by many
critics.
"Tobacco Road." dramatlzell
by Jac k Kirkland . opened on
Broadway in Decem ber 19:1:1 and
broke box office records with an
clg ht -~ea r run of 3. 1B2 perfor-

It was tho tall , outgoing Caldwell's pu ngen r use of sex and
language, his acute social comment and his prolific output that
brought hi m early success and
kept him amo ng the world 's most
widely published a uthors for
deca des.
Following the enormous successes of "Tobaceo Roa d" and
"God' s Li ttle Acre" in 1932 and
1 9:\~,
Caldwell conti nued his
steady one- book-a-year pace.
The ti tles included "Trouble In
July," "Tragic Ground, " "The
Sure Hand of God," "Love and
Mon ey" and " This Very Earth."
"God 's Little Ac re" was once

LOS ANGELES (UP! I - Kent
Tay lor, a former aw ning salesman from Iowa who beca me best
known for the Iitle role on the
1950s TV detective series "Boston Blackle," died du ring the
weekend at the Motion Pictu re
and Television Hospital. He was
80.
" He was tired out." sai d his
wife of !i7 years, Augusta.
Tay lor, who ma de more than 60
movies, died in his sleep Saturday. His wlfe loldthe LosA ngeles
Times he had had several hea rt
operations and had been cared
for at home by a nurse until he

Blower Funeral Home all day
Tuesday with th e fa mily to be
present from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Friends may also ca ll a t the
church one hour prrcPding the
services.

Elsit&gt; G. Cirl'lt•
F:lsie Ga rner Ours Circle, 67,
Ho ul e I. Rac ine, died late Sunday
night at Vetera ns Memorial
Hospita l. .
Mrs. Ci rcle was born Feb. ll,
1920, at Portland, a daught er of
the latl' Charles a nd Ha rri et
.J ones Ours. She att ended the
Carmcl·Sutton Unit ed Met hodis t
Churc h since Sept. 22, 1946.

Ja&lt;'k

I~

I

William A. Tay lor, 47, of Long
Aott om, was arres ted Sunday
aft ernoon by th e Meigs County
Sheriff's De partment at his Long
Run Road resi dence on a De·
rcmber 1986 charge of corrupting
a minor.
The cha rge stemmed from an
incident las t fa ll in which Tay lor
Is alleged to have engaged in
sex ual conduct wit h a 1:1-yea r·old
female.
Taylor rc pori Pdly left th&lt;· an·a
In December· and a uthorlrlcs
have been looki ng for him since
the criminal romplalnr was flied
,m
. Mc 1gs Co un 1y Co u rt . An
a nonymous tip sent four deputies
to Long Bott om Sunday after·
noo n where Taylor was fo und.
Ta)·lor a tt empted to conceal
himself , but was discovered
when deputies entered th e residencc. He offered no resistance
and was taken into custody.
Taylor was to appear this
morning before Judge Patr ick
O'Brien In Meigs County Court.
In ot her ma tters, Mike Conley,

.Jack' L. Cowdery, 44, Li tt le
Hocki ng, died Sunday at Sr.
.Joseph Hospital, Pa rkersburg,
W.Va .
Mr. Cowdery was born at
Coolv ille. a son of Ha rold
CowdC'ry, Belpre, and the latr
Hele n Ba rri nger Cowdery.
He' was an ac tive member of
the Hockingport Un ited Metho·
dis t · Churc h where hl' was a
Sunday school tcar h£'r, a trustee
of the church buildi ng fund,
Sund ay school superintendent.
a nd. a dmi
nl s lra rt vc co unr1if
· H
h
c mrperson. e was a veteran 0
the U.S. Air Foree and was
employed by E .! . Dupont Co.
Surviv ing besides his fa ther
area sis ter'. Doris Blake, Belpre;
a broth er, Donald Cowdery.
Belprr; a brother and sis ter-inlaw, Gary and Dia nne Cowdery,
Belpre; two nieces, Mrs . Lora
Ann DeMent. Mariett a, and
Tami ,Blake, Ell'lpre; a gra nd
nephew, Sea n Michael DeMen t,
Mar iett a.
Besides his mother, Holen, who CCL mt-els Tuesday
died In 1970, he was preceded in
death b)· an infant brother, an
Middleport Child Conservation
Infant sis ter a nd a brother-in· League will ·meet at Skyline

