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                  <text>Poge-14-The
•

By WU..LIAM C. TROTT
United Press lnlernatlonal
TRUMP THIS: Donald Trump
has moved from thP board room
to the board game. Milton
Bradley has jotlled with the
billionaire developer and, as
might be expected, the product
bears the name Trump and the
object of the game is to grab as
much money as possible.
"From the Trump standpoint,
all of the proflts we make will go
toward charities," Trump said at
Trump Tower news conference
to Introduce Trump The Game.
• Trump the person says the
game is better than an interest·
free loan and he will appear in
television commercials to pro·
mote it. "I've played Monopoly
all my life in many forms ;" he
said. "And this is a more
~ophistlcated game. ill 's) not ·
just a game of luck, It 's a game of
talent. If you 're smart and have
the right instincts, you'll end up a
big winner."
The money used in the game
bPars Trump's likeness and

Ohio Lottery

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People in
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We Reserve The Right To

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limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-1 0 PM

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

a

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., FEB. S THRU SAT., FEB. 11, 1989

Vol.39. No. 192
Copyrighted 1989

l

Grand jury rerurns
152-&lt;0unt indictment
CL!;;VELAND (UP! )
A
Cuyahoga County grand jury has
returned a !52-count Indictme nt
against Ronnie Shelton, 27.
charging him with rape and other
crimes Involving 24 women durIng a five-year period. ·
The go-go dancer, who has no
permanent address, was Indicted
Tuesday on 40 counts of rape , as
well as charges of gross sexual
Jmposltton, li ldnapplng, aggra·
vated robbery and burglary ,
felonious assault, grand theft ,
and Interfering with telephOne
service.
Pollee officials • said the
charges Involved crimes com·
mltted In Cleveland , Fairview
Park, Parma, Parma Height.s,
and Middleburg Heights between
i983 and last. November.

.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
It appears that the man who
robbed the Syracuse Branch of
·the Home National Bank In late •.
December returned Wednesday
afternoon to rob the Home
National Bank In Racine.
Wednesday's suspect got away
with an undisclosed amount of
cash.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Depar!ment and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation are
probing the armed robbery
which occurred at closing time
yesterday.
A white male, 6 feet one inch .
tall, weighing 195 pounds, wearIng a dark colored ski mask, a
green army jacket and blue
jeans, and brandishing a chrome
plated automatic gun, entered
the bank at 2:55 p.m. The man
handed a garbage bag to teller
Darlene Newell and ordered her
to empty the vault. He then
pointed hi~ weapon at teller Kelly
Eichinger and ordered her to
begin emptying the cash
drawers.
.
BANK ROBBED - Concerned employees and law enforcement
The suspect was only In the
officials were still at the Home National Bank In Racine after
bank a couple of minutes, author·
closing time on Wednesday. The bank was robbed on "Wednesday
!ties reported.
shortly be'ore th,e regular closing liwe.of 3 p.m.
Max Eichinger Jr., husband of "·
the teller, was leaving the bank
when the suspect entered. Mr.
124.
Route 68.
Eichinger became suspicious
The Ravenswood Pollee were
West Virginia State Police and
and when the suspect fled the
notified and set up a roadblock at a State Pollee helicopter from
scene in a brown Chevrolet
the West Virginia side of the Interstate 77 responded, but the
Celebrity with Ohio dealer tags,
Ritchie Bridge. The suspect, suspect was not located.
he ('Eichinger) followed In his
When spotting the road block,
The dealer tags from the
own vehicle. The chase headed
skidded around In the road and get-away • vehicle were traced
out State Route 124 towards
started back to Ohio with Ra- back to Smith Buick, Gallipolis .
Ravenswood.
venswood Pollee In pursuit_ The . When contacted, Smith Buick
Meantime, an FBI agent from suspect passed a log truck on the officials did not know the tag had
the Athens office was parking his Ohio side S!Jd turned up river on been stolen. The vehicle did not
vehicle at the bank when the State Route 338. The pollee belong to the car dealership.
suspect exited the bank. The caught up and the suspect
Bank employees feel the desagent had come to Racine on slammed on his brakes, stopped cription of the suspect _matches
another matter and had by and turned around. The po.llce that of the man who held up the
coincidence, stopped at the bank had difficulty turning their Syracuse Branch on Dec. 28.
at the same time the robbery was cruiser. The suspect got away,
The amount of money taken
occurring_ The agent, when In· crossed the bridge back Into West was not released by authorities.
formed of the robbery, also Virginia, and was last spotted
The bank reopened for bus!·
entered the chase on State Route heading south on West Virginia
ness as usual on Thursday.

SEA STAR FISH-N-BATTER

09
Fish Portions •••• ~ Sl

CHUCK WAGON BRAND

Sliced Bacon ••••••• ~~ 79(
SUPERIORS ASSORTED
.
$11 9
nch Meats ••••••• ~

LEAVING THE SCENE - This is the scene at
3:02p.m. Wednesday at the Horne National Bank
In Racine. An armed robber, carrying a garbage
bag filled with the . bank's money, flees the

building. Bank cameras reconled the robbery. An
lnvestlgallon by local and federal authorities
continues. The photograph was provided by the
Meigs County SherHf's Department.

LB

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$2
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SUPERIORS

Hot Dogs ••••••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

COMMUNITY SERVICE - Dr. James With·
erell and Dr. Wlbna Mansfield, standing, slaff
meQJbers of Veterans Memorial Hospital, have
served as medical supervisors for American Red
Cross bloodmobiles visiting Meigs County over
the past 10 years as a part of !heir roles In

community service. Here the two physicians
observe bloodmobile volunteer, Jean Nease,
working during Wednesday's bloodmobUe visit at
the Meigs Senior Otlzens Center In Pomeroy.
Mrs. Nease has been a bloodmobile volunteer
worker for over 30 years.

Meigs area residents donate
89 pints of blood Wednesday

$2
3
9
Potatoes ••••••••••••••
RUSSET

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FLAVORITE

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HANGING ROCK GRADE A

Med. Eggs .••••••••~.1!'! S9&lt;
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5 QUART PAIL$

Crackers ••••••••••••••~~
FLAVORITE

299

CITRUS HILL FROZEN

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6
Orange Juice ••••••••
Tomato Juice ••••! .~z~
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DETERGENT

"

oz.

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21

oz.

99(

Limit 1 P• (ust.,.. ,

Lim~

1 , . (uot•
Gooll Only At i'owott's S.pw Yatu
0 Gooll Svn., ftb S '"'"·Sot., Ftb. 11, 1919

THANK YOU CHERRY

t

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o
, Gooll Only At PowtiFs S.pw Yatu
• Gooll s..., Ftb. S thru ~-· Ftlt. 11, 1989
~

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OXYDOL
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PURINA

•

CAT FOOD
6.5 oz.

5I Sl ·

limit s ,. (OJ!Gooll Only At Powotl' • Sopor Vatu
GoCIII s..., Folt.S llwu Sat., foil. 11, 1919 .•

...................... .
•

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: DOMINO SUGAR :
SLB.

$169

limit 1 , . (uotGoollllnly At Powotl's Svpor Volu
o. Gooll S.l\, Ftb. S tllru Sat., ftb. 11, 1919

••
•
••

Eighty-nine units of blood wer~
received at the Wednesday visit
of the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile to Meigs County.
Twenty of the units were
designated for relatives and
friends. At the visit Mace! S.
Barton became an eleven gallon
donor. Other top donors were
Howard p_ Logan, ten gallon;
Virginia M. Blan&lt;l, nine gallon
donor; Dalvd J. Koblentz, seven
gallon donor; Raybon R. Wal lace, two gallon donor ; and
Joseph Marcinko, Betty J_ Lowe,
Deryl E. Well, and Danny R.
White, one gallon donors.
First time donors wer_e John
Bentz, Jeff McKnight, Harriet
Friend, lj:eith Wood, Paula
Wood, Debra Drake, Eunice L.
Jones, Mike Johnson, Keith
Phalln, Delores Whitlock,
Drema Ward, Eugene Tripplet.
Attending physiCians at the
bloodmobile were Dr. Wilma
Mansfield and Dr. James Witherell, and the nurses donating
their time were Beulah Ward and
Naomi London.
RetlredSenlorVoJunteerclerlcal workers were Marion
Ebersbach, VIrginia Buchanan,
Dorothy Long, Wanda J ., Fetty,
Emma Clatworthy, Pauline Hy·
sell, Jessie Curtis, Gerald Wll·
dermuth, Florence Richards,
Edna Triplett, Evelyn Gilmore,
Grace Welsh, Lula Hampton,
Gertrude Robinson, Jack
Sorden, and Joan Sorden,
Other volul\teer workers were
Peggy Harris, Jean Nease, Shlr·
ley Finley, and Edward Cozart,
representative of the Vietnam
Vets Motorcycle Club. The canteen was served by the Women' s
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion,
Middleport.
Donors b)l communities were
as follows:

Fire destroys
mobile home,

Road project should
be underway shortly

Pomeroy-Susanne Heck, Jeff
Rutland: Mary E. Davidson,
McKnight, Lenora McKnight, Marla H. Blackwood, William
Don Cullums, David King, Har- Allen Blackwood, William J.
riel Friend, Imojean Blevins, Eblin, Iva H. Sisson.
Service.
By NANCY YOACHAM
Raybon R. Wallace. Robert W.
Middleport: 'Dorothy McCloud,
First reported that "englneerSmith, Lawrence D. Leonard,
Kathryn D. Johnson, Sarah Jane
A Racine man was Injured and .
Sentinel News Stall
(ng plans are coming along" a nd
Pamela J . Miller, Dan E . FolFowler, Joyce v. Bartrum,
a mobile home and pickup truck
A project to fortify a portion of
were destroyed in a fire which stream bank along Dexter Road that a project agreement will
lrod, Lloyd E. Blackwood, Fonna David G. Dodson, Sr., George L.
occurred
Wednesday afternoon (County Road 10)' to prevent probably be ready for signing In
K Cullums, William W. Radford,
Harris, Leafy M. Chasteen, Fredat
225
Pearl
St., Middleport.
undermining of the road by 30 to 60 days. Th e project
Walter R. Couch, Howard P.
erick E. Penhorwood. Gloria J.
agreement must be signed by the
Paul David Casto was admit· Leading Creek, should be under·
Logan, Eunice Jones, Michael Peavley, Mary A. Sorden, and
commissioners In order to com Edward Johnson. Karen S. Charles P. Gerard.
•
ted to ·V eterans Memorial Hospl- way by summer, according to a
mit th e county's 25 percent share
Clark, Brenda L. Morris, Keith
Manasoas, Va.: · P atricia F.
tal for treatment of second report Wednesday to the Meigs
of the project cost. The remai n·
Phalln, Betty J . Lowe, Patricia , Kitchen.
degree burns of the right hand County Commissioners from Bob
ing 75 percent will be paid by
and arm suffered In the fire First and Mike Duhl, represent·
J _Barton, Janet Ambrose, Joann
Gallipolis: Lynda J. Fraley.
RC&amp;D.
Ward, Drema Ward, Bryan S.
Mason, W. Va.: Sharon L.
which destroyed the mobile ing the Resource Conservation
and Development Council and
First further repor ted · that at
Shank, Loretta A. Brown, Gary Leffle and Teressa L. Coover!.
Continued on page 16
Snouffer, William E. Snouffer,
Continued o~n~p;;a~g:e:l:6:;tr:_:.:.:M-:-e..;lgs;:__c-:o-.unty Soil Conservation
Gloria K. Kloes, Carolyn A.
Charles, Patricia Ann Parker, ·
Marsha L. Barnhart, John F.
Snyder, David J. Koblentz, Adell
L. White, Danny _
R. White, Paul
Marr and Eugene Triplett.
Portland: Kelly R. Ginther.
Reedsville: Joseph Marcinko,
Deryl E . Well, MarcelS. Barton.
Syracuse: Teresa M. Tysonn
Drummer, David F . -Lawson,
Darla N. Thomas, Kathy J .
Cummings , and Delores
Whitlock.
New Haven, W. Va .: Steven
Mace.
Long Bottom: _John Bentz,
Paula Wood,. Keith Wood, Laura
L. Hawley , Bruce Hawley, Hazilee Riebel, Vanessa M. Sidwell .
Racine: Barbara .Lyne Chapman, Virginia Bland, William
Hoback, Betty V. Sayre, Nola C.
Young, Curtis D. Jones, Debbie
Drake, Dor!ha P. Rittle, Charles
W. Bush, Marie A. Bush, David
Aaron Wolfe, Mark Matson,
Jeanettte M. Radford, Louise
Frank, John D. Frank, Charles
F. Pyles, Barbara F. Beegle.
Vinton: Keith A. Vanover:
Langsville: Ellis E. Myers,
MOBILE HOME DESTROYED-BY nBE- Thllllraller; owned
for over two houn bringing the fire· which spread to a pickup truck
Elva B. Clark.
·
by Angellque &amp;archer aUDPearJSt. Middleport, wu detroyed by
parkM nearby under control.
fire "Wednesday afternoon. Middleport firemen w~:re on the scene .

