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                  <text>The Sunday Times-~entinel
76

·Auto Parts

78

&amp; Accessories
IUDO~TTrensmlssians : U1&amp;d &amp;
Rilllulh. All typn torque conVer-

ttfs • trantf..- c.-es. Engine
Ol;llrhtul kit1. Allison Tran•mt•lkNI P1rt1 II CVC Joint•. Gua - .
rtl'ltltd, will deliver. cash &amp;
c•ry. or lnsr.n Cell 814 -379 -

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Camping
Equipment

81

Lot for S1la- 40JI100 camping
lot, in c~mpgrour"ld on Aaccoon
Creek . Ph . 614· ""6·1294.

Home
ImprovementS

All typH C.tJ*Iftr • concrete

Home
Improvements ·

Work:

ln~.,ior,•

exterior, remo·

deling, ptintlng, roofing, fret
eatimates. Ctll 114-.Ue-&amp;174.
Prof•tional wellpeper inltllli·

79 Motors Homes

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnGCJ~~dltionel lifetimt QUirin·

&amp; Campers

2220 0&lt; 1· 304·175-676e.

81

Serv1ce s

tion .Cell Randy Ph. 6U-U6·
6260 or 4-'8·3131 or 446 2200.

tee. Local ref•tnces turnithed. , - - - - - - - - Free ntimatee. C.ll cotlect
1-114-237-0488, diV or night.

213 Chf'lty engine. Good. One
C4 Ford tren1mlnion 1nd one ' 1987 Travelmuter by Coach3&amp;0 GM :, tran~misalon . C1ll men . 26tt., 7,000 org. mile1 1
liMe ntnov, loaded. Call 614 -258 1_1 '-992· 2&amp;e6 .
1267.
Truck Topper for Ford R~~nger
long bfd. Four 14" Outlaw
Chrctmt WhMis , new, for Chevy 19'76 Dodge RoCkwood M ini
Mot or Home. 47 ,000 mila~ .
8 -10. 304-676-1070.
nooo. Call 614 - 949- ~128.

R o ·g e r· •

B·• 1 e ·m en t

Wtttrproollng.

SWEEPER an_d Iewing machine
reptlr, perta. end suppli•. Pick
up tnd dtlivt'V. Davia Vacuum
Cl .. nar, one half mile up
Georg" Creetc Rd. Call 614 -

446· 0294.

LAwn Mowing Churches. Reti·
dentlal.tnd Buslnett. By hour or
by the job. In Gallipolis and

11mounding areas. Ph. 614367-0634 .
RON'S Television Service .
H01.1M c1ll1 on RCA, Quazar.
GE . Specialing in ZBflhh. Call
304 -676 -2398 or 814 -4462464.
•

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Ohio Valley Bank
Company. 420 Third Avo·
nut, Gallipolis:'" Ohio offers

81

Home
Improvements

Fttty Tree Trimming, stump
rtmOYIII . Call304-171 -1331 ,
RINOLES'S SERVICE. tllpt rienced carpanter. eleculcJan.
meson, pein1er, roofing {Including hot tar application) 304676-2098 Of 676-7147 .
.
Rotery or teble tool drilling .
Mon wells completed nmtdfV.
Pump tales ,end service. 304-

85

.

Dillard Wilier Service: PooWs,
Cistllrns; Weltt. DeiNery Anylime. Cell 1514-448 -7404-No
Sunday calls.

Formerly Ken Wheaton 's now
John'• Water Service. 1 ,000 to
· 2.000 gal service. 304 -576-

614 -446-3438. Open dailv 9 fo
4: 30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.
...

utimatea.

AL record

PICK-4
0124

Daily Numht•r ·
-· 004

- Page_4 ·

Mowrey 's Upholstering serviJ:tg
-tri countyar11a :i!2 years. The belt
in fumiture upholstering . Cl{ll
304 - 675 -4154 for free ·

Louo
33-I 6-25-14-9-22

or

promises in Miting.

Home 12x66

at
·
. y

.,
Vol.36. No.244
Copyrighted 1987

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

· Clear tonight with a low
near 55. Mosfly sunny Tuesday with a high hetween HO and
85. The prohahlllty of precipitation Is near zero through
Tuesday.

•

ent1ne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 20, 1987

1 Section , 10 Pages
25 Cenl s
A Mul_
t imedia Inc. Newspaper

TheCENTURY2rActionWanan~~
When you're ready to sell your home, get
the CENTURY 21 Action Warranty-a
personal promise of service that tells youin writing-the steps we'll take to help
sell. your home.

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

1971 Marietta Mobil e

•

We put our

St1rks Tree and lawn Service.
Greener ..wnsthlt i• Weed and
Pes1 Free. liquid or grenduler
application -tree and shrub too.
Stump removal anywhere without lewn dem!l9'· For complele

Home 12x66

Gallipolil. Ohio

Phone 614-446·3888 or 614·
446-4417

83

Aprll20 . 1987.at3:00P M.

.Call today for details.
446-6610
Ontu~

Excavating

All property will be sold to

the hlghell bidder "as is"

Cultom garden tilling, profel·
slonal equipment. profesllon ..
resuht. Ph. 614 -367 -0567.

without •nv eJipreaaed or
lmplltd wlrranty. Arrange·
mentt to see the mobile
homea can be made by cont.cting the Con1umer loan

84

Dtponment.
The Ohio Vallay Bonk Com·
pany mervet the right to accept "' reject any end ell bids.

Electrical

~21

&amp; Refrigeration
Resider'tial or commercial wir ing'. New aerv~ce or repain.
Llcented electrician . e.nmate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304676-1786. .

and to wrthdraw any or all
property from sale prior to

confifmltion.
AprM 12, 16, 19

85

86 Climbing plants
87 Danish island
88 Roman bronze

90 - Lanka(Ceylon)

91 " The Man Thai
Never - "

92 Part of circle
93 "The Lion in - "
96 Certain
99 Observes
101 Flngerless glove
104 Brick-carrying
device

105
107
108
t09

Hearing organ
Mourntul
Seed cont ainer
Succor

110 Mr. Gershwin

111
112
114
1t6
117

" - Llle to Livo"
lnlerlwlne
Reaps
- Lollobrig lda
Association:
abbr.
118 Arllliclal
language
120 Melabollc
disease

122
123
124
125

Sn Is li s symbol
- and pepper
At home
Above

171 Wear away
172 Uncanny
173 Score
175 Rational
176 Lock ol hair
177 Falls In drops
178 God ot love

73
75
76
79
81
84
87
89
92
93
94
95
97
98
99
tOO

DOWN
1 Gaseous
'-,

hydrocarbon
2 Merrymaking
3 Unlocks:
poe11c
4 Youngster

5 Either
6 Tidy
7 Mother
8 Arabian garment

9 Disprove
10 Oregon 's capital
11 In favor ol
12 Old pronoun
13 Equal
14 Negallve prellx
15 Sai lor: colloq .
16 Egyptian goddess
17 Public
storehouse

131 Former Russian
rulers

133 Mr. Patino

35 French article

127 Before noon

129 Journeys

Locate
Unrullled
Run easily
Hurl
Saucy
Poured
Fuel

124
125
126
128

136
137
139
140

3 7 Commonplace
statement s:

141 Inquire

142 Printer' s measure
143 Anger
145 Permit
147 VIsionary
151 Plunge
152 Belore
153 High
155 Gratuity
157 Send lorth
158 Ship channel
159 Mix
160 Revised : abbr.
161 Des Moines Is
lis cap .
163 Nobleman
165 Jet lorth
167 Diphthong
168 Sliver symbol
169 Surgical thread

1986 Buick Park Avenue
List new for over $19,000
Choose from 3 Factory
Program Cars.

Sin
Scold
Disturbance
Is ill
Twist
Roman 51
Clo1hlng
Paddle
Bound
District ol

$14 ,900

WERE
JUST ANNOUNCED
FACTO.RY SPONSORED
$
.
'REBATE ................................. 1200

NOW ONLY

Kind
Joins
Marches
- de mer

slang
40 Ale 10 lose
weight
42 Baker's products
43 Grin and - II
45 Uses a pencil
Up
48 Rear of ship
52 "- Last
Frontier "

56 Twists
1oge1her
58 " - Farly Dallas"
59 Sum
60 Macaws
62 Foreigner
63 Essenses
65 Rivor In llaly
66 Places ol combat
67 Choice
68 Tibetan gazelle
69 Catch: colloq .
71 Oog Star

$13,700

1986 Pontiac Sunbird 4 Dr.
3 To Choose From

132 More
precrlpltlous
133 Snake
134 Continued S1ories
135 Power
138 Obtain
141 River Island
144 Spanish article
146 Country ol Asia
148 Anglo-Saxon

Still Under Factory Warranty with
·
Low Miles.

WAS
DISCOUNT -

s7995
s595

NOW ONLY$]

1987 Pontiac Sunbird
NEW
Automatic, Air Cond, AM-FM,
etc.

$9450
AFTER REBATE

1986 Buick Somersets
7 IN STOCK

Some of the "Best Buys in the
Ohio Valley". Good colors, low
miles, popular options.

400

$8988

slaves

149 ·· - the World
Turns"
150 Pondered
151 Ap'polntments
152 Latin conjunction
154 King of beasts
156 Young salmon
158 Clutch
159 Scorch
162 Sue - Langdon
164 Fish eggs
166 Swiss canton
167 Devoured
170 Tantalum symbol
174 Beholdl

·-

FACTORY LIST Sl0,311
NOW ONLY

Sorry-temporarily sold out of America's #1 Van
Conversion-Mark Ill-more coming next week.

..'
1

-

senger, ~2,000 miles. This hard to find unit shows
excellent care ...............................................................
II

1984 Pontiac Trans Am with T-tops.Just

traded this week. Completely loaded ...................... .
Ill

1984 Buick Century St. Wagon

We solq it new. Absolutely Immaculate ....................

SAVE$
•

!

v 1983 Chrysl'er LeBaron, local one owner,

low miles, shows TLC, "good Family Car' ................ . $.5695 ~

Sniith Buick-Pontiac
1911 EASTERN AVE, GALLIPOLIS, OH.

@ 1N7 U1111..r F..... Syndicate

446-2282

"Have a Happy Easter with Your Family"
\

By PAM MURPHY
United Press International
Americans rose with the sun 10.
worship at r.'aster s!'rvices from
the Lincoln Memorial to the
Hollywood Bowl and dell~hf ed in
egg hunts, sky-diving bunniPs
and a show of bonnets lo inspire
son net s In New York's Fifth
Avenu e parade. •·
In San Francisco. speci~l pray·
ers were read Sunday for AIDS
,·lrllms at Most Holy Redeemrr
· Catholic Church, where I he Rev .
.John McGarran spok~ about his
work mlnlslerin)l: to pallenl s
suffering from acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome In an adja·
cent hospice.
" I speak of God 's love lo
family, friends and 10 peoplr who
arc dyln)l:." said McGarran .
"There's a special kind or lovt&gt;
among us we mighl 'never ha v&lt;'
bellrved pos sible.··
In Detroit. a 7-year-old girl's
appearance at Sunday school
spared her from a fire I hal swrpl

throu~h her lamlly's home. Crys·
Ia I Lawson got up on her own. put
on ~ new pink dress and l eft the
house about 8 a.m . lo attend the
class. missing lhe bta 7.~ that
er upted an hour later and seriously injured her falhcr ,
mother and younger brother.
President Rea)l:an and his wile
Nancy anende!l ·s-ervlres at •th·e
Firsl Presbyterian Church In
Santa Barba ra, Calif., greeted by
applause as they entered and left
1h&lt;: church .

Cardinal John O'Connor held
Easter Mass -al St. Patrick's
Cathedral In New York for 6.000
worshipers. and a celebration
dubbed a sunrise service "In the
clouds" look place atop the
Empire Slate Building's 86th·
floor obsrrvalory.
Rain clouds gave way losun for
thr traditional Eas1er Parade In
the Big' Apple. where up to 10,000
people strolled up and down Filth
Avenu~ showing off 1he bonnets

and other spring finery thai
moved Irving Berlin to consider
wrlt!n!( a sonnet In 1he song
"Easter Parad(•."
Dressed as a clown. Robert
Richard Finne, 48, of New York.
balanced a 50-pound pink ferris
wheel filled with Easier eggs on
his head. sweat trickling down
Ills Wlllte-palnte(l !nee.
Fran Sorrow of Dallas and her
five grown children, all ouffllt cd
In bunn)· costumes, paraded
down I he avenue packed together
In a giant cardboard lop h'at.
Nearly 15,000 worshipers filled
lhe Hollywood· Bowl In Los
Angeles for Its 67th Annual
Easter Sunrise Se'r vlre, broad·
cast by satellite lo 37 rou nlrles.
Actor Roben Stack read from
thr Bible, Rhogda Fleming rt&gt;ad
a poem and Rober! Guillaume
sang "I Believe. " Hundreds of
white doves were rcle"sed afler
Shirley Jones led children
dresst&gt;d In cos tu'mes represenl ·

Middleport Fire Depaftmcnt.ln hack ar~ Michael
Dorst, who found a $23 gold elfg; Gary Lct•llcn•e,
who found a $25 gold and a $5 hronz~ ••gg; Bohby
.Johnson, a $25 gold; Pet er Cottontail, who was
Ju•t th~n· lo havr a good tlmt&gt;; Ko•nny Currcnct•,
who lound a $10 sllvt•r &lt;&gt;gg; Tara Grut·s~r. a $3
bronze; Zack Meadows, ll $10 sllvrr; and Preston
Cook, a $5 hronze. Not pldurrd t. $10 sllv.r ''KK
winner ,Jamie Walters.

.

•

·
•
:
•
:

ing lh~ nations or the world In
singing "Let Th~re Be Peace On
E~rlh . "

Severa l thousand people ga l herrd for sunrise services on 1he
steps of I he Lincoln Memorial In
Wa shington and across the Po·
lomar River al lhe lwo ,Jima
Memorial In Arllnl(lon, Va .,
where lht&gt;
ol"lh{' resur_. •
lion of Jes us Christ was retold.
embellished lly music an!llnlerprellve dance .
Against lhP splrll of peace
Integra l to Easter, a 20- y~ar - old
h'adlllon among street gangs
drew abou1 fi ,OO(J people - lo
downtown Chicago for an Easier
Day brawl thaf resulted In .10
arrests, primar ily for disorderly
conduct.
In Georgi~. some 25. 000 peopll'
!locke(! 10 thr G~rrlson family
home In Banks County for the
28th ~nnual F.asler egg hunt.
recognized as the world 's la rgesl
by lhe Gulnnt'ss Boo k of Wor ld
Records.

.nr,

Swollen Va. waterways begin to recede

•

1980 GMC Suburban,4wheeldrive,8pas-

With lots of people on hand to searc h lor the
hrl~htly colored t·~gs. the hunt Is over in a mah••r
of minutes. But It's fun while It h.-Is.

WINNERS - Some 800 pla.•tlc ~ggs contal nlng
slips lor prizes lrom ar•a businesses were hidden
In the grass of Hartinger Park for Sunday's
annual Easter t•gg hunt sponsored by MiddleportPomeroy Rotary. These lucky youngNiers found
the eggs coutalnlng tht~ special prizes which wert•
given away. In front from left to rlghl arr
Matthew Caldwell and Eddlt• McKinnt•y with
Ea.•ter ha.•kcts which werr provided hy thr

America rises to joip. Easter~· celebration

With $1200 Factory Sponsored Rebates on
Buick Park Avenue for Two Weeks Only.

marks

36 Walstcoa1

SE/lRCHJNG THROUGH THE CROWD Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Cl uh's annual
Easter egg hunt al.ways attracts a large crowd.

The "Good Stuff is on Sale!

130 Punctuation

134 Selenium symbol

Sodium symbol
Tattered cloth
Born
Flap

At Smith Buick-Pontiac

Melted
On behall ol
Also
"- Elmo's Fire"
Roman gods
S1ill
Mr. Garfunkel
Search for
Verdi opera
Which person?
The act of: suffix
Tolled
Knock
Revises
Squandered·
Dawn goddess

Germany

18
19
23
26
29
32
33

652 SECOND AVENUE

Geneial Hauling

10 1 Large amount

102
103
106
109
113
115
116
119
121
123

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

J ,J. Water Service. Swimming
pools. cistern• &amp; walla. Call
614·246-92e6.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

61 Teutonic deity
82 Capllal ol
Canada
64 Deep sleep
66 Gels up
86 Alrlcan
antelope
70 Sends lorlh
72 Decay
73 Barter
74 Newt
77 Grain
78 Tooth doclor
80 Sticks to
82 Game at cards
83 Competently
85 Lac:k of
sufficiency

cit.,, Oh. &amp;14-256-1470. eve.

Ohio Lottery

Estate

Homo 14x50

60 Oriental nurse

Hou1tt coal , limestone, and
gravel. Delhte'red 1 ton and up.
Jim Laniet'. 304-'875 -1247 or
675 -7397.

224e.

baumenlt - any aize job. Senior
Citizen Dl1eount. Rick Gerfield .
614-985-4464 .

1971 Windsor Mobil e

1 Nucleus ol the
atom
7 Deface
10 "The - Who
Loved Me"
13 Shows
compassion
19 Make ready
20 Actor Vlgoda
21 Metric measure
22 Rubber band
24 Manlleated
affection
25 Laotian mo~ey
27 Hebrew month
28 Tony - Blanco
29 Hebrew letter
30 Lasso
31 Simians
32 Traffic sign
3.\ Rubber tree
36 Part of speech
38 Twirled
39 White House
nickname
40 Delirium
tremens: abbr.
41 FoUows August
44 Concerning
48 Consume
47 StyliSh
48 Ventilate
49 Capuchin monkey
50 N.Y. time
51 Morsel
53 Tellurium symbol
54 Prellx ol down
55 Pedal
extremities
57 Decade
59 Make lace

R S. M C1.1Uom Co1,1che1 and
. Raupholstery, St. Rt. 7 , Cr01,in

2~19 .

Concrete finish. parking lots,

1986 Redman Mobile

ACIID88

Watterson 's Water Hauling.
ruaonable rates, immediate
2, 000 gallon delivery , eiJterna,
pools, well. ate. cell 304-6 76 -

·Milwaukee
establishes

896-3802

82

ptrty lhlll be told by aaalod
bid at the main office of Ohio
Vtllty Bank on Monday,

87

General fiaulfiliJ

-----~

2842 Or 676-2903.

The aforementioned pro -

85

General Hauling

trennd lawn carecall304-576-

for' sale the following:-

19137

-...

.'

RICHMOND , Va . iUPii Tralllc began movi ng more
normally . throu)l:h a llood ·
stricken sect ion of down1own
Rl rhmond today bu 1elf;· workers
sf Ill raced a ma ssive cleanup job.
Pari of Main StrE'et through
low -lying Shock()(' Bottom In
downtown Richmond area reo·
pened by 7:.~0 a.m . and clly
officials hoped to reopen a bridge
that was closed because or high
watrr ovrr thr w~kend.
Thedowntowncxlf ramps from
Interstate 95 north and- south .
• rPOpened In t lme for commuters ,
said a spokesman lor fhe
Richmond -Petersburg Turnpike.
"Thl' rlfy Is doing a good job of
clean in)( lhlngs up." said David
Cosby. the turnpike spokesman.
"Thl'y·re right on fop of If."
Floodwater had receded from
mosf streets but many remained
blocked by mud , slit and d!'brls, a
spokesman sai d. National
Guardsmen called to !he scene to
HelP. and to guard against looting
left fhe city Sunday .
The James crested early Sun day at 24.91ee1 - almosl 16 feel
over flood stagr - before II
began receding .
No one was killed or Injured In
the second flood to )til Rrchmond
In 17 months and au1h0rlt1es kepr'
curiosity seekl'rs away from thl'
swirling waters produced by
snow mellln!( In VIrginia's west ·
ern mountains and a week of
heavy rain.
Tom Carr. of the- city emer·
gency operallons olffce, sald 500
workers spent Easter Sunday
clearing debris from streets.
'"They're doing as much as •
they t'an right now with what's
gone done already," Carr said.
"They have lire hoses that
they're using lor a washdown. •·
Thl' National Weather Service
said the river: had dro~;~ped 1o

17.26 fel'l by 8 a.m. Ieday, hrlplng
arcrlerale I he cleanup .
Assessmen t crews surveyed
the flood damag!' Sunday . Preelse estimates were not "''aliable
but William Costin, of the emer gency operations office, said
damages probably will not ap·
proach the$100 million caused by
the 198!i Election Day flood .
City Manager Roberl Bobb
sa id a key s!'wer pumping station
near the low-lying Shockoe Bot ·
lorn was kepi open 1hrough the
flood , minimizing damage In the
former warehouse dlstrlrf now
dolled wllh trendy renovation
projPCtS.
The pumping station usually
closes when the water tops 21

feel' but sa ndbags were placcd
around the facility and steel
plates were . welded over the
doors.
Bobb sa ld kE'epjng 1he pumping
slallon oprn was crucial to
holding down damages. If lhe
plant had closed, floodwaters
would have .barked through lhe
sewer sys tem and Inundated a
larger area.
" I think the parties lhat
worked at the pump slallon were
really the her()('s ." he said .
AI Its height, the rain-swollen
r iver was 30 to 100 yards wid er
than no1·mul on both banks
throughout I he city . Pollee sai d
!i!i str&lt;'E'ts wPre closed and
floeded lo depths oflwo fee11oslx

fret.
Somr threatened m erchants
and Wllrchou sc ownrrs sand·
bagged their bu sl nessPs and
slarfcd movi ng Item~ Ia hi gher
ground 4R hours ahead of the
flooding.
.Joe Defazio. whosr ,&lt;; hock&lt;X'
Bol l om restauran t was damaged
by 1he flood. said sandbags kepi
fh~ raging wal crs al bay lor a
while.
"We were beating the flood ·lht'
whole way:· said DeFazio. " We
saw I he wal cr co me up I he gla ss
and WI' were sta nding on dry
~round Inside. Buf I hen th e ll oor
popped and It 1lloed ) won ."
Two people were killed la st
week In flooding upstream .

RGC part of new planning program
RIO GRANDE - The explo·
slve growth In knowledge and
Information, scientific and tech·
nologlcal advances. ahd lhe
desire for an Improved qualify of
life. expanded career options and
financial slablllty have In·
rreased the need lor a college
educallon.
Yet, large numtlers of students
- ·especially those whose parents
did not attend college, members
ofmlnor!fy groups. and economl·
rally . or culfurally dlsadvan·
faged youth - do not perceive
themselves Ia have 1heoppor1un·
lly for continuing their formal
educations tleyond high school.
Research suggests that par·
ents need to be Involved In
planning I heir children's educa·
tlonat an early age II college Is to
be a viable option. They need
Information about the kinds ol
college opportunities available,
academic preparation required.
college costs, financial planning
and ava!lablllty of financial ald.

centers. churches and olher civic
In response lo this need. the
Ohio College Association, of
organizations.
which ~lo Grande College and · A series of public service
Communlly College Is a
announcements. mailings Ia po·
tentlal user groups and direc t
member, has authorized expen·
contact s by fhe colleges and
d!fure of $40,000 to make available to the parents of Oh lo' s.
universities will be used to
450,000 seventh, eighth and ninth . generate Interest In I he program
grade students the nationally·
and publicize Its availability .
acclaimed "Paving the Way "
Coordination or this collabora·
program. Developed by the Natlve college and university elton
will be provided by 1he Ohio
tional lnst!fute lor Independent
Colleges and Unlversltles. lhe
College Association, with the
program consists of a 20-mlnute
support or 1he Association of
videotape presenta lion, an Illuslndependenl Colleges and Unl·
versltles of Ohio. the Inter·
trated parents guide fo college
planning and relurn mailers for
University Council of Ohio and
Information about specific colI he Ohio Technical and Commun·
leges and sources of financial
lly College Association , repres·
ald.
entlng more than 80 public and
The program will be conducted
privati' Institutions of higher
by experienced admissiOns or
education In Ohio.
financial aid olflrers from Ohio's
The project Is endorsed by
public and private collegeli and
Gov. Richard F . Celeste, Board
universities. The presentations
of Regents Chancellor William B .
be available beginning In the Coulter and Superintendent of
fall or 1987 to middle school!jun·
Public Instruction .Franklin B .
lor high PrA groopt. communl!y
Walter.

will

WHAT DID YOU GET! - Melwa and Andrea Ntutzllnrt•IOJJ In
tht• mld~t of Sunday'M annual Middleport-Pomeroy llotary Club
Ea.~t~r Egg Hunl to Hec Ju•t what 1-year-old Androa got In her
pla.•tlc &lt;•ggs. The hunt Willi held a! Hartln~er Park.

Ferry senrice may
resume this week
Hopefull y. Pomeroy's ferry
will resume serv ice by mid-week
wllhoul lurther problem s 10
hlnderr Its opera lion .
Marcia Rodger, wife of ferry
opera1or Darrell ~dgrr, r e·
porfed fhl s mornlnR lhal her
husband's twin -engine boat Is In
dry dork al Marion Shamblin's In
Polnf Pl easa nt where a broken
propeller Is being rcplac&lt;•d. She
said lhe propeller should be
finished by Tuesday, which
means the ferry may be In
operallon by Wednesday.
One of I he boal' stwo propellers
broke la st weekend when II
became entangled In trash and
debri s from fhe r cccnl high
waler. Rodger . then wen I to
Duffy. Ohio, where he leased a
si ngle-engine boat to use In pla ce
ol 11ic larger twin -engine. However , when he lrled lo ao back

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lnlo scrvlt•e wllh the slngl!'·
engine boa I. he found 11 'did nof
have I he power wo•·klng from th&lt;'
sldr or I he ba rgc, nor the
maneuverabllty necessary to
fight I he swift rurrenl on I he Ohio
sidE' or lhl• r iver.
Unable Ia depend on tho leased
boaf, Mrs. Rod~cr lh'cn drove to
Wi sconsin Ia pick up I he rcplacvmenl propeller for the lwln e nt~lne boat.
She sa id her hu sband had
expecw&lt;l 10 have lhl' big boat
bac k loda y and be back In servll·&lt;'
Tuesday. but rt' P.Uirs an'laklnga
lillie longN I han experled .
Even whc•n lhr larger haul Is
back In opNallon. Mrs. Rodg•·r
said her hu sha nd ma y ust• a
smaller boul . whirh hr bt'OURh l
wllh him from lh••lr CIInlon. Iowa
base, Ia asslsl wllh landings on
I he Pomeroy sltk.

