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                  <text>Monday,April21, 1986

Two treated

after wreck
Two Masoo County women were
Injured In a two-vehicle accident at
Thppers Plains early Sunday, the
state hlghway patrol said . .The
accident remains under lnvestlga·
lion, troopers said.
The patrol said an unknown
vehicle reportedly pulled from Ohio
681 ooto Ohio 7 at 6: 25 a.m. Into the
path t1 a southbound car driven by
.ilerntce Bays, 47, Rt. 1, Point
Pleasant, causing Bays tostrtkethe
other car In the left front. •
R£Portlng Injury were Bays and
a pasaenger, Carla Coles, 28, Point
Pleasant. Both were taken to
Holzer Medical Center by emer·
~ pemnnel. They were both
·treated and released for mild
contusions, a hospital spokesperson

APRIL SPREE DF SIVII&amp;S

Boston
·Marathon
..

Scholarship winners

PhoWs, report on Page 4

!ltory,

.Library lines
.
Column on Pqe 5

1

Area death

1

Emmett Davis

MAKE rr YOURSELF- U your heart beats for a

son

retired operating englneerw ho works with wood as a
retirement hobby, copied his )YOOden RoDs from a
magazine photo.

IIA&gt;Il&lt;; Royce, you might copy Charles P. BaUey,

Flatwoods &amp;ad, Pomeroy, who cr eated a'l'epBca In
gll&lt;;terlng cedar. Not having a pattern, l!aUey, a

Emergency squads
answer five calls
Meigs County Emergency Medica l Service 1-eport s five calls over
the weekend; two on Saturday and
three on Sunday.
On SatUiday, Syracuse at 1:03
a. m. to Minersville lor Marie Rizer
to Pleasant Va lley Hospital; Mid·
dtepon at 1:00 p.m. to 967 South
Third for Pauline Taylor to Plea sant Valley Hosptiat.
Sunda y, lfr 16 a.m., Tuppers
Plains transported Edna Walker to
Veterans Memor ial Hos pilal ;
Tuppers Plainsat6:09p.m. treated
but did not transpor1 Louise Poley;
At6:26p.m ,.PomeroyandTuppers
Plains were called to an auto
accident at tile intersec tion of Rts. 7
and 681; Pomeroy transported
Ojrta Coles and Bernice Bays from
the acc ident to· Holzer Mroical
Center; Tuppers Plains transported Tanya Savo and Gloria
Wheeler from the accident to St.
Joseph's Hospital.

WWiam E . Brown, 53, of Harts·
vllle, S.C., died Sunday evening at

Veterans Memorial

Meets Tuesday

Sa turday Admissions .. James
Hayr&lt;'s, Middleport; Mabel JOIU1·
son, Clifton, W.Va .; Jolul Call, Long
Bottom; Cec'l Frazier, Middleport .
Saturday Discharges--Juanita
Jenkins, Arlene Taylor, Thelma
Grueser. Jennie Bass.
Sunday Ad miss Io ns-- E dn a
Walker, Springfield; Willis An· .
thony, Middleport.
Sund ay · Dischar ges .. Ja mes
Haynes.

The Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Sheila
Curtis .
The Auxiliary of Veterans Mem·
oriai Hospital will meet at 1: 30p.m.
·tUesday in the conference room.

Meets tonight

Carolyn Sue Payne, Cheshire,
and Kenneth Harry Payne. Pomeroy. have !Ued tor a dissolution of
thr lr marriage in Meigs County
Common Pleas Cou11.

ltacine Vlltage council will meet
in recessed session tonight iMonday), 7 p.m., at the Shrine Club
Park buDding.

Exempt From
Federal Taxes

Weather forecast
Occasional rain today, with ,
temperatures falling Into the low
405. Showers or snow flurries likely
tonight, with a low In the mid :lis.
Variable cloudiness Tuesday, with
blgbs betwren 40 and 45.

Exteacled Foreclllt
WeE 1 17 lluoulh Frld~
F* WedMIMI•y IIIICilbunday,
wllh a cblace of llllowen Friday .
.... wll bela lbe. Wemeaday, .

IOIZEII
CltDIC£
Of
14- OZ. Sill
CIOII,
011 u oz. COlD
CIIAII

NIM
3.99 RETAIL

349
t.:OREAL:

TilE-IFF

IIUEUP IEIICMI cumtS

z•·s

MEMIEI' OF

EXCHANGE

r - - - - - - - - - --l..---------,----------------1

SERVI~tTJIR®

Spring

1m'S

I RILL

".

CASSrmlllft
ftlllmllti!WIE
AlliSIS

Exferk&amp;
Latex no•
House

Pailt

ExterkX
Oil Base
1-Wse

&amp;:,,~

~

Interior Latex
Semi-Gloss
Paint, mfr. list
price $12.99

Exterior Latex
Flat House
Paint, mfr. list
-price $10.99

Exterior Oil
Base House
Paint, mfr.. list
price $13.99

~,.g.

mWton, bad the six numbers drawn

In Saturday's Ohio Lotto, state
lotterY otflclals say.
The. two winners will receive ,
their shareS In ai annual payments.

~-:;;;:;j
Lottery oltlclals bad not deter-

mJned how many tickets bad lour
and' five t1 the correct numbers.

999oanon _ f299Galkln 1299Gallon

1399Gallon.

Best Interior Latex
Wall o•coratlon,
mfr. sug.list $16.99

Best Exterlorlatex
Gloss Houae Paint,
mfr. sug. list $21 .99

Best Interior Latex
Best Exterior Latex
Satin Gloss Enamel, Flat House Paint,
mfr. sug.list $19.49
mfr. sug. lis_
t $19.99

1------------:-----------=----=-------=------l

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
405 N. 2ND AVE.

2tl
SERIUITS

FWIRDOI"III

5!!" 8!! 7!! 9!!
Interior Latex
Flat Wall
Paint, mfr. list
price $8.99

99

NIM

&amp;Trim

•to

Two

at y

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pogoo 25 Cent•
A Muhimedlo Inc. N-apa,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, April 22, 1986

MIDDLEPOIT

992-3748
.

CONVENIENT OFf THE STIEn PAlliNG

litter
program
outlined
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff writer
Representatives from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
were in Pomeroy Monday to
discuss aspects or Meigs County's
$76,096 litter grant for 1986.
According to Mary Wiard, chief
of ODNR's Office of Litter Prevention and Recycling, Meigs Is in the
Drs! year of the " Implementation
phase" of its litter program.
Since the Implementation phase
usually lasts about three years,
Wiard says the county is likely to
funded for two more years after
1986. "The program ts intended to
be on-going," she adds.
After three yea rs, the county's
lUter program would enter the
continuation pha se and funding
from tile state would be reduced,
perhaps as much as 50 percent.
If the litter program is tben
expected to run at the same
capacity as before the reduction,
local funding would have to aug·
m ent the state funding.
yet, Meigs' 1986 program will
not be In tuU operation untll a Utter
collection supervisor Is hired by the
Meigs County Commission. Steve
Powell, program director, expects
this position may be filled by
Wednesday's regu lar meeting of
the commission.
In addition to program director
and collection supervisor, the ooly
other paid position allowed by the
grant's guidelines is that of enforce·
menl otneer. Dan Levingston.
assumed his duties as enforcement
officer on March 1, He works 35
hours per week.
'
Levingston Is a commissioned
deputy sheriff, but he is not on the
sheriff's payroll.
Levingston reports he has 1'1'cetved numerous complaints of
Utter areas In Meigs County. some
of which are on priva te pmjJPrty.
He says many of the problem areas
on private property "have already
been cleaned up."
Attmugh Lev ingston has not yet
cited anyone for Uttering. he say she
will when necessar y.
Anyone cited for llt tering would
be required to appear in Meigs
County Cou11 before Judge Patrick
O'Brien and could be ftned up to a
maximum of $500.
Levingston qualifies lor tile Job
Training Program Aot iJTPA 1
through the Gallia-Melgs Community Action Agency . This means that
a portiOn of his sa lary can be
refullded to the county through
SfPA. thu s making litter grant
oollars go fat1her.
•
Powell says ·he hopes that
someone who qualifies for JTPA
wUI also be hired for the collection
supervisor's positiOn, thu s extend·
lng grant dollars even more.
Powell Is also making attempts to
link tbe lltter p!pgram with others,
such as the county extension office
In order to extend his budget.
Regarding actual Utter clean-up,
Powell says volunteers from local
civic groups such as Jaycees, 4-H,
and hoy and girl scouts, will be
organll.ed to pick-up littered areas.
Summer youth and litter corps
workers wilt clea n-up utegal dump
sites. General relief workers are
also to be used to clean up dump
sites.
Use of coun ty and township
trucks to hau l Utter wUI be
negotiat.ed as needed PoWI'II said.
Following clean-up, area garden
clubs and conservation leagues wUI
be oontacted about planting trees to
Improve the cleanro area and
thereby eliminate the probabllty of
that area agaln becoming a dumpIng site.
•
Another main aspect of the litter
program Is education.
A curriculum Is being prepared
by Jolul Cootanzo, of the county
bOard of education, to be used In the
•fail In the three school distrtcts.
Containment Is another major
(Continued on page !OJ

as

INVESTMENT SECUIITIES

Wednellday momln1,
llle mid
Ihe ll!ld
411 early 'Dunday IIIICI from the
!Nil 4811 to ~ low • Friday

each worth more Iban $1.7

3.69 VAWE

SWENEY CARTWRIGHT .&amp; CO.

lbe • Tllunday IIIICI raDPnl from '
lbe . , . . . . to lbe ,.,. Friday.
O.ailllfiM ._ wll be In lbe mid or

Two share iackpot

119

Sill CIIE SPmn

NOW

.

!OZ.
IIOW

593-8805

lnnst1111nt

small private burial of hl~ daugbter's remainS.
· Marvin Resnik of Akron, Ohio,
says the family expects to get the
remains sometime next month,
thus closing one chapter In the
tragedy of the space shuttle .
explosion.

CLEVELAND (11Pl) -

311

HUAIOII
UNSUimD

Ohio Bonds are free of state
in&lt;omt taxes for Ohio rnidonh

NEW YORK (UPIJ- The father

ticketS,

12 oz.
IIOW

SURE
IE.ImiT

MUNICIPAL BONDS

Ask to wed
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs Count y Probate
Court to Raymond Warren Kimes.
23, Clifton Co., N.Y., and Regina
Rene Lee. 18, Meigs County.

1111«10
!01111111 fl((

II'r;;;;;i=~====:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;1

of Challen~r astronaut Judith
Resnik says he bas made plans for a

"''""'from

II

DtaE STIEIICTli

To end maiTiage

Plans private burial

IIIPI!I' •

IYUITI

Happenings in ,Meigs County

WUliam E. Brown

.

•

P&amp;«e 10

Meigs'

Emmett Davis, 81. of Rt. 681,
Darwin, dted Saturday at Veterans
Memortai Hospital after a brh&gt;f
illness.
Born In Mann, W.Va., Mr. Davis
was a
of the late Alex and Avie
Johnson Davis. He was a retired
bus drtver and fireman.
Surviving are his wife. Sophia
Shockley Davis; two daugbters,
Juanita Jenkins of Darwin and
Naomi Powell rl. AmarUlo, Tx.;
lour grandsons; two granddaugh·
ters; nine great grandsons and two
great granddaughters; fotU" brothi&gt;rs, Eugene Davis of Huntington,
W.Va., Paul Davis of Weston,
W.Va ., Jesse Davis of Salt Rock,
W.Va. and Alex (Budl Davis of
Clarksburg, W.Va.; one sister, Mrs.
Harold (Bernice) Jolulson, Salt
JWck, W.Va.
.
In addition to his parents, he was
preceded In death by a brother,
Clark; a daughter, Mrs. Betty
Hawkins; an Infant daughter ; and
five grandchlldren.
Services wlll be 1 p.m. Tuesday at
Blgony-Jordan Furrral Home in
Albany with Rev. David Curfman
officiating. Burtal will be In Miller
Cemetery In Lawrence County.
Filends may call at the fu neral
home after 2 p.m. Monday.

RJchland Memorial Hospital in
Columbia, S.C.
Born Sept. 19, 19:rl at Laurel Cliff,
he was retired from the U.S. Air
FOI'Cl' and was a veteran of the
Korean "and VIet Nam Wars. He
was a mernberofthemasontc lodge
aitd the 4th St. Baptist Church In
Hartsville.
SurvlvOI'S Include his wife, Rutil;
a 90n and daugbter·ln·law, Randy
and Shannon Brown; another son,
Bill Brown; his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Frick of Pomeroy; a
brother, Robert E . Frick t1 Michl·
gan; 'three sisters, Linda Pullins
and Paula HaD, both of Pomeroy,
andJerrt Ball of J acksonville, Fla.;
several aunts and uncles Including
Qorotlzy . Clark and VIrgil (Boi
~wn. both of Pomeroy; and
riumerous nleces aitd ·nephews In
ihe local area.
'Arran~ments are pending from
Brown-Pennington-Atkins Funeral
Horne, HartsvWe, S.C.

Photo

Vot.36, No .269
Copyrighted 1986

on•Page 8

Lawman
retires
on

.

e

Said.

photos

ltiUI alita
DOC 011 CAl
COWlS

NOW

•

Child dies
following
accident

('

11500

- ¥.
•.

'

.

.
tllc actual buUdozlng. Buck Hall L~ sho"n working Saturday. althoup
wet weather has put the dozing on hold, work will continue and grass wW
be planted as sooo as the weather clears. Park equlpmenl wW also be

EXCAVATION UNDERWAY - Work has begun lor a recreation
area on the land between Ebenezer St. IUid Monkey Run In Pomeroy.
The vlllage announced AprU 7 that It Is Ieasbtg the land from local
buslnessmM, Jay HaD for $1 a year. HaD is donating the excavation
work fort he park area with his brothers. Buck HaU andJerr:v HaD doing

installed In Ute near future and park committee, made up of village
residents, has been fonned to continue the planning of recreational
facllltles within the village.

Pomeroy-Mason bridge repair
may close structure 6 months
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel correspondent
Syracuse Village Counclllearned
Monday night that the PomeroyMa son Bridge will be closed tills
summer for repair for an estimated
six months.
Mayor Ebcr Pickens presented a
letter from the Ohio Department ri
Highways informing council that
the br idge would be closed. It was
notro that the deck wUI be replaced
along with a pier.
State Route 124. through Sy ra·
cuse. was designated as one of the
detour routes to the new bridge at
Ravenswood.
The state wUI maintain alternate

cerning problems with Cable TV.
Council has been very displeased
with cable teception and the fact
that the cable system is dropping
WOUB.
Crow t6l(l''c(fancil to draw up a
resolution for in vestigation con·
cerni ng llreach or contrac t and to
join ct her villages in a possible suit
if necessary.
A tetter was also received fi·om
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
asking .if SyracuS&lt;' Village offiCials
would be int erested in attending a
meet ing of representatives from ali
area communities t.o discuss problems and possible ac tion which
could be taken conceming theca ble
sr1v ice. Council expressed interest
in attending such a mee ting and will
notify Mayor Hoffman of Its desire
to attend.
Self·lnsuran re p-ogram
Council also Nreived a Jetter
from Sou theastern 'Ohio Manage·
ment Consultants, Inc.. Ironton
regarding a joint-&lt;.'Ounty seUinsu rance program.
The forming ol the joint-county
self-insurance program stems from
the lacl tha t vil lages In Ohio are
currently having difficulty in obtaining insurance to cover liability
of the village. it s officers and
employes. Also, a village Is now
required. by the new sovereign

routes and do what repair Is
nlo'Cessary after the detours are no
longer necessary. No date was
given as to when repair would
begin .
Mayor Pickens sa id· he cailro
ODOT at Marietta and he was
informro that the bridge would only
he closed for three months. How·
ever . the Information In the letter
gave an estimatro six months.
Pickens was asked ~ one lane
traffic could be malntainro. Ac·
cording to the mayor, the bridge is
not wlde enough to accomoda te
traffic and equ ipment.
Meeting with council was village
solicitor, Frroerick Crow 111 , ron·

Efforts underway
to promote levy
By KEVIN KELLY

.

OVP staff writer
With an ello'Ction In two weeks,
backers of the one-mUI mental
health levy campaign are consoU·
dating efforts to alert the public loa
stronger mental health program in
the area.
Plans for a telephone campaign
and postcard distri bution were
discussed during Monday's meet·
ing of the Ga llla-Jackson·Melgs &amp;18
Mental Health Board.
Fonner Board President Ro·
berta Holzer told the board teie·
phone techniques were discussed at
a recent levy campaign meeting.
Plans are being fommlatect for the
distribution of leaflets, airing of
radio spot endorsements and con'tactlng area ministers.
Officials said it may be likely the
postcard distribution rriay be done
more heavily In Meigs County and
telephone contact •• may be done
prtrnarlly in Gallla County.
The levy is expectro to help the
hoard develop an umbrella of
mental health services to the
community, ranging from programs at Woodland Centers Inc. to
senior citizens activ ities in all three
counties.
648 board director Dr. Romola
Hopkins .said that In light of
dwindling federal funding, the levy
money wUI assist rural mental
health boards ~tabllsh programs.
The government didn't Intend to
continue fUnding Indefinitely , she
said.
.The board su bcon~racts with
sever al service agenCies In the
three counties. U the levy passes
May 6, It wlll generate a total of
$861,!0l. Gallla County, with !Is
~

larger Indu strial baS&lt;'. will provide
the Uon's share at $459,!0l. while
Meigs County will co·nttibut e
$189,000 from its tax b~ and
Jackson County, $213,000.
Tl,le levy money, Hopkins said, Is
meant to provide "a stable S&lt;'t of
community S&lt;'rvlces addressi ng
pmblems.' '
In other action, the 648 board
reviewro a list of funding requests
for fiscal year 1987 from ar ea
agencies subcontracting with tile
board and approved prPlimlnary
amou nts it will provide to the
programs, based on carryover and
availability of federal and state
funq s, Hopkins ex plal~ro .
Jackson County Board on Aging
re:Juested $12,700 and will get
$6,1XXJ; Gallla County Board OJ!
Aging requested $7,2M and wUI
receive $6,!0l; Jackson County
Cl1Ud Development Center was
granted Its full req uest for $9,100;
Rio Grande Community Educa·
Uonat Counseling Center wilt get
$18,1XXJ, $2,000 less than Its request;
and Woodland Centers, which
r.e:juested $1,267,486, wUI get
$1,117,486. The board Is negotiating
wi\)1 three arm alcoholism and
drinking problem treatment cen·
ters on funding.
Hopkins said final action on loose
amounts won't be taken until May.
Hopkins told . tile board Us
application for residential funds tor
the establishment of crisis beds and
admlnlstratkin of the HUD apart·
ments at Racine was accepted by
the government. The hoard must
oow submit a proposal, she said.
" It's Interesting that there were
turn downs In the state. but we were
oot one of. them," Hopkins said.

immunity bill, to idemnlfy Its
employes against most UahUity.
Council expressed Interest In join·
ing the council.
Council. In other bu siness. hired
the lollowing as fuil time life·
b'llards:
Sherr! Sisson, 'JTaci
Hubbard, Scott McPhail and Dald
Deem. l-lirro as part time guards
were Michl King, Annette Cardone
and Sue Fry . Meeting with council
to review ap plications lorlifegu " rd
duty was Marty Morarlty. pool
manager.
Mayor Pickens and Gene Imboden, fire chief, told council that
the fire truck tha t has been
refurbished wut be picked up today.
trnooden reportro tilat the truck
will he lis ted with the state as a
recertified vehicle.
Jim Hill. councilm an , extended
thanks to members of the health
department for Its assistance In
helping council wit h sanitation
problems within the village.
Council asks that if &lt;11yone knows
of any. existing problems that have
not been eliminated to please ootl!y
council.
Mending In addition to those
named were Glen Cundiff, Jack
WUliams, BUt Arnott, Ernie Slssion,
and Kathryn Crow, council
members, Janice Lawson, clerk,
and Jean Hall.

QUARTER FINALS - Four seniors of the Meigs
IUgh School Quiz Team are In the quarter finals of the
llonor Society compelltk&gt;n lor smlor studenll! of
teams In the areaiUid wW beseeri In that competition
at 6 p.m . Saturdjly on Channel 15 TV, WfAP,
~

J

Cynthia Marie Hensley, J.8.
month-old daughter of Charles
Eugene Hensley and Laura Dar·
lene Hensley, Tuppers Plains, died
Monday evening In the emergency
room at St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, w. Va. of injuries
suffered when she was run over by
a truck.
Witnesses Indicated to Meigs
County Sheriff Howard E . Frank,
Deputy Kenny Klein, and Paul
Gerard, Investiga tor !or the Prosec·
utor's office that the father acclden·
tally struck the child as he backed
up the truck shortly after 6 p.m.
Tuppers Plains squad members
attempted to resusitate the chUd
before transporting her to St.
Joseph's Hospital.
Dr. James Conde, Meigs Coonty
coroner, was ootlfled. While In
contact with hospital personnel, he
was advised that the chUd died as a
result of a massive head Injury. No
autopsy was ordered.

Beautification
effort begins
Combined efforts between Pomeroy VIllage and the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce are under·
way to beaulify the downtown area
of the village. Thirty flowering crab
trees have been purchase(! by local
merchants and wUI be planted
along Main Street as soon as
weather permits. Vlllage strEet
workers will do the planting.
Sandy lannarelli, representing
the merchant's association, was at
Monday night 's meeting thanking
council tor permitting the trees to
be planted and for donating the
labOr to do the planting.
lannarelll asked council If an
ordinance would be needed to deal
wlth vandals who might harm the
trees, however, Mayor Richard
· Seyler said the village already has
an such an ordinance.
Jolul Koebel oft he Columbia Gas
Co. made a " routine" visit to SEe If
councU had any problems to report
and to assure council that gas rates
would not he raised In 1986. A
moratorium on raising gas rates Is
now In efflo'Ct due to a ruling hy the
Public Utllltles Commission of
Ohio, Koebel said.
Koebel suggested ·that council
give the gas company prior notice
when street resurfacing Is planned
for the village, thereby allowing the
company time to conduct a "leakage survey."
.,
The gas company conducts leak·
age surveys In business districts oo
a yearly basis, Koebel said, but
surveys residential areas onlv
(Continued on page 10)

Parkel'l!burg. 'The four team inembers defeated
Waterford IUid Fort Fry to earn their way Into the
quarter ftnal competilioiL 'The group Includes. front, I
tor, Gary Colemall; Fady Advisor Rita !Iavin, Soall
Pullins; back, Jan Dunt and '11m Sloan.

'

�Anduj~,

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

,,

StoCkman's primary insight William F. Buckley Jr.

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE.~TS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publisher
BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher (Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMB ER of Th£' Un!IM Pres!l In tematlonal. ln land Dally Press Assocla·
!ion and the American Nt&gt;Wspaper ~ubll!lhers A.ssoc la tlon .

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than :JXJ words
lon~ . All leners are subjE"C t to OOiting and mu st be signed with name. address and
tf'l ~h one numbf'r _ No uns igned letlers will be published. Leller5 should bt' In

good tas te .

a dd res s ln ~

Is sues. no! person allllrs .

::The rules change
· ' The argument over what to do about state-sponsored terrorism can be
. stated In two Policy choices: 1. Stop It wltoout blowing up the lnnorentwlth
'the guilty. 2. Respond in kind.
: ·Jsrael practices the second pollcy wltoout apology. As r1 Monday, April
• 14, unable make the first policy work, the United States adopted the second.
· Does It work? Israel says It does. It points to decreased terrorism in Its
· own territory and f!'w incidents Involving Its state airline as proof that
· quick and violent retribution works.
Some critics of Israel's policy of striking at areas where ll'rrorists live,
are trained or are given haven, say it Is only makes things worse.
· · They note that Israel still suffers occasional bloody attacks, usually
against civilians, and contend that El AI has Installed such strict security
measures )hat !he terrorists ran boast they have mad!' Israeli travel
t;rilserable.
· · They also say Israel's policy kills people who have no part in terrorist
acts In the effort to punish toose woo did . And this, they say, has stopped
movement toward peace In the MiddlE' East and severely &lt;damaged
Israel's Image around the world .
' 'u.s. officia ls at times have supported Israel's "eye !or an eye" policy
and , when it ha• led to operations such as the invasiJn of l1&gt;banon,
· crltici?.ed it. But except for one instance when the Navy shelled an area
·outside Beirut alter the U.S. Marines' barracks was blown up, It did not
. adopt the Israeli policy.
· Libya 's role in terrorism has been no secret. Moammar Khadafy
boastect abou t it in some incidents and U.S. Intelligence had the evide nce to
'link Libya to othrrs.
The United Stales tried to get i!S friends in Europe and elsewhere, many
victims of tcrrrorism themselves. 10 stop doing business with Libya, which
might have been an effect ive non-violent way to punish It for sponsoring
hnrorls m. But most of them, dependent on Libyan lrade and aware they
are fhe most convenient targets, refused . Polley Choice 2 iJrdeallngwith
· terrorism appeared to be a d!'ad end .
The United States also threatened to l'!'taliate against rerrorlsts when
they could be loca ted. But finding the people who actually had planted a
bomb or hijacked a plane was all bu~imposslble . The only rea l success wa s.
the capture of the Achille Laum hijackers, which was marred by the
escape of their leader. That version of the Israeli policy was a wry limited
SUC&lt;YSS.

