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                  <text>The

W.Va.

Times-sentinel

'TRUC LOAD SAL
EN®

e
Vot.36, No.238
Copyrighted 1986

•

at y

en tine
2 Sections. 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. March 24, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Parental notification abortion bill becomes law
SPEAKER UVESTOCK BUYER - Chamber of
Commerce -mh Annual Banquet speaker Stanley E.
Harrison, Is sb&gt;Ml wring the 1985 Guilla County
Junior Fair, when he ~rdla.•ed the Rffierve
Olamplon Lamb. Shown with Harrison (I), are Lovel

CLEVELAND (UP! I- A U.S. Disllict Coort jud~e
today refused to grant a request for a temporary
restraining order, thus allowing Ohio's new law
requiring parental notificat ion for minors seeking
abortions to go into effect as scheduled.
The Ohio chapter of the American Civil Liberties
Union filed suit Friday in federal court, seeking to
stop the law from going into effect today.
Judge John M. Manos scheduled a hearing for a
preliminary injunction before .Judge Ann Aldrich
March 31 at 9: 30a.m.,saidLinda R. Sogg. an att orney
representing the ACLU.
Aldrich was originally assigned the case, but is oot
or I0\\11 this week attending a seminar.
"The new law is in effect. Young women who are
pregnant ," Sogg said, "must have a parent rotlfied or
secure a court order to go !orward with tre abortion."
Attorneys representing the Ohio Attorney Gener·
al ·s office and the Summit tounty prosecutor's office

Forgey (c), who raised lhe lamb, and Mlti Gallla
County, .Jo EDen OUver, (r). Ms. Forgey Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hank Forgey, and a
member of the Qmterville Young Fannel'!i.

Dinner reservations still available
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Area Chamber of C'.ommerCP 49th
Annual Meeting will be held in tl1e
Dining Room of the James A.
Rhodes Student Center at Rio
Grande College and Communi ty
College, Rio Grande. Ga liia Countv
native, Stanley E. Harrison. Is tnP
featured speaker. The dinner will
be held on Thursday evening. April
3, at 7 p.m .

COMPLETE M

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----J
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Harrison. President and Chief
Operating Officer of the BDM
Corporation. has achieved a most
distinguished career and is r({'og·
nized nationally.
All Chambe r of CommercP
members ha ve roceived notice of
the meeting by letter. and reserva·
lions for the dinner are due no later
than Monda)'. Mart'h 24. in the

Chamtn of CommerCP ctfice at 16
State Street in downto\\11 Gallipolis.
Local arrangements for the 49th
Annual Meeting are being made by
the Chamber's Banquet Commit·
tee. Further Information on the
meeting or rrservat!ons are ava ilable from Thelma Eliiott. Chamber
Exf'('utive Secretary, by ca lling
446-ffi96.

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with the abortion on her own;
-if a grandparent or adult brother or sisler flies a n
affidavit with the court stating the young woman
might be abused by her parents if they are notified .
Named as defendanls were Summit County
Prosecutor Lynn Slaby, represroting all county
prosecutors, Gov. Richard Celeste and AMorney
General Anthony Celebrezze.
Celesle allowed the biU to become taw without his
signatu re in Of'('ember. He said it was a "misdirected
attempt" to solve a parent-child communication
problem but acknowledged he had no chance of
sustaining a veto in the Legislature.
· Levy also said the law would he impossible to
enforce in many counties. The measure dlrected the
clerk of the Ohio Supreme Cou rt to distribule forms
ex plaining the bypass procedures ID juvenile judges
In each county .

lronicaliy, the Akron clinic was ttK&gt; plaintiff in
another case, which went all the way to the Supreme
Court, involving an abortion law passed by Akron City
Council.
The Supreme Court, on Jan. 15. 1983. thr£'W out the
Akron ordinance, which required ali abonions after
the firsllhree months of pregnancy be periormed in a
hospital; prohibited a physician to periorm an
abortion on unmarried minor under 15 witoout the
consent of a parent or guardian. or without a coun
order: required the physician to inform the woman of
the development or the fetus and mandated a 21· hour
waiting period.
The current case was assigned to U.S. District
Judge ·Ann Aldrich, but Manos heard arguments late
F riday afternoon because Aid rich was out of town. A
hearing on the ACLU's request for a preliminary
injunction is scheduled for March 31.

Large quantity
water usage
permits being
filed in Racine

Fonner city manager
charges interference
led to his dismissal

BAY &amp; BOW WINDOWS

lemainder to 1M paid upon Nceipt of 111aterial.

"'I

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-a:

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ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION

.

ANDERSON SUGGESTED LIST

declined comment following the meeting in Manos '
chambers.
'
The suit was tiled on behalf of the Akron Cen ter for
Reproductive Health , Dr. Max Pierre Gaujean, a
clinic physician, and ' 'Patty Poe" and "Rachel Roe",
two unidentified 17-year-oid girls seeking abortions.
In Columbus Friday, Mark Levy, acting director of
the ACLU's Ohio chapter, said the law violates young
women's right to privacy .
The law requires the parent or guardian of any
unmarried, unemancipated woman unde r 18 who
seeks an abortion to receive at leasl21 oours' advance
notice of the procedu re in person or by telepoone.
The parents do not need to consent to the abonlon:
they mu st merely be aware of it.
The only exceptions to notification are:
- if a juvenile court rules that the young woman is
sufficiently mature and well· informed lo pr'DC('('d

FREE REFRESHMENTS

GALLIPOLIS - Foliowlng his
dismissal as Gallipolis City Man·
ager Saturday, Alberl R. Pierce
released a statement on the city
commission's action to terminate
his contract.
In his stalement, the former city
manager alleges certain members
of the commission had unduly
interiered in day·to-day operations
of the city during his short tenure as
chief municipal adminstrator .
Pierce Is known to have "unoffi ·
claliy" resigned on two occasions
betWI.'I'n January 7- when he was
sworn-in - and March 22. 'Those
resJgna lions came during the period when the city was in the
process of furloughing some one
dozen municipal employees.
Pierce said Friday the reslgna·
liOns were spurred by undue
interference on the part of the
commission in " perso nnel

matters."
In both cases, Pierce withdrew
his "unolflctal" resignations once at the bidding of the commis·
sian: the second time. upon hls own
init ialive.
Pierce's s latement reads, in full,
as follOws:
"This will advise the citizens of
Gallipolis that my services as city
manager of the city of Galllpolls
have been terminated as of March
22. 19~.
" I attribute my termination to the
fact that i have slrongly oblected
from time to tlme to th,• involve
ment of the members of the city
commission, particularly Richard
Moore. president of the commls·
siOn. in the administrative affairs cJ
city government .
" It goes wltoout saying that in tbe
commlsslon·manager form of go·
vernment it is up to the city
commission to set the policies that
the cily government is expected to
!ollow and to leave the administra ·
tlon of trose policies up to the city
manager. This Is the procedu re
followed by commission-manager
cilles across the nation.
"I also wish to ·mention, at the
same time. that I feel in the short
pcrild o! time that I have beenctty
manager of the city of Gallipolis

o I will attend.

I

01 will try to attend.
01 can't attend but please send me
more information on Andersen.

I
I
I
I Name ______________________

I

A d d r e s s - - - - - -- -- - -

1C i t y - - - - - - - - S t a t e - - - 1Zip------ Phone - - - - -- - - - - ~----------------------

PHONE 6 14-992-6611

&amp; SUPPLY CO.
555 Pork St.
Middleport, Ohio

President puts pressure on Senate

"In closing.! wish to reiterate my
feelings that ~Richard Moore, and
certain other members of the city
commission, would have left ttK&gt;
administration of lhe city up to tl1e
city man ager and concer'led them·
selves primarily with I he setting or
JX)licy , that we would continue lo
make rea l progress that would have
been of tremendous value to ttK&gt;
Gallipolis city government In the
future
"As I take leave of yoor lOvely
French City, nestled In the foothills
of Appalachia, IJ?slde the beautiful
Ohio Rlver, I want the citizens of
this community lo know I leave
with malice toward no &lt;Ill' and with
charity toward aU, and I wish the
cit izens of this city the very best
today and for all days to come."

WASHINGTON tUPI1 - Presi·
dent Reagan , decrying "scurrilous
personal attacks" on his motives,
trained his powers of persuasion on
the Senate today in hopes of
reversing a setha ck to his cam·
paign to arm Nicaraguan rebels.
Showing no loss of zeal after a
defeat last Thursday in the House,
Reagan demanded action from
Congress In his weekend radio
address and lashed out at oppo·
nents of his $100 million aid request
in a New York Times intervil'w.
Today, he planned to lobby
senators for votes he wlli need lo
puU off a victory In the Republican·
controlied chamber at midweek.
White House officia ls believe a win
would ensure event ual approval or
some. if nol ail. of the aid he has

DEMOCRATIC SPEAKERS - Ohlo Altomey
General Anthony Celebreew, Jr., was principal
speaker at the 111nual bean dinner of Meigs Coonly
Democrats held Saturday night at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Cen~r. Celebreew related aspects of his
office in working with oonsmner affairs and
hazardous waste laws to conserve natural resources
oltbe state. He also touched upon the advantages of

support of a slate Democratic ticket. Also !ol~Caklng
were Jan Long, ClrclevWe, fonnerly of Middleport,
who Is a candidate lor the district seat on the !Ute
senate 1111d Rep. Jolynn Boster, who Is seeking
reelection to the house of represestlallves. Shown at
Saturday night's Junction are Ling, Celebreew,
Boster and Henry Hunter, Meigs Crurty Democratic
Chairman.

requested.
Reagan, pledging "an aU-out
effort to get this passed," displayed
little interest in compromise over
the weekend, despite predictions in
both Congress and the White House
that he will forced to accept
compromises on any military
assistance approved for the Con·
lras fighting the Marxlsl-led Sandi·
nista government of Nicaragua .
The $100 million aid package
in cludes $'ill million in milit ary
assista nce a nd ~ million in
non-lethal aid .
As Reagan focused atlention on
the Senate, the confrontational
tactics he used In the House- tot he
apparen l detriment of his causecontinued to dog I he debaleover his
public call for secret military

assistance to tiw rebels.
House leaders described the
222-210 defeat last week as r€PUdla ·
tion cJ an inlense admin istration
hard sell assailed by [)&gt;mocrats
and some Republicans as "red·
baiting" and "McCan hyism."
But Reagan lold The New York
Times Ihat loose denouncing "shrill
rhetoric" from the White House
were JX)inting fingers "in the wrong
diff'('tlon ."
"I'm not impugnin g motives at
ail ," he said . "But some o! tbe
qJponenls of oor progra m engaged
in some of the most scurrilous.
personal attacks against me , for
example, tbe most dishonest use of
dlstonions and oulright falsehoods
that I have tK&gt;ard In a legislative
batUe."

Packwood's tax refor1n faces first test

r---------------------1

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that we have made considerable
progress and a few of the accompiislunents made over the past few
m:mt Its foUow:
-The dty has a balanced gt&gt;neral
fund rudget tor the current and
fiscal year, which started out with a
deficit o! approximately $215,00&gt;.
-The water department has
tl&gt;en put on a sound financial
footing a nd Is now able to cover Its
q:&gt;erating costs and bonded indebtedness from Its operating
revl'llues.
-PersoMel have been removed
from lhe various departments of
the city governmenl wiD were
found to be in excess of the needs ci
lhe city.
-The way has been cleared for
the widening and paving of:Eastern
Avenue and this projects Is ex·
pee led ro go ID bid next July for
con\pletlon early In 1987.
-Constr uctiOn of the new
S'r.Al,OOJ (440,1m gallon I swimming
pool is underway and It is expected
that It will be completed and ready
for use by July or August of this
year.
-Bids have been tentatively
awarded for conslructionof the new
$6.2 mllllon wastewater treatmenl
plant and this major capita l
improvement facility should be
ready for use in the early part of
1987.

PROPOSAL FORCFl! Val'E Sena&amp;e F1n111ce committee
chalrmall Bob Packwood's tax
relonn plan hall forced a vote
1oc1ay on the proposal evm
"thouJh l'ackwood, above,
co.-Is the plan Is In Jeopardy.
UPI.

WASHINGTON iUPII - An last Tuesday night , had by Wednes·
uproar over Senate Finance Com- day paralyzed the tax-exempt bond
mittee Chaitman Bob Packwood's market, but It later recovered.
tax reform plan has fort'ed a vote
The proposal, which Packwood
today on the proposal, and even said the administration requested,
Packwood concedes the plan Is in would require weaitey people who
jeopardy.
have to pay . an alternative min·
When a portion of Packwood's imum tax to Include as taxable
tax overhaul proposal virtually income the Interest they receive
brought the tax- exempt bood !rom normally tax-exempt municl·
mark(&gt;! to a standstill last week, pal boods, no matter when the
evl'llts ovenook the chainnan's bonds were Issued.
tlmetable and forced him to make
The tax pian that the House
the matter the first Item on the passed last year would include as
committee's Bgl'!lda today.
income only the Interest on newly
After all opening session last Issued municipal bonds used to pay
week in which there were no votes, tor private projects such as hospiPackwood, ROre., planned to have tals and factor ies.
the conunlttee cast ballots this
Other municipal bonds used for
week on a few non-controversial public purposes such as schools and
Items in hts plan txofore Congress highways would be tax-exempt.
begins a two-week Easter recess
In response to the market
Thursday.
upheaval, 10 of the committee's ~
The provision, which surfaced members told Packwood In a letter
only when complete detalls ci last week they wanted the provision
Packwood's tax plan were released immediately reversed. Other sena-

tors who did nol sign the letter also
opposed the trovision, aides said.
The critics charged It was unfair
to pass a law that would change the
tax treatmentof exlstingbondsand
speculated that the alteration&lt;;
could make it more dlfficult for
state and local goverrunrots to pay
for projects.
However, outside of agreeing to
bring the matter up, Packwood
refused to try to meet the lawmak·

ers' objections.
Friday, he conceded that he
expected to lose the vote today, but
he tried to paint the other senators
as being too concerned with
wanting tax loopholes for the
wealtlzy.
The proposed tax change, hesatd ,
would not bother middle class
investors because they are not
subjected to the alternalive min·
imum tax.

•
•
River traffic movr,ng agar,n
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (UPII
Traffic on the Ohio RJver is moving
once again, now that repairs on a
Gaiiipolis locks and dam gate have
been made.
Twenty -two towboats were
moored along the Ohio RJver
between Tuesday and Friday after
a tug with a string of 10 barges

struck the locks. Repairs were
completed Frklay, a day earlier
than expected.
After repair crews !inlshed replacing the hlngt&gt; on the ln-ton gate,
the first through was the "Allied,"
an Ashland Oil Co. towboat ~siting
10 barges !IUed with petroleum
products from Westwood, Ky., to
Pittsburgh.

Applica tions and permits for
Racine residents using large
amounts of water are now available
a t the Village Cut Rate Store.
The Racine Board of Public
Affairs reports quantity water
usage materials are available and
that the clerk will he sending
notices to pool owners reminding
them that special water fees are
due.
Council has sent a letter to the
Racine Gas Co. requesting a
meeting concerning reduced gas
rates since the cost or natural gas is
going down .
Council also discussed insurance
on the fil'l' trucks and equipment
and the possibility of IDiding a
meeting wilh an insurance agency
representative to evaluale the
current coverage.
The board of affairs was autho·
rlzed to ~rt'hase chain link fencing
from Sears to go around the aerator
building. Revenue sharing funds
wlli be used to pay forthe ~ rt'ha se.
Da le and Kathryn Hart and Dick
and Charlotte Wamsley were
named as additional members to
the Shrine Park Board. Councilmen
Lany Wo~e and Robert Beegle
were apJX)inted to a committee to
draft a use and user fee schedule for
ttK&gt; fire house annex . Councilman
Carroll Teaford will check the
operation of a nasher light at the
elemental)' school. Counctlman
Wolfe reported tha t parldng of
vehicles is blinding drivers at
intersections. He will check with thf&gt;.
village solicilor as to wha t steps can
be taken to prepare an ordinanre
prohibiting such parking.
The nexl regular meeting Is 7
p.m. oo April 7. Attending the
session were Councilmen Frank
Cleland, Dick Wamsley. Wolfe,
Beegle and Teaford: Clerk Shirley
Evans: Street CommissionerGieM
Rizer; Fire Chief Robert Johnson;
[)&gt;puty Marshal Joe Kirby and
Jack Wolie.

Elderly man
found in ditch :
An elderly man was found
Monday morning unconclou s in a
ditch on Vanre Rd . in Scipio
Township. Thc88-year-old man was
discovered by a school bus dri\w.
The bus driver notlied the Meigs
Coonty Sheriff' s office and a deputy
. was dispatched to the scenP.
Rutland EMS transported the man
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The matter is under investigation
by the stK&gt;rlff s deparunent, how· .:
ever, It is believed that the man ·
accidentally fell. A sheriff'sdepan·
ment spokesman said the man may
have been outside on the ground all
night.

WIC coupon pick·up
dates are announced
The schedule for the prkup of .
coupons by residents participating
in the WI C program is announced ·
by the Meigs County Department &lt;i :
Health.
:
Pickup days are Tuesday, April
l; Thursday, April 3, and Friday,
AprU 4, with times on a Uthree days
to be !rom 9 to 11 a.m. and frorn \ w,
3 p.m. Those unable to mak~ . ; :
designatro schedule can p i coupons on April 7, 14 and 21, 9toll
a.m. aM 1 to 3 p.m.

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�Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Courl Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERF.'!TS OF THE MEIGS- MASON AREA

ROBERT L . WINGETT
' Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publis he r /Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MF:MBER of Tht- L'nltf'd Press I n!Nnationdl. Inland DailY PrPSS Assoria ·
tlon and lh(' Amf'rican Nt"\\.'Spap('r P ub lls hprs Association
·

LETIERS OF OP INION are wt•lt'O nw . Thpv should bt• ll:'ss than 300 w01·ds
long. A. II letter s are su bjP&lt;"t to Ed illn ~ and mu st bE- s I~ ned ~· [ t h na TT'K' , ad dress and
telt'Ph one numbrr. No un sl2" n&lt;'d lf'tt('rs will bC' publ!sh&lt;'d L('ttf'rs should bt' In

good tasle , addressing lssurs. not personallttfs.

Celeste's view of
economic realities

Page- 2- The Dailv Sentinel
Pomerov- Middleport, Ohio
Mondav. March 24. 1986

Sorry, Mr. President ____W_il_lia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_ J_r.
The president oft IF United States
gave a oompelling speech last
Sunday. Moreover It was a speech
that. in the judgment of thi s
listener. can truly be termed
propbE'tlc. By this Is meant that the
fate of Central America very Hkely
rests on what happens In Nlcara·
gua, or rather to Nicaragua; tii'
fate of Central America almost
certainly will determine the tate of
Mex ico. And tlx' fateof M'xlco can
affect the United States directlv in
ways far more serious than 'imy
threatened by Kaiser WUII'Im,
i\dolf Hitler. Kim Ti-sung, or Ho Chi
Minh, and we went to war against
all four .
But It's precisely ttDse wtll g&lt;&gt;t
the presid&lt;&gt;nt's message wiD are
dismayed by what he ]rOceeds to
ask for. With reluctance ooe turns
to quote fmm one ol his JrOfesslonal

r~rrdimt@IDl.d ©llYlld Xrm~Rd.@.

Hour theq flanned for Retirement.'
fe-~ir.a.nd. \'t&gt;etntl~ 1'l)OK a.dvantaqeof an

Smith, the c hairman of the board of General Motors Corp ..
shov.ed dunng a nsll to the ca pital city· last week that he subscribE's to
many of the economic Yiews expressed by Go,·. Richard Celeste.
Smith met priYa tely wit h the governor and w·ged him to take a n acliH'
role in modifying Ohio's workers ' compensa tbn law to better suit the
business c;&gt;mmunity, which claims til&lt;' system is dr ivmg up business costs.
. But Sm1th told repo11ers that a sta te's Insurance systems for workers arP
JUSt one ptere of the puzzle an indu stry pu ts toge tlx'r when dec iding Wiler('
to locate a factory· or whether to mo\~ elscwherP.

compensat io n ow•rtidf' P\'f'J)'thin g f'IS('.

whether to blockade Nicaragua,
Interdict Its sea and air lanes and
prepare for introductbn of U.S
mtlltruy force to safeguard Ameri·
can citizens and the hemisphere.
They ought to be asked 10 send in
the Marines."
Begin with the last point . Mr.
Reagan has no appetite to use the
Marines In Nicaragua, and neither
oo the American people. But weare
entitled to ask this question,
namely: Is the use of the Marines
justifiable otii'r than to defend U.S.
terrttory? We did send them to
Lebanon not long ago, and the
casualty Usl was a great shock: one
kamikaze terrorist, 241 dead. The
United States, post Vietnam. is a
very dlffer('nt country from the
United States that thrtlled at the
ttDught of sending Marines to the
siiJres of Tripoli.

~AM.ILY FlNANC:lAL PLANNING: Th.e Mat-GoSes

R~ger

" It' s no different than the cost of paint . glass or steel." the aut o
manufacturtng cxecuti\C said. ·we ha\'r to be compel it i\·e ...
Smith sold a slate's businl'Ss taxi'S. labor costs and location are all
f~ctored into such decisions. "EH•ryttting's imponant. " he said
d!sm issing, as the governor has, tlr id&lt;&gt;a that taxes or workers'

crillcs, but Haynes Johnson of The
Washington Post, after a few
paragraphs of anti-Reagan push·
ups, said II in language for which
Mr. Reagan's fr iends have no
answer , facile or strained. Here Is
what he said:
"Assume, for III' sake of argument, that Reagan's analysis about
the supposed grave threat from
Central America is correct. 11 !ll,
his proposed remedies. expressed
passionately In numerous speeches
throughout tre five years of his·
presidency, have been a dismal
failur('. The threat, at least as he
describes it, has grown ever more
dan~rou s. By Reagan 's terms.
members of Congress should not be
debating whetii'r to make a m::&gt;Sl
minor switch of funds in the
Defense Department's accounting
rooks . They should be voting on