EPA chief denies
conflict of interest
COLUMBUS !UP!) -Ohio
E nvironm ental Protecll on
A ge nt'y Director Warr en
Ty ler ma lnta ln s thaf his ser·
vice on I he advisory board of a
firm he r ecommended for an
EPA headquarters design con·
tra ct did not represent a
conlllcl of Interest.
The company, Moody-Nolan
Lid ., working wllh Ihe project
. developer, The Daimler
Group Inc.. designed Ohio
EPA's new $7.8 million head·
quarters In suburban Columbus las.t year. Moody-Nolan
received a $1l7,000 lee.
The Daimler Group, In the
formal proposal submllfed to

Ty ler Ma y:,, l~XIi. s" ld Mood.' .
Nolan would Jx• lh c'a rrhllf•&lt;'l
for the proje~t . Bol h compan Ies are loca to:&gt;d In Co lumbu s.
Tyler rcs lgnt·d lrom Mood)'·
Nolan's ad1·lsory board nlm·
day s later , sta tIng In a let wr 1o
company cxecull vr Cur ti s
Moody thal )te had enjoyed hi s
lime on lhe board but though I
II appropriate to rcsign.
Tyler and o th ~r·s ass()(' laird
with the co nstrucllon proje&lt;·l
confirmed th at Tyler rt'rom·
mended Moody-No lan while
serv.lng on the board. but thry
denied lher e was any
Impropriety .

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~entinel ·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

lpcal Briefs:----,
Gallia -Melgs Community Action Agency will hold Its free
clol hlng day for low-Income persons on Wednesday from '9 a.m .
until noon.
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The agency clothing bank Is located In the old sc hoolhou,;.,
bu i.lding in Ches hire. ·
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· Accident inJures Racine woman
II woman was injured in an at'C'ident Sunday afternoon near

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Rutland. at'cording to th e Ga llla -Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Pat roL
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. Regina Rou sh, 19, Hac ine, was taken to Pleasa nt Valley
Hos pit al a ft er hillin g a utility pole on Ohio 124 , the patrol said .
!Is she was dri vi nr: west , she went off the right side of the road,
th e patrol sa·! d. She 1hen. drove acros s the roa d and ra n off the
lrft sidr, hitt ing 1hr pole.
She was admitted to the hos pita l Sunday afternoon, where she
was repor ted by hospital administration to be In stable
ro ndition .
She was cited for fa llon• to control her vehicle.

EMS units respond to 15 calls
Meigs Count y Emerge ncy Medica l Services reports fift een
ca lls over the Easter weekend; six on Sa turd ay and nine on
Su nd ay.
·
Saturda y at 12:24 a.m., Pomeroy to 606 E. Main Sl. for June
Ha yma n to Holzer Medica l Ce nt er; Rutland at 1: o4 a. m. to
Da nville fo r Charles Stewa rt to Vetrra ns Memoria l Hos pital;
Pomeroy a t 7: ~8 a.m. to Wolf Pe n Road for Iva Johnson to
Holzer Medica l Center; Pomeroy a t 10::17 a.m . tr,a nsported
Geo rge Reltmire and Lee Has k from a motorcycle accident on
Union !I ve nue to Vetera ns Memorial Hospi tal; Tuppers Plains
a t 1:52 p.m. tr~~ tcd bu t did not tra nsport Theodore Sedwick;
Midd leport at 7:o1p.m. 10 Ru tland Stref&gt;t for Helen Sauer who
wa s dead on arriva l.
Su nd ay a t 12:19 a.m. to an aut o accldc•nt on Ohio 124 where
Da ve Wandling and Rebecca Ti ll is refused tre.at ment ;
Middleport at 2:51a .m. to SuperAmcrlca for Connie Steinmerz
to Holzer Medica l Ce nter; Middlepo rt a t 9: J:l a.m. to Hudson
Street for Martha Haggerty lo Veterans Memorial Hospita l;
Midd leport at10: .11 a .m. to Story's Ru n for My rt le FHetoHolzer
MPdlcal Ce nter; Sy racuse a t 12:21 p.m . to Third Street for
Darla La mbert to Holzrr Mc·dical Cent er: Hu t land al 12: 56 p.m.
lra nsportcd Regina Hou sh ami libby Thompson from an auto
aecidt•nl on Ohi o 124 to Pleasa nt Va lley Hos pi tal; Middlcporl at
9: :to p.m. to Fair lanc Drive for Carol Ba ker to Veterans
Mc·m orial Hos pit al: Pomeroy at 10:41 p.m . toR utt crnut flve nue
for Bell y Royd who re fused trea tment; Tuppers Pla ins at 11 :24
p.m. to Ohio 24Kfor Dorsal Miller to Camden -Cla rk Memoria l
Hospil&lt;tl .

Shade River Lodge

to

Medicaid to cover ·
anti-AIDS drug

Area deaths

Free clothing day Wednesday
Karl M. Harder

Karl M. Harder. 80, Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, died Sunday in Pleasa nt Valley Hospital. .
A retired self-employed carpenter and a member of the
Reorganized Latter Day Saints
of Jesus Christ Church, Vales
Mill,he was born June 19,1906, at
Radcliff, a son of the l ~te Herbert
R. and Emma Ethel Fitzpatrick
Harder.
He married Doris Snyder on
May 8, 1929, and she survives,
along with four sons, Ted Harder
of Columbus, Bradley Harder of
Rt. 1, Ewlngton, CletusHarderof
Rutland, and Ter ry Lee Harde r
of Columbus; a daught er, Mrs.
James !Phyllis) Mulholand of
Wilkesville; 14 grandchildren
and 14 great-grandchildren; two
brothers, Worth Harder of Co. Jumbos, and Robert Harder of
Mems, Fla.; and two sisters,
Mrs. Harry tShlrley l Peters of
Wllkesvflfe, and Mrs . Clifton
tMinnlel Spires of Ray .
.
He was preceded In dea th by
three brothers.
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday In the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, VInton, with the Rrv .
Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial
will be in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call al the fune ra l
home fr om 3-5 and 7-9 p.m .
Tuesda y.
Gra nd sons will be pallbea rers.
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Ruhal F. Deem
Rubal F . Deem , 71, 2683
PtrasanJ Drive, Lancaster, died
unex pectedly Saturday at her
home.
Born J uly 20. 1915, she was the
daughter of the late .John and
Bertha Shumway or Keno a nd a
former resident of the Carmel
and Meigs County area for 51
~' ears.

Comment

Monday, April 20, 1987;.

She Is· survived by five sons,
J immy, Racine; Robert, Roger
Junior and Michael , Lancaster;
three daughters, Thelma Mont ·
gomery and Sharlene Gray,
Hocking County; and Carol Willman , Bethal Park, Pa.; two
sisters, Edna Westfall . 'Akron:
Evely n Barringer, Belpre, 24
gra ndchildren, and 10 greatgra nd children.
·
She was preceded in deat h by
her husband, Pearl. and four
brothers, Leland, Eugene, Victor
and Guy Shumway.
Services will be held at Carmel
Chu rch Wednesday, 2 p.m. BurIal will be In the Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Ewing Funeral Home Mond ay
·
and Tuesday, 7-9 p.m.

Wiley . Gallanna ; two brolhers
and sisters-in-la ws, Clifford and
Clara 'Smith, Mason, W.Va .. and
Oliver and .Jean Smith. Scottsdale. Ariz.: a nd a sis ter-In-law ,
Vesta Smith, &amp; aver . Pa .
· ·Rpsides her paren ts she Was
preceded in death bv a sister and
three brothers.
·
Services wi!f be held a t 1 p.m
Wedn esday a t the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home.
The Rev. Thomas Fisher will
officiate and burial will be in the
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home. 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Tuesda y.
Cont ributions mav be made to
the Middleport Presbyterian
Chu rc h in memory of Mrs. Sauer.

Helen R. Saut-r

Young boy dies

Hel.e n Ruth Sa uer, 6.1, of 36
Rutland St., Middleport , died
Sat urda y eve nin g at he r
residence.
Born on Jan . 1.1, 1924, In
Wes tbridge Wat er, Pa., she was
the daughter or William and
Fleda Pearl Workman Smith .
!In active member of th e
Middl e p or t P res b y te rian
Chu rch, she srrved as a deacon
there. For many years she had
charge of the mother-daugh ter
banquet at the church andcaterC'd many loca l weddings .
She was also a member of the
Middleport Ga rden Cl ub.
She is survived by her hu sband, Lew is; two dau ghters and
sons-In-laws, Carolvn and Rick
Collins, Pomeroy; and Lois and
Rill Harkins, Athens: a son.
George SauC'r, ·Virginia Beach;
four gra ndchi ldren, .Amy and
Kelly Satterfield. Pomeroy: Tom
Collin s, Co lumbus, and Paul
Harkins. Rochester . N.Y.
fllso surviving are a sister and
brnlher-in-law , Fleda and Rob

COLUMBUS tUPii - A .'! year-old Columbus boy , who fe)l
Into a waler hole in Licking
County this weekend, has died at
Children's Hospital.
Brent Granpy strayed behind a
barn at his ba by sitter's home
north of Patas kala, said a Lickin g Count y sheriff' s deputy.
West Licking Fire District
parampdl c Mark Holmes said
the boy apparently fell into a pit
that is about 8 feet wide and filled
with water 3-6 feet deep.

Pomeroy, Ohio

~lb

Blm~

~v

PAT WHITEHEAD

AMEMSER of The United Press lnternaUonal, Inland Dall y Press
· Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome They shoold be lrss than llO words
long. All lett ers are subject toed !ling an d rrus1 bP stgned with name, address and
teiEcllhOne number. No un signEd letters will be pi.'blh;hed. Letters should ' be In

good taste, addressing Issues, not IJ:!rsoo al! rtes.

•

Ches ter Cou ncil :12:1. Daugh! N s of Americ&lt;t, will meet
T ucsclay at R p.m . at lh ~ haiL A si lent auctio n wll be held by the
good of tlw ordrr committee. Members are to take cook ! ~
recipes for the nationa l ways and mea ns co mmittee.
l{drPshmPnl s will be s&lt;•rved.

Gruup 2 cancel.~ meet.ing

or lfl Su nd t~y .

Two motorrycli s l ~
tUicl on(' (&gt;rdestrtan Wl'rf' amo n ~

the vict ims.
Vlelims lncluclcd:
Fri&lt;hiy nl~hf
Wauseo n: Steven li lian Hallet t. 2H , S&lt;r uth Mor&lt;'n cl. Mich ..
kl llf'd in a O rli' · C ~ll' &lt;lCr icl('nl on
Ohi o 120 In l" ull on (' unt y.
l'osr hnc lon : I&lt;IIPn 11 . Elck. :t:t,

Cos hoc ton. killed whe n her

Cill'

t•o ll)dt."'\d with twn r nwk ~ on Ohi o

Kiln Coshoc ton Count )·.
Youn gslown : Gr iffith M.
.Jo nes. ~ 2 . Diamond, ki lled in a
three-car ac·c ldPnt on lntcrstlll!'
7ti In Ma honing Coun t)'.
Snlnrdny
Howli ng Gr&lt;·~ n : Gera ld 1..
Plr kcrson, 18. Toledo. kill&lt;'d In a
onC'·ca r ur cidc•nt on Oltlo ti4 In

CLEVELAND ! UP I\ - The
las t Ohio Lotto ,jackpot. mot·e
than $I.I million, wen t un cla imed Saturday ·nigh t. Ohio
Lottery olflclals said Sunday.
The money will be rolled Into
the pool fo r Wednesday's Sup&lt;&gt;r
Lotto drawing, which will cany a
grand prize of at least $7 million .

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Nex t Saturday will see the
beginning or a second weekly
Super Lolto drawing. with a
jackpot of at leas t $5 million.
However, It could be more tha n
$10 mlllton If there ' Is no grand
prize winner Wednesday.
There were 334 Hckets In
Saturday's drilwlng with five of
the numbers correc t. worth $685,
while $46 will go to each of 13,726
tlokets ·with four correct
numbers.
The wlnnlnll numbers were 9,
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South Central Ohio
Clear tonight wltli a low near
55.
Mostly sunny Tuesday · with a
hl~h between 80 and 8.'\.
The probability or preelpitatlon Is near zero ·through
Tuesday.
Winds will be from the south at
five to 15 miles an 'hour tonight .
Ohio Extended ForeciL'!I
Wednellday through Friday
Chance of showers Wednesday. fair 'Thursday and Friday.
Lows will be In the40s. Highs will
be In the 60s Wednesday and
Thursday and In the mid 60s
to low 70s Friday.

IS ~UV'Z

~!'He

TRAILeR~s

'F1 ~ WfKIM;.

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To his credit , President Rea·
jlan has bat tied stoutly for major
redu ction s I~ the domestl:c
budget. even offering to take the
heat all by himself If Congrf&gt;~S
would just give him the neces-·
sary llne·ltem veto. But the
response of the Deomocrats was
only a dry chuckle. There will be
no meanin"ful cuts In the domPs·
tic budget~ while lhey control
Co ngress, a nd II that pusht&gt;s the
nation ever nearer to the economic brink - well. with luck
Reagan may s!lll be around to
lake the blame when lt _goesover
the edge&gt;.
Is there any way disaster ca n
be avoided? In the long run.
probably not.

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Reagan takes charge __J_ac_h:_A_nd_&lt;Jr_.m_n_&amp;_·.l_Ja_le_V_a_n_At_la
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan's handl ers have been
doing th eir best to make him look
like a take-charge chief execu!lve, determined to shake the
Tower Commission' s criticism of
hi s relaxed '" m a nage me nt
style."
The rt'sults have sometim es
been almost laughable, but In one
area overlooked by the Whit e
House Image-makers Reaga n
has been truly presidential, a
take-charge guy dealing one on
one with another presldenl. This
has been In his relations with
Mexican PI'E'sident Miguel de Ia
Madrid . When U.S.-Mexlca n relations get particul arly prick ly,
Reagan and de Ia Madrid ca n
settle things with a personal
phone calL
We've learned of. a convincing
example of this unusual perso nal
rapport. It occ urred a few days
alter Feb. 7. 1985, when U.S.
Drug En-forcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena
Salazar was kidn apped and murd e r ed b y Mex ican dop e

gangsters.
hours," a Mexican offi cial re- bet wC'en the United States and
In retallallon. th e U.S. Cus- called. "the bord!'r cross ings Mexico arP cer tainly very comtoms Service launched an Jmme· were opened up again ," and th e plex . Jus! as they provlde,eppo rdl ate "Operallon Camarena" at old system of spo t Inspection s tunitles for coopPratlon, they
21 bord er c h eck poi nt~. closi ng was resumed. Traffic flowed also provide potential for co nfllcl. Mexico Is the weaker part In ,
nine of them and Instituting across the bordrr once mo re.
time-co nsuming scrutiny of ev" I would say that on a personal this relationship and th! s. or
ery vehicle at the ones that wer
level my r&lt;'latlons with President co ur se, Is wh at · sometimes
left open. The result was two Reagan have been good." de ra makes It difficult for us."
De Ia Madrid's approach to the
weeks of massive traffic jams Madrid observed In a recent
and delays of much as 12 hours Interview with Dale Van Atta. United States Is more th oughlful
for anyone crossing the bo rder " WI!' are frequ ently In touch and t11an resentful. "The United
Into the United States. This had a see ·om• anot her once a year on States Is more th an a country,"
predictably chilling effect on average. On certa in difficult or he sa id. " It Is a whol e continent.
American touri sm In Mex ico.
se nsi tive occasions, he has with great complexity and dlf!cm
ences . The East Is onr thing, and
shown a posi tive attitude."
the Wes t, the center- tand then
De Ia Madrld also believes that
Th ere were Immedi ate and
co ntinuin g Mex ica n protests, but relations at Ihe Cabine t level arc !here's) T&lt;'xas.
"This crea tes greal problems
th~y fell on deaf ears In Washln R· good. "Obviously on Interna ton; the specter or the tortured tiona l affairs we do not always for us In term s of communicadrug agent was enough to keep share the sa me views," he said . ti on, Inform ation a nd analysis. 1
Operation Ca m arena go ing. "But we have foll owed a policy of think thNe Is a l(reat lack of
Commerce across the borllN spea king ve1·y fra nk ly with the knowledge~ In the United States
about Mexico . I bel ieve we- do not
was grinding to a ha ll.
United Sta tes governmenl. ...
Then de Ia Madr id, fru strated Wh enever possi ble, we try to know the United States very w~ll .
OvN his subordinates' lnablll! y rrconclle our views, but we do not ei ther."
But a t least the two heads of '
to smoot h things out , placed a believe wo~ ha w• lo agree on
State Ca n talk fhln!{S OV~r man tO ,:
persona l call to Reagan. The eve-ryth ing."
ma n whrn stic ky situations
De Ia Madrid co ntinu ed:
presldenl accommodaled his fel" I wou ld say that relations
ar ise.
low head of sta te. "Wi thin

as

Advice for '88 hopefuls

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c·ar on Ohio 4 in Mo n 1~o mer y

Ohio weather

CALLIN6MR

would ~early ' love to blame 'the
consequences of their demagogy
on Ronald Re aga ~. and have laid
a conslderabl!' foundation for
doing just that by weeping
crocodile tears over the federal '
deficit In rect&gt;nt years. But poll
aft er poll shows that, more than
six years Into the Reagan admin·
istratlon, the American people
still reg ard the Republican Part y , ;
as far abler th an the Democrats
to cope with the deficit .
And it's not hard to see wh y.. •'
The two bigges t expenditures of
I he feder al government are for ··
social welfare a nd defense, In
that order. CutUng defense Is a '
fool 's . game. That leaves wel fare: but the Democrats decades •
ago craftil y conver ted the majot· ,
. social welfare programs Into ~
"entitlements" ..:. commitments •
that don't even require annual •
re-passage by Congress, an~
which are Indexed to the lnflatlun •
rate. So any president woultl ~
have found himself strapped to !IF
rocket prc&gt;-set 19 take off for the •
stratosphere under the econom ic ,
and df&gt; mograph lc pressures or
the N rly 1980s.
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Dayton: Haymond F . Ba nks,
28. tno homet ow n! , killed when
his m o i O I'l' ~' c l e collided with a

14. 16. 22, 2o and 3~. To tal sa les
wrre $.1.047,930.

C'ALL/N6IN F~

...

road .

Final Lotto prize unclaimed

for '88 campaign

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Wood Co unty .
Columbus: .IPIT\' L!'c Copeland, :1!\. Columbus, killed when
hi! by a car on a Co lumbus r lt y
slrert.
Xrnla : .Joseph M. Stewa rt. .1R.
Miamisburg, and Lynn fl . Elliot.
:11 . Cr ntcrvlllr. killed ina 1wo-car
aecidPnt on a Gref'ne Cou nty

Co unt y.
Solon: J oseph \. Greiner Ill.
411, Orange, 01n cl Kathleen M.
Marks. 2!i. So uth Euclid, killed In
a onr-vrhic lc ilrcldent In Solon.
Leba non : RobNt T. Rainey ,
29. Mason, killed In a one- vehicle
accident on a War ren Count y
road.
Sunduy
Da)•ton : Dea n P. Webb. 2:1,
Vrrona. killed In a two-veh!clf'
accident' on a Montgomery
C01ml y road.

P~I~T..THI~

America is truly a melt ing pot of nationalit ies. and so is eastern
Ohio. leading Columbiana Coun ty Democratic Chai rman Don R.
Gos ney to as k the qu es tion: "Why ca n't a congressman from Poland.
Ohio, be president of the Unit ed States?"
Gosney Is referring to Rep. Jam es Trafica nt, the for mer Ma honing ·
County sheriff who ~ tunn ed a lot of people in 1984 by winning a
co ngressional seat In the Youn gs town area.
Now Gosney want s Trafk"nl to be Ohio's fa vorite -son ea ndidate fo r
presidPnl In 1988. "We are look ing for a candid ate for president that
stands ~p for the middle class and lht' poor. " said Gos ney . " We are
looki ng for a pres ident with gut s. We are ,look ing for a president that
ca n give us all confidence. "
Gov . .Celeste surveyed the DemOC'ratlc fi eld and said to himself,
"I'm as good as any of thes e guys."
Likewise. Gos ney said In a leiter to Traf.lcant : "After looking over
the Democrat field for president , we feel that you offer way mo re than
an;· ca ndidate at the present time."
Gosney rrminded Trafiranl and other Democratic count y
chairmen that Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and Rep . Wayne
Hays of Ohio won national convention delt'gat es from the area In past
Democratic primaries.
The difference Is that Ohio now has a true presldentfal primary.
People vote directly for lh&lt;' national candidates and not for Jhe
del ega tC's W&lt;'ll known in the district , thereb)' reducing Traflca nt 's
chanrPs.

Che.'iter D of A meets Tuesday

By t lnltNII'r&lt;•ss lntt•rnutlonul
At h' &lt;tS11 2 p!'&lt;&gt;IJie clled In tra ffi c
accidents In Oh io this wrekend,
lht• St atP Hig hway PMrol sa id
toda.l '.
ThP &lt;'nun! s howed I hre&lt;' dN1t hs
f'rlda,\' nigh t, eigh t Saturday ond

How did we get Into this mess?
Not having read the book, I am
not sure just how squarely the
author points the .£Inger, but

tMre Is nq serious doubt about
the answer . Democracies tradl ·
tlonally have trouble resisting
the temptation to vote them selves more "benefi ts" than they
are willing or abl e to pay for.
Left-liberal politicians are al ways egging the voters on to
greater and greater profligacles,
on the theory that the necessary
money Is out there somew heremost probably In the hands of
"the rich." But of course In fact
there Is no such convenlenl pile of
loot tat leasJ. of any significant'
size), so 1\le politicians go the
debt route- with the long-range
co nsequences described above.
If you think I am pointing the
fin ger at the li beral democra ts,
go to the head of the class . They

Metzenba~m ·. gears
By Lim L!'ONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMB US t UPI I - Si lver-maned Se n. Howard Melzenbau m,
D-Ohio, popped into the State Office Tower last week 1o visit
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown and Allorney General Anthony J .
Celebrezzc J r.
Was the 69-year old solon delivering advance news of his retirement
and setting the whet'IS In motion for a replacement? No chance.
according to Brown and Celcbrezze.
.
"He's been runnin g !'ver'since 1he was re-elected int1982," opined
Brown .
Cel!'brezze, who has stepped to the heod of the lin&lt;' for lhe
Democratic Senate nominat ion should Metze nbaum retire, said the
t_wo-term senator was merely lining up suppo rt from statrwide
officeholders for his 1988 campai gn.
''I' m on board." sa id the allorney genera l. adding he will help in
any way he ca n, including making speeches around the state.
Word has it that Gov. Ri chard F. Celeste and Sen. .John Glenn,
D-Ohio. will be co-chairmen o(Metzeribaum 's re-election ca mpaign.
Celeste, lhouf[h a "la me duck." sti ll commands th~ ca mpaign
juggprnaul that burled Republica ns in 1%6. The designation of Glenn
will complet e the reconciliation between Metzenbaum and the former
space pilot, who feuded throughout th e 1970s over the right to
represent Ohio in the &amp;&gt; nate.

· So ns of fl mrr ica l'os t 4fi7 of Hu tla nd wi ll have !'lect lon of
of!lt•t•rs Wl'dnesda y, R p.m.. aj.t hr ! ~gin n hall.

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equally savage .deflati on.. (whlcll
would have the same effect by
driving many 6f them Into
bankruptcy) or a near-total nationalization of the economy,
unde r cover of which the government would default on Its own
bonds .
Is th ere any truth to this grim
prognosis'' I am afraid there Is .
The actual scenario ·probably
will be less dras ti c than any or
those above: but I just don't
believe that th e basic laws or
arithmetic have been repealed
for our sake.

I

,.,[ate.., officer ('lection

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I have just been readin g· a
· frightened review ·of a gloomy
new book about the eco nomy.
The book's author apparently
warns thai the United States has
.long been living beyond It s
means; that this has been possible only because the eco nomy's
expansion encoura ged hu ge domestic and foreign loa ns; and
that doomsday will arrive when
the slowin g economy can no
longer service Its debts and our .
creditors decide to close the bar.
At that point ft he author
contends) we will adopt , wllly- ·
nilly, one of th ree courses, all
extremely painful : either a· savage Inflation (which would f'na ble debtors to pay off their debt s
In w.orthless currency) or an

Ohio Politics

S(II' V('ld .

Weekend accidents kill 12

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BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power .. .......,.... 27l',
AT&amp;T .. .... ........................... 24 Y,
Ashland Oil ........................ 61 \),
Bob Evans Farms .. ............. 2~14
Charming Shoppes .... .. ........ 2o',l
Federal MoguL. ......... ..... .. .42 %
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... ... ........ .:i9 ')4
Heck 's Inc . .... .......... :.... ...... .4 ·)\,
Limiled Inc ................. .... .. .42\),
Multimedia Inc . ............ :....... .Oo
Rax Rcstaurants ......... ... ...... 5l',
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ......... .11',1
Shoncy's Inc ... ...... ........... ... 29%
Wendy 's lnll ... ...... .. ......... .. .10',
Worthington Ind .................. 19%·

Meet in g of Gr·oup ~o f the Women's flssoclallon, Pres byterian
\ hurr h, Midd leport. sch&lt;·duled this week has been ca'n!'elled
due Jo the death of a membH.

r-n_,._..,.. •......,d.=

ROB.ERT L. WING ETr
Publisher

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryer and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

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DEVOTED TO THE lNTERI!'S'fS Of,THE 1\JE\~.-~ON t\REt\

nwet

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The coining ·crash ~---__...:.___W_i_lli_am_;__A._R_u.~_·h_(Jr \

Ill Court Street

Shade Ri ver l.odg~ 4!i:\, Chcs trr. wil l hold a special mee ting R
p.m. Thursda y with work In E .fl . degree. Refreshme nts wil l be

Po.~t

...i...--..;...._---------:----------...;.;......--,
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The Daily Sentinel

Daily stock prices

Saturday Admissions - Rodney Spires, Cheshire.
Saturday Discharges- Patri cia Triplelt. June Cremeans.
Sunday Admissions - Nicole
Young, Port William; Virgie
Fett y, Langsville; Martha Haggerty, Middleport; Roy Eblin,
Pomeroy: Caro l Ba ke r ,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges - Otho
Fajls. Nicole Young.

