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                  <text>Wednesday, May 14, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Hitler's personal photo album surfaces

HrrLER ARTIFACJ'S- These old photographs, two second1ldltlon
copies of "Meln Kampf", unHonns, etc., dallng back to World War I,
were part of Adolf Hitler's personal property, Theartlfactsweresoldby
a fonner U.S. Anny private to the Seven Acres Antique Village and
Museum at Union, W. UPI.

Mason County..••
(Continued from page 1l
McCausland of Southside. Magiste·
rial District IV, Committee District
7; and Goldie Powell and Sheldon
Starkey, both of Glenwood. Magis terial District IV. Committe!' District S.
Elected to the Republican Executive Committe&lt;' were Audrey
Young and Dayton Raynes, both of
Mason, Magisterial District I,
Committee District 1; Brenda
Merritt of New Haven, Magisterial
District 1. Committee District 2;
Tina Cotton, Magisterial District II,
Committ ee District 3; Diane Buxton Buck and All~n Hart, both of
Leon. Magisterial District II, Commiltee District 4; and Jean Warner
and Randy Filkins, both of Point
.Pleasant , Magisterial District III,
Committee District 5.
Susie Krebs and Brian Billings,
both or Point Pleasant. Magisterial
District lll, Committee District 6;
Dolly Dodson of Southside and
Rocky Sturgeon of Gallipolis Ferry,
Magisterial District IV, Committee
District 7; and Carolyn Tolliver and
Leslie Wray. Magisterial District
IV. Committee District S.
Complete results of the races for
state executive committe were

Effort underway
for grave sites
Efforts are ~ing made by the
Racine Post 002. American Legton,
to locate the graws.of veterans In
Letart and Sutton Townships so
that Oags can be placed on the
graves for Memorial Day.
Those with informatiOn on the
graves of veterans. particularly
those which are not marked, are
asked to contact either Pete
Bearhs. 9!19-ll74, or Ed Turley.
9!19-lllO, evenings. Permanent
markers can also be secured
through the Legion Post. A special
project of lhe legion is tn see that
flag s Oy on the graves of all
veterans for the hoUday.

UNION. Ill. (UPI) - What
appears to be Adolf Hitler's personal photo album from World War
I has surfaced In a collectlo,n sent
home from Germany by a young
World War II Army private in 1945.
Technical testing requested by
United Press International and the
opiniOns of two University of
Chicago scholars tend to support
the authenticity of the album, taken
as a war trophy from Hitler's
Munich, Germany, headquarters
during the Allled advance at the end
of World War II.
The former G.I., who asked to be
Identified only as "Bill," told UP!
he found the album and two
second-edition copies of "Meln
Kampf"~ In a small, sparsely
furnished room Hitler used as a
study . "Nobody (else) had been
Interested" In the album, he said.
He granted an Interview on the
condition that his last name not be
made public to protect his privacy.
The red leather-hound album
contains 68 yellowed black-andwhite photographs. some depleting
war-decbnated areas around Belgium and the northern horder of
France. There are several pictures
of a young Cpl. Hitler posing with
members of his regiment of tlv' 16th
B!.varlan Reserve infantry.
Randy Donley, owner of the
Seven Acres Antique Vlllage &amp;
Museum In tbe tiny nortlv'rn Illinois
town of Union, acquired the collection last year and plans to display it
during tlv' Memorial Day weekend.
At UPJ's request, Samuel "Skip"
Palenlk IU, of Chicago's Walter C.
McCrone Associates Inc.. conducted microscopic tests on samples of a photograph , mat. album

pages. binding fibers and leaf
dividers. McCrone Associates is a
re~pect e d
forensic tes tl ng
laboratory.
"There were no inconsistencies In
the materials," said Palenlk, a
senior research microscopist and
forensic specialist. ·~Everything I
found was available and In use
during this time period."
The pictures were Inserted In the
album some time after they were
taken, as Indicated by the swastika

on the the
frontNazi
cover.
Hitler
helped
found
party,
with
the

bumed- out buUdlngs as mem~rs
of Hitler's Infantry regiment.
In one attempt at humor, a
picture of a smllingsoldler sitting In
a latrine bears the caption, "druckpunkt nellmen," which roughly
means opening a military attack at
a central location, or to apply
pressure points.
'
Bushy mu!tache
In another picture, Hitler. sport·
lng a larg&lt;', bushy mustache

MEN'S LEVI JEANS
$500 FF
NOW

0

·War on drugs .

Kindergarten classes ·

Repcn; on Page '7

Pholo8 on Pap12

'

'
L.
·---~-". . . _. __.

e
Vol .36, No .8

Sl 599 • Sl 799
REG. $20.99 to $22.99

AVE.

Ohio House approves
workmen's comp bill

IDDLEPORT OH .

1--------....:.._____.:,_________

UNLOADING- Beth Stivers, R.N., reviews vital
of a patient in Wednesday night's mock
disaster as members of the Tuppers Plains

statistlc!l

fORM -FITTING OO'OSABl£ CW'ERS

Emergency Unit wtload the tornado vlctbn at
Veterans Memorial Hosphal ..

Extra Absorbent
Medium 40's

Mayors end ca~s
Three persons fotfeited bonds
and one was lined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Edwin K.
Cleland, Middleport, UiO, driving
while intoxicated; John Ratliff,
Middleport, ~. driving without
regard for safety; and Larry
Grueser. Pomeroy, S50 assured
clear distance. Lore! ta L. Atldns,
Pomern~, was fined $10 and costs
on a char~ cl expired tags.
Danny Robson, Pomeroy, fotfeited a $213 bond on an assaut
char~. and Leonard
Koenig,
Pomeroy, a $43 bond on a stop sign
vio latiOn In the court of Mayor
Richard Seyler.

$11900

Now!

with ElasticWaist

tOUO

11

(do

Absorbency to
help stop leaking
even better.

Dt.. • .. '
1

,,....
'-• r•
,.. 1111&amp;••==·
.. _..._.,_
lUI ot t.t'ro filoll IIIIo.

l1

-------------

,(;'i Kimberty·a..tc

COBB
MIL-S!,

-T.III.

-- - --

;'-;:.~··

EXAM - Dr. Phll Robbins assisted by Cathy
Baldwin examine a tornado victim In the emergency
room of Veterans Memorial Hospital Wednesday

night foDowlng the annual mock disaster drUI staged
for emergency unit.s Md hospital staff rnemhers.

Mock disaster staged here
Four1('('n Meigs Counllans wrr~ injured and one
was killed when a tornado touched down in !;('Vera!
communities Wednesday evening.
This was thr scenario of the annual mock dtsastrr
staged in tnr county to givr rmrrgrncy unit s and rhc
staff at V!'terans Memoria l Hospit al a glimpse of
what the situation would be if such a disaster actually

..,,.,

....... (6141 991-6614

.... WM., fri. 1:30-UO
I '11M" I :)O. S:llt
lot, 1:31·1.00: !om. 1.00-loOO

f••·

Introducing ...

Nestea®
Ice·Teasen·™

Tea Teasin' with Real Fruit Juice

occurred.
The first ca ll in last night's disaster was received at
8: 29p.m. with the last victim arriving at tne hospita l
at 9;12 p.m. Thert' were 45 emergency personnel
taking part; some of them playing the roles of victims
and other functioning with I he slx emergency stations

which took part in the training session.
Bob Byer. director of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service, reported one emergency squad
worker participating In the exercise actually became
ltl and was trea ted at the hospitaL Four of the victims
a fter arriving at I he hospital were transferred to other
facilit ies. two by Llfeliight and two by ground units.
Dr. David Price. emergency medical director and
head of emergencies at the hospital. took a role as a
vlclbn during Wednesday night s mock disaster.
Byer termed thr training session as successful and
wrll done.

Governor, representatives
will attend dam conference
POINTPLEASANT ~ · OhloGov.
Hogsett.
Richard Celeste, lOth District U.S.
Leaders will discuss the need for
Rep. Clarence Miller and West planned Improvements at the dam.
Virginia Third District U.S. Rep. according to Philip Columbus,
Bob Wise will join Assistant manager of membership of
Secretary of the U.S. Army for Civil DINAMO-OVIA, a towtng Industry
Works Robert Dawson and state advocacy orga n!7a tlon hased in
official s from West Virginia, Ken - Plttsbumh.
Unless Congress acts otherwise.
tucky and Pennsylvania Friday for
the
ca nal plan toa tlevlateproblems
a 11 a.m. press conference at the
caused
by tlv' presen t smaU locks.
Gallipolis Locks and Dam In

BULLETIN BOARD

plans.
will take place in August.
Sentinel staff writer
Ted Warner. highway superlri County Engineer Phil Roberts
Seeding of approxbnately 11 reported that the Hobson railroad tendent, reported his department Is
acres of Meigs County road banks is crossing on County Rd. 21 will ~ presently Involved In dust control
expected to ~gin lat e this summer closed from Monday to Wednesday application. Warner said the east·
according to Bob First of the Meigs for Conrail to make repairs. ern portion of the county has been
County SoU Conservation Service. Ro~rts said he was told by a completed and the western portkln
That information was presented at Conratl representative that only the is nearly completed. The county
Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs timbers in the tracks will ~ department has also applied dust
Cou nty Commission.
repaired, not the approaches to the control for Letart Township.
Seventy-five percent of the seed- crossing.
Warner satd he expects other
ing Is being funded by the federal
Several weeks ago, commission- townships will request dust control
government through SCS. The ers were asked to sign a consent also.
remaining 25 percent is to be paid form to allow the railroad company
Dog Warden Andrea Batey rl'by the county.
to perform the repairs, however, quested a phone line at the anbnal
Total costs for the seeding has commissioners do not Intend to sign slv'lter and a parttime lv'lper to
been estimated at $26,400. or that the consent because they feel "the assist her two days a week In
amount. about $6,600represents the work order is not extensive enough euthanlzation of l ar~r anbnaLs.
county's share. of which, $1.8X) Is to to cover what needs to ~done.
The rommlssion said it would
be paid by Salem Township.
Some time ago, Conrail super· consider her requests.
Approximately two acres of road elevated the tracks at Hobson to
Batey also reported two anbnal
banks will be seeded along Salem accomodate high speed trains. In clabns. one which was denied
Township roads.
doing so, the crossing became because the claimant owned an
The 11 acres involved in the danggerous for vehicles. "They wtlicensed dog. and the otrer from
seeding will be reviewed annually created a hazard on our road and Bill Eskew, of Clelan d Hill Rd .,
for the nrst three years fol!o~~oing left the county Uableforaccident s," Dexter. Eskew's claim was for a
the initial planting. Written reports commented Commissioner Rich one-hour old Hereford calf. On the
wUI then be prepared and any Jones. " I think that's unfair,'' he recommendation of Commissioner
damaged areas will be reseeded added.
David Koblentz, the board apexplained First.
Ro~rts was not sure if the proved a $40 payment to Eskew.
First said he hopes the project board's refusal to sign the consent
At the recommendation of Steve
wtll be bid In July and that planting form -will effect Cmrail's repair
Continued on

constructed In tre mid·l9lls, wtll ~
authorized today. Plans are to
replace tJx&gt; present 600-foot main
lock and 360-foot auxiliary lock with
a 1,mfoot main facility and
tro- foot auxiliary to accommodate
larg&lt;'r barg&lt;' traffic.
Officials of the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers say construction, to be
done on the West Virginia side, will
not start untlll9SS.
DINAMO-OVIA sponsored a
meeting In Septem~r 19S1 at the
dam that brought together Gov.
Richard Thornburgh cl Pennsylvania and tlv'n-Govs. James A.
Rhodes of Ohio and Jay Rockefeller
cl West Virginia to demonstrate
solidarity from the 1 three states
· most affected bY barge traffic along
the Ohio River to get the proposed
· new locking system funded and
under construction.

It Pays
To Advertise
CALL '
992-2156

compensation, but no more than $1 million. ·
A $5 million fund for such awards would ~
established from assessments of employers.
Corbin said the Intentional tort modification was the
single most important feature of the bill.
"This etlm !nates double-dipping," he said. "It takes
care of alllnjurles sustained on the job, but it does so
wtthln the framework of the workers' compensation
system and not In the courts."
The legislation also provides for a system ct fines of
up to $25,txXJ fO( each safety viOlation by a oompany .
The money would go into a special fund for making
low-Interest loans to firms wishing to upgrade safety.
Under the blil, occupational diseases 'NOU!d ~
compensable, but not conditions brought about as a
resutt of aging or that require psychiatric treatment.
A provision was included to cover exposure by
police officers and firefighters to respiratory diseases
and ailments caused by stress and heat.
The blll provides for alternative methods of
premium payment for employers, and discounts for
good satety records.
11 also increas€5 maximum ~neflts for workers
sustaining the loss of a limb, eye, or similar organ.
But Milan Marsh, president of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
said "this is not compomise legislation, and for them
to say that is an outright lie. Labor had no input In
this," he said.
Marsh conceded the bill would probably clear the
Republican-controlled Senate. He said his next line of
defense will be wtth Democratic Gov. Richard F.
Celeste, who has pledged to sign whatever the
General Assembly sends him In the way of workers'
compensation reform.

By NANCY YOACHAM

and Added

PII

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Beneath the silent
glares of some 180 union mem~rs, the Ohio House of
Representatives Wednesday approved and sent to the
Senate a negotiated workers' compensatim reform
bill abned at pacifying business groups which claim
the existing system Is too expensive.
The measure, which llmtts lawsuits for Injuries or
illnesses covered by workers' compensation and
imposes penaltieS for corporate safety violations,
cleared on a 74-22 vote after just 15 minutes of debate.
Senate President Paul E. Glllmor, RPort Clinton,
said the bill, negotiated over the last four rronths by
lahor-and business-oriented lawmakers, will proba·
bly reach the Senate noor Thursday.
Thirty-five Democrats, Including 94th House Rep.
Jolynn Boster, were joined by 39 Republicans In
supporting the bill, which denies workers' compensation to prisoners and to employees whose condition
wa s caused by abuse of drugs or alcohol.
"Workers' compensation is a hlghiy -emot!onal
issue," said Rep. Clifton Skeen, D-Akron, a fanner
labor negotiator who found himself in the tough
position of sponsoring legislation opposed by
organized lahor.
The bill defines an intentional tort- negligence on
the part of an employer deliberately calculated to
inju rl' an employee- andestablishesa procedure for
settling claims.
The Injured worker. while coilectlng workers'
compensation, would be able to bring a lawsuit in the
loca l county coun. A judge, not a jury , would
determine il the wrong was Intentional, and the Ohio
Industrial Comm ission would set the damage award.
The award wouid' be between 50 percent and :;m
percent the compensable a mount unrler workers'

Meigs seeding project
to begin this Summer

OWN A CHEVY S-1 0

FOI AS LOW IS

2 Sections, 16 Pages 26 Centl
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 15, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Plan free clinics
Free blood pressure clinics wm
be held Wednesday, May 14, and
Wednesay, May 28 from 8: .'ll to 11
a.m. and 12 tok 2:30 p.m. at the
Meigs County Health Department
In the Meigs Multi-Purpose Build·
lng, Muklberry Heights. May Is
National High Blood Pressure
Month and the clinics are being held
to emphasize the bnportance of
blood pressure controL

show

PhotoiJ on Papll

Village funds total $352,493

Showers and thunderstorms likoly today, wtth possible severe
storms and highs in the upper 70s. Showers and thunderstorms likely
again tonight and Thursday, with a low tonight In tlv' tow 60s and
highs Thu rsday near 8J.
Eldended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance or showers Friday and Saturday, with fair weather
Sunday. Highs will range from 75to 85 Friday and Saturday, falling
to between 65 and 75 Sunday. Overnight lows generally wUI be In the
50s.

'I"

Pace .a

PRICES GOOD THIU SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1986
11-------------....:,
___. .;,.___-1

unavailable. In Mason County,
however, leaders were Pa t White
and Debbie Phillips, and Bill Leport
All Middleport Village funds as of deficit; sanitary sewer escrow, no
and Charlie Damron for the April .'ll totaled $352,493.78, Village receipts, $3,500, $113,217.29; fire
Democrats, and Norma Jean Cope Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports. house bnprovement, $5.16, no disand Mary Henderson, and RG.
The receipts and expenditures bursements, $'41,506.96; water tank,
Greene and Roger Fisher for the during the month from e¥h fund no receipts, no disbursements,
Republicans.
and the month end balan~ of each, $130,977.58; water. $8,945.65,
On the Democratic ticket, Albert
respectively, include:
$9.270.79, $17,350.95; san itary
"Marty" Gilley bested Gregory
General: $10,732.44, $15,710.50, sewer, $6,779.53, $6.538 .63 ,
Barker in the race for Congres- $12,032.24; street maint enance: $28,216.51 ; swimming pool, no
sional Executive Committee in the $3.790.91, $5,1ll9.98, $1,588.81; fed· receipts, $18.65; $1,550.50; ceme3rd District and Senatorial Execu- era! revenue sharing, $4,362, tery, $1,034.57, $1,443.50, $392.38
tive Committee In the 4th District. $517""
., 812 .38 ; st ree t 1Jg
· ht , no deficit; water meter trusts, $315,
.uo, ...,,
Rog&lt;'r Hughart won over Gilley and receipts, $1,577.1ll, $2,367,87, deficit; $454.85, $11,&amp;16.~; 1. cont .. no
Barker for Delegate Executive street levy, no receipts,nodlsbll rse- receipts, no disbursements. $102.10
Committee in the 12th District.
ments, $2,343.56; fire equipment. no deficit; economic devel. : $1,100,
On the Republican ticket. P.E. receipts, $735.58, $39.1li deficit; fire $7,349.W, $7,006.49.
Receipts for the rronth totaled
"Red" McDermitt was unopposed truck, no receipts, no disbursefor Senatorial Executive Commit- ments, $7,466.91; public transporta - $41,921.15 while disbursements dur·
tee, 4th District. and Brenda Shirley tlon, $4,!!55.89, $5,460.53, $6,001.~ ing April arrounted to $57,6a;.8J.
was unopposed for IA&gt;Iegate Execu- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l
tive Comm ittee. 12th District.
r
All wte totals are unofficial until
the ballots are canvassed and the
results of the election certilied by
the Mason County Commission.

Weather forecast

The Stylettes Twirl inc Corps isaccoptin&amp; ""' students,
thr01 throu&amp;h
six yeats old. for spt1n1 baton twlrlin&amp;
&amp; pompon ' '"' " to be held each
Thursday at Rutland Civic Center.
Instructor. Peggy Gillespie
Re,ister It Rutland Civic Center on
Thursdavs 1fter 4:00P.M.

l'hoto, story Qll

r;~;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;~;;~~;;;;~~

broken-cross
swastika
symbol, In 19:ll after
the endasofItsWWJ.
One picture shows Hitler standIng among
a group
eight men,
some
with their
headsofbandaged.
A spotted dog, Identified as
Hitler's dog "Fuchs!" or "Foxy" bY
author John Toland In his book,
"Adolf Hitler," Is in several pic·
tures m the laps of various men and
In one sitting next to QJL Hitler.
All the photographs ~ave typed
captions underneath, many ~arlng the words "Graben-RJR-16,"
Identifying the men posed In
trenches and In front of rubble and

InStead of the familiar small
upper-Up brush, stands In front of a
burned-out wilding. The }icture Is
captioned "Foumes," German for
what ls .now Veume, Belgium.
1\vo history scholars from the
University of Chicago examined
the pictures In · Union at UPI's
request They said the pictures
appeared at least to ~ aut~ntic
records of Hitler's regbnent durtng
WWI.

Varie~

.Preakness .preview ·

TO THE DEALER: '1\Ju will be re1mtlurselllor
,:: thf loce value ol!hiS coul!(ln olus ae. rt sub·
~

S

mmoo in compriante wtth ~esu&amp; Foo!ls corJ)OI~IIOII R~demphCin Po~ty Incorpora ted

l'lefrrnby reference Good on~ 111 US A Consumer must pay Sales Ta• Votr:l where 1
Pro!'llbtl!dflmdiReslrtC1etl Casn Value
111~ FORRECEMPTION, MAIL TO·NESTLE

FOODS CORPORATION. PO BOX 2034()

EL PASO. TEXAS 71J99B.

Gov. Richard Celesie

Rep. Clarence Miller

......... -..' '

The Corps of Engineers' Huntington District completed a four-year
st udy on locks replacement In 198J
and submitted the }ian to Congress
more than a year later. Authortza·
tlon legislation was approved by
Congress In the last hours of Its
summer 1985 session and area
lawmakers are C!Jtlmistlc the
project will continue to be funded.

'l1le lliCh auilaJ
INentalionai ChlckM l'lylnl; Meet w0J be held
Saturday at Bob Evans Fllml8 near Rio Grande.
CHICKEN FLYING MEET -

llarayllid avilton will be trying to break lhe record
rl D feet, ellflllnches lhat has stood since 1919. (FOe
pholo).

�Thursday, May 15, 1986

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
,Thut'lday, May 16, 1986

Monkey business -----~J_am-:-e_s1-·_K'-=-·tpa_t_ric_k

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTER&amp;'lTS OF TH E MEIGS· MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER

of The Untroo Press Inrernattonal. Inland Dally Press Assocla·

lion a nd !he- American Newspaper Publis hers AsSociation.

LETTERS OF OP INION are welcome. They should be les~ than m words
long. Allletrers are subject to editing an d must be stgned with name, address and
re-lephone number. No un signed letters will be published. Lf'tters should be !n
good taste. addresstng !ssul'S, not JX'rsonalltlcs.

WASHINGTON - You would
have to travel a long way to find an
uglier or more depressing story
than Ute story of the 15 monkeys of
Silver Spring, Md. The primates
are now living out what is left of
their tormented lives in cagesatthe
National Institute of Health. The
government's conduct in the easels
both appalling and Indefensible.
The story goes back at least to
1981, when a 23·year-old student at
George Washington University,
Alex Pacheco, spent four montlts
working undercover as a voiuntrer
at Ute Institute for Behavbral
Research In suburban Maryland.
The Institute's main purpose was to
conduct research of potential value

to victims of stroke. Dr. Edward
Taub served as principal investtga·
tor. His work was financed by
grants from the National Institutes
of Health.
No one who has suffered a stroke,
or !mown victims of stroke. woold
minimize Taub's purpose. He was
seeking means to help such victims
rehabilitate themselves. At Ute
time young Pacheco went to work,
Taub had been conducting animal
experiments under NIH grants br
eight years. He believes Utat his
findings have resulted In Important
gains In Ute field.
When Utat has been said, Ute best
has been said. As part of his
research, Taub experimented with

ByDICKW»&gt;T
WASHINGTON IUPI ) - The Senate, which is experimenting wlth
closed circuit television Utis roonth, will begin "live" public telecasts of its
,
sessions on a trial basis In June.
Viewers who have grown accustomed to watching the comparatively
disciplined House proceedings should bear In mind that the Senate
operates under its own rules.
Although Utere has been no move In either chamber to refer to public
galleries as Ute "studio audience," tllm&gt; situations in particular may need
clarification when the "Cave of the Winds" is at work . One is the !l'esiding
officer.
Unlike the Hou se, where the Speaker usually presides. the head r:i the
Senate Is the vice president. Constitutionally, presiding over Ute Senate Is
the veep's only duty. Nevertheless, he rarely shows up. Therefore, you
likely will see the gavel being wielded by a designated presider.
Another eccentricity is the "rooming hour." A viewer who accidentally,
or mistakenly, runes In the Senate should be warned that "morning hour"
oratory may break out at any time of the day or night .
Furthermore, the "morning hour" seldom runs precisely 60 minutes.
These things happen even when viewers rune in deliberately.
Anotlter Senate inst itution that may warrant a word of explanation is the
quorum call.
During quorum calls. at least during Ute cloS€d circuit shake-out, the
words "The Senate is conducting a Quorum Call" appear on the screen.
This message should not be confused with a test paltern. Chances are there
Is nothing wrong with your set. Therefore, no adjustment is necessary.
H you listen attentively , you may hear a clerk calling the roil . But don't
be alarmed if the I'M&gt; senators from yoor state don't answer. It doesn't
necessarily mean Utey are sick, or injured or anything untoward .
Their derelection probably just means they have better ways to spend
their lime than answering Senate quorum calls.
The rules l'l'qulre that roore than half the members (approximately 51 )
be present when the Senate Is conducting business.
The majority leader. one of whose attributes Is Ute a billty to rount noses.
may notice a majority isn't present. So he "suggests the absence ot a
quorum."
More likely, however. Ute majority leader has promised to summon a
senator to the floor In this manner for a spot of oratory.
Or perhapHhe majority leader simply needs to stall for a few minutes.
Either way. Ute home viewer will be deprived of the excitement d seeing
whether Ute Senate can muster a quorum. Consequently, don't Invite a few
friends to drop In to watch a "Great All·Time Quorum Calls" special.
Also bear In mind that "Hnal passage" may be routine. The crucial vote
may have come eariil'r on a motion to lay on Ute table the rootlon to
reconsider Ute vote by which tbe motion to lay of the table the motion to
pl'O&lt;Et'd to consideration of the bill was rejected.
Imagine what keeping up wlth tre parUamentary situation can do at
show·and·teli time next fall.

Berry's World

&lt;

1~~~

~

.........

~Y~v'fu1

' .

Plowing into the Amazon
WASHINGTON - Overpaid, un·
derworked officials In Washington,
sitting In their plush offices almost
totally out of touch wlth the real
world, are often tempted to Utrow
millions of dollars at a problem
despite tre urgent, knowledgeable
warnings of underlings that open·
handed spendings may create more
misery Utan it cures.
That's pri&gt;ny much what's hap·
pened wlth the extravagant, lll·
conceived development pian called
Polonoroeste. It was suppused to
bring progress and development to
Rondonia. which is not a tiny
European kingdom but a West
. German·slzed state in the far
rorlhwest of Brazil.
As Ute home of the vast,
ecotoglcally fragile Amazon rain
forest. Rondonia is about as far
removed 'from tre carpeted, air·
conditioned offices of World Bank
poohbahs as It Is possible to get
without a rocketshlp. And Ute
disastrous outcome of the Polono·
roeste project st.Jws it.

evidence shows open wounds lndlf·
ferently bandaged. Pacheco has
testified vividly of the animals'
self·mutliatlon. One monkey
named BUiy chewed ott eight of his
10 fingers. Another monkey, Paul,
tore df the five fingers of ooe hand.
The laboratory conditiOns, ac·
cording to Pacheco's testimony,
were at nightmare levels. Cages
were Infrequently cleaned. 11 a
caretaker faDed to show up, Ute
monkeys could go two or three days
without food. The place was
overrun with cockroaches and ruth.
Some medications were two years
rut of date.
On the basis of Pacheco's evl·
dence, Montgomery County police
raided Taub's institute In September 1981. Tljey seized 17 SUMV·
lng monkeys and charged Taub
with violating Maryland's law
against cruelty to animals. The
anlnoals, 15 of which are still alive,
were sent under court order to an
•
NIH facUlty at Poolesville, Md.
;r Taub was convicted on six counts,
rut Ute Maryland Court of Appeals
reversed . It was held Uta! federal
rules pre-empted state law. A civil
action still is pending.
Almost five years later, Ute
monkeys remain In Utelr cages at
Poolesville. The Nlll We5 not want
them. Last October, Nlli spokes·
man WOllam F. Raub saki that "We
,1'· wish to dlsconUnue oor (emporary
,,
" eustoeyo!tt.&gt;Nllimonkeysassoon
as possible." Taub's Institute does ·
rot want !rem. Joseph Vasapoll,
chief executive officer of the
institute, said last September Utat
In the absence of continued Nlli
funding, "Dr. Taub will not con·
Unue to pursue this research effort,
and wlll not l'l'quire further use of
the pimates."
A humane organization known as
PETA (People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals) does want
them. PETA has arranged for
Primarily Primates Inc., an
animal sanctuary near San Antonio , Texas, to take Ute anlnoals.

highly Intelligent and socially ac·
tlve macaques. These monkeys
were subjected to surgery that In
some Instances severed their spinal
columns. The Idea was to destroy
their neural sensations. Some
day·old monkeys had their eyes
sewn shut. Arms and legs routinely
were crippled. The animals were
subjected to various ·forms of
torment to determine If they could
be taught to regenerate their
Impaired llmoo and organs.
The monkeys went through hell.
Though Taub has sald that "there is
no pain In Utese experiments," no
ooe who has seen Pacheco's
photographs oc heard his testimony
Is likely to be so persuaded. The

