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W.Va.

Chip Young joins ·oVP sfaff

·April

---

NCAA

James L.Oliver promoted at Gavin
James L. Oliver, of Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was recently promoted to production superintendent of operations at Ohio Power
Company's Gavin Plant.
Oliver started hi~ career In
1956 as a laborer at the Kanawha
River PJant, owned by the
APP!Ilachlan Power Company, a
company In the American Electric Power System.

Chip Young, 22, a 1983graduate
of Gallla Academy who will
receive his BS degree In communications from Rio Grande
College In May ,Is a new member
of tile Ohio Valley Publlstllng
Comany 's advertising stall.
Young has been an advertising
·account representative with the
Gallipolis Dally Tribune since
October. 1987.
He and his wife Caroline reside
on Rt . 3, Gallipolis.

3, 1

He transferred to Ohio Power's
Cardinal Plant In the operation
department In 1966 before mov Ing to Appalachian Power's
Amos Plant as an assls tant shift
operating engineer . He was promoted to ·'shift' engineer at the
Gavin Plant In 1972.
He Is married and has two
daughters.

fmals
tonight

New agronomic hotline available
mist who is experienced In corn
and soybean production In the
Midwest , while the Nebraska
farmer will want the agronomist
to also know . about sorghum
productlo n and lrrlga tlon ."
Each call to the l -BOO·AG-8-4767
Agronomy Network will auto·
matlcally be routed to The New
Northrup King agronomist who
works In the caller's geography.
This will be. done through an
AT&amp;T computer that deciphers
where a call originates and then
routes It instantaneously to the
appropriate agronomist.
The New Northrup King agronomist will answer the call unless
on a field call, In which case, an
answering machine will record
the caller's name and phone
number. The Ne.w Northrup King
agronomists call their offices for
messages several times each day
wheii they are un the road.

.Golden Valley , M&lt;nn . Farmers anywhere ln 'the country can call a new toiHree
number to llrtd answers to their
local agronomic questions. The
telephone number Is 1-800-AG-84767. This agronomic hotllne Is
being offered to all farmers by
The New N'o rthrup King.
"Callers will be able to t~lk
with an agronomist who Is
experienced with the crops, soils ,
weather patterns and manage·
ment options In their paMicular
geography," says David Tho·
mas, Executive Director of Marketing for The New Northrup
King. .
·
"Naturally, a farmer from
North Carolina who raises soybeans, peanuts and tobacco will
not want to ask cropping ques·
lions of an agronomist who works
In Nebraska or Iowa. ,
Likewise, the farmer In Iowa
will want to talk with an agrono-

'C:' _

o

'

Daily Number
453
Pick4
1147

Page4

Tests available
TYPICAL veal calves are shown In lhls Jim Kessinger photo.

'

Super Lotto
5-9-11-20.32-38

•

e

WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio State University's Ohio
CHIP YOUNG
Agricultural Research and Development Center offers low-cost
soli ieS ts for homeowners looking
to find the exact type and amount
COLUMBUS, Ohio UP!) Results of a recent Ohio study
of fertilizer needed for a healthy
·
support the common assumption
lawn.
Sue White, a turf specla.llst,
that smaller farms are less
says such tests are the only way
efficient, but the Ohio Farm
to determine how to properly
Household Longitudinal Study
fertilize your. lawn.
might not tell the whole story.
The testing Is easy: your · D. Lynn Forster, agricultural
county Extension agent can tell economist at Ohio State Unlver-'
you how to take a soil sample and slty, wonders If the expenses that
send It to be tested at the OARDC. part-time farmers Include as
Envelopes for soli samples are business costs ar.e . all farming
available from your county Ex- costs.
tension office or by writing the ~:;:::::::======:::!
Research Extension Analytical I
Laboratory, OARDC, Wooster,
44691-6900, or calllng216-263-3760.
Soli tests cost $6 and take about a
week to 10 days, Including
mailing.
Recommendations on the
amount of fertilizer to apply are
based on the lack of nitrogen In
•
your soli. Nitrogen Is the most
Important nutrient In creating a
thick, healthy lawn, White says.
The soli test will also show If
(6141 992-6606
your lawn needs phosphorous or
potassium. ·

Results released

at

Vol.38. No.231
Copyrighted 1988

Panama forces try to ·sto official U. S. car
-

hm1ted

ONLY

Americare-Pomerov
Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center

.

.

'

PANAMA CITY, Panama Washington as the leader of
' (UP!) - U.S. officials said an Panama despite his ouster by the
attempt by a Panamanian De· pro-Norlega National Assembly
tense Forces truck to stop Feb. 26, made the remarks In a
Ambassador Arthur Davis's car tape-recorded statement to Uniwas a serious and Intentional act, ted Press International Sunday
but Panama's justice minister from his Panamanian, hideout.
suggested · the United ,S tates
Minister of Justice and Gocould be using the Incident to vernment Rodolfo Chlarl said
"justify a planned Invasion."
Sunday's Incident Involving DaDeposed President Eric Arturo vis was "strictly a pollee affair"
Delvalle, meanwhile, urged Wa· that began when the driver of a
shtngton to join a multinational pollee vehicle "noticed an exagforce to "capture" Gen. Manuel gerated display of automatic
Antonio Noriega, but ruled out weapons wielded by civilian
full-scale military Intervention agents traveling- In three cars
by the United States to topple the following Ambassador Arthur
strongman.
.. Davis's armored car."
Delvalle, who Is recognized by
"There has been no act of

use controls.
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harassment at all," Chlarl said.
"We would not like to think that
false accusations are being fabricated against our armed force
to justify a planned Invasion."
U.S. Embassy spokesman Ter:
renee Kneebone said Davis left
the papal nuncio's residence
after "a standard .courtesy v.tslt
on Easter Sunday, and was
Immediately followed by a 'Vehicle of the Panamanian ·oetense
Forces."
The white pollee pickup truck,
a vehicle commonly used by riot
squads, turned on Its lights and
sirens In an attempt to mak~
Davis stop as he traveled to his
residence about a mile away.

''

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VAUGHAN HONORED - Leo Vaughan, Logan Monument
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Prealdent's Sales Achievement Award at the firm's annual
banquet held recently ln Logan, He was presented the award for
exceeding his sales goals In 1987. Vaughan began hill.career with
Logan Monument In 1947. Vaughan Is shown recelvlnK the marble
plaque from Logan's Prealdenl Don W. Boone. Logan Monument,
dating back to 18110, has sates olllces In Logan, Clrelevllle,
Pomeroy, VInton, W~llston and Piketon.

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By Untied Press lnlematlonal
warnings were Issued for strong Louisiana, snow In the southern
The National Weather Service
storms on Lake Erie.
Plains and tornadees In the Great
By late Sunday evening, show- Lakes region.
canceled tornado and severe
.
thunderstorm watches and se- ers and a few thunderstorms
The storm over the Pl&lt;!ins
vere thunderstorm and special were scattered around the east- headed northeast Sunday Into the
marine warnings In Ohio Sunday ern half of the state.
upper Mlssslsslppl Valley and
Rainfall amounts for the 24- Great Lakes, producing two
nlght'but said scattered showers
and storms would continue statehour period ended at 8 p.m.
tornadoes In Michigan that damwide Into this morning.
Sunday ranged from half an Inch aged property but caused no
to 1 and one-cjuarler Inches
A tornado watch was In effect
Injuries.
.
,
until 7 p.m. Sunday for 'e xtreme statewide.
The weather service also
Partly cloudy skies are fore- warned of severe flooding along
weslern Ohio, and a severe
thunderstorm watch was posted cast In Ohio for Monday and the Neosho River from southeast
·
until 10 p.m. for most of the Tliesday.
Kansas to northeast 'Oklahoma,
easlern two-thirds of the state.
with the river cresting about 6
Forecasters had severe thunAround the Nation
feet above flood stage today from
derstorm warnings up Sunday
The weather quieted down over the week'end's rain.
eye•.too- In Luca~. WoN!, De- .. the~middle of the country today . .~ )o a foot _of snow was
fla~e"a~nd " WlulainS' ·c~i.iritfe's .:· ,.-after "
Ea'ster weekend Ilia t · expected In the Cascades of
and a couple of special marine featured flooding In southeastern Washington state, with tempera-

an

tures cold enough to bring snow
levelS down to 2000 feet.
Temperatures arou:~d the na·
tlon at 2 a.m. ranged from 29
degrees at Baker, Ore., to 76
degrees at Key West, Fla.
The rains that caused havoc
and canceled Easter sunrise
services In Louisiana began to
ease In the late morning Sunday.
During a three-day onslaught,
New Orleans was hit by as much
as 14 Inches of rain that flooded
roads Saturday under 3 feet of
water, drowning one woman, and
sending some 180 residents scurrying to shelters.
"The emergency, at least for
now, Is over with," said National
Continued on page 5

.

By MIKE BERRY
talntop" speech the night before
United Press lnternallonal
he died.
Twenty years after Dr. Martin
"I was one of. those peopl~
l,uther King Jr. was kllled by a
blessed enough to have been here
sniper, civil rights activists and Aprll3, 1968," NAACP President
supporters gathered around the Benjamin Hooks told the crowd
:ountry today to remind Amer- , Sunday night.
ica that the slain leader's dream
"I remember It as If Jt were
has yet to be fulfilled.
yesterday. Listening to the
In ttemphls, where James power and pathos of ¥arlin
Earl Ray shot King' at the Luther King," he said. "I reLorraine Motel on April 4, 1968, member Ilr.lQng saying, 'I may
several hundred people attended not make It with you ... to the
a memorial service at the church promised land."'
where King delivered his "Mou~"No, Dr. Kin~'( we haven't
•

made It yet," Hooks said, "but
your unfulfilled dream still
haunts us. God help us to realize
our dream."
Hooks desorlbed King, winner
of the Nobel Peace Prize and the
leader who symbolized the civil
rights movement, as "not simply
God's gift to black America, but
to the nation."
A cadre of King's closest
followers were to lead march In
Atlanta this evening from the
slain civil rights leader's graveslte to the governor's mansion,
and memorial services and other

a

The Rev. Ralph Abernathy,
vice president of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference under King and his closest
confidant, heads the list of civil
rights lutnlnarles at the Atlanta
march. Abernathy will be lolned
by Atlanta City Councilman
Hosea Williams, a field general
In the King forces, Earl Shlnhoster, regional director of the
NAACP, and NAACP Georgia
director Edward Brown Jr.
Williams and Abernathy were
wtth King when he was shot.
King was· In Memphis to

Arab death .toll mounts; unrest continues~. ~-~~-~-~a-~h-cee_~
. 0_u_~-~-e-sc_h_ed-ul-ed--su_p_po_~_t~-~-~~-~-dg_0;_a~-~-:~-~-CO-ll-ec,-

1987 SUBARU GL-1 0 TURBO

BAUM LUMBER IS PLEASED
. TO ANNOUNCE A NEW
SERVICE TO
ITS CUSTOMERS
...
,·

questions from UP!, Delvalle
said Washington should maintain
economic pressure on Noriega
and expressed support for a
multinational force to capture
the mltltary leader, who faces
drug t"afflcklng charges In the
United States.
"I disregard (sic) any sort of
military Intervention by the
United. ·States · or any ·other
country," Delvalle said In English. "However, I do not dlsre·
gard the possibility of forming a
multinational force that could
come In, take out Noriega and
bring him to justice. After all, he
Is an International fugitive."
Continued on page 5

Dr. King kille«J by sniper 20 years ago

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Noriega has repeatedly ac.'.:~~~~~~~·s driver folIo
sta
rd
rlty proce- cused U.S. Embassy officials ure and did not stop," Kneebone Including Davis, who has been In
said.
Panama for more than a year · The Defense Forces truck did of masterminding opposition tacnot make any other effort to stop tics to overthrow his regime.
Chlarl said the government of
Davis's vehicle, such as trying to
force It off the street,' Kneebone Panama "has tried at all times to
offer security to the diplomatic
said.
Th.e embassy considers the representatives of the United
Incident "a serious act which was States In spite of their attitude of
definitely not accidental," Knee- not recognizing the current gobone said. He said the embassy vernment and their Insistence on
would not file a protest note recogntztng as president of Pabecause It does not recognize the . nama a person (Delvalle). who
has not shown any evidence at all
Noriega government.
"I haven't gotthesllghtestldea of being in the Republic of
why the pollee would want to stop ·Panama."
In his taped response to written
Davls," ·Kneebone said.

Cancel tornado, storm watches in Ohio

Research needed

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the customer to 1\)ake future
payments. Banks 'bought the
notes from the merchants to
demonstrate confidence In both ·
the merchant and the customer,
and to take money.
The Constitution, with all of Its
freedoms and liberties, yet Implications of a strong central
government , gave rise to our free
enterprise s:;stem today.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Changes In consumer preferences and more demand for convenIence has Increased the need for
research In the beef Industry,
says Bobby VanStavern, meats
specialist at Ohio State
University.
Money from cattle producers
helps researchers look for
a11swers to the Industry's
problems.

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, April 4, 1988

~()Jl()lfl~••• ____~C~o~n~tl~nu~e~d~f~ro~m~D~-1~------- ~~------------------~------------~-------L--------------------------~------~-------- .
the lowest price, he Increased the
compeUtlon among manufacturers, thereby putting pressure on_
the wages paid to the growing
class of factory workers.
While many leading merchants had Inherited their
wealth, there was always room
for an ambitious young man to
move up or even rise to the top.
Many private fortunes were built
In these years after the adoption
of the Constitution .
Shipping became a business
and overseas -trade became the
focus of the new nation's business
hopes.
The effects of shipping
prosperity spread throughout the
American economy - much In
demand were the rafl' materials
that the United States produced
- grain, meat, cottOn 1 leather,
and wool.
"• . Banking prospered . The mer·
chant who ·sold his goods on
credit, took a· note from the
customer, and placed his trust In

Clear tonlghl. Low
around 50. Tuesday, sunny,
breezy and warm.

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•

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cruise, sport wheels and just 18,000 mlltal !lew van trade-in. ·

'·

JERUSALEM (UP!) - The Israeli approval of a U.S. peace
Arab death toll In nearly four plan for the region.
months of anti- Israel violence
Even before 'the American
rose to at least 131, and Palesti- diplomat arrived, however,
nian leaders called for new ·· there were signs his trip to Israel
protests during the visit of would not succeed.
Secretary of State George Shultz.
Speaking to soldiers during a
Six Arabs were killed by tour of army bases In the
soldiers Saturday and two Pales· northern West Bank, Prime
tlnlan youths died Sunday In Minister Yltzhak Shamlr warned
Incidents related to the unrest, that Israel will never agree to
officials said.
open peace talks while the
A Palestinian man wounded by Palestinian uprising continues In
army gunfire Wednesday died of the territories.
his Injuries Sunday, and there
"If anyone starts negotiations
were unconfirmed reports that . under these conditions, the desoldiers killed an Arab protester mands of the Arabs will escalate
In the West Bank village of and the moderates will have no
Hawawara.
chance of expressing themThe deaths came as Shultz selves," .Shamlr said.
arrived In Israel, his first stop on
At least 131 Palestinians have
a flve-.,ay visit to the Middle East bee~ killed In the anti· Israel riots
aimed at winning Arab and that erupted almost four months

ago. One Israeli soldier was shot
to death by an unknown
assailant.
Protest leaders have called for
q new round !lf violence this week
to mark the Shultz visit. l!'lfteen
Palestinians were , kllled In
clashes that erupted during the
secretary's last visit In early
March.
Thousands of soldiers and
pollee officers were deployed In
the West Bank and Gaza and In
Arab East Jerusalem In an
attempt to prevent violence as
Christians celebrated Easter.
Vehicles with blue West Bank
.license plates were searched at a
checkpoint set up near the walled
Old City of Jerusalem, and some
motorists were barred from
entering the city.

••

Military officials said the 'risIng death toll Is the result of new
army policies allowing· soldiers
to open ftre · On protesters suspected of throwing gasoline
bombs, and therecentdectslon to
confront· demonstrators after
several weeks of attempting to
avoid clashes.
Since the protest began Dec. 9,
Israel has been condemned
worldwide for using live ammunition against unarmed rioters.
During a tour of Gaza Sunday,
Defense Minister Yltzhak Rabin
said the army's Increased use of
deadly force was an Important
tool In the effort to crush the
uprising.
"In most cases, not all, the
clashes were the result of our •
Initiative In an effort to keep the
Continued on page 5

Wisconsin all set for ·Tuesday primary
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1

11
I

1

I

By ANNE SAKER
Untied Preu lllterna&amp;lonal
The presidential candidates
are redoubling efforts In states
making the next decisions In the
1988 coolest, Colorado and Wisconsin, and Democratic leaders
are looking ahead to the posSibilIty that Jesse Jackaon could win
the party's nomluatlon:
Jackson's victory In the March
26 Michigan caucuses has
created momentum for his campaign. Willie Brown, chairman of
the California A11embly anl!
Jackson's natlo~l campalp
chalnnan, said Sunday that
wb!le he Is surpllsed at how well
Jackson Is dotug now, he belieVes .
tbe nomination Ia attainable. •
Appearing Sunday on .ABC's
'"1;),115 Week with David Brink-

ley," Brown said, "If we do well
In Wisconsin, If we do well in New
York, we roll on to California
after doing Pennsylvania, Ohio
and Indiana, I think we will be In
a commanding position to get the
nomination, and that's the way It
should be."
But now the candidates are
concentrating on Colorado's Democratic and Republican caucuses Monday and Wlseonsln' s
primary Tuesday.
The four Democrata - frontrunners Jacklon and Massacbusetta Gov. Michael Dukak'-, and
Sena. Paul Simon of DliDola and
Albert Gore Jr, of Tenneaaee planned to he In WIIColllln today.
DukaldaattelldedEaateraervices Sunday ID three Milwaukee
.churcbea with a V!Ud 8-polut lead

over Jackson In the latest poll
·published In The Milwaukee
'Journal. But the newspaper,
Wisconsin's largest, endorsed
Gore In a Sunday editorial,
saying Gore Is the most experienced candidate.
The newspaper's survey, taken
Thursday, showed Dukakla favored by 43 percent of the
respondents and Jackson by 35
percent. Two weeks ago, Dukakls also led Jackson by 8 poluts,
38,percent to 30 percent.
·

whose only GOP opposl tlon Is
former television evangelist Pat
Rqberlson, was supported by 80
percent of those questioned. Sen.
Robert Dole of Kansas, who had
hoped to win Wisconsin to get
back Into the race, dropped out
last week.
In Denver, Robertson stayed
maluly with Easter themes and
used sermons at four churches to
urge conservatives not to abandon the fllht for a new morality.
"Some of you aee today what
looka
11~ the triumph of evil In
Gore aut Increased support In .
curriculum
contrary to what's
the poll, rtalng to 15 percent from
right,
drug
addiction,
and llleglt10 percent two weeki ago,
mate
pregnancy,"
he
said. "But
~on, trying to keep biB hopes
you
can
never
give
up."
auve, got only 5 percent In the
Jackson, to demonstrate that
poll• .
VIce Prealdent George Bush,
Continued on page 5

''
~ ~J tlf!l~ii

.

RAPPYBASTERPABADB-OnnltllewoM'alaqwtltueer
egp wu one of &amp;h feUund alta of Ule "Walt DIAeJ World
broadcaat live Dll 011 ...._
Rapp:y ~ler PIII'He wlllcll Sund&amp;)' by ABC-TV, Tbe rebeanal took place ,t Dl111:y World
Frida)'.~
•

\

�•

'

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•

Monday, April4, 1988

•

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Comment
· The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monda~April4,1988

'

Brazil may _sell missiles in Mideast

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

WASHINGTON - Brazil Is onlytheiranlansbutalsoAmerlshaping up as the country that . can warships In the Persian Gulf.
Ill Court Street
could Introduce highly accurate It may have been an accident,
Pomeroy, Ohio
ballistic missiles to the powder' but It was a ·slower Iraqi missile Someone would get hurt, and It
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
· •
that struck the U.S.S. Stark last wouldn't be1he dog.
keg of the Middle· East.
Our Intelligence sources say
Three
countries
Brazil,
·
May,
k1111ng
37
Amer-Icans.
~~
.
Israel and India - are intent on
Ballistic missiles In the hands · that Libya and Iraq have already
rs:m~ I"'T"'L......'-~·~d •.=.
producing
long-range,
superof
the far more volatile Muam- asked Brazil about buying the
~v
. ..
speed missiles that could be mar Gadhafl would have more SS-3110, a surface-to-surface mts·ROBERT L. WINGETT
topped, In time, with nuclear dire consequences. At worst, slle now under de.velopment In
Publisher
warheads. But tt is Brazil that Gadha!l is a madman who would Brazil.
In 1984, the BrazUians successhas the Centr&lt;1l Intelligence strike any country with such a
PAT WHITEHEAD .
BOB HOEFLICH
fully
launched the· Sanda IV
Agency and the Defense Intelll- missile. The kindest assessment
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
General Manager
gence Agency alarmed. As one of him is that he Is a desert fox rocket, and now they are working
CIA source told us bluntly, who ls not above using mlsslles to transform that technology Into
AMEMBER of The United Press Ir.ternatlonal, Inland Dally Press _ ~ "Brazll wlll sell arms to anyb- against U.S. ships in the Medlter- the SS-3110, which is supposed to
Assoclatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
ody, especially Iraq and Libya." ranean, or In the waters he have• a 6110-mlle-plus range. It Is
· Ballistic missiles were so claims In the Gulf of Sidra. estimated that It wlll be operaLE'JTER.S Or OPINION are welrorrie. They "';hould be less than 300 words
named because they are·as filS! Giving Gadhafl a ballistic mis- tional In 1990, and available for
long. All letters are subj~t to editing and must be signed with name, ad!iress and
as
bullets. In the fidgety hands of slle would be like Sending a pit sale.
telephone number. No unsigned lettei'8 will be published. Letters should be In
Worse, the Libyans and Iraqis
•
Iraq,
they would threaten not bull to greet the mailman.
Rood taste, addressing issues, not persona ll11es.

Ohio Democratic
presidential primary
shapes up as exciting
By LEE LEONARD
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS -The air went out of Ohio's Republican presidential
primary last week, but the Democratic contest Is shaping up as an
exciting race that could determine how the nomination Is won.
Leaders of Robert Dole's Ohio campaign quickly aligned
themSelves with Vice President George Bush after the Kan&amp;&lt;ls
senator dropped out. The only question left on the GOP side Is how
ll)UCh support Pat Robertson can generate.
, Although other names will be on the Democratic ballot, the
spotlight . will be on Jesse Jackson, Gov. Michael Dukakls of
Massachusetts and Sen. Albert Gore of Tennessee.
·"The race Is still there for somebody to win," Democratic State
Chairman James Ruvolo said last week.
, Ruvolo believes that If either Jackson or Dukakls win both the New
York and Pennsylvania primaries In April, the race will be over by
the time the Ohio primary arrives May 3.
Jackson, Dukakls and Gore all have strengths that could make It an
even race In Ohio.
Jackson polled 16 percent of the statewide vote In the 1984 Ohio
primary. He defeated Walter Mondale by 2-1 In the 21st District of
Cleveland, and ran an extremely strong third to Mondale and Gary
Hart In Cincinnati. Columbus and Dayton.
.Dukakls comes from a state similar to Ohio In that Its old
manufacturing base disintegrated and It was rebuilt. He will point out
he was responsible for that, and can help do the same for other
Industrial states.
Gore may be the sleeper, If he Isn't out of the running when the Ohio
primary comes around. He could be highly pOpular In southern Ohio,
just as Jimmy Carter was In 1976.
Rob Mulligan, Gore's Ohio campaign director, said his candidate
also wlll be fighting for the votes of working men and women in the
'
Industrial northeastern section.
"We thtnl&lt; we can compete most everywhere In Ohio," he said,
adding that Gore's message will be that he will " put the Democratic
party back on the side of working men and women."
But Ohio Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel, D- Youngstown,
the Ohio campaign chairman for Dukakls, said his candidate will be
very strong In Cleveland, Dayton, Cincinnati and Toledo by
emphasizing his work !_n economic development, job training,
housing and medical cost containment.
"Frankly," said Meshel, "I think Dukakls Is a lot more attractlve
(to regular party Democrats In Ohio) than Mondale was." Mondale
lost the 1984 Ohio primary to Hart, but won a plurality of delegates.
: Jeanne Mallett; field director for the Jackson campaign In Ohio,
iays Jackson will be strongest In Cleveland, Toledo, Youngstown,
Akron, and Youngstown-Warren, where "there Is practically a
perfect rainbow" coalltlon of blacks, ethnics and economically
disadvantaged.
' Jackson also will be strong again In Cincinnati and Dayton, Mallett
predicted.
' Ruvolo said he is ·not aware of any "stop Jackson" movement
among Democrats, and adds that would be a bad Idea for a party
which Is trying to include more people.
.
''The party cannot afford any 'stop-anybody' movement," the
chairman said.
But Mulligan Indicated Gore Is not going to back away from
challenging Jackson's stands on Issues and his lack of experience In
government .
. "I think he Is going to raise the Issues that need to be discussed, so
peopie will take a hard look at what Mr. Jackson Is saying," said
Mulligan.
Likewise, Meshellndlcated that polls will be used showing J;&gt;ukakls
as the only Democratic candidate who can defeat Bush In November.
''That doesn't sell to anybody," responded Ruvolo, who Is hoping
the Democratic candidates preach positive messages.
· State Rep. C.J. McLin, D-Dayton, a Jackson campaign leader In
Ohio, also discounts "wlnnablllty" as a valld Issue.
"Jesse deserves as much of an opportunity as (former Sen. &amp;rry)
Goldwater, (former Sen. George) McGovern and Mondale," said
McLin, recalling three presidential nominees who lost In landslldes.
"Jesse can't do no worse than they did. He's got to do better."

