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-·~l~,.~~~~~~D~-~B~The~~S~un~d~ay~Ti~me~s-~Se~n~t~in~ei~===~P~omero~~y~M~~~d~lepo~~rt~G~a~llipo~lis~.~O~h~io~P~owt~·~t~Piea~~san~t.~W~.~V~a~,============~M~arch~~9=,1~9~8~6

More shu'ttle wreckage found
B~

WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Scleace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) ~ Salvage crews have
recovered large pieces c:i Chal·
Ienger's lett wing and luseiall",
olflcials said Saturday, but a
submarine skipper said the shut·
tie's suspect rocket booster appar·
ently broke into small pieces.
Shortly before midnight Friday,
two salvage ships returnEd to port
and one unloadEd what appeared to
be one of the largest pieces of.
shuttle debris yet recovered. NASA
spokeswoman Andrea Shea said
the ship reported recovering a large
segment of Challenger's lett wing
and aft tuselage.
At a presidential disaster commission heartng Frklay, salvage
director Col. Edward O'Connor
said of 'lil
contacts mapped
on the QC('an noor since the accident
on Jan. l8,17tumEdout to be shuttle
components and 2'i were unrelatEd
to the accident. He sakl185 contacts ·
remain to be Identified.
The priority for salvage crews Is
recovery of components from
Challenger's right· hand solld-tuel
rocket booster, the one that rupWRECKAGE FOUND - NASA has released this the orean Door off Cape Canaveral. A pair of "0"
tured Jan. 28 and resulted in the
pholo~ ajolnt~lhe lelt!lllHdrockel hoosier laying on ' lings can be seen hanging from the jomt. (UPI)
detonation of the ship's external
fuel tank.
So far, only small pieces of the
right booster's aft SECtion have been
recovered and no wreekage has·
been located from the area .where
the rupture occurred.
Other high·priortty targets are
the remains of the shuttle's crew
compartment, parts of the left-side
.·
B~ JACK REIID
two strikes. which began a few days and I believe that it wiU be rocket and the struts that attached
the boosters to the external tank.
; MANILA, Philippine (UP! 1
aft er Aquino took office, are among presented in due coui'SI' to the
Overall, only about 10 percent of
' The governmeni has "dynamite -14 un!'l'soh·ed labor disputes in the courts.''
Ihe
blasted spaceship has been
: documentation" that for the first country. labor min lstry sources
Solarz left the Philippines after a recovered along with about 8
: time proves former President said.
three-day visit that included meet· percent of Us external tuel tank.
· Ferdinand Marcos secretlv ac·
Also. the Manila Times said
ings 11i th Jo,·ito Salonga, head of
The Navy's nuclear-powered NR
: quired vast real estate holdliJgs in Aquino has nominated Emmanuel
the Commission for Good Govern- 1 submarine Is playing a key role in
: N{'W York. a New York congress- PelaPZ. a ,·eteran legislator who
ment. assigned to Inves tigate the the search for the remains of the
. man said Saturday.
twice participa ted in negotia tions
"hidden wea lth" of Marcos, his rlght·hand rocket, mapping por: As the 13-day-old government of ovC'r rwo l' .S. military ba ~ in the
family and associates.
tions of a large "debris fi«&gt;ld" about
· President Corazon Aquino moved Philippines. as ambassador to
The congressman said Salonga 40 miles east of the launch pad in
: to recover assets believed spirited Washing1on.
had asked him not todi\' ulge details water up to 1.:m feet deep.
: out of the country by Marcos during
Rep. StepiK'n Solarl, D-N Y..
of the mrumentation, but he added,
LI. Cmdr. James Holloway,
· his 20 years in power. offlcia Is whose Hous.· Suocommill"" on
"I have now seen the dorument commander of the NR-1, said In an
: announced plans to recover assets .-\~ian and Pacific Affairs. inn•sti ·
with rt... ru•me of President Marcos Interview that most of the wreck·
: at home that we!'l' seized by Marcos gatt'&lt;l Marros· alleg,'&lt;l Ne\1 York
on it."
ag«&gt; Sf&gt;en so far Is small and
. and given to his fri«&gt;nds.
holdtngs. soid the gO\Trrunent had
"He produC\'d dynamite docu· scattered OVI'r a wide area.
: In another development. the ne11
a document linking Marcos to New
ment alion. which firmly estab"I'd say the biggest pil'ce I hav«&gt;
• govf&gt;mffient was confronted Sa ru r· York im·estment managers Joseph
lishes the link between the &amp;rn: day with two major labor strikes and Ralph Rern.s tein.
seen
Is probably 10 feet high and 10
s tcin brothers . who were
to
12
feet across," he said.
: that threatened to disrupt telephone
" \\'€' wen:~ alv.·ays told by our
responsible for the management of
· service and shut down a paper mill critics tha t wr didn "t have a
"Thf&gt;re'w
only been a couple of
thE- Marcos holdi ngs in thE- New
: supplying 90 percent of the news- smoking gun ... Solat7 sa ict. "I think
those.
Almost
all the rest Is small."
York Area, and President MarH«&gt; said one problem for the
: prtnt for Manila's newspapers. The the smoking gu n is now a,·aiiable. cos." So larz said.

sonar

12-man crew r1 the submarine,
including a NASA rocket expert on
hand to identify debris, Is poor
vlslbUity.
"Most of the area I've been
q~eratlng In, vlslbUity under waler
has been 15 feel (J' less 9l you a rro' t
SEeing &lt;tf a long distance and
SEeing a great deal underneath
you/' he said .
"We generally have been beat·
ing pieces by 9lnar and then easing
in oo them to within visual range or
else we just run along the bottom at
an altitude of 10 or 15 feet."
The NR-1, the world's first
nuclear-!Dwered deep-diving research submarine, Is equipped with
!lllphlstlcated electronlc search
gear. including sonar and t elevlsion
cameras. It is capable of staying
submerged for up to 30 days at a
time.
Holloway said while the NR·1 Is
equipped with a mechanical arm
that can ll11 "fairly substantial
pif&gt;ces" of debris - the exact lift
weight is classified - the subma·
rlne currrotly Is concentrating on

mapping Ihe dobrls strewn over the
ocean noor and rot recovering
wreckage.
"Most of what we see L&lt;; small
pif&gt;ces," he said. "I have oot heen in
anyM!ere near all the debtis
fields," he sa id. "The small part
I've been in (oontalnsl more small
pieces than large andlt'svery, very
scattered. It's qulteobvious notooly
the initial distribution from the
expi&lt;!Sion or whatever, but also
lighter and Oatter pieces .. . are
being carried underwater as well.·'
The search for shuttle debris now

Includes 11 surface shlps, two
manned submersibles, three robot
submersibles, seven !l&gt;nar rtgs and
41 divers.
The NR-1 and the JohnsonSea-Link 2, a privately owned
lour-man submarine, are concentrating on loca tlng debris from the
two shuttle rocket boosters. Several
other ships are concentrating on
work closer to shore where remains
of the shuttle's payload and other
wreckage have been I:JUnd .

Vot.3&amp;, No.227
Copyrighted 1986

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
(UPil - Salvage teams stood by
today to recover the wreck of the
shuttle Challenger's crew cabin
along with the remains of at least
some ol the astronauts, resting on
the floor of the Atlantic in 100 feet c:i
water.
Nearly six wf&gt;l'ks after Chal·
Ienger exploded In a ball of naming
debris 73 seconds after blastotl on
Jan. 28, the space agency announced Sunday that dlv«&gt;rs had
been able to provide "positivi'
identification of Challenger crew
compartment debris and the exist·
ence of crew remains."
On board the Challenger at
launch were New Hampshire
schoolteachf&gt;r Christa McAultffe,
commander Francis "Dick" Scobee, co-pilot Michael Smith, Judith
Resnik, Ellison Onlzuka, Ronald
McNair and Gregory Jarvis, a
commercial engineer with Hughes
Aircraft Corp.
NASA spokesman Hugh Harris
stressed, however. that he did not
know thl' condition of the two-level
reinforced cabin or how many~ the
seven astronauts' remains might
still be in or around the wreckage.
H«&gt; said recovery operations wen&gt;
expected to last several days.
A NASA statement saki a "posslble" Identification of the cabin was
madebysalvagecrewsuslngsonar
on Friday and that "famtly
members of the Challenger crew
were inlonned."

1984 FORD RANGER
TRUCK
l.orWJed,

black with red vinyl interior, V-' qine. automatic transmission.
power steeri111 &amp; braltes, am radio. swi!11-oul mirrotl. rear step buQ1Jer &amp;
•

'5,800°0

llt,!t~ .-s ..,...a~ 1o 1ai&lt;P "'

!IOQlelamlly

members by surprise

Sunday. Bruce JarviS, lather r1

yrtle Beach, SC

The

MYJ1l~ Beach

Hilton and Golf Club

][

Wll..I&lt;SVlLLE - Despite the
payment of nearly $1 million to 21
property owners atfecte:! by min·
ing, c:ificials of the Southern Cillo
Coal Company maintain IOngwall
mining Is sale, f&gt;COnomlcal and has
minimal effects oo the environ·
ment, according to independont
experts and representatives of
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division.
John P . Apel, viCe-president In
charge d governmental affairs br
the American Electric Fllwer
Service Corporation's Fuel Supply
Department in Lancaster said any
surface structure or water supply
that Is damaged due to mining Is
being repaired CK replaced.
His remarks carne at a public
conference held by the Cillo
Department of Natural Resources
recently at WUtoo Elementary
SchoOl. The department COnductEd
the CQnl«&gt;rence to allow InterestEd
parties a chance to voice their

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446·0842

Resnik's father, Dr. Marvin
Resnik of Akron, Ohio, said he
"didn't expect this part to be
found ." He saki hi' had been led to
bellevl' the 11051' of the shuttle had
vaporized in the exposion, but "this
new lnlonnatlon ooes oothlng to
change the situation."
NASA ofOclals said "assistance
inhposltlve lentlflcatlon r1 crew wUI
be IJVvided by Anned Forces
Institute of Patlvbgy personnel
located at the Patrick Air Force
Base Hospital."
Thf&gt; USS F'reserve', a Navy
salvaee ship ~!Quipped with t1Ml
..,
,
crane., OMotWtiicfi·am.llltJh:ms, - • · . AIIJW.!'OtllifD ;,. HAM ~~llliliavel'ilOOVeftifthe
Wlllspl'arhead the attempt to raise
crewtnocllleoii!Jit(lellhuttleChalengerwhlchexi*HieclonlakeoiiJan.
the cabin dobrls. ·
28 at Cape Canaveral, F1a. NASA olllclaluald tbe ttew compal'lment

concerns befol'l! It makes a df&gt;cls!on
regarding Southern Ohio Coal's
applications for revlsbns to exist·
ing mining pennlls.
Because the panning process for
underground mining Is an oogolng
one, new infonnation about the
geology r1 the coal resi!IVe area,
Improvements In mining equipment and methods, and chan&amp;es In
regulations and economic oondl·
lions may force revisions to the
original mine plan, Ape! said.
Some c:i the revisions mthe new
applications are the result of such
factors, be said. lllwever, the
primary reason lor the proposEd
revisions, Ape! said, is that the
approval pl'OCI'ss for the original
pennlts took two years.
Thf&gt; five-year mining pennlts,
therefore, only cover the last three
years that the original permit
applications were designed to
cover. The revisions are necessary
to Include mining plans for the

fourth and fifth years that the
permits cover, he continued.
A major concern of people living
near the Meigs mining complex has
been the ~fi'Cts of Iongwall mining,
Including subsidence. In the long·
wall mining pl'OCI'ss, a mechanized
sbeal'l!r shaves coal from a wall
hundreds of feet long while hydrau lie supports hold up the roof and
provide protection for the crew .
As the shearer cuts away the
coal, the roof supports advance
with It Into the coal seam. In this
method , the roof of the mine behind
the roof supports collapses almost
Immediately, and land above the
mining operation subsides In a
plannEd and controlled manner.
Currently there are thrf&gt;l' bng·
wall machines operating at the
Meigs Division's Meigs No.2 mine,
said Jeffrey D. Gerken, managermining englneering tor the Ameli·
can Eli'Ctrlc Power Service Cor!D·
ration's Fuel Supply Department in

Lancaster.
Not ooly Is the mining method one
ci. the best techniques, in terms of
safety for the miners, it is f&gt;COOOmi·
cally efficient, removing close to 100
percent of the coal, he said.
For this reason, longwall mining
is less expensive than other underground mining techniques, Gerken
said. Other mining methods rarely
recover more than 50 percent of the
coal and subsidence may still
oocur.
As longwall mining significantly
reduces the cost of producing coal,
It helps to stabUizf&gt; the cost of
electric !DWI'r, Gerken said.
The three underground mines of
the Meigs Division produced more
than ftve million tons of coal In 1985
and iongwalllng accounted for 36
perll'nt of that total . The mines
currrotly employ about 1,650 peo·
pie, and paid more than $61 million
wages ·and nearly $24 million in
benefits to these employees in 1985.

.,

lARRY EWING

OVP news IIIaH
Senate EducatiOn ChaJnnan Oakley C. Collins, R-lronton, says his
committre will hear testimony
Tuesday on legislation creating a
four-year university out ol the
existing Shawnee State Community
College at Portsmouth.
The enabling legislatiOn, spon:
sored by House Speaker Vern Riffe,
D- N{'W Boston, has passed the
House; and, according to Statehouse observers, has a "greased
path" thhrough the Senate as II
heads for the governor's lonna!
approval.
The proposal got a big boost last
week with House approval of the
$51:!4.3 mUiion capital Improvements bUI. The biD allocates $19.6
million In a two-year constructiOn
bill that was th«&gt; close cooperation
between the governor and leaders
of both major parties In the Ohio
(',pnPral AS9emblv.
Brian Usher, the governor's
press secretary, said Friday Gov.
Richard Celeste gave his approval
to include the necessary tunds for
the (:I'Oject In the two-year capital
bU4get. adding that he thlnki the
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
__ _..I

institutiOn can bTfllthe nf&gt;W economic life into the dzp-essed
counties of southern Cillo.
"The governor belleves that to
help any area recover, you have to
have a strong educational base,"
Usher said, referring to the Inclusion r1 Shawnee State In the capital
measure.
The $19.6 million aJIIOIInls to
almost 35 percent c:i the $56.1
million that wiUhgo to all &lt;t Cillo's
elgllt, two-year community col·
leges under the bill.
At a news confermCI' last week In
Portsmouth, Speaker Rllre said the
total IncludeS f7.5 mllllon lor a new
library and $6.8 million tlr a math
and scienceS INUdlng.
Th1.'91' wlll help Shawnee State
obtain . accreditation as a lull·
fledged tlnlverslty, the speaker
said.
Another $5.2 mUllon was included
for renovatiOns and ~her improvements at the school, which some
Cillo academicians have opposed
on grounds that It fails to meet
population and other criteria; and,
that It Will compete for stude!lts .
with other existing campuses in the
region.
_,,........,_,...,

Additionally, the division est!·
mates Its 1986 payments for real
estate and personal property taxes
to Meigs, Vinton and GaU!a counties at $1.88 mUllon. Local busl·
nesses profited from sales to the
mines In the amounl r1 $2.2 million
last year.
David V. Wright, senior environ·
mental enginf&gt;er for thE- M«&gt;lgs
DivisiOn, testified on the monitoring
plan the company uses to deter·
mine what effects, If any. longwall
mining has oo surface property and
water supplies.
So far, the monitortng program
indicates that very few surface and
groundwater systems are even
temporarily affected. Wright said.
However, as required by the
permits, the program monitors all
of the water 9lurces that are mined
under, be said.
In addition, the company is
monitortng a number of water
sourcrs oot required by law , he

said. In total, this amoun ts to some
97 water points at present.

After determin ing from this
information whether water sources
are affected. the company will
either replace or repairttK' sources.
Wright continued .
Wright's findings were supported
by a representative of Burgess &amp;
Nlple, Ltd., an englneering consul!·
in g firm which supervised a stu d;·
to det ermine and describe the
general hydrologic and geologic
conditions of the mining a!'l'a.
In a report genera ted after
introsive study of the mining area .
Burgess &amp; Nlple concluded that
longwall mining has not had and
will not have any significant effects
on tre water bal ance i.n and
adjacent to the coa l company's
mining areas.
Thomas W. Swinehan. manager
- geology and exploration for
AEP's Fuel Supply Depat1ment.
1Continued on page 61

Reagan: compromise
possible on Contra aid

hearings
will begin soon

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Gregory Jarvis, said he IQUnd out
after a neighbor heard the news on
televisiOn.
"I'm angry that I haven't been
notified," he told WCPX· TV in
Orlando. "All through this invest!·
gallon and so forth, I haven't really
been contacted. I never dkllike the
thought of him being blown to
pieces.
"I'd like to have sam«&gt; proof,
some tangible pnxif. that they were
somewhere - they didn't just
disappear."
McNair's father said he heard
NASA had locatEd remains of the
cabin from reporters.
"I just heard on nf&gt;WS reports,"
said Carl McNair of Atlanta, his
hands shaking as he appeared at
ceremonies in New York City
creating a city fUnd for the Ron
McNair Science Playground.

Sha~ee

FIXED RATE

VACATION INCLUDES:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, March 10, 1986

Mining permit revisions sought by coal finn

S1300

TO

en tine

Shuttle crew
remains found

~Aquino government finds the
- ~ "smoking gun' on Marcos

UP

at y

e

.

just 16,700 miles.

•

POWER OUTAGE - Power was oulln New Haven, Hartford and
Letart lllld tralllc on lWule 33 was lnlemlpted alter power lnilt! feD
!iuJIU.y evflllnl. 111e downed lines U!!o cauaed tleVIftl brush llre8 on
~ PowerCGmpany propeliy,accordlncto a New Haven Fire
Deputmenl spuloeiAIUUL Power was ell to 1,7111 wlliomers from l.etari
to apper ~. 11le l,U wlllomen IIOUib ~ PNIIp Spom Power Plant
llad powe- i'elilorecl by t : 0'7 p.m. 11le rematnlnc culliomers received
power at 4:15.a.m.

~~-------~,..

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

WASHINGTON iUPli - Presi·
dent Rl'agan, in his zealous pursuit
for ald to the Contra rebels In
Nicaragua, says he may be willing
to compromise to salvage the
proposed $100 mUIIon package
because "the alternative Is
unthinkable."
Plunging Into a week of concerted
effort to drum up popular support
his aides acknowledge he lacks,
Reagan Indicated Sunday he Is~
to compromise on his aid requestbut only after a pivotal March 19
vote In the House.
Any negotiations before that vote
would not "be productive at all," he
said. When asked what he might
accept In the way of compromise,
Rl'agan replied, "I would have to
walt to sre what someone offers."
The hint at compromise marked
a slight tactical shift by Rl'agan,
who spent most of last week
depleting the Contra aid Issue as a
black-and-white crucial lest of U.S.
resolve to prevent a communist
takeover of Central America.
In an indication of the Importance
he attaches to the Issue, Rl'agan
stopped to field questiOns about the
Contra aid Sunday as as he and
Mrs. Rl'agan returned to the White

House from t hr prf'S idf'n 1Ltl n '1 n '. tt
at Camp Da,·id. Md .
' 'I'm going to ri o m~ bf'st to
convince IlK' HouSC' th;, t ""''should

have this." hr .sa id. "Th&lt;• altern;,
tlve Is unthi nkable."
This W('('k . official' satd. Ih &lt;t l
hard sell will lx• .'&lt;lft ent&gt;d 't r tin"' '
with relnfom'&lt;l ('()mmitm&lt;•nts ro
diplomatic solutions to the cunnirt
in Nicaragu a. as e\·idrn= l b\ th1•
appointment Friday of veirr•n
troubleshooter Philip Ha bib as the
new U.S. specia l envoy to C1•ntr" l
America .
·
Habib wil l makr hi s first trip ro
the region this wer k. as H ca~a n
engages In a mund of pu blic and
private lobbying tha r will cu lminotc
with a televised addrl"s to IlK'
nation next Sunday .
His remarks hinted that a &lt;i'f!'at
in the Hou S&lt;'. consid&lt;'J'ed likely at
the moment. would be ttK' ca talvst
for negotiations on tiK' amotint,
form and terms of renewed aid especially arms 11nd amm unitionfor the rebel Contras.
However, Reagan was v·agu(•
about when and how middle ground
might be found . "Don't ask me to
make decisions about that this fa r
in advance," hr said .

--- --·· - -· --·-- --+---·--- ·-·-·-···-·--··- ---. -~ -·

�Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVO'I'Eil '1'0 THE INTERESTS OF THE MEI GS- MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publishe r
PAT wmn:m:Ao
Assistant l'ublisher/Controll er

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of Thl? United Press Internn11onal. Inland Daily Press Assodatlon and thC' Aml"rlr&lt;~n Nf'w spap er Publ ishers A ssQ(' Ja tion .

LETTERS OF OPi i':IOr-;: arE' weJC'O mf' . Tn t'y shoUld bC'

I C'SS

than».} words

long. All ktte rs ,m's ubj{'(' t to Ed !ling and mu st b(' sig ned wllh na nw. J ddrf:'ss and
teleph on e numb£&gt;r . No unstgnro lettE'rs " 'ill be published . L£' tters should b£' in
~ 9od

tast e. addrl!ss!n g JssuPS . not personalities

Playing the
analogy game

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
M~day, March 10, 1986

WASHINGTON- Is tbe nali:ln's
welfare system creating poverty
rath'r than reducing It? Two Ohio
University economists, Lowell Gal·
!away and Richard Vedder, ad vance that argument In a paper
(Xlbllshed last month by ttl&gt; Na·
tiona! Center tor Polley Analysis in
Dallas. Their rontenllon merits a
look.
"At least 5.7 million people," the
autoo rs say, "are living In poverty
by choice as a result of the
generosity of [XJbllc welfare. Each
addlti:lnal $1 lilllon In welfare
spending incrt'ases the poverty
population by 250,000. Put simply,
we are exp&lt;'rienctng more poverty
lx'cauS&lt;' we have been Increasing
the amount we pay people to be
poor."
To arrive at these conclusions,
the aut oors developed a correlation
i&gt;'lwE'!'n welfare spending and

poveriy levels throughout til&gt; nation in the years 1966-1984. They
came up "1th some eye·q&gt;enlng
data, The poverty rate In 1966, wll&gt;n
Lyooon Johnson's "war on poverty" got under way, was 14.7
p&lt;'rcent. It dropped to a low of 11.1
p&lt;'rcent In 1973, and then clfmbed
back to 14.4 percent In 1981.
Statistically speaking, weare virtu·
ally back where we sL '161 :.llyears
ago.
Yet there is a difference. Two
dffades ago, a theory was widely
advanred that people were trapped
In poverty for want of economic
opportunities. "Thday's structural
poverty Is something elS&lt;'. To a
much greater extent it Is poverty by
choice. By thai we mean that people
choose poverty levels of Income
CNer non-poverty levels because
they reel the combination of Income
and leisure which accompanies

poverty to be preferable to oon·
poverty."