The Lighter Side

Rules to keep you
glued to the set

Dawson's one man
show defeats Braves

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

-Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear

Most of the World Bank's SOOO their famUies, pitifully overbur·
mUllan contribution to Polonoroeste dened realth services and rampant
-one-fifth of wWch Is guarantl!'d violence. There have been reports
by U.S. taxpayers- hasgonelnto a d enslavement and the disappear·
paved highway through the heart ri. ance of entire famUies.
Staff specialists at Ute World
Rondonia. According to environmental experts and others famUiar Bank warned that a di, aster was In
with the project, this was a badly the making, rut Ute i~J&gt; dvice was
misplaced priority. It opened up unheeded by top officials.
"Most of Ute soils are lnfertUe In
huge areas to a headlong rush by
BrazU's landless poor, who were their present state, all the nutrients
lured on by government propa· being lOCked In Ute growing i:lrest
ganda promising fertile farmland and decaying litter," explained one
Internal report. "After clearing and
for limitless numbers of settlers.
The reality the poverty·strlcken burning, these nutrients are repioneers encountered was a cruel leased, but the solls do rot have lhe
disappointment. Most of the rain peyslcal and chemical capability to
forest land is hopelessly lnfertlle. retain Utem."
But the composition of soU was
unsuited even to subsistence farm·
lng. Most of the little arable land too grubby a subject for tre high
was already held by tar~ private muckamucks In their gilded oftlces.
owners, who wanted cheap help, not World Bank officials told our
competitive yeomen.
~~~te Donald Goldberg that
So, unlike the sod·busters who there are areas of "exceptionally
followed their dreams into the good soils" In the rain forest Utat
Great Plains of the United States a could sustain such tree crops as
century ago, the Brazllfan settlers coffee. Outside critics and the
found land that couldn't suppon bank's staff experts strongly

disagree.
"The suggestion ... that tree crops
are capable of providing a suslalna·
bie production system for a fairly
lar~ proportion of Ute area does
not accord wtth reservations ex·
Jl'essed by research workers In
BrazU," one Internal report stated.
"The soils of the Amazon area as
a wbole are .generally poor,"
another report stated.
"Th use unproven technologies as
a basts for agricultural settlement
under extremely adverse soil rondl·
tlons would be a highly risky
undertaking and would prove disas·
trous for tre settlers themselves,"
warned an early stall memo.
But tre warnings were Ignored
and the World Bank encouraged the
BrazUian land rush. Desperate
settlers keep clearcutUng and
burning, destroying an lrreplacea·
bie environment In Ute vain bope of
finding land worth !arming. The
disaster the experts warned about
grows worse by the day.

We won't go __________A_rt_B_uc_hUXJ_ld

By FRED McMANE
UPJ Sports Writer
Imagine If Andre Dawson had
two good knees. It probably
wouldn '.t be fair for lhe rest of the
National League
All hough his left knee sometimes
aches so badly ·he has lo have It
drained of fluid to ease the pain,
Dawson remains one of baseball's
most gifted performers.
He excels in every phase of the
game, which he proved again
Wednesday night by leading tht•
Expos lo a ~·2 victory over the
At lanta Braves.
Daw !&lt;ln homered, stole home.
and threw out two runners on the
basepat hs to help the Expos to the
lOth victory In their last ll games.
"That was my most satisfying
game of this season" . said the
Expos right fielder. who is in his
option year and can become a free
agent afler this season. ''I'm happy
I was Involved in lots of plays that
made a dilfermce in this game.''
Daw!&lt;ln 's heroics left Atlanta
m a n ager Chuc k Tanner
flabbergasted.
"All we saw out there was Andre
Dawson," said Tanner. "He put on
qu lle a show. He threw two of my
men out. and made a heck of catch,
But we had our chances in the nint h.
and I was SUT'(I we would come

back".
The Expos used their speed to get
two runs in the first inning off Iosc·r
7..ane Smith. :n
With two out. Dawson walked and

Today in history

1894:

"No, I mean Ute terrorists who
have been trying to drive ali the
Americans out of Europe. Your job
Is to show them you are not afraid.''
"Why do you say (llal) 'your'
(unital) job Instead of (Ita! ) 'our'
(unital) job?"
"Since I wasn't planning to go In
the first place, I have no reason to
cancel. The way I see it Ute
American tourist who was planning
to go to Europe shouldstUlgo, lffor
no ott-er reason Utan to show the
F1ag -like In the song, 'Over there,
wer Utere, send the word, send tre
word we'll be there.' "
"It's easy for you to say (I tal) we
(unital) should go because we're
the ones who have to take Ute
fallout. You know why I'm rot going
to Europe?" White said. "Not
because of ten-ortsts or nuclear
accidents, bOJ t because the dollar
has bst a illird of Its value and you
can't get bargains anymore. I can
handle a nuke accident and terror·
Ism, but I fall apart when I can't get
a decent rate for my traveler's
checks."

John Haskell, who has always
been a travel name-dropper said,
"Let me tell you Ute places we're
rot going this year: the Villa D'Este
In Italy, the Palace In St. Moritz, Ute
Grand Hotel du Cap oo the Riviera,
the Ritz In Madrld and Claridge's In
U&gt;ndon. Now let me tell you the
restaurants we cancelled.''
"Enough, Haskell. You don't
have the money to stay at any 'of
those hotels. You don't even have
the money to cancel them. There Is
nothing worse than a tourist who
says he's not going somewhere he
never Intended to go to In the first
place."
He replled, "It's the truth - so
help me. I could never live wtth
myself If I lied about cancelling the

Ritz Hotel in Madrid. I bave to look
at myself In the mirror every
morning."

"There is too much defeatist talk
at this party. "I sald. "The Russians
are laughing In Kiev at our panic.
The terrorists are gloaUng In Libya
and taxi drives from Dublin to
Budapest are sla~hlng their wrists
because Americans are cancelling
their trips. Are we going to spend
the EJI!ire summer sitUng around In

wlcker chairs teUng each other
where we dldn 't go Utis summer?"
"I am," slad Sumteen. "But It
won't be .dull because I have Ute
slides from my previous trip to
show everybody."
• Yru can buy anything tram
Europe at Bloomingdale's," Mrs.
Haskell said.
"Besides," Trinkle added. "all
the European artwork worth seeing
winds up at the National Gallery
anyway ."

despite Jackson's long blast
ByMIKETUUY
UP! National Baseball Writer
If Reggie Jackson had done lo
Roger Clemens what he did to the
ball - knock it out- things might
have go nP better for the California
Angels.
Instead, the ball left the park. but
Oemens remained. a nd pit ched the
Boston Red Sox to an 8-5 victOIJ'
over the Angels.
Jackson hit hi s seventh homer of
the season and 537th of his career,
moving hlno ahead of Mickey
Mantle int o sixt h place on the
a!Hinoe list. Clemens, howf'Ver.
surv ived the firs t·in ning shol , and
raised his record 10 &amp;-0.
Jackson pasS&lt;'d Mantle. the
original "taJ)('-mcasun:• homrr"
slugger, with a towering sho l to
center field .
"lf you'rt' gonna ' go by a Mantle
and end up with o.1'i home runs.
that's Ihe wa)· you wantlo hit a ball
to be remembered." Ja ckson said.
Ahead of lhe soon·tcrlx' 40·
year·old Jackson al No. ois former
Mi nnesota slu gger Harmon Kille·
brr w at

~7.3.

Dwighl Evans OfX'ned the Boslon
ninth with a wa lk. and Wade Boggs
followed with a s ingle for his third
hit of the game. Bill Buckner.

batting .192 at the time. singled
,home lhe go-a head run . Boggs
srol'{'(i on Jim Rice's double. Dave
Siapleton singi&lt;'!l homr the third
mn.

Ci&lt;'mens, 6·0, wa lked five, hit a
batter. and unecrkE'&lt;l three wild
pitches. He scatter('(! six hit s over
Pigh t innings, JO!' Samb ito pitched
thr ninth for his four1h save. Rookle
relirver T.R. Rf)·den. 2· 1, took the
loss.
The Angels had their four· game
winning streak snapped.
ln other games. Oakland blasted
Toronto 94 , Mllwau kPe downed
Sea n ie 9·6, Detroit tipped Texas 8-2,
B&lt;tltlmore routed Min nesota 8·3.
Chicago shaded New York J.2, and
Kansas City blanked CI&lt;"Veiand 5.0.
,\ 's 9, Blue Jays 4
At Oakland. Toronto right ·
han der Dave Stieb. the ALleader in
ERA las I year, surrendered lhrce
hom(' ru ns in thr Sf'\' f'nth and

dropf.('d his fifth straight game.
Rookie Jose Canseco tipped a
two-1un homer. and Dilve KingmHn

and Mike Davis added solo shols.
Curt Young, 1·0, was the winn&lt;•r.
Brewers 9, Mariners 6

At Scall le. Charlie Moorr scored
thrCY' runs and drovP in two 10 IC'ad

Milwaukee. Dan Plesac. 2·1,
pitched 41·3 innings d shutoul relief
to pick up the victory after
replacing Juan Nieves with two
outs In the flfi h and the Brewers
leading 9-6.
Tigers 8, Rangers 2
At Detro it, Walt Terrell , with
oomerun suppon from Chet
Lemon, Lana:• Parrish and Darrell
Evans, threw a five· hiller for the
Tigers. Terrell , 4· 1, blanked Texas
on t"''D hils over e1ght innings befot'E'
trey collected three hits In thr ninlh
and scored two runs. Bobby Will
fell to 2·2.
Orioles 8, Twins 3
AI Baltlnoore, F1oyd Rayford
ignited a seven·run seventh with a ·
two· run ·double. and Fred Lynn
capped it with a three·run homer to
power the Orioles to their fifth
straight victory. Ken Dixon, 4·2,
was the winner. Minnesota's Roy
Smalley hit two solo homers. and
Kirby Puckett added his 13th homer
of the year.
WhHe Sox 3, YMkees 2
At New York , Ozzie Gu illen's
]WO·OUI, two· run ltiple highlighted a
lhre&lt;'-run ninlh that rallied the
White Sox. Reliever Joel McKeon,
2·0. was the winner. Brian Fisher,
1·2, took lhe loss.

Royals defeat Indians, 5-0
KANSAS CITY. Mo. 1UPI 1 Grorge Brett figutl:'d It wou ld be
another lost nigh I in what so far has
ThP Kansas City Royals' third
baseman, however. brokp out of a
six·week slump with a Uor·3 nighl
&lt;tnd druw in lhrf'!' runs Wednesday
night to help beat thp Cleveland
indians 5·0 and give Mark Gubicza

-===========;1

r-

The Daily Senlinel
1!-" rs f.! 'f. !Iilii 1
A 1)1\·bolfln

Multlnwdln. lnl' .

11f

Publl s l u~l ••vt•n
rhrou~h Fri(lav.

Berry's World

Dawoon belted his eighth homer
of the season In the eighth for what
proved to be the winning run.
The Braves gol a run back in the
second on singles by Terry Harper,
Ken Oberkfell and Glenn Hubbard,
and would have had more If not for
Dawson's strong arm. Smith hit a
single to right field, rut Dawson
made a fine throw to the platetoget
Oberkfell, who was trying to score
from second.
In the fUth , Dawson made a
strong Utrow tu 1bird to nail O'aie
Virgil, who was attempting to
advance from second on a fl yout to
right.
Atlanta scored a run in the ninth
on a walk to Oberkfeil and singles
by Andres Thomas and Ted
Simmons. The Braves loaded the
bases with one out, but Reardon
retired CiaudeU Washington and
Rafael Ramir£2 on pop·ups to end
the game.
Elsewhere in the NL. Houston
whippc'!l New York 6-2, U&gt;s Angeles
topped Sl. U&gt;uis 8-3, San Francisco
routed Chicago 11·3, Philadelphia
turned back Cincinnati 8-6, Mont·
rea l nipped Atlanta 3·2 and San
Diego trounced Pittsburgh 10-4.
Aslros 6, Mets 2
AI Houston, Bob Kn epper lx'·

came the major leagues' first
seven·game winner wlth a fivehitter in the Astros' victory.
Knepper, 7·1, walked one and
struck rut five In his third romplete
game of the year. Bob Oj('da, 5'1,
was the loser. Dodgers 8, Cardinals
3
At St. Louis, Steve Sax drove In
three runs wlth three hits, and
Mariano Duncan scored three
tlnoes to lead the Dodgers to
victory. Fernando Valenzuela, 5·2,
survived a shaky first Inning to go
eight·plus Innings. He gave up five
hits, struck out nine, and walked
five. He also had three wlld pitches,
but helped hlnnself at the plate with
two singles.
GIMts 11, Cubs 3
At Chicago, Jeff Leonard and
Dan Gladden hit tltree·run homers
to spark the Giants, who had 16 Wts,
scored three runs In Ute third and
six more In the sixth to give starter
Mike LaCoss a 9-2 lead. LaCoss
improved to 4·0, giving up seven
hits and two walks over 5 1·3
innings.
Padres 10, Pirates 4
At Pittsburgh, Steve Garvey and
Bruce Bochy hit home runs, and
Kevin McReynolds knocked in·
three runs with a pair of doubles to
lead the Padres. The home runs
helped the Padres build a ;.z lead,
and after Sid Bream's two·run
homer pulled the Pirates to 54 in
the eighth, San Diego erupted for
five runs In the ninth to sea l Ute
triumph.

Clemens hangs on for win

bc('n a los1 Sf'ason.

This Is the best year we've had for
rot going to Europe In a long, long
lime.
It's even better for those who
weren't going there in the first
place. The reason Is It is now very
chic to say you're staying home.
L'ast Sunday I overheard tre
following comments at a party.
"Gloria and I have cancelled rur
plans to go to Venice because of
terrorism," Sherman said.
Davldov said, "We cancelled all
of Scandinavia because of Ute
Soviet fallout. Too bad, because we
could have met up with each
ottEr."
"I think terrorism Is a bener
excuse not to go to Europe," Clinton
piped up. "You never know where
" To Austria. to Waldheim and to 'RESUME
It's
going to strike next."
ENHANCEMENT."'
Lincoln told us, "We have a better
reason than eltrer terrorism or
fallout. We're not going because of
the French. When they would notlet
our fighter planes fly over France I
said to Myra, ''Plat does it. Scratch
Today Is Thur.iday. May 15, Ute !35th day of l9S6 with 230 to follow.
Paris and the Riviera .too .' "
The moon Is moving toward Its first quarter .
Arch Trinkle said, "We're oot
The morning stars are Mercury. Mars. J upiter and Saturn.
going because rur ch lldren begged
The evening star Is Venus.
us not to go. They said they wooldn 't
Those born on Utls date are under Ute sign of Taurus. They Include be able to enjoy their summer If
English author Edward Bulwer·Lytton ("The Last Days of PompeU") In
they knew we were touring abroad .
JLn1· French chemist Pierre Curie In 1800; autltor Katrerlne Ann Porter In Ordinarlly we don't let rurchildrm
Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley In 1002; actors JoSEPh Cotten In l905 tell us what to do, but we made an
(age 81). Tyrone Power In 1914, and James Mason In 1909, and actress exception for this trip to Europe."
Anna Marla Alberghettlln $ (age 50) .
Sumteem was holding a hot dog
On Utls date in history:
In his hand. "I wasn't going this
In Jll62, Congress created the Department of Agriculture.
year because everyone else ~as .
In 1918, the first regular air maD service was established between Now Utat ro ooe's going I'm telling
Washington, PhUadelphia and New York.
everybody I cancelled because I
In 1962, Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper was launched Into space atop didn't want to be over there alone."
an Atlas rocket and completed 22 orbits of the earth.
I tried to bring some sense to the
In 1001, Justice Abe Fortas, under Dre for an admitted lifetime .money discussion. "H you don't 11/), the
deal with jaDed financier Louis Wolfson, resigned tram Ire SuiFemeCoort.
other side wlll feel trey have won
In 1972, Alabama Gov.' George Wallace was shOt and crippled at a . Ute battle."
presidential campaign rally In Laurel, Md.
"You mean tre Russians who let
A thOUghl for Ute day: Novelist Edward Bulwer·Lytton began ooe of his
their nuclear plant melt down
OUtiide Kiev?"
stories with the words, "It was a dark and siQJ'{IlY nl&amp;ht ... "

moved to third on a single by Huble
Brooks. The Expos worked a
successfu l double stea l, with Daw·
son scoring and Brooks taking
second. Tim Wallach then doubled
home Brooks.

ai!Nn•~)n. M o nd : • ~·

Ill C'ourt S1 . Pn
mf'rm·. Ohl u, bv t tw Oh ln V:d iPy Pull·
ll!&gt;h ln.,g Company Mul!!mPdla . ln t·..
P o mN o~ ·. Uhlo ~ r. ;ti,, Ph . !*'2·21 :&gt;t1. SP·
L'o nd dd s .~ p o.~rn~P paid at Po mNoy.

Ohio.
Mf'mb~ · r · Unlwd

Inland

Uall ~

Pr(&gt;S' l n1Nna1 1on it l.

Pl'l'SS

A ssod;~ t i on

and

tht~

Oh io N!·w ~PapPr A 'iS O('i all on.l\'.ttlon:d
Ad \'Ntlslng H&lt;'p!'('srnr arlv&lt;'. nran ham

N (~· spapN ·SRi f's. 7:1.1 Third J\\'f'llU&lt;',

Nc:'"' \'ork,

j\('\1.'

York \00 \i

POSTMA."·rER: Send &lt;!ddrl'!is changM
to 'illr Dally Sentlnt•l. 111 Court S1. .
Po!Tl('roy. Oh io 45769.

StJBSCHIPTION Rt\T e5
8y (\trrlt'r or Motor Roull '

Onr \\'&lt;'l'k .........

· ··

··

Onr Month ..
On f' Yf•[H

...... $1.Jf!
.. S~ HO

.. S.'i7 20
SINGLE COJI\'

PRICE

Dall v ...
Su hsrrlbrr s nor d£'!:.! r i ng to pa v t hr&gt; r a r ·
rlN mav rf'mll ln advanl't' di r('Ct to
Thf' Dali:v St• nllnt•l on a :1. ti or 12 mon1h·
Ws ls Cn'l l l1 will IX' ,e:lv&lt;'n crll' I'IN mch
m on th
No subsf'rlpllons by mall pcrmi11NI In
1owns w twrr hom!' t·ardr&gt;r )i('rv lc &lt;' Is
avallabli•.

Mall SuhHcrlpllon!'l
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26 Wf'r ks .....
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~2 Wf'PkS .................... ... .
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13 Wl'rk s ............................... SIHO
26 Wf.&gt;C'kS ...................... .... ...... $.11.20
52 W(&gt;()kS..... ........................ $.~9.~

his first victot;.· of the season.
" I knew I wa s hitting .229 going
in. and wilh I Phil I Nirkt'O pitching
-and the way I hit him - I thought
I'd be hitting ..22l going out."
Brett has been taking extra
ba tting pt·aclice, hoping to find the
reason a career .316 hitter has sunk
into the .2Ws. W&lt;'&lt;lnesda)·'s burst
gol him to .242.
"I've been having trouble waiting
on lhe pitch, but with the way
Niekro changes spc«ls on you all
the. time. you have to wait,'' Brett
sa id.
"W hen you step In the batter's
box and you don't feel comfonable,
you're nol going to get a hit.
Tonight, I was about as ecmfona.
ble at Ute plate as I've been for a
long time."
The first time up Brett waited out
Nir kro for his league·il'adlng ~th
walk (he later was walked for a 31st
tlnoe\. In his second plate appear·
anCE'. Brett just got Ute end of his
bat on a pitch and guided It to left
fie ld to drive in Rudy Law, who had
doubled , for the game's first run in
the third inning.
BI'E'It essentially put the game
away in the fift h wit h a double over
the head of Cleveland left fielder
Otis Nixon that allowed WUiie
Wilson and Law to score easily.
Jorge. Orta drow In Brett wit h the
fourth. run with a hit later that
inning.
Kansas City look advantage of
two Cleveland errors to score an
Insurance ·run In the eighth off
reliever Jamie Easterly. Darryl
Motley singled with one out and
moved up when An~l Salazar
reached on Tony Bernazard's

Indians. He got the flrst 10 batters
he faced and closed rut the game
wlt h a string of nine straight outs.
"The difference in our series with
tt.&gt;m in Cleveland and tonight- no
question. was that guy," said
Cleveland Manager Pal Corrales,
referring to a three·game sweep r:i
the Royals earlier this sooson.
" If we'd been red·hot with the
bats, we'd of had trouble tonight,"
he sald. "(Gubicza\ was outstand·
lng, and we're not hitting. He
chalked up a hell ri. a game.''
For Gubicza it marked the end of
a personal four·game losing streak.
"Every time I looked at the
scoreboard I'd see 04 and a 7
(earned run average!," Gubicza
said . "That was embarrassing.

ANOTHER RUN- The Phlls' Mike Schmidt slides
safely Into home plate as Red&lt;;' catcher Bo Diaz
awaits the hall In Ute eightth Inning of last night's

Reds lose 8-6 after blowing
six run lead against Phillies
PH ll.ADE LPH lA I U PI I - Th e

Philadelphia Phillies musl have left
a sixth·innlng wakeup call.
The PhiUies. who ret urn('(! from a
road trip at 4 a.m.. played like
sleepwalkers in the first 5)1 innings
Wednesday night , falling behind the
Cincinnat i Reds 6·0.
But Philadelphia rallied for an 8-6
victory. scoring four runs in the
eighth inning on a single by pinch
hitter Mike Schmidt and a costly
throwing error by Cincinnati se·
cond baseman Ron Oester.
Manager John Felske said the
sehedule. wWch has the Phillies
playing only 1wo games at home
before starting a West Coast road
trip, was no excuse and pteferred 10
think about his learn's comeback.
With the Reds leading 64. the
bases loaded and no outs, Schmidt.
in only his second pinch·hitting
appearanCE' of the yea r. hit a
4ffi·foot single off reliever Ted

Rose had no second thoughts
about his decisio n to bring in
Power, who had an ERA of 6.ffi. to
face Schmidt .
Cincinnati's Nick Esasky hil his

fourlh
home run
Phillies
starton
er
l'ev in Gross.
wit off
h Dave
Parker
base. to give the Reds a 3-0 lead in
the tWrd inning. Dave Concepcion
fo Uowed with a walk and Bell
singled to cenler before Bo Diaz
knocked in Concepcion with
anolher single.
· With two outs. Reds' sta rler Tom
Browning singled w light off
r eliever Tom Hume. scali ng Bell
for a 5·0 Cincinnati lead, but Glenn
Wilson threw oul Diazat the plate to
end t ll&gt; inning.
The Reds took a 1·0 lead 14ith ,,..,
outs in lhe first when Parker. who
had singled. sec red on a single by
Concepcion.
Cincinnat i took ils &amp;-0 lead in Ihe
s ixt h when Eddie Milner singled off
Philadelphia t'clicvcr Dave Rucker
Powrr.
,
and.
aft er Rose wa lked. scored on a
Schmidt's hit sailed over the head
single
by Parker.
of centerflelder Eddie Mliner and
ThP
Phillies
scored in Ihe sixth on
scored Rick Schu, who had walked
Hayes'
homer,
which sC'Ored Wil·
off loser John Franco, ().J.
son,
woo
had
singled
.
Oes ter took the tht'Ow from
Philadelphia
sec
red
1wo more
Milner and threw wildly past Budd)'
runs
in
the
seventh.
Bmwning.
who
Bell at third. allowing Steve J elt.z,
gave
up
nine
hit
s.
walked
pinch
who got a bad·hop single. and Luis
Aguayo, who had walked, to score. hitter Greg Gross to open the inning
Schmidt went to third on Oesler's and was rep laced by fr anco.
Franco stmck out Milt Thom pson
error and scorrd on a sacrificr fl v
but
walked Ron Roenicke and
by Juan Samuel to cap Philadei·
Samuel
foUowed with a single to
phia 's four·run inning.
load
thr
ba ses.
Phillies reliever Don Carman ,
Wilson
hit a slow chopper tha i
1·0, got Ute win and Steve Bedrosian
Bell
could
not handle at third.
picked up his fifth save witll a 1·2·3
secring
Gross.
and RomickE•smred
ninth.

on a fielder's choice grounder to
second by Hayes.
Kevin Gross went only 2 1·3
innings for Philadelphia, giving up
eighl hils and five runs.

~·fliij~~i~~~lii

5J I JACKSON PIKE · RT 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
BARGA!~

MATINEES SATURDAY

&amp;SUNDAY · ALL SEATS S2.50
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_--&amp;~~~~
V.~I!)DoHn DI'II'M

Shelby's Choice has second victory

Jrd WEEK : 7:00 &amp; i :OO ".M.
SAT &amp; SUN lllmEE 1'00 ' 3 ' 00

COLUMBUS. Ohio (U PII Shelby's Choice posted her second
victory in the Utird round of Ute
Terry's Woe pacing series, winning
the $.1,1XXJ eighth race Wednesday
night at Scioto Downs.

-

The 3·year·oid pacer, driven by
Don Irvine Jr .. grabbed Ute i'ad
past the half·mile marker and
puUed away to a 1y. !eng! h victory,
good for payoffs of $2.[1), $2.10 and
$2.W. Lulu Blueehip finished srcond

NEW ·AMBULATORY
CARE CENTER
SEEKING RN'S WANTING
A NEW ADVENTURE
IN THEIR CAREER
COMPETITIVE SALARY
CONTACT BETH STifERS, R.N.
DIRECTOR OF AMBULATORY CARE

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

115 E. MEMORIAL DIIYE
POMEROY, OHIO U769
PHONIII14-992-2104

error.
Easterly loaded the bases by
walking Wilson and Motley scored
when J ulio Franco bobiJled Law's
ground ball.
Gubicza was retiring strings of

game at Veterans Stadium In Phlllidelphla. Schmidt
had a 408 foot pinch single which helped the l'hlls
com!.'-lrom·hehlnd to defeat the hapless Reds. UPI.

Equal Employment Opportunity

and Rumors Are Flying ca me in
third .

COMING SOO N ~ STALLO NE in -

"COBRA"

,------------..1....------- ----

�1986 ·

Ohio

Andretti hurt in Indy cras~h ·

Last place derby finisher
gets attention at Preakness
The field for the. $534,400 PreaBALTIMORE (UP))
The
kness
Is limited to a maximum 14,
hOrse that finished last Iri the
compared
to :V!orthe Derby, and is
Kentucky Derby is receiving a lot d
generally
even smaller. In fact,
the attention forthe 1llth running of
three
times
-1883. 188&lt;1, and 1889 the Preakness Stakes Saturday.
Groovy. a speed horse thai laded the race was run between just two
to nearly 50 lengths behind winner horses.
"In a small field like this, there's
Ferdinand In the Derby, could be
oo difference In post positions,"
the determlng factor in the field d
seven probable starters. His usual said Richard Small. trainer of l-1
break-neck pace - and how long he Broad Brush.
In a Iargl'r field, trJrses with
can sustain 11 - wUI be the key to
the 1 3-16-mtle middle jewel of inside post positions have long,
nerve-wracking waits In the gate,
racing's Triple Crown series.
. "Groovy Is going to be a factor, and risk getting squeezed hack on
bul that doesn't mean he Is going to the rail when trJrses that broke
win." said Ferris Allen, trainer of outside cut In for position.
Dl!tslde posts are similarly una!·
20-1 Miracle Wood. "The way to
handicap the race Is to see woo Is tractive because of the extra
distan[J&gt; and potential traffic jams
going to be iylng second early.
"I'm going to to be off the pace involved In the early manruvering
early. In order to set the race up for towards the rail.
"But with seven horses, if post Is
me, there have to be two or three
hOrses right behind the pace (to your excuse, you shouldn't be
bi'(e," said Craig J\&gt;rret, who will
push Groovy to fast fractions ).
ride
ll-1 Groovy.
The field In the 11-4 mile Run for
"It's
a small field, and it's
the Roses was 16, and a ll the speed
three-sixteenth's
of a mile to the
trJrses - Groovy, Zabaleta, Bachefirst
tum,
lots
of
time
to jockey for
lor Beau and Snow Chief - drew
position,
so
post
isn't that
outside post positions. That forced
important.
the speed hOrses to cut Inside
"I'd like an inside post, because I
quickly In an attempt to get inside
can
do a little maneuvering early if
· by the first tum . The largl' field and
I'm
in there.'' Perret added . " I'd
jostling for position produced one of
prefer
not to have to start rroving
the roughest Derby races in recent
out
of
the
gate."
memory.

Sportswriter-Denny
~cuffle under stadium

WORKOUf - Assistant trainer Peter Lyllll'l gives
Ferdinand a Jookover after the Kentucky Derby
winner's workout at Plml1co ~ Course Wednes-

day. Ferdinand Is preparing for the lllth Preakness
Saturday afternoon.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

Oakland 9. Toronlo 4
Mlkl'a lllil'&lt;' 9, S&lt;'-111tk' 6
\hieato 3, NN ' \ 'ork 2

NATllNAL lEAGUE
By Unl&amp;ed ~ ln&amp;.o!"'IIMionaJ

"""

Montl"l'ill

" ' I, Pet. GR
21 1 7:l) 19 II hll l

""'''

13 lti -~

fll.l

].1 1l .431
12 16 -~ '.!!

~

"'

Sl. Lou

Plstr5!h

.....

'~ '
Houston
SanFran
!\anDj&lt;o
LA
A t1ant.a

C'ncnnt i

\3

~~

9

.419

91.;

19

u

.6Ll -

20

I~

58"

li
16
14
R

]h - ~1 5 1
t!l m ~
Ill l'\11 :,1 1
11 _271i 10

1".1

~-~ .y' 1 Rfs~

lor; Angf'lN 11, S!. Lou~ .1

San Fr:trK'l'iNI 11. C'hk'a~o ,1
MmtrmJ J. Al~ n la 2
Ph lladrlphla R. Clncl nn.atlli
San Dlrtro 10, Plltsb.JI"Jlh t
Hou slon 6, NMN \'ork 2
'l'!un(IQ'R Gllmfti (AU
EIYfl
1\Uanta l Palmr.' r 2-'2 1 at Montwal rTibn;
:~-tll. J:,fl p.m.
CtnC'lnnatltGullleltson 2-3t at Phlla&lt;ll'lpN a
tHudsm2-l t. i · l'i o.m .
NPW York 1DarUnj.l: J.Ot aT Jl oo~1 on 1Ryan
~ ~ - 11.:.?1 p m.
Frldap Gameti

nroo;

Sl. Lruls at Atlan la . ri~o:h t
PIII.&lt;;I:J.J rRh a t (lrr ln M II. nl~h l
C'hkago a t JI OU!iton. nlRhl
N~- Yori! i'Jt LOlii An~l" . ni,ght
Montrt'a l ltl San Dif'l']. n l ~ h t

... ..

PhlliKX'IphJa at San F'ranrbro. nt,gflt

21

~I

(lo.•lncl

~

.

"" --,.
''"
.6.11

1.1

" .&lt;KI-"'

B11 mr

14

H 1~ ' 5.11

Ml w~

ToronTo

14

.1

.l •J

tl2

))

" -'"

19
16 II .51fi

Ca lif
Tl&gt;xil~

Oak land

" ., ._,.....
17 -' 14

KC

I' 16
11
1.1

Mlnn
~a t1 k •

"''

11

.

"., .m
_.

I
I

2

'
''

SkyUne Laneo

Stondln.,. lor AprU !ll, 1986
Pts.

...

I~

Ptumnacy Non h .... .
. .... .... 174
Whaley's Used Cars &amp; Parts
.. 173
Robblns &amp; Myt&gt;n . .
. ............... Hi2
~· ell 's Su per V &lt;~ l u
........ l:ri'
J &amp; T Su ppli ~ ......... .... . ................. 131
Callery Hair Arts ....... . ................ .... 124

Jeffers Trucking &amp; Exc. Co ....... ........... 107
Rt&gt;dm an Inn .......... ... ......... .. .. ...... ... ... . 96
Ind. Game- Chris BaUcy,l85: Sue Walker,
176: Bevr rly Roush. 168: Ind. Series - ChrL'i
Bailey. -193: Be\'crly Rous h &amp; D&lt;&gt; bbie Sklnner,

454: Sandy Folmer, 453.
Tram Game- Whaley' s Used Cars &amp; Auto
Parts, 008: J &amp; T Suppliers, ~ : Robbins &amp;
My('l"s, j94; Tt&gt;am SEirles - Ca.seys. 17]);
' Robblns &amp; Myers, 17(8; Gallery Hair Ar1s,
!7(11.

T....,
Dan's ...... ... ...... ... ....... ....... .......

~L

n

0;11'1•. \ in11 II
Aml'fkill1 Ll'.ll!lll'- ~ J r• f1di •f1i0n. 1\'Y 2ti,

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M,......h, . Tor Ill. F'f'IR"-1.

\t il. Shd~ .nu_l Wl~!'\rro. . fl.:_tl ~
l' k•iliiiK Vktnrit"''
~ atlrmal i~'ilf,&gt;JJr - Kllf1)Jrr, 1\0IJ 7 1.
1lj!-d il ,md (ioodm . , ·y ~ I. !!Pardon. ~1! 1
&lt;.llld \ 'n1rnt \IC'Ia . l.t\ 'l-2
AmPrir lln l .l'iii!\JI' - l'lf'm rn s. t la; li-U:
ll&lt;ws. Dak n I. thrrlff'n pjtrno•r-; 1 ~ '( \ '.l.ll h !

\lrlllrir'o;
WM!fd Kun A\'el'llltl'

1nrum: ~ lli.HT1lN cJ ~ """"
plaH&gt;&lt;h
;-..,,lkmal I.R"J,'\1!' - ( iO!U'n . '\'Y 1 l2 ,
Oj,-;;la. :"Y I iO: Uo("("'~ Sf IT. : Trb!)'. , Mll
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wders

l'&lt;~&lt;'h

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• Ba ~od o n .1 1 pial!• ap ~' &lt;lfaRlP.. ~ nrJ ot
l(amf'!'lf',t(' h Tf',tffi h.a.~ p Lo.\ o'{l l
Nattoo.l L- ~·
It ah r h pel.
Ra1 1'111
:!9 ll i lH ~ l1'1
Cw~ Tm. S()
12 1.1.1 2.1 ·17 ..'li.l
l \ \1!1 1!142 .:fi.l
Sox. LA
H,-,Jts. ,\t tl
5I 1!:0 :5J 3!1 Xl!l
)'~ \ttl ~~ 1~ lll
HllJIIo•n. SF
HrRJKII. ,!"

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Knlt:f!t , 1\1'

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llhrlcfll. All
;\nwr lt•IUI

li'&lt;UT\

to~ ..

,\.ml •rka.Jl I ' 'dj.'UI ' - i:idrhur n_ Tou !I ji
I H ln.J nJ . t.:r 1 fH. Ha01~ . O .olo. 2 U. (', rhmll!

()ak 2 +' . I 'I•'""'11~ . IU..

~ ~il

Sl: rlltr'!Iol ,.
~a tl"l n;• l l.o ' ag\.U' -~nil . \lou'-() _ ~ m1 th .

Ml and

\'all'nrur~a .

LA 'fo. V. f'lr h. 1.-\ .fl .

~l r liflf' . ('I 4~•

..111
..111
llti
.11.i

HI~:UPra..\111

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:"a!loi'I..I I IRagul'- Smllh, Hoo 9: 01'UWJ,
;o..·Y. C'.n.s.11:f', SD lllld fWarrlon. M tl ti;
fjo!JPr . Chi and BPdroslan, P hil~
Amf'Tiran IRa(.'\JI' - RIJ,(Ilf'll \. f\.''1' 10:
,\a'-1 •, BaH !'.; Cam&lt;lt'ho. t'ir'. HaiTI ~ . To:•x .

IA&gt; ....I'

.1.11:19 .\1 "&gt;4 ~
.l.l Uti 2~ 4h 11'\~
l'l 1.16 2146 3ffi
.\.1 1 ~ 1 '!I~~ \t1
O' rl rln. T"
.11 1~ ll .'Iii ..\'tl
2fi Rll 17 ~ _.t 'fl
Flf'll'l1r· T t
ri;oVL~. Sl•i!
.l l Hl5 1~ .'\4 J U
f'ol l lrt~. Dl
'!7 !M1 lfi 'll JZ!
T•tbk,... n('
. :l\119 16Jl. .3 \!l
l'2 121 111 .19 ..1\7
Lnsl rd. Ok
llnml' Rurw.
1\atloM I l .i'a$(UI' - Daw ~ n . Mil lln11
~~ r ~llllll , L.o\ 8; Brook,&lt;;, Mi l. 1:\.J , l". ltuu.
and Murphy , All 7.

lll'r n.:tndt•!, [)' I , J;tm l'!o , [);•I , ('hi ,Hld :vl0011 •.
(ill ii

Transactions
8aoil&gt;hall
lltt ltimorr - Plll«'d lnflr ldl:&lt;r J 01rki1•
r; u Hr-rrr7. 1r hJ' krn poll! on lhr 1 ~ -&lt;1 ;1~·
•li~ bltxllb l: 1"1"'{'1l]IC'd lnllri OO Rl'x Hudll'r
from Horhr'Stf'f ct thr lnll'r ru tiOn:tl U:·agul'

STOP oe CALL MIKE
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T{'am 3-Games - Bl'f'nda's Bout ique. :!!26:
l'd Hl ~ h Team J..Gamrs - Dan·s. ~4 .
SKYUNE BOWUNG LANES
MORNING GLORI&amp;&lt;;
Standlnp for Aprtl Ill, 111111
............ ...

Pl8.
. ... IE

FranciS Floris! ......................... ............. 58

Slmmo!l.'l Olds. (:adlll ar &amp; Ch('V . ............. 54
P\lols Plus .... .. .............. ......... ...... .... ... 54
Pl2za Dan ........................... ... .... .... ...... 42
The Fabric Shop .................................. ()

Jst Htgh Indv. Ga me - Linda Anh\lr, 2JJ :
. ..... 54
2nd High Indv. Game - Sandy Fotrrrr. :112:
Pizza Dan .. ........ ......... ..................... 46
Jrd High Indv . Game - June Lam ber t &amp; Peg
The F a bric Shop .............. ..................... 42
lsi High lndv. Came - June Hawkins, 245: " Houdashel!, 197; 1st High Jndv. J.Cames 2nd High Indv. Gami' - Junr Lamben, m ; ~, Linda Arthur. 532: 2rid High lndv. 3-Games 3rd HIJ{h lndv. Game- Joyce Haggy. an: lsi ' Sandy Hysell , 531: Jnl High lndv. 3-GamesLena lkward, 5:11.
High fndv. .J.Cames - June Lamben. 567:
lst HJgh Team Game - Slmrrons Olds,
2nd High Ind\1. 3-Camcs - June Hawldns.
Cadillac It Chev ., 1017: 2nd Hl.i!h Team Game
~ Jrd High Ind\1. 3-Ga.,.,. - Unda Anhur
-Pools Piu.s, llll; :I'd Hb!h 'team Game &amp; Phyll~ Cllne. m
Dan's, 1&lt;X9; lstHighTeam).Gamm - Dan's,
I~ Htglt Team Game - Pl22a Dan, 1058:
2916: 2nd H!ah Team 3-Gameo - Brenda'•
2nd Htglt Team Game - Hiney Wine
BoutlqLie, 29(i); 3rd High Team J.Games tWMPO I. IIHO: 3rd High Team Game Francis FIOJ"kt, 2105.
Dan ' ~ 1033: l&gt;t High Team ;l{;ami!S Brenda's Boutique i Ptua Dan, 29«!; 2nd
High Team 3-GII1TII!5 - ll'•n's, l!23: 3rd High

-!Ill . .

SKl'UNE BOWLING LAN&amp;&lt;;
MORNING GLORIES

Aprfll8. 1M
PIA.
Brenda 's Boutlque ............................. .... 78
Dan 's ................................................... 78

HJney Wine rWMP0\ ............................. 72

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SALE ENDS MAY 31 . 1986

Swindell expected to sign pro pact
AUSTIN, Texas (UP! )- University of Texas pitching ace Grt&gt;g
Swindell. a possible No.1 draft pick.