Today in.historyr
By United Preu International
Today Is Monday, April 4, the 9~th day of 1988 with 271 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
ThOse born on this date are under the sign of Aries . They Include
social reformer Dorothea D1x In 1802; Inventor Linus Yale, developer
of the cyllnder lock, In 1821; dance school founder Arthur Murray In
1895 (age 93); author-playwright Robert E. Sherwood In 1896;
broadcast news commentator John Cameron Swayze In 1906 (age82);
blues musician Muddy Waters (McKlnleyMorgantleld) lnl915; actor
Anthony Perkins In 1932 (age 56), and South African musician Hugh
Maseke!a fll1939 (age 49) .
·
On this date In history:
In lMl, President William Henry Harrison died of pneumonia after
servtnlforone month: He was the ninth U.S. presldentand the first to
die In office.
In 1896, the Yukon gold rush began with the announcement of a
strtke In the Northwest Territory of Canada.
1n lNI, representatives of 11 nations gathered In Washlngton to
stan the North Atlantic Treaty, creating the NATO alliance.
In 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was asi&amp;Sslnated In Memphis.
In 1983, the space abuttle Challenger lifted otf on Ill ln&amp;UIJIIral
mission, the 1lxth flight In the shuttle program .

A !bought tor the day: Dorthea D1x wrote, "The reason that
bulbands and wives do not understand each other Is that they belong
v
to different sexes."-.,

.

1'

--...

are pressing Brazll to j&lt;pee9 up .
the development of the SS-10110
missile, which will have a longer
range, sharper guidance ~ys­
tems and more payload capability than the SS-3110. Most slgnl!lcantly, It will be capable of
carrying a nuclear warhead. The
SS-10110 could be off the assembly
lllle In Brazll as early as 1991.
The. military missiles are a
byproduct · of Brazil's active
space program, run by a Brazilian Air Force research group
called the Aerospace Technical
Center (CTA) at Sao Jose Oos
Campos. The aim of ,the program
Is to put four satellltes Into orbit
between 1989 and 1992, two of
·them for weather forecasting
and two for terrlan photography.
As we reported after the
Brazilians launched the Sonda
IV, a rocket that can launch
satellltes can easlly be converted
Into a rocket that can launch
nuclear weapons.
One of the primary roadblocks
to producing missiles for export
was overcome by the Brazilians
early last year. A plant to
produce ammonium perchlorate, a key Ingredient In solid
fuels useq,.J&gt;y missiles, was
quietly opeiild ai'Jacarel, a town
not far from the CTA . The plant
produces 50 of the 500 tons of
perchlorate the Brazilians need
annually for their space program. It Is only the sixth such
plant In 1he world.
We also reported previously
that Brazil's traditional rival In
Latin America, Argentina, was
building Its own . rocket at a
slower pace. Just last September, Brazil's Pres!dent Jose
Sarney announced that Ills country had succeeded In enriching
uranium, the major obstacle In
producing nuclear weapons.

Those problematic polls·____W_ill_wm_R_·us_·he_r·
It's bad enough that American into believing (quite wrongly)
voters have to put up with what that the candidate of their choice
the media tell them both before has nQ chance - · O••, alternaandaftereveryelectlon (blgand tlvely, that he :.viii win by a
margin so big that no special
small) about Its significance.
We were assured In advance, ef!ort on his behalf Is needed. In
for example, that wha~,· .\{l~ ettber case, a false poll result can
Republicans and Democrats of be't!llll&lt;~ 'enough · to Influence the
·
Iowa did in their respective outcome. .. '
caucuses would be of enormous
It (s, true, of course, that
Importance. And when Robert pollsters will try to predict the
Dole an!! Richard Gephardt outcome correctly - at least
emerged the winners, the media most of the time. That Is, after
promptly went out of their minds a]], In their own Interest.' But two
with e:&gt;~cltement. Yet today, Important copslderatlons render
scarcely two months later, Dole theIr accuracy h 1g hI y
and Gephardt have been all but questionable.
ceremonially Interred as
In the first place, any poll is
.. candidates.
only as good as the sample
But It's even worse, If possible, polled, and there Is absolutely no
that the voters must be !nun- foolproof way of Insuring that a
dated, In advance of every particular sample Is representaelectlon, with polls ostensibly live. In the second place, those
revealing how they are leaning or doing the polling have their own
even how they will vote.
preferences and may, either
The vice of the process is consciously or unconsciously,
simple: These polls purport to be allow these to Influence their
"scientific" measurements of conducting of the poll.
public opinion, but In fact they
Some such Interference Is the
are no such thing. As a result,
they can and do mislead voters only conceivable explanallon for

the enormous blooper commUted election by 10 percent.
And yet there are those who
by the Gallup Organlzatlon In
this year's New Hampshire Re- want the petworks to abandon ·'
publican , primary. Seldom, their present agreement to resurely, has a single prlq~ary been frain from announcing the reof more crltlcal Importance to a sults of "exit polls" (I.e., polls.of
candidate. Geor1e Bush had lost voters emerging from polllng ·
Iowa badly, coming In behind places on Elecllon Day) untll the
both Dole and Robertson. If Ifnsh actual results are in.
Imagine a close race between
had falled to win In· New Hamp'
shire, his campaign would have (say) Bush and Dukalds this
coming November. Suppose that
been dead In the water.
At that crucial moment, with 24 the actual result, like that In the
hours to go till the polls opened, , Wilson-Hughes race of 1916,
the media announced breath- hinges on the outcome In Callforlessly that Gallup reported Bush nla, where the polls won't close
losing to Dole by nine percentage for up to six hours after those In
points, with a "possible error" of various Eastern states. How
up · to 3 percent. (All the other would you like to have millions o{
polls, more caullons but only less . California voters go to the polls
wrong, had them neck and neck.) depending on the accuracy and
As we now know, Bush blew objectivity of the Gallup OrganiDole away, beatlng him by eight zation, or any other pollster, to
percentage points and making a tell them on the basis of exit polls
liar out of Gallup by a whopping ("with a possible error of up to 3
margin of 17 percent. Gallup percent': ) what Is happening
announced lamely that It had back East?
These shysters make enough
"stopped polllng too soon" - the
same excuse that Its Brl!lsh money out of our credullty
affiliate used in 1970 when It without being allowed to pick our
miscalled an enUre national president for us.

Bell on 15-day
disabled list

.

'

routes they will take before duties I have as a state legislator meet with me In their local
transporting the hazardous Is to attend to the needs and communities to discuss their
materials. The bill was passed by . concerns of the consiltuents of problems and concerns as they
the House In February and Is now the 17th State Senate District. pertain to state government.
If you have any comments or
pending before the Senate While the legislature Is In recess,
Energy and Environment I wllJ be traveling thro~ghout the questions on these or other Issues
district, as I have In the past, and that Interest you, please feel free ·
Committee. ,
look forward to meeting with to contact my office by wrltlag
'
The legislature Is considering local govj!rnment officials and· State Senator Jan Michael Long,
another environmental Issue: other civic and commun!ty•lead- · Ohio Senate, Statehouse, ColumImplementation of the federal ers. I will also be setting up my bus, Ohio, 43266r or call (614)
•
right-to-know law, which re- constituent days, which will give 466-8156.
Individuals
the
opportunity
to
quires firefighters and other
workers to be Informed of hazardous materials when they
work around them. The Senate
passed a version that would force
cities with strong right-to-know
ordinances to replace them with
a weak state version. A House bill
allows clUes to retain local
control.
The legllllature Is also considMY HUSI5AA~
ering a reform oJ the workers'
compensation system. SB 332
15 to\ORE KON·
follows a report Issued by a select
VER~L 1\-1~
committee establlshed to examIne the administrative structures
'(OUR ltllS~~D.
NO, M'f 'I'U\~.
and duties of the two agencies
'.
Involved In the system and to
tftV t\USSMD
Identify any overlap or dupllcafMR.E NON·
tlon that could be eliminated In
VtRfJI\L TI-\M
order to Improve effeclency.
However, many questions about
~~till5&amp;AA~
the blll that were raised In
committee have not been adequately Bddre11aed. The legislature should not vote on the plan
untll these questions are
answered.
Both the House and the Senate
h11ve billa pendfD8 thai would ban
corporal punllhment In public
schools. SB 179 would ban pad- ,
dllag, but allow local school'
d!atrlcta to declde differently by
qa.:...~
holding bearings to justify retainlag corporal pun!abment.
One of the moat tmpor:tant
•

.

" Whitey kept saying, 'I don't field playable Immediately after
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Winter Ja11uary about the sore'armed
decisions and diatribes began Solo. "We're not counting on know why we 're here,' like he · a rain.
The tradltiona 1 opening dayexpected us to lose,'' said Smith.
undergoing sprlngtlme scrutiny him."
parade
wound through downtown
But Soto pitched brilliantly In "I kept waltlng for him to say
today for the defending National
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Cincinnati third baseman Buddy Bell
Cincinnati
a couple of hours :
League champion St. Louis Car- spring training and won himself something positive, but he never
has been placed on the Ul-&lt;lay disabled 1181, retroactive Ill March
before
the
start
of today's opener
did."
the opening day as·stgnment .
dinals and Cincinnati Reds.
26, because of a sprained lett knee, a Reds s pokesman said this
and
the
ceremonial
first pitch
If Smith strikes out more this
The Cardinals-Reds National
When Parker was traded from
weekend.
was
tossed
out
by
National
League opener at sold-out 56,0110- the Reds last winter, he boldly year , he probably can tell you
Bell was lett behind al the team 's spring training site In Plant ·
League
President
Bart
Glamattl,
seat Riverfront Stadium sig- predicted Cincinnati will finish why: umpire revenge
City, Fla., but will rejoin the club later In Cincinnati to continue
the forme r · president of Yale
Smith recently said of urn
naled the start of evaluating "fourth or fifth" this year withrehabilitation.
plres: "Their judgment ls bad. University.
off-season big deals and brash out him.
In reaching the 24-player opening-day r011ter, the Reds adde&lt;)
Incidentally, the game had two
Reds' manager Pete ·Rose's their eyesight Is bad, their level
statements.
outfielder Leo Garcia, recalled from lhelr Nashville farm team,
starting
Urnes - 2:05 p .m.
Were the Cardinals foolish to reacUon: "I laughed. I'll be very of consistency Is terrible. Since
and lnflelder-&lt;latcber Uoyd McClendon, purchased from
12:05 p.m . (BST).
(EDT)
and
let Jackie Clark get away? Were disappointed If we don't win our my (rich) co ntra ct, my strike
The
actual
starting
time was 2: 05
Nashville.
zone has all u!" a &gt;uddenllecome a
they wise to go to htgh-tech Japan division."
Pitcher Frank WIUlam!i, left behind In Florida because ol a
EDT.
Whlle
12:05
BST Is man-:
.
As for .the Cardinals, they lost lot larger ."
to retrieve low-tech Bob Horner?
by
law,
(twas
also a joke.
right shoulder problem, Is OK and will remain on the IUJiive
dated
Will Ozzle Smith pay the price for their slugger when free agent · Tbe new season brought new
roster, the opokesman said Sunday.. He was to return to
Clnclnna!l
City
Council,
unClark opted for the N~w York uniforms for the Reds Thin red
ripping umpires? •
Cincinnati and join the team today.
happy
that
the
Boston
Red
Sox
Were the Reds wrong to trade Yankees. St. Louis manager and white stripes have been
Dave Parker? Will Parker's , Whitey Herzog believes Horner added to the sides of the pants. season opener today started an
prediction that the Reds will will put some much-needed During the first homestand, the hour before the Reds game,
Reds will wear black armbands, passed a law last week creating a
finish fourth or fifth wlthouthfm power Into the Cards' lineup.
come true? Can Marlo Solo still
"Horner will be my everyday In memory of Cine;; slugger Ted new time zone - Baseball
pitch?
first baseman and anchor our Kluszewskl, who died last week . Savings Time (BST) at River·
New Astroturf has been in- front Stadium. AccordlngtoBST, ·
The sheer fact that So to was . lineup l)atting cleanup," said
stalled at Riverfront Stadium, the Reds' game began at 12:05,
named as the Reds' opening day Herzog.
starter meant general manager
Herzog was criticized In the Where the Ali -Star game will be an hour ahead of the Red Sox.
"It seemed like we always had
Councll members approved '
By GERRY MONIGAN
Murray Cook already was wrong off-season by Smith for not played July·· 12. The new turf
next year to look forward to. But
UPJ Sports Writer
the
fake starting time on an 8-1
In one of his wlnter!lme Instilling enough confidence dur- allows water tu flow through th&lt;'
this time, it would have been a estimates.
Regardless of how the New
vote.
Ing the Cardinals' losing World surface to .a drainage system,
crime for that to happen.
"It's ridiculous," said lone
Jersey Devils tare In their first
'.'We have no expectations of Ser)es encounter with the Minne- which should eliminate standing
"II couldn't have gone farther ·
playoffs In team history. the
dis~nter
John Mlrlisena. ''It'~
water during a rain and make the
Mario at all," Cook said In sota Twins last October.
down the wire. Everybody In this
silly."
manner In which they reached
room, the last seven games,
post-season play will remain a
played their hearts out every
franchise highlight.
shift
. I'm so happy and so tired.
At Chicago Sunday night , John
The Daily Sentinel
The last couple of weeks, every
MaclRan .tied -the score In the
game was do-or-die."
third period and scored 2: 211nto
(\JSPS 14,._9ti01
Jordan pulled the Bulls Into a Ue edged New Jersey 105-103, PorBy BILL WOLLE
The Devlls, 7-0-1 In their last
A DlviAian ol Multimedia. Inc.
overtime Sunday night to lift the
with 2: 10 left and both teams tland escaped San Antonio 110UPI Sports Writer
eight games, finished the regular
New J ersey Devils to their
Published every afternoon, Monday
missed several shots down the 107 and the Los Angeles Lakers
By
giving
Michael
Jordan
the
season tied with the Rangers for
franchise-record !lith straight
through Friday, 111 Court Sl., Po·
stretch
before
Jordan
stole
the
shaved
Sacramento
108-104.
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub victory, 4-3 over the Chicago ' fourth place In the Patrick with outside shot Sunday, the Detroit
ball on an exchange between
lishing Company / Multimedia, Inc. ,
Pistons
gave
the
game
to
the
82
points,
but
earned
the
final
Blackhawks . The victory vaulted
Pomr-roy. Ohlc45769. Ph. 992-2156. SeCeiUcs
110,
Mavericks
101
Detroit's
Islah
Thomas
and
Blll
playo!f berth by virtue of more Chicago Bulls.
the Devils past the New York
rond class posta ge paid at Pomeroy,
At
Boston,
Larry
Bird
scored
Laimbeer.
Jordan
was
fouled
by
Jordan, who scored a seasonOhio.
..
victories. The New York IslandRangers for the fourth and final
Lalmbeer and sank two free 32 points, including a club-record
high
59
points,
hit
two
free
throws
ers
wiU
host
the
Devils
W
ednesPatrick Division playoff berth.
Member . United Press lnlernational,
with four seconds remaining to throws. Thomas' s~t,ot at the seven 3-polntet·s, to lead the
day In the playoffs.
Inland Dally Pres!i Association and the
"It looked for a while like it
Celtlcs. The loss was the fourth
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
'.'This Is the liugestpne so far, " give visiting Chicago a 112-110 buzzer hit the rim and bounced
wasn't meant to happen," said
Advertising Representative, Branham
straight lot Dallas which has a
away.
victory.
said
MacLean,
who
tied
the
score
Aaron Broten. who Joined the
NPwspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenuc, •1
franchise
mark
of
1
15
against
"They
made
a
run
at
us
and
we
Jordan hit 21 of 27 shots from
N~w York, New York 10017 .
ln the third period and scored the
Colorado Rockies In 1980 and
weathered It, although' we the Celtlcs Ro~ Tarpley led thP
the
lield
aud
sank
17
of
19
free
winner
2:21
into
overtime
.
"I'm
stayed with the club when it
POSTMASTER· Send address ch anaes t •
throws as ·he surpassed 50 points missed three of~ou1· lree throws Mavericks with 22 vmnts, Mark
to The DaUy Sentinel. W Coun St.,
moved to New Jersey In 1982. "It on Cloud Nine/ '
Aguirre
added
20
and
Rolando
late
In
the
game,''
ChlcagoCqach
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
Sean Burke, 10-1 since joining for the fourth time this season. It
doesn't seem like it's been that
Blackman had 16.
Doug
Collins
said.
"We
survived
was
the
fourth
highest
total
In
•
the Devils from the Canadian
long .
S\JBSCRIPTION RI\TES
Hawks 102, P acl!rs 100
Olympic team, made 22 saves, Bulls' history - Jordan also the things we lost ballgames on a
By Carrier or Motor Rou.t e
At Indianapolis , Cliff LevingmoiJ.th ago. "
owns the top three.
_
One Wce k....... ..... .. ......., ..... ....... Sl.25 ·
many of them spectacular.
OnP Monlti .. ... ........................... .$5.45
The victory was the 12th In 16 · The Pistons' lead over second- ston made a steal and fed
The Blackhawks, who will face
'One Year ... ,... , ........... ... ........ ... $65.00 ' ,
Dominique
Wilkins
for
a
dunk
place
Atlanta
has
dwindled
toone
St. Louis In the first round of the games ·and third straight for
SINGLE COPY
with 51 seconds left to 11ft
PRICE
,
playoffs, finished the regular Chicago, which trails Central game.
Atlanta, Wilkins scored 35 points
Daily ...... ..... ... , ......... .......... 25 Cents
"I dqn'l Ilke what's
season with a 0-7-1 streak, but Division leader Det,rolt by 3 Y..
and Glenn Rivers 19 for the
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car.
• LAKELAND, Fla. (UPI)
Sunday night played as If the games. The defeat was Detroit's happening," Detrplt Coach
Hawks,
who
moved
one
game
rtE!r may !'('mit In advance direct to ' •
In
six
fourth
straight
and
!lfth
· The Tigers this weekend opti- post-season already had begun.
'Chuck Daly said. "We've got to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or tl month
behind
flrst
·place
Detroit
In
the
oned pitchers Eric King and
Chicago· goalie Darren Pang games.
come together a little better ·
basts . Credil will be given carrier each
"I felt good all day," said throughout the basketball game Central Division Wayman Tis·
Wf'ek
Dave Schulze to Toledo, their stopped 38 shots, including .33 In
dale scored 26 points tor the
T lass AAA affiliate In the Inter- the final two periods a nd the .Jordan. "I felt good mentally and - for 48 minutes."
No subscriptions by mall perm\ !led In
Pacers.
physically. My outside 5hot was
areas wher£&gt; home carrier service Is
national League, Detroit General overtime.
Thomas led Detroit with 24
ava ilable.
dropping and when that happens
Manager Bill Lajoie announced.
, 1 Ballets lH, Nels 113
"You have to be happy for that It makes It tough on the defense. points and Dantley, Lalmbeer
Moll S.bocrtp&lt;tou
At:'\ East Rutherford, N.J .,
Detroit Saturday also pur- team for all they have been.·
. apd Dumars added 18 apiece&gt;
l•lde Mftp CouniJ
···Most teams . give me the Sam VIncent scored 18 points and Moses Malbne scored 15 of his 31
chased the Toledo contracts of through In the last few years,"
13 WeekS , .................... .......... ... $17.29
outfielder Bllly Beane, Infielder Pang said. "Nobody wants to lose outside shot becauSe they feel It's Charles Oakley had 14 for points In the fourth quarter to
26 WeekS ............ ........ ....... .. ..... $34.06
the weakest part of my game. Chicago.
52 WeekS .................................. $86.56
lead Washington, which won for
Jim Walewander and pitcher and I'm not th,at happy for them,
,
Outshle Melp Count)'
Today,
because
the
Jump
shot
Don Heinkel.
13 Weeks .. ... .. .... ....... :..... .......... S18.20
but you have to give them felt so good, I just pulled up and · Elsewhere, Boston rolled past the fourth time In flve games and
26 Weeks ......... ........... ...... .. ...... S35.10
Dallas H0-101, Atlanta nipped !led Phlladelphla for the llnal
' King was battling for a spot In credit."
52 Weeks ................................. . $67.60
shot
the
jumper
rather
than
Eastern
Conference
playoff
spot.
Indiana
102-100,
Washington
the starting rotation for Detroit.
In other games, Winnipeg
But In 28 Innings this spring, he nipped St. Louis 5-4 In overtime, challenging the big guyslnslde."
Chicago led 107-1110 with 5:48
has given up 21 runs for a G. 75 Calgary bombed Minnesota 4-1,
left
In the fourth quarter, but
EHA. King played In 55 games Boston edged the NY Islanders
Detroit
used a 10-2 surge to take a
last season with the Tigers and 3-2, Washington tied Phllao;lel110-109
le~d on a Up-In by Bill
had a 6-9 record.
,.
phla 2-2, Montreal tied Buffalo Lalmbeer with 2: 56 remaining.
The purchasing of Heinkel's 4-4 .
co,ntract came as the surprise ol
Detroit's training camp. HeiJ:Ikel, who didn't pitch any exhlbi. tlon games this year, caught
Tigers Manager Spark Anderson's eye whlle pitching In a
couple of morning B games.
"It just goes to show that
someone Is always . watching
you," Anderson said. "When I
saw him tie (Cincinnati's) Eric
Davis In knots, I looked a little
HA~E
closer."
CALL (614) 992-2104
Heinkel has pitched ' In the
Tigers' organization since 1982.
(304) 675-1244
Last year he was 8-10 at Toledo.

New Jersey gains
NH~ playoff berth

Jordan nets 59 in Chicago victory

Tigers option
two pitchers

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
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HEARING AIDS"

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·Berry's World .

I

Daily Sentinei-Page-3
The
.
-

Cards .i nvade Rivetft-.lnt ·for '88·opener::

Upcoming legislation _____se_n._Ja_n_M_.,Lo_ng__;;;_
. While dozens of bllls passed the
Ohio General Assembly a few
weeks ago before the legislature
recessed, Important pieces of
legislation are awaiting action In
May. These Include several environmental bills, plans to restructure the workers' compensation system, and banning
corporal punishment In public
schools.
HB 592, a comprehensive overhaul of Ohio's solld waste laws,
was re-referred to the Senate
Energy and Environment Committee, so has not yet been voted
on by the Senate. This Is perhaps
the mo~t important piece of
legis Ia lion before the General
Assembly today . because· the
Issue of solid waste disposal In
Ohio Is past the critical stage.
Fifty of the 88 Ohio counties
either have no ex is tlng landfill
space or wlll run out of capacity
within the next five years. T~
blll provides for local district
planning boards to evaluate their
area's needs, available space,
·and to make recommendations
for managing solid waste disposal over the next ten yea!'$. The
blll also establishes fees on the
disposal ot solid waste that was
~enerated outside of the state.
·The Senate should vote on this
much needed bill In May.
Another measure that I have
reported on before, HB 428,
would strengthen Oblo laws
reiJIIlatlng the transportation of
hazardous waste. It would require transporters ot hazardous
waste to regtster with the Public
UtUltles Commlulon of Ohio
(PUCO), to place placards on
their vehicles describing the
hazardous contents, and to notify
the PUCO and Kl!t approval of

.

Pomeroy-Middaport, Ohio

9.9

Chances are, your old gas furnac~ is,550Jo to 7007o efficient
But a flameless electric heat
pump is 20007o to 30007Q efficient.
, By adding a heat pump onto
your old furnace, you create an
energy-efficient team that can
cut your total heating bilL And
give you the bonus of central
air conditioning in the summer
as welL
Get the full
story by con-

iS

I

·-.......

Upper River Rd.
t ..,,_ lnm tile Alrpert)

I

I
.u

..

~·

'

..

�•

..

•

~

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday. April4, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April4, 1988

Kansas, 0 -klahorDa battle for national crown
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) On Its _latest jaunt down college
basketball's Yellow Brick Road ,
Kansas needed neither tin men
nor lions.
Danny Manning anq Milt New -.
ton were quite enough.
Manning scored 25 points and
Newton hit for 20 Saturday to
send Kansas past Duke 66-59 for a
berth In !be NCAA championship
game.
• "All last week, the kids had a
feeling that they could win, "
Kansas Coach Larry Brown said .
Duke simply was unable to
emerge from a deep early hole.
Kansas broke to an 18-potnt lead
and held on delljlite the Blue
Devils rallying gallantly In the
second half.
" Kansas came out and at·
tacked us." Duke Coach Mike
Krzyzewskl said. " If It kept going
the way It started, they would
have won 82-20."
Monday night, Kansas will
play the winner of the semifinal
between Arizona and Okllahoma.
The' Jayhawks have been to the
title game four times, with their
only crown coming In 1952.
Saturday's game continued an
unlikely journey for Kansas . The
Jayhawks lost two key players
early this season - Archie
Marshall (knee) and Marvin
Branch (grades) -and dropped
four of their first flve Big Eight
games .
But Kansas regrouped and has
won 14 of 17 on Its road toward Oz.
The Jayhawks, 26-ll,lost to Duke
In the 1988 Final Four.
"The revenge factor was
there. ;· Kansas forward Chris
Piper sald.
Only five Kansas players
scored, but the play of Manning
and Newton proved more than
sufficient.
For No. 5 Duke, 28-7, Danny
·F erry had 19 points and 12
rebounds, and Kevin Strickland
added 10 points. The Blue Devils,
beset by poor shooting during the
season, hit just 34 percent. Duke
was 3 of 14 from 3-polnt range.
The showdown matched two
teams that have drawn on
defensive strength all year. And
each team showed It lor a half Kansas In the first, Duke 1n the
second.
"Our defense kept us In the
game," Strickland said. "They
could have easily blown us out.
· As Individuals, we went our
separate ways tn the first half."
The game was also billed as a
confrontation of All-Americas Manning for Kansas and Ferry
tor Duke. Each dtd his part, but
the strong supporting cast that

· carried the Blue DevUs all year
was In short supply.
.
" It was just !he mental aspect
or the game," Duke's Robert
Brickey said , "We didn ' t gettnto
the game the way we should

have."
Duke's turmolt dld not end with
the first half. Kansas scored 8
straight points to lead 46-28. But
the Jayhawks ' then went Into
hiding.
The Blue Devils surged tor an
18-5 tear to draw to51-46wlth 9:27
to go. Ferry scored 6 straight
points during the spree.
Ferry's steal and stuff brought
the Blue Devils to 55-52, but
Kansas toughened, hitting 7 of 9
free throws In the flnal1 : 43. Two
Important ones came from
Scooter Barry - son of Hall of
Farner Rick Barry, one of
basketball's great foul shooters
- with 1: 08 to go.
"We couldn't get the big
basket, or OIJ the big passesstons ·
we just didn't make the plays,"
Duke guard Quln Snyder said.
The Duke cheerlng section,
always quick with a wisecrack,
held a sign before the opening tip
about "Banning Manning."
Humor gave way to grim realism
In a hurry. ,
Kansas scored the game's first
14 points and only a jumphook by
Alaa Abdetnaby after 4: 48 ended
the prospect of a shu lout. The
Jayhawks extended their lead to
24-6, leaving the Blue Devils In
uncharted waters. Duke had not
trailed by more than 15 points at
any time this season.
"It was very Important to get
off to a good start, which we did,"
Brown said.
Duke, ordinarily so well com·
posed, repeatedly threw the ball
away and compounded Its woes
with poor shooting. Manning and
Newton set the tone for the
opening burst, scoring 15 of their
team's first 18 points.
Mannlng," who also totaled 10
rebounds, 6 blocked shots and 4
steals, clearly . was a dl!ferent
player from the one In his last
Final Four, when he encountered
early loti! problems and finished
with 4 points ln the 1986 loss to
Duke.
"It was a nice feeling being
able to compete with Duke,"
Manning said. "But no matter
what happens tn this tournament, I'll always remember the
'86 tournament."
For aU of Duke's Inept early
play. the Bl_u e Devils were still
alive late In the first half. An
8-polnt run capped by Strick·
land's push shot drl!w Duke to
24-14. But Kansas soon raised the
.score to 38-23 on Newton's scoop

By

l'lliladelplllla t, HoUI&amp;oil !