JX)ints lower. F or gf't tiw

But H llt·n \OU ht'd! or· '4.'(' ')l('"t' pub!icily gimmirk::o in thrpaper a· rn thf'
tUbP . rPnwmb1•r 1ht•\ . 1!'l' all .m' .timt'tl at tht.• Si:l mf' Ia r~' t and you are it .

~1mount..., ttl ~.5

mitlilln

lowes t AFDC

~1;11 (':-.

BPt~'"~""~' n

l'lllq

and 1979, thP n uml)•r ''' dlihtn~ n "111
poverty" in thr 10 highr'-1 t\1·'[)(

states incrmsl'fl

b~

.tn

,t\·t·r. tgt·

()r

Z7.9perC'f'nt. I n this '-..ltnP r~·t·iocl. Ill

the 10 i:lwest states. 1hr !'Hit' fl•!IIJ\'
17.4 perCPnt. In

1 ~0~

'1\...,Xd:' h.td a br

higher rat P of c hild J)(l\·rrt~· th;tn

New York. B~· i ~l i~ rltl' JX)sitinn"
were rp\.·rrsrd . What prin• puhli(
wplfare?
T he

statb tics

,ll t'

ltJ rmi tbb l~

.~·quick ~lan"'­
arn bv n.l~U it' suspiciou~

hard to absoriJ at
BccausP I

cl all statistir-s

I dn not st.wk
!ht'IY' h lllOI'I' lil

11lat

1 suS(}('('!
story than tl1t'l'ls thr P\t '
Certainl_\· not rnam h(t\l .....f'hnl(l.; tlll
mvse lf.

thC

wPifarr wnu ld thmk tlu·ir

.!tl\"t'lll

ment is n·c•a tin).:: thi'm L:t'IH'n1ush
DPfinitions of "pn,·t·rl\··· \ ";t lY('t\l lr
m ouslv . E\·cn ....o. the· t' \ irlrncc• h

sta111ing . wr ~('f'm to tl ~n·r nuniiiPrl
into a SP ilSPit·s ~ situ. tti nn in \d1id1
the more bendlts \\' t ' pro\ idr. lilt.'
worsr ttl' pic 11m ' gp t s.

g et into t hf' ncw..:;pr.lpPrs and on I~ air. ThC'~· arC' try ing to provide what

dr'('ldf' hig ii\".UC'". in thr So\·irt L'nio n

Inside an airline hijacking
WASHINGTON - Airplane hi ·
jackings make big head lines when
they oecur. But by thP very nature
of these teTmist opera tions, ttl&gt;
planning !hat went in to them is
secrr1.
w~ can oow prov ide a rare,
behind-the -scrnPS look at the prep a·
rations fnr a hijack ing that or·
run·ed a llrrle more r han a year ago.
1\,·o

Am~:~rican s

wE"rr mu rdered

and two others torturro duri ng ttl&gt;
ordPal.
Our sources at the CIA have
helpro us piece togeth'r ttl&gt;
nuts-and -bolts planning that led to
the alrlxlrne piracy of Kuwait
Airlines Flight 221 In December
19l\J . Here's how the plotters did It:
On ~m·. 22, 1984, the four
prinrlpal tet'rorists go t rogeth'r In
Baalbek , the main city of ttl&gt; Bekaa
Valley , in Syrlan -co nt rolled eastern
Le banon. They were Iranian
charge d'affaires in Lebanon,
Mahmoud ~ourani: Sheik Sobhi
Tola ill i. comman!Fr oft he military

Airlines ntght the evening belore
and connect wtth Flight 221 In
Dubat.
Their weapons- to be planted on
board at Duhal - were two
. ~ ·c aliber pistols (unlikely to
pierce til&gt; airplane's huU unless
fi red point-blank) and a single hand
grenade.
By morning of Nov , 26, every·
thing was set. Then the terrorists
learned that three Kuwaiti diplomats and at least three Americans
would be aboard ttl&gt; same Flight
221 a week later, Dec. 3-4. The
Americans' reseiVa tlons had been
made by the U.S. Embassy in
Sanaa, Non h Yemen .
This meant the hij ackers would
have six VIPs to be swapped for the
17 terrorists imprisoned In Kuwait
The hi jacking was to occur before , - wiiJse release was the point of
dawn on Nov. 27. Flight 221 would
til&gt; hijacking. So the hij acking was
leave Kuwait the evening before postponed a week.
and take oft from Dubal shortly
After prayers onlhe aft ernoon of
aftff mldn lght. The terrorists were Dec. 3, the hijackers were driven to
to leave Beirut on a Middle East Beirut airport to catch Middle East

forces In Baelbek tor the terrorist
group Hezbollaij; Hassan Hashem,
thP pro-Iranian leader of Moslem
mil itia units that contrul Beirut's
international airport : and Ali AI
Yafi, the Lebanese Shiite Moslem
who had been chosen to lead the
tea m of hij ackers.
The targe ted plane was an A-310
Airrus that Kuwait Airlines Dew to
Bangkok with stops at Dubal and
Karachi. AI Yafl briefed tiv' thra&gt;
ot her members of his team - two
Shiites and a Palest inian -on the
configuratio ns of thr Airrus: ttl&gt;
location of Its exits, galleys and
lavatories. Meanwhi le, Iranian
spies In Kuwa it wl"e swff'plng
airline reservation computers tor
names of a ny V!Ps on Fligh t 221.

lack A rulerson &amp;
Dale Van A 11 a

JACKSON, Tenn. (NEA) - Rosemary Derrick's first confrontation
with those holding economic and polit·
leal power here in rural west Tennessee occurred seven years ago, when
she was a member of the Rock Springs
~
Community Organization.
At issue was the disposition of Community Development Block Grant
funds from the federal government.
"We were up against the local power
structure," Mrs. Derrick recalls.
"They wanted to spend almost half of
the money on an unnecessary bridge."
Local residents, however. insisted
that there were more compelling
needs - especially paving decaying
gravel
roads which posed a hazard to
Today is MilnrLt\ :.L•r• h Ill th&lt;• tllrh d;11· of J9Hii with :!'lti to fo lio ~&lt;·
school
buses.
·Thr moon i" nl'w
"W
e
lived right there and we knew
1l1l' moming !-.1.t! ... ;m· i\.I.tr~. Jupifl •r and Saturn.
the
community's
needs," Mrs. Derrick
'11tc c\'cn mg ..,r;u· ... drP \lP TT Ut ~· and \'pnu s.
says, recounting that early victory. In
Those born tHl till -.: darr i.ll'C' undr r ltv' sign of Pisrt•s. 1l1C'\" includf' the eiJSuing years, she has fought sociologist l.tlli,lll ll I\ did in 1Rb7: actor Bany Fitzgerald in 1.888: Frmch but not always won - counlless simi·
compos&lt;•r 1\ tfliur lion•·~ger in IR~2: ShrnTJan Billingslc)·, 0\\11Cr of ~ew Jar battles about the need for every·
York' s Stork Cluh. 111 1!100: jc~zz cometisr Bix Aeidrrhrckc m 190J: poet thing from gates at railroad crossings
Margaret f'i,hh ,tt h 111 1901 tage 82!: pla)'wrighr Dal'id Rab&lt;' in 1940: to playgrounds in low-income
actr&lt;'SS K;lllldl tn r Houghton in 194.): ;und PrinCI' Edward, third son or neighborhoods.
Just Orga nized Neighborhoods Area
Qu""n f:li;al•·rh II. in 1%1 '; tgr 2'21.
Headquarters, a confederation of 10
On th i.-. c.l.llt' m i11stot;. ·
community organizations including
[n col5 R.f' .. r&lt;' building of the great JC\\iSh temple in J r rusa!Pm was
the Rock Sprinp group, has reprecompiNed
rn 1R62. tht• l' S Trrasut}· Issued the Hrsr American paper rmney. in sented the formerly powerless resi·
dents of the region during much of the
denomina Itons from Si ro $l,(XXJ.
In 196.9, James Em·I l!.1y pleaded guilty 10 the murder of Dr. Martin past decade.
JONAH was formed in the late
Luther King Jr., and was sentenced to !1.1 years in prison.
1970s,
when a former bishop of the RoIn 1982, President Reagan imposed an embargo on Libya n oi l import s
man
Catholic
diocese of Memphis reand restricllons on high-technology ex p:H1 s to Libya, citing Moammar
cruited two nuru1 from Michtgan to
Khadafy's suppor1 for interna tional terrorism.
minister to the needs of the region's
In 1985, Konstanlin Chernenko, til&gt; last Soviet k&gt;ader born uooer the tmpoverlsbed ruralrt!9idents.
czars, dled of heart failure at age 73.
Although the early religious tie Is
A thought for the day: poet Margaret Fisltlack penned the lines:
somewhat unusual , JONAH Is typical
"The same old charitable lit&gt;
of hundreds of local groups that enRepeated as the years scoot by
courage low· and middle-income lam·
ilies to Improve the quality of their
PerpetuallY makes a hit lives by becoming more active in govYou haven 't changed a bit!"

.

,_
....
-

Today in history

-·

Melp' Chris Kennedy (13) and PhD King (31) and
Greenfield McClain's Brian Myers (3%) and Jim Price
( 11). Greenfield, coach by fonner Marauder Rick
Van Maire posted a 58-41 victory to advance to the
reglonals against Sky view.

VALUAILIIUI&gt;IDRY STORE COU,ON

had no ba gga~P ....111d WPit' dt ·i\'l, n
directly tn thf' pbn t' . ,n ·1Jiclm g
examin e~ tion of ttll 'll fur C,t'd lt"d\,'!
documrnt s h,v I .t •h,uH·~· orfici.lls.
Dw·ing thP llour·lung LtYO\'('t' .tl
Dubai waitin g for Fli ght 221. th~
hijackers Sell a pan in thP i HI"IJIWI
lounge , a\'oicl ing l'U 'n j'\"P etlll\.tt t

AI Yafi US(([ thf' intetYal to ,h;l\'e
off hi s beard. '111Pn rill' four
hijac krrs qu i(' tl\' nnng\Pd wit h tht•

ot h'r 14 pa«rn~rs who lwJanhl
Flight Zll "r Dub:ti. 'l'wn wrn'
Iran ians who lall'r act l'CI .1s spif''i
for the terrorists. llstr'ning tnr !lin t"

if resisla nC'f' cuoong th!.' pa'"' 'llj!t '!"'-

after lhe hij ackin g.
The hijacklnJZ: ocrutn\1 10 mtn
ut es out of Duba1. "·i1 Pn t1\"il11t ttl t'
terrcwists O\'C'l'l)(1\\"t' l"f'(l t ht · J, 1111 ·

security gtli:lrc\. T hf'\ " U~t'CI

ernmeni and polilics.
The projects they undertake range
from campaigning lor the installation
of stop signs at dangerous intersections to opposing proposed exorbitant
utility rate increases.
In Massachusetta, Obio, Illinois,
Iowa, Arkansas and elaewhere, coali·
lions of local self-help groups have become so powerful that they now wield
statewide influence.
"We .want to empower people to
bring about change," says Mn. Der·
rick, who Is JONAH's director. "'!'bat's
what we're all about - improving our
living conditions."
In Stanton, Tenn., JONAH SUttesS·
fully pressed public officials to extend
the town's water system to the May
Hill neighborhood so residents of that
community would no longer have to
drink from rusty barrels.
In Lexington, Tenn., JONAH won a
reduction in the amount of money new
residents must deposit before receiv·
ing telephone service. Near Cedar
Grove, Tenn., JONAH conv~rted a va·
cant school building into a thriving
community center.
Then! have been setbacks as well,
including an agonizing attempt to
launch a community organization
here In Jackson, by far the laraest city
in the area. "It's been a strugle to get
the group of! the ground," admits Mrs.
Derrick, "It takea an awful lot of moti·
vatfon and determination."
Although tbe two nuns who founded
JONAH were white and llrl member·
ship lnitlaii.Y was biracial, it has become a predominantly black or&amp;aniza·
Uon Increasingly concerned abotit a
lack of black poUtlcal power In the
region.
In nearby Haywood County, for example, 51 percent of the population is
black, but far mol'&lt;! whites register

and vote. A!. a result, whites control16
of 20 seats on the county commission
and five of seven seats on the school
IJ9ard.
Similarly, blacks constitute almost
one-fifth of the population ln adjacent
Gibson County but do not hold a single

Wl\!pnn:-.

[rom a br\Pfci:1St 1 tilat had ht •t· Jl
plantEd on bo.:1rd in ach".tn~t·
ThC' hi jackin g l aslf'&lt;l ..,;"" cl ~ t\ · .., ,t NI

led I ran to stag-r a phon\ ··n·'C"Ul' ..
as thP p Jan1 • S.tl ;II '1'(']11 ,Ill ,Ill ~0.11"1

seat on the 25 -mcmbt&gt;r county
commission.
"We've got to gel people to tht'
P.?lls," Mrs. Dernck says wtth a sig h
'It's hard work," she adds, suggest i n~
that grass-roots commumty organ iz ing can be fru strating as oflen as tt 1s
rewarding

But the Marauders, whose 23
wins was by-far the most wins In
school history (McCialn's 23 wins
this year Is also a' school record),
drew praise from their coach.
"These boys have alot to be proud
of. They had the school's best
r=rd In history and had probably
til&gt; best players ever.
It's always of heckuva oote when
tre seniors lose In the toumament ,"
added Drummer.
Greenfield will advance -to rt'gional play vs. Cincinnati Wyoming
(19-5) at Dayton's !lara Arena next
Wednesday at 8: 15 following the
Greenon (24 -0) Cincinnati CAPE
121·3) opener at 6:30p.m. Finals are
sel for Saturday, March 15 at 1:30
p.m. Winner advances to the state
tournament.
Grff'non defeated Wilmington
74·54, CAPE knocked off Spring·
field Kenton Ridge 51-49, and
Wyomin g whipped Germanlown
Valley View 68-1)1 In !heir district
ftnals .
'
. The Meigs loss clo&amp;e oot brilliant
smsons for six 5enlors including
Qumcey, Wtse, Lee Powell, Shawn
Baker, Brad Robinson, and Chris

By KEml WISECUP
ATHENS - Toumament·!I"OVi!n
Greenfield McClain (23-1) roUro to
Its' lhlrd aass AA district title In
four years wtlh a 58-41 win over
Meigs (23·2) In the district ftnals at
Ohio University's Convocation Cen·
ter Saturday night.

McClain broke It cpen by ootsoor·
ing Meigs 11·1 to start the third
period, holding the Marauders
without a field goal for CNe!' six
minutes. That widened the Tigers
24·19 halftime lead to a oommanding 35-W. McClain's lead was never
fewer than 10 after that as tre
Highland Coontlans drUied 16 of ID
fourth period free throws.

"I don't Ihlnk our kids could have
played much better. The temiXJ was
exactly right for us. we wanted a
game In the high forties or low
fifties. We oone a nice job c1
handling tre baU, patient, and
mUked the clock when we had to,"
rornmentro 1971 Meigs grad Rick
VanMatre,
A brutal J.J.J wne defense try the

Kennedy.

Tigers forced Meigs Into chllly 25
p&lt;'r cent siiJoting (15 of ID) . Meigs,
who had rome off a 56 per cent
game in a 71.8J win aver Jackson,
hit oo eight of 22 first half soots, but
stone-cold In the ~nd hall,
makin g ~"'len d 38 includlngfour c1
~ in the fin d period.

Otancey's team-high 21 points
gave tre 6-5 forward 1,076 points for
his career, the top scorer in MHS
history .
Wise was held to his lowest
scoring outpul of the season, four

McClain, meanwhile, took only 37
soots but sank 20 fo r 54 per cent
Including 12 ol191n the first half (63
per cent),
"We tried to take away Rick
Wise's penetration and keep Mfke
Chan"'y from getting Inside. We
wantro Jo make their ~rer players
shoot from the perimet!'l'.
We did a beautiful job of taking
Wise' s scoring away," added the
former Mfddlepori native Van
Matre , woo sports an In creditable
97-18 record in his five years at
McClain .
Meigs rooc h Greg Drummer,
woo shared the district co-coach d
tre year award with Van Matre ,
agreed with his coochlng cohort on
the Tigers play. "We never played
wtth as much Intensity as McClain .
We dldn 't run our offense and that
caused poor soot selection, " rom·
mented Drummer.

------------1
The Daily Sentinel
(liSI'S lll-. . )
i\ DMslon of Mllltln•edll, lae.

Berry's World

~v!'ry artPrnoon, Monday
through Friday, Ill Courl St.. Po-

Publ ished

me-roy , Oh io, by The Otl lo Valley Pub·
Jll'hlnl{ Company/Multimedia , Inc.,
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cond clau postage paid at Po meroy,
Otllo.

M£&gt;mber: United Press lntE&gt;rn allonal,
Inla nd Dally Press Assoc iation and tht

Ohio Newspaper Assoclallon . National
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Newspaper Salf'8, 733 Thi rd Avt&gt; nut',
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POSTMASTER: S.nd address rhang&lt;t
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available.

Malt S.bocrlpU0111
J A ,_i

q'l!! • '"&lt;I A "'

" We've lived in the 'real world ' long enough

LET'S TRY SOMETHING ELSE! "

VALUAILIIUHDRY STORI COU,OH

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points, and only the second time thi s
year the 5-9 guard failed to reach
oouble figures. Wfse· closes his
career SECond on the a ll-time Ust
wlht 912 points. Wise also scored 454
points this year, the most ever in
one season at Meigs while Chan·
cey's 434 this year Is the second
highest in any one year.
Robinson's 10 points wa s the only
oth'r Marauder in double digits .
McClain's Tony Jackson, who
shared the district pl ayer of the
year award with Chancey, led the
Tigers with 22 points while Dale
Gillenwater added 14.
Meigs outrebounded the Tigers,
37-31, as Chancey 's 14 topped all.
Lee Powell added seven while Doug
Mustard and guard Joey King led
McClain wilh seven each. McClain
had 18 turnovers and Meigs 15.
Meigs made .11 of 17. foul shots (65
per cent) and McClain 18 of 29 (62
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BOX SCORE:
GREENnl!l.D McCJ,AIN (M) - Tony
Jackson 7·8·22: Da le Gl lt enwal f'r 7-0-H:
Dou!il Mu s tard 1·2·4: J eff Campbell 1-4-6:
Joey Kina: 2·2·6: Gerald Moon 2·2-6: J !m
?rtctl- O.O.O:·TimKn appO·O·O: Brya nM yrr~ '
0.0·0: Ri ctdt&gt; NorTon 0-0·0: Gle nn Coll man
0·0·0: John Roth&gt;0.0·0. TOTAL.~ 2G-18·5S.
Mt:JGS (-II) - Mlk r- c nanrP y 7-0-tt
Shaw n Baker 0·0.0: Lt&gt;e Powr&gt;tt 1·0·2: Rlrk
Wise 1·2·4; Brad Robinson ~0 · 10; J.R.

SUHDRY SfOIE COUI'OM

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Mf.'igs ... ...
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CLOSE-UP
TOOTHPASTE

VICKS FORMULA
44-D

Brutal zone defense helps
Greenfield oust Marauders

Atrltnes ntghr 426 rn Ou hai. Titc\·

Grass roots ups and downs ___R_ob_l'r_r _II n_ller,~
.,.,..••.&gt;'..

IIRCII 18

ll!Jllli)('t'..;

children.
IJJOk again . tlllnking nf l'~'r
children, at tlw 1(1 hi~ ht '&gt;I ,111d t lw 11 t

But thl' huk'&lt; :n rih'&lt;&lt;' analogies don't make the least bit of differrncr to
those who ust' thvm. What rhe) are looking fo r is easy comparisons that

ttll' \\' (\ ~ th r~ ·

SHORT JUMPER BY POWELL - _M elp' Lee
Powell (43) puts up a short jumper during second
quarier action of Salurday's 011811 AA Dlolrlct
Toumarnenlllnals al Olllo University's CMvooUion
Center. others In this Keith Wisecup acl.,n shot are

The authors JJOint IS !hilt the
dl fferrnce

kinds of contlwt"'

beat

1101 TIIRU

were goin g down by an ,tu•ragP of
almost 25 pt.•n'E'nt. Th f'st.~ In an:-

Alabama, Alizona. Arkdn&gt;&lt;l'. Flor
The two economists looked at ida, Georgi a. l.oulsi;tna. :-li"i'
poverty and wellart', state by state, sippi. South Carolina. T, •nm'S'I f't '
belween 1969 and' 1979. In this
and Trxas .
period, only four oltbe 10states that
"Thrsr stJ ti stie~ ... thr .1\llhnr~
spent the most on Aid to Familfes
with Dependent Children (AFDC) say, "dramatic ;;1ll~ l'OnEirm that
ex perlenced a reduction In their high levels of welfarP benrft" .tl't '
poverty rates. TheS&lt;' were. Minne· oot the magic mad ro eliminating
sofa, Oregon, Washington and poverry. All JO of the ·low-benefit
Wisconsin. Vermont showed no states show conslderabl )' morr
change. But live of the 10 biggest progress in Pliminating povel'l) '
welfare spenders - Ca lifornia, Ulan the nation as " "·hole,''
Gall away and Vedder made a
Connecticut, Massachusetts, MIChl·
gan and New York - experienced special study of poor child ren . In
Increases In their poverty rates. 1969 tre ~vert ~' rail• !01 p&lt;'rson'
New York's increase was a pheno- under 18 was llR Il&lt;'n:cn r Ll.r 1 '1~ it
had climbed ro 21.1 pcrwnt. If tht'
menal :.ll.7 p&lt;'rcent.
Meanwhile, the 10 states that level of AFDC in 1~84 dn real
were spending the least on AFDC • terms) had been no htgher th;m In
were having a very different !969 , the po1·c·rr .'· ,." tr "mong
""p&lt;'rienee. Their poverty rates children would tx· .l~l Pt 'r&lt;J•nrag-L'

suppor1 thP established go\'crnmcnr in El Sal\'ador frrqurnll)· ran mro the
Vietnam analogy.
"El Salvador will bt' rhe \ "ietnam oft he 1900s." critics of the president's
Cenlral American policies inloned c1wv time he askf'd for mo ney ro
suppo11 tha Duarte gmwrunenr. The m;p:mse got attention and made
rmuble fo r thr presidt' nt
Now Reagan h,l&lt; found his 01111 an alogy : rompanng f\'icaragua to the
Philippines.
" ( think lhP wnr ld is watching to Sll' tf l'ongrp5s i." a~ rommittrd to
democrac~· in Nicaragua in our m~11 hPm isphC'rr a..;;; it was in tiY'
Philippines," the president said duting the w·ar of words la st WE't'k OIW his
t'('(]Uf"t for $IOU million to assist the Contra rebels 11·ho area fi ghting the
Marxist Sandinisra go1·crnmcnt in Nicaragua.
Upon examination, analogies S&lt;'idom are p&lt;'ticct, as demonstrated by
both thP \'i ctnam F:l Siill"ador and PhiUpplnes-Nicaragua rompa risons.ln
each case, the,· compare countries in difterrnr parts oft tl&gt; world in which
ther'€ an' differing l'.S. interests, and In which there are or were different

thr m ··tcnun"!s. · · Tt11' pn~si dC'nt im·okrs 1h£' Spf'{'trr of ·· anot tr r Cuba ·· in
the C&lt;.~ribh ·&lt;~n . The il\) P\ IIIl'Ill!-- summon up nrmorit-'S uf t~ old d&lt;-~ ys of 1h..1
"Yanqui irnpt" l'ialist" 11-:-mg ro domlnatf' !h.' \\'rstPrn H('mi.sphrre.
All of this is wlithin thP 111 lrs of debate in a dPmorralic society . It may
seem disonklrl.v and somt •t im(•s PXl'€' S."' ivPI.Y mugh -and -tum blr . But it d{)('s

SILE PIIICES

WE RESERVE THE
RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES

Paying people to be poor?__Ja_me_s_J._I(_ilp_at_ri(_·l. .