is expected to forgo his senior year
and tum professional, his coach
says.
. "He' ll sign," said Texas Coach
Cli ff Gustafson. ''I'm not any more
sure of anything else than I am of
I hat. "
Swindell has 43 career victories
- eight shy of Don Heinkel's
national record set over four
seasons - against only six losses.
And the left - hander holds the
NCM record for career shutout s at

Gustafson said he expects Swin
dell to be taken by one of the first
five teams In lhe June 2 major
league draft - Pit is burgh, Cleve·
land, San Francisco, Texas and
Atlanta.
" I never dreamed of anything
like thi s," said Swindell. "Hopefully
I can go ahead and pu rsue my big
drea m now."
The Houston native, who this
season has a 10-2 n"&lt;:ord and 1.26
earned run average, sa id he tbcsn 't
care who draft s him. adding, "Pro
ba Uis pro ball . It 's alii he sa me."
In addit ion to a 90 mph fastball .

an excellent curw . changpu p and
slider, Swindell also has exce llent
cont rol. He has struck out 492
batters in his carrer, 49 smt1 of
Derek Tatsuno's NCAA record.
About two dozen major league
clubs sen t smuis to Swindell 's most
recent outing 11 days ago in
Houston.
" A lot of scouts are wastin g a lot ·
of money being there," said Lou
Filzgcrald of the Atlan ta Braves.
"He's got to he one. two or ttu·ee."
Fitzgerald sa id Swindell !{'minds
him of former De tmit pitcher
Mickey Lo lich.

A~"vacare.

ea _: an
es
wort
wit a vanta
•
Into.
As

Two Dolphin
picks consider
MIAMI (UPil - Two Miami
Dolphin draft choices who are lxoing
pursued by the United States
Football League · say they are
mnslderlng playing in the 4year·
old league.
Wide receiver James Pruitt. a
fourth-round pick from Cal· Stair
Fullerton, was drafted in the first
round by the New Jersey Generals
of the USFL. and seventh-round
choice Larry Kolle , a linebacker·
nose tackle from Ohio State, was
offered a contract by th~ Arizona
Wranglers.
. Pruitt said he planned to attend
the Generals rookie camp begin·
nlng June 2. He was unable to
practice at last week's Miami
mini-camp because of a sprained
ankle.
· "As It stands now, I' m going to
the Generals rookie camp," Pruitt
sa"ld. "'I't!lngs muld chan ge, but
thOse are my plans now. I have to
decide whether it' s wise fo r me to
go, whet her It's In my best
l~terests. "

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3-Game!i - Simmon., Olds, 2m: 2nd f-Ugh

Dan 's...

. .. ... 76

Th is economica l m o del h Ideal lor
smoUer yords. ~eoture ~ a oowertu 16

to a hospilal where he was treated and released. The
car was heavily damaged. UPI.

duting last weekend's qua liflca- :
tlons. Two cars owned by Simon's
team • had apparently qualified
Saturday . But the ca rs, driven by
Simon and RauI Boesel, were
disallowed because the cars' popoff
valves we re too large. Boesel
requalifled Sunday.
Thirty cars practiced on the
2\1, -mile oval Wednesday, with J im
Crawford gelling the day·s top
lime, ru nning 214.592 mph in an
unqual ifi ed March-Buick. Tom
Sneva ran his qualified )'llarchCosworth 212.414 mph. Roberto
Guerrero and Michael Andrettl ran
their backup Marc h-Coswor ths
above 210 mph .
Rupert Keegan completed his
rookie test Wednesday and Spike
Gelhausen completed his refresher
USAC Wednesday fined Dick test.
Simon $5,000 for rules violations
bi gger ques tion mark.
While running his Lola -Coowort.h
above 205 mph shortly after the
track opened, Andrettl hit the wall
as he en tered turn three. Observers
reported something broke on the
right rea r of Andretti's car, ca usi ng
It to slide 480 f('('t Into the w lside
wa ll.
"There was major front end
damage," said Mike Teeguarden ,
head of the \.lnited States Auto Club
tec hnical committee.
Andretti's car was sent back to
England for repairs. U the car Is
beyond repair, Andretu must qualify his backup car in the back of the
field . The Andrettl team has unt il a
hen final carburet ion runs are
conducted .

Boih races wUI sta rt and fin ish at
CLEVELAND iUPil - The year. Including I he Cleveland f'VPnt
by
nearly
two
and
one-haifmlnu
les.
East
19th Street and Euclid Avenue
ninth annual Cleveland Mara thon
In
front
of Cleveland State
Other
world-class
runners
exand 10-kilometer race this Sunday
pected
In
the
field
for
the
men
's
University.
are expected to send more tha n
The marati'Kln cout"Se runs west
10.!XXI runners scurrying a coUec· 10-kilometer race are Tanzania's
through
Lakewood and Rocky
Filbert
Bayi.
Kenya's
Sulcmain
tive 122,00&gt; miles throughout the
Nyambui.
Jon
Sinclair
of
Fort
Rlwr.
before
returning to down ·
city suburban street s.
town
Cleveland.
The 10· kilometer
Collins,
Colo.,
Andrian
Leek
of
Rated by Runners World Maga·
course
circles
the
downtown area .
Chestertietd,
Mo.
,
and
Sandoval.
zine among the top 25 road races In
Race
offic
ial•
estimate
close to
Tony
Staynings
of
Bowling
America. the Revco-sponsored
7,000
prople
lliill
run
In the
Green,
Ky.,
and
1985
runner-up
and
event. returns top men's and
lO·kUometer
rae&lt;'
and
3,00:1
In the
hometown
favorite
Ted
Rupe
arc
women' s fields. The 26.2-mile ma 14.
entered
in
the
maratoon
.
marathOn
.
rathon begins at 8: 30 a.m., with the
6.2-mile evenl following at 8:45a.m. , - - - - - - -- -- - - - - -- - -- -- -- - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - -- -- - -- - - - - - - -Mexican native DeMetrio Caba·
nillas, now of Magma. Utah, guns
for a foutih consecutive Cleveland
marathon victory , while Kilty
ConS()IO of Kent defends her 1985
women's title.
The men's marattrJn record of 2
trJurs, 14 minutes and J6 seconds
was set iii 1982 by Tony Santbval. of
Englewood, Colo., an entrant in the
10-kilometer field this year. J ane
•
•
Wlpf has Ihe woman· s record of
2: 40:42.
Michael Musyokl of El PaS().
Texas, by way of Kenya. Is a S()ild
favorite to repeat his title d a yea r
ago In the 10· kilometer race.
Mtisyokl, a bronze ml'll al winner
at the distance In the 1984 summer
Olympics. established the newly
designed course record with a t lrne
of 28:10 last year. England's Dav id
Moorer aft ran me second faster for
the old course mark In 198.1.
Musyokl, the 15-kllometer world
record holder. owns a 27: 28 )X'r·
S()nal best for 10 kilometers.
Anne Audain of New Zea land .
goes for hPr fouti h consecutive
victory in the women' s 10- kilometer CleVeland race. She holds thl'
old cou rse record of 31:45 ln. l984
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SKYUNE 801\LING LAN&amp;&lt;;
MORNING GLORI&amp;&lt;;
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Stolt"&gt;n Ha.D1.1 W:Ill . LA L'i:
Dor..n, 1101.1 13; H a t rw·~ . :0.11 1 ,ulll Cul i 'mll !l.
!"a!Kll\:.11

7 .'t'i pm
Ck'I'Piand 1Schrom J h at Kntt"-15 Cit
1\i,-,nard .3-k ?.: l'l p.m
f'rldlu'!l GIU'I)Mi
~at l ir' at .Srw \'ork. nl,lilhl
M l n~a at M nwau~. rll:ht
CaliiOrnl.a a t [)(&gt;!roil. nl~: hr
Kansas Cl!v at ChK'ago. n l ~:hr
llrwlari&lt;l at T oronto, nl ¢\t
Oakland ar Ba ltlm«l'. nlgl'll
Tl'~as ar ~ · on nJ J(hr

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lja ltlmon:' !1, M l niY'SOia .1
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Boston 8. CallfornJ a 5
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w~"'· s Ket!ul.'l

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;

Waiting In Line

Steve Fagan. managing editor of
The Post. said from Cincinnati tha t
Schoenfeld flied mmplalnts against
Denny with the Veterans Stadium
seculity police and t hP Philadelphia
police department and plans to
meet with the Philadelphia Disttict' s office today to discuss
pressing a misdemeanor assault
charge.
Denny. who was traded from
Philadelphia to Cincinnat i last
winter, denied the accusation.
Schoenfeld said the lnciden t
occurred in a tunnel at ground level
of Veterans Stadium as he was
loqking for the Reds' clubhouse. He
said he wa lked past an a rea where
Denny was engaged In conversa·
tion with a team officia l when the
pitcher suddenly grabbed him.
''He said 'You have no tight to be
here, this is our area ."' Schoenfeld
sa id. "He just went nuts."
Asked to oomment on Schoen·
fcld 's charges, Denny said, "Are
you kidding me? Is this a joke?"
Fagan aiS() said The Post will
complain to Reds president Marge
Scholl and Bill Bergl'sch. executive

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Mario
Andrettl, who May 10 qualified his
Lola·Cosworth on the second row
for this year's Indianapolis 500.
crashed his qualifying car Wednes·
day and damaged it extensively.
Andrettl, the 46-year-old champion of the 1969 Indy 500, suffered a
puncture on the left side of his left
ankle that took several stitches to
close. Andrett i was released from
Indianapolis Methodist hospital
following treatment and returned to
his hotel room for the remainder of
the day.
Before Andretti can return to the
track to drive, he must pass a
physical exam from Dr. Henry
Bock, the speedway medical
director.
Though Andretli's ability to drive
Is a question mark after the
accident , his car'sa billty to run Is a

Trainers and jockeys olthP other
horses would prefer the same thlrig.
"It's rrore important sometimes
whO Is next to you than where you
are In the gate.' ' Small added. "I
would prefer to be outside Groovy."
The entire field drawing for post
today Includes Ferdinand, lhe 9-5
morning-line favorite; Badger
Land, who was fifth .In the Derby,
Clear Choice, at 2-1; Broad Brush;
Snow Chief, who finished lOth as the
2-1 Derby favorite , at 4-1; Miracle
Wood, and Groovy.

vice president and general manager.

PHD.ADE LPHIA tUPli - A
Cincinnati sports writer said Reds
pitcher John Denny attacked him
prior to Wednesday night' s game
against the Philadelphia Phillies.
Bruce Schoenfeld, a sports wliter
for The Cincinnati Post, said Denny
grabbed him around the neck and
banged his head against a wall in an
unprovoked attack.

The Daily

Ohio

·'!'he Dolphins. along with thP rest
o!.lhe NFL, took their time signing
draft picks last season. Miami
announced eight rookie signings on
tbe ~ning day of training camp;
and No. 1 pick Lorenzo Hampton
missed pa rt of training camp
because he was unslgnend.
"This Is something we will get 011
right away:· said Dolphins Director of Pro J\&gt;rS()nnel Charley
Winner. "Obviously, we don't want
·him (Pruitt) to go."
:Kolle was Impressive in the
[)lllphins' mini-camp.
·"Right now, we're just talking to
the USFL. " Kolle sa id. "They
offered usa oontract and we made a
munter. That's where It stands."
The USFL currently is em broUed
$1.32 billion anti· trust suit
against the NFL that likely will
d~lde its future. The trial Is
eX:~ted · to concluder In two
mpnths.
.
. . ..

1n: a

.

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�-

'
Thursday. May 15, 1986
·- -·-··-----~~~:......;..;;.:....;.;.;:.:.

Calgary defeats Blues, 2-1;

Media, advertising agencieS
launch major war on drugs

takes Campbell Conference
CA LGAHY . Alber!U il'Pli ...

pL1.,vr'&lt;lti.ghl ~m dstu ('k to our
g;mw ).'l.1n." !--aid \ ·olin PaHerson,
wlm :&gt;\':.ln-d th(' cvPnlual gam ewinning goill nt l: ~~ ~ of llll' middle
~' noel.
"~ \ ' r' .•.11.. ·mPd to bu ndlr ll'l"m up ln
ilC' n• ttt1:1 /On•' run ight and did not
f!lt'lll •:I:I ~:id l'll"tl ." sa id rookie
l.dl·• 1u.t.!it' :\ilk~~ Vernon, who
Lln"'.l iu;-;t lb ~ hots. " We fore·h~\'.·kd d d P \'l n li!-! hl tonight."
l'h~' !• btn•'" ll).)k a 1-0 opPnlngi 't·r·~'d [('&lt;~d on d~.:'fcnseman AJ
\i,•( ;. ]!-. )2oa l ar 5:- l2.
1J-·:·l'·.lt· hrl\'ing ju~1 lwo stots on
'r•: n(·fl wi\.'1 ju~1 0\'('1' half the fjnal
J'A'rio.;! 1·~ ·rn . Jining-, the Blues re.lll!.t:'., !. q·1it. Ed &amp;•C'rs brought St.
1
" \ ;(·

11

CanJda!
Th t• anthem so familiar to horlot·r
fa ns o nce a~ain is the t hC'mC' !or t h~~
C'al~ar~·

Stan ley Cup fina L Thr

F'la mPs assw«:t nn all-Canadian
final for thP first ti ml~ u1 1!) \ mr;-:.

t\'cdnPSda y night with a

~ - 1 Y i C"IPI.\

over thr St. Louis Blu(•s in 111~·
deciding game of th(•ir t.x:~t -ol
seven Campbell Confcrrncr filii! I.

11n• Fia m0s will face til&lt;• Mttitl
n•al ( ana dirns in thr final, brgin

ning Frid;ry nrghl in U1&lt;' OlvmpiG
Saddledon'le. Ca lgary is app&lt;'arinf.
in lhl' fina l for the firs t timl' In
franchiS(' history : Monlrral h; lo..;
!~'Cord 22 Stanley Cups

won a

...
WINS CHAMPIONSHIP - F1arnes captain Dou g
Rlsebrough (left) and assistant captains, Jim
PepHnskl anmd Lanny McDonald, (behind ) hold the

Camphp\l \.
df'featin~

An L'nitcd Sta i(IS-b&lt;.lSf'd ·t(';lln h.~:~
appPared in P\ 'PJ;.' pll'{' t&gt;t.'Ciim~ !in.u
o..;in('{· tht• lmgur pxpnnciE'd in i'k ·; '

1t~~

:t:lo

,llr· nfl ''t'

,

Jhc' . _.

:.t;~t~.; ion

.John TunL•IU kll U\\ S th1•

•

Rozelle first Wllllf~·.
filed by USFL
j ! ~·

NEW YORK ;UPI 1 - NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle, who
has closelv followed proceedings
from the back of the courtroom in
thr U.S. Football League's $1.3
billion ant itrust suit against his
league, today steps to the front as
the USFL's first witness.
In a blunt. often mocking opening
statemen t Wednesday, USFL attorney Harvey Myerson told the jury
he intended to call Rozelle as his
first witness.
"I want ;·ou to hear what he has to
say, and I want you to watch how he

responds to what I show you."
Myrr9:ln sa id.
Myerson promised to produce
sevNa i "smoking gu ns" from the
1\TL'sown files to prove h1s client's
claim the older league had deliberately set out to destroy the USFL.
In its opening remarks. the NFL
respoJHled it would eounter with "25
smoking guns" to show USFL
owners were unhappy with New
Jersey G&lt;&gt;nerals owner Donald
Trump, who, aceording to NFL
attorney Frank Rothman, was
controlling the league. ·
The $1.3 billion antitrust suit was
part of Trump's "grand plan ."
Rothman sa id. to force a merwr of
some USFL teams with the NFL
and make the Genera ls. bought in
1984 for about S5 million. worth
more than 10 times th at amount .
Rozelle has bePn a regular
presence in the courtroom since the
case began with jury select ion on
MoJHlay. He was joined Wednr'&gt;dav
by NFL owners Hugh Cuh•(•rhousc

&amp;!~,

of Tampa

~In\~

Ar!

II

, '

r.

m

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regu lar observer.
Ton~·

Tmmp ,

;mel

d'·':

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lunnhl !~ll;!'''

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Tampa Bay, and F.d w.Hrl h,.,f,
of the disbandPd l'h ic,1~o tv 11 ·l
MyPrson said ili~
.:n

1

~ rill)..!

pi

l\

In (;amr 6. !I)' Flames

-

~"""111'\i ,.,...,fl

Ir . '

•tt

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Fl&lt;ontl6 141 991-6614

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Fred H. Barnhouse

•

Fred H. Barnhouse, 57, Cook
Road, Hemlock Grove, died Wed·
nesday at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital In Parki'rsburg, W. Va .
Mr. Barnhouse, who had been in
faDing health for several years was
born In Athens County, a son ol the
late Lewis H. and Mary M. Cooper
Barnhouse, on Nov. l3, 1978. He was
a resident of Meigs and Athens
Counties most of his life. He was a
veteran of the Korean Conflict.
Surviving are a son, David
Howard Barnhouse, and a daugh·
ter, Rose Ellen Barnhouse, bolh of
Hemlock Grove; three brothers,
Leonard G. Barnhouse, Columbus;
Dana R. Barnhouse, Flortda, and
Lewis H. Barnhouse, Kentucky ;
four sisters, Dorothy Hook. Springfield; Norma M. Guess, california;
Bessie Bolin and Erma Guess. both
mAlbany.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife, Alice
Bailey Barnhouse, an Infant son.
three brothers, Lawretce, Jay
Robert and George, and a sister,
Florence.
Services wUI be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Gary Klngofficlat·
ing. Burial will be in Meigs Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at the
fUneral borne from 7 to 9 this
evening and anytime on Friday.

.ours.

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'~~se n

Zura E. Hawk, 83, of Rt. 1, Shade,
died Wednesday afternoon at Lick·
ing County Memortal Hoopital in
Newark.
Born in Lodi Township In Athens
CO\Inty, she was a daughter of the
late Wilbert and Myrtle Swai1z. She
was a lifelong resident of Athens
an(! Meigs Counties, and was a
member of the Methodist Church
and the Lodl Grange.
Surviving are Ol\f oon. Lloyd E.
Hawk d. Newark; three daughters,
Mrs. Eugene (Betty) Wllllams of
Newark. Mrs. John H. (Caryl) Ruth
m Rt. 4, Athens, and Mrs. Marvin
(Rachel) Pullins of Rt. 2, Bidwell;
one daughter-In-law, Willa Jean
Hawk of Rt. 5, Athens; 14 grand-

We use original shatter proof glass and

'jr,ur (dr IS

l?t

•Door glass
•Rear window glass

liiWing glass
EXAMPLE
73-86
o .. ,,. Pick-up

•Homelite

Cltor

$7995
INSTAllED

#W813 shaded .... '89.

"

•I

•y

•Starters r Al1~rnotors rebui lt
•Brake Colip&lt;rs rebuilt
t~Brake

127

2234

Retai l

~ol ad

THESE EXCEPTIONAL VALUES ONLY AT::·~

r~iH·~-:1

••
•
'l

.Jj

106 N. 2nd

Middleport

GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT

~·

240 Third Ave. 1704 Eastern Av o. Si 5 Main St. 2611 Jackson Avo.
675 -273 1
675 -1520
446-1813
446-4204
8 am. lill 5:00 p.m.
Oaily 1:00 a.m. rill 7:00 p.m.
Saturdays 8:00 a.m. till 4:00 p.m.

PPfEROY

n

MASON

"i:i:"3T"

:2nd Avo.
992-2139
773-5511
1:00 a.m. till 5I30 p.m.

Salurday

EASTERN AVE. STORE OPEN SUNIIAY ll :OO A.M. TILL 4:00P.M.

992-2635
\

•

•••

1

lhroulb Monday

r

s.w.

1981 Olds. Cutlass
2 dr.
Stock 11111271
1980 Ford Bronco

1984 Ford E·150

1983 Chevy C.10

1984 V.W. Scirrocco
Stock llti80 I

fOR_THE

~

GRADUATE

POMEROY
GAWPOLIS

NOW THRU GRADUADON

DIAMOND .
NECKLACE

$3995

Veterans Memorial

REG.

Admitted--Earl Stevens, Pomeroy; Burl Blevins, Middleport;
Dolly Deland, Middleport; James
Elselstein, Long Bottom.
Discharged -- Freda Durham ,
Christopher'Triplett. Roger Smith.

A cbanoo d. tlhowers and thonclerslonns Saturday 1111d Sunday,
with lair weather on Mtlllda.v. Hllftl wiD be In the 'Jls Saturday and
!luntla.Y and ranatn1 from the lhe mid Ills to lhe mid 10s Monday.
OvernllblloM wW be In the !lOll Saturday and Sunday rnomlnpand
lilllle tos early Moaclay.

,.

Frank reports that shortly after
mk!nlght on W.ednesday, two young
men were apprehended at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center as
they attempted to steai gas from
employee's parked cars. Tim Herdman, 24, and Dale Riffle, 23, both of
Pomeroy, were arrested at the
scene. The two entered pleas of
guilty when they appeared Wednes·
day In Meigs County Court . They
were each sentenced by Judge
Patrick O'Brien to 90 days in jall.
with 70 days suspended , and credit
given for time already served. They
were also fined court costs and
placed on probation for two years.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1983 Datsun Maxima
Guysvllle. died Thursday at O'Bie-

t

1 &amp;9.96

Ing oot of the sherUfs department.
ln other matters. the board has
been granted an addlttonai3J days
by Meigs County Deputy Heallh
Commissioner J9n Jacobs in which
to eornplete seeding at the county
landfill.
The board also approved a new
constitution and bylaws for the
Meigs Coonty Emergency Medical
Service.

USED CARS &amp;

James G. FrQst, 73, Rou te 2,

Showers and thuJHlerstorms lllcely today, tonlgh t and Friday.
Highs todliy wUI be near !ll, with a lowtonlgllt In the low OOsand highs
Friday near !ll.
The probabUity mprecipitatiOn Is 00 percent today and 7tl'peroent
tonight and Friday.
Exlended Forecast

CSI6.021

Gasoline theft nets
Emergency squads 90 day tenn in jail
answer five calls
Meigs County Sheriff Howard

James G. Fro8t

ness Memortai Hospital In Athens.
Mr. Frost was born In Athens
Coonty,a sonotthelateJohnE. and
Maggie McClain Froot. He was a
veteran of the U. S. Air Force
having served in World War II. He
had been a farmer all of his life.
Surviving are his wife, Hedwig
!Heddy) Unger Frost, a native of
Munich, Germany: a brother,
Forrest Frost of Troy, Ohio; a
niece, Donna Jeanne Waker, two
great nieces and a greal nephews ..
Besides his parents he was
preceded In death by a brother,
Glen Frost, and an infant brother.
Services will be held at I p.m.
Saturday at the Whil e Funeral
Home In Coolville with Rev. Lee
Tall officiating. Burial will be In
Frost Cemetery. Friends may call
at tbe funeral home from 6 to Sp.m.
Friday.

amount, most will pay the salary

tor the litter control &lt;ificer operat-

URNP

chUdren; eight grmt grandchildrrn; one brother, Otto Swartz of
Five calls were answered by local
Shade; and one sister, Mrs. Clar- units Wednesday, the Meigs County
ence (Hazel ) Creamer, of Rt . 5, Emergency Medical Services
Athens.
repot1 s.
Besides her parents, she wa s
AI 6:&gt;7 a.m ., Middleport took
preceded in death by her hu sband, Burl Blevins from South Second
Ross Hawk; one son, Merit' Hawk; Ave., to Veterans Memorial Hospione brother. Wayne A. Swartz; and tal; Rutland at 11 :46 a.m .. took
a great grand.o;on, Travis Ruth.
Dolly Cleland from Main St.. to
Services will be Saturday, 1 p.m.. Vetera ns Memorial; Racine at 2:16
at tbe Hughes Funeral Home, 168 p.m .. took Ben Stobart to Pleasant
Morris Ave., Athens. Rev . Charles Va lley Hospital; Middleport at 5:51
McVey wlll officiate and burtal will p.m .. took Angela McCarty from
be in Garden Cemetery near Shade. Sycamore St.. to Pleasant Valley;
Friends may cail a1 the funeral Rut land at ll : 52 p.m.. too Clarence
home anytime after 2 p.m. Friday. Haning to Holzer Medical Cent er.

Weather forecast

•I

lngel$ Furniture and Jewelry
© 1985 SDI
entorged to show deloll

Shoeo.

• Broke Drums &amp; Rotors turned
•Bearings pressed
•CV U-Joints rebuilt

StQQS

!'195

wiD be Died wllh reinforced concrete to repair the
. sUppage and prevent further erosion on tbe hillside.
The $298,000 project is supervised by the Ohlo
Depanment of Transportation.

Area deaths

!11

"' '

cans make their chOICes."
Richard T. O'ReUiy, fonner
advertising executive and president of the "Campaign 8)" to elect
President Reagan, said executives ·
of ABC, NBC and CBS have agreed
to donate air time. Including
prime-time spots.
In cable televisiOn, commitments
have been received from ESPN.
MTV and Nickelodeon, among
others. In prtnt, Hearst Magazines.
Newsweek, Readers' Digest, Time
lnc., and U.S.A. Today all have
pledged support.
The N W Ayer agency estimates
that pledges by the media and
advertising agencies to conttibute
money, effort, advertising space
and time will armunt to an
equivalent d. $!lll mUIIon a year
during the three- year campaign.
Ayer estimated the campaign
.wUI generate rrore messages Ulan
advertising for Coca-Cola, McDonald's or Ford.
"We are convinced that illegal
drugs are lnbermtly evU and
destructlve," Hagopian said. ''We
are going to try our very best to
make people who use or condone
drugs feel very bad about what they
are doing and about themselves."

Meigs seeding project

'

h~t~.

leagu e."
The third "smok1ng C\.n·

85~ minu tr

.. ,

~

'

renewal of ,l.£1("~ :vJ, .,.,d,,·
Football contract br'&lt;'a u;.· · ·" '
network rna;· wr- 11 he "·

M a nag~nu

(1:'

*••t!l &amp; rme

1

Hr also citro a mt·rm, ~~, .
NFL general counsPI l ,t\ :\i1;&gt;
which MoyPr tl'Commcnd•.

the l\'FL

l.lo'ff\1

•Jzt.

•

tkr['(! a thrN' goal lr.Hl mid\'. .1
rhmugh thf.' final PL·riocl. \\'('dlit .
d: 1 ~ . !herr wa~ no stH'h bt ~·; 1 kd; h\ r

' '·

i ,'to

~~

. ....,

Two people cited
following accidents

'· •

ManagemE&gt;nt Council. 1h
c.wn?rs' n ~otintin g cnni

invitalion to form;J tiPll

I
'

r~bound . "

PU

(, ..... '"

~qu:1n

·---------~ ~-

League," preparrd h1 !ht· lbt
th1

Ttll:clii. \\.: ho has clispla:,·••d lll!' '.\'1 1J:.
dluc that macJr him d kP\' p.u-r pf
iilc lsliU1d'r's four ~tan.ll·\·
('h•unpiuns hip h'r.u n~ "!',~· 11 ;
:~Lirl C'nlgar;.' Wl \ 'f' m P a f'h,Jn\'1

'\j·'l ,'"
l•,j
·,t s

guns" i ncludf'fl a slud\ ·n.
Conquer thE' Unitrd Sli!tt'" F···~~

Business School ft&gt; r

I~

l

veteran Blues' captain Brian Su i·
ter. "Vernon made a helluva save
off Ric Nattress' shot he did not see,
and I just couldn't get to the

f.I()Nlll

~ l '''I 'o.'JU

'- ·,_,\) 1

1\ LtL 1tl

1

" l l shows that o!1Pn lth gr 1:--, 1·
J..!IT'&lt;'rtl' l' on thr olllPr &lt;-.ide,"
.i

:-~~

Cleveland, an ~ Welli rwton ;,; .. ,
the NP\.\' York C ian ts.-~
The USFL tram incl ucll'ti c ,
missioner Harry L1sh:r. ~~~~

.'

'~

I

"With a break, weeouldbave tied
it up and maybe won it," said

qoo

ftd!lh'

:1.:J\ ing lx·rn pnrl of four Slc~nlt·~·
Cup \ '11Jmpionship trams \·v Hh th~
~rw York l slanrlrrs in ~~~r~.
"l(isa gnC~at fl'diug bd.n~dJ!''f' ...
"·•id ·ronrll i. 1radPd rn( ·, tlgat ~. , .., ·rn
\rw York VI arc h ll "I \V&lt;.h ·,r ltiiJ1'
hu11 at thC' bcginnin,e: of tht• 1t',HL
!Jut thi~ makt&gt;s 1 '\ t ' ' ·,:·,,~.,
\', orth\\ ll ilr .

Quoting statlsdcs that 23 mUilon
people regularly use marijuana, 5
mUIIon regularly use cocaine and
$ll0 bllllon Is spent annually on
Illegal drugs, Hagopian said the
goal of the campaign Is to make
drugs unpopular.
"As an industry we are credited
with - or sometimes blamed forselling Amertcans fast .food, soft
drinks, cars and jeans," he said.
"We've done a lot of changing
opinions and beliefs In people.
"Now we need to take !bose
brains and energy that have sold so
much to the world and convince
people that drug usage is not chic,
not acceptable and Is plain stupid.
"Un~lllng may be toogher than
selling, but we must present the
attractive alternative fl. saving the
fllbllc their money, their lives and
their self-respect."
Attorney G&lt;&gt;neral Edwin Meese
and Dr. carlton E. Turner, ·special
assistant to the president for drug
abuse policy, both support the plan .
Meese SEfll the association a
videotaped message in whlch he
Two area people were cited by said, "Your program to match the
the state highway patrol in separate skills of Arnertca's best communicators with the media will have an
accidents Wednesday.
enormous
Impact on bow Ameri·
Troopers ticketed Bruce A. Hysell, 23, Middleport, for assured
clear distance after he reportedly
struck the rear of a car driven by
Tony J . Pierce, 29, Syracuse, on the
U.S. 33 ramp to Ohio 7 near
(Continued !rom page 1)
Pomeroy.
Pierce had slowed for a stop sign Powell. litter control program
while northbound on the ramp at supervisor, the board approved
7:43 a. m. and Hysell failed to slow John Rice, county extension agent,
in time to avoid a coillslo n, troopers Keith Wood, game warden, and
said. Both cars were moderately Sheila Curtis, president of the
Meigs County Garden Club, as
damaged.
additiOnal
mem!Ers to the county
Cited fo r assured clear distance
Utter
eontrol
board.
in a two-car accident on 7 at the
A
general
fuJHl oertlflcatlon of
in tersectlon with Ohio 124 was
$1757.11
was
approved
as reimburErnest F. Baker, 64, Racine.
sement
to
the
sheriff's
department
Baker was northbouJHl at 3:05
for
Utter
control
expenses.
Of that
p.m. when he reportedly failed to
slow down and struck the rear of a
northbound car ahead driven by
Marteena D. Eblin, 16, Rutland.
Eblin had slowed to make a left turn
onto 124, troopers said. Both cars
were slightly damaged .

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,
W.Va. (UP!) -The nation's media
and advertising agencies wUI
launch the largest volunteer adver·
Using campaign In history this fall
- a three-year, $1.5 billion war on
drugs, officials announced today.
All major companies in the
television, radio, magazine, newspaper and advertising agency
Industries have agreed to run
anti-drug messages tree of charge.
The plan to enlist America's best
eommunlcators In the war on drugs
was developed by the American
A~latlon of Advertising Agencies, whose 722 members prepare
nearly 70 percent of all national
advertising.
"The public is used to hearing us
holler 'buy,"' Louis T. Hagopian,
AAM chainnan, said today durtng
the group's annual meeting. "Now
we will tell them not to buy."

S-10

from the big onr ...

r h ~u11pion ~lc •:,

L(luls wllhln a goal with a powerplay seore at 18:02.
"We were forcing them in the
neutral zone, and what let them
back In was when we were 5- on-3,"
said Doug \llsebrough when the
Flames were forced to play two
men short for 48 seconds with just
over three minutes remaining.

~

"11H.'rc··:-; no frelinJ:! likP gf'lting I ~
t h1~ f&lt;.~ r." said right · wing0r 1 .I.Hl\ i ~
\lkDona ltl . \vho will m~kP thi' ~· ·q 1 •,
iinal .lpJX'arnr Jcf' 11f his 11 \'I'd' : y
c;uf'C'r. "\\'r'rr four win~ J.\v~·\

7

Ohio

Stock 116!8111
Stock~

der•sooo

Stod&lt;MI41

Slod&lt; 1501101

der'4000

V.W. Rabbit 4 dr. 1980 Mercury Cougar
Stock lltHII
XR•7!!tod!IIMI81
1~82 V.W. Pickup
1984 Mazda B-2000
Stock "'-U'll

Slockll051%

1982 Ford F-150

1980 Olds. Delta 88

14K GOLD

ADD·A·BEADS
Now

2 5°/o oFF

CHAINS INCLUDED

er
BULOVA-SEIKO-PULSAR
CARAVELLE WATCHES

2
5
°/o
OFF
THE PERFECT GRADUATION OIFTI
NOW

113 COURT
POMEROY, OH.

342 SECOND
GALLI~OLIS, OH.

992-2054

446·2691

1981 Chrysler Cordoba
2 dr. Slo&lt;kil51110l
1980 Mercury Capri

2 dr, Slo•U!IJ61
1919 .Chevy fe'onza

Slockl85033

StO&lt;kii5M'I

1979 Ford F-150

979 Pontiac Lemans

Slodllllll71

Slo&lt;ki®IJ!

446 9100
-195 Upper Rlllr
'

, ~i

GriP all, 0.
,.

•

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Kennedy birthday is observed
Two parties were held recently in
observance of the second birthday
of Jennifer Ann Kennedy, daughter
of David and Deena KennedY.
Pomeroy.

Band awards presented .
at Eastern High School

Attending the other party were
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kennedy, Mr. and
Mr. Charles Strauss, Mr. and Mrs.
WUUam Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.
John 'Thomas Adam and Brandl.
Debbie Kennedy , Mike Kennedy.
and Kenda Donahue. Sending gilts
were Mrs. Kitty Mees. Mr. and
Mrs. James Drehel, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Stone, Lynne Oliver, Mr.
and Mr. Charles (Jody) Neece, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neece, Amanda,
Ly~tte and Darlene.

Eastern High School Band Director James Wilhelm presented
awards of trophies, certificates,
letters, pinS and other awards at the
annual band banquet sponsored bY
the Eastern Band·Boosters.
Trophies werit to:
Tracy Murphy, fifth grade outstanding muislclan; Jennifer
Deem, sixth grade outstanding
musician; Kyle Faugbsnough,
sixth grade most Improved, all of
the Tuppers Plains School; Nicole
Kanlawalsky, fifth grade outstandIng musician; Sherry Wolfe, outstanding sixth grade music ian:
Danny Lawrence, most improved
sixth grad~r. all of the Rl""rvlew
School;

STODART BDml - Jerry
and Pego Stobart, Albany, are
aniiOUIICing the recent birth ol a
daupjer, Sara Lynn, at lhe
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She
weighed elgbl pounds, seven
ounoes. Mrs. Edna Stobart,
Main Sl. Pomeroy, Is a

Kim Michael, outstanding fifth
grade musician; Tabitha Phillips,
outstanding sixth grade musician;

grandmother.

Bell birthday

13 RECliNERS TO CHOOSE FROM

Attending besides her parents were
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bell, Mr. and
Mrs. Loyal Holman. Jacob and
Nicole, Merissa Teaford. Doug Bell
and Pebbles OhlingPr. Her great
grandmother, Helen Phillips, Cool·
ville. sent a gift.
The second party was held althe
home of her parents in Pomeroy. A
Crittl'f Sitter's theme was used with
cupcakes and ice cn:'am being
served to Mr. and Mrs. RDger
Jeffers, Jeannie and Jay Gilmore,

Your SocSec:

A SUIJlrise party honoring Donna Phillips. Max and Vivian Bolen,
Nelson on her birthday was given Harold and Juanita Bolen, Jack and
recently by her hu sband . Jim, oons Helen Bolen, Wesley, Travis and
and daughters-in-law. Gary and · Greg. and Greg's girl friend, Gina ,
Diana Nelson and Steve and Kim 'Lois Weaver, Maxine Nelson, Sue
Nelson, and their children. Nicole Grate, Scott a n ~ Laurie Grate, Dan
and Chad and Sara Beth and Alan. and 1\aren MeAdows. Bill and
Cake and ice cream were served Noami King, John and Tunie
following a buffet dinner. Attending Redov ian. Leigh Ann and Amy
the party were Blnde Diehl, ilDgl'r Beth .
and Betty Bolen and John, Georgia

0 .

Di ~ ISION

Of ASI! lA~D Oil

We Reserve The
Right To Limit
Quantities.

~

IN FASHION COLORS
20 NAILS

:

.5

oz.

A SAFE AID TO WEIGHT
LOSS - 100 TABLETS

~!~is $31 9

ONLV

$369

AMITY
BILLFOLDS

BD DIGITAL

FEVER THERMOMETER
THE BRAND DOCTORS
USE MOST

ONLV

40°/ooFF

$523

GOOD NEWS

Q-TIPS

DISPOSABLE RAZORS

COTTON SWABS

PKG. OF 2

204-20% MORE FREE

$117
RIOPAN OR
RIOPAN PLUS

KLEENEX

FACIAL TISSUES

12 OZ. SIZE

WHITE 175's

ONL~

SAVE

1

1110

73C

"'-----~ kenn•th McCullough,
A.Ph .
Ch•rles ~IItie, A.Ph .
" Ronald H1nln,_, R. Ph .
Mon . thru S•t . 8 :00 1.m. to 9 p m.
Sundey 10:30 to 12:30 1nd 5 to 9 p.m .
PRESCR IPTIONS
PH . 992 ·29155

:
•

46 Oz. ~ SuperAm~rica
llil
Fountain •
Quart
Drink

c
•

Po mtt'OY. Oh .

E. llhin

Cigarette!'

••

1

:

SAVE

••
••
•••
•

: 31

:

•• * * • • * * • • • • • • • • • * • • * * *

•:

Coffee

Freon

*

••
•
•

c."""

: Pepsi
:

70C

:

••

SURGEON GINIRIL's WIRNING: Srookong

•

2 Liter

C~t~sn

Lung Canter. Hea11 Otmsr .
Emphwsema. And May [ompliu te Pregnancy.

•

•
*
*
*
'

L9111: 14 mg. "fir". 1 2 mg 1'11(0111'111: Ultrallljlt 5 Bmg .
"111", O.li mg. nicatN, tlooflt!f 23 mg. "tar", l .li ~·
nicotN; FLII·fll ror . 11 mg "tar ", 1.3 mg . niCO t ll'llll ~
I* cio•rt11e by fT C MethOO .

•

• *

SBOcAVE

* * • * • * * • * * • ·...::~,:;.,

VCR • Delta
··············•**
•
•
:• GOld
*

:

W II ' Wh·t

7 '12
Oz.

SAVE
5Dc

••••••••••••••••*•••••.
*
•
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••••••••
•
••••••••••••
Eckrich Hot ••
•
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•

i........................
19C
·=
•
•
: Sun Shield
•
Wax
.s 69••

r::;:;;;-o;;-:t

12 Oz.

•

1
Lb.

SAVE

&amp;oc

~

· uc

•
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*

Wl•lc'lfl-c• ft•vurcd

*

S•ok•l- Tob•eeu

•