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COLUMBUS tUPI I - The
Ohio Department of l:luman
Services announced today that ,
the state's Medicaid program
will begin cove-ring patients
receiving the drug AZT. the first
drug found to help In the
trea tment of AIDS.
The department said that due
to the limited avallabiUty of ,
Retrovlr, the commercial name
for the drug marketed by th e
Burroughs Wellrome Co., prescribing physicians wlll ·have to
apply to the manufacturer before
dispensing the drug.
In addition, said Paul Offner,
deputy director for Medicaid,
departmental approval will be
needed between now and Aug. 1
for eligible recipients to secure a
supply of AZT.
Medlcafd· Js the state program
providing assistance in paying
doctor, hospital and other medical bills for Oh ioans of all ages
below a cer tain income leveL
Offner said it costs between
$4Q,OOO and $o0,000 a year to treat
AIDS pat,ients.

Vt&gt;lt'rans Memorial

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 .Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhip
Monday, April 20, 1987.

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Soon, opportunity is going to be at your
business' doorstep. You'll recognize it
immediately because this opportunity
lool~ on awful lot like your Ameritech
PogesPius111 representqtive. He or she
will show you how td mal~e the
most of your ad in
Ameritech PogesPius, the
original Ohio Dell Yellow
Pages. You already know
it's the directory nine

out of ten people turn to ..But your rep
will show you how to help more of
·
these potential customers
tum 10 your ad In fact. we've
got lots of features that
could help bring more
business 1o your door.
And that's an opportunity nobody should po~
up. For more information,
co II us toll free: .

1..aG0-:)62-9190
Jf

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0--

As one who strum:Ied throu~h a
presidential candidacy, I have a
deep sense of c omp;~sslon fort hr
various cand idates who are posl. tlonlng themselves lor the 1988
electio n.
Perhaps they will not object to
some advice from somE'One who
discovered by tria l and error the
hazards, as well as th e opportunities, Invo lved In a presidential
bid .
No one shou ld seek the pres ld·
ency who Is unwilling to make a
total commitment of body, mind ,
energy and spirit to th is pursuit .
The days of a 'presidential draft
appear to have ended. Today's
co nt e~ders must be prepared to
give of themselves In a man ner
tha t has no equaL
Careful preparation on the
Issues, extensive orga nlzallon
and the direction or an army of
lunteers a nd paid workers, the
vo
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, April 20, the 110th day of 1987 with 2:i5to follow . use of mass communications,
countl ess speeches, Interviews
The moon Is approaching Its l~t quarter.
on every conceivable topic and
The morning stars arc Merrury, Venus, Jupllter and Satur n.
on
all aspects of one's personal
The evening star Is Mars.
Those born on this date are unMr the sign of Taurus. They Include a nd family life, endless and
' French Emperor Napoleon fii in 1808; sculptor Da niel Chester demeaning lund-raising, attacks
French creator of "The Minute Man" statue. In 1850; German Nazi · on one's convictions a nd personal
. dicta to; Adolf Hiller In 1889; silent film comedian Ha rold Lloyd and life, a host of assignments and
Spanish surrealist pai nter J.oan Mire In 1893; New York Mayor a ppeara nces requiring travel
Robert·F . Wa gner Jr. in 1910 t age771; actress Ni na Foch In 1924 t age a nd work without end - this Is
6.3 1; actor Ryan O'Nealln 1941 t~ge 461, and actress Jessica Lange In burden that lew can carry
physically, m enta ll y a nd
1949 (age 38! .
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emotionally.
These efforts are not worth·
On this date In history:
.
In 735 B.C., according to the Roman historian Varro, Rome was while ellher lor the ca ndid ate or
the public unle~s the presidential
founded by Romul~s .
In 16.'i3, Oliver Cromwell, puritan, revolu!lonary and Lord asplril'nt Is a person with convictions that are deep and abiding.
Protector of England, dissolved Parliament to rule by decrre.
As one who has made my
In 1943, Nazi forces responded to a Jewish uprising by razing t h~
Income
from the lecture circuit
Warsaw ghetto.
•·
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.
In
recent
years. I travel widely
In 1976 the Supreme Court ruled that federal courts could order low
confer
with many people
and
cost hou~lng for minorit ies In a city's while suburbs to ease racial
wee~ afler week. I have gradusegregation.

Today in ,history.

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ally become aware that th e
expected candidates for 1988 al
this poi nt have a problem.
Not one ha s elicited an enth usl ·
as ti r response from the public .
Perhaps It Is loo ea rly for us to
expect enthu sia sm for any one
ca ndidate. But, Idea lly, a win·
nlng candid ate and an effective
president will develop a netwdrk
of highly commit ted suppo r ters
monfh s a head of the act ua l
selection procedures .
What Is missing thu s far is a
candid ate who co nveys a clear
and compelling vision or the
nation 's future and i!S past
g-reat ness .
A pres id e ntial co ntend er
should be able to draw on a sense
of history that ena bles him to
articulate the country's va lue
and mission In the world. Beyond
th is, one who asp!res to thi s most
awesome office should be able to
dl;cern the historica l for ces thai
are moving us In our own timethose that we should resist and
those that we should nurture and
encourage.
1 bel ieve the Cold War mlllta·
rlsm that has largely guided
American pOlicy In the world
si nce 1945 Is obsolete . The procedures used In guidin g that policy
- an enorm ous arms race,
relentless attempts to cont rol
Internal revolutions ol develop·
lng nations. convert oi&gt;erallons,
the ass umption t hat our rival s
only understand military Ioreeare all Jll-s ul ted lor tod ay's
world .
America ca nnot be content to
rest Its case among the na!lons
primarily on a found a lion of fear ,
hate and comba.tlveness . We
need to set forth what we arc

Georg&lt;J McGovern ,:

" for ," ra ther than expendin g so
much cnerJ;Y and eff ort on what
we are "a~a lnsl."
Bot h the America n peoplr and
our fellow liumans would profll
fro m an Am eri can vis ion based
on our constitutional democracy
and a "dcc!'nt respec t for ·lhe
opin ions of mankind .''
There Is no room for a needless

.

arms ra ce and a covc•rl war In
Ce nt ra l America In a world thai '
yea rn s for a greater sense or . '
brotherhood and decency .
'
This vision Is, I believe, pres- "
ent In souls of several current '
president ial asplranl s. I hope
and pray that such a vision will
emerge full -blown as the ca m-' ;.
palgn year deve-lop.&lt;.

..

Berry's World

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" Here's to affirmative NON-action!"

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.Page- 4-:-The Daily Seirtinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monda~April20,

1987

· Monday, April 20, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Giants, Reds ~ontinue hot pace.in We~·t

COLLISION - Clnclnnall rlghtflelder Dave Parker collides with
second hus.•mun Ron Oestcr as th e pair go aft er a pop fly hy the
. Astron' m en I&gt;avfs In short cl!nlcrfleld Snnday . Parker cuughttht•
- ' hall durinl(st'Vcnth Inning action, hut tht• n eds lost the opener, 1·:!.
• fU I'I)

By Rl(;K VAN SAN'l'
CINCINNATI (UP)) - The
slugging Cincinnati Reds proba·
bl y would have swept .this wee·
kend 's four·game series with
Houston had It not been fo r
Astros' pitcher Mike Scott.
As It was, the Reds hammered
eight home runs In the four
games and won three of them.
It was only Scott, who pitched
seven Innings of t hree·hlt ball in
Houston 's 7·3 win in the first
game or Sunday's double·
header, who could stop the
ram paging Reds. who are off to a
9·3 start.
1
The Reds, who lost I ~ of 18
games to the Astros last year, .
used home run power In wins of
9·8 Friday night. 8·0 Saturday
and 6·2 in Sunday 's night rap.
" I don't think Houston realized
we had that much power," said
Reds ' manager Pete Rose. "We
hit a lot of home runs thi s
weekend.' '
Kurt St illwell hit a grand slam
and a TWO·run horner, Kal Da·
niels had three solo hom ers,
Dave Parker cracked a three·
run shot, Tracy Jones blasted a
two·run homer and Eric Davis
had a solo homer.
Houston manager Hal L anier
was furious about the fat pitches
that his pitchers served up to the
Reds.
" We tell them 1pitchPrs and
catcher s) In meetings what to do
and then they do ju st the opposite
of what you tell them," corn·
plained Lanier. "They ju st ar en't
thinking."
Lanier had no compla int s
about Scoll 's pitching, though.
Scott, 3·0, who pitched a one·
hitter las t week against Lo s
Ange les. gave up three hits and
three run s over In seven Innings
in Houston's lone weekend win.
" We looked like we were asleep
In that ga me," said Rose. "But
good piTching against you will do

•

that. "
Scott probabl y would ha.v.~
gone the distance h,ad museles It\
his upper back not tightened up.
" M y bad&lt; started bothering
me a litTle bll , but I don ' t think
it'll cau se me to mis s my next
start ," said !'icott. ' 'l also got a
lillie Tired late In the game. It
was pretty hot out ther e and It 's
stlll early In the· season."
While Scott was setting the
Reds down, Cincinnati's Tom
Browning, 1·2, wa s perf'llittlng
six hits and six run s in 4 and I· 3
Innings, lncludlni( •tw o horne runs
by Bill Doran and a two· r un
homer by Phil Carner .
" [got frustrated. " said Brown·
lng. "I th rew some pitches I
t hought were sirlkes that weren' t
ca lled strikes and I let II upset
me. I got In a roupte of jams 1
wasn't abl e to get out of."
However, Scali 's pitching was
matched in Sunday 's second
game by Cincinnati's Ted Power,
2· 0, who yielded five hit s and two
r uns in 6 and 2·.1 innings,
out&lt;!ueling Houston loser Danny
·
Darwin, 1·1.
"I watched tBIIII Gullickson
beat the Astros yesterd ay with
breakin g stuff and I tried to do
the same today," said Power.
"The Astros are a good fastball
hitting team , sol wanted to make
sure, my breaking pitches we re
working.
·
"1 al so had (center fielder)
Jones playing some excellent
defense behind me." added
Power. "l think he los t four
pounds of skin sliding on th e
As troturf after making that one
catch."
The catch that Power referred
to came In the sixth inning when
Jones robbed Kevin Ba ss of what
would have been a run·scorlng
ex tra base hll with a divin g grab
of a liner tailing away from him
In a near·bllndlng sun.
"I didn' t even see It !hat well
because of the sun ," said .Jones.

" I dove and it landed in my glove.
I was just lucky." .
Said Reds' m anager . Pete
Rose. " If .Jones hadn't caught
that ball. it could have gone for
an Inside the pa r k home run and
tied the game."
Nallonal Leagu•• ~oundup
Giapts 4, Braves 3
At San Francisco, a grounder
by Matt William s went' under the
glove of seco nd base man Glenn
Hubbard for an error that a!·
lowed Chris Brown to score from
third with two ou t In theninthand
lift ihe Giants.
It wa s San Francisco 's eighth
straight on&lt;'· run triumph and the
victory kept the Giants one· half
game ahead of second place
Cincinnati with a 10·3 mark .
Cards 4 Mets 2
On il day they should have been
celebrating, the St. Loui s Ca rd i·
nals were agonizing.
The ca use for celebration Sun·
day was a 4·2 v ictory over the
New York Mets to co mplete a
three·ga me sweep of the World
Seril'S champions that va ull ed
the Cardinals into first place in
the Nallonal League £as t.
But the sweep " ;as oversha ·
dowed by the freakiest of Injuries
to pitcher John Tudor that may
sldellne the ace left . hander for
up to three months. Tudor, who
was not pitching in the game,
broke a kneecap wh en New York
catc her Barry L yon s barrel ed
into the St. Louis dugout while
chasing a foul ball.
The ball off the bat of Jack
Clar k landed sever"! rows back
In the stands. hu t Lyons said he
thought he had a play.

Why

worr,v

about

du c kin g

IC'am .5 ·~

" II you want to be t he llrst. you
have to Ileal thr best. \Vp have a
phi losophy th an most
teams. I thought we'd turn It
ar ound. tCoarh l K .C. .Jones got
on our rase a lit lie bll about our
altitude of not play in g ha r d."
Elsewhere. Philadelphi a de·
ft•atctl Wa shin gton 108·102. Por·
tland topped Sa n A nt onio 144 · 1:\4.
Seattle l&gt;&lt;•at the Los Angeles
t akers 110·104 and Coldl'n Stat~
dlff er~ nt

trounced the Los Angeles
Clippers 10&gt;·85.
S!xers ION, Bullets 102
AI La ndover . Md ...Juliu s Brv·
ing scored 24 point s in hi s final
r egular·season ga me and PX ·
ceedcd the l .IXJO.polnt platea u for
t he 16th t ime In his lfi profrs·
s lona l se asons in l ea ding
Philadelphi a.
Blazers 144, Spurs 134
At Portland, Ore., reserve
forward Jerome K e r se~ tied a
career high with 28 point s to lead

.... -.-.-·

......... . . 11

Nt\TIO~ ~U.

Ea~t

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Portland. The Blazers finished
the regular season with a 49.33
n•cord, tying th~ second· best
record in franchise his tor~ .
SuperSonics 110, Lak••rs 104
At Inglewood, Calif .. Xavier
McDaniel scored 39 points to
pace Scall le. Warriors 105,
Clippers 85
AI Oakland , Call!.. rookie
center Chris Wa shburn tied h.l s
career hi gh with 17 points Jo .
power Colden State over Los
Angel es.

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Pittsburgh

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1\WE HAVE HEARINS AIDS"
CALl .(614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

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Qakland (Sit•w~l il-:!) a t fallfor·
nl a (.\1t·fastllll 2-0 1 UI:!J3 p.m.

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The Daily Sentinel

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14 ~9!!11

....-

Bill L*X Sllkl
Gioia Erwatl

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M('mbf'r : UnUrd PrP5!t Jntrrnatlonn l.
In land 0111i VPrNs Msoclal ion and I hr
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With cool ooa creamy

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Dairy~· IS proud to support our lOcal Childfen's hoepilaJI tlvough
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,.

•'

,JERRY PI CKRELL
Memhcr:
,
Outdoor Writers As soclallon
of America, Dlstrllmted hy UPI
Carnfl"'rS usually can' t wall to
roast a few hot dogs over the first
ca mpfire of the st'ason.
After a winter of hot dogs
bollf'd or baked or cooked with
pork and l!eans, they taste 1&lt;reat.
Unfortunat ely , that's probably
the only thing that the fire cooks
WI') I.
Flames can sear whatever
they to ur h, so It' s Imperative
that ariy seriou s rooki ng be don~
onlv over a bed of coals . That ca n
tak·e· some time to produce. '
Even th!'n, coals do not al ways
remain at t~esa me temperature.
That means that by the time
you 've fried the ba con, there Isn' t
enough ·heat to do the eggs.
A better alternative Is a camp
stove. The old standby, of course,
Is the Coleman gasoline stove.
By

lhl~~h FridaY. 111 Court sr .. Po·
m~rpy . Ohio. bv thl' Ohio Vallry Pub·
ll~ht'i'IJ! Comp:in.v Mull lmrota. l nr.,
? omri'O\'. Ohio 4!m;9. Ph. !ffi'l·21!tli. Sr·
(.'(Jn d d il!i..S postag e paid ul Po mC'ro~·.

- ~....._

sai d afl&lt;'r his errant tee shot led
to a double bogey·6 that handed
Love hi s first PCA triumph .
" Thew lnd slmply qult on me just
before I swung from the tee. I
was so pumped up, I hit the ball !II
yards ou I of bounds on a 1(!(). yard
wide fairwa y. The one thin g I
tried to guard against all w('ek
was to not rush myself, but I
hurried m y shot at 18. I tried to
grab that shot back from the tee.
but I knpw It was already gone."
Lov e, who trailed Jones by four
shots with l'ight holes remaining .
ear ned $117,000. The Tour's long·

es t hiller had a tread)' ro mpletNi
hi s third ro nsC'ru ti v(• round of 67
for a total of J:l·under pill' 271.
.Jon&lt;'S, spek !ng his first v ictory
In four years on the Tou r. hit his
tee shoi at lRout of boun(ls to the
right and he barel y missed a
!iQ.footer out of th e bunker thut
co uld have s alva~cd a playoff
again st Love . .Iones finished with
a i2 for a 12·undet· 272.
·" 1 thought i needed to make a
blt•dle at 1~ .'' said Love, who
played In th e group ahead of
Jones . " The winds at that hO le
played so dlff&lt;;r enlly today.

though. I saw Steve hit his tee
shot and hPal'd some people In th~
condos yc ll!n~ thai it was way
r ight. 1. didn't wa nt to get too
cxdtl'd too soon. I found out fOI'
sure It wa s out of bound ~ when
th ~ rules offlclul told me as I
stepped ou t of th£' scorer' s tent ."
.lon&lt;'S' double bogl'y wus only
lh(• second or the entire tourna ment at th e 458·yard 18th. He also
had a double bogcy·6 at No. 8
Su nday, along w!1h two bogey s
and five birdies.

Stanley Cup playoffs resume
By MARK COHEN
UPI Sports Writer
This week , th e provin ce of
Quebec will be more than a bll
preoccupied.
The Montreal Ca nadlens and
the Quebec Nordlques resume a
live ly rivalry Monda y night lm
the first ga m&lt;' of the Adams
Division final.
The serll'S which pits Montreal
against their toughes t competl·
tor begin s at lh&lt;' Forum where
the Nordlques will try to keep the
Ca nadlens from a run at a second
co nsecutive Stanley Cup.
The Cana dlens·Nordlques feud

elicit
s more
Quebecers
than Interest
any otheramong
sports

.

·

Some of these have been
feeding the same folks who
graduate from college this year
since their parents did the same
thing. They 're almost Immortal
If you take care of them.
Some people who don 't care for
bother of spilling while gas
around the campsite have opted

the

'

regular season against the Nor·
diques. Including 4·0 at the
Forum.
" 1 said before the pla yoffs that
we're going to put the accent on
discipline, " Perron said. " We' re
going to continue to stress that.
Discipline Is going to play a big
role. especially with the Quebet·
power pla y, which wa s unbellev·
ably, good against Har tford."
Peter Stastny and Mlrhel
Goulet are the mai n offenslvC'
threats. whom th e Ca nadlens ;
have to control, he said.
"Goulet Is fatal for goalies and
defensemen," Perron said. "He

"All hockey
Quebec for
Is the
going
he . .
living
nextto few
da ys," F!etron said . "Ther e Is a
v ibrant atmosphere and that's
good for hockey ."
The teams have been known to
engage In some of the wor st
fight s In National Hor key League
history, Including two bench·
ciC'arlng brawls In an Infamous
Good Friday playoff game lhr€&lt;'
y~ars ago. BvC'n brothers carn e
to blows that ni ght as Dal e
Hunt er of Quebec and Mal'k
Hunter. who played for Montrea l
a! the tim e, engaged In a furious
exchange of punches.
Sti ll , the players think It will be
a physica l series but not neres·
sarlly a dirty one.
"N&lt;'Ither goalie - Quebec' s
tMar!OI Gosselin or our Patl'lck
1Roy I - fiels upset by n erv~s."
Ca nadlcns' defensernan Larry
Robinson said. " Both r lulls have
a lot of talent. "
T he Ca nadlens arr on a J:l.
game winning streak dating ba r k
to Marrh 11 and arc coming off a
four·game, opening· round sweep
of the Boston Bruins.
They had a :;.,) record In the

for thr propane variety Instead of
1he original. It does see m to bP
more convenient , and you don't
have to sit around pumping the
thing up all of the time.
•
But II al so sC'ems th at the heat
they produce Is less Intense than
from thr old gasoline models.
!Tha t cou ld be personal ,
though ).
In any rase, either will cook
well for you If you use the sa me
rare you would usl! at home In the
kitchen.
. If you ju st must cook over the
campfire, try cooking under It
rather than over IT. Go to a goad
campi ng store and buy a dutch
oven.
These go In a shallow hole In
·the .grouftd with the lire being
built on top. You'll be amazed at
what yqu ca n make In one of
those old fashioned pot . And the
stuff tastes better than the hal
dogs done over the lire.

Stasln)' is thl' big pluymukt•r hl'
wa s at th r peak of his career."
Thl' Nordlqu•·s d&lt;•h•ut&lt;'d lht•
Divi sion c hampio n Hartfo r d
Wh a l ~rs in lht~ ir first r ound
· series.
In anoth er Wales Conft•ren&lt;'&lt;'
mach up, the Phliad~ lphl a Fl yet·s
and Nt•w York l slunders opt•n
their serond·round Stanley (' up
pla yoff SNics Monday night.
The F lyers Pn l ~ r the Pntrirk
se mifinal well· rested since fi n·
!shlng off the New York RHngt•rs
In six ;!arne.&lt; last Thursday.
Meanwhile. th e lsland(•rs didn't
even have u pra&lt;·tir &lt;' du,v aft er

,.Jn~e~v~er~s~lo~w:s~do~w~n:·~S~t~a~s~tn~y~ls~s~
· o~~p~la~yit~ng~ln~t~o~s~
· u~n~d~a~y~m~o~
•·n~l~n~g~t~
danl(erous whrn he shoots.
get by the Wushln~ton
Cupll
alsoJ~~~~~~~~~~~~
.

rivalry .

Camp stove best alternative

I"''·

-1\ Dl\•tslrm ol Mulllll)f'dla.

SAVEI]OO

HILTON HEAD I SLAND. S.C.
1 UP I t The splendor of the
Masters faded quickly 9" the
PGA Tour this week .
Instea d of Larry Mize's maj es·
tic chip shot , the $6:,0,000 Herlt ·
age Classic offered a l esson In the
sport's fickle nature. With Tour
jour neyma n Steve Jones holding
a one· si(Oke advantage over
Davis Love Ill heading to 18
Sunday. a shill In wind and
playing rhythm cost Jones the
tournament .
" I don't th ink I've ever swung
like that in my whole life," ,Jones

Ohio Outdoor.s

,r .

Houee&amp;ltlm

OFF- SUII. tJSr I'IIICE

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1\UdWt'!'il Oh•ision
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0·0 1. 7: 11 :1

Mlt;Ktfo\N I.K\!ll 'E:

Nt•w \'ork

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Sunda)' 'l'l Ht'!'inlt."i

We're ~inting the
town wHh more
colors than everl

Fr i da~·-

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Sl. I.AIUL-.
Nt•w \ 'urk
Mnnlrt'lll
('hit·llg()
l'h llu

Tlu • tJlu~' u f!'s OPl' ll in lhr• P.&lt; ISI

'

'r11rontn (Sil(oh ll-:! 1 111 ( 'IN't•lund
(1\ulltos 1).0) , i :;t;; p.m .
Mllwuukt•P (Ni('\'' '" 2-11) al ( 'hi·
, • t · a~o !Dt•l.t•o n t- Il ), H p.m.

t•..r . con

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Mil~

T l111 rsd a,\ ' wi tll Chicago il l !Jos·
Inn . 0 11 Jo'ri cl;1y I ndi il ll H is al
Atl.&lt;nla , Wa shin gton Is at Detroit
and Phlladl' lphla is a t
Mll\\'auk&lt;'l'
In till' Wl'st on Thtii'S&lt;Ia,v.
I )f'fl \'i ·r is a t l .us J\ ngt ·ll'~. SC'al I I(•
Is a1 1),11 las nncl Goldl'n St a tr Is a 1
Uta h. H ou t ~o n is at Por tland on

' lli r d .;cur rd :12 poi nt s and hanciN I
oul 1-1 usslsts, Danny t\inge
:tddrd 2~ poi nt s, O. •nnl s John so n
Sl'Orl'&lt;l 21. f\pv in McHale IR nnd
Holll'r t Pari sh l i .
, " Thai's lh&lt; · lt•n rn . that's the
• Cl'ltlcs ,' ' Atla nta guard Glr nn
: H i\'&lt;'1'~ said. "Yo u knpw l.arn·
· Bl rd \\'otlld tit) it , ~r ou knt' w
ilPllnis .lohnson would do II. Rut
torla)· Llunn,1· Ai ng&lt;' did It , and
HohPrt Pa rl sh '"l(J KC'vln Mr Hale
·did to o. Thr\· 1.1rr ' a gTPH II Ptl lll .
' You ha vr IO.b(•at tlw (' hampions
: :and wr didn 't do th at."
Ros ton t&lt;·a llrd 12·!i after 2::.l.
: : n ut aftvr a tlmt•O lll the CPIIirs
' wrnt on n H ·O surgt' to ta ke the
karl for good, with 1\tlanta g-oln;!
: ·scor!'l(•ss over a 4:49 stt·etch.
Bird krved Roston' s run with a
: &lt;l·poln trr 'and an over· the- h!'ad
: : feed to Pat•ish on a fastbt·eak that
: :completed 1hr run at a; 03.
.:· When wC' needed the hoops,
Larry came up with the bi g
ones, " sa id . team m ate Bill
Walton .
: . The CPl tirs . who have r eached
:. : the playoffs each of the last seven
· ·years. lost nine of ten on the road
: : toward the end of the season.
Their experience, thOugh , will be
n adva nl.age In the posf·season.
" We're going lo have to party a
Ill tie bit today then relax a bll
and prepare. lor Chicago." said
McHale. " lf we're p!aylng well,
we' re going to beat anybody.