During his first l!'rm. Reagan's Ul'gent appt""aL" to Congress for mom,~ · t o

\ \/ill

I

I

President HeagJn is showing that he can pl ay th&lt;' analogy game with rhr
best of them in 1\"ashinglon.

writers refer to as an ·hook" on which to han g a story.
And, it might be added, it is unlikPI) that an\' one sNiuusJ1· thinks these
analogiPs will rea II,. change minds in the places whrn,dffisi:lns are made,
whether it is on Capit ol Hill or in the White House.
The audienC'!' for thPse gimmicks is outside Washington and the hop&lt;' is
that the,· will catch on with thP (Xlblic , to be reflected in lett ers, telegrams
and tclephom' ra il&gt; to the people woo do make the decisions .
The ana log' g ame Ls unly par1 of the st ruggle over Nica ragua. The
president brings Con iras to th&lt;&gt; While House to dra rnatize t ht&gt; rebel cauw.
The opponent&lt; of tht' president' s policy bring eminent church ctficials to
the cap ital to dtnl the atd pmposal.
The pn'&gt;idr nr coli&lt; the Conrras "fr,.,oom ft ghtcrs ." The opponents call

•

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CHOCOUTES
EllllfS EGti ClOSET HOllOII
11010 7 OL

�Pomelay-Mbtlaport. Ohio

Monday, March 10. 1986

Late rally earns Piketon trip.to regionals
The stanmut performanre paced
PHS ID a 10-4 lead as Soutll!l,'ft'S
leading duet, Jay Bost!ek and
Adams IDsled In goals ilr the
Tornadoes. Altmuglt PHS maintained at least a lour point lead, a
spirited comeback btd led by
Bostick, Adams and sopmmore
AmiJurlley ~Ued the score closer
at 18-12.
Piketon, which had enjoyed
sucwss as a man-to-man team.
showed variations r1 a zone, a
triangle-and-two 011 Bostick and
Adams, and a bJx-and-one to
constantly keep SHS oo Its toes.
SHS stormed Into tbe second
frame with lury ~ de tbe score at
18-18 on two Adams goals and a 15
looter by Amburgey. Tied twtce
more before tiE halt, the game was
tied at 2f.2f before an explosive
Piketon effort rtght before the half.
Early In the second round senior
Richard Gilbride and Matt HaiTis
took turns cur1alltng Legg's scoring
elt&gt;rts as they both turned tn good
&lt;l!!enslve games. Legg, however.
an all-illstrtct honor student managed 19 markers In the llrst hal!
with SHs trailing by seven at 1;-28.
SECOND HALF
Opening the third round, the
standing room only crowd saw
Southern at Its best as It WlVelled an
aggressive luU oourt trap press and
defensive effort to put the Red
Streaks oo the run. In a !our minute
span, Southern outscored Piketon
16-4 to take a 44-39 lead wtth an
opportunity ID go up by seven.
The sudden, dramatic change In
('111!1 ts quieted the vocal Piketon
crowd as momentum misleadingly
came to Soutbern's stele. Southern
went box-in-one and m1111-to-man to
constantly dog tbe scoring threat c1
Legg.
As Southern's fire fizzled to an Icy
Canoe, PHS regained Its momentum to grab a 48-44 lead by
~arter's end.
This set the stage lor the final
SHS comeback bid that gave SHS a
52·51 lead oo a Kenny Turley
jumper, but a drained SHS quintet
finally ran &lt;11 t of steam. setting tbe

By SOO'lT WOU"E

CHIUJCO'IlfE - TraUing 52-51
!lie newly crowned Class • A"
District Olamplon Piketon Red
Streaks ootscored the Thrnadoes
1!1-2 In the final live minutes to
claim a 66-52 triumph tt..ts advancIng to the Regional Thumament.
Piketon plays Skyvlew Thursdlly.
Going Into tbe final round Piketon
held a sUm 4844 lead, but the llest;y
Tornadoes buckled down to tate a
52-!11 with 5: 18 remaining. The
IDITid start to the tina! frame
appeared to make a strongtmpresston on the slumping Red Stmllls,
as an emotionally drained Pike
County Club was signaled ~ the
bench by Coach Joe B. Stewari.
During the qll!lllng lmllll!llts 1!1
the hectr finale, Dave Ambuflll'y,
T&lt;QI Adams, Matt HaiTis, and
Keiii\Y Turley all pumped m
two-pointers to ~t the locals m t~
lor the llnal time.
Piketon's "timely" !IJne.oot was
well worth tbe lfin1 as the Streaks
adjusted their &lt;l!fl!nslve strategy
and reallgned tbeir ~ense, going to
an aggressive box-In-one m senior
Todd Adams during til! last part c1
the gllJill'.
Tratllitg ~:i'l with 3: 51 left bt the
game, Southern !ound Itself In a
position of again playing catch-up,
tilt the third time was not a charm
as the Tornadoes went completely
cold from the field.
A rejuvenated Piketon club,
inspired by Its lour point advantage, played super defense the rest
ot tbe way to btoo Soutbern Into a
IJ('rtmeter game and less than
IJ('rfect soot selections.
Altrough Soutbern oontlnued to
repel all-dlstrtct player Scott Legg,
the talented senior soored tour key
points. The big story, however, was
the surprising play of "sixth-man"
Bub Brabson, a 6-0 senior brward
who tossed In seven burth quarier
points and 15 overall to become
Piketon's second leading scorer.
During the last two minutes,
Southern resorted to sending PHS
to tbe Une, wbere It hlt six c1 seven,
including four c11lve bonussh:lts by
Brabson.
A lone steal and ensuing lay-up by
Adams was all·that SHS could
muster In the final live minutes as
Piketon claimed a 66-M triumph.
FIRST JIALII'
With both clubs tabbed as
fast ·breaking clubs, the llrst quarter was what ('lleryooe expects! as
a rapidly paced tempo was establlsbed. The btltlal bWtng qutckly
became "Southern versus Scott
Legg" as the talented all-illstrlct
sharpshooter sparkl!d the ~enlual

HANDS UP- Piketon's Bud Brabson woo enjoyed a line out1111wlh
15 points provides some defense against Southern's Jay Bostick (24)
during action from Saturday's Class A District game al Chillicothe.
Piketon defeated SouUtern. 66-54. Srott Wolle photo.

Eight titlists chosen
for NCAA Tourney
KANSAS CITY. Mo. n:PI I The NCAA. • n otganiLa tion that
likes fa,wi t~s. hf'id true to fmm
Sunday b' tapping its last eight
dtlists to pia\ m this y~ar's nationa l
~liege basketball tournament.
Along with the eight former
· dtamps.

:1

llkr numtx'r of trams

:will make tht'ir first bids for the
&lt;N'CAA tltlr. The' newcomers are

; ~kro n, Arkansas-Little Rock.
• Cle,ebnd S1.1te. Drexel, Faniield,
;~ Marisl. Mississippi \ 'all~~ Statp
·' ~nd Nebrask,1.
.- .' . Thr most familiar nam f' is
·· · Nebraska. which isn't used to
: JU.eping compan) with t h~ Ma rists
.- :ana F:.iJiiclds of th~ world . Th~
·· ;- Cornhuskers usual!)· 11Jn ~· ith the
' South~ rn Cals. Penn States. Tex . and Ohio States- in football.
•' ases
::: · If they ran wlth that crowd on the
: .:basketball court. the\ 'd be home

..

~

Final Foor learns. The Big Easl
earned four bids this year - Sl.
John's. Svrac use, GeorgE'!OMt and
\'illanO\·a .
Among the tournament high·
lights 1\111 be the reappearance ct
1\~ ·
League champion BroMt,
whose only pre,·ious appearance
~·as in the in augural NCAA Toornament in 1939. The Bruins, hOW('IIer,
must face Sy racuse. the East
Regional's No. 2 sE'E'd. oo lhe
Orangemcn·s home floor Friday
night.
The tournamen t committee.
faced as u.'ual with the need to send
se\'era l eastern schools to the West
Rt•gional. ap!J('ar&lt;&gt;d to make that
region the tought&gt;St.
In addition to No. 5SI. John's, the
\\'est includes No. 3 North Carolina .

f'\"C'I~·

Californ ia. the nation 's rrost popu-

··. }rear wtwn \'OU start out ... :.Jebraska
_ ~oac h Mo&lt;' lba sa id Sunda, . " It' '

lous stat r. in the toumannent.
Among tho•e failing to win
lm·itatlon.' were 20-game winners
Rai ton l 'niwrsity . Mlddil' TennesSft' . Ohio Uniwr•ity . Tcnnesseel'hananooga . Texa• A&amp;M . Texas
Christian and Wyoming.

:.• · . " 1 1'~ wh i:J1 \ ·ou work for

~

takrn u:-; a long I imr to accomplish
: · [t. It 's J bt't'a kthrough for u~ . It' s
:. tim r I')( I\\ ' fn r 1hr peoplr in thC'~tatP
: of \L•b ra~k.i tn b.• proud ol rhrir

· bl• '-kl'IIJ..l ll1t, IT11 .
' :;..,l'br.t~ kd, ;\l~nst o~nd compJ.m·
join fl!lmcr chi.!mplon:-. \ ' ilbn o,· ~ .

fri'Otf!dou n. \u rth l 'aroli na

~tatf' .

~o rth l'dro lma.lndi&lt;.l nd. L ouiS\' Lllr.
~·lichigc~n St Jll' a nd 1-.:t'ntucky in

· fhis .\ 't'&lt; lr'" fil'ld .
~

Ci\'Pn thf' top Il'gtonal -.C«~s ut&gt;rt •

. N_o . 1-r&lt;•nkPd Dukt' m thr Ltst
Region:J!. \n ·2 hans;I.S in 1~·
· Mid\\'(':-.1. ~u ~ l.;:pntuck~ in lhf'
• SoultH \1"1 and '\ n ~ St. John·-. in tht•

.. west

- Dukl' . wh ich

\\ ' Jt·~ !Pd

t Jfficia Is

at Ohio State University
and at Ohio University confirmed
Sunday night tha t Ohio University
will host the Buckeyes at 7: ll p.m .

top rrtn klng from con frrrnet_• nLd
. -North l .llf,IJ!ld 1\m \\'('(•1\&lt;.. .1go. 1.ril1
;-:pJar Thursd.J ~ night in GrfY'nsOOm,
;. ' ·N.C . .t g~lln ... r Mississippi \ 'a llry
•: . si atC'. n·hrch took thf' Southwl'-.fl'rn

.

.
··Athlf'trr

~: ~ s@a ~on undrr coc~ch Edclir ~utton.
"'~ll makP its ninth ;;fr&lt;llght ro ~mJ
mrnt &lt;lPJX'.JraJlC'f.' l-'ruL1 \ n1gfl r in
:· -~ OlilriOftP . \ .C. ,~ g, un..,t I ),n 1d "--n.
_
1lll'othi:•rtop . . ,·n i.ST .. John . . . ~\· ill
: .. pl&lt;J.\ if _.., nJX'nLilg ganw 1-' 1·itLJ:, night
lit•acll . L1ltf.. &lt;~g;~in .q
: .Monta nd Staf('. lhf' '-U!l)l'isr willll('J
..o f
ttr Bi g ....;k~ ( 'unf\' J'f'nc'f'
tournarn(•n l .
.\ftrr first and '1'&lt;:'4JIH.J round
g,nnr s a t dght -; i t ~ -s nt•x r Wt{'kf'ncl.
rt'J,:!iunal action will be lwld .VLm·h
20- 2'~ in Atlanld ! ~lU!hrJ~t 1, Huu . .
in

!.(lng

ton r\l'esl '· E.t&lt;l Hut~tiord. :\ .. 1
tEas! \, J nd 1-\il nsa'l Ci t ~. :\1o
tMillm~i 1

Tht• Fin al Four,
Millwt•st ;mel

~t i ling

Sout~&lt;~~t \"S .

io

F.a-t ,.,
\\'r•st, is

b.• pla~C'd at Dalla~· Rf'union
\.vil h srmilina ls March Zi
1111d tlr championship March .11.
Jo ining Duke in t ~ 63-gamc
tournament are At lantic Coast
Clmf&lt;•rence members Georgia
•• Tech. North Carolina, Vlrglnta.
•• ·Nort h Carolina Stale and Maw
land. The Big Ten also ha S six
rcprescnt ;llivl'S- champion Mlchi·; :gan. flli nois. lndlana. Iowa, Michl·
: ;gan Slate and Purdu~.
• · The slx entries from me confer; :ence lies last year's record set by
: :1he Big East, which produced three

Medical

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Office

Maintenance

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[I

Food

Data
Processing

Service

Industrial
Electronics

Machine
Trades

Auto
Body

!Quality at I
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: s29 95 s349s I
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$3995

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components • Set

Are you out of work? In a job with little or no work 1otisloction? Have you checkad the job
pro1pect1 and found that you are not qualified for any of them? Todoys job market calls for
quolillad workers - let us tlelp you become a qualified worker. With our full time adult
program• you con hove a ealeable eklll in leu than o year - o skill built on our hands-on
approach with emphasis on actual job ar laboratory experiences - job skills lor today and
tomorrow.
Make your move now . remember: We core about you and your future . Let us help you
toke that lint step toward your future.

FINANCIAL AID IS AVAILABLE

hmtnq • !die adJUStment

1Engtnes eqUipped wtth greater
th.1n 2-bbl carb and standard
•gnot1on slightly higher 1
Offtr h,W" ..... J I

COOPER

CHRYSLER, PlYMOUTH
DODGE, INC.
•

MIDDUPOIT ._.
9U·6421 . . .

Spring Qua rtar
Starts April 7th

----INFORMATION---...

REGISTER IN PERSON OR
MAIL IN THIS COUPON
I would like more Information about your adult
vocational programs . Check one or more.
•

Name

I

0

0

I

'

o

o

0

o

o

o

o

o

o

,

o

0

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,

0

O

O

0

O

0

,

0

0

,

Addre11 ..... . .............. . . . . . .. .
Moll to: The Adult Educotion Center
Trl-County Vocational School
Rt. 1, St. Rt. 691 Nelsonville. Ohio4576.4

llhone 7U-151 , •••• 71

J

0

c;f'hr ~nl

\:,:Tis

t')1.'f'.

\-1! "

wrrP
Bnnni ('

PER POSTED SCHEDULE

Shannon PricE', being held hJ the mayor, a future
daisy, and St£'phanit' Prirt\ a romcroy junior.

: Girl Scout Week being observed .
The week of March 9-15 has been
.designated as Girl Scout Week and
_Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
has signed a proclamation calling
for the eommunlty to give special
· ·recognition to SCQUts this week.
For 74 years the Girl Scout
program has provided girls with a
wide variety o! opportunities for
challenge and fun as they "Reach
for a Rainbow ."

Emphasis of the prowam is on
giving girls rre opportunity to
develop leadership qtJ a III ies, to ~ lp
them apprr-ciate cultural dil'&lt;'r ' i"
of ;;routs and other people in tht•

i~ that t hC' mO\'C'mrn t is LUliqur in its
comrnitmcnt to hringin ou 1thr· lx'st

in C' JCh indh·iclua : girl .

This wt:t·k is ~ t·t asidl' as a tin1 e
fnr cit izens in cnmmunit iPs all
.\c-ross tiY' l:SA to sa lui(' the Girl
Scouts for lhf' mt·ir hment Ihe~ · add
to thr·ir 0\\11 lin~. and t lY' contrib·
rions they m&lt;:1 d1~ t o ward irnp1 O\ "idng
thP qualit\· of lifr in C'\'C'I) '

commu nity and ar ound the w orld,
and to assist thrm in IC'arning new

sldlls. mft'ting new people. nnd
ex~orlng new ideas.
The real "po t of go ld" i!lthr rnrl
or

tlr Girl Scout ra inOOw , h nWP\'('l'

f'Oini11Uil it ,\"

job's Daughters conduct ·meeting

QUESliON· My Wlft'" ! nd 1m Con ~ lderl.,r, MJoptinR ll child ~re
any ol the ~ ~ flO:II~P; nr\olv~d w th lh1 pru;;r~ure d!!duchbh!?
ANSWER: If j LU •• :, ' . (.)I lid Will ,, •. ojl'l t'" lh ~ o u CJII •nclude
up \0 $ ]~00 u ·IU·I ,!,.d ~o:I Op11011 r'[N'I ~ S ~&lt;, par1 01 ~ 0lll11 e
mt!Pd do' ~ W 1 1r' I ·• ~ 1\ 1~ I~ ' 1-' o'l,l' ll''"J'i '1 d (ill 1d .-.110 QU~ I
Iiles lor ac!opt ~n as~~~t dn c~ p.1~men1~ uttder sec t~:~n 473 ~t he
1

Soc tal

Ar· Ur ,fer 11-r.; lef i40f . J
hr~o -

FULL TIME ADULT PROGRAMS
- BUSINESS DATA P~OCESSING
- WELDING
- AUTO BODY REPAIR
- MACHINE TRADES
- INDUSTRIAL ElECTRONICS
- INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE
- ELECTRICITY
- CARPENTRY
- OFFICE SERVICES
- FOOD SERVICE
- AUTO MECHANICS
- MEDICAL OCCUPATIONS

~~ r k! c~ nr•o llc, r &gt;hould
l01~eapsecral

he1 parf!l"lls br ii'PO r rn&lt;'~~

factor ol conrl1!r ~n II at wou rltff1Uirra&gt;5 1S I ~nce ,,,, ~ De r marl~n l
adoplo11 placrmcr.l Qualt i ~·J ~ ~pe nse s rrcll dr re aso nable an~
necmarv ad opliJr' e1(1(' n)~~ rou1t cns ts. atto1 ne~ 1er s ando ther
e,.pens~ t11re&lt;tl~ lt':~t~&gt;d to llr~dPplro n p,~~PP I))4'ns~s e3 11not
VIOl~\~ tedt'tal r' 'liP 1.1 ~ Jln1· t'I[V'n't'' [IJ•d b~ 1n y federal,
sl~le or tocal pr ng1~~r. c~' .rot tle mclu~1! r : ~ ~ "lllUtl t dtducled

REEDSVILLE .,.. Revival servl·
ces will be held at Ute Reedsville
United Methodist Church, March 10
through 15, '1 :30 each evening. The
Rev. Jimmy Stewart. pastor of tre
United Methodist Church in Albany
will be tbe SIJ('aker.
MIDDLEPORT- Heath Un ited
Methodist Women met't Monday
7:ll p.m. at the church Prowam
by Rev. S. Zuniga. Hostesses Nellie
Zirkle and Hallie Zirkle, Martha
Chambers, and Lorena Davis.

Secunt~

not be re\utrlt'1 :o

as 11ar1 ol you'

•t~rn•ted ·!~(lLJC I ~·ns

ANOTHER SERV ICE OF

REG . TARTAR
CONTROL.
MINT OR GEL
4.6 OZ . TUBE

H&amp;RBLOCK
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. Main St .

PH . 992 -3795

. OH .

HURRY!

BEDFORD - ToM~shlp trustees
mE'E'I7 p.m. Monday. township haU .

HUR P.Y!

REKA

·.

OR TIME-ZE RO
COLOR filM
&gt;INGLE PAC K

GENERAL ELECTRIC

_.

LIGHT BULBS

r'

EI
I u I

I ~ \

"

' ' A

I\

I

I ~i J. T~~L~;r!

199

EUREKA
UPRIGHT
Powe rful Motor
4 Posi tron Oiat A-Nap

Top l o11dmg large
Capacity 01soosable
Dui11 fr! ye Klr.ener

GILLETTE

MENNEN

TRAC II

SPEED
STICK

SHAVING
CARTRIDGES

DEODORANT
Mode l 174£

.

1
2.0
Peak Horsepowtl
Roi.-M•ic
powemead It- - - - - - - - - - - - ,
I Power Oriwen
I

Cordawav'"

BONUS! BUY 2
PACI(AGES OF

Tool Pak

DIS POSABLE
DUST BAGS,
GET 1 FREEl

ONE WEEK ONLY!
QUAtmnES a• LIMITED

79

MUSK. REG.,
SPI CE
OR FRESH
2.5 OZ . SIZE

SHARP
DIGITAL FEVER
THERMOMmR

EARL VDETECTOR
COLON RECTAL
CANCER
DETECTOR KIT

43

EUREKA
UPRIGHT

LET US

PRICE

YOUR NEXT
PRESCRIPTION

II'
omJl """"'
!!O"o ( • 1&lt;0 S~&lt;H•
"~"'"'
(i u ii - ~!O~I

I

~~ •

WE RES!II'IIE THE RIG HT TO I ' MIT QUANTITies

~·lltl Bll~

,,;

99

SUDAFED
DECONGESTANT

Ousl Bag

...

EriCa Tackett. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. St('llen Tackett, was the
wtnner of the annual '!:'!PIX'rs
Plains Elementary School Spelfing
Bee.
The problem words o! the bee
were herring and hidden with Erlce
s!J('lllng both correctly' to wtn the
contest. Rwmer-up was Amy Well ,
daugllter ol Mr. and Mrs. Deryl
Well. Tackeit will represent rer
school In the county bee Monday at
... F.l!Jif'l'fl HI_. ~hall!.