pickup-truck

9

.,

I

••

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Racine bank robbed;
·continue search for
white male suspect

$ 69
Chuck Roast ••••••~~ 1

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 9, 1989

there are no denominations less

than $10 million.
BORG TO HOSPITAL: Bjorn
Borg's friends say it was a bad
meal - not a suicide at tempt that sent the Swedish tennis
great to the hospital. Borg, 32,
had to be rushed to a Milan, Italy,
hOspital from the home of his
girlfriend, pop singer Loredana
'Berte, and have his stomach
pumped.
He went home about fo ur hour$
later but police said Borg had
tried to kill himself with barbituates and a hospital source was
quoted as saying he had taken 60
sedatives.
But a member of l:!erte"s band
said Borg •had eaten some bad
meat and Borg's adviser lngmar
Alvedal said it was only a matter
of three sedatives that Borg had
taken to help him sleep. ''I'm
well. It's all over, ·• a smiling
. Borg told reporters when he
returned home.
Borg, who Is divorced from
Romanian tennis player Mari·
ana Sbbonescu and has a son
with another woman, and Berte,
36, were scheduled to be marr ied
Feb. 26 but her divorce from an
Italian businessman is not final.
GEORGIA ROCK: A Georgia
legislator Is trying to liven up the
state by having Little Richard 's
classic "TuW Frutti " made the
ofliclal state rock 'n" roll song.
"Quite frankly, I don' t think
Little Richard has ever gotten
the acclaim or the notoriety for
his contribution to rock 'n' roll, "
said Rep. Billy Randall, a Democrat who represents, M.1con,
which is the hometown of "'Little
Richard " Penniman .
"I don't think anybody made
the contribution of Little Ri·
chard." Georgia already has a
state song - "Georgia On My
Mind" by Ray Charles - but
Randall pointed out that no other
state has an official rock ·n· roll
song, although Oregon last year
considered making " Louie,
Louie" the state rock song.
NEW BUSH GROWS: The
homey atmosphere at the Bush
"White House just got homier.
Nell Bush and his wife, Sharon,
became parents of a 7-pound,
2-ounce girl early Tuesday and
Ashley Walker Bush becomes th e
11th grandchild of President and
Mrs. Bush.
The White House iss ued a
statement saying mother and
child were doing fine after the
birth In Denver and Neil was
quoted as saying the baby, the
couple' s third child, " really is
cute."
LANCE WRITES: Reagan ad·
ministration refugees aren't the
only people who get book contracts. Bert Lance, the former
Jimmy Carter associate who was
pushed out of Washington by
charges of financial ir regularities, has signed with Summit
books to write about his
experiences.
The book, which is due fo r
publication in thefallofl990, wlll
touch on hiS work on behalf of
Carter and, more recently , Jesse
Jackson, politics in general and
his successful fight against ba nk
fraud charges .

Increasing cloudiness tonight. Low · In mid teens.
Friday, partly cloudy , high In
mid 30s.

I

�'

.

-Thursday, February 9, 1989

Commentary
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS oF OPINION ar~ welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. A1lletters are subject toedltlng and must beslgned with name, address and
!elephone number. No. unsigned letters wUI be pub1tshed. Leiters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Bimbos not best
reason to reject Tower
By LEON DANIEL
UPJ Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - DefenseBecretary-designa te John Tower surely
deserved our sympathy when hts vindictive second wife broadslded
the little Texan with allegations of womanizing.
And it was easy to side with him when a Washington gossip
column ist. relying on an anonymous eavesdropper, reported a mildly
lustful, probably playflll and certainly private remark by Tower to
his companion In a hotel dining room.
Conservative lobbyist Paul Weyrlch got a lot of Ink and TV time
wilh his sensationalized charges that the former Republican senator
is some kind of a knee-walk!rig, commQ\Ie-hugglng d•unk.
Even those of us prepared to believe Tower may be too fond of the
grape were put ofi by the sanctimonious Weyrlch, known around town
as a wowser, which is what Aussles call an excessively puritanical
person.
But the question of whether Tower has a drinking problem quite
properly Is taken very seriously by the senators charged with
deciding If he should be confirmed In the nation's top defense job.
It is known that several of them were not reassured when the
nominee scoffed at the notion that booze might be a problem for him,
asserting rather pompously, 'Tm a man of some discipline."
We don't yet know for sure what the FBI, still scrutinizing Tower's
private life, has disclosed to the senators, but there's a lot of
speculation about bimbos as 'well as booze.
Inquiring minds want to know If the·gumshoes are going to turn up
some really good stuff.
One of the juicier tidbits actually to reach print was a vaguely
attributed and unsubstantiated report In The Boston Globe "of an
affair In 1987 with a Soviet ballerina for whom Tower allegedly was
providing lodging In a house In Houston."
: ~uch spicy speculation obscures the Senate's best reason for
rejecti ng the president's nominee
,Although Tower no longer openly shares a bed with the defense
ipdustry, he still is too closely Identified with the Pentagon's.
discredited purchasing practices. That, In a nutshell. is why he should
be denied the Pentagon's top job.
· "At his confirmation hearings, Tower told the Senate Armed
Services Committee he once chaired that Congress should close the.
·'revolving door" hlgh:ranklng Pentagon officials pass through on
their way to cushy jobs with defense co ntractors.
·
· ~ow Tower proposes to use that dOOr himself - albeit in the
apposite dlrectiOll- to return to government service after pocketing
:f763, 777 as a consultant to defense Industries.
• An independent defense publication - the Army Times editorially has urged Tower to withdraw his name from
~onsideration.

:cuing the appearance of conflict of Interest, the newspaper said,
"lfhough the charges against Tower IT\aY be umprov~ . they
undeniably create the Impression of a man much too cozy with the
Pentagon's worst ways of doing business."
·
: If there's one thing a new administration professing t~e highest
~thical standards should know, It"s that foxes should not guard
lofnhouses.
•,•

1oday in history
•

By UnHed Press International
: Today is Thursday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 1989 with 325 to follow.
·:The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
&gt;The morning sta~ are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
, :The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
William Henry Harrison, ninth president of the United States, In 1773,
actor Ronald Colman In 1891, former Secretary of State Dean Rusk In
1909 (age 80), exotic dancer Gypsy Rose Lee In 1914, Irish playwright
Brendan Behan in 1923, television journalist Roger Mudd In 1928 (age
61), singer Carole King In 1942 (47), and actress Mia Farrow In 1945
(age44).

WUAtJ ·GALLIPOLIS-POMEROY

25°/o
WATCHES ........... SAVE 25°/o

WASHINGTON- The inspector general at the Environmental
Protection Agency is supposed to
be a Wiltchdog on waste. Instead,
his employees describe him as a
hog on travel.
Inspector General John Martin
and his chief assistant, John
Barden, spent thousands of dol·
Jars to attend a week-long conference In Hong Kong. Two months
after they got back. to Washington, D.C., Barden ordered the
staff to curtail job-related trips;
the .travel budget was too low.
The staff Investigators were
understandably miffed. There Is
enough money for overseas
junkets for the boss, but not
enough to send the underlings
across state lines for
Investigations.
· The travel bug Is as pervasive
in Washington as a flu epidemic.
There· s something a bout a credit
card and the open road that a
bureaucrat can't resist. With
President Bush pledged to cut the
. gargantuan bu9get deficit with-

It's nearly official. Soon we
enter the kinder, gentler era
promjsed last summer by a
rhapsodic George Bush. Why,
even Congress appears disposed
to ·new-found good will.
As always, though. talking
about a new era Is easy. The
proof will only surface In actual
policy. For example:
• - Education. Nothing Is
crueler than consigning millions
of urban kids to lives of functional Illiteracy, yet that Is what
American public schools do today. Middle-class kids fare better, of course, but even they learn
scandalously less than their
counterparts In advanced countries around the world - especially In science and math.
A kinder, gentler Congress will
recognize that public schools
require structural reform, not
merely another shower of money. Our schools already Ingest
more of the gross national
product than does education In
most countries. And we spend
more today per student than we

.Decor

WASHINGTON (NEA)- Writer Jonathan Kozol was Invited to
attend a weekend symposium In
Arizona, sponsored by the American Institute of Architects, on
Improving the design of she! ters
for the homeless.
Kozol, the author of "Rachel
and Her Children: Homeless
Families in America," notes that
In New York, Cornell Unlversl·
ty's school of hotel administration Is offering a new course -In
shelter and soup kitchen
management.
Here In Washington, Kozol was
asked to advise a task force on
shelter decoration assembled by
the American Society of Interior
Designers. Its mission Includes
the assessment of pastel walls
and other amenities.
When Kozol' s book was first
published last year, The New
York Times aptly characterized
it as "a searing Indictment of a
society that has largely chosen to
look the other way." Now, far

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pollee," on'e staffer told our
associate Scott Sleek.
The agency's mission Is to
make sure that the federal
budget allocated to protect the
environment goes for that and
nothing else.
Martin Is "doing the very thing
that he's supposed to be a
watchdog on," said one employee. "It seems to me it's
setting the worst possible type of
example. For the troops that
can't go to Idaho and Investigate
some contract fraud, It can be a
tough break."
Partial records available from
the Hong Kong trip show that
Barden alone claimed more than
$3,400 In expenses. The lwo men
took a vacation day, using their
own money, to tour TokyO while
they were In the neighborhood.
That Is legal, but some members
of Congress frown on piggybacking business trips with vacations
because It makes the business
look like thinly disguised
pleasure.

EPA employees "told us they
are afraid to criticize the junkets
openly for fear of reprisals.
Martin said the agency has a
grievance process and his employees are free to bring complaints to him.
The situation at EPA raises a
troubling question. Who's watchIng the watchdogs? Do we need
someone to make sure the
Inspector general Isn't guilty of
the abuses hels supposed to stop?
Martin and Barden are not the
only continent hoppres among
the Inspectors general. The Hong
Kong conference drew Inspectors, general from the Energy,
Agriculture and State depart·
ments and the U.S. Government
Printing Office. We recently
reported that June Gibbs Brown,
the inspector general of the
Defense Depilrtme!lt, took a
month-long junket to the Far
East and another triP to Europe,
ostensibly to eyeball overseas
military bases .

