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                  <text>p:!!!::!::1~0~-::!T~he~~~~T~i~me!:!s-~S~en~tinei~----.!~~~~~~~~~~~~O~h:io~-Point Pleasant. W.

·Giants regain
top spot in NL
West
-Page 3

Ohi_o Louery

. . Druly Numht&gt;r

967
Pi&lt;'k 4
7391
Super Louo
4-10-19

\

25-26-43

~

-···

T DEALS and
GREAT .SELECTION

T JIM

a1 y

.Vol.36, No.259 '
Copy rig hted 1987

•

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Monday, May 11 , 1987

LYON, France tUPl i - K l aus Barbie. the Nazi
Gestapo commander known as the "Butcher or
Lyon," took his seat in a bulletproof defendant 's
box today for the beginning of his trial on charges
or torturing, murdering and deporting nearly BOO
people to death ramps during World War II.
Three-hundred poli ce officers co rdoned orr the
courthouse overlooking thr Saone River as
Barbie, 73. looking thin in a dark business suit,
en tered from a side door.
He stepped into the specially built de fend ant's
box protected by bulletproof glass. An es timat ed
700 people attended, most of them journa lists
from 27 countries.
Barbie. looking con fident and ca lm, smiled and
talked with a German -spea king interpreter in thr '
box and agreed to hav&lt;' his picture taken with
lawyer Jacques Verges by about two dozen
photographers in the rourtrooon .
The first order of business was the selec t ion or a
nine- member j ury from 26 candidates. followed
by the reading of charges t hat wa s expected to
take severa l hours .
The nine jurors and a t hree· judge panel will
hear testimony in the trial. which is expected to
last seven weeks.
The controversia l tr ial pit s the word of Jewish

We Have The
Mu1cle Carg 'lou Want..
J

COBB

survivors and former Resista nce fighters aga in st
that of Barbie, w hose attorney, Jacques Verges,
has threatened to r ev ive t he ugliest memories or
France 's wartime occupation by the Nazis.
Verges is expected to stress the widespread
French collaboration with the Germans and the
policies of the pro-Nazi French governmen t ln
Vi chy that acquiesced in the depor tation of
thousands of Jews who were murdered in th e
extermination camps .
He also will claim the French Resistance was
plagued by tra it ors.
" We hope 'the French arc left as while as snow .
Me, I'm going to return to the r eal terrain of
his tory," Verges sa id.
When Ba rbie stepped from St. Joseph prison an
hour before the 1 p.m. start of the tria l and rode to
a heavily guarded Lyon court house, 44 Jewish
children at the Place des Terrea ux square across
the Saone River marked the occasion or what
could be t he las t major trial of a Nazi officer by
inaugurating a memorial to the Holocaust.
Their number. represen ted the 44 Jewish
children, aged 3 to 17, who in April 1944 werr taken
from a farmhouse in the remotevillageofl zieu, 50
miles east of Lyon, and deported to ex termination
.ramps. Th ey allegedly were arrested on Barbie's

Chevrolet
Oldsmobile
Cadillac

order.
The children today hun!( photographs or th e
death camps and drawin gs by deportee! .J ewis h
student s insid e t he monument - Co! steel cubf'
abo ut 60 f~et on ea ch side.
The silent reremony was altended by abou t
1.000 people. many of them Jews who su r vived the
Nazi occupalion or Lyon. Politicians from both
right and lr fl also attended .
Students across France werC' as krd to observe a
mom ent of silen ce tod&lt;.~:V in m emo r y of t he victims
of the Nazis.
Vl'rges, who co mpared t hr &lt;Jttrnlion given the
tri al by Jewish groups to the "prepa r ation or a
lynching." also plans to deflect the cl aim s of Nazi
torture by citing France's usc oaf torture in the
Algerian Wa r_
Represent ativps or the 40 proscculin~ attorneys
say they wi ll co unter this s tra h'2Y by ronrentral ·
ing on documentary proof of at roei t iPs co mmitted
under Barbie's authority.
Barbie was co nv icted and sent enced to dea th
twi ce in absentia - in J952 and 1%4 - for war
cr imes. He is believed to have bern in vo lved in
4,000 murd~rs and 7.000 deportations while
Ges tapo chief in Lyon from November 1941 to
1\ugu't 1944.

AKRON, Ohio (UP!! - A
recent opinion poll shows that 53
percent of ail Ohioa ns approve or
Gov. Richard Celeste's perform ance. but a solid majority does
not think he is ·presid ential
material.
The survey, conducted between Apri l ~0- 30 by the i\kron
Beacon Jour nal and. th e University of Akron, showed only ~6
-percent of Ohio's voters sa id
. Celeste 'was presidential mater ial ; 62 percent sa id he would not
make a good ca ndidate; and 12
percent had no opinion.

Th e survey also showed. how ever , that o7 percent of Ohio
votPrs believP it i s proper for
Ce leste to build a na t ional image
now so he ca n seck higher office
after hi s term ends in 1990.
But that maj ority said no st ate
mon ey should be used for the
governor's na t tonal ambit ions .
"This Is the time for him to go
out and make a name for him se lf,
but only if it benefits Ohio at the
same time and only if th e state
does not fall apart while he's at
it ," said Jeanie McGaughey, a
Democrat from Piketon.

"If he waits unti l ;tft er he
leaves offi ce. nobody will know
who he is ."
Another :!0 per ce nl sa id It is
abso iutel.v not proper for Celeste
to cultivate nat ional ambi tions
now . and J:l per cent had no
CJ nswer.

· 'Wh r n pro pie put him in office.
It was to govern the stale." said
Diana VanDoros, 611, of ncar
Akron . " He should stay put
because that"s what he campaigned for lasI year."
The survey found Celes te sti ll
popular after his land slide vic·
tory in November against former

Had president's 'wishes'

KLAUS BARBIE

By ,JUDJ HASSON
WASHINGTON tUP11
Former national sec urit y ad·
viser Robert McFarlan e sa id
today he helped organize support
for the Nicaraguan Cont ras at
President Reagan' s " wishrs"
when direct American military
aid was banned but that hi s staff
was to told to "operate at ali
times withi n the law.'.'
In an opening statemen t to the
Senat e and House I ran - Con tra
committees, McFa rlane said II
was clear that President Rea gan
"did not intend to brea k faith
with the Contras " when Congn•ss
cut off direct aid in Oct ober 1984.
McFarlane sa id that congressional restrictions. however.
"made it impractical " for either
the Pen tagon or the Cli\ to art as
a liaison with the Co ntras and
thai th e State Department " ha s
aiwa;•s be&lt;on di sinclined to be
associated with covert action ."

Disaster drill slated Thursday

ON ANY CADILLAC
IN STOCK .

\

Sought by French aut horities after the wat'.
Barbi e. with the help or the u.s. Army, W&lt;lS
spirited out of Europe to South America in 1951
aftrr hf' helped 1\mer!ran counter lntelligencP
aga inst communist gr ou ps in postwar Germany.
Barbi e lived in Bolivia. att ainin g success and
influence as a bu sinessman and intelligence
consult an t to successive dictatorships. until he
wa s expellr d to F'tanrr in February 198:1.
•
Ay th at time the French deat h sentences had;
Pxpired undPr a 20-ycur sta tut e of llmilations on
war crimes. French aut hor il ies charged him willi
" cr imes against humanity ." inrjuding the torture. murder or dcportntion of nea r·Iy 800 .Jew&amp;
and Resistance members.
:
Barbi e says he is Innoce nt . Ver ges plans I ~
argue he was onl y carrying ouT his orders as a.
soldier.
:
Sources at St . .Josep h prison said Ba rbie is well
enough to sta nd trial despite a prostat e opcrat iori
three months ago.
Ninety -three witnesses are sc hedul ed to appear, in cl uding th e lca din[:! French writer
Marguerit e Dura s, who Is to tes tify about the Nazi
occupation, and Nobel. Peace Prize winner E ll ~
Wiesrl, a con(·enlrutlon cump su rvlvor noted for
his writing on the mea ning of the Holocaust.

Celeste isn't presidential material-poll

••

Mon., Wed., Fri. 8:30 a.m. • 8:00·p.m.
Tues., Thurs. 8:30 a.m. • 5:00 p.m.
Saturdav 9:00 • 4:00 p.m.
~ Sundar 1:00 • 4:00 p.m.

1 Section, 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Jury selection starts Barbie trial in France

COBBchev.-

CUTLASS 442

Partly cloudy tonight.
Chadcc of thunderstorms.
. Lows n&lt;•ar 60. Moslly sunny
Tuesday.

Localed Along 1he Riv• In Pomeroy

308 MAIN SIWI

POMEROY,

This year marks the l oth
Annual Simulated Di saster Exerci se' co ndu cted during NG tional
Hosp ital Werk in Ga liia and
Meigs Counties in Ohio and in
Maso n Coun ty In West Virginia.
Hos pitals involved Inclu de
Holzer Medical Center. Vete r ans
Memorial Hospit al. Pom eroy.
and Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Poi nt Pleasa nt . W .Va . Also participating arc the Gallipolis Develo pment al Center tGDCI .
Woodl and Centers. inc.. Middleton Estates, Lakin Hospita l.
Lakin. W.Va.. the emergency
medical sPrvices and law C'n·
forrement agencies in the three
counties . along with fire depar tment s and the Mason County
Civ il Air Patrol. and member s oi
the Mid-Ohio Valley indu stri al
Emergen~y Planning Council
tMOV1EPC ).
Each yeat. the simula ted dis·
aster Is held during National
Hospital Week. This year the
theme for Hospital Week is ··we
F'eel Good Helping You F eel
Better." The three hospirals reel
the simulated disaster is one way
of calling special attention to th e
services they provide 19 help the
communities safeguard and im prove their health during this
specla i week. ·
A tornado will supposedly

strike the tri-eounty area on
Thursday. Ma y 14. causing sev·
C'r al disasters in each cou nty . At
the designated time. the approp·
riafe authori ti f:'s will be nolifled
and the exercise will begin.
The loca l emergency services,
fire clcpa r tmenr s or poli ce departments will respond to ca lls in
their area . tes ting their readiness for an actual disa ster . At the
sifes. industries will also have
thr oppor tunit y to test their
disaster pian.
" Vi ctims will be tra nsport ed to
the nearest hospital for treat ment. At the hospital s, the staff
in the e mergen~~- room as welias
throughout th e entire hospit al
wi ll then initiate their individual
disaster plan.
fn Gallia Count y. the exercise
will take place on the Junior Fair
Grounds and wlll involve approximately 24 victims. who will be
nursing students from Buckeye
Hills Vocational Center"s LPN
program. The tornado will also
strike the GDC. and Middleton
Estates. Woodland Centers, Inc.,
will also· acl!vely participat e in
the exercise. Coordinating_ the
disaster plan at Holzer Medical
Center is Tom Childs, vice
president of professional
services.
ln. Meigs County, six EMS

squads. all under the direc tion of
Meigs EMS direct or Robert
Byer . will be invol ved In transporting Meigs Cou nt y disaster
victims to Veterans · Memorial
Hospital _Coordinating the disa ster drill at Veterans Memorial
Hospita l ~re Teresa Colli ns, R.N ., director or nursing, and
John Brigham, ad ministrator at
the Skilled Nursing Farliit y i ln·
termedlate Care Facility. ·
Mason Cou nty. W.Va., di saster
sites wlll be Lakin Hospital , the
boat dock in Point Pleasant and
the Goodyear plant in App le
Grove. Participating will be the
Valley rescue squad and the fire
department, the EMS squad ,
Point Pleasant's police and fire
departments, the emergehcy
vehicles at Lakin Hospital , and
the Mason County Civil Air
Patrol. Several victims from the
sites will be transported to
Pleasant Va lley Hospital Emergency Care Center. The TrlCounty Simu lated Disaster is
being coordi nated in Maso n
County by Fred Taylor, Mason
County Emergency Services
coordinator. and Inez Howes, ·
R.N., Pleasant Valley Hospital
Disaster coordinator.
These annual disasters are
staged as training exercises for
area agencies and hospitals

'

" Bu t the pres ident had made
cl ear that he wan ted a job done,"
sa id McFarlane, a ppearing for
the fi rst lime on the fifth day of
co n ~ ress l o na! hrarl ngs. dThe net
r esult was that the job fell to the
Nat ion a! Securit y Council.
"And it wa s not the righ t
agency. as subseq uent hlsrory
cl early revealed.'.' he sai d.
McFarla ne said that "to ca rry
out the president' s wishes" he
in struq te&lt;l one member of his
staff to oversee efforts to gain
congressional supporl fo r the
rebel s and also involved Lt. Col.
Oliver North In the effort.
He said he told North " to be a
vis ible sign or the president' s
strong personal suppor t. " and to
'.' hel p thP Contras in their effor ts
to become a rea l po litica l
movrment."
" I did make a spec ia l point of
stressing to my starr tha t wr
were to ·opera te at all times
withi n the law and that in
particular we were not to solicit ,
encourage. roercC' or othcrwl sr
brok er financial con tr ibutions to

McFarlane

the Contras.' ' McFarlane said.
MrFaianc sa id he did not
believe addit lanai funds for the
r ebel s were necessary in th l'
period becau se "support needed
to sustain them In the short t'un
was coming from the foreign
gove rnm ent 1hat had made a
co nt ribu tion in mid-19A4 and then
doubled In in 1985."
He did not name the gov rn mcnt but it is believed l obe' Sa udi
Arabia. Th e Saudis have denied
!&gt;ring the source of !he mane;·.
Lawmakers said th ey wou ld go
Pasv on MeFa rlan r., · who has
lr•s ilfierl prr•v iou sly to in ves tiga tors but t rled to commi t suicide
with an overdos~ of Valium pills
hours before t al king to th e
pr~s idrntja l Towrr Co mmiss ion
F'cb. ''·

Onl.' rongres.'t lonal source suid
the ques tioning of McFarlane
would I~' in sharp contra&gt;! to th e
grueling four days rx perlencccl
by r~ t irrd Air Force Maj . Ge n.
Richard Secord, who opened the
hearings last week as the first
wit ness.

CONFERS WITH ATI'ORNEY - Former
National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane, .
right, confers with hls atlorney Leonard Garment

Gov. James Rhodes.
The survey showed 53 percent
approved or strongly approved of
the job Celeste is doing.
Another ~6 percent disapproved or st rongly disapproved.•
w'hi!e 21 percent had no opinion:
" He's trying to bring j obs to
Ohio and that's always the
number one priority, " said Mary
Burls, O(i, of Yellow Springs.
Said Joel Jernigan, 29. or
Springfield: " He' s done a lot
more lor sc hools than Rhodes."
The survey wa s based on
telephone Interviews with 1.056
Ohio aduil s.

RPa gan, making appeara nc·cs
Sunday in Al abama and North
Cui'Oil.na , sides tepped qu estions
uhout McF'uriane's ex pected tcs·
t !many. fir st report ed Sunda y by
The New York Times.
·
''I'm not going to take any
ques tion' now." he said at onp
point. " Wp' re her ~ for a different
purpose.... There' s nough con trover sy and we' ll leave it in
Was hington for today ."
What the president knew and
when he kn ew It is the critical
qwstion facing Inves tig ators as
thPy try to document full details
of hi s worst crisis. Reugun has
repea tedly llenled any pri or
knowledge of the rra n·Contra
diversion sc hr-mP, .~ aying he
knew only of private effort s to get
th e r brls non- mllitury ald.
But leaders of t he Senate
ro mmlll&lt;'c probing the scandal
too k their quest Ions on th at topica . IPP further Sunda y on ARC's
" ThI s Week with Oa v hl
11rinklcy. "

this mornlnfl' prior to testifying before the ·
congressional committee looking into the Iran·
Contra arms scandal.
.

•

�Monday, May 11. 1987
"•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Commentary

1. .....
'

.

Monday, May 11, 1987

'

.
....

! ••.

Scandalous evangelist ---~-Ge_or_ge_P_lag_en_z

The Daily Sentinel
Ill C&lt;&gt;urt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

"'

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.'

~rb

rs:m~ ~L.-.-,~r::::~,~-

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publl•her/ Controller

....
• .

A MEMBE R of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
• :· A ssocla11on and the American Newspaper Publls hNs Associa tion.

..

LETT' ERS OF OP INION arP w e l co ~ They !Jlould be ll.'ss than .nJ words
' ·Jong. All Jet ler s arc su h)CC II oedltlng and mu st br&gt; signed w!th name, address and
• • .l elt&gt;phone number . No un signed letters will be p:bll ~hed . Letters shoulrl be In
•

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt. Ohio

Aimee Semple Me Pherson mel
David Hut ton in the choir loft. He
sang, in the choir of the ,Angelu s
Templ e in Los Angeles , which
·she built and wh ere she was the
minist er.
Th e flamboyant eva ngelist
made no secret of the fact she
was madl y in Jo ve , Shortly after
they wer e married in !931 , a
report er cover ing her arrival in
Boston noted I hal "all the way "
from t he airport to the hotel , the
couple engaged In one long,
lingering, sweeping embra ce."
"It wa s love at first si ght. "
Aimee told the newsmen. "I
loved hi s beautiful voice. I love
his m an li ness. He's a r eal man.

good tas tl', add rN;sln g Issues, not JX&gt;fs ona ll tles .

THe
;Back.'ttairs at the White House

God bless him and amen.".
Added David, her plump 212pound spouse of less than a
month. " She's th e sweetest lit lie
girl in the world. God bless her.
It's my first marriage and my
last. fn Gop we trust."
Less than two yeMs later, Jhe
co nstant lovers had separated
and In three yea rs they were
divorced . David became involved in a breach-of-promise
suit flied by a chqru s girl he had
met before marrying Aimee. He
was found guilty. That did it for
Aimee; he was her third husband
and the last.
II this episode in the life of
Aimee Semple McPherson lefl

her flock gasping, It was only one
of many episodes in h&lt;'r life that
did . Feuds with her mother,
church uproars and co urt bat lies
- along with her own brand of
happy evangelistic fervor made Aimee the most -talkedabout woman preacher In
history.
She was always good copy. The
fact ' that she was photogenic
didn't hurt. Reporters referred to
her " bright red hair" and " figure
of a schoolgirl."
She was found dead in a hotel
room from an overdose of sleeping pills in 1944 (the coroner said
death was accldentall ; the cur·
lain fell on "the last giddy

.
RElALIW oF B~ING A~~Ke oFFir~R

;Press
and
government
•'
.
&gt;

The president also told the publishers the story of a particular
Pditor "w ho j ust wouldn ' t admi t to any mistakes ever in his paper."
"Everyth i ng in his paper had the weight of srrip ture." Reagan
said. "A nd then early one mor ning hr rccived a ca ll from an outraged
subscriber who protested that his name wa s listed In that morning' s
obi tuary sec tion as havin g di ed th e previous day. And the editor said,
'And wher e did you say y&lt;&gt;u were ca llin g from ?' "
Wh en President Reaga n was del'p iy invo lved in bolstering the
Sa lvadora n !ZDVC'rnmC'nf agai ns l an insurgency, hf' rons lant ly
attacked the leftis t guerrilla s for try ing to des lroy the co unt ry's
" lnlrast rurture," mean ing its en&lt;'rgy fa ciliticcs. roads. bridges and
so on.
When Benjami n Linder. a n year -old American engineer wa s
kill ed by the Co nt ras while he worked on a ·hydro-elert r ir plant in
N ica ragua 10 brin g electricit y to the nearby villa ges . a Wh ite House
ai de wcrl' asked aiJoullhc ar llv ll y ollheConlras, lhe U.S. supported
rl'bel s. Why wet'c such far lilt les being bl own up and workPr s on th em
killed '! !he aid e was a5kc d.
His rep ly : "What wou ld you ha ve t hem all ark."
F irs ! ludy Na ncy Rru ,gtw . who makes " no llpolo_g ics" for lhP
proll'r lion of hN hu sba nd, ha s madr it clear to aides tha t she wqnts
the prt•sld&lt;•nl lo haw ample rt•s t on his trip to Europe to Europe June
:l -12.
De spite his "feast and fa m ine" reg imen. Reaga n st ili feels the
effpcl of jl-t la g l ike eve ry one else an d a coup le of day s ar c being set
aside whorl' hr wi ll br able to rest up before the Economi c Summit in
Venire .
Tlw prt•sid&lt;'nl It'll asleep during hi s last visit to the Val ira n to meet
with Pope .John Paull I. and the fi rs t lady does not want a repea t of
1hat inddrnl.
Siner then l hr staff ha s lea rned l o build in rrsl limr on all his
journeys abroa d l or the 1-'rcsidrnt to ca tch up on hi s sleep.

Nanry Heag un sa.v s shr nrvl'r drPa med she would be "as bu sy as I
am" liv ing In thl' Whit e House. Sh&lt;' told the nrwspapN publ isher s:
" In six yNtrs. I 've hosted R4 Christm as parties. There ar c hundreds
and hundreds of olfl rlai dinners. iunr hes. teas, receptions and
polit leal events to at tend ."
" Thl'rc are rea lly not enough hours In the da ~." she adds.
She also has some advirr for her surcessor s:
-Bl' ~o ur s l'i f.
- Do what yo u'rr• lnl cr estr cl l n.
- Don't be ufraid to vole&lt;' your opi nions to your hu sband or staff.
- Don' t th ink it 's a li go ing Jo be "a glamor ous. fairy ta lc life. It' s
hard work."
~~. -Never wear a ring on .1·our right hand in a re&lt;·eiv ing line. It 's
: always a llt tir old lady who will sq ueeze so hard "she'll bri ng you to
kn0es ."
- You can m ake a d\Hen 'ncc in the lives of others.

::Your
"&lt;
•

•, • Whit &lt;' House spokesman Marlin Flt zwatCI' made no bones about hi s
!J\It l'restln thr Iran arms -Contra aid hea r ings th&lt;Jt started on Ca pit ol
: Hili. On thr first da y of the hearings, F'l tzwat r r sa id l'arly In the
~or nlng : " I 'ro going to br glued to the tube. This is so exr ltlng I 've
•')!read)' had my fi rs t cigar
Z:· In 1he current atmosphrrt'. smoking ha s almost become verboten In
~he Whitr House.

·tteuers to the ·editor

.! .~

Student
Council says 'thanks '
.

'.· The Eastern High Schoo l Stu·
:~ent Co uncil would like to thank
:a11 the various bu si nesses who
:nave generously con tributed to
:,out sponsoring the Aml'rlcan
1Red Cross Blood Drive .
• Through thr help of our com·
munlty bu sinesses . we have
:collected near ly 200 pints of
!)llood . Th r American Red Cross
.CPnter In our ar ea services the
!il'rt·State region consisting of
\Ohio. W~s t Virginia , and Ken·
~ckv . Over three hundred (3001
~p it s of blood are needed dally In
~:his Tri-State ar ea -a ll coming
:rfom volunteers.
•.; Sponsoring the Blood Drive has
1tleen very eduealiona I lor us.
~ppmxlmately twent y st udents
jWork durin!{ a blood drive at
.various jobs: Chairman of the

'

Day. ~qu lpm ent movers, registration typists. taking temper ature and pulsr In the donor room.
labeling and numberin!( contain er s, and In the canteen. The
experience has taught us much
about organizing, planning, and
being responsible. Most Importantly It has taught us how much
people truly need people and how
our schools truly depend upon
our communities for ·our continued success.
No 011e really knows the
Importance of giving blood until
we hear of ali the hundred s of
lives It ass ists or saves on a dally
basis. Your help In sponsorship Is
greatly appreciated. Thanks for
helping us give the "Gift of Life."
Eastern Student Council
Todd A Wilson , President

.

~oday · in history
'•1•.

By United Press International
:; Today Is M onday. May
the 13lth day of 1987 with 234 to follow .
'&lt; The moon Is movin g toward Its full phase.
'• The morning stars are Ve~us, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars pr·e Mercury and Mars.

n.

Even after she wa s dead, there
were some who were not convinced that the world had heard
the las t of Aimee Semple
McPherson . Her ornate casket
was fitted with a telephone with a live connection to the
Angelus Temple- in case Aimee
would relurn to life and want to
get In touch with her old friends.
Well. hasn't she done that
before - in a way?
She was wading In the sea off
Ocean Park. Calff., one . May
afternoon in 1926, when she
disappeared from sight. II was
generally assumed she had
drow:~ed .

•..

By HELEN THOMAS
,•
UPI While llous1! Reporter
' . WASHINGTON - Pres idPnt Reagan is oft en quotes Thomas
.Jerfcrson wilh r eg,, ·d to the press and government . But with a lot
skepticism.
He .told the American Newspaper Publishers Association i n a
speec h on Elli s I sland:
·
" You all kn ow wh at Thoma s Jefferson sa id of the press - thai
;i(ivcn the rhoirr of a govrnmcnt wi thout newspapers, or newspapers
"W IIhoul a govcrnmPnl. he wouldn't hesit ate for a second 10 choose the
latter."
"Of ro urSl'. .Jeft('r son sai d th at befo re hr was president ." he
quipped .
·
Reagan delivered the sa me Jefferso n quot e to reporters a lew yrars
ago durin g a reception in Tokyo, so metime alter th e invas ion of
Grenada. and the bl ackout of the press.
"What abou t Crenada." a reporter asked .
" .leflrrson would have los! th e war, " Reagan replied.

spasm " !till now) of reviv alism
in America .

••

•

A memor ial service at Angelus
Tempie drew thrpngs. The collection netted $40,000. Then, five
weeks later, Aimee showed up in
Douglas , Ariz . She had an exciting tale of having been kidnaped
and taken, blindfolded, to a shack
in the desert. She escaped from
her abductors, she said, by using
the ragged edge of a tin can to cut
the ropes binding her hands and
feet.
Scoffers 'said it was all a hoax
and a publicity stunt . Others
whispered - none too quietly that
Aimee was off on a
rendezvous with Ken Ormiston,
the engineer on her radio program . Witnesses reported seeing
the two at a cottage at the seaside
resort of Carmel.
When authorities could find no
evldencl' of a kidnaping, the ease
went to the grand jury and Aimee
was held for trial. .But the case
was later dropped.
America has had lew evange·
listie characters the equal of
"Sister Aimee."