COLDS
MEDICINE

~~~gO
~ATTS )99
PKG . OF 4 BULBS

COOL VILLE - Master Mason

Tuppers Plains
Bee winner named

NIGHmME

STANDARD

Degree work to be cbne by Masonic

POMEROY - Dwight Pugh of
Smail Business Development Innovation Center, Athens, speaker at
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
meeting, mon Tuesda y at Trinity
Church In Pomeroy; luncheon wUI
IX' served.

339

AT LO W

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE- Cheshire Chapter
OES meets Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. for
meE'ting and practice.

Motorcycle Qub of Ohio Chapter 2,
Belpre, wren CoolvDie Lodge 337.
F&amp;AM, meets at 7:30p.m. Tllt&gt;Sday
at the temple; all Master Masons
Invited.

BOTTlE
OF 60

NYQUIL

I!F,

1~14

REEDSVIllE - Riverview
PTOmeetlngTuesday 7:ll p.m., at
school.

1\-&lt;:ylmdm

• Pncc 1ncludes tnopor"'

S8nch :1

and service unit din•dor for thr Black Diamond Girl
Seoul Council, and left to right , Stacey Price. hroMtie.

CHESTER - Chester Township
trustees meeting, 7:ll p.m. Tuesday, IDwnshlp hall.

F§~§.-t)§§~

:a savinds!
~

GIRL SCOur WEEK - Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler sips a proclamation declaring the week of
March &amp;-15 as Girl Scout Week In tbe Bend area. Here
:: with Seyler !or the signing are Kathy Price, a !ruder

HARR!SONVlLLE - Hanison
ville Senior Citizens blood prt'SSUI'!'
clinic Tuesday at toM~ hall;
Ferndora Story, R.N .. in charge: 10
a.m. to noon, public Invited.

- ADULT

mrnl wi nner Ball Sta te in the
semifina ls this pa't weE'kend in the
tournament in Rockford. IU.

.. .

•

~
~

Carpentry

losing P\'£1ntual confrrence- 1ouma-

J\n.~na.

•'

~

The Boocats fin ished t~ season
21-6 O\'Crall and 14-4 in the
Mid -America n Conferen&lt;l' before

l1r&gt;(Jm w inr,l :·s. 1n ;• !cl it ion 10 the

top winn!'r'-'

· ~IS

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Boosters meet Monday, 7:ll p.m., at the school.

~

Occupations.

Electricity

John 1'\HS!XIh}..,'l'&lt;Jlli I llllht~cin~~of

.Ju tic· Hyr1 Hr will &lt;..,('!'\ '( ' DS
n.l te r n:t l&lt;' tn tilt· , cnnl\ P\'C'Il!

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

Calendar

Frida~·

•:
Conf('l'f'!lC(' rnur11amf'nt
: -· : Ul lr 90 min uti'S ;1rrrr thl · \( ':\:\
::. ~nnounct'd rts pL~ ir in g'i

:: : : · Mb, is.... ippl \ "allr~· · s 7l ~ \ic !CH}
~:
saved th' \CAA tllf' t&gt;mhan , 1\:-,
; ... _ men! nf ll:t \'i n ~ a h-2·1 h'am ::: : prairi(' \'J{' \~· ..\~· M - m tlw•
..:, · tournamcnt
~: - : Big EigtJr chJmpion h.an~us
hrad:- for Da ~ ron. Oh1o. ~tnd a
1}lur;..cid_
\ · nighr gamt" with \'nrth
· . ~Carolina A&amp;T l\cnturk\ ·. m 11-' flrst

"WE HArE HEARINI AID$"

~ [I]

T &lt;JUill;lm&lt;'n! .

the nation · ..

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Mechanics

i\THF:!"S. Ohio iU Pl r - Two
Ohio team' will play each other
Frida \· night in a first -round game
of rhr 1\a tional Invitational

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Welding

Automotive

Bolx&gt;ats host Bucks
in NIT game Friday

IX"P was .lnhn H api~on. son of .Jo hn
and 1)J Cl nP f lan 1snn I &gt;omProy.

Annual go-to-church Sunday of for inspe&lt;:&gt;tion at 2 p. m . l nspr'C'tion ,~nd 1 ~IIIli ~ · \\' c1\ Lilt!! Jlt rr nal l' fu r
Betrel 62, International Order of will be held on March :ll with a ,hi' :\ l b -. Ot\iu .!t1h ' ~ D•tug hlf'r' s
Job's Daughters wlll be observed dlnncr ro IX' scrwd prior ro the l '&lt;l ~'.l·,l ll 1 11~ b&lt;' hc~d in t 'ul urni.Ju~ on
\ Ll\ :'. :;llprrnH' SPS sion wi ll be tv..~ lei
ritualistic work.
on March 16.
Plans to attend church together
It was announced thRt for the ,"\ II ~. 1() ](; iti (1\l Jf l. :\•Jt•l'l'l ,\mslJCII},
al the Zion Church of Christ were pmmotlon and education fund . llcil' t·l g~mdi:111. and Mike Busmade at Monday night 's meeting of mrmlrrs are 10 savr cans whirll ki rk ao;!-&gt;OC'iute euardian, wrrc
tbe Bethel al the Middleport can be rr-cyc led. They arc 1o be 1n tmtlw·rtl . :\e\1 nr{•ting \l'ill IX'
· Masonic Temple. The girls are to rumed in at the March :JJ meeting
hPid nn Mom.l e~y ;tt 7:30 p.m with a
·· meet at tiE temple at 9:45 a.m.
Carol Smith was named d&gt; legarc {'(\lll'l l'il n1('('1ln g to fDllU \\,
·. Alterwards they will go to Poinl ,.....-.,.---~----------------·
Pleasant for lunch and lren will
· n&gt;hlrn to tbe temple !or a praclice

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

[~]

Fisher's fourt h grade; Danlelle
Crow. Mrs. Margie Gibbs fourth
grarl &lt;'; Stephanie Price. Mrs. Debbte &lt;;(·bert's filth wade; Debbie
Alkire. Mrs. Marsha Radabaugh's
fifth grade. Barbie Anderson, Miss
R\N., sixth wade. and Melissa
r-;;' utzling. Miss Triplett's slx Ut
grade

Humu·1 up 111 th1 · annua l school

Local bowling

12 points of his own to match the
Tornadoes.

Vegas. No. 12 Louisville, No. 17
Texas-El Paso and No. ~ f'l&gt;p!J('r·
dine - the only school from

• · toumamf'nt.

Rachal'! ftoush. dau ght er of Mr
and Mrs. Roger Housh. Bailey Ru n
Road. will represent tiJc Pomero)
Elementary Sehool at the annua l
Meigs Cou nty Spelling i.le&lt;' to lx'
reid at 1:30 p.m. Monday at the
Eastern High School.
Rac harl Is a sixth grader in the
dassroom of &amp;cky Triplett

wiruwrs to an JS.rlleoKI, poouinc In

No. 9 Bradl&lt;'y , No. 11 N&lt;-vada-Las

: instPad of pld\ ing in tht"' national

stage for Piketon's final assault that
"Our kid have nothing to he
ashamed 1/.. They've had an
cast a mlsleacling fog oti the
closeness of tbe game.
outstanding season."
Legg, the game's leading scorer
Southern bows from further play
with an ~ overall record, whUe
with 29 points, hlt a sizzling 12 c118
Piketon advances to Ohio's "Sweet
from the field plus hit 5 of 6 at tht'
Sixteen" and the Regional TournaUne. Sixth man Brabson ripped the
cords with a stunning 5 of 6 attack
ment with a 22-2 record.
ilr 15 JXllnts, nm Hill added 9, and
SOUTHERN (141 - Amburgey. ~0-lO:
Rod Nichols 6.
Adams. H:IO: Bostick, 3-HO: Turley,
Southern placed four men In
~10: Harris, 2·0-·t S. Grueser, 1).().{1; K
Crueler, ()..1).0; Gllbrld~. 0-0-0: Wickline.
muble figures led by senior point
o.o.o. ror.u.s tnH.
guard Adams who ended a great
Pllll'li'ON (H) - Le(g,l2-~29: NtchotJ.
2-2-6: Davis. l -1-l: Brabson, ~5-ll: Hill.
~arrer with ~ poJnts. All-diStrict
smuh. 1.0.2. ror.u.s %1-JI-46.
payer Jay Bostick tossed In 10 3-3-9:
Score b)' qr111rten:
points and collected 11 rebounds,
Southern .............. ..... 12 16 16 10-~
Plke!on ............ ........... 1! 17 13 11-1!6
wlile sophomores Dave Amburgey
and Kenny Turley both tossed In 10.
PHS hlt 25 of 48 tor 52 IJ('rcent,
netting 14 ct 2t ilr l!EIIJ('rcent In the
EARLY Wt:DNE!D4Y MIXED
llrst halt and 11 c1 2t In the second
r.-y 1!, 11111
half. Southern, despite a slow.start -r-n
'
Pia
Carrv OUT ........ .......................... 29
and slow llnlsh, hit 23 c1 00 !Jr 39 ' Tony's
Smith N&lt;is&lt;i1 Mot&lt;n ......... ...... ......... .28
percent.
Mlddlepot1 Luoch Roan .
.. ..... ...... 21
Piketon hlt 26 c1 2t from tbe line
~:~~~~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::. :::::::::::::;~
and Southern 8 of 10.
Shammy's &amp; 7-3.1. .. ................................ 16
HiRh Seri('S - Pat Carson. sz-,: [)(obi
The winners grabbed ll reHonstl'V. I15: 2nd High SE&lt;Ia - !1Jro1
bJunds, led by HUI's 11 and
Ru...tl. 51Z John 1Y""', llO; lllgh Gat11('Brabson's 7, while Southern col·
Par Carsm. 221: Bob H"ns~e;-·. l9"l: 2nd Hlllh
Cam&lt;' - SP£'('d Ru9iE'\I, 190; Dl'b6 H£'nslpY,
lectoo 28. Bostick had 11 and Harris
181.
7.
· T('am Sf-rtf'S - Tony's C&lt;:~rry Out - 19-ll
PHS had 11 turnovers, 2 assists, 6 Tt"am Gam(' - 1'oi"G''s Carry OU! - 700.
!teals, and 12 IJ('rsonal louis. SHS
had ten untimely turnovers, 0
assists, and six steals, and 19 louis.
The Tornadoes ftnlsbed the game
with their ftve seniors on the court;
Bostick, Adams, Srott Wickline,
Sean Grueser, and Kelley Grueser.
Richard GUbrtde also made a final
!131 J.ICMSON PI&lt;E · RT: 35 WEST
appearance.
- 4 4 8· 452&lt;
EstabUsbed first year mentor
Howle Caldwell satd, "Piketon has
a real nice baUclub. jSeott) Legg ts
an rutstandlng baD player. Tonight
was just their night. I am disappointed that we lost, but not so
disappointed because the ktds
played 90 weU . They gave It every
thing tbey had In tbe thlrdquarier."
"Every game has to have a
winner and a loser! ...tonight we
were tbe loser. Our defense carried
us much of the season ...we only
gave up about~ points a game. Our
defense wasn't as sharp as It should
have been."

Pomeroy Spelling Bee winner is named

.o.u•omoHC ro
111 19~1 .~,ut:"'~"'
8 rlllhl~ t ~~r
C01oe1 1&lt;1"".,

~-·•

' RIC!S EFff CTI VE MA"Ot 10 THRU 10, Jq86

NOT RESPONSIItlE fOR TYPOGU,HICAl UIIOU

-- -""- ------...

~

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

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
992·2635 - Middleport
•

_____...

208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY . 011
PHARMACY PHONE : 992 -2586
_,...._~

,

, r"t' •• ,..

�.. ...

Paga · 6-lhe Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 10, 1986 ,...

Mining...

·C ounty Agent's Corner

A8rlcalure
Farmers trytng to decide
whether to sign up for the new
COI1SI'!Vatlon reserve program can
get some help from the Extension
big a
Servtce In figuring
!J)vernment payment would make
parttclpatlon worthwhile.
A computer program and hand
worksheets developed by Richard
D. Duvlck and Darrel Acker at The
Ohio State University can help
tannern compare the annual rent
payment from participating In the
program wtth the Income lost by not
cropping the land.
The conservatbn reserve program pays farmern wtth highly
erodible land an annual rent
payment In rl'!llrn for taking that
land out of Jl"oductlon for 10 years
and Installing conservation practices that will reduce erosbn. 'The
government wtll share the cost of
some of tl&gt;?se practices, Duvlck
says. Farmers rrust submit bids to
the government March 3-12 to he
considered for the program.
"It's asking for a lot of lnforma·
tiori In a hurry to get ready to
subrnJt a bid, " Duvlck says. "There
are -many estimations that need to
be considered and you have to
remember that when you ~read It
out over 10 or 15 years the!l' are
many unknowns."
If you have all the lnlbrmatlon
ready when you go to your O:lunty
EX(t!lslon office, Dwtck says, 11
will not take long to run it through
the · computer or worksheet However, gathering that lnlbrmatlon
requires some P!l'Parati:Jn by the
farmer. Getting a copy of the
worksheet hefore visiting the Ex·
tension office may help, he says.
The first step Is to decide how
many acres of highly erodJble
cropland you want to J:AII In 11»
contract, Duvlck says. This n'duCPs
the base acreage you have available for tl» government feedgraln
program.
Local Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Service people
can l»lp you determine wha 1 the
reduction In corn and wheat bases
will be If your conservation reserve

row

lid Is accepted, Duvick says. Since
you can !pUt the base acreage lost
between corn and wheat, you
smuld try to allocate most to the
least profitable crop. The balance
comes from acres devoted to
non-Jl"ogram crops such as soyheans and hay.
The next step In deciding what to
lid Is to determine what conservation practices are needed to establish the grass, wildlife habitat or
Umber planting required by the
program. Using the cost of establishing and maintaining these
Jl"acttccs, estimations of net Income lost by not growing crops and
tl» length of the conservation
reserve contract, farmers can
estimate what minimum bid could
make tremas well off by participating in the program as by continuing
to crop the land, Duvlck says. He
adds that the analysis also lets the
farmer and Extension agent calculate bids that allow for the
~ssiblllty that benefits of participating In the conservatlon program
were e ither ov e r or
unde restlmated .
"This gives the farmer a range of
tlds from which to choose. sort of
an optimistlc and pesstmistlc look
all at once," Duvtck savs. " Under·
stand that It's not the final wordwe'ne dealing with too many
intangibles here - but It shou ld
help tl»m analyze their situatlon
quickly enough to decide whether
c.- not they smuld submit a bid ."
Plan your fertilizer needs now ~ !
Take soil tests and plan your
cropping program now. Vartetv
selection is important. Corn. sovhean , and alfalfa trial data "ts
available and shou ld he used. We
have this materia l free at the office.
Corn trials Include MDM varieties
as welL Be su re to specify MDM
variety trails if this Is what you
want. Agronomy Guides are now
available. They can assist you in
making herbicide selections. The
plicc is $1 .
Soil Insecticides are probably not
necessary wl»re fields are planted
to com the first tlmr but should he
considered wbene corn has been
planted the Jl"I'Vious year.

"

Area deaths
Bertha L Moore

Roy EUis

Bertha L. Moore. !1;, of Bucytu s.
died March 5 In the Marion
Community Medical Center Hospi·
taL She had been in failing hea lth

Roy Ellis, 84. Harrtsonville. died
Saturday at \'eterans Memorial
Hospital.
A farmer and a custodian at the
Hanison,·ilte Element ary School.
Mr Ellis was mrn April 18. 1901 In
Athens Count y. a son of the !at~
Gram·Uie and Martha Bolin Ellis.
HP was a ml'mix&gt;r of the Harrison·
d tlr Presbl'lerian Chu rch.
SurviYing. are his wifP. Margaret
Etlcs; two daughters. Nellie Jones.
Ph&lt;:x•nix, Anz.. and Ann Ward .
Hanisonville: a son. Raymond
Ell is. Texa s. and st'\"eral gr;md ·
children
RI'St&lt;k's his parent s. he wa s
pt1'Ccded in dea th bv a daught er,
&amp;&gt;tty. sewn brothers and lhrf('
sisfll£•rs .
S&lt;&gt;rv icos will ix' h&lt;'ld at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at lht· f:wing Fur&lt;'rai
Home with ;u.,.. Krnn~th J.
Wilkinson officiating . Burial will tl'
in Well s Cl'miPIY. Th~ro will iJ&lt;&gt; no
ri!" ililtion.

tor St'Veral years and was seriously
ill for five weeks.
Born March 31. 1899 in Union
County to the late Wan1'n and
Sarah Burkepile Tatman. si&gt;? was
first married to Fred VanMeter and
then to Walter Moo re. Both hu sbands precf'dcd her in dea th She
was a memtl'r of the Bur:-·ru s
Congr egatio n of .Jr hol'ah' s
WitnE'SS(lS.
Surviving all' a daughter, Mrs.
Harold 1Linnie1 Wren. Edison;
three sons, \\'arrm \ 'a nMeter of
Reedsville. Wilson VanMeter of
Ocrola . Charif'S VanMeter rJ Bur )··
rus;.

two

slstE'rs.

Mrs.

Harry

1Mariha 1 Hayes of Bucy ru s and
Rosanna Overfield of Wisco nsin: H
grandchildren and 27 grPal
grandchildren.
She was preceded in dt' alh b' a
son, Harvey VanMeter; a da ugh ter.: Irene Bowers; two brothers;
ooe sister: two grandc hildren and
one great grandchild.
&amp;&gt;rvices were held Saturda) at
the Munz-Plrnstlll Funeral H om~ in
Bucyrus with El&lt;k'rs David Kieffer
and Willard Light officiatin g Bur
ial was in &lt;::lcwla Cemelel)'.

Victor E. Nelson
Victor E . Nelson . 80. of Rutland.
died early Sunday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born March lB. 1900 in Ru tl and ,
be was a son of the late Ja ITl('s
Henry and Edith Mae \\'right
Nelson. A retired New York Crnt m l
railroader. he was a member of thr
BrotherOOod of Locomotive E ngtIJI'('rs and Middleport Lodge 36.1
F&amp;AM. He at1ended the Rutland
Nazarene Church .
Surviving are his wile. Bernice H.
Haley ~elson. whom he married
April Zl, 1927: two son.s. Witlio1m H
Nelson. Pomeroy and Clarf11C&lt;' R.
Nelson. Owen sboro . Ky.: seven
gra ndchildr en,
four st&lt;' p
grandchildren and 11 great
grandchildren.
Services will he Tu esday. 2 p.m ..
at Hunter Funeral Home with the
Rev. Floyd Ford officiating. Burial
wtlt be In Miles Cemetery. Frkonds
may call at the fu neral home today
(Monday! , 2 to 4 and 7 10 9.

Bill Jewell
William E. "Bill" Jewell. -lO,
Mason, died Monday morning at hi s
home after a long illness.
He was head football coach at
Waharna High School and former
bead football coach at Southern
lllgh School In Racine.
Funeral arrangements wUI iJ&lt;&gt;
announced later by the Foglesong
Funeral.Home.

Weather forecast
Wind)' lodav. with showers and
thu nderstorms likely this aft ernoon
and highs near i5. Cloudy tonight ,
with

sca ttcrro shower s and thu n-

&lt;k'rstorms and a low b&lt;&gt;tween 45and
50. Partl)' cloudy Tuesda)·, wit h
highs tl'tw('('n 55 and 00.
The pmbabil ity of pr('(' ipitatlon Is
;o percent today. 50 percent tonight
and less than Jl percent Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wedn....tay, with a chan""
of rain and thunderstonns Thur.;day and Friday. lllghs wiD he
hetween 45 and 55 Wednesday, 55
and 65 Thursday, and In the 00s
Friday. Ovemlghl lows wiD be In
the 30s Wednesday morning, hetween 35 and ~5 ellliy Thul&gt;iday,
and between 45 and 55 Friday
lOOming.

Class; Dlinny WID, Srd Place Men's Class; and Jeff

the Chester Bowtaniers and Arehery Club recently
had an ootstandlng day In oompetltkm wtth tl»
Hocking Tech. Archery Club. Pictured 111'1! left to
right, Charlie lAwson, 2nd Place Jr. Class; Billy ·

Dennl..on, First Place Men's division. In back are
president Tom \Wson and '''"'·ll"esidentJohn Young
holding tl» team trophy. \ "oung also took second
place In the men'! division. TI1e Chesler team had an
overwhelming Slt&lt;'Cess rate against tl» Hocking
Tech. Club.

Pano118, F1rsl PIIICe Jr. Class; Kelly Parsons. 3rd
Place Jr. Class; Vicky Wheeler, 2nd Place Women's

M&lt;"igs Coun t) F:mrrgrnc\· Mrdi·

PERFECf SCORE - Jeff Dennison, lefl, recently soot a
perfect :.JO score at tre Chester Bowhurier and .~!'Chery Club's
Indoor range. Tom WUson, tight, president of ti&gt;? Chester
Bowhunter's Club, presmts Dennison ..-Hh a :110 ctnh tag. [lpnnison
has been active as a mem her of tl» du h.

Meigs man critically
burned in trailer fire
,\ Meigs Count:&gt; ma n was
ct·itica tlv injull'd Sa tu rda, · in
Tampa . Flmida in thr r&lt;'SCueof hts
four-year-old strp&gt;&lt;&gt;n .
Accordin g to T. Stone Jr..
Mtddlepot1. Thomas Roach . of
W~t St ., PornProy, sustained
S&lt;'COnd and th ird degree bu rns O\W
~percent of his bod)' as he rrsrmd
his stepso n. Brawn. from a bu rning
trailf'r
Roac h a nd his wiff'. ttr formr r
Fatlh Horman of Middlcpot1 . and
her son. had just moved to Tampa
where th&lt;')' were spending thPir
first ni ght in a camper·D·a iler. At
about 5::JO a. m .. a bottl&lt;' gas leak
causoi an t\\plosion, ttu·o v.1ng

.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Glad To
See
You're
Still Out
Goin'

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

20 years
"Free Estimates "

CAU COllECT:

1

· __:::::;; S349 lndudos Complllt IMtallalia

•FREE Vinyl Siding
•New Homes Buitt

Roarh :t nd Fait h Herman 11rre
just manit&gt;d on Frb. :!2. He is the
sun of Carl and Dorolh)' Hoach.
Pon1l'ro\'. She is the da ughter of
Shirley Herma n and Dale Herman.
both of Middleport.
Cards may bP sent 10 Tampa
\o&lt;'nt•ral Hospital. Dal'is Island.
Tampa . F la , lmi.

Saru rda)· a1 5:02 a.m .. Tuppers
Plain s to R&lt;'&lt;'CisviiiP fur C'ut1L'
C'a uthom to Veterans ~kmori a l
Hospital : Ru tland at ti: 41 fl. m. to
Rt. 124 for Hilda Carpen ter to
\ 'etera ns Mrmorial Hospital :
Tuppers Plains at 7:40a.m . toRt.
681 for Teresa LaComb to St.
.Joseph Hospital: Middleport at4: 24
p.m . tu North S&lt;'&lt;'o nd A\'c for Ca rl
Sti ll lu \ 'ptpr ans Momor iill
Hospital.
Su hda\ et 12 : :,:; a.m. : M idd lrporl
to Harr St. fo r Da, ·id f;t'G rgr• to

[J

IFHA-VA-HUOI
•Blown In Insulation

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy,
PHONE 992-7075

•A Professional local
Contractor
•16 Yrs . of Local Service

Pll. 949-2101 or 949· 2160 Day or Nlaht
NO IUIIDAY UlU

H -tfn

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 (andar St., Pomeroy

Public Notice

992-2975

2-14-1 mo .

\ 'rtrran s

!Vl rmorii'll

,:.==~---------------.:_

$3995

-z~

I

I

I

I

arr in in lf'n ~ in' ca rr in thr
same hospital with st\·u nd degn'&lt;'

Bennen Clark, dece11ed.

C01o No. 25,0t6
NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On February 24, 19B6. in

z

the Meigs County Probate C

_____[____________

Bennen Clark,

Probtta Judge
lena K. Neu.elroad . Clerk

(313 , tO 17, 31c
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PlEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ARLENE MARIE WILSON.
Plaintiff,

work. Transfer of pi cture

Dh•orct· granh'&lt;l
Linda P(.llt L'I'SOn . Harinf'. and

Jamr"

lt&lt; lcinl'. h;wr
t:x&gt;cn grantC'd a dissol ution of
maniag&lt;' in Mcig; Count)· Com
man Pl&lt;"as Court. A dii'OrC&lt;' action
Jx&gt;gun by Lindo P"lll'r&gt;i&lt;ln prior 10
the dissolution prQ('('('()ings, has
te&lt;-n dismissed by U10 cou 11.
P(lttrr~n.

Vett'rans Mt&gt;morial
Sa I urd a~·

Ad missions - -Cu nis

Cau thom, Reeds\'il i('; Laura B)'·
rrs. Racine; Betty Oilrr. R&lt;tcinr.
Saturda)· Discha rges.. Nonc.
Su nday Adm iss ions .. Dar tene
Hicks. Pomproy: Rub)• Freder ick.
Middlepon A lie&lt;' \lark . Pomml\
Sund a)· Dl srharges .. Rrth
Stivf'rs.

Ohio loltt'rv winnt&gt;rs
CL EVELAND 1l ' l'l l d a_
\ ·'s u.·inn i ng Ohio
numbPrs: Dall~~ ~wniJt• r

Santr
l.ottrn·

·

R.li.
Tir kel sa le' IOI. tll\1 $1. -1-t2.l &gt;9.
wi !h ~~ pn~ nff dw • uf Sh1 l.KI').I Ohio
Lotto
IU. 12. IK o2. Jt; a nd . ~

~ Offer Ends Marth 22nd.

Mondlv·Saturdov

Council has recommended
the passage of this Ordi·
nance Is an emergency
measure in accordance with
the Charter oft he Village of
Rutland, said ordinance being necessary to insure the
continuous , uninterrupted
delivery of said services and
to secure funds to provide
for the Immediate pres81"\1at+on of the public peace,

('{ v
.rlf'. · &gt;
':.;;
~
'.·, ..~.',\l-: ,.

.

PLUS: Offico !upplios &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, Magntti'
!igns, Rubber Stomps,
lusiness Farms,
Copy S.nicH, Eh.
2!! Mill II., Middleport
104 Mulberry h ., Pom•oy

992-3345311/tl n
tOW INTIRIIT I£FINANCIHG
Home Mortgage loCI'II
9 112% FIXED RAil

On VA &amp; FHA, Low Conventional
loam Atailablt. PurciHIH or ltfin~c•.

Vickie Houldron-4H-4042
COIUMIUS AliT ITIOITGAGI CO.
l-11 · 1 •

16x 19". directions.
Send $3.25 plus 75¢
oostage , handling, for
each pa«ern .
Sond to:
AllceBrooh~

3 t ·;
The Daily Sentinel
lloodor llai

Prill-.

62·12 Narttler1l 111'14, Woocllldo,
NY I IJn.
Adchl&amp;.
Zip, SGt. Po1ltm -

va.
MELVIN RAY WILSON.
Oelondant
c... No. 88-DR-46
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION
To Melwi'l Ray Wilson.
whoae 11\lt known .tdr- was

2810 McOuffio. N46, Houotoo, To.., nose. vou ••
hlrobv notffiod that you h..,.
_, named Oeftnclllnt r. •
legal IC1ion .,titled Arlene
Marie Witoon. Plainliff. vo.
Malvin Ray WIIIM, Oofenclant . This action twa been

oaigntJ coso rumber 86-DR48 ond Is pending in tt. Court
ol Common Plea of Mtiga
County , Pomeroy , Ohio.

.
Tho objoc1 of thl Comploint
Needleerafl Catalog
is to t.,.,llte thl marriage of
t 50 designs. $2 + 75e.
younolf end A~.,, Marie
Books $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.
Wiloon, ond tho demand for
133.fullion Home Cl11t11111fl
roliof is 10&lt; ArtenoMorioWoloon
to be grM1ted 1 dillo&lt;co '"'m
126-Thrifty Crilly 1119-S... + Knit~ lncll
you.
103-15 Qull11or Todlj
You are r-.utred 10 lr'IIWII'
tho Complaint within 28 days
lilt publication of this
notice which Wit bo publilhed
C R A F T S
once _, br oix
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___, tucceaive - ·· Tho lilt
pub11crion wiH bo made ""
March 24, 1988, ond tlw 28
deya for .,,_ will commence on lhet dltt.
In cue of your fawro ID
or Od\OiwiN ·~
eo required by the Ohio !lutoo
of CMI Procedure. judgr1Wit
by dofaoh will bo ntndorod
against you for the reli.t
demanded in thl co...,lolnt.
Doted: Fob. t3, t981.
Lin'/ E. S11«1cor.
Cieri&lt; of CQino
Moigo County Common
PltuCoun
By Martone Horrilon,
Deputy ct.n.
!2lt7, 24: 131 3, tO, t7. 24,
6tc

·sa

ALICE BROOKS

46789.

-the

SAV'ESTEPS!
Shop the
Ads ..,_
first!

use'a sment

jS5 .00] will be eddod to lt.
monthly statement of each
and avery consumer of the
Rutland Water Works .
This assessment will be in

addition to the
normal
charges for water and sewage within the Vill~ge of
Rutland. Each and every re sident within the Village of
Rutland that ere purchasing
their water from the Rutland
Water Works is subject to
this a11e11ment.
This ordinance shall take
effect March 5, t986.

Poued Feb . 4. t986 .
Attest: Greg Van Meter

Cklrk ofthe Village Council
Warren G. Black

President of Vitlogo Council
ill 3, tO . 2tc

64 Misc. Merchandise
Why Pay More for
Your Pet food, When
MGM form City, Inc .,
Pome ro y. Oh10

ot4 992 2181
Is lower Priced with
A Beller Product .

50 # Dog Nuggets
Only 19.50
2511 Cat Foo d
On ly 17.52
All Ktnds of Pet
Su pplies
We also have Cana ry &amp;
Gumea Ptg Feed

MGM

Form City, Inc.

"SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS
.GATHERING DUST,
'~DD" DOLLARS
TO YOUR.POCKET

WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

PUSH

MOWER

FRONT·END
AliGNMENT
1 i' Yr.:; f

qwnt~n1 f •

Complete Ftont End
Parts and Setvt ce

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

lOC:/'J.T~r;

,--)N

'V'IAi,., ST

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

TUNIUP

IN R UTt AI'. II
F or App1111l11l1t&gt;nt

CA LL
142 1051
10 '·, :L

8-lltfn

$19.95
Turn left at Meig1 Memory
Gardens . 3 mile off At. 7 m
the right

47159 Eaglo Rldga Rd .

1·17-tfn

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRIJCK
REPAIR ·
Also Trm111IUI01
PH. 992-5682

R~~DIATOR

ERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-lfc

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
NOW SERVING THE

and

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New

5-POINTS AREA
For Service

Can

992-3194

3-3-'86- 1 mo.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

•Insulation

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Add ons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

- Con crete wort!

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

"FREE ISTIMAI£S"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992.-2772

/ 1186/t1n

- Plumbing and electrical
work

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621S or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12-S·IIc

.

lOSE EXCAVA11NG
RACINE, OHIO
FREE ESTIMATES

CONTRACTING
DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER . SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER .
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

Oil Fi.ld Strwic1,

land Cleoring, Pond1, Septic
Systoms, tto..y Hauling,
Stone &amp; Grawtl Hauling
Eltdrical Work
(Certified Electrician]

DOll ROSE,

Owner

949-2493

.,

..·'

J&amp;F

Landuaping, lonm .. 1s,

-..

JIM CLIFFORD

Home 143·5340

PH. 992·7201

2-20-1 mo.

·7·

Hotn1s luilt

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

POMEROY. 0 .

No

Sunday Calls

9?2·2259
NEW LISTING - Here ts a
grea t deal, 3 bedroom home
on 6 acres ol grou nd close to
town. 10x20 butldtn g, plus
ail tumiture and appliances.
Owner will sacnlice &amp; wants
oiler. $24 .5110 00
FIVE POINTS AREA -A 3
bedroom ranch oo me on ap()'O X. ~ am lol. Includes
dtshwashet , tange. hood .
Electnc B.B . heat, gatage
Gi.e us a call. $31.000.00 .
LEADING CREEK ROAD 3 bed room home with stone
!~replac e . l ocaloo on ap ·
()'Ox . I am . Full basement,
electnc heat, close to town.
$29 .000.00
POMEROY -Cute oome wtth
up to 3 bedrooms. Deck area
&amp; othet featUJes. $19 ,!ll0.00.
NEAR CHESTER -Country
I1V1ng in style' Thts 3 bed ·
room home ts ~ excellent
conditton Fu ll basement.
othet featu res, on latge lot.
$35,000 00.
Now Available, interest
rate as ow as 9\\ % fixed .
Henry

E. Cleland, Jr.

J/11 / tfa

~

rn
!!AlTO I

Help Wan1ed

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

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522
"W• R111 F11 tm "

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
Sl. Rt.

160 'lltrt~

01lllpolle, O•lo

7111/ tln

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Far111 Equlp111ent
Part• &amp; SeNlee

WE ARE YOUR SALES
•AN 0 SERVICE

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

•SYLVANIA

.

•SPEED QUEIN lAUNDRY
&lt;GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATILUTI SAliS &amp;SERVICE
Wt HnJ ~ F•ll Tl ..
S~t~ Ttt.alelta

..RIDENOUR
...

REGISTERED NURSES
IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR REGISTERED
NURSES OR MEDICAL SURGICAL UNIT
AU SHIFTS, EX aUENT BENEFITS

CONTACT TtRESA COLLINS, RN

VnEIANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Memorial Drive, Po1111roy, Ohio 45769

614-992-2104, Ext. 204

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Complete Building
and
Contrading Service
(Free Estimates)

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
'

10-8-Hc

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTIR-915-3307

4/ Li tfn

Badtan Building

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
E. Shockey,

DVM

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gaure Shotcuns Only

9-30-tl

Howard L Writettl

Mon.·W... •ThurL 3-5 pm
lv11. 6•30·1; frL 1· 1 pn1

ROOFING

Saturday 10-11 o30 ..,
IAIGI AIMAL &amp;
SUIGIIY IY APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AIEl CAU
Ripley Office
Forlloun
304-372-5700

l0-14-Hc

NEW -REPAIR
Guttet'l
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Insulated Dog Houses

Racine, Oh.
1·20 -tlc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURI UIEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All M1ku
•Washer~

•Dishwashers

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freeters

PARTS and SERVICE

.,

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commetciat
Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

.,

11-14 -ttc

~ · 5- tlc

Announcemenls

,

"

3 Announcements

Now

loca~on :

161 North Socond
Middltporl, Ohio 45760

SALES

&amp; SERVICE

W• C•rry Filh_,g Supplin

Pay Your Cobia &amp;
Phone Bills Hero
IUSIIUSS "'ONI
16141 992 -6l!O
RnDINCI "'ONI
1.141 992 -7754

tmtttn

TV, Washer, Dry r
and Refrigerator
Repairs
OPEN 8 TO 6

COUNTY
APPLIANCE,
INC.

U9-2263

62 7 11rirtl An. Gallipolis

or 949-2969

446-1699

2· 17-86-Ifn

Sizes from 6'x 6'
Up to 24'x36'

Ph. 1114-143·5191

2-10-tfn

...

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PH. 949-2649

PT. PUASANT OfFICE
SMAU ANIMAl HOUIS

POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes Start from 12116'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

~

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FilE DEn.

AU STEEL &amp;

long Bottom, Ohio

1-3-tlc

992-3410

992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692

A

BOGGS

3DS Jadt10n Awe.

EaSt

DUGAN'S

Oi Chongo. Shorpon Bledes

Paul

115

742-2552
1·17-86-1 mo .

!P1rts included\

*VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
0 110WN IN
INSULATION

in the

of Five Dollars

949-2969

VIDEO
SERVICE
BOB DANIELS

Television listening Devices
COf1'4!Uterized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

ROCK SPRINGS

an affirmation vote of all
members elected thereto :

An

z

/wlllil~lllg Ofl11

3-24-Hc

and PfOperty .
Be it ordlined by the Village Council of the Village of
Rutland, State of Ohio, by

amount

::&amp;:

IAGU IIDGE
SMAU ENGINE CENIII
Parts • S.nico

or 992-7121

an emergency ordinance in
order to secure revenue for
the daily operation of the Village and to insure the continuous uninterrupted delivery of said servk:es and to
secure funds to prowide for
the immediate preservation
of the public heahh, safety

11

REFLECTION'S OF YOU :
13041 773-5388
Malon, W. Va.
c..tt Sonctv. Carol ot Diann

deceased ,

Iota of 203 Parle Straet. Mid·
dtopon. Ohio 45760.
Robert E. Buell,

tJ.Jms on•r
bodit•s.

ORDINANCE NO. 1986 -3
AN EMERGENCY
ORDINANCE ENACTING
AN ASSESSMENT ON
CONSUMERS OF THE
RUTLAND WATER WORKS
FOR THE VILLAGE OF
RUTLAND. OHIO
WHEREAS. the Village

y,, Ptllllllf N11i1

public health. sefety ond
ourt , Cue No. 25,016. Gory property within the municiAcrae . 430 Hoodloy, Mid- pal corporation.
dleport, Ohio 46780, woo
WHEREAS , '"" Village
appointed Eucutor of the Council finds that said ordiettete ot Hannah Margaret nance should be passed as

·scared Heart" panel to
embroider Family and
lriends Will admire your

of thri r

Public Notice

Estate of Hennah Margaret

753~-lnspirational

~ · n,• n t

tlJ 3. tO, 17, ltc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

&lt;;t rp~n

~

Probate Judge
Lana K. Neaselroad. Clerk

Public Notice

CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH
DODGE, INC.
.

Robert E. Buck.

WANT AD

COOPER
MIDDLEPORT
992-6421
8 - 5 MON. -FRI.

F01 AIf

ISA

Off•r hpirtl Mardi ll

•

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

THE BEST
HOUSECLEAN

• Replace dtsc brake pads
• CK . front tolors o Inspect
maste r cylinder/calipers
(t epa~r s extra) • Repack
wheel bear1ngs'replace Iron!
gtease seals 1! apphcable
• Road test

Hos pital:

Pomero) · ot 2:3.&lt;; ;o.m . to Lincoln
Height s for Darlene Hicks to
\ 'rtcra ns M emorial Hospital :
Pom&lt;'ro)· at 10:J2 a.m . toRt. 7 klr
Norma ( ;11Jeser to Holzer Medica l
Center : Middlepor1 at .1: o4p.m. to
H;·s&lt;'il St. fur Ca rolyn Young to
Holzer Medica l C(•ntrr: Pomeroy
at o: 16 p.m. to Pometm· Hr Ct lth
Carr l"Pntrr for A lie&lt;• Clark 10
\ 'ctcrans Memorial Hospit al, Syra·
r use Fire Depar1ment at 6: 10p.m .
to a brush fire on Pine Grove Rd.:
Salem To'Nt\ship a nd Rutland Fire .
Departme nts at 10:01 p.m . to a
btush fire on County Rd . 10.

C!J

a sawngs!!

HORSE
SHOEING
TRIMMING

PUT YOUR SNAPI'IR REAR
nNE TIUER ON HOLD
NOW THRU MAY I
AS LOW AS 1100 DOWN

RAE

I
I

Oh.

HOURS : 9:00 A .M .-5:00P.M . Mon . thru Sat.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment
1-11 -tfn

l!fl'(ll THERM

INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

Sy racuse Elementary PTOmeel·
ing · has IJe&lt;on changed !rom Tues·
day, March 11. to Wednesday,
March 12. at 7 p.m . The m('('tlng
will he held at the school.

DJSC BRAKE
SERVICE

FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS

E~rcimat..

Meeting rhanged

FRONT REMAINS

-

Blue Streak Tax Service
W. E.- (Bill} SNOUFFER

f -12-2 mo.

47th

The surface fractunes that do
appea r, are infrequent, occurrtng
over a small fraction of the surface
areas tha t were mined und er, he
added .

BISSB.L 51~~~ COMPANY
, · ' S~rl•t &amp; S•••er Speel1l1
Tliii'LE PAN£ THUMAIIAJIIIIER DElUXE Till·
-o;:;:.,.j) \ SASH. EASY CIIAN IIPUCIMINT WINDOWS

Ph. 16141 843-5425

Happy

strp son.
Roach i." in thf' Tampa f.f'nrru l
Hospit al bu m unit His wifr and

'5. off

0pon

Business Services

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wr1lt 011lly Stntulel CIIS$1htd Dept.

~lr·=
. ?;'

Rooch and his wiJr fr om t h&lt;' traiiN .
Roa&lt;·h rrturnc•d to lhf' trailrr for hi-.

ALL PERMS

4(

rcpons four calls

Salu rda)· ;md se\·pn c:tl ls Su nday.

EASTER PERM SPECIAL

r ...--):..

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7 ·. ·:

Emergency
squads answer §§§§§§0_-_-=-=·=·-=
Qual!ty at·!
II calls
ca l SPrYicf'

_________

!II Courl Sl . Pomuov. Oluo '!176'9

on its own.

BOMIUNTER'SCOMPETE -These members of

_ __ _,. __ -·- · .. - .. . ....

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The. Daily Sentinel

(Continued from page 11
said that the cracks on the surface
du e to subsidence are not deep, nor
do theY continue Into the mine.
The geology of this area consists
of many rock layers, Swinehart
says, and ti&gt;? types of rock here
don't allow for much water movement beneath tre surface.
U fractures or cracks occur,
whether they he caused by loongwail mining or Mother Nature,
water Is generally only transported
no further than the next lower rock
laver becausP the frac tures nor·
m"any do not continue from layer to
layer, he said.
Generally , a fracture near the
surface even ruallv hea ls en Its own ,
be said , and in mast cases, if any
water supply is affected, itr'PCOvers

Sign or not sign?
By JOHN C. RICE
Coualy EJdenl!llon A&amp;enl

Monday, March 10, 1986

,. ,

2-13·1 mo .

SWEEPER and tawing mach ine •.
rep11ir. parts, tnd supp lies . Pick
up end delivery . Davis Vacuum ·

..

Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Cell 614

446-0294

'1

.c

Pregnen~ Testing ; 8 ir1h control.
sen~icu , VO tQting ; confiden tial: 1liding fee •c•le; Pl•nned '
P~rentho od of S.E.O.. for appt:

C1U 614 · 446·0166 Or' 614 ·,
992-6912

'•

Racine Gun Shoo t sponso red bv "
Racine Gun Clu b. Every Sunday , ,

~·

beginning at 1:00 p.m Fac tory . · •
Choke 12 guege 1hotgun 1.
Need a friflnd 7 Adopt 1 klt11r1

cw . ' :~

catl Call the Meigs County

Hum1na Society . Ctll61 4 · 992 ·

8&amp;06
FIGURE SALON Care·la ·Way
Help us celebrate our 1 11 annl- '

verury We an Offlring onei'
third otf.,on all tr..1m•na. (W~ .
have the excluaNe Gloria M•r1
shall clrcltml'llc tlbl• tnd •It
equipnwnt.j C.H today for your '"
ftH contuttatlon and dtltt lls~1 ' '
540 W. Union, Athens, Ohio
Houfl: Monday-Friday 8· 8, Satt ...
urda y 9· 1 Call e14 · 594· 2287 .

.. ",

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel
4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Giveaway

42

LA.FF·A·DAY

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .

61

Mobile Homes
for Rent

tone, call today. W1rda Key·
board. 304· !715·15800 or 17153824.

2 bdr. fully furnllhed. 12xl515.
conv. locatk&gt;n, Upptf" River Ad .•
Wit., Pllid. IIC. dep. requtrtd .

Coli 814·448·8558 •• 814·
441 -2430.

Feme!• bleck end ten 15 -month

cld dOg . 304-871· 2611.

Furnished , ceble. beautiful rlvar·
vltw, in Kenauge. no city t1x11 .

Lost and Found

Fott.,. Mobllt Home Perk. C1ll

814·448· 1802 .
LOST Bl1ck &amp; whilt Cit with
seer on feet . Cflllllcolhl Ad .
ChUd's pet. Aew•rd . C1ll &amp;14·

1· 2 bdr .• 1· 3 bdr. Botti It Kerr
ca ... letely furnithed . Call 114448 -9869.

446·8390 .

12•70 2 bdr. mobUe home,
woodbumer. 3 mi. out Bulnille

J"U""''"

Yellow gold Jul••
watch . V•lued at keeps ... e. $26.
rewlfd . Call 814· 992 -31530 If·
ttr 5:16 p.m.

9

Wanted

To

Rd Coli Gt4·«8-9204.

44

Buy

We pay cash to r l•te model cle.n
used cers.
Jim Mink ChBV .·Oids Inc
BiM Gl!tlle JohntOn
814· 441 - 3672

"AS a rnatter · Q f fact ! I've
never Seen them WQfk"mg. U

WANTED TO 8UV u"d wood llo

coal heatlfl . SWAIN' S FUANI 1\JRE, 3•d &amp; 011" St. Goll.,o·
lis. C•ll 814-446 -3169 .
TOP CASH paid for 'S3 model
end nw.-er ua.t can . Smith
Buict-Pontia c. 19, I Eattern
Ave., Gallipolis . Call 614· 448 2282.
W1nt ed to buy r.. r wheel for
Farm111 cub tractor, 8-8 .3x24
inch tire or 7 indl nm. Ca ll
614-446-1797 .
Buying d•lty gold . silver coins,
ringt. jewelry, sterling ware. ~~
coins. I•~• currencv. Top pncH. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middleport. Oh. 614 -

992·3476 .

~;:;;:;;:;:=.~;::;~::::'r.~~~;~~=;;;:~~1
j
18 Wanted to Do

I---------:-Will do babytitttnu my home.
Merc..-villa trN . 1t1nlng MIY
t .. . F. . .. ~r-•ticn Clll 814·
~ "~

258 -8843. 1· 9PM .
Will do Spring cle.ning or
houseclellling on 1 weekly ba·
sit
C1ll 614 - 388 - 97015
•nytime
Home rspairt and remodeling.
rww conl1ruction . decks. petios.
Phone J04-87&amp; -6834 or IS71S-

t259 .
WtntKI old pianos . P1ying
S20.00 1nd t40 .00 uch . First
floor only. Write gNing direction•. Witten Plano• Boa 1815
S•rdlt, Chic 43948 Call 81• ·
483· 1105.

21

11

Help Wanted

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends thlt vou
do busin•• with peopl1 you
knew . and NOT to stnd money
through the m1il until you havt
lnv .. tigat.:l tht off•ring .

Grocerv Store equipment. deiry
c11•. dt li Clll. 1licer, Cllh
riJllist.,-, , atc Call 614- 246 ·
5062 . 9-4. Mon .-Fri.

Oek Hill C ommuni~-t Medic11
Centlr, Oak Hill, Ohio II cur·
r.. tl. acc•pting 1pplicatlon1 fer
AN ' s. To apply pie••• conttcl
Sherry Johnson A. N ., director ot
Nursing, at 614 -682 _- 7117 hom
8 to 3. Mon. ttuu Fr 1.

Will plac• c;garttte m1Khin11.
Good co mmiuion1 . Call 304·
773 -5651
Oistributort-Sal• People · New
patinted product. •mpil leeds.
til Ohio , no trtvel . Top J»Qplt
eamed 826 .000 to e50.000illt
vear Toll frM 800-334 -7479
.... 1015
Maplew ood Lounga fer ..1• . 7
miles north of Poin t Plea11nt.
304-476 -2269 .

33482 .
Euy Assembty Workl 1800 .00
per 100 . Gu•r•nteed P1yment.
No Ex;ptrienoa -No Sal• Otttih
,.,d 1elt· tdd reued st•mped
.,velopt: ElM Vital -716 3418
Enterprise Rd . F1 . Pierce. Fl

33482
Governmen t Jobs . 118 ,040
t59 , 230 - yr . Now Hiring . C•ll
80!!HI87-6000 En. A-9806 for
current federal list.
Eny Anembly Wo rk I t600 00
per 100 Guarentttd payment.
No e~t parien ce - no ..111 . Oetaill
..,d ulf -addrnsed stamped
envelope: Elen Vitel-5847 3418
Enterprise Ad . Ft . Pierce. Fl
33482
RN '1 needed . Full t ime-Part
time. co "l)•titive ulary , ellc•l lent b•mrfit pach.ge. retirement
prcgr•m . Equal Opportunity
Empklver Arcad ia Nurs ing Cen ter , Cootvilla. Oho0 814-6157 ·
3165
Heed Cook -0 ut reach AK:I e E• peri.-.ced ordering suppli-.. in·
'11..-.tory control and tor toad
priJf]aration for 115&gt;0- 200 people
BookkHPn g -typing skill•. •u·
p~Nilory experience requ ired
Send reaume and rlf•rtn cn 10
Bc1 722 . Pom er oy . Ohio
46789 Equ•l Oppor t unity
Employer
To se ll A'o10n in •nv area . Can
304-&amp;76 -1429
Part &amp; full time med ical recep ·
rionitl Send 00"111eta r"ume
with three reierenc.s to BoJ. PIS ,
in c ~re Pt Ptea11nt Register .
200 Mtin St .. Pt Ple111nt. WV

26550 .
Da iry farmer needed , mu1t be
1ble to oper•te eteculc milkll"
end live on premi111 . lnquira
Point Plea1ant Job SeN ICtl. PI
Pleuanl . WV
H•lp W1ntad experienced res t aurant wo rker, m1negement
trlin• . pOOne 304-1576 · 7182
Wo men tc 1tay wilt. eldwly
woman 24 flour duty, 4 dtyl
eectl w-., cootl ing . light hcu1e·
work requ ired , induderefrences
and reply to So• P-9. Point
Pleuent Register , 200 M1in St.,
Point Ple11ant. W. Vlll .
PRIOR MILITAAV SERVICE
tNOIVIOUALS ·· The Army Na tion•! Guard needs yourvtluab le
eJ. ptrience. Join the Gu•rd tc! a
part -time }ob with manv benefttl
like prom:ttion•. edu c1tion1l 11sillanOI. re1iremant . tnd many
mo re. 304-876-3950 or 1-800·
642 -3819 .
HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS AND
SEN IORS -Join tha Army Na ·
donal Guard now ll'ld ltlrt
gettinlil • ptyctleclt . Anend
trllinif"lg periods during su_mmer
end continu• schooling Without
interruption . Educ•tional IISIII ·
11101 IVIilltllt. 304-878· 3950
o r 1-800 -642 -3819 .
Re1pon1ible blbysiner in my
ho..,.. for 2 11n111 children .
304· 1575 -6674 after 5 p.m.
G•llipollt Ferrv 1r11

12

Situations
Wanted

Money 1o Loan

HOME OWNEAS -Rehnance to
low fi11td ratt. U11 equ;ty for •nv
purposa. laadtf Mongag• Co.,
614 -592-30151

23

Professional
Services

PIAN O TUN ING ANO REPAIR .
tscover 'fOUl piano·, bl•utiful
tone , c.ll tod•y. Wards lev·
board . 30'·1576 -6&amp;00 01' 875·

r~

3824

for elderly man or
women in priv1t1 home . 24
hourt care. C1ll 814 -992 -75153.

ptANQ TUNING ANO REPAIR ,
reditco\1., ~ou r pi~no ' t beautiful
tone . call todtv . Wards Kev ·
bowd , 304-875 -5600 or 1763824

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroo m
fireplace, 3 mi
hi . 129 .900
448 -1615 or
1244

GOOD

ondFoocland. poolondCobloTV
aveltlble, oftict hourt .. possl·
bie 10
em to 4Fridey
pm and
7 pm814to 9
pm
MondiV·
, Cell
441-27415 01' INve m•nge.

Nicety tumtshld mobile hom•.
•ff. tpt. , centr•l 11f 1nd t\111 In
11
C II 814 U15
cit)!. adu • only. •
·
·
0338 .

Fum . apt . 919 2nd. Ave . G•lli·
polll . ... .,. bath , sinol• mtll,
1150 mo .. utllitl" peid. Call
448-4418 aher 7pm.

1984 Sctaultz. 14a70. 3 bad·
roonw. 2 full bflthl. Exct11nt
condition. 117,000. Cell 114-

949·2&amp;94 "'30·· 92&amp;·3283.
How•rd Roush property In AI·
cios. Oh)o. 24x40 one
old
doublewlde . All ..tctric . cllltrll
lir, nice lot, flrltll. out buiktlng.
Ch\1 Wlttt 1nd MWif. Would
consider c• or treil.- on trldl.
Priced on iftspeetlon . 114· 949 -

2013 .
Mobile home on ~ 1cr1 l.ndi CIIJid lot. GN fleet. Ctntrll llr ,
approved woodbum., , wuf"l•.
dry., , stove. r11frig1t0f . St. At .
143. acrott form. Dudltt1"t
Pl~nt ' t . Priced fof quick Ull.

015.000 Coli 8t4· 992·2792 .
1982 14x52 2 bedroom. vinyl
uncllry)inntng, til dowM , 11x1 0
perch and IIKtric entr~nce
Mrvice. Excellent condition. C•U

514·992-2772.

304·175·&amp;388.

a

Fum . 3 rooms baCh, uptttlrs,
cl11n. no peu. •dulta. ref. • dtp.
req . Cell 814·441 -1519.
2 bdr., nHr Sltvtr Bridg• Plaza
~eting. wtter &amp; gwab·
av• p.atd. c.u e1 4-4415 -702&amp;.

Nice

Furnished efficiency apt. , priVItl • QUilt. lingle working
penon only. CtiiB14-448-4807
or cu• -441 -2102.
Unfumitfled 2 bdr. in Crown

8525 .
1978 Liberty trail.,, Z Met·
roo~ . undtfpinn ing, window
1ir conditk&gt;n•. fumilhld . vtrv
304-175-1451 .
nice.

n .ooo.

, 982 Redman mobile home.
14d8. 3 bedroome, 113 ,000.
5 p.m.
Call 304-t75-1505

•ft•

Valley Furniture. new &amp; usld .
Llrgl sectiOn of qu1llty fuml ture . 1216 Eut• r n Ave .,
G•Uipolis.

Get r111g1 30 in . t715 . g11 renge
40 in. 175, Kenmore wuher
tl6, Wh irlpool w•sher 195,
uprigflt frHZer 11150 . M•vtao
drtytr 185. GE dryer 1160.
Skeggs Appli1non . Upptr Ahttt

Rd . &amp;14·448·7398 .

63

Antiques

1485.

2 Bedroom, unfurnished , up ltlira. utilitl• not fumithed. 3
Glrfield Ave . Singl• a coupl•

on~ .

*115.00. 448·7144

2 bldroomlpt inPomeroyabove
Kroger~ . ni'Wty rtmodeled. C1ll
614 -992 -15215 or 814-992 -

7314.

1 bedroom furnished lpt. down
ltlira. Oepotlt required . Nc
pits. Cell 814 -992 -2937.
Efficiency apartment for rwnt .
Roush l1n1 in Chethire . Ctll

304.n3· 5828 .
2 ~room 1st floor apel1ment
torrent in Midd lepon. withysrd .
1175 plus utiliti" and dapcsit .
Call814 -992-71n
1 bedroom apt . for rent . Basi c
rant atartt U, 6. a month th1t
tnducMI Ill \ltilitiM. Oepoait
requ ired of 1200. Con11ct Vii ·
lege Mtncr Apt . Middleport .
6,4 -992 -nBJ . Equ11 Hou1ing
Opponunlty.
5 room unfurnithld apartment
tor rent. Call 1514-992 ·6430 or

30C·BB2· 268&amp;

64

C•llahan 'a Used Tire Shop . Ovtf"
1 .000 ti r• . siall12 , 13. 14 . 15 ,
16 , 18 ,6 . 8 miles out At. 218.
Cell 614 -25 8 ·8251 .
Now tailing orders for Eisler
Cendy 1nd c•kes. Boxed candy,
variety for filling b•sktts , choco late covered dlerrlet . Call 8144415 -8593.
Heevy industrial 20 ton pr•s.
motor puller. mttal bend IIW .
Hou11 - 1111 or rent C1ll 814-

367·0242.

Computer- Redic Slleck TAS ·
80. mcdtl 4 with TRSOMP120
printer. TRS 80 mini dis c drive.
Call 1514-246· 6062. 9-4. Mon .·
Fri.
2 · 14 ln . plow1. 1 mowing
mact11ne. firewood for 1111 t3ei .
set of cult lvators. C•lll14 -44&amp; 9648 Of 11·· ... 1 -4630 .
Nsulhu1 wood 6 coli buming
stan. Coth t750 , wtll ..at'
1250 . C1ll 814 -379· 2171 .
Firewood hardwood , split ,
lttckld II&amp; dlliverld , very llrge
lood 035 . Coli 814 ·448 -7993.
811utiful to lid Olk chlnl Cl·
b intt , UOO. C1U 814-388 -

33

Farms for Sale

1 bedroomt~•r-velpt . for rent It
814 S . Fourth, Mlddl1por1.
ltfiO . plu1 utilltiH . Call 614·

687·0988 .
86 ICrll Or 106 I Crtl . Call
814 -381-8139 .

36

Lots

&amp;

APARTMENTS. mobile homes .
hou•• · Pt . Pltusnt tnd Gallipo·
lis . 114-446 -8221 .

Acreage

2.4acrll, Gtetn Townsh ip C1ll
614- 379-2866 .

By OWtler 3 bdt 2 b•th ran ch.
gM"eQI. fireplace. 111c neighbor ·
~od . walkinlil disttn ce c f city
1chool1 , r«tuced to ull . Call

814·«6·0388 .
Llu rtl Rsnctl Styl•. 3 bdr. &amp;
garage. Otl lerge lot in Addi1on
Twp , 9 ~ % filed 30 y. .r FHA
tan tva ll tb41 . Call 1514-4415 -

0722
J bedro o m, rtnctllty!t , in 11ctl
co,d with .arne 1cr•eg•. 'I• mi
oH Rt 7 on Georg• Crk. Ad
446 -47 23

Ren lal s
41

Houses for Rent

15 CD4'" St . 3 bdr. Kltchan
fumishtd, no peta. U&amp;O mo.,
plus utlliti-. . reterences &amp; dtP·
Ollt. Call 814-448 -4926 Of
81'-446 -91580
12 mi . trom G1ltipoli1 in Hannan
Trace School Di1trict. 4 btdroom tri -ltvtl house, flr~l~ee.
CA. hNI pump , pri'YMI tatting,
t200 per month, rllf..-enos
requ ired &amp; depoeit. C1ll 114·
441 -3262 or 114 ·441 -3848 .

6 room houM for .... located in
Middtepon. 110.000. Cell &amp;14·
992 -6213 Of &amp;14 -949 -2 1115 .

3 bdr . woodburner . watlr" &amp;
trath plid, 1225 mo. plu1
diPOiit, 1 milt from holj)ital
Call 814-441 -1354.

L1ve in one. rent the other. tw(l
bedroom houu 1nd two bidroom mobil• ho me. Call aft•r
5 :00p.m. 304·875-UBJ

J bdr .. wtt., p1kt.
pius deposit . Ctll

Houn for ule in Muon .
•30 .000 00 . Buy n11 w befor•
interett rtt•• go up , 304-87!5·
1!1743.
New tiding end windows. ck)ll
to 1wimming pool 1nd North
Point Grad• Schoo l. 304-87&amp;-

6972
BY OWNER - 3 bt&lt;lroom hou11
for .. le. 160,000 , 8 '1J IliUm&amp;·
blelo1n . 304·875· &amp;047 tfter 5
p. m.
Newty remodalld 2 b.droom
homt, largelot. Clo11t0H1rmon
Perk. •26.000 304 -1 75 -1818
after 4 p.m

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Repelled mobil• homn . 1500
down, ttlla over PIVmtnll. 78
Sunris• Ptrk 14x70, 2 bdr. •a
peymant• • 1118 . Fr11 deUvlfY .
Mid Ohio Flnlncill Strvict. Ctll .
1980 Liberty 14x64 . 2 bed·
room, unfurnished . vinyl undtr·
pinning Included . Muet Mil . Call

304·773·8873.

1971 Sctluhz 12d5 2 bdr., n.w
cerp.r. 1183 NIW' Moon 10x10,
nf/M carp.t. 8oth OCIIIII"It con d.

For r..-,t Sleeping Roams •nd
light houH kMping rooms . Perk
Cennal Ho111 . Call 114 -446·
075&amp;
Fum ithed Room . R1nge &amp; ,..
trig .. t116, utiUti11 paid. 919
2nd. Ave.. Gallipolis. Single
male. sf"lere b1lf1 . Call446 ·4418
after 7PM

46

3 bdr. OOmt in Gallipolis. rat .. no
pets . Call l!l14 -448 -1158
Oowntta irl duplex. 2 bdr , un furn ished. refrtg .. stove. u•ave.
good neighborhood . r.t. I dep .
Ctll 814-441 -3949 or 814·
448 -2419.

J bdr . h0u11 in country, nNr Rio
Granda. sec. dap ., no pets, U40
mo. Call 814-24&amp; -6439.
J bd r ni'Wiy peinted. gil hell.
pay own utilltl•. UOO mo.,
1100 dep. Cell 814-448-0131
or 814 -448· 7437.
3 bdr. tloual, fumit hld kit chen
Clll614 ·448-7025
3 bedroom house In H•nderson

Space for Rent

1 Zenith co nsolt colortd TV ,
remot• control. 26" . 304· 876·
6574

Comm•rcill gsrage eYiil•ble tor
rant . 10m&amp; too ls , compres.a r.
etc. Rt. 160 . Ca ll 8,. · 388·

Coun t~

9763.

.

COU NTRY MOBILE Hem• Part~ ,
Rou t e 33, North o t Pom..-c~ .
llrg•lotl. Ctll &amp;14-992 -7479.

M e r c h~ndi se

61

Household Goods

SWAIN
AU CTION • FURNITURE 62
Ollv• St .. G•llipolis . New • used
wood -co al1tov11. &amp;pc wood U.
suite 1399. bunk beds t199 .
antron reclinlfl 199 , new &amp;
used bedroo m su;t•. rangea.
wrfnger Wllhlrt . • lho•. New
livingroom .uit• 1199· 11199,
lamps. 1110 buying co•l lr wood
rtovn Cll\1514 · 448 -31 59 .
Whirlpool w11her&amp; drytr, Meg lc
Chef
range, livingroom
1Ui1t. queen t ize wetw b~ . • II
items tn good condit ion . Cell

e••

114·441·4113

42

Larg• custom buUt coucfl , ••c.
cond., 1160. Elllctric r~nge ,
good con d. 11 115 . Celll!l1 4 -2.&amp;5.

1439 .

Cro.. Stitch Suppli•
1nd Country Items c:tlalcgaveil·
•bit . Send t1 .00 lrefundlblll
to: County Xpre.. ions . P .0 . Box
4484. P•rkertburg. WV 2810ot .

66

Building Supplies

Bu ilding M•ttrial•
Blade, bric k. sewer pip-.. windowt, lintels, t tc . Clltldl Win·
t•rs. Rio Granda, 0 . Cl ll 1514246 -6121 .
Kentucky Lu mp , Ohio Lump ,
Ohio Stoker . Yard or deliv1ry ,
cement blocks lfld building
mltllfial. Gtllipolil Block Cc .,
Pine St. . Gelllpc lit, Ohio C11l
614 · 441-27B3 .
Utilitl Bldg. Spl .. 30'x40 'Jt9' ,
Eave w- U ' 1B' alldng door &amp;
strv . door - t52!i6 erected. Iron
Horta Bldgs . 814· 332-9746
collect.
Bled!:, brlct. , morter end m•sonr• ._.pplin . Mountlin S11t1
Block. Rt. 33. New Haven , W.

Vo. 304·882·2222 .

Brit'lfatch Klf'lnelt All · br.groomlng . English Cock• Sp•
nl•ll. 388-9790.
Or~gonwynd Cettery Kannel.
CFA Hlmal1y1n, Pertllrl and
Slam-.e kittens . AKC Chow
puppiN. Ctll 44&amp; · 3844 1fter

Gt4-448· t364 .

Pk:ttens Usld Furniture. Good
quality utld tumtture. Op .. 9 to
8 or call for eppolnt rnent.

'I'IYid . 060 . Coli 114·«8·
91S3.

12•80 2 bdr. In Cen1en1ry. Cell

304·875·8483"' en. t460 .

Attllt.,-ed Mlnleture Sc:hneu. .r
puppl•. Bl•clt·tltvef mile; Seltpapplt' fem1ie. Cuh. nc diD a.

Wllfltr ·drver. weter &amp; trasfl
p•kl. 2 bdr., 1 mile from ho1pti1l
1200 rlf'lt plut d~l!t. C1N

814·«8·4292.

Brown Naugthydt lovas•t.
sw lv•l rocller and ottoman
1310 .00. brthtonepllid reclin ing c:h ..r 180.00. HOOYif" 0 111·
A - Mule upright ucuum
2 bedroom mobile homt, 30th · . . 0 .00. 304-175 -11181 lhlf
Strltt, clileft..34M-e78- 1 :00 PM w1Mtd8yl, Wltlltndl
12•88 two bedroom tfllllf.
Loceted on Rou1h Un1, Ch•
thire, Ohio . Cell304· 773 -8828 .

304·.S9-2027
CINrwttM. fl.

Rt. 218 . Coli 814·24e-GD48

2 br treilwr. r..r•ances 1r1d
d.,OIIt . Adult• Only. You pay

IIYt' l.

utllhl•. 304-07&amp;·2131.

U12.

•:oo.

7PM.
Atd , temet1.

lr ittl

Sttter,

30C· 875·1030.

(!) Mazda SportsLook
Cil Cil al &lt;nill]l Newo •
1!11 C!l Dilfront Strokes
([) 3·2· 1, Contact (CC)
® Eyewitness Nowo ·
(j] To Be Announced
@ Good Times
ffi Down to Earth In

a

Motorcycles

t
I ¥f f t]

IBANZER
I 'I I J I

8:30 I) Cil NBC Night11Nwfio
(]) The Rifleman
Cil lllllJ ABC No 1 .
1!11 C!l One Dey at 1 Time
Cil ® CBS Now. -·
([) Doctor Who
II]I Body Electric
@ Jalforsons
IJ]I NBC News
6:35 CI) Safe It Home In Stereo .
7:00 I ) Cil PM Magazine
(]) Alieo Smith end Jclneo
(!) SoorteConter
(I) Entenainment Tonight
On location with the original cast of 'Andy Griffith '
for the upcoming TV movie
' Return to Mayber~ · .
1!11 C!l Jafforaons
CIJ IJ]I Wheel of Fortune
([) Nightly Businou Report

a

114-317-7782 or 814-387·
7262 tftlr 8PM .
Motorcycle Pens pollshtd tnd
buffed, 304-8715-MS&amp;.

68
8o

Evinrucll 4 hp boat motor, ell

71
Fency Fruits &amp; Veg.tlbln,
onion Mts. tMd pct•ton. to
percen1 dilcount to ell Senior
Cltb:ent. BAS Produc•. 206
Vi111d St Pt. Pl•tunt .

Autos for Sale

78 Dodge Colt. ••c . cond.,
tt .460. Coli 814· 448·0159

oh .. 5. Gt4·441·9478 .

Fm 11 S up p l 11~s
&amp; LIVI~s l od

t914 DOdge Ch•'11• 2.2. 6
1pd., 18.000 mi., AM-FM CIU,
niCI. Cell81. · 379 ·2721.

1985 Cf"leYiftl 9. 000 mi., 2dr.,

Farm Equipment

CROSS llo SONS
U.S. 35 Wttt. J•ckeon, Ohio.
814·288·8451 .
Mltnv Ferguaon , NI'W Hollll'ld,
Buth Hog Seiel • Service. 0Yif"
40 used triCtotl to choose from
a. C0"1)1ete line of niiW • uHd
equipment. LlrgHt Mlection in

S.E. Ohio .

Check our Speciel S1l1pricn on
Long Trsctora &amp; Vtrmetr hay
equlpnwn wh:hfinencingevtil•
ble at 5% ht••t. A complete
line of bile hendling &amp; fllding
ICCIIIOritl , grinder rniJttrl.
WlgOnl, fOtlry tilllf"t, rGtlf'Y
cutttrt, bled•. cuttivltort. disc,
plows. stedera. post drNera,
woodsptlt11n, llltH, power
wesf"l•ra 6 Wheel Horn Lawn
Gird.-. TrKton. And a• u1 for
a COI11)tltl line of par1a &amp;
,.,.,ice.
USED : A v1riety of UMd treetors, grlndlf" mixtf". w-von•.
tob1cco senen, apreyer. cultlve tors, disc. plow1. complanter,
l'terrow , r-":M. equera b1l1r.
rro'Ning machine. teddlrt. rid ·
inu 1..-.rn mower.

a

1980 Long 810. 4 ·WD. 8 ft ..
ditc mow•r. 10ft . teddtr rlkt, 7
h . J .D . tide mower . C1ll 814 -

245·9657.
Trectors for lilt. AC widt front
end with 3 pt. hitch , A· 1 shepe.
8 N Ford trector A· 1 lhapa. C1ll
tftar 6:30PM 114-388·8419.

.,00
ciun,

Ford cHeeel erector. ••·
sheet metll good, Pllnt
good, good rubber . el5 ,9!i0. 10
ft . blrcfl whetl dilc 1795. 5
bottom CeH plow• e59e . C111

114· 288·8822 .
830 Ceu wide front, Olfver 3
bottom plow1 1300, I fl . whtel
d isc ••9s. 8 ft. Wood bulhhog

039&amp; . Coil 814-288 · 8822.

20t0 JD tractor , JO 2 bottom
PloWI, JO disc. 13.960. C1U

114·286-8822 .
1315 MF tr1ctor. 5 ft . HI
buahhog , 2 bonom plow , 3 pt.
diac. 13.895. C•ll IU-281·

CENTER . SA 3&amp; W. 01llipoll•.
Ohio. Cell 814-448· 97n. lYe.
114-441· 3192 . Up fTont 11'H·