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8UJ Dlep 8, Lu Ve1u I

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Det.-:vlt

MJtftukee
New Y•rk
TorttiiO

NBA results

I .. . -

MlftMIIO&amp;a

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SeUtle

I .. . -

NATIONAL BASKETBALL A.SSOC.

Sajlri-r'• Beslll:is
Clevelaad 1111. ladlau 1-t
New YG111: lM, HG-.1 N

I .. . -

Mihraull.ee Ill, New olerleJ 111

Mu.d!Q '• Gan-

Detrek • (Mont. 18-111 at lotkln
caeme•:lt-t), I:• p.m.
M:lhnllkee {Ripllra 11-11) at 11111*1 ·
more (lodtticl•u lt·ll) , t :tl p.m.

Duwr Ill. GoldeB Stale 111'
llaa~ Ill, LA Lallers n
lA Clippers ••• S.:Nmento ••
Seattle 111, Phee ..~:tn
......, .. ~nit.

Tore. . (Kef IH) at 1.. . . . Ol:r

Bos&amp;ol Ill, Dalu Itt

(!!label'llap•IB-11), I : JI p.m.
C.'Uonla (Witt IH ). M Oatea10

Dlleap 11!, DeiNk 111
Allallta ltl, ..lit... IN
W.a.a.p.. IN, New olet~~er IIJ

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Qnelud (Ca ..loUI 'f·U) al Tuaa
IR•IIIIIII-IIJ, 1:11 p.m.

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Seattle (L..,....

PorUMd lit, su.u .. Uotn
LA Lallers t•, s.,.mea&amp;o Itt

Oaldaltd

(8tilwart •II), 11:11 p.m.
Game•
Ml..eM4a-M New Yol'll
Sea&amp;tlf! .at DaiiiMid , a1111t
W"--l.,'a G&amp;IRH
Ml_._. at New Yolil.
Detretlla&amp;lle... n

Mo ..a,y'l Glmtt '
No IIUIIeiiCllleftled
'I'IIHIIa,y's Garnes
Detro• at New.leneJ, 7:1t,.m.
New York M PIIU.Ikl,_l&amp;. 1:• p.m.

,.._.ltf"'•

MIIWIW.ee at Alluta, 7:1t p.m.
CleWJland at 1n • .,.,l1a p.m.

S.a&amp;tle AI Oua-4

11111wa•ee .at Baltimore, nlihi
CatMo,.r. al O.k:ap, nfl:ht

-.........

lhllalncf;oaaiOIInp,l:•p.m,
De•wr at Rouato1o &amp;lt,.m .
Uta II U Phoub. 1: • p.m.
&amp;tallle .. LA Lalu!ra, It. a p.m.
Su Mlolllo at Gokle•l!ltate,lt: Mp.m,
lA Cllppen at PorUud,. II: It p.m.

To .... M &amp;a_, Dty, •IIIII
aewla.. M'Te.a., 11IPt
NATIONAL LEAGUE

........
,...........
Mollllreal

NeW Yorli

Plllllib.l'lll

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Clatl .... l
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IAtl AllpiH

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suPraa.

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NATIONAL ROCM.EV LEAGUE
Wa18Confen.ce
Patrt~;:k Dt~ ....•

WLTP&amp;a.OtOA
88 108 11'7

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Miller, Nelsonvllle, Federal and Alex.l
ander have no reserve teams.
MEIGS tiM
IIOYS/OIRUI