Arms give-away _____Ja_c_k_A_n_d_e_rs_o_n_a_nd_D_'a_le_Va_n_A_u_a
WASHI NGTON- The Centra l
most come to the country's is up to the military in telligence
Intelligence Agency has spent $3
southern port, Kar achi.
staff to distr ibute them to the
billion on arms lor AFgh an
There cust oms agents look the groups. A total of 200 troops and
re bels - hall of th at amount put
other way as the shipments 11 offi cers under t he orders of
up by Am eri ca n taxpaye r s. Yet,
labeled as food produ cts. engi- Br ig. Gen s. Reza and Youssef
incr edibl y, not a single American
neering parts and such - are perform the logistical chore of
dec ides who gets the w~ons.
loaded aboard trucks and trains transportation and dis tr ibution.
The CIA l eaves those decisions
hea ded to distribution wareYoussef, who has a repulallon
to a sec ret live-member di rectohouses in Peshawar and Quetta. for Integrity , has at tempted not
ra te of hi gh-level Paki stani offi .
These are the two gateway cities only to give the most deser ving
ci als. wh o h ave their own
to Afghanista n which now bul ge rebel groups the ri ght arms but to
agend a. This mea ns th e CIA 's
wi th muj aheddin and non- help the mujaheddln plan batlargest cover t assistan ce procombata nt refugees .
lies. But he is an exception.
gram since Vi etnam has made
The CIA's orders are unequl vo·
Intelligence sources (including
rich sugar daddies out of Pakis- ca l: No CIA offi cial Is to have CIA officials) and Pakistani
ta ni gener als.
direct co ntact wit h thl' mu jahed- sources charge th ai some pakisFrom our Investigati on, which
din, unless it's to !rain them on tani soldiers have become rich In
Included a tri p by Dale V an At Ia th e Ameri ca n Stinger anti · t he process.
to Pakis tan, we have fou nd that
a lrcra ft wt"::pon. ·Because the
Another intellljlence source,
th e CI A's sec r et arms pipel ine to
Paki sta ni s run I he risk of retalla- however. maint ains thai "the
th e muja heddln Is riddled wit h J.Ion from Ru ssi a. the CIA lets Paks (In genl'ral) are good
such opportunities lor co rrup- them decide which competing so ldiers. and they want to help.
tion. The losers are th e poor ly
rebel factions gel what weapon s. There Is a l(reat seriousness on
equipped j(Uer r lllas fi ghting the
For several years . those decl· . lhl'ir part. They r eally want to
Soviets In Afghanistan and the sions were mad e by a five- win this war ." He cited Youssef
American peopl e whose congres - member committ ee Including in particular as the man whO
siona l represe nt alives h ~ve been Maj. Gen. Akhtar Abdul Rah- keeps hi s co lleagues honest.
bl'lrayed by the CIA .
m an, head of military lnteillThe Paki stani generals are
Here' s how the Paki stani par- . gence; Gen. Rahlmuddln , chair- also charged with transferring
lion of the pipeline works:
man of the Pakistani joint chiefs Intelligence packets thE' CIA
The CIA purchases Sovil'l - of sta ff; Gen. Faza l Haq, the gathers for the mujaheddln.
deslgned weapons primarily former governor of Peshawar, They often Include satellite phofr om E gypt and th e People's and Foreign Minister Yaqub tos of Soviet troops and arma·
Republic of Chin a. Some Chinese Kh:in . (Both Haq and Rahimud - m en! emplacements Inside Afghweapons are shipped In convoys dln recentl y retired. and Rah· a ni s t a n. Some Include
along Karakoram Highway, a man was recently made v ice information - from Intercepted
· r·ugged r oad cut through high chief of the Army staff. I
conversa tion s between Soviet
mounta ins in to Paki stan . But
Once the arms are assigned, It
aircra ft. The muj aheddln have

privately complained; that the
packets are usually opened by
Pakistani officials before they
receive iheJII - which suggests
the Information may be
compromised.
Still. one source Intimate with
the entire operation concludedas we have In previous columns
- that " the opportunities for
diversion and corruption are far
greater before the arms get to
Karachi than after" . ·
HIGH-TECH HIJINKS: The
Moscow ,embassy spy scandal
ha s dominated 'tile headllnes,"'itit
Intelligence agents are just as
concerned about a less visible
securlly breach: !he diversion of
htgh-teeh secrets to the Soviets
through our allies.
.
Int elligence r eport s name
West Germany and Japan as the
two worst technological sieves .
The CIA Identified 493 probabl e
Instances of high-tech diversion
to the Soviet bloc during the
1966-1982 period. West Germany
was belil'ved responsible for 243
of the leak s; Japan wa s blamed
for 85.
How was It done? Shlpptng
containers were mislabeled;
false addresses were put on
shipments to disguise their true
destination ; forelgncustomsol!l·
clals were bribed outright by the
KGB .

..

They don't make clowns like that anymore_w_e_st
WASHJNGON - Use of th!!
Senate Ca ucus Room. also known
affectionately by some old·
t lmer s In the press ~allery as the '
"Cirr us" room, to kick off ye t
another major congressional invest igalion necessa rily evoked
ghos ts of hearin gs past .
Scns. Est s Kefauver . .Josep h
McCarthy , John McClellan and
Sa m ErVi n Jr. were among the
name mentlone&lt;t in these rem inisccnses. And th at just took care
of some of th e questioners.
Thercal so wa salongparadeof
witnesses, with members of the
Mafia perhaps standing out.
Younger reporters, when they
aren' t preoccupied with the sex
lives of presidential candidates,
sometimes rail it Cosa Nostra.
but I always fijlured they were
just showing off their knowledge
of a foreign language. Cosa
Nost ra litera lly translates as
"our lhlng." ,
Either way , they probably are
r eferring to the underworld. You
r emember !he underwor ld , don' t
you?
Recent history ma y show that
organized crime was Imported to
this country from Sicily during
Prohibition to give AI Ca pone
something 10 do in the evenings
when he wasn' t rum- running.
Admittedly , hanging arou nd a
Mafia clubhouse Is not everybody's Idea of a swinging evenin g.
but then ol' AI just bootlegged the
stuff; he didn' t have to drink 11,
too.
I use the term "rrcent history "

here because I don't rega rd
any thing tha i happened during
mv lifetIm e as truly hi storic .
. Capone may have swigged booze
wi th the bes t of them. for all I
know . He mi ght well have drunk
up most of the profi ts due hi s
underworld buddies.
Anyway, . judgi ng from thl'
r eferen ce work f consulted to
refresh my memory. Ca pone was
somet hing ol a ladles· man. The
ca use of his death was given as a
social disea se.
Had ol' AI come along a few
decades l ater . he might have
been among the first· celebrities
diagnosed as havlng' AIDS. But
th at Is water over the dam . so to
speak. Or at leas t flowing past his
native land .
Ca pone, incldenlally, always
claimed he was born in Brooklyn .
But Naples, Italy, seems more
likely .
AI any rate. he apparen tly took
the poetic inj unction lo "see
Naples and die'· seriously . As
A merica's first gangster, he was
generally credited with having
Instigated the St. Valentine's
Massacre In Chicago.
There Is, of course. no evidence
that Capone ever was a member
of the Mafia , whtch was also
known In Sicily as the "Black
Hand Society." iCupo Mana
Socteta ?).
The Cosa Nostra, 1ft halls your
preference. kept lousy membership records, lor some strange
reason.
Capone mu st have kept his

hands pretty clea n. un til the
Internal Revenue Ser vice ca ught
up with him . So I assume
mem bership disclaimers were
valid .
As fo r the Caucus Room. It
l ikewise was the scene, I believe,
of a midget sitting on ,J.P.

Morgan 's l ap. But tha t wa s bark
In the days before Capone and
oth er expatriat es invented the
American underworld . Since
then, the M afia has supplied
many of the silent witnesses .
So much for recent hi stor)·.

Phils; bees sting
Reds, Power, 4-3
By RICK VAN SANT
"Beca~se ·of the sun, I didn't
CINCINNATI IUPI) - Ted even see the ball until It was
Power go! stung 'by a bee Sunday, about five feet away from my
then by Juan .Samuel and Lance glove." said Stone. "I just trlj!d to
Parrish.
get In position where I thought
The Cincinnati pitcher was !he ball was going,"
stung by a bee on the Index finger
Clnclnnatl'manager Pete Rose
of his right pitching hand In the was unhapy that his team blew a
first Inning. That didn't hurt him good scoring opportunity in the
much .
second Inning. Buddy Bell
But later, Power was stung for opened the Inning with a single
home runs by Samuel and and moved to third on a double by
Parrish. Those definitely hurt as Bo Dlaz. But then Dave Concepthe PhHadelphla Phlllles buzzed cion grounded out. Ron Oesler
the Reds 4-3.
struck out and Power filed our.
"That was what killed us The game was halted for . 17
minutes In the first Inning runners on second and third and
becau se of a swarm of bees on the no outs and we didn't come close
field . Players cleared the turf to scoring," said Rose. "You've
while three bee experts with nets got to score In that situation.
were summoned to catch and That's why It turned out to be a
4·3 game Instead of 4-4. If we had
chase the bees away.
The delay came Immediately scored when we should have. we
after Power wa s stung while he could still be out there playing."
And dodging bees.
pitched to leadoff hitter Milt
Thompson.
"I got stung on my right Index
finger, but It didn't affect my
pitching." said Power. "During
the delay, they put bee sting
medicine on It and Iced II. ·
"The bees kept flying around
during the rest of the game, but I
tried to keep my head ·down. It
seemed like the bees wanted to go
for your head. I didn't want to get
By RICK VAN SANT
stung In the head or neck because
CINCINNATI (UPi l - For !he
when I was five years old I got third time in 11 years, bees
stung In the neck, it got swollen visited Riverfront Stadium Sunanq bothered my breathing. II day and buzzed a baseball game.
wa s prelty serious."
And Cincinnati pitcher Ted
Power. 3·1. who lasted eight Power felt their sting.
innings, struck out a career- high
Sunday 's game between the
11 batters but suffered his first Philadelphia Phlllles and Cincin loss alter nine straight victories nati Reds, won 4-3 by the Philltes,
over two seasons.
was delayed 17 minutes because
Mea nwhile, Philadelphia's of a swarm of bees on the field.
Shane Rawley pitched a honey of
Power was stung on his right
a game for seven Innings. ,Raw- pitching hand as he pitched to
ley, 2·2, took a five-hit shutout lea~olf batter .Milt Thompson
Into the eighth, when he finally and the game wa s halted at that
was tagged for a three- run point to rid the field of bees.
homer by Eric Davis.
The players cleared the field
and
three . bee experts were
"The bees were ·fly lng real
summoned.
They spent about 15
close to my face, but I tried to
concentrate on the game, not the mlntes waving nets and colleet bees," said Rawley , who wound lng bees between home plate and
up pitching an eight · .hitter over first base . ·
Before the g~me, a massive
seven and 2-3 innings . "I noticed
of bees had lodged on the
swarm
the bees when the catcher threw
batting
cage. Although a bee
the ball back, bul1 wasn't about
to start ·thinking about the bees expert removed the queen bee
and most of the other bees
when I wass pitching."
dispersed, some bees continued
Steve Bedrosian got the final
to fly around the fi eld as !he
out of the eighth and then struck
game
started .
out the side In the ninth for hi s
CinclnDali
manager Pete Rose
second save.
noted
that
Sunday
was Mother' s
Samuel cracked a two-run
Day.
homer to left . his second of the
"You expect a bunch of bees
year, after Milt Thompson 's bunt
around
ihe queen bee on Mothsingle In the sixth to give thl'
er's
Day,"
said Rose.
Phi !lies a :l -0 lead. Parrish hit a
Riverfront
Stadium's first bee
solo homer. his fourth of the
attack
11
years
ago was nationseason, to left in the seventh to up
ally televised. During an Aprll17 .
Philadelphia's lead to 4-0.
1976 game, bees Invaded - and
In the Reds' eighth, Tracy
took over - the visitors' dugout.
Jones and Barry Larkin singled
The
game was delayed 35 minand Davis hit a three· run homer
utes
whil e Reds ' general man to left, his 13th of the year and
ager
Dick Wagner and other s
six th home run In six games
t
~
led
to
evict the bees.
again st Philadelphia :
On
May
26, 1980, another
Philadelphia got Ia run. In thl'
swarm of bees landed on the
fourth when Jeff Stone walked,
raced to third on Samuel's single · backstop screen and remained
there In a huge pack. Th e game
and scored on Mike Schmidt's
wasn't
delayed , but fans and
sacrifice fly to center.
pla
yers
worried about wha t a
Left llclder Stone took a home
foul
-tip might do.
hard
r un away from Ron Oester In the
Although
Power gave up two
filth. Stone raced to the waiL
home runs Sunday and was th e
leaped and got his glov&lt;&gt; above
losing pltchN, he refused to
the eight-foot hlg.h fence to grab
blame
the bee sling on his right
Oester' s drive,
Index finger .

Incident
third time
in 11 years

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U l"i ..at

By ,JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writ er
The next few days should
determin e how well the World
Champion Mets handle a slump.
The Mets. whose longest losing
strea k all la st season was l our
games, lost three straight in
Atlanta th is weeke nd and they
entl'r a two-game set In Cinci ~ ­
natllooklng like a Florida State
League tea m .
" This is what th e~ rai l a tea m

slump. I guess." Mets outfielder
Mooklr Wilson sa id Sunda y aft er
New York dropped an 8-7 dec l·
sio n to the Braves.
Atl ant a won the gamew ilh two
runs in the eighth aft er New York
had taken a 7·61 ea d with six run s
in the top of the Inn ing.
" The Mets are a tough ballclub
and any time yo u beat someone
like that thr·ee times In a row. i t
rea ll y does help you ment all y,"
sai d Braves right fielder Dale

'

'

Murphy, wh o clouted hi s third shilled Howard .J ohnson to
hom er In as m any days.
short stop.
The Mets have been beating
themsclvrs lat el y, . so mething
.Johnson ro m mined two l'rrOr§
·they rarely did l as t season. and it
Sa tu r da y and another Sunda~,
has made Manager Dave .foh n- and hr looks Insecure at the
so n furiou s_
poslllon . The Mets need Rafae l
" The meni al err ors arc aw fu l. Santana ba ck al shortstop to
inexcu sabl e," ,John son said .
bring st abillI y bar k 10 the Infield.
Th e defense has been shodd y,
Dave Johnson will not !aull
part lcularl y the left s ldP of I heir Individual players because "to
infield sin ce .Johnso n lnsel'led do that would be dlsruptlv ~.
Dave Magadan at third and . Words would just come In anger.

T.ornadoes humble North Gallia Pirates
ROCK SPRINGS - In the
wake of a devastating Tornado,
the dus t on the Meigs High field
set tl.ed to the tune of a whopping
24-5 opening r ound tournament
win for the Southern Tornapoes

over the North Gall Ia Pirates.
The hard-hitting Tornadoes of
Coach Mlck Winebrenner pounded
out 17 hils (all singles) enroule 10
the Important win .
The win IJoost s Southern lo 12-4

Collins top candidate
on All-District Team
JACKSON - Seven area Class
" A" baseball pla yers. Includin g
four from the SVAC. were chosen
10 the Southeast Oh io A ll -District
tea m here Sund ay at Jack so n
Hi gh School where Eastern star
Eddie Collins was also selected
to first tra m All-Stale by member s of the assocla tln.
The all -di strict rrco!(ll itlon for
seniors only Is separated lnlo two
divisions; East and WC$1. and
wher e nine players from each of
Ohio 's three classifications were
voted upon for All-District honors.
Coaches from both divisions then
convene to select player s Mservlng of all·sl ate honors.
Eastern 's Eddie Collins led all
distri ct ca ndidaII'S wllh a total of
25 point s, while Bainbridge Paint
Valley first ba seman Joe Cowman earn ed 20. Both Collin s and
Cowman earned ail -sia l &lt;' honors
with Lu casville Valll'y ' s Alien
Alley ea rning fi rst alternate. The
duo will joi n other players sta tewide In the Ohio Stal e Ali -Star
games to be played Ju ne 14 and
15 In Col umbu s.
In addition to All-Stale honors
Co llin s hea ded the Distri ct tra m
with a .443 balling average (27for-611. 26 runs scor ed. seven do·
ubles. 26 RBI 's, an d 15 stolen
ba ses to date . Th e senior hu r il'r
Is currently 6-0 pitching, giv ing
up only 8 runs {3 earned before
Frida y l in thirty -eight Inni ngs of
work. When not pitching Colli ns
Is star ting short stop for the 17·2
Eagles .
Joining Co ll ins on the All-Ots·
trlct sq uad from the Immediate
area In Class "A" wcrl' Rob Wll,son, Scott Shamhart , and Bill
Shust from Trimble: Richard

Hurt from North Gall Ia; Sca n Co lley and Danny Patrick from
Southwestern .
In 14 games S!'an Co lley Is bat li ng .426 121-471 with two home
runs and a line defensiv e record
In cent erleld . Patri ck owns a .380
avt'fagc 119·50! wit h 15 RBI lor
!he Highland ers , also possessi ng
a fine pit ching slate. The six -fool ·
seven. 260 pound senior hurlc·r
owns a 0.70 ji:RA , givin g up just
l our ea rn ed run s, 27 hits. posting
53 strikeout s and Issuing .lust 16
walks In 40 Innings of wor k.
North Ga llla's Richard Hur t
earned All -Distric t recog nition
with 2o stolen ba se s and a .:106
bat ting average, his lowest In

three yea rs as a sta rt r r .
Th rPl' ·time TVC honor('(' Robby
Wilson headed a trio of Trlmbit'
players on the dlslrlrl squad. Wilson owns a .400 balling average
and fine slal r as top hurler for !he
Tomcats.
Also makin g lhr team werp
St oll Shamh arl with a ..125 aV(' r·
age and Bill Sc hust a .275 hitler in
thP Iough TV C conf!'rence.
The co mplete l ist or Ali -Di s·
trkt nomlners wil l 1&gt;1' rr lt•ased
later th is wrek .
Southwcswn Coach Jac k
JamP ~.

a V('t(•rcm of ~wvr n yPa rs.

wi ll be lhr Cla ss " A " Coach of
th e Yea r In the Sout heast Di s·
lrlct all-star gamr . .James ha s
one SVAC diamond lith' 10 his
credl! as well as Sf'v&lt;·n d runm)r ·
up fin ishes .
The Southea st All-Star Cla ssl r
wi ll be held Sund oy. Ma y 24 at
Ohio Uni versit y's T r&lt;t utwein
Field. where a doublf' headf'r will
begin at 12 noon.

ovl'ra ll and 11 -2 In the SVAC.
North Ga llla started out with a
ban g to take a ~ -0 l ead In thr first
two Innings, as Ri chard Hurt
loo ped a single, followed by a
walk, and an err or, thP sco re 1·0.
In the second canto Eastern
walked , Watterson reached on
an error. followed by a two-run
single by Shane Glassburn. th1~
scorl' now 3·0.
Southern fo ught ba ck to 3-2 In
the bottom of th r seco nd as
Shawn Cunnin gham reached on
an error, M ike Wolford walk ed,
Mark Port Pr reac hed on an er·
ror , and Mike Hill reached on an

r rror .

fanned seven and walked two In· a·
fine effort .
"
Cunnin gham led Southern hit·
ling wllh t hret' singles and three
RBf ;s alon~t with the healthy bat
of John Riffle with three hits an~
!our RB'I's . Porter had two sin',
gies and three RBI 's . Barry
McCoy threP singles, Amburgc~
two st ngiPs . and hit s.by Wolford,
Stout. Lisl e. und Shawn Arnott .
W&lt;•ich had a double and single
for North Gallla, while Glassburn,'
Hurt, and Petrie each singled. ':
Soul hern, 12-4, now plays Crooks·
ville, 2-11 , In the second round of the
sectional at Meigs High School'
WNJnrsday at 4:30. Admission l,s
$2.00 per person .
· ·
· Crooksville scored a ~- 2 comefrom-behind victory over Sout~ ­
western In Saturda y's second
ga mr a s senior hurler Dan Pa :
tri ck suffered a uisappolnlln g
Joss dr·spil e pll chlng a two- hllt~ r .
Southwes tern had l ed 2-0 goln~
Into thr six th Inning, but a walk,
rrror , fie lder's chOicl' and aneth·
rr Prror resulted In the :l-2 loss.

Southern took the lead, 5-.1, In
the th ird as Chris Stout wal~l"d.
Shawn Cunni ngha m walked.
Wolford rr·ached on an error. and
.lol\n Riffle singled.
fn till' fifth Inning Southern
broke the ga m e on on eight
straight singles. Barry M cCoy
st arted It al l, fo ll owed IJy Stout ,
Dave Amburgey. Cunningham.
Wolford . Hlflle. Lis le. and Por l &lt;'r , !hi' score now l !i-.1
Llnc!4corc:
A bi g six th Inning turned thP
gaml' into a lopsided affair as North Ga llia ... .. 120 002- 5 57
Southrrn .......... . 023 289-24 11 5
Nor th Callla pll ching struggiNJ
Batlrrles: Porter cWPi and
to finish th r game.
Riffle.
Hurt ! LPI and Glas sburn.
Sophomore M"rk Porter pick('(]
up th•• win, his second varsity win , - - - - - - - - - - - In a row over North Gallla. Porter

REVIVAL
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION

----

&amp;31 JACKSON Pllf · tn.a&amp; WEST

BAAG.IIN MATIMEES SA!IJIIOAY '
S IIND~Y • ILL SEllS I UD
~~ISSION

EVERY TUESDAY $2 .50

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MAY'""" 14 _j
THURSDAY ~

Co . Ad . 31
Bald Knob ·

thf'l.l

Stiverville A~ .

MAY 20 to 25
7:30 P.M.
Rev. Clyde Ferrell

Special Sh1gerc
Nl htl
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Giants regain division lead; Mets beaten

C'hlr ap Ill NMI· l'nrk. ni1h$

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I ..•

K11n•~~&gt;o fM ) 111 Tor•nh1, nlll"hl
~lllltH •tW1U Ill ftaltlfiNif'f', flill"hl

bees showed no piety on either Phllllcs Shane Rawh•y (Jell~ or:
Cincinnati'• Ted Power. The ganw was hlllled ahout20 minutes as ·
lwc keepers sprayed the arcl\.

So • lllllh· lll~ttft.lll ....

m.rlllt ':o'!I , II: Jl p.rlt
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'"'":M

DANGEROUS PLACE - The pitching mound at Cincinnati's
Riverlronl Stadium was a dangerous place Sunday as a swarm of

. ....

'

�Page- 4--:- The Daily Sentinel

....- ..... . .

~hesapeake win~
By .JIM SOULSBV
Sentinel Staff Writer
Chesapeake's girls scored a
rotal of 84.5 team point s to easily
· outdis ta nce Meigs with 51 and
Warren with 28.&gt; In a triathon at
Me igs High Sc hool.
Jenny Miller. Jenny Swartz .
and Wendy Kloes finis hed first In
the high jump , 300 hurdles and
:noo meters respectively . The
Mauderettes pos ted four seco nd,
third and fourth place fin is hes In
the 16 event meet.
In a dual meet wl! h War ren.
the Marauder lads were bcsted67
to 6.'i. Gera ld Moore placed firs t
the shot put a nd pole vault, Rex
Haggy captured the 1600 meter
a nd 3200 met er races a nd Joh n
Risk lhe 300 meter hurdl es. The
tea m also had five second and
seven third place finishes.
Complete resulls:

..

)n

',j rf~

11····11"

HIKh ,Jump:rh:'Rn)' Mill t"r , (.M) ;;• I" ;
Dt•an~

Hauy OW) 4'K" :

M~t eb

(\\' ) and

l..url(r (fll 1 ~ ' M " for a tie.
·
l.on~~t .Jump: Th lU;ktr Wll 1 H ' .~ Yt' ' .Jody
'fay lor, I M) 14' 4~11 ", Hutil:o;ta ((:H )
14'1 V1".,St:hail.d(W l I:I'K'',
, Shot Put : i\k £~ rs {fil l :JX'511t' , Shnlh·r
t 1CH) 3TH" ; Ht•1dlll'r Wo ods ( Ml 29'6:' 1 ",
,Jody CUI'itf'r fM) 211' 10%'' ,

' • DIMcuM: Shafl t•r (( ' H) 10 1' . ,\ klor'l'l (( 'II )

, K9'6", SuMan 1\rnold.

( M)

K:l'.t", Nikki

fWl IB.5.

' 100 Ml'tf'rl'l: Tonkf'f'}' 1('11 J lUI, Th :u•k1•r
'.(CII) U .O, Hrns l••y l W) 11.1 , Mu.rk."i, ( \\' J

Uf

· ' ilfr. Mt•t••r

Rf'l lly: fht'!Ul('U'all. •· l: ftli.7,
MPII{JII, 1:3K.5, \\'urrl'n, 2: 07.
1600 Ml•lt•r!&lt;i! Rurrlng rf H 1 5: 1\!U, Hull
(K') G: 3:1.t, Cu thy Slott.~. IMJ G::ill.!t,
OltRJC totl (\\' J 7: l!i.K.
, , 4011 Mcl..r l!t•lay: ( 'h• osttpf•uk•• .i5:!1,
,Mt•lg" JG.9.
', 460 Mt'l f'fl'i: M11rk..; 1\\' J IJ$. 7, r"almt•r {\\IJ
00. t, l!llldUit• (C'H) 70. 7, ,Jt•nn." Mlll1•r I M)
·' 11 .:1.
:1011 llurdl ('!'l : .J(•nn.' ' S\oll·arh: (M) ;,u.3,
J.ar a:t• (( 'Ill :H. i, 8rcnnt'r f( ' H ) :iU,

KOOMt'ten~ : Burrtn ~ !'CHJ :! :31.7, Fl~·
nin""" IW) 2: ~8.!, II"' ley CBrr 'M) 5 1. ~.

a:

TM-mrn)' KM.urt (M ) 2:: !U.3.
200 Meler8: Thu.cker (CH) 29.0, .fod y
Tay lor fM) 29.0, Marb CWJ t9.21 Work
fWI 3l. l . ·
3100 •' ll"l""': Wendy Klo.. (MI I3:3U,
Hodl (W) 14: 14.e, PlUI§mol'f CCH ) 15:04.4,
Pllt m1U1 iC H J 16: 5;l.5.
1600 Mt11t•r Rthay : Che~apeake 4:37.a,
Me ill' -1:52. 1. Warrt&gt;n 5: 01.4.
Hl~~;h .Jump: Clt&gt;m (WJ 6'0", Hu~~:hey (WJ
5'H", .J.R. Kli t ht'll tMJ 5'6''.