tors with w.rr1nty OYif' 7&amp; uud
trectott. 1000 tools .

1984 ChiN•«• 2 dr.• 38,000,
02.100. Col 814· 379 · 2882.
1980 Pty TC3 85,000 mi.. auto .
AM·FM. 12, 100 . C1l 514-379-

2182.
1978 VWAibblt IUto. lit C:Ond.,
AM-FM tterto , r•ar defrotttr,
fJIIC. intlt'ior. good redial tires .
pric• t750 . C1ll 114 -388-

8144.

1977 Buicll A101t C•ll 6141971 Oeta~n810. 4apd .. ....~.
minor work, t875. Cell 8141984 Ptymouth Reliant auto. sir
cond .• •1 . 000 mi., 4 dr. Ctll

814· :179· 2728 .
1984 Ford LT04 door. euto., l lr,
AM ·FM. rul nice. 13.499 .
John 's Auto Sail&amp; , Bulavill• Rd ..
Gellipolil .
Speclalll 13) 198" Chev. Cht·
VHtl. Some hlvt 1uto . wltf"lalr,
ciNn, low mHIIQe cer1. 13,000
1Kh. 8 • D Motors, 4 mil• N.
of Holzer an Hwy. 180 . Call

1984 Dodge O.ytone AM · FM ,
N; , PS , PI, 5 epd .. bledt on
bteck. 7.000 mil•. uc. cond .,
1981 Dodt• Arlee k Clr, 4 spd .,
ttend .. new tir11. 39, 000. 11c.
cond. Ctll 814 -448-420&amp; after
5 :30PM or WMhrtda.
71 Rabbit for ule. 261 · 1540.
1874 ChiVrolet. 1uto., pow. 1t .•
good oond. 1971 Monte Ceria.
good cond. 441 · 1122 .
81 Plymouth Vllilnt 4 dr. good
lhtpt, little Nit . t500. 73
Ptymoutfl .&amp;00 engln• alrtldy
tom down with trantmitslon 1nd
redlttor. Cell liter 8 :00p .m.

814 ·992·1141 .

1983 Z28 . PS. PB. eir. cruise
control. Exeelltnt condition. For
.. t. o r trade . C1ll 814 -742-

2460.
1917 Ford Pinto . Aunt good .
Low mi111g1. AM ·FM caustte.
C1ll 8,4. 9815 -4440.
1975 Ford Thundwblrd . Good
condhlon PS . PB. 14150 . Cell
1975 Dodge Dert 1460. 304·

' 80 Rlbbit. elr. AM -FM . 4 door,
6 spMd, tJtC cond, 12,000.

304·875·8159 .,,.. 5 ,oo PM.
1985 Cemero. rid with blk end
red lntwkn. bw mil•.g•. 304-

871-6&amp;10

.

1977 Pontl.c Bonnwill•. 4 dr.
111 poww. ••c•lltnt condition,
no rust . t1200 . 304-175· 3194
ahw !i p.m .

1971 Oatton B 210, dolln"t
run . new tirw. body In fOOd
lhlpe. 1400 .00 . Phone 304-

3091 .

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hoy 01 .00 bolo. Coiii1C·258 ·
1818 .
Hey for Mie 75 centt 1 belt. CIM

Gt4· :17t · 2424.
Urge round belet of hay. Cen
dollv•. 120. Coli 114 ·t92·

74Dt .

11 . 000 .00. Coli 304 · 773·
8303.

\!
1972 21 H. Terry Clmplf. V4H"'(
good condition . Air condition.
crenk up TV ent.-.nl, rOll aw•v
.,..nino. 2 30 pound tenkt. gn
lighll , sleept
•2995 Firm.
Csll814-742 -21 25 mominv• or
evan lrup .

~

1.1' 0 111'

·U'V,
1

n:

':0

'

Servtees

I'L L SAY! l
COULD SPEND
TH'.RESTOF
'THE DAY IN

l',:"l._""L. .\!\J!"
~-

Jl,• Fi\

lr

·V " I · •

... .•·{ •
., l

:.t: ·.• \

~

~

1400.00. 304·875-8480.

72

Truck• for Sale

1971 Ford 'It toft PU, ltltrldlfd
tr ..t .• •lr . SM It 541 Fourth
A.vt., Glllipolill, Oh . •1 .200.
14 Int . 2~ ton 14' etum. bed, I ·
spd .• 2sp . r•r. good ah1p1. Cell

814·441· 0088 oft• O:OOPM.
t912 DOdge PU , 8 cyl.. 3 'I'd.
with overdrive , flberglau
109P•· ax . cond. CaU 814 -317-

814· 94t· 2150 .

67

1182 F1 00 Ford pk=kup. heel·

\SOLl~t:

(;

Uncondhionel Ufet lm• guar•n ·
tN. Local reference~ tumilfflld .
Fr" lltlm•t•. C1ll collect
1 -8U-237-0488. dey or night.
Rogert B1t1m1nt
Wetarprootlng.

.\LLEV

9:00

eviction papers?

D1ve' t Home lmprovem.nts.
VInyl, eluminum gl.lttetl 6. CUI·
tom trim. 17 ye.,.. taparlenca.
Call 114-.WI-9"17.
VInyl Repair Servi01 Home.
bualn•• &amp; MJto . Snting. Mon.·
Sat. 8 :00·8 :00. For det•ll• cell
Htnrv. 814· 379-2530 or 114-

Cil

*

379· 2838.

RON "S Ttltvlslon Strvlce
Hou11 call• on RCA , Oul.ltr,
QE . Speciellng Jn Zlftlth. Call
304-578-2398 or 114 · 44&amp; ·

9:30

... THIS 15 ZOE ADAMS ' PHONE
NUM~ER! M 500N AS ORVIlLE
FIND5 A .tAIVY4'R FOR WENDY.
A!~f/!l CONTACT ME /

RINGLES ' S SERVICE. upe·
rienced ctrptnttr, aiKtridln .
muon, pelnttf, roofing (Includ Ing hat tar eppllcetion) 304 .
875-2088 or 875·7388 .

Boone

II Knightly

a

13 Work unit
14 Large

B3

Spencer Tracy Tribute
By Katharine Hepburn

barrel
16 Summer

B6

a

I
\

'

MY
WE:EkENDS
AREN'IVERY
E:XCIIING . .'.

7911 .
Ktn 't Wettr Service. Well s .
dlterns. pools filled. Phone
BU-387-0823 or 814 -3&amp;7 ·
7741 night or dev .

1 833 .
A • M Furn iturt Man uf.ct uring .
St. Rt. 7. Crown City , Oh . C1ll
IU-258 -1470 , ctll Eve. 814 ·
448 · 3•38 . O ld &amp; new
Upf"losttred .

I, '
' .'

. ·. r
·~

. ?1

mi n.) In Stereo.

(]) Bill Cosby Show
CIJ ABC Nowa Nlghtllno
CIJ MOVIE: 'ltoo'
(IJI MOVIE : 'Goldwyn Fol·
Ilea'
12:35 lll llJ Nows
1:00 (]) Dobie Gillis
(!) Mark Sooln's Solt Woter

a

Journal

the luxury of being able to change ·
horses in midstream. If he plays two..
rounds of trump and then realizes he •
should perhaps trump a spade, it is t()(j :
late. When declarer then plays ace and
a spade, East is in with the queen and ·
can lead back his last trump to eventu· '
ally set the contract. Better to plan
ahead and do it right.

Yesterda}·'s Answer

Swi ~

25 Xyh•·
phorw ·:-.
COUSIIl

27 Maun a -

~9

( in·--·lo:
t!-&gt;l an rt

:10 Sp\
111
I · aJ HUtrl

:u 1-'raJ.(nmtT
;tlt tu llaw

:17 fo\mt·l in n
39 El""'

.,......,..-r.-

h-+-!-

40Takr
a hreak
41 German
export

DAJLYCRYI'TOQUOTES-Here's how tn ~n rk &lt;t :

.

.

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In tlus s.o:· • A " u;ec
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etr ' .,~1 &lt;· letter&gt; .
apostrophes, the length and fonnatio n of tr,. · ·'rr'' arc all
hints. Each day the code letters are dtffert·r··
CRYPTOQUOTES

S· IO
XW C XWFPGD

ZMY

HZ F M

z

r u

II Z \ 1 \1 I ' \\"

A C M J F Y P W Z G F C 11

C GBPWJ

z wp

G

nr

ABZWZAG PWFJ G F

VPMG E PH ZM

-

YF I\1

I

( "

I,

J

W
l.

( "

,.

I' F F

YeoterdaJ 'o C'1Jitoquote: THE PURPOSE&lt; If' LIFE IS
PHYSICAL &lt; ;w •liTH -

SPIRI'nJAL, MENTAL AND

® MOVIE: 'Lody Llborty'

Oevid Letterman To night's

Opening lead: • K

Martin film

Bi shop. (60 min .) (A)
(!) SportsContor
Cil WKAP In Clnolnnetl
1!11 (!) ® Taxi
(JJ Aomington St..lo
Rem ington is suspected of
p remeditated murder after
he accidentally hits a pedestrian with his car. (60
min .) (R) .
Ol llJ ABC Nowo Nlghtlino
(IJI Trop,.r John, M .D.
12:00 (]) Beat of Groucho
(!) World Cup Skiing
CIJ Entertainment Tonight

guest is Robert Klein . (60

Pass

36 Stage show
38 Honeydew

1110MAS BLAND!

Ol &lt;ni Barbour Report
12:30 1J CIJ [5I Leto Night with

-

4"

Pass

network

' Return to Mayberry '.

'

Pass

35 Dean

fJI (!) Rowhldo

I I· \

motorcycle. Eac•lltnt condition.

FORMCNDAY.

I NT

rf'frain
34 Italian
radio-TV

ginal COlt of 'Andy Griffith'.
for the upcoming TV mov•e

7397.

lont ollopo; 1t82 V· 4&amp; Hondo

AS DRESS REHEARSALS

Pass
Pass
Pass

sectio n

On loc ation with the ori-

Ccal. Nm•ton•. gravel, t t c .
Otlivlred 1 ton and up. Jim
Llnilt', 304· 175·1247 o r 675 ·

Upholstery

I 11-JINK OF "THEM

East

1+

29 MacArthur's
pipe
33 June's

a

.\ f'.1G
\ ",;, '."-IN[J
"' \I.J N El ?

~ortb

river
6 Breather
21 Bearing
7 "Geor!O' - • 22 Kn a•·k
9 Revolve
23 Panl" '
tO Written
24 Lay
letter
burr

town

ageous'

I ,, 1.\&lt;, .

General Hauling

Wtst

28 Cirrlo

Cil 0 (]) al llJ IJ]I Nows
1!11 (!) Bonny Hill Show
CIJ MOVIE: 'Captains Cour.

" \ \ IH. ' '

••

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

25 Bishop's
hat
26 Alley
27 New Guinea

plorar

\'-' 'J!

• 53

instrument

C1J ®I Newhart iCC)
Dic k's joke backfires when

Linda Ronstedt and Joey

Jamn Boys W1ter S•nfica. AIIO
poolt filled . Ce11814 · 268· 1 141
Of 814-446-11715 or 814-448 ·

87

5

® Eyewitness Newo
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
11 :30 U Cil [5I The Bo•t of Cor·
son Tonight's guests are

Good -1 EXCIV Iting , btllmllflh.
footlfl , drlvew•v•. septic 11nka.
lendsc aping . C1ll anytime 614 441· 4537. Jtmn L. Davison .
Jr . owner.

SOUTH
+A 9 6 5
' AQ10752

rivtor

in Evian
17 &amp;nnoble
19 Lummox 12 Allude
15 Grecian
•20Poem
d eity
2t Unspoken
18 Ballot
22 Wind

Ad"

Wrestling

EKcavating

+ K QJ 9

plam
English

3 lmhue
4 Denture

gear

ffi Notional Geographic Ex·

\

Cl1rk Plumbtng and H11tlng, 18
veers e,_p.,llnbt , untto p drelns .
New -remodetlng -reptlr worlt
Phon• 304-882-.2012.

2

place
10 F'all dri nk

(]) Man from U.N .C.L.E
(!) Pro Baseball Team Arm

H'M AI LMA N

' 98i
t K 10 1 2
• 10 7 6'

I Marsh

8 Beastly

mals

Cor. Fourth and Pin•
Gellipolls . Ohio
Phone 814-448 -3888 or 814 ·
448 -4477

• J 986

.6

DOWN

Richard

1!11 (!) INN News
11 :00 IJ Cil NewaConter
llf-flE lOIII)fS URIAH,

EAST

43 Priest' s
garb

7 Actor

Dividend '

AND HEATING

+Q 10

Indian

I &amp;at
4 Singer

@ News
10:30 (]) Can You Be Thinner
ffi Wild, W ild World of Ani·

CARTER 'S PLUMBING

WEST
• K J 84

42 Caddoan

ACROSS

~ - h is publisher.
10:00 [J) CBN News Tonight
1!11 (ZJ Odd Couple
0 CIJ ® Cegney and La·
coy
II]I MOVIE: 'Fathe r's Little

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

'K J 3
t AQ 7
+A 8 3 2

l!&amp;MJ
.."tal
br THOMAS JOSErH

he uses his old pen name to
book to

895· 3802

1-lf·ll

NORTH
. i 32

It's a little unusual, but sometimes
three small cards in a side suit can be
a distributional feature. A good de·
darer will not overlook such
opportunities.
North was reluctant to rebid one notrump with only three little spades,
but the alternative - raising hearts
with 4·3·3-3 shape - was equally re·
pugnant. He finally chose the bid that
told the truth about his shape. When
South then invited game by jumping to
three hearts, North happily raised to
four.
+o'l,fely make the game contract,
d~ must suppress his natural·in·
stii)Ct'\O draw trumps. Instead, rea liz·
inltllllt there is a possibility of losing
th,.,.de tricks, be should plan on
usi~i'bne of dummy's heart honors to
rufF-j jpotential spade loser. So, after
wilJIII9C dummy's club ace at trick
on~~M,clarer should forthwith lead a
spade back to his ace and play a spade.
On repining tbe lead, he can then play
another spade and eventually trump
his lui loeing spade with either the
king or the jack of hearts in dummy .
The diamond finesse is then available
for a possible overtrick.
Here declarer does not even have

~submit his latest

Aotery or clblt tool drltllng.
Most wells completed 11m•d•y.
Pump Nln end service. 304·

r I XI I X)

By Jam., Jacoby

Hero

Fetty TrN Trimming. stump
rtmovet. Celt 304·175-1331 .

fo rm the s urpnse answer , as sug·
gesled by I he aoo"e car1oon

tA nswers lomorrow)
JumtHs: DJRTV E~PTY FAM ILY INTONE
A~wer: When a kid fell down wh ile wa lkin g l hrolJgh
1 pallure , 11 must ha"e been ll"liS -

(]) 700 Club
CIJ lll llJ MOVIE: 'Between
Two Women' (CCI
Cil ® Keto &amp; Allie

WPBY

Now arrange the c1 rc1ea le!le'S 10

A hidden
ruffing value

(1) The Spencer Tracy Le·
gacy: A Tribute by Kethar.
~ ine Hepburn (CCI
"@
Greatest
American

\ \ 1\'\1 E

2454 .

82

I

scoRe.

James Jacoby

U Ill [5I Dress Gray Pert 2

I

,,w·~ove
~o~ 1 s

MIDGE

of 2 Cadet Ay Slaight trave ls to New York City and
New Orleans seeking infor·
mat ion to clear his name in
a student's murder investigation. (2 hrs)

You served Rufus his

-ro

A FIELD "TRIP"

Stere o.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

TRISTATE
UP HOLSTERY SHOP
1 1t3 Sec. Av1 ., Gllllpolls.
814-448· 7833 o r 81C -448 -

1871 Chww truck . 4 wfl..t
drlvt, 350 automatic, good
condhlon , 304·175-1"598 after
&amp; p.m .

Sltu rday's

wh ich enrages Valerie . In

304· 111· 8874 .

9188.

SEEYOU .•• NOWI

·--,

1811 ChfYy plc:t.up U'UCII PS.
PI, V-1, aulo . 18300. Can

lktwttt C11h FMd Store. Wall
stocked on 1llyour Spring nleds .
Rt . 514, Bidwell. Call Sf 4-318-

MAADO WANTS lO

Home
Improvements

1872 Nov1 , 3&amp;0 -'QH'Ie, 11 it

03t4.

Musical
I natru mente

ENOUGH~ QUEEN

HERE!

,

. ...,
...

gerald end tho Lest of the
Belles'
CIJ ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
([) MocNeli·Lehrer Nowsh·
our
il]) The Spencer Tracy L•
gacy: A Tribute by Kethar.
ino Hepburn (CCI
@ Dempsey end Mekepellce
B:05 ffi NBA Bukotboll: Boston
at Dalles
B:30 I) CIJIJ]I Valerie When Michael's Air Force mentor
visits, Willie and David
adop1 his macho attitudes-

a

l':ll:V

1 l f.\IJ

e.

1977 Chrysl•r Cordobl. 1100.

304· 773·913&amp; .

(!) College Baseball: Arizona State at Texas
(I) Ill (1}1 Hordcestlo end
McCormick (CC) McCormick's Old flame is the tar-

1!11 (!) MOVIE: 'F. Scott Fitz.

mlloogo, good oond. 304·571·
2109.
187&amp; Ply, 4 cDor. 400 1ng, PS.
Pl. AC, cru•e. exc cond.

[J) Father Murphy

L

137· 2642.
1182 Cutlau Supreme. low

Stereo .

get of a murder anempt.
(50 min .) (A) .

7478.

Vo. 304-87&amp;· 742t .

304· 1175· 3134.

vr~s.

(&lt;:IGHT I'IOW HE~ TA\CING
A NAP.

Motors Homes
8o Campers

85 Buidl: Rlv•ria. Sherp . Still
under warranty . 30• · 875 -

1971 Cem.ro 1700. 304-67&amp;-

P~o .

Sp[lrNG pevE:f2

Stlf'tls Tret •nd llwn Strvtc:e,
lendseeping. 304· 578 -2010

Before you buy your nut lrlctor.
get tile belt price, Sidll'l Equipment co.,..,any. H~ndtrwOn . W.

304· 1!75·1!799.

We'VE ISOLAT"E{;&gt; IHE'

LA B

4 , Mon .- Fri .

08.985 . CoM 8t4-448·7031 .

2010 Jofln Deer treclor, John
Detr 2 bo"om plow•. JoflnDHr
disc . 139&amp;0 . Call 814 -281-

Aagit1tf..:l Awile•• mert, ur..t
contltt ,_,,... for the Mglnn..-.

Auto Repair

1 979 tTIVII t reiler 15th whMI. 31
h . Bonenza . f97B For d Ranger

B1

:]) College Beskotbell Report
1!11 CV WKAP in Cincinnati
[5I Jeopardy
([) Good Neighbors
® Wheel of Fortune
Ill &lt;nl Entorteinment Tonight Interview with Ka"tharine Ross .
1H1 Bob Newhart
7:35 ffi Sanford and Son
B:DO U Cil IJ]I You Again In

a (])

379·2107 .

816 ·3131.

Livestock

f£.........o~~~~L.!!!LJ I

L-. . .

Auto peinttng end body work,
done to your udlflctlon, receive 10 per cent cff any }ob
IChtduled between now 1nd
M•¥ 111. lnsur•nc. clelms,
dtt1lling and tome mac::h•niCII
work. fTit 11tlmet•. C•ll for
appointment 1 · 304-875· 2813 .

(i)J Barney Miller
ffi Mory Tyler Moore
U Cil CIJ New Newlywed
Game

''

...

Ford Pinto good cond .. good
tir•. PS , PB. 1500. Call 114-

03995. Coli 814 ·281·8822 .

63

7:05
7:30

.

B· N·M TIRE, 304·89&amp; ·3451,

n

1872 Chevy C1prlce, runs good,
1100.00. lfttf 5 :00 call 304·

01800. 304-871-38114 """'a
P'ri·

our

"!'H I ~ '&lt;EI.PS
MANY A GOlFER:

Prtntllll&amp;wtrhere: AN

Eyewitness News

lll llJ Divorce Court

114·441-n22 .

13&amp; Ms. •ector 5 h . HI. Bush
hog. 2 bOftom plow• 3 pt. disk

9N FOI'd tractor, neww p1int, ntW
ttru. recently overheuled

®

Ctntenniai-PireiU , Republic -

79

..

(j] MocNoii· Lohrer Nowah-

1970 two door Chwell•, for
Plrtl, 304· 8915-3838.

77

1

a

F-260. Coil 814· 241 ·6062. 9·

895 ·3138.

F1rmaM Supw A tractor, h•dflu·
lie. PfO end IQUipmtnt. Runt
r-.l..,od . 304-175· '7115.

Auto Parts
Accessories

15 - 38x16. 15 Ground Hewg tir11
with or without 8 hole Ford
White tpokl wheels. Call IYen inOI 814 -949 -2069.

441·2099 oft• 7PM.

8522.

503 pldlup hly reke. UOO.
Arm. Ctll 114-742 · 21215.

&amp;

448·4&amp;•8.

814 ·992·3825 .

8)() c11•. Wkte front, ollvtr 3
boHom plowt 1300. 8ft. wh"l
dloc f495 . I fl. woodo buth hog

76

AM·FM. 03.2&amp;0 . Col 8t4·379· , Armttrong IFerm). Speci•l• I
2882.
81emt. Aold Heurd Repairs,

8000 Ford dlqal trtctor utrl
ciNn, sheet met1l good, pelnt
good , goodrubbtr115910 . 10ft.
Blrcfl wh•l dAle 1791 . I bOttom
cue plows 1585 . C•ll 814-281·

8522.

304· 773·5303.

ohtr 1 :00 814· 388 -HSI.
3000 1977 Mlfcedn di•••t
plrfKt condition. price reduced.
nwr 1in1, meny optk&gt;ns. C1ll

61

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Tr.rn sporLJIIOil

Fruit
Vegetables

Coli 114· 9112·2807.

2 vr. ckl Klmbal contcle pi~no .
pecen wood , IJIICIItnt oondl·
tton . Cell 814 · 441-78115 .

CD GrMn Acres

1986 Y1matu Vlr1g0 700,

t~rtytlme .

Bentwood rocker . chrome.
wldlerltd, g~dcond , l28 . 00 .

loerrr'
o
. ---

8:00 I ) Cil NewoConter

3. 300 mi., Pc. cond. C•H

76

by H&amp;nrl Arnold and Sob Lee

UniCI'If1"bbe lhtle loor Jumbles,

Stereo.

1-----------.. .----------•

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

l.J:/J ~~ •

one fert«IO IIICh aquare, to form
lour ordlnory wor&lt;ls.

EVENING

1983 Honda XR 200 din bik•.
exc. cond . Call 114 -441·70115 .

HOrtll. lode 11 . Htnd.-.on ,

Pets for Sale

~

3/10/86

8:05

304· 1!75· 3160 or 875-6317.

56

h'Eh' T r-1£:. OT HER DAY!

/

0395. Coli 6t4-281·1522.

211n. color TV, 21 in . B-WTV . 2
door Hotpeint r•trig ., 12 cu rt
freezer upright, 10 cu ft: frNaer,
g .. dryers. tlte . drylf't , IUtC·
metlc Wllhars. Ftr•tone Stor•
Mktdleport.

3 tt.droom 12•70 ••Pindo
living room, 31 4 3rd. St. . K•·
nauga. Cell 814-448-7473.

74

/

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

TRS BO Model 4 oo rq:~ut•r wit h
OMP 1 10 printer. Likanaw . Only
1800. Call 814 -992 -6706.

-&lt;JC.'c

·,'riA T"S T HE
[:r" V'd--10 KEELE D

5PM.

Complett electric hOapitll bed
for .. Ia. Call614· 992 -5434.

614-992·3359 .

•.I -1l

~!J\JNl ji;)ft ~

Television
Viewing

DO R E COGNIZE

lbovt heve never been in1t1Ued.
~rgin1l colt 1389, 1111 prlct
1150. C•ll814 -266· 1188 .tl•

8522.

New -Colt new Frontier 22 revolver 71ft inch blrral with
Magnum cylinder. 1300. Call

~ ·~~L

New cloth top, •II herdwlrt,
if"lcl . docrt , CJ-8, 82 models,

6774.

1 milt from hospitel wtter &amp;
tr11h paid. 1615 mo. plus dapoti1 .
C•ll814 -44e -1364.

304 - ~76 - 7448 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Two grave pk)tt tn Meigs Me·
mory G~rdens . C1ll &amp;14 -992·

TONV ' S GUN REPAIRS, hotd)p
rebluelng, 111 typ" of gun1mith
wo rt~ , f11t ••rvic•. 304-6754631 .

1354

Coil 814·448·0175.
12d0 Naw Moon with 2 loti.
A.C . IICUflty llgh1. bldg .. juet Off

Furnished Rooms

Mi1ed lltrdwood slabs. 112 per
bundle, cont1ining IPPfOX . , "Ya
ton . F.O.B. Ohio Pallot Cc .•
Pomeroy, Ot1io . C•ll 114-992·
6461 1

W .O.
•

The Daily

Ohio

18 Ford Bronco 8Dod motor 111d
NN'IIng gtltl , 1400. Cell 114·
448-0019 tfter 8 :00PM .

JIVIDEN 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
814·441· t875

Misc. Merchandise

10, 1986

379· 2424 .

Mollohan Fumiture 6 Apphn ·
us. Rt . 7 Nonh , Kanauge , Oh.
Cell 814 -441 · 7444 . Credit
terms • ..,.u.a,l•.

Efflcltncv apt. , neet I ciHn .
ground ftoor. ptlwat• entranc•.
priv1t1 parking , all utilit i• paid.
1175 mo . Call 814 -448-7616 .

304-576·2338

1971 . 12x815 Holly P•rk. 2
bedroom, 7x20 tip out. new
fumac• tnd lfr cond , 304-875 -

Coonty Apptitnct , Inc. Good
usld appli1n1:11 tnd TV ....
Open SAM tc &amp;PM . Mon thru
Stt. 614 -446-1699 . 827 3rd.
Ava. Gtlllpolis. OH .

Antiqun, bran bids 1nd l1mp1
polilhed .nd buffed . 304-8715·

.ured. ,...on•l• rat11, Call

1973. 14a70, 3 bedroom, exc
con d, underpennld , patio ewn ing . 12x18 built on room , ptnty
fumilhed, on 1 •cr•. phon•
304· 15715 · 2791 or 304 ·1575 ·