I ·New .lene)' SB. II I I! . . tM
NY kucen • U II It Ill Ill

~~~ ~:. ~p:!~~~~.~..~~.~.·.~~.-.~~~1.:::: ~

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May

5-Warren .......... :................... A

7- MEIGS INVITATIONAL ..... H

May 10- VInton ............. ........ , ........ A
May 13 - Melp Junior Invitational .... A
May
14 - TVC at Federl\1 o4focklng

holed the
birdie for the victory,
worth
$180,000.
It was Lyle's second GGO
· victory and fourth career PGA
Tour triumph. Both of his triumphs this year have come In
playoffs. He won the Phoenix
Open In sudden death against
Fred Couples.
Lyle, a native of Scotland,
Joined Steve Pate as the only
two-time winners this year·o n the
PGA Tour. He also vaulted to the
iop of the money list ahead of
Mark McCumber.

111 Ill

lm)'dle Dl.tlloll

Chic ............

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81, ...... a .............
ft. . . . AI PIIU.IIelpllll, •1111

I

Nen11 DIYIIIH
tl M II D

J·Delroll

....................w

Aprlll9- Trimble ..... ........ .. ...... ......... H
April21- Federal-Hocking ......... , .... ... A
April 26- VInton/Nelsonville .............. A

Ml lfl
Ill

J•Mootre..
II tl 11 111
J:·loiMOI
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11 II II M
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C.mllbeU C.JdeiH!le

•=•
'bM.,-'a Oamn

DATE- OPP.
LOCA110N
Aprtl 5- Nelsonvtlle--York .. ... , ... .. . .'..... -H
April 9- Oak Hill lnvitatlona1 ... ......... A
Apri112- Alexander/ Eastern .... ......... H

Ill
81

Adun•Dh1alooi

•(So• J.l),l:ll p.m.
New 't"erl. (Goede. 11-7) a1 Mo.treal
"tM~-11-IJ, J:M ,,.,
lu Pn•r.eo (Draweeiii:J' 1..11) at lAta
Allpta (V..._.r. l .. lf),
p.m.

-

BROWN SNOUFFEI
FilE SAFnY
EQUIPMENT

y·NY bllllllllt1 31 II ll
x·Wuhl...on 311 IS I
a:·Phll.
S8 IS I
M II

A Shade man was cited In a one-truck a ccident Sunday, at 5: 03
p,m. , In Salisbury Township on U.S. 33, according to the
Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Paul E. Wilson. 26, was cited for 1ailure to control after hts
1973 Chevrolet truck ran off the right slde of the road , hlt a road
sign and a guardrail. He was heading east at the time.

r

I

..._,..---..I'

EMS has 14 weekend calls

l

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services re·l'Orts 14 calls
over the Easter weekend; nine on Saturday and five on Sunday.
Saturday at 1:45 a.m., Middleport to 158 Pearl St. for Mary
Bonecutter to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 4:15
a.m. to Bradbury Road for Fred A. Clark who was treated but
not transported; Pomeroy at 9: 27a.m. to Crew Road tor Wade
Humphrey to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:32
p.m . to the 7-33 Carryout for Richard Boggs to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 3:30p.m. to State St. for John McKenZie to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mlddlewrt at 3: 30 p.m. to Front
"- SUor Josephine Donahue who was treated but no!transported;
Racine at 6:26 p.m. transported Glenn Winland to Veterans
. Mer:norlal Hospital; Racine at 8: 32 p.m. to Buck town Road for
Allee Balst"r to.Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at8: 49
p.m. to Broadway St . for Jack Bechtle w)1owas dead on arrival.
Sunday at 5:20a .m., Racine Fire Department to a hay fire In
the Portland area; Middleport at,l2: 16 p.m. to North Second
Ave. for Kathryn Downing to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 2:49 p.m. to Bucktown Road for Charles Findley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:54 ,p.m. to
- Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Gladys Shumway to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 7: 26p.m . to Pearl
St. for Mildred Milburn to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

I

Jury trinl canceled
Juror~ need not appear Tuesday for the jury trial which was
scheduled t"J take place In Meigs County Court.

Area deaths
John Bechtle

.

'

Meigs spring
sports cards

TRACK SCHEDULE

NHL results

I .Ill -

Shade n_wn cited by patrol

again.,.
So1,1ners 88 Wildcats 78
Stacey King, posting up relentlessly for his soli left-handed
jumper, scored 21 polftts Saturday night In leading Oklahoma to
a SG-78 triumph against Arizona
that ensured the Big Eight Its
first national champion In 36
years.
The fourth-ranked Sooners,
35-3, ended Arizona's 15-game
winning streak and advanced to
Monday night's championship
game against surprising Kansas. '
The Jayhawks beat No . 5 Duke
66-59 · In the opening semifinal
game behind Danny Manning's .
25 points.
The last time a Big Eight team
won a national title came In 1952,
-when Kansas· downed St. John's
80-63. The 1985 meeting between
VIllanova and Georgetown of the
Big East marked the last t1111e
two teams from the same conference dueled In The final game of
the NCAA Tournament.
The Sooners posted a pair of
8-potnt victories against the
Jay hawks thts season In winning
the Big Eight championship.
King, a 6-foot-10 junior center
with outstanding mobtltty,
scored 12 points to trigger a
decisive 27-10 , run midway
through the first half. He dtd not
play. the final 9: 16 of the game
after picking up his fourth
personal foul, but forward Harvey Grant stepped tn to maintain
Oklahoma's advantage. Grant,
6-10, also finished with 21 points
as the Sooners continually
worked the ball inside.
The second-ranked Wildcats,
getting little from 3-polntspeclal- ·
tst Steve Kerr, made a secondhalf run behind All-American
forward Sean Elliott, whO scored
19 of his 31 points after Intermission. Elllott's slam dunk through
the lane with 12: 51 remaining
narrowed Oklahoma's lead to
51-48, but Grant ))It 2 tree throws
and King followed with a short
bank shot. After a Tom Tolbert
free throw for Arizona, Ricky
l"ll'iAlo'i - Oklahoma center
Reunion Arena In Kansas City. The Sooners will
Grace put the Sooners ahead
Stacey
King,
light,
playfully
cups
the
face
of
take
on Big Eight rival Kan8811 tonight for the
58-49 on !! 3-point shot with 10:42
Tubbll
In
h!•
hands
following
the
NCAA
champlollllhlp lllle, which will be ahowa on
Coach
Billy
lett.
Sooners'
11&amp;-78
win
over
Arizona
Saturday
night
at
Channell3 (WOWK-TV) at 9 p.m. (UPI)
The Wildcats, 35·3, who led the
nallon Jn field-goal percentage
and 3-polnt shooting, closed
within 58-54 on Elliott's 5 consecutive ' points. With King on the
bench, Grant scored 8 points over
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UP!)Green won $108,000 but a them tted with two holes to play.
!be next five minutes to hold off Sandy Lyle and Ken Green saw . victory would have made him
Green pulled ahead with a
the Wildcats.
their fortunes reve~d on the eligible to play In the Masters 20-foot birdie putt at the par-3
Anthony Cook added 16 points 72nd hole o!Sunday's$1 milllonK . this week tn Augusta, Ga.
17th. Lyle's birdie attempt slid
for Arizona, but Kerr, who shot mart Greater Greensboro Open.
Lyle began the day 17-under Inches past. But he caught Green
an astounding 60 percent from
That'S where Green missed a
par and shot even-par 72 on the on the final hole of regulation
3-potnt range this season, hit just three-foot putt that would have 6,958-yard Forest Oaks course when the leader fa tied to two-putt If
given him the victory, forcing a lor a 271 total.
from about 40 teet.
sudden-death playoff that Lyle
Green, who shot a closing 67,
"I thought I was doomed (after
wonontheflrstholewlthablrdle. began the day five shots behind
Green's first putt left him three
"I pushed It," Green said of his Lyle and two behind JeffSluman . feet from the hole)," Lyle satd.
missed putt. "I just hit a shank Sluman closed with a 71 to finish
"I thought Ken would make his
and It's going to take me a while third at 15-under and collected
putt."
MEIGS 1188
to get over it."
$68,000.
·
VAJI81TY/RE8ERVJ!
"I'd given up hope," said Lyle.
Scott Hoch finished fourth,
· GIRUISOF'I'BALL
"He'll probably be kicking him- closing with a 72 to wind up at 278.
DATE- OPP.
LOCA110N
sell the rest of his life."
Gil Morgan was next at 72· 279.
Aprtl 4- Wellston ..................... .. ... .. .. A
April 6- Trimble .. ............... .. ............ H
Green's putting !allure on the
Lyle, playing tn the final
SALES _SERVICE _TESTING
April 7- Southern ..................... ........ H
par-4
final
hole
gave
Lyle
a
threesome,
led
by
two
strokes
April 8- Gall1polls ...... ........... .. .. .... .. .'H
Aprtlll- Miller ..................... ............ A
chance ' to end lt In regulation over Green and three ~"'over
&amp;
Apr1ll3 - Nelsonville York ..... ............ H
play. But Lyle's chip from the Sluman when they went to the
Aprtll~- Vinton ................... ............. A
fringe for a birdie bounced out of par-5 13th. But Green drew even
&amp;
Aprll18- Federal Hocking ..... ...... ... ... A
Apr112!1- Belpre .. ,. .......................... .. A
the hole. sepdlng the tournament with a birdie after Lyle failed to
Aprll22- Alexander ... .......... .. .... .. .. ... . H
Into sudden death.
get up and down from a greenstde
April 25 - WellstOII. ............................. H
Aprll27- 'l'rlmble ............... ......... .. .. .. A
In the playoff, at the par-416th, bunker and bogeyed.
l7lllort• S.COIMI Awe.
Aprll29- Athens ................................ H
Green
dumped
his
second
shot
Both
parred
the
14th
and
15th.
Aprll30- Warren (DH ·12:00) ............. A
left o! the green. Lyle, after a Lyle sank a 60-foot putt on 16
Mltklepert, OWe 45760
May 2- Miller ................................ H
May t - NelsonvUle ... ....... .. .. ........... A
295-yard
drive,
lofted
a
pitching
after
Green
had
hit
a
a
6-lron
to
PM. (614) 992-7075
May !l - Southern .... ........................ A
wedge
to
within
70
feet.
After
within
a
toot.
His
tap-lit
kept
May 6- Logan .. .. ...... .... .... .... .......... A
Reserve away when varsity is at home.
Green's chip to three teet, Lyle
Gary Snouff1r - 992-7U6

W L Pet. GB
I t .Itt -

t.• (llap•ul!l 1-7) a1 Dll\1-u

"' ·

(Ue, 11

h.Unp)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ualteti'Piwt .. lerutMnal

"Duke's comeback was· in
everybody's mind," the Jayhawks' Jeff Gueldner said. "But
we weren't going to let It happen

2 of 12 attempts from long the defen sive pressure. Arizona points came In the 27·10 run.
Elliott led Arizona with 12
distance and scored only 6 points . turnove rs fueled Oklahoma 's
Elliott was charged with 6 of running game,' and when 6-foot first-half polnts ., but the Wildcats .
Arizona 's 15 turnovers, and the Mookle Blaylock sneaked Inside were unable to complement
Wtldcats registered just 2 steals for an offensive rebound and fed Elllott with their usual balanced
.
Wiley for a layup with 5: 58 left. ·attack.
against the poised Sooners. •
Blaylock, a junior-college
Grace scored 13 points, and the · the Sooners led 29-19.
Sooners. who go to their bench
Coach B!Uy Tubbs and the transfer from Midland, Texas,
sparingly, received a big 1111 Oklahoma bench leaped Into the was credited with 2 of Oklahofrom reserve forward Andre air as the Wildcats appeared ma's 8 steals In setting an NCAA
single-season record. Blaylock
Wiley, who added 11 points In 17 unnerved.
With Kerr unable to hlt from has 143 steals, topping the mark
minutes.
The Sooners padded their re· 3-polnt range (1 for 6 at the halt) , of 142 !Jeld by Aldwin Ware of
cord when leading after halftime Arizona's offense wilted, and Florida A&amp;M.
The Sooners boasted a 22-8
to 30-0 this season, as the top seed freshman reserve Terrene~ Multn the Southeast Region · out· ltns put Oklahoma ahead 39-25 on advantage from the foul Une and
played Arizona ln virtually every a 3-polnt shot with 2: 05 remain- they attempted 23 more free
phase. Oklahoma's trapping ful - Ing. Elltott's 2 free throws left throws. Blaylock and Grace
lcourt press keyed a 27-10 spurt Arizona tratltng 39 -27 a t combined for 14 assists com·
pared to 12 tor the entire Arizona
midway through the first half Intermission.
after Arizona opened the game
King, who was named the team, a goraphlc lndlcallon of the
playing confidently.
outstanding player of the Sou- Wljdcats' Inability to move the
Working Inside for layups, the theast Region, scored 12 points ball around e!fectlvely against
Wildcats grabbed a 9-2 advan- and Grace recorded 7 assists In Oklahoma's gambling, lunging
tage before the Sooners turned up the first hall. All of King's 12 defense.

r--l.ooal news. briefs---.

Lyle edges·-G reen for. K-Mart tide

Scoreboard ...
Majors

and Jed 38-27 at halftime.
In some ~ays, the first half
mirrored the one In Duke's 74-70
overtime victory at Kansas six
weeks ago. The Blue Devils
trailed 23-8 before _pulling within
·a point at Intermission. This
time, they had a more difficult
and dangerous road to travel.

(0'1')

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sources for a11iatance and you may qualify
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
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vocate.
.

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DILES HEARING· CENTER

326 W. Union St., Athens, Ohio 45701
(614) 594-3571
1-100-237·7716
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INDIVIDUALS-FEDERAL-STATE
OUT OF STATE RETURNS
BUSINESS - SMALL OR LARGE
PARTNERSHIPS
CORPORATIONS
OIL AND GAS

John Willlam (Jack) Bechtle,
74, Broadway St., Mlddlep()rt,
died Saturday evening at home.
Born Sept. 16, 1913 In Hender·
son. W.Va. , he was a son of the
late John W. and Virgie Lee
Dabney Bechtle. For 33 years, he
was owner-operator of Jack's
Dairy Bar In Middleport. He was
a member of Heath United
Methodist Church where he was
a former Sunday School superln·
tendent and held other church
offices, a member of Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department
where he was a past chief, and a
member of the Middleport Masonic Lodge.
Survivors Include his wl!e,
Euvetta Barnett Bechtle, Mid·
dleport; two sons and daughtersIn-law, John A. and Ruby Bechtle
of Columbus and DarreII L. and
Carolyn Bechtle of Middleport;
one daughter and son-in-law,
Sarah and Russ Clontz of Lancaster; three grandchtldren, Mary
Ann Davis and Debra Kay
Bechtle, both of Columbus, and
John David Bechtle of Middleport; one great granddaughter.
Lacy Davis of Columbus; a twin
sister, Jewell Caudill of Marlon;
and several nieces and nephews .
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by six brothers
and one sister.
Services will be Tuesday, 2
p.m., at Heath United Methodist
Church with Rev. C.S. Zuniga Jr.
officiating. Burial will be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at Rawllng-CoatsBlower Funeral Home from 2 to4
and 7 to 9 today (Monday) , or at
the church on Tuesday where the
body will lie In state for one hour
prior to the funeraL Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department will
conduct special services at the
funeral home at 6: 30 tonight,
followed by masonic services at
7.

Howanl Phillips

'
Howard E. Phillips, 77, of
Rutland, died Sunday at Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital followIng a lengthy illness.
Mr. Phillips had been a crane
opreator at the Foote Mineral
Plant. A son of the late Joseph
and Della Graham Phillips, he
was born Aug. 15, 1911 In Poca,
W.Va. He was a member of the
Rutland Nazarene Church.
• · Survivors Include his wife,
· ' Clara Payton Phillips, Rutland;
two sons, Jack Philllpso!Mlddleport and Joe Phillips of Owensboro, Ky.; two stepchildren,
Charles Spires of Rutland and
Isabell Nelson of Morris, Dl.; and
several grandchildren ancl great
grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by two broth·
ers, a sister and a stepson, Curtis
, Spires.,
;:
Services will be Wednesday, 1
·• p.m., at the Ewing Funeral
,· Home with Rev. Lloyd Grimm
: officiating. Burial will be ln Mtles
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
::' to 9 on Tuesday.

:· Jennifer Friend
..
HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.-8 P.M.
SATURDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

;.

Jennifer Dawn Friend. age 7,

·• ot Middleport, died Sunday at
• Children's Hospital in Columbus
after a lengthy tnneu.
Born tn Point Pleasant, W.Va.
on . ~t. 10, 1981, she was a
dauahter ot Jeffery .Don Frtend
of Letart Fal!J and Dawn R,
Rouah ot Middleport. She attended U1e United Pentecostal
Churcb In Middleport.
, Besides _her parents, she Is

survived by a sister, Heather
Renee Friend, Middleport; maternal grandparents, Barbara
Roush of Thomas, W.Va. and
Ernie L. Roush of Letart, W.Va.; .
maternal great grandparents,
Robert and Neva Clarke of
Letart, W.Va.; paternal grandmothers, Betty Jane Friend of ·
Bashan and Amy Friend of
Canton; ftve uncles, Ertc Roush,
Brian Roush, Ernie Roush Jr.,
Randy Friend and Brett Friend;
and one aunt, Cheryl Bailey .
She was preceded In death by a
paternal grandfather, Luther
Friend: paternal great grandparents, ,Allee and Frank Capehart and Hodd and Mary Friend;
maternal great grandparents,
Linley and Mary Roush; and an
uncle, Jerome A. Roush.
Services will be Wednesday, 1
p.m., at Rawllng-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home with Rev . Clark
Baker officiating. Burial will be
In Holtman Cemetery at New
Haven, W.Va. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 on Tuesday.

Wisconsin...

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

continued from. page 1

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

his appeal Is broadening Into the
white ~lectorate, needs to win
Wisconsin as a follow-up to his
majority victory over Dukakls In
Michigan. Only 4 . percent of
Wlsconsl,n 's population of 4 milBon Is black. Dukakls needs a
victory In Wisconsin ·to solidify
his "Inevitability" claim to the
nomination.
Also In Denver, Jackson, a
Southern Baptist minister,
preached a rousing Easter sermon that drew on the mystery of
the holiday, the assassination of
the Rev . Martin Luther King Jr.
20 years ago today and the
"midnight" of the Reagan
administration.
"We've survived the long mid·
night. Seven years of the cutbacks In Medicaid; aid to women
and Infants and children and

mean-spirited behavior and Indictments and sleaze and corruption and homelessness, and yet
somehow, morning ls about to
come," Jackson told the congregation at the First Baptist
Church of Denver. Seated In the
front row of the church was
former .presidential candidate
Gary Hart and his family .
With Jackson's political
strength gaining, the chairman
of the Democratic Nallo11al Committee would not dismiss the
posslb!Uty that Jackson could
win the Demom·atlc nomination,
even though weekend polls Indicated a ticket led by the civil
rights leader would lose In
November.
DNC Chairman Paul Kirk
cautioned against any predictions on what will happen be-

tween now and the Democratic
National Convention tn Atlanta
July 18-21.
,
"It Isn' t ove r until It's over;.
we've got nine weeks to go·," Kirk
said on ABC's " This Week with
David Brinkley ."
·
" We ought to look at J esse
Jackson's candidacy not as a
threat and a blg proble m , but as
an opportunity, perhaps to form
one of .the most powerful and
viable coalitions the Dem~ratlc
Party could put together In
years, " he said.
John· White. a former DNC
chairman, echoed Kirk's remarks , saying, " Let 's let th~
race run out. There Is many a
turn down this road, back and
forth, so to get too excited at this
stage In a political campaign

seems to me to be prematurely
,
judging the end result."
But poll takers already are
looking ahead to November.
A Roper Orga nization poll
taken last week for U.S. N!:ws &amp;
World Report showed that 11
Jackson were the Democratic
nom inee, he would lose to Bush 51
percent to 35 percent. A Gallup
poll lor Newsweek found a larger
margin - Bus]l 58 percent to
Jackson 35 percent.
•
O oser In the polls, however,
were matc h-ups of Bush vs. the
other Democratic front-runner,
Dukakls. The Roper poll put such
a race at Bush 44 percent to
Dukakls 43 percent; the Gallup
survey ha d Bush 49 ·percent to
Dukakls 44 ·percent.
Both polls had a margi n of
error or 4 percent.

Death toll ... _c_on_tl_nu_ed_f_ro_m_pa_g_e_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
calm by taking aggressive action
against violence In · order to
suppress violence," he told
reporters.
·
"Basically. we adjust the
means, the methods, to the
situation," Rabin added.
The defense minister said the
unrest appeared to be dying~
"Basically, especially In the
Gaza Strip, we see over the
months a relative tranquility, ,

Cancel•••

with here and there outbursts of
hostilities," he said. "But they
are handled very e!fectlvely.
And I believe If I look at It, at the
trend In the last four or ftve
weeks, I see It going down."
In the northern West Bank, two
Arabs were killed early Sunday
tn Incidents Involving Palestinian flags, which are outlawed by
Israel. Protesters frequently try
to hang the flags from electricity

_

lines In the belle! that Israeli
soldiers will not risk their lives to
remove them.
The army and Palesttntan
sources said Kalil Hamzawt,18,
was electrocuted after an Israeli
soldier forced him at gunpoint to
pull down a flag waving from an
electrical utility pole In the
U.N. -run Askar I refugee ,c amp
outside Nablus .
There were contrasting ver-

slons of the events surrounding
the death of Ma 'm oun Jarrod, 17,
in the town of Tu lkarm.
Palestinian sources sai d Jarrod was shot to death by soldiers
as he tried to drape a home made
red-and-black flag over a power
line. But an a r my spokesman
said no troops were ln the area at
the ttrr.e, a nd ad ded · the boy
apparently fe ll to his death .

observances but all known sunrise services tn the area were
canceled.
In Slidell •. residents cleaned up
following a Saturday morning
tornado that damaged as many
as 40 homes and about 20
businesses.
"Everything looks fine right
now," a dispatcher ln St. Tammany Parish said early today .
"All the roads are passable and
everyone Is·back In their homes,
except !or those whoSe homes
were damaged by the tornado ."
To the north, thunderstorms
accompanied by heavy rain,
strong winds and hall developed
Sunday In Illlnols, Indiana, Ohio
and Michigan, where at least two
tornadoes were reported.

Three houses were damaged
and two barns were destroyed
but there we re no injuries
reported .
By contrast, Eas ter dawned
with pleasa nt weat her a nd clear
skies from the Southwest through
the southern Rock ies and in to the
southern Pla ins and Texas .
ThOse areas we re stunned Frl·
day by a spring snowstorm that
dumped 22 Inches of snow and left
drifts as high as 6 feet.

Continued from page 1

Weather Service meteorologist
Mike Kozlara.
Power was res to red Sunday
morning to two Jefferson Parish
subdtvtslons where 180 people
had to be evacuated Saturday by
boat, said parish emergency

coordinator Tony Rod!. Gov.
Buddy Roemer visited a shelter
at West Jefferson High School
Saturday night to talk to 126
people.
Many church-goers In south
Louisiana sloshed to Easter

~=----Weather----Wednetlday throqgh Friday . ·
.. South Central
Showers likely and a chance of
Today, mostly sunny and plea·
san!. High In the lower 70s. thunderstorms early Wednesday. Colder with a good chance of
Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph.
Tonight, clear. Low around 50. showers Thursday and Friday.
·'Lows around 50 Wednesday, 40 to
Light variable winds.
Tuesday, mostly · sunny. be- 45 Thursday and mid-30s to lower
coming breezy and warm. High 40s Friday. Highs from 55 to 65
early Wednesday, only 45 to 55
In the lower 80s.
Thursday and the 40s on Friday.
Extended Forecast

Dr. King. ••

Continued from page 1

Ucence issued
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Jeffery Jay Al br ight , 23,
Pomeroy, and Rhonda Kay
Kerns, 17, Pome roy.

----Announcements----Meeting tonight
'f'
Letart Township Trustees will
meet tonight (Monday) , 6 p.m .,
at the town hall.

To meet Wednesday
The Middleport Li terary Club
wtu meet at 2 p.m . Wednesday a t
the home of Mrs. Wilson Carpen-·
ter, Pomeroy. Mrs. James Cia! worthy wlll review "Edna St.
Vincent Millay 's Collected Lyr Ics." Members are to respond to
roll call with a v erse or favori te
poem.

"We want to recreate that
spirit, that hope," Smith said.
He said the sanitation workers'
life has improved considerably tn
20 years - with hourly wages of Cub scout leaders to meet
All new cub scout leaders are to
between $7.50 and $9.50and many
benefits - but blacks still lag meet for a training session on
behind whites In Job Saturday, at 10 a.m., at the old
Raymond Workman
American Legion Hall tn
opportunities.
Middleport.
The
King
remembrance
In
Raymond E. Workman, 87,
Meet Cancelled
Memphis,
"Martin:
With
Us
Mason, died Sunday, April 3, 1988,
The regular Monday night
Still," Is designed to address that Lodge meeting
at Holzer Medical Center H,ospital.
games
at the Middleport Fire
Pomeroy Lodge 164 wtll hold Its
Issue, Smith said. A wreathBom Aug. 17, 1900 in Chelyan,
Department
have been cancelleQ
laying ceremony was planned monthly stated meeting on Wed·
he was a son of the late Gilbert and
tonight
due
to
the death &lt;if Jack
today at the Lorraine,' where nesday, 7:30p.m., at the MiddleRoma Allen Workman.
Bechtle,
longttme
Middleport
marchers will gather to begin a port Temple. Practice wtll be In
Also preceding him in death
firemen
.
Fire
and
EMS
person30-day ptlgrlmage through Mls- the fellowcraft'degre. All master
were a son, Raymond J. Workman
nel
are
asked
to
meet
a t the
masons welcome. The lodge will
stsslppl, Alabama and Georgia.
in 1987, and a grandson, John R.
firehouse
at
6:
15
p.m.
ln
dress
The Atlanta march also fo- meet at the temple on Saturday
Workman in 1985.
uniform
to
go
to
the
funeral
home
cused on the rights of low-paid at 7: 30 p.m. for annual lnspec·
He retired as an electrician on
·
lion. Work will be In fellowcraft for services at 6: 30 p.m.
public workers.
construction, he was a member of
"We !eel that Dr. King died for degree and master masons are _, - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ ; _
the Mason United Methodist
public
employees 20 years ago," welcom~ . Refreshments will be
Church, the Clifton Mason Lodge
·
said
state
Rep. \)'rone Brooks, served.
23 AF&amp;AM, where he previously
Veterans Memorial
·:KARL A. KEllER Ill, CPA
D-Atlanta,
an
organizer
of
the
served as past master and IBEW
Saturday Admissions- Myron Atlanta march. "We feel that we
Local 968, Parkersburg. He was a
Bailey. Pomeroy; Carl Robinshould be doing something for
32nd degree member of Scottish
son, Norfolk, Va.; John McKenzie, Pomeroy; Glenn Winland, public employees 20 years later ..
Rite Valley of Charlestor. Shrine
"We are concerned about low Dally stock prices
618 EAST MAIN STREET
Racine; Allee Balser •. Racine;
Club.
_pay and are struggling to make (As of 10:30 a.m.)
H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE
SUrvivors are his wife, Vertic 0.
Betty Friend, Long Bottom.
Dr. King's dream become a Bryce and Mark Smllh
LOCATION
Workman, Mason; one son, )bhn
Saturday Discharges - Mary
living reality and not a · of Blunt Ellls " Loewl
M. Workman,
Mason;
four
Porter. Albert Hoffner. Bertha nightmare."
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
Diehl, Cathy Chapman, Timothy
daughters, Betty 1. McKee and El(614) 992-7270
Am Electric Power ........... .. 26%
Hively, Veletta Rowe.
Lottery numbers
sie M. Bullock, both of Dayton,
AT&amp;T .. .. ..... ................. ... .. .. 26)1,
Sunday Admissions- Kathryn
Ohio, Loretta J. McClanahan,
If you would care to :
CLEVELAND
(UPI)
SaturAshland
011 ... ... .. .. .. .......... .. 63*
Downing, Middleport; Gladys
Eleanor, Eva M. Persinger, Clear
Bob
Evans
.........
................
.
17t4
day's
winning
Ohio
Lottery
meet a CPA and talk :
Shumway, Pomeroy; Charles
Water, Fla.; one sister, Elsie Bod·
Charming Shoppes ............... 13
about what they can ·
Findley, Racine; Mildred Mil- numbers:
kin, Charleston; 11 grandchildren,
Ct ty Holding Co .... .. ......... .... 33
Dally Number
burn, Middleport.
12 great-grandchildren.
do for your company
Federal Mogul. :......... ...... ... 38%
453.
Sunday Discharges - Robert
The funeral will be Tuesday,
- call us. We would
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ........ ......... 63%
Ticket sales totaled
Russell.
April :5 at I p.m. at Foglesong
be happy to visit with
$1,776,379.50, with a payoff due of Heck's Inc . ....... .... .......... .. ... 1%
Funeral Home with the Rev. Bennie
$801,715.
.
Key
Centurion
...
.................
40%
no obligaion to you .
Stevens officialil)g. Burial will in
Lands'
End
..
..
...................
..
20%
PICK-4
Union Cemetery.
Limited Inc ... ........... .. ....... .19%
1147. .
Friends may call Monday from 6
Multimedia
Inc . ... :.......... .... . 64
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Rax
Restaurants
.......... ... ..... 4')5
$288,031.50, with a payoff due of
Masonic rites will be conducted at
CLEVELAND ( UPI) -The $6 $129,903.
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .......... ... .. 10
the graveside.
million jackpot In Saturday's
Shoney' s Inc ... .. .... .... ..... ..... 24*
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
drawing o! the Super Lotto will be $2,604 . .PICK-4 $1 box bet pays Wendy's Inti . .... .. .......... .. .. .....6
split two ways, Ohio Lottery $217.
Worthington Ind .. ..... .. ...... .. ... 20
officials said Sunday.
Super Lotto
Continued from page 1
Two tickets rna tc hed the slx
5, 9, 11, 20, 32, 38.
Delvalle did not say who should
5• 9• 11• 20 • 32 •
numbers
drawn
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
make up the force or where It 38. Each ticket Is worth $3
.,..
I bef
t
$5,269,784.
shonld take Noriega.
million, or ...-annua ,
ore· ax ·. - - - - - - - - - - - - "The United States should
payments of $150,000.
continue exerting economic presSome 173 tickets matched five
sure on the Noriega regime and
numbers and !bose tickets are
be prepared to form a part of that
worth $1,000 each. And 8,002
multtnatlonal force ... to capture · tickets matched four numbers
Noriega and his other narcotor $76 each.
eronles," he said.
· Sales totaled $5,269,784.
!!o3t JlliCKION PMI· IIIt.JI WEST
Wednesday's drawing will
The Pentagon Friday said 1,300
have a jackpot of at least $3
BARGAIN IIITIN!ES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEA15 $2.50
i.J.S. security troops would be
million.
BARGAIN
NIGHT 1UESDIIY 12.10
sent to Panama starting Tuesday
to pro!A!!!t 45,000 Americans,
Including 10,000 U.S. troops and
Now Op111 Fer Spr1111
their dependenta, because of
5111011
Noriega's "heavy-handed tactics" to remain tn power. The
!OMPlETE UNE OF VEGE1Ailf
Pentaaon said the troops were
&amp;IEDDING IUNfS AND
not intended for offensive action.
GEIANIUMS NOW IEADY.
Delvalle, who was replaced II¥
HANGING WitTS, AZALEAS.
Norlega-ally Manuel Solis
FIUIT TillS &amp; SHIUIIEIY
Palma, tried to !Ire Norleaa aa
OPIII
DAlY t-S-SMAY l·S
chief of the powerful Defense
Forces Feb. 25 after Noriep wu
Indicted on drug traffletclna
charges by two Florida tecleral '
SYUCIII-tft.J76'
grand juries. ,
tors 20 years ago when he was
felled by a single gunshot whtle
standing on a second-floor balcony at the Lorraine Motel.
Local union leaders say that
although conditions for sanitation workers have Improved
since 1968, when black garbage
collectors made $1 an hour and
had few benefits, there Is still
much to be done.
The night of King's last speech,
"there was a sense of hope, a
sense of direction," said James
Smith, executive director of the
local American FeHeratlon of
State, County and Municipal
Employees, the group sponsor·
lng Sunday's service.

Hospital news

Stocks

KESLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

Super Lotto has
2 jackpot winners

Panama...

---

HUIIAID'S

GBIIIOUSE

2 5MARCH
to 30°/o OFF SALE
30 - APRIL 9

�r

By The Bend
-- -

The .Daily Senti-n el
Monday, April 4, 1988

.

. Page 6

.Who's._tclling Ann the full story?
DEAR READERS: Remember the
lener from the mother from Madi·
son, Wis., who attended a rock
concen wiih her teenagers and was
horriflfd" at what she saw'
·
She described filthy . language,
ob&amp;ene costumes, violence, broken
bottles and live firL'Crackers tossed
. , recklessly into the croy;d. There
were medical emergencies among
7those who were drinking, smoking
dope and doing drugs. Many muples were taking off their clothes.
and some muples were having sex
openly.
The response to that woman 's

letter has !Jeton mi1td·boggling. I've
been putting in 12-hour days and
two bags or mail have yet to be
opened. Take a look. -

Ann
Landers

from VH Meyers, who wrote in
the Washington Post on March 29,
1987: "The Beastie Boys don 't do
concert,, they do orgies. In Mem·
Fronl Madi~on . Wis.: I arn a
phis
a giant inHatable
music cri lir for the Wisconsin Scatc
ts during their song. 'Fight for
journal and I don 't believe the rock
Your Right to Party.' In Columbus,
com·ert described by that mother Ga .. they invited the ·girls in the
Ingleside, Texas: I've seen them
ever , took place. Don't get me audient-e to bare their breasts and
all
. from james Brown to Neil
wrong, a few kids have gotten
have sex with members or the crew.
Diamond, Bon Jovi and Anthrax.
tragicall y out of hand. and I've seen
!'hey altered the lyrics to refer to
In CoqJus Christi there is assigned
some terrible shows in Mattison
oral sex. The Columbus chie[ of
searing
and everyone behaves or
(Moll e~ Crue. the Beastie Boys. etc.),
police. jim Wetherington, said, 'The
get
k.kked out. I've seen worse
they
hut evrn the;e inramous bands
Beastie Boys rap music trio should
behavior
in church.
nrvcr ·crmlrd the bedlam the worn~
have been arrested for indecent
So,
d"'jr
readCrs, I have concludan desaibed. --john Kovalik
exposure ~n d disorderly conduci. ·"
that
some
rock groups are great.
ed
From San Antonio; Here·~ a
Billings, Mont.: I've taken my
Others are disgusting. Parents who
review by Rob Stewart and Dwight
teen·agers to many rock concerts,
want a clear understanding of
Silverm;m, two ~tatl(&gt;r..; on the San
and while the music was loud and
what's going on should inquire
Antonio Light. TilCl' wrote: "'I[
some kids used bad language (I've
about
the video "Rising to the
evrry parent in America attended
heard the same in the halls at high
Challenge."
It'll knock your socks
just one hea V) metal concert like
schools) there was no nudity, no
off.
Write
to:
Parents' Music Rethrone wr saw hrrr last week , such
drug• and the security wa• excel·
'o urce Center, 1500 Arlington
goi ngs-on "·ould cease to exist. The
lent.
Wvd., Arlington, Va. 22209.
crowd went wild over Iron Maiden.
• New York : Concerts featuring
a heavy metal band. Several enter- Motley Crue and Vince Neil were .
tai ners pranced · on the stage with shocking. Our children were told
their leather pants cut out to expose drug abuse is great, casual sex is
their backsides. li was revolting. "
fine. and violence is OK. Please
From Sacramemo: I've been to note. some rock stars such as Bob
dozens of rock concerts and have Dylan, Bruce Spri ngsteen, Stevie
never seen anything like the one WQnder and Llire Straits have a
that mother described. I've seen . positive message and are uplifting
Kiss, Van Halen, Led Zeprelin and and wholesome.
the Rolling Sto nes. All great .
You 've been hornswoggled. Annie.
Santa Ana, Calif.: A 17·yea r-old
From Buffalo: I'm 30 and attend- girl was raped Sept. 17, 1985. during
ed two rock concert• in a foot ball a weekend mncert &lt;tt the Irvine
~tadium when I wa• 18. Kids were
Meadows Amphitheatre. The vic~toned and screaming like maniacs.
tim , a resident of Orange County,
I left when dozens of people around was taken Ill Western Medical
me stancd to hallucinate and th row Center in Santa Ana. More than SO
up. It was disgusting.
people were sitting nearby and did
Washington, D.C.: Here's a quote nothing to help her.

BRrrrANY HYSJ:;LL

Hysell birth
Mr. and Mrs. Gary E. Hysell,
3'7265 SR 124, Middleport, are
announcing the birth of their
·:second child, a daughter , Brltlany Nicoll, born on Feb . 8. The
• couple have another daughter,
• Amy Michelle, age live.
. Maternal grandparents are
Dana and Bernice Winebrenner,
· Syracuse, and the paternal gran·
· parents are Harold and Twlla
· Hysell, Rutland . Paternal great. grandparents are Carl Hysell,
Rutland, and Bill and E ula
~ Stewart, Clifton, W.Va.