EARRINGS

IN HEART SHAPES
SAVE

did In 1980 when the supposedly
mean-spirited Reagan era
began.
.
·
-Child care. A kinder, gentler
Congress wUI not favor one form
of child care over another.
Rather than directly subsidize
regulated day-care centers, It
will Instead assist all parents
with young children through
expanded tax crec;llts.
With such credits, families
would receive the same benefit
whether they sent their kids to a
franchised day-care center or a
church program, arranged to
leave them with• neighbors or
relatives, or, for that matter,
kept them at home with one
parent.
The most popular child-care
proposal In last year's Congress
was neither kind nor gentle. It
was a discriminatory bill favorIng model yuppie families .
Worse, It would have further
undermined the role of parents In
child-rearing while boosttog the
role of Institutions.
- Housing and the homeless. A

kinder, gentler Congress will
Ignore calls for the federal
government to finance more
low-Income housing, w))lch lines
the pockets of developers and
bankers while creating Instant
slums. Government doesn't grow
food to help the hungry; It gives
them food stamps. It should
assist those who need housing
through expanded use of housing
vouchers.
Better yet, Congress could
threaten to end housing subsidies
to communities In the process of
liquidating their housing stock
through such perverse policies as
rent control.
- Regulation. Airline, truck·
lng and telecornmunicatlohs deregulation have saved consumers tens of billions of dollars. A
kinder, gentler Congress will
search out other areas of the
economy to unchain. It will start .
by loosening Depression-era restrictions on commercial banks.
Meanwhile, It will repudiate a
host of well-meaning proposals
whose main effect would be to

shrink the job market- such as a
bill ordering private firms to
provide 10 weeks of parental
leave.
- Taxes and private savings.
It's time tax policy strengthened
incentives to save rather than
stifled them. A kinder, gentler
Congress will authorize tax-free
accounts In which parents can
save for their children's college
education. It wlll also Index the
capital gains tax so Inflation
doesn't strip Investments of their
accumulated value.
Admittedly, many people who
extol Bush's vision of a kinder,
gentler nation resist the poliCies
outlined here. They prefer the
false political kindness often
practiced In the past, one In
which the state limits choices
rather than enlarges them and
seizes additional private earnIngs rather than fostering productivity and Independence.
While loudly touting their own
compassion, In other words, such
people maddeningly conspire to
save us from ourselves.

make a shelter a home

more attention Is being paid to
the problem - but much of it
trlvlalizes homelessness.
Kozel, now touring the country
to promote the recently pub·
llshed paperback version of his
book, emphasizes his belief that
the Institutions described above
are well-Intentioned but mls·
guided. "Good people," he says
"are Investing their energies In
evil Institutions."
The popular definition ofhomeIessness long covered only what

journalist Susan J. Smith refers
to as "the ragged alcoholics and
mentally Ill adults who have
shuffled along city streets for
decades" or what Kozol describes as "the theater of grotesque bag ladles In Grand
Central Station and winos sleepIng In the dusty sun outside the
Greyhound Station In El Pa~o.~·
Today, It Includes entire families, many of them working poor,
and "Is the result of years of
cutbacks In public housing and

'
FACES POSSffiLE
AMPUTATION - Detro!' Tiger fantasy
caqop coach John IDIJer of Hermersvllle, Mich., rubs his right foot
during camp in Lakeland, F1a., Wednesday. The 45-year-old
Hiller, a former relief pitching ace for the Tigers who had his best
season two years after suffering a heart attack at age 27, faces the
loss of his right leg below the knee. He suffers from a blood clot
behind his knee. (UP I)

Gooden signs largest
pact ·in Mets' history
NEW YORK tUPI) -The New
York Met s announced Wednesday they have s igned right hander Dwight Gooden to the
largest contract ever given a
pitcher in franchise history. a
three -year deal worth $6.7
million.
'
Gooden, 24 , became 'the third
Met this winter to sign a major
contract, following outfielder
Kevin McReynolds and righthander Ron Darling.
Gooden 's agent, Jim Neader,
said the contract contains the
same neutral lockout language
. as McReynolds' and Darling's,
which means an arbitrator will
decide if he should be paid in the
event of a 1990 lockout.
Neader said Gooden's deal

Robert
Walters

other federal social programs
Including job training, foods
stamps, health care and spendIng on the mentally Ill," notes
Smith.
In 1979, the year before Pres!·
dent Reagan was elected, the
federal government was spending $32 billion annually on low·
Income housing programs. Today, that figure stands at $7
billion yearly - less than onefourth of what It was a decade
ago.

contains

•

25°/o

GOlD filED

p92-2054

IN

SALE .ENDS FEBRUARY 18,· 1989

Gallipolis, Oh.

446-2691

•
'

incen-

investment.''

Gooden, who had to limit his
time on the phone to take his wife
to a medical appointment , said
the contract made him hope he
can finish his career with the
Mets.
"I would like to," Gooden said.
"You come through an'organization and It's almost like a family.
There's no doubt I'd like to finish
my career In New York."
Gooden went 18-9 with a 3.19
ERA and 175 strikeouts last year.
He owns a 91-35 career record,
but has never approached the
standard of his sophomore season when he went 24-4 and
captured the National League Cy
Young Award.
He missed the first two months
of the 1987 season while undergoing rehabilitation for substance
abuse. Upon his return, he went
15-7 with a 3.21 ERA. He said he
hoped the money would not
change him.
"Hopefully, I'll be the same,"
he said. ''I'll try to be the same
Doc."

On Jan . 30, the Mets signed
Darling to a 3-year deal worth at
least $5.3 million and perhaps as
much as $6 millioh. Gooden said
Darling's deal had little effect on
his.
"Really none at all," Gooden
said. "Me and Ronnie are two
different people."

Symmes Valley tops
Kyger Creek 83-68

.

NOT SALE ENDS TODAY

342 2nd Ave.

"numerous"

tives, including one calling for
$100,000 for winning th e Cy
Young Award. The amount
would roll over and become part
of the following year's salary.
Only last week, Gooden 'scamp
was expressing unhappiness
with the progress of talks. Now
the right-hander Is saying. "I
gotta' go out and show them they
made the right choiCe."
Speaking on a conference call,
Mets senior vice president AI
Harazin said he understood how
much money was involved, but
"given Dwight's track record,
we believe . il is a sound

VALLEY
LU BER CO.
INSE TS RUNNING

~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

a~ious

to get on playing field

two weeks when spring training
begins..
Benzinger, who celebrates his
26th birthday Saturday, has
played the past eight seasons In
the Boston Red Sox organization.
He was thrU!ed two months ago
when Boston traded him to the
Reds because Benzinger Is from
the Cincinnati suburb of New
Richmond.
"It feels like I'm finally on the
team that I was meant to play
for, " he said. "I was always a
Reds fan even when I was
playing with Boston . I would go
home after a Red Sox game and
watch television to see how the
Reds were doing."
The Reds acquired Benz! nger
to replace erratic-hitting Nick

Esasky at first base. They plan to would come around In the 1990s."
bat him fifth In the lineup behind says Benzinger. ''They got me to
speedsters Barry Larkin, Chris be a player In 1989. They're not
Sabo, Kal Daniels and Eric going to be sat lsfied If I hit .250
·
Davis.
and drive In 50 runs."
" Todd will get a lot of opportunEven If Benzinger slumps. It's
Ities to drive in runs with those unlikely the Reds will force him
four rabbits in front of him ," to stop switch-hitting or change
Reds General Manager Murray his swing.
Cook said. " He drove In 70 runs in
''My dad was a big fan of Pete
only 120 games last year, which Rose and he started me switch·
translates into about 90 if he hitting when I was a kid because
plays a full season. We" re expect- . of Pete," Benzinger said. "I'll
ing a significant performance always be a switch-hitter.
from him."
"And, I met Ted Williams back
Although Benzinger only bat- In 1981 when I first signed with
ted .254 last year for Boston, he the Red Sox. He thought I had a
was productive in the clutch. He good swing and told me never to
bat ted .421 with the bases loaded change it."'
' and .394 with a runner on third .
"The Reds didn' t get me to
The Daily Sentinel
watch me develop and hope I

Cardinals slip past 'Cats;
Georgetown defeats Huskies

SALE STA S
TODAY

ANY PIERCE

141 • STEiliiG • STONE

113 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - This
winter' s "Hot Stove League" has
lasted too long for Todd "
Benzinger.
" All I've been doing the last
couple of months Is talking,
talking, talking," the new Clnclnnat I Reds first baseman.
"There's been no outlet for all the
talk .
''Ail players need that outlet of
going out on the field , forgetting
about all the talk and Jllst'
playing. It's fr11stratlng to keep
hearing about and talking about
what I'm supposed to do without
any outlet."
What Benzinger Is supposed to
do is help the Reds win the
National League West this year
and his "outlet" finally arrives In

'.

TODAY'S
NEWSPAPE
SHOULD READ

30°/o OFf
GIFTWARE............ 20°/o OFF
14K GOLD ...........

FlEE- FlEE

PR£-ENGAG01ENT

out raising taxes, travel will
become an even more coveted
commodity.
·
The solution Is as clear as the
.stamp on your passport eliminate junkets to conferences
where sightseeing and ·parties
are the real agenda. But you can
watch for the bureaucracy to
take the low road - preserving
the junkets to Paris In April and
eliminating the business trips to
Duluth In February.
Martin and Barden told us
professional conferences are a
must. The Hong Kong conference
In late 1987, where they were
Invited to speak, was for international experts In corruption.
Barden also traveled to Toronto,
Canada, for an International
meeting of pollee chiefs.
What all this International
hobnobbing has to do with waste
In the EPA Is a mystery to us, as
well as to some of the grounded
staffers. "We don't do ·anything
that has International Implications ... and we're not chiefs of

can~t

TUESDAY FEB. 1••..

-

Benzinger is

Hoping for a kinder era ____V_in_ce_n_tC_a_rro_ll

a e This
Valentine's Day
Special!!

KREMENTZ ......... SAVE

FREE Gin WRAP

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 9, 1989

Do watchdogs need watchdogs __Ja_ck_A_nd_ers_on_

The Daily. Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

The Symmes Valley trio of
Scott Miller,"Carl Robinson and
Tony Schneider divided 54 points
to propel the Vikings to an 83-68
victory . over visiting Kyger
Creek Wednesday night.
"We had a strongflrsthalf,and
we did a good job . on (KCHS
center Mike) Reese," ' said Vlk·
ing chief Terry Saunders, whose
troops limited the 6-3 senior to
fou r points en route to winning
their third game of the season.
Reese wasn't the only Bobcat
suffering the scoring blues, as
, point guard Chad Leach was held
to six points in the first half.
However, the Valley couldn't
keep Leach down forever, as the
5-10 senior sank 19 points In the
second half on his way to scoring
a game-high 25 points.
Symmes won the reserve contest by a 51-33 count.
On Friday night the Norsemen
(3-1~. 3-10) will play at Eastern,
and Kyger Creek (5-14, 2-11) will
wrap up the regular season at
home against Oak Hill.
Quarter latah!
Kyger Creek ... .... 8 17 24 19-68
Symmes Valley . 22·23 21 17-83
SYMMES VALLEY (83) Miller 6·0-6-18; Rob! nson 7-0-418· Schneider ~- 1·5-18; Hayes
'
I-1-5-10;
Smith 2-0-2-6; Justice
1-0-2-4; Large 2-0-0-4; Nicholas
1-0-1-3; Harris J.0·0-2. TOTALS28·2-Zl-83
Foulshoo&amp;lng - 25-41 (61 pet.)
KYG Ell CREEK (611) -Leach

8-1-6-25; Sipple 5-0-5-15; Denney
4-1-3-14; Johnson 0·0-"1-4; Perry
1-0-2-4; Reese 1-0-2-4; Villanueva
1-0-0-2. TOTALS - 20-2·Z2·611
Foul shooting - 22-31 t71 pet.)
'

By LISA HARRIS
UPI Sports Writer
Given the upsets in a season
that has featured a new No. 1 for
four straight weeks, the No. 4
Louisville Cardinals will gladly
live with the fact that they barely
beat Cincinnati.
Playing their fourth game in
eight days, on the road, tlw
Cardinals held Cincinnati score·
less over the final three minutes·
and ultimately let star J;'ervis
Ellison provide the crucial ,offense In a 69-66 Metro Conference
victory.