eor\1.1 ~ti rem~l'lt ~r f~m l-lis em?IO 4e Y:
Im~~&lt;l~ t)tlve up a. prorn\si"q career in corruptiOI'\ tO ma~ ~couple's irwtstmel'\tS.
Throuqh careful pltli'IYiir.q the c.ouple MS
5CIVed Q 1\CIIf billiOI'\ dollars eQCh 4e&lt;ll" froM
~~~ C\l'll'IUO.I Scllarq of :¥5,700,

FE~INANP's
ANNUAL.

SAL~~, .....:$ 5,700.

CRA'tES Or PESOS
SWISS SAN~ ACCOUNTS
GOL~ BUL.L.ION
REAL. ~~TATE

STOCK~. BON!'~

Smith put in a plug for Ohio's educa tional sy·strm, which Celeste and the
General ASS&lt;'mbiy haw upgraded during tlx' last three vears.
"I trunk the educational S\ Stem of a state is trrmenoous iv impon ant ." hP
said. "We' re oniv as good as the people we ttire. They·'ve g01 to be highiv
educated.·
•

J EWELRY,ART
C.\7. 5
FLEe-T OF AUTOS
YACHT

OUR f'ANEL OF
FlNAWCIAL APVISE~S
~ECOMME~~ THAT

TI\E MA~CO)cS
GeT A REALLY
GOO\:&gt; LA\NYER

CA'IIA~,I~Ufrl~~

And tbe GM chairman echoed Celeste's oft -repealed message that
indu sllial comp&lt;'lllion Ls on a glomi sca le and is no longer confined to
backyard wars with othl.•r stall'S.
"We make a mistakP to think that our competition is with Illinois,
Indiana and Michigan," said Smith. "Our competition is ~&lt;ith Toyota
City."
State ia"makrrs arc moving once again to shi ft the date of Ohio's
pi'I'S idf'ntial pnmary to giw the Ruckry·e State m::&gt;re of a \'OiCP in
nominming the s1andardbrarers of thl' ])comocrat ic and Republican
paflif'S

(l\"£'1;.,·

[our

.\ "('JI'S .

Thr Senate passed a bill last WE'&lt;'k s•i tching th:• Ma' primary to tlx' tttird
Tucsday in Mdl'ch, figu1ing Ohio would capture some of the "early bird"
attention that now gOC'S to second·rate stat"' tike New Hampshire and
Iowa .
Ohio nJil('d down lhf' OC'mocratie prPsidcntial nomination for .Jimm\'

CartN in 1976 when the primary in .June . but ha s been shut out of the
drcision- making prorrss sinC'f' then .
Sponsors an' It;. ing IU('Oruuragf'" Midw~! rogtonal primarY in March .

whl'n candidatrs will focus Jill h&lt;'ir dllrntion on probl('mS common to Ohio
and o thrr

n ra rb~- stalf'5..

But Sen , Char if's 1.. Rur 1s. D · &lt;'lf'\'dand . w:::1 r!'Y'd his ro llragups an f'i.l rl~

regional pnmary mJy· rrqu1n' c1 huge bankroll to get on teir••is ion and
('Stablish moml'nlUm with ,1 ··sup2r" win in Ma rch . That will minimizPthC'
chanC'f'S of eJ ndidalt'!' \\'liD cannot

rdJSt ' mo m-.~ .

" I' m afraid the 'log r.1bin' concept of selecting a prcsid&lt;&gt;nt will
disappear,"

s~tid

£1ut1 s

Marcos' 'billions'
Wi lliam A. Rusher
The conunu1ng uproar ove r F'erd1 · pie engaged tn makmg money 1hrough
mind Marcos and hts alleged pecui a· "arbitrage" (e g , buymg pounds, con·
t1ons se rv es a number of purposes. not vertmg them mto ma!'ks or sc hilli ngs
the least of wh1ch 1s to help ieg1tim1ze and seil mg the latter at a profit ) and
Cor azon Aqumo·s painfu lly slender 3 .. Amenca n politicia ns - and
claim on the office she ts current ly here ." he ("Oncluded dramatlcallr.
•
holding Given all that has happened "my mouth IS stopped 1"
I woul d be disappotn ted tn any F'tl1·
recently. she could probably win a
snap election easily now: but 1t 1s far p1no pres1dcnt
or any maJor pohtl fr om clear that she won the last one. ('l an m any other unstabll' cou ntry for
even assuming massive fraud on the that mallcr
who didn 't follow the
part of Marcos· supporters and none t·xamph.• uf these Americans and
at all on the part of hers. As the late stash away a little br ~a d outs1de the
Mayor Daley would agree. a milliOn JU riSdlctwn In the case of Marcos
and a half votes (th e margtn by wh1ch !whose w1fe. at leas t. had notonously
she los!) are a lot to steal.
expensive ta stes f. It may well add up
'Moreover. Marcos' re-election was to a large IJgure He was. after all .
officially certified by the Nat10nal As - pres1dent for 20 years . wtth plent y of
sembly (a formality casua ll y di s- opponumt1es for graft. Bu t the g1dd y
missed by our media on the ground ta lk abou t5 . 8 or even 10 "bill ion · sto·
that the assembly IS "dom1nated by len dollars 1s simply ev1de nce of how
Marcos' supporters") and might even desperate ts the need of the Aqu1no
be affirmed by the Phihpptne Su· forces to depict Marcos not merely as
preme Court if tested there - requtr· a Vill ai n but as a monster.
ing that the court, too. be condemn ed
as. corrupt. No wonder thal Mrs.
Let us assum e, however . just for
Aquino is reported to be thinkmg seri· the fun of II . that ail the charges prov e
ously of proclaimang hers a "revolu- literally true that Marcos somehow
tionary government ... wh1ch could mana ged to stea l 5 or even 10 bil11on
then close down all uncooperative dollars and mvest it tn foreign real es·
governmental Institutions and agen- tate and /or Swiss bank accounts
cies, write a brand -new constitution Nothi ng is plainer than that he will
and start with a clean slate
never be able to enjoy it , or even m
Meanwhile, it is extremely impor- any serious sense possess it. Litigatant for Mrs. Aquino's backers (In · tion over who is entitled to it is going
eluding the U.S. media) to make the to enn rh a great many lawyers, but
former presidenllook as awful as pos- Marcos' access to 1t w111 be delayed
sible. jle has been known for more indeftmtely:
than a decade as authoritarian and
He could have relired in 1981, in·
probably corrupt , but that was pretty
s1a
iled some compliant friend in his
thin stuff. In less than three months.
stead
and lived on in the Philippines.
he has been transformed into a "dicta·
tof" (a quite ridiculous charge, by the in quiet enJoyment of his ill-gotten
way) and accused of publi c thefts so "bill ions." In stead , he has been driven
huge that a sophi sticated ear at once 1n to ex i le f1v e yea rs further on, mani festly in poor health and probably
notices their implausi bility.
soon
to d1e. It 1s a commentary on the
I was once told, by an expert on
sheer
futility of avarice, that so much
Swiss banks, that the three chief users
money
has produced so little genuine
of secret accounts are: I. people see k·
secur1tv.
Ing to avoid inheritance taxes, 2. peo·

,., .

But of oourse it is at this p:&gt;lnllhat
tl£&gt; president and the entire country
need to give thought to the role of
the military. That role is to prevent
tii' need for fighting in one's own
count ry. It is for thal reason thal we
fought In odd places like Pantellerla, before graduating to Italy, and
tii'n to Normandy, Parts, and
finally, Berlin.
Now Mr. Reagan's difficulty Is
lhat he describes exactly a situation
in which tre use of American
military force is relevant, but
draws back dogmatically at the use
of American force . Note. dogmaU·
cally; which is different from the
a rguments on wttich he publicly
r el ies. ThE'se are til&lt;' arguments
that lhe contras can do it by
tl£&gt;mselves. But a we have learned
anything from the expertene&lt;&gt;of the
past few years it is that the oontras
can most emp hatica lly not do It on
tl£&gt;ir own. Wh at they can manage
on their own is the kind of desuilory
terror for whic h Americans have
very lillie appetite. The contras
(ius 100 million American dollars
can hardly be expected to counter ·
vall the hundreds of millions of
oollars and tlx' advanced weaponry
with which the Soviet Union , v1a
Cuba, is nourishing a dictatorship
growing every day in sophlstlca·
tlon. Expec ting the rontras to
depose Ortega In Nicaragua Is on
the order of appropriating a
hundred million dollars for Alpha n
and dispatching lito displace Fidel
Castro.
I l)ate to say it, but If I were a
congressman I would write a letter
to President Reagan and I'd say:
"Sorry. Extremely oorry, precisely
because I t hlnk your analysis of the
threat posed Is exactly correct. But
one Band-Aid isn't going to stop that
bloody gusher. You come to
Congress, Mr. President. and anrounce that you are ending all
diplomatic relations with Nicara·
gua. and thal the evidence is before
you to support a request for
declaration of war. That decla ration or war doesn't mean we have to
send nuclear weapons to Managua,
but it does put it out In the open.

Better than stealth----------------------------Jack Anderson

WASHINGTON -Groaning and Here's why this program is such a
grimacing over the llldget like a particularly wasteful and wooden·
professional wrestler on carrera, readed boondoggle:
Congress Is about to cry "Uncle!"
Unlike the 13-1 bomber, which
to the Pentagonandapprovetii' Air was designed for use In eHII'r
Force's crac kbrained , $Ill lillian nuclear or conventional warfare,
new loy: the Stealth bomber.
Stealth will be trealed like the
We've already reported Stealth's crown jewels. Sources told oor
long list of d&lt;&gt;flclencles, Including associate Dona ld Goldberg that
the most serious flaw of all: the Stealth Is to be used strictly as a
ac knowl edged fact tha t the second-strike weapon - that is,
bomber. supposedlv invisible to afler an exchange d missiles.
radar, won't be able 10 fool the
The super·sec rel bomber will be
oldfashioned radars the Sovlel roiled ou t of the han gar only after
l nkm stU! has d&lt;&gt;pioyed .
the nuclear IIJ!ocaust has already
Now wE'' ve ullE'artlx'd an 8-year- begun. It can'l be used before then
oid Pentagon study·. still classified because It's too expensive to lose
Seem, which sho ~&lt;~ tha t a souped - and for fear that merely flying It
up commercial jetliner. 11ith refine· "1ll give away tts design secrets.
ments could do a better job than
Stealt h at a fraction of the oost. Yet
Never mind thalthe invisibility to
this p:&gt;ssibiilly isn't even being ra dar would hardly be necessary In
consi dered.
tiF confusion and conflagration
With It s customary rigidi ty. the tha t follow a nuclear missllealtack.
DcfPnse [){&gt;partmcnt. from Secre- Overlook the fact that even In
tary Caspar Weinberger on oown, Is peacetime. with nothing better to
Insisting that It must have It s do, the Soviet air defense in 1983
planned 132 Stealth bombers . look two hours to loca le and shoot

oown the unarmed Korea n Air
Lines plane that had been wandl'r ·
tng around In Soviet air space.
Ignore tlx' p:&gt;sslbliity that the KGB
wil l find al least one vulnerable
employee among the 30,&lt;00 who'll
be working on the Stea lth bomber,
and be able to buy its secrets long
before 0-Day.
Why does the Air F'orre insist on
the Stea lth bomix'r. then? It's hard
to escape til&lt;' conclusion that the
ex-pilots who run ltv? Air Fore&lt;&gt; are
stili hy]:llotized by the glamor of
man ned aircrafl. Even under this
Dr. Strange love spell. there a r(' few
who will argue that a cruise missile
wit h a small radar signature Is an
infinitely better penetra tor than a
slow-flying plane (which the Stealth
must be to make its supposed
invisiblllty work at all !.
What the Pentago n should be
buying Is a simple plane that is
harck&gt;ned against some of lhe
by]roducts of a nuclea r exchange
- Uke electromagnetic pulse -and

can get up fa st enough to be safe In
tlx' air, where it could drop
alr-launched cruise missiles to
devastate the Soviet Union. A plane
like thal would be a cred ible
deterrent; Stealth is not.
The stili-secret Pentagon study
found just the plane that could do
tii' jo b. tii' CMCA, or "cruisemissile-carrying aircraft," could be
a Boeing 747 or an a l1lckheed
L-JOIJ simply redesigned to meet
the Pentagon's second-strike requirements. Bul no one In the
military- industrial complex will
lobby for this simple solution, which
would produce few profits or
promotions.
Given the reality of Washington.
tre cheap answer Is ou t. But there's
still a way to lop off a sizable part of
tbe Stealth bomber's $&amp;1 billion
prtce. If Congress can talk the
Pent ago n Into 132 more B· 1
IIJmbers instead of Srealths, it
would save the taxpayers approxl·
mat ely $55 billion.

National boom, local gloom.__

Communicable disease on .rise in Meigs area
Heart disease No. I cause of death
By Nom1a ,\. Torrls, R.:-1.
SuJll'rvl«lng Nurse
The Meigs County Hea lth Deparl ·
ment r('pons the incid&lt;&gt;nce of
commu nkable diseases on III' rtse
in Meigs Count y. Officials srnt 108
,.,spected S.T.D. tSexua lly Trans·
milled Disease) samples to the
Ohio Deparlment of Health thi s
past year.
Chicken p:&gt;x. mumps. s11'(1Jt·
throal, meningi tis and influenza
werP other serious health probl ems
concerning the department .
Head lice and scabies screenings
comprised 134 suspect~ with f!7
confirmed carriers. It' s imponant
to note the people can get lice or
scabies at school, church , by using
others combs / hats or clothing,
respec tively.
No one is immune because it is
oot true tha t this = urs oniv in
IDmes wrere people are dir ty.· If a
person's ha ir becomes very itchy,
he should seek medica l a ttention to

Help Course, and Neurology Clinic
tor ages blrth t hru 21 years of age.
A total of 1.:m certificates and
permits were issued by the Vital
Sta ti s ti cs - P art o f t he
department .
Heart to rean relaled diseases
were responsible for the first and
third causes of death. Cancer as the
second highest cause.
The total number of Individuals
lx• anemic.
contacted
for medical reasons in
With a tota l uf 1,02'i Influenza
1985
were
6007.
Health ln:Ormatlon
vaccines were given and 69 of
and
promotional
talkswereglven to
H-meningetls flu vaccine give.
4,'192
people.
The following clinics are also
The Meigs County Health Depart·
available I for ages up to 21 1 at the
mentis
affilialed wilhthe Bureau r1
Heailh Department (by appoint·
Crippled
Children 's setvle&lt;&gt;s, Ohio
ment only): Weli·Childi EPSDT
Department
of Health. The Meigs
Chec kups, Ea r -Nose-Throat
County
Health
Department Speech
tPOD t, Vision (DOPI, OrtiDpedlc,
and
Hearing
Clinic,
Human Re·
Hean tCardlac l, Plastic, Pre-natal
!including pregnan cy testing ), WIC source Council . Easter Seals, and
tWomen, Infant s andChildrro food many other agencies to numerous
to mention.
supplemental progra m ), KISS Kids in Safe Seats Program tear
VTTAL STATL'\'nCS
sea t rental program). ArthrltlsSeH
ISSUED - A tota l of 1,377
Cermtcates &amp; Permits (1 ,1176 Birth
&amp; [){&gt;a th Certificates; 'm Burial·
/Transit Permits &amp; 24 Veleran
Copies )
RECORDED - A tolal of 215
Blrlhs, Deaths, &amp; Certificates of
Setvlce. 17 Births; 178 Deaths; &amp; 30
Certificates of Serv ice I
DEATH CAU!ES LISTED
Myocardial Infarction &amp;
Arteriosclerotic
Hean Disease ................. .. ...... ~
Cancer ................................... ~
Cardia Respiratory Failure
&amp; Pulmonary Arrest ................ ~
Circulatory Failure .................. :!;
Medullary Failure .................. . 17
Respiratory Failure ................. 11
Pneumonia ............................ 7
Shock.... ..............
. .......... . 7
Multi-System Failure ............. .. 3
Accldenl. ............. ...... .... ... ...... 2
Cerebra Vascular Addid&lt;&gt;nt ....... 2
Clrrohis .................................. 2
DlabE'les ....... ...... .................... 2
Renal Failure ........ .. ..... ...... 2
Acute Pancreatitis ................... 1
Hypenensive Intracebral
Hemorrage ................ .... ......... 1
Intestinal Obstruction ............... 1
Leukemia ............... ............ .. 1
Multiple Myloma ............... .... .. 1
&amp;tlcide ................................... 1

rule oot head lice infesta tbn .
Children can be immunized
against measles, mumps, rubella,
diphtrerla, wtDoping couph, tela
nus. p:&gt;llo and H·Ou at the Meigs
County Health Deparment every
2nd and ~th Tuesday, monthly from
9-IJ and 1·3 p.m.
Twenty-five pere&lt;&gt;nt of all client s
screened for anemia were found lo

I ~

ENVIRONMENTAL - These are the Meigs Health Departmenl's
envlrorunenlal employees who are, seated, I to r, Jon Jacobs,

sanitarian-administrator; Joe Young, sanllarlan II, 1111d standing Keith
Uttle, sanitarian I.

.:. .:. . .:wa:.:.:.:
lte:::.rs
.:. .::

R....:...::..o.:....:..
ber
:.....:._
t

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Although
the conventional wisdom holds that
the nation's l'!Conomy is booming,
acute regional recessions linked to the
plight of particular industries are
painfully apparent in almost every
sect1on of the country.
By Jar the best known and certainly
the most Widespread of those sec tion·
al economic disloca tions is the severe
fi nancial crisis confronting many
.
farmers in the Midwest.
In the Rocky Mountai ns. the colla pse of oil prices and a slump in the
mining industry have adversely af·
fected the economy. Similarly, the
Pacific Northwest has been devastal·
ed by the timber industry's profound
difficulties
The states bordering the Great
Lakes continue to suffer along with
the deeply troubled auto and steel in·
dustries. In North and South Carolina,
as well as elsewhere in the Southeasl
the textile industry has faltered
badly.
Perhaps the only economic tore·
casting service to identify the phe·
nomenon of regional recessions is
Sindlinger &amp; Co .. Inc .. a 32-year-old
firm in Wallingford , Pa. that specializes in conducting surveys to measu re
consumer confidence.
According to Sindlinger . 28 of the
48 contiguous states al ready are in a
recession while an additional three
states are in a precarious "borderline" condition and two others are ap·
proaching "borderline" status.
When Sindlinger's data is transferred to a map of the nation, it produces a disturbing portrait of a coun·
try with a bifurcated economy. Most
notable among the relalively few
states not immediately threatened by
recession are those where publie opin·
ion is he a vlly influenced, if not
formulated .

They are California •nd the urban
corridor that begins in southern New
Hampshire and stretches from Boston
through New York to northern
Virginia .
Is It possible that a deep and wide
economic decline has gone unnoticed
by "bi-coasta l" opinion-makers who
regularly fl y over but seldom visit the
rest of the country?
There is some sta tistical evidence
to suggest that indeed may be occ ur·
ring. The business productivity rate.
the principal measure of the nation 's
efficiency in producing goods and ser·
vices, declined 0.2 percent during all
of I985 and was down 3. t percent during the year's fm ai quarler.
Si milarly the gross nat1onal prod uct grew at a sluggish 2.3 percent last
year - substantially below the opll·
mistic rorccasts and slower than at
any time since the recession year of
1982. The GNP growth rate in the last
quarter of 1985 was an even more di s·
appointing 1.2 percent .
Especiall y stnking about the re·
giona l recessions is the fact that tn ·
ternational rather than domestic
causes are the dominant contributing
factors - further evidence or the extent to which this country has become
integrated into the global economy
Once-powerful Texans find that
they no longer have any control what ·
ever over the price of their oil and
gas. Instead, the price rises and fall s
on the basis of ma rketing decisions
made by Saudi Arabian princes.
Many financially hard -pressed
farmers ca n trace their economic anguish tO the Inflated va lue of the dol·
iar compared with other nation's cur·
rencies in recent years and to the 1980
embargo on shipments ol wheat and
feed grains to the Soviet Union.

Timber imported from Ca nada.
au tomobiles manu fact ured in Japan.
steel produced tn South Korea and
lextiles woven in China all have contributed to various regions · misery .
Some of the affected businesses
have belatedly sought to reduce lhat

vulnerability. The textile tndustry, for
example, has mounted an ambitious
"Cra fted with Pride in USA" advertis·
ing and marketing campaign to promote domestically produced apparel
- but it may be too little too late.

The Dailv Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomerov- Middleport, Ohio

Mondav. March 24, 1986

y
CARE - Pre-natal care employees for the Meigs Health Department
are seated, I to r, PhyULs Bearhs, clerk: Ann Blackwood,

STAFF - Tiu!Se are the tuU-time staff members pf
the Meigs Department of Health - seated, I Ill r,
Pearl Scott, VIrginia Killin, Nancy Ohlinger, Jon

69 animal bites investigated
During 1985, Jos(1Jh A. Young
and Keith L. Little, Sanitarians for
lhe Environmental Health sec tion
of III' Meigs County Health [){&gt;part
ment investigated 00 animal bites.
There were 62 dog bites , four by
cals and lhree wild animals. Two
dog heads and two wild animal
heads were sent to the Ohio
Depanment of Health Laboralories
in Columbus for rabies testing. All
results were negative.
The sanilartans issued 33 private
water well permits and approved '!I
completed sySlems. They look 183
water samples for well owners.
There were 79 permits issued to
install individual sewage disp:&gt;sal

NEWARK N.J. fU PI I - An
Ohio research firm has determined
that New Jersey jurtes award the
highest damages In personal inju1y
cases in the country, 15 percent
above the natlonal average.
The Jury Verdict Research
Group Inc. , based in Solon, Ohio.
found tha t juries in the state
awarded the highes t damages in
malpractice and personal injury
cases, as well as those in wttich the
plaintiff suffered spinal cord injurIes or brain damage.
A report prepared by the U.S.
Justice [){&gt;partment. using Jersey
Verdict data, blamed the growth in
damage awards mainly on an
increasing number of very large
awards, the newspaper said.
The national study said in 1975
there were 12 verdicts awarding
more than $1 million In medical
malpractice and product liability
suits In the o'ntlre country. Ten
years later there werr 157 such
awards.