U •:At;UE

II'

r:""{ - •)r:
,)
wol ,

w ll h

( ltlmdt•n I· I ), i : :MJl .m.

8)' lln llt'fll•m.,,. lnh•rnullunal

JOHN A. WADE, M.·D. In,•.

While Sox 7. Tigers 2 ·
At Detroit, Tim Hulett and
Carlton Fisk slugged two run
home runs ro l ead Chicago over
the Tigers.
Red Sox 4. Blue ,Jays I
At Toronto, AI Nipper, 2·0,
scattered five hits over s~ven
i nnings and was supported by
Wad e Boggs' solo hamar and Bd
Romero's two.run single to lead ·
Boston over Toronto.
Indians 3, Orioles 0
Indians R, Ololes 7
At Ba ll ilnore. Mel Hall ho·
mered and Pat Tabler drove In
th r"" runs to help lh&lt;' Indians
romplele a doubl e· header sweep
of IJaltimore.
Yanke••• 3. I~oyal s 0
\ ' ankccs I, Royals 0
At New York. Dan Pasq ua hit a
sacr ifice fly in the eighth lnnl~g
and r ellt&gt;ver Pat Clements, 1·0.
plrked up lh&lt;· win to lead the
Yankees over Kansas City, C'na ·
bllng the Yankees to ro mplete a
doubl e- h.cader shutout over the
Roya ls.

llt•trult (Morrt., I- I) ld N1'M' \ 'ork

1-:a101

AtliitiLI ho1&lt;l a ninr&gt;-g;t m&lt;• win ·

: !'itHl

BQ!Iitoa !H11rst ~- 0). U : m~ p.m .

Majors

p.m.

an d (• nch·U lil t• n •gu \ar S('aso n a l

'

SALUTES FANS - Milwaukee's Dale Sveum (left) und Roh
Deer ( 45) salute Milwaukee funs at Milwaukee County Stadium
following Brewt•rs' 6-4 victory over T&lt;•xas Sunday. Both homered
in the ninth Inning as lht• Brt•wcrs sel an 1\merlcan League best
start record with their 12!h strai~ht victory. (UPI)

SUPPLY - " • -

Milwaukee. had tied the AL Its ninth straight decision. " We' ll
record for most victories to start just go homC', get somp home
t he season - set by th e 1981 cooking and we'll be fine. \Ve'v('
Oakland Athletics - with a 4·3 got a long homeStand comi n;! up·.
victory Saturda y over the {We' vel got to ~et ou t of th is
Rangers. The Brewers ca n tie the town, that' s for sure."
major league record - 1l set by
Half of th&lt;' Brewers12v lctorles
the 1982 Atlanta Braves - when ha ve come at the expense of the
they play the Chicago White Sox Rangers.
Monday night at Comiskey Park,
Elsewhere. Sea ltiP troun ced
" They're amazing right now, Oakland 8·1. Minneso ta ni pped
ther~',s no doubt about It," sa id
California 6·:.. Chicago bea t
Texas' Larry Parrish . · " When Detroit 7·2. Bos ton outlas ted
yougo up there and hit horne run s Toronto 4·1, Cleveland swep t
like that ... you can't tell from Balllrnorc ~·Q , R·7, an d Nfiw York
watching batting practice who' s shut out K ansas C!ly twice 5· 0,
going to do stuff like that. "
J.O.
Mariners R, 1\lhleti&lt;os I
With Milwaukee trailing ~ · 1
At Sealllr , r ighl ·hander Scali
entering the ninth. Glenn Braggs Bankhead won his thi rd st r aight
drew a lea doff walk off Milch start, and .Jim Presley and Mike
Williams . Greg Brock singled
Kingery eaeh drove i n t\vo •·uns to
Braggs to second. After Cecil
lead the Mariners over Oakland.
Cooper filed to ce nter, Texa s
Twins 6, 1\ngcls 5
M anager Bobby Valentine made
At Anaheim , Calif.. Gary
th e call for Harris.
.
Gac tli beiiPd a thrcl:'·run homl'r
" If there's another move, I
In the sixth Inning and Jeff
don't know what II. is." said
Rea rdon posted h1 s fourth sa\·c to
Valenl!ne. Whose tPam dropped
~uldc M lnncsota over Ca liforniu .

Love 1987 Heritage Classic champion

'

!HI

( 'lnl'lnnull Cllofflnun II· I I nl Sun
HIP~n (K ll:l\' l"i 0· 1), 111: 05 p .m .
IAI!' i\111((• 14~ Ult•rshlst•r 1· 11 at
San .. mnd.~ ·u j 1\1 . Htn Is 1· 11 ), Ill: :u

nlng :-. freak hrokl'n. The ll uwk s
111 i:-.M •d :1 l'IW IH 'l' to i nC't'f' JSP 1h PI t'
fl'a tH ' h i~ c· !'I '('(Jl 'll \' ICI O!'Y total

1

r-------------

j

p.m.

(~n rd &lt;' t L

.

•
!\

rittl'ihllrKh

Boslun is a eom 1Jin1 •cl 11-H on l hr
r oad against 1hC' II a wks, Bur ks
and 711t• rs, arH.I was 1-2 ag a ln st t hr
Pi sto ns in n et mi t. Th ose teams
fin i.&lt;ht•d s&lt;·•·ond thro u ~ h fifth
n·s pl •(' tl vC'l ~1 overall in thr Eas t.
'1'!11• Crii i&lt;'S, winner s of 29
st r 11i~ht ~ ~~ IHHllt' , havr won 7;, of
thl'l r IH.... t 7(1 g:Jtnt'S at 13mHon
·

By DAVID AVD'ABII.E
UPI Sports Writer
Dale Sveum clubbed a homer
that brought the streaking Mil·
waukee Brewers wlthlq a victory
of equaling the best start In
major league history .
"I tell you, when Dale hit that
home run, I think that was the .
greatest thrill I've ever had,"
Rob Deer, who had a three·run
· shot ·in the ninth to tie the game,
his second home run on the da y,
said after the Brewers rallied
past the Texas Rangers 6-4 'to
break an American League re·
cord for victories to start the
season.
" We have a long ways tb go,
this Is just part or the seaso n, but
we have to enjoy It as much as
possible now," Deer said.
After Deer's homer. off losing
reliever Greg Harris, 0·2, to tie
the scorC' 4· 4, Sveum followed
Jim Ga ntner's walk with a two·
run shot to make a winner of
M ar k Clear, 2·0, the fourth
Brewer pitcher.

.----------- - -L _ _.:.__________

:Celtics win finale, earn home court advantage
lly IAN LOV~:
UPI Sports Writer
Th r Bost on CPl tlcs. who fai il'&lt;l
· to beat i\lla nla, Milwauker or
1'1liladelp hla on the roa d thi s
yPa r , Sunday t•ndcd thr season
· by ea rning ttl .. homeeourt advan ·
tagc th i'Oughout their r un In tht•
Ea strrn Con ft•rcncc play offs.
T hr t t•lll&lt;·s r lln chf'd the home·
\'Ourl l'dgc w it h a 11H·107 victory
: ovrr the A tl anta Hawks. Atlanta
.co u \d huvl' l 1 i.II,ned 1he· homPt'Ou rt
adva nt age wit h a victor y.
How impor tant will the homf'·
r·our 1 advan tugP be i n th&lt;' East ?

Milwaukee sets· AL's best start record

sun and that made It harder . .
St. Louis Manager Whitey
Herzog could not understand why
Lyons went after the ball when It
was so ol&gt;vlously out of play.
The Injury is the second major
one for the Cardinals this st&gt;ason.
On April 10. ca tcher Tony Pena
broke his .left thumb when he was
hit by a pitch and Is expected t o
be out until June 1.
In the game, 'fillle lflcCee hit a
two-run homer and Tom Pag.
nozzi celebrated hi s first major·
league start .with a solo blast to
power the homestandln g
Cardinals.
McGee hit his first horner of the
year to highlight a three· run
third Inning against Sid Fernan·
dez, 2·1. Pagnozzl led off the
fourth with a drive into the
bl eachers In right to Increase the
St. Louis lead to 4·0. .
Greg Mathews, 1·1, scattered
seven hils over 6 2·3 Innings for
the vic tory . He carried a five· hit
shutout into the seventh, but
after a walk and a single, Keith
Hernandez drilled a two·run ,
lwo·out double.
E l sew here, Pitt sburgh iopped
Philadelphia &gt;·2, Montreal
stopped Chicago :n

"I wa s playi ng a ball I thought I
could get ." said Lyons, the Met s'
backup catcher. " I was going all
out for it. I was loo king into thC'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

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

'The heat pump will
double your heatin
system's efficiency.
.
'

Chances are, your old gas fur·
nace is 550Jo to 7011Jo efficient.
But a tlameless electric heat
pump is 2000i'o to 300"7o 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 contacting your power
company or your heating
and cooling dealer today.

Ohio Power ·company
Pan of American Electric Power

�'

By The Bend
~q,mily

,_

medicine:

Have AIDS test

'.I•

'

:Jiy Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor
.
of Family Medicine
• Ohio University College
: of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: ·r received a bl ood
transfu sio n In 1979 and r~cenll y
h ~a.rd that the blood may have
been contaminated wi th the
AIDS virus. Should I gl't the
so-called "AIDS test? "

n~w

Answer: The Centers fo r Dis· blood.
casg Co ntrol urge anyont' who
Of the 28.000 cases of AIDS
received a blood tra nsfu sion rt&gt;portt&gt;d In the United Statps
bet.ween 197~ and March 1985· to bet ween 1981. and 1986. only 2
b&lt;· tested for the Acquired percent were causM by contaml·
Immu ne . Dcficicnc·y Syndrome na ted blood. While your chances
virus. Of thP millions of people of getting AIDS from transfu·
who rpcelved blood durin g that slons art&gt; sllm. the risk Is greater
ti me. lhP CDC cStlf\latcs that depending on when and where
20,000 of them ma y have con· you recelvM the blood. Your risk
tracted the l( lrus through tainted --'ot' Infection Is grea ter If you
received a transfusion In the
ea rly '80s In, an .area where lh&lt;•
Inc idence of AIDS Is high, such as
New York . San Francisco or
Mia mi.
Question: What exactly Is the
It'S I?

Your Social Security:

DRJ\ WING - Angela Carl&lt;•! on, ,)(· r~m.v Norllm p and 'J'racy Card
Wl're winners In 1114' hook drawing competition at Ill&lt;' R:ocine
Elementary S&lt;:luml.

Right to Read week
noted in area school
The•entire month of Marc h wa ~
ubSCJ'VI'd ~s rlgh! 10 n•a tl monl h

a t · the Harln&lt;• f:lrm ••ntarr
SchooL
Building . l&lt;'VC'l act lvlf' ls in·
eluded dally sustained si lent
reading, !·shir t slogan da y, a
book fair , bann&lt;'J' and pl;I('Pma l
contes ts, a IJa lloon Ia unrh . claSS·
room bulletin boards, short films
on fairy talc•s and romcdy wtth
spPrlal activities taking part In
eac h of 1he class rooms during th e
month .
Among thes&lt;• w&lt;•r('
l'('adlng to others. wiring s hor t
stories. givin g book report s,
writ ing poe try, erea tin g co mic
s trips rf'latlng to •·read ing. and
oral book n•ports .
T·shirt slogan day wi nn ers for
1hP various grades WC'l'C' Mal ·

thew Dill. Alan McG uire . .Jos hua
Wilson, Nico le liitl , grade• 1;
Angl'la Carlet on. Ca mlllia You·
cham. Ta mmy Mart in .. lpnnlff' r
Scarbcrr~ · ,

gro.1d c

1:

Rya n

Slddcr·s. i\llrla .Jenkins. . John
Carll , g~;&lt;~clt• :t; .kiT Hose, .Ja son
f.:rvl n, .IC'I'f'm V Smith , Shanno n

Monday. April

J\n~wer : The most readily
available screen ,for the AIDS
virus is the enzyme-linked im·
munosorbent ~ ssay (ELISA 1.
Although the ELISA test can not
be used to diagnose wit hout doubt
whether a person ha s AIDS, It
ca n deled the presence of
antibodies to the virus. A positive
test means that a person has been
exposed to Human Immunodefi·
clency Virus, " the AIDS virus,"
and Is at risk for developing
AIDS, which destroys the body's
immune systell') and Its ability to
fight di sease.
H.owever. a positive· test does
not mean that you will nf'Cessar·

Survivor,s

Hen.slor, .Jere my C'lre k. Aaron
Cu rd , 1\er i Whllak rr. grad e fi.
f3oo k d rawi ng winrwrs wcrf'

,Jrrem.v Nor th up, Tra cy Card.
An,o::cla Ca rle ton. Ban ner and
.placrmat winners were Mall hew
Htrflo. Danlellc Singer, grade 1;
Mi chelle John son, Matt hew
Bradford, gra de 2; Paul !hie,
Jason Hudson. grade:;; Katrina
And er·son, Co urtn ey Housh,
grade 4; David Justi s, Fredd ie
M a t ~o n .~: rad c o; F:ddieSawyers.
Mlchel k Car uth&lt;•rs, grade fi .
Winners of Chap te r I reading
progra m rv0 n1 s wrn• Chad
Clark . Hobbie Ca rd , gn1dce 1;
C'a mllli a Yoacham. gra de· 2;
.laS&lt;m Dl'f' m, Faith Hose•. gr ade
:1; .l immy Handolph. grade 4;
1\cv ln Fin Icy . grade ;;, and
MIC'hr llr Ca ruthers, grade 6.
Top 1yl nnPrs In thp srlrool for
! ht• mont h·long obSCI'VancC' Wt't'P
Niro lr Hilt . Da nn y Sa.v rr. gra dr
1: Ml chr ll r .Johnson. Amy No rlhup, grath• 2; Luk &lt;' Hol man .
Pau l lhlt•. grade :1; C'ourtney
l(oush; Crista Hose. grade 4:

Tho r harll'r wa s drapPd for
Fa .v Prall a t lhr recen t meeting
of Har riso nville Chapte r. Order
of th&lt;· L JSIN n Slar, held at lhe
!C'mp iP.

i\va nr ll George, wo rt h.v rna·
tron. and Dana Hoffman , worthy
patron. pr&lt;'sided at th e meeting.
Pas t matrons and pas t patrons.
a long wi th dist ringuished Ma·
sons wC'n \ pn•s4'n1 ed along with

Beth Cl:trk . Mar&lt; '.' . Math NI'S,
gra&lt;Jc o; .)('n ·my Di II. .!Of')'

.l!l'atlr :}, ancl T odd Cr;u '(\ .Jtll ir
ll i ll. gnuh • t).

llo•alher Lynn, llolly MlcheliP Dully

Duffys announce twin births

•·

Mr·. and Ms. F:ddie Duffy.
Syracuse. are announ cing the
bir th of twi n daughers. lira ther
L.v nn and Holly Mi chel e. The
Infant s wPighed six pounds. H
ounces and six pounds .l ~oun cr s.
One was 19 Inches long and thP
othPr 20 Inc hes long. They were
born on Ma rch 21; at the liolzcr

Medi cal Ce nter.
Materna l grandparpnts arc
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clyde .Johnson.
Portland. Pa ternal grand par·
cnt s arr Mr. and Mrs. Jar k Duffy
Sr., Syracu se. Mr. and Mrs.
Duffy have a daug hter. Amber
Nicole. age three.

Wildwood Garden Club meets
As a part of National Garden
Club Week , thf'Wlldwood Garden
Club wll carr)' out seve ral
romm un it .l ' bra ut lfi ra l ion
projects.
Members will be removing
shrubbery a nd tr·lmmlng trees
whlr h extend ovr r the Gilmore
Ct• mrtery sign and then will do
some replarrment plantings

then' laiN. Tht· group will also
participate In bc•au tifvi ng the
Forest Hun and Morning Star
Churches with plantings of bu lbs.
pe rennials and annua ls.
Flm'l:f'r

urrangcmC'n l s

ur c

mad&lt;' wreklv for churches in the
commu nit y: Members di vide
and sh11re pla nt s fr om their ow n
ganlens.

Meigs County property transfers
Compiled by Emmogene Holstein Congo, Melp County Recorder.

J,i\UNCH - Students of the Ruclne Elenwntary School
preparing for thPir hulloon launch for the right to read month
ohs(lrvan ce.

I

Poet's corner
.~~~~lU~I'

Of \ 'ou

Wlwn

Thftrt" onrr " ''' " n 11 rl,\'
111111 I didn 't . l"f' you

.Ju..-t a s!t•P n"·uy frnm Ht'U\'I'n .
Whrn" l '111'1&gt;t'l'l\'l• rn~· crnwn,
.J u .~t ~~ C'hl1m;•p th at I m u~· ~~~N' Him .
Cl'al'!p th1• hanrt HI' ofrrrs mr.
.J u~ t a r h:JOCf' thAt I cun thank Hi m,
For thC' tlmr Ht• Sl'l mr frrt'.

It Wll !l SO lll Cilk. St) ~li d ,

SO blu£'.
fh('rf' h:l\'l' bt'f'n mun.v u clay
~ as t suy,
That luwl' hnpprnf'd to ml'.
So blue and untrm•.
fk'c•oJUS(' or you.

. Ju~t (I chunrc to S('(' thr fllory.
Of that plat'r up In l hr skv .
To "'a !k on sli'('('! S of ~old fol'l'wr.
In tha t pi{U:'l' vou nrvrr dlr.
JtL~t toM lh&lt;;re wllh thf' AnjZrl!!.
And l ht' Onf'S "' hO'V£' ~Onf' l:K'foi'C'.

Thrn thr day that I ~II "' ,\'Ou
Thr sun shone throu f,l h
Thr r lauchl movrd nwny
And aJr:"aln m~· hf'art felt trur
Of roursc\ l:wt'ausP of ~Jou .
lJow I!C l! that I rnmf'
To fl"('lthls way , ~·ou ,o; uv
Wl"ll , don' t vou know
BPcau~·
my hl'nrl Wa.!'
Mv life WlHI lovf'd :tnd ALl.

orYou

Just u C' hancC', but Jtlnd I ht'ard Hi m.

Wh rn Hr kl10t' kcd a t m y hNu·t,. door,
.
11'\l('

.. Jlt•rausc• of you.
Rhonda Rlllhburn
SPnlor at Mrl,~~t!l Hl ~h St'hool
JuM A

Chlllnt~

.lust a onn f'r away from Vlcrory,

I

•
r• lav mv bun:kns down.

,Just tl r-hnn C'r. hr wl\1 rr mrmbe'r .
or m\' llh'. $0 IOSI In !tin. •
o r thf. tlm" 1 tr t Him r nt l" t',
Clt'nn!'t' m~· !lOU I from det"p Wilhln .
.Ius I u c• hnn cr to bt' tht'l'f' with Ulm,
Th rou)i!'houl all E ternity.
" Twus worth 11 all, thr r hanrt" HeoffeN'd.
When Hl' .snjd "Comt• Unt o Mt'."
Ol('n Har rislln

Pom rroy

Elmer Gerald Young, Sr., by
adm., to Robert A. Murphy,
Trac t. Ches ter.
Kenneth T. Doty. to Alva
Sowards, Hazel Hughes, 4A.
Bedford.
Cecil Tolan , to Dante! 0 . Tolan,
Valerie Tolan, 1.97A, Bedford.
James F. Russell, Irene F .
Russell, to Harold Miller, Anna
Mae Miller, .lOA, Lebanon.
Gary S. Asptn, to Karen Aspln,
Tracts , Salem.
Ruth A. Toothman, to John
Douglas, Sue Douglas, Parcels,
Olive.
Charles F. King. Dona Lee
King , to Charles Randel King.
Cheryl Ann King, Parcel ,
Rutland .
Frances Raymond, to Esther
Mae Franklin, John H. Warner,
Jr., Dorothy A. Hill, Richard N.
Warner, Tracts, Rutland.
Yv9nne H. Scally, Paul E .

Dalley, Scally·Dally Properties.
to Ronald J . Raymond, Luella C.
Raymond, Pt. Lot 72, Mldd. VIII .
Carl D. Hughes, to Evelrn
Hughes, Lot 33, Pom. VIII.
Diana L. Smith, Gary M.
Smith, to Ltsa R. Ashley, Pt. Lot
82, Mldd. VIII. .

Timothy F. Imboden, to Vaterie J . Imboden . Lot 297,
Syracuse.
Jerry A. Draper, Jeanette I.
Draper, to U.S.A. Farmers
Home Ad m 1n . , Pa rce Is,
Columbia.

---=:
--

'"-"

IIIL•

.,_,. •

·•

c :,

.~ SWim Molds · Interpreting Services

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

:a: Licensed. Clinical Audiologist
! (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenv~. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
11.1

8·

MOHAWK CARPETS
STAINMASTEI

NOt:ICE
OF SALE
By virtue of' an Order of
Safe issued• out of the
Common Plea• Court 01'
Meigs County , Ohio, in the
case of Diamond Savings 8a
loan Comp1ny, Plaintiff,
against Joyce A. Blake. at
al .. Defendants. upon a
Judgment therein rendered ,
being Casa No. 86-CV-197
in said Court, I will offer for
&amp;ale, at the front door of the

and New Streett and more
particularly described 11
follows:
Beginning at the IOU·
thea at corner of lot 1 19;
thence North on seid lot, 84
feet, more or less. along
Section Street; thence run~
ning due West a distance of
108 fee$,·1J.!Ore or tes1. to,t he
propeny sold to J .N. Roth·
burn Sons by Mary Heyman ;
thence running due sou1h 1
d;.tance of 86 teet , more or
len. 1henca running ducr

Eeat one hundred the feet,
more or leu, tq the place of

beginning .
Reference Deed : Volume
218, Poga 571, Meigs

Co"unty Deed Records.

PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE
.
The Village df Middlepon
is applying to the Ohio
Department of Transportation for an operating ••sist·
ance grant under Section 18
of the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964, as
amended. The grant will
provide a public tranaportation service for the rnidents
of the Middleport-Pomeroy
area.
The village invite• commanta from all interested

public, prlvete. and paratran·

ilt operators Including tiJII

opliratore regard~ng the pro"
po&amp;ed urvice.
A public hearing will be
held on May 28, t 987 at
7 :30 p.m . in the Council
Chambers al Village Hall.
~ Fred Hoffman

4· 7·'87·1 mo .

E. Mai••Wil

\ I

482-smart, easy cro·
chet! A great tabard to
wear and wear. Use baby
yam in one color, edge in
2nd color. Directions.
sizes 8·14 incl.
Each patlem $3.25 plus
75¢ postage/handling.
(N.Y. residents 111t1 sales lax.)

Sind ID:

Alltllr IIIII

The Daily Sentinel
124 11a1111m Blvd., w-.,
NY 11m. Pritt Nemt. Adchu.
~.

5

lEBANON TOWNSHIP- JO
acres 1\'0odland, minerals,
t&lt;ee gas !rom exisling well
Private &amp; secluded. RE:
DUCED PRICE' $8,500.00.
lEE CIRCLE - SYRACUSE
- Nice 3 bedroom ran ch
with dining area, large liv ing
mom, laundry a&lt;ea, carport
and outside storage. Nice
neighborhood. Owner must
sacrifice. I. 900.00.
PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DLEPORT - Nicely remo·
deled I ~ story home on a
Quiet street in town. Many
features. Must be seen. Was
$24,900. NOW $21 ,900.00.

Size, Plltlm -..-.

FLOWERING PLANTS

Mayor
Vltlaga ol Middlaport
(4) 20. 27

FrW Cllidt111

4·15 I mo.

!AGIIS CIUI-rOMUOY, OH.

New Credit C1rdl No ~
refused Vlu·Meaterc:1rd. t':jtl
t • 011 · 55 5 · 15 22 o.iJ :;.

C04440H 24 hours.

, ... ..

U. . ...J.OII•111tll7

rutuc IN'ima

·

G&amp;MTV
REPAIR

••••
..,

4

.

Moving mu1t glviiiWI'f CQ.~4j

49835 St. lt. 124
locine, Ohio 45771

lhephlt'd Pup 8wks. old .~ ~,
014-445-4070.
•J'::--:-:~---~""

949·3088 Bus.
949-2606 Home

1yr. old Ph. 114-44~ · 0912 . .. ·..,'"'

F•mtle black ltbrtdore d~

:-----.;_;_--..~,;;;

All Makes &amp; Madlls

&amp; puppin glveaw1y to good
home. mother • betglt. OWkl
old Ph. 814 ·441-3599.
·
, ,.
.

24 HR. SERVICE

Young Femtlt pert llut Tiel• •
Hound . Ctll 114· 241·5439 .

3·17·2 010. pd.

.

::-------..:.. ~

Mattr"t &amp; b~~~ tprlnv•. Good "'"
Condition. 304·175-3731 .

WOODWORK$
;;--o::-:::-:-:-7P:---,..- •.

CUSTOM :
•PLANING
•JOINTING
•MOLDING

6 Lost and Found

VARIOUS PATTERNS
AND WOOD SPECIES
985-4176 qr 985·3564
38632 BAILEY RD .
f!OME

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u, S. RT. 50 EAST

Po~~~troy Ohio

G~YSYIUE,

OHIO

Aulhorlutf.Jolrn Dttro, .
Now llolioiNI1 lutll Hog
form Equipmont
Doalor

F~t~t Eq•l~•••t

Pertt &amp;Se.-.lu

1·3·'16 tic

Plumbinl and
Electrical Repair 25%
Off for Senior
Citizens. Free Est.

0924 .

Wanted To Buy

9

' ~~ .
'

We PlY Ctth for lett model clttn ,

t

TOP CAIH pold la,; •n modal ,
ll'ld ntwtr u1ed ctn , lmHh
lulctt .Rontleo. 1111 Eltttrn ' ••
Ave., Gtlllpona. Ct11 114·4••· , , ·
2212 .