, l.qng.Jump: Rntthok (W) IK' 9Yt ", t.:hrbi
Sm ith fM) Ul'7a,l" • C IE'm (WJ 17' 7%".
Shol Pul : Gt•utld Moore (M ) :t9'111ti",

l&gt;e nn)' W1•J s~ (M) 39'i", Dt"nnlil Boothe
(MI .19'6" .
Olsr:us: Paul Oatl ey ( M) I 13't" , Thodl'
(\\' J 103' 11 ", Dt•nni.M Boothe (l't1 ) 101'3" ,
J,oll' Vuul1 : Gt&gt; r&lt;lld Moore 10', .J~ m e'l
1-li&amp;UVUR'f' (M ) 916" , AndtrKoo (W J 8'6".
32011 Mf'tt•r ~lay : Meip 9: U.6; W11rrt&gt;n
9:1H
1no Mdf'r HurdiCH: Rnohok (\\') : 16.3,
i\ndt•rNon r\\'): 19.8. J()hn Ris k {M) : 19.7.
100 Met••r DaMh: Rnobok (W) : II. i, .J.R.
Kltt·h1•n (1\1 1 : 1'!. 0, Wes Howard(M J: 12. 1.

16nfl M' r tf'rs: Rex llaa:o CM) -1: 52.2.
(\\' ) 3: UI..i, Slolhlf"(WJ .i:28. t
40\t M('lf•r R4•1~ty : Mel~ 1:47.9.

"' all 1•r~~t

So uther n .l un lor Hig h Athletic
Boos ters . will meet 7 tonight
I Monday 1.

FIO,I'd da n lcd lhe crowd and
the Lakers ' defenders. hilling 12
of t:l shots from the field in the
fourth quarter to bring the
W.arrlors bar k from a 102·88
deflr ll &lt;li the end of th e third
period. He out scored the entire
Laker offe nse by 10 poin ts.
F loyd ll&lt;'gan penetrati ng early
In thr fou rth quart e r and seemed
to take adva ntage of lackadaslai
play on the part of the Laker
drfenSl'.
" I thought we celebrated a
lillie ear ly. We sho uld know
better than tha t.' ' said Lakers
guard Magic John son. " H ~
t Floyd I was doing It on transition
and he was doing It on the set
offense. Our weak side help was
ju~t awful In the fourth quarter."
Floyd's 51 total points were the
rnosl ever srored by a n opposing
player against the Lakers In a
playof! game and a career high
for the vetera n guard .

14~!601

1\ IJhrl"lon of 1\tultlnwdla, In•··

PubU:-ht'tl t •wr~· afll'rn oon. Mondlly
F'rldu y. 111 ('nun Sl.. Pll ·

1hrnu ~ h

nwnw, Ohlu. 1}\· lht• Ohio Val It'\' PuiJIl~ hln'r.: CI) IT1 pti n~' Mull inwdla .· lnl'..
Pomf•t·o.v . Ohio 4~ 7fi!) , P~ . ~ 2 - 2 \r~ . St•·
t' 1•nt1 ctn10s Pt\" lli J,; t~ pa id al P\mwt·n.v .
Oh io

Mr mbrr·: Unll r c1 Pt·r ss

lnl (' rnall o n:~l .

l nl;tnd D:1ll.\' Prrss A ssorln tlon a nc1rhr

Oh\{l N l'w .~p uprt' Assorlnl lon. Natlnnal
J\dwrl lslnJ! H r pl· r~rn l alh'( '. Br anham

Sal rs. '13.1 Th ird Avrnur.

N••w \' ork . Nf'w York 10017.
P0~'1'MAS'TF:R : ~· nd

Ohh1

addt'N'S ChHn!lVS '
Sfonl lnl'!. 11l Court ~1 ..

4 ~7ti!l .

Sl iBSfiUPTION RAT&amp;'

r lly Ca rrh•r or Motor Koutf'

one WN"k... ...........

............... $1.2;

Ont• Mo nth ............................ $5.45

On&lt;'

Y f't~r

.............................. $6!'1.011
SINGLE COP\'

PRICE

Dally .. ·................ .... ..........

2~

CPnt!l

Subo:albN!I not d£&gt;S1rln~ 10 pa y lh('C'ar·

rll·r may rrmll In advan ('f' dlrf'C't to
Th~ Dally Srnllnf'l on a 3, li or 12 monthOOs l,.. CrNIII will lx' ~lvf'n r nr r [('r f'UC' h
Wl'&lt;'k.
No .~ u bs rrlpt lo n !' by m a llpcor m illf'd In
ar('a!&lt; "'hl't'(l hom&lt;'. r orr l&lt;'r st'f\'IC'(' l!l
IH'Il llnblr.
'

Mall Sub8crtptlon8
lnsldr Mf' lp County
1.1 Wl"4'ks .......... , ...... .......... .. .. .. , Sl 7.211

2~ Weeks........... ....................... S34.00
52 W0.ks .................................. S66.56

Outside Melp County
13 Weeks ......... .................. ....... St8.20

, 26 w..ks ........... ............... ... .. ... $.!.1.10
52

'

w..ks ................................. $67.60
~

Floyd, who has been nursing a
hamstring Injury, said he decl d~ to go out In lhe fourth
quarter and try lo make something happen. He broke the
s ingle-quarter scoring record
I hat was set Friday night by lslah
Thomas of Detro(t In a victory
over Atlanta.
Warriors coach George Karl
ordered his team to "get the ball
to Sleepy and let him go.· · ·
i

WATERFORD - Enjoying yet
combining for eight walks and two
another outstanding season, the
strikeouts.
" high llylnp;" Eastern Eagles
Jeff Caldwell had a homerun
base ball team swooped down to and single wllh three RBI's to
twlce·make the Wa terford Wild·
lead Eastern, while Ed Collins
cats their prey In a Saturday a f·
had two singles, Durst a double
lernoon double heder at Water·
a nd single, Steve Horner two sin·
town Park. 15·8 and 14·1.
gles, Kyle Davis two singles. and
The bi g victories pushed Eas·
singles each by Mark j;rlf!ln ,
te rn 's record to 17·2 overall (10.1 · Mike Marlin, Greg Leachman.
In the SVAC) and lengthens Eas ·
Jeremy Barber, and Jeff John·
tern winning streak lo eleven
son.
!(ames. Waterfo rd drops to 4·11
Heath Quimby and Duane Huck
overa ll.
had two hits each tor Waterford,
The Eagles rece ived qulle a
Torn Young had three singles,
scare In the first ga me, being un ·
Nick Brown a single. and Greg
able to capi ta lize in prime sltua·
McClutcheon a single.
lions to trail 6·2 after !our corn·
In the second game Eastern
le te Innings. Continuing to swing railed early with eight runs In the
the bets well. Eastern erupted
first Inning. Ed Collins and Jl'fi
for six htt s In the sixth Inning en· Johnson each walked, Bryan Durst
route to aJ)Otent 15·hlt attack and singled, Mike Marlin doubled, Kyle
15·8 v ictory.
Davis and Brent Norton each
J e f Caldwell led off the fifth singled, Mark Grtffln walked, Jefi
frame with a boomin g hom erun Caldwell doubled, and Ed Collins
to le ft field , but later that Inning singled. the core S.O.
E HS stranded two base runners. ·
Durst, Horner, and Norton each
adding to six others lefl on base
doubled In the second frame for
In the previous Innings.
three more runs , while Mike Mar·
Kyle Davis started the big sixth lin 's two run home run capped a
Inning assault with a single, later
three·rnn third frame .
returning to the pla te In the Inning
Eastern hurler Steve Horner
for his second hit, a n RBI single. pitched a nother super gdme to
Mark Griffin hit an RBI single.
push his personal mark to 4·0.
Greg Leachman and Jeff Caldwell
strlklbg out 7 and walking none.
wa lked. E(l Collins slammed a
Junior Mark Griffin in his fir s t
two· run single, Jell Johnson aga in
va rsity relief role finished the
loaded the bases by reaching on a ga me with a good effort.
fi elder's cholce.and Bryan Durst
deli vered a sacrifice tly.
Bryan Durst and Mike Marlin
Jeremy Barber rapped a si n· led Eastern with three RBI' s
gle. Steve Horner a two· RBI si n· each. Durst had a double. single.
!(le, Davis another single, wa lks and sac rifice tl y and Marlin a
to Leachman and Gr iffin, and a home run and double.
s ingle by Jeff Caldwell. EHS led
E d Collins was two·for·lwo ,
13·6.
Brent Nor ton a double and sin·
Easlern wen t on to score two gle, Howl e Lawrence a double.
more In the seventh for the 15-8 Jeff Johnson a single. Kyle Davis
wi n.
a single. and Derek Yonker a stn·
Despite struggling early, Bryan gle.
Durst came on strong to pick up
Eastern. ranked 16th In lhe
the win (wit h a personal record of stat!'. Is now 17·2 overall with an
7-11 . while Scott Stephens suffered 11 ga me winning streak .
the loss.
Eastern plays In a second
Durst wa lked three and fanned round ga me of the Sectional
one. Stephens, Swelkert. and Huck Tourna ment at Meigs Tuesday
went to the mound for Waterford, against Kyger Creek at 4:30 p.m.·

~

fI

BREAKS RECORD - Eas·
tern female track otar Melissa
Nutter broke her own record
to set another ocbool record In
the discus with a loss of 36 feet
II Inches to claim first place In
her division at a recent meet
at Fort Frye High School. Nut·
ter, a senior, went to the state
last year with several record
breaking performances and Is
a favorite to win the Sectional
again this year for Coach
Ralph Wlgals' club. Nutter
wtll be preparln1: very hard
for the upcomlnr tournament
meets to be held In the near fu·
lure. ·

POMEROY - Mlsslonarv ser·
vices will be held Monday', 7: 30
p.m .. at the home of Arl Eblin.
Harrisonville Raod, Pomeroy.
Rev. Roy Taylor. Chauncey, will
be gucsl speaker . Public invited.

TUESDAY
CHESTER - rh~&lt;tor

•

$3•25

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAUUIT
._...,,, 011..
I'll. tU-5432
frW(Iidlttl

·'

CHF.STER - Sunrise. a gospel
group from Chester. ha s
announced I he release of "Firs t
Clas!j,". their third recording
since the group formed In 1980.
"Firs I Class" ls a cassette tape
featuring "Jes us Is Coming For
Me" plus nine other songs. It will
be ava ilable in June.
"First Class" was recorded at
Harves t Gospel Studio In Hun·
tlngton, W.Va., which Is owned
by Mark Hale who Is also the
e ngineer . Chuck Lawrence,
form er WEMM announrer Is the
producer. Lawrence Is also ir
song writer having written the hit
gospt&gt;l song. " He Grew the
Tree."
s ln~lng

-TIIM'YOU..W~~
Doifv ~·ts proud to IUPPQII our local Cltlldo• ,., ~ t~~rooq~
the Olmol ld fol.rdatton'sOlltdnrn's Miracle Net\oak lalelo•.
~ ... D.O. C..,lMl'
IF a "'-Mob.Qeoop.
•
I

Mrs. Sheila Arnold, group
member, wrole eight of the songs
on "First Class" Including the
feature song. ' Jesus Is Coming
For Me." She has written numer·
ous gospt&gt;l songs and In 198.'1 one
of her songs, "I'm Golrrg Up First
Oass;" was one of the top ten
winning songs In tbe Southern
Goepel National Quartet Conveli·
tlon Contest In Nashvtlle, Tenn.
'nle 10111 wu publtslred by tbe
Rex Nelon Publtsblng Co. In lis 1
lNIOil titled "Keep on Slnp!IJ"

,,

Club activities relating to the
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs' convention to be he ld In
July at Columbus were reviewed
at Monday night' s meeting of the
Rulland Garden Club at I he home
of Robert a Wilson.
Mrs . Wilson was elected as
vollng delegate to the conven·
tlon, with Dorothy Woodard as
the alternate. It wa s reported
tha t Ruth Erlewlne and Pearl
Canaday have donated teapot s to
be used for table arrangements
a( the convention , and that the
pieced tabl r doth ll&lt;'lng made fo r
.the count ry·theml'd banquel will
be fini shed at a work session next
week.
Pauline Atkins, Neva Nic hol·
son, Mr s. Ca naday. Mrs. Wilson.
Ann Elizabeth Turner and Eva
Robso n attende(l the regional
meeting_ held at' McArthur and
reported on lha t. Mr s. Robson
. wa s regional director of sa les
tabl es and Mrs. A(klns. l'halr·
man of nature and conserva tion.
It was noted that Mrs . Erie·
wine, Binda Diehl , Mrs. Nichol·
son, and Mrs. Turner attended
the Rutla nd Towns hip Bl ·
cente nnial Celebra tion held a t
the Rulland Civic Center re·
cently. Eva Robson assisted with
th e Bedford bicente nnia l. Mrs.
Wilson and Mrs. Robson al ·
tended lhe regional board mee t·
lng at Chester with Mrs. Er ic·
wine. Mrs. Ca nad ay, a nd
Elizabeth Ann Webst er ll&lt;'lng
e lected to the nominal lng
committee.

.

How's Your
Hearing?

It was reported tht Marvin
Wilso n rerc nlly put up the OAGC
community sign In lowe rRulland
a nd the group gave a vole of
th anks to him. A lour or a loca l
greenhou se was di scussed and
will be held on May 5 a t J p.m.
Mrs. Wil son's devotions wrrc
from the 6!i)h Psalm.
Mrs. Diehl. Mrs. Turner, Mrs .
Ca naday. Mrs. Nicholson, and
Mrs. Woodard repored on their
bus tour to Ga lwa y Gardens In
Georp;la. Marcia De nison, Mrs.
Robson. Mrs. Nicholson. Pauline
Atkins. and Mrs. Turner fur·
nlshed flowers for churches an d
the Grange dinner. Rubv Diehl
won the tra veling prize fu.rnlshcd
by Mrs. Erlewlne.
For the proga m. Ruby Diehl
had a paper on roses. She sa id
thai they grow In most rllmates
but do ll&lt;'st in the midwest. and
that spring Is the best time to
start roses .
Mrs. Ca nada y gave a paper on
"Cle ma ti s. th e Frl &lt;• ndll cs l
Vtn•··" She descrlll&lt;'d It as a lhln
vine which grows well as a screen
for privacy. Mrs. Di ehl gave tips
on soil prepara tion for plunllng.
It should be tested for ph fa ctor.
with a good mixtu re being a
scoop or good dirt . a scoop or
spaghrnurn moss. a scoop of
perlite and a scoop of sa nd.
Mrs . Robson displayed a ho·
ga rth arrangement. Mrs. Ca n·
cja;· brought som&lt;' money plant s
to share with I he memb&lt;'rs . Thl'
door prize was won b,v Mrs.
Robson.

HI.GHER YIELD
Certificate Of
It Rates
S..er'l Qolct
Clillnc.tll

"

/
Area group records tape

CCMJr8d wtlh llavas like~ and
pineapple. AH made wtlh Dally Queen~ sort ave.
o reol dciry product. 'b.r fovorHe ~feat. Now specially
priced al your pallcipalh o Dalty Q teBI r•s1ofe.

.

tional session s and then spent
time In small groups prcicessl·ng
the Information and relating 11 to
the ir lives . Conducted in a caring
and giving atmosphere. lfre lnstl·
tut e Is designed to help build
togethern ess a nd support amonl(
the teens who wlll need 10 draw
upon this In their own communi·
ties. There were 106 teens and 30
adults from seve n. rountles at·
tendin g. Jeannie Taylor, Meigs
High fa culty member. Is advisor
· for the Teen Institute Club.

(for May r1, '87 thru May 17, '87

/

N. 2ND AVE., -.motT
.
Dig Into lhe cool, rich. dallcious tos1e of our
Peanut BuslefePafalt.Or luscious Bancroa SpiH

There were social event s In·
eluded such as a fi ft ies' dance
complete with a hula·hoop con·
test. a tal ent show and a "Happy
New· You " dance. Students spent
time tn large group informa·

-

~:.:-

•

They also at tended workshops on
other topics such as suicide
prevention. eating dlsorclers.
self·acceptance, group motlva·
tlon. peer pressure. a nd drinking ·
and drivi ng.

With Dally Co•pou•cll•g

•

rj

1

cole sllw. hot roll. butter and cofltt. sony,
no st1bstitutu tll:tpt btwt1111 Iiiii lddi-

Tm.om.

J

IIOIID W fl Ill 'C . . ft••

Sltwd willllllllpptd potltDts. chlckln pvr.

MIDDLEPORT - The Ama·
teur Gardeners Club or Middle·
port has cancelled It s Ma y
meeting, srheduled originally for
May 1~ .

\

P1li4 hr b' the Carrdidalt1'"'-s Werry, 9 fisher St. ' - • , Olio 992-2076

FOR JUST

Cane~ lied

i

Republican Candidate for
MAYOR
POMEROY VIWGE

COIIINAnOI
El
DilliNG ROOI OJIL

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce meets
noon Tues day at the Trinit y
Church In Pomeroy. At 8 a.m.
Tuesday, Bend Area Merc hant s
Association meet at Bank One.

POMEROY- Disa bled AmerIca n Veteran s will mee t Mondav
al 6:30 p.m at lhe hall. 124
Butlernut Ave .. Pomeroy.

THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPO.RT
IN THE MAY PRIMARY
Thomas "Pee Wee" Werry

.

Chicago, Ill. -A free offer of
special interest to those who
hear but do not understand
words has been announced by
Beltone. A non-operating
AtTEND CAMP - Pictured are Meigs County
Blake, Bracy Korn, John Swanson, ,Jenny Beth
students and stall who attended the Southeastern
Miller, Marla Graham, Marl Byer, Nikki Bunch,
model of the smallest hearing
Ohio Regional Teenage Institute held at Camp
Mayr'erie Thomas, Sarah Philson, Shannon
aid Beltone has ever developed
Akita. The are, front; Elise Meier, Hank Cleland,
Slavin, Paul Dalley, Kim Calvert, Jeff Nelson,
wiU be given absolutely free to
•Joe Parker; second row, Kevin Meadows, Mindy
Huey Eason; back, Ed Crooks, ,John Anderson
Spencer, Laura Cobb, Danyan Magers, Eric
and .Jay Buskirk. Huey Eason, Shannon Slavin
anyone requesting it.
Walker; standing, I to r, Sabrina Wilson, Amy
and Paul Dailey were on lhe youth staff of lhe
It's yours for the asking,
Institute.
so send for it now. It is not a
real hearing aid, but it will·
show you how tiny hearing
Lee Ann Robinson . daught er of scholarship to attend Hocking ted more than $1.5 million In
help can be. The actual aid
Wllbur and Marilyn Robinson, Technical School in Nelsonville. fin ancial asslslanre to 457 stu ·
weighs less than an eighth of
Coolville, has been awarded a She · is. one of 48 scholarship dents through It s fraterna l scho·
an ounce, and it fits complete·
$1,200 two yc&gt;ar fraternal winners chose n In the 1987 la rshlp program.
vocatlonal-terhnlcal sc holars hip Modern Woodmen Scholarship
ly into the ear canal.
In national competition with Progra m. Selection Is based on
These models are free, so
other students who arc members the scholastic records of the
we suggest you write for yours
of Modern Woodmen ol America. competltlng students and on
Modern Woodmen is a fra lcr· qualities of leadership and ehar·
now. Again, there is no co~t,
nal life Insu rance society with acter In arademlc and extra
and certainly no obligation.
home offices In Rock Isla nd . Ill.
curricular activities.
A senior at Eastern High
Although a hearing aid may
During the passt 18 years,
School, Robin son plans to use the Modern Woodm en has commit·
not help everyone, more and
more people with hearing
losses are being helped. For
your free sample send your
MONDAV
s hip Trustees meeting will be
name, address, and phone
PT. PLEASANT- PVH auxil· held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday a t th e
number today to: Department
lary meets Monday. 7 p.m. , townhall .
75676, Beltone Electronics
downstairs co nference room.
Auction In place of progra m.
HARRISONVILLE-The Har·
Corporation, 4201 West Vicbring Items for sale.
'r!sonvllle Senter Citizens Club
toria Street, Chicago, Illinois
will have a fr ee blood press ure
BEDFORD - Bedford trus· clink Tuedsay at the townhouse.
60646.
Lee Ann Roblnoon
tees meet · Monday. 7 p.m ..
10 a .m toto attend
noon.. · Anyone Is r---------------------------------------------~--------------------------L-----~--~-----------townhall.
welcorne
•

CalendarI happenings

•

;---------------------------1

.

Rutland Garden Club
has recent meeting

Woodmen award scholarship to girl

,

Admiss ion Is $2.00.
Linescore: (Game 1)
Eastern ... .... 100 1110 2-15 15 5
Waterford .... 131 110 2- 8 11 4
Batteries: Durst tWP) and
Davis.
(Game 2)
Eastern .... ...... .. 833 000-14 11 1
Waterfordd ....... 000 010- 1 7 2
Batteries : Steven Horner (WP ),
Griffin 6th and Davis , Griffin. Yon·
ker. Barber .

.

Monday, May 11. 1987
Page-&amp;

Students of Meigs High and
Southern High Schools attended
a lhree·day event at the Sou·
lheastern Ohio Regional Teen·
age Institute at Camp Akita.
During the three days, they
rece ived Information about
drugs and alcohol prevention
programming. They learned
about the negative effeds of
drugs and alcohol and positive
ways to Influence fr ie nds to avoid
the hazards of dru g· a lco hol use.

Butler In Sundy's game at Cleveland. The Indians
won, 4-2.

Eastern rolls over foe twice
to push season mark to 17-2

.

.,

Rosenthal had six Top 10
finishes last year - Including a
tie for second In I he UVB Classic ·
- to win Rookie of the Year
honors . Her previous ·best this
year · was · the Sarasota Classic:
when she finished sixth.

BALL GETS BY WHITE - Kansas second
basemun Frank · While makes an unsuccessful
slab at a ground ball oil bat of Cleveland's Brett

.The Daily Sentinel- ·
Teen Institute teaches about drug abuse

Gamf' tonight

Thf' Daily Sentinel

~mf'r~' ·

-- ..

1600 Mt·li·r R.l'lay: Warren 3:.t0.2, Mrl~

Boo!ttel'!l meet tonight

.

By The Bend

•

:1~10 Mt•h•r.. : IU•:rt Ha~IO' (M ) 10: 11. 2,
W illltorM{ W ) 11 : 19. t. Stollar(W ) I!!: IUl

In th&lt;) fourth quarter to lead the•
Colden Stale Warriors to a
1 2~ · 121 vic tory over the Los
Angeles l.a kcrs.
l.os Ange les. which swept
Denver :J.Qin their opening round
series, now lead the Warriors :1.1.
The bfosl -of·scvc n Western Con·
frrr nrr Stoml flnal series r·e·
surn es in In glewood. Ca lif .. Turs·
cia~· ror CamP~.

Da ll~

was."

400 Mf' l1•r : Da)' hoff (\\') : M.3. St•evPrM
{\\') : ~·U , .Jf'ff llood ( M ) : $7. 1.
:WO Met.-r llurdh'ti: .John Rbtk IM) : llO.
,\nd('ftiOO IW) : 47. 1, Hunt er { W) : ~7.9 .
KOO Mf'l crs: S&lt;&gt;evcnt ( \\I ) 2:()9.1, R~andy
llitwlty IM) 2: 12. 1, Cury Betting (M)
2: J"i.7
\!00 Mt•h •r!o!: Rt--toht&gt;k CW ) : U.O, \\'""
Jl owurd ( l\1) : U .t \\' ll ~t on (\\') :2'7. 1.

Coach Roger Foster sends his
Me igs .Marauders against the
Federal Hocking La ncers tonight
(Monday [ at Meigs High begi n·
ning at 4: :l() p.m . A wi n will give
the Marauders at least a tie for
the Tri·Valley Conference base·
ball cha mpionsh ip.

.

SUFFOLK, Va. (UPI) - Jody
Rosenthal, who !Ired a 6- under·
par 66 to win the $250,000 United
VIrginia Bank Golf'Classlc. says
her first LPGA victory Is lhe
sweetest.
The 24·year·old Rosenthal.
who joined the LPGA t0 ur In
October 1985; finished the 54· hole
tournament at ?·under 209 over
the 6,151·yard Por ts mouth
Sleepy Hole Golf Course to win
$37,500.
" The way everyone else was
playing. I was expecting some
more low scores today, .. said
Rosenthal. "I figured to shoot a
low score would ke;ep me where I

llol\ o Hr•ur/l .o

By .JOHN TORRES
Ul'l Spnrls Writer
Thr Los Angeles Lakers bfogan
relebrall ng whnt seemed to IJp
a nothN swN'(l Sund ay ll&lt;'forP
Goldc•n St&lt;l t&lt;'' s fcrlr "Sleepy' '
Flo;·&lt;i remincl~d t hl'm there wa s
still a pl'rlod left.
F'o.vd ca ugh t t hr l.akcrs nupping and SI'OI'Pd 2!l of his !il point s
--------------.

lo 11w

-

sweetest
Rosenthal

C"rhtn (W} 31. 7.

Warriors rally,
defeat LA Lakers

Nrw !~ p:tpi ' l'

First vi~tory

r•

BUU&gt; FOULED- Roston's Lnrry Bird Is fouled hy Mllwaukt•••'s
l'nul Press.•y (lelt) in Sunday's playoll ganw nt Mllwnuke~• .

(liS PS

Monday, May 11, 1987

:I : U. ~.

Bunch (Ml 'lt'K" .

, • :noo ftcol11y: ( 'lu""u pt•ab 11 : OK.2. ,\t t• l~c:~'&gt;.
' 11 ::17.6, Wu.rrr n 12:35.11.
, 100 Mt•lr •r Hurdl tos: Rusi'it'll H' II J 16. 1.
.k&gt;nny Swartz ( 1\1 ) li. l. Smith !f'Hl IK9.
~ ·(;nrhln

Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio

and recordl'd on a lbums by The
Ca thedra l Quartet . Th e Singing
Americans and The Speer
Family.
Me;nbers of Sunrise, a family
group. Include Mrs. SheJla Ar·
nold , Mrs. Sharon Hartman.
Mrs. Doris Muth. all sis ters,
Na than Arnold IV. son of Mrs.
Arnold, Lois Ebersbach and
Willard Ebersbach. hu sband and
wife who are cousins of the
others. All members play lnstru·
ment s and sin~ and have per·
formed In Ohio, Michigan, Ten·
nessee, a nd Wes t VI rginia.