. 1\ homemaker. Mrs. Circle is
surv ived by hC'I' husba nd, G.
Douglas Circle. whom she mar ried on Aug. 7, I93o: two
daught ers. l.lnda Pa tr crso n and
Sue Hager. a nd a son. La rry
Cil'cie. all of Rac ine; fi ve grandchildren, .Ja mes Brent Pa tt er·
so n. New Yor k Clr y: Terry Scott
Pa tl crson, Shane Sull iva n Circle,
Gra nt noug las Circle, a nd KimbPriy .lo Foll rod. all of Rac ine;
th r['{' sisters. Bernic·c Cor nrll ,
Po mcro.v: Gladys Deem, Raci ne. and'Marv .Johnson. Belpre:
two brothers. Halph Ours. Chester, an d .John Ours. Belp re.
Res ides her parents. she was
prl'red&lt;'d in dPat h bv a sister,
nora l.iovcr .
Serv ices will be2p. m. Wednesday a r the Car mel-Sutto n Unirecl
Methodist Church with Rev. Carl
Hicks and Rev. Paul McG uire
officiating. Burial will be In
Car me l Cemetery. Friends may
cal l a r thC' Raivlings-Coafs·

Scr\'iC£'8 wil l br at 11 a. m.

law
.
Wednesday
at th e White Funeral

Vt&gt;h•rans Mt-morial

Two to split prize
CLEVELAND tUPl i - Two
Ohio Lotto players have tickets
with the same six numbers as
pulled In Saturday night's game.
say offi cials of the Ohio Lottery
Commission.
Numbers draw n were 1.3, .11, 3S, ·
.16, .18 and 39.
The two will s plit rhe$1,158,288
jackpot In 20 annuaHnstallments
of S28,967 before taxes.
The 243 tickets with five
numbers are each worth $964.
The 11.091 tickets wi th four
numbj:'rs are worth $56.

Ohio weather ·
South Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low 45
to 50. Winds southeast ai'Ound 10
mph.
Tuesday, rain likely. High near
70. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Ohio Extended Fore.:ut
Wedneaday tllrourh Friday
Showers likely' Wednesday
with lair weather Thursday and
Friday. Highs will be between 55
and 65 Wednesday and Thursday
and between 60 and 70 Friday .
The low will range from /,he mid
40s to middle 50s Wednesday and
be between 35 and ~5 Thursday
and Friday.
'
[

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport.' Ohio, Tuesday. April 1 ~. 1987

By BOB HOEFLICH
$4,500.
Sentinel Staff Writer
Council at its March 23 meeting
Middleport . Mayor Fred Jlof- had approved Mayor Hoffm an' s
fman was authorized to enter Into seeking profess ional help In the
a contract with Community Pro- preparation of the application for
grams Inc .. for the preparallon funds on neighborhood redevelof a community development opment and housing upgrad ing
block grant applicallon when funds because funds. are more
Middleport Village Council met limited than In past yea rs and
in regular session Monday night . applications are highly competl·
Co~t for the firm to prepare the
live thereby making professional
~ppllcallon for the grant, which
help almost a necessit y. Numerwould be a tw o-year plan with ous surveys have been necessary .
$400,000 allot ted each year for · to complete the application,
upgrading two targeted areas In which must be filed no la ter than
tbe town, Is expected to be about Friday.

mances. When it opened In
Chicago in J9.1Ci, Mayor Edw ard
Ke lly called it obscene a nd shut it
down. It later played in London
and in 1941 was sa nitized by
Hollywood into a movie directed
by John Ford from a sc ript by
Nunnally Johnson.
A screen version ol "God's
Li ttle Acre" a ppeared in 19!i8.