In 1984, the last year for which
complete data is available. juties in
the state awarded damages r1 more
than $1 million In five personal
inju ry cases, tlx' study found .
A ju ry in Hackensack that year
awarded just over $1 million to the
survivors of a 22· year-old man wiD

died of an overdose of drugs and
alcotlll. The jury found thal local
pollee were ncgllg&lt;&gt;nl and failed to
resp:&gt;nd promptly to a ca U for
assistance.
The sa me yea r a plaintiff who
had been permanrotly injured In a
traffic accident won $2.3 million in
an Elizabeth court, and anotlx'r
accld&lt;&gt;nt victim wiD was confined
to a wheel chair won $1.3 million in
Jersey City.
A jury in Freehold award&lt;&gt;d $1 .5
million in a medical malpractice
suit. A Newark jury gave a plain tiff
$1.6 million in a product liability
case, and also awarded SliO,&lt;OO to
the spouse.
Between 1962, when tii' fir st
million-dollar verdict was awa rded
in tii' United States, and 1984, 24
plaintllts in New Jersey won
damages of mo re lhan $1 million.
The study found lhat juty awards
in urban nonii'ast New Jersey In
1984 averaged 14 per&lt;Ent above the
national average. The count ies in
tha t sec tion were Bergen, Hudson,
Essex, Morris , Passaic, Union and
Middlesex.
In the !llUthern part of the sta te
awards were 26 per&lt;E nt above
average. Those counties are Atlan·
tic, Cape May, Cumberland, Ocean,
Bw·llngton, Gloucesler, Salem,
Monmouth , Mercer and Camdl'n.

Berry's World

r
"Cou/dn 'I this wait until after 'Wheel of
Fortune '?"

systems in the county.
There were site inspections made
and approved for ail water well and
sewage disposal system locations
and fin al in spec tions performed
before the syst ems were approved
for use.
The sanitarians made 331nspec·
tlons at t he~ schools In the oounty.
There were heait h and safety
inspections performed at III' six
trailer parks, 3 swimming pools,
one ba thing beach, one resident ·
! day camp and six camping and
recreational vehiciP parks.
Inspections with Ohio EPA repre·
sentat lvi'S were made for rules

compllantY at tre cou nty landfill ,
both new and ol d and tii' two
landfills operated by the S.O.C.C.O.
There were 103 bE' a it hlnspectlons
made at the 96 lie&lt;&gt;nsed food sEn'lce
operations In the county.
The section investigated 34 nul·
sanCP complaint s tiled with the
Health Department. There were 11
for ga rbage /refuse. 15 sewage,
tiu·ee tDusing premi si'S, one rodent
infestation, two animal and one for
birds.
The Environmental Health sec·
tlon experienced the largest work
load increase in hislory of the
Heallh [){&gt;part menl.

New Jersey juries
.award most damages

R.N.C.,program director, 1111d Jon Jacobs, fiscal director.

me - The me program ot the Meigs Health Department is carried
oul by these staff members, seated, I to r, Do~ Rlflle, ADP
ooordlnal&lt;lr; Margie Blake, health profeti!ilonal; stanclng, llo r, Debbie
Lavalley, program director, IUid Nonna Toi'M'I, fiscal director.

Jacobs; back, I tor, Nonna Torres, Keith Utile, Carol
Gutntii'r, and Joe Young.

WELL CIDLD - Concluding the welkhDd prognim lbr tbe Meigs
Health Departrnenl are seated, I tor, Jon Jacobs, flscal directOr; Carol
Guinther, c'!!rk; baek, I to r, Nonna Tlllftll, director, and Carol
TannehDI, project nurse.

I

HEALTH CO~IMMIONER- Dr. Margie Lawson, a Racine denlisl,
serves as Meigs County Health Department Commis&amp;ioner.

Artificial heart patient
in critical condition
PITTSBURGH tUPI1 - A
former Ohio factory worker - the
newest patient to rece ive a Ja rvik·7
artificia l hea11 - rema ined in
critical condition today at Presby·
terlan University Hospital, but a
sp:&gt;kesman said he was recovering
normally.
Gary Bl ake, 43, of Eas t Liver·
pool. Ohio, a former foreman for
the Ohio Brass Co., underwent the
five-hour procedure Sa turd ay
evening.
The father of three grown
chlldr('n suffered from a d&lt;&gt;tertorat·
lng heart muscle and a sp:&gt;kesman
said the operatlon was the only
option available to doctors who
were waiting for a human hea11 to
transplant Into Blake.
Blake was transferred to Presby·
terlan on March 12 to await the
human heart oonor, but his condl·
tlon serbusly deteriorated four
days ago.
"He suffered tl!Tee cardiac ar·
rests during that period," said Ann
Metzger, a IIJspital spokeswoman.
Meehan said once Blake's condl·
tlon had stablll2ed, he would be
placed on a list cl. patients awaltlng
for a human heart donor.
"We are not certain how long that
wlll take, but his recowry Is normal
following the artaiclal heart opera·
tion," Meehan said.
Blake Is the second person
currently in Pennsylvania recover·
Ing from an artificial heart
Implantation.

Robert Cresswell, 49, of Hunting·
don, Pa ., received a ~nn State

mechanical h~art at Herslx'y Medi·
ca l Cen ter on March 17. He
remained in critical, but stable
rondilbn, hospita l spokesman Carl
Andrews sai d.
But Cresswell will not be cons!·
dered for a human hea 11 transpla nt
until some kidney problems are
resolved , Andrews said .
Blake's ~ration mar ked the
14th time an artificial hean was
implanted as a bridge to a human·
reart transplant . including two
implants in til&lt;' «Jml'pl'rson. Three
of the operations have been per·
formed at PrPSby•tprian in til&lt;' last
six months .
Surgl'ons at Presbyterian im·
planted a .J iiiYi k-7 Into Tom.
Ga idosh, 47. of Su tf'I'Yille, Pa .. Oc t.
~ and he l'f'&lt;'ri\'ed a human hl'art
four days later. He was released
from the hospital Nov. 15 and Is
recovering at home, a IIJsplUil
spokesman said.
Josep h Bu1illo, 39, of New
Alexandria, Pa., was implanted :
with an artificial hean Feb. 2 ar
Presbyterian and received a hu·
man heart 14 days later. He went
tDme March 8.
Bernadette Chayrez, 40, received ·
a mini Jarvlk-7 on Feb. 3, in Tucson . .
Ariz. It was rt1Jlaced Feb. 7 by a
human transplant. That trans· ·
planted heart failed and she
received a second mini Jarvlk-7
Feb. 9.
Blake has a wtte and three
chUdren , Ninette, 22; Nanette :!1;
and Gary Jr., 18.

�Page-4-The Daily Sanmel

Monday, March 24, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Marauders have·five
·returning lettennen
on '86 baseball team
By KEITII WISECUP

expected to be tiP Meigs stopper m
the mound while others being relied
on to handle tiP mound chores
include Wise, Baker, Mark Olrtitt,
Chris Haning, HendriCks, Toal
Hysell, and Jeff Nelson.
Hendricks, a lanky slx&gt;rtstop with
excellent range, was the SUillrise Of
last year's team and could be the
team·s leader this year.
Hendricks started off last year oo
the bench, but found himself In tiP
line-up after a few games due to
some Meigs injurles. He jrOmptly
Wffil into a hitting rampage that
forced Saunders to keep him In tiP
line-up . Hendricks finished tiP year
second on the team In hitting behind
Gheen.
Dl'Splte a 12-9 rerord last season,
the Marauders were not wJtiDut a
couple of high ~XJlnts that Included a
6-5 win over Columbus Dublin In the
Franklin County Stadium, oome of
tiP cla~s AAA minor · league
Columbus Clippers.
Later In the year. Meigs dumped
TVC champion WeUston 15-3. Wellston later continued oo the touma ·
ment trail until reaching tiP state
finals In class AA before losing tiP
state championship bY one run .

ROCK SPRINGS - First year
coach Cliff Kennedy weloomes ave
returning lettermen for tiP 1986
Meigs basebaU campaign !rom last
year's 12·9 squad.
Meigs was hit hard by graduation
!rom a year ago as no less than six
starters are gone Including the top
two hurlers, Dan Thomas and Nick
Bush. and some big sticks In TVC
MVP catchl'r Scot Gheen. Jav
Carpenter, James .o\cree. Dave
Hoover, and Jacklt&gt; Welker.
Also missing form the MPigs
diamond this ~,ar "111 be ex-coach
Tim Saunders. Saunders nJ&gt;ved oo
to Indiana University where tiP
ex-Rio Gran&lt;F sandlotter is an
assistant basebaU coach .
Kmnedy. a Meigs graduate and
eurrent frPShman bas ketball
coach. has assisted Saunders the
past couple ot ~,a rs and is
well-acquaintro with his players.
Returning lettermrn include senio rs Rodd Harri son. Chr is
Kennedy (brot!Pr to tiP coach!.
and Rick Wise. Junior Dave
Hendrlcks and !Dpoomore Mike
Bartrum round out the ~ve letter·
winners back from a year ago.
After sitting out last year. SEnior
Shawn Baker returns to the dla·
mond and is being counted oo
!PavUy to soore up the Marauder
in~eld and untested pitching staff.
The hard·thro-.ing Bartrum is

M.tpR.oen•Sclledult

~ !)

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

Mar . 'll
Mar :n
.-lt.pr. 2
Apr . 4 .
Apr. 9

.. .. ... BELPRi-.;
....a1 AlexandPr
............... at Athens
. ... ... WARRDI LOCAL
.............. ~'ELI..SI'ON
.. .. GALLIPOI.IS
.. ...... ... ar &amp;&gt;tprt'
. at Rlplt&gt;y rOH 1
.ALEXANDER
...... ..... . .... .TRIMBLE
.. ................... ar Logan
.................. ar WP!tsron
.. ... l.DGAN

A.~ . 1l

Apr . 14
Ap&lt;. 10

1986 MEIGS V.U!SrrY
BASEBALL ROSTER

AJr. Ill .

= .. . . .

\ 'r

Apr. l9

12
12
12

·' pr 2l
Apr . Zl .
Apr . 24 ..
Apr. ll

l2
12

May 2. .
May 8

~

Local bowling

~ --.

11
11

MOR~1NG

11
11
11
11
11
10

.\.pr
Apr
Apr
.\pr
Apr

lllud1

Da n's ...
Pizza Dan

16
17..
Apr . 'IlL ..

. ................. ar ~an
.. ....... ar Ravenswood

( lJSPS lf~Htl l
.-\ DI\IL~Ion of MW&amp;Imtdla. ltH'.
Published evf'ry af1t&gt;rnoon . Monday
t hnlU~ h Frida y. 111 Court St. . Po-

mt&gt;roy. Ohi o. by the Ohio Valley Pub- ,
ltshln ~ Company Mull l mf'dla . Inc
Pome rov. Oh io ~ 5469 . Ph 992 -:.! I Jtl. St&gt;con d &lt;'l&lt;iss posLl~f' paid .11 PomN oy,
Ohi O

Mf'mhf'r · L.; ni!NI Press lnt rrna!iona l.
In land Dallv P rt•ss Assortallon and lhr
Ohio NPwspapcr Association !'-O a!lonal
Advt&gt;rllsi n ~ Rl"pTI"5Pn1ath·f'. Branham
N&lt;'"'spaper Sali:'S, 111 Third 1-\\-f'nue.
POSTMASTER: Sl:&gt;nd 3ddrt&gt;Ss cha ngE'S
tn Thr Dallv SPnrinel. Ill C'oun S1 .
Ptllllf'r~. Oh.lo -lfi"iti9

SU BSC:KIPTION KATES
By Carrier or MoiM Koutf'
Sl Jn

$57 20
SINGI. t: COP\'
PRH'E

2~

0;-~ll y

.. ....

to come up

with a great
IRA.

Courthouse
Dawis-Quid:el Ins.

. s1-1.56

. $19.1 2

.... _$1 5.60
..... S31.20

,_w_,.._,._____..
5!

BIG SELECTION OF BOXED

MILK CHOCOLATE
EASTER BUNNIES

39e

TO

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EASTER
COLORING
CONTEST

LIFESAVERS
FOR EASTER
Assorted Flavors

10 Count

BANKEON£

AGE ____ PHONE

POMEROY, OHIO

ALWAYS
A
FAVORITE!

~....,_._,.~

POPCORN
BUNNIES

$1 69

$699

I
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EASTER
PLUSH ANIMALS

NAME ___________________________
ADDRESS
AGE

I
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PHONE

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO ,

10BAR
TRAY
PACK

12 oz.

$159

I

Allstate·

~~IL,

12 Pack

PLASTIC
EGGS

All You Do
Ia Add

II

CONTEST
RULES

I
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1. Just color one or more of the drawings on these
pages, fill in the blanks and take your entry to
the sponsoring store before 5:00 p.m., April

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BORTZ

SOLID
MILK
CHOCOLATE
BUNNY

NAME _____________________________

~-------------------~-~--------~I

SELECT FROM RABBITS, CHICKS
AND MANY OTHER
PLUSH EASTER FAVORITES!

Eggsville, U.S.A.
FILL'N
THRILL
Bill Qllickot
Across !rom tilt

Mall SubscrlpUonw

. 1.1 'NPf'k ~
26 Wf't'k s

=------------------THE FARMERS BANK

PAT HILL FORD

BUMPY
AND
JUMPY

9.25%

ava il a bl e

... $58.24

AGE ___,PHONE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Cen ts

OubldC" Ohio

AGE ____PHONE - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -

ADDRESS ----------- - - - - - - - -- - - - - -

.. ................... 16

Leave it to The
Good Hands
People

No subsrr lpt lons b).' mail p4"rm!rtf'd In
towns wher r homl" rarrl f'r Sf'rv\r(&gt; is

Inside Ohio

ADDRESS-- - -- - - - - - - - -

NAME _____________________________

.. ........ 3?
.. .......... l!
............. :;!
............ 'L!

EAST ME !GS - A softball
tournament will be !Pld Aprtl5 and
6 a t Eastern High School . Entry fee
Is $65 and two softballs, Trophies
will be awarded to the firs! , second
and third place teams a nd Individuals of the first two teams. Those
wishing information are to ca U

Subscrlbc&gt;rs not dPSi rin,c tu pa ~ th t•car rlrr may n•mtt tn advdncv dl rf'('t to
The- Oath· St'nl!n el on d 3. 6 or 12 monlh
basts . rr'edll wli11X' 2ivf'n rarrlf?r each
mnnlh

13 WPeks
26 WN'k S
:'12 'N f&gt;&lt;'kS.

ADDRESS - - ------------------------

Pts.

It's hard to find a retirement
savtngs plan with belter fea ·
lures than an Allstate "'Cash
Developer" IRA. You pav no
administrative charges flr
m&lt;1intenance

Nf'\1&lt;' York . Nt•w Yor k 10017 .

.S-1 .80

$1

NAME ___________________________

667.&amp;116.

The Daily Sentinel

On\' Wrt'k ..

For

$159

9 oz.

NAME _____________________________

. , .... S2
..... -1!

Softball tourney set

Apr. 19 .... ....................... . RIPLEY 1DH1
Apr. 21 ..... .........
.. .......at Ak.&gt;xander
Apr. ZL ... .. ...
.. ........at Tr1mbk.'
Apr. al .....
.. .... UJGAN
Apr . ~ -- -............ .. at Mlller
Apr. ~L . ........ NELSONVILLE Y&lt;JRK
Apr ..ll.....
. .. .. . ........ WELlSI'ON
.. ....... ar Soulhrm
May 1.. ..

OrH' M on1h
Onf' Y{'ar

3

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rranfls Flort.st . l057·

FF:DF:RAL HOLl&lt;ING
...... .at Galllpoll.,
.. ......... .... BELPRE

May:.! .....
May fL ...

9,.
7

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•Black
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MILK CHOCOLATE WITH
son FONDANT CREME

Hlfi!'h lnd. Sl'rlf'5 - Jt'an Norton, 529;
lst High Team Game - HtnPV Win e
~ WMPO I. IIHI; 2nd Hl2h TPam Gam&lt;' -

AL EXANDE:R
...... A.THENS

12 oz.

HERSHEY
EASTER PASTEL
KISSSES

lsi High lnd _ Ga nl(' - JUTif' Lamblort, 211:
2nd High lnd Gamp- Donna Grate, 214; 3n:l
High Ind. Gam e - JunE' Hawkins, 'Ill; 1st
HQlh Ind . Sf-riPS - Junt&gt; lamb:&gt;rt, ~ 2nd
H~h Ind. !iffiPS - Junt' Hawkins , st(t; Jrcl

.a t F'f'dt"ral Horkln ~
....... . ar &amp;lprt&gt;
.. aT Warren Local

CADBURY'S
CREME EGGS

Hiney Wlnt&gt; 1 \\'i\1?0 1... .. ... .. .. ........... .ll

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LA.~fS

1181

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Pools Plus . ..

10

POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GLORIES
~

Tt".am
BN'!"Ida's BouUqut&gt; ... .....
F'rancts Floris!.. .... ___

lllf' Fabrlr Shop

9

WHY PAY MORE
ELSEWHERE?

-

.. . ........ ... RAVENSWOOD

SK\'UNE 801\UNG

. C..U.LIPOLIS
. .... . WAR REN' LOC'Al
.. at VInton Count\·
SOUTHER N

Apr 4 .
A. Jr. 7

EASTER BASKETS
HERE!

Homp ~ames In Capital Lt&gt;ttPrs.

Metp RawJ:Id Sdledull-

Mar. Ji .
Mar. Tl
Mar. :n .
Apr . 2
A.pr. 3

J~

.... at Ga l\1poUs
..... ar Warm-1 l...cK'al
... VINTON COU NTY

Apr. 1l

Player
PO!i.
Shawn Baker ........ ..... P·JB
Rodd Harrison .............. 2B
Doug Jenkins ....... . ..... OF
Chris Kennedy ......... lB-OF
Rick Wise ................. P.OF
Charlie Barrett . .. .. . .... C
Mark Corbitt
.... P·JB
Greg Fields ... ... .......... OF
Donnie Fry .
...... OF
Chris Haning ..... ... .... P -SS
Dave Hendricks ......... P-SS
Toal Hysell ........... .. . P.OF
Jeff Nelson ............. P·INF
Tony Shoemaker .... ... 2B-JB
Mike Bartrum .... .. P ·lB·OF

FILL YOUR

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -AGE

PHONE ------------------~

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
POMEROY, OHIO

L-------------------------------

1st.

2. Entries will be judged in two different categories: ages 4-8 and 9-12. ·
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they Iike
but can only win one prize.

REESE'S

EMPTY
EASTER BASKETS
. Your Choice Of
•OVAL
•ROUND
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$129 AND
UP

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ADDRESS - - - - - - - - -- - --

GRASS

49e

21fz oz.
GREEN
OR

'"

ASSORTED

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NAME - - - -- -- - - -- -- -

EASTER

CELLOPHANE
EASTER BASKET
WRAP
Asstd..
Colors

First Prize •••.•••.•.•..•••••$1 5
Second Prize •••••••••.•••••S1 0
Third Prize •••••••••••.••••••• $5

$149

6 Pack

NON-FLAMM ABLE

20" X60"

4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.
5. Decisions of the judge will be final. -

PEANUT BUTTER
EGGS

·j.

- -- ;,~U
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QUESTION: Every year I donate to various
charities, but I e~n't itemize deductions.
Can I deduct these contributions without
itemizitll deductions?

· "Enrolled to

Boforo

.tlte lntern11 Revenue S.rviu ."

ANSWER: Taxpayers may deduct a portion
of their charitable contributions ewn if
IIIey 1111 unable to itemize deductions. For
1985 tht deduction is 50% ol their con·
tributions.

ANOTHEI SEIYICI OF

HIA BLOCit
tHE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E. Main St.
PH. 9U-3?96

SINGING
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GALLIPOLI S, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NAME -

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

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - AGE- - -PHONE

--=---------------1( &amp; C JEWELERS
POMEROY, OHIO

NAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

NAME _____________________________

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -

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AGE

AGE

PHONE - - - - - - - - - - -

heritage house of shoes/Locker 219
POMEROY, OHIO

.."',

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'A

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HOME NAnONAL BANK

SYRACUSE, OH .

RACINE. OH .

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

·'• ,
~

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentin81

Duke, Kansas, Louisville, LSU capture
berths in 1986 NCAA fmals at Dallas

Oberlin wins AA title
DAYTON - While the AAA and
A games were of the blo..out
vari?ty, the AA contest was up for
grabs In the 1986 bnys' state high
school basketbaU tournament here
Saturday night until Rodney Cannon hit two free throws with 14
seconds remaining to put Oberlin
ahead 73-70.
The score was tied for the Ht h
time at 69-69, when Oberlin sopoomore Tim Shepherd broke it wlth a
patrol free throws. Greenan's Scott
Ricketts hit one of two from the line
before Cannon's clinchers.
Oberlin hit aJ of 33 !rom the field
In the fir st half and scored the finalS
!Xllnts for a 46-40 lead at inter mission. The Indians built their margin
to 10 points a couple times early in
the t hird quarter, but RickE-tts and
Steve Smith ralliE-d Greenan back
Into the lead at 58-57 and it was tight

Plan tournament
RACINE - The Southern Junior
High School Athletic Boosters will
he sponsoring an independent
amateur basketball tournament
starting March 29. Entry fee is $50
per team with a maximum 10 man
roster. The entry deadline is March
26 and Interested teams are to
contact Sandra Grindstaff at 94920'25.

Monday. March 24, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

!rom then on.
"It was a tltantic struggle," said
Oberlin Coach Bob Walsh, "just the
way a state championship game
should he. We were able to take
away that transitio n basket that
had been !D good to them a Uyear."
It was the second title for Oberlin
(19261 a nd also the second for
Walsh, who won at Lorain Clearview in 1974.
Gra&gt;non ccmmitlE'd two turnovers late In the grunt:' trying to force
the ball in to 6-foot-9 Troy
McCracken. woo fo uled out with six
seconds to play.
"Any time we get in a very tight
situatio n we lry to go to
McCracken." ex!lai ned Greenan's
Lyle Falknor. "We worked so well
toge ther. U a cou ple of passes go
better. we could have been on the
other side of the coin."
Ricketts scca&gt;d 25 poi nts .
McCracken 16 and Smith 12 to lead
Greenan, which finished 27-l
Oberlln, also 27-1, had fiw
players in double figu res, led bbv
Oanny Jones with 16.

By United Press lntematlonal
The field for the Final Fou r Is set.
No. 1 Duke a nd No. 2 Kansas
eamed the remaining two berths
Sunday, and will face each other
Saturday In the semifinals of the
NCAA Toumament at Dallas.
Saturday's regional victors, No. 7
Louisville and Louisiana State. will
face off in the other semifinal. The
national championship will be
dl'Clded next Mon1ay.
At East Rutherford N.J ., Johnny
Dawkins scored 28 points and the
top-ranked Blue DevUs overwhelmed Navy '11-50 to win the Eas t
Regional, and a t Kansas City, Mo.,
Danny Manning scor&lt;'&lt;i 10 of his Z2
points in the last nine minutes to
rally No. 2 Kansas to a 75-67 victory
ov·er N011h Carolina Sta te and the
Midwest Regional championship.
"l lold our kids to cele.brate fo r
abnut 30 seconds," said Kansas
brad coach Larry Brown. woose
Jayhawks will be making their
seventh Final Four appearance but
the first since they finished In fourth
place in 1974. "It's a special thing to
gpt there, but you can't be satisfied
just gett ing there. You've got to do

Reds stop Dodgers
\'ERO BEAC H. Fla. 1UPl 1 The Cincinna l i Red s haw' rPSC'I'"\"P

catcher Sal Butrm to thank for
their latest victory. a 7-5 exhibition
win ovrr thr Los Angeles Dodgers
Sundav .
Butera cracked 1hree hits. srured
a run and draw in anoth&lt;T to k'ad
the Reds to the rom&lt;' from -behind
win.
Butera. woo entered the garnr in
the second inninwho enter&lt;'&lt;~ till'
gamr in the second inng when
starter Dave Van Gorder injul\"&gt;d
his left wtist in a colli&gt;;ion at home
plalr. sparked a four-run uprising
in the sLx th inning wit h an RBI
double
Butera reachl'&lt;i first base on a
ground ball and scored in the eighth