MilWAY
TAVERN
Crouov•IT d
Friday I Saturday

May~ 16

•t... C...ct
. . . . 21

..

11ft

32-89 Day
90·179 Day
180·364Day
12·23 Months
24-35 Months
36-83 Months
84-120 Months

tnt.tlt

4.97°/o
5.45°/o
6.20°/o
6.53°/o
7.23°/o
7.47°/o
7.93°/o

Can•••••••
Dlllr- YIIW

5.1 0°/o
5.60°/o
'
6.40°/o
7.57°/o
7.50°/o
7.75°/o
... 8.25°/o

Minimum Purchase Amounts- $500.00

..,

...

· BANK.~ONE.
Fifteen thousand people who care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS, NA, Atnent. OhiO
MeAfber FDIC

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

PomeJOY-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. May 11, 1987

Friends and Flowers have meetin?,
Plantings around the outside or
Krogers In Pomeroy was taken
on as a civic beautlficallon
project by the Friends and
Flowers Garden Club of Rutland
at a recent meetin g held at the
home of Brenda Bolin.
Members noted that Krogers Is
also looking into the possibility of
putting ben ch e~ and greenery
·around the outside of the bu II ding
and they voted unanimously to
assist with the co mmunit y pro·
j ect. Reports were given on the
bake sale and door -to-door fund
drive to rai se money for bu ying
the materials for tables and
benches which will be put l·nto the
Rutland Park.
The need lor teapot centerple·
ces at the state convent ion wa s
discussed with each club In the
reg ion being asked to co ntribute
one. Eart htone colors are rr·

Your

SocSec:

quested to enhance the country
theme. The reglona I m~t lng and
board session were dlsc,usesd.
For the progra m , Janet Bolin
reported on herbs. She displayed
a tussy -mussy ' of lamb's ear ,
lavender, ar temesla. ta nsy.
scented ger aniums, and a rose.
She noted that It can be used for
pot -pourri when It is dried. Mrs.
Bolin how to grow herbs and their
various uses In her program .
She discussed ihe vario us uses
for herbs as well as associations
noting th at parsi(•y Is thought to
bring peace of mind, . a good
appet ite ari d clea n breat h, and
ta nsy, Immortality, while sweet
basis is often associated with evil
powers. Herbs, she s,a ld , can be
planted either Informally In
flower or vegetabl e gardens or
formally In a classic herb
garden. The form al patterned

Field Representative
In our las.! column, we began a
discussion about survivor benef·
Its, telling you who could be
eligible for monthly benefits
from a deceased Inco me earner's
Social Security record . In this
column, we' ll continue with tha t
theme.
Any discussion of survi vor
benefits brings up the subject of
the lump sum death payment. In
the past, this $255 payment was
made lo whoever Incurred the
responsibility for a covered In ·
.come earner 's bu r ial Pxpenses .
The check could even be directed
to the fun eral home. However ,
Congress changed the regula·
!Ions In 1981. limiting the pa y·
men!. Now It is onl y sent to the
surviving spouse or a child

receiving or eligible to receive a
benefit from that record .
!Un married children 18 and
under or disabled before age 22
are those potentially eligibl e for
mon thl y benefit s.) By the way.
on ly people who have enough
Social Security cover ed earnings
have this payment made upon
their dea th . Someone receiving
only a spouses benefit would not .
Wh a t about pa y m e nt
amou nts? A 65 year old widow or
widower Is entitled to a benefit
equal to the amount the deceased
would have received at age 65.
Any benefit received belore 65 Js
permanently reduced. AI age 60,
for example, the benefll would be
71'h percent of the amount
ava ilable at 65.
Here' s a common question.
Can a man or woman who

--Honor rolls-'flu• flfth !'iiJI WPt•k~o~ JP'Udln,~: pt•rlod honor
roll "' iht• Mt•lfCI" Hl"'h Sc: hool h11Joi ht·t•n
annount:f'd.
Mllkln~ •~~:rndt• olD tlr uJH"''' In alllht •lr
, wuhjt•tiN lo lw n~tnwd lo lhl' roll wt•rt•:
S4•nlorH: Erin ttndt•r"un, .lt•U i\ mold,
~"'undy Rail!')' , Mkht•llt• Burr, Randy
Blrchlh•ld. Donna Rowt'ft, Duvld farw·
hurt, l.ln ( ' ln»~t•, AprU ( 'lark, ~hlrly flhll'.
.Jnnl C'out•h, Ht•alhtT fullumK, I.GI " F:hlln.
l..uura •·arh•.v. Mar.v Fh&amp;Kl· Mart.\' llttrt ,
Kr~ll Jluynt'lll, ( 'arol lft•nllrht, Shunnoo
· Hlndy, lhtrd lf.wwll •.Jullt• Hy~·ll, Oawn
'llt•f.'l'it~·. C'~trha Kln~e. Durin lUna, l)hll
Kin.-. Smnm Kin~~:. Mlt·hl'llt• Kn~o~pp , 'Nm
Knoth!, l'um l.uwrt'fl l~·. ·h•nn.v IA•t•.
Kt•nnrth Mt·f'll'llun , ·fudl Mt'l"l'&gt;, ·ft•nn)'
Mlllt'l', ('olt•na Mowt·ry, Marla 1\;luHsi•r,
:olh•\'t' MU16Mt&gt;r, ·h•f( Nt•INon, Kal hy t•it•lo:t&gt;nJii ,
1\•a:lt• Ph•n:t•. St:utl Puwt•ll, ~ull,v Rudfurd.
1\l&gt;n IUh·hh•, .Jiuokh• Kohln"'on, I 'lwryl
Hllutth. Krls ~t·ldun, Tony Shotonl~tkt'f',
Bn'ftdiiMin t'lWr. Du\•t•Smllh, MarkSmllh• .
· Mt•llnda Smllh, IChontlu ZlrkJt• Snldt•r,
M••IIMma Sprou ~o~t •, 1&gt;4•n Slt•ln, Mlt ·ht~ll·
Sf.t•\'Pftf!l, Kim Slt,.·url, ·h·nnl Swartz, l 1hll
Tromm, 04•nny Wt•l!'ill ..JuulnrN : Murgl t•
'·)k.kt'l', 1\nnt•U t• Burt•, Mllw Rurlrurn ,
;'.ttul'lllln 8Mum,ll11vld Bl•t•ll;h!, Btf'nl Bhuuoll,
Nunntttt• Rhllw, Cui h.f 8h ~14ln.-. Rill
Rrotht'I'S, Pt•lt• Rumt•m, Khn ('alwrt,
Pt•nny ( 'lurk, MPIIJoi~Ut ( 'lay, ~1h·kt•y na\'ls,
.lt•rry ll4•rt•nht•ra;t•r, St•an J)od~on , .Jotllt•
t :rvln, \\"1•ndy Fry. ~·nl."'t' iilhPuut, Pauln
Calkt•y, ,fut• lhtll, Kim H~tmrn. f'harloUt•
Haarl, l)t•ilnnu Ht•ndt•rSM, Tnn)' llt•ndriA,
Mlkkl Hupp. Thn ,lf•flt•D, Kt·\'ln V. KinR,
Oonlta Manllt'l , Tnu·y 1\t•wlun, l.t•tmn a
l'laanb, llonltiiiJ&gt;nolt•r, 1lnu RUnt•. l..u.url••
Nht•rh'flt.. d, 1\nl(lt• Nluun. K••ll,\' ThotniiSon,
t:nzu.lwt h Thornton, ~tmtlt Vun('nont•\',
·huu1 Wt•rr), Shi•II,V Wolf,.: Snphom11rt~:
('hrllltlnt• RnsK, MPhUlll' l~• t• ""lt•, llt'llf't'
Rtll'hu.nan. ~lt•nlt• Hmwh. Utmnv ( 'ari,
Mt•ltldl ( 'uri, IA •!&gt;i h'.V( 'nrr. ( 'harlt os t 'ursun,
ll111nll f 'Mu.nd, rutrldu llll\'ls. ~knll
F..dmnndH. Hdll to:,tilng, 'f t·r ry t'lt•ltl~ .
stut·t',\' (Hhh:oi, ~tu•lla llt•ntlrh ·k .... la nt•llt·
lly-.•11, Sl tH't'.V 11,\'.olo4'11 .. Jnhn · ll'fft 'f'~ • .Jnth·
1.4 ' \' ln~Kinn , l':lhw M••l t'f', Tti iiY Mnhll•i- .
IAJrl l'rlt 't'. Mindy Kin.... 1'1na Uomlnt•,
,)llrt'tt Sht•tof.M, Sul'tllii Trndt'l' , IUunlt·u
Turnt•r, l 'lutrh,. Wist• , 'nmnlh,\' Wri~hl ,
Ht•n•••• \ 'm.m.,;. t'n~hnwn : Nant·,\' J\akt'f',
&amp;rhuru C'ult•man, Eddlt• f 'rnuk.... Kdh·

Houa;IIL'i, Ryan ll!lrpt•r, \\'ully ll a lflt~ti.
Juy llumphrt'~"'· lld~·t·t·ll Kt•rr. Kristin
Kin•, Rnh l ~unht •rt, lk·t·k.v Nll JIJWr,
Mh·hut•l l,arkt •r, lht r lt•n t• St•t·. ( 'ht •r~ l
Slt'\'t'nl4, ('uri Wlllhtms. Snhrlnu \\'11 .. 11~1 .
1'tw fiH h l'l lx wt•t•ks ~:rndln~ pt•rlocl honur
' rull at tht• J•unu'foy f&lt;:lt•nu&gt;ntary Sdmol
hiL" ht't'l1 lUIIIillllnl't'd .
Makin~ 11 ~r tul•• ul nr nhtt\ t' In lliliht•lr
!iUhjt'lb IO Ill' P IUIH 'tl Ill 1111' roll Wl'rt•:
Jo~lrMt Uradt•: U1n ltl Andt•r snn, Lnllr't•n
Alldt'I'Mon, M'uynt• Rurnh11tl , .lt•r r nd ( 'lurk .
Tr1u·y ( 'off••y, " ''•ndl nanh,.", llun lt~h·
&lt;f rut'tlt'r , Erin HUUt'f'ly, T11rn Hu"·h•.v.
l.ln~ lt· NnU lnjthum, IW,\· l'n" 't•ll, Husi,\'
Kohl""'on, R"lny Walkt•r, 1\rLidlt•y \\'u.lktor,
.rt'MJf lt ·Lt M-'rtahl, ·••·rku ( 'ILtrk , ('IJJ)'lnn
C'row , H••ldl ll'!•Lim.-. Amy llit)'I'S, Konnlt•
lllrth. Sl••\'t•n 1\lt·C'ulltutah . ( 'and at•t•
Mlllt•r, ('hrlsllnn Nt•t•t't'. Amy St•to, " '••ndy
Shrlmplln, Tumy ru T11ylur, ,\thun Tho·
m"", .lu. rt'd "'~trnt•r .r.~nnlft'l' \ 't•UUM;t'l'.
~ t~tnd nr~d••: T11r)'n lluldKt', Whllnt•y

1

»

Hatplot»~lull ,

.lt•sslt•u ~lt· t: lru,·. SI LH'il'
"'' t'CI, KriMtu Suqu'tlt, Mlkt• i\nch•r)jtln,