~~~~a39C-

••

••

•
•
Little Debbie ••

Snack Cakes :
•
10 Oz.
Regular 25c Each •
•
•
•
•••
•••
•
•
•
•;,
20
•••
•
lb.
St.OO
Gallon
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••* * * • • • * * * • * • • * * • * • * • *•
•*
•*
REGISTER TO WIN
Mlnllndy Race Car
In celebra lionol the Grand Open ing ol tne totlow• no SuoerAmerlu store , Sl!perAmerica will gi~e away ~ Mim l r~dy Race Car

No flUFchne necessary. You need not be present Ia win

will be notified blpi\One or. ma ll. Prl2e must be cla imed in person at 1he ptu ttcipali ng SuperAmenc a sto r'e wit hi n seven
** daysTheolwinner
nollf1cat lon. Winner m y be reQui red to prov1da adeQuate ldenttrlcat lon and sign al hdavit s of eligibil ity and ratease.
* Odds at winning depend upon tne number ol entries aubmi1ted.
Alltu tlabilllyon 1ne Mini !nay Race Clr and e!lllabll lly lrt connection with the awarolng ol the Mtnl l rtOy Race Car and 1 ~ accep·
** lance
1ndJor uee of the Mlol lndy Race Car i1the sOle responalbllityolthe prize winner.

Individuals under 1B year!li of age, employees of Ashland 0 11, In&lt;: ., its subStd lar iOS and rel&amp;ted companies . and thoh spouses and
** Chltaren,
1111 not eligible to register or win.

*

Approxlmatt retail ulue of ..ch Mini Indy R1ce

A Mother's Day )X'Ogram was
gjven by Linda Broderick wha gave
humorous laundry Ups, Nancy
Morris, "Why God Made Mothers"
and Barbara Fry, "What a Mother
Is. " Dulcimer music wa s )resented
by William Grueser, and Ihere was
a contest on Mother's Day. Nancy
Morris was named the "1986
Grange Mother of the Year."
A film on heart and hy pertenslon
was shown bY Opa l Grueser. and
refreshments were served at the
conclusion of the evenin g.

work or on a tax rpturn should

correct her Social Security record

I , Meigs 4-H news
The Salem Center Goeeners mrl at Diane

Molden 's hoiTI(' on the 21st Of April w1th 11
members and 4 advtsors ~escnt. Candy bar

and koo!·ald. The next TT\E'('tlnro: wUl bl! at

sales Wi.'l'ediscuSSEdand ltrdateset to collect
money. A commurUty project was talked
atxJut and yearly

centtlcatcs

l

passed out and ass1gnments wPre mad('.
Bobbl Pauley served rffi"eshments of ra ke

Hurtman 's h:mX! on Ma y 16.
HL•a nn Pauley
Nt."""'s R£:,:lont.,.

were handl"d

c., Ia $1,000.00.

···········*···~·····················*········

* 497 General Hartinger Parkway, Middleport,QH
*•
279 West lain Street, Pomtro", OH ·
I
*
*
**

•

NEW PADDED TOP

CEDAR
CHEST

/

.J.J

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NEW 2 PC. I.A.
LIVING RM. SUITE

lAVE

REG.
'279

sao

S
RICE
~

F·u~I'JITURE

closP.II Tl""'
111,1'11 'l.lll"

854 Second
Gallopolt s,

4'1b-%2J

advisor and 9 members attending. The club
talkOO about a bB.kf' sale and decided on an
outdoor cookery j:I'Oject. Amber Oav ~ gave a
report on llllf&gt;T" .
The S('('Ond meetln~ was on May 5 at which
8 memb(&gt;r.;! an d ] 8(1\1sor ca mc. Another bake

givt'l1.

Loren a Oller
NL'WS Rl'porter

Our Gang had a fll('('f.inro: at \h(o Carmel

ANNUAL
RATE

.ouil£', a plcntr. and a swimming parry W('re
among ttl€' things dL&lt;;eussrd.
Rf'd Ligh t - Grern Light was played for
roctf'atlon. Thf' nf'.'tt m('('tlng wUl tx&gt; May lli.
Teresa PleriX'
Neo.vs R1•porter
'J'he Country Boy~ tw&gt;ld a ffic.etlng on April
25 att tK&gt; Carm£'1 Chu rch wit h 10 m embers and
3 advisors pf('S('flt . A car was h was sugge5ted
as a money·rTU\king project a nd camping was
dlo;cus.....OO. Ryan H"olt rr gave a report on
safety. Baseball and football were playro
ttfter the meeting then n.&gt;fres hments were
5(&gt;1\ffd by Roy J o hnson.
The 1'\e)l f l'l'\t'ellng ·,r,r\Jl be May 9 at the
CarllV'I Church when • a wiener roast l~
planned
Shannon Willia ms

Comm unity Building AprU 21 wil h 4 .mv1sors

and 19 memlx&gt;rs attendlnA. Selling candy
bars. roUectlng gia~ and aluminum, and
dues were among U.:. things discussed.
Jarrod Circle ga\'e a demonslrallon on
fl'lhln g. Dlna and Dawn Schuler SErVed
refr~hm!nt'l. 1lll' ne-xt nwE'ting wW take
plaN&gt; a t thE' Carmel Commu nity BulldinAon
May 19. Sharon Card's woup will ha\'e
demort'itra tlort~ a nd me mbers wU I work on
proji'Ct books.
Ke ll l&lt;' E rvin
N£Ws Reporter

The Rldg f&gt; Crlll ers mel F'rida)', May 2 at
Haynrs' tvlmt"_ .a ITil'mbers and I
adviSor attended. Thr dat r of May 16 W&lt;l~ se t
ror "lnslallatDn of Offi('(&gt;rs" night. Camp
J ani~

d at('tl were dl«cus,;ed. Projoct books wert&gt;

N ~' S

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~5760

SUPERAMERICA®
DWISION ASHLAND Dll. INC
Of

--·-·--·- ·-·
•

Social Security monitors these
"servlce" companies oo they do not
misrepresent themselves as go vernment agencies or operate
fraudulently. They provide you a
service tf you are willing to pay for
it ju.st like having someone mow
your tawn. You can do it yourself
for free or pay someone to do lt.
What I 've been trying to emphas·
lze ts that you should contact your
Social Security office before you
pay for any Social Security related
service or for a Social Security
card. RememtJtr, we don't charge
for our services: Save your money
with a phone call to 992-6622.

D. J.'a Tr•dlng Post

*

**
**
*

ln other words, you pay $10 to
have your application typed while
you still have to do exactly what you
would do tl you contacted us in the
first place. If you contact us, you
st U! have the $10 though. We've
issued over 225 million Social
Security numbers since 1937 and
haven't charged a nickle for any of
them .

ThE" Golden Girls .Plus OnE' recently held
l\I.'O fll('(&gt;tlngs at thP Tilompson ho~. The
first meeling took place on April :B with 1

out.
Diane Mol den served refns hments. BoMlc
Scott will host the next meeting at her tDm:&gt;
on May 19 whl-rc demonstr ations wtU be

00:
- .

S2~.

•

room .

as soon as possible, there are no
grave consequences. ,
And when you stop to think that a
birth certificate ls rEquired to get a
Social Security number, haw could
a county birth record have a
number on it 7 Also, we koow of no
legislation, enacted or pending, that
establishes a minlmum age for a
Social Security card or requires a
child's number on its parents' tax
return .
We did discover what someone
would get for his or her $10, trough.
The company sends a typed Social
Security number application back
Y.1th the Instructions to take lt along
wit h proper ldenmication to the
nearest Social Security offi ce to
have the applicat ion processed.

How to expandHWt-

"
C
SAYE

HANDLE ROCKER RECLINER

•*

:

*•

Information on the stuffed toy
and needlework contests to he held
in · August was given bY Barbara
Fry. chalrman of women 's ~ct ivi ·
ties, at Thursday night's meeting of
the Rock Springs Grange held at the
hall.
II was noted thai the premiums
for granges exhibiting at the Meigs
County Falr have been increased to
$75 bY tre 'falr board. Pat Holter
gave a report on worldwide support
for fanners and the national dalry
buyout. Communlcatiln was read
from Dorothy Smith of Racine
Grange alongwitha thank you note
fro m the Mlcldleport Child Conservation League for use of the dining

woman wha Is either recently or
sao" to be married. The letter
implies that unless the person's
name ls Immediately chan ged on
her Social Security card, there will
be some serious consequences. The
company then offers to chan ge the
records and have a revised card
prepared .. .. for a fee, of course.
Lately, we've see n a similar
solicitation aimed at new parrnts.
This lettpr claims county blrth
records indicate thelr child has no
Social Security number and pend·
ing federal legislation will requlre
one. Bot h types of letters are
misleading. Although a woman who
will be using a married name at

C/.oLI

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~~~~~l:ane~ e : Tapes :Chips

Dogs

~svUoot ~~

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*

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•

SuperAmerica. •97 Ger1era1 Hartinger Park wa~. Middleport . OH
*** MayThe24.registration
period !Or tne SuperAmtiiCI store Is !rom May 14, t 986 through May 23. 1986. rneorawtng w• l l tle held at noon on
19M at the store l•sted abowe_
.

Pharmacy

~

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*

SWISHER LOHSE

~()U~S~

c:
'=' ~ S5~'

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FIBRE TRIM

NIKKO

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•

CANDY BARS

May tie Used

Great Gas, Good
Goods, Every Night

Specials Good May 14 Through May 24

:

LEE PRESS-ON
NAILS

Cred 1l Card s

For A ll
Purc hases

Grand Opening

REGISTER~
*•• • • *

PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY

1~

Ore•t gn, good OOOCII, 1\'lf'V nlgl'll ·n Clay

TOWIN ~

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SUPERAMERICA .

Grange meets

CIIDIT CAIDS

15. The show has 74 quilts, both new and old, and there will he a
people's choice award present..~ at the end of lhe exhlbll.

No fees charged by this office

By Lou Horvath
Field Represenlallve
By now, you probably have read
a news article or heard a radio
message alerting you about com·
panies that offer to provide some
Social Security service for a fee ,
usually $10.
Here's how lt works. An official
looklllg letter with a Washington,
D.C. retum address Is received~ a

Nelson birthday is celebrated

l'il~a:l

ntus and Gloria JUggs. The ex .. bll will he on display unlll June

ON DISPLAY - Patterns Worth Repeating, a quUI exhibit at
lhe Athens Dairy Bam, Includes sev..-al Meigs Cwnllans.
Included are quDts by Maxine Goegleln, Delores Cleland, Ada

Pha.rma.ctsts Who
Care About You

Cake and i('(' cream were setved.

Monica Adams, most Improved
sixth grader, all d the Chester
School; Suzanne Oay, outstanding
seventh grade musician; RDbln
White, outstanding eighth grade
musician; Teresa Lambert, most
lmproved, all of the Eastern Junior
Hlgh School; David Rloe, outstand·
ing freshman musician; MarUyn
Barton, outstanding sopromore
musician; Jeff Sayre, outstanding
junior musician; Bob Epling, outstanding senior musician; Renee
Kaylor, most lmproved;
Amy Louks , outstanding majorette; Mary Edwards, most
lmproved majorette; Amy Hager,
outstanding !lag corps; Joy Swain,
most lmproved flag corps.
Winner of the top awards were
Terri Stout, the Arion Award;
Becky Kimes. the Splrit Award,
and Dawna Grueser. the John
Philip Sousa Award.
•

New Shiprnent - Just Arri~ed

• Prescriptions filled
• Over-the-counter drugs
• Hea.lth and beauty aids
• Cosmetics and perfumes
• Sickroom; surgical needs
• Vitamins and diet aids.

Stephan ie Nicole Bell. daughter
of Shawn and Nicole Bell, Pomeroy.
recen tly celebrated her second
birthday.
Two parties were held,the first at
the home of her grandparE"nts, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Bell, Racine where a
Big Blrd theme was carried ou t.