inning as Cincinnati see r&lt;'&lt;~ three

everyt hl ng you c an to wi n ooce you

gpt lhrre. "

With Kansas trailing 57-52 with
8: 53 remaining, Manning scor&lt;'&lt;i 8
consecutive !Xlints In a span of 2: 12
on a variety of shots and offensive
rebnunds off the left baseline to put
theJayhawks Into the lead for good ,
6().57.
"Danny will take challenges

when they are there, " Brown sald.
"He was the player of the year In
our conference, he was the MVP of
our (Btg Etght) tournament and he
was the MVP of this tournament.
Every time he plays against a great
player, he's been great."
North Carolina Sta te head roach
J im Valvano recognized Manning's

SAVE MORE WITH
MONEY SAVE-R COUPONS
THAN EVER-BEFORE!!!
SALE PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 30, 1986

~.-...

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

Spring Special
~31

JACKSON PIKE · RT. 35 WEST
Phone 646 -4524

FOR THE MONTH OF MARCH
NEW CHEY. TRUCK
1973-80
1973-85
1973·85
1975-80
1973-85

Fender ............................. s3900
Door ................................. '85 00
Rocker/Panei .................. S1800
Grille ............................... s2500
Front Bumper.................. s65oo

NEW FORD TRUCK
1973-79 Fender ............................. S4000
1973-79 Door ............................. S1 oooo
1973·79 Radiator SLppOrt .............. S100tl0
1973-79 Grille Shell ................... S1 00 00
1978-79 Grille lnsert ..................... S3900

BIG VARIETY &lt;J

June Van
Vranken is now
accepting piano
and organ
students.

dominatiOn of the game's turning
point.
'
"From then on, we broke down
defensively, especially on the seco rrJ shots," he said. "They .~PI
shaking loose on the baseline.
Greg Drelllng added 19 points and
12 rebounds, and Ron Kellogg 12
!Xllnts as Kansas defeated North
Carolina State lor the second time

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

IUPIJI

PAIN IILIEF FIIIMUlA

TAIUT 50'S

usm AUfO PARI'S:

Motors, Transmissions, Rea rends, Rotors,
Radiators, Sheet Metal etc. on Domestic
and Foreign Cars &amp; Trucks.

IUD liD CIIEST
DICOtiGISTAIIT I Ill.

Whalev's
Auto
Parts
fiT . 681 WEST

ONLY

DARWIN, OHIO

614·992·7013

2!~

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

8:30A.M. TILL 6:00P.M.

Phone 614-992-2270

limPS.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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•
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• • • • • • • • • • • •
•
·SURGEON
GENERAL'S
WARNING
:
Cigarette
• • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • •
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide.
•
• • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • •
.·. · .·.·.·.·~.~.~.~.~.-.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.-.~.~.~.~.~-~.~.~.~.
• • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • •
• .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

".

"..:

·-' - ~ )

FIIESSE

IIIIDtLOIII

SHAMPOO 01 COitDITIOitU
7 Ill. SIZE

ZOO FILII
Q. ll.S·M

. . . . . . . .. . .. . .

-

• • •

111111m
MTUUTI

ONLY1

~m._

I I

The
Shrimper's
Feast.

ONLY3~ ....,.
9

It's

---

•wo TO SilWER
_.,_..IOI..SfG

•

utte
A atch.
Sunday,lvlonday, TUesday
• A gcnl'fou; pi attn of
goldm -fricd ;hrirnp
• Choke of &gt;teaming rice
or Fn:nch frio (or ba ked
potato after 'i p m J • Cock tai l ~aun: • Lemon ,n·dge
• lllasted Grecian bread

FlEE
PllrtCI·

- PLL'S-

Ali-You -Care-To-Eat
Soup, Salad &amp; Fruit Bar!

$4.99
SB~~~
Dinner Table.

• •

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

• • • •
• • • • • • • ... .• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

MENTHOL IDO's : 13 mg."tat",1 Omg. nicotine. FILTER100's: 17 mg."tar". 1.2 mg nicotine.
av.per cigarette byFTC method.

~'' X P' In ~-.

....., on • II , rt,....pri01ftlttut~tnn0awllh200clp i111Wpercetton,20parpea.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

�. ,.

..•

s
•
ervi ces _______
.
:,.::.::..::.::::.::::..::::..:::...,..;=:....::::...:.....::..;:..:::..,:..::_

Monday, March 24. 1986

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

f3eat

at the bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Glad to be home now

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
: You'll be glad to know that Anne
tlavis has returned from Unlver·
~lty Hoopltal in Columbus where
she was taken by Lifefilght on Jan.
29 from Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She underwent surgery to replace a
ilacemaker and is doing fine what
'l'!th the good friends sending cards
and the visits of Rev. and Mrs.
James Keesee. Anne is recouperat·
l)lll at the home of a son, Charles
W\"lght, ll Riverview Place, Mid·
,dlfpoi1. She's better and glad to be
lllme.

...
·.

·. ;And from Louise Stewart, Ra ·

.-Qnr. comes a note of thanks after

'MI&gt; hospitalization at the Holzer

~- JQ~ealcal Center for over two weeks.

&lt;Siie underwent lung surgery twice.
:Her brqthers, Eher and Fred , and
··three sons, Jim. Bob and Ed were
"lliore to help support Louise and her
.·tiusband, Bill. Louise thanks you for
:tile;encouraging cards, glft s. vis it s
· Jllld prayers. As you all know. these
: things really help. Louise is home
'arid slowly lmproving.

Slinderella meers

Items sale at the Kroger Store In
Pomeroy on March 29.
Members of the two grou~ are
asking everyone who wants to
contrtbute to have Items at the store
by 10 a.m. If you need any
Information call Sue Hager at
949-2241 or June Ashley 247-2344. By
the way, officials of the group say
they'll really appreciateyuour help.

There will he no school on
Monday. May 26, due to Memorial
Day.
Southern Loca I schools were
closed for 11 days due to the
weather-road situation and the
State Dt?partment of Education has
been asked to approve five, as
provided by state law, as calamity
days, leaving six to be made up .

Southern Local School Supt.
Bohby J . Ord has anoounced an
explanation of the revision of the
school calendar in that dlstrtct to
provide for makeup of six days
miss€d due to bad weather or bad
road conditions.
Two Saturday sessions have been
scheduled and they will be oo Aprtl
12 and May 17. At the last meeting of
the Board of Educatio n, Thursday,
May 29 , was set as the last day for
students this year and Friday, May
30 as a work day and final day for
teachers.

Mrs. Homer (Dixie) Proffitt and
son, Thomas, encountered a tombstone on a hilltop near their home In
the Bowman 's Run Area. The
tombstone is that of Luther Daniels
who according to the marker Uved
from 1800 to lB81. It has an !epitaph.
The name of the Individual aea tlng
the marker was L. A. Weaver of

· And you Chester High School
~ads. I have been asked to remind
you lhat the annual alumni dinner
and dance will begin at 6:30p.m. on
Saturday, June 7. If you need
Information you might call 98'i·35Gl.
: The Meigs County Historical
Sociely and the Meigs County
Ce~Jealogical Society will be con-

Charlotte Smith lost the most
weekly weight and Diana }ierdman
was rumer-up at the Mntday night
Five PolntsSilnderella Class. In the
kids class, Amy Smith lost the most
weight and Crystal Smith was
runner-up. At the Mason dass,
Jane MeCJoud l~t the most weight
and Alma Jemers was runnerup
with Amy Roush being the best
loser In the children's class.

Plaintiff .

vs .
HAROLD P JONES . ot al

Defendant s

Case NO. 85-CV -309

In pursuance of an Order ot
Sale in the abcwe entitled ac tion, I will offer for sale at
pobic auction. at the fron1
dilor of the Counhouse. Se·
cond Street. Pomeroy, Ohio ,
in Jhe above name County, Cl1

Friday. the 25th day of Apri.

Sealed proposnls will be
received at the offK:e of the
Director of the OhKJ Department of Transportation, Col·
umbus, Ohio, until10 :00 A.
M ., Ohio Standard Time ,

Bid quotes shall include all
freight charges tor the large
dilmeter hose and u sociated fittings to be
shipped to the Middleport
Fire Department at 286

Tuesday, April 8. 1986. for

Race St., Middlepon. 10 .

improvements in :

Any exception• to these specifications mutt be listed in

Atl1ens, Gellie, Hodting,
Meigs, Monroe. Morgen ,
Nobte. Vinton nnd W11hing ·
ton Counties, Ohio, on

Athens-13·0.00 on S. R. 13
in Athens. Gallia . Hocking,
Meigs. Monroe. Morg1n,
Noble, Vinton and Washing ton Counties. by applying
Fast Dry paint for centet"
lines end edge lin es.

the bid quote 11 Exception•.
The Village of Middleport
reseNes the right to reject
liMY or ell bid s received and
110 waive •nv informality in
the bidding.
Fred Hoffm110, Mayor
Villoge of Middleport

131 17. 24. 2tc

Project Length - 0.00

feet or 0 .00 mile .
Work length - various
lowing de!cribed reel estate.
situate in the Cou ntv of Meiga feet or various mile .
Pavement Width- \ot•rtes.
an~ State of Ohio, and in
" The date set for complethe Township of Columbia,
C:.oUJ'tv of Meigs and Stat a of tion of t his work aha II be as
set fonh in the bidding proOhio. 10 . wtt:
Situate in the Township of posal ."
Each bidder shall be Ill ·
Columbia , in the County of
quired
to file with his bid a
Meigs and State of Ohio : Be·
gillning at the Northeast certified check or cashier ' s
comer of the Southwest check for an amount equel
quarter of the Northwest to five per cent of hi1 bid , but
auaner of Section 8 . Town· in no event more than fifty
ship 9 , Range , 15. said place thousand dollars, or a bond
of beginning being also the for ten per cent of his bid ,
Northeast comer of a cenain payable to the Director.
Bidders must apply. on the
80 acre tract of land con veyed to William H. Cheadle proper forms. for qualifica en4 Ida M. Cheadle. by deed tions at least ten days prior
recorded '" Volume 201 , to the date set for opening
Page 175. Meigs Count)' bids in accordance with
Deed Records; thence South Chapter 5525 Ohio Revised
toUowing the East line of said Code .
Plans and speciftcations
80 acre tract 660 teet to the
center line of the public road, are on file in the Department
T-13: thence in a Nonhwes - of Transponation and the ofttrtY direction following t ~ fice of the District Deputy
center line of said pubtic road Director .
The Directo r reserves the
to the Nanh ltne of said 80
tight
to reject anv and nil
acre tract; thence East following the North line of said bid s.
Wa rren J . Smith,
80 acre tract 620 feet tot he
Director
pfac:e of beginnin g. contain 13124. 31 . 2tc
i"g ~acres . more or less .
- Reference
Deed :
Vol

Public Notice

1986. at 10:00 A.M ., the fol-

272. Page 617 . Deed

Re ~

cords of Meigs County . Ohio

and Vol. 292, Page 127.
Deed
Records.
M eigs
County . Ohio .
Being the same reel estate
conveyed to Harold P . Jones
end Sheila J . J ones fr om
Mvrtle Irene Tho mas by general warranty deed dated ,
September 27 . 1987. pre·
•anted for record . September 27 , 1978, and recorded
in Deed Book 272 . Page 617
in the office of the Reco rde r
of Meigs Cou nty , and be ing
me · same real estate c:o nv8yitd to Harold P Jones
from Sheila J . Jones by ge ·
neral warranty deed dated .
January 3, 1 984 , pres ent ad
tDr record. March 23 , 1984,
and recorded in Deed Book
292 . Page 127 in the office
of the Reco rder of M eigs
County, Ohio .
· Said premi ses located at
S'ianhart Road . Po meroy .

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids will be received
until 3:00 p.m . April 10.

1986 at the Mayor'oOllico.

237 Race St .. Middleport.
Ohio tor
the
following
eauioment :

lARGE DIAMETER HOSE·
1 . 15 ea. 4 " x100 ' coupled .

2 1 ea . 4"x 50 ' coupled , 3. 1
ea . 4" ,.25 ' coupled .
FITIINGS . 1. 5 ea . 2'6 .. ns.
female x 3 " s torz; 2 . 5 ea .
21h " ns. male x 3" 11orz: 3. 2
ea. 4 " ns . female x 4" storz;
4 2 ea . 6 " ns. female x 4 "
storz with 30 degree ~bow ;
5. 1 ea . 4" It 3 " all lt orz
cleppered sinmese; 6 . 1 ee .
4 " storz x 3 " st orz ; 7 . 2 ea .
4 " storz • 2 1h" ns. femele :
8 . 1 ea. 4" sto rz x 2 - 2 W'
ns_me le 2 way ball valve; 9 .
1ee 4 " storzJC4 " storzand
2 - 2 112" ns . mal e 3 way vall

.•
Ohio 46759 . All SHER - vnlve
MISC
.. 1. 6 ea . 3 " ttorz
IFF 'S SAlES OPERATE
blind ca ps with chains: 2 . 3
UNDER THE DOCTRINE ea
. 4 '' storz blind caps with
OP CAVEAT EMPTOR . THE chains
: 3. 3 ea . 3" ltorz
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF mounting
ba se; 4 . 3 ea . 4 "
MAKES NO GUARANTEES storz mounting
bese ; 5. 1
AS TO STATUS OF TITLE
. set of 4 storz spenners
PRIOR TO DATE OF SALE. ea
w it h holder; 6 . 1 ea . combi -

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
· · Columbuo. Ohio
Morell 14. 1986
Contract Seles

legal Copy No . 86-316
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
CAU (614) 992-2104
304 675-1244

~a

lr

COLI'!!!.&amp;rrE
VRI

TOOTH

11

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRAI\ISPORTATION
Columbua. Ohio
Marc~

14. t986

Contrect Sales

legal Copy ~o . 86-328
UNIT PRICE "ONTRACT

Sealed proposals will be
recei\led at the office of the
Director of the OhKJ Department of Transportatton , Col umbus. Ohio, until10 :00 A.
M., Ohio Standard nme,

Tuesday. April 8. 198ti. for

improvement• in ·
Gallla , Hocking, Meigs.
Monroe, Morgan. Noble and
Washington Counttes. Ohio .
on varioua rou1es 1nd IlK: ·
tion1, the City of Merietta
and the Villages of Belle Val·
tey and Clarington. by her·
bicidal spraying .
Work length - 0 .00 miles.
'"The dllte set tor co mple·
tion of this work aha II be as
set forth in tM bidding proposal. "
Each bidder shall be re quired to file wi1h his bid a
certified check or cashier's
check for an amount equal
to ftve per ce nt of hi1 bid , but
in no event more than fifty
thounnd dollar• . or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Director .
Bidders muat npply, on t ha
pro per form1 , for qualifica ·
dons at "nt ten days prior
to the date Mtt for opening
bids in acco rdance w ith
Chapter 6525 ·Ohio Rev iaed
Code .
Plans and specifications
ere on file in the Oapertment
of Transportation andthn of·
fice of the District Dtipu tv
Director.
The Director re11arves the
right to reject any and all
bids.
Warren J . Smith .
Director
3 24 3t 2

be

to

Township , Meigs County.
Ohio, in the Village of Tupp8t's
Plains:
Commencino at a ooint i'l
the northeast corner of said
Section 5; thence oouth ofong
the east lile of said Section 5,
Orange Township end the
west line of Section 34, OHve
Township, 2469 feet m&gt;re or
leu. to e point in the grSltors
southeaat property corner;
thence west along 1M grantors

~~-\

lOUth property ~no. 792 feet

more or lws, to a point in the
grentors property corner;
thence south 5 dogree 52" 51"
west ak»ng the grantorw prop-

ANTACID

in tl'wt qrantors10uth property
line. thence north 87 rWu·- ·
52 ' 01 '' well along the gran tors south proPerty - line.
89 .18 feet to an iron pin in
the existing westertv right of
wav line of State Route No. 7
and the r•l point of beginning
for the hrtd her..-. described;

Moiga County Highway
Deportment's Bituminoua ~CHILDREN'S
SpocilicationL
CHIWAILE

tho

thence

'ABLETS

under·

99

..

I•

thet ,.., ~a,..tea io
given m the ectual IJI.,titiel
noodod. but aoch aJtx:ellful

vendor ""aH be rtlfulrod a&gt;
fumish oM 01 any port of tho

PKG.
Of 30

Coonty' 1 requirement• u or·

dared ...ring the bid period.
3- Biddod prices lhlol be
firm and in olfoct during tho
bid period.
4- Aibiddero mull agree to

01" West

at 199.79 feet a total
d-oo ol439.79 foal to en
pin

1

iron pin ; thenoe north 9 degree
43 · 29 " east along an ine
too.oo teet to an ron pin:
thence oouth 87 deg,... 52'

Ot" oest along a line and
paoaing en iron pin at 240 .00

feet a total dii1Mce of440 .00
feel to an iron pin the tJCisting

right of way lne of
Stata Routa NO . 7: thence
JOUth 9 degree 43' 29" west
along the axistlng weotoriy
right of w.v line of State Route
westerly

Politicll Subdivilion1 af Meigs

County during the bid period.

No. 7, 94 .00 foot to .,

5- .Tho onvolope, contain·

ing·;,ec;,·month's bid. ,..., be
plainly marlood "Bituminous

existing concre1e monument:
thence oouth 11 degrw 43 '
29 " west continuing along

I

PIOf)OIIIIs ... to be
retum.t on bid forma atpplied 1
by the Moiga County Engineer: ,

oaid

Comn · 1kN'Ien..

accept or reject env 01' al bids.
or i ny pan theriot.

Mary Hobotottar, Cieri&lt;
Meigs County Bea-d

AIRWICK

BRUT 33
SPRAY

SOLID
AIR
FRESHENER

o1 Corrvniaion ....

131 24, 3, . 2tc

HONEYSUCKLE
LEMON,
OR SPRING
MEADOW
5 OZ. SIZE

DEODORANT
BY FAIERGE

59e

9 OZ. CAN 0'

ANTIPERSPIRANT
8.5 OZ. CAN

1~

Being the sama rwl estate
conveyed unto LarT'( D. Cutlip
and Loio A . Cutlip by First

Auoc'-tion.

a Corporation
i1COf1JOf81ed under the laws af
the Sun:e of West Virginia, by
deed dated the 30th day of
December. 1981. to be

,_,_.
Said

Paroel No . 1 was

Said

Parcel

No . 2

_.-aioed at $27.000.00.

was

Term• of Sale: Cash.
RBIII estatn cannot be sold
for less than tv.to ·thirds of the
appraa.ed value.

Howard E. Frank.

Shorill of

TO
AGGREGATE VE:NDORS:
Sealed bido wil be rocoivod
by the Board of Meiga County
Commiloioroon, Coun Hou10.
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769 until
12 :00 Noon on tho 9th doy of
April, 1986, ond the bido will
be -od ond rood aloud at
t :00 p.m. on 1ho 8th doy of
April. 1986, lot the fumiohlng
of eggreg01e that my be
required by tho Moiga Coonty
Highway Department.
NOTICE

Meigs County. Ohio

13117. 24. 31 ; 141 7, 14. 5tc
REG., EXTRA BODY
OR NUTRICARE
II OZ BOTILE

99

SHERIFF 'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
MARTHA MAE SNYOER
ond HOWARD SNYDER .
Wife and Husband.

Estimated quantitiel of all
aggregate required. appro•i·

Plaintiff,

vs .
JACK YATES aka JOHN
LEE YATES , ot al

mately 40.000 ton~
SPECIFICATIONS
FOR THE BIDS:

Defendants

1- Bid pice per t:m f.o.b.

Cue NO . 85 -CV-207

too:led st tho vendors plont. fDr

As

me varioue ki1da and • • of

Sheriff

of

that

may be
tquir~ . which wil oon~mn to
1ho pertinent Stote of Ohio,
Dop..mont of the Highwoy
Conatruction and Materiel

for sale at 10 :15 A.M . on

April 25 . 1986. A. D.. at the

Court
House ateps, Pomeroy. Ohio, the followi1g
described parcels of reel es·

_1_1_ ·__' _•_ c.,-...,...-Public Notice
' Specifications, e&gt;tcoptlng """

181e:

NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS VENDORS:
Sealed bid1 will be recaivod
by the Board of Meiga Comly

lowing rea l eetetnsituated in
the Coun1y of Meigs, in the
State of Ohio , end in the Vil lage
of Pomeroy and
bounded and de1cribed as
follow• : Being Sub. 16 h of

Corrmiuionn, Court House.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769 &lt;01tif 12
Noon on the 9th day of Ap-il.

or shon griiVel. whid'l il an
ungraded material.
2- With rtiiiPect 1D the
aforeukf. enimated quantiliM. ""' lhlol under·
lta-td thlt 1'1) ~.,..... il
givon to the ...... CJjantltiol
nooded, but Ndl vendor "'•I
be r-=1uired to fum•h 1ny pert
of tho IIO!Uaf rtlfuirenwltl 11

the veer.

SPECIFICATIONS
FOR THE BlOSe

REG. OR
PIVOT
PKG. OF 5

Lot 178 and being tho aeme
premi1e1 as ere deacribed in

LET US

Vol. 96, ot Page B9 of tl'e

Meigs County Deed Re corda. to which reference is
hereby made .

PRICE

lowing de1crlbed rea l estate
aituated in the County of
Meigl, in the State of Ohio.

YOUR NEXT

In the Village of Pomeroy,

PRESCRIPTION
W£ IUfiVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

l'ltCI!S ffFfCTI'WE MAICH 24 THII:U 30. 1916

~

being pori of lot No. 178:
beginning 1051oot North of
the southeast corner otaoid
Lot No . 178 a1 the llreet
nno:thencoN . 23ctogrooaE .

:.!n:.!."~o~ng6l:"g.!!':"~:

Propo.. ore to bo
I ,...mod on bid formo aopplod

RITE

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY. OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

Hobot-.

"'•I

HOT IE5PONSISLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

I 6-

Weight por tOO' coupled f.o.b. vendors p!tm. tho bid

NO lUNDAY CAlLS

lJ

INTE1l TH£9 M

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING

'

100 feet; thenc&lt;O s. 23
degree• w. 46 feet : thence

~h.er:~:~~~~~~~toatto

&amp; COOLING

* * #1 * *

Bv offering a complete line of mobile home
heating and cooling products for the tri-

county area .

' FURNACES
'HEAT PUMPS
'AIR CONDITIONERS
' COMPLETE LINE OF REPlACEMENT PARTS
'FACT ORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAINED
SERVICE CENTER
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE

GALliPOLIS 01110

!.arTY E. Spencer,

Clert&lt; of Courts
Meigs County Common

Te;~~u,

n098, you are
hereby notified that you hevo
bMn named Defendant i1 a

PIMI Court
By Marlene H•rrilon,
Deputy Clerk
12) 17, 24; (313. 10. 17. 24.

Artene
w.

6tc

Melvin Ray Wilson, Defend-

IIOiignod cue number 86-DR·

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT AD~ ..&lt;:· ·
ARANDY
TOOL

46 and is pending i1 the Court
of Moiga
County, Pomeroy, , Ohio,

of Common Pfeu

46769.
Tho objoct of tho Coll"fllaint

it to tsmilate the marriage of

yourself and Arlene Marie
Wil100, and the dem~nd for
relief io lor Arteno MarieWitoon
to be granted a divorce from

2

sUe

aJcceuivo . . - ,. The ,.,
publicarion win be made on
March 24, 1986, ond tho 28
daya for answer will commence on that date.
In C8l8 of your faillre to
or otherv.lise r81p0nd

Raymond W. l.altins
who passed My 1
year ago today,
March 24, 1985.

608
E . Main

POMEROY,O.

m·m' ..

NE.W LISTING -

MIDDLE·
PIJRT - Nice lrtlle lwse wrth
many leatures. Must been
seen. Garage, basement I ~
baths. cal]let~~ ~I in good
condiOOn. $23.900.
1

All the seasons hm eone
and past. But Iovine
memories of you still
last.
II we have shed a tear we