MuU Ault, .Jullt• Kln~t . Tnr11 (:rutost•r,
Stut•t•,v Jlrit't', Sh lt14'11 Klnl(, Khnlwrll 1•
~~~otrlt'. IA•IP Ma,..h, ,Jndlt• Nl1'114t111, ('ryslul
&amp;rlli&gt;tt. Third Hr~dr : l~&gt;~ rlll'l (lrlrnm,
l.a DI•a.nu (lro\'t•r, Munty Hunh•r, Kri!i!y
" '""nt•r, TrU\' ~ AhhuU, t\nnt• Rrm1·n.
fun•y Dur111. Bt•rl M11sh . .lnnws " 'hilt•,
l•w.hna " 'llt'!4. f 'nurlh Grudt•: Kf' lly
c•n•Ht•r, Hlc·hlt• H tt~t'i'l. Rt•a:Kt•· l,rnU ,
Ad~tnl Sltt'4t!rl, .Judyn Swarh:, Opul " 'hi·
llatt·h, .Jult&gt;t• \\'olho, IJJ(u l"t•uua;t'f, Surllh
Andt'l'son. ·h·rud ( 'ouk, Tara Erwin. Bt•n
F.'A•Ina. ,JWrLun T11.,vlar, .lullt• \ ' ou n ~~; . f1tl h
Gradt•: Rrlld t\ndt'l'!'6lWI , Trt•\·or Bundy,
Tru,. FliP, l..r•• H.-ndt•rson , Slt•phllnlt-S•&gt;t•,
EriR \\'Mnt'f', Marlo .,Whitt•, 'tl-t•nltlll
fltf•d. •JoMhtlu. Ht•t•k. ·,JI'ti'Tny Grimm.
.I.P . 011.\1~. Danlt&gt;flr f' row, .lu.t·k StwaiC'y.
Sixth Ondf': Dtohhlt• ;\lkln, .Jt•nnlh1'
&amp;rnh....t, I.A•nnna Cundiff, fhu.rii"S Kina,
Vh&gt;kl Warnt•r, Nalhun Br0\4'11, Kt•,•ln
Lllnthft-t, Ht•IIJ l'hi&gt;l~. RuMty Trlplt.. l,
Mll·ht'lh• Younx, Kt•lly Doldjlll f'. fhrls
Knll{ht. Stf'Phltnlt• Prit't', 111•1h Roush,
Kulrlna Turnt•r. J) .H. ,\dam Bart on. Kt•lt h
l..andllkt't'.
Thr flit h i'il\ Wt't'k."' Rr u.dlna prrJod honor

roU allhf' Rutland F.:lf'metalary St·hool h:L&gt;i
ttf'toft IUliiOUDl'fll,
Makin.- MKradt of 8 or aho\'t' In alllhtlr
"uhjf"dJ$ to hfo naunedtotht' roll Wt-rt": Ftrs4
Grade: Dw.'V hl Bank.-!. C'11rly Chaudee.,
Emily Fo•·lrr, Nath1111 H•Uflilll , .Jill
Lfmlf')', Stu O'Brlfll, n anlf'lltPet.·khun,
Tahllhll PGWC"II, Mlt.·helll' ~m;~bur&amp;. U!'•
SftodKJ"Mtt, Mt•lll,q 'nlus. Mt•U8Nl t\'111 ..
untl. Sutdra \ 'ouq. S..wnd Grade:
SlepiiMitColl&lt;riL Ell..hdh Ellis, Shoun
FrM~

H"ald, Ml t hl'llt Miller,
Atlller Roach, •nrl,)l SCewarl, .Jamie
lllUiamtOit, ~lc11. Count"' ('had Bar·
trum.1111rd Grllde:

nyu~ fhar k, .lrrr.my

lrlsle~~

Da.ny l\'14. nmmy

t .aanu.

l,rldd y,l..orl Ru."'st•ll. ( 'Jndl Stt•urt , Htl\: llnl'
Wlllhun .o~. Fourth (Jradr: Philip t:dmond.-1,
Tru,·lx fi rult•, Mlchelh• " 'ard. FIUII
flrudt•: t\mlt•l'~ lllnU, llat•ht'i tlyst•ll, •la.&gt;iuf'l
Mlll•·r, ,Jny O'Rrlen. Shdh(,jrad••: ·h•nnllt'f
f ' hu~o~h•t•n . Int. 011: .Jm~huu Dunkle. LD:
l&gt;anlt•l

~to\'t•r .

'l'ht•ltlfifth
KbSah•rn
~·t•t•ks aradinK
honor
roll
thl•
( 't•ntt•r lll'riod
Elt•nwnlury
Sdwol 1'11111 ht•t•n anntMmt·ttd.

TO PUCl .IN AD CAU t92 -2U6
MOND,A'r thru fiiDU I A.M. to S P.M.
I I.M. ~ til NOON Uruto.n

·::.
... . ... . ._._... .....
.......,.. _,_..,_
. . .. _. ,. _ _ .,
.,,,. .., c...
...:. . .,....
.
................ .. . ... .. ,..,
~.::r..:;::.;: "' .......~ .. - ... .
.....
. . ..~.. c....... _.. ~-· ·--c. o-.toa,.,

Tht• fifth "'lx wt•f'~ Kfudlng pr·rlud hunur
roll lll lh\' SUiilihUI'}' Elt•mt•nlary St·hool
hll."' ht'l'fl annoont•t•d.
i\1uklnl( a f(rud r of R ur uho\'1' In ull lht•lr

.... ._ ,., _ .. ,_ .. _

·-

·n,

h•·• ·n aumount·t'tl.
M a kln ~e Lljtr ltdt• nl ll or ahn\'t' In ullllll'lr

&lt;O tth.l t't'll'l lo ht• mtnwd In llw roll \o\'t•r•• :
S4•vt•nlll fl rntl t• : n arha r n ,\nd t•r,.on, Tr ll'lu
S.tt'r, •·runk Rhtkt •, ~ll!~ily Bul..twr. Rt•th
( 'l:trk. IMdlt&gt; ( 'It-l und, Motry fompston,
~hurlu fuop•• r, K yun ( 'uK·an, UrLU ht•r
l)a\'t•nport, Slun•.v Jo'ry, Tura (it•rlat'll,
IL•111 ht't' tiiiWL\ul. ,Jt•tr,\' Hu. ~· ntun, St·otl
h •t'flhOI4't' r, Durin l.n ~nn .•Jot• Mt·l': lroy ,
(" h l\ rll'~ i"l ~'i h , Tammy MIIIN, Kt•\'ln
l\1tiSI'it't, Mlran4li1 Nlt·hol~on. ltu ~~:t'l" Pur·
llo"·. ~lt'l tmlt• tlutlll!ll, .rns on Ht•ynold'4 ,
·luhn ~llrfl:t•nl , 1'on)' Sb;. ('hrls Slo.Lln,
Robby \ 1!ln t·t•, ( 'hrbsy l\'t'll\t'r , ttuhh,\'
\\'yllU. t:ia: hth (irudP: ,fohn t-: w.ns, Murh'
Fuulltnt•r . Uu\·ld t' ry m,.••r, ltnard
•:ro\'1'1'1, Kip fi rm'l'&lt;t'r, H1•su Hnrrt.01, f:rlt•
llt•t•k, T tltll lltnnphr•• ys, Mlt•h(•llt• Mul ·
lht•wN, Dt•rt•k 1\;llll••r, ~'"r~· 1\lorton ,l\ll~s)'
Nt•l!'ltMI, Rlt •hnrd l,t•y ton, Stuut'' Shank,
1\urun Sllt•(&gt;ts, Kri~h·n Sluwh'r, .lo!Ot•ph
Smith. ,Jt•nny Taylor. ~lib VunM I'II' r,
r\my \h~tnt•r, Sh•phnnlt• Wullwr. •lt•nn.f
\\'t'rf)'.

'h-.

__ .....

lllloYI

.

"""I R

•• ,.,.u

I"U "I on " ""'
IUI&lt;DA&lt;O&amp;.. o
., , ~

I

...

... .., . , ,

. ...

.•

on .•

,.

011.11

tf .M

' " ·•

.....

........,.

-

loG O M IHU OIDOr

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

985-3561

"

All Maku

•Washers '•Dishwashers
•Ranges

POlE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAl

PH.

72
mo.

4-5-llc

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
49835 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45 771

949-3088 Bus.
949-2606 Home
All Makes &amp; Models
24 HR. SERVICE
- .

-

3·17-2mo. pd.

•

-

!

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

TUNEUPS 10 TRANSMISSION
CALL 992-7403 At&gt;t.
Sl. At. 33, Pomerov, OH.

•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW REPLACE·
MENT
•REMODELING '&amp;
'
ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS

We'll Sell You A
Used Car or Fix
Your Old One

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

PH. 949-2756

Phone

Day

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

985-4141

mo pd.

~ou

h1

4·21· 1 mo.

Pomeroy
HOURS: Tues.·Wed.·Fri.
II a.m. to 7 11. m.
Sunday: I p.m.-7 p.m.

PH. 742·2027

·Sale S3l9

RCA 19'._.,
XL-100 Color TV
o

Sale S258

RCA 13'~~~~~~onlll
XL-100 Color TV

til-button ChanneLock
remote control

RCA 19'.1.......
XL-100 Color TV

• 14-button Channelock
remote control

• Hi~ Can•• picture tube screen

608

E. Main
POMEROY,O.

992·2259
NEW LISTING - BUILDING
LOTS FOR SALE - 2.41
ac1es vacanl land located
near Ea stern High School
w+lh access to Rl. 7. Water
and electrrc av a+ labl e

$6,000.00

SP£CIAL LIMITED TIME OFFER

NEW LISTING- ST. RT. 33
- About lour m1les to
Counly Road 14. Appm r·
mately 25 ams o( va cant
ground. Appro•. 8 acres
pasture. Good bulldm g site.
WANT $1 1,000.00

Sale $519

Sale S499
RCA 25'.1._..
Coloi'D'ak TV

RCA 20'd!._,
Colot'lrak Stereo TV

• ChanneLock digital remote

• 31·butlon Digital Command
remote control

control

br~ant

• Broadcast stereo sound system

CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING
NOW OilY

Sale S339

Sale S299
RCA VIdeo Cassette
Recorder

RCA VIdeo Cassette
Recorder

• Infrared remote control

• Infrared remote control

• Up to 14-(lay, 2-nt piogrammer
• Delayed-start Express Record l.ng
(XPR)

• High Oualily VHS (HQ)
• tl().positlon cabt&amp;-compalible
electronic tuner

• Up

to 14·day. 4-evenl prOg rammer

• Express recor'ding ()(PR)

• tl().posltion 107-channel
broedcastlcable electron ic tuner

• "Field-still" special elfecls (SLP)

RCA 20'.i a •
XL-100 TV

• ChonneLock digital keyboard
control

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
QUALITY SERVICE
AmR THE .SALE

ELBERFELDS ~~.
992·3671

POMEIOY

CALL (614)-992·2104
(304) 675·1244

..

MIDDLEPORT - Yester
year has been 1es tored to
thrs beaut+lu l coloma! home'
ThiS 4 bedroom, 7 room
home wrth a level tot and 2
car gar age, has ornate trim,
lead ed glasss wmdows and
doors Attic studro with sky
light. Well·rnsulated means
low heat1ngbills. Must see to
apprw ate! $65.000.00.
POMEROY - A. 3-4 bed·
room home on a acre lot.
Prrvate bul close1n. Carport.
garage. slorage bu ;ld;ng.
ASKING $17.000.00.

Sale S299

:::::.::::
•

4·14-1 mo.

Public Notice

e.

'I

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

pd.

LETART - Like new msrde
and ouii Completely remodeled home on a large lot.
h cellent condition. Garage,
new rool and s1ding.
.$27.500.00

"WE HAVE'IIEARINI AIDS''

by Chance or Appointmtnl

511/ Mn

Sale S339

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
APRIL 24. 1 987 .
Contract Sales
Legal Copy No. 87-297
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depart·
mont of Transportstion, Col ·
umbus. Ohio. until10 :00 A.
M .. Ohio Standard Time.
Tueaday, May 19. 1987. for
improvement s in : Athens
and Meigs Counties, Ohio.
on ATH ·682· 10.·68J , State
Route 882, ·Athens County,
and MEG· t24·18.70i ·State
Route 124, Meigs County,
by applying a leteJC modified
emulsified uphall pave·
ment cour~e .
Project and Work length
- 23 .286feetor4 .41 miles.
Pavement Width - vtriea.
" The date HI for comple·
tion of this work shall be IS
te t forth in the bidding pro·
poul. "
Eech bidder 1h1ll be rt·
quired to file with his bid a
certified check or Ulhier'a
check for an amount equal
t o five per cent of his bid. but
in no even1 more thin fiftv
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Dirtctor.
Bidders mUit 1pply, on the
proper form s . for qualifica·
tion at least ten day• prior to
the dale Ht for opening bida
in accordence with Ch1pter
6626 Ohio Revised Code. ·
Plans and specificltiont
are on me in the Oep•rtment
ofTransport1tion lndtheof·

'

flee of the Distric t Deputy
Director .
The Director rese rves the
right to reje ct any and all
bids.
WARREN J . SMITH ,
DIRECTOR
1614. 11 . 2t c

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addona end remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing end alecu lcal
work

(Free Estimatel )

4-15-'86-lc

24 HOUI TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
USED TIRES
l\IEW . R I E S

ACTION
TOWING

949-9070 or
949-2045

4· 17·1mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Real Estate General

ST. RT. 33 ~ Roght on
Krngsbuoy Road 2 acre
bu;ldmg s1Ies. Wale&lt; and
eleclrrc ava+lable. Jerms
avarlable. MAKE OFFER
WAN! $6,500.00.

curity deposit and three references. Ava ilable June I.
Call lor illfonutloll
6 p.m. 'Or send
inqllily in cn of
Bo1 729·D,

190 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992·9949
lob

Barton, Owner
1-5.. 86-tro

BOGGS

SALE~

&amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Authorized John Deere,

New 'Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

Dealer

Fer111 Equl.lllent
Partl &amp; Smloe

nary. For mora inftumatlon call
304 ·372·261 B. · Deadl ine 1or

MOHAWK CARPETS

entry May 12 .

STAINMASTER
WEAR DATED ·

4

5. 10 AND LIFETIME WARRANTY
ON CARPET &amp; PADDING

otfi c ~~o .

Middleport, Ohio
4-16·87-1 mo.

hom e. 3 male,

Residential - Commercial -

Indust rial
Free Estimates - Fully Insured
ROOFING - Shingles, Rolled Roofing, Guuersand In ·
sulating Roof Coating
CARPENTRY - Add itions , Garages, Sun Decks

CONCRETE WORK- Sidewalks, Basements and Drive·

wavs
SIDING - Vinyl, Aluminum . and WOod
PAINTING - All types including space age insulating

paint
SANDBLASTING - Dry Blasting. Wet Blasting , and
Vacuum Blasting of stru ctural steel, tanks,
buildings . and miscellaneous itams.

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 614/ 949·1686

4·15 1 mo. pd.

4-16·16-lln

Public Notice
set forth in the bidding
propoeal. "
Each bidder shall be re·
quirad to file with his bid 3
certified c heck or cashier' •
check for an amount equal to
five percent of h ia bid, but in
no event more than flftv
thouund doll1n, or • bond
for ten per cent of hit bid ,
payable to the Dire ctor .
Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms. for qualifica·
tions at least ten days prior
to rhe date tet for opening
bids in accordance w ith
Chapter 5525 Ohio Revised
Code.
Plana end specification•
are on file in the Department
of Transportation and the
office of the Districl Deputy
Director .
The 0 ire ctor reserves the
r ight to reject anv and au
bids .
WARREN J . SMITH ,
DIRECTOR
MAY 4. 11

Public Notice

" FREE ISTIM ATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

4·28-'87·1 mo.

twelve o'clock noon. All bids
wilt Itt opened on tho 26th
doy ol Mey , 1987, at 4:00
P.M . 11 tho oHi&lt;:o ol Leodlflll
CrMII CottHrVoncy Dlltrict.
Letding Creek Conw~
YIIICV Dlstricl rtHntn tho
iftlht to occept, or ~. onv
or oH bids.
(5( .11 , 18. 26 ; 3tc

6 lost and Found
·lc-

lost: Cockatiel bird. Low'er
Middleport &amp;rea. If found or~een
call 614 ·99 2 ·6804 . Reward.

l: licensed Clinical Audiologist

~ (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Aven~e. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

BINGO

EAGLII CIUI - POMEROT, OH.
THUIS.z7 PM- U 61.S

8

Public 'Sale
&amp; Auction

Cash In • dey the Aucti on wiy .
Cllck'l Auction Str11lce, 304·
896 · ~430, License No. 764·.87.

Rick Peeraon Au ctioneer •II ·
cflnted In Ohio and West Vlrv l·
nla. Real Ettate, ant ique. farm .
liquidat ion ulu, 304· 773·
5785 or 773 · 6 4 3~ .

9

Wanted To Buy.

We pay ca1h for tate model clean
used can.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oidalnc: 1
Bill Gene Johnaon
614· 446 ·3672

paid tor '83 model
u1ed cara. Stnhh
Buick·Pontla c, 191 1 hatern
Ave. , GaUipOIII . Cell 814-441·
2282 .

TOP CASH
and newer

Buytn1r dally gold , 1ilver cob9a.
rlnga. jewel ry, atarling wara 1 old
cohn, larg e currency. Top ,pt' l·
cet. Ed Burkett Bar ber Sbop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport , Oh. 6\ 4·
992 ·3476.
t
W.nted: Atarl tape1 . Com. to
210 Spring Ave. Apt. 2 Po me·
roy. or ctll 61 4 ·992·8750. Aak
for Curt.
~
·I

Good used riding lawn mower, B
. to 10 hp. 304 ·875· 7431.

GRAVEL • SAND

ftllpliiYIIIrlll

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Ser vt LI~'

10·8-tlc

11

LIVE
ENTERTAINMENT

Roger Hysell
Garage

WED. 9·1;

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

FRI. &amp; SAT. 9:30·1:30
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK
SUN. 3 A.M.- 12 A.M.
MONDAY ·SATURDAY
i 0:30 A.M.-2:30 A.M.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
RfPAIR

We An~ A Privat o C lub
Now Accepting New

6-17-lfc

ROOFING &amp;
SIDING
GUnERWORK

Members

POMEROY, OHIO
Mtlg1 Co.'1 #I
Nlltefub
992-9901

M EMB ERS HIP $6 .00
N on ~ Membur

Charge

Cover
$2.00

2 POOL

EXCELLENT
REFERENCES
FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES COE

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR

614-367-0412
THE HAT RACK

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cl eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Soturdor 10 A.M.

949·2263
or 949-2168

(Sugar Run Areal
HOURI: Wod.- lhu&lt;1Ari.
tO o.m. to Sp.m.

Announcement s

Howard L, Writesel

Ull
S·S-' 17· 1 mo.

Help Wanted
;

Full· llma exeltemenl I Fir

pril81 2 perHim B, 1 fUII· II .
Cer • phone needed. TUPPE .
WAR E. Ph .

014·354·4001 .

RN / SupervJ•or. 100 B•d
SNF / ICf und• new 1\'Ulnag•
ment 11 now 11eking AN '1 wbh
tupervt1ory 1klllt. Recern I.!T~C

••perltnce prefened. Send ,,.
1ume to: Four Windt Nur ~l,.g
Facility, 216 Seth Avenue.•
Jac1t:1on . OH •&amp;&amp;40 . Ann: S~t
Woodard. Director of Nur a lng ~
·OR EAT

POSITION .Ught

Jp

you r lift with CANDLE CON CEPTS . Now hiring 6uptrvltora.
Free IJ IInlnfl, .. mpl tl &amp; ilu!111·
1le1. Wiutldy p•yehe olt:. ••• vOr.r
own houn . Begin In Mlntgit·
men11evel poaltlon. Ideal job for
mCJth eu . ft~~~chftt"l . JMrtV plan
dttltfl . C1ll collecl 614· 474 ·

8213.

We are eu rrflntly loo king f(lr
com puter 1.!1ht•paopl8 In t~e

G111ie, Mlltun. Melga County
treat . If you hnt a b1ckground

20 Years Exp .

3 Announcements

In c omp utert o r ••Itt and •
detlre tO bt I UCCHtfui, Jhlt
could be tor you. Apply In
penon , TC8 , ~9 Sycemore S.r
Gallipolia, or call 81 4· 448·4900
for

Tour Guides : Doe• moni'V moll·
vete vou 1 Salary to start ·
Comm lu ini · Bonua. F•ntutlc
opportun ity to Eern 1800·

1 1 000 / wii . Menv comptny
m•n•o•
ment positions avail11ble. Call
Sue ior fnterview 81 4 ·288·
6421 . NoT jutl 1 Job.
bentfifl · td~o~enciiJment

1n

appoin tment.

~

GOVE RNM E NT JOB&amp; .
11 6,0 40 · 159, 230 yr. Nd'w

E•'·

Hiring Ce ll 805. 687·6000
R·9806 fm currant tedMallln

S'f'racuH Vill•ye i1 tak ing r•·
aume' t for pool mtnlgltf. Sttnd
10 Janice l•wton by Mev l 8 .
BoA 288 , Syra c u1e . Ohio
46779 .
•

4·22-87·ttn

lo 12 NOON
OtMr rim" by chonu or

.,
'·

&lt;oil 99!.5 731 lor
oppointmtnt.

MANDCIAntD COUIIDY

!TIM I

Woocl-(rodMt-Quilting
Flowers, Sewing,
loskot Lidt
COIIIPUf QUI PRIUS!

4· 14-1 mo.

Leading Creek · Conser·
vancy Dittrict will accept
.ealed bids at it'1 ' offiee
located at 34461 Corn Hot·
low Rood. Rutland. Ohio.
46776 . for the purchase of a
two wev radio ttlemetry
ayatem and 1 two w1y radio
co~munlet1ion• system .
Bid apoclficotlons may be
acquired for esoo.oo at
l.Mding Creek ConHrven cy
Oittrict office during tt1nd·
••d butineos houro of 8:30
A .M . to 4 ;00 P.M . Mondoy
thru Fridoy.
All bide must bofiledatthe
office of le1ding Creek

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

tfn

•Sto,m Windows
•Replacement WindOw1
•New Roofing

Free to good ho me male kitten. 1
black.1 gray. will dellvar wlt.h in
reaaonanble di1tance, 304 ·895·
3681 ,

Post Ottlce, phone 304· 676 ·
5586 .

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

Eerly American couch, fair corid.
304-676· 3696 .

FOUND, t"n female puppy , near

4- 7 -'87- t mo .

No Sunday

1oward Racine in Syracuse.

992 -67t 7.

TWIN MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............ 598.88
FULL MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............ 1148.88
CHESTL ....... S49.95 RECUNERS ..... I99.95
DINETTE/ 4 CHAIRS ............................. 599.95
12 Months Free Financing

or 949·2801

h o ~oae

above Snowball Hill Ad. on laft

t~e

108 W. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-3307

PH. 949·2860

Setter. 9 wk s. old . Fifth

LO ST: Wellston clan ring With
name Paule . Meigs ballfield.

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
'

Estimates"

Partly house broke. 6 montJla
old. Ce ll614·446· 1149
Puppies to give away to good
hell EngJiatl

GHEEN'S PAINTING, INC.

New Hom11 lullt

•Insulation

A lie ..

H alf Dachshund, half Beagle.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•Storm Coors

Third

992·6173

Hobson Drive

~ Swim Molds · Interpreting SetVices

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

8'25

Ga llipolil

Free h11y in Gallipolis; 1·9 acr~s.
You cut &amp; haul . Call 614 ·4464930.

•BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULAUON

Giveaway

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

•VINYL SIDING
"AlUMINUM SIDING

"Free

·

Wooden Pallou on firlt ·come.
first-serve basis. Inquire in perton at Gallipolis Daily Trib,un e

Expert Installation
Up to 36 Mqnths Financing Availabl'e

1-3-'86 tic

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

con..,ancy Oittrlct on tht
26th dey of Moy. 1987. by

FOIIEIT
SOUTHUM DISTIICT - IACIME. OHIO - Tinnon Run
ROid - 3 bedroom house, full basement, 2 barns. garage,
garden. Rent $325, monthly, paid in advan ce. free gas. Se·

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

PH. 949·2801
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

.

. REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Alto TrutMittlu

NOTICE TO
CONT6ACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
April 24. 1 987
Contract Sales Lege! !fopy
NO. 87-296
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propos1ls wil be
race~ed at I hi office of the
Director of the Ohio Deplrt·
ment of Transportation, Co·
lumbua. Ohio. unlit 10:00
A.M .. Ohio Standard Ti me.
Tuesday, May 19. 1987. for
improvement• in;
Athens , Gallia , Hock ing,
Meigs, · Monroe. Morgan.
Noble, Vinton and Waa~ing · ·
ton Counliea. Ohio , on sec·
tion ATH -33 ·0.01 on United
States Route 33 in Athens
County , and for Improving
various routes and sections
in Athena, Gallie, Hocking,
Meig1. Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, Vinton, and W11hing ·
ton Countiea. by furnishing
and installing railed pave·
ment m1rker material a.
Pr(!i.ct length- 0 .00 feet
or 0 .00 mile.
Work length- various feet
or v1rioua mile• .
Pevement width - varlet .
" The date let for c omple·
lion of this work shall be 11

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

"At leosonable Prltes"

or 949-2860

$33.500.00.

A' .03

YOUNG'S

Public Notice

NEW LISTING- NEW.LIMA
ROAD - 166 +acres. Waler
and eleclnc available. Nice
level lot 101 I or several
bu+l d1ng s1tes . ASKING

Henry E. Cleland Jr.
991·6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dollie Turner ..... 992·5692
"lfice... ............, 992:2259

REASONABLE • REllllll
8·20-'86 tin

9'2-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

1124 Eait Moin,t.

RE510 ENTI A.l / COM M ERCIAL

Bus. Ph. 985-3813
Home 98'5·3837

management plan and proposed user fee schedule will

614-843·5248

Middleport, Ohio

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Ant' ues

FREE ESTIMATES

GAS · WATER
ElECTRIC
DRAINS

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1 -1 3 -tfc

ACCENT
Let lh Fem

TVs, Antennas
SCitellite Sales
lnstCIIICition
Service .

PAT Hill FORD
992·2196

FENCE COMPANY

All Types of
• Trenching

J.R.'s REPAIRS

RADIATOR
SERVICE

or honings

5·6·'87-1

4· 17·1 mo.

S-S-'87·1 mo.

CHESTER, OHIO

3 Announcements

992·7636

John K. Benh
Owner /Mechanic

4-16-1 mo.

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

Automotive Repair
&amp; Service

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

All types Carpentry,
P.lumbing and
Electrical Repair 25%
Off lor Senior
Citizens. Free Est.
Call 992-6952
Leave message on
machine il no answer.

·-·

Will Do ....
Carpentery - Vinyl
&amp; Aluminum Siding
- Painting Drywall
Free Estimates
Reliable
Guaranteed Work

Good Fri. &amp; Sat. nights
or any open bowling
time. Call us for parties
for your group.
992·3432 or 99tiH~~

THOMAS
BODY SHOP
992-3989
5·8·'87-!1

J&amp;N
CONSTRUCTION

Iring this ad with
vour famlv ar group
to bowl 2 games ond
got one fr101l

FREE ESTIMATES

•Refrigerators
•Drvers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

•

382 I. 2ND ST.

FREE ESTIMATES

RT. 4, POMEROY

.=-:;:a....,._

Pomeroy Bowling Co.

ELECTRIC &amp;
ACETYLENE
WELDING

11 -- ..,.._,..;

::=..:.:w_ .

BOWLING!!

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

__

lll:""-

=~~.-..

~~---

SERVICE

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

;-

........
"-~
~~---

loG" " /Oo o o v

THE DITCHING

JPHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

,.
,._.,...,.,

101)0 10 i'rtOfOIIO.OY

3·11·1 mo.

(U,TeU•I

'-

• Itoe
Oil ,'"'"o,.oo•
10 l !WI DOT

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
The Meig• Countv Commillionen will hold a public
hearing in lhe.Tupperl Plains
Community on Wedntdav.
June 24. 1987, at 7 o'clock
P .M. at the Tuppers Pla,nt
Fire House.
Purpose of the meeting
will be to diacu11 the revised
management plan and u~er
charge fee for the proposed
Tuppera Plaina Wlltewater
treatment plan.
Copies of the revised

$999
uanum

:tt.:::z...

• ·•

CltJN i/ied pap• c:ovn du
follou:tn8 •elephone u chtl"le• ...

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE U!£1

1
•
Pubic Notace

On Mev I . 1987, in the
Meigs County Probate
Court. c;ue No. 26617.
Jock M . Howley. 287 Cool
Stroot. Middleport. Ohio
46760. was appointed E•ecutor of tho oottte of Mildred
Hawley. decelted, late of
1 80 North 4th Avenue.
Middleport. Ohio 46760.
Robert E. Buck.
Proboto Judge
lena K. Neaaelroed. Clerk
(61 11 , 18. 26, 3tc

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 7

Gi rl s ages
8·Preliml·
12 tt. d
r-L..-----~---.,..---------'"'T------,;_--_, WANTED
13· 19 for. Modern
M!u

--'=--::.
"'- --..... ···-·-·-·""'
·--·__.,_
J·--·l--·-·
··-·--.,. .....
=

-..-~~~

D•v IE~no , 0\JOI ICOTO(I ..
IT oG 0 M I&amp;I UOOOT

lU !IOOY OOOf•
ttf0f0€~ oo

....

tlloU'II

····~-

co~'o~~W:;1~~"

. ...

wo..ro ,.. ••••
,_,,.

c .....

!

....na

-

.."_M. u .• ..,ot

Business Services

r--==:::;~::;:;;:::;:===---1

" uhJ t•t.i s luh••num t'ltlulht•rollw''" '; Firm
be available at the following
firndt•: 81111 ,Ju Bt•nllt•}', ( 'hud Folmt•r,
locations after May 18,
.JuKnn Frt•t·kt•r, Mlt·hut~ · Fr.vmyt•r, Jurtuos
1987:
t:(• l~tt'l', Myt:u Huyneo~. Mlt·h.~t.t•l IA&lt;IIhf'lt ,
1. The Meigt Countv
lf•·ldllo4••ur, Buh 8ru.nt•h Mt~rkhum, Tnr1t
Commiuionera office;
Mh·hat•l. Shl'l'u PaU('r~on. Mt•l~l'lll ICaOl!&lt;i·
2 , K 1 e b 1 u g h •
1
hurh, Sahrlnu Nmllh. Stt.'811d Grllldt•: IA't '
Realaurant;
C'ordruy, Atny ·lont'!4, .Jurt'd KinR. f; rln
Kruw.~~t·zyn, Tlnuny t•L·uvlt•y, fhrl"tophPr
3 . Lodwick's Grocery:
lti.Lush, MI'III'I!'W Wlrlrllt•y , Rrlnn Wlthr0\4",
4 . Cole'• Sohio.
Bt•t ...y lluud tlf'lh•·ll . Third frirudt•: ,Jt•tt·m~
All interested parties in the
lluhhurd. Dorttthy l...:•lfhtoft , i\1a.Uht•M·
Tuppers Pl1in1 area ere
O'Bryu.nt, Mindy l'altt•rJoiQn, ·IIL'IonNht.•t'il'l,
urged to attend this
C't•drk Andt'l'son. Fnurth Uradt•: ,Ju.rrod
mHtlng.
Jo'ulnu•r, lft•ldl ltulfnuan, Annlt• .lt'MIIIi',
M1ry Hobstetter, Clerit
.fnt •)' IJp~·omh, Sltllo Mnon•, MaUht"''
Meigs Countv
l'ttnrrl.... 1'on,vu Will. ,\dam krtiM'Jo11 '1.Yn.
.
Commissioners
f'lflh l irad+·: ltyan l'ondo•, Uroul• !tart.
161 1t. 18. 2tc
llt' lllht't' Huds1111 , Tony Kin a:. Brd KnuU!&gt;~ , -r-__;,_;_-"ji;;t~~i;;iii'c;l---~
·IIL"'f'" Wllht•r(•ll. Sixlh Grtadt•: farrl•• I
Public
Rartt•ls, fi:l1·1.111wth llo\\·nh•, Trt•,·or lfurrl!oonn, Ml:&gt;it,V ll11 ym tm, •IU,'4 tm lluffmun, ·lllhn
NOTICE OF
.\1 1.,lln. t 'ottrtnt•y Mltlkllf . •um 11 ullln1'1,
APPOINTMENT OF
Sh t&gt;l~·y Smit h. 1'\l'tli• \ 'nuna.
FIDUCIARY
t' fifth .. lx wt• t·k~ ~tradln~r: pt•rltld hun or
rullul lht• :\h•h,'!&gt;i .Junior lll~h St'hool hus

ClOSED WNDAf

-~

s uiJjt·ti ~ ttl ht• nunwd I u lht•roll wt •rt•:

•·lrst
fi rudt•: l.dgh 1\nn ( 'unh•rhury, 1\munda
Nuppi't, .\ .•J. Vau~~t:hilft. St•t,md firud•• :
t\durn 8urn•ll, Mt•lls ..,... Burrt•tl. Amy
flt•hmd . .Wnn,t' En-ln. ('arrlt• Hurmu11,
·htn l• .Judt•. Mutt Klrlt:, Tlmm.~ l..t•"'·l:&gt;i,
1\111ty M,n rs, .111 Nand,v, Slat·y Slh·rr~o~ .
'rhlrd Grud••: .Jakto Gannaway, Mlllt•
,ftlnl~. Rr)'ttn ( 'olwt•ll. Fourth' £,jrudt•:
frystul \' uu~than , liwt•n .Juhnslon, .Jopy
Rurrt1t , Kt•rry Ht'xtnn, 1\nnle Kln~~t:. Kusan
l'agt•, Kim •lan••y. Flllh Gru.dt•: Matl
( 'h.rk, ll4•nl!'+f• Sht•nr.f11old. Sixth f~ rud1•:
1\UI."'on Ganna"·u.y.l.ort•na Oll••r, ICundall
.Johnstun. VlrKtn lu Shuler, Turn Sht'Pht•rd.
•Jt•Ns lt·u !iill\'l'r!&gt;l.

1Gioft

· -·~

MEIGS PROM ROYALTY
- Meigs High School senlprs
Krisll Haynes and Jesse How·
ard relglled Saturday night as
queen and king . of tbe 1987
· Meigs High prom. Theme for
the prom was "Somewhere
Out There."

,

..,.. ___..
___
"'-···--·-

- -.--. __
.=_-- -__-_
_,

receives his or her own retirement benefit also get a widow or ·
widower benefit? The answer Is
yes but there Is a qualifier. The
benef]t paid will be the higher of
.ellher·the person's own amount
or the one payable as a widow or
widower. The two benefits won ' t
be added together to make a sum
total.
Let's look at an example. A
m arried couple, each 65, receive
their own retirement bene!lt
from Social Security. His Is $600
and hers ls$680. 1fthewlfeshould
die, the husband would be eligible for a widower ben!'flt of $680.
His benefit would be Increased by
the $80 from her record. If he
would die first. her benefit Is
higher than his so there would be
no widow benefit paya ble. In
othPr words, she already re·
celves more than Is available
from his earnings record. Either
of them would get ihe $255 lump
sum death payment. however.
If you'd like to k11olv more
abou t the surv]vor benefit progra m , remember that you can
,;et a free pamphlet from you
Social Security office. Just give
us a ca ll at 992-6622.

Mukln~:;a~rad 1 ·ofBoruhowlnaJitht•lr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Business Services

garden designs discussed were
the circle garden, spoke design,
triangle design, and block.
Mrs. Bolin discussed the many
uses of herbs for medicinal and
cu Unary purposes. as well as for
fragrance, as a patural dye, and
for controllng Insects.
She explained that an herb Is a
non-wood plant that dies down to
the ground. can be used fresh or
dried, are both annual and
perennial.
Brenda Bolin brought several
flower seed and bulb catalogs.
The door prize was won by Ruth
Dugan. Mrs. Bolin gave devotions on Easter using the theme,
"He Is Not Here."
Next meeting will be held May
14 at the home of Gina Tillis. For
ro ll call members wll ·name a
new flower they want to plant this
year.

More on survivor benefits

By Lou Horvath

Flf~

Monday, May 11, 1987

PLUMBING &amp;HEATING
168 Norlh Second
Middloporl, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
WI C1rry Fishing Supplip

Flo,./

Bouquet
Mo11n, W.

Pay Your Ctblo &amp;
Phone Billa Here
1

IUIINESS PHON!

9'1 -6510
PHONI
16141 9'2·7714
l~UI

l/78111"

FLOWERS FOR
ALL OCCASIONS
NEW IDEAS ·

•
·.... ·Pom·aro·v··...... .. ·······pf
Pieasaiif .....•
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
.,
.
&amp; Vicinity
..
•

"''"'' · ·~·····

.... . • • •. •• ••• · - ............. ,.j ..

Mey 12th fnd 13th. Wainio rn
Rt . 124 *Ct'OII from Rt tiM
Pining Mill. Lg . women '•

clo11'181 and nvr101 un iform1 .
m1n1 and children, ltdill clo·
t hing , bike, furniture , mil e
itema .
Fou r femily gerage 11 le. May
12th end 13th. 9:00· 6:00 p.m .
Two Mi. North ot Chuter on Rt .

7.

,Uil &amp; IARIAIA
. VAN filTER
J04·771 ·SS7S
All• S

.

CHECK THE

· ·· · ···· ~-

Bi(l d .t rd saln, 304 Wll1on Si.
H t~ n &amp;lion. Mev 1 1· 12 th. 9 ·4
behind GS.B E.tt:llon . Ho me Int.
1u.lull c lo lhfll .
' ··

VARO SALt!.: May 11 , 1l.
totaled on KMny Court liM
house on tlghl. Babybjjd, ea.,.
11111. adult cloth &amp;l , little girla.
clothe•. 2T· 4T, Toy1 1ome n~c
nacka, MORE . 9 :00 lo 6 :00',
RAIN CA N CEL~

....... Giilllpoli'S' ........
&amp; Vicinity · '
. -.. .... ........... .';'
... .... ......
811emen1 &amp; vetd

11 1e. 8 ap',

elect . 11ert Guwelv whh altacho

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

550 Poge St., Midlrporl

Ph. 992·3537
4-1·'17- 1 mo.

Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat. Ni1ht
9:00P.M. to 1:00 A.M.
The Medallion Band
12.00 Cover

mants. 011 heater, tampa, roll •.,.
way bad. corner c•blnet. tlnkr;
~leuwere . curtai n• . b 8dl1
preads, Loti of Clothe• . Ptarnz ,
Sub. 8th- to 15th. 10· 7. 448t
7721 .
t

1071 Stcond Ave. 9·1 Mondty
• Tue1d8y, May 11112. Sovi
clothes, SM·2T . Adult c lothes !: '
mote.

--+·-------------

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy..:. Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

11

51 Household Goods

LAFF-A-DAY

AVON . no service charij8. open
t err itorial, pl)one 304 -67514 29.

SWAI~
AUCTIO~ &amp;
OilY~ St. , Osllipolll.

FURNITURE 62

New &amp; used
wood·coal ttov... 6 pe wood LA
auite 8399, bunk bed• 8199 .
recliner• new • used bedroOm
auitat, wringer Wishers, &amp;
shoe.. New livingroom auitee
1199-t59,9, lamps. c.n 614-

REPS NEEDED
For busin•u accounu. FullTime t60 ,000
t80. 000. Part· Time 812.0008 18,000 . No selling, repeal
butin eu. Set your ow n hours.
.Training provided . Call 1· 612 -

County Appli~ce, Inc. Good
used •PPii•nces 1nd TV Mts.
Open lAM to IPM . M.on thru
Sat. 614-441-1699. 627 Jrd .
Ave, Gallipolil. OH , ,

Po,.on for genral hrm work and
milking auithmt. Mu11 hiVe
1ou nd family life and no drinking . Benefitt, depend on eKpe-

rienceand at1itud1. Aeplv with 3
n•hencet to Bo11 P-5, care Point
Pleaunt Hasp., 200 Main St ..
Pt . Pit. within 6 days.

Valley F~miture, new &amp; ualtd .
lArge sectiOn of quality furniture . , 1218 Entern Ave .,
Gallipolis.

Full flastl pan / time. $180 . per
roll taking photograph• . hpe-

0000 USED APPLIANCES
WtJhera, dryers, refriger1tors,
rtngu. Skaggs Appliance. .
Upper River Rd. btl_lde Stone
Ctelt Motel. 614·446-7398 .

ri&amp;nce unnecess~rv . 36mm ca·

mere and iilm aupplied free.
1 -416 - 482 - 2100 , X21 40 .

Dayt / evenings/ wee~endt .

~raft

lcs, (604)641
e. Other
call
-0091 inform11tion·
EXT 3667,
open 7 daytl CALL NOWII
Mature woman to live In and cere
for elderly gentleman on weekands " Fri . rhru Sun" must have
good refmence1. perter non
smvker. 304-676-1406 .
AVON -it s chang ing! Be among
the tint to reap the benefitt ol
the new Avon . Call 304· 8822646
HIR lNG I Government jobs-your
IU811 , $16,000-868.000. Phono
call utfund&amp;ble. (602)838-8885
flit ." 1203 .
NEEDED - 81bysltter in New
Haven wee~ di!Yt and tome
.Jo..eekenda Wr ite to PO Bolt 672,
New 1-t&amp;v e n, W.Va . S tate
r.eference1.

15

Schools
Instruction

Retrain Now. So uth ealtern BusIness College. C11 ll 614-446~367 .

'18 Wanted to Do
'

t:;;:::;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:=lr::::::::::::::l
32 Mobile Homes

42 Mobile Homes

for Sale

for Rent

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALifY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALUPOLIS, AT 36.
PHONE 114-446-7274.

Trail..- above Krogen in Pome-roy for rent. Total electric. Call
614-992 ·6216

For ule by ow net", 1 979 Buddy
14x70, 3 BR . 1 1h baths. total
elec . . elot of e~ttrn Call 614446· 3066 .

2 bedroom trailer, couples, 1
small child, locust Ad, At . 1,
Point Plea..ant, 304-676-1078.

1980 F&amp;irmonr Bayview Dalu1ut
141170 futnlahed, 28R , natural
g&amp;s heat , CA. on private rented
lot. On Rt . 36 Rodney . Ph .
814-446-7844 .
1983 Skline 14•60. 2 BR., AC,
extra nice. Frenctl City Brokerage Services. Ph. 814-446-

9340.

2 bedroom. Call614 -949 ·2424.

2 r,.droom mobile home furniahed. Used lawn mowefl fOf
11le. 30~ · 676 - 8612 after 5 :00
pm lUI 12:00 PIT!·

2 bedroom, you pay Utititiet,
adults only, deposit required.

304-876·2535.

44

1983 Naahua. 3 bdr .. e11c . cond.
Will sell with or without wood·
burner and underpinning. Call
258· 1448 after 7pm.
1972 Cameron 2 BR . $6000.
Cell814-448-2170.

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom basic rent 1176.00
plus electric. Al to required 11
S200.00 uc:urity deposit. CON TACT: Jackson Estetes Dept . Ph
448 -3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Furnished &amp; unfutnished apta ..
$160.00 and up, references Ph .
304-fl7&amp;-7738 or 304-875 5104 A-1 A.e•l Estate.

mow lawns in town. Call
614-446-3668 .

1973 12w:66 Kirkwood . Remo deled. WUI con1ide r otfM. 61499~ - 24154 aher 8 :00p .m .

1-!arballfa-Witlpaper Hanging ,
C&amp;tl 614-446-2200, or 446-

2 DR . treile.-. Carport. porch.

Furnished Apt . 18R, 701 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis. •226 UtllitiH
Pd. Ph. 446-4418 after 7PM .

Lawn mower re~a l r . Will pick up
and del iver . Also light hauling.
Call 614· 742 -2393 or 614742-3091 .

Can do lig ht hauling and roofing.
Ra uoneb le rates . Mari o n
Snider. 614-949-2629 .

e11cellent condition . Also trailer
tot wilh every t hing to hook up
trailer, on same lot. B1rn, pond,
in country. 9 acrea. Consider
land Contract . '20.000. 614-

742-3197.

1 984 Fairmont 141160 all elect·
ric, centel air, will conaidar
vehicle in tr1de. $13,600.00.
304-675· 31 1 B.

Large l1wn aervice: gran cutting
11 nd weed -eati ng. Raked If
wanled, nice neat job. 614-992·
2078 . c.n anytimell!

12x60 Magnolia mobile home.
e11c cond. phone 304-676-7278
or 676 -6864.

W1nted to do. spri ng cleaning ,
houae cte1nlng, office clenalng,
phone 304 -882-2662.

1986 Champion mobile home, 3
bedrooms , ttJtceptionally nice,
financing available .

WANTED TO DO: V&amp;rd Work,
mowing, p1intlng oulbulldlftQ•.
304· 675-4880.

F1nancial

$16,900.00, 304-67&amp;-4480.

33

Farms for Sale

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

TH E OHIO VALLEY PUBLISI-t ING CO. rectt mmends that you
do buslneu with people you
know. lind NOT to send money
through the mall until you have
invnttlgated the offering ,

Real Estale

20 acre farm Hannan Trace
Road, Glenwood, W. Va. fOf
more information call 304· 773 6118 or 773-6185 after 6:00 .
110 acres. leon Baden Rd.,
Houee &amp; outbuilding. Stream
through property. 304 -488 -

1066.

34

Rentals

4 BR , 2 b11th, lR , DR , kitchen.
fenced vard. two 81110 slorage
buildings. In city. 127.000. Call
614 -446 -6583 .

Newly redecorated 3-4 8~ .
family room, Plenty of atorage
1p1ree. Ni ce location . PI\. 61_.·
448-70215.

For t~le: .t roo m hou se with bAth
Ofl 1 Y, acresl11 nd. 10k55 ruller.

614-742-2663.

6 roo m house. bnt h, 11h acre.
Sell or trade . Red uce d to

t24,000. Coll614·992-7463.

4 bedroom house, baument,
c.rpet. Third Street, New
Haven. •16,000.00. Ca ll 304 ·
882 -2564 Clay Roney .
MidWay Drive, New H11ven. 3
bedroom 11 e1trt large}. pllrt
basement, laundry 1nd ttorage.
tottl .tleettlc, 100 • 200 lot, low

40'1, 304-875.3030 ur 6763U1.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Houses for Rent

3 bdr, brick in th e country, na1r
Riu Grande. Security depo1lt.
no pets. 1240.
montfl . Call
246 -5439.

p.,,

Nict 2 Bdf unfurnished house.
G1rage, workshop. Ref. &amp; depoalt. Prefer m1rritd couples.
Accept one cl'llld. C.all614-4*fl·

96B5.

2 lA ferm houH on Feirflald
Centen1ry Rd. C•ll fl14 -446-

Nice 2 BR apt. Stove, relfigera·
tor. water furn 'ed. 4'/t mi. from
Gallipolis. t210 1mo. S60 Dep.
No Pett . Call 614-446-8038 .
Graclou·• living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments II Village
Menor and Riverside Apart·
menu In Middleport . From
$215 . Including utilitiea. Ca ll
turni1hed spanment.

614-992·6434 or 304-BB2-2666.
APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
houtea. Pt. Pleasant and Glllipo,Jis. 614-446-8221 .
In Middleport, Ohio, 2 bedroom.
fumimhed 11pt. call 1-304-882-

2566.

45 Furnishad Rooms
Rooms tor rent , day. week.
month. Gallil Hotel. Call 614446· 971 6. Rent ulow as 1120
month.
Furniah&amp;d room. t 1 00 . Utilities
paid. Share bath. Single mate.
919 Second. Gallipolia. Call
446· 441 8 afte.- 7pm,

47 Space for Rent

Space for small trailera . All
hook· ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms, 1ir and cable. M,.on,
W.Va. Cllll304· 773· 6651 .
Space for rent, trailer apace•.
locust Ad. At. 1, Point Pl«a11n1.

304·175·1078.

47 Wanted to Rent
3 or 4 Bedroom houaa in Kyg&amp;r
Creek School District. References Ph. 814-446-8621 .

For Lease

100.000 BTU with 80,000
output. 83150. Call 614-9922517 ur 614·992-8293.
Bees and bee hives for tale. 130 .
per hive. Call 61*· 742-2292.

Will do lawn mowing in Pomeroy
and Middlepon area. 1978 Ford
Granade. 302 motor, 4 speed,
good condition . •&amp;60. 614-

15ft. boat and traUer. Good cast
Iron bath tub. J.W. Scarbrough,
Ball Knob Rd. near church.
Wektlng •et , tanlr• includ-s.
Astylin tanks complete 8360.
Cell 61 4-992-384711fter 12:00
noon ,

Mer r. h

se

78

56

Pets for Sale

Dr11gonwynd C1ttery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Peraien end
Siameae kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. New Chow puppi•.
Call B14-446-384.t after 7PM.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pat·
Grooming . All breedt ... AII
styles. Julie Webb Ph . 814 -44.fi0231 .

RegiJtered Golden Retriever, friendly, good with children.
For stud nrvice. call

W.-.ted to buy grande logs
delivered to uwmlll . Paul
Mercer Sawmill, McArthur,

Ohio 45651 . 614·596·6933.

63

882-2692.

Musical
Instruments

2609.

.

Nice :J bedroom houM. Family
room. a•es:~e. b"'ment. forctd
1ir he•t. IS woodtd Rftt, bam.
S300 per rnontPI. •1 00 d.,Otit.
No lnaldt peta. , 0 E11t St.
Pomeroy. 81.t·432·8289.

42 ¥obile Homes
for Rent
Coli 614-448-11889.'

hou••

Two btdroom
•raM•- One
tr1iler. CaM 114-.ut·

51 Household Goods
Automatic wathtf t9&amp;. clotheJ
dryer t9S , froat - frtl
refrlgtr~tor - whltt t 128 ,
frftiltr -15 cu. ft . t110, Mayug
wrlnvtr wuhtr ••• · air
conditlontr-5000 BTU til, AC
11'000 BTU euo. AC 11.000
BTU t180. 20 Inch 111 rtntt
t71, 20 Inch ttectric range
., 25. ~ ...ric rlnQ• double
oven t110. Sltaooe Appll.-tc.t.

U- Aiv&lt;" Rd. Coli e14·44e.
739e.

Rock• recliner- t30. Good
cond. Foot stool- tl. Unle bovt

clothing· lin• 4-12- Coli 514448·8113 1nytlmo.

z wooc111onn c~oor..,

• -

e-vr-

_ , ,, 3:bll0.

lor

eo. Oood &lt;Ot)CII11on. eo11 814448·4708.

I WAS FEP UP WITH
LIFE HERE ANYWAY.

Gentle Jer1ey milk cow with
heifer calf. e600. Atd &amp; white
faced heifer. t250. Call 614·

.

B14-742-2753.

Wanted to Buy: 200·250 squtrt
· bales rope tied hay . Must be dry
harv for reclamation. Call 814·

44B-9685 btwn_BAM a &amp;PM.

4930.

Transpnrl il l ion

Klmb•ll Spinet pi1no. eeOO firm .

304-675-6726.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

614-368-8647,

Farrn Supplir.o
&amp; L1vnstur.k
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S. 36 W•t. Jackaon. Ohio.
BU-286 ·6461 .
Maney Ferguson. New Holl1nd,
Bu1h Hog Salet &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractor• to choote from
&amp; complete fine of new &amp; uMd
equipmmt. large11 selection In
S .E. Ohio.

Autos for

ale

1980 Chrvaler Fifth AYIInue,
good condition. Call 814·441-

000B.

1987 Dodge Omnl, 5-spetd .
Uke new c:ondltkm U500. Ph .

614·3B8·B708.

1940 Oadge 8utineu CoUp,
2-stater with e11.trt perts. Ph.
MUST SElL 76' Corvette, T-top,

..800. Ph. 814-246-5837.

1980 Ptvmouth Vol1nt. heellent condition . One owner Ph.

814·44e·e201.

1971 Plymouth Duattr '250.
19n Ford LTD e100. 1977
Bronco $1,000. 1984 Old1
Omega tl5500. 1988 '1.! Ton
Ford Rtnger tB&amp;OO. Call 81*·

446-1420.

*850. Coli 614·286·6522.

4020 J ohn DaMe tractOt' with 6
boUomplows. 12fi. John0eare
transpor1 diac. 16550 . New
Holland 273 Baler •1795 . Cell

61HB6·6622,

For lilt Grevety, 62 Mriea like
n~rw tractor, mower deck I
Sulky. t1 , 700 all. 30•· 773·

Echo 6150 EUL &lt;:h1innw. 2
McCulloch c h~nHws . Cell &amp;14-

John Oeare. ~row. corn plantef,
e11c cond, t 450.00. 30•· 458-

5866.
1031 .

Buy one 1ny tiztchaln uwch1in
ond ,._ MCOfld chtln h-'f pric;e.

SID AS EQUIPMENT CO.,
Hendenan, W. Va. 304·675·
7421 .

SNAFU®by Bruce Beattie

I'IITH MY \ - - 1

seeM~o

NOW.

i5AP

7 15 52

304-46B-15ee.

1'

NeweHour (1 :00)
ill NeWI
II) lilonaytlna Current
reports on world economics
and financial news w"h Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
.1121 1111. WhHI of FortuM

B201 .

1980 Dodge PU , 4114. Short
wheel base. PS, PB, .t apd. 318
engine. Call 814-251-1467 after 7pm .
1978 Ford van for sale. Good
running conditton . Prietd right.
Come and drive jt. Call 614·

drive. auto with air. atrong 400
engine. AM-FM etereo, line
lfuck. Ste..-na Garage, 304·

675·n1o .. &amp;?&amp;·174t.

'78 Blaar; 4 whHI drtve. new
tim, tt.d•a. ltrong vehicle.
Stearna G•rage. 304-175-7710
Of

675-5749.

1976 Jeep CJ6, 30* engine,
priced to ~ell e400.00 . 304·

676-4090.

74

Motorcycles

1977 Honde CBII&amp;O four K.
imm•culate, low miles t700.

MUST SELL- 1985 Y. . oh1
Virago, Uke new. Ph. 614-245·
&amp;e37.
1974 Honda 750; good cond.,
with many ••traa. *660 . Call

11300. 1978 Hondo Cl 750.

1978 Chevy MtUbu Cl11 .. o. 6

1986 Ford Eacort, 4

AM·FM

IIPI.

U1tt.

1&amp;88

Chevy Chevette. 4 apd., 13119.
John '• Auto Saln, lutaviHt Rd .•
G•lllpolil.
••c ~

con d. ,

1983 Chevette: 11. 000 mllet,
tih WhMI, 4 lpd.. be. CM .
*2600. Prlee ntgotillble. Call

&amp;14-44&amp;-n17.

118e GTO 3e9 ong.

1981 Honde 710 Custom. GDOd
condition. Runt great. Alking

E111 . condition. 11.000 miln.
Geragt kept. Atklnt t1095.
1912 YwnaheiiO JCT. Uke new
condltk&gt;n. 295 Actual mit ...
Rttal MW for ezeta. cau

114-44e-9407.
spd.,

wMh

lri-powtt. 4tpd. 10bohpoahrac
,.., end. 45,000 origintrl mMet.
Garage kept. tll500 . Call 11*'

448-9407.

1986 Chevy Ch111ette Deku11e.
Excellent condiUon. Uke new.

Onlr 5000 mM... •4200. Coli
614-251·1211-

1914 KIWI18kl KJC 10. $8150.
Cell 114-241-15*32 after&amp; . 1
1978 Ktwauki motDf' cyclt. KZ
400. 4eoo miiM. 814·9e&amp;.

4308.

lion. Coli 814-3SS-1323 or
614·388·9727.

1910 Toyota T•ctl automatic.
air. rebultt motor in good concNtlon. Sm..l tNCk topper. Ctll

814-441-1510-

Kawasalr:l Tecate 2:10 three

1183 Chwy 'h ton "-'1 duty.
mho. etooo. I14-H2·_ZII1 .

oooot cooriitlon, ez.ooo .......
~~~--~~~~·1 874 flirmoutll- - · I cyl.