SPRAY COLOGNE

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 15. 1986

•

Green Mllchltw

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_ _
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614 992 6421

MIDDLEPORT
•

�Thurlday. Mev 16. 1988

' Peg• 10-The Daily Setttinel

Mothe~'s Day

Mother, daughter dinner
conduct_ed by Philathea
Several mothers werer~ognl2ed group were Clyda Alleosworth, Bea
and presented gifts at the annual Stewart, Grace Hawley, Mrs.
mother-daughter banquet r1 the WUcox, Phyllis Gllkey, and Mrs.
Phllalhea Women r1 the Middleport Rlley. Mrs. ElWin also presented
Cllurch of Christ. About 80 selections from Erma Bombeck's
book, "Motherhood." 1rere was a
members and guests attmdPd.
solo,
"Mother" by Mrs. Wilcox
In the horoml group were
accompanied
by Mrs. Erwin, and a
Mlldml Hawley and Grace Haw·
"Mother
Is a Priceless
reading
ley, the oldPst; Jackie Casto. the
by
Mrs.
RUey. 'llle
Person"
youngest; Mary Ash, the most
program
closed
with
a frtendslql
chlldren; Helen Jolmson:' the
circle
and
a
thank
you
(Xlem by
youngest grnadmother, and MarMrs.
McKinley.
tha Haggerty, the most gramk:hlld·
Narsa Van Meter was welcomed
rEI!. Also recognl2ed and II'ESellted
as
a new member. Plans for a
plants were Mlldred Rlley, pa.t
fatiEr·llm
banquet were made. 'llle
president; and DoMa Hartson and
dinner
will
be served at 6:30 ooJune
Debbie Melton, wives of the
14.
Committees
named were Mrs.
pastors.
Gilkey
and
Mrs.
R!ley, reserva·
Dorothy Roach emceed the prolions;
Mrs.
Roach,
Nettle Boyer,
gram wllh Debbie Gerlach dlr~t·
Clyda
Allensworth,
and Regina
lng the nurnery rhyme chorus. They
Swift,
kltchen;
Coleen
Van Meter,
sang several songs and pantomConant,
Clarice
Erwin, taJoan
Imed a number of nursery rl\ymes.
bles;
Betty
McKinley,
Thelma
In the group were Tara and Allison
Boyer,
Farle
Cole,
Ella
Mae
Gerlach, Donna, Carrie and Erin
Daughlerty,
Bea
Stewart,
and
Hartson, Ilea, Dina and CindY
Phyllis
GUkey,
dining
room;
and
Stewart, Terri and Don Hoffman,
Kasey Wtlllams, Maryln Wllcox, Mrs. Hartson, Mrs. Wilcox, Mrs.
Carolyn McDaniel, Rochelle and Melton, and Sharon Stewart,
Delana Eichinger, and Debbl Ash. program.
Assisting with properties for the
chorus were Betty and Jennifer
McKinley, TrudY Wtlllams, and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Longenette,
Krls Ash.
Rockport,
Ind., announce the birth
A k11200 band acompanled by
of
a
daughter,
Karl Michele oo May
Parlee Erwin perilrmed. In the 4. The Infant weighed
six pounds, 11
ounce and was aJ Inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Duane Longenette, Long
Bottom and maternal grandpar·
ents are Mr. and Mrs. WilHam
Wllklnson, Hatfield, Ind.

' recognl2ed and
Mothers were
presented potted plants at the
Sunday morning worship service of.
the Middleport First Baptist
Church.
Recognition not only went to
mothers, but to other women
present who also received plants.
Special recognition was given
Dorthea NeutzUng, the grandmother with the most grandchild·
ren p~t; EtiEI Hughes, the

celebrated

oldest mother; Pam Crow, the
·mother wllh the youngest chUd;
Jean . Eden, wife o1. tiE pastor,
mother ot the church.
Children of the primary depart.
ment sang several songs ID honor
the metiErs, and Tracy Grueser
presented a special number.
Wanda Shank had a reading, "The
Jo~ Mothers Have to Do" with the
Rev. Earl Eden preSenting a
special Mother's Day message.

Mother, daughter dinner
conducted at Middleport

Longenette birth

SINGING- Mr. and Mrs. Rick Mu111hy will be presenting tiE vocal
music at evangl!listlc to be held at the Rutland O.urdt &lt;I God, 7 p.m.
each evening from Sunday through Sunday, May 25, and Rev. Murphy
will allJO servj,as evangl!llst.

The annual mother-daughter
banquet of tiE Middleport First
Baptist Church was held Thursday
evening in the churdt social rooms.
Prayer was given by Marjorte
Walrurn. The table were decorated
In blue and white checkeml table
cloths and featuml daisy candle
arrangements. Members and gu·
ests were introduced with each
sharing some precious moment of
the relationship.
• Skits along with readings, some
humorous, some serious, were
presented. Kathy Riggs and Donna
Grueser did "Helpful Women";
Susie Heck and Marjorte Walburn,
"What ~bout the Lady Clown Who
Gives Out Balloons"; June Kloes
and LYM Andrews, "She Missed
the Baptism, Too" and Beulah
White and Tracy Grueser, "On
Sunday We Had to Repeat the
Cateclsm." Tracy Grueser read
"What is a Grandmother", Kathy
Riggs, "Let Me be a Woman" and
DoMa Grueser, "A MottEr Who

Did Not Quit."
Attending were Marjorie Wal·
bum and Brtttany, Kathy Riggs,
Claudine and Tina, LouiSe Thompson, Darla Thomas, Amber and
Autwnn, Marla Roush, Bridget and
Bethany, Doona Grueser and
Tracy, Dot Neutzllng, Katie Crow,
Pam Crow, Meredith and Carrie,
Oulda Chase, Franres Young,
CaroUne Miller, Beulah White,
Gwlnnle White, June Kloes, LyM
Andrew, Susie Heck and Jennifer,
Vicki EbUn and daughter, Sarah
Fowler, Martha King, Marsha
King, Sharon Hawley, Kate Wilson,
Carolyn Davis, AJwUda Werner,
and Helen Bodlmer.
Unison prayer of the Lord's
Prayer concluded the ol!iervance
of MottEr's Day.
The banquet was sponsored by
the Board of Christian Education
with Marjorte Walburn, Donna
Gruser, Carolyn Davis, and Kathy
Riggs In charge.

DANCERS- These members of the Southern IUgh
School Choir will he dancing to the pop hit "New
Attitude" In Saturday night's annual Variety Show at
Southern IUgh. Showtime is 8 p.m. and admission to
the event Is $2 f!11' adults and $1 for students. Direcred
by music tc!IA!her Roberta Maidens, tllis year's show

is entitled "SoUd Gold." Pictured are, llnit row,
seated from lelt to right, Cariss HW, Jessica Evans,
Becky Evans an~ Sharon Deem; secoild row, Kim
Adams, Cindy Neulzllng, Lori Grueser and Tracy
Beegle; third row, Monica HW, Rachelle Davi'i, I.Grl
Adams and Jill Amott.

•

A party for J .D. Jenklos on his
second birthday was held at the
home r1 his parents, D.J. and Lois.
Cake and Ice cream were served.
Pn'sentlng gifts were his paternal

PDABMA£

wandJlarents, Mr. and Mrs. Dar-

1

,.1'il'.TI•1
....

t-:

.: .:;. ;"':,.~ ..
-~ .·.:
. .....

3 .DAYS &amp; 2 NIGHTS

rell Jenkins Sr., maternal grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Parsons, Phyllis Blake, Darlene
jlnd Ryan Bates, Kim and Vicki
Eblin, Destiny and Doug Jenkins,
M~ry and Missy Roush, Kelly,
~arrod, and MoniCa Holman, Cha·
[tes Tyree, Amy Harrison, Penny
!l"d Amanda Brinker, Lisa, Jason,
~ ustln and Jeremy Roush.
Sending cards and gifts were
and Joy Roush, Buck and Joan
i!tl'!vart. Albert and Velsla Roush,
an Roger Holman.

WALL CLOCKS

2501 Jackson Ave. 364 Jackson Pike 786 N. SeCond Street
Point Pleasant. W. Va. Gallipolis, Oh~o
Middleport, Ohio

MYRTLE BEACH
VACATION

up to perlonn a dance routine to the hit !rll'lg from the
hlt television show at Saturday night's annual variety
show at Southern IUgh School. The show Is being
presenred by the Southern Choir and is under the
direction of teat!her Roberta Maidens. Showtime is 8

DECORATOR QUARTZ

Large Selection • Low Prices • On TNe Spot Financing

Jenkins birthday

Racine as it is on TV-watch out! 'lllese gah wm team

p.m. and admission is $2 adults and '$1 students.
Seated In front from left to right are, Usa Plll!IOIB,
Gina Nance and Karla Smith; second row, Tammy
Adkins and Mindy Patterson: Jell side from boltom to
top, Loretta Smith and Tara Wolfe; rlghl side from
bottom to top, Tammy Theiss and Annett Cardone.

SELECTION
CORDLESS • WOOD FRAME

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DURING THE MONTH OF MAY! HURRY, WHILE SELECTION IS GOOD!
J .D. Jmldns

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Closeout!
So We
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FOR

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Perfec t f o r use wi t h any
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a Family of : . (2 ~. dulls and 2 Ch ildr ~ .-.
Under 14)
A FREE' Fruit Bas ke t Prov1ded by the Hpt el
on Your Arrival
-t\,,. t.'\
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~
o\ Wl-i te 3a nd Be aches.
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T ra~sf•;, r abla To Relatives or Frie nds.

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sand

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Colors

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FLA-VOR-AID
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StockMII3
Jennifer Nicole Dum

Dunn birth
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy DUM,
Gallipolis. are announcing the birth
of their first chUd, a daughter,
Jennifer Nicole, born Aprtl3 at the
Holzer Medical Center. She
weighed seven pounds, nine ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Burdell McKinney, Mld·
dleport, and the paternal grandpar·
ents are Mr. and Mrs. Guy DuM,
Carlisle. Maternal great grand·
mother Is Mrs. Gurt!Ude Blttrnarr1
Pomeroy, and paternal great
grandmother Is Mrs. Thelma Har·
graves, Red Ho~, W.Va..

1986 FORD ESCORT

ONLY

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per/mo.

1986 RANGER PICK-UP

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pot.,.esB . mach•ne wash.•tH Choa ol

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color&lt; Suti 5-11-L ·XL .

1986 FORD
BRONCO II

per/mo.

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George and Barb EUis, Racine,
announce the birth of a daughter,
Ashley Elizabeth, born oo March 4.
She weighed eight pounds, live
ounces. Maternal grandparents are
Bruce and Patti Hoffman, Pomeroy, and the late Wayne Chappelear. Paternal grandparents are
Roy and Clara Ellis, Rutland.
Great grandmothers are MUdred
Castle. Pomeroy, and Betty Chappelear, Colum~s. and tiE great
great grandmother Is f ianna AI·
, sup, Columbus,
,

FLA-VOR-ICE

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ONLY

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per/mo.

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or
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'

.....
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15,1986

•

1986

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Business
Services
i,:;:;::::::::;r.:~;;:;;;:;;;t;~~~~~==rr============%:========~=;1~-,~''~~
TOWN &amp; COUNliY
VETEIINAIIAN
CLINIC

BACHELOR OF RHYME'!-

P.aul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICE

At 3 p.,m. Sunday jhe!le chllclrfJI
ol the momlng ldnderpnen

;·

class ol Mary Carolyn Wiley,

3D5 Jackson Ave.

Pomel'll)' Elementary Schoo~
will be awarded lhe depoee of
"Bachelor ol JU!ymes." Piclured left to right, lint row,
Keith Landers, Michael Lellhelt,
J.R. Hoover, Brandon Larldas,
Jimmie Jude, Wendl Daalels,
Tanya DOl; 11000nd row, Michael
Krautter, Betsy Sheets, Bradley
W!llker, Jack Day, Aprl Foreman, and Candace Miller; llllrd

SMALL ANIMAL HOUIS
Mott.-WocJ .. Jhun. 3-S pm
TuH. 6:30·1: Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10·11 :30 om
LAIGI A.NIMAL &amp;
SUIGEIY 8Y APPT.

row, Tara Hawley,

'

Dllnlelle

Brandy GIDIWJ!I',
En! llageriy, Amy Hayea, and
Jennifer Yeauger, and faurth
row, Chrllltlna l\leooe, Heidi
DeLoag, Wendy Shrmplln, Ll8a
RinseD, 111d Jerlca Clark. JoshUa Wlllon was absml wben
the pldure was taken.

4644--Sew breeze-easy
top, pull·on skrrt, shorts
ol easycare cottons in no
time to mi&lt;·switch. A
great patter n value .
Child's Sizes 2 to 8.
$3.25 lor each pattern.
Add 75e each pattern tor
postage. handling.

--·-·
11

.. . .# . . .,
t,

1

CARD OF THANKS

.CHESHIRE, OHIO

,
·,

•

Robert E. Buck
Probo1e Judge
16!8. 15. 22 3tc

54 Misc . Merchandise

Slater,

POMEROY - Meigs Junior
High sports banquet, 6: 30Thursday
evening at the Meigs High School;
each athlete or parent to take two
side dishes. vegetable or dessert.
CHESTER - District 13, Daugh·
ters of AmeriCa, wtll meet at the
Chester Grade School Thursday at 7

p.m.
CLIFTON -Clifton TabPrnacle.
Clifton, W.Va ., will be in revival
Thursday through Sund ay with
serviCes at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist will be B.T. Weston of
Columbus, Ohio . Singing ministry
will also be fea tured.
POMEROY - The Rock Springs
Better Health Club wll meet at 1:15
p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs
Methodist Church. The program
will bP bv Nancy Grueser, the
contest, seuna Grueser. New offiC·
ers will be elected.
MIDDLEPORT- Child Conser·
vation League 6 p.m. Thursday at
the home of Helen Blackston for
hike and wiener roast; also white
elephant sale.

---Meigs poet's corner
A LeUer To Mom
Well , Its tha t limP of year again . a lime
when \oW ga ther tuget her to C'l'lebr:nr a da y
we call yours. Solll.&gt;W h&lt;.1"e along the line, W(l
lllJSI havt' wandered otf ti'F tral·k and got
wrapped up In the wor ld, or rather the worlr.l

crept into our lives. We kind of for;got what the
other d ay.o;, rl the year rea Uy mean.
Now, 1 don't mean th.a,f Its wrong to want to
honor you IYl lhlsday , but what about the rest
of thf year? Do you suppose that you picked
just m e day a year to remember that Wf' are
yoor children? No. I really don 't believe you
~ld have did such a thing.
J OOn't know why , In this w«ld we !!veIn
!Dday, tllal poople become so forge!ful. We
knOw what yoo sacrutced wha~ y~ trough!

lll Into the world, row much you did without
many things In llfe, just so we wouldn't !eel
~tghted . Espedatty ~ones ""grew 1.1' with,
had more. And mw you chantll'd thE subject,
(I' maybe once in a whlle, even tad a small

untruth to keep us wt ot trouble.
When we sum It all up, a nd look back on llfe,
Its hard to forget thooe things. And even yet
today, tho:Y brlna a luq&gt; In our lhroat.s, when

•

on fast and It takes time to get the
nags ready. Deadline for orders Is
May 22.
In the birthday corner is Mrs.
Clara Roush who will be !11 on May
2'l. She still lives alone, takes part in
Senior Citizens activities and quilts
every day. Cards can be sent to
Mrs. Clara Roush, ·Box 44, Ma son,
W.Va., 252QJ.
And another alumni association
. has it ·pinned down.
All alumni are Invited to attend
the annual Raclne ·Southern
Alumni banquet and dance at 6p.m.
on Saturday, May 24, at the
Southern High School.
Honored classes this year are
1921, 1926, 1931, 19li, 1941, 1946,
1951a, 1956, 1961, 1966, 1971, 1976,
1981 and 1986. ·
After dinner. music for dancing
from 9: ll to 12: 30 wiD be provided
by Crosswinds. This Is.a seven )ieee
band that has been performing for
11 years across the state. The band
plays a wide range of po!JJiar music
including rock, disco, top 40, jazz
and standards of the 30's, 40's and
50's.
Tickets for the annual reunion
are oow on sa le and can bP
IJ.lrchased at the New York Clothing House, the Racine Home
National Bank, or Racine Village
Cut Rate Store.
Tickets can also be reserved at
the door by calling Betty Wagner,
949-2870; Dale Hart, 949·2656; Tim
Thoren, 949·2250; Larry Fisher,
992-6104 or Joyce Qulllen at 949-2695.
The deadline for the purchase of

ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING
DEALERSHIPS IS NOW
INTERVIEWING FOR THE
POSITION OF SALES
REPRESENTATIVE.

_,;;;__;,.

____

-:-""_~~

U. S. RT. SD EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Joltn 0Mrt,
New Holland, Bush Hog
farm Equipment
Dealtr

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS·

415-'B61c

SATElliTE
SALES

Between · 10 a.m. • 6 p.m.

Monday-Saturday Except Thursday

J•

r

reco rder. stflffiD . lki·bo oh , loti
m o re . Ohio River C&amp;mp
Grounds . Racine. Oh io .

Annou ncemen ts

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

~ Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection

z

-a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

&amp;

REPAIRS

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

992-6173

""&amp;·0294.

Giveaway

5 C0ff1)1rtment rabbit cag11 . Call
614 ·446 -1354 .

z

Hobson Rd., Middleport

SWEEPER and •ewin g m&amp; ch ine
repa ir, part s. and aupplie1 . Pick
up and detWart. 01vi1 Vecuum
Cleaner , o ne half mi te up
G.arges Creek Rd . Call 8 14 -

4

::1: licensed Clinical Audiologist

LARRY'S
SOUT HfRN MILLS
CARPET OUTlET
511311 mo

S'wim Molds • lnterprettng Servtces

~

pdate Vour Systems Now

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core 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 -tfc

Howard L. Writesel
I

ROOFING

RESIDENTIAL

NEW- REPAIR

COMMERCIAL

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design

Service

CALL 667-3271
Co111ptrt The QualiTy
lhfore V~tr6uf mo .
'VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2860
No Sun do y Calls
3111 / lfn

Roger Hysell
G_arage
At. 124,Pomeray Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Also Trtns111lulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-lft

949-2263
or 949-2168

1·1J.86·tfn

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
PN. 992·6931

8-t!ttn

L---------:-----------~

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYl &amp; AWMINUM
Co mplete Gutter Work
Co mplete Remode ling
Rooiing oi all Types
Worked in ho me area

20 years
" Free Estimates "

CAll COLlECT:

Ph. (614) 843-S42S

MANLEYS

Old achoot but for ~nit . Celt
614 · 446-4597 .
Female black Cockapoo. Call
814 · 258 ·68 36 .
6 kinen a. 1 ch11rcoa l. 2 y11llow
ltripes. 2 beig11. C11t 614 · 446 ·
Sa~g le Bauan . 1YJ years old ,
m1le, to goo d home, 304· 3660

TRASH

6 lost and Found

SERVICE
Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
•Commercial Container
Service Available•

CALL 992·3194
5/ SJ

5-12-'86·1 mo .

mo .

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYliANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Teehlclu

INI

Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Jl MCLIFFORD

Installation Available
4/ IMn

PH. 992·7201

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

/·'()( .\'fA I •\
IW.'I 'I' ·fl ' RA N T
located in the

Saddtebrook Inn
R t 62 . 8 ""' " 1ou tt1 ot
ltle Pome•o-r ·Muon Bridg11

(hoose from

3 Meats -

Hom, (ki(ktn or lakti Sttot.
St rnd witn 4 ngttobl" , ·
10lod, dtutrl and drink.

SUNDAY BUFffi - '4.9S
ll ,!Oa.m.

to 2,00 p.m

Otitdrt n 12 &amp; Undu -1/t Pt iu
5 &amp; llndu rREE
Out '" 1 1•-..ialt~

WHOlE APPlE Plll-'4. SO
5·5·" 86·1 mo .

3 Announcements

APPLIANCE REPAIR
Experienced Service in
Microwave Ovens,
Ranees, Air
Conditioners,

OPEN HOUSE: Sund.!y. May 11
Ill 37086 Kinpbuty Rd. 2 bed·
room. cedar ~tied, l )'$. old,
quiiMII&gt;me on 3.7acres m/1.
Dorot Ruttw 592-156215923738. und Bloom. Reehtrs

592·5263.

Refrigerators, Washers
&amp; Dryers, 1Vs &amp;
Satellite Systems.
24 Hr. lmwgoncy Stni&lt;o
~

.. r

~

·949·2145

5·12·1 mo.

Yard Sate, Fridly M1y 16th.
3009 Parrish Ave .. Point Plee·
unt , chi ldrens clothes 1nd mise
items .
Yard Sale 16 th &amp; 17th , At . 2
No rth , Pt . Pleuant Opposite
Good Shaphard Church . A11sR:e
clothes , tadifls lerge sius . c ur·
tain s. much more. 9 to 5 .

11

Help Wanted

Temp orary telephone sales peo ·
pie. Call 614 · 446 -3730 between 5 &amp; 9 on Thurs .
Needed dtiver to Dayton . Write
P 0 . Do~~: 1 129 . Gallipolis . 0 .
Boy ce . Fe11 nego tiable .
Go11ernment J obs 116 ,040 ·
t69.230 · yr. Now Hiring . Call
, -805· 687 · 6000 Ext. A-9805
for c urr ent teder&amp;llil t.
Somebody equip ped to butcher,
cut and wrap a hog. Call
614 -992 · 5918 .
AVON , 3 q:.en territo ries Call

304-£75-1429
Coming aoon Wallpaper Outlet.
Pt. Pleasant. WV now accepting
a pp li cltion for fu111imaamp lo y·
ment. Send resume along wilh
personal referen ces to C .L.
F11rrell. 3 1 1 E. 7th St. . Ch illi·
cothe. Oh 46601 Plea1einclude
phon11 numl:lflr
Airl in as now h iring . rflsttrvation·
ill. flighlattendentl. and ground
crew position• . Cal l
(refundable Jl -61 8 · 469 - 3535
ex• .A-1980 for info 24 htt.

61. ·992 -3785 .
Found : man 's watch . NII'W lime
Rd .. Rutland . Must dfltcribfl to
claim. C111 614 -742 -231 0 .

12 ' Situations
·
Wanted

Lost: Min 's glaue1 in blacrt.
l.. ther e11e . Betwee n upp~r
parking lot 1nd Five Poinu . Call

Will do alttypes masonry work .
Bri ck, block , 1"1oneendconcrete.
Fr11e flttimetes . Call 514 -74 22290 or 30 4 · n3 ·597t

Minfn g : German Short Ha ir Dog
(brown •nd white) In Pomeroy
1rea. Has cut honuhoul da r. Call
John Cost1ngo at 614 · 843 ·
5405 or 614 ·992 · 3BB3 .

Have vacancy for t'ld er ly . Room,
boerd , 1nd laundry. AllfiiOnAbte.
Catt 614 · 992 · 6022

9

17 Misce llaneous

Wanted To Buy

411 / tln

" Free Estimates"

I

Hugh Yard SA1 e, Fr i and Set onty
9 :30 til l? . Turn right cro" from
Bette School. follow aigns .
Clot he•. Tupperware . Home In·
terio r. some furniture , china,
cu rtains, 300 gal watertng
trough 850 00 , Avon bottl11s .
klts ot her mise it11ms .

CHISTER-985 -3307

•Insulation ~
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows

,tta~~
~ ~tl w-r,:

Ga rag e S1 le. nin or lhlne,
Fr i· Sat, 9 :00 to 3:00, h n ho use
behind Belle S chool. niJW' ch ina.
gun . sewing mach in11. binocu ·
Iars. glu1war11. artiflca l tree.
pro m gowna. mise

I.V ·Tech .· Jack son General Hospita! , Aiply , W. Va . is accepting
applications for the posit ion of
IV . Tech . Oualil ied peraonm u .t
havf!l pharmacy expfltil!tll tfl, be
l!lble to type .tecl~rately find nave
excellent math skills . Applic at k)ns 1re ttllailable at Hospit1!
Bu siness office or call personnel
dept . 304-372 2731 Mon day
thru Ftidly.

~14 - 379 · 2286

.:__ _ _ _ _ __ _
FOUND Coat on Bul.11ville Rd .
fou nd Tuesday night . Must
iden tity . Ca ll 614 · 44 e . 28 75 .

&amp;1•·992·9939.

•SATEllll£ SALES &amp;. SERVICE
We H1n Afill Tltttt
Sho~

LOST Quarter kerac Keepuke
di1m ond engtgement ring .
t{olzar between parking lot &amp;
pediatrics w1rd. R11w ard. Ca ll

Lost· Female Pit Bull. White111d
Brindel. Brlnde1 eve. and Brindel
a1r . CaH 614 -992 · 3692 IJr

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

Alter 5 Call
742·2027

A/C

.

Call Mr. Gilmore For
Appointment
...

6 fam ily b11ement 11te at larry
O'BriGn residence . letart Falls,
Friday and Sat. 16th and 17th
10 :00 - 9 :00 . Lots of nice
11.1mmer dothing. At least 1 00
pr . shorta, also lots of kn icll ·
lmaclls . Wat ch for 1igns .

4 family . May 11 · 18 . C. B., t1p e

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•New Ro ofing

" FREE llTIMAIE!"

5/

TOP C ASH paid for '83 model
and new er used c1n. Smith
Buidt -Pontlac. 191 t Eattern
Ave .. G1llipolis . C111 614 -446 2282.
Wan ted junk I UIOt . C11t 614 ·

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Buying deit¥ gold , silver coins.
ring1, jew11lry. st .. ling ware. old
coins, large currency. Top pr i·
cet. Ed. Burhen Barber Shop,
2nd . Awe . Middleport. Otl . 614 -

992·3476 .

Employme nt

tl

11
Ntw location:

161 North lt&lt;ond
Middlopart, Ohio 4S760 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Can v Fishing

Supplla~

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bitto Here
IUitNI!I PitON!
(6141992 -•sso
RE!toiNCE PHONE
16141 ~97 - 77S4

108/ tln

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

GOlD COINS
BASIBALl CARDS
MOTIIEI'S DAY &amp;
GRADUATION
1 OZ. SILVER IllS

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SUPPLIES

Help Wanted

Ca retehr to live-in ap1r1ment
CO "llle• . Catl304 -676 -5104 .

CLC COINS

&amp;

Sand , gravel, fill dirt . mulch , 3
&amp; spread
S48 00 per lo ad . Cell Don
Waugh , 614 ·446 · 9646

·cu . yards , delivered

l ewn CIHfl. home 111d auto
p11inting . auto . rApt~ir . house ·
c!lt&amp;ning . Catt anyt1m1. 61 4 ·

246·9693 .
Teactllf Wllflting t o do painting
&amp; VBfd word ttlit summe r at
reasonab le p1ice . C1ll 614 -246 61 97 after 5
Experienced paintflr inside or
out. e tso. odd jobs. reasonab le
rates. 304· 675 · 6709
Will do ho use c!e&amp;ning , $5 00

per hou1 . call f!venings 30 4 576·

!O·B·tfc

COINS

1 B Wanted to Do

388·93 03.

S~rVtt:CS

SALES

•No Efperience Necessary

UNDERPINNING &amp; SETUP

!Free Estimates!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-3345

UTOMOTIVE

,

.,.:.,.~--::--:-;:-:-;:-:-:;;- ·Ic -

-ESTIMATESREASONABLE PRICES

BOGGS

Em ploymenl

"""II'L - Pvt. Timothy Todd
Klein, 8011 of Mr. ,llld Mn.

Run Rd . Children end adult
clolhM . household goods . Rain
cancel1. M1y 14th, 16th, &amp;nd
16th. 614 -992 · 5275 .

3 Announcements

75 5 Mill 51., Middtoport
104 Mulberry Aw .. Pom.,.y

Individual to serve the capacity as a full
lime attivities diretlor I stKial service
director for a 2S bed SNF /ICF nursing
fadlity. Experience is preferred. If
int· rested please pick up applicotion at
Velerans Memoriol Hospital, 11 St;, E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Oh.

Joseph R. Poole. Nellie Parker.
Martha F. Poole to,Ca rl E. Smi th
Petr. Inc. , Right of Way, Orange.
Cljarles E. Power, Susanna H.
Power to Carl E. Smith Petr. Inc.,
Right of Way, Orange.
Willard G. McMaster. Kathry n
McMaster, Mary Lou McGuire,
WUllam P. McGuire, William
Curtis Lesher to James B. O'Brten.
Roberta C. O'Brie n, Lot s,
Middleport.
Walter K Harris, Dec .. to Helen
M. Harris, Affld .. Syracuse VIII.
Herman .Josep h McMurray. Elsie Mae McMurray, Ella Marie
Blight to Colleen Payne, parcels,
Scipio.
Janet Smith to Wesley M. Smith.
Megan L. Smith. lots, Mlnersv illl'.

OH Rt. 124. 2'11 miles on Hysell

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

992-3361

lusin,ess Forms,
Copy S1nKts, Eh.

NEEDED

Land acrions

II·

Pomeroy, Ohio

Signs, Rubbtr Stamps,

WANTED

May moves right along and just
think It won't be long untn the kids
will be homefor theentiresummer.
Without too many activities for
them here in Prairie Junction,
undoubtedly It will get in teresting.
Do keep smiling.

Yard Sale, MltY 16 an d 17 . 9 :00
til l 7. Dil hB!I. cklthe1. rno torcy·
cl el, chair, taw , fishing equipment , 3 miles out Redmo nd
Ridge , Donni e Sergen t
ret idenca .

Loti of everything. Fklr.-.C8
Sidders, Darwin. May 16th,
17th, and 18th. Rain cancels till
na•t day .

742-3195

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16-' 86 tin

St.

Middleport
1!. Vicinity

992-5875 Or

4 hm ily garage sale. 303
Sevent h St .. New Haven , 16th,
17th, 9 :000 -4 :00 .
2 f1mity. Thurs and Fri. 9 :00 ·
5:00, 2616 Mt. Vernon A111111 ., Pt
Pit ., lots of everything

····· Poiiierov ·····

Call:

Y11d Sete, G11t ipolls FArry , tum
righ t a t Beale Schoo l, 3 rd lane
on right a t end . Sat 9 ·00 till 1
Hou&amp;8ho td and miac

Fri .. Sat.. Sun. Vard Salfl 3
Family Yard Sa\11 lots of 1ir111
6 ·7. nightgown s. wo men and
children clot hing 64 sycam ore

Residential &amp; Commercial

CALL ANYTIME

PlUS, Offiu 5upplili &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stottonwy, Magnetic

CMA or LPN to work in physician 's office.
Job includes preparing patient for exams, venipuncture. injections, EKG's, etc . as wel_l as
possibly some work at front desk (scheduling,
answering phone). Salary commensurate
with experience and training. Replies ac ·
cepted until May 27th.
Send Resumes to :
Box LB -50
C / o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
,

Steve Powell as Meigs Coonty
litter control manager, will represent the county al a managers
session covering Southeastern Ohio
counties to be held nexzt Wednes·
day in Ironton. Financing the
loca tion programs, their qJeratlons
and plans for coordinat ing public
awareness activities throogh the
region will be up for dlscusslon at
tbP planning session.

carp specialist.