Community calendar
MONDAY
SPRINGFIELD Pomona
Gra nge meets Monday, 8 p.m.;
Springfie ld Grange Ha tl.
Potluck .

TUPPERS PLAINS -Ora nge
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the home of
the clerk.
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees meeting, 7:30
p.m . Monday at the fire station.

•

SYRACUSE - Regular meet·
lng of Sutton Township Trustees,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Syracuse Municipal Building.
RUTLAND- Revival services
will be held . at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church starting
Monday, April 4, and continuing
1 through April 9. Norman Taylor
will be the evengellst: The public
Is Invited to attend .

•'

,.

~VIDRANKIN

. Rankin birthday

RACIN E - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
wi ll meet Monday at 7: 30pm. at
the temple. Mock Initiation will
be held. Depu ty matron wilt be a
guest.

David Rankin, Tuppers Plains,
· .celebrated his sixth birthday
.· recentlywlth a party at the home
of his parents, John and Connie
Rankin, Tuppers Plains.
POMEROY - ·Meigs Count y
, Another party was also held at
; ' his afternoon kindergarte n class Salon 710, Eight and Forty , will
; at the Tuppers Plains Elemen- meet at 7 p.m. Monday ·at the
. tary school with the students home of Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
,:Cnjoylng Big Bird ;md Cookie Middleport . Mrs. Hackett and
Monster cupcakes, party hats -Ma ry Martin will host the
·•··,:nd games.
meeting,

:: firefighters
.··save stuck·

MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend
Clvtta n Club will meet at 7:30

• · Lennie Belle Aleshire was the
top loser with Julie Hysell,
runner-up, at the Tuesday night
meeting of 'fOPS 570 held at the
Coonhunters Building on the
Rilck Springs fairgrounds . In the
teen group, Penny Gillespie was
the top loser.
Judy Holter and VIrginia

,,

-- ' LOS ANGELES (UPI)- The
' Fire Department had to be called
' in to extricate an Inmate who got
,stuck In a second-floor window
·while trying to escape the jail at
:'pollee headquarters, authorities
. . said.
.. · Felipe Perez, 26, of Tijuana,
, : l\lexlco, had been held In a
• padded cell since Thursday be-

of

''bizar re,

self ·

clestructlve behavior," Sgt. Mar' vln Morton said. Hewasawa ltlng
·'acourt appearance on auto theft
charges.
About 7 a .m . Sunday, Perez
. was able to squeeze out of his cell
;'.-when the door was lert partially
, open. He made his way to a
' rorrtdor. where he opened a
window opening onto a ledge
'•aboUt 20 feet above the ground.
,.' ' A jailer noticed Perez stuck In
·-tne small window "and Ia tc bed
O!IID him until we got some help.
, The problem was that the win·
, _ was such a tight fit we
couldn't get him out," Morton

sa lei.
nmtahters put a ladder
.apiJiat· the outside of the build·
• IQ "'ud we pushed him back
· tbJ'OUIII," Morton said.
• Pen&amp; complained of back pain
,aDd wu taken to the jail ward at
, Los Aft&amp;ell!l County-University
of Southenl California Medical
c-ater. MortoJt said.

...

,,

TUESDAY
CHESTER- Chester PTOwill
met Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
Chester Elementary School. Dr.
Dan Apllng will speak on the
upcoming levy.

MIDDLEPORT - XI Gamma
Epsilon Sorority will meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Phyllis Hackett for the progressive tea and Installation of
officers.
MIDDLEPORT- Work will be
ln. the EA: Degree when Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM meets at
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the temple .
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting.
RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters will
meet at 7-. p.rri. Tuesday at the
high school. All par&lt;:nts of
basketball players, both boys
and girls, are especially urged to
attend the meeting at which time
plans for the athletic banquet will
be finalized .
PORTLAND- Lebanon Town·
ship Trustees meeting at 6:30
p.m . Tuesday at the township
building.

Wolfe Pen happenings

::: ~runate

, cause

RACINE - Racine VIllage
Council will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Shrine Park
Building.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew of Texas
Road were SuMay vis! tors of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald
and Gladys Tuckerman.
Mr. a nd Mrs . Jerry Holley
were Sunday visitors of Mr . and
Mrs. Harley Johnson and
Tammy .
Mr. Harley Johnson was Wed nesday evenin g visitor of Mrs.'l.
Iva Jo hnson.
Mrs. Lois Payne loca l, Mrs,
Donna Henson a nd Andrea of Pt

Pleasant were visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith and Mrs. lva
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Charies Knapp
were visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Peterson of New Lima
Road.
.
Mr. and Mrs. ·Joseph Evans,
Tyson and Jonathan, Racine
were Sunday visitors of Mrs. J .R.
Murphy and Peggy.
Mr. Robert Murphy aod Robbl
of Racine were recent visitors ol
Mrs. J .R. Murphy and Peggy.

People in the news-----

- ~--- &lt;1

-

·.C-... to ..., ........... -

for TOPS, while Ms. Aleshlte was
the best loser and Virginia Smith,
runner-up lor KOPS.
Pearl Knapp and Teresa Wood
were reported ill and members
were reminded to send cards.
Information on the weight loss
club may be obtained by calling
Ms. Aleshire, 992-7464.

The third nine weeks grading
period honor roll at the Chester
Chr istian Academy has been
a nnounced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
amed to the roll were:
Fourth Grade: Jessica FrederIck, Jalmee Spencer ..

Fifth Grade: Crysta l Taylor.
Eighth Grade: Bobble
Robinson.
Ninth Grade: Wendt Taylor.
Tenth Grade: Janeene Wilson,
Eleventh Grade:_Tim FrederIck, Missy Marcinko.

No. 33, Section 1.73, Moigo

County, Ohio, and to the the
value of said property. The
propeny sought to be ap·
propriated ia more tpecifi·
cally deacribed as foltowa:

DESCRIPTION OF
THE PARCEL OF LAND
AND ESTATE, INTEREST
OR RIGHT THEREIN
APPROPRIATED

of Bedford, County ol Moigo
end State of Ohio. and
known as being part of

Section t7. Town 4. R1ngor
t5, and more luly boundlld
and dMcribed 11 foHowa: ,

I

ukl centerline:
thence continuing along
ukl line and uid centerline

Souttl 6 degreee 27 minutes
14 aeconds West a diatanca
of 26.97 feet, to a point at

Station 443 ptuo 50.00 on

taid centerline;

·

32

mlnut•• 46 18C0nda
w..t a distance of 30.00
feet, to a point on the
existing weatarty right of
way line of U. S , Rout11 ~:1

21 mlnutto
20 - - ·
1 ...__of 307.11

Wwt

aw-.·

- · to the
Wlterly
at llftlon 444 pluo
70.08 on llkl
ooid- belnto lite TIIUE
PlACE OF 8EOlNNtNO o1
,.. "!"* ........ -·weylld; -

-lno.

DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
1866 Fountain Square

Second floor

COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224
until Thursday.

April 28,

198B at 11 :00 a.m. and

S. Route 33:

of:

50,00 on the centerline of U .

thence along the westerly
line of a prop~ highway
UMment to be taken .for

Project MEG 33 -01 .73 ,
106.4B foot, to o point

56.00 feat left of Station

444 ptuo 50.00 on .. id

adlotoncoof24.471eet, loa

point on Owneri' Qlterly ,

71 .82 on uid centerline;
thence along Ownera'

ooototly tine South 75 de·
lrtNtl 41 minutea 2 M&lt;:onds

:1.:.:'=

bl.tng South 21 d.,.....

nr- -

-

z

J::...- -

'

' or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

•HOME BUILDING

•ROOM ADOtTtONS

•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;

REPAIRS
·aACK HOE WORK

801

Roger Hysell
Garage

E . M~n

POMEROY. OH.

\)J92-2259
In loving memory of

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Curtis Jones

.AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o TrutMitllon

who passed away
April 4, 1984.
You have left us _here
But we'll remember you.
Our love will a Iways be
with you.
.
Sadly missed by
Mom &amp; Dad. Sons &amp;
Dauahters, Sisters ~
Brothers. Nieces
&amp; Nephews.

KEN FOUGHT
USED CARS

II. 50 Wlllol ( ...... Ohio

Att Of Our Caro Are
Worth Tho Money
lfl7 , ...... MW ,.•.,-SI47J
ltl7 ..... t.,.a·--- -SU7S

,..,.tloned survey and ••
ohown by (llano on file In the
Depe~twneut of Trlft1110t18·

tlono'Calumbuo, Ohio.
a-. cleim ' by
iNtrument Neorded in Vo·
tume 242, at Page 217: end
Volume 280, 11 P1gor 715, of
the Ollcl Rocord1 of !&lt;'•tv•
County, Ohio. ·
Soldporoononoledolrove
IIlii! lunhe&lt; t1k1 notloa thet
unleoo they, or their ottqrney, file 1n A - no leter
then 28 d~v• otter tha

~UTLAND tt ·
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG-Rt.· 2

is accordance with the plens
and speclficetlonl prepared
by the Department of Natu ·
ral Re10urc11. the D;t,llion
of Reclamation, Columbus.

Ohio. Bldo wltl be opened in

ST. RT. 338 - Summers al·
most here and this is the place
that you'll want to spend your
summer! River front property
wrth a nice cabin. Full basement ,2 bedrooms, sun porch
wrth a river view. Metal bu~d­
ing approx. 42'xll'. so· call
now and look at this home
away !rom oome' ONLY
$27,900.00.

Contractors are advised

that in accordance with the
provisions of the January
27. 1 972 eKecutive order by
the Governor of Ohk&gt;, and
amended executive order
~4-9,

February

I 5,

t984,

equal employment oppor·
tunity conditions are appli·
cable to this bid. Wage rates
eatabliahed in accordance
with Section 1513.18 and

1513.37 of the Rov!Hd

1

Code are also applicable.
Bida ar~ sealed and ad~
dressed to: Department of
natural Resources, Division
of Reclamation, 1866 Fountain Square, Building H,
Second

Floor,

PRICE REDUCED - MInersville - Sma ll I bed·
room home that wou ld make
a great rental investmenl or
a nice snug home. Elec. B.B.
heat, I bedroom, equipped
. kitchen. front deck with a
great view. NOW $7,500.00.
PRICE REDUCED - POMEROY - Nice ne&gt;ghborhood1 4 bedroom home w/2
car garage, w.b. lireplace,
full basement, oak trim,
workshop over garage. lots
ol "cabinet space. MUCH
MORE! A real bargain at
$39.900.00.

Columbus,

Ohio 43224. No bidder ""'V

withdraw hit bid within sixty

(60) deyr alter the oc:tuol
date of the openin'g thereof.
The Director of Natural
Resources reserves the right
to reject any or all bids, or to
accept the bid which embra ces euoh combination alter·
nate propoula as may promote the best interest of the
State.
As provided in Section

A

~

Clubs lhortonod $5.00
Now Grips $3.50
Sqoaro Groowu $1 0.00
. lasbtbaH Tropltios and
· Plaq_uu $3.50
Engrawing
JOHN TEAFORD
Cheslor, Ohio

3-2-'JI. lmo.

..............a.•
-··"·-··''"'
···- .....

·------ ·-...

Depenment of Natural Re·
The eetlmate fOr

thio project •• determined by
tlte DMeion of Reca.metion

io t660,224.001. A pre-bid mooting wiH be
hold on Wlldnesdey, April
t3 , 19B8 at tO:OO a.m. at
the alta.
Coploo of the plena, opeci-

TRACTOR shalt moke

effort to ftflsure that certified

from

minority

partment of Natural Resour- .

-CAll AMY CARTEl
or IOU'S ·ELECTIONKS

1tl7 $priltMr--·----- $16,1SD
JIFt. Mltt........,lk•MW
Ill lUIS f•
$54.10

...C..,.._.....

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows

•New Roofing

FREE ESnMA1ES

1-6ll7 -3 24

.

3 Announcements

BURDETTE CAMPER SALES
ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE .
April 8th, 9th &amp; lOth
Special hours will be
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday and Saturday
ancl 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.
There will be refreshments and drawin&amp;s for
daily door prizes. FREE with the purchase
of a new YELLOWSTONE camper will be
CAREFREE AWNING! We will also raffle off
an ALUMIN~M TOPPER.
So como join in the fun this woekendl
U.S. ROUTE 60 EAST OF ATHENS AT
OHIO

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES
New &amp; Used

992~J:IU
H·'ll-1 ••·

J&amp;L

INSULATION
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

RandS
AUTO REPAIR

BUS. 667-6102
HOME 374-5599
Sat.

br Appe!nt....,

3-4-'lt-1 ....

JO'S Gin. SHOP
fer Sprtftl aad S1 tt or
snAcuu, 111110
NEW STOI£-NEW STOCK
LOW PIKES

Come In - Lol• of
New Gi{lll
3· ·'11-1

Charfe1 Mauger. Asst . Oir.

______
,
__
·211-..---.........-...
.. _......,.
..,__. ... __
IJr.,,.,
.

-'

;

s..a:w.IDWt. Order now and rtiCIIWitwo wiluabllpe.. • a FREE: 'S.C.. Go.tmmont JIJ/lo.

E"'*'"*lf

lewn ~.&amp;. wrtt...a ·

ROOFING
Guttere

D-nepout1

..

TO ORDI=R:~.::n:r-~orid'f.:q~":*~~Fac1;.rj~
IIIIM. _ .. _,_ .............-M-- U -

-·

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must .. R..,..irablt"

Found: Ash St . Middleport.
Sm1ll fuuy brown pup. 814-

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Found: Smllll brown 1nd tan
dog. Wirelype heir. Male. Oliver

•Junk Yerd Bulineu

WAHl TO IUT WIICIID 01
111111 CARS 01 RUCKS

-IIIIISTIIIAIDFor ony of thou sonicol coD

614-742-2617
..IWHII 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

... r..a ...._

2-11'='' 88-tfn

YOUNG'S

FOR CREDIT CARD ORDERS CALL 1-80H22·EXAM {3128)

985-3561
We Service All Makes
1/ 22/11/Hn

RADIATOR
SERVICE

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing •ncl electrical
work
(Free Estimattsl

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boi I and rod
out radiators •.We also
repair Gas Tanks.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PAT HILL FORD

SERVICE
:--Addons lftd remodeling

9U-6215 or 992.7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'8ti-lc

EAGLE RIDGE
SIULL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
Dealer fer
YAIDUN I ECHO

Located Halfway be·
Rt. 7 &amp; Baohen.
NEW I USED MOWERS

tween

8 . 7 Financing on
Yardman

Service on All M1kes

Wo " - MC/Dilc/V'rso
l/71'1111 mo .

Will do Federal
and State
Income Tax,
typing,
bookkeeping,
and Notary
Service.
Margaret Parker

992-2264

3·21-' 87·1110.

P. E. MIUEI
&amp; ASSOCIATES

H- Health Care
AaiiKy

We Providi Care For the
Eldefty In Their Home.

NURSES AlOES.
ORDERLIES, LPN'o
Hourly or Uve· in

Arrangement•

BONDED · IN&amp;UREO
Covered Wwlth Workmen ·,

Co.mpenutlon

PH. 614-992-265 7

3-21 -'87-1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
._. CO.

...... ....

992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

BELL

CONSTRUCTION
IAC1NE, OHIO
NEW HOMES
REMODELING &amp;
ADDITIONS
CONCRETE &amp;
BLOC!&lt; WORK
ROOFING &amp; SIDING

949-2748

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAN'D
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-B·IIc

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.

S. RT. 50 EAST

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3121 .
Authorizod John D•re,
New Holland, lush Hog
Form Eqoipmont
Doalor

Fu• E~•l••i•l
P1rt1 &amp; Surwlu
1·3.'1&amp; tfc

Gutter Cleaning

Pllntlng
FREE ESTIMATES

949-1261
or 949·2161
J.Z.. . J

BISSELL
BUILDERS

,

.

....,

~rvin,- Mti~~:s,

GalliA and

M asnn Counties

· IKI HALStED, AGENT
l'elltt......,_WY ,
13041 675-,.11

Tec11111111

ut•
H_.ltt

Wttd

.llctiMtn

VlWY Ll. .ll
&amp; SIPPLY

Middleport, Oh.

992-881\

"'---~-~!!.! -\!'!

Found: Black and tan ~ maa.
beegle. Kingsbury. Wolfe Pan
orell. 814-992-5382 .

7

Yard Sale

-------G&amp;JlTpon-s-·---·---·
&amp; Vicinity
Mon. It
m.::hine,
&amp; etc .
Movtng S.le-Tuwd•v thru Fri·
dfiY, 9·6. Rodney vm..,a 11 -lrd .

ltr.... 8th hOUIII-

W.,m Inside- April 4 , 6, I . 218
Third Ave. Good clothing, gl ..l·
Wlft. dl1ht1. utensil•. drapn,
curteint. 1mall tppliances, ar. oellent unci r.-frig.-..Ot' lice
mtkerl. excellent etec. ttovl.

..·. --P-om-iirov---------Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Rain or 1hine. TueMay. April
15th. 2 milu HyseU Run, off St.
Rt. 124.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wedem..,..r's Auction Service·
IIVIil~le 1t your convenl~nce
and loc.lions. M~rlin Wedemeyer Auctioneer· 114-2455162.

NO SUNDAY (AW

GEARY
BODY SHOP

550 PAGE smn
iiiiiDLEfOII, OliO

OPEN 1•30-6:00 P.M.
I· 4-'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

AVON- Sell Avon for ALLaN11.
Cal! 814-446 ~33 68 .

EARN AS MUCH AS 0300.00

WEEKL ¥ . A11emblying products .
in your home. Sllrt .right away.
No expet"lence nectlllfY. Send ·
nlf •ddr•sed. stamped envelope to: HOMECRAFTS, P.O .
Box 7802 , Huntington. WV .
25n8 .
Alcohol Drug cOuncftlor· S.c:he·
lor's degr... CAC, CDC pref8fred. Job Se•ctl, P.O. Bo•
413, Gallipolis, Ohio 46631 . By
Mey 1. M / F'h. E.O .E.
Reliable person lor l1wn mow inw . can 614-448-8135.
Needed A"i1t1nt Dirttetor of
Nurs.. tar 100 bed snf/ icf
fec;:ility . Oullifiutkms: Rn, good
m•nagement &amp; nursing 1kills.
Exc:ellent .. 1...-y • benllflt1. Send
r•ume or appty 11 Scenic Hill1
Nursing Center, Rt. 2 Box 282.
Bidwell, Oh io 415814.
B•byaittet" "needed for 1m1ll
c;:hild. C11l 1fler 8 PM , 614-2466603.
Wanted: LP. Gil truck driv•lor
local deliveriq •nd L.P. ga t1nk
in1tallen. Both mud have e•perienC8. P1eue send r..ume to:
Box Cl1 142, c/ o GalllpolitOaily
Tribune, 826 Third Ave .. Gttllipolll, Oh~ "'583 1 .
Government Jobs. 116,0'40169,230 ye111. Now hiring. Your
area. 1 ·806·687·1000 ht. R·
9806 for c:umtnt Federll lilt.
Job h"'tnting? NeH a skill? We
train people tor jobs 11 Auto
M•chanic1, C~rpenttn . Electrl·
c:l1ns, Food S.n~ice Worken,
Electronic. Tec:hnic:ians. Industrial Maintenance Wo rkers .
Nursing ApiiJt~tnb and Orderlies, Machianists. and Weld..-s.
RegiiJter now for c:l••• beginning April 4th. Cell Tri -County
Voc:llion•l Aduh Canter tt71533611 IXt. 14 . A Vlri,ty of
funding wuroes: to pay for
training ere IVIilable to; tho11
tligibl• H1ir $tyli111. Acro11 The StrMt
styling ••on is seeking two
addhionlll ltyfilla who ere'l~k,­
ina for more than just 1nother
job. Call T.-rri •• 114-448 -1110
for details.
81by1itter nMded in Middleport .

Co11814-992-7215.

AIMmbltn wanted. Eem 'money a~~~mbling Tldcfli . . , ,,
Free information. Wrhe: J"9-EI
Enterpri.... P.O . Box 3aQ3,
Ki•llmmet. Fl. 327•2-220a.
Sell Avon today to friends ~
relatrv.. or In • tertitorv . Fr..

olgn up. 814-982-7180.

Full or p.-t tlmt h.. p. Elim Home
in Mlddhtltort. Oh. C•ll e 14-

982-8873.

Immediate opening. X-r.y Tach·
nologilt . Day shift with 3-11
relief. Comact Doctor' s Holpi·
t1l. Rltdtology Dept. 1950 Mt .
St. Mil'¥ Orive, N'elsonville.
Ohio. 614-753-1931 .
AVON • All •rNa. Call M~riiYn
304· 882-2645.

WIIV81

AVON all ar111; StHrley Sp..,l,

304·67&amp;-1429.

88.

Sal" person tor 1dvertising
...... expenlfl plus c:ommis·
sian, 304· 7157· 7881 .

Rick P11rton Auction_.., licenHd Ohio 1nd WQt Vlrg!nit.
Estate, 1ntique, f•m, liquidlttlon ...... 304·173-!785.

Get paid tor i'ltlding books!
1100.00 per titla. Write: PAS£ .
517K, 111 S. Uncolnway. ·N.
Aurora, II 60542.
'

9 • Wanted To Buy
We p.-y c•b for lite model clean
us.d ctn.
Jim Mink Chev .-OidJJnc.
Iii Gene John1on
614-448-3872
TOP CASH peid for '83 model
and new• uaed
Smith
Buldc-Ponti~~e, 1911 E11tern
Ave., O.lllpolil. C•ll 814·441-

c••·

2282.

Complet• houMholcll of furniture &amp; ant~t.t81 . Also wood &amp;
coli hNttrs. Sw1in'1 Furniture

e.

A...,ton,

Third e. Olivo,

81*·448· 31159.
W1nt to buy: Uaed furnhure tnd
entlqu• . Will buy _,tire househOld furnilhing. Marlin W.de -

, _, 814-241-5152.

Junk C1r1 with or withowt
motors. C•ll Llrry Uvely·t14·

388-8303.

Wantlld Standing timber. La rge
or smlll.crNgt. C•llf14-8827348 or 882-?218 .

ANTIQUES

bo••·

Radlllor tor 1171 Ford 1At ton .
Auto., 3~ engine. No ... Cd

304-411-1111 or411-1817.

Owns, lt.nlvel, coina, pod(tt
WIIChtl, miiiUry item
uniforms. ttc. Plylfto Cllh.

plcllup. con

814·441-Z7n.
W- to luy, UMOI Motrtlo
H -. c.a 114-448·017&amp;.
lul'lno dilly gold, • • cains,
l'inpi, jewltry, IMrtlng were, old

161 North Stcond
Mitltl.,.l, Ohio 45760.

GOVERNMENT JOBS .

Auctioneer Col . Osca.- E. C"ell.
304·896-3430. Lie. No. 764-

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtalonablt Prkn"

SIUiliNGINI
-All
AUIMrlnd Service
&amp; Plrtl
lriiP I Str11toa

St. Mlddl.,..,.. 814-992·7020.

Crocks, cupboerds, beds .
dttltet'l, bookea••· ch•irs,
q~lts. dolls. iren • ttn toys. post
cwds, picture fr~m• . gunt, tn.h
t-s. l.mps, wicker, china ce·
blnM, coin•. coetume Jtwlery,
mu.ic
gum ball ma ehiAft, a mlac. old ltema. Will be
In town on April •ttt • lth .
Paying cuh. C.ll cohct-Tonv·
21&amp;·144-1111 or Chuck. 218·
7&amp;1-2193 or Wrtte: Chuc*'•
Antiqu ... P.O. loA 4021 , Co·
ploy. Ohto 44321 .

4-16-1&amp;-Hn

*I 1r Ill WIIIIIDI

742-2584.

WANTED TO BUY

3-ll·tftt
I

Lost end Found

CUSTOM BUILT

Pl. 949·1101
or R•. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAW

6

3/ IS/'81 tfn

PH. 949·2101
or 111. 949-1160
Day or Night

"Free E1tlme1eo"

111•/'•11

NIW -IIPAII

NA'IIONAL EXAM "'CEII"'I""ER'I GUARANTEE
~
complete tile POIW. EXAM lliiDY COURIE anti do not
15% or Detter on thllltlrrt, IOU' money will be Jllunded In ful.

-----·"'··
·
····
··-Di
t
-\.':.. n:.:. -llllotltit-..... ·-il. ..

'

304 - 675-22~9 -

•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service

HOURSo 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

Mondoy-FrWctr

Free m1nure,

DEAD OR ALIVE

3-21-11-1 mo..

Purcha11 NtcniCirJ

APPROVED:

WANTED

•Dozer • B1ckhoe Work

PH. 992-2772

41926 ST. IT. 7
IUI'Pll5 I'WNS, OliO
17Yro. ExPIIfience
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

preoare ogw

"'

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

3-21-88-1 mo.

R'list.- for FREE
lirtl lath ..,.. No

,,....... and -

875-8506.

PH. 992-2772

161•)

REALTOR

PPoornm,ry

4Yt month 'old puppy, mixed
brMd, grett with c:hildren, 304-

JAMES KEESEE

HOMIIIIU
...... lle"-o OIL 45741
Ph. 161•) ...., ...
QUAliTY PIINT SHOP

WE lilY CAIS &amp; TIUCKS

Dtvi!llon of Reclamation

~·

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

SAliS·SDVICI·SUPPUIS
loyol &amp; SCM Typowrilors
lorol I IWI Colarloters
Royal &amp; • • Cosh llotiston

Ti~ l. Dieringer, Chief

are
. ,..

~ectton

~iolts

ling 11114)466·6700 or Tott
Free on 1-(8001 282-10a5.
RECOMMENDED:

-"'&lt;otlono become the
for JoHph J . Sommer,
11&lt;-'Y of the proopoctlve
Director
blddero and no relundo L
Department of Natural
7
be m-. Additional InfO&lt;·
Reaources
motion may be obtalnlld
3/ 21 / 88
lnun the Oiviolon of Aocll· (3) 28: t41 4, 2tc
""'tlon, 0-rtrnent of Not·
uret Reoourceo, t 8115 Foun·
tain Squore, Building H,
Socond Floor, Columbuo,
Ohio 43224. (Ph-: (6141
281·10118).
Eech ltld.mun ~occom· ·
p1nllld by 1 BtD GUA:
RANTY, _,ing the re·
qulrementa ot

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

&amp;

App llcatlont wil l bt acctpltd from tht general public for the
Clerk -Carrier eum April 11·15 at Pomeroy-, Lenpvfllt, long' lotlom,
Mlddleporl , P,ortland, Aaclnet, AttclavJIIt, and AYIIand poll otlloet tor
mall carrie r a'n d clerk pD8IIIona. Yow m-r 1110 apply 11 Alhtnl area posl
ottictta April 11-15 or Meritltl 1r11 poal oHiCtl April 25 ·21 for tht
Clerk.Carritr eum. rnl$ ,, me !real ftl'm gl tbtO kjOd fqr ., ygra IQ dQn) m!u tbi•

businesses

lhell be as set forth in the
specifications .
, Contrac~on requiring asllltance tn securing bids
from certified MBE lubconlractors and suppliers may
conta~t the Stete Equal
Employment Coordinator by

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

$10.15MR. STARTlNG • EXC. BENERTS • JOB SECURITY
APPLY APRL 11·15 ATTHEPOSTOFFICE

tracts awarded to and maleri81s end seNices purcttaaed

The Minority Bu1ineas Development Oivitiion by cal-

chaaed with uah In the
euct amount. Ptans end

- ....11

t t i i O . . - ... ""-'""'"
19J' ..... Picbp .....- ......... $HS
lUI c.t. C.... hw•·-· $1 . .

POSTAL 'JOBS

OVOfY

calling (8141 486-B380 or

coo, upon receipt of • chock
In tho omount of t19.00
made peyablo to the Oopertment ot Natur.t Reaourcea.
TheM ""'V ol110 be pur-

· - - - ... -

1-..
owor to _, YHS.

YHS TAPE
Lit us ,...,.,,
.W Mories

Yited Coda and Administra -

ticationa and propoul form~
wll be forw•rded from tho

Dlvlolon of Roclemotlon, De-

ltas..._.an.••····-- Uno

tive Rule t23 :2-1S-02 of
the Department of Adminit·
trativa Services, the CON-

814-742-2830.

a.... (.._

123.t5t o• the Ohio Re·

the Second Floor Confer. minority businan subcon·
once Room of t865 !Build- tractors
materialmen
Ing HI of The Fountoin participateand
in the contract .
Squore Offlceo of Tho Ohio The total value of subcontOUrcet .

IB

Dropped off Co. Rd. 12. Femele
dog . Blonde. going oU1 of heel.
Not pr-unant. M~o~1t find home.

CARPENTER
LESSONS
58.00
6 for 145

m-'•·

Red Hound female. 1 yr. old.

6· 17-tlc

71 Auto's For Sale

GET PAID for readtng bookl l
1100 per title. Write: PA6E33L, 161 S. Uneolnway, N.
Auroro, II. 60&amp;42 .

Giveaway

814-986·4242.

or 992.7121

GOlF

4

White Himel•v•n mile cit. All
1hots. neutered. decltw.cl. To
good home. Call 814-992 6669 . .

PH. 992-5682

KOU!llRY CLUB

ASSEMBLERS wented. Eetn
money 11sembllng Tllddy B11n.
FrM inform.. ion. Write: Jo-El
Ent8rpril81. P .O. Box 2203,
Ki11immee. fl. 32742·2203,

Give 1way: Chow dog. GOOd
with children. Femele, 2YJ vears
old . C.ll &amp;14-992-3581.
.

Middleport, Ohio

11 · ~_ tfn

Ref•itnc•

ATJ:ENTION the•raenowh•san
aU1horiled ••" and service
df;•l• for Electrolua products.
Call 304-176·3644 Curtis
McConihay, Ilk 1bout our
spring cleaning •peci•l.

1 tamale. Celll14-21•·9317.

319 So. 2nd Ave •

..

915-4141
G-LCH1UC101S

t18,040 - 159,230/yr. Ngw
hiring. Your area . · 805-6878000 EX1. R-10189 tor current
Feder•l lilt.

Gin1waytogood hom•2 BIKII

992-6282

Help Wanted

Perm• s ..t: s . .t. ,,...
punctur• in 1.-wn 1nd ·-••- ·o
trKtor ATV 1nd goH
lntlrHIIId In a new
out and try ollt our demonnra·
tor. New and used mow•s.
Echo WHd ,, •.,,_Two Brink!..,
dump c;:1rt1 left. Reductd for
chill'lnca. Eagle Ridge Sm1ll
Engine 814-949 -2969 .

Lab . puppiu. 7 wb . old. 1

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER. OHIO

-Doy ....-

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

417 ~nd Avenue. Box 1213 _
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·

Business
Services

SEPTIC $¥STEMS II

Code.

received at the:

oald point being 30.00 foot
left of Station 443 pluo

Eut • dlotonco ol 46.54
leot, to the True Place of
Beginning, containing 0.12
GLIMPSES: Je!IIMl Jackson Is doing well In the celebrity·
9 B!.,.,~~.~! af an acre. more or '"'· of
endorsement field, according to Billboard magazine. Jackaon's staff dlo,_ of 348.71 feet, to 1 which the Prnent Rolld
says he has received the backing of Are&amp;ha FrukHn, Melha Moore, point at Btallon 448 plus Ocauplet 0.08 of an acre,
Lou Rawls, Roberta Flack, Ph)'llla 11)-man, Quincy , _ , Kril - 1t .97ontheCIInt..UneofU. maN or lese.
Thto doocriptlon io beHd
Krlstoffer110n, DJ Casey IUutem and Pete See-r, among others ... s. Routa 33:
*
•"'
thence along uid cent•- on I lUrVey made under the
and oupetVioion ol
r-----------------------4Hne
.south
........ 3&amp;o dnctton
mlnulel
38 3o
_,..,.,RONid W. Ellert, Regloterlld
dlo,_ of 33.38 feet, to 1 S u - No. 60411.
Said o...ront being the
IIOint at Station 447 ptuo
Station numben •• otlpu'78.11 on ..ld c-oo;
continuing olong r.tlld In the hereinbefont

length of
• chord

::z:: (614) 446--7619 or (614) 992-2104

E.O.E.

153.64 of the Ohio Revised

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propo..rs witt be

opened the.r eefter for fur nilhing the materials and
performing the labor for the
execution and construction

line of Nid northwnt quer-

Me

completion of the Service by

thence North B3 dogr-

wlthln the following deo- line, oald point being 46.50
loot left ol Statton 444 ptuo
cribed pointa:

and

'"-~=-

992-2104
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

ttl6

11

~

Contact Karen Haines ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital

NEW LISTING - 3 houses
for one price or buy separa·
tely - a total ol 4 rental
units with a potential and
monthly gross income of
$685/mo. Cal! lor additional
inlormation if you are looking lor a good investment.
WANT $50,000.00.

3 Announcements

- ·c._.,..

····-

r IIIPtovn11: 11 1
Sr· r 'i 11:1: ·,

.- Television listenina Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senric4
C!J Hear in&amp; Evaluations 'For All Ages

-~--

7

A1111111111 Gem e nts

~ -LISA M. KOCH, M.S .

Full or Part .. time position for tech nolo:
gists in the X-Ray Dept. Excellent
working condition and benefits. Salary
commansurate with experience.

'

Public Notico

Statton 443 ptuo 75 .97 on

Eltg-ng, Inc. lor the

308.110 fwt, -

Public Notice

Publtcation, they will be
line with a curve to the left; deemed to have waived their
having a radium of 964.93 right to answe"r, and the
feet, a central angle of 6 petition will ._taken as true
degrees 38 minutes 48 and judgmani" will be renaeconds an arc . length of · dered accordingly; Civil Rute.
94 .1 I toet, and a chord 1 2(A)j1).
beuing South 9 degrees 16
BERNARD B. HURST
Direc'tor of Transportation
minutes 38 second• West a
distance of-9.4 .07 feet, to a
point on Nid eaaterty line at
Public Notice

e~~aement North 31 degrMs
61 mhtuta~ 54 seconds East

of18 do;two30--3e

......_

! =:-

··

X-RAY TECHNICIAN

POMEROY - l'h stOIY older
home in tiJWn. 4 bedrooms, full
basement large lot PRICED TO
SEll AT $14,9JO.OO.

tho wntotly line of oaid

sn a ncla.

-

07011

ltiiMnNW................. SIISO

centerline of a aurvey. mada
in t9B7 by Korde/ Nometh

r-·

011 •

m::::::::
J'lt-•-

PRICE REDUCED - ·Really
nice split foyer home. 4-5
bedrooms, all elec , I car
garage, I ~ baths, family
room &amp; much more' ONLY
$49,900.00.

centertine; '
thence continuing along

u6d OMutwllaw with a eww
to .... loft. hevlng •
of
114.13 fHt, • -·Ingle

oU 1111

---

NEW LISTING- 2 unit rental
in Pomeroy. t.\lnthly gross income ol $300.00/mo. ASK1NG $12,000.00.

on the left aide of the

qUIIrter of Section 17.
thenco along the ooutherty

1 IOOIITH

.1~.

NEW LISTING - Older mobile home oo a large lot in Pomeroy. WANT $13,000.00.

North &amp; degree• 27 minute•
7 aecondt Watt a distance of

Commencing. for i-efer..
ence, at the southwest
comer of the northwest

on•
on•
on.•

,;.,,

NEW LISTING- Really nice
1981 mobile home on a lot
in pomeroy. PRICED TO
SELL AT $14,500.00.

PARCEL NO. 1
(HIGHWAY)
PERPETUAL
EASEMENT FOR
HIGHWAY PURPOSES
Being 1 percol of t•nd lying

Oepertment of Trantporta·
tion. and being located

o•lll

••
on•
or o•

___
.... __

Daniel Hoffma·n was the 1988
&lt;jO'erall champion of the MGM
District Pinewood Derby held
r~cently at Royal Oak Resort; He
Is a tiger cub member of Pack
253, Mason, leader, Cecllla Harris, with cub master, Evelyn
Davis.
·
Hoffman receved first place In
the tiger division and then went
on to compete against the wolves,
bears, and webelos winners to
win the overall champion trophy .
There were 128 cars In the
competition. Daniells the son of
Danny and Tammy Hoffman ,
Clifton, W.Va.

· DANIEL HOfFMAN

thence along Owners ·
easterly line and uid center-

riete certain property dncribed he...-fter for highway
purpowt, namely the mak·
ihg, construction or improvement of State Route

MOO

NOll
,...,
o1100

I...,~,
,...,..

'Ciouljled pap• COtler the
followi"l telephone e.uhanJf!f,., ·

Hoffman wins
Pinewood

LEGAL NOTICE
FOR PU8ltCATtON
SHARON DAVIDSON,

County. Ohio, to opprop-

11M~I

«~...,..,

'"''"

~

-:::.·::~":.:'.:.-::.=.f:.•,.,,

Honor roll announced in Meigs

Public Notice

sued by the Director of
Tranaportation of the State
of Ohio, who has Instituted a
proceeding in the Common
Pleae Court of Meigs

-·-·---

R,\TE8

The Daily

Business
Services

Deem were the contest winners •

Public Notice

known tO the Plaintiff will

.

:~;:...~·.:. ~::.:::~":..'"""'' ~

David and Teresa Thomas
Hubbard of Aiken, S.C., formerly
of M lddleport, announce the
birth of their first child, Travis
William-Heath, born on Feb. 27
at the HCA Aiken Regional
Medical Center In Aiken, S.C.
The Infant weighed four .
pounds, 15 ounces and was 17
Inches long. Maternal grandpar·
ents are Harold and Charlene
Thomas, Middleport, and the
paternal grandparents are the
late WIUiam and Mary Stewart
Hubbard. Maiernal greatgrandparents are Stella Thomas
and Mabel Walburn, both of
Middleport.

take notice that &amp;he has bean

-·~··

..... J ...-. " .., ....... .

Hubbarclbirth

whose addre11(ea) it un-

..

_

................. ... ,..•_...
........... __,,.,.....,_____.,__ .......

·-. . . . ., . _, ___.........,...., ..
··-- . _...... ,..........-_..........
-.................
- ..... _.. __.......... ....,_'"" ... "·-···--···
::.

TRAVIS HUB.8ARD

Situated in theTownahip

•

·~

p.m. Monday at the Middleport
Public Library. All persons Interested In the club activities are
Invited to attend.

TO f'UU IIH U Ull 992 -2U6
MOHDI.t thru flaOIIY I A.M. to I ,,It
IA.IIIl Until HOOH SAIUIO#-Y
I'OI.JOtt
CIOSIO SUftDAt

-TOPS meeting held recently

,

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

T,

colno, •..._.
prt·
Ed
IUiblt
I a - hop,
Znd. A... Mlddlopon. Oh. 814-

112-3471.

-"

High

.

LoCII Nortt)ern Virgin ia HOm11
M•nwfacturer needs LlbcNers
who en looking for stNdy
amployment . Qu.,-antlld 40 hrs
per week plus overtime. Fout 1 0
hour day1 are avlilable as weU as
lodging. C.tverton, Ve. 1· 703 788-4222. 8 :00am to 4:30 ~-

WANTED rnpactatMe mid)Ue
age woman, who nMd• • hvme.
to llva with elderty lady. Would
have own room 1nd small wlges
per wHk. Ught hauHWOrk,;and
to tlk1 c•e of eldltrty wom•n
who is not 1n lnvalkl. C111
304· 675-1578 if interwted for
marl lnformetion. Do not ceU H
vow do not need • home.
L.P.N . PINNnt Valley Nuriing
Center seeking licensed
P.N.1 for part time employment.
medical and dental in1urence
available. If lnt•...ed c:all Kathy
Thomtopn, Director of Nursing,
C~re

13041875-5238. EOE'EE. , ·

PI"Nntl V1lley Nurling 'C8re
Centet is interviewtng f(.gistered Nurs• for lmmed._e
emp loyment . Stl•ifl begin• at
t9.81 per hour. cell Klthy
Tbomton, Director of Nu r•ing at
304· 675-5238 lf you ere intlr·
11ted. Ple••nt V~tlley Hos'""l i1
1n Equal ~pportunity Emplpy•
and Afflrmet lve A c~jo n
Employer,

'

Htlr lt¥1ist needed. eppy at
Body Conc.pts, 614 Mait. St ..
Pt. Pit. 30•-875-1541.
MAKE MORE MONEY I'
FULL OR PART TIME !
Men and Women nelldltd to. sell
our profi table line of ctldend~n .
pent and advenlaing gift' to
loc• l bu1ine.. firm s . Earn
weekly ' commitllion. Set your
own hown. Prompt. frlendlv
11n1ice trom 19 ylar old AA•· 1
comp11ny . No in¥11tment or
collections. Prevlou1 "'" e•pe- .
rienc:e not n~quired . Writ•: Kevin '
Petk•. NEWTON MFG . COMPANY , Dept . 01847. NBW10n,
low• 50208 . C&amp;1&amp;)792-4121 .

12

Situa1ions
Wanted

Ellm H9me. 201 S . Fodfth,,
Micldlepor1, OhM». Room aod
bDI!rd for a.nlor ctttnns. Sp. . .
c:are In .,mo... homlt. 114-112-

1173.

OUILTI

.,._=-=lot-

-ltiO

...-.....

-odtdoro.
114-HZ-ZtOt
or I14·H2·HI7. .
Dolton ~ tnc. luyor of

"""* - .....""

mndlntl
"'"'· Olllo. l14-tl...214.

All

.

tv,_

of fMIOftry . lri\tt .

block, IteM end conortt1. , _

01ti1MtH. Colt :104· 773·1HO.

"'":!:t:"'"-tritl

Wilt
do
...tnt
cto
. In P•-ovor
M11.._· llontend •._.Rot:
....- . C.lll4-742·2404.

�Page-8-lhe
13

Ua11y Sen'Une1

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Insurance

Ctll ut for your mobile home
inturence : Miller lnturan ct,
304·882 -2146 . Alao : auro .

46

..('

Space for Rent
RIVER LOTS

For Bolting a. C1mping·'For S•l•
or Rent. A-One R.. l Estate
Broker, 304-676-6104 ..

home. life, he... th.

MOPILE Home Park.
Route 33. Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 6,4 -992·
7479.

.COUNTRY

15

Schools
Instruction

54

Misc . Merchandise

Monday, April 4. 1988

College-441 - 4~87

75

Callehan'• Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tire•. slus12. 13. 14. 15,
16, 16 .6 . 8 mlln out At . 218.
Ctll 114-268-8251 .

M e rG h a ndl se

SWIMMING POOLS . ,988
~ RDER NOW - PAY LAT~R
Huge 31' ovel pool with deck.
fence &amp; filter. ln1tallation &amp;
finan~;lng available. 1-800-345·

0
6

be. t15.995 &amp; t,.lp. Models open.
Call 614-886-731 1.

Household Goods

"You've GOT to remember
h ere you put the cor·d.less

VI 'RA

-------------------·

Tr sport ot

••a•

Homes for Rent ~
-----------------Nicely furnl•hed am til house.
Aduhl only. Ref. raqulred. No
pOlo. Coll814-441· 0331.

e·

room house, 3rd Street. 3 rooma a. bllth. Fumilhed or
M..on. WVa. w.tking disttn~;t unfurnished . Call 114·•41 ·
to groC*'f, Jurniturs store, post •109 or 379-2740.
office, benk. t14,000.00 . 304·
~a2 - 2871 .
Nice 6 room house In town. No
pets. Have ref. • diJP. t271 . Ctll
Four bedrooms. 2 baths, Ned after 8:30PM, 114-448-173•.
'&amp;am Addition, centre! air cond,
basern•nt. gerege. firtpl1c1, . 2 BR . unfurnilhld. a.-ege. 1
eo· •. 304-175-6999.