Ml'anwhile, political pressure began mounting on President Reagan.
Some of Reagan's most loyal supporters publicly noted that while the
president talked tough about "swift and effective" retaliation, he really
was as helpless as Jln1my Cart!'r was Ul the Iran hostage crisis .
There were those who thought the Navy's manuevers near the Gulf of
Sidra last month were designed to provide a pret!'nse to hit Libya. which
took some losses, but did not clfer a full scale challenge to the U.S. ships and
planes. The exchange was followed within 11 days by tb: bombing of a
Berlin night club frequented by U.S. servicemen and one was killed.
American radio monitoring linked the Berlin incident to Libya.
For Reagan, that was it. Choice 1was ju.nked , Cholce2 adopted. For good
or evU, the stakes and the rules in a game much larger t~an any dls[:llle
between the American president and the Libyan leader were now changed.

Letters to editor
Wants bike returned
)'

To whomever took the toys
bicycle from Middleport Ell'nien·
tary School on or around Tuesday,
AprU 14, would you please return It
to the school. or brin g It to 1115 VIne

St. , Middleport ? There wm be NO
questions asked. Sam just wants his
bike back.
Judi Cowan

A double meaninng
'·
1:
I·

1
~

4
•
'

1

'I

I·
I
I
I

t.
1.

I·

There Is a lot to say, and a lot that
wlll be said, about David Stock·
man.'s book, one part of whlch has
been distilled and [:~~bUshed In
Newsweek, a second part due this
week. But already one point Is
cll'ar, and It would be a pity II In the
charg!?s and countercharg!?S In the
weeks ahead that point were lost.
Over my de'ad body.
What Stockman tells us Is that, to
use his own words, when he '.W'nt to
Washington he went as a "radical
Ideologue." Those too words do !Ill
emit easily from the lips of a
conservative, sumrnonllng as they
do images of Jacoblnlcal courts In
France sending people to the
gulllotlne, or Bolshevik planll(\rs
creating Gulag for dissenters.
But Stockman meant It In a
democratic context. He understood
his mandate\ ro be the fiscal
executor of the Reagan Revolutinn.
His job was to see toil that sufficient

dismantlement of "tederal pro·
grams took placE' to make possible
at one and the sam!' tbne tax relief,
a reduction In Inflation and a
balanced budget.
The scene Is very dram at lc when,
on Feb. 10, 1981, four days before
the presldl'nt Is scheduled to release
his budget plan, the full Cablnl't
meets, and Stockman Is, S1J to
speak, turned on. As In, "Go ahead,
Davkl, !I'll us what we're going to
cut.''
The

moment he hegins his
enullll'ratlon, he runs into opposl·
lion. Participants object to projected cuts at the e~~pense r1
business. But Stockman, thinking to
appeaSE' tbe Reagan Cabinet, finds
himself getting Into the mess that Is,
In fact, the subject of his book. In his
own words:
"I... began to tick r1f a number of
so-called social programs we
hadn't cut a dime out of. Social

THERE'S AP~OPoS'AL 10 RENAME
\HIS THE. •REAGAN NPITIONAL f0~5T'1

r----------------..,
NAME A N~IONAL FOREST AFTER A
MAN V&lt;IHO SAl~ ~EES CAUSE
I

If WE'RE GOIHG TO NAME ~METH\N6
Af1E~ HIM, IT SHOUL~ BE SOM~ING
1"0 Wf\ICI-\ l-IE'S MA~E A ~UBSTANTIAL
CO~TRIBUnON

-c·

c::,-

VOLLUTION'!'THAi'S AN OPP IVEA ...
4

0

01-\ .. :Tl\E~ HOVII AeoUT TI-lE

.? ..... -·

.

''REAGAN NAiiONAL PEBT"'?

..

f'ERFEC.T
)

'

Khadafy ignored in '69
WASHINGTON - In past reports, we have charged that
Moammar Khadafy could not have
gained power In Libya without the
sufferance of the Nixon administration. Hl're's morP of the hidden
history:
Richard Nixon and his foreign
policy whiz , Hl'nry Kissinger, stood
by while Kh ada fy . as boss.of a tiny
gang of young compirators, sezed
power In Libya in 1969. The Nixon
team also showed no particular
concern when the usurper dis·
played all the symptoms of a deep
hostlllty roward the United States.
· From the Orst day, the Khadaty
revolution acted out a progressively
widening animus so blatant as ro
make the new regime's survival a
distinct frontal challenge ro U.S
Interests. His attitude toward tre
United States was belllcose. llewas
clearly determined to shift the
balance of power in the Arab world
away from conservative, proWestern, commNce- as-usual
quiescence to radical, anti·

T-.e deadly

Today in history

·"'"

In part through my carelessness they were now about ro fence off
enormous chunks r:i the budget and
say, In effect, "See, we haven't •
rouched these! ' WI' were turning
Into The Gang That Couldn't Cut
Straight."
It took Stockman a very long time..
before he discovered that the
Reagan administration, for In·
stanoe, simply stopped thinking
about Social Security as a malleable budg!'l fea:ture. If he had known
that, he says, he would not have
rngaged In the struggll' ro begin
with, lor the very simple reasotl
that the struggle was not winnable.
And he says as much about the
Gramm-Rudman blll, whoSE' lm·
pact he was asked about by
Newsweek editors: "On the true
core of the wellarl'·statl" spending
- about a ha~·trllllon dollars for
everything from Social Security to
farm subsidies- Gramm-Rudman
won't have any Impact because
most of that Is exempted." In sbort,
he roncludes, Mr. Reagan has been
ll)llng to square a circle. And
circle-squaring expeditions don't
work. The laws of geomell)l forbid
that they soould work.
·
Only "a dictator," Stockman
roncludes, could get Congress to
agree to the kind of cuts thai would
result In budget·balancing whlll'
maintaining current levels of de·
tense and taxation. We wlll need to
see from episodes to come whether
Mr. Stockman has so far deserted
his attachment to -his radical
Idealism as to believe that the way
to avoid deficits Is simply ID raise
taxes. But he has singled out the
most Important impediment to
serious fiscal reform.
In 1940, when Social Security
il"gan , life expectancy was 65. At
'ffi, Americans qualified lor Social
Security.
In 19&amp;&gt;, life expectancy Is 75. And
Americans get Social Security at
age 65.
These data wr!'nch at the whole
scaffolding of the welfare state.
Unless Social Security Is made to
correspond to contributions to
Social Security, you arl' left with an
imbalanre that mocks at the Idea of
the Reagan Revolution.

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear

Western , commerce-be-damned t.he oil fields from sabotage. The
OA contended that the Marines
agitation.
As a determin ed revolutionary wouldn't even be necessary, that It
and religious ?.ealot driven at on&lt;'t' would he simple to engineer a coup
by idealism and hatred, Khadafy and replace Khadafy with a leader
was obllgl'd to take steps that were more friendly 10 the West.
Action against Khadafy, whether
dramatic , shocking and punitive.
He outlawed the teaching of overt or covert, could also have
English in the schools, harassed reen justified. We would have been
American PeacE' Corps volunteers acting not as an aggressor but as
out of Libya, turned Christian the defenci&gt;r of the lawfU l governchurches and Jewish synagogues ment, Interceding at It s request to
Into mosques and decrred that all oust a usurper.
Instead, Washington backed
businesses must be owned by
down ev!'ry time Khadaly staged
"Arab Libyans.''
Then he began a campaign to an Incident to test U.S. resolve. In a
I'XIX'I Americans from their great matter r1 months, the United States
air baSI' at Wheelus. This was the began evacuating all military
home of thousands of U.S. airmen, personnel from Wheelus without
training center br NATO bomling even contesting the matter. As the
forces and bastion of Western · Americans departed, Khadafy trl·
umphantly pledged "to put all my
security In the Mediterranean.
country's
resources at the disposal
Khadafy was conslderl'd so
r1
the
confrontation
states."
vulnerable .at first, according ro a
WI'
have
It
from
Henry
Kissinger
Pentagon assessment, that an
that
the
U.S.
government
debated
Invasion by too Marine divisions
whetll!r
to
accept
or
reject
the
was considered more than enough
Khadafy
roup
and
that
Kissinger
ro topple his revolution and secure

I noted. with Interest, Bob oourt upstairs and the autoor
Hoeflich's column of April 2nd In · presumably delivered suds to hlrn .
Milton writes with tongue In
which someone wants a ropy ri.
"Blackstone and While RDck ."
cheek so weare left todrawrur own
I had a copy and let l ·go to the conclusions.
The tobacco lndustl)' scored a big last year, Immediately rook off.
The title could have ooubll'
Meigs Historical Society. I would
one
the otb:rday In Its grim mntest
The anti-tobacco forces , thrown
Ilk!' another for my self.
meaning. I believE' that the Black·
with
the
truth.
into
rromentary disarray, are now
stone
refers
to
the
English
jurist
The book was written by Milton
trying to regroup. The Cipollone
Farber, son of a Fbmeroy junk who wrotE' legal· text l:ooks and · A fedl'ral appeals court held that
attorney Is going back to the
man, whom'! remember in thelJ's. White Rock may Indicate the White the health warnings on cigarette
p.rkages
shield
manufacturers
appeals
courl ro try for a reversal of
House
Itself.
Or
It
could
refer
to
the
It was published~ E.P. DllltonCo.
from
claims
that
they
IJ1adequately
the
initial
ruling. And if he doesn't
coal
and
salt
Industry.
In 1948.
warn
consumers
about
smoidng:s
ll!?l
l
there,
he says he'll go !or the
It Is reported that MUton Farrer
Milton was an attorney and I
risks.
~prerne
Court.
died
In
1963,
probably
In
Columbus.
I'Xpect the book addresses S1Jrne cl
The decision ov!'rturned a lower
That Is where S1Jme r1 his allies
Floyd Clark
his professional experience. The
court
ruling
that
the
warning
was
think
the issue Is going to hav!' to be
White HouSE' Tavern at Kerr's Run
Portland, Or.
not necessarlly that far-reaching. ci&gt;clci&gt;d ultimately anyway. They
Is the setting. An old judge held
That had raised the ropes r1 as mall can expect to have to battle every
army of litigants sreklng daml€eS step of the way - and against a
from the companies for smoking-, powerful weapon that they helP.ed
related deaths and disabilities.
hand to the memy.
The case In question Is that of
The health warning on cigarettes,
Today Is Tuesday, Aprll 22, the 112th day of 1986 with 253 to follow.
Rose Cipollone, a New Jersey
which was imposed on the manu·
The moon·Is moving toward Its full phase.
woman who had smoked more than
factureis to protect the publlc, has
Thl' morning stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
a pack a day for 42 years. She hill
been co-q&gt;ted by the lndusll)l. U
Thl' evening star Is Venus.
tried repeatedly but always umuc- mnsumers choose to smoke despite
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. Tll!y Include ressfully ro stop. When she died In
the warnings, the manufacturers
Spanish Qu!'en Isabella I, who flnanoed Christopher Columbus's first 1984, canoer had taken one of her rold they are thereby absolved
voyage to the New World, born in 1451; English novelist Hl'nry Fielding in lungs and chemotterapy most of from responslblllty for the
1707; German phllosopher Immanuel Kant In 1724; Vladimir llylch Lenin, her hair. Her husband Is continuing consequences.
leader of Russia' ~ 1917 Commu nist revolution, In 1810; pioneer nuclear , the suit against several tobacco
The Industry Is feeling good al:out
physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer In 1901; actor Eddie Albert In JlO! (age companies wrose branm she tre Cipollone decision, and with
78J; vlolln virtuoso Yehudi Menuhin In 1916 (ag1'70); singer Glen Campbell smoked.
good reason. Spokesmen point out
in 19l; (age 50), and actor Jack ~lcholson In 1937 (age 49).
The appeals roun decision Is a that It has won In every court test so
serious setback for loose sreklng to far.
On this dati' In history: In 1509, Henry VIII became king of England.
atlack through lltigatkm tre realth
But It Is In Ill position to relax. It Is
In 1889, some 20,0)) hornesreaders massed along the border or the threat posed by tobacco use. Til! In a game that for the defenSE' can
Oklahoma Territory awaiting the signal to start the Oklahoma land rush. Cipollone case has been considered never be_q.v~r. and In which the
In 1915, during World War I, German forces became the ftrst to use the strongest anll rrost P"Ornlslngof · Industry must keep scortng just to
poison gas on the Western Front.
the number of suits dtallengtng stay even.
In 1972, Apollo 16 astronauts John Young and Olarles Duke walked and cigarette makers on ground!; cl
People keep smoking, whlch Is
rod!' on the surfacE' of the moon for seven hours 23 minutes.
product llabUity.
what the Industry wants. But
In 1985, Jose Sarney was sworn In as Brazil's first clvUian P"esklent In 21
How serious a challenge was smokers also keep getting Ul and
years, one day aft er thP deat h of 76· year-old president -elect Tancredo lndl cat!II by the stock market's ~in g In ways whlch Implicate their
reaction. Cigarette shares, whlch habit. And so the suits keep corning.
Neves.
had been depressed·by the litigation A yeat ago, some 00 had been llled
A thought lor the day: Novelist Henry Fleldlng\vrote, "Love and scandal despite the tndusll)l's victories In a thrrughout the nation. Currently,
oouple of preUrnlnary skirmishes (lesplte the repeated court setare the best sweeteners of tea."
I

Security, Medicare, veterans' he·
neflts, Head Stan. Supplemental
Security Income for the poor, .
disabled and elderly, summer jobs"
programs for ghetto yruth. I;lut crucial point - It wasn't that we
Intended to spare trose programs;
they would have to be cut too II the
woole fiscal plan ivas to work. It
was simply that we hadn't yl'l got
around to cutting them."
So here he Is, ll'lllng the Reagan
Revolution that he has come up
with some cuts, but not nearly
enough, and that as of this moment
he has not yet even begun to hack
away at the programs Usted. And
their response?
" 'That's great! ' someone said.
·we:v" got ro get this out.' "
Meaning, get It out ro the press.
Stockman continues; "The whole
point of the Ca blnet meeting had
been to Inform them we would need
$5ll bllllon In additional cuts. But -

ha:l analyses made of various
actions that could he taken. What
tren , with the redoubtabll' Richard
Nixon at bat, was the rationale
hehlnd the benign, policy toward
Khadafy?
The official State Department
expanatlon, glv!'n to a Senate
Inquiry, was that there was a local
lntelllgenre !allure. Here's what the
Senate reported:
"The U.S. Embassy In Tripoli
had not anticipated the Libya coup.
The yrung mllltary officers (who
potted the coup) were not known to
U.S. government ofllclals. The U.S.
government therefore did oot antic·
!pate the radical changes which
were to follow .... "
. In the months alter he assumed
power, Khadafy look additional
steps to strengthen his h:lkl on
Libya, and each time the United
States backed down. But for
WaslingtOn 's equivocation and te[idlty, Khada(y would not have
heen stlrrtng up trouble In the
Mediterranean 17 years later.

By MIKE TULLY
.
within 5-2_.when Scholleld grreted 1-1, took the toss. .
UPI National Baseball Writer
Ontiveros with a rome hm '1/er the
throws center-field wall on his first pitch r1
Twins 5, Mariners 2
j
00
And
I
J oaqu n
u ar, w
the seventh
At
Seattle,
Frank VIola, 3-1,
hard, and Jose Canseco, who hit s
In other games, Detroit nipped
pitched
a
four-hitter,
and Tom
even harder, Monday night corn· Boston 5-4 1bronto oowned Texas
Brunansky
drove
In
two
runs
to help
blned to make things look easy for 7.6 Cleveiand blanked Baltimore
Minnesota
snap
a
three·
game
the Oakland A's.
'
clty 84, losing streak and hand the Martn·
ba
ked
Andujar's
first
7-0,
New
York
took
Kansas
Canseco c
.
and Minnesota topped Seattle 5-2.
ers their fifth straight loss. Loser
lndl- 7, Orklles o
American League vt&lt;:tory with two
Milt Wilcox, 0-3, lasted 5 2'31nnlngs.
~me runs and fou r RBI, gtvmg t~e
At Cleveland, Thrn CandlotU Gorman Thomas homered for
A sa6·2declslonover the Califorma pitched a thrre-hltter, and the
Seattle.
Angels.
Indians capitalized on four errors
Canseco hit a solo shot to right in by Baltimore third baseman Floyd rr::=:;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;
the third Inning, then tagged starter Rayford. Candlottl, backed by
Ron Romanlck, 2·1, with a threo;· rookie Andy Allanson with three
run shot in th~ seventh. The A s RBI struCk rot 8 career-high 10 to
. rRmEss iONAL co"'"' "''c, ~ .. Mil v sERvicEs .
have won four In a row.
ev~ his record at 1-i. Mike
Andujar, 1·1. acquired from S~. Flanagan, 1· 1, took the loss.
Louis In the off-season, departed
Tigers 5, Red Sox 4
At BOston Lou Whitaker knocked
after the sixth with a stiff shoulder.
Three of Canseco's home runs in two runs ' and Dave Collins had
have come against Angels pitching. three hits a~d scored twice to help
"Maybe the organlzahon ~anted the Tigers snap a four-game Red
to take pressure off ":le. sa~d Sox wlnnln streak in the Iradi·
Canseco, moved to third m the A s
g
MIRROR, l'IUI~KlOK
PARKER FACES SUIT - The Plttsbuflb Pirates
batting order. "But I like hitting Ilona! Patriots Day game at
Paliler Is llhowo above reacting to being tlrown out
I
THE WALL
hi
h
Hlttin
f
nt
of
Dave
Fenway
Park.
Walt
Terrell,
2-1,
Monday flied suit again Cincinnati ~ ouUielder
aUemptlng lo -steal second base over the weekend
1n ro
g er.
g
pitched
six
Innings
for
the
victory.
·
We
share
a vwy private 01)Dave Parker wer his admitted cmalne use chi ring his
qalnst Houston. UPI.
Klngman Is good. They look at my Willie Hemanci&gt;z posted his fourth
mcnt
wlih
the mirror each
nve-year ';Ontracl with the Buts from l!Jl!I.IB83.
slats, and Kingman's reputation,
2
mornlnr;. People have char3Ch to me. I'm working for save of the season. AI Nipper, I· ,
an d P11 c .
,
took the loss.
terl!lllc ways ol tlJ'eellng their
more consistency now. I ye been
Blu 1
relledlons, and their reaciloM
7 Ran rs 6
striking out too much." . . ~
At Toro~to "t~'John:n capped
are a barornelel' ol selleAterne.
The A's opened the scormg m 11\i'
'
.
Take the scomer. The lint
d
RBI . 1 b 1\Jfredo a four-run eighth with a three-run
~n on an
smg e Y
double, rallying the Blue Jays.
Impulse Is displeasure. He or
Grafm. , .
.
· Mark Eichhorn, 1-0, worked 3 1-3
she Is dlssatlsfted wlih self and
Ca nseco s ftrst homer made II 2-0 lnnl
ellef
d
k
1
fl
llle, and feels thai the outiilde
before the A's got one back in the
ngs 01 r
an_ s1~c ru ve
PriTSBURGH (UPil - The totalling $5,312,475, which was pan using the drug because It adversely
world Is loo harsh a judge. At
bottom
of
the
third
when
Andujar
ID earn his first major-league
Pittsburgh Pirates Monday an· of· his contract covering the five was affec ting his playing
the other extreme Is the s.mier.
Iked Dou DeCincos to force . :"ctory . Tom Hl'nke worked an
nounced they have!Urosultagainst seasons he played lor the Pirates, perfmmanoe.
He
or she meets the renectlon
~a
g
mnlng to notch his third save.
Cincinnati Reds ouUieldl'r Dave the team said. Thl' suit also
The Pirates sa id that during the
with
an open relaxed smile,
XJ~e :a~~-urprlsed 1 threw that Reliever Greg Harris slipped to 2-2.
Parker over his admitted cocaine requests a juty trial.
term r1 Parker's 1979 contract with
!Uggesllng
a feeling of peace
many walks," sa id Andujar. "Why,
Yankees 8, Royals 4
use durtng h\S 5-year contract with
the team, his performance steadily
Parker last year admitted duting
with
sell
and
life.
1 don't know. 1 didn't do anyt hing
At Kansas City, Mo .. Don Mat the team from 1979-1983.
dctl'rlorated.
the lederal trial of CUrtis Strong in
The
mirror
gazers woo cait't
different. 1 wasn't happy with the tingly hit three run-scoring doubles,
The suit, which was flied Monday Pittsburgh that he regan using
The suit ~lleged the deterlora·
resist
the
impulse
to primp lll'e
. . ,
. h
dnvmg home five runs and leading
way I pitched. I m acontrolpttc er , 1hey kee Ed \!.'hit
starting
In Allegheny County Common cocaine In 1976 and became a tlon of Parker's skills as a baseball
uMure ol themselvl'll, and wan ~
d ':: se c1
and I shouldn't walk that many
Pleas Court by Pittsburgh Asso- regular user of the drug In 1979, the
player and his failure to stay In good
crly concerned about the 'opibatters ..
on1y on 1 ,., roa
au
ciates, the new owners ri. the Pirates said. Parker test~led he
physical condition during the term
nions of others. otrers, who
Canseco's second oomergavethe negative fan reaction at horne,
Pirates, seeks relief !rom deferred continued to he a heavy cocaine
cl his contract directly were related
make playful laces at themA's a 5-1 lead . The Angels pulled improved to 1·1. Bret Saberhagen,
compensation payments to Parker user untll 1982 when he stopped
to and mused by his Improper,
selves, may not feel thai t~
Illegal and heavy use of cocaine.
rate the highest In tei'IJIII of
The suit said Parker fraudulently
beauty, but they are comlortaconcealed his use of coca in!'; that
l)le with who they are.
as a result of his failu re to disclose
Why are we bard on ourselves
"GETTING ~OU THERE SAFEL~~ •
the use, the Pirates fraudulently
as we la.e Ire mirror? Because
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
werE' induced Into en tering into the
II makes 11!1 visualize h:l w othel'!l
contract; that Parker materially
see
ns and how we stock .., In i-e.
LiGHT TRUCK TIRES
misrepresented his physical condl·
lallon to the Ideal. But rather
•ALIGNMENTS •FRONT END WORK
Uon at the time of signing the
than locus on shortmmlngs, Ills
By JOEL SHERMAN
home the tying run In the ninth contract; and as the direct result cl
*BATIERIES
*TIRE
REPAIR
a
&amp;Qod Idea to train wrselves lo
UP! Sports Writer
inning and scored the winner on the cocaine '·use and physical
recognize
the positives and be
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
The San Francisco Giants and Gary Carter's single ID rally the
condition,
the
Pirates
materially
kinder
lo
ourselves.
Los Angeles Dodgers have Mets. Carter earlier cracked a
OPEN : 8-6. MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
PIF.'U:'HfJ) '!'I 4 .:fl'lt\11 "'In' !11~:1\\ 10: Bf ..-uuo.
swapped lndentltles on the field and two-run h:lmer. New York's Ray were deprived of the service
u,,~rjp 0~._,-J:II". l\1 ~ . "'uU,..rr~ l ... l11ht•, r._.,.,
PH.
742-3088
t)h .. -4S7M. rho,... 992· 21q:l ~\lrl~:•l1 4..._S
required by Parker under the
In the standings.
Malter
Card
and
Visa
Welcome
lf;tllltlt"i 21fi.MI:'5JJu .... o"l .
Knight hit his third oomer. Mike
Gl'ltlng overpowering pitching Brown and Jim Morrison homered contract.
and timely hitting - two Dodgers for Plttst:turgh. Pat Clements, 0·1.
trademarks - the Giants moved took the loss and Roger McDowell,
Into another Los Angl'les strongh· 1-0, was the winner.
old, first place In .the National
Braves 8, Aalros Z
League West.
At Atlanta, Glenn Hubbard hit a
Roger Mason pitched a three· three-run homer, and Bob Homer
hitter, and ChUI Davis drove In added ·a two-run slnt to back Joe
three runs with two homers Mon- JolrlS1Jn's elght·hllter and lead the
day night to give the Giants their Braves. Johnson. 2-0, struck out
fifth straight victory, a 5-1 decision three and walked two In his first
over the Los Angeles DodgNS.
complete game. Nolan Ryan, 2·2,
Los Angeles lost fortheslxthtbne took the loss.
In Its last seven games !O drop into
the Giants' usual region - last
place.
The Daily Sentinel
·The major reason lor the turna·
round has been new manager
!liSPS 145-HII)
Rog!?r Crlag, woo has ilstilled his
A Dlvl81on ol Multimedia, Inc.
team with confidence, and his
pitching staff with the spllt·flngered
Publlsh£ld t'verv afternoon , Monday
through Frida Y. 111 Court Sl:, Po·
fastball .
mfroy. Ohio. by lhr Ohio Valley Pub·
The Doq:ers fell to 4-10, 5~
llshtng Comp any tMulflmedla , Inc.,
Pomtoroy, Ohio 4~769·. Ph . 992·2156. Se·
games behind San Frdnclsco. After
oond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
14 games last season. Los Anll!?les
Ohio.
was 8-6 on the way to the NL West
M&lt;'mb&lt;'r: Un lt&lt;'d Press IntE'rnatlonal,
title. ·
Inland Daily PrE'ss Association and thE'
Rick Honeycutt, 0-2, took the toss.
Ohio Nc wspapN Association. National
Davis conni'Cted for. his ftrst homer
Advertising RrprPSentatlve, Branham
New spaper Sa les. 733 Third Avenue.
of.tb: game leading off tb: second.
New York, New York 10017.
The Giants added three rrore runs
POSTMA...~R : Send address chan gE'S
off Honeycutt In the fourth.