'"A win on the road Is tough to
get, but our guys sucked It up
even though they were tired,"
Louisville Coach Denny Crum
said. "We were ahead at the time
the buzzer went off, that's aiL "
The Cardinals tied the score at
66-66 with 2:17 left on Ellison's
10-foot jumper. Ellison's dunk
with 1:30 put Loul~ville In front
for first time since the opening
minutes, at 68-66.
"Coming off a loss (81-78 to
Florida State Monday night. ),
this Is a good bounce back {or
us," Crum said. "Our guys

executed right down to the
stretch."
The Bearcats led most of the
way, Including 39-35 at halftime
and 54-45 with 13:06 left but
turned over the ball 16 times twice as often as the Cardinals.
"The guys are busting their
rear ends and playing very
hard," Cincinnati Coach Tony
Yates said. "They 've been competitive against tough teams. We .
had far too many turnovers down
the stretch which caused us
problems and caused us to lose
Continued on page 5

Leaders retain top spots in UPI poll
By GENE CADDES
UPJ Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio I UP))- All
four leaders managed to retain
their No. 1 spots In this week's
United Press International O~io
High School Board of Coaches
boys basketball ratings, but fora
couple. the margin was razorthin.
Toledo Macomber In Division I
and Chesterland West Geauga In
Division II were both well out
front of · their nearesi challengers, but for Beverly Fort
Frye in Division III and Division
IV's Springfield Catholic, it was a
different story.
Macomber, now 17-1 after a
69-55 win over Toledo Sl. J6hn
Tuesday night, piled up 32 of 36
first place votes in the big school
balloting and 354 out of a possible
. 360 poll points.
Lorain Senior, 17-0, was a
distant second with one first
place vote and 263 points, fol lowed by Ci nci nna ti WIthrow,
16-1, . with 241, Warren Western
Reserve, 16-1, with 217 and
Cincinnati Woodward, 14-3, with
197. Woodward got two first place
votes and Withrow one.
West Geauga, now 18-0, pulled
away from the pack in Division
II. The Wolverines, whose first
place lead wa_s 40 points a week
ago over Dayton ChamlnadeJullenne, .held the No. 1 spot this
week by a 402-297 margin over
Youngstown Cardi nal Mooney .
West Geauga also received 23
of 42 first place votes to just ttiree
for Mooney, 17-0.
Another Youngstown team,
Liberty, moved into third place
this week with 266 points, followed by Chamlnade, which lost
for the second time Tuesday
night, 67-59 to Beavercreek, with
250 and unbeaten Orrville in fifth
with 224.
Fort Frye,18-0, hung on to No.1
in Division III despite being
outdueled In first place votes 15-6
by Petersburg Springfield, 17-0.
Fort Frye had 224 points to 218 for
Springfield and 211 for Bucyrus
Wynford, 16-1, which had live
firsts.
Columbus Academy. which fell
to 15-3 Tuesday night with a 58-57

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loss to Plain City Jonathan Alder,
tumbled from second to fourth
with 179 points, followed by North
College Hillin fifth with 159 and
Oberlin sixth with 148.
Springfield Catholic, 18·0 after
whi pplng Tl pp City 76-36 Tuesday
n !ght, held a 213-208 lead over
runnerup Canal Winchester, a
58-57 loser Tuesday night at

Ashville Teays Valley. Springfield Catholic also held a 16-6
edge in first place votes. Third
for the second week was Sebring
McKinley , 17-0, wit.h 161 points
and a lone first place vote.
Kalida in fourth place and
Cincinnati Country Day In fifth
rounded out ihe Division IV top
five .

(USPSUI-ttl)
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�1989

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S.

Oak Hill edges North. Gallia five, 66-64

Cardinals slip past ... _c_ontl_nued. . :. . :.from.;,. . : .:pa:z.:. . .:Jge~

Pomeroy-

'

..
..'

,.''

••

'..

....,.
,.
'
,.

....

,.
,.

.·r"
'

..,.

..•

..
'.

•
.•

,.

...

~ -.

·~·
;.-

•

.-.
I

.....

LOOKING TO PASS- North Gallla point guard Greg Glassburn
(14) looks to pass the ballasOakHlllguard Bobby Coon (21) rushes
in to defend In the first period of Wednesday night's game on the
Oaks' home court. Oak Hill survived a last-second Pirate try for a
tie and won 66-&amp;4. (OVP staff photo by G. Spencer Osborne) .

Mullins 1st women's
piayer at Rio Grande
to net 2,000 points
Lea Ann MuUins is the first
women's basketball player ~t
Rio Grande College/ Commun·
ity College to score more than
2.000 career points.
The 5·7 senior power for·
ward from McGuffey, Oh Ia,
went over the lop Feb. 4 when.
the Redwomen defeated Mid·
Ohio Conference leader Walsh
77·65 in Canton. Mullins
scored 25 points and posted a
career high of 12 rebounds in
that game .
Mullins had started the
week with 1,939 points spread
over four years of playing at
Rio Grande, and ended up
with 87 markers for the week
to total 2,026. For her efforts,
she was named District 22 and
MOC Player of the Week, the
second time this season she
has received the honor.
The physical education major, a product o! Upper Scioto
Valley High School In Hardin
County, joins the ranks of Rio
Grande basketball athletes
who have tallted 2,000 or more
career points, Including such
notables as Joe Verhoff
(2,198) In 1987andJimmyNoe
(2,156) In 1977. All·tlme SCOT·
ing leader at Rio Grande Is the
legendary Clarence "Bevo"
Francis. who totaled 3,250
career points In two years
(1952·54) with the Redmen.
Mullins, who Is the national
leader In free throw shooting
among NAIA schools this
season, broke the 1,500-polnt
mark on March 1, 1988.
Scoring 16 points in the Dis· ·
trlct 22 playoff tilt with Mount
St. Joseph, Mullins ended her
third year with 1,505 points. In
the third game of the 1988-89
campaign, played at Rio
Grande on Nov. 19, 1988,
Mullins recorded her all-time
career high of 46 points
against NAIA women's power
Wingate (N.C.).

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
. OVC Staff Writer
Oak Hill used aggressive pres·
sure defense and an 11-for-16
performance from the foul line In
the last quarter of Wednesday
night's SVAC game with visiting
North Gallia to edge the Pirates
66-64.
"We've been worklrig a lot on
·defense," said Oak Hill coach
Doug Hale, whose cagers played
a tighter man-to-man defense
against the Bucs than they did In
their last meeting, which saw the
Oaks record a ~9-58 road victory
on Dec. 20, 1988.
That defense forced a number
of Pirate turnovers and with the
relative absence of green-clad
Galllans under the boards on
several occasions, allowed the
Oaks to get several uncontested
rebounds through0\11 the game.
"You've got to box out after the
shQt," said North Gallla skipper
Bruce Wilson to his crew In the
fourth frame.
North mounted a pair of
six-point leads In the first quar·
ter, with 6-5 senior postman
Rusty Denney, who led all
scorers with 20 points, doing the
honors both times. However, the
combination of traveling calls
against the Bucs and their
a !lowing the Oaks room along the
baseline worked to the Hill's
advantage In the opening act.
With three straight baskets In the
quarter's last three minutes, Oak
Hill broke a 14·14 tie it created on

J

AC standings I

SV

Although the Redwomen
(All games)
·
lost 100·96. Mullins set a new
TEAM
WL P
OP
record for the most points
North
Gallta
.....
11
6
1187
1065
earned by a Redwomen lor·
Soulhern ........... 11 8 1236 1191
ward in a single game. The
Eastern ............ 10 8 1314 1342
previous reccrd, 37 points, had
Oak Hill ........... 9 10 1140 1191
actually been set by Mullins
Southwestern .... 8 10 1237 1329
on Feb. 9, 1988 in the Rio
Hannan Tract' .. 8 10 1081 1061
ladies' 79-73 defeat of Malone.
Kyger Creek ..... 5 14 1209 1327
At the time, Mullins said she
Symmes Valley 3 15 1015 1258
wasn't so much concerned
about scoring the points as she
(SVAC games) ·
was about winning the games.
TEAM
WL P
OP
With six consecutive victories
Southern
..............
10
3
902
812
to the Red women's credit
Eastern ............... 9 4 968 929
entering action the week of
Oak
Hill .............. 9 4 821 761
Feb. 6, Mullins still felt the
North
Gallia ........ 7 6 907 807
same.
Hannan
Trace ..... 7 6 792 769
.. That was a big win for us,"
Southwestern
...... . 5 8 859 927
she said of the Walsh game.
Symmes Valley .. 3 10 , 735 866
"But I'm very happy to have
Kyger Creek....... 2 11 806 919
had the opportunity at Rio ·
TOTALS
............ 52 52 6780 6790
Grande to accomplfsh some·
thing like this."
·
(Reserves)
:'Lea Ann is quite a
TEAM
WL P
OP
shooter." Red women Coach
North
Gallla
....
:·
...
12
1
741
473
Cheryl Flelitz commented.
Hannan
Trace
.....
10
3
649
500
"But the unique thing is, she 's
second In assists for the team, .' Southern.............. Hi 3 635 506
Symmes Valley ... 8 5 560 561
which means she's not a
Eastern............... 6 7 572 655
selfish player. I'm very
Oak
Hill .. ........... 3 10 506 623
pleased and proud to have
Southwestern.
.. ... 2 11 503 636
coached her for three years."
Kyger
Creek.......
1 12 431 643
Mullins was recruited In
TOTALS ............ 52 52 4597 4597
1985 by then-Rio Grande
Wednesday's finals
Coach Dixie Jeffers. In her
Oak
Hill
66, North Gallla 64
freshman year, she made an
Symmes
Valley
83, Kyger Creek
Impact by scoring 404
68
markers 116.8 per game). She
Friday's slate
went on to post 528 points
Hannan
Trace
at North Gallla
(20.3) ·the following season
Oak
Hill
at
Kyger
Creek
and 573 120.4) In 1987·88. She
Southwestern
at
Southern
averaged 24.4 points per out·
Symmes Valley at Eastern
lng and held a free . throw
Saturday's contesl8
shooting standing of 94.9 per·
Point
Pleasant
at Hannan Trace
cent (132-139) as the week
OVCS
at
Southwestern
began.

la yup to give' the Oaks a 45·41
a Josh Ruff long jumper when North a 36·35 lead.
lead. George buried a threesenior forward Bobby Ward
After Stout was called for
pointer
from the right wing to cut
scored on a layup with five charging on the Pirates' next trip
the read to 45-44 . Twenty-nine
seconds left to give t'he hosts a downcourt. Rawlins, who had
seconds later Pirate guard/ tor·
16-14 lead.
Denney an~ power fo rward Don
ward ChriS Tackett, who had just
Once the second period was Mays on his back all night,
come Into the game, was fouled
under way, It took 11 seconds connected on a turnaround
by OH guard Chuck Miller.
before Pirate forward Darin jumper just right of the key to
Smith sank two free throws to tie give the Oaks a 3V·36 lead with· Tackett s ank two one-and-one
shots .to give the Bues a 46-45
the game at 16. After OH forward 5:02\eft.
lead, which proved to be the.l r
Chad Smith was called for a
With baskets by Chad Smith.
last lead of the game, because
three-second violation. Denney Coon and Ward, the Pirates were
with
five seconds left In the third
dropped In a jumper In the paint faced with a 43-36 deficit. When
frame,
Coon connected on a long
to give North an 18·16 lead. Then the Bucs called time out. Wilson
jumper
from the right wing,
at the 7: 06 mark, OH sen tor told his sailors "We're just
putting
the
Oaks on top 47-46.
guard Bobby Coon launched the standing around out there. " If
In prime time the Oaks kept
Hill's only three-pointer of the that wasn't enough detriment to
trading bas kets, only faltering
night, a shot from the right the Pirates' cause, bad luck from
when Stout fired a bonus bucket
baseline, to give the hosts a 19·18 . the field was a faithful servant
to
tie the game at 51. One of the
lead .
for the hosts until Stout dialed
Alter consecutive layups by long distance from just outside principal reasons the Oaks kept
the Pirates from gaining the lead
Oak Hill frontmen Jedd Rawlins the key. Coon committed his first
was that they maintained the
and Chad Sm lth gave the Oaks a · foul while Stout was shooting.
23-18 lead, the Bucs came right Stout missed the point after, but defensive pressure tliat kept
North from running its fast·
back. Darin Smith sank a pair of he. rebounded his own shot, put
one-and-one shots to cut the the ball up from the top of the key
break offense. The .o ther was
O'aks' lead to 23·20. Though lor and connected. In four seconds
their iHor-16 shooting from the
the next three minutes the Oaks he whittled the Oaks' advantage charity stripe in the last act.
kept making a ihree-polnt geta·
Even with all that, the Pirates
to 43-41.
way each time the Bucs pulled to
After Ward scored on another
Continued on page 5
within one, the Oaks couldn't get
away with It forever. Pirate
forward Brian Stout, who mlss~d
three times from three-point
range In the first quarter, finally
hit paydirt from downrange with
1:48 leJt to give the Galllans a
29-27 lead.
With 54 seconds lett, Ward !led
the game at 29 with a layup after
missing on his first try. Seven·
teen seconds later Pirate guard
Steve George launched a threespot from the right wing to ' put
North on top by a 32·29 count,
I
which was where the affair stood
at halftime. •
Air, automatic transmission
In Foul Trouble
Ward, who picked up three
fouls in the first half, walked out
~at
from under the shadow 'of foul
trouble, as he sparked the Oaks
by scoring eight of his 16polnts In
the third quarter. With a long
jumper from the left wing barely
a minute Into act three, Ward
gave the Oaks a 33-32 lead.
STOP IN AND SEE •••MARK,· KEN, ED OR J.D.
After Ward expanded that lead
to three points with a pair of free
throws, North Gallia forward
Todd Petrie scored his only
points of the game on a long
jumper from the left wing to cut
the hosts' lead to35-34, setting the
992-2174
stage for Denney's baseline
POMEROY, OHIO
jumper from the rtght side,
500 EAST MAIN
which at the 5: 36 mark gave

1986

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"'lery Nice Car, Sporty, But

Practical"

WE SOLD IT NEW!!