:----------·
·~
114.1 ...

FLOWERS FOR

U1td Mobile Hom11 Ph.

ALL OCCASIONS
NEW IDEAS
PUll &amp; IARIARl
VAN METIR ....:J04-77S ·IIIS

(1.....

Altar l

...iifl-"11

614· 741-2191

I·IH

110.

- -------- .,.
448·0170 .

.

Wll'lttd to buy, good woftdnt , · •

rlrtgtr weehtr. R.. nntbly ''
prleact Ctn e 14· 742·2211&amp;.

.

.

"

., . . .

Buying deily gold, tlhrtr I!Dint, • ;
rlngt, t-welrv. st.,llnv w•e. old' •1
oolnt.
currtncy. Top pri. 1• .'•
CH. Ed urkttt leJbtf lhop , t 1
2nd. Aw. Mlddlepon, Oh. 114: • •'
982· :W7f.
I , l 1'

'"I'

.,

luylng junk c••· C•ll•fltr l :o0 ' •
pm . Cal1114 ·t82· 1141.
•'
' I

S.tordoy 10 l.!lf.

to II NOON

OtMr tlmH by 1hafke or

I !ll[ti!IV!III'ill

'"" 99!-!731 ,.,

;, t'/ J :1 I'

appointmtttt.

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

~

l

Q Flo,•l ==-=--------'· '
~7 Malon,
Bouqu•t
W. Yo.

(SliP&lt; Run Aru)
HOURS. WIHf.. Jhun..Frl.
tO a.fll. to S p.m.

This Week

'•
1

J,m Mink Chw.·Oidalnc. ,
1111 Gent John10n
•.
814· 445-3172

THE HAT RACK

All types Carpentry,

.,

Lou or a1rtyed, 2 Elk Hound1. 1 '
mtle &amp; 1 ltmllt. C•lll14· 441·

uttd ctrs.

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

.'

(CUT OUT

FOR

fUTUif USfl

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.....

.,,

l011 'Moin~

llU
Pomeroy
HOURS: Tues .·Wed.-Fri.
II a.m. to 7 f!..m.

•Washers •Diahwashers

. ..
.,,..

.

ANTIQUES

BUY OR SELL
RiveriM Ant'

985·3561
~II M•ktt

•A•nu••
•Refrlger•tors

Sunday: I p.m.-7 p.m.

by

•Dryers •FrHztrs

PARTS end SERVICE

ChaMo

or AppolniiMtll

. RUSS MOORE
. 992·2526

1-tH,...

4 5·11&lt;

••'
''

..

"'

• ' "I

MIIIDCIAniD COUNflf

RIM I

Wooci-CrO&lt;hol. Quilling
flowtrl, S.wlng,
lo1ko1 Lid•

(Ofllml DUI

PIIC!II

4·14-1 mo.

SMAU ENGINE
REPAIR

Authorllttl Senlct
&amp; rarts
Briggs , Stratton
T11 umHh
Wed Eater

"' mellte

J~cObHn

VALLEY LUMIEI
&amp; SUPPLY
Mhllll.-t, Oh.

992·6611

3·20-e7

,

•

...

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

"

...

..

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"'
,.

-~·

CUSTOM llllt
HeMS &amp; GAUGES
·,"A1 ......... 1. '"'•"

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2160
Doy or Night
NO SIMAY CAW

·-··.

HEAnNG &amp;
PLU.IIG &amp; HE&amp;nNG
161 North SocOIIII

. •••• ,.. •• Ohio

457~

SAlES &amp;SERVICE

Wt C~rry flt!Mng luflllllat

Ceble.
Phone Bib Here
IUSINlll ,_.

PIIY Your

t6141 "I·6SSD
ti

Bill PIIOIIl

t6UI. "2-7754

~­ &amp;.
.,,_ioo of ductwork
-•illonilt.

hotrt141fitrl, for••· ....
1114 air c-itoiot
All work

,.....,,oltd.

CALL 16141915-4222
SPECIAL:
HEtL-=-Pocllago olr
condhlonlng for moblto

or modular ho,.., 2'h
or 3 ton unite inltiUid
on peel • rNdy
Price: 11019.98

cooL
....

1/ 21/""

CiOW'S
FAIILYIESTAUIAJn
PM. "1·5412
.a.IOY, 011..

'

New Credh C~rdl No ;.;._,\
ratuaect Viii·M..Iercerd. Cell
1 · 019- 585 . 1522 ... .
04310h. 24 hfl,
~ .~

"«'·

BINGO

Public Notice

Molga County, Ohio
(4) 6. 1 3, 20: 3tc

""

$3.25

.

4· 17· 1 mo.

11 Help Wanted
Hiring! 00\ltrnment )obt. yo,,
""· t1II,OOO·•••.ooo. Phone
c:tll retundeblt. 102·1:11-111&amp;.

SIJrubbtry or fruit TrHs,

FOR JUST

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 614/ 949-2686

6-17-lfc

..

•
"

G•r•llu..., Vlelets &amp;
llantillt los..ts.
Open 9-5 Daily, Sunday 1·5

,

4-16· 1 mo.

.......

_ , warletln;

paint

SAND BLASTING- Dry &amp;looting, Wet Bloating, and
Vacuum Blaatlng of ttructur~l atttl. tlnka,
bulldinga, and miscell..,eous Items .

•

PO so. Pl.
$JSO PO FlAl

Sl

"SIDING - Vinyl, Aluminum, and Wood
PAINTING- All types Including apace ago tnautatlng

Call 992-6962
leave mesSI&amp;e on
machine if no answer.

'

S7 50 m na1

ways

PH. 992·5682
or 992·712·1

Public Notice

The Faith Valley Church of
Christ In Christian Union, loca tro on the Bulavllle Porter
Road nca r Gallipolis, will have
revival serv ices, April 27-May 3,
7:30 each evening. Dr. David
Chase wi ll be the evangelist, and
spt&gt;elal singers will be the Holy
Family . The public Is Invited.

$ 1 pq 101111 PICI

ROOFING - Shlngleo, Rolled Roollng, Gutters and In·
autetlng Roof Cootlng
CARPENTRY - Additions. Garogaa, Sun Decks
CONCRETE WORK- Sid-oltuo, Beaomenta and Drive·

~110 Tr••••lt~lo•

' Happy Ads'

Revival planned

YEGnAILE PLANTS

Residential - Commarclel - Industrial
Free Estimates - Fully Insured

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Howard E. Frank
Sheriff of

'.

3 Announcement~

949-2045

GHEEN'S PAINTING, INC.

·sJ

TERMS OF SALE: CASH .

int&lt;&gt;rrstrd in organizing a r ub
sro ut pac k at Sa llsbu ry are askt&gt;d
to attend a mc•eting at 7 p.m. al
thr Rock Springs Grange haiL
Thu rsda.l '.

,.

Frte E.ster Kltten1. 304-871. "!
8517.
.. ... ,.

992-2259

IWO•thirda the •PPraisad
value .

Cubs
to meet
A meeting of boys and parents

Announ;: 1!1111' nl s

949·9070 or

POME~OY,O.

Public Notice

APPRAISED AT
123,600.00. Tho reol aatote
cannot be sold for leu than

bu y a new flag and thr women
wiil put " quilt in frame s and
begin quilting regularly.

4-16-87-1 mo.

TWIN MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............ 198.88
FULL MA TTRESS/IOXSPRING ............ 1148.88
CHEST$ .......... 149.95 RECliNERS ..... I99. 95
DINETTE/4 CHAIR$ ............................. 199. 95
12 Months Free Financing

801&amp;-0resa up a dress
or sweater with coltar and
cults sized to Ill all.
Crochet of bedspread
cotton. Instructions lor
both sets Included.
Each pattern $3.25 plus
75e postage/handling.
(N.Y.rllitlerls illtl sale! I¥ I

Courthouse In Pomeroy.
Meigs County, iinio. on the

quarter a pound.

Bridge Closing Special

992-6173

Middleport, Ohio

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

Public Notice

Qhio 4&amp;780:
Situate in the Village of
Middleport. County of
Meigs and Slate of Ohio.
Being on the West side of
Seeond Slroel betwaen Mitt

TOWING

IIIUIS.•I Pll-11 6&gt;41

EMPIRE FURNITURE

Dewey Horton
President of Council
141 20, 27 2tc

Mlddtei&gt;on.

8
ACTION

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

Hobson Drive

Paaoed the 23rd day of
April. 1987.
At1eat: Jon P . Buck, Clark

Cited at 66 South Second.

USED TIRES
NEW BATTERIES

5, 10 AND LIFETIME WA~RANTV
ON CARPET 8t PADDING
Expert In-lallation
Up ·to 36 Months Financing Available

lieet data aa provided by law.

15th day of May. 1987, •t
10:00 a.m., the following
lends and tehements, to-

· &amp; ROAD SERVICE

WEAl DATED

.

wrC'kC'nd \\' Ill I'C'f'C'ive u

SYIACUSf
992 · 5776
llow 0)1111 fiM' Sprifll S..1011

~ ' COmputerized Hearing Aid Selection ·

::r=:r. =-eo:·=

CHECK THE -

24 HOUR TOWING

,•

· oRDINANCE NO . 1181 -87
An Ordinanc'a to Establish
Salari•s for Village Officills
Be it Ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport •• follows:
Sec. L Th1t the salary for
the mayor shall be $8,000.
per year.
Sec. ft . That the utory for
the clerk-treasurer shall be
$6.000 per year.
Sac. Itt. Thet any ordinance
in conftict with this ordinance
is hereby ._etod.
·
Sec . IV . This Ordinance
shall taka eHect and be in
force from a lid after ~he ear-

all end nex t week's mePiing when
no rrin stah •mf'nl fC"&lt;' will br ',7_'
r ha rgecL lnfor'mation on TOPS ..
mli .V be obfai ned b)' railing
~m2- 21;12. Membrr·s are romlndea
.,
that those l osl n ~ weight over

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

.

- ... .~·.
1:1::.te..

Public Notice .

~

'

,. • .•

;;:=

"'
Swartz,
Barbara
toM.Elza
Pullins,
1.055. 1-------------~===========­
'"

Arvel
Swartz,
0range.
Lisa R. Ashley, to Diana L.
Smith, Gary M. Smith, Lot 82.
Mldd.
Frances E. Hewitt fka, Fran·
ces E. Moore, Dec'd .. to Beth Ann
Knotts, Robert T. Hewitt, MIchael E. Hewttt.Cert ., Porn. VIII.
Home Nat 'l Bank; to VIrginia
M. Hendricks, Parcel, Lebanon.
Jerrie Neal, James R. Neal, to
Elwood Howard Jr., Deborah L.
Howard, Parcels, Scipio.
Donna R. Ohlinger. William A.
Ohlinger, to Donna R. Ohlinger,
William A. Ohlinger, Parcel,
Chester.
.
France L. Hagl)', to David W.
Haggy, Parcels, Rutland.

na.•

::t=:'

Harrisonville happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Russ Eshelman
and son. Budd;·. visited the
F:shl'iman 's daughter in Otway
rcrrntlv. While hN&lt;' th&lt;·y at ·
le ndrd . a ··swup m&lt;' l'l. , at lhf'
Scio to Fairgrounds ncar
l.uc a sv iilr.
Ra ymond DonohuP is now
r mployrd at Powhatan Point.
Their son. Steve, Is staying wi th
his mother here to handle the
farm chorJ's.
.John and Anne Williams r·c·
Prntly visited her sis ter In
Somerset. Ky.
Louisr F.schelma n's grandson,
Henrv Ciavarella. captain in the
U.S. Air ForcP stationed In New
York. visited th e Esrhelman
fam ll.v rPrentl.v Installing his
belated Christmas gift, a sa tt c·
lite dlsr .
·
Ne llif' Lowe has return&lt; 'd to her
homP uftpr spending 'cvrrul
months at the home of het· sister
in WhN'lersburg.
The Har ri sonvill&lt;• Senior Cltl·
ze ns mel Apr il14 all he town hall
lor a biOO&lt;I prPssure rll nlr and
monthl y meeting. Twenty- two
persons had their blood pressure
rheckM. The members voted to

WM'I'I

=-=·

Visitors at the mN'ting w&lt;·re
Sand.v Qui r k. ,\ lban)· Chapter:
Mr. and Mrs. William King ,
Midd leport: and Mr. and Mrs .
l.&lt;•wis Sr hornlan , Clouster.
Grace was given by Bob RE'ed
and refreshments wrr-r• provided · ..
by the co mmlttrr Mr . a nd Mrs.
Charles King. Chester Kin g.
Anna Sf'huler-, and Charlden&lt;•
Alkire.

F.\ISif'r

• .•

Cl. . ified PtiP• ~,. dle
/oUo~nl rel~pltorw u:t:l..~~pt .. ,

TOPS holds recent meeting
of TOPS Oli Hoti. Rutland. Sa nd.v
Sergent won th&lt;• w&lt; 'ekl.v fruit
bas ket. Linda Hvs&lt;'l l and Carol
Fr ida1· werr ;vclro med. All
formpr members are invll&lt;'d to

ICifo..,.

_,..

allow&amp;Children and their surviv· household turns 16.
in~ parent benefit s if the income
Widows and widowers without
earner had six quarters of children can file for benefits as
coverage In the th ree year prior early as 60 while disabled widows
to death. ·
. and widowers can begin to
On th E' topic of children, they · receive as early as age 50. Even
can , receive benefits from a the divorced are protecteH; the
deceased natural parent , a step- marriage to the decedpnt must
parent, a divo rced parE&gt;nt, or an have lastro at least 10 years
adoptive parent. Checks con · before the divorce . however.
tlnuE&gt; until the child turns 18 and We're about out of space but stay
rE&gt;malns unmarri E'd. If the child tunM. In the next column we 'll
Is In high school as a full time talk about payment amounts for
st udent, then benefit wlll .be paid survivors and related matters.
until agE' 19 or high shoot
If you have nay questions In the
graduation, whlchE&gt;ver comes meantime. give us a call at the
first. No benefits are paid to Athens Social Security office.
college stud ents . The remaining Our number Is 992·6622 and we're
parent Is a lso eli gible for checks open Monday through Friday
until the voungest child in the 8: 45·4: 30.

runnf'r·up at lh&lt;' wrPkl,\' mP('ting

RATII

............. ...__ . .. -·
·.._
,.

explained

ShlrlPv Turnl'r wa s lh&lt;' w&lt;•e ki.l·
best los~r and rirk i Ferrell thr

·-·--

... ··___
-··- ..•..-.•....__.........•__. .

,...... N..

lly develop AIDS. The test Is not especially blood banks do.n'l ·
fool -proof, and a person without have enough resourcP.s to a&lt;jmln·
the virus may test positive and Isler the test to everyonE' a{ once
v ice versa. A Western Blot testis and .counsel Ihem a.ftE'rwards.
used to confirm lhe presence of
Tht&gt; Red Cross and other health
AlpS virus antibodies in people agencies perform the ELISA test
.with positive ELISA tests . The for a small fee. Because of the .
Western Blot Is ·more relia ble high demand for the test. you
than ELISA. but It Is also more mav havp to walt severa l ~eeks .
expensive.
Soon, however , doctors and blood
Question: Wht&gt;re d.Q I get the banks will be better equipped to
ELISA test?
administer the ELISA test and
Answer: The CDC's rccorn· · counsel people who positi ve.
mend a Iion for mass testing of
If vou received a blood transfu blood recipients surprised many sion between 1978 and March
health workers .who were unpre· 198~ . cton't panic. Most people
pared for thr Influx of people who rt&gt;ct&gt;ived •blood during this
wanting to be tested . Doctors.and time ·. are safe from the · AIDS
virus.

pa st matrons a nd patrons of
.lark Morri s \.\'CI S ini!iatdl and
other chapte rs.
welc omed into th r ord(•r
Huby Diehl. tiCI-yca 1 membe r.
Members sa ng ·· Happ)· Birth ·
was pn•smt&lt;•d along wi th Bett)· da~· " to n o nnu NPison. It \\'LI S
Bishop, president of District 2o, . ann ounced th.1t th&lt;· will bP ;1
and Charles Kin g. grand aldn to
potluck fo llowing Inspectio n on
deputy grand mal ron. i\ mem or· April :111. Mrs. Bi shop annou nCl•d
ia l for Dr. Domin ic· Rrul', past
the di strict part )· lo. bl' hr ld SPpt.
grand patron. was read by
1~ .
A Silusagr and pan ra kr
Graeic Wilson and the altar wa s dinnrr w&lt;:~s announ r c\cl for April
dra pM for him.
2o a t Hc•lpn•.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

.Business Services

'

ben~fits

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

2o,. 1987 ;·
PQ-6

Harrisonville Eastern Star conducts meeting

Morarlty, 1\n ~P l Hob&lt;'rl s. gra de• .lrn ·m.v Nor thup, Dm·id .Ju sl is .
4; Ra r hr l Hc nsl,•r, H.va n Hol ln.

Monday, April20, 1987

after 1979 transfusion?

By Lou Horvath
widow · who received benefits
Field Representative
from 1940 until her death In the
Here's a subject we've dis· mid-70's. Survivor benefits are
cussed before but we've been paid to widows ... but widowE&gt;rs,
getting a lot of questio ns about It children, dependent parents, dis·
lately in the office and on the abted children, dlvorcE'd widow·
radio call-In shows we do. The · ers and widows, and even CE'rtain
subject Is survivor benefits. It dependent grandchildren can
seems to be common knowledge arso qualify for monthly benefits.
thaf widows can receive Social You st&gt;e, Social Security protects
St'curlty benefits, but for some not only the IncomE' earner but
folks, that' s where thE' program also those family members de·
familiarity end s. They' re just not pendent on his or her Income .
sure about when, how much, or
The worker must be insured for
how to fil E'.
the survivors to be eligible. That
Survivor benefits were part of means that he or she had enough
the first package of amendments Social Security covE&gt;red earn·
lo the original Social Security lngs. The most anyone needs is
Act . As a matter of fact. the fir st forty quarters (ten years) but
Social Security beneficiary wa s a there Is a specia l rule which

'

Senti_n~l_

·The paily

•

. ..
'•
i•

••

i
I•
l

·-•

FOR SALE
6 room ~ouse in
Middl•port. 3
btdrOOIIS, bath,
'full NSIIIIAt,
IIIJI lot. 2 tar

praae.

CAU
614·992·5569
AFTER4

GUN SHOOT
We can r~ir and rt·
core rldiltors 11d
htltw cores. We can

also .-:id boil IIIII rod
out rldiltors. We also
111ptir &amp;II Tanks.

PAT NtLL FORD
li~·2111

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

uaNE

,. DEn.
lo .......l •••

IYIIT
SAT. liGHT
6:30P.M.
Farry

a..u

YOUNG.'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- AddOM Md remoc:ltNno

- Aooftnt IIICf - - _,.
- Conor11e wrod
- "'""*"t IIICf tltctrlcot

-·

lfrMhtimatnl

V. (. YOUNG Ill
.992-6215

If

"2·7il4

,_.,, Ohit
4-15-'86·1&lt;

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10·8·1fc

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennaa
Satellite Salts
lnatallatlon

Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-143· 5248
RUSONAIU • llliAIU
8·20-'86 tin

J&amp;N
CONSTRUCTION
Will Do .. ..
Carpentery - Vinyl
&amp; Aluminum Siding
- PaintinfDrywal
Free Estimales
Reliable

Tllwit6on AdvMtJtlna· N•M

high .,."IV ptrton for the

,..

Gltllpolls, •••· Postlbie futur• • •
m•ntetmtnt opportunity. hH r
&amp; commltllon . E•p•lence In
Ad\llf11tlng 111M prtfwr«t. Ph,

304·522·0304.

'

.
'

M1ke ••tra m011ey 1111 Avon

Prvduou. Cen ••n up, to 1!10%
proth Ph. 114-.t48· 2111.
~- ....

E.llptrltnctd body mtn nHd.., : to build
lllirt or trucke ....... l
Mutt hen tools &amp; b4t 1bl110 dci"' ·~

"""'tid

ttructurt work. Ctll e14 ·311·i" ,"'
1115.
•

PM1-Time AdrninlltretW. Astlstsnt. Musl tVpe 10 wpm • ,.
ec:cur•taly. Good vttbel tk.lllt &amp;
'""•
""lt1en communklation tklllt
FtcfUired. GDOCI fill"' tkllll ,.

...;.
•

qulr_,, Muttbub4etoworhwell.., ; , it..
unct.r prenure, knowledge of ..•'
lhOtthend. c:omputen I w~.rd '" .!
ptoc.ttora bentficlll . Job lhlr· •
lno poaUkm. Hour• art l1m . .. •
4:30 prn t\ltry Thurtd-.y S. , :

Friday &amp; tvtry oth• We&lt;tntt·
dt'f. Send resum., to : SEOEMS, '
At . 4. Bo• 144, G•lllpotlt, OH .. ,
45131 by April 27th .
Need plrHirnt baby litte r in my
home . Pl'f 190.00 month, 4
dl¥1 I

1858.

W111l1.

Ph . 614 ·44&amp;-

Gua11nteed Work
992 -7636
4-17·1010.
' 1

SANDY'S

AUTO SALES
&amp;ut01111tl" lepair
&amp; Senke
TUNlUPS It TIANSIISIION
CAll "2-7403 Aft•

Sl. II. U, P-oy, OH.
We'll Sell You &amp;
1114 Car er Pix

Y• Old One

AUTOMAnc
TRANSMISSIONS
IEIUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULIEIIY AVE.

POMIIOYI OH.

PH. 992·9949
llalt lart111,

Oifll~er

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP
SSO Page St., Mid. Ipot t

Ph. 992-3537

4-1·' 7· 1 mo.

It by titter to comelo my home 2
c:hlldren. etote to Holaer 7:30 to
2:00. ,_eferente rtquied C•ll
114 ~ 446 - 0498 t fter 8PM.

''

' '.J..

..'

.~

'' I&gt;
Truck drlvar nelded, 3vrs . e.o~pe· .' 11
v
rlence, t•nker uperltt~te n•ce 1. • '"'~
Nry. F•mily mtn preferrtd.
Wells Trucking Ph. 614· 258· 'If: i,
8088.
• '1;1 11

'r ••~l

BOWLING II

Ponwoy lowlino Co.
3821. 2ND Sf.

..... lhk

o4

with

r::.::~=

... -lrioll

Pert· tin:'• IOtltl worh position.
.,·,
1
Prot actNe ltrvlce rtpretentJ· ,. ~ ..
live •erving persona with mtinut
ftttrd.tion ·developmtnttl dla.
, •,,
ebilltln in Gellle County ......
·1
8ecl'ttlort degree in related tietd
,,r, /,
Pf'lftrred. Send rtaume by Mev • , ••Jo,c',
1 to Oient lluvegeot, Ad\loc~ey 't ,,_;,
&amp; Protective lirvit:H, 1814&amp;
Btni\Oek Aoed. St. Cleluville.

Ohio 439&amp;0 .

n~ld

Good Fri. &amp; Sat ni1ht1

or any open bowline
tlmt. Clll us for parties

lor your roup.
992·343 01 99lilt~~.

tte~uwtd.

Mature

penon

P•rt·timt,
C•ll ,114·

dllptretely

nHdtd to blbyall2yr. old in our

hOme. 111~ ehlfta. Cententry Ph.
11.·44e. f415 2 lo 8 PM.

'·V

�•
\
Page~ s - The

11

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy'-- Midclleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

44

LAFF·A·DAY

HBJ lnnuan ee Farm Unit. Se&amp;k ·
ing sales rep . in Gallit &amp;
surrounding counties. Unique
marketing s-ystem. Mtny eJdtt·

interviiiWtl write: Mr. Dainet Dltt .
Mgr ctre of Box T -200 Gatl!polis Oaily Tr ibune, 826 Third A11e
OaiUpoUt. Ohio 46631 .

u

skills

r equired . knowledge - office
praetices &amp; procedural. Appli cttio ntr.aken through Ftl~ay . Apr il

..
L

Health Department. Equal Oppor1unl lo,fadtemp -

$16.040 -

t59 ,230 yr . Now t'liring. Call
805-687 -6000 Ext R-9805 for

4926.

currant f&amp;deralli11 .

New apartment: Com pletely
turn. Rtf. &amp;r Oep. 1 or 2 adultt
onlv. Cell 614· 446 -0338.

Hiring! GO\o'Brnment JObi· '(Our
S15,000.-S68,000. PhOne
call refundable. {602)838 -8886
E• t 1449
lUetl

EMT. LPN o r AN to perform
insurance eumt. hperienced.
il'r'
PNU , p .0 ,
Pnrt Send
time retumft
poJitlon to
with
Box 370 , Dunbat, Wett Vitglnle,

"When ate··we·(going to ·see
the mountains of red tape?"

26804.

31

Homes for Sale

Federal. State and Civil Service
J obt. 816 ,707. to $69,148.
YJitf , Now hiring. Ca ll Job Line
1r 618· 459·3611 Ext. F-13860
lor litlin g. 24 hn .

7 room1, beth 1/1, houu In
Cheater, Ohio. Price r&amp;duced
from U7.000 to 126,000.
PhcnB &amp;14-986-3671 .

36 Lots .&amp; Acreage
33 ecret : 3 milet weat of HMC.
neat rout• 35 . C1ll 614 ·4488221 after 8 .

,,,ume to Janice Lewton. Svre·
c,_,, • • Oh io by Mev 1. 1987.

5 room. betl'l, u111ity , garage,
centrAl h&amp;flt , A.C., ttorm win·
dows end doort . &amp;14 -992 ·

5204.

Lot 4· 6 acrtt more-le... 6 miles
from city Umitt. Rt . 218 . Calf
814-448-2480 efter 4pm.

AVON , no service charge. open
territories . phone 304 -675 1,429 .

Gevernment Homet from $1 . tU
rep1ir). De linquent tax property.
Ca ll 1 - 619 · 565 - 1867 Ext .
HOU40H for current repo list.