Ad dons li nd remod eling
Ro ofing lnd gutter work
Con c rete work
Plumbing end electrical
work

312/Hn

tickets Is May 16. Tickets for the
dinner at $7- the dana&gt; ooly, S5.

Lawmace Klein, 32WI5 WelchIowa Road, Pomeroy, has completed eight weeks ol. basic
training at Fort Leonard Wood,
Mo. He received sharptshooter
and marksman bacJses, graduating May 1. AUendln1 gra.
duallon WIIS wile, Lila Klein,
daugWer and his parents. He Is
lilatloned at Fort Elutla, Va., for
six ~ A.I.T. tl'lllnklg as a

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

TRENCH~G

Sale Fri . &amp; S1t. 4 family .
much too mention , 42 9
Star Rt ., Low er Garfield ,

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

V. C. YOUNG Ill

F11 All Yw PI/IIIII N11l1

Meigs hands help

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Stall Writer
MONDAY
On Sunday, May 25th, at 3p.m. all
RlJI'LAND - The Rutland Meigs Countlans
Garden Club will meet Monday at will hav e a
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Albert chance to join
SATURDAY
Woodard.
hands with six
RACINE - Annu al Soutllcrn
m il liorl oth e r
High School variety show. "Solid
POME ROY - Revival services Americans in the
Gold", 8 p.m. Satu rday in the at the Pomeroy Chu rch of Christ .
"Hands Across
Charles Hayman gymnasium .
will begin Sunday and " ('(J ntinu(' Ampr l ca"
through Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
RACINE - Revival at Freedom each evening. Art Bush of Opera · program.
The Eastern High School Student
Gospel Mission Church through tion Eva ngt:'lizc wil be the
Council
.is hard at work trying to
Saturday at 7:30 nightly. Loca ted evangelist.
organize
the Meigs County line
. on CR 31, Bald Knob Stiversville
which
will
be a part of the 4,00J mile
Road back ri Portland and Racine. Spaghetti supper
stretch
from
Los Angeles to New
Rev. Clyde Ferrell. eva ngelist;
A spaghetti supper wi ll bP held York City. "Hands" Is an American
special singers.
Sat urday by the Long Bottom aid effort to fight hunger and
Community Associalon Saturday
R,AONE - A benefit dance will with serving to be held from 4 to 7 homelessness In America. Twenty
be held Saturday night at the p.m.at the community buildin g. million Americans, 14 miUion of
Racine American Legion hall from The menu will be spaghetti and them children, go hungry every
9 p.m. to I a.m. The public is invited meatballs, tosSt'CI salad . roll or month.
The Eastern Student Council
to a ttend.
garlic bread. tea or coliC&lt;', and says:
dessert. Cost wil be $3.50 for adult s
" Meigs County, we need YOU!
SUNDAY
and $2 for children
You
can participate lor as little as
CHESTER - Special services
$10.
This
is a chance to actually take
wil bP held at the Chester Church of Southern variety show
part
In
history
as well as help to .
God, Sunday through Wednesday, 7
RACINE- Southern High Choir demonstrate Ohio's spirit."
p. m. with Bible teacher. Angel will present their an nua l va riety
All persons wishing additional
Percy. Gilbert Spencer. pastor, show this Saturday evening at 8
information
or who have questions
invites the IJ.lbllc.
p.m. Entitled "Solid Gold" and may call9ffi.3329 from 8:35a.m. to
under the direction of music
POMEROY - Meigs County teacher Robe rta Maidens. the show 3:15p.m .. requesting "Hands Info".
The Eastern High School Student
Genea logy Society meeting, 2 p.m. will take place in th(' Charles
Council
Is under the direction of
Sunday at Meigs Musrum. Open to Hayman Gymnasium . Everyone
facu
lty
member,
Joe Bailey.
public. Those aMendin g invited to wei('(Jme.
You do remembPr "the purple
and white:•.
I'm sure J don't have to say, "You
And If ~· c han('(&gt;, shf' ha s passed Into I ht•
ITI('rT'IOry refuses to bP hidden.
know,
the colors of Pomeroy High
JO'l'at bryond , go vl&lt;i l1 her grav(', put a
So Ieday. In the lill ie ~~o·ay t h~:~t we can show
School.
"
OOuquet of nowrrs ,or evcn one llttlC' onc ther(l.
our 10\·c and try to makP you happy . accept
and I knO&lt;N ~hr will unders1.1 nd . Sht&gt; wl ll look
what we do, and look on the br ight side. Put all
Well - someone came up with
down tram aboVe and bf' Vr'flll pl l'a.~. Sh(&gt;
Thosf&gt; by·gonedays away. a nd gtveus anoth('!'
the idea that It , would bP an
may even have a tear In hl:&gt;r £'yr. hut shf' wil l
c han ce. Let us look upon you, a~ Clll' of lhf'
be happy. And {'\'C'n a&lt;&gt; grown up as we S('{'ffi
Irs! friend'! a ~rson could have, wtth thr
excellent Idea to display purple and
to be, It wouldn 'T tx! a disgrace for US(' to
exception of God hlmc;elf.
white flags over Memorial Day
We know there were many timeS when we maybe wipe our ~·cs a little.
weekend when so many alumni
Mom, this your day, a nd so Is th r: resl of the
beca me aprobJem , that only a Mother had the
yea r , even It we dosomct!Tll('S forget. So take
unders tandlrig to dea l&lt;,~,1th . And now that Wt&gt;
return to the Big Bend area. The
the little bits ol appreclat lon}"e give yoo , the
have ~UOW n older. and more broad minded,
nags
would be really a nastalglc
Jl'e!ient.s, maybe the dlnner ~· u takeyoo out
we can understand why.
to mjoy , the vlslt to ywr grave, or anythlng
Now, aUthls seems ~k e talk trom grown up
touch. So - the Fabric Shop Is
el&lt;i(' .,...1' ma y do, as a .small tcil:en of trying to
chUdren , without remembering thellttleon(.'S,
crea ting the flags at $10 each. This
repay )"00 for being 1he best Mom we ever
D.Jt Is Isn't . You llttle bo}'5 and girls, don't
l&gt;ld .
forget what Mom fnl'ans to you . And when
Is a non ·proflt endeavor with the
Maybe y01.1 won't have a crown on your
things seem to go Mong and she seems a little
cost
merely taking care of the
M the strict side, remember, shes a little head. but we'll try to make yoo reel llke a
Queen
anyhow.
Wf!
lo.....-e
yoo
Mom,
from
!he
material
expense.
older, wtser, and knows a little more whats
,flOd for you, even more tha n yoo 00 yoor!lt'lf. deplhs r1 our t-eart we love you.
·If
you'd
like one of the fl ags call
From all Of your children .
So l't'membfr her today as a Mother, put
the
Farbrlc
Shop or Sandy Ianna·
both yoong and old .
yoor ar!TL'I around her neck, and gtve ha- a big
hug and ki!Jg. You oon'l know what that really
10111t11s. your day )
relll at 992-7600 to place your order.
Thanks toi bel.ng our Mom.
means to me woo loves you as much as she
And you'd better hustle because
By Olen D. Hamson
dOf:s. It gtves her tile feeUlli of not havtng
Pomeroy
Memorial
Day weekend Is coming
IJved In vain.
. ·,
RliTLAND- Dance at Rut land
Civic Center 8 to 10;30 p.m . Friday
with music by Music Unlimited;
admission. $2 single; $3 couple.

lowboy Hauling
S8ptic Syttema
licensed &amp; Bonded

only . Centenary Town l""•uiO, boya &amp; girls clo thes, toy•.
9 · 4 . Brown&amp;. S.11liabury.

9636.

Fomily of
Neva Grimm

FRIDAY

Custom Walding

992 -621S or 992 -7314

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

Although she cannot
bt rl{lfaced in 111.0' t.arts,
sharing your kindness
orwl sympathy madt it
possible for us to con·
tinue during our time of
grief and sorrow.
Gocl Bless all of !oul

brin g their family Bibles to ha ve
their ri'Cords copied.

Backhoe Service
P1umbing Service

Vafd Sa te. May 16th. 17th,
2629 Mt. Vernon A1111 . Pt Pit .
Rain or Sh ine, 9 :0 0 -5 .00

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Day or Night

1· 3-'86 We

Funeral Homt.

Mellssaa ~~~r!1
topher S

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

farm Equlpmenl
Paris &amp; Service

Meigs CoUIIty E.M.S.,
Rn. Morlt II&lt;(IUIIg; lost
but 110tleast, tho Ewing

Trenton Qualls, Aaron Price,
Claudine Eblin, Jas&lt;""'-Ciill'diiJ!SS.
Michael Dent.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A I Rtasonable Prim"

We would lilte to OX·
in tt1e
prtSS ow sincere grut· Meigs County Probate Court.
itutlt and !IIIP"tdation to Case No. 25 ,061 , Pearl H.
al oor many friends and Swain . Jr .. 721 Tumer Road,
rttlatim who showed so Belpre. · Ohio 467,4. was
AdmillistratO&lt; of the
nwch kintl- and sym· IIPPoi'•tod
of Ftorence Anne Bay,
pathy dU'ing tht ilntss deceased . late of 55486
arwl cllarn of oor beloved Township Rood 1015, P.O.
Box 144. Reed1111itte. Ohio
mather and grundmothtr. 46772
.

Special tha.. s go to
the hospital staff at
Holur Medical Center of
Gallipolis. Also aur gratitude to the Middleport
Emtrgency Squadmen,

YOUNG'S

BISSELL
BUILDERS

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
FIDUCIARY
ON March 3, !986.

G1rage Sale Mev 16 , 16 , 17 at
2926 Maple A11a, a linle of
everyting includimng good li11in; ·
room suite, drapes , b8(hpread
and 6 speed bicyc le.

Emergency 949 -2516

Rt . 4. Hysell Run Rd .

" Jo

Public Notice

Trenching of Arrv Typi

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Ph t6t4J 992 ·2834,
992-6704
FREE ESTIMATES .
1-7-2 mo.

367-75110- 367-7671

...

Card of Thanks

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

SERVICE

If NO AN!WU CAll:

Don't get stung by high prkes !
Shop the classif~d section.

Office 949 -2438

WWAMS

•

Free panern oHer. ·send
TO GRADUATE - Pomeroy
Kindergarten chlldren will re-

SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES • SEPTIC
TANKS· CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS • ROAD
· lAND

367-0317

PATTERN CATALOG .

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

8!~3386

•
•END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE

J eanie Grete's Main St. Auti~ d.
Thur and Fr i.

&amp; Vicinity

5-14·1 Ill.

(304) 173·5521 or

137 Pearl St. M1y 16th lnd
Uth . 9 :00 to 6 :00 .

.. ..... Pf'Pieiisa·nr ·...

RACINE, OHIO

.••
.
•

1!. Vicinity

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR .

RAYMOND E. PROFFITI (MAC)

ANNE ADAMS

in
SPRING · SUMMER

'THURSDAY
CHESTER - New Life Drama
Co. will be presenting the Word of
God in drama at the Chester
Church of God. 7 p.m. this evening;
public invited.

Phone

5·15-'16-1 mo.

.... · ·GallTiioli'B ...... ···

I

.

PATTERNS

-"i

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC Inc.

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

•

t26-Thrltty C111ty Ftowors

~.Sill.--.
Fresh las hrons

Beat of the bend

'

$2 + 75~ postage.
Books $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.
, 127-Atvtton 'n' Dottin

j

12• _ , Btwd., W-ldo.
NY t t3!7. Print ttomo, Addrm,

Community calendar/ area happenings

I

OWNED •lDCilj,4BOi

• Po~
,..,.,..,[ll
Buiut·n..
• '"Baildinp
• SIOtllf
IALL SIZ£S AVIILABL£

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON W VA
_ _
304 773 5222

10-14 -tlc

The Daily Sentinel

Jason

•MIIal Buildings

For Hours
304-372·5709

ANdor Molt

Moodlspaugh,

Sizes 4 Yr1 and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

•lO!.\lll

lipley Office

Sonclto:

ceive their "Bachelor of
Rllymes" In ceremonies to be
beld at the l'llmeroy Elementary School at 3 p.m. Sunday
with parents and friends heing
Invited to attend. Children ol. tbe
afternoon class to receive dlpJo.
mas are left to right, first row,
G.J. Powell, David Talterson,
Stacey Hubbanl, Jeslca Wright,
Jennifer Mankin, Jimmy
Yeauger, Chmlopher Triplett,
Wendy Sizemore, Bonnie Rut·
ter; second row, Sleven McCul·
loup, JuDe Hunnell, Sue EDen
Barnhart, Tamyra Taylor,
Rallly Walker, Sara Craig,
Adam Barton, Adam Thomas,
C.B. Buckley; and ·third row,
Amy See, Wayne ADen Barnhart, Patricia Smith, Dallas

UT'S BUILD UP TOOITHPI

PH. 304·675-2441
BEND AIEA CALL

G.._,

'

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

KEN'S
985-3561
All M•ku

Buying Gold
&amp; Silver

•Washers •Oiahwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerator•

985-3937

PARTS

•D~era

•Freezer•

and

SERVICE

+I·I~

Rej:ll Needed tor bUiinell ac ·
co unts . Fult· ti me, 1150,000 fBO.OOO· Part · Tlme. t12 ,000·
•18. 000. No 111t!ing. repeat
bulln••· Set vour own hours.
Tr1lnlng provided . c 1 11 1 -6 12 _
938 -8870, M·F . 81m to 6pm
(Centr•l Steni11rd T ime).
An ••ceUtnt 11nd chlllenging
Clreer IWaitt you with a flat
growning mnlJ•ny . Wa have 1
p etitio n open for 1 person who ia
da~endlblt , communlctt . .
well, lnd htt general otflc•slt:Uit
indudtng typ ing Md m1th apt i·
tude . E.~~:ctlltnt worldng condi ·
tion1 · 111d btntfilt pt"Ogram .
Ple"e IPPiv In pet"IOn at:
Credilhrift of Amlficl, INC .
1312 E111.,.. Ave., Galllpoti1.

OH. EOE· MF.

hlephone .,llcitott. Call 614 -

,..8-8280. EOE·M ·f ·H.
in Loc1l S tore,
Start et f3 .66
Program &amp;
. Send backw· phone
No . 47 ,

2277

Financial

-;--.===--21
B ·
usmess
Opportunity

! NOTI CE t
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBliSH ·
lNG CO . recomm1n dt th11t vo u
do business wit h p!Kiple vou
know . and NOT to sand mon11y
through the mall until vou have
in ... ntigated the offe ring

Carryout. louge , St . highway,
good klca tion . Serious tnqulres
only . Call b11tween 81m &amp; 9am.
614 -367· 0488 .
S!1 tKln fu lly equlppfld Beauty
S ho p. Georges Creek Ad . Op .
portunUv to be you r own boss.
Call cwening 614 · 446 · 7476.
Gar ag o Apaftmen t to r uleand 2
mobile ho mu. Good return on
your inveu ment on tppr o.~~: . 1 Va
acres with 235 feet rold rront~ge . 6 min utes from town . Will
oontider "nd contr1c1 . Telling
cells betwee n 4 - 6PM. 304 · 675 ...

:Jl02 .

..

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
23

Professional
Services

-----

LAFF-A-DAY

', .or Ren t
"

'

PIANO TUNING AND AEPAIR ,
red ttoover your pltno' 1 beautifu l
tone, c•ll tod1y, Wards Key·
boa rd , 30o&amp;-676 •5600 or en;

' lo

1 0 !1

. ,,.. ,uo R:d
no

:1124.

1o Rt 7 Clll llb o
, I nr (lil W!l ltlllQ
• q; VGl'U

,1 1

Retll Estate
31

Ht 7 1
C11tt
61-1 446

I

4 b~room houH, flraplace, 3
m• sout h of Gallipolis. t29 900
Call days 514 ·448 · 1616 or

'' '''d Goo ds

lt\leningl 614 -446 6222
We

buih

big

4

bdr .

Early

ivAto!!T JA f 62
~
.~ \!(•\-... &amp; l l $ttd

Ameri can homes 818,995 on
vour lot See our ntw model
home Call614 886 -7311

t nr Wf'tJd I H

•

'.( I l&gt;if~

For sale by owner, 2 story ks

,

w1th garage Gt!Hin School Ott ·

With gtrage, on 8 1 ecres
located m Rto Grande Cell

614 ·245 ·5197 '"" 6 ooPM .
town . schools.

churches . library one story, 2

txh . attn ct1v11 bath formal
dtntngroom. good carpettng ,
large kttchen , good gal furr,-.c...
storm w1ndow1 Call 81 .. . .\.48-

"Well, I see my tinw "

ers please Call 814 -448 -2460
ahar 4 pm
For Sale bV Owner 7 room
twusa , 2 car garage, 1 '1• A lot , 'IJ
A hor ae pasture, garden apace,
on MitcheU Rd . Good location
tor home or buttneu. Sealed
bldl · Open May 23 , 1986 . May
refuM any or all bids Send your
n.ma, .tddreu. phone no. &amp;
oHer. To MR Chainuw. At 3,
80111 126A , Gallipol1a . Oh
45631
Ona year old 3 bdr ranch tn
cou ntry, vert pmtate No credtt
checka, no cloalng coau Simply
put 15.000 down &amp; anume
payntMts of t398 80 par month
at 10% fi111edAPR Callatter5pm
614 -367-7507
30 acre. 3 bedroom hou1e .
tobacco bate, Mercerville Call

9 room. 2 ba th• Can be made
into duplex . Located on Fourth
and Palmer in Mtddleport Close
to achools and shopping . Aak lng
pnce Uot.OOO Ownllf will sell
on lend contrac1 Call614 · 592 5568 after 4 pm
4 bedroom ho me on 7 acres. Can
neg otiete Ca ll 614 ·985 -4392

3 bedroom, lg knchen . heat
pu~ . air co nd carpeted, gar·
aga, Syra cuu &amp;14 ·992 ·3ot02
eher 5 pm .
6 room houM in Middleport 3
bedroom , 1 'h baths , fully car·
peted . o n level lot 614 · 992 3610.
Houte

and lot tor ula In
P o m~~roy 2 bedrooma , 1 bath .
Partially completed inttde. f500
downpayment, 10 percent APR .
Cell collect 814· 894 -3988 or
614 · 894-3 881 •nd atk tor Bob
Seven room Moun, co mp letely
furnithed , $2 ,500.00 Phone

30l·&amp;7&amp;·7540

Gallipolit Ferry . 3 bedroom
rtnch . all alec, 2 Iota. central a~r ,
larga de ck . ttove, ref and
dishwash..-, e ttachtd &amp;arega , 8
yrs old, 304· 675 -2932
3 bedroo m ranch atyle1ocated in
Meadowland Estates (behind
armory ) 1 26 ~ 70 corner lo t , winyl
si d ing , laundr y ro om , dts ·
!'twuher 11nd heat pu mp with
central t lr, plua many other
fsatures Owners moving and
an111ious to IIIII , t40 's. 304· 676·
7127 evening•
Three btdrooma, all eleetnc,
ranch stylehoull, fu ll basement.
dou ble c.ar gange sltuUted on
on11 acre of ground 1n Popler
Heigh II add111on located 4 m llea
out of Point P laaunt. shown by
11ppointrnant only I 1-304· 743·

7226

Very ntce house, 2 .000 sq ft plus
buement , 6 wooded •cres,
good hunting. Sand Hlll Road ,
304 · 895· 3383

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES , 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIPOLIS , RT 36
PHONE 614 - 446 · 7274

14M70 Festrval , 2 bdr ., 2 full
batht , lou of clouts. utilrty
room, AC . Call 614 ·446 · 624i1
anytime
1983 Mans 10n. 14X to, tldtomp
1983 Manalon 14k70. 3 bdr, 2
full bltht. like new Setup Quail
Creek Trailor Park t13 . 900.
Ca11614 -245 -9145
72 lrbeny 12d0 2 bdr. w ith
woodburner, good cond Pr iced
to aell 14600. Call 614 ·2 45 ·

9264 .

Mobile ho me u le Comer Peters
Bran ch -lemon H1ll off Bladen·
Mercetville Rd . Crown City. Oh
72 Freedom 14170, 3 bdr ,
par11y remodeted , equipped for
woodburner. porch &amp; underpin ·
ninu. 14.600 Ca ll 614· 379·

2808.
74 Holly Ptrk 3 bdr . 12x65.
price raductd Ca ll 6,ot . 446 ·
4766 after 6 30 weekdays.
anyttme on weeKends
1977 HOIII'f Park 12111fl0. very
good cond Partly furn it hed , CA
&amp; other axtral , n .500 Call
614 · 246 -5120
1980 liban~ 14d4. 2 bed·
1 room, unfurnished. vinyl under·
pinnfng Included . Mull ull Ca ll

304-773-6873.

Mobile tlome for tale. 14ll70
1978 3 bedroom, 1 'A b•th. total
electric t8600 Call 814-247-

: ~3:6~7:6~---------------

I

/ 1968 Trailer with two room1
buUt on Call GU - 742 ~2617 .
1988 SchuH 2 bedroom trliltr,
exc~tion•ttv good condition,
hfrnlthed, plut mlcrowlve. 1lr
condition•. storm windowa,
metal outbuilding, Pficed to setl.

14500. Coli 814·982·6697

woorl
11 'Jq

J

iU:1 [

'i

od ftorn
btXI~.t;39 0

&lt;;(II&lt;.J

- - - - ----·
1964 10x50 Wolvenn e 2 bod
room tnuleor K•tchttn fuuHshe rl
Call614 995 -4103
MOBILE HOMES MOVED m
lUred . reaso nable rates C ~II
304· 575 · 2336
1972 Schultz, 1211.70 t1lt ou t.
stove and reftlg8fa tor, fur nlhlr6
negot iabl e See by eppointmo nt
only , 304· 676 -7 1 17 .
1973 Kirkwood doub le Wld6
w1th len d axc cond nt ce area
Gallipolis Ferry, for more mfo t·
matlon , 304 675 -3087
1983 Knoolwood, 3 bedr oo m
h11let usume loen with a low
dow n payment 304· 675 5206
1970, 1211.50 1t&amp;1ler and half
acre lot . 1'h car garage and
buildtng . Galltp olil Ferry closa
to Stauffer, good con d. wtll sell
uperate , 304 675 6171 or
675 -3704

0::29 10
fmnt $10!)
'un::..lop Wl)n d
'11

J ACKS urt

MH.PS ,r

!UIIIt'( l

~·

1\1"1

,
Ill I

.,!/~

S 176 !or I r ,,,,

~375

Uur&gt;k bod COtll
'l••l&lt;tes
S275
ll,&gt;by t..ods
,, • :~~~ or be )(

',., S61 l 1t111
Oune 'l Sfl t s
·''C'
s;lO and

44 6 2745 "'

''•~'

Ntce ly fw
aft rt PI ~~
ctl v nd 1lt

~..nt)ma ts,

· ,.

rfnfl&amp;'i
S3S &amp;

n~

,.,.,e•

( s .!5

OJJB

Apt~l1111 11

' "'

·, · · •

,..,.,, ,

h ~&gt;a d

I"

Wllh rofrlq
DW Qllf .1•
WII Sh ti; "'""'I
sm gle 0 1 C• ''

~.-.r

1,

&lt;

11 t

sew ,,.~h ·•
raq u troo
~ 1 1l
9AM to ~P~'

Ava

,,
HI'JIA Nt'lS

· lllijl'&gt;fUI&gt;.)rS.
flf) 11orlll"f' 9

" 10118

Jlp

Gilh p

pad

IIttS

11111( 81

o,,t 9 ul l'ltn bpm.

ll'e'l

"'

POU A I ~In::. ··~

c ., J :l£

~

(~

I

ol

uti,,, ,.

~·l.l'J tl

SillS

f~

I

'&gt;'I Oil

S1 76 •nU
•II ll
or 304 67 ~ r; 1 l'

i,

New 1 ua&lt;J oc· •
6 14 4 46 OJ::~,·

Camptng lot for tile in Bt g Foot
Campgro und , S2 ,000 W1ll con
aider trad e for pop· up camp er
C11U 614 -446 -1294

''- 1 ·, ·,

!u r111
Av•.•

A "~'

vl

l 'l hlP

441 6 nlt.t '·

'H·'"~

chm a

' ,,.., qoo d

'55 So
"'llHi. Oh

Blnr~

.... 14
• Call

2 txl r u.,lu 1
cas at 6 0' "
&amp;260 mo r,
61 4 245 9".: -,

1 r,14 JBR

lor r9 tnu S. • 1&gt;
Call 6\4-441,
btJr

IH1 .H

y,.,,

r u rnt~ had
pt~t s

t

CaiiS1~

~·1 :~~~~ .t:5 ~~wn t3700 ,

Call

1\1'1 N

•I)

J,,

• lld

2 bell op•
w•thout Jl h• 1
ut tlll•es Dt~ l

.r\
lj~

&gt;It\

I

11r

1

'"'1 f

'I

., ' ·'' ltlf ~

51 4446 2~)'

1 3 acres 325ft fr ontag a A t

Ill,• hy

''" 1

2 bd r u11f• .,,, '

3
1 ·6 acres .parttally wooded lots
near approved IIJb· dtvtaton T P
11nd C water and approved road
to each lot. Reasonably p ncod
will finan ce with 10 pm c&amp; nt
down Call 614 · 985 -3594

j

l.~·· d

614 -2!i6 llj
Wooded lot el11 ctr• c wAter
bathhouse- bo at dock Not hmg
down 150 mo Bi~ Foot Park, At
7, 6 milea below Gallipolt s c ross
Raccoon Creek . follo w s1g ns

..) q

I

,.1,

De lu );e I l,. 1
mc nt 1(,11• \•"
peu nc;
1' ...

35 lots &amp; Acreage

\11 Ill

Fu rn
i"&gt;' '· ' '
ut tllt! OS J:'l'" l
2 ~ &lt;1

~

I

jl I

I

7,

2 bdr furn• h
qu1e1 rastdf"''
and Wi'!'\ber

~

For ul11 Gara ge apt a nd 2
mobtla homes , good retu rn on
your mwestment on appr0 11.1
mat ely 1 'h acr111 With 235 ft
road fro ntage 5 minute• lr o n1
town . Will eo nstder land con
tre ct Tak tng calls b11t ween 4 6
p m 304· 675-300 2

Adu lt s onlv I~
ut1htt es Cell 'l

1 SYJ acres At 2 Pomt P leas11n t
6m1l111fromtown 81 5.00 0 00

Opp Cl rtU ~I!,

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Aent , lealll , lan d contract. Jb1' s
Rodney Village II : 2 br ' s - E~oue k a
3br Evans H11ight s ; Oepo srt &amp;
reterencet required Bla ckburn
Realty -61 4 · 446 ·0008

3 bedroom home unfurn ish e d
gaa heat . Keneuga! S20 0 a
month &amp; 1100 de po sit
614 · 44 5· 7437

Call

Furniahtld house, 2 bdr , S1 9f,
131 rear 4th Ave , Galhpol tl
Call 446 ·4416 after 7 pm
Ni ce 3 bdr , full b11sement . CA
fenced yard Rt 14 1 S325 plus
dep . Call 61 4 862 2916 afte r 6
Nice 3 bdr full baument CA
fene~~d yard, Rt 141 S325 plus
dep . Cell 61 4 852 281 6 aft er 6
Furnis hed hou se 4 room1 &amp;.
beth . 3rd Awe , Ga llipolis , 812 5
mo .. $75 d11p Cell 614 44 6
3870 or 614 -44 6 -1340

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614 ~ 2 3 81' .
L11rylo! ] bM· r
mshed Gtr"H I I
utllrt •e~
Sy "' , ,
992 5[;81

2 bdr on 0 J Whit e Rd Cwet
country 1et1ing Call 614 446 7157 afte r 8PM

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

In Euraka Nice, clean , part
fum , adu lu cmty , no pets, $180
mo Oep req Call 8 14 26 6
1636 or 814i· 266 - 1291
Moblla home for rent on Upper
Rrvar Rd . Call 614 -446 ·0508
12x60 two bedroom mo bilfl
home. unfum ithfld . a 136 plus
utilttiel . Syracuu. Cal/ 614
Two bedroom tralllllf w1th ex ·
pando livlrtg room on l11rge lfNel
lot ir'l Middlep ort . Near 1toree
and achoolt No pau. Call
'14· 992· 2101 til&amp; 0 0 pm and
814· 992· 2319 after 5 .00 pm .

APARTME~'
houses •': , t.