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.

~

4NAPA~

~ .,

·EYES BASKET -Duke's Danny Ferry, wl.th
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Williams rides his hlp In the !lr$t half of

.....

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Oak Hill... ___

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$44!xchango
• Comes with a 50-month limited
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• Fitsmostd!Jmesticandimport
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(#5024, N5026, #502tiR)

NAPASILVERLIIE
34-Piece

Set

$)749~

including power generating
plants, major transmission
facilities and interconnections

with neighboring elactric: uti!Hy
systems-are adequate to provide reliable electric service to

its customers. During t998,
excluding temporary power
sales to other utility systems.
generati~ty margins of
the American Electric Power
(AEP) System, of which Ohio

Power is a part,~ were appro~el·

...

mataty 19 percent (or more) of
ta)MlbiiHy. Margins of at least
this level are expected to be
aval\abte throughout the year
and Into the peak load period
of next winter (1989-1990).
Generati~ margins
are requ\red In order to meet

r

• Includes com·
plete range of socket sizes in
metricand SAE
• Convenient metal box for storage
o MadeofChrome!Van·
o 8"quick release('!\" drive) ratchet
diom alloy steel
o SpinnerhandterA"drive)
• Heat treated
• 3"Extension(*"drive)
• Chamferedendson
• %~t0 1ft" adaptor
sockets
#89-5534N

79

unexpected lncre ••• in system
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alcohol to reduce luel tank

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below()" F.(lffillOO &amp; #7100).

(1168-1946)

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Approximately 87% of the
AEP System's power generating capacHy Is coal·fired,
9% is nuclear and the
remainder is oil-fired or hydr~

electric.

The

Company

believes that its coal supplies are adequate to enable
it to meat the anticipated electric: anergy reguiramenta of
Its customers during the
year.

LEA ANN MULLINS

The NAPA National
Warranty Program
HyouuseNAPABrandpartsunderyour
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arecovered. WiththeNAPANation·
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Rawlins led the Oaks with 18
points.
In the reserve game, the
Pirates won the league tllle with
a 47·2-7 victory. Terry Farley led
the Midshipmen. with 24 points,
while Davis led the Hill with 13
markers.
The game was the last home
contest ,f or seniors Bobby Coon,
Chuck Miller. Jedd Rawlins and
Bobby Ward.
On Friday night the Oaks 19·10,
9·4) will end the season at Kyger

NORTH GALLIA (64)
Denney 7-0·6·20; Stout 3·3·0·15;
Mays 4·0·2·10; George 0·2·1·7;
Smith 1·0+6; Glassburn 1·0·0·2;
Petrie 1·0·0·2; Tackett 0·0·2·2.
TOTALS - J7.~ 1S·64
Field goals- 22-70 1~1.4 pet.\
Foul shots- 15·21 (71.4 pet.)·
Rebounds - 40 !Denney and
Mays, 9 each)
Assists- 16 (Glassburn 5)
Steals- 6 (Glassburn 3)
Turnovers - 14

ROCK SPRINGS - Coach was joined in double figures by
Roger Foster's Lady Marauders .Jody Taylor ·with 12,slster Jen·
picked up two wins recently to nlfer Taylor wlth 11 and Beth
raise their record to 16·2 overall Ewing with lO.Melgs loss Jody
and 13·2 in the TVC, as they Taylor, Ewing and Shannon
defeated Wellston 42·25 and Alex · Newsome via the foul route,
while Jennifer Taylor and Smith
ander 50-43.
In last Saturdays win over the each finished with 4 as Meigs was
Golden Rockets ,Meigs jumped whistled for 25 personals. Missy
out to a 14·4 first quarter lead and James led the Spartans with 16
shutoUt Wellston in the seccnd points.
Meigs jumped out to a 14·2 lead
quarter building a 22·4 halftime
lead In coasting to the wln.Kelly In the first quarter and held a 14·9
Smith led a balanced Meigs lead at the end of the quarter.
at tack as she scored a game high Alexander cull! to 14·13 with 5: 24
13.The Golden Rockets outscored remaining in the half, but after a
time out Meigs reeled off 8
Meigs 21 -20 in the second half as
the Marauders cleared the unanswered points to build a
22-13 lead. Alexander cut It to
bench.
Meigs was whistled for 8 foul s 45·41 with just over 5 minutes
as Wellston hit on 3 of8foulshots, remaining but the Marauder
while the Marauders hit on 6 of 11 defense stiffened and allowed
only 2 points the rest of the way.
as Wellston committed 9 person·
als . In the Reserve contest the
In an exciting reserve game,M·
lssy Nelson scored only three
Marauders rolled to a 43·12
points but they were the most
vlctory,M issy Nelson led the way
with 11 to pace the victors.
Important as she drilled a three
pointer at the buzzer to tie the
Meigs ..... ...... , .... .. .... 14 22 30 42
Wellston .... .. .. .......... 4 4 19 25 game at 36 and force the game
Into overtlme.The Marauders
Meigs - Jody Taylor 1·0·4·
then outscored the host 8·4 to win
6,Ewlng 1·0· 1·3,Smith 6·0·1·
42·38. Kim Hanning had 15 and
13,Jennl!er Taylor 2·0·0·4,Carr
Trlca Baer had 14 to lead the
2·0.0·4,Newsome 1·0·0·2,Haggy 0·
way .
0-0·0,Kioes O·O·O·O,Nelson 0·0·0·
Thursday night the Lady Ma·
O,K.Ewlng 1·0·0·2,Baer 2·0·0·
·
rauders
will travel to Stewart to
4,Wagm!r 1·0·0·2,Black 1·0·0·2
face the Fifth Ranked team In the
TOTALS 18·0·6·42.
state lri the Federal Hocking
Wellston -'Ervin 2·0·0·4.Davis
Lancers.On Saturday night the
O·O·O·O,Smlth 0·0·1-l,Kirby 2-0·1·
Marauders will play In the
5,Simms 2·0·0· 4,Canter3·0·1·
DivisiOn II Sectional Tourna·
?,Mullen 1·0·0·2,Johanson 1·0·0·
ments at Oak Hill High
2.TOTALS 11·0·3·25.
Schooi.The
second-seeded Ma·
In the win over Alexander the
rauders
will
play McDermott
Marauders held on lor · the
Northwest 62·41 winners over
victory despite being In serious
Wellston with 'the opening tip a
foul tro\Jbleo Once again Kelly
6:30.
· Smith l~d the way with 14,she

#- MAC'slnjector

each

~

Meigs girls pick up
•
two more court wins

MAC's lniector Care
or TheiiiiO·Aicl
Theperfectboxlora
homeorapartment
stanertool kit or as a
serondkillokeepin
your car or truck .In·
eludes a removable

The defeat spoiled the White
Falcons bid to notch its first con·
ference triumph in 26 tries and
dropped the Bend Area teams
season slate to 2-15 overall and 0·
12 inside the LKC.
WaltQn overcame a seven point
deficit in the final stanza to record
the victory with Brian Randolph
leading ~e Tigers rally w!th six
consecuuve free throws m the
games.final mmutes.
Randolph fin_ished the . contest
w1th a game h1gh 25 pomts and
sealed the Walton tnumph by
calmly converting a pair of charity
tosses .in the final seconds. "Ran·
dolph IS a real player that can hold
his own with anybody in the con·
ference" . said Hall following the
league encounter.
Despite the poor shooting effort
on the part of the White Falcons the
local cagers managed to put
together a strong third quarter
showing behind senior center Chris
Jewell who dropped in eight third
period points to help turn a 32-27
halftime deficit into a 47-40 lead
going into the final canto.

· The 6-4 Jewell "played one of
his best games of the season" ac·
cording to Hall but when the game
'
ROANE
COUNTY
W.V.
·The
was on the line it seem¢ as if
'
shooting perceniage from the ftoor
nobody for the WHS hardwood
turned
in
by
the
Wahama
White
men could buy a basket. Wahama
'
Falcons nearly matched the frigid
attemDted 67 shots in the 2ame and
temperatures outside and as a result
•,'
all but 18 of those came from
the Bend Area teams bid for its
within 15 feet of the hoop.
second straight hardwood win went
During first half action the W]lite
for naught Wednesday evening as
Falcons shot a dismal 24% percent
the host Walton Tigers came from
but managed to stay close on the
behind in the final quaner to hand
strength of its prowess from the
the local cagers a 59-55 Little
free throw stripe. The Bend Area
Kanawha Conference setback.
team canned 11 of 14 from the1me
"You can't shoot 31% and expect
in the first two quarters and trail~
to beat anybody" WHS coach
by a mere five points at the inter·
Lewis Hall said following the dis·
mission break despite its shooting
appointing conference loss. "We
difficulties.
simply missed too many shots inBehind Jewell's four for four
'
side the paint, attempts that shoilld
'
performance in the third stanza the
have been easy to make. We didn't
locals connected 6ll nine of 16
take bad shots, we got the ball
shots to quickly erase the Walton Jewell adding 16 and John Bamitz
where we wanted too it just
lead to take a seemingly comfort- 11.
Io the junior varsity contest
wouldn't go in for us. Even though
able 47-40 advantage with just
''
.
Stacy
Nutter came off the bench in
we struggled from the floor with
eight minutes remaining.
''
the
second
period to lead coach
our poor shooting we still had our
But, lifter outscoring the hosts
Frank
Capehart's
Little Falcons to a
chances to put them away and we
20-10 in the third canto the frigid
shooting resurfaced for the Bend 65·57 win over the Tigers. Nutter
~' didn't do it and as a result Walton
)
gained the victory added Hall."
Afe!l cagers as fourth quarter play tossed in a game high 26 points in
resumed. Walton batded back to just two quaners of play as the Lit·
,.•
·'
knot the score at 55-55 followin&amp; a tie Falcons improved its 1988·89
'
...;C;.;;o.;.;n.;;;tln_u_e_d_f_ro_m_.:p_a.;;;g_e_4_ _ __
three pointer by Shawn Fields and a slate to 4-11 overaU and 3·8 inside
pair of free throws by Randolph the LKC.
had one last chance to tie the Creek. while· the Pirates (11·6, and regained the lead on another set
Joining Nuner in double figure
game. After Coon missed the
scoring
for the White Falcons were
7-~) will host Hannan Trace.
of foul shots by Randolph.
front end of a one-and -one with 17
Shwmon
Bam:tt with 13 tallies and
Quarter totals
Wahama had a chance to pull
seconds left, Pirate point guard
Robbie
Board
with 10. Burgess
N. Gallia ........ ... 14 18. 14 18-64
;·•, Greg Glassburn pllssed the ball Oak Hill ............ 16 13 18 19-66 back even but missed the front end topped Walton with 14 points while
of a bonus situation wiih Randolph
~
to George, who moved to the left
OAK HILL (66)
adding yet another two free throws Ellison had 12 and Johnson 11.
~
·· wing to shoot from three-point
Rawlins 7-0·4·18; Ward 5·0·6· in the final seconds for the Tigers to
land. He missed, and · Stout 16; Smllh 7-0·1·15; Coon 3·1-4·13;
put the game out Qf reach.
'·
rebounded. Stout shot just inside Mtller 1·0·0·2: Ruff 1,0-0·2. TO.
Randolph ltll all scorers in the
.·
the three-point line on the right
TALS - 24·1·15-66
.
contest w1th 25 points followed by
wing,
but he too missed. Mays
'
Field
goals25-55
(45.4pct.
)
Fields with 15 marlcers for the win·
•• had a shot inside, and so did
Foul shots - 15·20 (75 pet.)
ners. Bobby Kincaid noWhed 17
'
Glassburn. Glassburn's attempt
Rebounds -37 I Smith 12)
points
for Waharna . with Chris
~ '.
fell two feet short as the clock ran
Turnovers - 16

ties Commission of Ohio on

The Company's elaclric
power supply facilities-

By GARY CLARK
OVP Starr

..'