The first year program, if the
application is approved, would
provide for work In upper Mid dleport fro m Doc k Street to Mi ll
Street, while the second year
target area wi ll be in the
neighborhood from Pearl St reet
to Powell Street. Some roarl
reconstruction in the two areas is
provided for In the application.
Council approved the report of
Mayor Hoffman show ing r,..
ceipts In fin es and fees of
$4,919.09 for the month of March
and gave a third rea ding and
final approval to an ord inance

Cleaner
coal wins
industry
support

was hospitalized Thursday.
"Boston Blackle," a one-time
thi ef with a pencil mustache who
beca me a detective, was a
popu lar TV series in the '50s.
Taylor also made suc h movi es
as "Hamona," "The Daltons
Ri de Aga in," " Death Takes a
Holiday," "Payment on Demand" and. his last fil m, "Girls
For Rent" in 1974.
His fi lm carepr bega n in 1 9~1
when his fa mUy moved to Los
Angeles f.rom Iowa, where he had
played saxophone In · a dance
band a nd appea red In school
plays .

20, of Por tland, was returned to
Meigs County Friday evenin g
from Jackso n County, W.Va., on
a charge of receiv ing stolen
property. Conley was a lso to
appear today In co un ty court.
And d~pu ties were called to a
Texas Road res idence on Saturday where Do nnie Barringer was
arrested on a charge of domestic
violence. Barringer was to appear in rourt today.

jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..

lean
Up 1117
Ohio
WEEK

VOLUNTEER!
Call Meigs County
Utter Control
992-6360

ELBERFELDs·

which will put the vil lage In
compliance wit h the Ohio Code In
regard ro fireworks displays.
Mayor Hoffma n read a letter
fro m the Ohio De partment of
Natura l Resou rces indica ting
that the tow n's application for a
1987 li tter gra nt has been turned
down. The money would have
prov ided funds for litter con ta iners for the town. Mayor Hoffman
also read a communication from
Steve Powell of tHe Meigs County
Office of Litter Cont ro l asking
the town to particlpa t ~ In a
program which will provi de

2 Sections, 18 Pogos 26 Conu
A Multimedia Inc ..NtWIPIPef
' . .

per manent litter co nta iners In
communities of the county.
The lett er req uested the village
parti cipation In an on-site construction project of the containers stating that off the sit e costs
run $400 per cont ainer while on
sit e co nst ruction reduces the
figure to $120 plus labor. The
village Is being asked to provide
$50 of the cos t for each co ntai ner.
Council took mno ac tion on the
request. According to thc letter,
the Office of Lit ter Control ca n
place 67 such con tai ners In
locations In the count y on the

sugges ted cos t sha re basis.
Council took no action on a
req uest for the transfer of a B-5
liquor permlr from the Cedar Ba r
and Lounge nex t door to the
LaSalle Hotel ro the corn.ev
lor at ion, form erly the Martin
Res taurant .
A. communica tion was also
rea d fr om the Consumers ' Coon·
cjl outlining aspects of member:
ship In the council' s uniform
state'coalltlon which deals as a
group lf ith contract rates by
Columbi a Gas. The Consumers:
tConrlnued on Page 121