Woodland Centers, Inc.

.

New Pirate ·owners seek relief
from Parke~'s deferred payments

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

Giants dump Dodgers,
move into ftrst place

•

Mets 6, Pirates 5

At New York , Tim Teufel doubled

to The Dally ~ntln e l . Ill Court St ..
F'Omeroy. Ohio mw.

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Canseco pace A's

6-2 victory Qver _l;alifomia ·

Page-2-The Daily S!lntluel
Pomeroy-Mkld!Qport, Ohio
T~~April22, 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

T"81CIIy, April 22, 1986

•

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�Tuelday; April22, 1986

The Daily Sentinel

de . C~te~a, Kristiansen win Boston M~athon ·
&lt;

BOS'l'ON (UP!) - Rpb de
Castella llnlsll!!d the Boston Marathon with a course record, the
race's first-ever winner's dleck,
and a lot of respect for the
90-year-old event.
"It's the type of course that really
knocks you around a lot," said the
muscular Australian Monday after
!lnishlng the Hopklnton-to-Boston
run In 2: 07: 51. "My legs were
aching quite a blt that last mlle or

challenge rt the hills wtth determination and COUI'IIge. He atflleked
them and didn't let up. He ran a
fWJtastlc race."
The !&gt;-IOOt-11, 143-pow\der wtth
broad shoulders led lor aU but two
miles of the race, shaking 'orr
challenges at the four-and sevenmile.marks before pulling away by
the lG- mile point In pursuit o1.
Albei1D Salazar's course record or
2: ~:52, set In 1982.
Art Boileau of Canada was
second In 2: 11: 15, and Orlando
Plzzalato of Italy third In 2: 11: 43.
Ingrid KrtsllaliSOI, who before
the race said her goal was to be the
!lrst woman to · · ll'eak 2: 20,
struggled home In 2:24:5:i In her
first Boston Marathon.
The Norwegian world recordholder afterwards lamented,
"I don't feelmyboc:IY waswlthme. I '
feel I was In gOOd shape this
rooming and ready il run the race,
but I was a little scared ol. the

so."
The pre-race favorite earned a
total ~ $W,(Q) and a new Mercedes.
He picked up SJ),(Q) as the men's
winner, a $25,001 bonus for breaklng
the course record, and WJotiEr
$5,(Q) In perfonnance bonuses.
A distance rurmer rJ uncommonly powerful oolld, de Castella
used his strength to conquer the
dreaded htlls, and his speed to keep
the fteld at bay.
Steve Jones, the world's topranked marathoner who did oot
compete due to an Injury, said of de course.''
Castella's victory: "He met the
Slle started aggressively, hltttftg

the ftve.-mile checkpoint 11 seconds the past' twO years we to the
faster tllan Joan Benoit's prevklus absence of prize rmney, ~
mark of :11:11. At the 9.3-rril.lemark, was the top American fl~he~
KrtstlanSEII was 0 seconds ahead Monday, finishing fourth.
Neltherd t!Emen'soorwomen's
d l!er world-record pace d 2: 21: 00,
defending champlom competed.
then began til falter.
In second place, 2:40 behind Geoff Smllh, winner the past two
Kristiansen, was Carla Beurskl!ns · years ewer weak fields, decided
of The ' Netherlallds, who was Instead to run tiE New Jersey
followed by Llzanne Bussjeres of Marathon In May. Usa Lai'Se!l
Weldenooch was oot due to an
Canada, with a time d 2:32: 16.
Injury.
Andre Viger of Canada won the
Kenyan J~h l&lt;lpsang, a,
wheekhalr division 1n a W(J'Id-best former coach at Iowa Stale Unlver·
tlmc rt 1:43:25. ~ topped the slty, stayed with de Castella the
1:45:34 mark set here last year by . klngest, but by the 16-mile mark
Georg\' Murpbi of Tampa, F1a. , had faded badly·
,
who finished -second. To reward
The Australian credited the
Viger's record-breaking effort, hundreds dthousands &lt;t spectators
race otrklaL&lt;; anoounced they had along the route with belplng to pull
decided to. boost the wheelchair him through the race.
"The crowd support on this
winner's purse from S2 000 to
$10,001.
'
course,ln this race, Is 91lmetljng I'd
. The marattvn's ftrst year of never experienred IEIJre In the
'corporate sponsorship was re· world ," he said. "It's really phenogarded as an overwhelming suc· menal."
"cess by four-time winner Bill
Ro"'ers. After boyl'ottlng the race

By The Bend
."

Tuesday. April22,1986

Pa9e-6

.'

.'
'

Fernwood Garden meets

'

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A program on dltferent \)'pes of
humjngbird feederil and slides ·of
flowers and gardens were stvwn at
the rreent mesetlng of. the Fern-·
wood Garden Club held Tueday at
the Zkln Church d Christ.
· Marg\'Purtellwashostessforthe
meeting. Ida Murphy presided with
members repeating the dub wllect
'and liEn answering roll call with an
·. exchWJge of flower · seeds. Mrs.
Murphy had devotiOns using a
·reading from "The Meditation
Moments." II was noted that the•
club had attended the OOth annlversary o1. the Wilkesville Club and
momentoes were shared. For the
reglonai meeting to be held Saturday at the Eastern High &amp;hool,
Fernwood will provide help with tbe
sales table.
Mrs. Murphy reported on the
Lake CatiErine Walk to take place
Wednesday and the club walk on
the Giles Farm to take pla!eat 9: JJ
a.m. Tuesday. Evelyn Thoma had

' t ...
'

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Bulls, in must win situation
By Unlled Press International
In four NBA games Tuesday
nlght the underdog Is home In a bid

MEN'S MARATHON WINNER - Favorite Rob de CaildJa ol
Australia, .breaks the lape at the finish Hne to win the 90th Bo8tGn
Marathon Monday In a reconl-a~urse time d 2:07: 51. The victory was
worth $30,000, the first-ever pme purse in the 90-yearhlstory olthe race.
UPI.

to stave otr playoff elimination.
At Chicago, the Bulls wiD need
more tllan Michael Jordan's twogame total ol.ll2 points todeleatthe
Celtlcs. They trail the best-of-five
series 2-0. Their only hope may be
Larry Blrd's broken pinky.
Bird, who srored 36 Sunday,
dislocated the linger on his shooting
band. It was taped to his ring linger
lor the rest of Game 2.
"It's the finger IE's dislocated
several times before," said team
physician Dr. Thomas Silva. Before
hurting the finger In the first
quarter, Bird was 0-for-5. AftB"ward, he shot 14-o!-22. Chicago has
still not found a way to contain the
frontline of Bird, McHale, and
Rollllrt Parish. "On Tuesday we
will attack, attack, attack and then
we'D see who's standing when It's
all over," Chicago coach · Stan
Albeck promised.
The Bulls beat Boston once at
home this season In three attempts.
At East Rutherford, N.J., tbe
Nets, down 2-!l, have a chWJce to
show what they can do at home.
"It's very important to win at
home In the playoffs," said Terry
Cummings of Milwaukee. "Yau
have the O!her te,am thinking when
you win the first two games on your
home court."
The Nets were uncertain about
Darryl Dawkins' status. New Jer-

sey had said that Dawkins, who
missed 31 games because ria oock
In jury, would not play against the
Bucks In Game 2. But he came off
the bench to score 10 points In 17
minutes.
At Detroit, one rmre victory by
the Atlanta Hawks, who lead 2-0,
will push the Pistons oo t ol. the
playdfs. Detroit had a 2-1 edge over
AtlWJta onitshomecourt during tiE
season.
The PlslDns have overcome the
Hawks' height advantage. But
Dominique Wilkins, who scored 00
points Saturday, and Raney WlttmWJ, who had a career best 35,
have given Atlanta an Insideoutside pundl Detroit has been
unable to match.
·At Sacramento, about the only
thing the Kings have g:&gt;lngforthem
Thesday night Is tiE day of the
week. The Kings were 11-0at home
In the Arco Arena on Tuesday
nlghts this sea91ln.
Houston, ahead 2-0, thrashed
Sacramento 107-87111 the opener but
the Rockets struggled Saturday
IEtlre winning lll- 103.
In that game, with jjs team down
Zl points In the .second halt,
SacramenlD roach Phil Johnson
used reserve centers Rich Kelley
and Joe Kleine Wid No. 2 point
guard Larry Drew to shave the
deficit to 4 points. The Rockets
barely regained their composure to
kill the rally.
Two best-ol-flvl' series are t led 1-1

Blterlng Tuesday nlgbt.
At Phlladlephla, Charles Barkley
srored 26 points and grabbed 22
rebounds i1 hls team's 93-94 loss In
Game 1. He then delivered '!I points
and 20 rebounds In Phlllidelphla 's
102- 97 victory In Game 2 Sunday.
"They are still In the driver's
seat," Barkley said. "We haven't
played a !JlOd game yet, and we just
have to hope tiE momentum Is
changing. They dldn'tput too much
emphasis on (Game 2). For us, It
was a llfe-or.Ceath situation. The
whole season was riding on the
game."
At Portland, Ore., tiE Trail
Blazers klst the q~ener to the
Denver NJiggets but came back to
even It.
In that'llrst game. the Nuggets'
frontline of. Calvin Nail, Alex
English Wid Danny Schayes scored
a tota l rJ 92 points. But In Game.2,
the trio was held to 45 points on
17-ol-45 shooting.
"That's what we have to do with
them every game," said Fbrtland
center Mychal Thompson.
On Wednesday night, the Los
Angeles Lakers, up 2-0, are at San
Antonlo while Dallas, up 2- 0, Is at
utah.

BARGAIN MATINEES S.ITURIIIY
I SUNDAY - ILL SEATS $2 .50
!ll'&lt;ISSION EVERY TUESIIIIY 12 .50

DELEGAmN- Melp Jllclil!eboolt.i a delepllon &lt;i 31 whr' 1118ettmllac 111e IIIIDllii11Pm1 ....-.. teenace 1a111tu1e held at Lopn.
'Ole three day pi'IJII'IUII provllled bMic lactullnloi'INIIoa. prevt'JIIIon
lint p and altenatlvee lo alcollol•d other drul uae. JnlonnMion
WM prmntl!d and dlllcualed on declllon lllllldnl, lllreM Rlllll&amp;lenM!III,
sell-eateem, Belf-aooeptance aad IIUiclde preveatloa. Student&amp; pictured
who attended are front from left, uab Doldle. Mindy SpfDcer,
S&amp;ephanle EncJWt, Nlkld B.-ch, Dena Manley, Mayrme 'Tho1111111,
Lura Cobb; second row, Jenny Miller, Jody Taylor; Chrlll smth,

By Rutb Pnwers Last September a group of
Interested persons met Wid tills
was formed, the Long Range
Plimnlng Committee 6Jr the Meigs
County Public Library. This Committee amslsted d Patiicta Holter,
President ~ the library Board;
Patricia Mills, Mary K. Y06t Don
Mullens, members of the llrary
Board; Ruth Powers, Director; Wid
the i&gt;llowtng community persons,
Don Salmons, Committee Chairman; ~eySergent, ClneyOllverl,
Debbie Weber, Shirley Huston. This ·
Ccmmlttee was charged wH h developing a five-year Long Ran&amp;e
Plan IJr the Meigs County Ulrary
System.
The first step the committee took
was il adopt a Preamble lor their
plan. The preamble reads Uketlts:
Meigs County residents, we have
received an Inheritance of rur

HOUSE IMRFIOWINC?
ClEAN UP WITH
ClASSmAOS

l!OSTON (UP! ) - John A. Including today's, and llnlshed 52.
Kelley, the !b&gt;ton Maratoon's His official time for Monday's race
beloved elder statesman, Monday . was unavailable. ·
finished. the prestigious event for
He won the event In 1935andl.945,
the 52nd time and responded by and finished as runner-up seven
thrusting his anns In triumph and Urnes between 1934 and 1946.
saying he was dlfor a cold beer and
"I think he's marvelous," Heder·
a warm tub.
man said. "Sure I wcrry about him.
The78-year-old Kelley completed How can you not worry about him?
the race In about 4'h hours; But I wish him luck and God bless
surviving a heavy downpour Wid him."
finishing to the cheers of hundreds,
Kelley did rot say whether he will
many of whom stuck It out In the run In more Boston Marathons.
rain to see him.
"Just let me get through this one,"
Kelly, a resident of East Dennis, he said.
Mass. , has won two marathons,
The elderly klng~lstance runner·
, finished second In seven, came In said he hl!ll IEen teaching running
third once, fourth twice and fifth clinics lor the Jolll Hanrock
·three times.
lnsuranre company, tiE sponsor of
"I didn't have to walk once," he the event this year, and received
said rmments alter ruMing past wmptirnentary limousine service
the Ba;ton Public Library and over In retwn.
the finish line: "l.ast year, I had to
walk about 10 times."
Kelley ackoowledged the cheers
from the crowd, some of whom ran
up to shake his handandothers who
simply stvuted from a dstancr. His
sister, - Marian HedermWJ, 00,
hugged him warmly on hls way to
the race's medical tent
Kelley said his legs lllrt from
fatigue over the last live miles c1 the
26.2-mlle course. Asked what hls
post-race plans were, he said, "1\vo
beers and a hot bath.';
He complained oi a minor
.
Take this ad to yoar Stlhl dealer today lor powet Ill btya on
stomach ache alter the race, but
IU·powered bimmen and bnlthcutten ... from the world'e!aJ1est teller of chain aaws!
said he felt fine otiErwlse as he lay
on a cot. Medical personnel asked
reporters t6 leave. Kelley said he
has started 55 Boston Marathons,
I

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f1 an :~aan . D. Ma n lnl.'?- 161 and Dt&gt;m~· :
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noman i.' k, Cc.rhl"ll 1111 and llooiV'. Mlll'r.
W-Anduja r 11·11. L - Hom~mirk 12-l t. f-O hi
--Oakland . Can!lm."l 2 1'1· Murphy 1) 1:
CaiiiOrnla. Sc~ fk&gt;ld 121.

IISStd.

"•"dil"·

'

11ny flmllin wtll dloost to hlvt thl11sktl clostd just
prior to tht 111111111 strYict. 1ft lilt lnt •llrsls. tht
dlolce is lift totlltfllllliJifttr dscaalon wtth tlltlr dtr·
OJ!IIft.

11-le~J.. 10tJa&lt;rd-~ f«tteil.
ffu~Ytme

.

(614) . . . .41
.

111.11!0111',
OHIO
..

"Sttrl~• PIII ...At#..,J.. ,. Otttll"
IlL ILOWER
BRUCE FISHEl

.
S11JHl:

w•••M tur •"Y

)

Alfred UMW met Apr11 15 at the
home of Martha Poole and Nellie
Parker. Nine members WJswered
roll call. and 15 sick calls were
reported. Sara Caldwell was a
gueet.
Trl!asurer Osle Mae Follrod
reported a profit of S4l6.47 at the
Russell Findling sale.
The 90Ciety dlscu~ed serving at
the Dottle Jones sale, May 17, Wid
decided not ID serve. Alfred yooth
will do the sale lunch .
Florence AM Spencer reported
that Alfred Youth are serving tiE
Mother-Daughter banquet May 3 at
7.
.:J&gt;rtlsldent Nellie Parkl!r read
letters from Elizabeth Jeffers, new
lJMW pres ident , and other
members of the district officers
team. Mrs. Parkl!r anoounced
coming events; Retreat, May 2-3 at
Camp Otterbein; Red Bird Mission
Trip, September l'i-17; District

-·

..

Thelma Henderson reported that
the Crunty Council are offering two
$:15 scholarships lor the Schoo( of
Mlssklns.
Nina Robinson had the prayer
calendar and diose Betty Ruth
Goode, laity concerns In New York
City. The society signed a blrtlxlay
cal'd for her.
Mrs. Henderson led the Easter
IX'Ogfaffi with all readln~ and
discussing. Mrs. Parker read Why
Should He Die lor Such as I . Annie
Thompson read Prayer lor f'l&gt;ace.
The tvstesses served homemade
Ice cream and cookies and strawberries to thoSE: mentioned and to
Clara Follrod and Charlotte VWI

........
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--..--.........

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

POMEROY HOME.&amp; ·4UTO
POMDO

v

""Sending gifts to a recent layette Mamie Stephen91ln, Freda Hender- ·
s')lower held at the home ot Tammy . son, Sandy Wright, Sherry Hall,
Johnson. Middleport, tvooring Trlna Bower, Kathy Coder, Mary
Shiarl Blackwell and her Infant Reyookls, Bl'enda Smeltzer, Cadau!lhter, Aja, were Nancy Aelker, rolyn Martin; Debbie Gilmore, :
OQroth Bentz, Cathy Ruchti, Mrs. Marjorie Saunders, Juey Drum- :
Charles Smith, Mrs. Rick Smith, mond, Phyllis Rankin, · Saney '
Paulette F.arley, Clney and Trina Thompson. .Janet HamUton, VIcki
Faulk, Evelyn and Jlll Johnson, Ault, VIcky Russell, the staff of
Guiding Hand School and Calico
~lyn McClung, Gladys Presley,
lnduslrles. Their names were
~ and Pam Walburn, Helen
Icenbower, Erma and Terry Olllltte(l from an original news story
Harper; Delphia and Danny Haye, on the shower.
1:*
Phyllis Bearhs. Ann Blackwell.

•
'

Hale, Seoul, Korea . They repOrt
:r.!:~~~dlst missionaries

O'B nan
• de1egate named

Shanoon Slavin, a sophomore at
Meigs High School, has been
selected as the 19116 Hugh o·artan
Youth Foundation Ohio Leadership
Seminar cWJdldate from the high
school.
SlaviJI was chosen for her
outstanding leadership potential
demonstrated In school and communlty activities. She will attend a
seminar lli be held at Ohio
Dominican College In Columbus
May 11&gt;-18 where she will join ·over .
220 other sophomores from
throughout Central and !'outhern
Ohio to attend.
During the seminar one hoy and
one girl will be chosen to represent
Ohio at the Hugll O'Brian Youth
Foundation International Leadership Seminar In Indianapolis In
August.
Purpose of. the seminar Is to bring
Shannon Slavin
a selected group of. sophomores
·with demonstrated leadership qual·
Illes together with a group of discussions aimed at giving t~
dlstlngulsiEd leaders In business, young student a straight-forward
science, education, goverrunent view of what the world Is all about.
Shannon ts the daughter ot Rlta
and the professklns and let the two
and
Jack R. Slavin, Rustle Hllls,
Interact. The seminar takes the
form of Intense but Informal Syracuse.

Shower conducted in Meigs

'
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'-

served; to provide convenient the next 5 years; 2) To schedule
oours and (Xllnts ol. access Wid oours open In the main library and
the sta tlons for the convenience rt
~proprtate library service for all
the patruns; 3) To Increase the
community residents.
Now the committee was down to numher of volumes ID patrons by a
g:&gt;als that. needed til be set for minimum of !lXI per year; 4) To
reaching the role statement. Six purdlase multiple copies of vo'g:&gt;als were set down as follows: 1) lumes In high demand; 5) To
Improving user particlpatkln of ~sta bllsh "Book Stations" at 4
library services to all residents; 2) ' loca lions throughout the county In
Improving tiE delivery of mate- tiE next five years; 6) To reinstate
rials to patrons throu!lh the local the ftlm service; 7) To expand the
collectkln; 3) Improving the range record collection; 8) To develop a
rt materials; 4) Improving the cassette tape rollectlon; 9) To
facUlties; 51 Continue to fill re- establish a VCR rollectlon; 10) To
quests lor all types rt materials; 6) maintain the toy collection lor use
Provide services to community In the Hbrary; 11 ) To Increase tiE
collection of larg\' print books; 121
organlzatklns and Individuals.
The next step was developing the To consider other collections of
objectives to reach the goals. This Is Interest; 13) To acquire reference
a list of the objectives: 1) To material that will assist those
Increase the number of registered researdllng genealogy; 14) To
borrowers by 3 percent a year br expand the main library til comply
with the Ohkl Public Library
Standards; 15) To continue Improvements to the branch llbrary
16) Cooperate with all types of
libraries and otiEr resources for
annual meeting, September 25. at . Meter.
materials; 17) Provide book serviRichland Avenue Church, Athens.
Next meeting will be May 20 at ces for the homebound and physiMrs Spencer read a letter from the home of Mrs. silencer with Mrs· cally handicapped.
Jllisskl.narles l..ymWJ and Neva Thompson leading the program.

1\venty-two Meigs CountiWJs at- Bottom; Sharon Griffin, Reedstending Hocking Technical College ville; Lisa F. Hawk, Reedsville;
at Nelsonville havl' been named to David E. Huddleston, Racine; Troy
the school's dean list lor the winter Manuel, Racine; Kathy D.
\...J McGuire, Rutland; Jeffrey Moore,
quarter.
They are Susan M. Batley, Long Ch~hlre; Frances Moxley, PoemBottom; Jan ice M. Baker, Pome- roy; Scott M. Pickens, Pomeroy;
roy; Michael Bareswllt, Middle· Carlotta Reed, Reedsville; Michael
port; Beth A. Berkhlmer, Reeds· R. Smith, Pomeroy; Mary Warner,
ville; Angela M. Collins. Long Racine; James A. Weber, ReedsBottom; Katrina L. Donohue, vllle; Kyle S. Woods, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy; John F. Edwards, Long Jeff A. Wyers, Reedsville.
Bottom: Kevin N. Flck, Long

.