2746 .

Weshln,
dryert, refrluwetor._,
rengu . Skeggt
Appllencu .
Upplt' River Rd . bttkl1 Stone
Cr•t Mottl. 814 -"8 · 7398

City . C•ll 81&amp; -2158-1620.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED ' in·

1978 Hillcr•t Mobile Home.
14x70. 304-6715-1418 .

USED APPLIANCES

4

1978 CJ . 5 J"P . n.w 4-WD.
owrh1uled tnoine. Call 114·

Used Furniture -· Dr....,, 6 bed,
mttll office delks . 3 mil• Cllt
Bulevlle Ad. Open 9em to 5pm,
Mon . thru S11.

locetld nHI' Sprtng V.. ltv Plue

Vans&amp;

1\londay Mar c h

187&amp; Ch~t~~y BIIUf. Clll 114·
448·4&amp;48 .

plltl with mettr"'"· 127&amp;.
end up to t39&amp;. e.by bedt.
t110 . Menreuu or box
tprings, full or twin , 183., firm,
t73 . and 183 . OuHn Mtl.
1225. 4 dr. ch•ts, 149. 15 dr.
cheats. 1159 B•d fr1m11 .
120 .end 12~ .. 10 gun · Gun
cltlifl .. s, 13~0 . Gas or electric
r•nun 137&amp;. Bilby m•ttr......
•35 &amp; 145. bed hm• UO.
t25. • 130 . king tr~m• no.
Good stltction of bedroom
auitn. rockers. metal cllblneta,
heedbollrda 138 • up to 115.

6t4-445-0322

1973 New Moon 12•85. 2 bdr..
woodbumtt, ceiling ten, , 1ir
cond., pordt • underpinning.
Cell 814-258-1381 .

Trucll Driver School: Job piiCt·
ment llllttanct. DOT Cenlflcatlon, Eligible ln1tltutlon federal
.;ct, gu1r1ntetd lltUd«&lt;1 k?~~'~'·
Horne ltudy· rllldtnt treinlng.
Stll1immldl11tty. United True*
Mllttr, Mln••i Wells, W.V•.

ofllco.

73

t12&amp; . pc:. dinttt11 from 1109 .•
to 4315. 7pc. 1181 .,..d up. Wood
t1bl1 with Ilia ch.W. 1281 to
t741 . D111t 1110 14) to 1221.
Hutctt11, 115150 . Bunk bed DOm-

,,,

Rldeconted ~pt .. 2 bdr , •176
onty. Cell 304· 8715 -ei,04 or

hou11 tor ••II.
south of G•ll ipo·
C•ll d•y• &amp;14night• 8,4.448·

UI·0115.

homo

JACKSON ESTATE,S APART·
MENTS IEqutl Housing Opportunhy) monthty r1nt ltiMI •t
1 ~room
and 1200.
1212
to. 2 tor
bodroom,
d._it

46

197&amp; Fl11twood Ux70, tot1l
electric. 3 bdr .. 1 'h baths. ntw
urpet . wither-dryer , wood ·
burner. rang• • ref. CaM 814-

Schools
Instruction

'N' CARLYLE CiJbr lMry Wright

KIT

Sot• 1nd ~lirt prlc.d from
t2.8&amp;. to tB9&amp;. Tllbt ... tao ... d
up to 1125. Hldt·l ·bldl.l390.
1nd Ul) 10 1560., tof1 bedl
a Ull . Recllnen . 1228 . to
t37&amp; .. lamp• from 128. to

9783.

1-1100-828 -0752 .

Vacan~

15

22

Apartment
for Rent

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. "AT 315 .
PHONE fl4 -441 -7274.

¥••

AVON Call for Info rmation
about tellin g Avon productl,
eem up to 50% profit. Cstt
1514-446· 2166 .

Elsy Asumbty World •eoo .oo
p8r 100 Ouarant ..d P1ym~t .
No E"P•riance -No S•l• . Det••ls
send te4f -addrtuld sttmpld
env•lope: Et.., Vital -68-'7 3-118
Enterpri11 Ad., Ft. Pierce , Fl.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1978 81yvi1W 1.d5. uc .
cond. C•III514·:Z415· 58115.

Financi al

Elllp l o yn H~n l

Ser vtees

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

redltCOYtr your pi100 '1 . .IUtlful

6

Monday, March 10, 1986

(5) MOVIE: 'Strengo l.ody
In Town'
CIJ Barbour Report
1111 (!) Wild. Wild Woot
fl! CNN Headline Newo
1:05
1:30 CD Fothor Knowo Boot
(!) Outdoor Lifo
iil Newo
2:00 CD 700 Club
(!) Mazda SportoLook
1111 (IJ MOVIE: ' Night Must
Fell'

e

3:00

@ CBS News Nightwatch
IJ: MOVIE 'Boy From lnd&lt;·
ana ·

(!", Sp ortsCenter
dJ) Comedy Break
3:25 ffi MOVIE : 'The longest
Hu ndred M iles'

..

,

3:30 :]) Top Rank Boxing lrom
Atlan tic City, NJ

@ ' INN News
4:00 @) 7 MOVIE : 'The Bog
Hango ver ·

•I ~~ •

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 10, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport; Ohio

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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
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• ••
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Contains
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Monoxide.
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Conununtty Comer on Page 6

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Photo on Page 10

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enttne
Tornado-like winds rip across Ohio
e

Vol.35 , No.228

1 Sect ton . 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 11, 1986

Copyr;ghted 1986

By SANDRA L. lATIMER
By UnHed Press International
Killer lornadOl'S and high winds claimed tte lives of
al leas! lhree people In separale counlles as storms
r ipped across Ohio Monday.
A blustery, spring-like day lurned vicious as high
winds, heavy rains and hail caused ~avy damage in
several areas.
Winds were blamed for dealhs In Huron, Fayette
and Musklngum counties.
The National Weather Service said JXlSSible
tornadoes were reported in nine counties in t~ firs!
violent weather day of the season.
The hardesl ·hit area was across t~ Ohio River
from Cincinnali In northern Kentucky where high
winds ripped through the Greater Cincinnati Airport,
closing It for several hours and Injuring six air(Xlrt
control tower workers.
Authorities said the workers were treated at

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shower·

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hospitals for minor cuts and bruises.
Strong winds blew out tower windows and wrecked
several dozen small, private airplanes. Officials
estimate It will take. millions of dollars to repair
damage to three hangars.
Fayette County Sheriff's dispatcher Sue Rogers
said Jeff Coates, 34, was killed when a tornado
demolished his mobile home southwest of Washington
Court House.
Coates' son, Curt.is, 15, was in crilical condition
early today In Mount Carmel Medical Cenl er in
Columbus. Nurslng supervisor Mary Llnard said he
suffered an Injured vena brae and abrasions .
The State Highway Patrol said Coates' wife,
Melinda, 34. and their 5-year-old son. Mart ln. were in
Fayette Memorial Hospital early today in fair
condllion.
Officials said mobile homes about 100 yards away
from the Coates' home received only minor damage .

26 Centl

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

In east central Ohio, Muskingum County Sheriff
Bernie Gibson said high winds demolis~d !I'll mobile
homes in the county, killing Martha G. West, 64, of
Norwich and injuring her son, Richard West, 43. He
was In crlllcal condition early today at Be!tl'sda
Hospital in Zanesville.
Anolher possible tornado was re(Xlrted in Huron
Cou nty, where winds overturned a mobile home,
trapping Vickie Pocock, 16. She died of head lrauma
in Mansfield General Hospit al late Monday.
Huron County Sheriff' s Deputy Annette McLaugh·
lin said the winds deslroyed the Pocock 's mobile
oome In Olena, about six miles south of Nmwalk in
northern Ohio.
About five houses in !he Willard area were heavily
damaged and about five others sustained moderate
damage, McLaughlin said. No damage estimates
\\'ere available early today.
'l'h&lt;' wea Iher service said reports of ot tl' r possible

tornadoes came from MerC&lt;'r, Hardin, Sandusky,
Crawford, Franklin and Fairfield counties.
High winds were reported throughout the state,
with gust s of 66 mph at the Dayton international
Air!Xlrt belng the highest.
In Southwestern Ohio, hall the size of marbles was
reported at Harrison ln western Hamilton Coonty as
the storm enlered Ohio. As tha t storm moved
eastward, hail increased to golf ball size in Clermont
County, the National Weather Service said .
Scattered power outages. uprooted trees, roofs off
buildings, flattened farm and ootbuildings and
debris-covered highways were reported throughout
Ohio.
Temperatu!les were near the 70-degree mark ahead
of the cold front that ushered in the storm system. As
it passed, temperaturesplunged and •vereexj)I'Cted to
be In the 40s andoolow 50s today.

Jobless rate
skyrockets in
Meigs County
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The unemployment rate throughout southeastern Ohlo skyrocketed
between December and January,
according to a report released
today by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
All counties in the a!lea posled
jobless rates above 10 percent many reporting increases of several percentage points during the
one·month reporting period .
In Meigs County, the jobless rate
climbed 5.6 peiCPnt between [)('.
cember and January.
Meigs closed out 1985 with an
unemployment figure of 10.5 per-

Area jobless
rate in January
County

• • • • •
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• • •

...

Percentage

Athens ..................... 10.9 (9.3)
Ga!Ua ..................... 13.2 (10.1)
Jackson ............ ...... 14.3 (11.1)
Lawrence ........ ........ 12.0 ( 11.2)
Meigs ..................... 16.1 (10.5)
Vinton ..................... 16.9 ( 12.5)

• • • •

JOBLESS RATE - The unemployment rate throughout
southeastern Ohlo skyrocketed
hetwem December and January, ac:rordlng to a report
released tllday by the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Servl·
ces. All rountles In the area
posted jobless rales above 10
perrent - many reporting
Increases of several percentage
points. (December, 1985 rates In
parenthesis)

cent. In January, the county's
JXlSied jobless rale was 16.1
percent.
One year ago. the jobless rate In
Meigs stood at 10.4 percent .
The OBES reports 1,500 of the
county's work force of 9,200 as
jobless In the first month of this
year.
Gailla Coonty 's jobless rate
jumped 2.5 percent - from 10.7 to
13.2 percent-lnJanuary, 198i. The
jobless rate one year ago - In
J~nuary, 1985 - was 10.3 percent.
According to the OB ES, 1,700 of
Gallla County's estimated work
forced 12,700were witlnut work In
January.
Vinton Coonty, in (Xlstlng the
highest unemployment rate In the
lmmedta te area, registered a jobless rate of 16.9 pera&gt;nt In January
- up 4.4 percent from the
December posting of 12.5 percent.
Athens County, while continuing
to report t~ lowest rate in the
region, climbed into ·oouble-dlgits
betweEn December and January .
Unemployment there rose from 9.3
to 10.9 percent - up 1.6 pera&gt;nt during the p!'riod.
In Jackson Coonty, ttl' unem ployment rate rose 2.6 percent from 11.7 to 14.3 perceent.
Lawrence County's jobless rate
rose by eighl-lenlhs of one percent
- from 11.2 to 12 perC&lt;'n I bel ween December and January.
Statewide, the unemployment
rate rose fiv e-tenths of ooe percent
- from 8.5 to 9 percent.
Na tionally, the pbless rate held
steady at 6.7 percent during the
January reportlng period.

Depot renovation
plans discussed
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_ _ _ _ ___l_

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MENTHOL lOO's : 13 mg "lar".I .Omg mcoline,
FILTER 100's 17 mg "tar". 1.2mg nicotine, av.per cigarelle by FTC method.

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( 1181 111 .J AfY,.O LOS TOUCCO CO.

·e.oed on suggetted retsil price versus full·prlce brondo whh 200 clg~renn per carton, 20 per pock.

_ _ : ,_ _ _ _ - - -

·-

--~~ · ·

By CHARlENE HOEFtJCH
Sentinel staff writer
Preliminary plans for the renovation of the old depot at the Dave
Diles Park were outlined at Monday night's meeting of Middleport
Village Council
Phil Roberts, engineer WOI'king
with village council on the plans,
discussed t~ pro(Xlsed changes
and additions to the depot. II was
noted that two bathrooms and a
storage area wUI be put on one end
of !he building and that a stage
area,t 16 by 40 feetl will be
constructed. This wUJ be In addition
to the eight feet of current plat1onn
alrt'ady there.
As explained by Cou ncliman
Dewey Horton, who Is a clive on the
community commlllee for park
developmen t, tentative plans call
for th&lt;' platform to be topped wllh
;late to give the "look" of the old
loading platfonn.
Horton also reported that grading
Is sch!'duled to begin soon and that
the area toward the river will be
filled lo level the 228 by 140foot park
plot. The goa l, he said, Is to have the
park completed this summer,
August a t the latest when the
annual block party will be held.
1'111' councilman was compllmen·

tary to Roberts who has volunteered to take the plans and "hand
wal k them through Columbus."
Horton said the committee Is
working on fund raising and thai
donations arp coming ln.
Community affair
'"!be community Is Interested
enough to work on II and to pay for
It , and what we want Is to have t~
prettiest park on the river," he
commented. The park development Is being privately financed
with no tax money involved,
according to Horton. It is the
project of civic clubs, the recreation
committee, the Chamber of Com merce and Village Cou~ U .
Also involved In the development
Is I~ historical society which is
helping with decisions of au thentlclty. Even the (Xlwer company has
drawn plans and Is recommending
suitable llgtltlng. Horton said that
lantern type light fixtures Will be
used, that the playground and other
equipment wUI be ci the rustle type ,
all wood, that split raU i!nclng and
planters Will provide accent. Sod
will be removed from t~ dd brick
sidewalk which will be used just as
It ~. he said. ,
Horton also noted that the
(Continued otilpage 10)

Annual spelling bee
FINALLSTil - Sixteen Onallsts representing schools from the enthoe
county took part In the annual Meigs County SpeiUng Bee af Eastern
. High School Monday night. The roiliest lasted well over an hour with
Tom Kelly, guidance counselor at Eastern High, serving as pronouncer
and DIU Buckley, Eastern District; John Redovlan, Meigs District and
Bobby Ord, Southern, serving as jlldges. The Onallslll and t~ schools
they represented Included: l.GITe Olborne, Chester; Kenny Caldwell,
winner, Eastern Junior JUgh; Shen1 Wolf, runner-up, Riverview; Erica
Tackett, Tuppers Plains; Chrilly Wpver, Bradbury; Bobby Vance,
HarrisonvUie; Tammy Lambert, Melp Junior High; James Grueser,
Middleport; back, I to r, Rachael Roush, Pomeroy; Tammy Miller,
Rutland; Valerie Lynn Wilson, SaiW.!ry; Jodi HID, Letart; Joshua
Codner, Portland; Edddle Sawyers, Racine; Jom Barnes, Southern
Junior High; Amber Cumings, SyJ'IIalse,
At bottom right, winners of the annual bee receive their awards from
Meigs County Supl. of Schools John Riebel. Center Is Kenny Caldwell,
Eastern JWtlor High School eighth grader and son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Caldwell, Reedsville, who was named county champion. He
received a trophy, a tmvellng trophy lor his school and will represent
the county at the tri-state speUlng bee to be held In Huntington, W.Va.
On the left Is Shen1 Wolf, a sixth grader at the Riverview Elementary
School, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. '11m WoH, Long Bottom. As
runnerup she received a trophy and will serve as alternate to the
hi-(!l)unly event. Problems words for the lnal two· contestants were
~bltuary and occupation with Caldwell spellmg them both corTectly Ill
win the title. Meigs County Supervisors Russell Moore and Jom
eo.tanzo were In charge of the annual bee.

••'

Budget cuts could 'devastate' CAA
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
U President Reagan's pro(Xlsed
FY-1987 budgpt Is passed by
Congress wltbout major changes,
Executive Director Sidney Ed·
wards said it would "essentially
devastate" the Ga!Ua-Melgs Com·
munlty Action Agency and similar
agencies throughout the country.
ThP Gallla-MPigs. CM provides
gprvlces to many low income
residents in one of the more
economically depressed areas of
the state.
"The people on the street don't
understand the effect" the pro(Xlsed
budget would have on area servi-

ces, Edwards said. Reagan's
budget, termed "d£ad on arrival"
at Capilol Hill in Wa shington, D.C.
in January,calls fort he elimination
ofl4 1ow·lncomeprograms and will
reduc&lt;' another :Yl programs which
beneflt low-Income families.
In the Gallla -Melgs CM, Ed·
wards said COf9modlty dlstribu·
lions, weatherization programs,
food pantrys and transportation of
the elderly would be eliminated.
The Job Training Partnership Act
i.ITPA) program, which aids those
on welfare In gainlng employment,
and · housing rehabilitation programs would suffer severe cui·

backs, Edwards added .
Overall, at least 17 federal aid
programs, ranging from Aid to
Famllles with Dependent Children
to food stamps to housing assist·
ance and m!'dlcare and medicaid ,
affecting area residents Will go
through changes.
Programs scheduled for elimtnatlon Include the Appalachian Reglonal Commission; community
and regional development calegori·
cal programs, including rehab
loans, HUD l'E!ltal rehab grants and
Farmers Home Administration
(FHA 1 rural develop programs:
community services block grant

programs; Economic J)(&gt;,·riopmffit Administrat ion; g!'n~r;Ji r~venue sharing; loan programs
including FHA 1housing, farm
ownership ancl disas ter loans 1.
Rural E lectrification Administratlon and community dev~l opmen t
loan guarantws; rural de\'elop.
ment loans and grants: sewage
trealmPnl plant construction
grants iby l9!ll i; SmaU Bll, lni'Ss
Administration credit programs
and special milk programs.
Deep cuts will be absorbed by
agricultural ex ten sion sen1ces,
community development block
(Continued on page 101

Make-up days replace spring break at MeigS
The spring break for Meigs Local withoul makeup time required.
School District studPnts and However, all of the schools were
teachers practically did a disap· well over those five days.
pearlng act Monday night.
The board agreed to use all of the
Meeting in special session in spring break week with the excepMiddle(Xlrt last night, !be district's tlon of Good Friday as makeup
board of education took steps to days, and agreed to schedule as
alter tthe school calendar to cope Saturday parent·teacher confer·
with days on which schools have encewlthnoclassesoothatdaybut
been closed due to Inclement still with credit as another makeup
weather. 1'hestateallowsflvectavs vday. The remaining days will be

add!'d to the end of the year.
The high school, junior high ,
Salem Center, Salisbury and Mid·
dleport schools have seven makeup
days: Bradbury, Pomeroy and
Harrisonville schools havP eight
days to make up and Rutland has
nine days to make up. Into the
bargain, graduation date for the
high school ~Iars was changed
from June 1 tel June 8.

The board discussed problems
made by students and employes for
the spring break period and It was
decided If tr1ps and similar acttvl·
ties are planned and booked,
teachers can take the time being
docked rnonpy for the days oft and :
students can carry oul their plans ·
with excused absences.
·
In tbe positive atmosphere of ·
(Contlnuee on page 101
· :·

I

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