Would-be assassin's request
for Easter visit put on .hold

CHARLESTON , W.Va. tUPII
- Utility co mpanies have been·
forced to overlook opening coalpowered fa cilities because state
regulatory commiss ions regulate returns on utility Investments, says the president or the
National Coal Assoca rion.
Carl Bagge also said in a recent
appearance before a U.S. Senate
subcommittee In Washington
that a clean coal rer hnologles
progr.am helps the na tion pursue
Irs environment al and ene rgy
policies wilhout burdening prlva te sectors. ·
He said new technologies being
developed through the clean coal
programs for coa l-fired power
J(eneratlon facilities will reduce
emissions and Increase th£&gt; com·
bustlon effi ciency of coal.
However, Bagge ca utioned
that rommerclallzatlon or the
new technologies will be stymied
if sta te utility regulatory comANNOUNCEMENT - Standing with his family In the middle of
miss ions continue ro force utili·
ocenlc Red Rocks Park near Morrison, Colo., former U.S. &amp; n.
ties to avoid Investments In
Gary Hart announced to the media Monday lhal h• will s&lt;•ek the.
hil(her up-front ca pital Intensi ve
Democratic nomhiallon for president of the United Stal es. Hart Is
coa l plants.
flank£•d
by his daughte r, Andrea, left , and wile Lee, ce nter. (UP I)
He said state public utility
commissions. In regulating returns on utilit y lnyes tments.
have forced utllitlees ro opt
Instead for facilities with lower
start-up cos ts, without adeBy STEVE GERSTEL ·
Hart , 51.1, sc heduled a news
quately considerin g the lower
DENVER
I
UP!
1
Gary
Hart,
conference
today befon' begin·
overall lifetime cost of coa l
comfortably
aeccptlng
th
e
role
of
nlng
his
firs
t ca mpaign swing as
fa cilities.
-runner,
is
scr
to
wage
two
front
an
annou
nced
candidate, one
Bagge sa id a continuing comca
mpaigns
at
oncr
one
against
that
will
take
hi
m
to Texas, Iowa,
mitment to clean coal will help
the nation fulfill Its objectives of his fellow Democrats for th e Penn sy lvania and Cali for nia .
The former two•tcrm senator
clea ner air and en~rgy security party's nomination. th e o th ~r
aga
inst
the
Republica
ns.
from
Colorado was d!'fea red by
while a lso pu tti ng the United
In
ann
ouncing
he
aga
in
would
Wa
lter
Mondale for the nomina Stat es on the " leading edge In
seek
the
presidency,
Hart
chaltion
in
1984.
marketing and exporting techHar t's annou ncement Monday
nologies which provide Increased lenged other contend ers for the
,
1988
nomination
to
kee
p
"the
was
uniquely his. from the
fuel effl clenry wlrh reduced
hiJ&lt;hcst standa rd s" In rh pir ca m· selection of a s lt r ro the wordi ng
emissions. "
Thr{'(' rlt&lt;an coal technology palgns and accused Republica ns of an elght·mlnutr speech. deli programs exist tod ay with one in of allowi ng rhc coun try to fall vered before a media-only crowd
opera tion and the others In the " far short of the Idea l of In a slush and snow·£·ovrrcd
Ameri&lt;'a.''
parking lot of the magnificen t
proposal stage.

By LORI SANTOS
WASHI NGTON tU PIJ - Jo hn
Hinckl ey J r .'s bid for a n Eas ter
Sunday vis it with his paren ts is
on hold unt il a federal court can
see letters regarding convicted
murderer t harles Ma nson and
Florida deat h·row Inmate Theodore Bundy .
Cou rt proceed ings on Hinck·
ley's l'l'qucsr Monday were
stopped abruptly after a psyc hIa ·
trlst. tes tify ing on Hinck ley's
behalf, revealed the prrs ldenrla l
assailant had wr itten Bundy and
co nsidered corresponding wit h
Ma nson.

·

The test imony from Dr. Glen
Miller, a psyc hia trist and co nsultant to St. Elizabeth's Hos pital,
whe•·e Hi nc kl ey has"'been •·onfi ned fo r five years, prompt ed
U.S. District Judge Barrington
Parker to ha lt rhc hear ing unt il
Wednesday and s·ubpoena all
Information relatin g ro rho
corres pondence.
Hinckley, .11. shor Pres ide nt
Reagan, Whill' House press se·
rrNary .James Brady , a Secret
Service ag~n t and a Dlstrlcr of
Colu mbia pollee offlrcr on Marcil
:10. 19RI. He has been confln~d ar
Sr. Elizabcrhs slnrc his arqulttu l
In Ju ne 1982.
The da re the h'lt('J'S WC'rc

•

Red Rock ptirk In the· floek_v
Moun tain foo th ills.
Under cloudy skies wit h u
blu stery wind keeping temperatun•s In rhe :lOs, Har t drove his
own .Jeep Wago n to t he lonely sit e
and stood on a Jlar boulder to
announce he was run ning again .
Hart wanted- ro makr' his
a nnouncement ncar his home,
withou t a lot of fan fare, reinlorclng his Image as the anllesta bllshmcnt Wester ner seek·
lng thr nomi nation In a fight
against the part y leaders and
brokers .
"Th is eleellon Is nothin g less
than. a referendum on our na-