'.•

March.18, 1981, the Company
hereby apprises the public
of the atato of electric supply
In Ill service area.

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES

W ahama drops 59-55 cage tilt

out.

NAPA's

Wednesday night's ACC contest In Durham, N.C.
The Blue Devils outdueled the Cavaliers 85-66.
(UP I)

the basketball game .
" There Is something about this
team. They've got a lot of prid e.
They 're not giving up and th ey 're
not going to quit. There hasn't
been any successfu I person in the
world who has had not had
failures . This team is learning
from its !allures and ge tUng
better every day ."
Ellison scored 17 points, Kenny
Payne and Everlck Sullivan
added 14 points apiece and Felton
Spencer 12 for the Cardinals, 17-4
overall and 6-1 in the conference.
Cincinnati dropped to 10·9 and
1·5.
In other games Involving
ranked teams, No. 2 Georgetown
beat' Connecticut 70-58, No. 13
Florida State downed South
Carolina 88·72, No. 14 Duke
dumped VIrginia 85-66, No. 20
Georgia Tech dispatched lana
78-69.
At Hartford, Conn., Jaren
Jackson scored 18 points and
freshman Alonzo Mourning
added 16 for Georgetown, 18·2
overall and 8·1 In the Big East.
The Hoyas led 30·26 at halftime
before Jackson scored 8 points to
spark a 20-10 surge early in the
second half. The Huskies
dropped to 12· 7 and 3·6.
At Tallahassee, Fla.. Tony
' Dawson scored 20 of his 30 points
in the second half and grabbed 12
rebounds to help the Seminoles
break from a halftime tie to
improve to 19·2 overall and 7·1 in
the Metro Conference. George
McCloud added 28 points for the
Seminoles. South Carolina
dropped to 13·7 and 3·3.
AI Durham, N.C., Danny Ferry
scored 24 points and the Blue
Devils used stifling defense to
end VIrginia's six-game winning
streak. Duke, 16·4 overall and 5·4
In the Atlantic Coast Conference
game, beat VIrginia for the 14th

strai ght time . The Cava liers
slipped to 13·7 and 5·3.
At New York, Tom
Ha mmonds scored 28 points
and Dennis Scott a dd ed 24 to
help Geor gia Tech rally. The
Yellowjackets. 15·7, tralled
58-52 midwa y through the
second half before Scot t and
Hammonds sparked a 19-4 run .
lana , 10·13, led by as many as 6
points four times in the first 10
minutes of the second half.
In other noteworthy games,
Vanderbilt routed Kentucky 81·
51. and the Citadel trounced
Piedmont 105·48.
At Nashville. Tenn. , Barry
Goheen scored 23 points to boost
Vanderbilt to 13·10 overall and 7·4
in the Southeastern Conference.
Commodores Coach C.M. New·
ton will become Kentucky's
athletic director on Ap ril 1,
succeeding Cliff Hagen, who left
Kentucky during an NCAA lnves·
tlgation of possible recruiting
violations . Vanderbilt led 39-18 at
h&lt;ilftlme and 52-20 with 15: 59 left.
Kentucky fell to 11·12 and 6-5.
At Charleston, S.C., Patrick

E lmore sea red 27 points to lead
stx p layers in double figures and
pa ce the Citadel to lts biggest
m a rgin of victory In school
his tory. The Bulldogs' previous
largest ma rgi n of victory was 53
po ints. ove r Charleston Navy
Bas e In 1952 and Presbyterian
College 93·40 In 1960.
In other games, i! was: La·
fayette 72, Delaware 68; Notre
Da me 77, Fordham 58; Alabama
55. Mis siss ippi 54; Florida 65,
Georgia 60; Loui siana State 104,
Auburn 91; Me mphis State 73,
Murray St a le 62; Tennessee 81,
Mi ssissippi Sta te 71 ; VIrginia
Tec h 84, No rth Carolina·
Cha r lotte 76; Ba ll State 66,
Centra l Mi chi ga n 65; and Brad·
ley 75, VIrgi nIa Commonwealth
70.
Also, It was: Marque! te 84,
Toledo 65; Minnesota 59, Wlscon·
sin 58; Oklahoma State 87,
Ka nsas 81; Arkansas 105, Texas
82; Texas A&amp;M 82, Southern
Me thodist 58; Texas Christian 75,
Bay lor 45; Texas Tech 77, Rice
61 ; Colorado 83, Nebraska 80;
and UCLA 68, Southern Cal 65.

THE CENTRAL TRUST

SPECIAL
6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
RATE 8.00°/o-8.30°/o ~:~:AL
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

$3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
OF SOUTHEATERN OHIO. N .A.

The Bank That Makes Things Happen
GALLIPOLIS

MIDDLEPORT

446-0902

992-6661

Member FDIC

.

~

4NAPA~

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
Pursuant to the Com)Mlny'o
Capacity and Energy Emer·
gency Control Program
approved by the Public Ullll·

February

Ohio

NAPA is soconfidentof thequaljtyof
their parts, many are covered for as
long as you own your car.
Fortotalconfidenceon the road, use
NAPABrandparts. They're backed by
the strongest national warranty program available.

Calll-800-LET-NAPA
Whenyou'reon theroad,NAPA
partsandserviceareascloseas
ihe nearest telephone.Just call

HlOO.LET-'NAPA,forthe
NAPA,AUITOPAJntso:~llit·~free;,;neare!ltyou.
•Manufacturer'srtquirernenu must be met by the purchaser.

I
''

t)

.

Meigs winds
up regular
season play

'
ROCK SPRINGS- Th~1988-89
regular season basketball cam·
paign comes to a end this
weekend as the Meigs Maraud·
ers will host the Federal Hocking
Lancers on Friday night and
travel to Belpre Saturday night
to play the G&amp;\tlen Eagles in a
make-up game.
Friday night will be "Pack the
Gym Night" as the Marauders
will be honoring the seven
seniors who will be playing their
last home game. The 1 At~letic
Department is encouraging eve·
ryone to attend,AII or the school
districts Elementary teams and
their coaches will be present.
Coach Rusty Bookman's Ma·
rauders got of! to a slow start
losing their first nine games. But
the Marauders turned It around
January 10 defeating the Lancers
57·54 at Stewart. Since then the
Marauders have won 5 out of 7.
After. Saturdays game with Bel·
pre the Marauders hit the tour·
namet . trail Monday night
against Gallipolis at Rio Grande
at 6.

At your Chrysler-Plymouth dealer
OR

urro

PLYMOUTH
SUNDANCE

PLYMOUTH
HORIZON AM ERICA

~8,395'

Jl6,595'

-600i:!ii.

-400::.

147,795

K6,195

--------------------Plus-------------------CHRYSLER
LeBARON
COUPE

11 11,495'

600''"

-ucK•

!IJ0,895
PLYMOU TH

VCNAGER

IIJ1,312'
PLUS SAVE

14340 ON

TURBO ENGINE

DISCOUNT••

· TVC standings
TVC STANDINGS
(Varsity only)
OP
TEAM
W L
P
Trimble ......... 14 1 988 858
Wellston ....... .14 2 1113 907
Vinton . .. .... .. .. 9· 6 941 867
Belpre ........... 8 6 914 842
Miller ............ 4 10 914 1012
Alexander ..... 6 9 814 879
Fed-Hocking .. 4 11 835 955
Nels-York ...... 4 11 878 899
Meigs .... .. ...... 4 10 952 954
Tuesday's results
Wellston 71 at Miller 52
Meigs 52 Alexander 47
Belpre 70 Federil'l Hocking 48
VInton County 60 Nelsonville·
York 51
Trimble - open .
Wednesday's result:
Wellston 97 Nelsonville-York 59
(makeup)
Frlday's:games: '
Alexander at Wellston
'F ederal Hocking at Meigs
Belpre at Meigs :
Wellston at Trimble

One time is all you need
to pt up to $750 cash back
plus special discounts
on hot option packages.
'C"«&lt;se your nt&gt;'&gt;' Cit troln ~~oc~ )t your local C~ter- Piymoo!h ocaterano ge1 mese bt ~ cash tlill:k savtngs .. S.,..tngs irt lla&amp;ftd on tne stlt(~r pnteS ot tn6Q ploon~ 11

t~er were p.,rcha5edseparately .... AnrlUal Percemaqe Rate!inanctng rtll QIIBI1hftd buyers through Chrf.;IP.r Creoii'Corp on Su ~ance a rx;~ Hl)rtzon f10m new d~aler SIOeio:
Omerratesoi!ErEO ascontracl lengtn ~rtes 1The proees Sh&lt;lwn aoove arebue shc~er priCeS exr.IIJdr~g bll~. !a~ts anbnatroflttlilr~tes aoo ooh0naleauromentoac~ge 5

tlniLL WEN£E1l

1'0 00 'IOU FIGHT.

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
SEE MIKE NOnHUP, PnE SOMERVILLE or TOM SPRAGUE

NORRIS ·NORTHUP
DODGI
GaHipolis, Ohio .
. · ··
PHONE 446·0f42

�r
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 9, 1989

Thursday, February 9, 1989

Miami slips past Ohio University, 83-82
Kallflllln41111 ~ AlbktniJ
Kent Jt;t. lt. Bow Ina: Gr~t'fl 1t
Unt't'lln 711, Nor1flr,.. !MII:ii.o•rt 71

Boys rulings
'I'WII
wtft'li l '11lled f"rf'!!&gt;li lnl~r_..._. OhMcel.liMIK.' S. Ohio ii,.;PI) -

..,li

HI,_ Sehoul &amp;eard of t •o_..,.lir!l'

h_...ball ra~htp l •kh
..........~. rt't'Ot'th.

Lou.., viii~· 118, ClrM!tn.UIIf
Mar ll&lt;ILa 110, Mou .. u'•kln 511
MarQWtle !U, Tukodo

.,.~ .. •i!l6h

1\11 ami I OhiO} 113. Ohio U

in.,.,~, .

'1u~&gt;klnpun 10, Bal'"'ln·Wetoleyan 58

P•lnll"

~ ·•·II

I Tettto M1u:emher {!J't)
t. ~- ito•krr (l'l t)
:1. n. wtt~ tll us.u

llllnoii Ill Ihlv lds•n r.
P..-1111 , Ullnols 'f\e~~Miyan t5
Ohio "'tsti)an U, Kf!n,·on 18
Oklahnm.- :st. iii , llanWU~ Kl
0UI'rttl!'tQ 8:1, " 'hllr'nber11: RO
SE Ml~~~~~t~rt 1M, SW llaplll\1 77
lio 111-Edwucb;vllle 88, Mt:Kelllleto 80
St Jo"ranch-1 76. IW08t'v€'1l 61
\ lnt' t'n 1ft IDI, I) I flf"f &amp;I
\\uo!ilfor 119, 1Uit&gt;rht... y U
~

:tit

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..,

:H I

tn

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WhkmtT ~. 1:1 f~.._..
hMft tl: U . Trrlflltoo.l !\-1...._ It; U.

a. a.t•••

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'rkam;a~ 10~. T~u)o

Rt
:\kMurl') U3 Coaoordia 10~
l&gt;ralr1,. \ 'h._. 3~. ~E Willis Ia. . s;;

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u.- 11.

11
st ...) ....... : 17.
CUrl BMrtwrl.n und ~-~••• horr) , ~
111. TO\t'do St

f&gt;M.il;

f',

f'hul t'lfl

T ..,a.. A•M k:t, Suulh'-! rn Mellwdhti5R
Tens Chrlnlion 11. &amp;ylor -Ill
11'-'atO l.utll!'ran A!, St Edv;~t.r••JI !18

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l&lt;eM'f'M.' rt't'k l

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Te...