'""' poot.

2024.

euo.

LOANS - ANY AMOUNT

Uncpndltlontl lifetime gUiran·
tat. local ret•encn furnished.
Free Htlmatee. Call conect

1-814-237-0488,

1171 Kaweaaki KD 17&amp; din
.,. .. , . bcelttrt conclltlon. Newtv
rebuilt. Priced reatonable. &amp;Hat
10 Eaet St. Pomeroy. 114·992·

34111.

For ufe 1171100T motorcyelt.
1813 Y-45 Mllftl. 1183 XR

1100. 304-57&amp;-1881.

d-.
King tnd

c...om

ful1r

F"f Clllltt,
Queen
11.100.00 or b•t otter.

a.-.

1ow miloogo.

&amp;1114.

Phon•

••c cond,
304-171·

1180 K-LTO 1,000, uo
304-e78·5433.
1112 Y - • Muum 7110ce,

.....
rlltl COiwMtluw, IIUekl.
CIV.... • 1 Wit. IMall. .1,100.

3Q4.7n-13ZI 0&lt; ft2--2.

•

I14·Mt·

711

1180flfla-AI_4_
drlve.loyl.• - . 4 · - -

Boata and
Mot01'8 for Sale

e

'·

1'&gt;&lt;1WE5

~

away on nelghborw' plane
and must fly whan pilot gats
Sick,

5 •\ I

~ tNti&gt;T~U.. InO

(I)

droy or night.

OH, RANSOM,AH JUST HATE
TH' THOUGMT OF THAT FO'
MAN

COMI~ '

YANK~i;E

DOWN

I~

Tl'iRRITORYI

All typea carpenter &amp; concrett
work: lnterkH, exterior, remo- ·
dellng, p1lnttng, roofing, free '
ntlmttn. C•lll14-441-1174.'
~inyle

•

Aluminum Sidlngo '\

lntemo [POi (2 :45)
US [)) MOVIE: YIC1or/ Ylctorlll
(PG) (2:t3)
8:30 G [I) 91 Vlllrit Valerie
arranges a date lor David,
and he lalla lor her. (R)

Chein link fencn, tree • etumr.
removtl. Mulch, stone, ftl ,
aztllat. yeWs. rododtn*ont.~
Oon'a ltndsCtpel. Ph. 114- ~

WflL, fJf.Vt.R TALK ABCUr
R:lllKS, RWGIOJ. S~.
I{)L)R MOTHER, CX.D GIRL
FRIUJDS CR. lv"CU.Y

304-178-2391 •• 814-4482414.

'THAT l,EAVt..S MOJIES

AfVD

~L

£'STAlE.

(!) NHL Hockly

l!leDMy.....,. ..m

Sem's painfully reminded of
her waiHIOwtr days 11 Panl's
dance. (R)
8:110 [1) 7110 Club Spacial Oong I
World of Good
e [I) 91 'Hand• of a
Btranaer, Port 2' NIC
Monday Night II the MoviH

1;1

Fetty Tree Trimming. ttump
removal. Call304·875· 1331 . ·

c..,._

AoUtry Ot
tool dfiNng.
Mott wells cam pitted umtday.
Pump Ml• and alr'Viet. 304-

895-3802

g
liD American Pl8ylloun
Two Yale students coerce e

Concrete , finiah. partdng hlta.
batementt · any lila job. Srll'lkH'
Citizen Discount, Rick Oerflekl.

1;1

514·981·4484.

friend to imparsoneta an eunt
BS chaperont.
Ill e1121 Ntwhlfl Stephanie
gtvas Michael ultimatum
when he Iaiii lor hl1
asslsllnl. (R) C
II) LlrTY King l.lvtl In depll1
Interviews with top
new&amp;makerw ond celaDrlllu

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

r.oa ond uwn SIMct.

itwn e•' landtetpint. ttump
remowal, 304-571-2142 or

r---~r---------~--

&amp;78-2903.

Plumbing
Ill Heating

LOOK AT T1-\AT Bl.lEI

I Vv'ONDER

WALKI~ACf&lt;D55

HO#THEYDO

THAT PlJODLE:.

THAT .. :H

!GUESS HES
IM:&gt;NDERING,

100.

1:30 111 e1121 0.11g111ng ws..aual haraument biCOmel
t11e order of the doy for Mary
Jo.
10:00 11a1 e1121 e.g..,. and Lacer
Chris 's despondency and
Mary Betl1'a·llmei1Ght
t11reatens partnership. Q
11J Evetlfng - · A wrap up
of todly'a newa and a loOk
ahead to tomorrow's news
s1or1ea. (1 :DO)
®Newl
10,30@ Major LIIQUI . . Nball
11:00 [1) Hllfdcllellllnd
McCormlcll
• [I) Cll • [I) Ill liD

CARTER'S PLUMIINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Golllpollo, Oh1o

Phone 814-446·3881 or 114·
c::: - -.

Electrical
Ill Refrigeration

Residential Ot eommerclat wir·
lng. Naw Ar'Vice or reptkt. '
Llcenud electricien. · Ettimate ,
free. Rklenour EIICtriCII. 304· •

~

TH' CHORES WILL 60
A HE~P FASTER IF
WE ALL PULL
T06ETHER

e75·1711.

85

General Hauling

eca-·
(f) l18r HUIIItr 11M

11J Moneyfll11 Current
report1 on world aconomlcl

biltafd Wattf Servica : Poota.
Citternl, Wells. Delivery Anytime. CaM 11*·448· 7404-No
Sunday cella.
R • R Water- Service. Home
cisterns, wella, pools filled .
Fonnerty Jamn loyt
Same ratn. Call 304-175-

wa....

18711 17ft. a-111. 140 HP
lnb CIFd-outboeftl. open bow, II

(0:30)

•C8Ba Llte
'lln1onlnd a-·
'Night A.J. II !Urad

IntO a deadly web ol
obleulon by a fonner client.
(AI
• [!) Late 8l1ow llln11'11
.10111 RIYen
12:00[1) . _ 8l1d Allen

Hou• cotl. lmettone. tnd
..,... O.llwrecl 1 ton and up. 1
Jim leo'-, 304-171·1247 or ,.

e71-7317.

'

sentc.. John w.n.non. • ,.

Jr. Owntr. 1.000 or Z.OOO gal. ...
. . . .. 304-17f..224e.
~\ •l

J-.

'18 M-...,
Y-1. - ·
u . corotNI. II .000 .aa. AI . . . ..,.d n. Cal
114·1181·1102 .. 114-141·
J04.171-MI1.
ZIZI_,,oo . ....
2.0 L1tnr
'S3 Chairy
P lU..:IOO.OO.
Pl. 4 - 304·178·
· 11.000 1411. .,.....
miloo.
.- · 12-24- ""'2121-I'OOJIIII.
-.
-~
GrvH,U
,700.00.
304·•n-

C..-.

_.,.._,

''nMett:Y.........,.._m'lllt.
8:00 ci1

3Q4.171-2710 -

1-c:-..104·111-11117.

87

-.-.Ziho

...

R &amp; M CUIIOitl CDUCMI Md
R•phalatetf' lt. Jlh. 7 , CIOWft

Chr. Oh. I 4-2M-1470. ha.
114-44e-34JII. Opon- I to
4:30. Sot. 1;30 .. 1:30. ow •

,

._

- · - · - · 7 1-1413.

ACROSS

EAST
+2

• J to a
+AKJ!08

+as 2

SOUTH
tKJ98S

9AKS

+7&amp;

+K74
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

Weo1

HERE'$'THE WORLD WAR I
FLYIN6 ACE LOOKIH6
FOR HIS BROTHER ...

1M SURE HIS NATV~AL
COURA6E IS AN
1

INSPIRAAON TO EVERVONE
AROUND ~IM ..

Nor1b
PIBS
2+

Pass

Eu1

PolS
Pass

Pass
Opening lead:

+3

queen . The hapless defender now had
to play either a club or a diamond, al· :
lowing declarer to trump in dummy
while slulllng his losing heart.
If an overtrick in a part-score con·
tract is too dull lor you, use your
Imagination. Let South be declarer in
three spades doubled and redoubled . .
Now , that's work making.

DOWN
1 Emily on

1 Become
. cloying

etiquette

5 "Turandot"

· 'hero

2 Greek !'IVer

· · 3'Anania&amp;

IOBay
window
12Came

4Turkey

portion
II Editor's
mark

about

6 Aihlical

13 Hlkhcock

lion
7Theater

film
(1960)

331tallan

19,Speak
pompously

city

34 Headlluer
box
20 Apiece
8 Pallid
21 - Fortas 35 Comic
.Johnson
. (Fr.)
9 Lavish ·22 Mauna 17 Private
37 Simple
party
24 United
or shadow II Unbe38 Defore
· 211 Wire
18 Piebald
(Lat.)
coming
measure
39 Equal
20 Gustagaiety
26 Buddy
torial
UJust gre11t 28 Not showy 41 Bard's
,. 18 Tibetan 30 Lose rat
adverb
sense
23 Frolic
animal
32 Cubic meter 42 Fish
27 Blsck

115 Sailor
16 Life

IS Craze
291nterpret
80 Indeed!
31 Out of
the way
33 Crazy
-loon
36 Pagoda

ornament
37 CBI'W-

grapher's
product

40 Welll
opera

43Southem
"potato"
44Type of

cake

DAILY CRYPl'OQUOTE8- Here'l bow to wo~ II:

~Ill

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample Ais used

for the three L'1 X for the two ors, etc. Single letters,

:r;ophelthe iengu. and fonnation of the words are all
ta. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
G-Il

J

KZT

~~&amp;,,...

Y D WZ N

IIJ lllil/llltgM Uvt ,_.

HAL

[I)

IJHHAM

GYM WARM

FZ

SA V -

XLYIMYAH,

I!DIIInOII

w1t11 PUtc* Emory lnd
Klrllln Undqultt. l1 :00)
· 12:01 [I) lllllul111 Q IIi ipblc
,., 1: •
12:30 [1) lint ol Qroucho

J

GYMWARM

TJ H

S Z L X Z I .M:· Z N

MLYJVD. -- DARLIZ

u.,.,..,·,
u""*"'"•
..-..
...
_ ....
zz...,..Tha_

&lt;!l,.._,._(R)

304 -175
· 41&amp;4
fgr fro~
·
-....
Col

[i) VlfuiTell;' I 1
• (I) .......... , . . .

HAM
BHAGH
teneroq•1 CI'J')Itoqaote: SPRING IS A CALL TO
AC110Nr HENCE TO DISILLUSION, TIIEREFORE APRIL
IS CAlLED 'THE CRUElLEST MONTH." - CYRIL

• IIIIOVII: 'Cofullflo' Night

OONNOLLY

MWUphos"'id.

..... .... .........,,, . ..-....
For-u·--2ut.