have shed a thousand
hoping you would hear,
the emptiness inside
that wants you back so
dear.
Our hearts will never rest
knowing that He has
taken the very best,
but calmness aoes thru
our souls knowing you
are in his heavenly
nesl.
We know such sorrow is
not what you would
have wishes, but on
this day the world will
know how much you
are missed .

Wife Nancy, son
Eric, dauehters.
Catherine and
Charlene: sisters,
Vera and Donna:
brother, Howard.

NE.W LISTING - SYRACUSE
- N1ce ranch type oome oo
Rustrc H1lls. 3 bedrooms.

garage. elec Ell heat Patio and
mce lot. In good condrtim.
Wants $38,500.

oome wrth level comer lol. 2
car garage tllat could have
small apartment over. Home ~
good COfldiOOn. Wants
$19,900.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
10

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

rn
ltfllrOI

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

•

tAU~~RY

Why Pay ~ orr lor
You r Pet food, Whe n
MGM form (ily, Inc,
Pomeroy Ok·
El4 992 1181
Is lower Pmed w1th
A Belter Product .

50# Dog Nuggets
Only 19.50
25# Cat Food
Only 17.52

RIDENOUR
&amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTU-985-3307

4/ 1/!fn

(CUT OUT FOil FUTURE USII
KEN'S

Suppltes

MGM

Farm City, Ill(.

1Free Estimates]

SERVICE
BOB DANIELS

742-2552
2-t7-86-t mo .

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
Long Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

2-20-tfn

J&amp;F

YOUNG'S

CONTRACTING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

949-29119

llllldriiiiV 0(111

- Addon1 •nd remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

Oi Change. Sharpenllledes

work

$19.95

(Free Estimates)

Turn left at Meigs Memory
Gardens. 3 mile off Rt . 7 on

V. C.

the right

YOUNG

Ill

992 -6215 or 992-7314

47159 Eegle Ridge Rd.
1·17-Hn

Po!IH!roy, Ohio
12-B·tfc

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522

DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS &amp; SEWER lii\IES.
RECLAMATION . PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT
JIM CLIFFORD

PH. 992-7201

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

985-3561

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·tfc

NEED STORAGE
SPACE?
CONVENIENT
STORAGE UNITS

U-SA~E

FEDERAL-STATE

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

INCOME TAX RnURNS
107 Sycamore St.. Pomeroy, Oh.
PHONf 992-7075
HOURS: 9:00-A.M.-5:00 P.M . Mon. thru Sat .
Evenings S. Sunday By AppoinTment
·
1·15-!fn .

01111poll1. Ohio

7/1 1/ttn

Kanauga, Ohio

3-12·1 mo .

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP
F11 Ally,, fiJIIJif N11n
PWS. Offi&lt;t Suppll11 &amp;

Furnitun, Wedding
and Gr..,atlon
Statlon•y. llognotic
Signs, lulllMr !tampa,
lusin•• Forms,
Copy i••i&lt;ll. It&lt;.
25! Mill it., Middloporl
101 Mulltorry A•.. hmwoy

992-3345l/2/tln
LOW tHTflffi ltfriiArHING
Homo Mort,. loan
9'1!''t.
un

nxm
On Yl I FMA. lew (lllfMttiMI
lOMS ArMaWI. Purchott tr ltfi.
ft. .d .

Vitkit ~oo-116-11112
COt- ltiiTMOITGAGI CO.

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

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

992-2975

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30·11

1-IH mo.

BUYING

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

2 FT. LONG IRON .

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

RP:JIATOR . BRASS,
COPPER, CAST,
SHEET ALUM .

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NffDS
Residential &amp; Commercial
(all:

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hor
farm Equipment
Dealer

BOGGS
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

11 · 14 ~tlc

RIDER

1-l -tf&lt;

SALVAGE
St. Rt. 124, Pumeroy
PH. 992-5468
HOURS: 8-5
l/18/1 mo.

ROSE EXCAYA11NG
IA(INE, OHIO
FREE ESTIMATES

SPRING lEAR
HUN11NG &amp; FISIHNG
In Northernt Ontario

Farm Eqalpmenl
Parts &amp; Service

992-5875 Or
742-3195

SHORT STEEl

Roger Hysell
Garage

Oil field Stnitt,

Rt. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

landscaping, la1tm1nts,
Land (!oaring. Porlth, Sopli&lt;

'1\UTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR "
Also Tr111111111101

Systams, Haory Hauling.
Stoat &amp; Graval Hauling
lledrical Work
(Certiflad Eltctrlei•nl

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

DON lOSE, Ownor

949-2493
Hon 143-5340

3· 24-tfc

For mora information write:

MAIDEN

IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR REGISTERED
NURSES OR MEDICAL SURGICAL UNIT
SHIFTS, EXaLLENT BENEFITS

CONTACT TEHSA COLLINS, RN
VOERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

to:tn~':!~.~~~:..Tr:.t~t~

115 East Memorial Drive, Porntray, Ohio 45769

altu•ted in the County of
Melga, In tho Stoto of Ohio ,

614• 992 • 21 041 Elf• 204

in tho VIllage of Pomeroy, L.--...:E;::.;u;:•;.t:;E:,:m;.tP;:;Io~y~m;:;e::n:,:t,;O;:~p~po::::,rt::;u;:;n::,;ltv~--....1

ROOFING

Annuuncemen ls
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing mKhlne
repair, pens. and supplies. Pick
up and delivery, Davit Vtcuum
Cl .. ner. one hslf milt up
Georges Cr .. k Rd . Call 814 UB -0294
If thit it yesterdays paper. you
mav be too late to join the new

BAY

CAMP

their annual members end faml ley covered plate IUPPtr Mon -

day, March 24th at 7p.m. Bring
own drlnkl and tiling utinMia.
Club will fum ish btlctd 1\em lnd
coHee. We will also hlvt our
annua l fun auction after aupper .
All members are urgtd to bring
IOmething to be auction_. off.

- - - " - - -- - ·lc-'-

let ua color your Easter eggij.

Call Burlingllem Church Lacliet

Auiliary 61 • · 992 ·5311 or
61•·696 -1366 .
Singles introducdona. fr .. appll-

cation. Personal Touch lntrodu~ ·
tion. P. 0 . Bo" 6636 . Charln·
ton . W . Va . 25302 .
1 -304· 727-8434 .

4

Giveaway

ACK Regiateted Engliah Spf'ln- .
get Sp., iel to good horN In
country with room to Nn. FOf
tnformation call 614 -l88 -99M .·
Free houM broken kinen 1-7
months old. co rnea co,.,..._ty
furniahed with litter tray, W
_tt.,and cat food . Call 6U · ~4&amp;.·
6326 .

1 'h year old , full blooded mat.
cotlie . Bleclc-whitt -tln . NHd1

room to run. Cal l 614-7•2·
2386 .
Reoiateted bl1ck Cochr Spaniel, needs homt with adulta.
304·675 -1573 .

6 lost and Found
FOUND Puppy short black heir.
white ptwt·tip of t1il. NIXt 10
Chtrm B••ury Shop, St•t• 51,
Call 814·446 -3703

North t•Jt, Ontario
POJ 110 CANADA
Ph. Iefort April 15

1·705·672-388B
"'·~ Afttr May 1
1-705-647-8533

l·tl· lm.

~-20 - l 1110.

9

Wanted To Buy

Wa pay caah for late model clun
used cars.
Jim Mink Chtv.·Okls Inc.
Bill Gena Johnton
614 -446 · 3672
WANTED TO BUY uud wood.
coal heaters. SWAI N'S FUANJ.

lURE . 3rd. &amp; Olive St. GampO-

Iis . Call614·448·3159 .

.------

R/1~0111
We can repair and re·

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

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

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of atl Typos
Worked in home area
20 yean

PAT HILL FORD

" Free Eotlmotes"'
CAU COllECT,

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Ph. (6141 B43-5425

3-12·1 mo.

A

ALL

STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12x16'

NEW -IEPAII
Gutters ·
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

UTILITY BUilDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6'
•
Up to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Hoilsts

949-2263
or 949-2969

laclne, Oh.

2-17 ·16·tfrt

304-372-5

lox 218,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL

CALL!
992-3410

JUST

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

Help Wanted
Howard L Wrlte11l

For Hours

Thelzaak Walton Club wiU ha~e

PUT YOUR SNAPPER REAR
nNE TillER ON HOlD
NOW IHRU MAY 1
AS LOW AI $1 00 DOWN

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEn.
Bashan Building

5x10, 10•10, 10124

446-8592

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AIEA CALL
Ripley Office

Slim Up 1nd Live program .
Umited space available. CeH
614 -266 -1772 .

RENT IY MONTH
Manager liwing On Prtmises
OUTSIDE !TO!AGE AVAILAILE

305 Jarkson Ave.
SMAU ANIMAl HO•s
Mon.-WMI.-Thurs. 3-S pm
Tut&lt;. 6,30-8; Fri. 1· 2 pm
Soturdoy 10-11:30 am
lARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SURGEIY IT APP1.

-

Allllllku

•Washera •Di1hwathen
•Rangea
•Refrigerators
· •Dryer• •Freerera

VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

·1·

Blue Streak Tax Service
W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER .

6:30P.M.

All Ktnds of Pel
We also ho" Canorv &amp;
Gu mea P1g fre d

Controlling Service

VIDEO

"FREE ESTIMATES"
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
/ 5/86/tfn

3·14· 1 mo.

and

•• Dllf

54 Misc. Merchandise

REG ISTERE D NURS ES
AU

TRIMMING

Tee .. lei"

t-11 ·1•.

11

CONTRACTING
Complete Building

"W1 R111 F11 lm"

In Memoriam

In loving memory of

Real Estate General

MIDDLE·
PORT - Nice I floor plan

or 949-2860

TY

"'wer

NEW USTING -

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"'Froe Estimates"'
PH. 949-2801

n.,

notice whicll wilt be published

- Here rt ~ a real~ Bee home
- 3 OOdrooms. 2 batrn.
modu~r unl on a dooble
fenced lot. ~us a real~ n ~e
llx30 too car garage. Woodbomer. sunporch, all in good
condifun. Wants $39,3JO.

SHOEING

w. Htw1 ~ hll n••

You are required to an1wer

the Complair]t within 28 daVI
alte&lt; the fait pubticiTion ol thil

NEW liSTING - SYRACUSE

SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•GIBSON REFRIGIRATO!
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

you.

Iarm ..th siTO IIbarn,lencing to
Ihe sheds plus a 1978 modu~r
unrt wrth 3 OOdrooms, salellie
d~h. 2 good gilfden areas.
Dnlled water welL Wants
$29.800

INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

SMAU ENGINE (INTEl
Parts • Sorvi&lt;O

0 YINYL

•SPEED QUEEN

brass. vasos . toys.

SHOP HEIE &amp; SAVEl

CIRCLE

EAGLE IIDGE

3-7-1 mo .

•SYLVAN IA

{some with stands); Gifts of dishes. figurines.
lamps , clocks,

TOWN &amp; COUNliY

No Sunday Calls
31t1/rfn

ant. This .ction hat baal

Kissing cement yard dolla. cement animals, ~lay
red fire hydrant w~h dog. flower pelts of all k1nds

HORSE

(Part• included)

Public Notice

NOTE: First quality merchandise from factory
NEW POnEIY &amp; BIID lATHS All IN

J&amp;L BLOWN

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

17th

JO'S
Gin
SHOP
Rt. 124, in Syracuse

8-ll tfn

PUSH MOWER TUNfUP

2810 McDuffie, #46, Houo·

NE.W LISTING - LETART
AREA - Approx 2 acre m•1

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

"H-tfn

JNTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

whoaelart kno.,., .:ldrea wu

~

-

PH. UCJ-280 I or CJ49 ~ 2860 Day or Nlaht

as required by the Ohio Ruleo
MELVIN RAY WILSON,
Defendant of Civil Procedure. judgment
by delauh wiH be n•llltfod
Case No. 86-DR-46
against you for the re6ief
NOTICE BY
demanded in tho Co,.,..lnt.
PUBUCATION
To Melvin Rev Wilson. Dated: Fob. 13. 1986.

A

:I:

z

RE-OPENING MARCH

Coma in and register for
FREE BIRDBATH Ia be given away

M.S.

KOCH,

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

1'

V~;&lt;jil

YO.

each week for

~

--'-'

•Blown In lnsulat~n
•A Proteasion.al Local
Contractor
•1 6 Yrs. of Local Service

Plaintiff.

0001

-z LISA M.

' ~·

tFHA-VA-HUD)

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ARlENE MARtE WILSON ,

..,,ittod

~

•FREE Vinyl Siding Eatimates
•New Homes Built

CAU (614) 446-9416

Marie Wdaon, Plaintiff,

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
CD Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Tliii'IE PANE IHEIIMAl IAIIIIIR DElUXE IHT •
- ~ \ SASH, EASY ClEAN REPlACEMENT WINDOWS

PARCEL NO . 2: The fol·

Bid" .

Bid price per gallon ; by the vendor. 111d ... ..
op.,od on tho dote .,d ploco
shall not exceed 86 pounda. price P• filion dotiv- to the opacified ttllove.
7. Each section af large cia - vendo,. portable tank to onv
7- Tho Moiga County Com;
meter hose shall be 1tenciled location within the county ao I milsloners ..-.ve the r~t to
1
on the outer jacket wit h deeignotod by fl1e C.Unly 1ICCOPI 01 reject any 01 ol bido,
MIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPT. Engln.,, tho bid price per l""d at ony port thereof.
8. Eoch nction of Iorge clo· filion lor opplod ..... controt
Mory
Clort&lt;
meter hote •hell be 1t1mped fDr tho vorlouo pee of
Molgo County Board
on one coupling with MFD bltuminou1 motoriafl wllidl of CorrwniiJior,. ..
and the date of purchase. 9 .
conform to the pertinent f3) 24, 31 . 2tc
1-

PARCEL NO . 1: The lol·

j
-::;.~

Public Notice

Meigs

County. Ohio. I hereby offer

Sl~~~~ COMPANY
Strldg &amp; SuMMer Speelllt

BISSELL

:, ~~ S349 htduclos (omplotolnst~UaHc

278 E. Ma1n St. , m .the Vtl·

Fodo&lt;al Savingo and loan

appnoised at $28.000.00.

Public Notice

aggregate•

1

line. 6.03 fvetto tl'e pont

1.001 acre.
DEED REFERENCE c Vo·
lume 262. Page 167 .,d
Volume 280, Pege 7218.
Moigo County Deed Records.

o-.od th"'ugh the I
of tho Board of Moiga County

COIJntv Enginoor.
8- Tho Meigs County Commiuioi'W'I f81111Va tt. right to

~l;,u -~~1

of beginning . containing

01'

7 - The tuoceaful vendor
wil be required to fumilh .,v
lob wort&lt; 01 design grad01 U
requested by the Mtiga

cootlnuing along

..td line end J)llllin g an iron

fumi:sh eny lftlminous rNbtriala. M requlll'ted i1 Item 1, at
the lltlme prices to olt tie

Bid" .
6-

nonh 87 degree 52'

1-

lege ~f Pomeroy, Ohta.
S11d real estate to be sold
as one tract .
Said sale is subject to ap·
proval by the Common Pleas
Coun, Meigs County, Ohio .
Howard Frank , Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
Fred W. Crow. Ill , Anorney
for Howard Snyder and
Martha Mae Snyder
(3) 17, 24. 31 ; 3tc

ton,

T _________

I _________""T_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

~roy. Ohio, and is the prem1se1 _
formerly know~ as Au·
tomotiVe ~ransm!ss10n ~

erty line. 59.86 !oat to a pont legol action

TYLENOL

the
Hlghwoy
Construction end
.,d ·
Material
Spocfficotio,.

v..oo.. ,..

on 278 W. Main St .. Po-

"'ill 4. Range 12. Orange

PASTE

of

2

DEED REFERENCE· Vo·

PARCEL NO.. 2: The folowing described reel estate,
situated i1 Section 4 , Town ·

PUMP

REGULAR
OR GEL

Said reel estate is sold
~nder foreclosure proceed ·
mgs of a lend co ntract
81Cecu1ed by and between
Jack Yates aka John lee
Yates, vendee, end Manha
Mee Snv~er end Howard
Snyder, wife and husband,
vendors.
Said real estate is located

December , 1981

B USiness
• ·

S11 .333.34j.

No. 9 crl Hickory Acres
Subdivision, ;, Section 5,
Town 4 North, Range 12
Wm, Ohto Corr.,My's Pur·
chase, as described n Plat
Book No. 4. Pag 81 58 8ld 59 ,
Meiga County Plat Records.
a1bjec1 to the buikli1g restric·
lions as contained in said Plat
Record.

nJCOrded.

s~te :~~~~D:::, 1_____1=:. . .~-~-~-~- -

Slend

being pan of lot N0 . 17B

lume 260. Page 151. and
Volume 280, Tl,B, Meigs
Cwmy Deed Records .
Being the same real estate
conveyed unto larry 0 . Cutlip
and lois A. Cutlip, by First
Federal Savings and Loll'l
Association, a Corporation
inoorporated undet" the laws of
the State of Wast Virginia. by
deed dated the 30th day of

• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

1986. ond 1ho bid• wil be O&lt;dored cllring the bid period.
opened ond rood aloud at 1:00
3- Biddod pricu llhol be
Said Premiaes Appraised
at $9,000 .00 and cannot be nation storz spanner and hy· p.m. on 1ho Bth day of April. firm .,d In o11oct fft&gt;m April1 ,
t986 . lor the fumiahing of 1986 to April 1. 1987.
1Qid. for leu than two -thirds drant wrench .'
ol that amount.
•u these items cannot be bituminous materiata tor the
4- AI biddM'Imult~~gr•to
TEAMS OF SALEc tO% supplied as listed . they mu11: Meigo County Highway 0..- fumilh onv motlrialo .. tho
Cnh or CERTIFIED ch eck be deleted from the bid ~ms"lt: Md l!lllld'l month ume prices to ol tho Political
an day of Sale. On la nce upon qu ote and listed under EK· thereolte&lt;. blda witt bo recei¥od Subdivioionl ol Moig1 County
receipt of Dead .
ception1.
ond opened on the IMt Wed- during tho bid period.
· Howard Frank . Sheriff
SPECIFICATIONS
nesday crl 8ICh month for the
5- On the onvelope oon; By: Ruth Frank. Deputy
1 . large diameter hoae following month1' require- IBillng aoch rnonth"o bid, 1ho
•. ·
Meigs County, Ohio
FNd W. Crow, Ill , Anorney aize shall be 4" . 2 . AlllarGB ment~ Eltl..ted (JJontltieo o1 .......... d ~~~- ol tho
diameter hoae couplingllh•ll liquid aop~a~ roqured,llflllro•· W1dor mull be lito..., .,d
13117. 24. 31 ; 3tc
be Storz . 3 . M inhrum bun:t imately 500,000 golona for plainly mar1rod "Aggregllo
prea1ure shall be 700·psi. 4 .
Minimum klnlc preuureshell
be 260 psi. 5. Acceptance
pre81ure 1hell be 400 Pli. 6.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

01 W11lt Daa!ly
Cllu1f1td Otpl
t 1t Court St.. PONror . Oluo 457U

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAl ESTATE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Qf MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Many people these days are
learning to pump iron - fllln there
are those of us who are just learning
to pump gasoline. Do kEPp smiling.

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE

beginning 150 .t eet from the
Southeast corner of lot No.
178 on the sueet line;
thence along tM street lme
8anlc. formerfv first Fede.-al 60 feet ;
thence N . 66
Sa~iogaand ~an Association, degrees W. 100 fBat; thence
l&gt;ta~tiff. Bg81\at l.arTy 0 1 S. 23 · 14 degree• W. 50 teet:
Cutlip. . et al. , ~dents. thence S. 66 degrees E. 100
upon a JUdgment 1here11 nil · feet to the place of begin ·
dered being CUe No . 86-CV- ning .
381 il 11Kt Court. I will offer
Reference Deeds:
Vol.
for _sale, ,oo lhe 25th day of 282 . Page 61 . Deed Records
A,Pf'll, 1986, at 10.:30 a.m. ot Meigs County , Ohio ,
o clade. the foloYMg l.wlds
Seid real estate is ap·
and tenements. to -wit : Sit- praised a1 S 11 .000.00 and
Uate in the Townehip of cannot be sold for less than
Orange, Countv of Meig s two -thirds (2 / 3) of the ap and State of Oh~ :
praised
price
(namely

PHONESent1nrl
992-2156

Public Notice

Public Notice

By virtue o1 an Order of S•'-t
isaJed out of the Common
P\eea Coun of Meig1 Countv.
Ohio. in the caM of Magne1

Racine.

~d~uc~t;m;g~a~ba;;ke~~~le~a~n~d~s~m~a~l~c~ra~f~t~~==================~~~~~V~i~ll~a~e~o~f~M~i~d~d~le~po~rt::~~;JM~Z.

Public Notice

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

Public Notice

PARCEL NO. 1: Being Lot

PUBLIC NOTICE
Public meetings will be held on Monday, March 24.
1986andMonday.April14.1986at7:00P. M. toprovide
citizen input for possible applications to be submitted to
the Ohio Dept. of Devalopment under the 1986 Community Development Block Grant Program . Any interested citizens are invited to attend and provide their input for sub·
mission of such applications. Written comments can be
mailed to Mayor Fred Hoffman. 237 Race St .. Middleport,
Ohio 45760 and must be received before 7 :00P.M . April
31. 1986 .
Fred Hoffman , Mayor

The Daily Sentinel

Monday. March 24, 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

PLUMBING &amp; HfAnNG
Ntw Location:
161 North S..ond
Middloporf, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wt Ct"Y Fllhing SuppU ..

Poy Your Cable &amp;
Phone 81111 Hera
~ 16IUSINDi
PHONE
Ill 991-6550

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Ph. 614-843-5191

1·20-tlc

RISIDINCI PHONE
16141 991-7754

.
.

•

1/ :llll/ tfn

TOP CASH paid for "83 model
and newer used cars. Smith
Buick-PontiK , 1911 Ellttn\.
Ave .. Gallipolis. C1ll 814 ·4482282 .

Buying da ily gold. silver coin a,
rings, jewelry, sterling wart , old
coins. larga currency. Top priCft . Ed . Burktn Barber Shop,
2nd . Ava. Middl~rt . Oh. 814 992 -3476.
Wanted old planoa . P•ylng
· 120 .00 and 140.00 each . Flttt'
floor only. Writt giving dlr~ .'
tiona. Wittllf't Piano• Box 188
Smt;., Ohio 43941 . Call 114 ..
t83 -1606.

- - - - - - - ·lc--

Wooden filing cabinet and d•k.
praferably oalc . alto tn oak
dining room aulte. Call 11 • ·
949 -2093 after 6:00 or anytlnv
WHktndl.

MANLEY'S

Empluynu:nl

TRASH SERVICE
NOW SfRYING Tllf

St! f VICt:s

ROCK SPRINGS

'

11

Help Wanted

and
5-POINTS AREA
For S.rYict Cal

992-3194

3-3-'86·1 mo.

AVON ca ll for information lbout
aelllngAvon producta. e1m up to
riO% I)I'Ofit. Cell 814·441-2151 .
NHd babylltt•r: mature •

ce.

pondoblo. Coli 6U .... 6·0U7

after 5PM.

�Paga 10-Tha Daily Santinal
11

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Help Wented

44

LAFF·A·DAY

tuntty) montt.ly rent tbrts tt
*11t for 1 bedroom and t212
for 2 bedroom. deposit 1200.
~CIWd near Spring V•ltv Plat
ond F-ond. oool end Cllllo TV
IYtliltblt. oHIQI hours II PGIII·
hit 10 1111 to' pm 1nd 7 pm to·9
Pm Mond.,--Frld.,-, Call 81•-448-27415 or~"" m. . .ga.

178 - 81~.

Will do bebyllttingln my home
for worktn1 ...,.nta. Ctll 114-

3117-7873.

Tht 0.0. Mcintyre Ptrtc Dlltrlct
II IIOWKC.tinQ lppMc.tklintfor
Suri'IINf Recr.tlon lted• end
Aldt polittona. Contact tht Pant
Oiatrtct. fifll floor of t~ court·
hou11. or by c81Ung B1, ......
4112, m . 211.

Nlc.ty fumlltled mob'lt home,
tff . 1pt .. e~ntrtltl• tnd htt1 irl
City, lduttl only. Ctiii14-.WB·

0338 .

F~l th111 RN poah:ion avtlllblt
contact Pln.:rwt Cere Cll'lttr,
Ill JtcUon PM!:e. GtHipolia,

.

Rtdecortted • ·· 2 bclr.. •1115
only. Ctll 304-171-5104 Of

304-171-1381 .

p .....

Fum. tpt. 919 2nd. A.vt. Otllipolls. aher11 beth, single mtlt,
I 150 mo., utiliti.. ptKI. Ctll
441-4411tfttr 7pm .

Country mu llci•• Wlntld for
aountry bend . Ctll 81ol-3870213 .

••rt