mile -21 B. •200 Nnl. e150dep.
Ref. Married coup/a. One chUd.
6 room howse on 1 1cre plus, city Clll814-«8·9181.
· water, loctted Jim Hill Aoad,
118,000.00 down payment r• 3 or • bedroomt. retrtaerator
qulrtd owner wm fln•nce. 304- and ttove. llt'ge lot. t111. per
8715-4182 or 671-2111.
month ptut 150. deposH. Cell
I
114-81S·3822.
.
3 bedroom house, 2 betht.
central tlr. 1.-ge lot, 32K30 out 14 HFM, barn, pond, mile OUI. 2
bhfgs. down p.ymant · tuume bedrooms. ~entral 1ir. - . . or
81A loan. 304-t71·1279.
Nil • • 460.00. 3044-171-1189.
HouH for , ..a at Gtlllpolls Ferrv.
ac::rM or more, 30•·175-C6&amp;8
or 871·2•1 2 .

1 .. acrM, tt.n, pond, mila out, 2
bedrooms. central air. t.... Of
Nil, 0460.00. 904-871·8998.

32

Smtll 2 room t.ou.. utfiN._
pakt htrnllhed. tii.OO week,
304-17&amp;-31 00 .. 171· 6501.

~

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 .~II with large addition.
1h21 llviftt rvom. 2 batho, 3
bedroome. new carpttlhrough·
ovt HJttyfu,....lh.d. Lo~ldort
y, We wfth th..,. trill. garega.
....-lne ond
from yord.
Colll14-742-2017,
·

I-

Wlndl0rt111Der3toad oon11,wHh
Mdltlon. 3 .cne land. out
bulldl- O.lllpolla Fony. 304·
S71·6f30.

42

Mobile Home•
for Rent

12Jt80 2 BR., wt~lhet/ dryer
hookup. In Evtrp...,. Children

-optod. Coli 114---3117
or 2•11 ·5223.
Lllfll 2 Mdroom wlttl room
1ddllkln on 20 .ar•. FrH 911.
Above ReoiM. 11715 pet month.
304-372-U31.

1 bedroom eplrtmentl. Furnllhld tnd untumlahkl. f200 .·
82215. per month. Udlitia1 furnlshlld. Ctll 81 4·992-6724.
2 bedroom Apt. for rent. Ctr·
peted . Nice titling. laundry
tacllhlw tvailab... Cell 614992-3711 . EOH.
2 bldJOOm apt. for rent. Stov1
fumlthod . Dopooh roqulred. eon
81•·949 ·2234.
3 apt1. for rent. Cltlll14·9123623 or 114-992-1215.
APARTMENTS, moblla hom•,
houa•. Pt. PIHIIf'lt endOellipolit. 4!114·«1·8221 .
B hS
Mlddl
Oh
HC
treet.
aport.
io,
~ bedroom fumilhld apt. utili·
tin plid, r.ferenceunddlpoiJt,
304-882·21M.
one bedroom furnished tpt,
convenient locatkHI, 30•·1715·
2441 .

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

SURPLUS DENIM, ermy, rent1l
doohlng. Wild turk"''
soon, camoufl~ge. gr•n. black
whhe clotlllng. NO checloo.
Political advtrtlslng imprinted
apecloltloa. som s0 m.,.,.lllo. Rt.
21 june1ionlndapendanoeRoMI.
Ealt AaveniWOOd. Fri, S1t, Sun,
noon-8:00pm. 304·273-5155.

,..,on

Furnllhed

Prom gown. si~t13 with hoop,
parlaol tnd glovn, 304-773·
9198.
PI n"" • nd w ..
·~,ellt In prom d r••·
lira 3, worn onoe. 145.00.
30•·875· 8•89.

61

Farm EqUipment

660 International trlctor
w / plows. tranaport disc .,
13610. 241 lnlernM:ton•l round
btler. t2BIO. Owner wll fi·
ntnca. C.l 114·281·1522.
135 MF dlisel, 190 hours wtth
MF Dyne 8ounce mower, MF
rtllloe. MF II 12 bal•. tll50.
Owner will finance. Call 114·
281·11122.

rL.----------~--~~------~
SNAFU~ by

Bruce

Beattie

·' ---

1116Redft.oQT,Icylenglne,
304. 171. 8787 .

1881 Okls. Ctlals Supreme.
One owner. Loaded. Must 1111.
Malle offer . Call81•·446-1079
after 6 PM. ·
1971 Buick Regal . Good cond.
Cell 814 - 446 ~ 0677 .
198C Mercury Lynx. PS. 4 1pd .•
new tlr11. Excel. cond. e2700.
Call 814-448-2297.
1984 Okla. Cutl111 Broughm . 2

dr. Good cond. •s.ooo mUes.

Coli 114-441-1622 or 448·
7672.
1981 Ford A•nu•- htra sharp.
C11i 814· 317-7897 or 3870397.

,1 984 Lynx. 1983 Iuick. Skylark.
Both lor 11le or tr1de. Ctll
814-266-1270.

1982 Datsun 280 ZX - 2 +2 . 6
spd., T-top. new plint. etc. Good
cond. *5700. Call 614-4467438 .
1983 Ptymouth Reliant. PS , AC,
·auto., 52,000 miles. t2500.
Ctll 614-448·2716.

72

Trucks for Sale

Industrial lo1dtr with log forks.
2 ton lntemMionellog truck. C1ll
814·26S-8674 ohw 7 PM. .

. . (l)

,.

_76

Olds.. Buick. Pontiac. Chevy. ._
Chevy tru ck, Ford, Chrysler- ""•
transmiSiio na (used) era inter· •
nan., inap'ected &amp;. carry 3000 mi. . '
or 30 dey warranty (whichever ·
occurs fintl . We buy junk
trtnsml11ion1. Call 114·441·
09&amp;6.

3

..

Chevy car p1rtl for sale. Will htul
away junk cafl. Call 61•·446·
7012 .

"
,,
;

19?3 CJ6 Jeep parts for slle.
Hard top 1nd til good running
pant. Call 814-742-2646 .

'

CAN

'•

,.

A PAPeR .gAG':

Se rvi ces

"'

.
'

...

.'

Home
Improvements

ENGLI.SH 7·

,..- $V{~e. ,, PUT ALL
· '(Ou~ MoNeY IN

·.

"'
81

you $peAle

I'

••'

378-2788.
1910 Chevy Cunom, Deluxe
~cllup wtth topper. C1ll 814448-7,98 eft.- &amp;pm.
1984 Ford F3&amp;0 duel wheel pidc
up, 4 JPWd, 37.000 actual
miiH, 2 tone blue. 304-176·
1788 after 7:00pm ..
1971 Chev El Ctmino 350.
30'::8:;.33bg~~al. • 1•295 ·00 ·

1::;::;;::::;::;:=:;:::;::::;:;~;;::

73 Vane &amp; 4 W.O.
1-----------1186 Plymouth Voyager.
28,000 milu· fully loaded
w / running boards. •10.1100.
CIH 11 ..·446-7137 after 6 PM.
1873 Dodge M1xi·Y1n. , 300,
AT. PB, PS . Reerheater. t1000,
nogotloblo. Colll14·218 -1791.
1978 Ford F-1110, ,4x•. Good
lhtPe. Call 114·245·15223.
1883 Dodgt Charger 6 speed.
Good condition. 1979 Jeep

CJI5. Excellent coi'lditbn. New
top. nwt tir•. Call 114-892171·7 .

1-=------------

1982 Yamlht 110 Heritege
Special II. Good cond. S850.
Call 114-388·1121.

1114·V8Siobro1100.11 .000
mille. EJCMI. cond. 12000. Call

114·241-1417.

1171 Ho~- Dovkloon 8p0fti--.

e

secret aircraft. (RJ C
(1) Discoveries Und'arwater
A young archaeologist
uncovers some of the

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfetlrM guaran·
tH. Local referenc11 fumtshed.
,..,
Free etlimlles. C1ll COIICI • Of\
1-114-237-0488. day or night . ..
Roger18asement .«
Waterproofing.

earliest .ramains of man. Q
®I Ill Kala a lillie Jennie

.,
1

a

deals her way lnto adult

status when Emma moves In

the dorm .(RJ 1;1
l!ll Wondorworko Young girl

and her aunt share
understanding through love
of nature . Q
lUI Prlm8Newa
1BJ MOVIE: Murrow (NRI
(1 '51)
fl) (I) MOVIE: Tho River
(PG13) (2:05)
8:051D MOVIE: Rod Sonja (PGI3 )
(1 :29)

EEK &amp; MEEK

Siding, overhang gutters, storm
doors AI windows. Free llti· · 1•
mtte. Call 114·441-8070.
.... •'
R &amp; A Home Repair · painting.
remodeling, rooting, ceramic
tile, a. plumbing. Freeestlmttes.
Ctll814-446-7748.

I

HEY...1HtY JLISrCRUD ·
AIJ E.XE.RCISE. SYM /fJ
IJJASHIIJGlO\J, DC.

wrestling and suffers a heart
attack. (R)

•'

iUJ La"Y

·"

DO 'TOU EVER
TALK B&lt;Sa&lt; ro
'IUJI&lt;NOM~

,,

NQ. I'VE NE'VER
TALKED BA.CK TO

HER, e.uroNCE ...

\

r WENTLJPONIHERCOFAND
$1-COKTI-iE.ANTENNA WHEN
PHiL t::oNAHLJE WAG ON .

I

I

11:00(1) Remington S I D (2) Cll II (J) ®I Ill lUI
ii1J Nawo
(J) Major League -ball
WHkly(R)
1D Sign 011
I!Jl 1\ppalachlan
Junkumontery
lUI Monayllne
IBJ Twilight Zona Mirror
Image
fl) (I) Love Connec:11on
11:30 II (2) i11J Batt ol ca,..,n
(JJ SporiSCanter (L)
ill ChHraC
II (J) NlghUfne Q
11m Magnum, P.l.
l!ll HOtMtima Tips and

•'

,,..
•'

-···"
1I

I

i

WHAT

WAS
YOU TALKIN'
ABOUT OVER
TH' FENCE?

'

WHO WAS
YOU SCALOIN'
THIS TiME?

WE
WASN'T
SCALOIN'

RIPPIN' 'EM
UP TH' BACK

MAYBE

NOBODY!!

I.

Electrical
Refrigeration

(1 :331
10:30 (]) Good Flahlng

fl) (l) Hogan'a Heroea

,.

CARTER'S PLUM81NG
ANO HE'ATINO
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
GtUipolia. Ohio
Phone 81•·4•8-3888 or 614·
441-4477

King Uvel
10:00 (]) Slralghl Talk
'( IJ Martin LU1her Klng Jr:
Tribute by Wllliem Worfleld
1!JJ 1BJ Ntwa
lUI Evening News
10:051D MOVIE: Tloe 9enllnei (R)

I!Jl European Journal (0:30)

;;

techniques for most common

I
I

home repair jobs are
emphaalzad. ~
..
lUI Sportl Ton hi
'
Ill 'Hunler' 8 L.a1o
Night Hun1er and McCall
work frantically to nib a
psychoffc bomber. (A)
IIJ) Magnum, P .f. Rapture

I

I
Rllidentill or commerci1l wir·
ing. New service or rep1irs.
Licensed elee1riclan. Ettimate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 30487&amp;-1781 .

85

,.

- ~·

Genarai_Hauling

·I

Dllerd Water Service: Pools.
Cisterns. Wells. Delivery Anytlmt. Call 81•·«8·7•04 -No
Sundty calla.
J &amp; J Water Sarvice. Swimming
pools, eiaterns, wtllt. Ph. 114241-828&amp; .

a

I

fll m Tnt

THE GRIZZWELLS®
/IRE )f)U WRmN6 )t')UR

.

r

~~"r..~

·:

'· ,.

EKploNr (AI
12:30 (]) ....... Benny
W ii1J Ute Nlghl with

.

e

D- ...........

ill

~Coo-lion

v-.

UM!STONE- t7 .00 per ton.
"aullng. all llolncls- trath dump
truck loW, U&amp;. Call 114-441·
7019.

IIJ) MOVI!: The Rlwr CPd13)
(2:051
1:DO(]) leot of Clrouoho

mllll, e7.111.00. 30'·1711· 1811 Yamaha 110 M.. lm,
21:12 or 114---7311.
1000- Olic cond. "IS .OO.

Wauerson's W11er Hauling,
rUionlbte rttll. Immediate
2.000 gtllon deuv-v. ciaterns.
pools, well, etc. e~~ll 304-1712118.

r.cJ.-:'i.~o&amp;,~1 ~:

441- 23110 _

1111 Kow-1 111440.

good oondtUon. 11,000

'78 Olcla. low mil•. ua oond, 1"",1
""1- 3..:.:H.:-..:...:o.:vti_B_M_og_n_o_. -w-lll
304-171·3134.
... ,.,.. or-~~~- 304-

eiD MOYIE: .. lduCid'

CU 1.111 Moor11 (1:&gt;40) D

PEANUTS
..
:·,.
,,..

171-1114.

191111&amp;y..._ Umlted, luto.• lir,
PI, PI, AM.f'M, oruloo, lo-. '1!1 Hond• v•1 Mean•. 14
U2CIO- -ponloltr- Coli ....._. rnv mind, no fr• rkle•
814·371·2112.
of -h. 304·871·
W/ 0 3133.
1114 Muat•ne hatohtllak.
41.000 mlloo., outo., ok, ra, 1111 70, IIIlo
N, PW. AM·,M . • • • UfOO.
1312.
Coil 814·171-2182 .
· 1,400 - - --

Po-

87

SIIUIE«E'S Tf.IE TRIANGLE
if.IAT I e&lt;lRROWED..

'(j)

'•'
Mowrey's Upholstering llfVing
trl oountyar• 22 yHrt. The best
In fumtture upholatering. Call
304 -1715-•1att for tree ,. •'
1
tltlmttn.
IC ,

" .'...,
'

I

AXE H E L

IOa -

~-,,,-,.,--r,~,,--T,, . . : ,,---!

I

."

is

Complete the chuckle quoted
L._ _j__...J._
_ __J.____J._
__J.__.J.
by ldill'IQ in the mtss1ng words
you develop lrom step No 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
1

Lackey - Sulky - Oulff - Nibble - BLINK

·'

You must be dreaming if... the police oMicer who pulled you
over for speeding says, "Sorry, l lhink the· radar must be on
the BLINK."

BRIDGE

NORTH

• CJ) llgn 011
IIJ llllklll'olltllll ·u

e (!) Clilllle'e Angelo
eNetll arll:

1:30(1) L.Mnllnd....,
(I) Hoont aoppkog

=

(J)IDII'dWIIk I llllbll'l
luplr lowl otlports Trtv
(J) Newght
1111
011\lpciiM
IIJ
2:00 (]) fOO Club

()) lportsl.ook (R)

-~~~-

t-&lt;-80

+K J6
., K 10 5 3 2

James Jacoby

tA

• J 10 8 6

WEST

A costly
.cheap trick

EAST

., .

+s 3

+to&gt;&lt; 2

"J i764

tJ64

--

+ Qt0953
+9 75 2

+Q4 3

By James Jacoby

SOUTH

Poor Willy Nilly! He spends so much
of his bridge life.paying the penalty
for hasty, impulsive play. And today's
no-trump grand slam provided a dra·
malic setting for another Willy-Nilly
disaster. He was so overrun with high
cards that he simply asked for aces
and bid seven no-trump. West led from
his longest suit, even though it was
North's first-bid suit, and declarer was
immediately presented with the apparent gift of a trick that he could
cheaply win With the eight. Of course,
Willy took it. He now had no play for
13 tricks excer,t to hope in vain that
the queen of c ubs would drop.
Careful Charlie was presented with
the same problem at another table.
But he realized that winning the eight
of hearts was an illusion. Instead he
took the queen. He then cashed the ace
of diamonds, and the ace and king of
clubll, and ran all four spade tricks,
throwing a club from dummy. Maimwhile West had thrown two diamonds

+ AQ97

"A Q 8
t K8 7 2
+AK

Vulnerable: East:west
Dealer: North
West

East

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

South
4 N'J:

5 NT
7 NT

Opening lead: • 6

I

on the spades. But the king of dia·
moods closed the trap on West. He had
to keep the club queen , so he threw a
heart. Declarer discarded dummy's
jack of clubs and ran the remaining
hearts, taking the marked finesse
against West's jack along the way.

..

t!INM_,ttf'
by THOMA~ JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Israeli

1 Crescent-

4 A&lt;ljust,

· as a clock

7 Berg opera

shaped
leaf

2 Palm

4 March

8 Leave
10N.Y.C.

..

3 Nerd

plant
5

,,

English

street

river
6In name
13 Altar
only
in the sky
7 Zhivago's
14 Ship's diary
love
21 Soft drink 29. Trite
Ul Prefix.
9 Tenn in 22 Animal
30 Editor's
for cycle
office
track
mark
17 Share
10 Detonator 23 Harness
31 Mauna
19 Drag
12 Star
ring
Loa's Spew
20 Mining fmd
in Orion 24 Military
32 Ron -15 Turkish
courier
37 Historical
21 Feel
_ interest
weight
(Fr.)
period
unit
25 Half-w.ltted 39 Tokyo's
22 Place
old nam e
211 Mushroom 18 Perfectly 27 Add up
variety
11 Prevent

26

•

•,

·.

Nuisance

27 SllllSkrit
school

28 Food
ITagment

29 Wickerwork boat
33-- et

...

labora

34 Si!}UX
35 Indian
mulberry
36 Allude to
381mpudent

40 Gull's
relative

41 Conception
river
43Camper's
purchase

•

....

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

.·' '-,

.-

'·

CRYPTOQUOTBS

ill NlwiJwiCI 011111

......._

Upholstery

"Isn't this a mixed up world? "
commenled the old umer. "Now

_

_ _;______________, a car is a necessity, and walking

emRtwllkll
12:051D Nlllonll Ologrlphlc

R a R Wtter Service. Horns ~·"·
··~
clstera, wells. pool• tlllad. Formerly James Boys Wttlfa.CaR
304·176·8370.

.

DAILY qlYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work il:

l!ll Sign 011
IIJ-Night

•'I'

_

42 Scottish

12:00 (]) Burna ond 1\llen
(JJ Baeball AT&amp;T Challenge
lrom Newport Beach, CA (A)

AIJlObRAPI:IY A6AIH?

I-11 ~•~·

.,.::E:_;:..L

airport

making . I;J
®I Ill a NCI\1\ llolkelball

·'..

Sttrkl Tree end Lawn Service.
l•wn ctra, ltndse~~plng, ltiJmp
remov1l, 304-676 · 2B42 or
178-2903.

&amp;

Reese s1rains himself arm

OOLY...

MOVIE: 'Belt
Frtendo' .ABC Mondey Night
Movie (PG) l1 :491 Q
ID l!ll Japan Ancient rice
growing formed basis of

.r

\

Ill a= Deaignlng Women

ill II (I]

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
,,
Most walt completed same dey.
Pump tal• and 1ervlce. 304·
'·
896-3802
, '~.

84

8:30 ®I

modern Japanese decision

Fetty Tree Trimrhing, stump
removal. Cell304·875-1331 .

Plumbing
&amp; Haating

R:l.ITICifVJS

~
t

~....,..:T_UT:-'-F
I I' I

9:00 (]) 700 Club

RON"S Television Service .
MoU1e calls on ACA. Ouutr, ''.
GE. Speciallng in Zenith. Ctll ~304-678 -2398 or 814-448·
2464.

82

fCR

I'

Tree &amp; 11ump removal. new
l•wn•· mulch. topsoil. Azelitl,
shrubs. shade trees. mowing.
Don'1 landiCIPII·814-446·
9141.

1-------------'----

1819 CMYy Yan. 8 cyl., ltend·
ard, gooc:llirea and h....,. Runs
good. CoiiS14·H2-2881.

tm

destroy wreckage of downed

Call 11•-211-1811 .
80 Ch.vy 4JI4 pickup. lA. ton.
1515,000 •cutuil milt~. b. cond.
Alto. Olivtt trector. Cell 814-

fl) (l) M'I\'S'H
7,05 ffi Andy GriHith
7:30 D (2) (l) Hollywood
Squarao
(J) NCAA Final Four Special, ·.
(L)
liJ (J) Judge
l!liJ WhHI of Fortune 1;1
Cro1011re
Ill lUI ii1J Jeopardy! 1;1
IBl Bamay MOler
fll (I) WKRP In Cincinnati
.7:351IJ Sanford and Son
8:00 (]) Father Murphy
D (2) ii1J 'Merlo Puzo'o The
Fortu1181o Pilgrim, Part 2'
NBC Monday Night Movlei;J
(J) Collage Baoaball
ill
(I] MacGyver
MacGyver must lind and

-rls__,J_v,..:1E..,,__,,

t;-1

~ Cheers

BUDGET TRANSMISSIONSUIM • rebuilt, ell types guaranteed 30 diV• minimum . Pricll·
t99 &amp; up. Rebuilt torque•·••
low as $39 . 350 eon version kits
to fit S-10'a, C-10'1. metric &amp;
ov.,drive. Hard pans tor trenamlulon &amp; trtntrni~tion kits. C•ll •
1-304-4230 or 1-814-379 2220.

1172 Ford·ltete body truck. I
cyt. motor, 3 spd. trtns. t226 ..

304-112·1301.

..

ii1J Nowa
(JJ SportoLook
(!) MOVIE: Dr. Who:
Revela11on of the Daleko
(NR)(1:30)
l!ll Coloroounda
lUI ShowBiz Today
1BJ Fac1a of Life
fll(ll Happy Dayo

!Ill MOVI!: Mlrty(NR)(1 :31)

=

I

_

NCAA Final Four
Hlghllghlo (A)
ill II (I] ~ac Newa !;I
(f) NlghUy Buolne10 Report
®I Ill CBS Newo
I!Jl Body Eloe1r1c
lUI lnaldo Politico '88
IBJ WKRP In Cinclnnall
fl) (l) Too Close for Comfort
6:351D Leave It To Beaver
7:00 (]) Remington S1Hie
D (l) PM Magazine
(J) SportaCenter (L)
ill Entertelnment Tonight
liJ (J) Poople'o Court
CIJ l!ll MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
®I Nowl
lUI Moneyllne
Ill lUI ii1J Wheel of Fortune

•

RUGOtH

Ill Ill (J) ®I Ill a=

Pauf Rupe, Jr. Water Service .
Pools, ciaterns, wells. C1ll I 1• ·
448·3171 .

.tr-ml-,o•trou.-.oo. 1104-171•

I

a

Auto Part$

.·-

the
be·

low ro form four strnple words

6:051D 1\llce
~: 30 D (2) i11J NBC Nightly Newa

&amp; Accessories

S© v..~ N\- ~ t. ~s ·

0 four
Rearrange let~er! of
scrambled words

•

4

6:00 (]) Crazy Like a Fox

8' flbergiiSI tru~k cover. Like
new. •100. Cell30•·676-1•6o
or 114·388-1773.

uoo 614-992 -591 9. rnl•.
"14 T...... 1\m. loodod. 11.- 1.:.:.:.:..:....:..:.::.:..:.:...:..___ '

"I had to
vanity plate I wanted
•was already taken In California."

MON., APRIL

':~~:t:~y-

----·-..:___: .fdited b.., CLAY It, POLLAN

EVENING

. 1971 C815 Alive Tandem dump,
16'f.t ft. Benson bed. New 427
engine. I &amp;. 4 trans. Cell
. 11 ..·241-9567.

v '

7

1-

Television
Viewing
•

12 ft. Sean 1eml .V bo.at 1nd
accea so rlas , troller motor
..00.00. C•ll 304-676·2•&amp;7.

1987 Ford Escort GT: d spd .,
13000 mil11, 1ir, AM-FM-Ceas.
etc. Very clean. Call 61 4-.U&amp;0948.

1888 Chev Beretta OT, IUto,
2000 mH•. •10.111.00. 1181
Chew Monte Clrlo Y·l IUtO, 1878 lteweaatcl 400 . 8700
1e •000 mHn, t 2,581.00. 304. 7452.
mU.. 8500. C1ll 814·441·
112·3301.
---------71 Ford Mustang II, 302 IUto, 1en Honda 510 four K. 1200
llOO.OOorbattoft.-. 304-176- 4411·0841.
mU.. Gr..t lhapt. C.H 614·
21• 4

4wp, 100 .....o. Pl. Pl. I

1 - for omol
AH
hooll-upo. C.blo. ollaa . -..
roorM. llr end cable. Meeon.
W.Vo. Coii304-773·SIB1 .

Troll• 1oto. Rt. 1 locuot Aood,
·of K • K Mobllo H...,...
304·17S-1071.

.'

1;;;:::::;;;:::;==::;::===

u.-.oo,

Space for Rent

3 bedrooms. all electric.
1210.00 month plus utilitiH,
privoto lo~ 304-17&amp;-4018.

NEW INFORMATION! Jeeps.
Cllra, •x4s seized In drug raids.
Buy hom $100. Cell for facti
today. 213-926·9906, ut
2624 .

1979 flreblrd. Fr•h 388 engine. 4111 headt. Aunt atrong, ·1878 CJ5)Hp, J .C. Penny h•d
$950. OBO . Cell 114-992- top, rebuiH engine, ntw tlrll,
1337.
11.300.00 or bllt offer. 304·
881-3177.
1977 Cougar Station Wagon. 1-------------Perfect Interior, run• very weU. 1186 Ford F110. 4 wheel drin.
PS, PI, AM-F,.. tiOO. 114- PS, P8, AC. tuto, fuel lnjM:tlon,
9811·35Vl
1o no
07.110.00. 304-41810 3 1
NEW INFORMATION: Joop,
C.rs. 4•4'1 tilled In drug rllktt.
Buy loom •100.00. C.lforfoc10 _7_4___M
__o_t_o_r_cv_c_l_e_•_____
tod8V 1213tl28·9101
1

'78 Ford PlniO, 2300 ..,.._
- • ~=
PS • PI ' mol.. ~~
-r
ohopo, .......... - · •
.oo.
'78 Oklo Roe-Icy 18. 4 dr., 4
IINL
,,...,,, MO enlgnt. all
pow1r. 101.011 mllaa.
'78 Font F1110.

Roome for Nnt·welk ar month.
Stantna at 1120 1 mo. O.llla
Hotol-1'14--·1110.

Two tnd thrM Hdroom mobNI
~ mile out 81nd Hill
Ro.d. 304•175-3134.

1983 Chevy. Cltttlon. Am radio,
auto. trtnt., PS , PB, 89,000
miles. S 1450. Cen be sMn allhl
Gallipolis D1ily Tribune or for
more infonnttion cell81 4· 4482342 .

-

room-819 llacond

2 bedroom mob'le homa hatf
mDe out Jericho Road. ctll tfter
6,00 pm, 304·17&amp;·1483.

\ \

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

i

1181 Pontiac Grft Prbl. low 1978 Hertey Devkllon Super
GMdl. E.uel. cond. Wtltt miRy
d 304 •875 • ••trll.
m
Call 114· 441·0038.
8787. • exc .con •

Utilities paid. lingle mill. Shire
both. CoR441-441S-7PM.

46

us AU.

1987 bott . 1ake over payments
' nothing down. V-8 , 19ft. 175
hp, extras, u1!td 64 hours,
304·676-2364.

b_o o l ,

Ave.. Gallipolis. 11 Zl a mo.

Spactous motHie home loti for
rant. Femlty Prkl1 Moblll Home
Park. 0•1Upolle Ferry, w. Ye.
304-171·3073.

I

Wurltlzer pi1no. Good.cond . Call
814· 4·6-4107.

Furnished Rooms

1111 Schutb:. 1411110. all eltot·
ric 2' bedrooms. exc cond.
...;lng 110. 500.00 . 304·S75·
SIIJ.

Mm•.

Firewood delivered. •tacked.
$36.00. MasonCounty.Otllipo111. Ohio and other''"' within
fAIOn at our ditct'Ntion. 304896-3441.

.,

46

AI«) ~;AVe

~·:~~&amp;::: .........

'

41

~

~"' Nl'( t:1DilT'IOO 9NAT

I''· ·~,

· Owens Cabin Cruiser. $21100 or
belt offer. Caii614-2B8·6648 .

phone!"

For 11le: 81-Level, three bedroom home. family room. one·
c• gartge, situated on 1 eera
, m-1, 'It mi. from Rut11nd. Call
Hobttetter Re11ty. 61•·7•2·
3082.

/; 1,II o I 01

1978 llndan 1 2 ft. alum. V
bottom boat . Swival •eats. 6
HP .. Sea-'1 motOr . Trailllf. All
eJttel. cond. C•ll61 4·446·6167
after 5 PM .

ST. AT. 141 at Centenary-'/•

•mile on Lincoln Pike-Open Deily,
Mon-Sat.,9 · 6. 11 4·4•6·31 68.
18 Wanted to Do
Pogo ball•·•9.76. hulla hoopsSWAIN
t2 .99,10".12"tricycl ... 10"
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62 scooters. 12" scooters, 12"·
Olive St., Galllpqli1 .
BMX bieycles · atarting •t
. Jlm't Odd Jobs
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- 8399. t19.915-wlll take trade ins .
Sunftckt, siding, painting, roofliving room suites· 81199-$599. Strollets·t•4.96. ladltl frosted
ing, carpenter work. trailer reBunk beet. with bedding- t199. blue jean sllir1a-t10,99, IIM*I
pair·. Call 614-379-2418 .
Full ai1e mattre11 It foundation hair bows-S2.99 . Iron stone
•taiting· 599 . Recliners dlnnerware -4 pe . uning·
Tr.. work wanted: 'Pruning.
818 .96, 12' ' tilver ltonetkillet·
bedroom &amp;6.99. iron stone pitChers &amp;.
topping, removals. Free eat i·
mat ... Call 814· 448-1832 or
1ultea, •199 -t299. Desks. bowls-$ 12,99, twin size matlo.t-675 -4863.
W
wringorweohe•. acompletoUno treu, boX tpr'ings-199 / let. full
of used turnitura.
size mattre11, boll springsCIMning-Hou•• &amp; offices. Ref·
NEW· western boot... $30.
8119 . Whote•ele de1len ••
arence1. Call 614-446-8788 or
Workboota t1B &amp; tip . {Steel &amp; welcome after I PM , Mon.·
CROSS &amp; SONS
unleal by appointment. ·
2415·6383 .
r,;;;:;~~;::;~~;::::l";;;:;;::;::;;:::;:;~;:;::=::1'oft toe). Call 614· 446-3169 . Thurs.
U.S. 35 Wut, J•ellton, Ohio.
You mu•t be e Valid o.. ter.
61 ..·286·M61 .
,ttll tvPII m11ono~rv. brick. block. 32 Mobile Homes
42 Mobile Homes
County Appliance, Inc. Good
••one •nd ~~;oncrete. tree 11ti·
for Sale
for Rant
u•ed appliances •nd 1V sets. 2 . 6 HP tillert. t1 25 each. 8 HP Malley Ferguson, New Holland,
Open 8AM to 6PM . Mon thru Bowlin mower, $600. 6 HP Bulb Hog S1IH • Servlee. Over
m1tes. 304· 773-9660.
40 used trtctars to choo.. from
Sat. 61•·446· 1699. 827 3rd. Wheelhorte mower. 1376. C1ll
Will mow lawns tnd do other
Ave. Gellipoll1, OH.
Pa complete line of n.w • used
614-379-2746 .
equipment. ltrgut Hlection In
yard work. phone 304· 875- 1985 Nashua 14x60, 2 Bed·
In Eurekl-2 nice &amp; clean 2 BR.
3734.
rooms. und'erpinned, central air, mobile hom01. UOO &amp; t226 per GOOD USED APPliANCES G.E. 18.000 BTU Window 1ir S.E. Ohio. ·
JKlrt:h. unf\.lmished. Park Lane. mo. Dep required. No pets. Wllhert, dryefl, rltfriger1tora, conditioner. Used 3 mot. Mov·
JIM 'S FAAM EQUIPMENT •
Lawn Mower Rpalrs
Cell 614-446·9316 Mornings.
Adults only. C111 81&lt;\-246- rang11 . Sk1gg1 Appliances . . ing. Call614-379·2791 .
4·6-9777
Upper River Rd. be1ide Stone
Lawn Servic"
68&amp;3.
3 Pt . hitch. neder. fertiUrer
Crett Motel. 614-446-7398 .
Small Garden• Plowed
1979 Duke Crown Royal,
Used R66 ditch witch trencher.
•preader wHh PTO lh1ft. 1199
304-876-1663
14x70. lotal electric, 2 BR .• Mobile Homes for Rent. Call
Call 614-694·7842 or 419·
while they lut.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
undwpinning, CA. microwave, 614-446-0627 .
683-1469.
porch••· P1rtly furnished. Call
814-256· 9340.
1987 Southbrook-14x66, 2 Sofas and cbeirs priced from Nice no-troat refrig, couch/1· UTILITV BLDG. SPL: 30'x40'x9'
BA .• CA. allelec. Call 114-246· 8396 to t99~. T1bles t60 end leeper. twin bed. table &amp; 4 e1ve· 1 6'x8' sliding d• It 3 '
up to t125. Hide·a·beda 8390 padded ch•lrs, recliner. chat of service door, t4987 ERECTED .
1989 Globle Moster, 12x86. 2 9161 or z•&amp;-9173 .
F1n o nc •al
to $696. Rflclinera t226 to drtwort, couch. Call 614-446- IRON HORSE 8LDGS. 114BR ., 12600. 1973 Cameron.
332-9746.
.
1 2x60. 2 BR .. $2600. Good Fumi1hed, ·2 BR ., Addaville *376 . Lamp• t28 to t 126. 3224.
Dinettes 11!109 •nd up to S496.
c ond. C1ll 614-44•·7316 or school area. AC . V~Biher- Drver
246 -9476 .
WOod tabio 'Y· 6 chsiu $2815 to 10 HP Dynamark riding lawn
and g1rden IPICit . W•ter / MW$796. Desk *100 up to 8376. mower, run a good. Call ef1er 63
21
Business
Livestock
age p•id. C.ll61•·387-77-66.
Hutches t400 and up. Bunk 6pm, 614 -387-7800.
1972 Hommel, 12x62. 2 BR .
Opportunity
beds
complete
w-~ettr111ea
Elllcel . cond . Call even. aft" 2 BR. trailer in country. 81 66 a
t296 and up to t396. Baby bad• 2 prom gowns. One Is long,
7-614·4••·••09 .
mo. plu1 dep. Avallabla April
$110. M1ttr111M or box springs peach, size 7 . Other ia tea length, Hors111 tor aalo- Standardbred
&amp;th. c.n &amp;1•·379 ·2•3&amp;.
I NOTICE I
tull or twin 868, firm t78 , and whha, si2a 6. Call 614-742- and TennMtte Walkeri . C1ll
.1974 Cameron 12x55. Total
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- elacnic, 2 BR ., blockt. t3300. 14x70 with exp1ndo, 2 BA .• 11f.t
888. Queen sets S226. King 3018 IV'elllng•.
814-441-4711.
ING CO . recommend• thet you Call 61 4· 256·6031 .
1360. • drawer chest $69. Gun
beth1. LOCIII~ on St. Rt. 7
do butineae with people you
ctbinets 6 gun. B1by mlttriiiU 1920 W1lnut dining room suite 2 - 8 wk. old Iambe. Good f()t 4-H
below Eureka. Excel. cond. Call
know. end NOT to ttnd money 1980 F1irmont Bayview, 114-4•8-1211 or 268·1•20 ..
836 &amp; 8•6 . Bed tramn 820,
with daco eontors ••96. 1920's project. Exctl. 1h1pe. Call 11C·
through th• m1ll until you heve 1•x10. large living room wlttt
t30 • King frema $60. Good 9x12 wool rug with 3x5&gt;ml1ch 3S7-0334.
irw ..tlgolt..:l the offering.
ael~ion of bedroom suites,
fireplace, 1 YJ: betha. 3 BR. Good
runner t1 00. Smith till rototlller
metal cabinets, headboards • 30 &amp;HP. 1100. Call Thuttday · 8 wk. old Felt pigs. 160 each.
Cond. Call 014·4•6·•1 68 .
43
Farms for Rent
FIOUAE SHAPING TABLES
•nd up to •es.
CoH 114-268·181 0 .
Sunday 614-992-3955.
Open your DWn figure salon with 1970 14x70, 2 1.-ge BR . on 1
the orglrilel Steutfer Concept •era. NOrth of Porter. Aural
90 Day• seme n ca1h with Pioneer Kah·9191 High Power Childs riding hDr•. good with
70 aer.. of p11ture. 1 Y2 miles 1pproved credit. 3 Miles out 26wJt26w
figure Shaping Tebln. Buy w1ter. n4.000. C•lll14· 388·
car st.-eo with 100w children, 8200.00. w...... n tid·
west
of
Alfred
on
aouth
1ide
of
F•ctorv direct . 312-818-8096.
Bultvillo Ad. Open 9em to Spm
9719.
dla and bridle, good cond,
C.R. 231 . Phone 1·613·886· Mon . thru S1t. Ph. 814-446- Pioneer Speakara. $160. Call 0126.00. 304-87&amp;,1488.
614·992·7348.
Earn Thounnd•· Stuffing enve- Cuh tor your Uled home. Naw ' 2060.
0322.
::!Ct~· Ru1h 11 .00 end tell· buying pre 1880 12's &amp; 1•·•· I ~ r,. •
Four prom druses. Ra•aonable.
aued ttemped env•lopeto: Plee~~e c•ll 800-826-0762, ext.
Valley Furniture
Phone 614 -992 · 2830 for · 64 Hay &amp; Grain
·
44
Apartment
StuHen of America. P.O. 8011. 311.
New 1nd uatd furniture and directions.
1817, Findl-v. Ohio 45839.
applic1nus. Call 614-446 ~
for Rent
7672. Hours 9 · 5.
·
14x70 Schul11. All electric.
U Haul trUcks and trailers for 9 turkeys • rabbits for 11la. Call
Toning Tebl" 161. 112,600. W1aher 1nd dryer, refrigerator,
rent, 30•·876-7421 .
614-2415-6117.
Price Includes w•renty, lrtin- 11ove, drtp... porch, ewning 2 BR . tpto. 8 cloolta. llitchenJ &amp; S FURNITURE
illg, set up . Oeel direct. 1 7800- included. hcellent condition.
1•16 Eastern Ave.
Hay- 11 .00 per bela. Call
appl. furnilhl'd, Washer· Dryer . Living room sutt• $179 &amp; up.
334-0411 llllt. 1203.
C•ll 11•·992·5662.. or 814·
814· 388-8418 .
ww
Clfpet,
newty,
Bedroom
suit11
I
399
&amp;
up.
hook-up,
.982-3348.
plinted. deck. Rtgency, Inc.
55 Building Supplies
Apts. Call 304-&amp;75·7738 or
PICKENS
23 Professional
Hey for 11le. 81.26 bale. larry
176·510..
FURNITURE
33 Farms for Sale
Services
Johnson .814· 7•2 ·2•42..
New comPletely furnished Dinnettes , beds. bedding,
Building M1teri1l1
apartment &amp; mobile home in dreuers
Bloclt. brick. tewer pip81, win· 011 h1y. Never wet. S1 .00 per
.
chests
,
couchaa,
dows. llntel1. etc. Claude Win· bole. C.H 814-742-2111.
city, Adulta only, Perking. Cell chairs. IM'nps, cofiH, end t1bles.
Pipo &amp; Organ l•sons. Cell 49 1cre farm· 1200 ft . paved
I Every day Speclel1 . 'h mile out tert. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614Mllry Lucee-814-448-9787 or road frontage on Ohio Rt. 654- 614-448·0338 .
2.11 mlln from Rio Grande
245-&amp;121 .
448· 4428.
College • Bob Evant Farm- 10 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT , Jerrtcho. 30•·675-1450.
Kenworth and DeKalb lied CGrn .
mlnutll from Holzar Ho.pltal &amp; BUDGET PRICES AT JACK- Refrig., washer &amp; dryer. Good Concrete blodtt· 111 sites- ytrd Scon Ftrm Brtla Seed•. W L
Galllpollt. Ohio. Sevar11 good ' SON ESTATES, 153&amp; Jackson cond . Call 61•·446·36'8.
or deUvery. M110n und. Gallipo- •Vtriety Atf1tf1. 304-871· 1501.
building Iitts, good hunting &amp; Pille from 1183 1 mo. W1lk to
lis Bloelt Co.·, 123'/a Pine St ..
tithing tree. Mlner•l rights. shop 1nd mOYies. &amp;14-448·
Galllpoli•. Ohio. Cell 114-441·
SPRING
SALE
10%
OFF
t36,900. Cell 304-123-8568.
26&amp;8. E.O.H.
2783 .
.111
11111
Olnnatt81·•36
1nd
up.
Alt
bed27
acre
ftrm
·
12
acfll
roHing
Broolttide
Aptrtments:
Loc.ted
31 Homes for Sale
room ltemt-beda, . chests , 56
71 Auto's For Sale
land. th1 rwt It wooded. Aural off Bul.vllle Rd.· 1 HR. lptclous drnsett.
Pets for Sale
bedding. Holtywood
wetlf. blacktop road, septic tank ll)lrtments with modern kitchen fr1mea.
etc. Full ml'ttretl. box
2411.40 ..ctlonei-38R ., 2 bltht, &amp; wtter hookup. Within 4 mi. of end w..her-drytr hookups, c•· ·
aprlngs-e65 and up. 3 pc.
1873 Ford Bronco . Ret~tored.
utility room , new fireplace, Gtlllpolit. c.n 614-44&amp;· 2105.
ble
taleYislon
availtble.
C.ll
bedroom suite- compllte· like Groom and Supply Shop-Pet Excel. cond. 82900. Call 814·
porch. 1 ecre-land. 3 yra . old.
814-441-1932.
. new-t179.
Much more.
Grooming . All breads ... AII • 245-11100.
Clll614-388-9305.
188 1cre farm, with remodeled
Used Furniture-876- styles. lams •Pet Food Dealer. -:-::=--:~--:=~::::-:-:--:
hou11. two barns. thrM othtr Upsttitl unfurnithed apt. C1r· Pickens
1460.
Julie Webb Ph . 814·«8 ·0231 . 1972 - Ford LTD SW. Good
2 BA . house .aunounded by pine . buiklinliJI. free ,.,, Autllhd
peted, utllltiH paid. No children.
ohope. 0300. Coli 814·44S·
tr.... 13 acr•. full b•••·· 2 Twp. Call after 6 p.m. 11•·7•2·
No pets. CtW81"·448·1837.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel. 3071 .
Couch &amp; chair, swiv-' rocker, 7
beths. htlrdwood floors. new 2348.
pc. dinette set. 4 pc. bralk.fast CFA Himalayan. Pertitn and
fence. pond a. outbuilding•.
Furnished effldancy-920 4th. 181.
9x12 grey cl{pet. Tappin Siam..• kinens. New AKC 1981 Buick Sllylark. • dr .. AC,
Priced in t40 ' s. C1ll 814·448·
Ave.
t186
.
UtiiHin
paid
.
C1ll
Chow puppiea. Call 814·«6- AM-FM·Cet•. t1 100. Ctll 114·
911 r~e . Htlf bed mlltretl.
2 107-dlyl, 2·6-5800-wens.
114·441-4411of11f
7
PM.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
448-7211 .
Ctllafter 6pm, 814-266-1610. 384• after 7PM .
Tupperl PlainS· 3 BR ., e1t-ln
2 8R., 2 b8th 1pt. All utiUtiea MaUohM FurnitUfe. Quality fur- AKC Cocker Sp1nie\ pupt. 1983 Oldt CutiNI. New cond.
kitchen.
ltvtng room. full
includ.ct. e360 e mo. Dep. niture &amp;. eerpet It lowatt polli· · Reedy for E111er. C1ll 814-388· low mllnge. Loldld. t5900.
Ht~m~.nt. glf81f. 111 electric,
Vac1n1 lot on Pine St. . in required. Call 114-446-4222
ble prices. Finsndng evallableto 8890.
Colll14-441-2380.
centr1l1ir. Call after 6 PM-814- Galllpolia. No M.obile Hom• tMtween 9-5.
queliUecl buyers. Upper River
441-749S.
permitted . . $4,000. Call 814·
St. Bernard pups. Flm shots &amp; 1971 CGnlene. Excel. can d. Air.
Rd. Gtll. 0 . 814-448-7444.
694· 3833 •11• 8 PM .
2 BR . 1pt. in Crown City. $110 .
worm.cl. 1260 aac:h. Ctl 1 •
2 bedroom. I btths, 2 ctr
au1o. trans., low miiNgl.
Cell
61•·258·6•95.
Modern rttan bese. round gl111 886·8828 after 1 PM. Proctor- t-top,
g•ege, level lot on Rt. 33. 7YJ teres· #278. well &amp; septic,
t8900. Ctll 11 · -..... ~2390.
Swimming pool, satelite, close pond, tome woods. mobile Furnlth.cl efficiency IPirtmtnt. top teble, *100.00. 304-875- ville. Ohio.
to Meigs High . C.ll 614· 992· home hooll-up . t18000. Call Ctrpet throughout . Private &amp; ~3781.
1983 Ford Etcor1 . Air, tun root,
2 r-a. 5 y.., old white female new tlrn. Excel. cond. UIOO.
325 • .
614·444· 7316 or 2415·9476,
quilt . Single worllotng person
. Eskimo Spin dogs. Very geode, C1ll 114·245·1181 8 after 5 PM.
Derk
pine
trundle
bed,
8160.00.
Call 61•·•46·•607 or 304·175· 48SI .
good with kids. Cell 114· 4414 bedroom. 1 Yt 11ory houu.• Ashton. lqe building lots. only.
448-2102.
9492.
AQ Hot baralnsl Drug dellers
Nice lot. 70K100. Be1utiful oek mobile homes permitted. public
Clrt, bolts. pi•• repo'd. Surwoodwork. Quick posa... ion In w1ter. tlso river loti, Clyde I rooma. 2 b1th1 . Adults only. Mattrnt and box apring• •ets,
Si1me11 Klttent, pure bred. Call plus. Your afla, luyen Bulde.
twin 820.00 full 126.00. 40"
Middiepon. CaiiiS14-892-&amp;714 Bowen. Jr. 304·678-2336.
First Avt. C•ll61'·448-1079.
eYening• 814· 9•8-2290
pl•y pen t10.00. 304-676·
1 ·806· &amp;t7·6000 . E&gt;d. S· 805.
4589.
Par1itiiV burnt hou.. on St. At.
Pure br-.d English Shepherd 1179 Metcurv Bob C.t. Good
33. New aer1tor s.PtiJ: 1y1tem. 36
Real Estate
pups. Black. whhe and tan. 135; running condttlon. t260. 114Prh::e negotiable. Ctll-14-992Wanted
GrNt ftrm dogs. Call61•·986- 182-1372.
2473 or 614-992-8031 .
53
Antiques
4296.
1978 Chrylilf Le Baron. 4 door.
For tale by owner, 10 year old
New paint and tir•. t1700.
UnlbUc Home. Urgeo living room, W1nttd to IHse, nwver 3 BA
Buy
or
Sell.
Riverine
Antiquea,
l.oaciH. Also Honda MDped,
57
Musical
dining room. kitchen. 3 bed- home wittl 2 plu• acr11. Write: 1
1124
E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
880. Call 814· 992-7214.
rooms. 2 baths, ba11rnent with 2 AlPin Piece, Huntington. WVa.
Instruments
Hour~ : M.T.W 10a.m. to 8p,m ..
c:ar gartge on 30 acre• with old 2&amp;706.
•
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Four 1857 Ch""Y•· 2 door
f1rmhouu. Two miles w"t of
2828.
htrdtop, 2 door po1t. Ema
Oe11t., off County Rd. C on
2 llti·Druma. Excel. cond. englnee. tr•namilllont 1nd
Nelton Rd. or 1 mile off County
1600 each. flnri . See at KIDS - ptrtl. t1600. OBO . Call 614·
Rd. 1·1 miles NE of S1ltm
Rt . 180 or Call CU •·..,.1·8440 . 992-1337.
Center. Phone 1 -698-6345 .
54 Misc. Merchandise or
379-2780.

"

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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GCQEXZASINL .-- ZWCYSGSI
-· . -· ---·- ..... -Y.terd&amp;J'• Cr,ptoqaote: A BIGOT DEIJGHTS IN
·PUBIJC .RIDICUlE, FOR HE BEGINS TO TiiiNK HE IS A
MARTYR. T SYDNEY SMrrH

..

�1 0-The Daily Sentinel

.

Monday.April4. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Shop the
·want Ads

Zaccaro cocaine
trial begins today
~STEVEN

BREDICE

RUTLAND, Vt. (UP!) - Prosecutors -and defense attorneys
prepared to pick a jury today to
Oeclde whether Jahn Zaccaro
Jr., son of i984 Democratic vice
p~ldentlal nominee Geraldine ·
Ferraro, sold cocaine to an
undercover policewoman.
Zaccaro, 24, Is charged with
selling $25 worth of cocaine to an
undercover pollee officer In 1986
while a senior at Middlebury
College. He could be sentenced to
up to five years In prison and
Jined $10,000 If convicted.
A charge of cocaine possession
was thrown out last month.
Zaccaro withdrew from · the
expensive private school and
now attends Hunter College In
New~ork. Hehasdonevolunteer
' work at Covenant House In the
city to help tight teenage drug
abuse and prostitution.
Rufumd District Judge Fran·
cis McCaffrey will preslde at the
trial which Is expected to last one
week.
Lawyers tor both sides have
offered little or no comment on
the case and Zaccaro's family
has not answered requests for
comment.
The case begap, Feb. 20, 1986,
·when plalnclot!M!'s state pollcew·
oman Laura Manning went to his
oft-campus apartment posing as
a college student Interested In
buying cocaine.
When Manning asked Zaccaro
1f he had any cocaine, she said he
replied, "How much?" and
pulled a tray of 15 bags of white

By SHEILA MULLAN

behavior, like he's being accused
of doing by the plain tit!."
The suft alleges the store
owners were negligent In allow.
!ng Smokey to roam around the
store, something the cat has d!)ne
for about eight years, Ludln said.
But Smokey's celebrity has
turned the case Into a sideshow.
~~~ plight has prompted articles
In sever111 newspapers, the Wall
Street Journal and People
magazine.