+42

tQ J 10

(!)~(R)

Upholltery

1·11-11

by THOMAS JOS!PH

·~-=·1;1

packed epor11 hlghllghll wiUI
Nick Char1es ond Jim Huber.

c.IWII . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

The old IIIW about beggars walkingstreets of London because ther.
t dl.~n'tpull trump ls exaggerated, since
I~~~~~~ drawing trump ls often the
I(
Using the trump suit to
throw a ileiend1ar on lead as part of an
elimination and end play ls an unusual
ramification of the postponement.
Ajainst two 1pades, the d.elenders
cashed the A-K of dlamonda. East then
played the heart jack (an error - with
lour hearts to the J · IO and four small
in dummy, he should lead small). £le.
clarer played the ace, noting the fall of
West's nine. Certainly South's contract
ls ule, unleu he l01e1 two trump
trickl, but there is a ufety play in
case one opponent boidsall tl,e trumps
(lay down the king firtt). But If declar,
er can combine playing safe with the
best chaace lor making an overtrick,
that Is &amp;ood bridge_ Accordingly, declarer did lay down . the spade king.
.When everyone followed, he. then
switched to the club king. West made
the natural play of taking the club ace
and leading back the heart queen, won
by South's kina. A second spade was
now played to the ace, leaving West
with the good queen . Declarer played
dummy's remaining hl&amp;h clubs and
then put West on lead with his spade

empre!lll
.URLLmlnant

Watterton't Watlf Hauling, 1
reaaonable ratn. immedittt 1
2.000 gallon dehwy, datemt. 1
pools. well. etc. call 304-571- ,,
2911.
'I

NORTH
tA 7 6 4
9 8 IS 2

James Jacoby

and financial news wltl1 Lou

111
P.l.
liD 11111 Olcl Q
II) lpOfll Tonight ACtion

Weter

BRIDGE

[)obba, "(0:30)

J • J Water Ser&gt;~ice. Swimmine
pools, cisterna, wells. Ph. 114·
2*&amp;-t285.
q

now Jahn'~

UNSAID.

(!)I~ r11CinW (L)
[i) WRKflln Clncl1o..U

1370.

-----------·
Fomwty Ken's

YlsTitiliAY'$ SCIAM-iiTUNSWIIS
La'Mh - lndllx - Ouwn - Mutiny - UNSAID
Often the dlflerenca ll4llMM1 a succeeatul marriage and a
mediocre ana consl111 of leaving about three things left

45 Byzantine

• [!) M'A'B'H
11:D5 [)) tlonanu Showdown
11 :30 • [I) 1111 ileot ol ClriOn

tlr... eaoelle11t aorutltten.

tzooo. 114·742-2&amp;22_

'Queenie, P1rt 2'

e [!) MOVIE: The Towering

Ph.81 -448-5332.

82

(I)

Ill MOVttl: '!.olin'. II' PrtiM
Time [A) (1 :44)

Storm windows • doore. owt
hlftg juneu. Frte ettlmatt~~.,

111ru

8

ABC fliondoy Night Movie Q
(f) Adventure FOllow Welsh
climber Eric Jones' sOfo
ascent ol tha EIQtr.
Ill e1121 K111 i AHie Kall
and Allie cook up an new
career for thomeelvee 88
catererw. Q
liD Wondliwortca Young
hang gliding anlhualastls
projected 1,000 years Into
luturB. Q
IIJ PrimeniWI Wrap ups Of
t11e day'e wo~d ntWI and In
depth feature reporU . (I :DO)

441-0294.

Coli e14-89B·

1 Ill Honda Fourtr11111, 210A,
.-oost boolt, loyten Relda. hot
tip ....ctr. lwulh guerdt. ntr1
ban, twist grip throttle. 4
monthlleft on 'Mmnty. ezooo
finn . 1183 .......kl 780 LlO,
thaftdrivt, 14.000 mlle1,
e1 000 flrm. Bu«:h Roush 11 C.-

'Zt:p.oes IN A

7:3&amp; [)) Honaymoonera
8:110 [1) Father Murphy
G [1) 91 ALF ALF stowe

SWEEPER end HWing rnachiM
repeir, plt1t. end IUppllet. Pick
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum ,
Cleaner, ont halt mile up 1
Georgn Crttll Rd. Call 114·

84

catoo

/

8(1) Judge

!Ill WhHI Of FOliUM Q
II) Croaellre (0:30)
D 91 JIO!IIfdYI Q
®Jell• [!)Too Cion tor Comfort

JIL-l-ION?

Roger• Baaement
Wet•prooflng.
'

1971 Hertty Oevklton low rider .
Super Glide front end. Candy
apptt red . Stroked and runs

7018.

/SAY, How fv'IANY

1

Home
Improvements

448-4477

...••. uooo.

1

,'

""""'· 814-H2-U03.

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

1185 Chovralotll- tNCII. 304-112-3Jt7_
Loaded. low mil..... uc .....
condhlun. Clll 814-112-3342. 1114 Hande $;11bn.
1982 Oidl· 0.111 II. 18,000
m"-, AC , AM·FM . UOOO.

1973, 23 foot Starcrlft eamper.
tile ccnd, full awning, phone

18S1 Hondo 100 A. ••eo. 18B5

, 78 Oldt. PS, Pl. AC . 85.000
mil... Excellent aand. e710. lt2-721e.
c.n 114-448-1&amp;04.
84 Firenza GT, Auto..• PS. Pl.
AC , AM -FM Ctttette Stereo
Radio, Aeclwithf'lylnt.40,000
miles. UIIO, E•ceiMm condl·

e

RON ' S Telt'deion Senice .
Houtt edt on ROA, Outur,
GE . Speeiatlng In Zenith. C.U

1965 Chevy lmpela, V-8, ltir
cond ., liking •1200.
Call
388·8C09 avenlr.ga.

crl. Colll14-448-9219.

.,

BASEMENT
WATEAPROOFINO

Bllmoy Mltllr

Ill[!) M"A'S'H
7:D5 (I) Senlottl ond Son
7:30 [J) Cll Nowlywod Game
(!) Mlljor Loogut 111-1'1
O!UIIIt H"l 1975 World
Series (R)

toblo. Coli 814·3a8·1431 •

448·9845. ·

114-245-5120.

e250. Col1614·318-t619,

I

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

•

11(1) Peopfa'l Court
(f) liD MHNafl/ Llhrer

--------------------17 ft....f.contained TwlliQht ,

Q

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESESQUARES
.

• [!) Hogen'• llo!ota
8:35 [)) Down to e.1111 Stereo.
7:110 [1) Hllfdcllltlllnd
McCollnlcll
e [1) PM Mlgllinl
(!) Bpor11Cent11 (LI
(I) Entalblln1111111 Tonight

Vans Ill 4 W.O.

Moving· Mult Mtl 1983 Dodge
Cuttom V1n . Ph . 814·446-

IC RISE lp II N I

Yorli. (0:30)

26 ft. Titan , motor home, completely Mlf·conttined. gtnenr· •
tor. aiHPI 8 . 18800. CIH''

Quote from famous condu cto r:
"After silence, that which comes
nearesl to e•pressing lhe inexprassible is·····." ·

Complele the chuck lo quolcd
_
.
.
by filling in rhe missing words
'---1-...L-.L..--i--'----' you develop from step No. 3 be low .

® WKRP In Clncfnnatl

79 Motor• Home•
· tit Campers

81

.

Ill eDCIINiwl

1971 Chevy truck 8onanza10.
360 auto, good condition. 4-31 10 ntw tires. •1100. 614-7422522 anytime.
1979 Chevy pickup JA ton. 4
apeed, &amp; cyl. t760. or batt offer.

r---------,1
·I

liD R-.,g 11-.ow Q
II) 8l1owllfl Today News of
t11e en1ertalnmen1 world Is
anchored live from New

d&amp;oor,..
u,o•. :,!O.' '.!'!~ r:_w 1ndco10
. .~
1
u
~a u

anytime.

~--;,M1A_G1 E_L,....,I.=.!
I I I I' _-

e

------:---:--:--:::-

~~

UNSEV

t--r'-1..,I--ri!I"TI__, f

Wl1o Brain of Mortllus.

Cll
(I) ABC !ltwa !;I
(f) Nlgfdly llullnlll RilpOrt

11le. Exc. Cond. 304·875· .,
2477.

lht

be·

lo•m lour simpl• word1.

e [I) !Ill e D

AcMnlurH (R)

304-871-1797.

1974 Dart. Ul50. 197B Fairmont U60. 1971 Ford Ltd .

1 977 Camaro,

John Deere 1010 tractor with
plow• and diac, 111 like new
$3800. John o ..rt 1 4T Beltf
$796. John Deere Ba.-r r1ke

Colll14-988-4422.

Calll14-448-3485.

JIM 'S FAAM EQUIPMENT $1.895. Coli 814-3BI-9380.
CENTER . SR 35 W. Gallipvlis.
Ohio. Call 614·••6-9777, eve.
614-441-3692. Up fron1 tractor~ with warranty over •o uHd
tn ~ ton . 1 000 IOOII.

1972 White Freight Liner COE.
350 Cummins, Majored, 10
apeed o~~erdrlve tr1rnemlaaion,
411 ,...,,, 10-22 tlre1, on buds.

~7"1;---.,-:::---;--:-~s:-:- I 1977 Ford pick up, 4 WhHI

814-3B8-B820-

For aale or trada: 8 American Pit
Bull Puppies. Good pets. Call

Trucks for Sale

985-3545.

8 uaedplanos - •296.00 and upll

DAN FERGUSON MUSIC. RT.
60, CEREDO, WV . 304·4631153.

304-575·363B.

73

Hay 8r Grain

6 Tam1 electronic drums. mi1er,
atands &amp; cords, 8600 firm. Call

614-2C.6-5691 .

LIVItl&amp;

PA~ENTS WON 'T

10

CLAY I, POLLAN -----------

S P ACE E

®F-ofute
• [!) Dllf'Nnt lltnlkH
a,D5 (I) l:tlave It To ..._
8:30 G [J) 91 NBC Nightly Nftt
(!) ~ohn Foa'l ~

- - - - - - - - - r,-:Camper Pal1mlno pop-up for '

pool

Free hay In Gallipoll1; 7-911cres.
You cut &amp; haul. Cell 114-4*8-

Roval upright plano: refinished,
new k8'f• &amp; bench. $600. Call
614-446-434·1 aher 3 :30.

19115'h SP&lt;Irl Ford Escort,
ell tiC.traa. call

3,500 mil",

•

low

Part 4"

CAPTAIN EASY

1~1114 ~~

Rtorronge letters of
0 four
:ilchlmbled words

\Dl Sic'f;t City

camp.-. Good oondhion. C.ll
I ;,
1973 International· Tandem. 814•241•8241,
,,
Duroc Bo1ra. 8re;d jult like the. good condition Ph. 114·446·
1971 popup AHch•· Herd top. •·
boars we tetttd at the Ohto 1437.
good condition. Fumtce. rtfrigTeatatlon that gelntd over 2.1
lba. per day. Rog• Bentley, 1978 2 ton · GMC . $eptie tank ttator, ltove. SIHPt 8. Call
Sabin1, OH . 513-684·2398.
pumping truck. Johh'a Auto 814-381-9868.
Salat, Bulavllle Rd., Gallipolit.
1977 Wlldem ..• trawl trallet. '
· 3 ye1r An~bian gelding. Alto
smtll male pony. , Good chlld- 70 lnternetlonal 1 ton. Runs .15ft. self-contained. 8le1p1 I . 1Would like to buy a good u.-d 1
ren 's !Jet. Cell 814-2111-8200.
good. Coii814-38B-8822 .

64

58

(f) Dr.

::!:

'::~:t.~' $@~4\'llA-"r.~S"

----------

(!) Sportalooit (T)

Camping
Equipment

3

(I)

91 New1

1

Fem1le Beagle registered 6
months old, had all shots,
860.00. lncludn houH . 304-

304-675-4249.

Autos for Sale

72

Livestock

Wanted to rent patture fortheep
with woven wire lance. Cell

57

e [J)

814-44e-OOOB.

Old English Sheep dog pup1.
last of litter, 10 weeka old,
neads good home . 125.00.

614·992 -2607.

Half Prlctl Flashing at row sign•
$2991lighted , non -arrow 12891
Unlighted 12491 Free letters!
See locally. Call today! Factory:
1 -800· 423-0183 , anytime.

3B8-9822.

29B5.

'79 Cougar XA7, ntw paint,
rebuilt enginl no mil .., nice car,
&amp;te1m1 Qarege, 304- &amp;711-7710
or 1571-8749.

Fiah· Day! lt"' s time for atocking.
Catfiah. Hybrid Bluegill. Baas,
Crappie &amp; Minnows. Far more
information on deUvery. ~lt. Toll
Free. 1-800·643-8439.

Sufplus Rental Clothing, cheap,
cloM out pricea, every day. &amp;II
year, 68 Burdette Addn , Point
Pleuant .

20 1-tP Stiner lawn mower: 4
wheel dri11e, 1rticul1tes In the
middle. Call614-448-0471i . 8-6
daya ... k for Gordon or Sophia,
after 1!1 PM 814-387-7289,

71

Himalayan Porsian Kittent. Seal
points. Great mothers day or
graduation gift. No checkt.

59 For Sale or Trade

0932.

62 Wanted to Buy

814-112-2111 .

3 bedroom houl8 in Pom..-oy.
complet•ly furnished, washerdryer. microweva oven, rec.
rr:tOm. Pay own utllitin . U21
per month. Days 814-992 ·
2381 . Eventnvs: 814-912 -