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1' ~~, , '•l •9
15'x8 s hd •10 ,,,,r,r jl, J s· rv

Hu tlrl tn g Mateu ols
Olock bn ck, sewa r p1pm wm dow s, li nt els, etc Cleudo Wm
t ars, R1c Gran de, 0 Call 614
245 ·5121
0 1tll d1ng ITl Ate mtl $ r:emnn t
blocks 811 Sil OS, yard or delt\'erv
Gallipolis Blo ck Co , 1 Z3 V~ Put o
S t Gal hpolis , Oh10 Celt 614
446- 2783
S;w e Buttder!l Supphas S1Hp lus
Clusauut!l Se llfage
1 Prehung steal msulut otl 8 or 6
pan el doon$ 99 .95
2 Prehung steel msulat!ld door
and glass 9hte or line $1 2 5 95
3 Oo11 bl e Std t1 l1te a ntran ctJ doo r
sots 1'1 glass 91itfl $399
A S1ng le s1deh te ont rancv do or
~fit s · 1 ther mal glass $:? 9 9 9'5
5 Co1T1 merc1al do uh l ~ entr ances
Hl l brown fi ll alunun u on S59 9
6 Double Sldeltt as en trAn ce ~ul
woo d '1 panel ·~~ glass w
dP.cor attu-. 1run S29 9 95
7 Preh ung N1Umor door s all
s11 es nnd fuu!'ihe&amp; 8 9' lid 8"
$2 9 95 011
6 Pehun g llli CnOr 6 ['Jan el p1110
door's all Iil es {8 ) grade'!.
$S 9 95 ea
9 Therma l msulatOO glfl sA p•m
els 76 hg t 32 " wtd e $39 95

",0

Woo d door pa n el$ w-full
gl11n 7B " hg t 3 4 " w•de 1 1 •,
tht ck SJ9 95
1 1 Oc ta go nal wm do w w
s1a1ned leaded glass S5 9 95 lift
1 2 C lur acrylic 5heats 080 and
1 25 gaga seve ral siw1 btg
sav mgs
13 P lywoo d han dv pane ls
62"1ong 18 " wtde '11 thick s 15
$ 1 00 ei'J
14 M uo nlle pnmed h6 mon t ~tl
OA terto r ~ • dt ng 1 6 ' x l 6 x7 16
$20 OOsq
15 B·gradu mar hlo van1ty 10p 5
c hmce !IZ8S 1n s tock $20 OOe a
16 4'x9 tre11 ted prna latttce
$ 14 96 0&lt;1
17 K·lu• br~ck and ston(lfed end
l&lt;:n reg $6 99 t:tn now 51 50
11 nd $1 99 ctn
1 fJ Ex ten or Kev doorlodr. alum
num ftrush S2 99 eo
19 Goo d used 8 2 bulb hgh t
corty.~ le1e w bulbs $15 OO ea
20 Wood M.aso nt te · bathmom
panoll ng 4 'x8 ' pc 54 99 to
59 95 ea
21 Prehn tshed and unfinl!h ed
dno t anrl win do w an d all types of
lnm 1t11r1mg 81 6 1 00 lo r B' pc
22 ~ l um m um mo b1le ho me and
barn root coa tii'IQ w -f tber 56 ga l
S23 9 5 100 g al11nd up !20 95
Sgal pa il
2"3 Wallboerdadhes1voqt tu bes
or 29oL s t 39 B&amp; or ()y cor. e
s 1 25 1)11
2 4 Paneltng fltl lls S 79 bo ll;
PE NNS WAR E HOU SE
Wellston Oh 10 614 38 4 -3646
Block luiclo. mortlH and m11
!()nry sul)pli tn,: Mountain Sta tft
Block. Rt
New Helo'fln W
Va 30 4- 882- 22 22

33,

Pel s for S ale

Dragl,)nw v11d Ca n ery Kennel
H• malayan , Pers19n and
S mm8!1e KtltftflS AK C Chow
pup p1e1 New P'JPPtes &amp; kitt en ~
Cell 44ti 3844 after 7P M
CFA

Raytltered E1khoun d
pli pS 9 Wftllk~ , tlllt of !JOOd tt (IQ
dogs , good pet s. S1 0 0each Call
61 4 256 12 6 3
AKC

CEN Tt R SFl ::;5 \'\' St,llm'lhs
Oh to C,l ll 6 1'1- 440 9'7' ,,,.
6 14 446 35 !'~ u1, l't ·•t '• rr
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storoo S595 Call 6 14 ·258 16 16

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COUNTRY M081 Lf 11
Rou ta 33 , North ot p.,.
Largft l01s Cell 1 d r1q ..

MobUe home on Cr1b Creek
Road . •1&amp;0 .00 per month, no
pate . 304· 675 -1206 .

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Furmelled rl)r, "
pa td a.l1aro h~·~
mel8 91 9 2n d Av e Q,
Call 44 6- 441 6 ah•H '~'

SpeCB lor Ifni
noo~~
appl ication• for moh11"
lott. availab le In r.tt PI'
Gal!lpo lla. 30 4 6/ G ~Ol1

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&gt;110 C'A110 14992

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!rOfiiiJO W'l .,, •
h 11 •

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c11sh pu ce t3 .999
.1 •1h"1's A.ulo Seles Bulaville Rd ..
G)lltpOIIS

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Upr~ght p1ano Wi th bon ch ,$ 100
or w il l trade for atero 01 barf EN fo r
ppprOJdrnate1y 30 hours of hou so
o r yordwork Phone 614 -74 ? ·
2480 or 614 -9 92 -3342 1111.cep t
Sunday.

•
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61

Farm Supplies ,
&amp; liveslock ·
Farm Equipme nt

CROSS &amp; S ONS
~ S 36 We-t , Javkson , Oh to
6 14· 286 · 6461
Massey Ferguto n, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sa les &amp; Sarvicfl Over
40 used trt~ c l ors to choosa fr om
&amp; CO FTlJI&amp;te line of new &amp; used
f!Qu ipment l~rgen select1on in
S E Ohio

@) !I) Diff"rent Strokes

® 3-2-1. Contact (CCI
® Hatha Yoga

MAYS&amp; YOU

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1904 Pon tra c Ftero. 4 cy linder. 4
WtJotd AC AM. F M 1tereo w ith
~ 15'i8\1ft red . turbine wheels
S}I)OO Ca ll 614 742 · 2877 .

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, •·•.ttog lo! vo od ttres Fair cond t·

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Ill thfl bf ,t ,YI' I' ~1 If~ ( l'-'IP
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FnrTnnll S&gt;ij•lll

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Ct~ 11&amp;14 . 992 - 26 48

1 79 Pu1to, good cond1tion . 30 4 ·

!0"!"1 14_ 7_._ __ __ __
j

1'175 Toyot a Celice. t700.
Gooct con d1tton 3 04 - 675 -

I 40 14

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191_g_ z_Z_8_c_o_m
_o-,-. . -T_,-,• .-

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nn d ,
I '1'153

$3 , 80 0 . 00 . 304 -876 -

1972-C
- ,-,-,.-,-, -X-R-7-.-.-.-n-vo_rt_i_b-lo

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r.tass1c ll m1te d l)ro du c tion
rnodel. h11 8d t6 ,500.00 , all
op tton s. ~~&lt;~~ ry good cond, 11klng
$2. 996 00 Phone 304i-882·
3376

- - - -- -

1979 Ch rysler Newport, 4door,
P'lo' s te reo 11•tren1ce. mu.tsell,
day s ool y $2 ,295.00 . 304£76 53 06

1&lt;1..t

cond r ult tv 1" 1, wn., 111u '
mowu·q 'Tl vi·'""' h·~o r1utlo'
w fwn, t•.1uo' .1 ,...,~, ') Ph,in 1
104 RB?: J'l

21 3

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62

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_ _ _ _ __

11174 S u nbug 1/o lkswagon ,
C}(Jo d con d. 30 4- n3 · 9,85

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Ctt'i I Mrn •. •'
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9ond co nd . 83,000. 00 . Call
1 304·6? 5 -58 46 or 675 ·1960
VHi"

Tru cks for Sale

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8n•ttl• v ; 1''

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1 1J82 Dodgo Picku p 226 cu bic
ar.g .n o 3 8C)d , with overdrive,
fnq"r fllt'Jr[J inutop per Call 614 -3157·

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rrQrll da lt~ils 6 14 · 448 · 448 2

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AC c argo light , dual

g11s tan ks AM -FM c an tilt.
I "8 996 C11 ll 6 14 379-21 22 .

Two hel1 ff'\l'~t•••qJ p • " 1 H· •
lo rd b.dls 111 111 '' th, (JI •! ran.1y
fu• ' llrm:•r
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Gn•)d shiiPfl 304 -459 · 1591

197, Two t.alf ton Inte rn ational
i•Jrfll trur. k 7ft l 14 h bed . e11c
ror"td 304 88 2 · 2897

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Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

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19 75 Cust omlled Ford van
E 100 , bav window , IUntoof.
carpet. ster110 cau , wettam
mag s , good radiall , no nat,
Sl 900 Call 614· 446 -2847

182PS. Ctl6Vy
C 20, cergov11n. AT,
PB , AM·FM CIU , AC . C111
Fi 14 4.46 -401 4 be fore 2PM
I 1979 Ford Van w ith 1980
lll&lt;:lo ry biovac cu11om conversJun
Ex c ellent c ondition ,
G7. 500 Cnll 614 -992- 6964
t 11 fter 6 00 pm

l
71

Au;os 'or Sa le

1978 C·JS Jeep Goo d con dl·
t1o n S2600 Cell 304 · n3 -

J ufl o~tlf'll'll'
III I H!d
f [ll~f 1tfld

1971 untm

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

127
chrrJPitl ,, q •n, 'ln t• ho1111 "'
QUI!ff " M•tldlfi1H t! (lhn lbllfYI

74

198 0 Onr'&lt;' " Ct,•. ,,,g 1n 1 •rd
trfl(l" r~ c
! II.•; 1
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750 K HondA! C hopper Special
p111n t jOb, lltl of chrome. Ca ll
6 14 446 7262 after 4PM

NOVA

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g&lt;'tJ! I C'1 •tf

~

Motorc ycles

446 if.l6t-

8 6 Chevy Cnpm:o&gt; 4 door Can
bo t el'ln lit 1404 LflwiS St L,,, 4
C El li 30 4 67:'i 7117
19 78 faun~1111 4 cv: 4 spd
go od conn Slf'QO Call 01 ~ ?56·
1487
1979 Ford A.~t stan~ 1\ r.vl nfMI
robu111 mcoln' low m•l,, •Ill' C"'ll
614 2f)() 1?4 17
19ll1 " J

Call614

1 ~r~,

C , ,11

44fJ !)120

1966 C(J"J IIIr Monza qood
bo dy. ex in t !trio'. runu woll Hat
dave lopnd t t llntt liM lo ootSfl qr ttot
for ret~ t or n hon soon c .. u 614

24 5 5023

Monda XR 25 0 d irt bike 1986
n-«ld el pri ce 91 . 260 C•ll 614·
446 17 66 .
198 1 Honda &amp;60 cutto m, e~ec .
co nd
va ry low mila11g1 ,
81.400. Calt 614 · 388· 8769
19 85 Hondl V-66 Magna. 1100
CC Black . 3900 mllel Sti11
u nd"" WArran ty $2960. hires
Coll 61 4 -74 2· 2057
1985 Hon da VT 700 Shldow .
low mi leags, bought new this
SJHin g . Excellent conditio n. Cell

614·949·2820.

1982 Har ley Devldaon 80.
drt;U ed , 10,000 mllet . 814 -

742·2808.

4'----------------

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

fD CD Jeffersons

®

Plan the play
in no-trump

MacNeil-lehrer

a (JZ) Divorce Court
@ Barney Miller
00 Wheel of Fortune
7 30 0 (I) ® New Newlywed
Game
C!J Speedweek
@) !I) WKRP in Cincinnati
0 ([) 00 Wheel of Fortune

Acco~t&gt;ING

'lb youf?

COMf'UTE-/&lt;! WHICH
.JU,S"T F•.&gt;&lt;EP,
ow~

Me , $lf,219.

1978 Tarrt . 24ft , air cond.
awmng, Iota of eldru. exc con d.

' ...... .... '"'

•

5 ·15'

Servi ces

a ffil Entertainment TO·
night Jtmmy Stewan. one
of Hollywood's true l1v1ng le·
gends . dtscusses some of
ht s tavo nt e roles and dtr ec ~
tors 1n I he ftrsl of a two-part
tntervtew

@ Bob Newhart
@ Jeopardy
7:35 IIl Sanford and Son
B:OO O (I)OO CosbyShow(CC)
Den1 se
s trugg les
wnh
whe ther or not to attend her

falher s college alma mater.
In Stereo
(II Wackoest Shop In 1he
Army

ffi Auto Racing '86: IHRA

ALLEY OOP

Drag Racing~ Pro AM Na·
tionals From Rock1ng ham r

Home
Improvements

NC (60 m1n .)
([) a @ Ripley•s Believe
11 or Not! ICCI The use of

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditional Wfetlme guaran ·
tee . Loc•l referencu furnithtd
Frtt •tlmttlt C•n collect
1 ·1514-237· 0488 , day or night .
Rogera Basement
Waterproofing

w 1th a 6 -year -old ch1mpan·

cabulary w hen the stm1an
Witnesses a murde r (60

ornament

m1n I IAI.
(])

EEK&amp; MEEK

9 Anc. Greek

MacNeil -Lehrer

[j]) Forum

@ MOVIE · 'All That Jazz•
8:05 (]) MOVIE "Fast Break'
8:30 0 (I) @) Family Ties N1ck
rad1cally chan ges hts Illes·
tyle 1n o rde r to 1mpress

ill) Sneak Previews Hosts
J e ffrey lyons a nd Mtchael
M e dve d

pre v 1ew

toda y 's

Sam.

Pass

Pass

Opening lead • 6

nme tricks. The point is that you w111
have already scored one club trick and
need no longer fear that the defenders
will establish their spades and win the
race for tricks.

TIME TO GO HOME AND

SWE MY LITTLE Bf&lt;OTHER
A RIOECNM'YBIKE.

Merrillville .

DOYOLJGIVE
HIM A RIDE
EVERY DAY?

I HAVE
TO. ·

IF I DON'r, HE
B ITE5HOLE5
INMVTIRE5 .

su rpnse party on
Jason . Fallon shares a secre t with Connte and Jason

-·AN' IF 'IOU DON'T EAT
EVER' MOUTHFUL-··

Good · 1 Exc~a ting , basemen t s,
foot era . driwww1y1 septic tanlit,
landaceping . Call anytime &amp;14 .
446 45 37 , Jamu l DIVIIO n,
Jr owner

40

lyle. (AI. In S1ereo
10:00 0 (I) @ Hill Street Blues
Furil!o attempts to pre vent

1n a w•ld car race (60 mtn .)
(R)

IIl CBN News Tonight

® a @ 20/20 ICC)
fD CD Odd Couple
0 ill 00 Knots Landing
ICC) M ack wornes over a

Ken ' s Water Service Well s,
cittarn1 , pools and waterbeda
f1lled Ca ll 614-367 -0623 or
614 · 36 7 -77 41 or 304 -675 -

m 1ss1ng Kare n , Va l panics

when she sp1es Ben and

Ca1hy 1oge1her and Abby al·

1247

b+-+-l-

w,•ndo nf'~

measure

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

•

One leiter stands for another. In this sampi&amp;- A 1s used
!or the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE
5-15
TC

UQ G E

T

NUI

(!) Fron11ine: Hollywood

Dreams

7397 .

(CC)

Take

a

be h 1 nd ~ th e ~ s c enes

look at a
g roup of young hopefuls
s trugg ling for mov1e star·

U pholatery

PEANUTS
CONRAD WILL NOW
DEMONSTRATE FOR US
HOW THIS IS DONE ...

dom. (60 min.)
[j]) Newswatch
10:20 ([) MOVIE: 'Biggest Bun·
die of Them All"
10:30 C1J Enterprise USA
&amp;I CD INN News
(ill Tony Brown ' s Journal

@ News
11 ·00 O &lt;IlCil O CilOO ID @®
News
IIl Man from U.N.C.l .E
fD CD Benny Hill Show
[j]) The Shakespeare Hour
Hosted by Walter Mot·
thau: Measure for Mea·
sure The Duke manag~s to
outw1t Angelo and save

V T ll X r,

DUHNI

T

YITPNE

II II

H

(' l/

P G TV I

T II

QA

r w

c

I X

T B Q 8 E 0 &lt;../ I' I

A T V I

OFTEN DE VI &lt;TION TO
VlllTIJE ARISES fROM SATED DESIRE - AltELA
NICOLSON
Yes~~ay'a Cryptoquo~:

lo w s a drunk e n Peter in10
her home (60 m tn .)

Coal,- limestone, grave l. etc
Delivered 1 ton and up Jim
Lenitr 30 4 · 675 -12ot7 o r 676 -

('UC'kOO

27 oerenS&gt;blr
(var)
29 Stablr food 41 Rorder

44 Maidenly
DAILY CRYProQUOTES-Hert'&amp; bow to work II:

a n overprotected roc k sta r
who makes a drasttc deCI·
s 1on abo ut h1 s future lites ·

bomb1ng of a selfprocla imed teneme nt mes ·
s1ah. Balker he ars bad news
wht!e on assignment and
Renko and laRue compete

Jam at Boy a Water Service Alto
POOII ftlled . Call814 · 266· 1141
or &amp;14 · 446 -1176 or 614 ·446 ·
791 1.

moos&lt;'

9 :30 0 (l) 00 Night Court Ha"y
and t he s1aff must deal wnh

the

General Hauling

17 Shrew·

(hy cham·c) 39 Rla&lt;k

26 Nativf'

42 wc;eorRia
on My - ·
43 l1quid

tic explore r asks Tommy
Tuppance to loca te hts
mtss 1ng f1anceo (60 mm I

·-TH'DOG

nne

need

38 Mtl ll"'r's
sah•sman

and

I COOKED THAT SUPPER
SPECIAL FOR 'iOU !!

37 Pledgo•

35 &lt;.,/ uarr&lt;•l

mak1ng of Hollywood 1llu ·
sions is explore d through

BARNEY

36 Ptzzen a

hero

llth•

(]) Nova : The Magic of
Special EHects (CCI The

1er films. 160 mm ) IRI

IS

33 llu1&lt;·h UJ wn
34 llrahman

and Zach clash (60 m&gt;n 1

[j])
Mystery! : Agatha
Christie's
Partners
in

II Roll&lt;'
slylr
14 Castro

Pagh .

~wd "

0 ([) 00 Bridges to Cross

Plumbing

son ~

24 Oatmeal
25 At -

Jrlpa...;M 8 Mf'anllml'

Dran~

31 "I

a

8o Heating

20 lnOam&lt;'
31 Aonhon.e g
23 Chrvaher 3.2 Speechify

:JO Sturm -

IN Ltve

® 19 CUl Colbys ICC) Sable
forces

7 Sylvan
&lt;leity

philosophl'r
281lomhas1
29 - and haw

Crime ICC) A famous Arc·

41&amp;4 .

3 NT

Pass

27 Greek

In

scenes from three block bus·

Mowrey' s Upholnerlng ttrvln g
trl count., anta21 y. .ra. Thtbtlt
in furniture upholstering . All
work guarantied vilh our mod·
ern ahop It Mtton Count.,
F1lrgrounds Phone 304-676·

Pass

WC"Ighl Untl

IIJ 700 Club

886·3802

R ' M Furniture Manufacturing,
St. At. 7 , Crown City, Oh. Call
814· 256· 1470, Clll Eve. &amp;U ·
448 - 3ot38
Old &amp; new
UphotterGd

Soulb
I NT

24 August

C!l Top Rank Boxing from

Rotary or cable tool drHiing
Moat wellt completed tem•d-v
Puft1J Ml• end ltf'llce. 304

.

East

6 Spread JOY

23 Anc

S1ereo

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

16Tony
Manm 's

21 A Remc·r
22 PurpoS&lt;'

3 A her Sam a nd 01ane dash
at Janet's press c onfe rence.
Janet d e m a nds a romantiC

Sterkt Tree and lawn Service.
landscaping 304-576· 2010 .

1833 .

Nortb

title

You'll

honest f1lms . In Stereo.

commi tme nt from

5 Tou(hing

rw - ·~

9 :00 0 (I) 00 Cheers Part 3 of

RON ' S Telavltion Service.
Houae callt on RCA , Ouazar,
GE Sp~ialing In z.,ith Call
304· !78 · 2398 or &amp;1 4 -446 ·
2454 .

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave , Galllpolta
614 -448 -7833 o r 614 -448 ·

Wet1

4 Palstarrs

18 Aust. lnrd
19 "Maybr

S t ereo

614·986·4121

87

.QHB4

.KJ2
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

2 P a pal
euurt

I 0 Ran!(Y
12 Rear
13 Prank
15 Seaman
~, -

Sleven and Elyse IR) . In

Rooting. aiding . remodallng.
painting houttt and roott, and
glfleral repair Esdmatn , call

85

SOUTH
• A 10 3
• A 10

3 Slugg1~ h

roJnny

News hour

614·448·0918.

Excavating

.73
4A 95

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Correc1
I M1ll
a Lext
tnatenal
.QOWN
6 Spirr
I Esscncr

zee wtth a s1gn-language vo-

Blod S. concrete worlt, alto
J)lin ting II. car~ntry, gerau• .
patto' a. b•emtnt. lidewelb, 6
ye1rt experi1nce. Fr•• tlfi mat• wa·re on the L...,el, Call

83

• 75
.J8654
• K5
.,0 7 6 3

~-ote

A J and Atck must comend

814·256·1182.

446·4477

EAST

WEST
.K9864
.Q93

pyro te c hn iCS m conceptual

an 1s e•plored. (60 m&lt;n .) IR) .
f1l !I) MOVIE : 'Death
Wosh II '
0 (I) 00 Simon &amp; Simon

Roofing, Pllntlng, room addi·
tiona. etc . Free "tlm•tea, 17
yaeu ekl)tlflenc•. B a. W Con ·
It ru ction . Call81 4 -446 · 8668 or
&amp;14· 246 -9448 I'Je' e.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gt iiiPOhl, OhiO
Phone 614 · 446 · 3888 or 614 -

$-I~H

4Q 8 4

Whal are the rules for playing n&lt;&gt;trump contracts' You generally play
the smt that w11l prov1de you wilh
enough tricks to make your contract
Or you play the suit in which the defenders have a tojl winner or lwo that
must be forced out. Part of lhe fun of
bndge is the unexpected - there are
exceptions to all rules.
On the lead of the spade six against
three n&lt;&gt;-trump you win the 10 after
playmg low from dummy. The easy
play is to now finesse the queen of dia·
moods. If successful. that finesse will
give you enough tricks for your con·
tract, and m any event you will eventually have to play lhe suit. Alllrue.
But 1f that finesse loses and East returns a spade, what then• You will
lose your contract whenever West has
the ace of clubs and started with five
spades headed by lhe king
To guarantee your contract, you
must make sure of a club trick before
going after diamonds. If the opponents
do not take their club Irick immedi·
ately, you can switch ba~k lo diamonds and assure yourself of al least

(!) Yes, Minister

COMPUTER
REPAIR

NORTH
•Q J 2
.K 7 2
• A 10 6 2

By James Jacoby

Newshour

1 978 Wlldtrntsl Cemur 18ft.
Self-conte1ned EllceUent condition Call614-742· 3137.

82

Jum~es:

le·

port
00 News

Airstream travel tfliler. older
modal, but 011c. cond , roof eir, 3
wa~ refrtg . C1tl 814 -4415 · 0514 .

676·2088 "'&amp;78·7368.

·~

(Answers 1omorroW)
VAGUE CATCH TREATY WAITER
What that guy whO was always le111ng a
smile be tt la umbrella ended up with WET TEETH

(!) Nightly Business Re·

1975 Stercraft foldout cempar,
tlltl)t 8 . cof'l1) 1ate wittl stove.
ice bo11 . lighta&amp; atnk, PC. cond.,
like new . - Call 814 -388-9756
eher 6PM

AINGLES ' S SE RVICE . expt·
r~enced carpantlr, •IK1ricun.
mMon, painter, ruoftng jlnctuding hot tar application) 304·

1tv1ng

XX1 XK I XI I ]

Answerhere:(
Yesterday 's

Now arrange the circled letter&amp; to
lorm the surprise answer, aa sug.
gested by lhe above c•noon.

tJ

KXJ
.

0 ([) Jeopardy

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

nlfJ

b)I\J~

11-.\~ltlb~.

Oe t! un in r;ood cond . Call

· - --

, 1hn'l

lfl1 011 o'llli I•JII!I
gar•tle bl.t "" u .. 1 '• 1-J\' 1•
)')4 r 3 W''

~ M~ WIF£: •••

5974

Fmy Trl!ll Trimming, t1U"'fl.
ramowal . Call 304· 67&amp; ·1331

true

~II!(~UNI;&gt;J

mterv1ew

For Sale : H~gh perlormtnce 302
Chevy engine Call 61ot-992 -

Exterior stucco plutering S.
plaster repair . low ratu Call

® a @ ABCNews
fD CD One Day a1 a Time
0 Cil 00 CBS News
(]) Doctor Who
[j]) Body Electric
@ Jefferson• ICC)
6:35 IJ) Gunamoke
7:00 0 (l) PM Magazine
IIl Alias Smith and Jones
C!J SportsCenter
® Entertainment Tonight
J1mmy Stewan, one of Hoi·
h1s favorne roles and d1rec·
tors m the ftr s t of a two~pan

S!lOULD FIUD .).1ST TJj!;

f/!MLY IN iHE

5'0 MEiiME5 G!T5.

(!) Tennis Magazine

lywood 's

614 ·379·2220.

81

t]

@ Good Times
CD Andy Griffith
6.30 0 (I)@ NBC News
IIl The Rifleman
6 05

gends , d 1scus se s some of

I '/~.~IT" A61RIH~ 61FT

7? Da ts un Ptc kup. run• good,
I)Micl co nd, $45 0 .00 . 304-676 2.223

1

h o•~fl

37 n

WHAT )'OU MIGHT
F I"'P THERE.

All typel used &amp; rebuilt lrena m tsslona &amp; trenfar c•ate. Will
deliver . Overdrive trtntmit ltonl, hont &amp; rear whHI drtva,
transm1uion khs It tom c:onver ·
ters engtne rebutld kita Call

()J !) 4

-- ----·--F-260 XLT Ford PU.
'•l lw Lar~flt package, PS , PB , PW,

n·~r.;

1 1Bll5

9 yo

6AV A PRAYER FOR

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1 1 ~ 71 Sports l8r Ne wpaint , new
' ' u !1ll
rn cellau t co nd ition Ca ll
t 1 4 446· 4087 before 6PM

I 1.,.···n
I •I IM~

~HOU&gt;P

3438

Call evart1ng 614 ·

h3 l6
I Alvarez fl at -top G urtar tors al a
E-ca ll ent cond1110n Call 614
74 2- 29 96

,.

txc cond,

Xl4·876·3818

rJ r 0

News

1972 16 'h ft. Glaaaplr fibr.,
glatl bOlt wtth 100 HP Even rude end trailer Call 81 4 -992 ·

76

c~~--

IIl Green Acres
C!J Mazda Sportslook

Boats and

1 l4 J 74 76

•\wtv 1:./:00
I

•trrs

~ pt

'•

{melel 30 4

Musical
In struments

co nd . new tnoto r, new
n uw banery $4 60 . 1976
Bu rK ,.kyt arK V 6. runs good,
soml'l ru st $150 C8ll 614 ·446 ·
().1 56

'l~"

1984 Ford Tempo 4 dr , auto,

600 f"n•rf

Call 1114 7&lt;12 2f"tr:

57

119 7 i Dllfthe r 1/W s lationwagon,

'•'• '• 1 hn~

I!

\ :· pl• w

!

qu tCK !1818 1974 Chevy Nolfa
,,. 50 &amp; 1976 Pont iac Grandville
S530 Call 614 -379-2233

,lnh11

'•·'.

~I (!'::;

S29S

~ 01

' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' J•t1,,

Oettrll

llJCtl

'&lt; 1 11(

675 - 1851

~;

0390 - - - -- - 1G0 1 MATdA R)(7 6 !!pd C8 11
61•1 44 6-3231
- -- - - - 1~ 10 lJodge Aspen 360, eskrng
~1 !)00 Ca tl614 -2459602

11J

'3 14 :;!Bf, S'JV

For sa lfl 1 male AK C Reg
Pekooeu P'JPP Y 7 wk o ld Call
61 4 256 -93 91

RegtSterttd Br~t1an y

11176 L1nco ln Mark IV Goo d
tnnd $ 1 BOO Ca ll 614 446

\t.~o',t. l

l1 &gt; • 11{'&gt;1

64

Full blooded Beagle pups, 8
wAe k sold. $30 ea Ca ll 614
37 9 -2884 after 4i 00 p m
kRag•s te red u11 end poppet m11lo
Schnauz er pu pptes Cosh on ly
No Ch~K;ks Cnll 614 -992 · 26 07

19$7 C hev y Camara. rs, con ·
vor ltU io raltora tton started ,
h:~VIl
All parts to co mpl11te .
askmg SJ .OOO Ca ll 614 -44617*}1 ~; ! t o r 5PM 8 14-388·
9311

I OUIPr/lf N l

AR~A

1 yr old Ouaker perret cage &amp;
AIJit to
161Hn to talk 8100 Call GH
367 -0466

Ail aCC!ISIOrleS 81 t h11

1';}7B C utlass Brougham. good
Call 614 446 · 26 H

H loq~

JI M S I

Autos for Sale

1rond llto n
I .

!i5 lb!:i
•1o,~· • t•
hvn
6 14 J_&lt;,1 :J7•1;',

doN
H o rso

holliS

56

l7·t

tY·nt

lt ' •P

gor.nl ru!•ht• t Jl) ' I•'
c&lt;&gt;rn r;lul\h IP'·

5

~'''

r &amp;IIIJIOil

f-arm t

O)(C

-

•(&gt;;' ro Dd

I '

Tratler lo a s6wttr
fu rn 11hed. s mlfll
cep ted . At I Locn~t
K &amp;a K. 304· 675 10 7R

pllone 304·876·2247,

IR

?

,r,

992·6687.

t--------- - - -

61

•I 61 1 .):11 5
'I

1- - - -- - -- -

Fully lu rn11had , AC , all uNt1es
paid , adults only Call 6 14 -44 6 ·
4110 or 614 .446 2003

15

... a,h

J

43 068 Of Ctllt fi

for Rent

:.1

3 I Q01n5 flH 1 &gt;
6 14 94 9 2251

Middleport ~rea n1ce clflan
home, reuonable re nt , ' it mter••ted call 304 ·882· 372 2

42 Mobile Homes

; 1

hrnf:rl '&gt;

928 Fiiat Ave , 6 rooms &amp; bat h
Call 614 -446 -39 46 atter 4PM

676 ·6609

J oagor 126 po rtable 111r co m

--

I I I J

EVENING
6·00 O &lt;IlCil O CIJOO a (JZ)@

814·388·9811

~---- ~--~---

0"9'

J

1

lnt orested u~·JI,. ,,r
304 -713 51)11
nts a S1ro1b or r. I
th e Mem Otltt"

Cute cott1ge for tmgle pers on .
fum 11hed. u1t11te1 paJd , S56 0 0
par' week, 304 · 675 -3100 or

j

) &lt;)()

4 room &lt;Hirt IP
No p'lts r:r,· 1

Houses for Re nt

) 101

.• !