Reagan welcomes visit
to U.S. by Gorbachev

TUXEDO
RENTALS

MOSCOW 1UP II - Secretary would be coming to Washington
of State Georg£' Shu ltz today fo r a third summit with Reagan.
"This Is precisely what we are
prestmted Sovie t leader Mikhail
going
to discuss," hP said with a
·Garbarhev a lPtter from Presismile.
.
dent Rcagun encourag ing ~ 1m to
"We
must
co
ntinue
the discuscome to Washington for another
sion
and
then
answer
your
summit but Gorbachev said he
ques
tion
.
I
think
I
have
to
be
would need a good reason to
hopeful and II just canno1 be that
make th£'.trlp.
•
1
would avoid America In my
"You r are welcome to come."
travels,"
he said.
Shultz told Gorbachev as they
"But
generally,
without reaopened a Kremlin meeting. "I
so
n,
I
do
not
go
anywhere.
ha ve a letter from the president
particularly
to
America.
This
and It sa ys so."
Shultz thert handed Gorbachc-1 cannot just be a walk. When I will
a i&gt;ersonal message he carr ied be nearing retirement. then I
from Washington from Reagan. may travel jus t lor pleasure. Bur
now I need business."
Wllth a sweeping gesture toShultz, Gorbaehev and their
aides werpallsmlles at the outset wards Shultz , Gorbachev said,
of Shultz's first meeting with the
" And the secretary of stat e keeps
Soviet leader during three days silent " Shultz then handed Reaof talks that opened Monday gan's letter to Gorbachev.
Gorbachev passed the unce~terlng on arms control.
The meeting was held In the
sealed envelope to Soviet Forornate . gold-leafed St. Catheeign Minister Eduard
rine's 'Hall In the Kremlin's
Shevardnadze.
Great Palace.
Shultz registered a mUd objecGorbachev. during a photo
tion about giving Shevardnadze
opportunity as the meeting IJe.
"a leiter the president wrote to
gan, was asked by reporters It he
you.''

DON'T BE LEFT OUT!

No•'s the time to order yo·ur
tux for the Junior-Senior
Prom.

EASTERN PROM - APRIL· 24th
SOUTHERN PROAl ~ MAY ~nd
MEIGS PROM - MAY 9th

VISIT OUI MIN'S DIPAITMifiT AND SEE OUt
COMPIITI UNI Of IUIIDOS AND
ACCISSOIIIS.
SHOP 9:30 TO 5:00

wri tte n was nor revea led .
So urces sa id ParkN. who
presided over Hinckl ey's cr imina l trial, was ca ught off j!uard by
the revelations. Government prosecut oi'S also have submitted
anoth er lettc1· fi'Om 1982 or l98.11 n
which Hinckl ey di scussed his
pla ns ro est'ape from the hospit al
a nd a tt e mpt ot h er
assassinat ions.
Hinckley was foun d not ~ ullt y
by reason of Insa nity on .June 21,
1982 In a sensationa l trial that
spar kl'd new ra lls for re form of
Ihe lnsa nlt)· defe nse.
Miller revea led Mond ay th at
Hinckley had received a letl!'r
from L.v nc tt l' "Squ ea ky"
Fromme. a fo rm er Manson taltowel' who 'tri ed to s hoo t Presi de nt Fo rd In 1975, and had as ked
for Ma nson's address so that he
could respo nd to him .
Aut, Miller sa id, "So fur as I
know he has never written a
lett et· to Churles .Manso n."
St. Ell wbr ih's stopped monitoring Hinckley's ma ll In 19!!4.
Ma nson, the l~a d er of a dru g
and sex cull tha t shocked the
na tion with the sla ughter of
preg na nt Hollywood actress
Sharon Tate a nd eig ht others In
Los Angeles In 1969, Is se rving a
life scnt cnre ar Sa n Quentin

lio n's future, a nd I believe lh£'
co nt est wil l be wo n by th e
cand ida te· wit h the cleares t vision a nd rhe co urage ro challenge
ou r na tion," he sa id. "We arc
going ro select not only a lcadt' r,
we're goi ng to select the future.
We better know what we· arc
do ing.
"This Is serious buslnr·ss. PPr·
haps dea d! ~ sl'rious. Our llvos
and our national fu ture could
depend on lh&lt;' ou tcome. We wil l
Sl'lect not onl.v the perso n who 1.~
best qualified ro govl'rn this
c·c&gt;u ntry, bur thP furur&lt;' lmider of
rhe free wor ld."
Hart added. " ! Intend. as I