PITI'SBURGH (UP!) - Smo·
key, an elderly cat who lives In a
downtown stationery store, lias
captured the public's heart and
support for his court battle
against a customer who claims
be scratched her.
"He's got a·leglon of admirers
and a Smokey Defense Fund,"
the eat's defense attorney: Gary
Ludln, said before the case's
scheduled hearing today In AlSympathetic letters addressed
legheny County Common Pleas
Court. "We want to make him a to the cat from North Allegheny
Elementary School fourth itar."
graders
are plastered In the
Plaintiff Nlckkl Sikorski, a
store's
front
windows.
leJal secretary, )las sued sta~lon·
"Smokey
Is
not a mean cat;:·
era J.R. Weldin Co. of Pittsburgh
said
one
crayoned
letter. "Go for
for $3,000 In damages, alleging
the
gold,
Smokey,"
read another.
Smokey scratched her when she
The
fourth-graders
studied the
went Into the store to buy tape for
case
to
learn
about
the justice
ber bou, attorney Richard Gor·
system
and
have
taken
up the
don Johnaon. Johnaon Is repres·
feline's
cause,
said
their
teacher,
entlng Sikorski In the suit.
"AI 1he attempted to purchase Mary Jean Baker. ·
the Item, sbe was attacked by the
alley cat," Johnson said Sunday.
''The students have learned
''We bave since discovered that about the Constitution and the
the alley cat stays ·rlght by the system of justice It guarantees,"
Baker wrote the store.
~·h reitater."
Ludln dlaa eed.
About . the · only thing . the
plaintiff
and defense agree upon
"He'l a tie slow," Ludln said
.
was
that
the photo session for .
of Smo , who Is 18. "He's old.
People
magazineIn which both :
He'• ot a ver'y frisky pat.
Tbe 'a been no prior Incident of Sikorski and Smokey appeared I
- was In teres tlng.
~y ll:lnd inyolv!n, ageress!ve