AVON Sell Awon
up fee
FREE . Limited tlml. Ctl 114-

Fum. 3 rrooms a bt1h, uplttirt,
ciMn. no pete.ldutl:l. rtf. &amp; dtp.

441-33H.

roq . CoU14-441 -1519.

PubUo Notice Tht YIU~~~te of
l'f'MUN 11 aoceptlnu eppllc•
done tor Life Gut,. 11 London
Pool. """mil trw to be mailtd
or giwn to Jenict Ltw10n

Clift,
Village
21,
fill
. on or before April

"They'll be talking about that

· for years!"

~;;:~~==;:::::::;=l-::::::::::---"1

o..,....,....

31

OUffen1 fldtnllitt,

RMtOred home . Vint Street,
Rtclnt. 3 bedroom•. btth, ctrpedno, wtil coveringt, drtptri•
Included . New kitchen .
t315.000. Ctll 8U-9,9-251l0
tfttr 8 Wttkdtyl , tnytlmt
wtllktndt

Jobo. f11,040 118.230 - yr. Now Hiring . Cell
101-887-8000 b1. R-9101 tor
&amp;ey AtMmbfV Worll! 1100.00
per 100. 0UIIrln1Hd payment.
No tl~lp~Nnc:e-no •111. Dttaill
stnd Mff·addrnttd 1t1mptd

envelope: Eltn Vittl-1847 3-l11
Ent.-prlt• Rd. Ft. Pitrc:t, Fl
]3482.
Elay A... mbly World NOO .OO
per 100. Gutrent:Md pr~yment

No MJ*ience-No ul•. Details
lll'ld lelf·eddi'IIMd ltamp-.:1
envelope: Ellr'l Vitti •715. 3418
Ent..-prlll Rd, Ft. Pitrct. Fl.
·33482 .
A dtNb~ lldy would likt t
middle-~~g.t l.dy to ht In
Pl'"*'.,ttv- Oo cooking, llgtn
hou....,oril end l.undry. Room
•d bo.-d, to.,.. Mltry . In
IIDU!hwtlit

Homes for Sale

3 to 4 bedroom horne, in
Harttlonlo"llit. 115500 or trtclectr
or tNck of equal vetut. Call

514-182 -2772.
Two Hdroom home ready fOf
OCCUptlf'lcy , Equlpptcl with kh·
dl~ flrtgl, refrig..-.tCK tnd
C8binttt . Complttwty carp«td.
134,100. Loctt.cl In Otn••l
H•rtinu• Sub. in Middleport
Aetl ..tete tu ab.1emtnt progrt~m in tHect for 18 yetn. CtJI
1-814-992-17112 bttwun BAM
•nd 4PM daily .
l..-gt 2 ttory homt. full bll•
ment. wood tumtct end
oil
tum.ct, tttlltf' hoo•-up . ApprOJ:
1 -2ecr... CtoMtOMeiQIMin•,
in Dtllter . Priced to •II. CtH

tu•

To •II Avon in env area. Cell

304-1171-1429 .

P!!IOR MILITARY SERVICE
INDIVIDUALS -- The Army Nt·
don .. Qu.rdnledt yourvtlwblt
••~en c.. Join tht Guerd tor 1
part-time job whh many btnefitt
lib promotlont, tducationtl"sit1enc», retirement. tnd meny
,..,,._30' · ~8 - 3950 0t 1-800&amp;12 -3119.
Stml Drivtrt, 2 yttrl ovtr road
np•ltnee, one ve• fltt bed
uperitnce. 23 .,..,.. or " ' or
cuntr'11 mtdtctl card , cell

114-742-2832 .

---------leFor rent

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 31.
PHONE 8,4-.W8-727 ...
197,3 New Moon Ud5 , 2 bdr.,
woodbum.,, c.iling fan. air
cond.. potch a undtrpinning .

Colll14-251 -9311 .

ar• of Columbu1.

cen 114-!IB5-liB1 .

32

Nle on ltnd contflct.
3 bedroom homt toc.ttd It 408
Spring Avt.. Pomeroy , Otllo.
1200 . dtposit , *278 . per
month . Cli1&amp;1• -7&amp;3-•858.
Of

Llv1 in cr~t. rent tht ottltr. two
bedroom houte and two btd·
room mobile home. Cen lfttt'
5 :00p.m. 304-675 -1413.

old•.
304-27 3-8391.

1972 1.fx70 3 bdr. home aood
c:ondition, bNt ottw. Call 814-

441 -7!145.

36

Lots

2 .4 tcre building lot , city
~tehools , •e.8oo. can 814-379 ·

2851 .
8 .::r•. 3 btmt, teptk: C.nk tnd
county Wlltr . FinM~clng tlltilt·
bit. Ctllll1'· 379-2258 .
2 ec,.. around wtth 1952
mobile home, 11120 room lddld .
Well with AWl pun-.. tii'QI,

07,000.00 . 304-171-27]1.

1Y.:! tcr• Brotd Run Road. Ntw
H1v11n, W . Vt. Mortt th.ci tnd
tdd-on tMdg. for mobil• home.
Good wtt• well, teptic ttnkIMCh btd . Nictt-pOI fOf building
or mobile horne. 304-773-9688
or eft• 5 :00 3CM -773 -9128 .

4 bedroom houM for tt11,
Feder ... Sutt lfld CNII Stnitcl firepl.ct. 3 mi . touth of GtUipojobl mw tvtiltblt in your ,,.. _ Ut, U9 ,900. Can days 11-4 FOf r.torm.tiun cell 808-844 - 4,8 -1818 or nightt 814-441 9533 Otpt 1201

Rental&gt;

HOW DOES A MONTHLY PAY CHECK, edue.tiontltllitttnc».
lift in ..
Md rttirtment
benllfitl 10Und7 Wtl ...... but
tht AA MV NATIONAL GUARD
c.-, get t ptlrt time job wilf'l .o
meny full lime btntfttt1 304-

,...c.

171-311150 "'1 -800-142 -3119.
Need b.ey lin~r in my ~me .
Gallipolis FI"V trtt, 304-175-

1937 .

W~nttd

mitble btbv tin" in
Hendltnon trM. needt own
trtntpOrtttion tnd ht\11 llt11.ible
hourt. 304 -878·"'36

1B

Wanted to Do

Spring cl..,ing time -vllin7 Full
or pert -time for homeorotfict. If
you trt ...king rtliabilitv . hon.. ty , tnd taptrienct. Cd
814 -.a46 -8201 or 114 -256 1&amp;19 . DtV1 or eveningt.
Gtvt pieno ltuont ;n mv tlornt
to tdutt ttudtntt. Alao 1e1ch
cftording 1r1d trtnspoting . Ctll

114-!192 -1403.

.

1 roomt • btttl, 1 IC,. matt or
lilt. cttptttd throughout. vinyl
tiding 125.000. 12 N. Main St ..
Cht~hire. c1n 114-4415 -3793.
For 1111 cr rent 3 bdr. hou11 in
Eurtkl Mttl 32 terti . On At . 7.
OH t\Nt, c~mty wet•. Call
t1• -4U -2205 .
Leur- Rtnch Style, 3 bdr. Ia
gereg•. on '•rv• lot In Addlaon
Twp .• 9'h% fixtd JO yur FHA
lotn ewlltbla. c.~ &amp;14 -445 0722 .
7 room hol.ln. ovtriooalln~ Ohio
Atvtr in Addtton . NIIWtv remo dtltcl . 3 bedroom.. 1 bltl'l,
pani1l blttmtnt . ctrpon , c-lat,
2 t'ttttinQ IYI1tml, vinyl tiding .
On 'h tcrt lend . 125 ,000 . C1ll
114 - 381 - ~47 or 614 -387 0486.
Fumiahtd tpl . centrtlty loe.ttd .
3 rooms &amp; beth. 1225 mo ..
utiliti• pAtd . Ctll 114 ·4415 ·
0544 .

32

LAWN MOWING , qutlitv . dt·
pendtblt ,...,ic., low retn . ctll

e,,.....oeu "*'"'g•.

Fmanm l
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OMIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . rtcOnwnendt ttltt you
do bulin•• wlth people you
know . 1nd NOT tc Mnd money
throur tlw mew until vou tl'""'
inv ... lgettd the offering.
Will pl.c• clgtrtttt m.ctlln"
Good camml11k&gt;nt. Cttl 304-

773-l!el1

22

Money to Loen

HOME OWNE,.S -Rt11nll'!ct to
low fixed rttt. Utt equity for any
puf1JOII. Ltld• Mongtt• Co.,

114 -1182-3011 .

23

Profeuional
Services

PIANO TUNING ANO REPAIR ,
rtdilcovtt your pitno'• ~IUtHu l
tone. can todty , Werd• Kty ·

Mobile Homes
for Sale

14a70 •ll•lectric:: 2 btdroomt. 2
full btthl, ctntflllir. applienc•
included. 111.600. Ctll 1144415 -3243.
1879914x70 mobilehomtw.,t't
7a24 IJIPindo . Centrtl air . Loc.atld on 'IJ acrt kn . Fr" nttur•l
VII - In KygtJ Crtetl School
Oittrict. Ct/1114·4•1 -1837 or
" '· 61" ·" •· 3437
For ttl• or Nnt ont ,,.11.86 2
bedroom mobil• home. dty
~ehools . C•i1&amp;14-379 -21&amp;9.
Vlndtlt mobil• home 15 .000.
Call 814 -4-41 -8281.
1 91!11 Shulu mobile tlome
1 4a70. totalt~rlc. 3 bdr .. nice
ctrptting, curttint, rtf . &amp; range.
rent tir cond., tlrtady undtrpinntd , s.ning on rented kn .
Pri&lt;» 112,800 . Ctll &amp;14 -317-

0147.
1981 Commodor•4•h14, 2 br.,
txc . cond. Ctll 814 · 318 -1821 .
1982 N~thut 14all, 2 bed·
room, dlningroom, o•dtn tub,
1llpa. C.HIU -3&amp;7 -0261 lfttf'
4 :30PM.
19715 MIICOI mobllt homl
121180. good condition. 17.000 .
Call l14 -44e -2452 or 11444t -n49 .
1910 Llbtny 1.1114. 2 btd·
room. unfumlthed, vinyt underpinning Included . Mutt tttl. Ctll

bO•d. :104-17&amp;-5500 .. 87&amp;304-773-5873 .
]824 .
SHELTON POOL CO . Swimming Pools ..., · lna-ttllttions ·
Reptlrt . Your frltndly pool
bulldtrl. Bufftlo , W. VI. 304-

1975 Ctm.-on Mobile Morntfor
ttlt . 12x80 Ctll &amp;14 -892 8&amp;24 .

937-2478

12d0 PMC htndy rriMtap.O.t
129150. 121110 AQUirlout 2
bedroom. All tlectric. 8.t1 for
14500. Ctlll!l14 -117-3170.

31

H ome1 for Sale

5 room bl1h , utility u••g•.
ctntrtl heat window tir condidon. Ctll 114-992 -UOo\ .
4 bedroom hou11. flrt pltct. YJ
.,.....,._., In R.cine . MHt
offer . Ctll 114 -149 - 2293
I'MftlnOI·
To ...1 tttltt. 1 ftoor home .
eluminum siding, niiW roof,
urpetM, forme! dining room,
LocatMI ,.., Pomeroy Elerntn·
..ry. Asking undtt

Coli a1 4-H2-5322.

uo.ooo.

1174 C11tlt. 3 btdroom. 11h
battlt, elec1ric furnace. ttt up for
wood -bumtr, «ft. porch. Good
condtdon. Ctll 814· 915 -3960.
1983 Silylint Jty . 2 bedroom.
gM. very nice. •1 1 .000 . Cell
814 -9&lt;19 -2gl3.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: lnaured. rtllonlblt rtt•. C1!1

304-571-2331

•

1973, 14•70, l)lntv fumtthld
on ont tcre. l)tlont 304-1!171-

2791 .
1878, 14x?O mobfla homt, 3
bedroom, tppUencn, AC, un ·
dtrpenninu . nice . 304-175-

1411.
1112. 14•"' moblt home,
fum.. htd ..,._,,. kJtn, pay·

monti 1112.00 _,th. 304·

171-1712.

Unfumlshld 2 bdr. in Crown
City.
Ctll81•-2151-1820.
'-----

Nice 2 bdr. ..,t., 4 mi . from
GoHipolll, llovo, ....;g . .. wltor
fumtlhed. UOO mo .. no ~·Colll14-« l -8038 .
Uptttirs unfumlthld tpt .. ur·
pettd . UtllitiH ptkl , no children.
no pett. CtN 114-441 -1137.
2 bdr., fum .. good locttion,
utHI1i• peld. Call fJ 1 • -441 1,87 ,,.., ' :30.

41

Houses for Rent

5 Court St. 3 bdr. Kitch.,
fumtlhtd , no !)Ita, t250 mo ..
pjut ut:llhl•. f'tfeftnctt &amp; depotit. Call 114 -448 -4928 or

114-441-1180.
3 bdr. houtt. furnhlhed kitctltn.
C111 e1 ' ·"8-702!i.

u••;•.

2 bedroom hou .. with
Clflllted , curtllint. dithwt•h•.
rltrlg .. 105 Kinton Or. {ntlf
new dty pool) rtnt noo month.
0.,. ,..._.ired . CtH 114-441·
4413 Of 81· - ~1 - 4347 .
3 bcb. Pommouttl Rd ., city
tchoolt, db I. cer pratt, no pttt,
dtp. requir«i , U2&amp; . Ctlll14"'·1134.
3 bdr., btth. utility room, ni~ .
cl•n. CtU 814-o\48 -3607 or
614-4-4&amp; -361 1
Fum hou1e on Bl•dtn Mtrctrwille Ad . Second hou11
on ri9ht from At . 7. C11t
114-256 - 1482 .
4 bedroom , firepltCI, 1260
month, plut deposh tnd utili1itt.
Ct11&amp;1• -t•9 -2293. Evtnln;t.

a.. utiful

new 2 or 3 bedroom
houtt. Alto new ant bedroom
fumlthed apartment in Mtdc:il•
port. Ct ll 1114 -992 -530• or
114-992 -&amp;586 .

For rent with option to buy. 3
btdroomt. built in kitchen . 2 ctt
glftge , 1220 .00 month, dtposit. New Htvtn , 304 -882 -

2188 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rant

Furnithed . ctbll, beautiful rivtr·
view, In Ktneugt. no city 111111.
Fottan MobHt Mome Peril. Ctll
IU-.W8 -1802 .
Totti tltctr lc two bedroom•
furnlth41d . Adulb only , no pitt,
TV cabl• tvlllablt. Ctll 1!11"317-7,31 .
3 bdr .. fum lthtd, til utilltlte
ptkl, no pett, uc . dtp, 1420
mo . 2 bdr., fvrn .. hlcl . lll utllltl•
pekl, no p111. ttc . dtl). 1341
mo . 2 bdr .. untumlthtd, no pttt.
MC . dep ., pay own tltctrlc .
12715 mo . C111 1!114 -441-1315
tfttr &amp;PM.
N~WWfy

remodeled 3 bdr. mobllt

In Eurllkt nice &amp; clun , pert.
tum .. tduttt onfy, M pe11, 1180
mo . Dep. req. Cal 514 -251 -

1535 0&lt;114-211-1291 .
Two Mdroom 12ft. wkltmobllt
home in lktwll. No pttl. Min Imum Wlttr turnithed . Ctll

114-Ua -8148 .
2 bedroom. Recine 1r., Ctll

814-992 -5858 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Nnttl epartmen1a · in Maton
AptrtrNntt limited. Two bidroom epertmentt at •191.00
ptt month . Rtnlll rtl• m..., be
h6gtler deptndint on Income.
Houlling wlil bt tvtlltblt to IICih
tpllh:att rtt•diMt to thtfr rta.,
colot. rel.ton. Mil or netur..
origin . lnttruttd appllctntt
tttould cell 304-n3-6011 Of
contaCt Ot"ltt Stttlb or w.. t..JU11Ic:e 11: tht Meln Offict. 1171
lrict "otd, Reynoldtburg. Ohio

43018 "'coiii14-8U-4514.
Point PINMnt IPt. for rent.

~- 178-4024

orl71-1141.

~PI- 3 ..,.,,. •

bod., llo ..,, "'
•"" 4,00 -IY

clilld...,. Coil
r...-ld. :104-171-3441.

bin l Snyder

F~nllure.

91515

ch•,

Ohio

64 Misc.

U,I.;::========T"----------1
f
Sup pl lt!s

Eltctrolull VKCUU m dun•a.
A- 1 condltlon -11tachmtnts.
Availtblt II t72 .00. C•h Of
ttrrnt errtnged . C1ll 114-245 9111 Of 304-171 ·8799
Ooublt btd·mtttr•• • aprings,
solid wood h..r botrd, lAC.
cond., •126. Doll houM 7roon-.
175 . Clll514 -245-15417 .
Wtttrbtd - kingaine. lighted
httdbotrd. ctltlt of drtwtn,
htnging mirror, f300 . Ctlll1'4 -

2 bdr ., uptttirt, n.wly redecorettd, pay own utililiet , f176
mo. Ctll 814 -4-41 -71544.

Rtcil tttreo, AM -FM r.ciio,
ctatttte. recOfd player, old
comic book dating t».ck to 1955 .
C1ll 614 -446 -7081 enytim~~ .

Oh . 114-286-5530 .

1978 Model Dodge Colt end
btby go1t1 . Clll814 -446-0159·
tfttr 5 .
DB - mtple bed, dretler, nigh1lllnd 1150. Dilhwtthtr 110.
79 Chevv Monz• 1100. Call
614 -245 -9497 or 114 -441 -

0544.

4269

2 bedroom tpt. In New Hl\ltn,
W. V•. N.wly rtmodtl.ci . In
town. C1ll 814-992 -7481 .

2 formal• 1in 7 -8 wom 0111
time , f50 Itch. CaJI 81 o\ -U8 320o\ or 814 - 367-7105.

1 bedroom tpt . for rent . 8ttic
ltlrtt 1215 . 1 month th1t
includ.. all utlllti11. Dtposil
required of f200 . Conttct Vil lage Menor Apt. Middleport.
814-992 -na7 . Equal Housing
0pponuni1y.

l bedroom unfurnithed tpt .with
110vt, ref., wtttltr , dryer. All
utli11tt pd . ea.cep1electric. Quitt
country t•tting . 12 mllu
northwtt1 of Pom11oy on U.S.33 .Ctll 814-992 -2807 tfttr
8 :30p.m.
APARTMENTS . mobile hornet.
hou ... . Pt. Pl1a11nt tnd G•llipolil . 814-44&amp;-8221 .
402 21st St. Furnithed 2 bedroom tpt . upttairt , clean.
Adultt ontv. 1195 . 1 month .
Ht11 1nd Wtttr ptid. Rat. 1nd
Oop . :104 -575-2111 .

Furnished Rooms

Mixed htrdwood altbt. 112 ptr
bundle. cont1inlng tpprox . 1 VJ
ton . F.O.B. Ohio PaUot Co ..
Pomeroy. Ohio . Call 1514 -992-

6461 .
Uatd wood name 2 ptne win dowt. 2 sizes. Good condition .
Call 614 -985 -3942 .
H1lf Prictl Fltthlng trrow lignt
12991 Ughttd. mn-1rrow 12791
Nonlighttd t229 1 Free letttrtl
Only few left . See loe.lly. 1
(8001 423-0163 , tnytim•.
-lc 1 self-propelled ltwn mow111r for
111e. 1100 . Ct ll61 4 -992 -!5611 .
TONY ' S GUN REPAIRS . hot clp
rtbluling, til typea of guntmith
work , f11t ttrvice, 304-875•&amp;31 .
HALF PRICE I Flnhing trrow
stvns U991 Ughttd, non-trrow
f2791 Nonlighttd U291 Frtt
lettertl Only few- left. SN
locally . 1( B00)423 -0163,
tnytime .

For rent SIMJ)ing Rooms tnd
light houte k•ping rooms. Ptrk
Ctntr•l Hotel . Ctll 614 -4411 ·

1 . 200 J1mutown Coloni•l
Brickt, calletter 6:00. 304-875-

0711.

3784 .

46

1977 Moped , 719 tctutl milet,
e11.c cond , 304 -875-1296 .

Space for Rant

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park,
Routt 33. Nonh of Pomeroy.
L1rgt lou. Cell 614 -992 -7479.
TrtUor )ot for rent in MiddlepOft.
Ctll t~U - 992 - 7863 or 614 837 -3814
Trailtr •ptcet, tmall children
tcctpttd, ltWtr tnd water
tumlthed . locust Rd . back ol K
&amp; K. 304-871-1076.
Mobil home lot for rent. stt 1t
Mowrey• Upt!oltterv. M110n
County F1ir Ground• or ptlone

304-171-4154.

Merchandi se
61 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
OlivtSt., GtllipoUt. New&amp; uNd
WOOd·COtlatov", 8 pc WOOd lR
INI1t 1389 . bunk btdt 1,99.
tnt ron NCIIn.. 199 . MW &amp;.
ulld bedroom tul1•. r1ngtt,
wringtr Wllhlrl, lho•. New
INingroom tult• 1199-11!199.
lamps , tlto buying coal a. wood
lt0\1 • . Ctll 814 -441 -31&amp;9

a

LAYNE 'S FUANJTURE
Sof11 tnd chair• priced from
U85 . to •895 . Ttbl•. 1&amp;0 tnd
14t lo 11215 . Hidt·t ·btdt.l390 .
tnd up to 18150 .. tofa btdt
1145 . Rtcllntn . 122&amp; . to
U7&amp; ., Llmpt from 128 . to
•12e . pc. cMnen .. from •1os ..
10 4315 . 7 pc , 1119 tndup . Wood
t.ble whh 1111 chlirs U85 to
174&amp;. Dnk •125 up to 1376 .
HU1dl•. 1550 . Bunll bid complt1t whh mtttrntn, 1275 .
end up to 1385 . Baby btda,
1110 Mtttr11111 or boA
IPrlnoe . full or twin , 183 .• firm,
173. tnd Ill . au... lttl,
1225 , Bed frtm• . 120 .tnd
125 .. 10 gun - Gun ctbin11t,
1310.
or eltctr+c renv•
U71 . Baby mem•'" · •3&amp; &amp;
141 , btd """" 120. t2&amp; , •
UO , king frlmt 150. Good
11ltction of btdroom lllrtll.
rodlen, metal cabln1tt. htld ·
bolrdt na .. up to ... .
Ulld Furniture -- Ortner, • bed ,
Trundle btd, mtttl offlct dt•kt .
3 mil .. out Bulevllla Ad. Open
g., to l!lpm, Mon . thru Stt.

County ApplltnOI, tnc. Good
_.t eppi!Jinctl tnd TV Htl.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thru

Sot. i1C-441-tt19, 127 3rd.

11111

/; l l vI'S iiiiJ

81

Ferm Equipment
CAOSS. SONS

U.S 35 W•t. J.ckson , Ohio.
151 .. · 281· 6151 .
M11..._, fM~u.On , NIIW Holltnd.
Buth Hog Stl• a. Strvict. Over
40 utlcltracton to ctloo•• from
a. coi'Y1)1e1e line of new &amp; ulld
equipi'Mft1 , Largnt •IKtion in

S.E. Ohio .
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 3&amp; W. Galipollt,

c.u

Ohio.
e1ot-"'1·1777. eve.
81.f-""l -3592 . Up front treetors with warrtnty ovtr 7! uttd
trteton. 1000 tools.
SIS M11Ny F•rgu10n 240 ditul,
2 tpd. trane. live power, apm
outs. power tttlrino . Call 114-

379-2314 .

4020 John Dttre Diesel with
cab . Mutt SH 10 tpprtclttl.
t5995 . 15 Bottom lnttmt11ontl
Plows. MilL 10ft. Bird-1 Whwl
Oitc . •795 . TO 30 Fer.;oon
Trector. *1.15. 3 point trguICn Rtkt , ••as. New Holl•nd
86
1550. htrt clean . 2
tow Meaait Ftrgu.an Com
Plenttr. 1295 . M111i1 Ftrguaon
Mowtt. 1595. Cttl 151 4-2818522.

•*·

800 Fotd Tractor, tllgh end low
rtnge, live hydrtulics. tlltrt
ciMn , new rubbtr. U950. 2
bonom plowt, UIIS . IS ft. Ford
Buth Hog , 1350 . 2 row cultivator, t1915 . Itt . ..w SlidtrBitdt,
1176. Boom Pole , ••5 . 601
Ford Mower, 1450 . C.ll 81'·
286 -8522 .
Minnupolll Moline. 1916 76
HP . Wldt front end . 3 pt. hitch .

02500 . Colll1 4-1192 -5137.
· ICAC 2 Row No -Till com plenttr.
John DHft Model A Trtctor.
Ctli 814-992 -5010 or 1!114 -

992-1158.
8t1ore you buy your nllllt trtctor ,
get tht t.tt pric:t, Sldtfs Equipment Co"1).,y, H.,denon. W.

Vo. 304-S75-7421 .

2 row mtch. t'tntPitnttr 300
011. Wltltf ttn11111tt new t1 000 ,
152 ' 'tobtcco Of tomato ttlckt11S
cent1 . Morgen's Woodlewn
Ftrm, At. 36, 304-876· 1288 or

304-523-1143.

62

Wanted to Buy

Wtnttd to buy, milk cow. Ctll

614 -992-5518 .

63

3 J)rom drelltt. li111 3 , 6 , 7 .
C1ll lfttr 5. 304 -875-2474 .

66

Building Supplies

Building Mlttrills
Bloclt, brick. NWtr pip•. win dows, lintels. ttc . Cltudt Win ten, Rio Ortnde. 0 . Ctll 514 2,5 -15121 .
ICtntucky Lu~ . Ohio Lu....,
Ohio Stoklt'. Yard 011 dtlivtry:
c•mant blodt tnd buMcllng
~teritl . Gt!Upolit Block Co.,
Pint St., Gtlllpollt , Ohio Ctll
1514 -4415 -2783 .
Bloclt. bride. marttr lfld mt tonrv IUPPII•, Mount1in Stitt
Bloclt, At . 33. Ntv~~ Mtvtn , W.

VI. 304 -882 -2222 .

56

Pets for Sale

0 rtlljlonwynd C en.,.., Ktnntl.
CFA Himtleytn. Ptrtiln and
Sitm•• kittens . AKC Chow
puppies. Cell 4'8-38W ahtt

7PM

6,oo.

o\ year old regitttf.ci S.orrell
Out11tr Gtldlng. 90 day proft•·
lion1l trtinirlg. Rtgittertd 10
month o ld Quarttt Colt. Good
confirmation. WiH nil Reeeonebly . Ctll 51, · 288-8522 .
Btby 8011:1 110.00 and up. 1110

304·1175-3308 .

64

Hay

Ltrv• round btl11 of hty. Ctn
7401.

4i82 .

1983 Shlflntndoah t ra\l&amp;ltrllilar
32 ft. k:Jn . E•trts . AC , awning.
full rwfrig .. co mbo bath &amp;
shower . .. c. con d. Call 61 4 448-1758

86 MonttCtrlo, powerttMring.
powllr brtk•. tir, cruil8. 305
V-8, overdrive trent. •t•rto. Ctll
81,·379-235' 74 Ford LTD good motor, body
NH. btlt offer. Ctll 1!114 -245-

6'05

1983 Plymouttl Turilmo 2 dr .. 6
tpd., 37,000 milet. Ct ll 614 -

379-2721
For Nit 1977 Ctmtro. Ctll

114-211-5278 .

1978 Mont• Ctrlo 305 motor,
t2 ,000. Ctll 814-"8-9286 .
1985 Chtvy ChtvtHI. lutO, 2
dr. , power St..,Jng, AM -FM
fldio, wtth 5 ,100 miles, •llcelltnt cond .. price 15,700. C•ll

Mixtd t'tty ltrgt

~uart

fOf Mit or trtdt. 1988 Dodge
Colt. Will c:onatder trade on
1979, 1980, Of 1981 . c.n
6,,· 992 -7401 .
1982 Chtvy CittiOn 4 cyl.
Automatic. A.C . AM -FM radio.
42.000 low milll. Ctll 1!114-

1192-3703
1984 Ford Eecon, 2 door,
sttndard, AM -FM radio , 32 ,000
miles. 15200.
614 -949 -

c.u

197&amp; Pfy, • door, 400 engine,
AC , PS , PB, crull8, exc oond ,
un 304-nl -&amp;JoJ.
1976 CorvtHt, T-top. two tone
burgtndy. 4 speed. 350 engine.
PW, AC , 07,1500.00. :104·571 -

1971 Monte Carlo. 1974 Chevy.
Both good cond. Ctll 114--MB·

1122 or 114-441 -7172.

1971 Pontiac: ltMiftl, bC .
cond., n.w tirtt . Ctll 114-3792120.
1978 linwln Contln. . tll Mtrk
v. 2:5 ,000 mi .• "'""· good
oond .. n .OOO. C1ll IU-ke-

11 16 or 814-448 ·12'3-

•e.ooo

1971 For4 O.lu:l,
tc·
tutl mit• . PS. Pill , tlr cond ., very
tllctlltnt ccndltion. Uking
1750. Ctll t11o\ - 381·874ot.

AA~(&lt; l)ji'S Rt;LUR,&lt;:I~

r

Dl&lt;t'AM

11-tAT IM~IFWRELKfDGIIA

c::€Q;.e1' ISLA~D Wlll-t li-tiS
--------"-"-- ~

AW SHE 15 WILD, I M~ WILD
A!?a;T ME'! &lt;;.H~ GALL'? AIf
ADAM AND I CAl-l..

FRESH PRODUCE

81

W~ AT

ro '-IOU CALL

1-lt'i':

'S€:811-V:-8% c:ck~

r

f&lt;NOW MIXe'C&gt; GRFE-~N5

/ AAE GOoD fOP. 'Tbu ..

Services

EspEclAL-'-Y 'rE:NS"
ANc&gt; jWeNTIC:Y.

Home
Improvements

,\ '

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF=ING
Uncond ition1l lifetime gutrl n·
tee . Local r•ferences furnishe d
Free n1im1tet. Cell colle rl
1-61, -237 -0488. dl!ly or nigh1
Roger• Basem&amp;n t
Waterproofing .

.

ALLEY OOP
All ~U HAFTA DO 15 TAAE ll EASY
AND ACT NATUR:Al ,YDUR HIGHNESS,
AN' NOBOOV'LL GET HURT!

Home Improvement s
Vinyl, •luminum gut1ers &amp; cu s
tom 1rim. 17 yeert experi8J\Ce
Call 614 -446 -9467.
Vinyl Rtptir Serv1ce Home,
butinetl &amp; auto . Setting. Mon Sit. 8 :00 -6:00. For details call
Henry , 614 -379 -2530 or 814
Ltndactp i n~r

Shade &amp; fruit trees
12 in . yewt 19.60 uch . Golde n ·
Junipers U .60 etch . Mulch '
Ctll 614 -"'6-446 -9646 .
H•rdwood Floors. Stnding &amp;
reflniahlng . Parket tnd lounge &amp;
groove . Fre• estimttet, retere ncn tnillbit. Willtrd &amp; Dav1d
Bltnktnthil), 614 -446 -0266 o r
614 -448 -4047 . Commercial &amp;
r" identitl .
D. tnd M. Contrac1ors. Vin yl
sid ing ; replacement window s.
intultting; roofing. new . ramo ·
dtling; concrete; inside. O\.Jts i d t~
ptinting . Ctli 30o\-773-61 31

Sttrils Tree tnd ltwn Service.
landectping. 304-576 -2010

80 Chtmp, front wheel drive.
tuto . tir 11..-10. 1 1950 . 30.a-

Aot1ry or ctb le tool d rilling
Most wells co mpltted umed•vPump 11111 and ter\lice 304 896 -3802

171-2913.
1981 Oldt Cullan Supreme
Broughlm , V- IS . lotdtd .

04100.00. 304-1171 -2511 .

t&gt;roJr t.UH£THER~ m 10

1-\E.~

LIS.'TW 10 ffiiS,J®l .. .
lltY'RE Ht¥./lffi ltll~ BkS

GRMJr lbl.ITI(AL AS'rlUIJ\ ...

ruAl£. IIJ ca:£R£')S

Fenv Tree Trimming, 1tum1'