prison In Ca lifo rnia.
Bundy Is on death row at the
Florida Stat e P rison In Starke,
Fla .. ro nvlr ted and sentenced to
die for mu rder ing two sorority
sisters and a 12-year-old girl. He
Is suspected of killin g more than
two dozen other women across
the country and savagely mull·
latinj&lt; th eir bodies.
Hlnekley and his parl'nts. John
and .lo Hin ckley, att ended lh~
'hea ring before Par ker, who will
dec ide on th(' Apr il 19 trip
reques t. The hospital supports
the req ui'St fo r the &lt;Visit .
.
Hinckley' s lawyers have lndl··
rated the proposed vis it to an
und isclosed locallo.n could be a
forer unn er to a request lor
HJ.nckley's permanent release
fi'Om th e hOsplt a I.
Miller. who examined Hinck•
ley wh en .he entered St. E!iza -.
beth 's and again earlier this
year, sa id Hin ckley'~ psychollr
disorders wr re " In rrmlulon"
but qu rstioned his judgment at
times, l n~ ludinl( his decision•
a bout " responding ro some of the'
charact ers who wrote him." '
Miller said Hinckley had "written reccnlly to Aunity ... l'Xpreu:.
lng his sorrow" or the " awkwar~
position he mu st be ln."
•

.

'•

\l'

'

.
'
alwuys have. IQ run rampal11n o/
Ideas . Ideas a rr• what govc rntn k
Is all abo ut. And ~overnlng l~
what this cteerton Is all ahout ."•.
Two hours aft£'1' his announr&lt;l·
mcnt. Har t, slill at the wh('('t.
arrived In downtown Dr nvt•r lor
his firs.! pos t·announre mcn,l
rali)'. grrr.red by about 2,0011
well-wis hers dur ing the lunch
hour.
,
In u brief speech at the rally,
Harr was hars her and marl&gt;'
spcclfle In his atta cks agalnsltht
Reagan administration, rlppln~
away at the gov&lt;'nmcnt' s domto&amp;tlc, foreig n, defl' nse and agrlrul,ture polk les.

Goodyear chief says
tiremaker on rebound

REPORT TO THE PRESS - White House Chief of ~ all Howard
Baker and National Security Advller Frank Carlaccl briefed
reperten Monday on Secretary of Slate Georre Shultz'nt.lltothe
Soviet Union. The brleflnr wu held at the western While House In
Santa Barbara, Calli., where President Reagan Is vacationing at
hill ranch. ( UPI)
•

AKRON I UP! 1 - GoodyPar constructlv£' purpos&lt;'s that wou14
Ti re &amp; Rubber Co. Is laden wll h provide jobs, growth and In lern a·
debt from Its batt le aga inst Ilona ! competitiveness," MN rct
corporate raider Ja mes Golds· said later ar u nC'ws conlcrc•m·&lt;'.'
StIll, Goodyear Is "In no hul'l'~· · :
mllh , bu r the co mpany's recov ery Is on schedule, says chair- to sell Its r ncrgy subsidiary:
Celeron Corp.. a nd It s crude oil
man Rober t li: . Mercer.
Mercer told shareholders at pipeline, with a main leg spa n ~
their annual meeting Monday nlng 1,225 mile.• from the Callfor:
··
they can · expect first-quarter nla coast ro west Texas.
earnlnl(s of more than $1 a share.
Goodyear already has sold $1
Goodyear should be able to sell billion In assets , Including Goo,
Its energy subsidiary In about dyear Ae rosparl' Corp., Motor
two mohrhs and red u ~e It s Wheel Corp. an d far m and resod
tremendous debr to normal lev · property nca r Phoenlx, Arlz,
Mercer sa id seven companh,,;
els with in three years, he said.
In Its battl e aga inst Goldsmith · have expr,essed Interes t In form;·
late last year, Goodyea r Incurred lng a consorti um to bu y Celeron:$2.6 billion In new debt to buy One forplgn ·cou nt ry, which h~
back nearly hall Its outstanding declined to name, also Is Inter.'
shares, InclUding Go ldsmith's es ted, he sa id.
12.5 m il lion. Goodyear's Interes t
Mercer called Celeron a "mo.
payments · amoun1 to about $1 ney ma ker" that Goodyear would
mIll ton a day.
refuse to sell unl£'ss offered a lair'
" It's a terrible th ing to think price, wh ic h Mercer considers
that we' re sending one million roughly $2 billion dollars . Goo,
dollars a day to 17 ban kS around dyear could hold out on the saie '
the world , when tha t money through the end of the year , he:
could be employed for some sa id .