321188 Building. ••ctric &amp; city

Now teh ing appltc411 iO; nt for pool

nltanayer and life guardt. Send

ft rn exira money in the Army
Nationel Guard. 304 ·675 ·3960
·800· 642 - 3619.

Ul',

12

Situations
Wanted

Work wanted mowing. odd jobt.
l~ht hauling. Meig1. Gallia and
MBIHin Countias . 614 - 992 ·
8589 .
~-------------------

15

Schools
Instruction

Rotulln Now . Southoutern8ut·
iness Coli~J~ge Ca ll 614-446 4367

]; ~ Wanted to Do
M11'tun1 Cfuilt lan man. Groundt.
klltping, handvmBn, •nd lAwnc ar• Ph . 614-448-2760.
J (m' s odd jobt painting, drive·
wily resealing, c arpenter work &amp;
roof rep•lr, treea &amp; htdgel
uperl•nced . Call 1814 -319 -

2418.

.

Wou ld Uk e to babytit ffo m 7pm
to 7a m, 11l1o weekend• anytime.
Call814 -446-3978 .

Finanml
21

Business
Opportunity

4 8110 1cres- Jack ton Co. with

Mull te ll within 30 daya. In
Pomerov. nice 3 bedroom house
with tlreplac:•. full buementand
newer lluminum aiding. Oniy
816,000. C•ll814· 992· 3187.

3 bedroom home. storm win·
dows, c:•r P•I Ing, utilhy·g•rege
lnd 1tora ge. Garden spot. Priced
for quick ~ale . Sue Fred Williamton or cell 61 4· 742· 2490 •fter
6 p .m .
Middlepo rt. refini1hmt inside. 8
room. bath, large por ch. garage.
work •hop. good loc ation. Cell

614 ·992·2802.

5 07 Chandlnr Drlva, Point Pleasant . 3 badroomt newly remo deled kitchen Bnd b tth. New
c11r pot. Unatuu:hed garagn. Full
sbe buement . l•rge Uvlngroom
lind dining. Greatloeation. low
5o · • . C•ll Jo• -755 · 01 2 6 .
Thurad11y1 9 :00 -9:00 uk for
Dave.
No polntt or eloting co ttl I 3·br,

1 b•th , f a mily ro o m w ·
woo dburner cent rat air, 1 'It
.acre1. Auume lo•n et 10
perc&amp;nt lnterelt . Cetl •ft•r 4 :00
p.m. 304-875·4460 .

304-675-5835.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
USED MOBILE

! NOTIC E I
HOMES MESSEL'S QUALITY
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH - MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
ING CO . reco mmond1 tllAt you WEST. O'ALliPOLIS, RT 35.
d(l butin eu with people you . PHONE 6U ·446· 7274 .
know , end NOl lo send money
lhr011 Qh the mnil unlit vou h11v e
1984 Shulll Mobile Home.
invaatigo lud tho offttr ing
What a de•l l Ph . 61 4· 446-6725.

Professional
Services

" A little Dailgn", lntf)rlor de•lgn bualne u for peopl• on
limited budget . Independently
owned, 304-87S-M36
Electrolu• S11lfll tm&lt;t Se rvice,
304-875 -1467 . Spodel: Ehtc·
unlux D-2 tweeper S349.00 .

For u le by owner, 1979 Br..~ddy
Ux70, 3 BA , 1\/J bath t. total
ttiec. 1torage 1htd. wood 71/, xB.
porch. underpinning, tome fur·
nll hlngt , loc1ttd lot 4, Parklam1
Mobil e Court. C1ll 614· 446·
3066 ttf1er 1 pm.
1982 M11n 1lon o n beautiful
riverfront lot In Middleport . Toul
elect ri c, AC, two larg e bed·
roonn ftnd many extrn. C•ll
6 14-992 · 3348.

WtKtctlng J)ieturfll, Spri n~ Spu·
ci1lrla. Howard' s Studio, phuntl

1975 , 12~r~60 mobile home for
sale. t2200. C11ll 814 -992 6941 .

Rea l Eslale

1973 Freodom. 14a?O . J bttd·
room1. stove, retrlgerAt or. cur ttt ins. 87600 . C11 H 614· 992·

304·675·2931.

31

Homes for Sale

7479

1974 Granvllla 14x70, 3 bed·
room, 1% bAth, All electric. Mu t t
be moved. 18800 080 . Can

814-9e&amp;.4367.
New 38R 2 ur QI"IIQO. bri ck
ftnnt , ftont por ch. nice lnl. 6
mil el South ot On l11polit
847, 50 0 Ph 614 -446-8038
38 R, 2 bltht. QIUII Qe, Lg ,
kitchtn. din ing room, lg. lilrt' lng
roo rn, AC, 9 '/J% in terest 83000
down &amp; take over pllymenh. Ph
614-446·2472 .
Mo dern J bechoo rn home fr 11me
lg . ll ltc hen plenty nt cllbhltttl.
retrlgett~tor , electric range. di1·
potlll, dining room , 2 full b11ths.
ci'l rplted, full buement fin ished,
CA. new gas furna ce, lencad In
backy•rd. ig . Clrport. Re ady to
move in to. good l oct~ tion on
Sunset Or . on Second Ave Ph.
614·446 ·21573 or 446-11 7 1.
48R . 2 beth in clt v prlcft redtJCfld
$28,500. C1'tll614-446-6683
Two ni ce 2 BR hCJmlts With 2 c:: 11r
gflutge &amp; wor~sh o p . 4 383 acrea
on Rt 218 Ph. 61 4 446 -9686.
Govarnmunt homes h orn a 1 tU
tepc.ir). 01Jiinquan1 tu property.
Ca ll 1-619-666-1657 ex t H04310H for cu rrent ropo list
For sale by owner: 2 story ~ou se
In Middleport ovflrlooklng park .
30 vr. gu11rnte&amp;d lo'lny le t ldm g,
w.w c11r pet, 11,-&lt;, bat~ . unique
woo dwork , 614-99 2-6126 .
GO\o'Arnrnent ~omet from ., ,
W·repllr) Oellnquent ta 11. pr operty . Reposseuion1 . Call 805·
687-6000 Ext, GH .- 9806 tor
current repo litt .
2 bedroom hou 1e in Cllf1on .
Price redu ced from 118,000 to
$14 ,000. Phone 1·304 ·773·

5534.

3 BR .. recre.st io n room, .. itch an ,
dinin g room, l•rge front and
bnck porc h. 8a1() woodl!ln build·
in g. y1rd with c hain Hnk ftflce.
Auttlc Hlllt, Syracute. Ohio.
614 -9 49 · 29~ 0 betw••n 9 ·
4p.m . .614· 992 ·5886 after 4 :00

12•50 mobile ho me, unfur ·
ni1hed. 2 bedroom•. 1970
Dodge ·~ ton . C.alleveni ng1 on I\'

304-773-6279 .

1973 Kirkwood, 141170, 3 bedrooms. petrch, outbuilding. ntel·
lite dis h. located 1 ecret on
McC umber Road. Rutl•nd.
Ohio, relocating mu11 nil. c• ll
304·882·2 171 or 882· 2823 .

Rc nl al s
41

3 bdr . •·a nch , Rodney VIllage II ,
t286 mo. Plus deposit. Ref.,encel •equlred, Cell Blackburn
Realty 61 4-446·0008 .
Unturnishad houte, 38R, Rodney Village II. 1278. Ph. 448·
4418 after 7PM .

Furnlthed 3 room cottage aft
newty decorttad , in town ,
adu\11. PltaH no peta. Ref . &amp;
Dapotlt Ph, 814 -446 ·2&amp;43,

Hs. Ront 218 Mill Creek Ph.

614.448.8919

4 room1 , bath, ttll new plint, nice
and clt~an . Depo1i t •nd retitrflnte
"u~u l red . 1 or 2 ctlildren. 814·

992-3090.

2 b&amp;dro om , furnithed. AC, 1
c hild , no pets. New H•ven

304·882·2488.

J bedroo m, unfurnlthed 11 613
Mill St .. Middleport. UOO. pet
mMth plu1 8200. deposit. Refflren ces requ itfld . Calle 14-992·
7701
Myrtl e Ouch Condo Rental. 2
bedroo mt, 2 baths, tleep• 6.
Furni1hed complete with linen•.
Ttnn lt courll, indoor·outdoor
pooll, sauna. tleam roo m, res llurent. Few 1tep1 from the
ocean . No pat1. Ettc•llent rateJ.
Phone 814 -423-8817 .
3 bedroo m•. 2 full b1th1, l11rge
livin g room , d ining room and
kitchen. Alto l1undry room . 2
car garge, c•ntt•l air, Eutern
School dltu lct . Ref.,enees required. C•ll &amp;U-247·4946
Con•ga 8&amp;5 .00 per weak , utili·
11111 p•ld, 304 -676-3100.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x65 2 BR trailer, 8mi. fro m
town on 218 . L•ra• priv11e lot
w ith lndustri•l type play ground
equlpm1111t. UOOmo. Ph. 814 -

7032.

10 11cre farm , 3BR Mob ile hom•
wit h l 4.1116 room •ddlllon ,
wood burner. Rarage, 3 outbtllld·
ing1, lel)lltll(e lot with 28tt66
toot foundat io n &amp; block work tor
new home. clnern, WAter. 12
mil es from Gt~llipnllt on Hannan
Tr ece Rd. o H 776 t19 , 000. Call

12t$0 2BR , furn ilhtd. Plan II
Subdlvlllon •186mo., 1100

Over 86 '1t acre farm. Vtrv c:lt•n.
19 IICre meadow, rest puiure.
good fen ce. all miner•! 11ghtt.
21b 68. 3 btdroom home, 2
b11rn1, 2 pondl. l.Oit of outbuild·
lngs. school bus and m•ll by
door . Pr\c:t reduced. 304-4158·
, 8, 2.
9.3Ac:re•. 7milttonRt.l2from
Point Pltll•nt. Timer. minllf•l1.
well, ,..,uc. Owntr tin•nclng,
837.200. t4 .200 down Md
8242.22 .,., month , 304-125·

6367.

Large 2BR , modern kitchen . gas
heat . Furnithfld elote to tow n.
Depotlt &amp; Reference. No pets.
Ph . 614 -448 -1024 o r 446 ·

7'tt16' Flatbed Oual A1leTrailer.
8800 Ph . 446-6637 •fter8 !00.

2966.

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Per k,
Route 33, No"h of Pomeroy.
Rental tr•llen. Cell 614-992·

Sp•r.e for 1mall tr•llers. All
hook-upt. Cable. Al•o efficiency
rooms, 11ir and Cllble, M11on.
W.Va. Call 304 ·773· 5661 .
Spaciou1 Mo bile Home lots tor
rent. l'roe recreation and pi cnic
araa, free lot glva away. 304 ·
8715-3073 atttr 8 :00PM .

M erclt o n llls~

Commercial buildings for ,..., .
Downtown P"t: Pltlltnt. Storea.
office1. A·One '!:tat Ea1•••·
Ctrol 'hager. Broker. Call 304 -

13 9,900.00 Call 814·992 ·
7180
675·5104.

1986 Chrytler 15th Avenue.
15.600ml., e•cellent condition.
le•thtt interior. loadttd c.n

Ma ..ey Fergu1on Tractor, 89hp
with plows, uan1po" dltc: , 4 row
lantar. Foret mowing machine,
nternuional r~ille. New Holland
a.1., t.t85o. Ph. 614-288·

1981 Pontiac Tr•ns Am 305
lurbo whh Hop. ett. condition.
new etthautt Ph . 814-441· 2208
9-5 or 441-2734 on weekends
•ft• Spm,

56

1977 c..e 99&amp;. t58 H.P.,
excellent condition, new tlrn
teaoo. Call au.te&amp; -4U3 et,., fi : OO p . m . anytime
weekend1.
5 ft. Bush hog. 3 ft, H. 8 ft .
Bl1de, 3 pt H. 114-985-3881 .

304-87&amp;·8881.

I.H. Cub with cuhivator land
mower. \llry good cond,
11 ,800. Powelltob•cco 1ett.,
1160. Tobecco barlteu !3) 150.
ueh. Oltnr6dgaftrm, 304·875·

AKC Regitl•red Br\HanySJf•nlll
Pupplat. Ca ll efter Spm 814-

245·5697.

Used living roo, sofat and
loveseat . Corbin S. Snvdttr Furnl·
ture ph.&amp;U-4•8· 1171 .

2 AKC Reg llt•red Blue Eved
Sib&amp;tl•n Huaklea. t815 ••chmale
2yr. old &amp; ftm•l• 1yr. old Ph,

61.·268·8021 .

Good clean lurnltura, cry1tal
glassware. &amp; oth., ct..n ltemt.

Ph. 814.446.8398.

Golden R•tr lner PuppiH AKC
Reglttered very helhhy , aac:el·
lent bloodlln••· Going fast . Ph.

2985.

Wanttd to buv grande too•
d•llvarad 10 uwmiU. Paul
Mercer Sawmill, McArthur,

Ohio 45651 . 81•·596·8933.
63

Goad Ultd eoiOff)Ortlbl•• floor
model TV 't Ph . 814 .• 415 •1 149 _

~==========J.:=========~

Ourocr Boars. Brtd lutt llke the
bo1rt wt tt1ted 1t th• OMo
Tntat'nn that ge4necf owr 2.1
lb•. PI' d1y. Aoaer . . ntlay,

SoblftO, OH. 513·884·2318.

2 8mlll hor ... ~iQht 100·700
poundl. Call 114· 211· 1431 ·
3yr. old Reolet•d lomM Oulr·
,., 1Hora mere tetdtnt t400.
Aqlt._rtd Sorrell Matt· bted to
or•ndlon of lonfW Ole lar

.' -

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•

2

'

.

·'
•:'P

.I

I

,

.~:· ··
'

. " .~

l : \,' ·' ,", ,)

2 Att .. ttred Purt lptd Umoul.,_
luflt. 11 moe. okiiOOibt. tach.

L•wn Mowing Ct.urch•. Alii·
dentlal, •nd Bu•lnen. Bv hour or
by -tht job. In G•lllpolis and
turroundlng ara11. Ph. 814-

895·3802

Concrete finish . parltlng 1011.
buement1 · any sil1 job. S•nior
Chinn Ditcount, Ri cll Garfield.

614·991·448 • .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

84

86

73

V1n1

S. 4 W.O .

1111 OMC l~ury Convtfllon
Van. P'klth In lor..... cru•t.
tltt. etc. O.r
kept. 12.000

814-UII. ...,..,.......,. ~oMv

m. c,_

.., _ ...... Olllo .....

8U·3171.

0. 114·181 ·

uc.ntnl. 304·

74 Motorcycle•

~·--11oioloifl ...

1Tl1001loo 1 t Q , - 4f201.

E n - . -· I MO.·J

114-111·-1 .

.

yn,

114 Hay • Gr11ln

.. - . c.• lt4-MI·2734.

· Coli

?.
'

'

HE'S GOT A BAD
COLD, MISS PRUNELLY,
AN' I THINK I'LL
KEEP HIM HOME
ALL WEEK LONG

· LET'S TAI;..K A60LlT
SOMETHING ELSE.

(R)

,,

,

,

1!11 •112l My Slater ,Stm'
Patti brings a·punk rocker to
. S8m's party, aijd he 'lalla far
· · Sam. (R! : . ·
·
i!oo 0 &lt;21 IIJl .NBC Mondoy
.
. Night It th..Movlea .
• (iJ elll Mov,t,:t• w~·
lor Hire' ABC.
y Night
Movla (t :40) Q •
(!) . «J1 ~~- PtoJhoUII
The young ,., of Harrleon
go off 10 war, and return is
bidkl~ men. D
'
IIJ) e1121 New'htot When
Dlotc's check booncee, the
wholl town tlllnka h8'8
da8&amp;nutt. iR) 111
IIJ Llny Kli1g lil¥el In depth
lnterv\tWI With top
.
neWOimakara and celebrities.
8:30 I!DJ ell2l Deelgnlfta w-n
Charlene apOI)eora Mary Jo'a
daughler In a Min Pre l een
pageant. (R)
·
· . 10:00 (2) 700 Club
IIJ) •c Well 57111 CBS
NiWII prtme11me magazine.
11J1 E~lftlng NeWII A wrap up .
of tOday'a news and a look
8head to tomorrow's news
olorlos. (1 :00) ·

IBI-

e (l) Innocence Loat It
HlpptniHtra

10:20 ()) MOVIE; Porlrllt of Jtnnll
(NRI(t :26)
'
10:30 tD Major Leogut lt-n·a
oteattll Hila 1971 All Star
Glme(T)
e (l) USA Tonlglrt
11:00 (I) Hanlceatle and
. MoCermlcll
• aJ
elll I!DJ ®
· ec
IIJl Nlwa

w

l!l1N711oa1on M•ltllan

"The tom.do miNed 111••. 1aln"t sure about
McMillan's Chicken farm. "

I

!

I

C0 H K K .

'

"'I really like our new recaps 1 1 1 1 :l tlonlst," sighed the fellow. "But
. . . . .
;. when I &amp;eked to see her apart·
. - - - - - - - - - - , ment she drew me a -."

I

I

SURFEE
1---t=I-TI.:.:...rl
'--'11&lt;'6"'11--1 O Complele

lhe chuckle quoled

.
.
.
•
•
.
•
by fil ling in the missing wOfds
' - - '_ _,__..__,_ _,___. you develop from step No. 3 below.

e

PRINT N~I,I6ERED lETTERUN
THESE SQ~AiES

UNSCRAMBLE MOVE LETTERS
TO GET. ANSWER

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM-tl'ifANSWEIS - ,. -

.

BRIDGE

NORT!I

report&amp; on world economics
and flr~~~nclal news with Lou
Dobbl. (Q:30)

GJ

814-248·9218.

HoMrmoOt••

em M'A"I"H

11:30e121 1151111 o1 c.raan

W•ttenon ' t Water H•ullng -1
ra11on•bte retes , lmmadi•ta
2.000 a•Mon deUv..-y , cltterns.
poots, well, ate. call 30•, 578 - t

(IJ~ILI ·
(I) WIIIIP Ill Clnclni1ttl

a~~~
Magnum, P.t.

2111.

------------------·
HouH coal, NrnHtone, •nd
grtvef 1 Delivered 1 1Dfl and up.
Jim lanlll'. 30• ·671-1247 or
171 · 7317.

«11 Tl1ta Did Hautt Q'
11J lpaoll Tonight Action

Form..-ly Kan WheMon 't now
John' • w...,
1.000 tb
2,000 gol tervlco. 304·871·
2248 .

·=

Upholttery

Chl, Oh, 114·281·1470. Evo .
81 · 446·3431. 0 - dtly llo
4;30. s ... uo IO 1:30. Old.
n.w Uphottlf'ed.

'
Hey· 100 Mill on NalfNMar·

~d. Col1 Dolo .._
114-441·0171 .

I·IO.a!

U81

'H
t

James Jacoby

.

A 10 9S 3
8K 10 I

This week we will look at various
holdup plays and the reasons for them .
Declarer can have any one of several
purposes when he reluses to take a
winner right away. The most common
justification for holding up Is to disrupt the opponents' communications,
stopping them from playing a threat·
ening suil when they regain the lead.
(foday's deal provides an example.
West leads the three of spades
against the three no·trump contract
and East plays the queen. Should South
blithely take the king right away, he
will regret his haste. Eventually he
will take a diamond linesse. East will
win the king and return his remaining
spade. West will then take four spade
tricks to set the contract.
It's easy to see the winning play. Declarer should let East's spade queen
hold the trick. When the sull is contln·
ued, West can take his ace and clear
the suit, but he has no ready entry to
take any more tricks. East will win
the diamond king but will be helpless
to put his pa_rtner on lead. What If East
had three spade&amp; to start with and
West had led from a four-card suit?
Now the best defense by West Is to al·
low South to win the second spade.
East can then play a spade after win·

WEST

EAST

8A 108 3%

8Q7
.76412
t K8
8QJ97

'Q9 6

+7 I 2

•n

'

SOUTH
8 KJ5
J 10
• QJ 6

'K

8ABS2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Weol

Nor1b Eool

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

..

Soolb
I NT
Pau

Opening lead: • 3

nlng the diamond king, but the dele~!~~,
ers will not be able to take enolith
tricks to set the contract. The point of
South's holding up at trick one Ia that
he can protect against the one dtniiJ':
ous combination - five spade&amp; orlll·
nally In the West hand and the kine of
diamonds with East.
,,
'•

-

'

lty THOMAS JOSIPH
ACROss
4 Cole
1 Newmanor Tumer

5 "Gigot" star
film, .
.6 Patty Duke
with "The"
7 -- haw
, 6Jn·front
'8Go
wrong
11 Weiland
or Kiel
9 Agrlcul·
12 Suit fabric
ture (abbr.)
18 Lessen
10 Actress,
14 Uttle
SusanTeresa
27 "All About
17 ·-the
hi
"
I&amp; My (Fr.)
Su!"' ne 28 Ameche
111 Boxing
In
or
great
20 Not admit
Johnson
18 Prior to 21 - et
29 Sleep
bringer
19 ~::~h 22 ~;las_
, 24 Nonsense! 281A!pl cO!t 31 Sticky
stuff
25 Canal city '24 Talk wildly
Kind
of
ze
Tailor
33
Mockery;
211
car
of song
satire

. .'•. ''

Reclrord

'.

' '

Auwer

84 N.D. city . ''
"
85 Peerless
36 Revealed
39 Marpy '

'

.

civet
40 Beverqe
41 Never
(Ger.)
'
42 Lair
44 "Who am
- ar~~~Je?"
or

'

29Lure

' SO English
river
31 Blithe
32 Remark
H Fairy queen

37 Actor
Steiger
38 Dock org.
. 39Seahees
motto
43lnsig·

nlflcant

"

45Sci-ft nlm

46 Expiate
·47 Small
48 Well-known
DOWN
1 Rap&amp;eal·

lion

2 Small drum
3 \\1tless

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'ES- Here'I bow to work It:

BobbJ J - Qoeptf
i1J MontJflne Currenl

J ,J , Wet11 S•Yice. Swimming
poott, cistem• • weill. Call

B7

'

.

Enromb - Rower - Enjoy - Begone - WRONG ONE
One morning trying lo please her husband the wile poached
one egg and sc;rambied lh8 other. He snorted, "You scrambl·
'
ed lhe W~ONG ONE."
,.....;.·- - - - - - - - - ,

(!)

f)ICI&lt;IId tport1 highllghta with
Nlcll Chartes and Jim Huber.

(0:3!1) '

PEANUTS

'

'lltnon tnd lltnon'
Cll Loll Nlllf1l A.J. and
Rlcll trt hQCI by a girl to
lind her fat!W, (II)
MOVII!: All Tlltt H~a ..n
- ( 1 :29)
• (l) Llllll10w ....tng

a

,_AMp

12:00 l))llumt and .......
(I) lpal' all (R)

i=&amp;
.....
ICTV (0:30)
(!)

814·ft2.m7. tOH .

bt-

RIYfew(T)

Olltard Wst•r S•vicfl: Paola.
Cltlernl, Weill. Oelivary Any.
tim•. Call 114·446 -7404-No
Sundey callt.

1112 Hondo Cl710 Cuotom. R • M Cu1tom Couc~ end
New ,.,._ ,... ....... plus • Reupholat•rv. 8t, AI. 7, Crown

1700 · LIU l14-lt2·2772.

MI'Z 5MIF, AN'- -

General Hauling

4414.

FOf ...: 1114 Honda Aacot.

1211. lo-iftt utl11111t. CoN

JUGHAID WASN'T
IN SCHOOL TODAY,

aannc•.

1112 ltowltokl 210. t tl4
Hon4o3-. Col1114·441·

t THINKTHEYHAOecw.ETH I
10 W WITH MAY FLOWERS_

BARNEY

Anldentlal 01 commercial wlr·
lng. N•w service or rtpjlra.
licensad alaculel•n. btlmete
fTH. Ridenour El•ctrleal, 304·

1tl4 DodgoRom 1104•4. 311
v•I , 4 tpd. 32.000 mllot.
U710. Coli 114·251·1123.

KXIOO. Mth

o~~~e~ov. ~-

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeri1ion

678·1718.

GMC 2·10n c•c I ·0¥1. 512.
~04-178 · 73., ., 175·1247.

M.AY FLOWERS"~

....,w,.,,., IT WAS THE; PILGRIMS.

1

Excavating

whtolt. Ph. 114·248·5214.

Nnl good . 1100. or bttt otltr.

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

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Cu1tom garden Ulling, profa~,
tlontl t&gt;Qulpmtnt , protnslonal
tll,ultt.- Ph. &amp;14·317 ·01UI7.

n

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHO WAS IT THAT 6&lt;1.10,
'APRIL 6HONER5ei&lt;ING-

.

Dill MacOJVtr
MacGyver and his former
!Ianese flee dea~ soldiers
In Ilia Jilngle.(RI
(!) AdVenlura ~o ow &amp;he 3
year uansglobel &amp;Kpedltlon
led by Sir Ranulph Flennea.
I!DJ lllllJ K8ta • Alllt Allie
discovers that Cha~ea Ia In il
' deep lfepreaslon. IRI !;I
· ([D Wondtrworko A Hispanic
boy lorma an unlikely
frlehdahlp wllh an Italian
· Immigrant. Q
, 0 PltJ!I-• Wrap Yp&amp; ol
lha day's wo~d news and In
depth l68blre repona. (t :DO)
, 181 ellJ lnnoclftCt Lott
Eroalort of Amerlcon
Childhood Geraldo Rivera
' '
looks afthe dutructlon of
America's chlld11n by drugs,
pros1Htrtloll, and 1ryancy In
thla live special with Uv8 · ,
sa!IIIHe remotes. (NRl
·
' B!OlCIJ 'MOVIE: Dark VlclDry (~R)
f1 :46)
8:30 G &lt;21 IIJl Valerie Willie tildes
. tho lruth when he takes
.
lathar·s.car and ·damagea lt.