992-2094

T-.

libraries Wid the Bbrary system.
We In tum bave a responsibility til
receive It, hooor It, enjoy It, add to
It, Wid faithfully hand It on to the
next generation. The wordlngtn the
preamble was given to us by Board
member Patricia Mills.
The next step In planning was to
develop a Role Statement for our
Ubrary system. The role statement
that was adoJlled reads like this:
The Meigs Crunty Public Ubrary
will provide recreational, Informational, educational and cultural
service to all adults and juvenlles;
ji'OVide the most-wanted materials, print and non-print, with rapid
access to lesser-used materials not
held; develop broad community
awareness rt the Ubrary and Its
services; develop an outreach
service to encourage use of services
by population 5\lbgroups not now

Hocking Tech dean's list gi~len

,,. • .-.• ., LMMar ....... ClfAIIf uw

600 EASI MAIN .51.

Netper;

Alfred UMW conducts .meeting

WHY AN OPEN-CASKET SERVICE?
As professlonll fu111r11 directors, •• 111 oft• nktd
ebout the bend its~ 111 q111-caaktt s.vlct. Wttlllnk It's
importlnt 11111 this qu•tion be dlacusud.
Tile open-casket strvict prcwidts two IIIIPorllnt benlfits
for the berNnd . first, Yilllinl Ill tilt body helps lllt111
"come to ttrm" with tlltlr loss; In ., dolnc. tlltr tullr
end linellr ecctfllltltt tlltr hnw last elan done, thtrtllr
htlplna tht111 throu .. tilt fill proass.
Seeond, 1n open-cai-. IIIVICI helps tht berMncl RECAll the dtcmtd. lllnns or ill)lry 11111 u thtiiPPtll•nc:e, but pror,er PIIIPnliDII llflnctotllt dtc:eiUH nls- ·
qe ICCiptab 1 forllttr IICIII. Tlis Is llptcillly l~ort­
tnt for children, who meyiMtnlztln thtlr vtvld lmqlrllt~ns 1bout tilt body. By. Utili It, lilllrfttrllll dls-

- Denny Wellh, Matt Baker, Sc:oU PoweR, Paul Dalley; third, Ito r, Scolt
Steve Tracy, IUd&lt; Werl')', Kevin Meado..,., Johol\1' Swanoon,
Kevin
Chris Becker, fourth,ShanmnSiavm,LesleyCarr,Julle
MWer, J)anyan Ma;en. Sherry Cooper, Huey ~; fifth, Cathy
stotts, Jeaal Sw1111z, Dard H~Don Jle!lker. Kevin Meadows, Huey
Euoo and Shannon Slavin senoed osl the Institute youth .WI.
Attendance of the P'CJUP to the Institute w1111 through tbe spomorshlp d
Meigs ~ 2171, Fraternal Order of Eagles.

t:=: Committee working to improve service

1------------....l.-----------

Scoreboard ...

green.
.
Thelma Giles gave the demonstratkln on humlngbird feeders
roting that there are llO species of
the bird In the Western ~misphere
and that they are the ooly bird to
hover or to fly backward. The bird,
she says, consumes half of Its
weight i1 food dally and may feed
every 15 minutes on Dowers, such
as cannas, honeysuckle, lEe babn,
hibtcsus, or columbine Wid from
feeder!; In which she uses a liquid of
three parts water Ia one part of
sugar.
Mrs. Purtell showed slides of
fiowers Wid gardens of Interest to
her and her family. Ot~rs attendIng were F1os,o;le Hysell, Susie ·
Warner, and Helen Johnson.

.

Syraruse PTO has meeting

!SJI JACKSON PIKE ·RT. 35 WEST
Phone 448· 4!124

Elder statesman finishes race

WOMEN'S MARATHON WINNER - World rreord holder and
pre-race favorite Ingrid Krl&lt;itlansm ol. Norway, breaks the tape at the
finish line to win the 90th llo!!lon Marathon women's division Monday.
Her winning time was 2: 54.54. UP!.

the flow&lt;!" of the rmnth repcrt on
the sweet pea whkh grows ·well in
deep rich soil. She said the "plan
may send rut tendrils as long as six
feet and blooms In all colors except

.

'

$3• 2.5
.

Semd with whiJIIIed potato••· chicken &amp;li¥Y·
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry, ·
no substitutes except btven~~t wttlt addi-

Fellowship
meets
Activities at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly camp at Dar·
win and Its needs were discussed at
the recent meeting ol. the Women's .
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ held at the
Hemlock Grove Christian Church.
All rt the churches are collecting
paper products for use at the camp
and plans to purchase needed Items
fort~ camp were discussed. !twas
noted that a men's retreat wUI be
held a1 the camp on May 16.
Mrs. Wallace Bradford had
prayer, Trudy Andn&gt;ws gave devotions, and the group sang "Home of
the foul" to open the meetlng. lylrs.
Elwood Bowers preSided at the
meeting.
Guest speaker was Mrs. Marjorie
Purtell wiD did a humorous skit on
getting ready for spring. She
Included commentaries on her
youth, sunrise services, spring
cleaning and redecoration. Scripture was taken from Matt. 28 and
Mrs. Purtell commented on the
need for praying for our famllles,
our husbands. ourselves and our
ministers.
Refreslunents were served by the
host church. Next meeting wUI be
held Thursday night at the Dexter
Church at which tlmethere wlll be a
display of quilts and •: rafts and
recipes will be exchanged.

•

fried (hkktn

POMEROY, 011.

·fiRSl
BAPTIST
CHURCH
6TH &amp; P.AIMER ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

REV. CHARLES SIMON
APRIL 27-30
7:00P.M.

Win a
SunnyDav
G€t-away1

GET SOME BIUAD
:.WITH AWANT AD

992-2156

Enter lhe Teleflora
Sweepstakes for lSectretarries' I
Week, April21·25!

Small

wonder. 6ilrbusi·

ness has a jargon all its
own. Oeductibles .. Replacement Cost. Additional Living Expense. ·
Let us cut through the
maze -and explain your
insurance in understandable terms that make

. 214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

,· CROW'$ FAMILY RESTAURANT ·
.·

' RE~I~AL

FOR JUST

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

PH. 9112·5432

A letter to tiE cable company people have already volunteered to
serving this area protesting tbe help, It was reported. New strap
removal of WOUB television from swings have IEen Installed on the
stations otrered will be sent by the second grade swings. Field day will
be held eight May 27 or 2ll
Syracuse Pl"O.
depending
on the weather. Laura
Meeting recently at t~ s:hool,
to chair the commitGreen
agreed
the Pro also voted to spend $50 per
tee
to
provide
relrestunents
ilr the
classroom on educational games.
students
on
field
day
with
tiE
Pl"O
New officers Installed were Jill
Hobbs, president; Patti Struble, to handle the cost.
The next meeting will be held at 7
vice president; Brenda Donahue,
p.m.
on May 13.
· secretary, and Sherry Buskirk,
treasu_rer. The ways and means
committee will be named at a later
meeting.
It was noted that the treasurer's
·books have IEen audited. The
school can get extra Campbell soup
certificates . for educational nia1erlal It :nJ labels are coUected by
May JJ.
The cotton caney machine wlll be
taken ID varklus functlom during
the spring and summer and several

992·8887
,._..Auto
ln1UJ1111CI

Cot11111nt11 ·

A though!lui "Ihank you" to your
secretary - Sunny Day Carafe and ·
Mug Bouquets' V&lt;{rn two Sunny Day
Get-aways courtesy oi_Amencan
Airlines and Hyan Hotels One 101
you. Aseparate holrday101 your
secretary' Both tnps are 101 two To
enter sweepstakes and order your
bouquet. call or vrsrt us soon.· .
No purchase necessary to enter
'For complete Sweeps.takcs rulss. send a

sell-addressed. stamped envelope to
TelelloraSecrera..es Week Sweepsrakes
P0 l OJ&lt; 2059. Newpon Beach.CA92660

3 'Jelefiota"
POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
Pit 992-2039 or 992-572T
106 Butternut An.
Pomeroy, 011.
We accept all majdr ch¥1 it ctrrd.
&amp; wire .flmr~&gt;r.• Pt'f'f'vw/wr,•.

"

�P:

•

services

'

'l1le f!ev. Qwrlel Simona and his

wtte, Chris, formerlv rt Mldcileport,

ww retum to Middleport IIi leed the
spring revival at the First Baptist
Chu~ Slxt!) and Palmer Sts.,
&amp;mdaY llll'oulh Wed!tesday.
Rev. Simona was ~lOr Cit the
Middleport First BaPtiStO!ufcll In
Middleport tor ~ years !rom 1967
, tp l!I'T.t He mov~ trom MlddJeport
ID Indiana Where hP has served
three churclies and Is presentlY
pastor rt Calvary Baptist O!urch In

•

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•

lndlanapolls.

I

\

Darreri Jilulene Ha,ves

Scholarships announced in Meigs
The Bedford Township CommunIty Scholarship CommitteE&gt; Is an,

.nouncing the awarding of three
scholarships, ~ each, to three
· 1986 graduates of Metg~ High
School.
The recipients are Timothy
Wayll' Sloan, Darren EugenP
Hayes and Jodi Harrison .
Sloan Is the oon of Mr. and Mrs.
RollPrt Sloan, 37383 Rock Springs
Road. l'llmeroy, and plans to
continue his education at Ohio
University In rosiness ecooomlcs.
He has been a member of the
marching, concert, Ml and jazz
ba!Jds, the quiz team and the pop
choir. He also was a Boy's State
delegate In his junior year. He has a

grade point average of 3.346. Sloan
attends the United Methodist
Church.
Hayes Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth E. Hayes ot 37591 Rock
Sprtngs Road, l'llmeroy, and plans
to continue his education.at Ohio
University with a major In premedicine. He has served as senior
class vtce president; was treasurer
t:l the Meigs High School Chapter d
the National Honor Sodety In his
junior year and president during hls
senor year.
He has heen a member or the
concert band for four years, the ja12
hand for three years, AII·Counly
Band for three years and was a quiz
team memher lor ooe year. Darren

I
!

Tlltii'I'Cii~ Assn.
He was vice president ot the
executive c:Ouncll of the Gallia·
Meigs Commu'nlty Action Pro,
, gram; · was a trustee rt the
Soulhi!astern Ohio Baptist Camp
Cmference; president of · the
Mldd!Pport.Pomeroy ROtary Club
and served 88 preslderil ''rt the
Mei(ts County Ministerial Ass~. He
. 'has retained his membership l!i
Middleport Masooic - Lodge ·.3&amp;'!,
Free and Accepted Masons:
-.
'
Currently, Simons is coordinator ..
ot the Volunteer Pastortal Counsel- ·
lng Ministry ot the Warren Town· "
shlp School Distrtct In Indlanapollil, .
In charge rt acquiring ministers lo
to serve as councilors at two junior
high schools and at Warren Cenlrai
High School.

Tuesday, April 22, 1986

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
,=,~ GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

.

Durlngtheslx years that Mr. and
Mrs. Simons llv~ In Mkldleport,
Rev. Simons served as dl,rector of
youtll for the Rio Grande Baptist
AsSOCiation; was cbalnilan of the
Meigs County Crippled O!ldlre!l's
Society and the was Clu'mtmas Seal
Chainnan for the Meigs County

was awarded the first annual Eskey
Hill Memortal Award and Is a
language honoree, Academic All·
American. His grade point average
The Black Diamond Girl Scout land, vice president.
Is 3.722.
CouncU
rt which Meigs County Is a
The leaders are VIrginia F\n1er
Ms. Harrtson Is the daughter of
parthassetWednesdayasaspecial
and
Patrtcla Bissell, Dais)' 1037;
Mr. and Mrs. Dall' Harrtson d 41484
day
to
salute
leaders.
Tammy
Daniels and ~sle Smith,
Ktnsoory Road, f\:lmeroy, and
In
anoounclng
the
recognition
Daisy
1028;
MarUyn Powell and
plans to continue hPr education at
day,
the
Council
pointed
to
the
74
Cindy
Wheeler,
Daisy 1211; Pam
Ohio State University In the medJ,
yPars
of
scouting
noting
that
today
.
Russell,
Dinah
Stewart,
and 'i'l'rri
cal field. Jodi hasbel'na memberd
the
organization
has
become
the
'\\'llllams,
Brownie
1293;
Barbara
the volleyball team, softball team,
larg~&gt;st voluntary orgaJlizatlon for
CotterUI
and
Guadalupe
Stegall,
basketball team, student oouncU,
girls
In
the
world.
Brownie
lll6;
Faye
Cl!f!ord
and
computer club and has SB"ved as an
The
Council
Is
also
using
the
Stella
Blankenslp,
Brownie
1:2:»;
office assistant at Meigs High
occasion to emphasize the lmpor, Terri Robinson and Sally Erwin,
School.
She was winner of the Danllrth tance of the role of women noting Brownie 1371; Shirley Smith and
that In 1912 Juliette Gordon Low Patty Halley, Brownie 1254; Karen
Award, was a Girl's State alternate,
founded
the girl scouts, and within Dress an Sheila Erlewlne, Brownie
was on Ihe first team rt the all TVC
the
past
decade
a woman has bel'n 1196; Mary Hudson, Caley HubIn volleyball and was one the first
·
appointed
a
Supreme
Court Justice hard, Junior UOO; Marsha Barnand second teams of tl1e all TVC In
and
the
Drst
woman
I'Ver
has run hart, TPrrt Coovert, Junior 1276;
ooftball. She has a grade point
for
the
second
highest
olflce
In the Sarah Johnoon and Reml Franckoaverage rt 1225.
wlak, Junior lim, and
and

Leader salute slated for Wednesday

•BULLDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE
SEWERS· BASEMENTS
WATER UNES - SEPTIC
TANKS - CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS - MOBILE
HOME SETUPS - ROAD
BUILDING - FOOTERS - LAND

992-2156

(

Rog~&gt;r Luckeydoo, Cadette ll23,

SHORT STEEL

Cynthia M. Hensley
Cynthia Marte Hensley. daughter
of O!arles Eugene and Laur~ Diane
Hensley, Tuppers Plains, died
Monday evening at Sl. .Joseph's
Hospital In Parkersburg, W. Va.
Clnly child of Mr. and Mrs.
Hensley, she was born on Oct. 6,
1!f!4.

..

Public Notice

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

PROIIATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

BroWnie 1067; Barbara Lawrence:
Brownie 113J;Inna Bay, Brownie
1079;' Fred Scarberry, Nora Mar·
tin, Brown! 1259; Susan Nutter,
Linda Eastmim, Bmwnil' 1135;
AprU Hannon, Rose Ann Jenkins,
Faltll Hayman, Junior 1:!l4; Kay
Roberts, Anne Scarberry, Junior
100; Gladys Thomas, Ruby Drake,
.Junior 1015; Llal Van Meter, Sue
Metzger, Junior 1049· Linda East, man, Junlor 1274; ~nd Tammy·
Capehart and Susan Ferguson,
Cadette Ulll and Senior 1'roop :t~lt
Texanna Well I! II&gt; Brownie
consultant.

Estate of lawrence 0 . 'Hat·
tinger. Deceased .

Coso No. 25 ,097
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

On April 9, 1986 , in the
Meigs
County
Probate

Court. Case No. 26 .098.
Cindy Rothwell, Route 6,

A1heno, Ohio, 45701 , was

appointed Executrix of the
estate of Law rene D. Hartin ger, deceeaed, late of 463
South SiMth Street. Middle por1 , Meiga County, Ohio .
Robert E. Buok .
Probate Judge
lena K. Nenelroed , Clerk

141 15. 22. 29. Jtc

Jr., Deceased.

Caoo NO. 25,102
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On April 4, 1986, in 1he
Meigs Coomy Pmbote Court,
Cue No. 26,102, MolY Kay
Yoong, 742 Eaot Main S1rMt,
Pomeroy, Oho, 45769, Wll
appointed Executrix of the • ·
tate of Vk:tor C. Young, Jr..

deceaoed . late olthe Vii ago of

Pomeroy, County of Meigs

and State of Ohio.

Robert E. Buck.
(418 .

Probate Judge
Lena K. Ne11elroad
Clorl&lt;
15, 22, J1c

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of Sate
issued out o1 the Common

01110

Lilly Mae Brewer

Uly Mae Brewer, 64, New Haven,
died Monday in Pleasanl Valley
Hospital after a long illness.
She was born Aug. 31, 1921 in
Boone County, Ky.
She was a member of til&lt;'
Emmanuel Southern Baptis t
Church In Waynesville. Ohio, and
was a member or the Dairy Goat
Club ofl'lllnt Pleasant.
Surviving is her husband James
T. Brewer Sr. of New Haven; lhree
stepdaughters, Mrs. Imogene

Roger Hysell
Garage
At. U4,Pomsroy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Al1o TrUIIIIIItlon
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3,24-tfc

'

111111111' FDIC
2212 Jaclt... Avtftut

l'olnt PtHoant, w. ve.
61Jolt21

...........
New"'-w.v.. ·
'

.~

-fl·

,~.
f..::'~~

V. B. Horton '• Additk:m· to

.. 4&amp;90-Ca n't choose?

.Send k»:
· AllleAdlmsP1111rnL

I

'

,...,.
,_. -IIIII .

.-

c

RUN1~~

r----FRENCH
y
·sA
AY, MAY 3, 1986

'

'

•

•, PATTERNS

,..
I

AWARD GIVEN TO 1st; 2nd AND 3rd -PLACEFINISH·
ERS IN EACH AGE GROUP DIVISION.

t ..

i•
I
~

T9:00A.M.

.

...l
rj"'"·''

,

I

NAME

MALE (

5/3116

FEMALE (

q~inst

I FOUN'DAI~N dbi(HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER and tilt OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING COMPANY: I IItts! ihat
1111 piiJ?ICIIIy f1t, thlll hlwt sufficiently trained far my Plrficipation in thjs ntnt,and that my pllysi1 cal
condrtion hu been verified by a Pllysiciln.
.·
1
I
P11111tal Sl&amp;neture if Entr111t Undtr Ap of II

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?
BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS
MGM Farm City
POMEROY

~~::"'

11

II
1

I
I

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
Long Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

2-20-tfn

.

992-2181

Help Wantad

DENNY CO.NGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

: ~~"'

· ~~'~ ..
··

.......

~

· ~.

f

...
•

,.
~·

•.

,,,..

Aa;ress1ve with outaoin&amp; pusonality.
4. Prefer over 22 (or responsible).
5. Hiah school craduate minimum. Mlh four years full ti mework·
inc (sales) uperience or collece decree.
6. Must be out of town 6 nigh11 per week .
National tOfporalion has immediataopenincs for mature. profes·
sional sa les -oriented womtn and men thlt ""d ta earn

- J.

115.000.00 and up per vm.(llllry plus conmissionl. 1200.00

·~

~

per wtek while In trainincwith motel expenses, car allowanc•and
corp.,benefits.
Ret1ll. jewelry, cosmetic. telephone sales or m•rketinVtuchinc

batkJround helpful. GR£AT CAREER RHNTRY OPPOliTUNTI!
For personal Interview call John C. Hslt's offi&lt;O TOLL FREE at: 1IW0,52H584. Monday 1hroulfl Tltursd1y botw11n 8:00 s.m.and
7:00p.m. ONLY! Please call 011 or before Tltursdoy, April 24th.
LO.E. M/f

I
I
1
I

WH0-0·0·0 .
can help
you?
CLASSIFIED.
ADS

I

... ....

Oi Ch.:1g0. Sluoopon Blod01

FREE ESTIMATES

Tum ..ft It Melgt Memory
Gerdent, 3 mite ott At . 1m
the right
471&amp;9 Eagle Ridge Rd .

'

991-2156

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. Second

Oil fi-d Stnice,
Landscaping,. lallmlftU,
land Clearing. ~fonds, 5eptK
Systems, Heavy Htwling.
Stone &amp; Gravel Hauling
Eltrlrical Work
RESIDENTIAL. COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
(C11rtltled Ehtctrician]

DON ROSE, Owner

949-2493

Home 843·5340
4121'16/ 1 mo.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All Yw Plltll•t N11i1
PWi: Offi&lt;t Suppin &amp; •

UOIAGE AVAilliiE

446-8592
Kanauga, Ohio

itotionory, Magnetic
s:gns, Rullbor Stamps,

r

CLC COINS

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAVS
CJ CoJ11luterized Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds· lntetpreting SeJVices

-

GOLD, SllVIR &amp;
&amp; RARE COINS

IE:

CIII~ENCY

COINS, GOLD &amp; StLYEI
WHOLESAlf JUT.
JEWRRY

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
New Location:
168 North Stt:ond

•Dryers •Froezert

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5·11&lt;

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashon Building

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

I:

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

PH. 985·3937
AFTER 5 P.M.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
3,13 tfn

4-1·'86-1 mo.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone Bills Here

DOZER . BACKHOE.
TRENCHER . SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER .
GAS Bo SEWER UNES.
RECLAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
t!o DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

W.-.ted ;unk autot. Ctll 614 388 -9303
Und mobile home . C.l eu .

448,0175.

coln1, large currency. Top pric•. Ed . Burkett B~tbtr Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh . 814-

992 -3476.

Empl oy1mrtl

Help Wanted

Excellant i"lc:omt for part time ·
hom11 ••embly work. For info.
caii312 ·741 · 8'DO ext. 313.

Government jobt •18,0t0 ·
'69,230 yr. Now hiring . Call
805- &amp;87-!000 •xt . A·.-&amp;82 for
current t.clerallilt .
Dream Job for mothen .
taachert. PI"Y pllr'l deal••·
HouM of Uoyd now hiring
a~perv l iOrt to advertiae. hlrllnd
man,a(jle toy deman1trator1 .
Wonderful
horNCoc.,..r.
No
invMtment ._.. ·Call
llect 30'·

738 -6330 .
The Down Under Restaurant i.
now taking appliations for
experienced full stmca wai·
V..HI . Apply In PMIOn whh
r..ume of ,iob history. Pleau, no
phone caNt .

Man to work In aervice lt..tion.
Mutt have good reflftnCM &amp;
mec:h1nical e•parienca. Call
6U · 441· 382B .
Euy AIMmbly Wortd 1800 .00
Pfi 100 . Guaranteed payment . - .
No .xperien~ · No ..ln. O.tail1

llf'ld stlf·1ddre11ed ltlmpld
envelope: El1rt Vltal -715, 3418
Enterprtle Rd. Ft. Pllfce, Fl .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI
1714 .00 per 100. Gu1rentHd
P.ym1nt. No tal11 . D1t11ils.
Send 111mped env1lop1: Elln·
68.7. 3.18 Enttrprltl, Ft.
Pl1rC1, Fl. 33·8~.

Addons and remodeling
Roofing 1nd gutter work
Concrete wortc
Plumbing 1nd elec1ric•l

Government Job1. t1&amp;,040 .
tl9, 230 -yr. Now Hiring . Call
1-801,187-1000 EX1. R-9805
for cunern feder1111n

YOUNG'S
-

work

Poaitlons Open : Ttllphone
Coordinator. Ctalms lnvntig•·
tor, Boarder of Small Animalt.
S•l•ry negotllble. For more
rtform.don or int1rvlew , call
Meigs County HurNnl Society
.t 814 -992 ·SU7 01 814 · 992·

992·6215 or 997.7314
Pomeroy, Ohia

4-15-' 86·1&lt;

2203.
WANTED : Prior Mlllt1ry Service
Mernb«l. The Army Guerd
nHdlvourexperl.nce.Joinnow
for 1 p.art-tirne iob with t.Mefib
like rttirlti'Mnt 1nd lduc1tlonal

r--------1..,.,.....,..,...,.,,.....,.. . .1
TOWN &amp; COUNIIY

VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shackey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackoan Awt.
SMALl ANIIIAL !lOUIS
Mon..IVOII.·Thurt. 3,5 pm
lutl. 6:304; Fri. 1-2 pnt
ioturday 10·11:30 am
LAIGE 4NIMAL &amp;
SUIGEIY If APPT.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

"AI Reasonable Prim' ·

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860

PH. 304-675-2441

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30-tl

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

For Hours

"16}86 1frr

2282.

33482.

We C1rry fish ing Supplies

IUIItiiS P!IONE
16 14) 992,6550
IEIIOENCE PHONE
(6141

end niWtr UMd cera. Smith
Buldi -Pontiac. 1911 httem
Ave .• Geltlpolil. Cell 814-448 -

11

-------...!.--------t

BUYING

V. C. YOUNG Ill

All Maku

Bill Gene Johnson

114-441-36 72

614-446· 7283

Manogtr liwing On Prtmilts
OOT~OE

&amp; RENTALS

Out of Town Ctlstomers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheal Chairs
WE BILL MEDKARE AND OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN niGIBLE
·BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
63 Pine St., Gallipolis
We Deliver
24

RENT IY MONTH

and Graduation

992-3345311/ tln

SALES

SxiO, IOxlO, 10124

CONTRACTING

•Waahen •Oishwathera
•Rengel
•Refrigerators

Jim Mink Chev .-0\dalnc .

HOSPnAL SUPPLIES FOR HOME USE

SPACE?
CONVENIENT
STORAGE UNITS

KEN'S
985-3561

u•~ CIIFI .