291

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I llilrrvtllf' (4) (UHJ)

t. Wltlanl Hl (17-1)

et

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t it
Iii

II .... VIIMge ('!) ( IIMJ\

Iii

ld:d.~ .

Jlii, Rocky Moulll11.ln til
611. Soot her n Cal65
\\' W""hinf11on $1 P~h:lfll' L.lhcrlUI .f,
t.CI~A

'tV
1'1

M ....._,," ( I~ I)

II

HWI.'IIIq&gt;v M;

rl•it~.-:IJ'urnll'w-tl!J;

M. ~ lll~hiiUld il,

I, lltl'arl,.ll'1, II ( lk&gt; )
_. AlihlabiiiM, 8 e~W,:h,

U

Reporting dates

», U.

.............. 42. 13. WIIIW«IJ

n:

( olonadull3, Nt'htrlbklt 811

U.

e fMtbrldre ( 1s-:!1
il!&lt;.•lll lf'n

l 'al Pol3 Pumuna tl, Rt&gt;dbuuh; KB
flllremolll Mudd Ill M' hiltlt'r 71

.Jflt

S. Y•w..,.t.wn Uho.ort)' ttl t iW!
1 IMt' n amia~t.dt· lit t I'; t1

li •Jieful'll

Y . . w..rt

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'Dl

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•
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l't

l hl {'ltJ:O, SarasoUt. Flu .. Fe&gt; h."· Frb.
::J
t ''''('l!tnd, Tuctton,
Ariz , Ff'h. Ill,
t'l'h. '.!'.!
lkl roil Luki'IMd Fl .... Ft·l~ 141, Fr I~

(.'aiiKllll _., Ak•·unSl Vl•ut~ Miii"J ,
1 tach; ~.Minford 3.
Dtvt!llon IV

Jl'otnhi

I iittf'I•I!;!IMdf'lll h (l6) (1MIJ
CMi.. \\h~~;h ..ter (6J( I!-I )

U8
ill

S. 8f'flrin~~: Mel.tnley ll l (14.01

Jfi1

-1 lo ....... ! IHI
$ On fuulllrJ lb.) iiH)

111

;:r

r•n Leramk i1HI

1'2

1 AlltM!rp ( IG-1 J
B$
~. Ulleri:Y renl4'r (IS. I)
n
I . . .,iehl Sl . P('lt'r'!i t IS.J)
U
M.Jiil. . tMt ry C11 I I
:Ill
!Ire».. ten: I I Un11 Cuthotko tr. It
• • .,.._.." l'•Utoll&lt;-3~ 13 SL llrMySI :

\\ ehrte 'H, 1'- n•••

cal...rt :!D Ui 11 f'Yt• lantlllt1 .... 1Mtllf"
r .. 1:.-1 11, t7 P&lt;'Ciintl~
lA (lit&gt;l
ll•lple. Eh rill Open INvf and C• nv•)
CreM\4-. I t&gt;!tl'h

*

:! I.
Kun~

fll) l:loanh,alli &amp; Bll!i('haU,
F'la ' t'e l~ 111, rd, 23
Milwaukee. Ch lllldlf&gt;r, AriZ , f'l'b. 21.
..~t' h. 2.J
:\lhuJ•,.;otlt, Orlando,
Flu. . f'l'h. 16.

Ft• h. .! ~
~ ~·~~~

l 'urk, J-1 LJWdt•rdalc. Fla, Fe h.
It;, 1'' 1•1, 'll
llakland, Phoo.-nP. Ft&gt;b. lit, t't•h. 2'!
St.•atlll!, Tempe, Ark., F'Ph. 16, Fe• h. 21.
l'c&gt;"a .s Purl ChariDik', Fla, t 'f'h. 1!1,
h .· b ~J
'J'uqmto, Ounrdln. Fl&amp;. Fl't\ 21. f't'h.

"

4/ttr"' Ohio ftl,;hSchQul IIMiol.lfo«-..1
8y Untied Pr~~~ ~... .-,..1
""dnt&gt;!lda,y FNlll

Rep!i.r &amp;•oR
North 10, ft'tHlllrhljte 13
.Uren E ... t Jli, Stn'eUboro~l!
.IIIVtrcrf'C"k iS, F~lr00rn35
artr.tel Ill, Windham 30
c . ..t Fwllon NW $7, N (loUII"*flov•er
A*r~~n

.

LrljMtlt 6~. Utlt'rty lknhm :&gt;!!
._f!lflricl Sr ill, l..orala ~ 44
MMt-. l 'rl'!ohUHld 61 . A•on l"J
M6 ....11eld c.. rdlnRI .JB, Otanlen :W
Toumamerl1.s
m, kiun II
Ketlton Hld«f' ID, ften)amka l.opn U
VIM'enl W arn•n 116. \' Inion 01 ( Gt 1
IHvl... lon Ill
Bwckt-)t•1rall h'";, Ca l~t·11
Ul\ I" ion 1\&lt;

Lll:. An !{('It'S,\ l't'O lk' it.Ch. tl&amp;, t'e h. 16,
~ t'h.

'!I
Muntn!l&amp;l, \\ t'sl Palm Bt!ach, Fla.., Feb

h. :!3.
'\'l'"' York, rurtSt Lucie, Fl~t., Fe h. 17,
f'!'\'1. 23.

l'hlladt"lphl:a. t'lf'arwalt"r, Fla., Fel\

11 F,.,, 2%

I'IU.shuflth BradPnlan f1a.. l&gt;'t&gt;h. n ,
l•i•ll 2'!
St . l ..onls, Sc, Pt•ter10hur~. Fla., f'rh. JR •

.-,.h 2.1

S1u1 Olep, l' um~~ Ariz ., FPh. 19, Fe h.

"

San f ranriS(_"') S&lt;o tl.!;dal e, Arb ., Feb.
19 Feb. :!fl

, ,,TTOS,\L H()f'KE\ ' I,Ei\GUE
WPdJM•sdaG' K Gamfti
' " ,ltlfffil'!il

ThurM ~a's Gamts

~ C'Iol

lt•r!!f',tall&gt;droil,1 .•llpm
l ..o!&gt;! ,\n~ele~at Boslon, 1·!1~ p.m
Huffatu at Hartford, 1: n p.m.
Qo t' ht'l IU Pltt!ltorJh. 7.:13 p m
Ednwnhtnat Phll11.delphl~ 1.35p m
tal ~r.trJ al :oil Luuls, !'1:35pm
\'unt-Guwr 111 Minnl'sota, M:35 p m .
Friday'K Gam~
VI.UlCU II\W ~~ Buffalo, niKhl
l ..&lt;h 1\ft~,... at Wllio"hhnldon, nll(hl;
Nl' I~IMdcr"'al Chleai(O, nlrhl

3t

H.tnmn 'fn&lt;'l ' Ul

~

Rn~olon

Sc&gt;~~o

Miltl111':1, Ohl~t I flner~J ~~
M.-...,tt.t&gt; lit Toll'do G:i

Lo¥1svlllt&gt; 1!1. C11K'tnmU 66
iii

Cr.ttl;ll Kl, Ohiu Nurlhern •ti{
llbrWoi:I.M. tiO, Mutut tnte• ~ \Ol)
1*1Md•pm 111, O..ldwm·W~ M
tltlerbeln 82. ttlttl:-ntwraWJ
H.-1 ..11•'1'11: 1"l, OherHn 1ti
" 'ellfk'r t9, !U1~·1flll"'' li¥
f~ttc&gt; Ro•..cnt• 1'L Ji.&gt;al!wn ~I
fHtk W~k.t'a t• 1il, Kesyillll 81

1'-lliiL&gt;~

al

Ul~tll,

!I· 98 p m

llo•t:&lt;Aon at Portland, 10.111 p m.
Frld~ 's Gam~.-...

:\•• l(':um'!i lll'hl'duk'd rAil 1ilar hrulill )

st:J{If' Me1Mtt.J4

Thu 111d11J '" Sport." ( 'lllendar

&amp;eR .II

81\~;~lhi:IJI

'll••w •lt'rq Ill \\at~ohlnAton. j 38 p.m.

86. 'l'uh" H

Atl.mlll 1U ChlU'totte. f.!JO p m
lndi!OI'Iu at rl•v••hmd , 7.:W p m
fhlu,;O m S11n AntoNI), 11·38 p m .
:t11 wnl lU Orn\&gt;er 9: JV p m
Uallwi 111 Utah
pIll

..,...,,. 11:1. Sto~t.tn tt:!

-..mJholdlll,SII''l'O~''ell ~

Ham-"1~

1&amp;

,.:I&amp;

..... ndllll. Hotilnt'lD
(,.rion Jl3., CMIH L Ul l'a. 6i8
Drrlil"'lll'4' \ aJ. foil. II, FOC tll"di&gt;&lt;o11

..

Ill

I. A ("llpp•rs Ill Phoenix:, 11:311 p m
(,o ldcn Stah• lltS~t.cramenln,IO .llp.m

E•~i

a.toel' Iii. SPv.

,\tl~nw

l ' nrk 11.1

Ot-troit IO~.MIIw~tukt&gt;e!Nl
Golde n SIIU I' ttl, L,\ Lakl'l'li II"
Lo\ nlpp•r•lt( Hou!Con Ill
Thur.;da.y'" fOIImf':!ii
Nt•v. ,l!•r!&gt;if'y 11.1 \\'11101inll{lo n, 7.311 p m
\tla11ta al fhar1otll&gt;. 1 .10 p m
lndllVIU "'(le''t.'hmd. 0: 3Cip.m
l hi• ltf!:O at Sa.n Ant onlo.ll· 3tp m.
~11auul at lltonH!r , 9:.10 p rn

\\ •·OOe&lt;&gt;d •._,.. •to h. K
16.Pttt ~t.IH! iii, .BuwUnJ ~t-8110

MnM!r~

ID9, lndlluw JO t
St"!lltlf' Itt

PhUadeoJphl~t.lt!t,

Olllo C'ollc&gt;Jtt' HitS r.tball flelo\dlJ&gt;o

Coll~t' IJiw; ~baH

\TIONAL B,l'iKE'l'BALL AS:oJ)(: ,
M' l'~l'5dll,)''!l Rf'SUib

"7.

MIMt&gt; T,•nOI'S.-t' ":I. " 'rlfbtlit

!ll:llit'dulrd

\\IIII'IPf'IC at 1\'l HMn~r'" 1 3S p m

ac.,.!&gt;! Ohl&lt;1 Hl~h S1 t_.,ol BMs aw-t.,all
\\ 1·1lnri'1d it.l' , fr h II
,
C..., 5ll Gn•l!n!ihurg Uri&gt;('~! -li
GlllttHIIIK .f6, PI Plt•~nl IW\'a ) 43
.._.(On M, R11 hllf'id Rl!'f'rte Ill
......... Joldll GG, Non• 61
&amp;11111111 !IS :ooionh LIIIIM&amp;t
itrmml"!! V ••tlll, Kygtr ('rf:ell•
. . .worth 93. Ml"dlau: •PdMI4 71
~on
Nc&gt;bonullr :t9

-hM t.:lll'r..tl fil far

fli!WIMIII.I Leacue

\ll.utfu . \\est Palm Bf-Alh, Fla.., Ff'h.
IIi Ft•h. '! I
Ctuu~eo, Me~ . &lt;\rlz .. Ft•h. ~ . fl'h. ~"
Clnt lnlll.ll, Plant Uty. Fla., Fe h. IR,
••"h. !I
II Oil !COn. Khslmrnrf'. Fla , F~h. Ui
f'~ h. 21

~1. .~1'

Cage scores

S'~l'lill'rn ;))1,

ta llfornla. Mt..a, ,\rlz , Ff'h. li f'1•h
:! 1

u~

ou,...... ,. .... radii:. •

~

~-~,.k :.~ .

ne
II&amp;
11 11

Wllef+t&gt;riibul'j( 21. l:t. nlt' J ~.­
llf711lvM' Mnd Hur(lrt, II e:edl: li (til")
I!!M:tl; ,,
Cl ..lnNIIIMcNicbola!t T: II. (t.IIJJM

Tto.m

Datl'!!i

! u .. t iuJtl!:' IUtl, "'lies. repotti•KdaleN for
ll.lttcrymen and fuU ~q1111. d I
•'mf'rk lUI l.e qtK"
Bu.lllmOI'f', ~llanll Fl'h. IIi Fi'h. 2t.
Rot.lnn R' ln~r H ~tvt'n, Fla.. . Ft&gt;h. 18

Pullll
Ht

I lrv~rly Fur1)' r)•• (I ) t ~ )
!. ,...,,.,._~ f;~rflPid ( 1:1 ) ! 17~
S. .,., rw1 W! ..llrd ( ~/ ( ~II
&amp;. rol.m..!i .\••adl'my 1 11 ( ls-3 \
S N•rth l 'ei~Kl' Hill I 11&gt;-1 1
•. &amp;bertl• (14-3)
,. ........ ladln i l&amp;;ll
A ... rOll lhllllll ( I~:J J
t .. MII\ille 1li-J )
lt.'h. IY'IIWii&lt;ii \I !tile)' ( I H )
~l•IIJ hm II ('h dllllph&amp;ie tl;

f&gt;lllrlol

lnlernt.tlo•l

~portln~t

Tt'...