remo111 1. Clll 304 -675 -133 1

1982 Ford EXP , rtd. ttd. lolded ,
low mil•. 814-«8 -031&amp; .

"75 Toyota Celcle and ·71 Fofd

EEK&amp; MEEK

RON 'S Talev t•ion Ser\lic e
House c•lls on RCA. Ou11ra t.
GE . SpecitUng in Zen it h. Ca ll
304 - 676 -2398 o r 614 -44 6
2464.

Grantdt, 304-175-4014 .

41595 .

82

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

r

WHEN I WAU&lt; , 00 I 5TAI&lt;T
OFF WITH MY I..EFT FCXJT
OR MY' RIGHT FCOT ~

MAY NEVER

WAU&lt;~IN!

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

Trucks for Sale

114-441 -3243 .

CARTER ' S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth tnd Pine
Galllpollt, Onio
Phone 614 -448 -3888 or 614 448 -4477
Cltrk Plumb ing tnd Hut ing , 18
yurt uperlence, unt~op drnins .
Ntw -rem odtling -repelr work.
Phont 304-882 -2012 .

'73 ChtvV truck,lllndlf'd, Nnt
good, body rough, 304 -n3 -

BARNEY
I NEED TO
BORR'f' TWO
DOLLER5 REAL

-

-

.

SHORE ··I'LL
BE GLAD TO
HELP 'f'OU OUT·-

BAD,

114-247 -42e2 .

83

Excavating

30··1175-1325 .

Vanl

a. 4 W .O .

1979 CJ 7 Jeep . Ntw Wlttr
puf11) , ni'W •hemttor, J1tw top .
Price rtductd . Ctll 114-742 2839 .
1975 Chevy Bltur, C wheel
drivt. .. 75.00 . Ctlltfttr 6:00 ,

85

Jt mel Boy1 Watl!lr Setlo"i ce Al 1o
pools filled . Call 614 -266 -1 14 1
or 614 -446 -1176 or 6 14 -446 791, .

BECAUSE
LAS1"NIGHf
I WAS
OOUBL.ED
UPON THE

Coal, lim!lllo ne. gravfll . fil e
Otlivered I ton tnd up Jtm
Lan ier, 304-675 -U4 7 or 675
7397 .

1980 K.WIIIki440Hd . bltck.
d1rome: mint condltkm . will
llketradt. Cllll14·448 · 3031 .

87

71 Suptt GUd• new cuttom
front, new wtrh•ul. loU txtrtt,
good ahtpt. Ctll 1114-268 -

1009.

TR ISTAT E
UP HOLSTE RY S HOP
1163 Sec Ave. Ga ll tpoUw
614 -446 7833 o r 614 446

1980 KewaullilTD 1000. exc
cond. 304-&amp;7&amp; -&amp;•U3.

-------A &amp; M furnitu re Monulacluttnl_j

Upholstery

1833

St. R1 . 7 , Crow n Cily. Oh C11 11
814 -256 -1470 , Cllt Evil 6 14
··~ - 34 3 8
Old &amp; nf!w
Uph ottered

NO,
AEROt!&gt;ICS
CLASS

FL-OOR!!
r-:.....:::;

Now arrange th e circled leiters Ia
form tne surprise an swer. as sug
gested by the above canoon.

Saturday's

I

(Answers tomorrow1
Jumbles: INEPT PIPER JIGGER FABLED
Answer What the dent ist whose income lagged
behind his neighbor's decided he'd have to
do-BRIDGE THE GAP

MIDGE

James Jacoby

Transparent
discards

NORTH

3·24-11

• 10 7 3

.K2
t A J9 7
+J 8 43

By James Jacoby
Defense is the most difficult part of
bridge. and today 's deal shows why .
Declarer ducked the opening lead in
both hands. The second heart was won
by the king. A low spade was played
from dummy: East played the eight
and declarer the queen. and West won
the king. There was nothing attractive
for West to do except continue hearts.
Declarer won the ace, shedding a club
from dummy . Now came the ace of
spades, dropping East's jack, and another spade played to dummy's 10. On
this spade, East played the club five.
Declarer now returned to his hand
with the diamond king to play two
more spades.
it is easy to see that declarer can
make nine tricks by leading clubs.
since East holds both the ace and the
king. However, without the benefit of
X-ray vision, South will fear that West
holds the club ace or king. And so he
would normally take a diamond finesse and be set one trick. (The defenders would take one heart, one
spade, one diamond and the A· K of
clubs.) But lo and behold, as declarer
played the fourth and fifth spades,
West threw both remaining hear!£
away, advertising the lack of an entry.

WEST

EAST

+K 9 2

+J8

.QJ/084
• 10 8 6 4

• 973

• Q 53
+AK752

+10

SOUTH
tAQ 654

.A65
t K2
+Q 9 6

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

North

East

South

Pas.s

3 NT

Pass

Pass

I NT

Pass

Opening lead: • Q

Even though d""larer felt certain now
that West held the diamond queen, he
knew it was safe to lead clubs, and
East had to give up a crucial trick to
declarer in that suit. How much better
for the defense if West throws the club
I 0 and a diamond , seeming to still hold
a high club honor . South will now take
the diamond finesse and will certainly
be set.

61~•·•"u(
loy THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1 One kind

3 Expia"'
4 Knightly

of dive

6 Classify

II Proportion
12 Work
13 Direction

title

5 Selfproclaimf.&gt;d
expert

on ship

(sl.)
6 Sadness

14 "Prine&lt;'

7 Criminal

Igor,"
for one

15 Bolivian
export

16 Japanese
measure

charge
8 Actor
9 June
hPPtle

IONOW

18 flutch city

19 Circuit
clout
24

Card
game

25 Terrible
26 Substance

Yesterday's Answer

Vigoda

co n ce rn

24 Meager

35 Doughy

26 Hackney
27 Wrath
28 By

36 Aviary

17 0wl

sound
20 Paradise
21 Outfit
22 English
ri11er

mixture
sound
39 Designatf'

way o f

29 High31

40 Ho&lt;key

mu&lt;'k-

~rcat

a-muck

41 Moslf•m
title

f'liel

33 Kooky

42 l'urr

in pe-rfume 23 Gain ahove 34 Scottish
29 Procreate r,--"xnp'-e-"n"-" -.,'.,....~..::island
30 Pril'P

44 Miner's
find

·-

renditiOn
31 Sloe

or &lt;'Ordial

32 Tyke's

run

sourct'

34 Likely
37 Jl'nny
38 Coar!'&lt;'

39 "Cheers~~
ror

example
43 Rm.inanh•
was one

45 Jargon
46 Declaim
47 "Diamond
Jim ..

48 Axiom
DOWN

I Jalopy
2 Ha•ty

••

DAILV CR VPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work 1t:

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sampll' .\ 1s used
for the three L's, X for lhe two O's. etc. Sm ~lo' letters.
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the u ,: J, are all
hinls. Each day the code leiters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
3:24
SZANA

DNA

IIAXOVA

Wreetling

CIJ Notlonol Googrophlc Ex-

tJT(J S A ll

plorer

fll (I) Bonny Hill
Cll IHJ News

REAC71NSA
HORROR &amp;TORY.

I I I J

(IJ) Thlo Old House I CCI
1 1:00 U Ill NowsCen1or
CII Mon from U.N.C.L.E
(!) Pro Bon boll Team Arm

SNAKE!!

HOW ,-0 ENJOY

IRUTUNE t

cutive

Ken 'a Wetar Servict. Walh .
clttemt. poolt filled Pho ne
1514 -367 -0623 or 614 -36 ..,
7741 night or dty .

'78 FOf'd 4114. 304-1575-5327.

1974 eeo Suzuki nao.oo.
116&amp; F100 IRICk, 11560 .00.
Afttr 15:00. 304-1715-2307.

t
I KJ J

I CALAPA

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® Ill IW Tho Barbera Walters Spacial (CCI Barba••
Walters interv~ews President and Mrs. Reagan in
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f1l (J) MOVIE: 'lava With
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® MacNeil-Lehrer Newshour
il]) Pride of Place: Building
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(CC) The individuals whose
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CHI Dampsey and Makepeace
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8'30 IJ CI)IHJ Valerio David end
the twins attempt to cheer
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In
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9:00 U (I) @ MOVIE: 'Dirty
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IAI.
® 700 Club
t1l Ill lfll The 58th Annual
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Robin Williams, Alan Aida
and Jane Fonda host the
annual film awards presentation from The Dorothy
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Q Cll ® Keto &amp; Allie
When Kate 's old friend
moves in indefinitely. Allie"s patience is stretched
1o th e li mit tAl
(j) lill American Playhouse: Displaced Person
(CC) A six year-old war orphan befriends an Ameri can soldier whom he be liaves to be his fathar . (60
m1n .I(A).
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Greatest
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Hero
9,30 Q CIJ ® Newhart ICCI
Dick reluctantly stands in
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Q (I) ® Cagney &amp; Locey
Cagney and lacey become
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(I) A Bodywa1ch Speclak
In Search of tho Porfec1
Day ICC) Heal1h. a1ress. e•ercise, nutri1ion , and sex

@Newo
10:30 CII Weight Loss
Cil Wild. Wild World of Animala
@) (I) INN News
t]) Special Opera1ions Exe.

General Hauling

304-881 -31]8 .

Motorcycles

I [)

(lJ Eyewitn,ss News
il]) Hatha Yoga
(j]) Good Times
([) Down 10 Earth

lill Newawa1ch

Good · 1 E•ct\ltling. btsemenl s.
loo ters. drivewtys, septic tenkt .
l•ndsuping. Call anytime 614 446 -4537. Jamet l Dav110n.
Jr . owner

Umes1one. 11nd. and gr11 vel
C1ll 614 -367 -7760

74

·--

DIGUL

are discussed .

e244.

btl ...

Autos for Sale

I

17 ft . 1989 self conlained
camper. e11c cond . must 11 8.
•1.100 .00 . 304 -676 -1146 .

RINOLES "S SER'\I'ICE , exp e
rlenced ctrpenttr. electri citl'.
mnon , painttr, roofing (in clu d ing hot ttr epplic•tion ) 304 876 -2088 or 875-7368 .

73

Tr .Hisp ur t, JI IIII I

BORN LOSER

]79 -2635

Is It TNt You Ctn Buy Jeepa for
144 through tht U.S. govem mtnt1 Gtt the ftctltodavl Cell
1-3U-74:Z -114:Z. Ext. 4089.

CIMn mi11td hey for Nit. Ctll

01.10 . :104-171-5171.

OUT'!

Da~~e ' t

Good hay fu•~tlt . Ctlll14-192-

114·992-3709 """''"'"·

SOO!:\i!'ll, THE JOLT
WIL-L. TUFUJ HER
9-TOMACH INSIDE

31,000 mi. 01,991 . 1978 PlY·
mouth Voltire, 2 dr ., tuto .,
•&amp;95 . 1982 Chevy Chtv•tt•'
cyl., o\ IIPd., 12.896. 1977 Ford
lTD onty 7".000 mi. . clttn,
•1.695 . Mi61e'• Auto Stln,
Mon .-Fri. 9 1D 6 , Stt. 9 to 12.
Ctll 114-441-2900 Stlumen
Meril Surlet.

1873 CtltvrOitt Pickup, 1979
motor. air condition, new ta·
htutt end t1r111. 1900. Firm.
Phonal04-17&amp;-1721 .

1133.

AQ:ATS~ FROM THE-

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1978 Dodge pickup V-8 , auto .,
topptf', U.teiS. 1979 Dodge
Amni 4 cyl., tLilO, -4 dr., only

7o\ Chwy 'h ton 3&amp;0 tutometic ,
power ll .. rlng · brtktt, eir,
topper, good dr• . "50 .00.

CooiYIIIo. Ohio. 11 4-M7-3838 .

, ·j·
BUB·HE SAID SHE\'::::::::::'~
WA&lt;; HERE TO 11/0Rk , r
NOT PLAY.

WHEN C'Y61oJU~ V'f.. 5-EP-

9102 .

SOLO FARM. Mutt Ill 800
baltt nict Orctltrd GranTimothy HI\' . 11 , per belt, 1.10
in lott of
or more. Lasher
Farm, Rutland. Ali wtlthtr
Icc••· Ceil OotHI Antusfarm ,

eoo

Auto painting 111nd body work.
done to your 1atisfltction. HJ ·
ceive 10 per cent ott any job
schftduled bltween now end
May 1st. lnturance elsim s.
dettiling and tome mechanical
work , free Utimatet. Call tor
tppolntment 1 -304-875-266 3.

1977 Cobrt Mutteno 302 4
epd., utrt clean . Ctll&amp;14 -448 4171 oftor &amp;PM .

~okl

dollvor. 020. Coli 114-912-

Auto Repair

79

1974 Chtvy pickup. V~8 tuto.,
whttll , huvy duty
springs. Runa good . 1&amp;95 . or
trtdt. 19157 lnt•mtllontl Cub
Cadit wtth culllvltOFI. Motor
co"-ltttl~ rebuilt 2 y11rt •go.
Oood oonditton. MilS . CtM

a. Grain

1981 C.mero runt good, tac .
thtpt. Cat! 1, . .. .8 -0059.

Frllztr bMf cut, WriPfJed tnd
fro:r:tn . Ctrf ICinnelrd, :wJ4-175-

CAPTAIN EASY

2 new bilge bucket seen
180 .00. 1 r«t bucket ... t. Ukt
New 115 .00 . 304-676 -1325 .

n

s_,_ _ _ _

U Ill NewsCen1ar

C!l Mazda Sportslook
® 0 Cll Ill il}J 1Hl News
fll CD Diffran1 S1rokas
® 3-2-1, Contac1 ICC)

1974 Vollttwtgon Beetle tor
ttle for ptrtt f200 .00. Phon&amp;
304-882-2147 .

For ult 1977 Mercury Ctpri
Ghla. V·8. 4 apd .. very good
condhion , •1.200 o.- belt offer.
Ctll &amp;14 -387-0602 lf1tt 4:00 .

1978 Chevy. 1977 GMC . Ctll

114-388 -8720.

Ktnnlbtc potato . . . turilty' t for
ult . Ctit 8, • . 317-7230

1982 bttat Ch ....ette acooner
~.000 mTI11. a~nroof.l2 , 400 .
Ctll 814-44&amp; -.W53.

flnt brtd pfgt, 1Uitablt fOf Ftir ,

71

&amp;

&amp;PM.

72

Tickfleld Ktnntlt. AU brMCII clog
grogming . ObtcUtnCI Veining
inttrucdon . AKC Otrmln wlr•
hairld Potnter puppl•. CaM

Fruit
Vegetables

at: 2179 Ettttm Avt ., Gtllipolit
Of ctll 114-44-IS-9744 aher

1 milking oooc "'ono304-1715043 . •

114-388 -8132

58

1978 Chtvetttlool&amp;l fOOd, runt
good, good tirH. •900 firm. see

895-3138 .

Pletn OOru, gelding. will work.
1300 . Ctll 814·2fii-62BO .

ChH'Iuthut't puppi• 1nd 1 melt
dog . will hold for Eatter. Ctll

Bunnttt tnd chk:llt trt htrt.
Ducka will trrhte Mondty. 10
gti. N1 up 11 .. .99 . Fith Ten .. .
2413 Jtckton Aw .• Po.,t Pita·
unt. W. Va . 304-175-2083 .

1878 Pontitc Grend ltMtnt,
PS, PB, air cond .• dlklxt interior. good tina, tllctMtnt condi·
tion . 815.000 mlltt , ••king
11.350. Call 814-388-9744 .

197ft Dodge D1rt 1450. 304-

Livestock

20 ft . flatbed goo• neck t,.ll.,
Mth ctnlt rtckl, 801 F~tmtll
ITtctor 80 hot'lt pwlf with two
txtrt tiret 1nd rims, 8-11 inct\15
bottom plows. 12 foot hal\ly
ditk . Ctli 814-2!58 -6801 tfttr

Surplut · Denim · Army - RenUI
Ctothing, Sholl Boots all Iiiii.
til ytar Heavy Ck&gt;1hing. Stm
Somerville't , E11t · AtvenaWood , Jui-lction · independtlnce Road · Old R1 . 21. Fri.
Ev~W~ingt . Stt., Sun ., 1:00 -7:00
p.m. (Ditcount Political Advertiaing Specitltl" 11 FrtcUon
Origintl Cott 30'·175-3334 )

Autos for Sale

2913 .

Chett f'flle Pepai pop cooler ,
fl96 .00 Ptlont 304-571 -

2814 .

71

114-3117 -0147 .

firm ~uipment Allia Chtlmtrs
hty btltr, M•IHV Fervuaon
front end load•• - 30'· 458 1917 .

Ch1roli1 bull 1nd Pollild-tcurt,
1C mot. old , 9150 lb . Ctll
614 -379-2597.

•n•

Croil Motel. 114-441 -7391 .

1

HAlF PRICE! Fl~thlng trrow
sign• 12991 lighted , non-trrow
12791 Nonlightad 12291 frtt
lertertl Only fe"~N l1ft . s ..
loctlly . 1 (800)423 - 01&amp;3 ,
tnylime.

514-441-0322

GOOD USED APPliANCES
Wlltltrs. drytrt, rtfrig.-etort.
reng11 . S ..
Applitncu ,
Uppw . Rlvtr Ad . bttlde Stone

All tVPel uud &amp; rabuilt
trtnamiulont · tran1fer catBt
1100. Overdrivt, front wfl•el S.
rttr wheal drive. Tran1minion
kltt 6 tork oonvertert. All typas
tlr cor'!l)rellort 1 to BO HP , 5
HP -2 ltlge 11 ,295. Call 814·
379 -2220 .

one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

(I) Green Acres

~OU TELL OU~
R~IAI&lt;J F5l:IE-ND THAT

Cellth.-.'t Uted Tirt Shop. Ow.1,000tlr
, U,14
,
16, 11.5...
. 8tlzn12
mil• out
At. 218.
Cell 814-2158-1251.

Auto Parts
Accessories

lJnec::rathbkl these four Jumbles,

EVENING

DID

Marchendise

Wincll•ter model 12 lhotgun
16 g1., 28 in ., full choktbtrrtll,
1-450, very good cond. Ctll
814 -448 -9407 .

Furnithtd 1pt. centrally IOCittd,
3 roome 6 btth. U2&amp; mo ..
utiliti .. Ptid . c.n 614 -446 -

&amp;

ftjJgN} fj}\1 ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

3/24/86

Boats and
Motors for Sale

76

Picktnt Ulld Furnlture. Oood
qu•llty ustd fumitutt. Open 9 to
5 or call for appolntnwnt.
304-1578-&amp;483 Of 175-1450 .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Television
Viewing

!)AM, YOU ANO Lf.E' ARE
~KINa 'T'H£ S I RCMci MURDER~TA~ l!rY S&gt;IOWING OUR SUSP£CT
SKe:TCH TO THE .JOSt:Se~s A"T
THE PARK·

1976 Chtckmate 17 ft . opon
bow with newly rebuilt 1977
140 HP Evinrude . good condiUon , S4,200. Ca ll 614 -2561410 .

•u.
Sk,,,

Furnithtd tpartmtnt. utiliti•
pakt 108 Vine St .. U35 . Ctll
814-448 -9244 between 9:005 :00.

Avt, Gtltipolit, OH.

Monday, March 24. 1986

6 :00

Whirlpool w11htr 175 , GE
Wlthll" 11150, Mtytag dryer
" '· Wtttinahoutt dryer U5.
refriawator ffo1tfret 1125, , .
frlgerator I'IOctdo small 1911,
trtez•
30 Inch g11
rtngt t75.
Appllanott,
UpptrAIYttRd . ,, ....... 7398 .

Bltclt powder 16 .98, capt
U .OO . Kotbelt, Mill Cr•lt Ad
Htl . M-F. 5-8. Stt. 1·5. C1ll
814 -44&amp;· 2311 .

3 bdr. Honey-tucklt Hill• wtltr·
II'W'tr -trlth ttrvicet provided.
no pttt, dep r~uirtd . Ctil
8 " -448 -1 1 34 _ Equtl Houtlng
Opportunity.

76

Second Avt., 114-MI-1171 .

Pltltic ctltem natt IPPI'Ov.ci ,
plastic tepdc tanlcl, pl111ic
culvtrtt, m11al culvert e. til ctps.
Ron EqntEnterpril•. Jacbon ,

a••

APARTMENT FOR RENT Now tccep11ng ~C~f)lic.t6ons fOf

c htir , hldt -t -bad. Mtytao
wesh11 , T1pp1n microwave
a....... qu..-. .Ut bedding. Cor-

offstrtt1 parking. Kitchtn turnithed with rtirig. Mit cl ..n·
oven. OW , oar. ditp .. hookup for
weth•· drytf'. Available April 1
fOf ftOn -smoking tingle or couple. No childrtn or pe1t. All
tltc1ric,
ptr month ln cludn wtt...-· MWtgt·t,..th. A
ont yMr i... t it rtquirtd. Ctll
814-448 -119o\ 9AM to SPM .

homt , 1 2xl&amp; fumi•tledorunfur -

nithld Bull'\lillt Rd . Ctll 814.W&amp;-0627 tfttr 3:00.

Motorcycles

1981 HondtfJISO cuttom. 1981
Suzuki GS 8150 G fully dre••ed .
1983 Hondt CB 1100 F. lik111
new , only 1.100 mill!ls . Bt rg atn
buyt. c.ueu -«e -oa4a .

Sota, chair, rocktt, raotlnll',

448-7879 .

46

74

Larry Wrlghl

Vtllty Fumiturt, new • ut.t .
~roe MCticn of !:JJIIIty fumi turt . 12111 tuttrR Ave ..
Gtllipolit.

OUIIIIty 2 bdr., 2 btth •pt. in
prime downtown location with

r~t

12'"-

2 bdr IS yr . holM, mint condiHon. A•trlcttd eubdNltion , 9
mil• from GtllipoUs. Call IU 258 -5200.

2 bdr ., "Nr Silver BridSit Plazl.
Nice carpttino. wattr • INtb18• peld. Cali 114-441 -7025.

••oo

a. Acreage

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Household Good a

DICK TRACY

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS IEquol Houllne 0ppo,.

C.ret•hr wtntld for '''·
oo...,a.x. 10 ht in. Cell 304-

Oh. No phone c.~ Is

&amp;1

Apartment
for Rent

Monday, March 24, 1986

Show

Q

SZA K

®l Eyowltnooa

SN P S Z

SX

.I \

f)

1•

A II ll V Y A \ I • ' I' X ll
S A \' \

C1J SCTV

Newo
il]) A Bodywotch Specie!:
In Soorch of 1ho Perfect
Dey (CC) Hoal1h. s1ross. ax- ·

•

PEANUTS
SHE WANTS YOU TO 6E
1-lER PARTNEII. IN THE
SPRING MIXED DOUBLES •
TENNIS TOURNAMENT I

- -----1

'

J

SHE'S

T~E ONE WIT~ THE

FAT FACE,THE FAT 60D'r'
AND THE FAT LEGS .. .

ercite, nutrition . and sex

are discussed. (60 min .t
(jj WKRP In Clnclnno11
I I :30 G (I)IHJ Tho Boat of Carson Tonight't guests are
Bob Uackar. Mark Hudson
and David Horowiu . (60
min .IIAI. In S1oroo.
1Il !!P&lt;&gt;riiContor
f.ll crJ® Tul
Q Cll Remington Steele
laura and Remington investigate the mvatery of a

C X .1 Z

~· r s zxr s

runaway car
which almost runs them

down . 160 min.IIRI.

(I) Auo11n City Llmito

fBI Tropper John, M.D.

•

I' I\ \

G T V \' T ll Y .1

r ..tei'IIIAf'• Cryptoquote: DICTATORSHIP IS LIKE A
GRF..AT BEECH TREE - NICE TO LOOK AT BUT
NOTHING GROWS UNDER IT.- STANLEY llAI .IlWlN
12'00 CII Boat of Groucho
(!) World l'up Skiing:
Women' I Giant Slalom
CIJ Ill il2l News
f.ll (I) Rawhlde
® MOVIE: 'Connery Row'
12:15 (I) En1ertainman1 Tonlgh1
12:30 U Cil (jJ) Lilt Night with
David letterman Tonighfs
guests are Tony Danza and ·
Ann Wedgeworth
t60
min.) In Stereo .

driverless

'

CII

Bill Cosby Show

® (I) @ ABC News Nightline

® MOVIE, 'The Girl
Called Hatter Fox'
_14 M.W IE ' 'Stella Dalles'
,_3 Dobte Gi llis
(!) Mark Sosin's Salt Water
Journol
CIJ MOVIE: 'The Proud end
tl'le Profane '
([) Barbour Repon
Q

1 ;00

...

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Emergency

Area deaths
Everett C. Ransom
Everett C. Ransom. 83, 5JJ79
State Route 338, Racine, died
Sunday morning at his residenCI'.
A retired coal miner and farmer .
he was born on May 15, 1902 at
Gauley Bridge, W. Va., son of the
late Lee and Joseptune Oxcher
Ransom. He is survived by hi5 wife.
Gay Farley Ransom, two daughters, Lillian Scarbrough, Napoleon,
and Treva L. KimPS, Racine; two
sons, Wilbur Ransom . DP!aware.
and Ronnie Ransom. Racine, and
four stepsons. Willard Lusll'r, Dry
Branch. W. Va.; Jeslee Lusher.
Graceland. Ky.: Uoyd Lusher.
Westville; Merman Lusll'r, Baltimore, Md . a sister. Ercie Moore.
Witcher Crff'k. W. Va .; and a
brother, Charles Ransom, Ceda r
Grove, W. Va .; several grandchild ren and great -grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his first wife.
Gertrude Proctor. a daughter. four
sons, one stepson. four brotll'r&gt;.
and two sisters. He was a memb&lt;'r
of the United Mine Workers of
America.
Funeral services will be held at 3
p.m Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev . Rowr
Grace will officiate and burial will
be In til' Let an Falls Cemeterv.
Friends may call at the funeral hnie
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

Elmer Sigman
Elmer Sigman, 75, of South
Fourth St .. Cheshire. died Sunday
at Holzer Medical Center.
Born in Poca, W.Va .. hewasason
of the late Rufus M. and Blanche
Lovejoy Sigman .
He was a retired constmction
worker and coal miner. He was a
graduate of Cheshire High School
and attended the Old Kyger
Freewill Bapti5t Church. He was a
World War II veterar and set'ced in
the European Theater ~h Prm·ost
Signal Corps Seniet&gt;. He was a
member of Lafayptte Post 'li of 1he
American Legion.
He Is su"·ived by his wife. Mary
M. Sigman; a son and daughter-in·
Jaw, John and Shirley Sigman of
Addison; two grandsons. John Jr.
and Randy Sigman, both of Addison ;

a sister,

Sylvia

grandchildren and eight great·
great-grandchildren.
Funeral serviet&gt;s wlll be at 11
a.m. Wednesday in Foglesong
Fur&gt;2ral Home, Mason. with t!v&gt;
RPv. LPster VanMeter officiating.
Burial will follow in Clifton Hill

p.m. and 7 to9 p.m. Tuesday. ln lieu
of flowers. the family requPSts that
donations be made to the hea11
fund.

Benjamin H. Cross
Benjamin H Cross. 97, of Mandan . N.D .. formerlyofRar1ne. died
Friday at the Mandan Hospital in
Nort h Dakota.
A retired farmer. he was born on
March 7, 1889 at Racine, the son of
the late David B. Cross and
Amanda Batey Cross. He IS
survived by his wife, Flora Rob&lt;'rts
Cross. Mandan. N. D., a daughter.
Pearl Holter. Mandan. N.D. and
two sons. Pearl Cross, Los An~ les,
Calif. and James Cross. Lancaster:
right grandchildren. and eight
grea I-grandchldren.
Besides his parents. he was
preceded in death by five brothers.
ttu-ee sisters. sewn half-brotll'rs.
and two half-sisters: and three
daughters. Lela Mac and Emma
Jane Cross. and Mrs. Grace Frank.
Funet·a J serviet&gt;s will b&lt;' held at I
p.m. Wednesday a 1 the Ewing
~u1&gt;2ral Home with the Rev. Stev••
DPaver officiating. Bmial wil be in
til' Oak Grow O?meten '. Friends