~an..,.r­

~~~~~~~:;:~~=~~~=::;;;,~~~~~?1 new
Camper
refrtgeratOf
for•..a.,li"'
..:.:
tea.:
Entry door
ac...en.-:
1

379-2609.

Sof1, chair. &amp;200 .00. Coffee
and endtables $200.00 . 1982
V.t6 Meg. 750cc $2.000.00 or
bear offer. 304-675-7337.

GOLF CLUBS . custom m1de set
of Iron• computer bl1naced, 3
thru 9 and PW . 304-676 -1604.

Cl,. r..,,... JM.

AKC Boston Terrier pups. 6
weeki old. Caii61*· 388· B1615
or 614-446-6610.

For Bale - limestone, lind,
gravel, tm din , firewood. Delivered. 304-675 -4412 .

SIGNS . H1lf Prleel Save 65%11
Flashing arrow ligna $2991
Ughted. non-11rrow S2891 Un l~httd 12491 Free letters! See
loca llv . 11800)423 -0183 ,
anytime.

~

Rough Lumbet". Oak 6 Poplar ~--------------81 60 per 1,000 by bundle; 20c 1
by board ft. 304·675-4412.
Now bu,ying ahtM corn or •ar
com. Call for ltt"t quotes. River
Chy Farm Supply, 114-4*1-

Flowert and vegettble plants tor
sale. First hou1e on right above
Racine locka and Dam.

For sale new %" drill press 'lz HP
with vise. S126 . Nearly new
Homelite su per XL chain taw
with .new el'lt ra ch&amp;ln . $200 .

S·ll

MON., MAY 11

EVENING
8:110 fl)lllg Ydey

Jointa. Gutrenteecl t mlnumum •
of 30 Uys, will d.thier, c•h II ·
n...-y or install Call 114-371·

·

Brook Cement
304-n3
- B23C. and Supplies,

Tony's Gun Repairs, hot roblueing . Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM .
Call 304·675-4631'.

Co11114 -448-7101.

5e58.

•

2220 or 1-304-175-e?&amp;a.

Gas furnace . 4 veers old .

Oeluu 1n1werlng machln.. like
new. Original ptict •379 . Will
. ..11 fot 880. 1982 Honda &amp;0
IMke:J good for tHneg••· t3215 .

Upatairs office. cornar of 2nd
2 btdroom in Midd ltpon . Be•u- and Court, Pomet"oy. Call 61.ttlfut lnalde. New curt1ins. c•pet 992-5e77.
1nd kitchen ctbineta. 127&amp;'. p-lu1
depoalt. No petl. 814· 992·
;111 r1 1

fon1 . 30'-871·4863 ur 875- lot fOf
0627
4230.

614·9B6·3B39.

Plurlc cistern sta te approved,
Office Space for Rent b ca llent plastic septic 1anks. pl11tlc
for Attorney&amp;, Accountant , etc. culverta, me111f culwerts. RON
Close to Court House. Call · EVANS ENTERPRISES, JockWi&amp;emtn Real Esttte Agency. son, Oh . 014-288-6930.
61.t-4C6 -3644
Briggs &amp; Stratton 5 HP. 4 cycle
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park, indu1tr l1l, lide ahaft. gasoline
Route 33, Nortl'l of Pomeroy. engine whh centrifugal c lut ~ h ,
Rental 1r11tara. Call IU-992- 111 brand new. U OO. Call
7479.
614 -446-6826 or 614-446·

49

27B3.

30'\·8B2-3376.

9442.

2 BR mobUe home in Bklwell.

198* 14x70 Knoltwoad 3 br,
gtrd.., tub, two bty windows,
cethtdrtl c-'ling, twa cMiing

Self-propelled elee1ric atartlawn
mower. Self-propelled lawn
mower. Gas pua.t'l mower. Call

Television
Viewing

Auto Parts
Accessories

Aebuilt. All types torqut

Concrete block1111 si•es y1rd or
d!tJivery . Me1on s11nd. Qallipolil
Block Co.. 123'12 Pine St.,
Gallipolie, Ohio C1H 6,4-448 -

614-245-5676.

Signs. Half Price! Save 66 per
cantil Flashing arrow signa
82991 Lighted . Non -arrow
$2891 Unlighted 82491 Free
letters! See locally. 1· BOO·C2301 83, anytime.

304-675 -1050.

41

992-2602.

·a.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

POmeroy-Middleport. Ohio

teu • transfer c..... .eve

245-6121 ..

A~C

367·7296.

•

,.·.

BUDGET Tttntmittionl : Uted II
Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes, windows, .llntela, etc . Cleude Winters. Rio Grandt, 0 . Cift"614·

Good uttd portable and floor
model color TV ' t . Ctll 4461149.

70-CC 3 whaelet, like new .
$276. Girl's 20'' bike. $16. Puah
mower- runs. $16. Call 614-

• •

Monday, May 11, 1987

66 Building Supplies

Chinese pug-registered. One
vur old. Muat•all.soon. M"ake an
offer. Cell 614-448 -7862.

Deluxe 3 rm . unfurn 'ad. apt.
Fiflt floor-like nfiW throughout.
Priv1te and quiet. Heat furn'ed.
'286 / mo. Call 614-446-4607
or 446-2602 .

4 rooma, balh, nice loc:ativn.
Depoait and reference required.

Business
Buildings

For sale by own er in Rio Grande.
3 BR cedar home. 6 mon tha old.
l arn e co untry kitchen, 2 batht ,
large deck. 2 bal conies. City
8C ho'ols Call 614 -246 -6488

Pomet oy, no down paymtflt
n e eded Thr ee b e droom ,
equipped kit chen. b11th , basement , AC. c 11rport Cal! 614·

76

446-9780.

614-446·0322.

843·5274.

614-446 -25B3.

3 room

$38.000. Call 614·266-1319.

733·6062. EXT. G2021 .

Sears 18 ft. 4 ft . deep pool. AH
accusori81, t600. Call 114-

Ready mill 'concrete and all
concrete •upplies. Call us Yafltv

1- - - - - - - - - - - -

.

boat with lean I HP motor.

up to
•126
. Hide-a-beds
S390
to
'-596
. Recliners
$226
to
8375. Lamp 1 12B to .126 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

•

t300. C•ll814-44t-7121 .

Sof11 end chairs priced trorn
839~ to 8995 . 'febles $60 and

12 Month• tree fln•ncing with
appro1.1ed credit. t300 minu mum· purchase necenary . 3
Miles oUt Bulawilla Rd. Open
9am to 6pm Mon . thru Sat. Ph .

.

so.. 12 fl, Kl,.ttorhor fi ........

Coll514-255·8261 .

canvtt only, 4deptal:}ta to cere
tree awnl~a frame. Call 3o.t882-3108.

Wood table w-6 chairs &amp;286 to
$796. Desk *100 up to $375 .
Hutch• t400 and up. Bunk
bed• complate w-mattreues
S296 and up to •396. Baby beds
•1 10. Mattre11ea or bo" springs
full Of twin 863, firm $73, and
S83 . Queen tets $226, King
UliO. C draw'er chnt *69. Gun
cabinets 8 . 12 gun . Gas or
electric renge t375. Bally n,attrnan U6 8r t46. Bed frames
820, 830 6 King frame 160.
Good selection of bedroom
suit... metal c11blnets. heedboards 130 end up to 166.

'

, BORN J.OSE)l

lumber. Air dryad 4 Vrs. $30.00
per 100 board feet. 400 ft .
walnut, air dryed 3 yells.
•lOO .OO per 100 boart feet.
Phon,t 614·892-3921 .

3 rooms S. bath, stove &amp;
refrlgflfator lurnithe. Utilities
paid, No children. no pets. Ph.

ol

NIHy co nsider trade-in of mobil a
hume ur property on thla new 3 35 Lots 8r Acreaga
BR home. 2 S:llr g11ra ge, 6 mi.
aouth on Rt. 7, 147,600 . Call
614 -446 ·8038.
lot In private park on Raccoon
Creek. Electric , 1ewer. and
Redu ce d: Modern R11neh :
water . Well financed. Shown by
wo o dbuJnlng firepla ce . appointmftnt only. Call 614Scrnned porch. c.o~ rpeu~ d . car- 742-2577.
port. 3 11cres. N8111r Crown City.

Govftrnmftnl Homea-from 11. (U
re pair) , Ai1o 11111 dolinQuenland
foreclosure propertiua. For list·
lng. call (refundable) 1 -316·

per mo. Deposit tequired. Call
614-448 -4222 between 9-6.

614-992-77B7. EOH.

CommRreial building• for lease.
31 Homes for Sale
Downtown Pt. PleAUint . Store1.
offices. A-One Real Eltate
Fo r sA ift lly owner: 28R , Ran ch Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304Style House, full basement. 2 675 -5104.
batha, one attached garage &amp;
breezewtlv . Surrounded bv 747 lnddustrlal 11orage 12 foot
atllnd ofpineton l 3ecret, Pond, over head door , 3 phases uf
new fence. bern. Call dayt electric. , 8Jt48 steel building
BU -44&amp; -2101 or eveninga 614 - 446 · 2362 For
appo intment .
246-6600. Prlc8 rnducod .

For ' ale by owner; 2 story house
in Middleport ower tooking park.
30 yt . nu~rrueed vinyle Jidlng.
w •w t llr~t . 1 V, bath, unique
woodwork . 614 -992-6126.

----------------~
740 Second Ave. 1 8Ft , •18s.·

87 Acr&amp;s in Green Townahip.
16yr. old home. Tobacco bate,
several outbuildings &amp; barna.

'62.000. Ph. 614-446-1437.1.

21

Clllahen' t UtedTlreShap. Ov..1,000 tir... tiiH 12. 13, 14, 15.
16, 115. 5 . 8 miiN out Rt. 218.

l

Boat• and
Motol'8 for Sale

17 ft. green end white ewning,

Dln01tll t109 ond up tu &amp;495 -

New 1partment: completely
furn . Ref. a. Dep. 1 or 2 adults
only. Call 614-446·0338.

31 31 .

75

Appro• . 4000 ft . pine8ndpoplar

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

1976 Governor 1 4x70 mobile
hume. e~tc . con d.. 3 BA , 86 .996.
J im's odd jobs painting, drive- Call614 -388-9350.
way rouu•ling. carpenter work &amp;
roof ropair , rroes &amp; hedges 14.1166 mobile home &amp; 3 Iota in
uperie ncod . Call 614 -379 - Evergreen. Call 614-446-1339
or 446-1628.
~416 .

\Nm

KIT 'N' CARLYL! ®bJ Larry Wright

448·3169.

93 8 -6870, M -F. 811m to 5 pm
ICftntral Standard Tlmel .

EX CELLENT WAGES for spare.
lime enemblv work: electron·

54 Misc. Merchal)d;l8

.

Monday. May 11, 1987

•

[I)

1121 Llllllflhl wlll1

o.vldL4DILWiilft
I

I

Owl ~ (Hitl (2:00)

�Page-' 10- The Daily Sentinel

Pometoy-Middlepon, Ohio

r---- Local briefs:---. -The 17-year locusts
A ltercaLion reported
Eugene Ra tl iff, 19, of Route 7, Middleport, charged wllh
feloniou s assa ull, Is being held In th e Meigs Co.unty Jail, pend ing
an cxpec lcd appeara nce today !Monday) In Meigs County
Court.
Early Sa turd ay mornin g, Ratl iff and Johnny Blake, 21 , of
Broadwa.y St. , Middleport, beca me Involved In a figh t on Race
St. In Midd lepor t. Duri ng the fi ght. Ra tliff cut Blak e on the neck
with a fo lding knife with a three-Inch blade. Ratliff was picked
up by M iddlC'por t Poli ce aOOut 10 minutes later near th e
M iddlrpor t IPVP (' .

Bl ake-'s wou nd req uired 20 st itches. He was tre at ed and
released at Vet erans M_e m oria l Hospi taL

EMS records 13 weekend calL5
Mr ig&gt; r·nunty Emerge ncy Medical Serv ices reports 13 calls
over lh (' w(•Pkcnd ; eight on Sat ur day and fi ve on Sunda y .s

Saturday ar 1: 16 a.m., Middleport to Race St. and North
Second Avr· . for John Blake to Veterans Memor ial Hosplla l;
Middlepor t at 8:!10 a.m . to Broadway for Thelma Boyer to
Holzer MJ'dical Cent er; Middleport at 9:39 a.m. transported
l~oss Morr is 10 Pleasant Valley Hospit al; Middl eport a t 3: o2
p.m. to Ches hi re for Vi rgil Wat son to Holzer Medical Center;
Tu ppers Pla ins at :.: 04 p,m, to Reedsville for Curtis E.
Ca ut horn&lt;' 10 Vetera ns Memor ial Hospita l; Racil\e a t 5 : 0~ p.m_ to MI. Oli ve Hoad for E llzabel.h Bartoe to Veterans Memori al
Hos pital: Racine at 9:57p.m. to Trouble Creek Road for Mary
Kl'l' ns tot!Bize r Medlra l Center; Syracuse atll : 13 p.m. to Ohio
124 for .l :~ so n HuJX• Io Vetera ns Memorial HospitaL
Sund ay at 2Si a.m .. Middleport to PageS!. for Arthur Ba rr to
Vr tera ns Memori al Hospita l; Rutland at 12:23 p.m. transported
Audrey Pa tt rrson to P leasa nt Valley Hosplta,l; Middleport at
:1: 22 p.m . to Olivr·r St. for E ugl a Johnso n to Velerans Memorial
Hospital: Hutl and at 9: :12 p.m. to Lark ins St. for Avanell George
Ia Holze r Medical Cent er; Ru lland at 11: 34 p.m. to Tow nship
Road 1:1 for C1HI Cas ler to O' Bieness Memor iaa! Hos pitaL

Conference game tonight
roac h Roger Fos ter se nds his Meigs Marauders agal nslthe
~'edl'r a l Hocking Lancers tonight 1Monday 1 at Meigs High
oegl nn ing at'4 : :10 p.m. A wi n will give the Ma rauders at least a
ti e fo r the Tr i-Vallcy Conference baseball cha mpionship.

(~{

Board

public affairs meets

Hac inr· l&gt;oard of Public Affa irs wi ll mcel tonighl (Monday! , 7
p.m ., atl hP Shr i nfl Pa r k buildin g.

Boos t e r.~

plan meeting

Sout her n .Junior Hi gh Ath letic Boosters will meet 7 p. m.
ton ight 1Mo nda y)_

coming this summer
By United Press International
Orange and black bugs 1 to 2
Inches long with red eyes a nd
dia phanous veined wings show
up In Ohio every 17 years, a nd
this Is the 17th year.
The bugs, known as the 17-year
cicadas or lucusts, a re waking
from their extended hibernation
and are building mud ·chimneys
over their burrows, some central
Ohioans have reported.
" The chimney activit y tells
you ll lsn' I going Ia be very long,"
sa id Richard Miller, stale extensio n entomologist at Ohio State
University. He sa id loc ust
nymphs make mud chimneys
usually about 1.5 Inches high and
1.25 Inches In di ameter.
The nym phs are a bou t threequ arters of an Inch long and a
half-Inch wi de.
Miller remembers when the
cicadas las t visited Franklin
County. The hardest hit places
were areas with large, hardwood
trees and orchards. Mo re cicadas will be fo und In those areas
this time a round too. Some
places will produce swarms of
the droning bugs, while ot hers
will have very light Infestations.
Miller remembers trave ling
along Intersta te 71 toward Ctn-

Betty Jean Hawk

Daily stock prices

Weather
By United Press International
South Central Ohio:
Mostly sunny a nd windy today
wit h highs In the mid 80s. P ar tly
clo ud y lonlghl wllh a chance of
thunders torms. Lows will be
near 60.
Mostly sunny Tuesday with a
hi gh in the mid 70s.
The probability of preclpllallon Is ncar zero tod ay, 40percen t
tonight and near zero Tuesday.
Winds will be from the southwes t at 15 1o 25 miles an hour today,
dimin is hing Jo 10 to 20 miles a n
hour tonight.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Friday
and a chance of showers Thursday - Highs will be In the 70s.
Lows will be In the mid 40s to mid
50s Wed nesay and In the low to
mi d 50s Thursday and Friday,

" Hoppers and Co~ nir Singe r will be doing a bencfll sing fo r
Stiver Mc•morw.l I· reewll l Bap tist Churc-h on Thursday, 7:.10
p.m., :1 1 l&lt; yger Creek High S&lt;' hooL Everyone we lcome.

..

regul ar meeting of Ra cine Lodge 461 f'&amp;AM will be held
Tu csdu_v. 1::111 p.m., wi lh work in the mas ter maso n degree.
Pomr• ro_,. Lodge' Chupt cr RO RAM and Bosworth Coun cil 46
H&amp;SM wil l hold regular mee tings Wednesday , 7:.10 p.m., to
pract tr&lt;' ror suprr-extellent mas ter degree.
, Annua l inspr'el ion of Bos wort h Counrll 4h R&amp; SMwill be!; p.m.
ThP

Sat u rc.b ~' . followed by din nt'r at 1'\ : :10 and super -exrel lent m&lt;.~ s l er

drgrrrs at 7: :1u.

Chmn /)('r, Ml'rchants to meet
/\ l'P::I C' hamb&lt;'r of rommNr &lt;' w il l hold m l'et

mC'mb&lt;&gt;rs arr

ro .111rnd.
l knd 1\ n·a MPrT it&lt;Jn t s ,\ ssO&lt;' liJ I ion will meet ' l'uf'sdny . Ra. m ..

Ul 'gP cl

&lt;JI l1;u1k Om'. A ll nwmbN S should alt ('ncl

S;tt urday a dmissio ns: Ma ggie

Nelson.

Mlcld\cpon:

Edward

RABIES CLINIC

Ol\ 1. Ponwm.v : Mil ll C' Pi erce.
Mhldlc (Jnrt : Th om;.~ s L ow er~· .

Pornrro.v :

Zon a

PRESENTED IY

Sh rr ld un .

Meigs County Humane Socioty

TUp J)C' I'5 Pldi ll ... .
Salu rda)' •l is d wrgl'!oO : T.v .l ohn ·

&amp; Meigs County Health Dtpt.

E dward Dill.
Sundny J.ld mission ~: Pill ri r la

S(ln ,

the Roc~ Springs Fair
Groun~s Sat., May 16, I :00 P.

at

Ba rr. Midtlli •por t: C'arri£' N('a l,
V\n rf' nl : Jo:ugi :1.loh nso n. Mlddl C'-

M. until 4:00 P.M.
Dr. Carol -Osborne, Yet.
Rabies 13,00. other innocula-

por l: Cll; 11'11·s l'ay n&lt;'. Pomrroy.
Sundu)' tli ~ t · h argt•s : Glo ri a

tions available. Dogs must be
on leashes. Cats in carrim.

C:~rson.

Mid dlepor t;

Ar thur

lh\('. M il liP l 'if't'('f' .

A

shortd•••e
to ln•taU it •••
A
longd•11e

toeaJorlt ...
,.._'nst
••,.,._,
au.wu
~~

Enjoy the convenience, salrly and
low llllinttnanc:o of an .JMinl
Dileo B_,.,t Door. You'llllkl
its neat, trim appearance, . . . Df
operation, and tho '"1111 It ohodo
rain. It's a great do-tt-younolf
project and octually COlla lno than
haolng a now VIOOCien door built.
Stop In for a replac:omtnlb&lt;Ochurt
and che&lt;:k aU the loolurn ola ·
Bllco llaHmont Door.

-

~

............... .......
~

liNG IUILDIIS
SUPPLY CO.

405 N. 21111

992-5020

lllill'lllfloo'"' "'t

Pllnty of OH l!rtol ,......

•

A yellow pages ad con be just a nome and
a phone number, but isn't there more to
your business than that? Don't sell yourself
short. Show your stuff. Customers wont to
l~now more than o phone number.
They wont to know about
your business. 5o show your

hours in your ad. Maybe a mop. 13rond
names and credit terms. In todoy's business
world, it's information that
sells. Ameritech PogesPius.""
The original Ohio 13ell
Yellow Pages. Call us toll free:

1-800-362-9190

.,, ,.,._
""

I

en tine

at y
Vo l. 36 , No.260··

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 12, 1987

!

Middleport ·council
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport VIllage Council meetin g In regular
session Monday night accepted the only proposa l
It received for Improvement ott he fo rmer Empire
F ur niture Store loca tlon·an N. Second Ave.
The village has been approved for a community
development block gra nt by the Meigs County
Commissioners to help on the purchase of the
property, the scene of a major !Ire a couple of
yea rs ago. The village advertised recently for
proposals from residents on developmeml of the
property and the only one received was th at of
Mit chell an d Debora Meadows , accepted at last
night' s meeting.
The Mea dow ~ propose to erect a two-story
building at the sit e with 3,000 feet of space on each
floor and a parking Jot at the rear of the struct ure.
The Meadows would spend at leas t $125,000 on the
building to be financed by local banks. The
building lo be used for bu siness would retain
present employees, create jobs for new employees and would help draw more people to the

ok~ys

business secllon In add ition to gel ling rid of an
eyesore In the business section, accord ing to the
y roposal.
· Mayor Fred Hoflm an indicated that the
community development block gra nt would be
coming from the commissioners In the near fu ture
and after the Meadows begin Improve ment at the
sit e, the completion wil l be wllthln a n 18 month
period.
Council unanimously accepted the proposal of
the Meadow s.
Council a pproved the monthly report of Mayor
Hoffm an showing rece ipts of $4, 431. 60 In fines and
fees du ring April and Mayor Hoffman announced
a $29,000 grant approval from the Ohio Depart ment ol Transporta tion for the public tra nsporta tion sys tem, which Is the Blue Streak Ca b Co.
Mayor Hoffma n reported that three represent atives of ODOT were In Middleport all day Friday
to review the cab co mpany operallons a nd were
"very pleased" with the review. The trio even
questioned people on the s treet about the Blue

WAS Hl NGTON IUP I) - Congres sional In vestiga tors hav e
located the SIO million con tribut ed by the Sult an of Brunei to the
Nicaraguan Contras, but the
money was deposited In the
wrong Swiss bank acCQunt and
withd raw n by an unidenti fied
individu al, Sen. Daniel Inouye
said today.
lnouye, chair man or the Senate
panel investigating the lranContra sca nd al, opened today's
congressional hearing Int o the
I ran-Co ntra scandal wit h the
announceme nt tha t the $10 million cont ribut ed to the Contras
had been traced to ·a Swiss bank

25 Cents

Meadows proposal
Indicated that Fceney·Bennett 128 Post, Amerl·
can Legion. will make a donation towards tHe
costs of I he llreworks this year.
Due to the ohservance of Memorial Day, the
next regular council meeting was set !or Tuesday,
May 24. The development of the Dave Diles Park
was discussed a nd II was agreed to send letters to
a nu mber of people who have donated labor and
malerlals to the project.
Mayor ljoffm an report ed that Lloyd Blackwood
and Dick Newell have ga-thered all lnformatlo~
needed on the establishment ora village television
cable sys tem from Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric and General Telephone Co. of Ohio I~
regard Jo utilit y pole usage. This materlalls being
feed Int o comput ers as a part of the r.eastl)lllly
study on the establlshrrie nt or such a systemDuring the discussion last night It was staled that
some officials have the understa nding the
Co nsolidated Commun ica tions Group, Inc. , which
now operates the cable lelevlslon system, has sold
to another firm .
contlnued on page 10

Strea k Cab Co. operations and "heard only good
things" , Mayor Hoffma n said .
A nd ther e wa s good news for cust omers of

Columbia Gas of Ohio disclosed at last night' s
meeting. Mayor Hoffman read a leiter from the
company stating tha t effect ive with the Ju ne, 1987
billing. gas bills will be redu ced due to u decrease
in t he compa ny's costs. The aver age customer

will benefit from th e decrease about $24 .82
annually, I he leiter slat ed. It fu rl her point ed ou t
tha t due to this decrease and an earlier decrease
all Columbia Gas ol Ohio customers will benefit to
the tune of about $58,000,000 a ye ar.
Mayor Hoffman reported that fir eworks for the
Ju ly 4th celebra tion will cos I $2,540 this year plus
insura nce of between $300 and $400. Th e
Middleport Fire Department Is the onl y orga nization so fa r to donate to the fi reworks cost. The
department has given $500 and two firemen h,we
al(ended the required school and have received
licenses required for sur h fir eworks displays, the
mayor report ed. Councilman Bob Gilmore

Barbie
trial in
2nd day ·
.,

LYON, Fra nce !UP!) - Ac·
cused Nazi war criminal Klaus
Barbie entered court today wear·
Jng the same dark \ suit a~d
- gra ndfatherly smile he h ~d _24
hours ear lier when his trial
bel(a n on '"Charges he tortured,
murdered or deported nearly 1)00
people.
Barbie. 73, shook hands with
• his lawyer, took his seat in the
defendanl 's box and watched the
audi ence Impassively as the
judges proceeded to finish readIng more than 100 pages of
charges they had s tarted reading
wh en the trial opened Monday,

ACCEPT AWARD- Mary Lou Pullins, widow Olymplos. for Suulhti118tern Ohio. Dougt .. Little,
ol Ray Pullins, accepted a plaque In lr'lbute of president of lhe Meigs County Boa rd of Mental
years of volunteer service by her late husband to Retardatlon·Developmental Disabilities, presCarleton Sc hoo~M elgs Industries. A great suppor- ented the plaque at Monday night's MoiJIH County
ter of physical edu cation, Pullins helped Initiate Board of MR·DD lhlrd annual dinner . A lar,ger
physical education at the school. He also led the plaque will remain on diM play in lhe school'• lobby
school's s pecial olympics program for years. and in m1•mory of Pullins' dedicated cflorts.
· at his death w"" coordinator for Area 8, Special

Barbie - the forme r Ges tapo
chief know n as !he "Butcher o!
Lyon" - is expected to plead
Innocent.
Unlike Monday, when the cour·
troom was pa cked with about
1,000 people, the hall was half
empty when the hearings began
at 1 p.m. Several journalists.
however, were lined up In a light
rain outside waltinj1: to pass
through pollee lnspecllon before
entering.

•
seSSIOn
Awards, remarks highlight third MR-DD

ROBERT MCFARLANE

Ing." Inouye said.
Inouye said congressional Inves tigators have not yet determined whe ther Lt. Col. Oli ver
North gave Abra ms the wrong
bank account number or whet her
some other error occurred .
account.
He sa id the S10 million had
The $10 million was solicited by
Assistant Secretary of Stal e been wit hdra wn from the acElliott Abrams In Augus t 1986to count, and Inves tigators are
help the Nicaraguan rebels at a working to determine the na me
time when Congress had ba nned ol the Ind ividuaL He also said
Swiss author ities have tiled crlm·
direct mili tary ald .
The purpose of the ai d was . Ina! charges seektngthe return of
strictl y for non-military pur· the money.
Inouye m ade his annou nceposes, according to Abrams who
has testified he had the approval ment as Robert McFa rl ane. the
of Secretary of Sta te George for mer Nat ional Security adviser, opened tes timony for a
Shultz.
Inouye said a lawyer and an second day Into his role In the
· accounta nt wit h the Senate panel secret sale of U.S. arms to Iran
ha d traveled to Switzerland to and the diversion of profi ts to the
trace the money an d determi ne&lt;) Nicaraguan Contras.
He said It was the last unacthat II was tra nsfe rred Int o the
wrong account at the Credit counted money In connectio n
with the worst -foreign policy
Swlsse bank.
c
r is is o l t he Reaga n
" We have located the $10
million cont rlbuied to ihe ,Con· admlnlst raton.
On Monday, McFarlane testitras by the Sulta n of Brunei
whic h was made in August 1986 fied that North told him there
and as all ol us are aware this was ofllclai a pproVal for divert·
was the last substa ntial donation ing money to the Contra s from
unaccounted lor until this morn- t~ arms 5ales.
1

1 Sect ion, 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. New ~paper_

OBES office to
close on May 27

Locate
• •
mtssmg
money

rr::::::::::::::::::::::::;-

Clear toni ght. Low between
50,_ Mostly sunny
Wednesday, Highs near 80,
45 and

5844

The Ohio Bureau of Employ- Pomeroy offi ce staff members
ment Services' Pomeroy offi ce who do not opt for early rell rewill close at the end of the menl will be transferred to
near by OBES offices to maintai n
business da y on May 27.
"As a federa lly funded agency , essenll al services to the public.
"As a resu lt of early retirethe Ohio Bureau of Employment
ment
and other staff reductions,
Services has suffered several
OBES
can no lo nger slaff 108
consec utive years of federal
olflees
In
the sta te. By co nsolidatbudget cuts a nd can no longe r
Ing
our
services In to fewe r
co ntinue to operate all of It s local
,
we
hope to continue to
offices
offices," said Dr. Robertla
Ste inbacher, administrator of provide q ualit y services to t he
the Ohio Bureau of Employment public." Dr . Steinbacher reports.
Offices to bj! consolidated were
Services.
base!! on operationa l
determined
'Pel-so ns who currently use the
costs.
location,
prox imity to
services of the Pomeroy OBES
other
local
offices,
physical fac llOffice will conti nu e to be served
ll
ies,
workload.
sta ffing a nd
by the OBES offices located at 45
lease agreement s.
Olive St. , Ga i1Jpolis; 246 West
Unemploy ment insurance claiSla te St. , Athens; 317 Brqadway,
mant
s a nd job seekers will be
J ackson, and 217 Thi rd St.,
given
the opportunity to choose
Marlelta.
which
rema ining office they will
·'The Pomeroy office Is one of
use.
Unemploy
ment Insura nce
42 offices targeled for closing to
cla
imants
will
receive office
help offset the agency's projected $12 million deficit fo r selection c•rds In the ma iL If
fed eral fiscal year 1987 which claimants do not return a comends Sept. 30, 1987, Dr. Stei nb- pleted office selec tion ca rd to
OBES before the closing da te.
acher said.
Statewide, OBES ·staff has their records will be moved to the
been reduced by 900 through Ga llipolis office.
Job seekers curre ntly using
altrit lon since 1983. In add it ion,
OBES has offe red early retire- Pomeroy's employment services
ment to eligible em ployees to should co nt act their local emCo ntinued on page 10
furt her reduce payroll cos ts.

Bmef it -~ing planned

Hospital news

935
Pick 4

· Copy,ightod 1987

Willie Maude Coates o! Middll"port died Sunday at Vetera ns
Memoria l Hospi ta l. Ewing Funeral Home Is In ch arg~ of
ar rangements.

Te n .v Byf' r .. lPn rlws her. F.mma Kay C' latwor t hy a nd Marga re t
W&lt;' bt•r.

Ponwrn ~·

Daily Number

Willie M. Coates

J-lc:Jih Uni ted Me thodist Church Mother-Da ughter Banquet
will !)(' h&lt;' icl li p.m. T hu rsda~-- Program leaders wi ll be Twlla
Childs und Do nn a .Jenkins. Hos tesses wil l be Beu lah McComas,

T ul'sda~' . 'JL noo~. a t Po nwro :v T r i n ii~' C' hu rr h . All

Ohio Lottery

way, Kim Calaway, Randy
Br_ow nlng. Tim Browning, Robin
Hunt and Chelsey Wood; a
stepbrother, Har ley "Buzz" Saylor ; a s tepsister, Wa nda
Paulsen; three aunts, two uncles
and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wit h Pas tor Duane Sydens t r ic k~r officiating. Burial will
be in Mound Cemetery . Friends
may ca ll at the f~n e r a l home
fr om 7 to9 p.m. Monday and fr om
2 to l and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

Mother-daughter dinner seL

Lodge meetings planned

.

Area deaths

clnnatlln 1970 and having locusts
Bell y Jean Haw k, 58, :!8639
thump aga inst his car wind- • Township Roa d 404, Long Botshield. He said he could reac h out
tom, died Saturd ay a t Holzer
and catch them In his hand.
Medical Center following an
"They were active, fl ying exten ded illness . ,
across the road from one wooded
Mrs. Hawk was born Sept. 3,
area to another," he sa id.
1928. at Long Bottom, a daught er
Miller saw the Insects a fool of Kermit Hall F rost , Ashl and,
deep in Cincinnati 's Foun tain Ohio, an d the late Fan ni e Lucille
Squa re. Wor kers used shovels to Miller Frost. She was a member
clean them out.
of the Chester Volunteer Fire
"They were crawling a ll over Department's Ladles Auxiliary.
the building a nd falling on the
Surv iving are her husband,
sidewalks," he recaa ed.
Paul
Hawk ; tw o daughters and
George Uetz of the Universit y
son-in-law,
Fer n and Michae l
of Ci nci nnati Biologica l Sciences
Large,
Sidney
; Pa ula and Keith
Department sa id there will be
Wood,
Long
Bottom;
a daughter,
hundreds of thousands of cicadas
Frances
Hunt
,
Ches
ter; her
!his yea r_
father and stepmother, Mr . and
"When they emerge, you won't Mrs. Kermit Fros t, Ashland; a
brother , David Frost, Akron;
be able to avo id cr unching
them ," he said. "They will fly four sisters, Helen Heaton, Palaround and hang on your c loth es. metra . Fla. ; Ruth Paulsen, As hThe big thing they do is sing. hi nd; Shirley Linda ll, Dayton;
They make quite a lot of noise." Jack ie Whil e, Bradlngton, Fla.;
Uetz said the insects spend 17 slx gra ndc hildre n, Tom Caiayears un derground, sucki ng on
roots . Then th0y emerge as
larvae, male and die.
Uetz believE' some cicadas may
(As of 10: 30 a.m. )
show up before . May 15, a nd by
Provided hy
the middle of June they will be In
Bryce and Mark Smith
abunda nce. By the end of Ju ne,
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi
. their nu mbers will der rease.
Firm
Price
Am Electric Power __ ., ___ ..... 27'4
AT&amp;T ....... .. ----- ---------- ---- ---2l jl,
Ashla
nd Oil .. ... ..... ............. 62 'h
Steven W. Gar ber, 20, of Liberty
Bob
F:vans
Farms .... ........ .. 25:%
Center.
Charming
Shoppes..
.... ______ .. 27%
Deputies sai d wit ness report s
Federal
Mog-u
I
..
__
,
_,
.... ______ .401',
Ind icate Va nce 's car was trav elGoodyear
T&amp;R
,
........
.......... 67%
Ing at a high ra te of speed when it
Hec
k's
Inc
.......
..
..
..
_______
____ . __ .1%
went out of control and went left
Li mited lne. ---------------------- .42 jl,
of center.
Va nee and a passe nger , Kevin Mult imedi a Inc. ------------------- .. 54
Bugbee, 25. Toledo. were trapped Rax Restaurant!; ... ... ... ... ... ... 5 ~
Inside the car as it rolled in to a Ro bbins &amp; Myers-- ------ --- ------ -.1 1
dit ch and caught fir e. Ga rber Shoney's Inc . ......... .. ........... 29 %
was dea d al the scene, offi cials Wendy's I nti. ----------------------- 9\1,
Wo rthington Ind__ __ __ ______ __ .. ... , 19
said.

Three dead in fiery crash
GRAN D RAPIDS, Ohio iUP l i
- Three people were killed In a
head-on collis ion tha i tra pped
two ol the vict ims Inside their
burning car, a uthorities sa id
today _
The acc ident occurred at 8: 56
p_m _ Sunday on Ohio Route 65
west of Gra nd Ra pids. He nry
County sherl!l's deputies_said a
car driven by Michael Vance, 26,
wa s headed eas t when It collided
with a wes tbound car driven by

Monday, May 1( 1987

a re enjoyi ng th e fruit s of th e workers arc now employed In th e narrowed even more to " Us."
labors of I hose- dedicated commu nit y," Wedemeyer sa id, Now In the 1980's, we ca n ex pert
"not being 100 percent supported to read " Me" a nd "when you
people."
The Meigs County Boa rd of by socia l programs ." He called open the rover, all you see Is tin
MR-DD Is co mmitted , Wede- thl$ "a maj or accom plishment fo il, and a retlecllon of yourselt."
Wedemeyer Iss ued a challenge
meyer sa id , to prov iding Inten- for th e Indi vidua ls and also for
to everyone associat ed wit h the
sive and releva nt services 10 the communll y as a whole. "
He rela led that " back In the Meigs Board of MR·DD to ta lk
people with ment al retard atio n
and developmental disablltles. 1950's, people read "Life, "· a about life, not, a bout me. " We all
The board Is also committed to magazine which dealt with life, nl&gt;ed to respond to a nd In teract
Improving the communit y as a peo ple, nat ure and environ- with everyone In soc iety. Our
whole, he added, and to Improv- ment. " But that was Joo btg, he goal and mission Is to Improve
Ing the quali ty of life for people said. so In the 1960's, reo ple th e lives of people with handicwho happen to ha ve a hand icap _ began reading " People." Th en In aps, and a t the same time
Continued on page 10
"Four of our ha nd icapped the 1970' s, the reading was
~----------------~

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
"The old trad ition of care Is
being combined wit h the new
tradition of service. Parents and
staff are working as partners to
bring the best services possible
to Meigs Coun ty. T he State of
Ohio Is looking to Me igs County .
as a showplace for s mall rural·
county service deli ver ing. "
These were some of the comments by David Milliken; dlrec·
tor of Meigs Industries Inc.• at
the third annu al Meigs County
Board of Menta l Retardation and
Deve lopme nt al Dis a blllt les
dinner hel d Monday night at
Carleton SchooL Milliken's com·
· menl s came during a slide
presentation of events a nd
changes which occurred al Ca·
rleton School-Meigs Industri es
over the past year.
Lee Wedemeyer, school super·
int endent, spoke brlelly abou t
the many cha nges the Meigs
County Board of MR·DD has
undergone since It was organized
In 1967.
Wedemeyer sai d he real ized
upon review ing pas t boa rd meet·
Jng minutes from 1968 through
1983 that " the board s urvived a
lot of adversity ,"
He said It was a small,
dedicated group of parents and
supporters that made today's
Ca rleton School-Meigs Indus· ,
tries progra m become a realit y.
When those people were fi ght . lng battles for thei r children,
there was no building, no adm inIstrator. a Jack of tra ined staff
and limited lunds for operation,
Wedemeyer said. "There was
much to be done. Yet In 20 yea rs,
much has been accomplished,
Those Individuals perservered
through dl!llcult times a nd the
children In the progr am today

STAKES - When you plant
70,10G tomato pi!UIU, you scalier 70,000 •take~~ lor
lhe planfl to lfOW next to . •John and Mlcbael
Rous h, of the Lester Rou sh farm In the Letart
Fall• area. scattered stake~~ Monday afternoon.
All alon11 the rl'"r bottoms In Letart Falls, Apple
)

t

Grove; Portland, Lonr Bottom, Reedsville, and
various other Melp County locatioM, tomato
farmers were doing the Jarrte thing, Farmen 1111d
non-farmers alike will now wall impatiently just a few more weeks - for tho"" roocf.laatincMeiJIH County tomatoet1 develop and ripen. '

"

'

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