!

'

·•·.

Democratic front-runner Hart opens 2 campaign~

r~L~a~n~e~s~T~u~es~d~a;y;•;I;7;P;·;m;.;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Home In Coolville with Rev . Jeff
Burd sa ll officia ting. Burial will
be In lhr Eden Cemetery.
Fl'it·nds may ca ll a t the fun eral
home aft £&gt;r 10: .'!0 a. m. Tuesday.

•

at y

Vol. 36. No . 240
Copyrighted 1987

'

Showers and thunderstorm' .
lonlghl, with a low between 50
and 55. Rain Wednesday, with
highs hetween 60 and 65. The .
probability of precipitation Is ·
90 percent tonight and 118
percent Wednt'Sday.

Middleport to submit rehabilitation application ·

Meig~ man taken into ~ustody

f..owd ..ry

Daily Number
762
PICK-4
6006

•

TV's "Boston Blackie' dies

Area deaths

die on Ohio's highways

'I

ca ncer over
chemothe rapy.

Daily stock prices .

'
'I
·'

documents and evidence on the
Iran affai r that reaches back to
the star t of the Reaga n
adm inistration.
Wh ite House officia ls told the
Post th e new search was de· .
signed to be more far-reaching
t·har ea rlier effort s under Regan
a nd ro show the new White House
team is t rear lng the Ira n affair as
a serious long-term lega l matter,
ra ther tha n a passing political
storm, as some of Regan's
deput ies described it.
Bu t a Whi te House spokesman
said late Sunday night in California the search was "a rourlne
reques t." showing Reaga n's "tota l commitment to full disclo·
sure" about the cont roversy.
In contrast to the Rega n staff,
"People around here know who
they are worki ng for," said one
offi cial. referring ro Hega n's
autoc ratic persona as that of a
"prime minister."