SPECIAliZINS IN WINDOW j /100~ II.EPlACE/IfENT

NEED STORAGE

!Free Estlma1es)

SERVICE

Wepey cnh for lite model ciMn

s~ rV Ices

J&amp;F

APPLIANCE

Wanted To Buy

Buying daily gold, ailwf corte,
ringt, jewalry, nertlng w.re. old

PHONE (614) 992·5009

1· 17-tln

Furniture, Wetlding

lusintss Forrm,
Copy Senktl, Etc.
255 Mill lt., MiddlopOft
104 Mulberry Av., Pomtroy

Middleport, Ohio

COMAIRCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMATES-

519,95

UCIIIE, OHIO

(CUT OUT FOR rUTURE USE)

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office

304-372·5709

10-14-tlc

FOUNTAIN
RESTAURANT

••llt11nce. 304-1575·3950
1· 800·142 · 31119.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERSJOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFAIG~RATOR
•SATEWTE SALE. &amp; SERVICE

FENCE COIIPAin
PH. 992·6931
Altor 5 Call
742-2027

130 ACRES

2 BUILDING LOTS
I ACRE PLUS
S4,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES-S6,000
I S auts wooded land,
hugo poplars, mtlltnt
timber, scenic. Wright
St., Pomeroy.

MONTGOP/iRY
REALTY
- 614-385-7419 .

Colltct Calls Auepltd

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILlf, OHIO

D""·

Fir• EqulpMut
P• tft &amp; Strvlet

CHESTER-915 ·3307
4/1/tfn

Huge Dulth style barn,
txlllltnt lake side and
farmland pos1ure and
weods. Asking $400 per
am. for quick sale. Adjacent Pomeroy.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Authoriud John
New Holland, luoh Hog
Farm !quipmonl
lltaltr

•• Ntu Afill Thttt

Real Estate General

BOGGS

1-3-'86 tfc

RADIATOR

SER~ICE
We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1· 13·tfc

ParNlrr., full· timto rtpr11ente ·
Uv1 OHded. Educ•tion1l Salll.

At 82 . 8 miln south of

C•ll 304 · 882 · 2415 for
appoint~Nnt .

the Pomeroy·Miton Brktge'

Choose from 3 MeatsHam. Chitkon or 8akod Stoak
Served with 4 ••1etobtos.
Iliad. dnSirt ond drink.

Blbytlner needed in our homa
for 5 yesr old girl in Point

Pleuant. Flex lbll WHitday
hours. ref1rences required . CAll
304· 1'16 · 3214 after 5:00PM.

SUNDAY BlfHT
11 :30 "·"" to 2:00 p.m.
for $4.95
Children 12 &amp; Unthr
lf2 Pri&lt;t
S &amp; Undtr FH!
Our Specialty
WHOLE APPlE PIES
for $4.50

HOO

Howard L Write11l

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Guttef'8
Downspouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
_or 949-2969
2·17·86·11•

*VINYL )jDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULAnON ,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Buill
"Free Eatimat•"

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2860

•~U..~..-,..:..~....-......;rl

Wo..-.n _, lvf In with 11derty
lady. Sonw cooking tnd ligh1
hou11 keeping . C1re for semi
lnv.tid. Out of town r•ldence .
Smolllfl need not epply. Mul'l
have good reftrenoes . Send
FIIUtnltO BO X C 19. Clrt Point
Pte111nt Reg later, 200 M1ln St .•

Point Pl.e llant, W. Va.

Annou nee111 enIs

Baby titter needed Henderson
ar•. flexible hourt. phone
30•· IJ76· . .38 .

3 Announcemeiful

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Insulated Dog Houm

Call:

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992·5875 Or
742-3195

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·5191

SUPERIOR
, SIDING CO.

VINYL I AWMIIUM

Complete Outler Work
Comploto Remodeling

Roofing

of

Ill Typoo

Worked In home eree

20 YNrl

"Free Eltlmates"
CAll COllECT:

Ph. 16141 143-5425

1·12·2 mo .

441 -0294.

Vegetable plant.: Vld1lla and
Sw1et Spenith Onion Plentt:

ftow1rt in flatt . pots and hang Ing b11klt1. Cl1l1nd Grlln ·
hou11. Vin1 St. , R1cin1, Ohio.
SINGLES . MHI that tPICill
ptROnl Fr .. appNc.tion . ParIOnll 10uch introducUone. boll
51538 , Chlflllton , W. V1 .
25302. 1 , 3Q4, 727-8434 .

4

UTIUTY

EUGENE LONG

SWEEPER .,d sawing mllehln1
r~lir , pert1. and IUPPW•. Pick
up end daliYery, Otvil Vacuum
Cl11ner. one hilt mile up
OeorgN Creek Rd. C1ll 814 -

17 Miscellaneoua
DatiOn Troe S1rvlc., frM uti·
mat•, 30.C· 578-28 97 ,

Sizes Start From 12116'

BUILDINGS

Sizes from 6'x6'
Up to 24'136'

1·20·tlt

AKC Aeglttertd Do bermtn.

VINYL &amp; .
ALUMINUM SIDING

•lntulatlon

veer old f1m1le Slam•• cat.
D•·ciiWid . Call 8 U -44&amp;·
U72 .
2

•Rtp~ctm.nt~ndo~

•New Rooting

"FREE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH.

Business
Opportunity'

I NOTICE I
lliE OHIO VAM.EY PUILISHINO CO . reconwn.nds th•t you
do bulin•• whh ptop .. you
know, end NOT to and money
throut~~the m1il until you have
iw•tlget.d the offering.

II month old tarnal• Cochr
Spaniel puppy 1D give rNIY 10
good ,-home. Cell 11.C-182 ·
7005 .
Gla11 b1throom 1hower doors to
gJveew1y . Calll51 • -91115 -3942.
pll1 Collie

1013.

HOME OWNERS·Aefinanc1 to
low fiud r11e. U11equltyforany
p..upos1. Le_.er Mongage Co

dogs, 304,87&amp;, 8t 4-592,3081 .
23

• Roottll'l, 304· 575-8620 .

a

Lost and Found

..

Profealonal
SetVicee

PIANO TUNING AND AEPAIA,
red'-covll" your pi ..o·• beautiful

•Storm Dooro
•Storm Windowa

2,

1354.

I

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Fmanm l

Giveaway

Black 6 ttn female. 3 vr•· old.
,oood home only, Ctll 814-448-

Situations
Wanted

8oohkeep• whh 15 .,.,,. experience lnconw 11M priiJaralion .
Taking new clients. Bulin......
farmers . trucker~ . rentllt . R ....
onlblll ret.. . Call 81t .992·
23 18 1ft1r 4:00 p.m.

No Sunday Calls

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

LJ,J4 -tfc

Of

Located in the
Saddlebrook Inn

12

:.~ ,

1

lOSE EXCAVAnNG

10-8-tfc

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

BUILDING

SEUING

Sho~ T11htlelu
ett O•lf

•---~---- -------------------------------------~
I
-.
. ' .
-· - ··

.'

(•.:'H

; .•. ~ ·

(Free Estimates)

'I

•

1I RACE ! !5KlOK(3.1(6.2MILES
I1
MILES)
I
(
111111 DINOSAIII DASH (FUN RUN)
1
II allIn s~blnlttlna
tllis 111try to pirticipa11 1~ tbt HIIC/OVP FRENCH CITY RUII. 1Wliveud 111u-. any and
1
ri&amp;hts and clll•s for dimaiJI, demands and actions I tttiY hllwt
the HOUER HOSPITAL
I.
Sipelttrt