? '! 49

Rentals

li:t.ffii~

I ~· . . ~ , ,.

l mdo Star nng and neck iMctr
S126 00 30 4 -675 -5996

55 Building S u ppli es

THURSDAY
5i15/86

Motors for Sale

Used dozers. loaders, bac khoes
tru c ks 70 lntflrnat•onnl
tractor tra tler phone 304· 736
7896 neat Hunttn gton , Rt 10

:2 0 000 bill alt con d. usnd 3
mo nth s s anHl as ntwv pho ne
304 773 9185

SOME' CHANGE ...

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

Television
View,i ng

~··67&amp; · 6248

'1t
l[l,

2 bar

1981 Honda CR80,

1979 24 ft . R1ant1 ·cuddy clb.
228 Mercruiltr, full gtlll'f, dual
voltage rerrigerator, toilet with
aewageayatem , radio t•lephone,
depth ftnder, power trim, lnd
many extrst . Aakltlng t13 ,500 .
Call &amp;14 · 4-46 ·1781 after 5PM

S al e or tr ade. T9 lnt erne tlon&amp;l
b ull doze r gas eng1ne neods
\N()rk , catla her 5 PM . 304 675
1620

GYM TO&lt;:o!'&gt; BUT MY
CAR KC:YG AND

•

1981 Honda CB cuttom 900.
mint cond . full~ drttMd. Call
304-676 · 1Hi8 tfter 5 :00PM

iro n lencmg , 10 0 It
wtlh corner post and gt~le 2 106
Jttfl11rson Alfe 304 ·676· 291 9

&amp; llO d .

I I ··~

,,

I

304-&amp;76·7869

A n t~q u o

do wn lnwn ' , ,
s t r o~:~t pM~II' 'l

Coil

75

A1dmg 1ow n mow e r, 8 hp
· DynBmark . 36 tn cut, uc t::ond
3 04·675 -1 386

POCI&lt;ISTS O F THC:510

1984 Kawaaaltl KDX200 dirt
bike. like new, last 110 miiM, ,
1n1wer liltnOif, t1 , 375.0Q , -~·

lONY ' S GU N REPAIRS scopll
bo re sighting. fl'lcto ry rab luamg
hou rs 9 00 t1ll d8rk, c8ll 304
6 75 46 3 1

pr essor , tn llflr mo u ntOO
l Ond . :\04 -458 -1031

NOTHING IN THE:

•aaa.oo .

Tn Countv Sport Sho p S pnng
Va11uy Pluu. Ga llipolis. Oh 10
G l lnS. Arc hery
Tadd e 61 4
446 -2336

&amp;

2 1J ttf ·•l

1981 Hon.t,. 860. CB cutton"
Excellent . tdhlon t1200 o
bett offer. 614-898· 710&amp;
1981 Kawltakt KX 250, Nnl
e111c . look• good ,
Phone 304-773-5244.

Whit11 Cron Bu c k Stvla storm
door. With acreen Brand new
Paid &amp;100 will take 860 614
992· 2143 Aher 5 ·00 cell 61 4·
992 -6373

'&gt;UI!O S

1 1

Mini Far m on McCumber Road
6 acrM 3 bedroom house Real
nice . Call 614 -992 - 214 3 After
5 00 call 614 -992 -6373

Wards 2 1 cu ft frost lrtftl
upright freeter $200 Hobar1
moat gnnder &amp;350 . Call 614
7 42 - 2877 .

Gond

, "'J

7pm
By owner. 110 acres at Da ~ ter
8 eauhful 8 room homa . harn.
outbutldmgs , sw1mm1ng pool
POL Alao 114 acres near D&amp;•te r
w ith 3 bedroom modern hOme 2
bams. valley setting Ca ll 614
742 -2877 tor appointme nt

w

I

f\lhJn d~v

pm

$28[; TO

!l

l

•• J

b•Hlt 11111
IOClll ttt1 ll:l ill ' • l '
snd f oc,l -111! r
11va lablt} o• , r
ble 10 llm Ito l , 1 '

~" ll l fll~h1111

Farms for Sale

llt1 tf5
10

&lt;.'):21j

BR

33

~SOand

,i;A,

/1~ ..

44

800

3 bedroom, newly redecorated,
alum'num lldtng, ltrge car pon,
garage. on 3 acre lot in C h eiter
One· four1h mile on 248 off Rt
7 814· 986-4356 .

r

'190 $[;99.

for Sale

614 ·266 9360.

Government Homes from 11 fU
repair)
Also delmqul!tnt t1111.
p roperty . Call 1-805 U87 6000
Eld . GH 9805 tor info rmatton

N~ w

1:,n(1j

"

"':::;::;::::::::::::::::::-r-=:-I·
32 Mobile Hom es- -

-------~--~~------~

d utTl)

fm l

HouH &amp; 32 acres SiM n\llet fr
Gtlli pohl Only lntere~ted buy-

&amp;

'•1c0 o1 1 &amp;

0530

,. I

I ~n(lll~

q

1'h story . 4 5 bdt 2 baths, FP,
fu ll basem8tlt. 14x20 bu1ld1ng,

to

II)S

••

446·91 60

Wall\

.,,,~··

,

tnct ApptOit 1 ICte. t25 ,000
C1ll 614 -446 -2026 or 614-

199,

~

:1'&lt;

DICK TRACY

~Lt;

54 Mi s e Merchandise

Pomeroy;-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 15, 1986

-··- ·---·----~~~~
74 Motorcycles
KIT 'N' CARL
· ny larry Wright

8 tt truck camper top Warlib ot
Organ, 4300 with n1u lt1 peretu ·
sian Ct~ll 514· 992 -3 436

•

Homes for Sale

Thursday, May 15, 1986

Middleport, Ohio

Ll•l oy-

Claudoo ·s life. 160 m1n I
11 :03 ()) SCTV
1 1 :30 D Cil @ Tonight Show
Tonighl's gues1 &lt;S JoBe1h
Williams . 160 min.l In
Stereo

!~wood ' s

true

ltv1ng

le-

gends dtSCusses some of
h1s favonte roles and dtrec·
tors'" I he ftrs t o f a two·part
1n1ervie w

•

:I) Rawhide

® MOVIE: 'Doc'

(!) SportsCtntlf

()) WKRP In Cincinnati
•CD®T&amp;lll
.
II ()) Night Hi«t Giem·
bone poses as • would·be
professional boxer to crack

a drug ring tha1 has already
left one f1ghter dead. (70
min.)

()) Austin City Umlts
.(JZ)ABC News Nlghtline
@ Trs-r John. M.D.
12:00 I]) B81t of Groucho
(!) NFL Supentars
ill Emei'UIInmenl Tonlgllf
Jimmy Stewart. one of HOf-

'

e

@ Eye on Hollywood
12:30 D (IJ @ ute Night with
Devld lenermon Tonighl' s
guests are Bernadene Peters and record company

founder Sam Phillips. 160
mtn ) In Stereo

C1l Silt Cosby Show

(!) Fishin' Hole

()) ABC News Nightline
8l (JZ) News
@ MOVIE: 'Tho Big Red
One"
12:40 ())MOVIE: ' Night of Dark
Shadows·
'

�..,_ .....,, ...·-------~-

Page- 16- The Daily Sentinel

Young
killer
executed

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

HUNTSVILLE, Texas (UP() Double murderer Jay Kelly Pinkerton was put to death today tor the
murder, rape and mutilation of an
Amartllo housewife, mal&lt;lng him
the youngest person executed since
the Supreme Court lifted a ban on
capital punishment In 1976.
The 24-year-old lxJtcher 's apprentice, pronounced dead at 1:25
a.m. EDT after being Injected with
lethal drugs, was the third person
executed for crimes committed as a
minor since the death penalty
resumed In 1977.
Pinkerton was 17 when he broke
Into Sara Donn Lawrence's home In
1979, raped her and stabbed her
more than lJ times with a bowie
knife while her chUdren slept In

nearby bedrooms. Her throat was Mom."
slashed, and she was sexually
"llye, J ay," said hls father, who
abused and mutUated after her leaned heavily on a metal rail
death , Investigators said.
throughout the execution.
"That man Is an animal," said
"I love you, Dad," Pinkerton
the victim's aunt, June Morgan of repUed as he lay strapped 1o a
New Waverly, who walled at the gurney.
prison for word that Pinkerton had
"I feel dizziness. I feel dizziness,"
been executed. "It should have Pinkerton said as the lethal combibeen done a long I !me ago. I'm here nation or three drugs took effect.
for Sarah and her babies."
Pinkerton cleared his throat and
Pinkerton,• who converted to the clenched his jaws several times. He
Islamic faith In prison, recited a then y a wn ed a nd stopped
chant lo Allah before prtson breathing.
officials gave a signal to administer
Pinkerton became the 57th perthe deadly drugs.
son executed In the United States
"Be strong for me," Pinkerton and the 13th In Texas since
told his father, Gene. "I want you to executions were reinstated.
know I'm at peace with myself and
Pinkerton also was sentenced to
with my God. Say goodbye to die for the 1910 rape-slaying of

AmarUio beauty queen Sherry
Lynn Welch, who was attacked and
stabbed more than l) times whtle
waiting for her hu sband at a
furniture store.
'
'The Supreme Coort rejected
Pinkerton's 11th-hour appeals twice
Wednesday, Including a final appeal written by Pinkerton from a
death house holding ceU and
deUvered to a federal court In
Houston by his mother.
In Pinkerton 's l!rst appeal with
the high court Wednesday, Justices
William Brennan and Thurgood
MarshaU voted In fa vor of the stay,
against the majority, with Marsh aU
citing Pinkerton's age at thetlme of
the crime.

of the veteran

Thursday. May 15. 1986

·Year

Prize unclaimed

Editorial on Page 2

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
top· prize In Ohio's Super Lotto .
drawing went unclaimed Wednesday night, Increasing the .
jackpot to at least $10 mllllon lor
next week's game.
There were no tickets sold
listing all six of the numbers
drawn Wednesday, a lo!tery
commission spokesman said.
The numbers were 5, 9, 18, 29, 31
and 'll.
Although the $7.5 million top
prtze went unclaimed, 223 players picked five of the rrumbers to
win $ll1 each. Also, 9,392players ·
selected four of the numbers,
winning $36 apiece.

SIA!ry on Page 4

Daily devotions

!

-··I

Sennonette on Page 5

'

.

.-

'

e
Vo1.36, No .9

•

at y

•

enttne
2 Sections.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 16, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Pages

26 Centt

A Mu lt imedia Inc . New spaper

Workrnans' comp hill dilemma for Celeste
FRIDAY, MAY 16th•••• SATU · Y, MAY 1

MONDAY, MAY 19th

THIS SUPER SALE BEGINS PROMPTLY AT 9:30A.M. FRIDAY AND CONTINUES THROUGH MONDAY 'TIL 5:00P.M.- YOU'LL REALLY SAVE ON
QUALITY, WELL KNOWN MERCHANDISE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT.'WE'LL GLADLY HELP YOU WITH YOUR SELECTIONS. IT PAYS TO TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THE SALES AT ELBERFELDS.

Tk'B~

$PECIAL $ALE/
MEN'S $22.95-BASIC DENIM

GIRL.S'
SHORTS

JEANS

Choose Lee or Wrangler prewashed blue danim. Straight
leg and boot flara styles. Sizas
29 to 42 waist.

s1600

In sizas 2 to 4, 4 to 6x and 7 to 14.
Jams shorts. knits. poly cotton
blends. solid colors and fashionable
prints. Coordinate with girls shirts.
Sale Priced .
Girls •5.00 SHORTS .. . Sale •3.47
Girls •6.00 SHIRTS ..... Sale •4 . 17
Girls ' 7.00 SHORTS ... Sale •4,87
Girls '9.00 SHORTS ... Sale ' 6.27

PAIR

$PECIALI
MEN'S "VAN HEUSEN"

DRESS SHIRTS

"'" Dsg Ssls/
AILEEN SPORTSWEAR

Neck sizes 14'h to 17'h. Solids and
stripes and neat patterns. Short
sleeves, regular and button down col·
Iars. Save 30% Friday, Saturday and
Monday.

114.95
6.00
9.00
124.00

DRESS
DRESS
DRESS
DR£SS

SHIRTS ....... SAII
SHIRTS ....... SAI!
SHIRTS....... SAl£
SHIRTS ....... SALE

Dsg Ssle/

40°/o OFF

Save 40% on our on1iro •lock of Aileen Sponowear.
5-M-l.,d 6 to 18. Reg. ' 14.00 to '35.00

110.47
111.20
113.30
116.10

TOPS· SHORTS· SLACKS

~~g. S8 40 TO S21 00

REDUCED 300fo
BOYS' BASIC

!

BOYS'

DENIM. JEANS

KNIT
SHIRTS
Short slttve styles. Tank tops, dress

Student sizee26 to 30 waist. Regulan, slims
end husky. Sizes 8 to 16. Pre-washed bll!e denim by Lee and Wrangler.

knits in sizes

Boys' ' 14.95 JEANS .... . Sale ' 10.47
Boys' 1 18.95 JEANS .. ... Sale ' 13.27
Boys' 1 19.95 JEANS .. .. . Sale '13.97
Boys' 1 21.95 JEANS ... . Sale $16 .37

JUNIOR SHORTS

REDUCED 30°/o
113.97

lseacs shorts. 100% cotton and
/~;~~~~blends. Choose jams. pedal pu~h~~·
c:1
and belted ltyltts. Size• 6 / 6 to 16 / 1

. 95 Stretch Joana .. . Sale '15.37
'«D .!IIi Stretch Joana ... Sale '18 .87
'&lt;!ll .!lli S1retch Jean• ... Sale '20.97

. $12 .00 SHORTS .. .. . Sale ·:~~.c•a
1 14.00 SHORTS .... Sale '1
$15.00 SHORTS ... Sale '11

Stretch Jeona .... Sale

74,, D1g S•l•l

GALLIPOLIS - An appeal to an
order to schedule a new trial for
Charles Lee II has been tu rned
down by the Ohio Supreme Court.
A ruling signed by Chief Justice
F rank D. Celebrezze was received
by Lee's attorney, Hamlin King, on
Thursday, sta ting that "no subs tan·
tial constitut ional question exists"
in the appea l motion !!led by Gallla
County Proseculor Joseph L. Calp.
"We are delighted ," King said.
The high court ru Ung paves the
way for a new tria l fo r Lee,:!!, Poin t
Pleasant, who was convicted on
Dec. 9, 1983, In Gallla County
Common Pleas Court of murder In
the shooting dea th of 17-year-old
Barbara Twyman of Rt. 1, Ewington, In March 1983.
Lee received 15 years to life
foUow1itg a nine-day trial. Lee, then
17, was the ltrst juven Ue to be tried
as an adult In Gall!a County.
The Fourth District Court of
Appeals ruled In January that Lee
should have a new.trlal because his
Sixth Amendment right to counsel
du ring questioning was vio lated .
Appelate J udge Earl E. Stephen·
son made note of the fact Lee's

'

S1r1 Thl1 W11kuuJ/

then-girlfriend, Shirley Furst off
Gallipolis, had made tape record·
lngs of telephone conversations
between herself and Lee with the
help of the GaUia County Sheriff's
Department. Those tapes were
entered as evidence In the trial.
"Whtle the appelant was aware
that Furst had given Information to
aut horities, and he may have
suspected recordings were being
made , it did not appear he actually
knew this was occurring," Stephen·
son wrote in the three-judge panel's
dec ision. "Under the clrcumstan·
ces, we are not persuaded that a
knowing intentional reUnqulshment
of appelan t's right 1o counsel was
Sho ¥111."

Common Pleas Judge Richard C.
Rode rick Jr., who presided over
Lee's trial, said he will contact Cain
and arrange to meet with Lee's
family to determine If they wUI
reta in King as the ir attorney or
req uest court-appoin ted counsel.
"I do need an Indication from Mr.
Ca in ," Roderick said. "But assumIng there Is no appea l, we will have
to proceed with a new trial."

CAN'T REACH DEADI..II'I'E - Sen. John Glenn's campaign
comm!ltee failed to hit the May 15 deadline lor repaying $2 m!Uion In
debts wfour Ohio banks for Glenn's Presldenlial campaign bid in 1984.
Sen. Glenn, however, says aU debts wUI be repaid.

~

·~

now a fuUgrmo:n jack. Is contrnt just roaming tlle
Lucas farm.
A.s Lucas explains, the Bureau of Land Management began adopting out wild horses and bu rros
because they were eating up the open ranges of thc
West. If left In Ute wild. the animals had to travel as
fa r as 25 miles a day just to find enough food to ex ist.
The government began herd in g the wUd horses and
burros together and transportin g them to different
locations throughouithe country to be adopied out to
w!IUng Individuals.
After a yea r~ long tria l period , the Bureau of Land
Management Issues fi nal ownership papers to the
person who adopts an animal. Only then may the
person sell the an!mal.
Lucas Is pleased wit h hi s burros and encourages
other people to adopt from the Bureau of Land
Management. He notes that adopt ion prices are now
$75 for a bu rro and $140 for a horse, lower prices from
when the adoption program originally began.
As for the new burro, he's already romping around
as much as his un steady legs wiU allow; trying to run

-

DRESS ·sALE

olf and tennis shorts. Jelri1, denims,
ahotrto. regular sizes and big sizes to 50 waist •.

s:un-dre·nats, casual dre•es, .fancy dre,SIItl,
:.utes NB to 24 mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to &amp;x, 7 to

g,,,
p,I6Bd
$402 $2 34

REDUCED 200fo
.96 MEN 'S SHORTS ..... .......... . SALE '5 .
1.96 MEN'S SHORTS ... .. ..... .... SALE
3 .95 MEN'S SHORTS .............. SALE
15.95 MEN'S

&gt;

TO

ThHI Dsg
$sle/

OPEN FRIDAY
'TIL 8:00P.M.

1 6.00

1987 and ran campaign commerciaL~

abou1 the matter.

The banks instead selec ted May
15. Glen n sai d he and campaign
ircasw·er William White met Wed·
ncsday in Columl:lls, Ohio, with
bank officers to discu ss the ban .
The oo nks did not indicate whal
steps they would take. White said.
Glenn said he told the banks it
was unlikely they would get much
money unt Uafter this fall'selectlon.
He said he needs to concentrate on
rP-clec tion bu t assured ttl' oonks he
will work on repaying them and
ot hc r crl'd itors.
"The committee debts will be
repaid :· Glenn sa id.
In addition to the banks. Glenn's
committee owes $950.oo:J to hotels
and other vendors.
While said the last payment on
ihe president ia l campaign debt was
made in November 1985. Interest
!las OC'f'n accumulating at ahout
$17.000 a month since then , he said.

FREE
PARKING

PROUD OF THE NEW ADDmON - Rutland
area resldenl Jbn Lucas Is as prolid of this brand aew
IIUie burro as the buiTO's mol her Is. Tbne of birth was

·'

shortly after nildnlght Thursday momlng. MoltEr
and baby are doing just One.

Lucas says ihat Pepino an d Jenny are smart, but
!w ry of people. He thinks since the baby was born in
capt ivity, he may be ('asier to tame.
In a few we&lt;'k s. the nrw arrival should be weaned
and eating grain.
In just nine days. Jenny will be ready 10 breed again
Lucas reports. and then Peplno gets a chanD:' at being
a fa ther.
Thai mean s, if naiure takes its course. another little
bu iTO may arrive at thP Luca s farrn again next

su mmer.

Ohio hit with severe thunderstonns
By United Press lntematlonal
Srvere thunderstorms tipped
ac rossOhloTh ursda)' night , spawning at least one tornado that
damaged homes and barns and
downed utility lines In northern
Crawford Counly .
Tornado warnings or watches
were issued for cou nties In cenlral.
north central and western Oh io, as
the stmm s swept across the state.
"We had several confirm ations
from officers In th is d('partment as
far as tornadoes In our cou nty,"
said Crawford County Sheriff's
dispatcher Dia ne Crossman. " It
was possibly one tornado tha t just
kept bouncing around, lhen dissipating, then coming back."
Damage from the tornado, which
struck a bou tS p.m., was reported 1n

Jude declared
incompetent

•4 .17
•6.27
17.67
19 .77

ELBERFELDS

pastt !me is ealing.
Lucas says it took only about 15 minutes for tile
60-pound. 36-inches-high anim al to be bo rn.
Both mother and son are blue lxlrros.
Peplno is a d!Jferent breed and Lucas Isn't sure of
the con'!'Ci name of the breed although he thinks It
originated in It aly. Peplno has a black stripe down
both his shoulders which, according to legend.
represen is the blood of Chris t which ran from his
cloak when it was placed across the back ci. a donkey
at the time of fh(' crucillxtion.

New Washington, located about 12
miles northeast of Bucyrus. Crossman said the winds blew the roofs

GIRLS' TO.PS

TOPS .. .. .... ..... .. .. .. .. ..... SALE
•9.00 TOPS ...: ... .... .. .... ..... .... SALE
1 11.00 TOPS .... .... ........... ..... SALE
'14.00 TOPS ........... ............. SALE

WASHINGTON tU PI\- Republican nominee Thomas Kindness is
within bounds to make an issue of
campaign debts, Sen. John Glenn
says, but it is not much of an lssue
because he will pay back the
money.
" ! don'i th ink the p€0ple of Ohio
are going to see this as a big.
burning issue," Glenn said. when it
l' compared to issues like national
defenS&lt;', jobs and good school&gt;.
''These are things !think we should
be discussing In detail."
Glenn, D-Ohio , said his presiden·
tial campaign commit tee had not
been able to meet a Thursday
deadline to repay $2 million to four
Ohio ban ks. He repea ted a pledge to
pay al l the debts from his 1984
pres!drntlal campaign, just as he
retired debts from other races .
Kindness, a slx -terrn congr('SS·
man from sout hwesi Ohio, raised
ques tions when Glenn asked the
banks earlier this year to f&gt;JSh back
the due date on the loans to March

a nd kick . And as with all newborns, his favorit e

1he county's r ur al areas and nea r

Sizes 6 to 24 months, 2 to 4 , 4 to 8x and 7 to 14. Knit top1,
blouses, crop tops in colorful pattems, qaaon's belt styles.

GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS
GIRLS

version.
Milan Marsh, president of the Ohio AFL-CIO, said If
Celeste support s the bill, he will be "tuming hls back"
on work ing people.
Sen. Richard H. Finan. R· Cincinnati , who
negotiated the terms of the bill , told hiscoUeagues the
new provisions w!U eliminate la wsuit s for ord!rta ry

negligenCf' "which had crept into our law·· by virtue of
Ohio Supreme Cour1 decisions In recent years.
An "mployw will be allowed to sue for an
intentional tort - defined as a deliberate act ion or
inact ion by a company, taken wit h the lmowledge that
an em ployee is "substanlially certain" tn be Inju red
or made ill .
A toea! judge will deiermine if there was an
intentional wro ng, and the Ohio Industrial Comrnls·
sion will decide the size or the award, ranging from 50
to 200 pcrceni uf the amount of the workers'
compensation benefi ts. bY I no more than $1 million.
But Sen. Robert L Burch. D· Dover, poin ted out
ihere is a two-year statute' of limita tions on lawsuits,
meaning a worker intenl iona!ly exposed to a
canc-er-causing agent or toxic substance might "die
wit hout the opportunity 10 file for an intentional tort."

Glenn's committee
misses deadline
to repay debts

MEN'S SHORTS

LlnLE GIRLS

•35.oo

·

""' Dtg $•1•1

29 to 42 plus big sizes 44
50. Lee and Wrangler brands.

to

759

San 30'\lo
During this Sale
MATCHING SWEAT PANTS................. Salt 17.59

DENIM
JEANS

REG. •&amp;.00 .

~

The fin al product prohibits lawsuits In negligence
cases compensable under the state's Inju red worker
Insurance system, sets a lim it of $1 million da mage
recovery for an "Intentional tort" - a deliberate
anempt by an employer to harm a worker esl&lt;!blishes low-interest loans for safety improvPmenis and forbids compensation to prison Inmates or
workers using drugs or alcohol.
Celeste prom ised last winter to sign a workers '
compensa tion reform bill, but this week he has
hedged as labor vented it s objections to the current

Ohio's high court
supports new trial

By NANCY VOACHAM
Sentinel staff wt11er
It's a boy! Er - I mean - It's a jack!
No matter what you ca ll it, It 's still a baby burro.
And is It ever cute! With It 's long wobbly legs long tw itchy ears - long straight zyelashes - and
soft shock of hair on top o! his head .
Born just aft er mldnlghl on Thu rsday, the little
fellow belongs to Rutland area resident Jim Lucas.
Lucas adopted the mother last August at a Bureau of
Land Management horse and burro sa le held at Bob
Evan's Farm.
Lucas calls the mother Jenny, which. hcexplains. is
what all female burros arc called. Male burros arc
called jacks he adds.
When Lucas adopted Jenny, she wa s already in the
family way, having been bred somewhe re In the wUd
around Yuma , Arizona.
Jrnny was Lucas's fourt h adoptiOn. He adopted
three other bu rTOS before her. Of those first three, one
died for unknown reasons, another was sold to an
Alhens County resident, and the third one, Peplno,

16.27
17,67
19,07

~. l H~~~!.'!
/llft/mo
w,.,,,.,
.. $,,,,,,_ .!~~~!!!!,
$
l

f,

MEN'S STRETCH

I

S4, 17

Bll Strllll- MEN'S 110.95

BJg Ssle Now/

advice from all quarters.
"He will certainly listen to the concerns ci.labor, but
he wlll make a very independent analysis of the bill,"
said Usher. "He will be glad to mee t with labor,
bu siness or anybody else."
The state Senate, ignoring vociferous complaints of
unfairness from organized labor, approved the
measure Thu rsday on a blpattisan vote, 21·12.
The bill, sharply limit ing lawsuit s which may be
tiled against employers for negligence bu t instituting
a system of fines for safety violations, cleared after
almost an hour of debate. The same measure bad
received 74-22 House approval Wednesday.
Fou r Democratic senators joined 17 Republicans In
ratifying the bill. which was negot iated In private
, during the last month by business-and labor-orient ed
lawmakers.

Baby huiTO a1rives at Lucas farm in Rutland

a to 1a. You_save o big

30"/o now.
loys' 15.95 KNITL........ Sale
lo)'111.9S KNITS ............ Sale
loys' 110.95 KNITL..... Sale
loys' 112.95 KNITS ........ Sale

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) - Gov. Richard F .
Celeste, long a rec ipient o! organized labor support
but now dependent on the captains of Industry for the
success of his eConomic development program, faces
a dilemma In the form of a workers' compensa tion
reform bill.
The governor ~a n sign the bill, sent to his desk
Thursday by the Ohio General Assembly, and
alienate organized labor. Or he can veto It and risk the
wrath of the business community and lawmakers
who stuck their necks out on a controversial matter.
Brian T. Usher, the governor's press secretary ,
sa id late Thu rsday Celeste has not decided what to do
with the biU that sharply limits lawsuit s which maybe
flied against employers for negllgencr l:lJ testabUshes
a series of fines for safety violations.
The governor probably has at leasl two weeks to
make up his mind, and Usher said he will listen to

Jimmie Jude, Pomeroy, has been
declared Incompetent to stand trial
on rapce charges, according to an
entry tiled Friday In the Meigs
County Common P leas Court.
According to the entry , upon the
facts preset:\ ted and the report rt the
. Shawnee Foren sic Center, the
defendant was declared Incompetent to stand trial. Judge Charles
Knight declares In the entry " It
appears to the court that the
(Continued on page 10)

off some homes.
.
homes. shcriff's deputy Annette
"Qu it e a bit d property was hit McLaughlin said. an d heavy rainhomes. barns and buildings." she fa ll caused stree i floodin g In
said.
Norwa lk.
No injuries were reported and
Several deputies reported SE'('in g
there were no reports of trres or funnel ~ like clou ds ihat appea red to
other objects bl ocking highways rise and fall from the sky, lxlt none
because of the storm. Crossman • touched down. s ll' sa id ~
said It could take one or two days to
Golfba ll -sizl'd hail feU in Upper
complete damage es tlmatt'S.
Sandusk)' in Wvandot County and
Meteo rologist Marvin Miller of th&lt;'re were numerous reporls of
the National Weather Se1v ice in large hail in othl'r parts of
Cleveland said a ham radio opera - nor1hwest Ohio. Thl' wea ther ser·
tor near New Washington rep011ed vice said Wa)'!l{'. F:rir, Medina and
seeing "a roof blo" n off a barn and Ravenna count ies n:p orted pea ·
a garage en top of a ca r. "
sized hail.
The weather service also issued
Thunderstorms also hit SC'\ 'Pral
tornado warnings for Huron, ot her area s of ihr '1a te Thu rsday
Wayne and Erie counties but no night , bu t no maJOr damage was
touchdowns were reported, Miller reported.
said.
Showers and thu nders torms
In Huron County, strong " inds were expecied to eonl inue across
tore shingles and siding loose from the sta te at least lhrough Sa tu rday .

Commissioner injured
Meigs Coun ty Commissioner Manning Roush and another driw r
were Injured Thursday In a t"u-vchicle accident on SuuonTo wnship
Road :MJ.!, the state highway patrol reported .
Roush, 49, Minersville, and Brian K. Buffington. 18. Pomeroy,
driver of the other vehicle, were taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Meigs EMS.
Roush was admlned for trea tment of chest inj uries an d was in
stable condition this morning, according to a VMH spokesperson.
Butflngton was treated and released for mu ltiple contusiOns,
abrasions and lacerations .
Troopers sald Buffington was westbound. se·cen·t l'nths of a mile
south of Ohio 7, at 5:40p.m. when his car rcporic&lt;lly slid lrfl ri centct'
and coU!ded head·on with Roush's east hound pickup truck.
Both cars were severely damaged and I mopers cited Bufflnglon
tor faUure to yield.·

I

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