Noted ·American novelist dead at age 83

Saturda)' Ad missions - Budd
Darst. CheshirC'.
Sat urd ay Disc harges EvPl)•n
McCaskey, Ke nneth
Racine board m eets tonight
Hayes.
Sunday 1\dmlsslons - John
l1"clnc Board of Public Affu lrs will meet tonight t Monday), 7
!.osca r , ReedsvlllP: Ta mmy Thop. m .. a t the Shrine Park building. A mcerlng of rhc Greenwood
mas, Middleport; Elsie Circle.
Ct•mrtcr)' Trus tees will follow at 8 p.m.
Raci ne: May Bonecutrer. Pomeroy: Ger trude Andrews, Pome, roy: Alice P ull ins, Portla nd ;
.Jona thon Gre&lt;&gt;n, Rutland: Dale
Ro ush. Pomerov; John Perez,
Pomeroy.
By Unltcd. l'rt'ss lnlt'rMtlonal . l ~nd, whl'n his car hit a pole a long · Sunday Discharges - FrederIck Tutt le.
; At least 11 prop !~. inc luding a city street.
•four molorcvrlls rs, were kllled In
Woos ter: David F.. Jenkins, 37,
'·"•:nine wef'k e~d tra ff ic accld~n ts Wooster, when his auiomoblle
:arou nd the sra re, a spokes man was struck b.v a tra in a t a
,for· the Ohio H l ghwa~ Pa rrot sa id raik'oad cro~si ng of a Way ne
&lt;As of 10: 3J) a.m.)
today .
County road.
Provided by Blunt, Ellis &amp; Locwl
l A patrol survey shows one · .Stow: David W. Law, 19.
roadway dea th Friday night. sl ~ Akron. a nd Jennifer L. Maylras, FIRM
Price
~a t a lltles Sa tu rday a nd four 19, Tallmadge, In a motorcycle American Elect ric
acc ident on a city street.
~ea ths Sunday .
Power ... ...................... .... .. .26%
• OhiQ's no n-holiday weekend
Marietta: Dale P .. Bennelt . 21. AT&amp;T ..... .. ... .... ....... ..... ....... 2.1 '11.
ha ffl c fata llry count runs fro m 6 Amesville, In a car-pickup truck As hland Oil .......... :.............&gt;9%
;p.m. Fridays until midnight ·accident on Ohio 550:
Bob Eva ns Fa rms ....... .. .. .... .. 26
Sundays .
Sunday
Charming Shoppes .. ........... .~~
Killed this we~ ken d were:
Delaware: Roland K. Graves, Federal Mogul.. ..... .. .. ......... 42~
Friday night
25, Marysville, In a one-car Goodyear Tire &amp;
, Warren: Ja mes P. Hess, 26, aecldent on U.S. 36.
Rubber ............. ......... ........ ....59
No rth Jackson, when his motor·
Cleveland: Willie Rushing, 25, Heck's Inc . .......... .. .......... .. . .4~
cycle collided with a ca r on a and LaShawn Cromwell, 20, both Limited Inc..... .. .. ........... ... .42~
.!rrumbull County road.·
of Cleveland, In two-car accident Multimedia Inc . ............ ...... 55~
Saturday
on a city street.
Rax Restaurants ..................... 6
Maclane
Buies,
15,
,
Robbins
&amp; Myers ................ 11%
Marietta:
Cinci nna ti: Charles R. Leedy,,
io. Middle town, when his motor·· Marietta, In a two-car accident Slloney's Inc....................... 30~
on Ohio 550 In Washington Wendy's Inti. ........................ .11
~yc le collided with a pickup truck
County.
Worthington
.
on Ohio 73 In Hamilton County.
........
...
...........
:.... 19~
Industries
: Cleveland: Reed Or I, 37, Cleve-

ll

' "There will be other victories"
In the budget batHes, expected to
consume most of May, one ai de
said.
In addit ion, Reaga n and his
chief aides will plan foreign
policy Initiatives - a id for the
Nicaragua n rebels, arms control
with the' Soviets and themrs for
the June economic summil with
allies - during what they ca lled
a "window" of planning created
~y the Easter vacation.
The officials sa id th ey are
awa re th at congressional hearings on the Ira n-Contra aff air
may well ralsen ew questio ns of
· Reagan' s in vo lvement in rhe
ar ms sa lr bu t they are not
planning an.voverall strat'eg,· for
res ponding, preferring to wai t
and see the po te ntia l effects of
the testimony.
Thr Was hington Post reported
today that the Wh ite House has
launched a ma jor new sea rch for

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers hand
Houston first
·season defeat ·
- ·Page 3

1

By IRA R. ALLEN
SANTA BARBARA , Call!.
1UP!) - P resident Reagan and
his top -aldiis are using this
vacation week to plot domesti c
a nd foreign policy strategy for
the coming months, say offi cials
who accompa nied him.
Since the late Februa ry resig nation of chief of staff Dona ld
Rega n and the pres ident's
speech a nd press conference on
the Ira n-Contra affa ir, ''There is
a mo m e~tum go ing and the staff
Is energlwd, " sa ld one ofllcial
who asked not to be identified.
Among rhe advisers sum moned to this ocea nside resort
was long- time Reaga n adviser
a nd pollster Richard Wl rthlin ,
who counse led chief of sta ff
Howard Baker aga inst hav ing
the president adopt a confronta ·
tlonal tone with Congress as he
tr ies to reform the budget pro·
cess , the officials said.
Bur Reaga n. facln_g a so l idi ~

SPvrra l nif'&lt;'PS a net nr phcws also
su r viv('.

Columbia trmlf'es .o;late m eeting

Monday, April 13, 1987

I

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