T ~t

,

J ... :

~~~

I

_•

1 ot(

1i4 Misc. Merchandise

; - · If you want an OJ)portunity that comes rarely in a person's
' ::- · . lilelime then you owe it to yoruself to investicate.
.. : 1. If you are a cood communit~tor/CAREER MINDED.
1•..- 2. Neat appomnce/HIGHLV MOTIVATED .

------~--~

OURS: 9:00 A.M.-6:00P.M. Mon. thru Sat.
Evenings 8o Su~day By Appointment
1-15-'86 Hn

I''"'"'"* Olf11

14115,21.28 Jtc

I"'.1.,.,.,. ----~===::::::====----"'1
AnENTION: WOMEN AND MEN

SPONSORED BY

I

Howard E. Frank
Shariff of
Maig1 County , Ohio

BULK OR BAGGED

;.;c·: ~; arJ' H f~

~_

REGISTRATION THE , DAY OF THE RACE WILL BE
1
7.00.

I

· •·EJ

,-·

(Before April

.
Ir-----------------------------------I
FRENCH CITY RUN
.

·r--..-

... ,.

I' ...•~
I

6K AND 10K RACE COURSE IS FLAT AND RUN
THROUGH SCENIC GALLIPOLIS.
•

28th).

., .

I'
,,

REGISTRATION BEGINS AT B:OO A.M. IN THE CITY
PARK AREA. DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS.

16.00

117-EIIy Altoflttdlpoinl
112-stvft 'n' Puff tMI1s

!;~ ANNE ADAMS

AWR OS GIVEN TO 1st AND 2nd MALE AND FEMALE
FINISHERS IN BOTH THE 6K AND 10K. ·

The reel estate camot be told
for looo dw1 tv.&lt;Hhirdl1he llf)praited vakte.

.

; .. fr.esh lash ions in
. -.,, SPRING , SU MMER
: ~· · Po!oTTERN CATALOG .
;,.;.t-Free pattern offer. Send
,. " $2 • 75~ JXlStage.
: . • Eiooks $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.

PRE-REGISTRANTS WILL BE GUARANTEED AN OF·
FICIAL RACE SHIRT.

PRE-REGISTRATION IS ONLY

'

APPRAISED AT S8,400.00.

TERMS OF SALE : CASH

·=~ ~Size, Plfttm Number.

!.,_r
~··.

lege of Pome"roy. Ohio .
Deed Record1.

' .
; •: 008 Natthem Blwl., Wooctsklt,
, ·Jfl. 11m. Prln1 Nome. Add.....
I ,_..'

the Village of Pomeroy. EMcept a rtrlp off of the aaa·
terly side of said Lot No. 60 ,
23 feet wide on Front Street
and running beck at that
width a diatance of 36 feet .
It is the intention of ttw
Grantor• herein to convey to
the Grantee herein all of the
real eatate owned by Helen
Harper at the time of her de ·
ceaH in lott59 &amp;. 80 inV. B.
Horton' s Addition to the Vii·

Reference Deed: Vol. 288.
Pago 411 . Meigo County

'l -..•1

:r' ; : The Daily Sentinel

HOI.ZEI .DICAL CENTEI
OHIO 'VAUEY PUILISIIIIG CO.

.. ......

I

1

Ask \Abo.-t Our
·Direct Deposit.

~

1.)0'

blouses lo mix with your
.- slacks or skirts. Use easy
!:"",care fabrics . Women's
:,......;..Sizes 34 to 52.
, ':," $3.25 lor each patlern .
i I_"Alld 75¢ ~ ach pa«ern for
: -;::' postage. handling.

RACES START

ES.BANk

'-

l

:_'' Sew both easy-to-wear

Part Of Your 'Life.

IT'S THE QUICKEST AND
EASIEST WAy-TO IECIIVI
YOUR GOVERNMINT CHICK.

\-· ·~~~

,

COME DRESSED TO RUN.

'

meroy, County of Metgsand
State of Ohio. and bounded
and described 11 follows :
Being • pan. of lot No. 80
in nid Village of Pomeroy ,
and mora pan.icularty de scribed •• follows :
Being all of Lot No. 60 i1

I

Doesn't Have To Be

.

Stanford

of Salisbury. Village ot Po,

•
·t....
,.,,.

Waiting In Line
I

ogoin1t

Situated In the Township

•

RUTLANDD - Zion Church of
Christ revival continuing with 7
p.m. services each E'\lening through
April 25. Philip H. Ling Sr..
evangelist.
POMEROY - Plans for a
rronlon of lhe Meigs High School
class of 1971 will llP made at a
meeling to he held Wednesday
night at 7 p.m. In IlK' Meigs High
Library. Class members are urged
to attend.

and
Contracting Servile

meroy, Ohio 45769:

~ --·"'

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING

Ohio, in the ca1e of Bank One
of Athena, NA. Athans, Ohio.

217 in ooid Coort. I wil offer
for sale. at the front door of
the Courthouee in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on the
23rd day of May, 1986. at
10:00 A . ~ .. tho folo,.;ng
lands and tenements. b01ted
at 1104 East Main Street. Po·

':. . .

WEDNESDAY

Rt. 124, Pomeroy
PH. 992·5468

St.

IP•rt• inctudl&gt;dl

Complete Building

Plaintiff.

lOK

9

PHONE 992-7075

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP

Pleoi Coort of Meigo Coomy.

Moon, et el., Oefendantl.
upon a judgment therein ren ·
de red, being Caee No. 85 01

SK

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

EAGU III'GE
SMAll INGINI CENlll
Parto • Stni&lt;O
949·29..

- 367-7671

.

1 :00 Cllll 304-6711·•11 .

TOP CASH paid foJ '83 m ocllll

IF NO ANSWER CAll:

Eltate of Victor C . Young,

.v••

Wid • . wm ttb .,,
consignments, for more lnfror·
m1tion e~l13(14-171 · 31 21 Itt•

INCOME TAX RETURNS

RIDER
SALVAGE
HOURS:

FIN M•rketl!! Curley's bltOf't, 2
mllet out S.,d HHI RoM. MIIY 3

'

367-0317

all

In l!lg Bend West.
Mary Dempsey, Unda Well

Calendar

RADIATOR, BRASS,
COPPER, CAST.
SHEET ALUM.

FR EE ES TIMATE S

Faulkner of Covtngton, Ky,, Mrs.
JoAnn Perry of Wolfe County, Ky. ,
Mrs. Brend3 Maines of Langsville;
one stepson, James T. Brewer of
New Haven; 14 step-grandchildren
and five step·great-grandchildren.
Graveside services will be Wed,
· nesday at 1 p.m. In the Graceland
Memorial Gardens In Mllford,
Ohio. with the RI'V, NalhanKingray
officiating.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. on
Tuesday.

Besides her parents stl' is
survived by her maternal grandparents. Walter arid Linda Brawley
of Dlyton, and Carolyn and JamPs
Nestor, Springfield. Paternal
grandparents arl' John and Bar·
bara _ Hensley, '!Uppers Plains.
Bessie Brawley of Coolvlll~ Is a
'l'li»&gt;DAY
maternal great,grandmother, and
HARRJSONVILLE -Senior CIStella Chevalier, Beverly, Charles
and Dorothy Hall, Reedsville, and tizens Club meets 7 p.m. Tuesday at
Gay and Laura Fields, CoolvUie, the HarrtsonvUle Town Hall. ·
are paternal greal,grandparents.
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
Ada Triplett, Marlon, Ind. Is a
F&amp;AM meet In special session
grea l,greal,grandmother _
Friends may call at the Whit!' Tuesday. 7: 00 p.m., for annual
Funeral Horne in Coolville Wednes, lnsp€Ctlon. Work wUI be In the EA
'
day, 2 to 4 and 7 1D 9 p.m. Funeral degree.
services wUI be held thereat J p.m
MIDDLEPORT- OAPSE C:hap&lt;JI Thursday with the Rev . Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial wlll be in ter 17 meets at Meigs Junior High
Tuesday, 7:00p.m., for election of
the Reedsville Cemetery.
olflcers.

·w. . E.FEDERAL.....;STATE
(Bill) SNOUFFER

2FT. LONG IRON,

Public Notice

'

1

The 'Daily

Pomeroy-'-Middleport, Ohio

tDday, 'Ward• Kevbo•d. 304-175,11100 .. 171,

tone , ~ cen

Found: 8prlnelf' Spaniel CM' pert
Smtr near Melgt High SChool.

Clll614-992-3489

...,.,in II•·

3824.

Lo1t ~ Racine area, black, t1n,
.,d white Stub•UIII . llflft.

SHELTON POOL CO. Swim·
miflg Pool Salls - lnstallat~n• .
Fhplirs . Your trlendty pool
buildlfl. Buffalo, W. Ye . 304·

141·2481 .

137·2471 .

An.w.re to Chrilty. Call 114·

1

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
23

Profel$ional
Services

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

44

54 Misc. Merchandise

Apartment
for Rent

~

One bedroom 'ept, covenl.ent
locetlon, 30•·676 -2£41

Window Tinting . Auto, commer·
c•al. r•ktentlal Free eatlfMtea
Call 614 -•·U-93•&amp;

45 Furnished Rooms

Real Estate
31

For rent Sleaplng Rooms and
Ught houstkeeplng rooms Parfi
Central Hotel Call 61 4 -U &amp;-

Homes for Sale

0768.

4 bedroom hou ... fireplace. 3

46

m t south of Galllpolie , 829 ,900
C1 ll days ~14 446 -1616 or
even1ng1 614 446 1244

7 rooms &amp; btth, 1 acre more or
leu, carpeted throug hout VInyl

s1ding 125,000 12 N Mam St ..
Chaahtre C•ll614 -446 3793

repllt) Alco del•quen11all property Cell 806 -687-6000 e.:t
GH -4562 for tnformetton

"Wilma s so sentimental... it's
1

weelo:day a

6 Acres 3 br bnck home.
locatlld '" Kyger C reek School

O!St rtct U9 ,000
367 7238

Ca ll &amp;14 -

the dress her mother wore

446 -9181

92.8
2 or 3 bedroom lg k1tchan &amp;
1tv1ngroo m. gas heat • wood
biJrnlnQ stove. 3 storage bUild·
tt19S Located 1 city blo ck trom
new c•t¥ pool across street from
!nt e of new golf course Call
614 -398 9477 o r 614 388 -

8S15
3 bdr tn town good locatton
Small down payment will sell on
land contrac t Call 61C -44675 72 t1l 6 00 or 61 4 ·446 1522
11her 5 0 0

w,

ston es. 4 -6 bdu, 2 baths,
t(rep lsce. full basa 't , 1•h20bldg
with gerage on 8 1 acres
locat!Kt in R10 Grande Call
514-245 ·6197 after 5
New never occup1ed 3 br. 2 full

baths, family room, 2 cargar~a
No mainttf1uca Brie... S. vinyl
elllllnor CA. G111 heat , large
shad!Ki lot w·plenty of pnvacy
Oircle Drive near Hol~:er Hoapi
tal All for $69,000 614 448 -

2"967

Houses for Rent

1••70 F81tNal, 2 bdr . 2 full
baths. Iota of cloaets, uflhty
room, AC . Call 614 -446-6241
tnyttma

81.· 388·9888
Furnithed or unfurnithed 3
bedroom hou11 for rent 1n
Mrddlaport. Ctll 614 -992-

Mobile-MtnufKtured Homes
For Sale Conskler e ra-cl .. med
hof'MI 1500 down end tlkeover
ptyments. Delrvered tNt. '8 1
Pttriot 1 4~~:68 thrN bedroom.
1187 per month. We have morel
Mid Ohio Financltl Service.

5084.
ACT NOW!! 10 6 per cent APR
to quellfled buyers Announcing
thelaw11t int.,•t rete tn ye.-s
Why PlY rent. when you can own
for Ills Ltt ont of our hou11ng
conauhtnu lhow you how. TRI

800·828·0752
1976 Richwood 1111• 60 2 br, 2
bath Call 614·"8· 4661 or

STATE HOME CENTER . 1-84

814·387-0397

OPEN EVERY DAY

Nitro hit. 304 -765 -0181 ,

1974 Holly P11k 121118 &amp; lot 3
br's. AC, Verv. vary nic.. Call
814 · 4•') -4716 after 6 30
anyttme· weekends

Cute cottt;e tor lingle parson.

fumihstd, utilitiM pr~id , 166.00
PIN' week. 304-876 3100 or

875· 5509

141170 ManstOn new Nved in 7
mos ... t up In ChMhlre Moblle
Home Park. Call &amp;1 4 -367-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

0522
12 x60 mobtle home. new
carpet. g11 furnace, underpin·
nlng Per11tlly furnithed, 115.&amp;00
or belt oHar. Call 814-2158-

Furntshed,.cable, beautiful nvervttw. in Kaneuga. no City taxes
Fosttf1 Mobile Home P~rk Ctll

1980 ltbeny 14•&amp;4 , 2 bad·
room. unh.lm1shed. vtnyl under·
pinntng 1ncludtd Must AU Cell

For .... or rant , 14a70. 3 bdr ,
1'11 btth , cloae to town Cell

Settle esnne 3 BR ranch . 2
bath fireplace, garage. Dasira·
ble Gallipolis a rea Walk to
school or town Hilltop lllltW
Ce ll 614 · 446 0388 after 6

304· 773·5873

5.06
I ~ Midd leport , 3 bedroomremo·
deled home. Air condttJoned.
11inyt Stdtng tnsulated. fenced-In
b1ck verd, stor1ge bu1ldtng,
close to tchoo ls Show by
appotntment only Call 614 992 -2012
4 bedroom home tor sale Good
Hunting and good fithtnQ Can
be negottattd with owner Cell

614 -985·4392

5 rooms, bath, ulihty gsrage.
aluminum s1d1ng storm win·
dows doo rs, central he11t. atr
condition 614·992-5204

tnEurlkan1c., clean, pttrt. tum ,
adults onty. no pet1. 1180 mo
Oep req Call 814-258· 1638 or

1978 121160 Naal-tua Mobile
t1ome in ••callent condition
lncludta stove. refrigerator, dll·
hwllhet". 10x14 storege buildIng, IWnlng, concrtttsttPI.Iots
of extras. Own..- movir111 Must
IMtOipp~iate CeU814-592·
6858 enytim•

8U-258-1291.
2 - 2 bdr. mobile homes on
8ul.v1lle Rd., I 200 mo plu•

dopooh C.H 81•·«8· 9204
MobHe Harne Call 614 -448 -

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: lnaured , rtMonlblt retet, CaU
304 ·578·2338

0508 offer 5:00 PM.
2 bHroom mob61t home. Neer
Racine C•ll814-982·5868.

Now displaying our new 1pring
models in single and doubi.Wid•
homes at reduced prlcet. WMt·
wood Homes. 5898 Rt . eo E..
Barbourtvllle, W. Ve 304-7363888 open IY'Iry dq.

2 bedroom in Syncu• Fur·
nilhed. Deposit requ ired . Cell

11•·992-7880.
Furnished 3 bedroom Mabile
home Washer and dry.r No
pets C1ll 814-949· 2263

1984. 10d&amp; Van Dyke mobile
home. 2 bedroom. living room
with t•P out. new carpeting 111d
linoleum, 12,000.00 304-876-

5113

Of

14'•70' mobile home. 3 bed·
rooms, underptnn ing, eppltan
cta i'lcluded, NICE , 304 876-

175·2949 .

1.18

BUV 14a70, 3.bttdroom mobile
home. sitting on a lot reMty to
move tnto . 1225 00 down
1200 00 month. 304 -712-

MUST SELl Houat, 17 acres,
e.11 tras on ouUklrts of Rutla nd
Will nego tia te 614 -7£2-3006
3 bedrooms. 2 full balhs,
equipped kttc:hen . 2 car carport.
m Syracuse Call6 14-992 7285
etter 4 00

1973 Kerwood, add on room.
central air, with or without
furniture. One 1cr• ltnd. need
otftt, 304-676·3030 or 171-

12 year old 6 roo m house with
deck, above ground pool, ptal·
hte d1th. woodburner. economt·
eel ta heat 2 Plus acres ne•t to
Sh ade Rtver Forest, $35 ,000
Call 614 ~67 3278 after 8 00

pm

7 room house in Chester , Ohio
Price reduced 126 500 Call
614 ·98 5 3571 .
Ouatn l older home on Vine St in
Racine 3 bedrooms, bath, l1v111g
room. dimng room, new kitchen.
app l1ances included new carpet.
wallpaper. c:urtetns Prt ce .
$35 ,000 Phone 614 949
2540
In Mtddleport , 7 rooms 2 baths.
full b•sement
hllll. air
conditioned, well msulated 2
car garage. nice corn er lot.
Phone 614 -992 3686 or 6 14-

u••

286~

Que lily bu1ll 11IJ story Tu dor
sty le home on 5 wooded acres,
10 m1nut11 from Po1nt Pleasant.
Sand H1ll Road. $88,000 00

304 895 3363

4 bedroom houM. 1907 N Main
St 2 bedroom house, 2207 Oak
St , • bed room house 2324
lin coln A111 . Point Plt.. tnt . W
VIII 304 -675 ·21 3 0 .
N1ce two 110ry, 4 bedroom . 2
11vmgroom1. kitchlen . dming,
bath and cs r port Rec1ne. OhK&gt;
&amp;32 .000 00 814 -247 -3622 .
111, storv house. Flatrock aree.
30 's. 304 676 -4008

32 M obile Homes
for Sale

3,31 '

1979 141170 Schult with ex pa nda, 3 bedrooms. 1 ~ baths,
tirepii Ct, hell pump, deck,
awning, underpinning Call 61 4·

246·5566
1981 Ven lu ra Cathedral ceilings . ges. CA. underptnnlng.
19.600 W-0 wuher dryer.
110,000 With Clll 814 245-

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS !Equal Housing Oppor
tunhy) monthly t~nl 1111r11 at
1178 for 1 bedroom and 1212
for 2 bedroom. deposit 1200,
loCited n..r Spring Valley Plue
and Foodltnd. poolandCablaTV
IYiilllblt, Office hours 81 PGIII
ble10 em to4 pm end 7 pm to9
pm Monday-Friday, C1ll 814·
446 -2n5 or l•w m•sage

- ...-"\.

Farms for Sale

Nk:ely furnished mobile home.
tff apt., ctntrtl air end hltt •n
citv, adults only, C111 614 446 -

1.-2 acres with hou ... barns, 2
lge. ponds. Nm•tone Call &amp;14·

0338

2·6·9248

Furn. apt 919 2nd Ave Galli·
polis share beth, single male.
113li mo , utlllti11 paid Cell
446 -4416 after7pm.

By owner, 110 acre ferm ••
Dsater. All high ground. bHUtl·
ful ho~ with dual heat, swim·
ming pool. Mum •e P 0 .I. By
owner. 114 acre term ntar
Outer. 2 barn1, modwn 3
bedroom hou•. valley setting.
Csll 814 -142-2877

2 bdr., nHr Silver Brktge Plan.
Nice cerp.ting, weter • garab·
age pekl Call 814·••6-7 25.
Al)lrtmtnt tor flnt . Quality 2
BA . 2 blth apanment In prime
downtown locttlon wtth offstreet ptrking. Kitch., furnished
with refrlg , HH-ciMn owen,
OW. gar. dltp , !MH)twp for
washer/ dryer. For non-an-iOidng
&amp;lAIIt or &lt;lOU Pit. No children or
pets. All lltetrlc lnctudM water·
I MW / traah AoneyetriiUeis
required Call 814-•48· 189"
9AM to ~PM

7 ~~e ret with mobile home, small
bam , pasture. gerden apace,
pr1Y1te setting. 3 milll from
Chnter. Must Mil , priced at only

015.000. CoiiiU·988· 3928.
Mini farm 2 215 ~terea , modlfn 5
room houae. 3~0 ft. road
frontage, 9 mil• from Pt
Pl1111nt 111,000. Call be·
tween 8 9 . 304-87&amp;·7216

Ftlrnilhtd apt • 1 bdr.. 701 4th
Ave , Gallipolts. 1235 mo utili tin p~~ld . c.n "'·4418 alter

35 lots &amp; Acreage

7pm

lot at Ch~rotals Hillt, 300a160
C1ll1tttr 5. 614 · 246·5629

6 CourtSt 3bdr 11/r beth, t260
mo , plu1 utilities. ret.-ences &amp;
no pets Ctll &amp;14 -44&amp; -4921

''

1-6 acrta.l)lr1111fv wooded lots
near approved 1ub-dhtt1ktn, T.P
•nd C water and approved rold
to tech lot R••onebty (lrictd
wiU IW.ence with 10 pirc:eni
down . Calll14-985 ·3&amp;94
60 acrea, lmtll bam, tobacco
aHot~nt , nMnerel righU. rurtl
water, 30111-875-3628 .

1~-=-----"'..:...:=::.:._

__

BY OWNER - 6 6 acr•. Mt.
Alto on St. At 2, e•c•llent
building lite with all utlllti11
drlvtWiy , llpt lc IYittm '
garden, utility bam. fruit tr..i
and some lendi Ciping .
119,000. 304-8115 ·3422 after

1

Furnishtd Apt 2 bdr , 1196
mo . watlf pd 1138 2nd. Ave ,
Gallipollt Cell 614·"48-4£1&amp;
after 7PM

2151·1202.

Halt Prl~t fl11hlng arrow slgnt
t2991 Ughted , non·•rrowt2)81
NOflllghted 12291 Free letters!
Only taw left. See lociMy.
1(8001423-01 &amp;3 , anytime.

uc. cond. Ce11114·"8·7018.

TONY ' S GUN REPAIRS . hotdlp
reblueing, all t ypes of gunsmith
work, fast service, 30"· 875·
4631

S.• King 12 ft Semi·V with
padestel usts. Wards Tilt
Trailer. trolling motor end more
t475. cau &amp;14-742-28n.

CAPTAIN EASY

6:30

IN TRE ""AME 01= A
LASTING PARTNER5HIP-

'71 Toyota Ctllca GT, 4 splld,
2110 Maple Ave, 304-175-

00F!

4'

401• .

8:05

1 1 Joot boat. weighs about 80
lba, full tlaetations. 1171 .00

8:35
7 :00

or Pomt Pleasent tor 28 yr old

304·876.2068
- -- - -

71

bdr. apt ..

199 mo

N"'f 1 Mdroom eper1ment Cell

81'·"8·0390.
1 bedroom apt for rent . S.slc
rent starts 1215. 1 month that
lncludtl Ill \ltUititl, Oepo~it
requir.d of t200 . ConUte1 VII·
lege Manor Apt Middlepor1.
&amp;1•·992-n87. Equal Housing·
OP~JQrtunity .

41

Houses for Rent

2 bdr. unfurni1hlld hou11 r.t. •
dep required C•ll &amp;14-U8.

9888 .

Rent, llllt,land cont;ee1, 3br' •
Rodney Villegell; 2 br' e-Eurlkt;
3br Evens Hlight1; Oepo11t &amp;
reference~ required Bleckbum

Rtohy·IU·"8·000I.
2 bedroom. new CllfPit, AC. tn
GaiNpolit. Caii.J14 ·441·1401

2 bedroom furnlahtd apartment
for rent In Middleport. All

UIHIII• pold. Coli 81.·982·
110U.
1 btdrqom epartmenl at 402 1/J
Twenty Fourtlt St., Point Plee.. nt c•11 1 · 30• · •7~ · 4024 .
1 bedroom fumllhld IPirtmtnt.
ldNI ror working c:ouplt. No
peu. O.OIIit required . Cell

Rid1n g lawn mower, goo d cond,
91 Burdette Addn

Merchandise

55 Building Supplies

Con 814·112·5212. Key Ctcll.

8UIIdmg matertals , cement
blocks a ll stz u , yard or delivery.
Gallipolis Blodr Co , 123 1/t Pint
St , Galhpohs, Ohio Call 614 ·
446· 2783

Automatic washer, works as is,
126 00. Phone 304-676 -41 56
after 6 30.

Chow-c how puppiu sllv11r blue
AKC Reg chemp10n blood lin•
h . pedigrees. Slud ser'llce.

1·614·266 ·1271
304·676 ·6099

54 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan 's U•l!ld Tire Shop Over
1,000tirii , IIUI12 . 13 , 14 , 15 .
16, 18 .6 8 mllet out Rt 218
Call 814-266-6261 .
Electrolux vsccuu m clean ers:.
A· 1 con dttton · tltachments
Avtiltble at 172 00 Cash or
terms arranged Call 614 2U 9116 or 304-675 6799
Pl•tlc ctstern nate approved ,
pladlc septic tanks , plast ic
culver1s. metal culwertt RON
EVANS ENTERPRIS ES . Jack
son, Oh 614 · 286 -5930
Women 26 inch bicyc le E11.cel
lent condition 160 Cell 614

Rtlrigeretlon &amp; Appliance Ser
vice. All brtndt used appliances
p•rts. Unit's Refrlg . &amp; Appl
Chnhirt, Oh 814 -367-0440 .
Paying caah l Foroldqutltt, llone
jera with blue writing , toy s &amp; old
fum lture Cell 614·367-0138
2 18434 6-ply tractor tn es 1
Nnv ld11 1 -row 310 corn
picker 146 John Oeere 4
bottom tractor plow All in good
cond. Ctll614-448 -21 11

~

Regt stered
Pood l as
Schnauzer
No Checks

57

Cocker Spaniel , Toy
an4 Min il t u re
puppiH Cash ooly
Call614· 992 2607

Miusical
Instruments

Beldwtn organ double keyboard,
needs tome repair. 1300.00

304 675 1928

Megic Teen1e Jeanie Lowry
organ , 7 years old , psld
$1 ,200 00 wtll sell 1360 00
Exc cond. all sounds 30•·882·
3794 11nyt1me befor e 5 30 or
anytlme after 9 30
PIANO FOR SALE, Wanted:
Ae1ponsib le psrty to assu me
small monthly payments crt
IPtn et con tole plano Can be
seen .toC:. IIv Write Unclude
phone number) Credit Mantg•.
P. 0 Box 520, 8acktmtvtr Ill

62219

58

.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

G1m" Grtenhoute. Leten, W
Va 304·896-3400, f1owe&lt;oond
vegetable plenu now avtillblt.
wholesele and retell

Frtrlll

lloJ 814·.WI·I221 .

1•3·0116.

Jivld•'• Farm Equipment 814446-1157&amp;. Spring s.a. on all
Long ••ctor a Vermatr htV
equip wfth 5% flnlftcfng avtilablt A good Yltri«y of Ultd
equtp _, atockl
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 311 W. Oolllpoio.
OtltO. Call 814· 441-97n. eve.
614 -448·3112 Up trom tractors with wart"enty ov.r 75 used
tractors, 1000 tools
MtaiiY Fergu10n riding Wtwn
mower. 139&amp; Garct.n tnctor
n.w tlrat, runt good, with
mower ettechment, t:Jiowt, disc.
cuhlv1tor, ~d herring 12915 .
Call 614· 286·8&amp;22.
T030 Ftrvuton tractor u.c .
CIHn, *1 ,910 Ntw polt hol1
digger 1271 . Ntw I ft. adiustt·
ble gradltl' bllda t175 . Boom
pole 145 1 bottow plow 1115
Ctll 51 4 ·286·1622

••ev

176 M
Fergu10n dl11el
13,950. No . 12 MuHY Ftrguwn b.l• *1.2115 New &amp; fl .
drum mower t1 .47&amp; New
rotary ladder wtn rowwer 10 h
•x working width 11 .685 Call

614 ·2111-11622 .
730 Ctlt ditlll good rubber.
good ptint, dun. •2,850. 3
bottow Mn..., Fergu.un pkJws.
t360 9ft treneport disc. •595 .
&amp; tt. Woods bullhhog •3915 Cell

I U -281·11622
8N Ford tntctor, A· 1 condttlon
•d equlpmtnt Cell 814-2111 -

81M
3020 John OtertTnctor. E.cel l«tt condition . 2 nl• low boy
1rllii• . .C.II814-892·7401

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

Pole Bulkllng Sp.clel. many
c.tl for tow
pr~c:• . 814 -2tli·B141.

colors and liz•.

1 _:_----~----­

Allis Chtlman 7030 trector,
130 hp, 17,900.00. luth Hog,
1800 disc: like nftll', t2,1500 .QO
Sk1.,1 Equlp11*1tCo. 30•·8757421

1-,-----------

Oeub 1t'1ctor. par1s end aervlca
prlc4t, Skltr~ Equlpment Co 304-1711·7421 .

It tht bait

1---.:..:..:....:....:....:...:.::..:....._

Ame ChalfNr 2 row 3 point
no -till plsntllf, dry f.-tlllzer snd
In net ttt1ch1msnt , dlmOnlln·
tor 12.100.00. Alit Ch1lmera 4
row pull no-dll, dry ftrtniztr.
lns.:t ett•c:+,emnt, l1 ,to0.00
AHis ChtlrNrs'4 row pul no·dll,
78 llllri11, air units. dry tertililer
t6 .1500.00 . Ails Chalmers 8
row dry ftrtililer. hydraulic
rNrkers. k111Ct end h•blclde
ltttchmant 11 ,100.00. ca..
Model 1510 gu backhoe and •d
loader, cab, very good ,
15.1100 00 International 800 D
deistf dru:er hydraulic blade and
wtncft 18,900.00. Kttflf Set·
viceCtntw, PointPI...IntRiply

Rood , 304·•8· 3674 .

62 Wanted to Buy

61

Farm Equipment

814 2B6· M51
Musav Ferguson. NM Holland,
Bu1h Hog Sal" II Service. o. .er
40 used trectort to choott from
&amp; CD fl1JIBttllne of new &amp; ultd
equ ipment. Lerg11t •t•ct~n in

S.E Oh1o

21112 .
84 ChiYtne Auto 24,000 mi.
tl .OOO 114· 378·2112 .

18n Comoro LT. PS. PB. AC .
CoH Mon -Fri. 8-8. 81.·.WI·
1873
1979 Buick leS1bre lll·dr. one
owner. lo•ded . rww tires .
12000. 1183 Chevy 4x4
thortbtd. lit, 11.700 mnn.

Blue • white, tJ~idlllle 14800.

Coll114·"1·701t.
1977 Thunderbird PI, PB, AC ,
good cond. t2100. Cell &amp;14 ·

"1·082• .
1173 CtPf'l v·l for •I• or trade
for BOCC or bklgllf drt bike C•ll

814·317·711110.

1971 Chl'tl11e. no ruat. good
tlf•. OOod Interior. tutomatic
• .,.milton. 1100 Call 114·

. . .. 94180.

78 Fairmont .

good cond .
• 1200. 117 Chwy pickup, good

cond. 0700
1487.

1979 M"o10nU Cobn&lt; PS. Pa.

Auto trans., 302 VI 155,000
actual mil•. Alllngi219B Cal
114-.. 6-1724 .nytlme

Now buying shell com or ear
COt"n. Call torlst.. tquotes . River
Chy Farm Suppty. &amp;14·448-

29811

.

63

.

livestock

Men 3'11 yr Ousrter end Pa·
llmeno. medium llzt. good
dkpothlon. green brokt. ,..10·
Albie offw. Call81 4· 378-2144
Bentley Pig ltle. Wedntedey
April 30th, 7 30PM. Fey.ttar

Pure bred Duroc boars Rog•
Btntlty .. Sibinl. Oh. Cell 513·

814·2311.

Reg POA mare. ,.ldy tD foal
Reg ttdlo n, '(larilngt. a 2 yr
ofds. Pelrofblymtr•. western
Mcfdl1 brid
A
'- • Mlehltdl. Cell
814·..• 1· 2222

1- - - - - - - - - - Polltd Her.tord Cow whh BH·
falo Heft., Calf Cell 81 4 ·742·

Fridov H. SIIUrdov 1·12. Coli

121100. 1971 Chevy Comoro,

· 1971 ptymouth Duster 31 8
auto. PS. rune good, loaD good
U78 . 1170 Fotd Mo-lck I
cyl., auto, runt good, Jookl
dec8rlt 1171 or offer 5" at
1710 Chlthem Ave , G•llipoUa
1974 Chevy Nova I cyl .. runa
exctlttrn. lookl IJ)9d 1150. Ctl

114·"1-Bioe ...~~ ...

197• M..-cury Marquia auto
trans . Call 81-'· 48·0810

1177 ChtYttte tood shape,
mille good work car. 1500. Cal
11•·"1·S189 oftor 8:30 .
Can you buy Jeeps-Cere·-'• " ' •
Mized i'l dNg rektl for under
t100.001 Cell tor ftcts today!

11151 219-1701 Ex1.e&amp;6.

.

1977 Chvro._. Camero Rtfty
Sport. Auto, loeded, f•lr condl·
tion. 11200. 010 Call 81-'·
882· 3133 Of 114·992· 3781
8fttr 8:00 p.m

71

Autos for Sale

1979 Mercury Marquis Ill door,
302. auto , paW'II. AC, good
cl•n condttlon. Cell 114-317·

7217 .

cusses h ts role as billion·
1ndustnahst
Ross
Perot 1n the upcommg TV
mov1e, " On Wmgs of Ea-

a1re

··ANP .I: WANT ALl.. MY
CHfafC$ P~INTeD WITH

114-245 15629

1972 Teg·A·long 18 fl tratler
Very good conditiOn 11.96
C•ll 614 -992·8113 or 114-

'

992·1201.
197t Palonino tent camper
Sleeps 6. 1900. Call 814-8673170 after 8 00

1

Do NOi cA.ft UNiiL
Ne-XT MONDAY" ON T'H~.

Q_I_es".
C:1Al Bob Newhart
7:35 II) Mojor Loeguo Ba11ball:
Houston at Atlanta l1ve.
8:00 U (]) (j)) Tho A·Team iCC)

The team helps out wres-

tl er Hulk Hogan m banltng
m o bste rs who are trymg to
close down Hu lk's Boys

Ce nler (60 mm I IR)
(]) Deklari
CII III ~ Who's tho Boss i
(CC) Pert 2 of 2 A ra grng
thu nderstorm at K1ss mg
Rock forc es Angela and

1980 {28ft.) camp• by Skyline
Completely lilt-contained
10'h ft. tNck camp• all 11tf
contained, shower, commode
tnd refrigerator 304· 882·

ALLEY OOP

2887

a secl uded mote l. (R).

till CD MOVIE: 'Fitrw1lly'
Ill CIJ ® Morning'star/

304-878·8.212 .

Eveningster A vl..,iiCIOUS
new res tdent sparks rom ance 1n McGreg or. while
lt s a enters a be auty co n-

Serv1ces
Horne
Improvements

1es1 160 mm .)
CI) MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh-

our
(i]) Visions of Star Wers
(CCI The 51ralegic Defense

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

lntttat1ve IS

Unconditional llfetlrM gUiren·
tee . local reterenc11 1\lrnilhed
Fr11 Mtlmatll. Call collect
1-&amp;1-'·237-0488. dev or night
Rogers Basement
Wt ..rprooflng

EEK&amp; MEEK
HDJJ 11-\b.'J, MR SE(RETAR'r'.

Herdwood Floors Sanding •
reflnlahing Parket end tounge ~
groov1. frH Htlmttll, rtfertn·
ell tvtillblt Wlllwd l Oevid
Bltnkenshlp. 814·448·0216 or
614-448·4.0•7 Commlfcl•l •
reaktentlal

(AIJ

U IXHtM. NJ A~
Rm.Xlla.J PWJ
IF W£ rrumu NJ

fOUCY?

~(k
:::\

Stlrks Tree tnd Lawn Service.

Of

11•·1112·8121 .,ytlmo.
19M Chevy Covo11or AT, PS.

Aotery or cable tool drilling
Mo1t w.lls complet«t same day.
Pun., IIIII and serv lca 304·

72

Trucks for Sale

72 Ford PU nc . cond , 3 utility
bed tool bOx•. Call 014-44&amp;·

""

1177 'II ton Chwy pldlup,
U200 Coli 814·.W8·7837.

11n Ct!wy trucll. low miiNge.

••oo.eo11 114·M9·25«.

1111

ml•.

beckgll11, sunroot, Nnt good.

Van!' &amp; 4 W.O.

1971 fOf'd

~

tDn, 4 wheel drtve.

Mondtrd ohMt,
411S·1853.
'711 Chtvy. •

u.ooo.

304·

82

AT LEA5THALFOF THEM .

*
10:00

BARNEY

Cor Fourth •nd Pine
Gallipolis. Oh io
Phone 814· 44&amp; -3888 or 814·

MAW· ·

«1·"77

I NEED

S OME ·· UH ··

Excavating

I KNOW WHAT VOU
NEED· ·VOU NEED SOME
CARD·PLAVIN'
MONEY

THAT FEMALE COULD MAKE
A FORTUNE REA DIN' PALMS

Motorcycles

1171 Mondt H..-k 400 motor·
cycJt w+th vatttr quickdwr
ltn'lng. lu111ou• rock • boclc
rest , orulle control, two
helmets. eac....-.t oq-ndltlan,
HOO Col 51.·2.S·II311 101111

1112 H001d1 Cl·710, 2920
mlltt, ••'"'· •14110 Coli
114·"1·0122 ohor • ·
,... CA 10 with--~~
., ... , •soo. 1179 CR 210
17110 Coli 81.·317·7110.

Get 10 know Barbara.
louise, and lrlene on

0

(JJ (j)) NBC White
Paper: Tho Japan They
Don'1 Talk About
(]) II) tnl Sponsor: For Hire
(CCI Spenser helps out an
eM-prostitute
unfa1rly
atta c ked by a gang of
hoodlums (60 mon I (R)
till CD Jimmy Swaggart
§pecial ·
0 (I) ®I The Equalizer
McCall must pro1ec:t a

edly becomes th e next vic-

General Hauling·

Jam11 Boys Water Service Also
pools ftlled Call81 4·2&amp;8- 1 141
or 814 ·44&amp; 1175 or 614 -•48 ·

7811 .

ti m of a contract assass m

(50 mm ) lA)
Sandbaggers
(j]) Nowswalch
I!J) News
10:20 CII NBA Basko1ball: Playoff
Game Teams to be an·
nounced (2 hrs ., 16 mm I
10:30 I]) ColebriiY Chefs
[j) Great Ou1doora
t 1:DO 0 (]) Now1Contor
(]) Glrl ·rrom U.N.C.L.E.
(]) Ill (]) 01 tnJ il1l Naws
® SCTV
(]11 Eyewitnell Newt
[j) Groat Railway Journeys ·
of tho World
il]J WKRP In Cinclnna11
11 :30 II (]) (j)) Tho Tonight
Show Tonight's guests are
Tom Hulce. Brian Slawson
and the Amazing Randi.
(60 mrn) In S1orao .
(!) SportaConter
(]) WKRP in Clncinnotl
fJI CD®T.. I
(J) Simon 8r Simon A.J .
and Rick are In lor a little
steiQht of hand when an up

Ktm 's Water ServiCI . Wells.
cisterns, pools 'Jnd Wlttrbtdl
filled . Clll 614 -387 ·0823 or
1514-367· 77•1 or 304-875 ·

12.,.

Co~ l , lim.. tont , gflvel. etc
Dellverl!ld 1 ton and up Jim
Lanittf. 304·876· 1247 or 676 -

7397

®

SNAKE!!
ENAMEL-

OR

SOMEONE

HA5

ACRYL-IC?

t'L.L. GET THE

5ERF"ENTINE.!!

"fHROWNA
BUCKET
OF PAIN1"
OVER

SNAKE!!

87

Upholstery
TRI STArE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

1 Hl 3 Sec. Av. , Galllpot11
114-448· 7833 or 814 446
1833.
.
A • M Furnrture ~hnuf~turin__g
St. Rt 7. Crown City, Oh . 'eeti
114-2151 -1470, call Eve 114 .
441 · 3438
Old It new
Uphosterect.
Mowrey ' 1 Uphoitterlng urlling
trl counlyarea 21 Y••r~. Thebtst
In fumlture upholstlflng. All
work guaranteed visit our modern shop 11 Mtson County
f•lrgrouiJds. Phone 304-8764154.
h

PEANUTS

HA! I

KNEW THAT'D 6ET
A RISE OUT OF 'lOU!

a

a nd c om ing illusiom•t is

i

murd e red. (70 min.) (R).
CIJ Auatln Clly Limits: Roger Miller and Earl Thomas
Con!!y

....

What a person mtght have to be In order to
blow out all those ca ndles on h1s birthday
cake -LONG-WINDED

James Jacoby

Making use
of a long suit

'AQ3

By James Jacoby

+AJ8753

NORTH

H!-11

+J4

tK7

Here's another interesting lesson
from the new book by Reese and Hoff·
man, "Play it Again, Sam" (Devyn
Press). Against three no-trump, West
Jeada the king and queen of spades.
which you duck, but you have to win
the third round of the su1t. Of course
you place West with the diamond ace
for hill opening bid, so you know not to
play a diamond right away. But you
have only eight top tricks, so where do
you look for that ninth trick? Seems
reasonable, doesn't it, to also give the
opening bidder the heart king? OK, so
you play a heart to the queen. What a
disappointment' East wins the king
and leada a diamond to his partner's
ace. That sets you two tricks. Don't
jump out of your chair now, but this IS
a contract that you really should
make.
What is required is just a little bit of
looking ahead. Upon wmning the th1rd
spade, you discarded a heart from
dummy. Now picture what cards ev·
eryone will be left holding if you now
run your six club tricks. Dumm" Will
have the A·Q of hearts and the K· 7 of
diamond&amp;. You will have four red
cards, Including the d1am~nd queen.
But what about opener West? If he
ever lets a spade go, you can set up a
d1amond trick by forcmg h1s ace, since

EAST

WEST

+KQt085

• 732

'K
tt096532

'J tO8 4 2
tAJ
+6

+ton

SOUTH

+A 9 6
' 9765
• Q8 4
+K Q9

Vulnerable· Neither
Dealer West
Wes1
I+
Pass

Nortb

East

Soulb

2 NT

3 NT

Pass
Pass

2+

Pass

Pass
Opemng lead • K

he cannot then have two spades to set
you. And so perforce West w11l throw
the d1amond Jack and four small
hearts as you run the club suit. It becomes easy after that to play the heart
ace. dropping East's kmg and making
the contract.

~·"""
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

45 Ren1ai

I At1ack
6 Micro
procrssor

td

sign
DOWN
I Outdo
2 BemK

.lorn m
(Sp )
II F'ahrte
13 llarkn••)NI 3 Cnndtt •on
14 Mtnnt•stlta 4 T(&gt;l t•Osl

fish
5 Sl•d tltnn
6 Spotlcs.

cny
A~ 1 an

15

hn lrday
16 flrah man

7 Co ncealed
8 Pr1mary

24 Bogart lil rn 32 Himalaya n

25 "Some

cou ntry
Enchanwd 36 abject
37 F'rurt
of sm
decay
12 Pes1ered
26 Madden
City
39 "ThiS21 PartiCipial 17 or course! 27 Rampart
for H1reM
20 Headliner ' 29 ~hid oath
endmg
41 N1gcnan
23 Card game 31 Increase
22 "Odetitle

18 Dcsignaw
19 German

9 ExptatiOn

Skylark "
23 "Dcr

·

F ru hrrr's

28 As.•·w.verau.•

c harged wtlh a weapons possess iO n rap af1er she 1S

~

BESTOW DOMINO

BRIDGE

on stage (60 m1n)

housewtfe who 1na dvert·

85

YOUR

I Answer:

24 Auto '1ylc
27 manched

THE MANDRELL
SISTERS AND FAMILY
NASHVILLE Ad•

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Good -1 E•c.vattng, be11menu,
footers, drivii'Ways, H pltc tanks.
landiCaping . Call anytime 614·
441-4637. Jtm" L. Daviso n,
Jr. owner

r I ] "r r xr r

Jumbles. CANAL GUARD

ale co untry songwrrters, includi ng Rosanne Cas h and
Emmylou Hams. perform

9:30

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83

toona l blackmail plot (60
mm I IRI
CIJ Aus11n CIIY Limr1s:
Songwnters' Special Fem-

I THINK I CAN MCJDESTLY 5'\Y
THAT r\\11 RE5FON618LE F'OR

lng, phono 30 ·876·7147, AI·

whotl drivo,

kl.:led . 'U JMp, 4 wheel drive.
good cond 30•-1118·2010.

74

THE PAPERS SAY THERE's BEEN
A SHARP RISE IN THe NUMBER OF
TEAO·U:R5 TAKIN&lt;'i EARLY
RETIREJAENT.

Ch.. Dooloy • whool

•ltd.
73

and McCal l track a ruthless
cr imtnal wh o k•ll s hts two
pa rtners af1er a $6 mll hon
a1mored tru ck robbery !60
mrn) (R). In Stereo
(]) 700 Club
@ Top Rank Bo• ing from
Las Vegas. NV
CIJ II) II2i Moonligh1ing
M ike Hammer Hammer's
reumon With h1s long-lost
love IS ma rred by he r In volvement 1n an mterna -

chard D Purche11.

-1234

11ft Camero, cal before 2:00
PM. 30•·1118· 8110.

/

a

9:00 U (l) @ Hunlor Hun1er

7@

RIGHT?

Richard and Sons, lntet'lor end
e• terior peintin.,.,d wallpaper·

1171 Ponti.C Trllr'IS Am. IXC
cond, etored In winter monthl.
Loltded whh utres. 30"·175-

oond. 304·1115· 1298.

VJE:AR::)JR'{ ..

buymg Larry a g1ft .. w1th
c heck that bounces

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

88&amp;· 3102

•71 ChevroJtt. 4 doorud~ . .. c

DlsrDJTIUJE
'rttJ OCfJ'T fJA~ 1

Now anange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

th1s

~C~® Mickey Spillane's

075·7358.

londocoolng. 304·878 ·201 0 .

8 whole ultra llfftln vehicle.
good condition. lDt-•2· 2887

50, HOiJ CAIJ 'tlJJ

e~~:plo r ed m

com prehens1ve dccumenlary (2 hrs)
@ MOVIE: Wostworld'
B 30 ® lll lill Perlec1 S1rengors
(CC) Balkr ce lebra1es hos
'new c heck 1ng account by

RINGLES 'S SERVICE. "PO·

198$ Pontiac: Ftero. ,Loaded,
excelllnt condition 181500. CaH

191!11 fllfd LTD, red tour door,

\Wi, ARMS Rt!XKTtaJ
M~ ll:IJ N:!F££ 10
DIS{.O\JTi WE C£R!Atll

AAM5 lmXrnOIJ

RON'S Tele vi sion Serv ice .
Houat calli on RCA . Ou•11r.
GE . Spec:llllng In Ztnhh Ca"

675· 2088

fulyoqulpptd . 7.000mll•. 10lo
ovet" payments or 1111, 304· 418·
1722 .

Tony to spend the n1ght at

1982 Co1chm1n pop - up
camper, eleeps 1i11., txc cond.

11··"2·877.

8 :30.
1182 Camtro v.e, tlr, t-topo~
good corld. Coftll•·" l·2310 .

night Richard Crenna diS·

1980 19 ft. Prowler air cond.
uc. cond tleep• 6 canafter&amp;.

81

Yesterday's

(I) Mind Your language
® Wheel of Forluno
Ill tnJ En16rloinmonl To-

' " j" '

115 22 .

1172 Plymouth Fury 3. Oependlblt wotk cer. 1400 Call

Mtxed hay llrge equere biiH,

1r,IIISiJIIrt,ltlllll

'•

TH! FOoT C'OCTOR.

(Answers tomorrowl

till CD WKRP in Cincinnlll
Ill (]) (jJ) Jeopardy

'

YOU 11\IISHT DO
WHEN YOU GO iO

1 1

-. t I

Game
@ AWA Wrea11ing

1974 Camper Hlf contained
FibtrglMS bolt wrth 50 HP
Ev..,rudttng'ne. All for 11 ,591.
1178 Flat te915 . C•ll &amp;14·286·

rianc.d carpent1r, electrician.
mason, p•lnter. roofing (lnclud·
lng: hot tar appl ication) 30111-

u.ooo. so•·411S· III3.

attar 8:00PM.

1974 Starcraft foldou• camper.
t1eep1 8. corrptltt whh ltow.
Ice box, lights &amp; 11nk, ••c eon d.,
like new Call 614 -388-9766
aft• IPM

Fetty TrH Trimming. stump
removtl. C1lt 304 8715 1331 .

64 Hay &amp; Grain

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

&amp; Campers

AM -FM, Iow mWeag•. tllvarwith
bl.ck spoU•a Excellent condl·
tion. Call81 4 ·992·8747 .

1979 Dodgo DIIO Bport. 8
...dtrd ohiiL olldlng

Attention .,.. Fermenll Bet.
Dt" lb
G
vour from
~~~• Tim
IIHcl corn
lh IHia
Co.
M..,,,,
Call
e14-448·4307