'

.,

champion

AND IT'S A GREAT TIME
TO SAVE THIS WEEK
.
AT....

4

Daily Number
.414
Pick 4
6177

Page3

Showers likely tonight.
LOw In mid 50s. Wednesday
showers, scattered thun·

derslorms. '

ELBERFELDS!

•

•

•

at

e
Vot.38, No.232

enttrie
I Section. 10 Paget 26 Centa
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. April 5, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

•

Liabllity msurance coverage councll topic
By NANCY YOACIIAM
Senllnel Staff Writer
Although Pomeroy V!llagew!ll
pay the same premium for
!lability Insurance for the pollee
department, the coverage Is
being cut by half, according to
Information presented In Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy
V!llage CounciL
Two years ago, the cost for $1
million liability coverage for the
pollee department went from
$1,600 per year to $3,918 per year,
according to Jane Walton, vii·

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!age clerk-treasurer. The pre·
mlum tlten remained the same.
This year, the $3,918 premium
will stlll be In effect; but starting
later this month, the coverage
will only be $500,000.
Coverage for the pollee department Is provided by Brogan·
Warner Insurance, Pomeroy. No
reason for the coverage decrease
was given by the company, ,
Walton said.
In anticipation of rate In·
creases for medical Insurance
coverage for village employees,

Councilman John Anderson sug·
gested that Walton begin Invest!·
gating other Insurance programs
which might provide the same
coverage lor less premium.
Walton said one area Insurance
agency had already contacted
her about providing coverage for
the village at a lower price than Is
now being paid. Anderson also
suggested checking Into Health
Maintenance Qrganlzatio·ns
(HMO) , before the village's June
1 !nsuranct renewal date.
Council also discussed repair·

lng the floor In the gymnasium of and Installing tile before making
the village hall . Anderson re· a final decision on the gym floor .
ported that concrete prices are
Baronlck said It would be good .
down right not, and that for to have the three new upstairs
apprOximately $700, a three-Inch offices In the village hall rented
cap of concrete could be poured so that rent money could be
over the existing floor, finished applied to the downstairs lm·
off to a •mooth surface, and then . provements. The offices were
left until the vlllage can afford to finished during the w.Inter
have tile Installed.
months and are now ready for
Counc!lmembers Betty Baron- occupanc:r.
ick and Larry Wehrung said they
It was reported by Councilman
w~uld like to have estimates on
Bryan Shank that the new tr1,1ck
leveling the floor In the hallway for Pomeroy Volunteer Fire

$25900
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COVERING
Quality ArmlltnH!g and
Congoleum vinyl floor
covering. 12 ft. width.
Large auortmant of pat·
tems and color~.

SALE $5 45

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15 CU. FT.

CHEST FREEZER

$39900

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State education 11nd law enforcemen! officials Tuesday unveiled
a new program to teach elemen·
tary school pupils how to say
"no" to drugs and alcohol.
"The only way we're going to
stem the tide of drugs Is to start
with the kids who aren't on drugs
yet ," said Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze Jr. In outlln·
lng the Drug Abuse Resistance
Education (DARE) program to
the media. •
Under the program, wl\lch was
Initiated In Los Angeles In 1983,
uniformed pollee offt~rs are
trained to go Into the classroom
and teach young people about

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MOUNDSVILLE, ''w. Va.
(UP!) - Authorities In three
states searched Monday for
three murderers who hammered
. a hole In a briCK wall and then
used bolt-cutters to cut thtough a
fence In a ."well·planned" escape
from the West VIrginia
Penitentiary.
Authorities said the convicts
are b()Ueved arm~ and. should
be considered dangerous.
Corrections officials said they
believed the !mnates had help on
the outside and that It was
possible they also had Inside
assistance. The officials added
that the layout of the 123-year-old
prison was a factor In the escape.
"The problem Is the way this
place is laid out. It's the physical
plant Itself. We simply can't

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"Because our cells are below
standards, we cannot keep them
locked up for long periods of
time. That's court orders," Do·
~ drill said .
Pollee using ti·acklng dogs
discovered Monday morning that
the inmates walked about hall a
block from the prison before
being picked up by a waiting car.
" It obviously was well·
planned," Dodrill said. "We've
got to assume that plans also
were made for the outside once
they got out."
Corrections officials also were
trying to determine If the In·
mates received Inside help, since
the escape went so smoothly,
said Dodrill.
"We're certainly not overlookContinued on page 10

Arizona governor impeached

Electric

$78900

watch every nook and cranny In
this place," said West Virginia
Corrections Commlssoner A. v.
Dodrill .
All three Inmates ·- Tommie
Mollohan, 46, of Boone County,
Bobby Stacy, 37, of Columbus,
Ohio; and David Williams, 29, of
McDowell County - were servlng life sentences without parole
at the prison.
The ' three had been among
several inmates out of their cells
during a court·.Ordered recrea·
tlon period. Tney were disco·
vered missing at 10:15 p.m.
Sunday after prison officials
performed a routine headcount,
Dodrill said.
Conditions In the prison were
declared unconstitutional In 1983
by the state Supreme Court.

Direct-Drive

.,

Washer

Large Loatl
Capacity

PHOENIX (UP!) -Gov .Evan
Mecham was convlcted_Monday
by the Arizona Senate of obstructing justice and misusing
state !unds, becoming the sev·
enth U.S. governor removed
from office in an Impeachment
trial and the first In 59 years.
The Senate · then decided
against barring Mecham from
state ottlce for life, but It was not
clear whether that meant hewould be allowed to run In a May
17 recall election forced by
opponents who organized hi
anger over what they said was
Mecham's Insensitivity to
blacks, gays, Jews and other
minorities.
"Well, they don't like my
politics, so we tlnlshed a political
trial. It's as simple as that,"
Mecham said with a smile as lie
left the Senate building to the
cheers
of supporters.
1
1 Asked ff he would run In the
I recall election, Mecham Hid,
] "We'll hold all of our options
1open." The attorney general's
1 office said legal research was
i needed to determine Mecham's
status for the May election.
Mecham, 63, a tint-term Re-I publican who also faces a crlml:
nallndlctment, was convicted on
1
a 21·9 vote by the GOP-controlled
1 state Senate on charges he
obstructed jus_tlce by blocking .a
state Investigation of an alleged
death threat by one of biB aides
against another.
The Senate, by a 26-4 vote, then
convicted Mecham of Illegally

I

•Eay-

1

i

'

loaning $80,000 In state money - . cham with concealing a $350,000
raised at his Inaugural ball and campaign loan was dropped last
·then deposited In his protocol .week to avoid the posslb!llty of
fund - to his financially atltng prejudicing the governor's crlmi·
automobile dealership.
nal trial, which Is scheduled to
The votes automatically· re· begin April 21, on felony charges
moved Mecham just 15 months of fraud and perjury stemming
a.fter he took ott!ce and elevated from the loan.
Rose Morford, the Democratic
State officials said the recall
secretary of state, to the gover· election would proceed as sche·
nor's chair. Mofford had been duled. Six people flied nominal· ·
acting governor since the House !ng petitions to get on the ballot
of Representatives voted to lm· with Mecham. However, legal
peach Mecham Feb. 5.
questions have been raised about
MQJtord said the end of the Moftord's candidacy, the result
five-month trial . and the lm· ot·a draft, and Mecham's ellglbll·
peachment conviction meant lty was In 11mbo.
The recall was forced by the
"the end of some difficult times
In Arizona."
Continued on page 10,
"As we work together to bind
the wounds, let's clear our hearts
of suspicion and hatred," she
said. "Let us go forward together
as Arizonans .... I did not ask for
this burden, but I do not shirk
from the job before me. With
God'S' help, I ;will not let you
down."
The vote on whether Mecham
should be permanently dlaquall·
fled from holding public office
failed to gain the two-thirds
majority required.
Seventeen senators favored
the "dracula clause" and 13 -10
Republicans and three Demo·
crats - voted against II.
Mecham's press aide, Nonnan
Martin, said the governor was
"surprised, but pleased" that the
~enators did not bar him from
office for life.
·
A third article charging Me·
GOV. EVAN MECJLUI
.J

self-esteem, decision making,
communication skills and positive alternatives to drug abuse.
The program focuses on fifth
and sixth graders, but curricula
are available for kindergarten
through fourth grades and for
seventh and eighth grades .
The young people are taught to
recognize and resist subtle pressures of their peers to experl·
men t with a !coho! and marl·
juana. labeled as "gateway
drugs" by Sgt. Don Van Velzerof
the Los Angeles Pollee
Department.
The program has already been
tried In 35 states and 500 clUes,

Including Medina and Lake
County, Ohio.
. The Ohio Department of Edu·
cation and Ohio Association of
Chiefs of Pollee are cooperating
on a statewide program.
"We feel very strongly that
Project DARE will make a
difference, " said Irene Bandy,
assistant state superintendent of
public Instruction.
The Depar!ment of Education
has allocated $50,000 in federal
antl·drug funds to the Assocla·
tlon of Chiefs of Pollee. Celebrezze's office added $40,000 to a
$401000 federal gra nt for the
program.

Con8ider lJlockade. against Panama

.

0

.YOU'LL SAVE MORE AT ....

MICROWAVE OVEN

WIUlams. All are serving life ter018 without
m'ercy lor llrsl degree murdel'. Stacy was
convlcte4 of the 1982 killing of a Huntington,
W.Va., pollee olllcer, Paul Harmon. (UPI)

STILL A,f LARGJ!; -,._ Three West VIrginia
Penitentiary Inmates eseaped Sunday from the
!ac!llty at Moundsville. They are, !rom left,
Bobby Dean Stacy, Toml Lee Mollohan and David

Department Is now · a't D!l's
Mountaineer Company In Ra·
venswood, W.Va . where finishing
details are being Installed. Shank
said the truck should be In
Pomeroy later this week.
Finally, Mayor Richard Seyler
a nd Councilman Anderson a re to
meet toda y (Tuesday ) with Ohio
En vlronmen ta I Pro tec tion
Agency authorities In Logan . The
compliance schedule for updat·
lng Pomeroy's sewage system
will be discussed.

State unveils ~ew program
in fight against drug abuse

$39900

Gunman opens fire
·on ex-wife~s family

Cat goes to cotirt·

Ohio Lotte..V

'NCAA

IT'S SPRING

powder from under his sofa.
prosecutors say.
Zaccaro's lawyer, Charles
Tetzlaff, claimed the undercover
buy was an Illegal search because Manning did not have a
warrant. He unsuccessfully
. argued that the evidence from
the visit should be thrown out.
Tetzlaff did get a cocaine
possession charge dismissed
March . 23 by arguing that ·a
warrant to search Zaccaro's
apartment did not cover his car,
where pollee said they found 8
grams of cocaine, about $1.600 In
cash and drug transaction
records.
Prosecutors are appealing the
ruling and plan a second ttlal If
the charge Is reinstated.
.
Tetzlaff claimed Zaccaro was
unfairly singled out for prosecutlon because of the celebrity
status of his mother. a former
congresswoman who shared the
1984 Democratic ticket with
presidential nominee Walter
Mondale. McCaffrey ruled Tetz·
,!aft cannot make that argument
before the jury.
Zaccaro has said he left Mid·
dlebury during hls senior year
because he was told he would
have faced an Internal hearing on
the drug allegations.
In February 1985, Johp Zaccaro Sr. pleaded guilty to schem·
ing to defraud in a real estate
deal and was sentenced to 150
hours of community service. He
was subsequently Indicted and
acquitted on charges of soliciting
· a bribe from a company trying to
get a cable TV contract.

EDNEYVILLE, N.C. (UP!) - · gunfire, nonetheless drove away
-A gunman opend fire on and was stopped for speeding a
mourners gathered at a country . short time later by Hendersonchurch for the Easter Sunday ville pollee.
When Investigators arrived at
"" funeral of his ex,w!fe's grand·
mother, kUling three and wound· the church, they found Bowles
lng three others as they fled, and the Owensby&amp; dead In the
authorities said.
church parking lot with 25 to 30
Henderson County Sheriff's witnesses gathered nearby. ·
Capt. Tom Hatchett said Michael
Pollee took the three survivors
Leslie Rainey, 40, was charged to Pardee Hospital in Henderson·
with three counts of first-degree ville, where Andrea Rainey was
murder and -three counts of admitted In stable condition.
assault with a deadly weail\&gt;n
Johnston and her daughter
with Intent to kill, Inflicting were transferred to Memorial
serious Injury.
Mission Hospital In Asheville,
"We've got a mess, we've got a where a nursing supervisor said
real mess here," said Hatchett. both were In "critical condition
"These people 'Were all related, but stable" late Sunday night.
.or I should say formerly re.lated.
The six were arriving for the
One of the wounded females was funeral of Andrea Rainey's
his ex(·wlfe) ."
'
grandmother, Effie Justice, Hat·
Authorities sa _ld Ra~y, chett said. •
armed with "at least one nd·
''The funeral was just siartlng,
gun and one shotgun," b an or just getting ready to begin.
firing as the six victims arrl ed The family was the last to
at the Mountain Home Baptist arrive," said Hatchett. "He
Church about 3 p.m. Rainey was confronted them as they drove
still standing In the church Into the parking lot.
•parking lot when sheriff's de tee·
"As the gunfire erupted the
tives arrived 30 minutes later.
women- stlllln tile vehicle when
Killed In the bloody assault was he started shooting - took off
Rainey's former father-In-law, and one of the wounded females
Wll1ord Owensby, 61; his former was driving the car when they
mother-in-law·. Ponelle were stopped."
OWensby, 60, and Cha.rles Scott
Hatchett said the rampage
Bowles, 24; whose relationship to apparenlly stemmed from a
the family was unclear.
longstanding property dispute
Wounded In the attack were Involving the gunman and the
Rainey's ex·wlfe, Andrea Ral· victims, .a n of whom were
ney. 40, now of Kennesaw, Ga.;
"related In one way or another."
her sister, Sheila Johnston, 30;
"Apparently It Is a domestic
and Johnston's ll·year·old situation that's been going on for
daughter Wendy.
some time and It got out ot hand
The six victims had just today," he said. "The best we're
arrived at the church and were able to determine Is It's a dispute
getting out of their vehicle when over some property or. property
the shOOting began. Sheila John· lines going on for some period of
stan, critically Injured by the time."

Kansas

992-2156

.&lt;I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Reagan administration Is considering a near-total economic
blockade against Panama to
escalate pressure for the ouster
of military leader Manuel Antonio Noriega, American officials
said Monday.
The measures, under the International Economic Powers Act,
. would Involve some of the same
punitive measures already used
against Iran, Libya and
Nicaragua.
One official said, "That's the
economic s!loe that hasn't
dropped yet."
•
President Reagan and other
top officials have said the United
States wants Noriega - under
Indictment In the United States
on drug charges - to leave
Panama, where he has near·
dictatorial powers as head of the
military.
''
But Noriega has rejected U.S.
overtures, which have Included
promises the United States would
not pursue his prosecution If he
took refugee In a third country.
The admlnl$tratlon has tried
some economic measures agalnt
Noriega, and is dispatching 1,300
more American troops to Pa·
nama to reinforce security for
the more than 10,000 U.S. citizens
and mtlltary personnel already
there. ·
The Panamanian military
pushed the administration closer
toward declaring the economic
boycott, according to officials In
Washington, when a vehicle of
the Panama Defense Forces
tried to halt a convoy In which the
U.S. ambassador, Arthur Davis,
was riding Sunday.
"It Is the kind of thing that
directly affects us for practical
and symbolic reasons," one
ottlc!al said. "We take It very,
very seriously."
"The American security
guards are not trained to tool
around," the ottlclal aald, ad·
dll)g, "The Panamanians were
very lucky they didn't get blown
away."
The new economic · pressure
could come In a variety of forms.
As one official described It, "The
president can do just. about
anything he wants to Panaman· .
tan 11sets, Including confiscation ·
ol Panamanian bank accounts,
sblps, aircraft and anything else
he can lay his hands on."
Alao, as In the cases of Iran,
Libya an~ Nlcarjll\ll. the president could Invoke total or partial
trade embargoes.
Under the wording of the act,
the president may act by declar·
ing "a national emergency." He

In California, where Reagan Is
does aoes not neea the approval
vacationing,
White House spa·
of Congress for such action,
kesman
Marlin
Fitzwater said,
although he must consult with
"It's
always
serious
whenever a
key members of both the Senate
U.S.
official
Is
harassed,
but on
and House and keep them ·
the other hand, the episode
advised.
Congress has already laid the resolved Itself pretty quickly
groundwork for Invoking the with no harm to th e
stern measures with a resolution ambassador."
Fitzwater also said the U.S.
approved last week urging action
against the threat posed by ec.onom!c sanctions Imposed so
far " will be significant and
Noriega.
·
The harassment of the ambas· things are only going to get more
sador Sunday was another sign of difficult lor Noriega, and we
the Increasing tension between think that he will leave,"
Noriega and the United States, · But the spokesman added,
which recognizes President Eric "It 's just hard to say how long
Arturo Delvalle as the legitimate that will take."
leader of Panama. Delvalle was
In an Interview published Monforced Into hiding after he tried to
day In The New York Times,
fire Noriega.
State Department spokeswo· Delvalle opposed an y new U.S.
man Phyllis Oakley said, "We economic sanctions because they
consider any threat to the safety could make It more difficult to
of the ambassador to be serious. oust Noriega "and might generAs always, we will take the ate a negative effect towards the
necessary steps to protect United States and might not
provide Immediate effects."
Americans."

Name s~ker ·for
Democrat meeting
State Senator Eugene Bran·
stool will be the featured speaker
at the Meigs County Democratic
Party's Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner, this Saturday, 6 p.m., at
the Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy.
· Branstool, from Licking
County, has been a legislator for
14 years. He was elected to the
House of Representatives In 1974
and went on to serve four
two-year terms.
, In 1982, he was elected to the
Ohio Senate from the 31st Dis·
trlct and holds that seat today.
representing Licking, Hocking,
Fairfield, Perry and part of
Muskingum Counties. He Is presently Senate Minority Whip.
Durlpg his first term In the
Senate, Branstool fought to save
the jobs of 250 coal miners In
Perry County by helping to
persuade Michigan coal users to
postpone a ban on Ohio coal.
Key legislation that Senator
Branstool has been responsible
tor Includes Ohio's enefiY con·
servat!on law; worker access to
medical records held by employ·
ers; creation of agriculture dis·
trl~ts to preserve Ohio farm
land; the public employees'
collective bargaining law; the
hazardous waste law and In·
creased penalties !or fUing fraud·
ulent health Insurance claims.

Henry Hunter, local party
chairman, reports that State
Senator Jan Michael Long and
State Representative Jolynn &amp;$:·
ter wlli' also be on ha nd for the
dinner, along with lOth Congres·
slo'nal Dis trict and local
candidates.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m .
with the program at 7 p.m .
Tickets are $7 each and may be
purchased from an y Democratic
Committee person or at the door .

·'

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