''

Rotlr~ or c•ble tool drilling,
Most wella completed ume day .
Pump ula• •nd •ervlce. 304·

'78 Oldl Cut1111 Supreme, cafl

1tl4 Ford Aeng•: Or•not. V-6.
PS. PI, 5 ·tpt.ct owrdriw, mag

EEK &amp; MEEK

2454.

614·448·8U8.

ground• Wtlhh\fiOn Court
Hou•. hllintl 110 hHd of
Ouf()()'t. HaMp-Ou'"' Hlill'ftlto
York, ltrrowt, Olltt. COI'I·

~-

1

RON ' S Telev i1l on S.rvic1 .
Hou1t cella on RCA , Qu•zar,
GE . Speci•llng in Z.nlth . C1ll
304 -5718· 2398 Or 614 -•46 -

83

eondhlon 13800. Ph. 614·388·
9710.

ALLEY OOP

387·0834.

1981 Plymouth Tur.. no, tun
roof. I ePI't(l, U, 700 .00. cell

Truck• for Sale

4 -20

2200.

Cor. Fourth end Pine
O•lllpolls. Ohio
Phone 814·441· 38811 or 814448· 4477

304·888·3347,

THAVtf5

'

1974 vw SuP*I' Bletl\ f'tW
cond. immeeut•t•. ·13,800.00
price neQotl•tH•. phont 30•·

481·1613.

'

'"l"' "'"·""

t•tlm••••·

Rtbullt engine, uansmittion.
n.w clutch, prattUtl .plate.
throw out bt!M'Ing. 400 cu. In,
High P..-lorMtnct. N..dl Paint.

1111 eon
"•'"'
o ..• -·
tlldo.
114-742·2171.

Or•ciou1 Wvlnu. 1 and 2 bMroom apertmenu It Vlllttt
Minor and Rtvltlidl!l Apen.
m .. t• ln Middleport. From

Aparunen11 Md houttt for .-t.

1978 Orand Pt-itt p•rts for ule.

1171 CJI .loti&gt; 304·3 , - .
4t,DOO mlitt; 1111 Kowotokl

homH.
houHt. pt. Pl. .ent end Otlltpo·
Iii, 81 4 •441 •1221 : •I

Coii1U·Itl·2403.

12,000.00. 304·175·2778.

ltn1~ Pig lolo Wtcl. 1\pril 21,
7,30 PM. Foy011o C.Umy Folr·

F1k Junior lhOw wat purehiMd
tllH1YNt .....

APARTMENTS , mobllt

1181 lour daor Sliver Volkaaw•·
gan LS dulal A•bblt ,

(R)

(l)

"IOU KNOW, OOP, I&gt;.S
DELIGHTED ~S WE ARE
THAT you TWO SHOWED
UP WHEN "IOU DID •••

' 80 Cordoba c.- runt good and
look• vood. 11 .000.00. 304·

1181 Ch.... rolet Malibu Clastic
wagon, AC . AM· FM ' stereo .
power wlndow1 , door locka, eac
cond. 3304-175-4384 .

c.

SWEEPER end sawing machine
rtPIIr. Plrtl, and IUppUH . Pick
up and delivery, Davis V•cuum
Cleaner. one hall mila up
Gaorget CtHk Rd . Call 114·

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , txP•·
rl..-.ctd carpenter, altctrlelan.
m.. on. painter, rooflngtlnelud·
ing hot tar •pplicttlon) . 304·
075· 2088 or 871· 7147.

875·33U

'

g~cAU.$/3

StNI&lt;S IN.

Fttty Tr•• Trlmmino. llump ·
r•moval. C•ll 304-8715.1331 . •

,, 1.200.00. 304 ·878-2180.

OfF,

NOTHING SVEF!

' 85 Tran1 Am. T-ToP. loaded,
one owner . low milu .

Coli 114·21t·1187.

-

' '

1

1980Datlun310. Good condition $800, C•ll 81 4-593· 7390
evening•.

mllu . •1f.
4411. .

.,.... ...... "'·.,.

IPFJA~

Unei)ndiUon•l llf.timt gutfan· ,
tee. Local rer.-enctl furnilhBd.
Free ettlmatat. Call collact ,
1·814·237 -0488. d..,. or night.
Rogerl 8alem~tnt
Wat•rprooflng.

1971 Fortt F-210 4•4. good
condtt6on, chromt whHit. good

1300. Ctll t1•·211·1822.

d

12200. Coli 814·992·8719.

72

Lives~ock

P~f?~ON iO BOUNCE

1980 Chrysler Flftt. Awnue.
good condition . Call 114-448·

1978 Ford LTD 2 door 1ud1n.
Fully equ ipped. 57,000 actual
mitat. llbtolut-'y immaoulatl.

IIJI Croaaflre (0:30)
1111121 01 Jeopardy!
IBl Jalfaraon• ·
.I ll mToo Cloae lor Comloll
·7:35 CIJ Honaymoonera
8:00 I]) A.D., Po113(~R' 12:00)
a (2) 01 A~F To Impress
~ynn. who h&amp; has a crush
on, ALF makes a rock video.

W!:LL, J:'M A GOOP

Home
Improvements

4U·0294.

Hockey

aCIJ Judge

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG

304·871·4819.

61 4-281·51, 0.

Ou•lity Rottwetl., pt.lpl, Sea
both parent• and pup ftom lilt
litter. 814·!193-1489 or 18 14·
6915· 1317.

B1

NH~

1!DJ W11eeJ.of Fortune

S t~ rv1ce s

END LOADER, John Dt .. t420

Now b\rylng thtll corn or ,.,
corn. Call for l•t•lt quotte. Riv er
City Farm Supplv. 614-UI·

l!l

18000. con 114·949·2.128.

1979 Tron1 Am U850 F1RM . 82

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

FRANK AND ERNEST·

1976 Oodg• Rockwood Mini
Motor HOme, 47.000 milet.

304-675.7710.,878-8749.

6504.

814·3e8·9339.

0900

81.·446·0008.

5504

crswler, uood co nd, •3.800.
Ol•nrldge Farm . 304 · 175·

Pets for Sale

28 ft . Titan motor homo, c:om·
platety Hll·containld. gantrl·
tor, tleept 8 . 18900. Call

Profnsional wallpapar ln11a1111:t
lion Call Randy Ph. 614-4•18·
8210 or 448 -3131 or 446,-

11118 Corvette. 380-300 HP . •
tp . Cell 114-742-2876.

Rota Tiller. 6 H.P, M.T.O . 1160.
2 yr1. old. 814·247-4122.· ,

Purebred Pitt Bull Puppin Ph .

Ct.est ol Dr•wert- 4 drewer
148.
6 -dr•wer chatt 159 .915 .

and llnanclal news with ~ou
Dobbs. (0:30)
' 1111121 01 Whftl ol Footuno
IBl Bamoy Miller
ll)(l) M•A•S•H
7\05 (I) Senlord and Son
•7:30 G (2) (j) Newlywed Gsme

, 1987 Tr•vtlm•ster by Co•ch·
m•n. 26ft., 7,000 org. mil11.
likt new , loaded. C1ll 814·258·

74' Dodge Dart 1400 . 78' Ford

0008.

62 Wanted to Buy

Re ady mix concrete and all
co ncrete •u ppll ts. C•it ut V•ltey
Brook Cement and Suppliet,
304-773 -6234 .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

All typaa cerpanter Ill concrete
work; lntfiiOr, e1terior, remor"'
deUng. p•lnting. rooting , fr•e'•
C•ll 814-441-1174. 1,

LTD 1300. Ph. 814·3919.

8 N Ford Tractor, plows. ditc,
culllv1taN, boam. 4h . brU1h
hog , 6ft. Blada, 12:800 Ph,
814-448· 1837.

2783.

SINe at Panont Furniture
141 &amp; E•ttern Avenue
Bedroom Sulttl 1399 ·1900
Living Room Sult11 •179 .96·

814·448-9614.

8&amp;22.

Concrete blocke aU eh:tl y•rd or
delivery. Muon ll!lnd . Galllpoli•
Block Co .• 123 ~ -Pine St ..
Oalllpotls, Ohio Call 614·448-

STOP·LOOK·SAVE

441·9588.

3000 Ford Tractor with 309 2
row Ford Corn Pl•nter, piOWI,
diac, 1.,150. Ph , 814· 286·

245·6121 .

Mollohan Furniture &amp; Appllan·
Cll. Rt. 7 North G•Mipolll, Ohio
Ph. 614·448· 7444 . 6pc. Wood
Living Room Suite 1399.00.

1981 Dodge Omni 4 -door,
4·tpetd. 56.000mt Call 614·

8522.

Buildlnn M atarlalt
Block, brick, •ew•r pipet, win·
dow1. 'lintelt , etc . Claud• Win·
ten. Rio Granda, 0 . C1ll 614·

GOOD USED APPLIANC ES

19?0 Dodo• D11t good condl·
tlon 1600. Ph . 814 ·2158· 6278
1tter 4PM.

r.

55 Building Supplies

Wash ert , dryert , rafrigeretOII,
r•noe• . Skaggs Appll•nee t ,
Upper Rlver Rd. batlda $t(lne
Crest Motel. 614-4418· 7398

En-lnmenl Tonlghl
a ill Peo!*'t Coull
(!) IIJI MacNeil/ ~thNr
NtwaHour (t :00)
I!DJ Newa
IIJI Monaytlne Curren&amp;
(I)

814·446·2863.

Utilily Bldg. Spt ~ 30"tt40' x9 ',
1 6d Overhead door, Strvlca
Door. t6333 Erec!ed, Iron
Horu Ridge. 814· 332-97.6.

Ch1in uw partt, •uppUet end
rep•lrs. Sid•t Equlpm4tnl S.ltl,
Ak al model M· 9 Reel Recorder · Hendanon. W.Va. phone 304·
with Crut Field held sy1tem, 675·7421 .
buill in amp and spaaktr, 304- Ferauton tractor with ptow1,
new rttr tirat. rebuilt enalne.
468·, 665.
new pein1, 11 ,750.00: C•ll

VAUev Furniture,- new &amp; used.
large uu:tlon ol quality furniture . 1 2 16 Ea11efn Av e . .
Gsllipollt.

1981 Chf!i'V lmpal1, 4· door, AC,
Ult tttering, Crulaa. AM · FM,
good condition. 12850 Ph.

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

Adult potty chel r, •31&gt;.00 new.
phone 304 -676· 6413.
'

County Appliance. In c. Good
uted 11ppllance1 end TV 11t1.
OpM BA"A to 8PM . Mon thru
SAt . 614·448-1699, 627 3rd.
Allft. G11lllpoll1, OH .

l!l SportiC.nler (L)

Lot fot S1ie- 40x100 camping
lot , in campground on A•ccoon
CntH. Ph. 614 -448-129• .

6590.

CENTER . SR 311i W. G1lllpolls,
Ohio. Call 814·441-9777, eve.
614-448· 3592. Up front ttl&lt;:·
tor~ with warranty over 40 used
tractOII, 1 OQQ t(lOII.

- 12,oo . e,oo P.M.

446-3159.

Camping
Equipm.ent

1980 Oldt Oalta 88 Rl)v•••· •ir,
....w tirtl, high mlleag•. ·good
condition e2300. Pt.. 6,.· 258·

M1ssey hrguson, New Holl1nd,
Bush Hog Salet II Servlc•. Ov•r
40 Ultd trectors to choot• from
&amp; compl•te line of n.w &amp; uNd
equipment . Larglflt salectlon In
S.E. Ohio.

Surplut · Army Camouflau~• ·
Denim -rentAf clothing. tW•Id
Turkey Staton St•rtt Aprfl27thl
Sam SomervU!e' t Junction lnd•
pend8nce Road · Old Route 21 •
Eatt R•v•nt wood. Fri, S•t. Sun.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITUR E 62
Olive St ., GaiUpolit . Naw S. used
W ~Od · CO AI IIOYel, 6 PC wood LR
lUll~ $399, bunk btdt 1199.
rechnart n4tW &amp; used bedroom
tuitea. wringer wuhen. Ill
shoes . New tlvingroom Il-lites
1199-1699. ta mpt. Call 614·

.

CROSS&amp; SONS
614·286·8451 .

3326.

61 Household Goods

1973 VW, 96, 000 actual mllet .
Da~tt c•ll 814· 440·1919 E"'en·
lngs Cat1614· 444· 61570 .

U.S. 315 W•t. J•ckaon, Ohio.

light finllh , 101id maple drop le•f
tablfl , po dt . 4 uphols1ered
c hairs. chinA CAbinet . 304-67t5·

Q

York. (0:30)

' 9219

2010 John Dtl!lfe di ..et tr•ctor·
plow1, disc Ull50. New Ide•
Oynt Bounce mowet t49S. Lste
model 224T John De•• baler
11296. Hay w1gon t300. C•U

Arbor Vitae. 81ueberrlet, Burn·
in g bush. Birch. Auiut. Dog·
wood r•d and white, Holly,
Junipert, P ine. R•d Lut Maple.
Rhodendron, Spruce. Yews , ttc ,
All plant• gutranteed . W11h inu·
ton Nurtery, 16 minuttt North
o f Po int Pleuant turl'l 1t We1t
Columbia follow •lena, 304·
882· 2&amp;72 .

VnfUrrtith..t I room •pt, ca_ll

Business
Buildings

1978 Chtvy MallbLI Cla11ic,
6·cyt f1350 Ph. 814-U6·

3001 .

7479.

Autos for Sale

61 Farm Equipm"nt

Hemlock. 5 " to 6', tightly
sheared conlclll thape. Ideal for
lendacaping , Sent•'• Fora•t
Evans. W. Va. Phone 304·896·

304·171·1411.
34

71

304.273·6856.

the

I!DJ lll1121

IBl WKRP In Clnclnnllt
Ill (l) Hogan'• H-•
6:35 (I) Down 1o Etrth Slereo.
7:00 IJ) HardCaitll .ond
McCormick
II (2) PM Magulnt

Cali

1267.

Surplut denim , rental, army,
Carha" clothing. Sam Somerville' • East Ravenswood, Fri,
Set, Sun, 12:00 till 8:00 PM .

814-446· 3644.

882·24U.

Apartment
• for Rent

Tr.1ns ~o r la l to n

614·286·8522.

Rearrange ~ten of
0 lour
Kromblod woods

re.ports on world economics

&amp; liVI!SiliC~

Prom dre11a1 for ule. Slrt1 7 -8
a nd 11 · 12 . 814·9•9-2868.

Office Space for ~ant. Exctllle-nt
for AHorney•. Accountant. au:.
Close to Court House. Ca ll
Wisem1n Re11l Estata Agen cy.

~ ' •, •

St•nford Setd Corn, 11t plac:•ln
VIrginia ~ation•l Corn Growers
Conttlt. from 2.000 entri ...
1eil w.lghtt to 82 lb. From
154.00 '*beg, Call Ancty Sigl•
ror more detell,, Morgen ' s
Woodlawn Ftrm. Pliny, Rt . 36.
evenlngt 304·8715· 1288 .

f dill I Supp ll l''

19 inc h Motorola Ouuar T.V.
. with stand 1100. 8 pc . bedroom
Furnished room. 1100. Ut ilities t u!te with box sprlngt and
paid. Shar11 bath. Single mete. mattress t1200. Call614·992919 Second. G•lllpolis. Calt 24 13 11f1ar 5 p.m.
446-4416 aftflt 7pm.
Tony's Gun Repairt, hot reblue·
ing. Open 9 :00AM to 7 :00PM .
Call 304· 876-4631 .
46 Sp~ce for Rent

l

YOU CAN t;irAY
IN THI? ~OOM ' WITH
Me, IIIIOOke •.

283 Chwy engine. Good. One
C4 Ford tranpnission and. on•

7B

::::

8

IBl FICII ofUft
·Ill (l) Dlll'rent Slrollet
6:05(1) ~tiVtlt To IINV8r
8:30 II (2) 01 NBC Nlghlly Newo
l!l Action Ouldoota Julfu1 Boroa (T)
(I) elll ABC Newt !;I
(!) Nlgl1dy .Bullneaa Rtpoll
. Qll • OJ cas Ntwa
I!J) Rttdtng Rtlnbow Q
OJ ShowBfz Toay News of
1he entertainment world Is
anchored live from New

Seed corn fot ula, OtKtlb and
Kenwonhy, 30•·&amp;7&amp;· 11506.

Groom ~and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming . All brttdl ..• All
ttyl.,. JuUeWtbb Ph . 614· 448·
0231 .

ton pick-up , with wood an bed
51400. Camper top 125. Both
good 1hepe. 12 gauge 1hotgun (
made In Bra;rill end 410 shotgun.
Ctll 614· 992 -8881 .

Roo ms for rent. day . Wflflk.
month. Gallia Hotel. ·call 814,
446·971 15 . ~ent u tow u 1120
month.

I

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Pets for Sale

Or•gonwynd C•ntrv Kenn-' .
CFA Himalayan, Peul1n and
Siamne klnen1. AKC Chow
puppin. New Chow puppln.
C•ll814--«4· 3844 af1..-7PM .

~

Furnished Rooms

2 btdroom, lurnl1htd, ~ teen . 1
child, no pet 1, t 150. per month.
Ntw Hav•n. w .v • . Call 3o-4·

44

.

~

l!l Spo~ook (T)

Auto Perts
&amp; Acce..ories

r.i::::~~~~~~~f~;;~~~·~·M~·;~;,...._;~~ :~~- 9 :r28:;~•mlllion.

379·2798.

2 bedroom trailer In country.
1200 per month. Gat and water ·
lnctud~ . 61 4· 742· 2170.

bedroom unfurnllh.d. 118
B~o~rdttle Addn. Newfy redeco·
rtrted. 11&amp;0. month plus utili·
lin, 304-27:t· ll511 . Ont, ••
rlou1 lnq'-lirln.

4-..
~
I.UtjtJtf

w•

(!) SqU.re One TV
I!J) S.CNt City

9117

For nl• 500 g•l. fuel tan II t200.
John Deere B•ler good th•pe
8960. Ph . 614-379 ·2802 or

28,., reference 81 de:potlt re·
quire&lt;! Ph . 614 · 367-7220.

Otpotlt
. 1 child,
pets.
Call 8U-446
-41Se&amp;outlld•
tfter l)pm.

• (2)

01 Newt ·

614-6120.

76

MON., APRIL 20

•:
1••

1983 SuNk.i RM 121, w.ttr
COolad • full ftoattr IUIP.,_I~Il.
rune great 11&gt;16. Ph , 114·245-

PUUlU

- - - - - - - - - - ltlltt4 ~y CLAY I. POlLAN - - - - - - - - -

EVENING
6:00 IJ)IIIg Volley

1974 Monel• 750, good condl- ~,
tion Whh many eatr11 t&amp;l5'o , Ph.

Whirtpool no lrott rafrtg.-ator,
like new Ph. 614 -446-8217
aher 6PM .

814·258·8009.

9 1.? Acut•· Modern''houte. bun.
hu nt ing . Bordl!ll't Wayne Forrest.
839,000. Lend Contract· quail ·
lied buyer P~ 614-379· 2144.

20 ec:rfl term H•nna!l Tr•ct
Ro ad, Glenwood. W. Va. for
more in'l ormatlon call 304· 773·
61 1 8 or 773 -6188 atttt 5;00.

814·448·3934,

448 -0974.

--:-:--:---:----- 2
New hou1e for rMt or 1ele In
Crown Chv: 15 mlutu from
Huntington, 25 mlnutttl lrom
Gallipolis, new locAitchool. Call

Eltetl~nt condition t4, 500. 'PI\,

114-448·3083.

Freezer. 31 .1 ci.t . h .. tlpr6ght
eacellent conditton $300. Ph.

7715.

Unfurn ithttd 4 room hou•e In
GaUipoli1 . Qu haat Ph . 614-

2 Bedroom. neat Haltet, child ·
ren acce pted Ph . 614 -448·

61 4·268·6820.

Private entrance &amp; privata parking. 1 bedroorn. utilities p&amp;id.
Good location Ph . 614-446 -

Houses for Rent

268·1393.

p.m

Urge ISBA houte, 47 •tNt.
Meigs local. Cherry Ridge .

10 tot15 acu11 , letan, New
Haven or Mason areae. With or
without houte. Call 614·448·
3072 after 8 :00PM .

•

bl~

1978 tiD 7Sttl AnniYit'Nry Ft.H

son, Oh. 814· 280· 5930.

45

175 d"'

&lt;..,
...., .-... s•s z"'"'""· ·
tights, oil cooltt". end -~~&gt;' '

EVANS ENTERPR1SES, Joclc·

2683.

36

3 Bft Uvlngroomt lerge kitchen.
singte geflgl!l, utility room. o n
:IAr. tcre lot, flnt•l co uay•.
At . 315 3mi. from HMC . With
Jeffeuon 9tvd. 304·6715-3901 · option to buv . Ph. 814-448·
after 6 :30p.m.
1358.
Newly built home. 3 bedroom•.
wall·to·wall c•rpatiny. 2 car
garage, etttra ,arge kitch en with
oak oablnetry . Situated clot• to
school. Mlnutet from town,

Pfatt!c: cittern state ap!)rOved.
pl ..t•c uptle t1nk1, plaltlc:
c ulvert~. mM•I cutvert1, RON

J •. 304·578·2336.

RS

1225. PI&gt;. 614·258·1217.

Collohon'oUaedTI,.Shop.Ovei 56

3 rooms &amp; bath. stova &amp; rafrig.
All utilities Included , Adult•
only. No pets . Ph. 814-448 -

1 bedroom furnished •pt. Utili·
ties paid. t 2:10 p•r month. t1 00
dapoait . MiddlepOrt. 614 -9925 150.

Real Estate
Wanted

=:-:---:-:-::-::-::::~-:-·.

1982 SuiUid

S©~~lA-L&amp;t-~s·

111AT DAILY

low to form four simple words .

fOod condition, t4QD . 1112,·
SutUki T s 121 DOOd conditlon t;

54 Misc. Merchandise

_44_6_·3_e7_0_· _ _ _ __

Athton building lou. mobile
•homes permitted. Clvde Bowen,

Television
Viewing

..11.00 "'· l14·aK·""'·

us.

1.000tlret.tlret12. 13, 14: 15,
18, 16.5. 8 miles out At. 218.
Call814-266 -6251 .

Furnished Apt. 1 BR , 701 Fourth
Ave., G•ltipal it. 8225 Utilit ies
Pd. Ph. 446 ·4416 after 7PM .

.BORN LOSER .

, If I

614·448·0322.

94 Locust St . 1 BR . furnithed.
•pt . uptt•ifl. S200 Utililitt paid
860 dtp . Ph. 446 · 1 340 or

f9 . 000 2.5 IICrlll On Rio•
Centerpoint Rd . 1 ml, from Rio
Grande clear l~t~~el front , woodt ,
Cell 814·441-3805 after 7PM .

Old time log homes. for more
Informat ion ca ll 304-675 -7384 .

NEW AND

23

w•ter hook-up . Owner sayt no
te ..Onlble offer will be refuled .
Call 814 ·281-8822.

The. Daily

······T"'

Country living. 1 BR furn 'ed
•pt. AC , Wuher and dryer , no
children or pets , ref li dep
req 'ed. C•ll 614 ·992· 2807. lif·
ter 6PM .

flexibil· ~~~:;;;;;:;:;;;:;;:;:l~;~~:;:;~~~=:1

20,1981

Few .... or ttede for IQU.I ve~ :
1912 Yamaha 510 Mai l

Uud Furniture: wood teble • 2
benches. bad1, • dteuer. 3
miles out Bulavilte Rd . Open
9AM to 5PM , Mon . thru S•t.

Spaciou1 2bd~ . apt., C. A., water
p•id. Near Piua Hut, Gellipolit.
Ph. 81 4· 446· 7025 .

======-:-·1&lt;EX CELLENT WAGES for spere

11me auembly work: · electron·
1ts. crafts. Others. Info 604641 -0091 EXT . 3026. 7 da-ys
CALL NOW

10

20. 1987.'

,.

' SO

15 Court Street, 2 BR, 1'11
b•tht, w / w carpM, conipltee
modern kitchen, 911 hNI, wt~ll
lntulated, wired fOf phone &amp;
Clble tv, tpacktut, parking in
rear. patio, t375 / mo. plut
utilities. Depc;&gt;lit , Refertnctl
required . Nopttt. C•ll614·«6·

April

MQtorc:yclea
-~---------...;,· ··

Sol• end cheirt l)ri'td from
t!96 to 1985, Ttbl• eao tnd
up to 11215. Hki••·Mctt
to 11595. Rectin.... 1221 to
13711. Lampl ua to • 125.
Dln.WtH 1109 and up to t495.
Wood ta"lt w·6 chain U85 to
4795. o.... t100 up to e3715.
Hutches 1400 •nd up. 81.1nll
bed1 complt'le w-m•ttr"M'
•2.95 and up to •395. Beb¥ bed•
•1 11';)&amp; t175 . MattrHaasorboa
spring• lull or twin 163, firm
173, and 183 . Ou•en Htl t2:ZS.
King 1350. 4 d,_wer ch .. t ee6.
Dressers t89. Gun cabin.t1 8.
10. 12 gun. a •• oraiM:trlcr•nu•
t375 . Baby mettmll!lt $35 •
t45 . Bed framH 120, UO •
King frame ft50: Good Hlectm
of bedroom tuit.,. metal c•
bineu. headboard• 830 1nd up

Furnished &amp;r unfurnithad apts ..
1160.00 and up , r•terencn Ph.
304. 675· 7738 or 304 ·67&amp; ·
6104 A· 1 n..t Elt•t•.