79 Motors Homes

304· 571·2398 •• 11.·4'8·
2'64
1914 Eooon OT PS, PI, AC, , - - - - - - - - - -

311.

65 Seed Ill Fertilizer

1178· 2137.

runa good t2115 1910 Chevy
Ch:atlon 4·cyl. . auto. 12191.

rx]

Ill (]) (j)) Whsel of Forluno
[]) Nig hlly BUIInlll Reporl
® Eyewitness News
[j) MacNoii·Lohrer Nowah·
our
II) II2i Divorce Courl
il]J Barney Millar
7 :30 0 (l) (I) Now Newlywed

061100. C.ll51. ·742-2184.

drive , 38 ,000
Eace41.,.t
condhlon. 304·182·2187

01 211 304·176·8878.

1974 Chev Vega, tiO.OO , for
parts {f)Ot wrecktdl eall 304-

W~AT

IKERROBI

till (!) Jelforsono

Mike' s AU1o Sal11 Mondey114· 4411· 2100 l ..•man·Merk
Bnrtes. 1180 Plymouth HOfilon
• · Dr.. 4·cyl • auto *1995
1978 Pfymouth Hotil:on 4-cyl.,
4 • • 01581 . 1862 Chovy
Chevettt 2-0r .• 4 -cyt .. 4 epttd

Lf T'f tI j

pop charts.

11523

Let me tetl you all
about my trou bles

1

explatns the recent crossover of gospel mus1c to

Coli 11• -288-

814·1112·3703

CROSS&amp; SONS

0 S 36 Weat, J tchon. Ohio.

82 Chevy Cavalier. 2' dr. 1uto,
o~~.ooo m1 u ,eoo 51•·378·

P8, rldlo, C...-.. low mllte. C.N

..,nhy Phono 304·871·1808

Supplli!'

81.·.WI-1783

680B Cllt backhoe with ••ten d_., boom tnd cab exCellent
condhkm 112,500 Cell 614 -

rat•. 814· 2151· M315

&amp; L1ve stu ck

1763

Gla1a &amp; chrome kitchen table. 4
widter bach chairs Good condi tion, 160. 614-446 -6300

cuetom

SNd com Dekalb end K.n-

8 ft . pool table. Ar lnc:tl si11ta
bottom. complete set of b•lls,
sticfl:s 6 reck . P1ng pong tab le
top to tit Call after 8 614-446Malley Ferguson lawn mower,
3&amp; -lnc:h cut. ,h._dro ·static trans
8 HP, snow bllde. Cell after 5

or

We will do all IYPII

County Ftlrgroundt. Washing·
ton. CH. Salllnl150 heed of
Hamp, Ouroct, . arrow• • tilt a.
Aogar lentil\', 3112 RMd Ad ..
SebW.a , Oh Call 513-1584·
2398

1

APARTMENTS, mobllo ho..,...

ttou•. Pf. P1. .1nt end Oelllpo·

Bu1ld1ng Materials
Block, bnCk, sewer pip•. wtn dows. lintels, etc Claude Wtn·
ters, Rio Grande 0 Call 614·
246 -6121

Save 8UIIden Supphes Surplus.
Clououts Selvage 1 , Prthung
steel
insulated 8 or 6 ptnel
LAYNE 'S FURNITUR E
doorsl 89 95 2 Prehung stttl
Sofas 1nd chatrs pflced from msu lat8d door and glass 911te or
1286 10 $896 Tables, 160 and lt1t11 $126 .96 3. Double akle
up to 1125. H1d&amp;·a· beda ,S390
and up to $660 , sofa b&amp;ds ht a en1rance door eets 'h glsss
1145 Rec li ne rs. $226 to 911te 5399 4 S1ngle skhthtt
door sets 11: thl!lrmtl
t37ti .. Lamps from S28 to entrance
glass $299 96 5 Commerc1al
t12ti pc. dtn tttes from S109
double entran ces aet brown sll
to435 7pc. 1189 andup Wood aluminum $699. 8 Double
table with SIX chairs S286 to sidah1Bs entrance set wood 'h
1746 D•sk 8126 up to 5375
panel V~ Qlllll W·daCOrltiVIttim
Hutch• , 8660 Bunk bed com
$299 95 7 Prehung lnteuor
plete With mattresses, $275
doors all t tlel and finisha 8
and up to S395 Babv beds
gr!ldes 889 95 111 9 Thermal
1110 Manr euas or bo.11
springs, full Of twm , 863 , firm, msu leted glau panels 78 " hgt
32 " wide $39 95 11111 10 WOIXI
173 lind *83 Oueen IllS
1226 Bed frames. 820 and door panels w-fu llgiiiS 78 " hgt
34 · wide H4 thick 139 96 . 11
126 .. 10 gun · Gun cebinets
1360 Gas or ,Jiactrtc ranges Octagonal w1ndow w-minacl
leaded gless S59 915 e1 12
1376 Bab y maWtesses. S35 &amp; Clear acrylic sheets080 and 125
1415 , bed frames no. $25. &amp; gaga t!We ral liZI!II btg 1aving1
130. k1ng frame S50 Good 13 Plywoo d handy psnels
selection of bedroom suit es
62 'long 18" wlde 'h thtck I 76 ·
rockera. metal cabinets, head
S 1 00 ae 14 Matonltt pruned
boards 138 &amp; up to S65
horu ontal exte rior Siding
16 'a16 " "7-16 $20 00~ 16
Used Furnrture Dresse r. &amp; bed.
B·grMle marb le ... anity topt
Trundle bed, metal offtca desks
3 miles out 8ulav1lle Rd Opat chotce sizes m stock 120 OOea
16 4'x8 ' treated pine laHice
9am to 6pm, Mon thru Sat
$1 4 96 •• 17 . K · lu ~~: bnck end
614 -44&amp;-0322
stone red and tan. reg. 16 .89 ctn
GOO O" USEO APPLIAN CES now 51 50 ad •1 .99 ctn 18 .
Extertor key doorlodr alu rrinum
Washert, dryers. refng eretors
ftn lsh S2 99u 19 Good used
rangu Skagg s Appl ia nces
Upper ANer Ad beside Stone 8 -2 bulb ligh t CO IT1)1ete W•bulbt
f15 OOea 20 Wood-Meson lta ·
Crest Motel GH -446 -7398
bathroom panehng 4 ' ~~: 8 ' pc
County Applian ce. Inc Good S4 99 to $9 96 11. 21 Preftn ·
ished and unfinished door •nd
us.:! applian cH and TV sets
Open BAM 10 8PM Mon thru w1ndow and all types of tr1m
startmg at S1 .00 for 8 'pc: 22
Sat 614-446· 1699 , 627 lrd
Ablummum mObile home and
Ave Gallipolis OH
&amp;rn roof COll1tng W fiber 50 gal.
523 95 100 gal end up •20 9!i
Vtlley Furniture, new &amp; u18d
large section ot qua lity furni - Sgal pail 23 Wallbotrd ldhe s1va ql tubes or 29o~: . 11 39 11
ture 1218 Eutern Ave
G11llipolit
' or by cate 11 26 ea 2•
Paneling na1t1 1.79 bo• P~~nn 's
Htgh prtces gol you down1 • Werehouse -Welltton.OI'I io 614 ·
39 4-39 46
Check Ul out Mollohan Furn &amp;
App l. G1bson &amp; Ketv1nator Rt 7
81oclt, brick. mortar 1nd ml ·
Nor1h , G111ipolit, Oh Celt 614·
41116 -7444 Credit available to sonry suppl1n Mountain Stata
Block. At 33. Naw Haven , W
qualified buyers
Va 304-882 2222
Used fu rniture, sofa. cha1r. lull
llll hide-a-bed. ~een size met·
56
Pets for Sale
trill l nd boa sprmgs . Corb1n &amp;
Snyder Furnlturs, 965 Second
Ave. Gallipolis Call 814 -4461171
D•agonwynd Cenery K4K1nel.
CFA Himalay11n, Parsien and
40 Inch Norge Electric Range . Siemeae kttten s. AKC Chow
176 40 inch Frtgtdatre Electr.c pupp1es New puppln &amp; kitt•u.
Range, 150 8oth good condi· Call 446 -3844 after 7PM
t ioit . Whirlp oo l Automat iC
Ticldietd Kennels All breed dog
Wuher, S36 Needs rep•u
Alurri num storm door witk grooming Obedience training
ICrHns. tl5 M•ytag EII!ICtric instruct1on AKO Ge rman wire·
hatred Pointer puppJel Call
Dryer, 160. Needs m1nor reparr
All nice appurance and good 614 -388 8720
condition. Ctll 614 -992 7786
Wentad to buy Fo• Hound
Pi~ens Ustd Furniture. Good
puppy C•ll 714-637- 1843 or
wr~te 10662 Teal Or , Garden
tJJality used furn iture Open 9to
Grove CA 92643
6 or c all for appointment
304·876 6483 or 876-1450
Rat Terr1er pu ps, wormed.
ttanderd size , 11110 Aultrtlian
Uving room suite, on tv 9 months
Bl ue Heeler, female, 2 yr.
okt mo vlng, 1600 00 ftrm,
614 -256-t467
304·875 ·3320

1.Jsed lving room tuite, phon e

Utility bldg spl.. 30'x40'x8',
16 '•8' sliding door A 3' Hf\1'
door. 1~ . 2155 erecled. Iron
Hor1111 Bldga. 814-332-874!
farm mtehlnery work . Cell for

SWAIN
AUCTION !. FURNITURE 62
Olive St • Gallipolis New &amp; usad
wood·coalstovn, 6 pc wood LA
suite 1399, bunk beds $199 ,
antron rec lmers S99 ne-w &amp;
used bedroom IUJtes. ranges ,
Wtr1glt Wlll'llfl. &amp; Sho81 New
llvingroom suites S199 -1699.
lamps, also buy ing coal &amp; wood
stoves Call 614-446 -31 69

114·H2-2137.
SmeH a,u.rtm.nt for 1 per10n
On Second St. In Middleport.

Five black dl1mond ET unilu8
whtels with two new 7
Urea 1280 Call 814 -•46m~~g

Cell

30'-878·5104.

Autos for Sale

(]) Green Acres
@ Mazda Sport1Look
CIJ Ill (]) Ill (!]) (jJ) News
till (!) Dilfronl S1r0kes
CIJ 3·2 · 1. Contact JCC)
® Eyowltnoas Nowo
[j) Hothe Yoga
il]J Good T1mea
CIJ Andy Grilmh
U (l) (jJ) NBC News
(]) Tho Rifleman
@ Rovoo's World Claas
.Women
(]) 01 (!]) ABC N1w1
till (!) One Dey ot a Time
(J) (jJ CBS Nowa
CIJ Doctor Who
1Ill Body Electric
il]J Jolforsona
II) Gunamoko
D (]) PM .Magozlne
(]) Alloa Sml1h and Jono1
@ SportaContor
(]) Enlorloinmant Tonight
Gospel singer Amy Grant

a

304-812-3371 .

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

I BLEAH
I.........I·-··- ---

8:00 U (l) NowoContor

Boeu and
Motors for Sale

\9 ~J.!~ll.!h•

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
onefetlerto each square, to lorm
four Ofdlnaty words.

EVEN ING

1980 Ktw...ld LTD 1000. E•c
oond, 30t-1715-M33.

76

)tjf~r.\.ft fj}1t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

4/22/86

1883 Hondo XR 200 din blkt.

1978 DQdge Plc k·up 6 cylind~r
1400 Two 260 gal fuel oil
tanks , 12 5 . esch Platform
scales. f60 614 - 985 ·33 ~3 .

The Daily

Television
Viewing

1 to3bedroomhomoneo•L•''"

992 ·2.28
2

5 pm

Renta ls

PHONE 614·.. 6· 727.

44

1974 Holly Park mobile home,
A·1 condition. clll'ltnl air end
elltrll, 304-675-3030 or 175-

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES , 4 , MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 36

Coli 30•·87e.s1o•

3,31 .

REDUCED EXrRA NICE HOM&amp;
- 3 bedrooms, reedy to move
into Cer~tral a~r , pool-deck ,
chain hnk fence. gardan plo t
Lots of e11 trat Cell after 6 p m
and weekends, 304-675 -7261

34 acre cropland. 50 ICntl
Pllturt • tobacco alotment

c.u

33

large 2 1tory home Fu ll b.uemenl w1th wood furnacund fuel
011 furnace. carport, p1cn1c she!
ter. tratler hook-up Approx 1-2
acres . In Dexter . *2&amp;.500. Call
614 742 2832

43 Farms for Rant

2228 .

1984 Mens10n mobile home,
located on lot £ of 2 C'1 Trailer
Park. Ctmp Conley. Ctntrallir.
dishWIShtt. IPPiitncet. lOft
with matching chtir and tlblll.
vinylsh111lng end meulsconge
bu ~ding .
304-875-5508

9240

81.·.W6·76'S .

FOR RENT WITH OPTION TO

Government Homes from $1 IU
repair) Also d•l•nquent ta11
property Calll -806 -687 6000
Ellt GH 9805 for Information

992

7U·2086.

HALF PAICEII Flashing arrow
signs S299 1llghted , non-arrow
S2791 Nonhghtad 12291 Free
letter1l Only few left See
loca lly 1(800)423-0163.
anyt1me

51 Household Goods

81' ·"6·1802

3 tw r 1 \1, bath, garag e very
nice, near Spring Valley Pl111
S400 mo plus sec. dep . Call
814-446·92 80 or 304-675·

-. ··-

Motorcycles

'
1982 Honda CA•ao Motorcycl"a. Good condHion Call 81 4·

.W6 ·2336

47 Wanted to Rent

3 belt home tn country. V1nton
1r11. Water -trlsh furn11hed.
I 200 mo. 1160 depottt Call

670•

2697

1

41

32 Mobile Homes

Jay Dr 3 SR . LR kitc hen·
dining. 11h batt'. UT AM , 2 car
garage gas hut. CA 614 448 3427

Three bedroom ho me. large lot
Prtce reduced Call 614·4•8·

74

40 ln. Bi1Uw Steal RUe ~ T.O .
Driven, never used . UOOO .
Phone 814-742· 29215 or 814·

for Sale

Ltrge 3 bdr house , 3 mile from
town, 2 fu!l baths. CA. gas heat,
pnce reduced Ca ll 614-245·

Wright

Ohio

1986

ltngle malt with dog, former
for her dl'vorce "
L . . . . . - - - - - - - - , .·- - - - - - - - - l n o v o l officer. 0300.00 rango,

- -- - - - - - - r
3 acres, 4 bch , frr eplace 247
Neighbo rh ood Rd Ca ll 614·

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®by

Tri County Sport Shop. Spring
Valley Plaza. Galltpolls, Ohio.
Guns, Archery, Ttckle 814·

966 -4329

Spac•oua 4 bedroom •n town,
2'/t beth . garage, &amp; mu ctl mora

5 00

for Rent

Trailer lots for rent on Toun1hip
Road 67 S~hool bus. water,
electric. telephone 1 mile from
Memori1l Gardens Cemetery
Call Marion Reynolds at 614·

GoYemment homes from $1 (U

atler

Spii~B

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parlt,
Route 33. North of Pomeroy
Large lots. Call814-992 -7479

$84,800. Call 614 -446 2174

Tuesda~April22,

29 Ncedlelish
30 T hat ;.,nrnan
31 Nohlcman

33 ( 'oll r rtto n,
of faC'L'-'

34 Hart'ln
('hamh&lt;'r
35 Sulrsidc
38 F'amflus

Starr

40 or the
pop&lt;'

42 C'atlle
I.Jreed

43 Expunge

Classy guy
DAILY CRYPFOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

44

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AXYOLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stand&amp; for another In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc S1ng lc letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormatio~ of the ~nrds are all
hinlq. Each day the code letters are dilferenl
CRYPTOQUOTE
4-2 2
VPISWT

)( w u

HIW

X PTG

p y

V P I

0 T

II GVW I

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III'Kt'~:

T GKZZ
P 0 I

II

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K U E

F. \\ I' I E \\'

Yesterday's Cryptoqaote: NO BODY CM llt:SCRIBE
A FOOL TO TilE LIFE, WITHOUT MU( II PATIENT
SELF-INSPECfiON . -

GJ (UJ ABC NIWI Nlghtllne

tDl Troppor John. M.D "
12:00 (I) Bu1 ol Broucho
(JJ lnoldtlhl PGA Tour
(J) Entertllnmont Tonlu,ht
Gospel songer Amy Grant
explains the recent cros sover of gospel music: to
pop charts
fJI (!) Rawhide
® MOVIE: 'lmpauo·
Gl tiZ Studio 34
12:30 D (l) ~ late Night with

F M COLBY
Dev td Lenerman Ton1 g ht s

guests are Ann W e dg e·
worth and Cab Calloway

{60 m1n .) In Stereo
·
Cil Bill Cosby Show
I]) Au1o Raci ng ·as: IHRA
Drag Ra ci ng · Funny Cfr
Showdown 1985 Stroh's
fu nny car showdo wn fro m

Darhngton, SC
(]) ABC News N1gh11ino
Ill (!}) News

�·'

Page . 10-The Daily S..tinel

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Beautification _ ___.&lt;c...,o,...ntln_u_ed_trom___:.pa...:;ge~1::.)_
eyery four to Jive years. CouncU said !here are no plans
for paving at this tlme.
Pomeroy resident Donald May
thanked councll for street Improvements oo Martin St. He also discuss
needed street llghtlng In that area.
May ~s told that street Ughtlpg
wlll be placed on Martin St. as soon
as til&gt; Installation can be worked
Ol!t with the !X)wer company.
Cnuncllman Bill Young reported
he was in attendance last week at a
Point Pleasant, W.Va. council
meeting, and that Point Pleasant
along with Gallipolis, has entered
Into a suit against Olnsolldated
Communications Group Inc .. which
provides local cable television
service. Young says the suit stems
from Olnsolldated Olmmunlcations' decision to drop WOUB from
Its cable line-up. Young said that
Marty Crawford of 1he cable
company reported that til&gt; company received only a combined
total ri l81etters and calls In JI'Oiest
of dropping WOUB.
Young urges anyone wishing to
protest til&gt; dropping of WOUB to
"call or write" to the cable
company.