may call at the fuTFral nimefmm2
to l and 7 10 9 p.m on Tuesday.

Artley E. Blake
Art ley E. Blake. 95. Clifton. died
Sunday in l'eteran's Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy .
Born March 8. 1891. in Glenwood.
he was the son oft !I' late James and
Franci5 Spurlock Blake.
He was preceded In death by his
wife, Bessie Mae Blake.ln 1973, and
one daugltter. Ada On-son.
He was a retired coal miner.
S.nvJ\·ing are two daughtet·s.
Mrs. Loretta M. Stewart. New
Haven. and Mrs. Clarice F . Dunlap,
Clifton; one son, Gror~ A . St!'rling. Alaska: four si5ters. Mrs.
Alma Zimmerman, Clifton, Mrs.
Willa Jacobs, Mason. Mrs. Rena
Williams. Point PIPasant. and Mrs.
Mae Tolliver, G len~&lt;ood; nine
grandc hi ldren. 18 great -

Ce metery.

Friends may· call at the fu1&gt;2ral
home from 24 p. m. and 7-9 p.m.
Thseday.

Martha

E. Faso

Martha Elizabeth Ballah Fa so.
117. a resident of the Pomeroy
Health Care Center. died Sunday
evening a t Veterans Memorial
Hospital .
Born Oct. 5, 18\l! in Orient, Ohio.
she was a daughter of of the late
.James and Ella Fitzgerald Ballah.
She was a member of the Sacred
Heart Chu ll'h in Pomerov. ·
Sutvivors include a daughter.
Mrs. Robet1 rWinnle l Waldnig.
Racine; si.\ grandchildren , Mrs.
Melania Holman of Racine, Mrs.
Debra Petzo of Wheaton, Ill. . Mr.
Robet1 Waldnlg Jr. of Racine, Mr.
Steven McC!askle of Roanoke. Va ..
Mr. Tom McClaskie of Westport.
Conn , and Mr. Barry McClaskle of
London. Ohio; and nine great
grandchildren.
[n addition to her parents, she
was preceded ln death by her
husband. Frank Fa so and tl'.l.l sons,
Bob and Lewis.
Sen·JCI's "ill be 8: :ll a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred Heart Church.
Re'·· Father Anthony Giannamore
"ill officia te. Burtal -..ill b&lt;' in
Sacred Heart Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funerallnmefrom 2
to l p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday
with rosary scrvlet&gt;s at 3 p.m. on
Thesday.

MaiTiage licenses
Maniagc licenses haw b&lt;'en
issued In Meigs County Probat e
Court to Thomas Dean Foreman,
27. Middlepot1, and Robin Marlene
Boring, 32, Pomeroy: Loren Joe
Humphrey, 19. and Jamle Lou
Acrw. 20. both of Pomeroy

Weather forecast

ProSSf'r,

Elyria; and se\'eral nieces. nephews and cousins.
He was preceded in dea th by hts
parents. five sisters and a brother.
Services will be 1\'ednesda\·, 2
p.m.. at Rawlin g-Coat s~ Blower
Fun&lt;&gt;ral Home with RP' . William
Price officiating. Burial will be in
Gra,·pJ Htll CemetPry . Friends rna)·
cat! at the funeral home !rom 2to 4

Monday, March 24, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Surmy today wllh highs in the mid :ils. Mostly clear tonight with a
low near 40.
Mostly sunny Tuesday and windy with highs in the low 70s.
The pmbability of precipitation ls near zero through Tuesday.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through F'ridu.y
Chance of showers Wednesday, fair Thursday and Ftld~ - llighs
"111 be In the 00. Wednesday and In Ill' 50s Thursd~ and Ftld~.
Lows will be In lhe tos Wedncsday,ln the mid tosto mid 40s Twrsday
""d In the :.Is Ft-lclay.

One person wins Ohio lotto
CLEVELAND (UPil - One person won Ill' grand priZe in
Saturday night's Ohio Lotto drawing, worth nearly $1.5 miUion,
lottery officials said today.
The winner whO has one year to turn tn the winnlng ticket, wUi
receive $1,495:009. in ~annual Installments of $59,8l3.00 after taxes
are subtracted.
There were 265 people who picked five of IIV&gt; six numbers. worth
$1,068 apiece, and 13,684 who had four of the numbers. worth Sffi
apiece.
I f
The winning numbers were 2, 18, 19, 2'2, 23 and li. Ticket sa es or
the drawing were $3,774,631.
The jackpot for Saturday's drawing i5 at least $1 mJlllon.

squads busy
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports 13 ralls over the
weekend; seven on Satunlay and
six on Sunday.
Saturday at 12 midnight, Pomeroy to Country Mobile Home Park
on Rt. 33 for Henry Allen to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:29 a.m. to Holzer Medical
Clinic In Middleport for Gail Smiley
to 1:47
Holzer
Medical
Racine
at
p.m.
to Old Center;
Town Flats
for
Hayes McMurry who was dead oo
atTival; Pomeroy at 1:53 p.m. to
742% East Main tor Dora Hoiley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2:05 p.m. to Bradbury
Rd. for Wilbur Hanning to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport
Fu·e Department at 4:56p.m. to a
minor brush fire on Story's Run
Rd. ; Pomeroy at 10:54 p.m. to 404
Lasley St. for Harold Triplett to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Suroay at 6:51 a.m., Racine to
Main St. for Dan Shain to HolZer
Medical Center; Racine at 7:37
a .m. toRt. 338 for Edward Ransom
who was dead on arrival; Rutland
Wilcox
Holzer
Medical Center;
at
8; 17 toa.m.
transported
Adria
Syracuse Fire Department at 12:06
p.m . to a minor brush fire on Rt. 7;

Inside:
By lhe Bend ........ Paxes ~ "
Cla8sllleds .......•.. Paxes 7, 8
CooUI's-TV .............. Pagl' • 9
Dealbs ...................Page 10
Edllortal ... .............. Pagl' 2
Sports ................ Pages 3, 4

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

MUNICIPAL BONDS
Exempt From
Federal Taus

•

at y

e

Ohio tomls are free of stab
income taatl for Ohio rtsidtnll.

~~t~~~~~m~~a~~~~~~tt to
Divorce granted
Yvonne Slsron has been granted
a divorce In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court from Stewart Sisson on
grounds of gross neglect of duty.
Cella R. McCoy and John L.
Warner have been granted a
dlsroludon of their marriage.

Jury sel~tion begins

Jury selection began this moming In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court In the case of Mary Jane
Talbott, Thppers Plains, against
Raymond Conner. administrator of
the Ohio Bureau of Worker's
Compensation. Retired Judge John
c. Bacon is presidtng.
In other court matters, John
James Jr . of Pomeroy has pled
guilty in Meigs County Common
Courtwas
to aggravated
Pleascharge
The
filed againstassault.
James
following a Jan. 25 Incident when
Jacobs shot at Pomeroy resident
Robert Qualls. Sentencing for
Jacobs has been scheduled for May
7.
Tony Gilkey has been released
from probation by the court.

CONTINOEs
All .WEEK.

~J\IJE

~

By RICHARD C. GROSS
WASHINGTON iUPli - AvengIng U.S. warplanes and ships st ruck
a Ubyan anti-aircraft mi5sile :;;ite a
second time and destroyed four
Libyan missile boats In two da.ys of
fighting In the di5puted Gulf of ::;idra
area, the Defense D&lt;&gt;partmenr said
today.
DPfense Secretary Caspar I lo'etnberger said a fifth Libyan ml ssile·
armed patrol craft may have been
"severely damaged."
Two A-7 Corsair light ben 1bers
from the aircraft earlier San itoga
for the second time Mo oday
att.acked radar equipment lhat
guide Soviet-built SAM-5mi5sllesat

•---

$1JBOIS/ SSfl
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ELBERFELDs
,g,

POMEROY

FREE
PAlliNG

By Ni\NCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel News Staff
II doesn't matter whether y&lt; m're
... . "
In the county, out of the coun~ v. or
even out of the state. If you're
behind In paying child support,
sooner orlaterMelgsCounty'S&lt; 'hlld
support enforcement author !ties
are ll9ing to find you.
·
Wilham A. Hale, of St. Amant,
· · LOOK ' FOR 'l1IE
Pnmemy
aftetWI,
pfOilelllre
La., recently made a first payr nent
alleallon. As the !iln!am of wa1er was pumped hlp
llremeD were doing a roudDe check of pwnpktg
of
$15,00J on a Meigs County 1 :hlld
Into the air over the Ohio a rainbow was valble.
equlpmepl on dlls truck at tbe l'omeroy levee late
support arrearage of $32,000.
The collection was a comb !ned
effort of the Meigs County C"hlld
Support Enforcement Unit comprtsed of til' bureau of support, the
department of human serviCI's .a nd
the prosecu ting attorney's offlc e.
The prosecutor Is hired throu1 ~ a
oontract with the departmen t of
By BOB HOEHJCH
emergency home repair, water and
village hall at 6:30 this evening. human services.
Sentinel News Staff
sewer lines and clearance
Council representatives. chamber
Hale's $15,000 payment Is the
Middleport Village will apply for activities.
of comemrce membe rs and the largest first time payment on any
a $400.00l comprehensive housingFor a housing rehabilitation
recreation commi5slon as well as arrearage ever recorded by the
neighborhood revitalizalion pro- program under the grant. 51
Interested townspeoople are Invited Meigs County Bureau of SUP!tJOrt
gram grant through the Ohio percent of the residents In the
to the session.
accondlng to Jean Vineyard, oo DPpartment of Development.
deteriorating section must be in the
Council voted to horor the late reau director.
Middleport Council meeting in low and moderate Income bracket.
Art Lewis, Middleport native,
The money goes to the h :&gt;eat
!W"lar session Monday night used
Surveys can be conducted by the outlitandlng at hlete and coach who department of human servlce:s to
part of the session as a public vlllage to determine the percentage durtng hi5 career served as head reimburse past public assista, nee
hearing on the upcoming appllca - &lt;:i low and moderate Income football coach at Washington and paid by the county to suppor·t of
tlon which must be tiled by April 18. families In a section rut forms Lee and West VIrginia University. Hale's children.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported provided by the state must be used Councilman James Clatworthy outHale was arrested last fall In
the Department of Development
in such a survey. The state lists lined the accomplishments of the Meigs County on a felony be nch
has a total of $5.2 million to Middleport as having 44 to 46 late Mr. Lewi5. OfficialS of til' town warrant for non-support of I 'our
dlstlioote throughout Ohio in the percent bw and moderate Income wou ld like residents to phone or children and ondered to appea r in
grant program this year. Applica - families. However, the percentage write In their suggestions on how Meigs County Common Pll.eas
tions of comm unit ies will be divided may be higher tt a survey Is taken the town can best hooor Mr. Lewis. Court. After pleading guilty to
Into two sections- those with over locaily, Mayor Hoffman reported.
Councilman Bob Gilmore Indi- non-support before Judge Cha rles
10,00! population and those under and he said that II' has adequate cated It Is alleged that two trash Knight, Hale posted $500) cash o f a
10,000 for the purpose of decision ll'lp to handle such a survey If It haulers are worldng In the com- $00,())) bond and was released on
making by lhe DPpartment of smuld be needed.
munity without licenses. Pollee will his own recognllance.
DPvelopment.
The conditions of Hale's rele·ase
Mayor Hoffman wUI have Kim check out the matter.
Grant s are divided into two Shields, advisor 10 the town, assist
Council voted at the suggestion of were that he would make a $15 ,OOl
categortes, primary actlvltes and with the town's application and Councllman Jack Satterfield, to payment on the arrearage .,1nd
secondary activities. Primary ac- another ll'arlng will be held on secure pictures and plaques of the b&lt;'gln making $622 monthly &gt;oay tivit ies use for grants Includes Aprll 14. The town wlll know If Its late Don Roach, who served as a ments which would Include $52! of
rehabilitation of public residential application Is approved about eight pollc~ officer tor a number d yean&gt;, current support and $100 on til'
property, rehabiUtatlon of private weeks after the llUng deadline.
and t lr late chlef d police, Herbert remaining $17,00J arrearage.
residential property, emergency
Also, the Meigs County D&lt;&gt;p art During last night 's session, Gilkey, for placement on a wall In
home repair and new housing Mayor Hoffman announced that an village hail along with plaques of men! of Human Services now tx lids
construction. Council discussed the application filed with the Ohio other officials who have died .
liens on two semi-tractors of Ha le's
posslblilty o[ further housing devel - [)('part men t of Natural Resoutws
Attending were Mayor Hollman, to guarantee the remaining $17 ,OOl
opment at lhe complex on Hartin- for a grant which would have Clerk-treasurer Jon Buck and Is paid.
ger Parkway since under the pmvlded Utter containers for the councilmen Gllmore, Satterfield,
Vineyard says sll' is now er .couprogram new construction must be town has been turned down.
raging support parents to opt for
Horky and aatworthy.
carrtedout by a non-profit organiza A letter was read from a
tion and Middleport already has representative of Conrail indicating
such an established non-profit that Conrail personnel will mfft
group.
wit h council In the near future to
Secondary activit ies under the discuss an Improvement and ocprogram Unclude all other com - cess to the Ohio River project
shareholders. and with only one
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI I munity block development grant planned at the Hobson yards.
Shareholders of Kaiser Aluminum exception, and I'm not even sure
activities which support the comCouncilman Dewey Horton an- l!lld Chemical Corp. rejected a about that one, all oft !I'm lndlc-·ated
prehensive revltalllatlon of a tar- nounced that another planning takeover attempt by an Investor they were going to SU!JPOrt
geted deteriorated area and lhis session on the development of the group durtng a special voting management."
would Include such activities as Dave DUes Park will be held at
He said It would take a day . or so
process, delighted company otllto
count all of the consent re&lt; lOCaclais announced .
tion
forms signed by stockholdt !rs In
"Every Indication is that we
support
dIll' current manage 1ment
really beat them up pretty good,"
and
submltted
to Kaiser. ~ 1 not
Kaiser President Steve Hutchcraft
signing
eitll'r
form,
stockho lders
said Suroay.
automatically
approved
the curOklahoma financier Joseph
rent
management.
Frates and businessmen Alan Clore
WASHINGTON (UPII - The last manti( to 3Z7.5, equivalent to a
The Frates group, which has
and Charles Holmes had sought to
seasonally adjusted consumer cost of $323.~ for the government's
acquired
more than 21 perce nt of
overturn the current Kaiser board
prtce index fe ll by 0.4 percent in sample "market basket" of goods
Kaiser's
stock,
had 60du.ys In" 'hich
of
directors
and
assume
rontrol
of
February, the largest decline In and services that cost $100 In 1967,
to
convince
other
shareholder!' that
the
company.
more than :ll years, thanks to the department said.
In
management
was
a
change
Adjusted
for
seasonal
variations,
To
sueet&gt;ed,
the
Frates
group
had
sharply lower energy and food
needed
to
mak
e
Ka
iser
the
index
feU
0.4
percent
to
323.2
to
obtain
consent
forms
signed
by
costs, the Labor DPpartment said
percent, the first decrease since stockholders In possession d a competitive.
today.
December
1982 and til' largest drop majority of common by midnight
The group said it wan ted to
Without considering-seasonal va·
since
a
0.4
percent decline in Saturday.
streamUne Kaiser, whlch bst $433
ria lions, the consumer prtce lndeK
Hutchcraft told UPI, "We con- million In the past three years, and
for all urtlan wage earners and November 1953, according to a
Continued
on
page
10
.
tacted
all dour major Institutional ]rOduce as much alumlnurr 1 as
clerical workers fell by 0.3 percent

..

Middleport seeks $400,000
for 8rea development project
Extra Crispy-.
Tender and 1u, cv or the
ms1de and crL~n chy or
ouh.1de

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herbs and

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Weekday Special

Four Great Breakfasts.
1.

Made w11h the Colonel's

Three hotcakes fresh off the
griddle and two delicious sausage
patties.

secret blend ol eleven
herts and sp1ces .

2. Two fresh eggs cooked to

Kentucky Nuggets ·

order, two strips of thick-sliced
bacon, a buttermilk biscu~ made
from scratch and fresh home fries.

3. Two buttermilk biscuits made

from scratch, with a bov.i of sausage gravy and fresh home fries.

Rio Grande

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At. 60 and 1-64

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Kanawha City

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Two fresh eggs cooked to
order, a delicious sausage patty,
fresh home fries and a buttermilk
biscuit made from scratch.

Monday through
Friday any time
of day.
Extra! Unlimited refills of coffee!
Offtrup lrttMa~2.

1986

1-77 and Rt. 7

Barboursville

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Parkersburg

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A Multimedia Inc .

Sun, the Pentagon said. The radars
were replacements for another
radar system that was knocked out
In an air sllike earlier Monday,
Weinberger said.
•
There was no immediate damage
assessment after the second strike.
he said. He Indicated the Libyans
will continue to replace desu-oyed
radar parts with Soviet-shipped
stocks in Libya.
Officials said the second wave of
U.S. attacks was prompted by
Libya launc hing six more mlsslies
at planes from the three-carrier
American task forCI' in til' Mediter·
ranean north of Libya. Three ships
were in the Gutt of Sidra - two

crui5ers and a destm~er- south of
the "line of death" proclaimed by
Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy,
Pentagon officials said.
A Pentagon source said that
although the exercises are scheduled to run until April! they may
end as ear ly as Thursday because
"we don't need tocontinuetodo that
(carry on a conflict with Libya) ."
"It mlght have been over yesterday, but they keep taking aggressive action." the source said.
Weinb&lt;'rger hinted to reporters
that the operation may be called off
before April 1, saying the "exact
time of completion is up to the O&lt;'et
Continued on page 10

Enforce11rnent officers going
after noJtt·suppot!_ violators

TL'

rsm

en tine

U. S. ~~~trikes back
secon(l time; Put all
emba~!~sies on alert

ELBERFELDS

EASIER

ostJ in rmals

March 25 '1986

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~

Rutland at 1:49 p.m. to Danville for
Lucille Jude to HolZer Medical
Center; Middleport at 2:26p.m. to

.rally

"voluntary" wage withholding by
employers when it comes to setting
up support obligations. She says
this ls the simplest way for support
parents to make their scheduled
payments.
David Jenkins, human services'
child support enforcement officer,
agrees that "voluntary" withhold Ing Is the best way to handle support
payments.
Jenkins says there are ··numer·
ous new enforcement tools availa ble" to Insure that support pay ments are made by parents who
have Ill' means to pay.
Since the enactment of I_OIIj~

enforcement laws, the department
of human services may request an
officer of the lnternal Revenue
Service be sent directly to the home
of a support parent to collect the
money directly . The department
may also Intercept federal and
state tax returns and may attach
unemployment and worker's compensation with or without the
permission of the support parent.
Jenkins notes that these services
"are ava ilable to both the parent
receiving public assistance and the
parent not receiving public
assistance.''

!.!lll"'o~F~TII=E~YEAR

- Carl Hysell was named "Citben of
the Year'' and presmted a plaque at the Satunlay night regional
meeting of Clvlan Clubs held at the Salls wry SchooL Steve PoweU,
president of tbe Meigs Club, made tbe presmtatlon to Hysell, Meigs
juvenile officer, and cornpBmeoted his roncem lor youth and the
many houl'!l spent showing them II' cares. Others receiving awards
were Belty Cleland, co-founder of tbe "I Can Cope" program, given
by the Pioneers Ladies Club, Marietta; Wesley Walker, Belpre. an
ootstandlng volunt..,r, Belpre Clllltan; and Ted Rauer from the
Marlelta Men's Club. GeraldPoweU'scloglngcliiSSeS presented tiM&gt;
program.

Kaiser Aluminum fights takeover bid

Consumer price index falls
by 0.4 percent in February

possible.
Kaiser Chairman Cornell Maier
said, "Kaiser's shareholders obviouslY shared our serious concerns
over Ill' condltklnallty and speculatlveness of the Frates-CloreHelmes proposal as well as the
business histories of certain
members of the group."
The United Steelworkers Union,
which represents Kaiser employees. also opposed til' takeover.
"I don't wanl them to take over
because they're less concerned
about us than Kaiser Is," said Dan
Bass, a 10-year employee at
Kaiser' s Mead smelter near Spokane. "They (the Frates grou~ l
don't have any devotion to the city.
At least Kaiser has some devotion."
The late Henry J . Kaiser got Into
the aluminum buslnes 40 years ago
when he leased the nearby Mead
smelter and Trent wood rolling mill

from the gon'rnm~nl .
DPmand for alu minum rrrated
by the post -war boom pald off for
Kai5er, who acquired another
smelter at Tacoma and built other
plants ln \\'Pst Virgin ia and
Louisiana .
But declining alu minum demand
coupled with s!-;y 11:&gt;eketlng electricIty rates caused serious problems
beginning In t II' late 1970s. Elcctlicity Is a key ingredient In the
production of aluminum .
"In a fivP-year period. we went
up 900 percent 1in electric rates I
and It was catastrophe," said
Spokane Kais~r officia l Chris Carlson. " II caused us to hemorrhage
and hemotThag•' bad."
Since then, Kaiser has won wag&lt;'
and benefit concessions from employees, and Is now seeking a rate
break from the Bonneville Pl.lwer
Administration .

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