24. 1987, et the Galtle County

ove rnment Jobs.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE CllbJ lMrJ Wrteht

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

ing accounts. Compln'1 benefits
&amp; incentfve programs. Grtlt
e&amp;fl"jlng potential. For penonal

Cell614-446 -3828 .
Conract Cler~. typing

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for. Rent

1 S.droom b•ie r~ f178 .00
p$1.11 •IKtrle. Alao requlr.ct 1
$200.00 Heurity depot lt. CON ·
TACT: Jackaoi) Estlttl Dept. Ph
4"8 · 3997 Equtl Hou1ing
Opport1.1nity.

Man to .work In tervl ce station.

Monday,

®llgnOII

0

~"!llluhl

uve news

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
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,
apoatrophes the iength and fonnatian of the words are all
hinta. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.

CIYPTOQUOTES
4-20

RBMZ

cww

WL

QBCV

N W L

VB L Q M
M W

GZ

W'HQWHO

C U LV V

R B P C

R Q-

cww

RPM CUG PA

c w

F W

-

'•
••t

••

L C L v
YVBP - JB.. JQ
'
Y,....,..,.,, CryptDqaote: THE MORE PARKING '

z

SPACES YOU PROVIDE, THE ·MORE CARS WIU. COME
TO FlU. 'niEM.

.CASSON

rrs UKE FEEDING P!GEONS.-- HUGH

-

'·

�____________ ____
I•

'"1

· ·· ·:·,,·---...:;.;.....;.;.....:.:..:.:..::.:.:;.~~~-------------....;..:-....;..;...;.;..;...;.
:PiijJ8=1o= rhe Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
~~- -

·~ ~--People
I

in the news---. Quirks in the

By WILLIAM C. TROT!'
Unlted ·Press International
ANNIE GROWS UP: When last seen Andrea McArdle was 10
years old, wearing her curly red "Annie" wig and singing
..' "Tomorrow . " Now she's back on Broadway playing quite a
dtr!erent charac ter - a sexy siren In the British musical
' "Starlight Express ."
;
"People see m shocked to see me grown up like this, " the
former Ann ic says. " !think they still expect me to be a little girl
In a curly wig. They don't expert me to be sexy."
McArdle, 2:!, says in People magazine that she is enjoying the
change. " tovP this role because It' s a lot holler, " she says. " I
get to be volup tuous." McArdle ret urned to a normal life after
her run In "A nnie" and she says she's a better person for it.
"I think I 'm a lot more norma·J person because I went baek to
school and wrnt to horrible proms and wore those depressing
wrist corsages just like everybody e lse," she sa id. "It's hard
being a chi ld star. Hav ing tp grow up In fron t of everybody In
your awkward years is tough. "
OiL Am I I\' TEXAS: Roy Orblson, creator of classic songs
like "Pretty Woma n" and "Only the Lonely ," is the headlin er
for 011 Aid - a two- da y, lnvJ tat ion·only party for oilmen who
have been ta king a finan cia l beat in g.
Organizer Dennis Grubbs says the event, set for April 2!;-26 In
Midland, th e heart of Texas oil country, will show that oilmen
are st ill around . " We' re doing this to kind of boost our spirit s so
we will keep on perseveri ng," he said.
"We're not raising any money todl sperseout. If we make any,
It will go back to us. It' s going to be a weekend of nos talgia, what
with Roy Orb! son co mln~ ln. I don't know If those days are any
better, but we fee l like It's bottomed out.".
BAI.LET, SOVIET STYLE: May11 Pll•clskaya, prima
baller ina assuoluta of the Bolshoi BaliN, will come to the United
Stall'S nex t mont h for her first teaching job In this country .
Pllsetskya, who has the offi cial sanction of Bolshoi director
Yurl Grlgorovich, will instruct 10 advanced master classes at
' the new Da vid Howa rd Dance Center in New Yor k from May 11
through 'Ma y 29. Pllscts ka ya, who made her debut at the Bolshoi
In 194:l, has made ft•wer and fewer a ppearances on stage In
recent years and usually onl y In ballets composed by her
, ~, husband. Rod ion Schcdrln.
· David lloward c rwch~s somC' of 1ht' world'sloremost dancers,
Including Gt'!St•y Kirkland, Mikhail Baryshnlkov, Natalia
Makarova and Fernando Bu.loncs.
TELWRII&gt;F. NIYI' (;Ri\TEFUL FOR DEAD: Th t' residents
of the• plctu n•"J"C mountain comm unit y of Telluride, Colo ..
don't want ncw r·omPr llill Graham bringing the G rateful Dead
to town.
Tcllurld&lt;' alrcad.v hosts bluegra ss and jazz fes tiva ls and the
loca ls say th&lt;' Dr&lt;~ d show Graham wa nts to put on would be too
taxing on pullli" facilit ies and would disrupt their softb all
season. Town ofllrl als want to di sc uss the matt er with Graham,
who rcccnlly purelwscd '' house In Telluride.
'

Million dollar honeymoon:
LAS VEGAS, f'lev. (UP!) Lorraine Page told her new
husband she wanted . to quit
playing the slot machines be·
c-ause her shoulder was tired, but
she took a last $3 and slipped it
Into a one-arined bandit and
bingo - a wedding pres&lt;·nt of
$1,150,697.
'
After feeding the progressive
slots at Caesars Palace for
severa l hours Saturday night, the
2o-year-old Norwalk, Calif.,
woman lined up four triple-bars
on a mach'in&lt;? she had been
pla yi ng only about three
minutes.
She thought her payoff would
be $250, and became irritated
when the co ins did not spill out. A
casino employee walked up,
looked at the machine, then
politely told Page she had mls·
read the pa yoff cha rt.
The machine, he explai ned.
was not capable of spitting out
$1,150,697 in silver dolla'rs.
Page, who works as a recep·
tionlst for a law firm , a nd her
husband, Robert, a medical
com pany salesman , were given
th ei r check Sunday .
Cas ino spokeswoma n Debbie
Munch ·. said the couple, who
ma rried in Las Vegas abou t 10
hours befo re hitting the jackpot,
had been. living with Pagr' s
moth er until they cou ld save up
enough money to buy a hou se.

__

Monday,
Aprii20. 198~
__;_;.....
~

~

n~ws _ _ _ _ _ _ _, ----:--

" Her husband also said he
wants to buy her'a nlc!'r wedding
ring," Munch said.
The two were given a luxury
suite for the nl!(ht and invited to
take a free honeymoon at the
Caesars in . Lake Tahoe. The
hotel-cas ino also offe~ed to fly
the co uple;s parents io Las Vegas
· for Easter , Munch said .
Smoking and drinking fhlmp
goes cold turkey : COLUMBUS,
Ohio iUPi) - Sam, a chimpanzee who allegedly smoked cigarettes and drank liquor to
entertain bar patrons, will be
going cold turkey for six weeks
while he Is examined and his
owner answers animal cruelty
charges .
Sam was removed from his
cage adjacent to a tav ern In
Warren County last week ,and
brought to theOhloState Unlver·
slty Laboratory Animal Center.
Authorities seized the 16-year·
old chimp after an animal right s
activist complained that Sam's
quarters were filthy, he was not
properly fed and he was forced to
s moke and drink.
The complaint said the chimpanzee was loaded with coffee
and cigarettes to get ~oing in the
morning.
Law enforcement officers said
Sa m was used to enter tain
patrons of the bar, owned by
Kennett h Harr is , who was

All three
Meigs tearris
.
post WIDS
-Page 3

charged with cruelty to an paving part qf a highway because
1
animal .
of a resident's allergies.
•
"Fred Cornhlll, chairman of the
Sharon Glassman, 29 , had
Institutional Laboratory Animal worried fumes from the asphalt
Care .and Use Committee at Ohio roadwork would aggravate her
State, 'said Sam will be In severe allergy problems and
quarantine for at least Six weeks . force her .out of her house for a
He'll be given thrf'!' physical · year.
examinations, dental exams,
Glassman said ~he · has a
blood test s and tes ts for severe illness that causes ad·,
tuberculosis .
verse reactions to almost every
"He will receive the sa me kind element 'in the environment. She
of treatment a huinan would said she tries to stay In the hou se
receive," said Cornhill.
as much as she ca n. hikes a
Cigarettes and alcohol are off variety of medic ine and eats
the menu.
special foods .
"We will be alert for any
She wanted the city to postpone,
problems of withdrawal," Corn· paving the road for a year to
hill said.
allow more time lor her inedlclne
After the quarantine, " What to JmproVP her condition or for
will happen to him Is up to the her family to lind another house,
co urts," Corn hill said:
The city decided to pave the
Assistant Warren ·county Pro- road to within 1,500 feet of her
secutor David Ernst said Sam's home this year and the section
cage was unventilated, filthy and that runs past her home next
dark and that he did not receive year.
proper water and food.
"I 'm very thankful for what
Harris 's lawye r , James the city Is doing," Glassman said
Sheets. said the animal was well of the comprom ise.
cared for and that his quarters
City Engineer Tom Young said
were Inspected regularly and an he thought the city should try to
inspector for the Department of work with Glassman but was
Agriculture said Sam and his wor ried about future requests.
cage were inspected in No·
"We tried to work with her and
ve mber and met federal still meet our public works ·
standards.
responsibllties," he said. "But I
Woman's allergies postpone hope this won't bring a flood .of
paving: CINCINNATI iUPli similar requests .from people
The l-ity has agreed to postponr who simply don't like the smell of
asphalt."

.

NORTH PROVIDE NCE, R. I.
A woman who used
mon ey she saved for her honc.v·
moon to pay $5.0t10 in medical
bills for a badly burned aban·
doned kitten says it was some
thing she " had to do" afler
looking Into the kitty's eyes.
"Life is very prrrious , eve n for

a little anima l that ca n' t talk, "
sa id .Janet Ciampanelli, :l9, after
s he committ ed her honeymoon
travel money to paying the
m edical bills for a 7· month-old
kitten named E rnie.
The impish, green-eyed tiger
kitten was abandoned .Jan . 17 at
the Coventry A~imal Hospita l.

wher e &lt;iampanrUI works as a
volunteer. Ernie's haunch es
were burned by what veterinar·
ians speculated was scalding
water.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
administration of Gov. Richard
F. Celeste got in the first punch of
the 1987 budget debate in the Ohio
Senate, telling business-oriented
Republican senators Monday evening they ought to "reach out
and touch" the phone co mpanies
with a controversial telephone
tax.
Slate Tax -Co mmission er
.Joanne Limbach lobbied vigor·
ously for the new tax on Inter·
state long-distance telephone
calls proposed by theadmlnlstra·
tion and kept by the House. She
warned senators that If It is
removed, spending will havE&gt; to
be trimmed by $116 million.
Limbach and William J .
Shkurll, director of the state
Office of Budget and Manage·
men!, led off the budget hearings
in the Senate, testifying before
the Finance Committee on the
House-passed $22.1 billion plan
for 1988·89.
Shkurti told the senators the
budget Is a tight one, the most
difficult he has worked on ·s ince
' the mld ·1970s, and Is ba sed on
"middle of the road" economic
assumptions. If they backfire, he
warned, cuts or more tax In·
creases could be necessary .
Long distance companies and
businesses which use long lines
lor "' data , tranliD!I&amp;sjons are
mounting heavy pressure on the
Senate to remove the telephone
tax , saying It will harm the
state's business climate. They
could testify later today on the
tax portion of the budl!et.

APRIL FURNITURE SALE
r home. Stop in today!
ARMSTRONG &amp;
CONGOLEUM

Automatic
Washer

Timed Dry
System

Capacity ... but
only 24" wide'

Dryer

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING

Large

Huge assortment of patterns

to match any ~ecor. No WOK
finish. In stock for immediate

-Auto Programming
-Ca~le
Drying Cycles • 3 Drying
Tomperatur" • "No-Iron" Cool·
Down
•180"' Side-Swing
o001 o
DU RAWHITEN In·
o 4

Preml1r Comfort Twin
MaHrns or Box .... 175 ... p1
Premier Comfort Full
MaHrns or Box ... 110S ... p1
Contour Correct
Full Set It! I'· wu,.t .....J2S8 '"
Perfect Sleeper
Full Set tu ,,. wo.. .t ...J:l72 ,.,

o 4 Automatic Waah &lt;;yclaa • 3

Waah/Rinaa Combination• •
Eaay ·. Claan Ramovable UJ\1
Filter • SUGILATOR• Agitator

Ready

$339°0
25" diag.

featuring

automatic:

SPILLOUARD'~

MEALnMER '"
clock

coolctop

CONSOLE TV

1/4 OFF

ENTIRE STOCK OF RECLINERS

Coffee Tables, End
Tables, Sofa Tables and
Lainp Tables.
Mersman quality.
All Tables in Stock

25°/o OFF

£tr1H 8h4 LLOYD
5' 1' SUMMER

FURNITURE
Parma-Wicker Spring
Bate Chairs

Reg. $ 102.00
Low-Back Chair ............ 172.00
Reg.l119.00
.
High-Bock Chair ..........,114.00

• One 8'', thrN 6' ' plug-in surf1ci
unit• • Custom Broil Control •
chromt reflector bowl• • Two •d·
ju1t1bl• oven rackt • Full·width
IJOrlgt drewer with Uter~~ture P1c

• A...,ovoblt

-n

door • ....need

. Wlllto .

----t

FLOOR
LAMPS

loautilul bran plaftd
floor lomps. Ptrltd for
lOading. sow!ftg or ••·
oryday uso. 3 stylos.
hg. '7'-95
OIILY

• -· White .

SALE

UVING ROOI SUITES

Qoo11ty I _. J pltn hloot , _
Mliltt, ' " _ , .... ..,.,,......

Cltoi!Y ~ ..............
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250fo to 500ft off

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enttne
3 Sect ions, 50 Pages • 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Fire unit
will get
funding
from tax

· Truck
overturns
\·
The driver received only
minor Injuries but the tractortrailer he was driving was
heavily damaged when It
overturned In Syracuse Mon·
day afternoon. The accident,
invesllgated by the depart·
ment of Meigs County Sheriff
Howard Frank, occurred at
2:54 p.m. Stanley C. Hunting·
ton, 50, Cleveland, driver of
the truck, owned by Cotter &amp;
Co. ol Westlake, hauling male·
rlllllor Tru-Value, was trans·
porred by the Syracuse squad
to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was examined,
treated for minor Injuries and
released. Reports said the
tractor-lraller was traveling
east on Ohio 124 when It was
crowded off the right side ol
the road, striking and break·
lng an Ohio Power Co. pol~,
tearing down. R\'erat llnet1.
Electrlclly WI\S oul for numerous customers. There Is no
guard railing on the narrow
section of road and only a
limited berm, seen at right.

--

·u-•
,.........,
.•lilt...,_
.,.._
......_
,.

$54}~

$69}"·

•Actl

t

•u Ft. INt
-c- .......
ONlY

nor In ~ ·e oruary, worKers want ·
lng to buy the plant have also
req uested loans from var ious
banks and lending Institutions
throughout the United States.
Shaw said th!' new law exempt ·
lng frrroalloy will make the loan
package more appealing to the se
lenders.
" The signing brought us one
step closer. Now that we have !he
support of the sta te, we hope we

will soon reopen the plunt and put
Its 200 workers back to work. "
• The plant hasbcencloscdsl ncc
December 1985 whe n Foot r Min·
era! sold It s fcrroalloys division.
Attending the govprn or's bill
signing ceremony wert rcpr!'·
sent atlves of Appalachian Pow!'r
Co ., Including P. Scott Icard; th e•
Ma son County Development Au ·
thorlty , Including .lim L wls,
president , and Frank Lcc, cxer u-

tlvc director; the United Stillrs
Steel Work~r s of America , In·
elud ing, Bernard WhIt c. vlre
president of Local ol71, and Cury
F'rermu n, president : the West
Virginia AFL·CiO, Including
MargarN .Jarvi s: the West Vir~ I·
nla Chamber of Commerce.
Including John Hurd : Shaw.
Del&lt;'gatc Johri R~ed , R-Putnam,
and Fra nkie Shannon, a leglsla ·
live Intern.

•

accident injures two Gallia COUDtiaDS
Holzer Medical Center by the
Gal !Ia EMS. Repass wa s treated
and released for co ntusions.
Neal, who suffered multiple
lacerations and possible lrar·
tures. was admitted to the
hospital and at present Is In !he
Intensive rare unit In guarded
cond ition.
. The tanker did notlgplt e and as
the lire departm ent sen t' three
trucks and 24 firemen to the
scene to control things In .the
area. The firemen participated

In ront alnlng the gasoli ne th at
spilled Into a nea rby dit ch and
prevented It from reaching a
nearby creek.
So me of the firemen r maim•d
on the scene for eight hou rs
before turning the area over to
the Ohio Environmental Prater·
tlon Agency crew led by field

coordinator KPvln Zambro, ac·
cordi ng to Fire Chief Ray Bush.
Ashland Oil sent tru cks and
men from Marietta and from
Henderson, W.Va ., to re&lt;'over the
unspllled ga soiiM from th&lt;'
tanker .
The accident Is und er Invest!·
ga tton by the put :ot.

By NANCY l'OACHAM
Sentinel Staff Wrller
Pomeroy Villa~e Council voted
In Monday nfi(ht 's meeting to
commit up to $16,000 of village
Income tax money to the Pomerox Fire Depari ment to subsidize
the purchase of a· new custom
built fire truck .
· Financial matters regarding
th'c truck's purchase were dis·
cussed at length before council
commlted the fund s, Including
the amount of money to be
generated by a new five-year
two· mill levy lor the fire depart·
mcnt passed st t lctly for the
purchase of the truck.
Jane Walton, clerk-treasurer,
reported s he was told by Joan
Hoffman of the county auditor's
office that the fire department
could expect approximately
$25,()()() a year Cr·om the new levy ,
This flgur&lt;' falls short of the
$~1 , 000 figure which had been
anticipated by thr fir e depart ·
ment "because not everyone
pays !heir taxes," Walton said.
The $31.000 Is the amount which
could be generated "If everyone
who owes would pay."
According to the state audl·
tor 's office, as rQported by
Walton, the new truck must be
pa1d off In five years before the
levy expires. In addition, the
department. must h""ve a 2ft
perccnl down payment of about
$31,000 before Wa1to9 can legally
sign any documents ordering the
purchase and committing the
payments .
in the first year, the. down
payment and regular payment
combined would be about $60,000.
F.ven with $25,000 from the n~~
two-mill levy, and Sl2,000 from,
the old one-mitt levy, whleft·
expires nex t year, the drpa_ti~;
ment would still fall short of~~~·
needed fund s. The fire depa'rr::
men! also receives other funds
throu ghout !he yea r. but must
allow for operational and main·
talna oce costs.
Thr depart ment spent abOut
$:10,(J(XJ last year, not lnrludlni( a
S6.ii00 truck payment which wlls
paid by council from lnrome tax
money . Council will also be
pu ylnJt: th!' final $H,fi(XJ truck
payment , which comes du e .June
of thi s yea r .
.
· Because of this, It was suggested by Mayor Richard Seyler
and Coun c ttm~n Bruce Reed and
.John Anderson that the depart ·
mcnt walt one more yt&gt;ur before
ordPrini( th e truck, In order to
allow some of th eir money to
ea rn Int erest, thereby cllmlnal·
lng posslblr financial burdens
ca used by the purchas!'.
"There's ju st too many flnan·
rContlnucd on Page 101

· Iran offers
deal to U.S.

PORCH &amp; PATIO

CARPET ·SALE

GlEIM TUIF

Governor Moore to create an
employee buy·out package,"
Shaw said. "The signing of this
bill will mean approximately
$496,000 will be added to the
cas h·fiow package at the New
Haven plant."
Shaw added that this will help
sell 1he plant - to be known as
American Alloys ]nc. - to
various Investors and lenders.
In addition to a state loan of $4
million, approved by th ~ gover·

GALLIPOLIS - A tankE&gt;r · Barton Repass, 40, Rt. 4,
accident on Ohio 7 Monday Ga lllpolls.
.
afternoon left two drivers injured
Both trucks overturned after
and forced a major clea n-up leaving the road, ca us lni( heavy
operation, according to reports damage to both vehicles, the
from the Gallla-Melgs Post o! the patrol said .
State Highway Patrol and the
Neal was reportedly trapped
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Inside the wreckage of the pickup
Department.
for approximately 45 minutes .
The accident occurred about The Gallla County Sheriff's De·
2:15p.m .. north of Eureka. when partmenfs "Jaws of Life" ex·
a pickup truck driven by Ronald traction device was used to !ree
Neal. 26, Rt. 2, Bldwt&gt;ll, traveling Neal.
south on 7, reportedly went left of
Repass and Neal were taken to
center and hit a gasoline tanker
truck owned by Bob Myers of
Lowpr River Road and driven by

$479°0

• Two 8", two 6" high·lj)Otd. plu•
in ~&amp;.~rfact unrt1 • Cultom Broil Con·
trot • Chr.,..... mtector bowls •
Own window ond _ . tt;ht • F\111·
width 110te0e d - with l.l'ltfO·
an he • Iaiii Cld Cooldng Sy•

"AT&amp;T, one of the largest
corporations in the world, with
1986 sa les of $34 billion, Is
currently orga nizi ng a campaign
to convince the Ohio Senate not to
repeal this tax loophole which
they currently enjoy." . sa ld ·
Limbach.
"Don't be fooled by all of this ,"
cautioned the tax commls'Stbner•:· •
She said tong-distance com·
panics pay less than hall of their
fair share of the taxes for all Ohio
telephone compan les, enjoying
45 percent of Ohio' s telephone
receipts but paying only 20
percent of the telephone taxes.
Limbach said the tax ma y or
may not be pa s~ed on to business
consumers In the form of In·
creased charges. But !lit Is, she
said, the 5 percent Increase for
large companies would be
"dwarfed" by their .10 percent
savings from deregulation of the
telephone industry In 1984.
"We think it Is lime to ·reach
out and tou ch' long-distance
telephone co mpanies sO&gt;that they
pay their fair share of Ohio's
taxes, " said Limbach.
Sen. Charles F. Horn, R·
Kef terlng, said he Is concerned
about high technology firms In
his area which condu ct all their
business on computers over
long-distance telephone lines.
"They ~rceive that they are
going to get a tax Increase of 5
percent or more," Horn sa Id.
"Clearly there Is a risk of th!'ir
expanding (movlng l out or
state."

l'loudy lonlghl with a
&lt;'han&lt;·&lt;• of showers and lows In ·
th~ low 60s. Mostly cloudy
Wt•dn~sday with a chanc~ of
showers and thunderstorms·.
and hlgJL• near 70.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 21, 1987

T~nker-truck

-Pine ·or Oak
-XL-100 Chassis

RECLINER SALE

Quality Btrkline Walloway leclllltrs, ltclc·O-leungers and Stan·
danl leclln111. ugo 11loctlon of labrkt lllld colers.
layaway Now for Mother'a 8t Father's Day

TABLE SALE

MASON. W.Va . - A bill
recently signed lnlo law by Gov .
Arch A. Moore Jr. may give
workers at Mason County's
Foote Mineral Plant a better
chance to owwn the fa cility .
Sen. Mike Shaw, R-Mason,
sponsored the bill, which will
rxempt sales of electricit y consumed In manufacturing a fer roalloy from the state's bus iness
and occupation tax.
"I have been working with

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teaturing
lilt-up

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Bill·increases cash flow .package for Foote plant

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BEDDING SALE

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State official
makes case
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ELBERFELOS
Automatic

821

a.• y

Vo1.36. No.245
Copyrightod 1987

that you just had to do? I looked
at thos!'littleeyesa nd tsaw) the
love and the tru st.
" I had moments of guilt when I
saw him In pain. But I'll tell you
something about animals- they
forget the past. We hang onto our
pasts and our hangups. A little
kitten forgives and for gets."

"I could.n't put him to sleep,"
Clampanelll sa id. " Have you
ever felt something compelling

Daily Numh(•r
'

•

Woman spends honeymoon money to save kitty
1UP! 1 -

O.hio Lottery

WASHINGTON rUPII -The
speaker o!lran's parliament , the
highest-ranking official of the
Islamic nation to play an active
role In covert U.S. arms sales to
T!'hran, Is proposing new deals
for the release of American
hostages.
In an Interview with an Iranian
government newspaper, All Ak·
bar Hashemi Rafsan)anl said I! ·
the United States would return
money and property It seized
during the 19'79-IJJ hostage crisiS,
"We will help you In Lebanon."
The powerful leader appar·
ently was referring to U.S.
hostages still held In Lebanon
and to abOut $500 milliOn In
Iranian funds that were blocked
to asture Iran's payment for
debts and Indemnities ordered by
(Continued on Page 10)

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AINT IT TilE 'I'RV'I'II! - MuJ Metp Ceu&amp;t.. A11WJ with
t . . biDhoard made from • poMer etped .,. Nllcld llde, • llxlh
l'ltder at Radae Elemeatar)' School, wblch proelalma that
"LIUer laadEAR.rable." Tbe paetel'wuchoeen utbewlnnerln
a countr·wlde coa&amp;Nt apo•orfll Jut rear b)' tile Melp Countr
Offtce ol Liller ControL Tile blllboartl Ia loealed oa West Main
Street betweest Pomero1 ud Middleport. 'l'llrotlpoat the comh;lg
rear, lhe politer wlll be dlaplaJed oa other, blllholll'dlr lhrotlghout .
the count)'.

ARTIST HONORED- As winner In llll!tyear's
county-wide p08ter contest sponsored by lhe
Melp County Otnce of Liner C'l"trol, Nlkkllhle,
daughter of Mrs. and Mn. Nick I hie and a sJxlh .
grader at Racine Elementary School, was
pretlented a plaque and a tee shirt by Mary Wiard,
ehlef of the Ohio Office of Liller Prevenllon and

Recycling. Wiard was In Pomeroy Monday to
make the special pre~~entation. With Nikki and
Wiard Is the bear which Wll8 d&lt;·plcted In her po&gt;~h!r
entitled "Litter Is UnBEARabk" -The ·ht-ar
costume was patterned alter · Nlkki'H de•lgn.
Nikki's poster - reproduced giant &gt;~lze- may be'
seen on a Wesl Main Street hill hoard In Pomeroy.

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