Young also reported he has
numbered an additional ~ houses
In tile Wlllls Hill. Pleasant Ridge,
l\Jrlng Ave. areas since the last
meeting of council.
He also reported that park
equipment being made for tile
village by the Meigs HJgh welding
class Is nearly finished. Swing sets
are ready to be picked ~R now he
said.
Olunctlman Larry Wehrung announced that Chuck Mann of
Engineering Associates, Wooster,
will be contacting Clerk·TN!asurer
Jane Walton In the nearfutureto set
up a meeting to discuss EPA
required Improvements to the
village sewer system. Mayor
Seyler suggested the meeting he
held next Monday evening.
Oluncll moved to enter Into an
agreement with a Cleveland firm to
put aU vlllageordlnanoos Into coded
form. The motion passed with !he
stlpulatl:ln that Walton wlll decide
when there Is enough money In the
budget to allow lor the codlflca lion.
Council also discussed purchasIng a · heavy duty mower for the
street department but no action
was, taken In !he matter.

RETIRES -

Alfred (Putt)
LyODS has retired as marshal of

Racine VIllage, a post II! has
held for the past 44 years. He is a
charter member of the Gallla·
Meigs Chapter, Fraternal Honor
of PoUce, having been a
member lor some :ll years and
was recently hooored by tiE
chapler.

ont ued !rom page 11 _ _
Mel•IJ'fiJ. '••--------:.IC:.:.:.:~:.::.:..:.:.:~:...::_
e~

aspect of the program. Powell says
permanent collection containersll to 40 gallons In size and weighing
approximately 100 !X)Unds each
with heavy anchor pins - wm be
dlvkled out to til&gt; communities In
the county lor use In public areas.
Portable lightweight containers
wlll be available through the
JI'Ogram for special events
throughout the county. Pick-up of
the !X)rtable containers wlll be
negotiated from event to event.
Both Powell and Wiard point out
the relationship between economic
development and litter clean-up,

noUng that a "first Impression"
often makes a lasting Impression on
an Industry which may be consider·
lng a move Into an arPa.
Powell also noted that "commun·
lty pride" lncrPases as the results of
litter clean-up become apparent.
Anyone wanting Information rPgardlng the litter program may
contact Powell at his office In the
Ohio Bureau f1 Employment Servl·
ces' building. Union Ave., at

I

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Kenneth
H. Hager, of Coolville. VFW Post
9m3, has been ap!X)inled by VFW
National Com mander-in-Chief
John S. Straum of Mlnnea!X)lls,
Minn., to serve as a National
Aide-&lt;le-Camp, Recruit lng Class lor

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treatm~nt.

Cooper

ChrylserePlymouth•Dodge, Inc.

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STOP AND SJE All THE FREE
OPTIONS ON THIS MODEL

Two calls were answered bY units
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Monday. At 3: 27
a. m. theTuppersPJalnssquad went
to the State Route 681 residence ci
Geneva Gulhrle who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 5:16 a.m. The Tuppers Plains
unit answered a call lor Edna Lee,
State Route 7, who was also t ak~n to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for

Aeyone with reports of Utter sites,
lllegal dumps or Jitter violators.
should call Levingston at the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department at
992-3371.

Coolville veteran
earns appointment • • •

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S737300

1987

Two emergency runs

!J92.jj36().

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Staum, head of the over two
mlllion member crganlzatbn ci
overseas veterans said, "It Is
because of the tireless efforts of
civic and patriotic minded s lltzens
!Ike Hager that the veterans and
communities the VFW serves have
been affected in a positive

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·,~·~·~·~·L.~·~·-&amp;-·~·~·~·~·~~~~.&amp;-&amp;-&amp; .I• .l~.l~J~.J'~ I

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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer; Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy.

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l986.

.~"!'~on Page Z

Racine VUJilge CwncU has ·apCnunetl au tborlzed. the vUlag&lt;
The clerk was also directed to
proved a request from the Ohio clerk to send a letter to !he owner of send · a letter to the Racine
Department of Transportation de- a vacant trailer ori VIne St. Emergency Squad asking the
signaling State Rt. l2l as a detour requesting that litter he cleanE!d . president of the ll}uad to be at tile
for U.S. Rt.. 33 when the Pomeroy. !rom tiE bt on which the trailer next regular meeting of connell to
Mason Bridge Is closed for repairs.
rests.
discuss Incidents which are of
The request was approved at • Council reminds residents that concern to the VIllage.
Monday night's meeUng of councU. the lawn moWing season Is here and
Hel'b Glboon of the Racine Gas
CouncU met In recessed session at
urges residents to comply with Ol. IS also to be In attendanee·at the
the Shrine Club Park.
moWing ordlnanoos.
next meeting.
· Councilman Bob Beegle said the
bridge may he closed as long as six
months, however, no date for the
closing was given by 0001'.
Beegle caUed the designation "a
formality."
Ann Layne and Rhonda Lyons of
the Firemen's Ladles Auxiliary
were at the meetlngtoaskabout the
lllture use of the firehouse annex.
The Meigs County Head Start
. Center has been housed In the
annex for almost 10 years but Head
Start moved out last week. CouncU
explained that cuts and adjust·
mentswlll havetobemadetomake
up for the lost revenue from Head
Start's rent.
Council said that any outside
groups wanting to use Ill&gt; annex
will have to pay a user's tee,
Plymouth Turismo, ),door hatchback
!X)lntlng out that tax money for the
building must not be used to benefit
private persons or groups.
.
Rules and a fee schedule lor the
annex wm be developed at the next
regular meeting of councll Beegle
said.
Glenn Rizer, street commls·
sloner, requested permission to
"THE DO IT ALL DEALER"
replace tiE bristles on the vUlage's
WE SERVICE WHAT WI 51111
!X)wer street broom at a cost of
about $400. Cnuncll authorized
Rlzer's request slnoo the broom Is
needed to preparB vUiage streets
for chip and seal work.
Councilman Carroll Teaford reported that the lawn and parklng lot
of the Shrine Club Park were
..
399 S. Third Street
cleaned up last Saturday, and that
(Hmi.ER
Middleport, Ohio 45760
~
additional k&gt;vellng and dlsclng wll)
be done before Ill&gt; lawn section of
(6 14 ) 992-6421
1he park Is seeded.

ONLY

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manner".
"Our programs touch every
citizen in the community, !hey help
the you ng, the old. the VIetnam
veteran, and tiE World War 1
veteran. I am pleased to make this
appointment because I know Comrade Hager will do an outstanding
job for the VFW, the veterans and
commmunlty."

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Bueball roundup on Page 1

Photo 011 Pace 12

Vot.35, No.260

•

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By JUDY MORGAN
OVP news staff
PT. PLEASANT.:... Appalachian
Wood Products, Inc. today announced plans for expansion into
Mason County.
With the signing of a lease this
morning, Appalachian Wood, a
major manufacturer of waterbeds
that has operated a production
facility in Ravenswood lor lour
years, becomes the first Industry to
locate In the Point Industrial Park,

Point Pleasant.
Company vice president Dave
Cox said the new manufacturing
facility will be placed In production
by July 1 in a ~.OOJ square foot
facility leased from Point Indu strial
P~ rk, formerly the site of Point
Pleasant Malleable Iron.
The plant will employ 65 workers
and will represent a total capital
Investment of approximately half a
million dollars Into the new facility.
Cox said.

Libyan gove~~ent
expels journalists
TRIPOLI, Libya iUPI I - The
Libyan government today ordered
more than 100 A~rlcan and West
European journalists to leave the
country by nightfall, explaining
only that "your mission is over."

The order from the Information
Ministry did not include joumaiisl s
from Canada. Japan or Eas tern
bloc countries- anot!Jer estimated
100.
A mlnlstry slJOkesman refuS&lt;.'&lt;i to
link the action to Britain'sexpulsion
of 21 Libyans Tuesday or to
sanctions impo,S€d against Libya by
th£' Euro p ea n Economic
Community.

2 Sections , 12 Pages

26 Cents

A' Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

of deaths and tn junes to Ohio's
citizens. The new seat belt law goes
Into effect May 26 and enforcement
will begin on July 4.
"Don't wait unlll the seat belt law
hecomes effective,.. Henderson
said . "Start wearing your seat belts
now. It can save your Ufe. The next
time you get Into a car. try wearing
your seat belts. Once you get used to
wearing them . yoo will never know
why you ever drove without them. "

clear first choice. "

our competitive edge. It was
essential that our company grow
and expand Immediately. We could
not have found a better partner fi:Jr
this expansion than Point Pleasant
and Mason County."
The company's Ravenswood
plant will oot shutdown completely,
he said, but 111ll be restructured to
produce companion products for
waterbeds.
The company now employs about
28 workers at its Ravenswood plant
and Cox expects from 10 to 15 of
those employees will transfer to
Point Pleasant. The Point Pleasant

~

Cox added, "In ordertomamtaln

facility will employ about 65
workers, with the capacity to
ex pand production and workforce,
he said.
Appalachian Wood supplies waterbeds to about Ill dealers In six
states, according to President Jack
Hendricks. and operates too lactory outlets, In Ripley and
Charleston.
HendrlckssaidttEmovetoPolnt
Pleasant reptesents an c:.p!X)rtunlty
to cover the company's existing
market trore thoroughly as well as
expand Into additional markets.
Point Industrial Park, formed In

the spring of L9SI when Malleable
Iron was purchased by a group•of
businessmen, Is a ""'en-acre park
with approxlmat~ two acres, or
85,00l&amp;Juare feet, under roof. Since
the purchase, til&gt; facility has
undergone extensive remodeling.
Including re-roofing and painting.
Carroll Casto, president of Point
Industrial Park. sa id while Appaiachian Wood is lhe first firm to
locate In the facility,it "certa inly Is
not going to he the last." He said
Point Industrial Park Is currently In
"serious negotiation" with several
other companies.

~

~~

pmvldo! a ,.,e an4 nUaltle Jantlm~ place lor UfefiJPt - a heBmpter
ambullllce service 011! o.f Grant H011pltalln Columbus. Meip Coumy
Cmlm.......,r DavW Koblentz spearheaded the bulolng of the II!Uport.
Kobleatz lllld Bob 'l1ltlmpson. (In hard hat) of Assodaled Fabrleators,
are Jn tloo hllckKnJUII.
......... ,

CHANGES BEING MADE - The driveway to tile heUport pltd m
Mulberry Helghls Ill being changed to ellmlllale a steep Incline In the
lonner access road. Workers from ASaodaled FabricatAJrs were busy
Tuesday dozing the new road and pouring concrete to enlar(ltl the pad
itself. The acce;s road will also be paved. The helport was boUt tn

Record low temps sweep across Ohio
spraying water over the crop
helped provide some protection.
. "A5 long as you keep pumping
wa ter, It gives off enough heat to
keep plan ts from freezing."
"A5 1ar as the apple trees, I'm not
sure. They're not In bloom yet. The
cherry trees look pretty much
cooked, " he sa id. "The petals were
wide open and In fu ll bloom.
They're pretty much gone."
"We've got Ice all over," he said .
" Til&gt; Ice looks nice."
The water changes to Ice, which
creates enough heat.
Patterson Fruit Farms In Ches·
terland, about M miles east of
Cleveland, appeared to escape
slgnUica11t damage the strawberry
crop, but apples were in danger.
"The apples, sustained injury,
I'm surP that's !he case. To what
ex tent , we won't be able to tell lor a
couple weeks." said Jim Patterson.
Four helicopters were at work
during the early morning hours at
Lynd Fruit Farm in Pataskala,east
of Ollumbus. The rotating helicopter blades warmed tIF air arid push
It down on the blossoming trees.
"The thing that rea lly hurt us Is
that the apples are ahead of
schedule. Usually we don'! get this
far along Wllil the first week of

By UnHed Press lntematlonal
Record low temperaturPs swept
across Oh io early today. forcing
fruit growers to ta ke extraordinary
measures to protect their crops as
residents wondered wbere the
spring weather had gone.
"It's very unusual to get extreme
temperatures thiS lat e in ApriL By
clipping down In the low 20s.lt rea lly
can hit the crops hard," said Tom
McNutt, Franklin County Ex1ension Agent. " It probably only
happens once In every eight to 10

ye-ars."

LT. DAN HENDERSON
Melgs-Ga!Ua Slate
Patrol Commander

Ohio lottery winnei'!J

In making the announcement,
Cox expressed appreciation to what
he called the "Mason County
industrial development team.
"After narrowing our selection to
fi ve counties," Cox said, "It became
obvious thai the combination of
facilities, available financing and
the tremendous cooperation hetween the mayor. county commls·
sklners, Point Pleasant-Mason
County Chamber of Commerce,
and the Office of Economic Development made Point Pleasant the

Most of the reporters were
housed at Tripoli's AI Kablr Hotel.
"I was having breakfast and t!Fy
told TTK' I had to get out of here,"
said Mike Parry of the London
Daily Express. " I'm~lngtohook a
flight now."
An Italian journalist said, "We're
still trying to find out exactly what
to do."
Journalists sa id tiE order was
delivered politely but l~mly.
Mean while, demonstra tions - an
everyday event in Tripoli - have
been lacking since U.S. warplanes
oomhed the Libyan capital. and
diplomats said that cou ld be a sign
of public dissatisfaction with
Moammar Khadafy .
In London. The Times reported
today that a fiv&lt;"-man military
junta may have divested Khadafy
of exclusive control of the nation In
the aftermath of the U.S. raid.
Western and East-bloc diplomats
said Tuesday unexplained small·
arms fire, explosions and nightly
anti· aircraft fire that punctuated
ihe days after tiE raid were
...,idence of Internal tension.

Extended Foreca8t
Thursday lltrough Saturday
Fair Thunday, with a chance ol
showers Friday and Salurday.
. m~~~s will be In the 'llls each day.
Ovemlght lows wW range from the
mid 3011 to mid ~ early Thursday
ond from the upper 40s to the mJd
:JOB Friday and SatunJay momlnp.

At 5:45 a .m. in Toledo, tlx'
temperature dropped to 21, a
31-year low for the dat e. Meanwhile, record lows wen~ also
recorded of 23 In Columbus at 5:3.1
a.m., 24 In Mansfield at 5:~ a.m.,
and 26 in Dayton all2: 55 a.m.
A 27-degree reading In Cleveland
at 2: 30 a.m. tied the longest
standing record for April 231n Ohio,
set In 1875.
Fruit growers Tuesday called In
helicopters, built bonfires and
burned smudge !X)ts to protect the
crops.
Michael Hoen, wbose west Toledo
orchard and strawberry fields this
morning were covered with Ice
created hy a sprinkler system, said

May," said Lynd Fruit Farm's
Dick Wander, who was Wlcert.aln as
to the extent of the damage.
Grape grower Kl"'l Schuster of
Valley VIneyards In Warren County
In southwestern Ohio summoned
ll!llCO{lters and also buUt bonfires to
protect what remained of his
grapes.
"The cold hit us Wlexpectedly last
night (Monday)," Schuster said f1
1he rocord low temperatures. His
vineyards are between Dayton and
Cincinnati.
"WP lost 15 percent of our crop. "
he said.
Bob Davis of the Hamilton
County Extension Service said,
"The location of the trees !sa factor.
If they're on a hillside wbere they
get good alr drainage, the damage
wlll be less severe. If they'rP In a
!X)Cket where the cold air wUI
remain, It would be tmre severe."
The oold weather forced the
Cincinnati Reds, !he Columbus
Clippers and the Toledo Mud Hens
to ea ll off Tuesday night hascllall
games, but the Cleveland Indians
and Baltimore Orl:lles played In
33-degree temperatures along the
Lake Erk&gt; shore.
"It doesn't feel !Ike spring at all, "
said Denise Terrell ol Cleveland,

adding that she had already put her
winter clothes away. "You don't
know how to come out of the house
from day to day."
But warmer weat!Fr is on the
way. The National Weather Service
said a sharp warming trend would
hegln over Ohio today with highs
climbing In to the 50s. Highs are
expected to reach the 10s In many
parts of the state Thursday.
Ohio strawberry growers said
they were covering their crops with
blankets, and grape grower Ken
Schuster of Valley VIneyards near
Dayton, Ohio, used helicopters and
bunt bonfires to protect what
remained of his grapes.
"The cold hit us unexpectedly,"
Sc huster said of Tuesday's record
low temperaturP of 28degrees. "We .
lost 15 percent of our crop... ·

llliodes brands 1983 deficit .a 'Celeste myth'

CLEVELAND (UPli - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number
701.
PICK-4

7635.

Veterans Memorial
.
CHARGES TVPICAL - A
spokernan for Gov, Richard
Celesle says fonner Gov; James
Rhodes' clalm8 that the btcome
tax hl.ke Wider Celeste were
unneces•ary are typical because
Rhodes won't admit the state
was In flnaoclal bule when he left
of nee. Rhodes left a
mBllon
deftclt according to Celeste's
campaign director, JeriY AWl· tin. (File photo).

Admitted: Wilma Anderson Ra·
cine; Edna Lee, Pomeroy; Helen
Fell, Pomeroy; Todd Lee, Ctester;
Eva Haning, Albany.
Discharged: Cecil Frazier.

Window :vandalized
A display window at the Swisher·
Lohse Drug Store In Pomeroy was
broken out early Tuesday !JIIIrnlng.
· Pomeroy pollee report !hat the
Incident occurred about 1: ~ a.m.lt
remains under lnvespgatlon.

({;)

Mason County gets waterbed pla~t

"We need to use exira caution in

A freeze warning Is in effect for
tonight.
Bemmlng sunny today, with
hlgfis near 40. Clear tonight, with a
record low In tile mid 20s. Sunny
Wednesday, with highs between ~
and 55.
The probability of precipitation Is
near zero through Wednesday.

.
ent1ne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 23, 1986

our driving and he mo1P alert for
children walking, riding bicycles
and other motorized vehicles on
and along our streets and high ways," Henderson said.
The patrol Is also looking to
reduce fatal accidents, he added.
and the public's use ci safety hells
and sea t restraints wUI help. There
were 10 traffic fatalities invest!·
gated bY the patrol In 19&amp;5, and In
eac h one, none of the victims wore
seat hells. This year, Henderson
said. two people have died on the
area's highways and nelt!Fr of
them were wearing seat hell s.
"The year 19~ brings a new seat
hell law to motorists in Ohio,"
H~nderson said. "This law was
enacted to help reduCe liE number

·Weather forecast

.

Shopping spree

Copyrighted 1986

GALLIPOLIS- A reminder that
warm weather Is approaching and
more children will be outside
playing has been issued to area
motorists bY Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the Gallla-Meigs
Post of the Ohio Highwa;&gt; PatroL

A Huntington man was cited by
the state highway patrol for
assured clear distance In a two-car
accident on U.S. 33 Monday.
Troopers sa id Philip W. Smith,
26, was westbound at 8:20 a.m.,
five-tenths of a mile east of the
Athens County line, when he was
unable to stop for a car stopped
ahead driven by Stephanie J .
Houchins. 21. Middleport, and
collkled.
Houchins had reportedly stopped
to allow a dlog to cross the road, the
patrol said. There was slight
damage reported to Houchins'
vehicle.

.

Giants win ~n

Seat belt reminder
given by commander

Cited by patrol

l

Photo 011 Pap 7

e

"Your mission is over. You must
go," til&gt; spokesman said . "If you
don't make your own arrangements. we will maket!Fm lor you ."
He did not elabora te.
Journalists poured into UbYa at
the start of America 's latest
confrontation with Libyan leader
Moammar Khadafy . Many were on
hand when U.S. warplanes bomhed
Tripoli and Benghazi before dawn
on April 15.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• I • I •I •I •I • I • I •I •I •I • I •
• • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • •
• • •
I

God, ·country awards

.Frustrating decision.

.De,our r,eqtlest gets approl:al

'

abo~t

Tuesday, April22, 1986

MENIHOL!OO's: 13 mg."tar".l.Omg. nicotine. FilTER TOO's: 17 mg."tar". 1.2mg. nicoline;
IIV. per cigarette by FTC met!tod.
•

'250

• • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Mlnlholltlfl bl lnllfel*d-.

'C•It.R,J . III:YNOlD8TOIACCciCO.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP]) Fomier Gov . James A. Rhodes
Tuesday blasted Gov. Richard F .
Celeste's for claiming there was a
budget deficit In 1983, and charged
that Celeste made the clalnn
because "he was hell - bent to
overtax the people."
Rhodes, speaking a l a reception
at Scioto Country Club, said
"Celeste created thls myth as a
smokescreen for an. el(cesslve and
•unnecessaxy 90 percent Income tax
hike.
"Dick Celeste Is a spender. He
cauldn'.t stand having a sljm budget ·
In his first months as governor
because he had too many !X)lltlcal

Gov. John Gilligan. He said when
Celeste took over In 1983, !here were
bills left unpaid "so tile Incoming
goveroor could rot deal with It
without raising taxes. "
Rhodes, wbo Is running against
Sens. Paul Pfeifer and Paul
Glllmor for the Republican guber·
natorial oomlnat!on, said Celeste
admitted til&gt; tax hlke was wrong~
giving taxpayers a rebate in 198!,
bY pro)l061ng a tax cut and bY
signing a budget that cut taxes.

Governor Celeste did what he fie It
was necessary to get tile state In
sound finan cial condition."
Rhodes quoted a Legislative
Budget Office report dated Dec. 31,
1982 as saylngtll!rewould only be a
shortfall If a 00 percent tem!X)rary
Income tax surchar(ltl, lmple·
mented In 1982, were allowed to
ex)ire. He said the report said the
delle!! would he $145 million.
Rhodes charged · that Celeste
could have prevented til&gt; deficit by
extending the surchar(J'.
Austin said the charges are
typical because when Rhodes lett
office In 1970, Ill! state was In !he
hole, and tiE 80lut!on was a state
Income tax Implemented under

debts to pay off with unbid
contracts," Rhodk&gt;s said In a news
release Issued after the reception.
Jerry Austin , Celeste's campaign
director, called the statement
"typical James Rhodes campaign
rhetoric."
Austin said l:loward Collier, the
budget director during the Rhodes'
last term, admltled to Celeste's
transition committee In 1983 that
there was a deficit of at least $250
million.
"Rhodes doesn't want to accept
the responsibility" (that there was
a shortfall at the end of his term),
Austin said. "He always blames It
on someone else. The tact Is tllat

"There's a veryslmplereasonfor
Celeste's trumped·updellclt ligures
and · his confiscatory taxation: It's
because II! was beD-bent to overtax
til&gt; people," Rhodes said.

"BBIIIIon• 111 'n11 ~rNNprlol ~fu~~Wtth200c~u~Mteper~, It per~.

-.

..,__,.._

....

~~

,,
....

'

.

.

IIIAS1S C~LESTE AGAIN · .
- GOP gubernatorial candidate
James A. Rhodea has qaln
blasled Richard Celeste's 'Income tax hike of 1983. Rhodes
charses Celeste tnunped-._, II&amp;
flcll ~!lUre&amp; and could have
prevmt.ed the deficit by extadtnc the lacome tax lllll'llluu-p.
(File pbojo).

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