14. Celllmll\l!i

Pre!&lt;~;;

JJy Lnlld

IMvh.~niU

1

TPt•h 1i, Rlt'f' It
w~•

p.,.,_"

1Wn1Gf'11Mia i :l~)lltl-il
t. t'ellll~~piwn MDOAI'J4II ) (16-t)

~t

MlnnNtJill S!, Wlk'Oil!i.ln SoH

Dhbionl

Te-

e

t \ fllppt•r~ llf Phoenix. 11:30 p m
(,l~ldf' nJiilall • lit S•&lt;Tamento IIJ 30p m
Hou"'-on :tl Portland, HI::W p.m.
Bo:.lng

Otdleiii!&gt;GD lie, Go•tt;r-tiJII I'J!i fill
I:~M~t SCrOU!h.hurK 6~ . Weir 01~1' fl6

5!, Drew 37
f'M.I·Tr..nedl H. Ll\ ··"*'Jflil7
GM,.Ia1'f" l'h7A lo•W
Gtorrf"town 711, Cv•nt"lik:ut iM
~hdhlvw•

... flnM ftupllln ll" l, ~WIUUMl'tO,-fli'f

Kt'"'-'" Sl tl, S\'\0&gt; H11m,...u.., Cnll X-1
L.lll"l't"114' -;t U~l:iv.•an• 6t4
I.A•hllh !1\, Kldl'r 1-1
Lincoln Ktl, SprlnM tl.a~• •
I.JM•k bltvf'n IIi, lllllillllll \ !. Of h\; Jiil

\\ ~ ltc&gt;rwel_..s

St•w l'nrk - Olrnwood llro11n "'' Saul
Mamh,, : .\uon llu' '" u RGddy Blakf'
Holf

ll o nolulu - SillO,OO(l PGA HII\UtiiM
Opc&gt;n

Palm

&amp;.·~h

PGA.

H~ld".I'Y

\\lnniPill[ Ill NV RIUI(f;I"U, i :t~ p 111
Nf'w d~·r,.•\' at DclruK, 1 ~$ p m .
1.11" &lt;\u Kt'l('!lo IU BtiloiOII, j 3:1 p m
Bullah) .11 H.trtferd , 7 !J$ p m.
Qm." ht&gt;l' Ill I'HI,o;m.f'lh, i: l~ p m
to: (lmunl(m Ill Pllllladel~a. • ::t3 p m .

7$, Fnmidhl P1(7t!if' n
•...Wh_--td JUS. J\Uli'l""a tt.t

...,.,..,. MQ, Ul}wtlng 01

( al glif~ .u S4 Louho, K: S$ p.m.
Vwtt'OU\'f'r at Min ..-sou.. 11· n p m.
Skllllin&amp;

RaiUmort" -

t'.S. flrurP Slw.tlng

( h atnpklmhlp!l

SkllnJI

\'all and ReMer freek, l'olo - "•rid
Al&amp;llltl' l 'h IUll pkll'l!lhlp!i

13

Scranlot~lt•. "lie~
Sliptlfr~ Hock !Ill. f....,...

Gardens. tlll -

1'if n lo rs fh arnplol'bhlp

l'"!~&gt;ll

MHrtrn.ck •• DIJIIOl .
...,_JII.tl 711 Sus..-eh.,. •
Mldllf'blrJ 11!1, SU4tnoft' ~
,..,.,,...,.,. t:l. Lf'blrt. . "......,.
Ne"'' \' •rk I ' IIi, t ........ II
l'lilltl't" Daun e 11, Fu.-.hwnt a&gt;l
Phil•. T..-.: til(' IS", Pace It
Peudam 111, 8t La" ... o~X&gt; fi
•twrr•&lt; amdl'n 1&amp;. Alllll"!'ri'Jilfti"Krk

Sulcer
MISL
l!

"'l•·hltll al Lo&amp; 1\R~t'!t, 10.35 p. m.
tipc&gt;elhkatlnK
lk11t• ·. i\Jont - womf' n's \\orltl Cup

S . An.i&gt;l rn tl i\Jneric:_. tillll'IN
St. FI'MACbi (l'li\') 111, fl.-In 11
St. Mtclut~•l'~" W, b111Pptton ll

Sl. Peler' Ji 3t Fairfield tt
Sto.:lll~~nst ~n. "'llhlfll P:1.....,..,.n
Trenton$ . IIi, GIIII!Mf'llll jiJ J1

l&amp;plif.l !I, t'o11... tul C :tr oll~ 'I
f'•••nrd §7. Nid(!fll 05
U.ke II,, Vlr11lnl•li
n.rid11.

~

Cocor,;la 6t

Florid• Sl t'l!. South CariJfl•t!
t•mw~ !3, o\u~!I(.M ·a
0eof'R;., Mll~nn M:l FA!II t.•tu. \fiS
Gh•n,.illf' a. ~' I!!" I Uln'IJ n
Gt-amhllnlt 79 Mo.·I K - t11r 11
.lam" M~tci&gt;Joo 81. Shlppi...... IJ
IA111f111Mia iii . ICit, Aahn •1
Mf'mphl!i sa ;:,, :n uw.r II. ill
,' ljpl 1f'IM.) Ill. Tc-. 'l'h&gt;ll . .
llllddl•• l't·nn t'tt. 83. Wn,lrt 81;, ill
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An 8-18 Dyke College squad will
look to improve its fortunes
Thursday when it meets the Rio
Grande Redmen m a District 22
game to be played in Richfield,
Ohio
The game begins at 4 p.m. It
will be the prelude tel the
Cleve land Cavaliers·lndlana
Pacers pro contest, set for 7:30
p.m .
Rio Grande carries a 17-10
record into competition after
defeating Cincinnati Bible on the
road Tuesday. 'jlhe Golden Ea·
gles fell86-64 under the weight of
balanced double-figure scoring
by Redmen starters Larry Ben·
ning, Marc Gothard, Anthony
Raymore and Mike Tidwell.
A victory last weekend over
Urbana improved Rio Grande's
district standing to fourth . The
Redmen are preceded by Findlay 115·511n first place, Shawnee
State (19-8) in second and Urbana 115·9) at third. Dyke is
currently 13th.
Dyke battled valiantly against
Malone, then 14-10, Tuesday on
the Pioneers' court but lost, 93-85.
James Wiiilams, 6-2 starting
forward for the Demons, was
their highest scorer with 16.
"We played reaiiy hard, we
should have won, " Dyke Coach
Rusty Rogers commented
Wednesday.
The Redmen are currently
averaging 79.4 points a game,
based on 2,144 markers in 27
games. They have surrendered
2,026 points 175 per gamel and
maintain an overall field goal
percentage of 50.6 (794-1568). On
3-point lield goals, Rio Grande is
40.5 percent 1168-414 ). but is
holding its own at the free lhrow
line. sinkmg 406 of 552 attempts
for 73.5 percent .
Expected to s(Sirt againsl Dyke
at forward will be Benning (6·4,
freshman I, who is averaging 9.5
points and 5. 7 rebounds a game,
and Tidwell (6,3, sophomore!.
·now averaging 7.5 markers and 3
rebounds.
Opposing them from Dyke wlll
be Williams, a junior and the
team·s top scorer at 16.2 points
per outing. and Brian Arth 16·2,
junior, 10 points) .
Starting guards for the 'Redmen will be Anthony Raymore
15·11, senior), whose per-ga me
average has gone to 15.7 points,
2. 7 boards and 4 1 assls ts, and
Brad Schubert 16·3, freshman).
Schubert Is pumping in 8.8 points
and 2.4 boards a game.
.
Spencer Latimer (6-1, junior,
12.3 points, 3.1 assists) wUI start
for Dyke at one guard, while
Lewis Taylor (6-1, junior, 4
points) tak es the other defensive
position.
Marc Gothard (6·4, senior, 6. 7
points, 3 rebounds) will be at the
post for Rio Grande, confronting
.

Trani~

llulecrdllln, Nt"th~~:"rbmd..,
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MISSION. Kan (U PI ) -The lop ttl

lf',\ltl" In lh~ N.t lo•l Culle((iilc Alldf'lh
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{MinD.); M('rrim•k ~Mau.): MHIM'•
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M•t.'(,!n (VL I; MdS.noma 81.. e f'('allf, ),

Mld·American Conference win They fought to get back in it and
for the Redskins .
had a chance to win the basket·
"When you go to the line in that bail game.
kind of hostile situation and
"It's nobody's fault in partlcu·
make two free throws, that's iar," added Hahn, In an attempt
~reat ," said Miami coach Jerry
to take taketheblameaway from
Peirson. "TI)e first one was the Whitaker, who missed the first of
key one to get us into overtime, a 1-and-1 free throw situation
and then to win it. I'm very proud with nine seconds to play. "Eveof him.
rybody misses shots so everyb.- " But, he's done a lot for this ody has to take blame for the loss.
basketball team," added Peir- You can't blame just one
son. "This was a big moment fqr oerson."
Paul "Snoopy" Graham
this season, maybe the biggest
scored 36 points to lead all
moment we've had."
Hanna and Tim Stewart led scorers.
"I thought Snoopy was just
Miami in scoring with 22 points
each and Karilon Clayborne tremendous," said. Hahn. "I
thought he played as hard as he's
added 18.
ever
played since he's been at
For Hahn, it was just another
In a string of tough defeats for his Ohio University."
In other MAC action Wednesteam, picked to wm the MAC.
"T'm not not saying anything • day night. Bali State took a
about the officials or about the half-game lead over Toledo with
a 66·65 win over Central Michl·
call at end of game," said Hahn.
·'That's their call and we have to gan, while the Rockets were
live w1th it. Our locker room was dropping an 84-65 non-conference
contest at Marquette. Ball State
very silent. This was a tough one.
now is 8-2 in the league and
Toledo 7-2.
Kent State moved into third

Redmen face Dyke,
Walsh on road

l:hh~ ugO - l»ff,liWITen ritA TOIIrllltUIH"nt

l'~:rntollf 74,

f (;u• 81, 71
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"•~•crk un 81ol, WiiHc.-n b M1117l!D

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Pressure Is standing at the free
throw line wltb time expired and
the outcome of the game resting
on your shoulders. Miss the first
shot and your team loses. Make
the first and at least the game
goes into overtime. Hit both and
you're a hero.
Miami's Lamont Hanna faced
that situation Wednesday night
at Ohio University. Today, he'll
probably spend much of the day
accepting congratulations on the
Oxford campus.
Hanna, fouled by Ohio Un!ver·
sily's Dennis Whitaker as the
final buzzer sounded, went to the
line despite protests by OU coach
Billy Hahn that the foul occurred
too late.
•
A career 54.9 percent tree
throw shooter going into this
season and hitting 65 percent this
year, Hanna, with OU fans doing
everything they could to dis tract
him, made them both for an 83-82

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given
that on Saturday, February
11th, 1989, at 10:00 a .m .,
e public ule will be held at
39143 Success Rd., Reeds·
ville, Ohio, to sell for cash
the following collateral:
1 989 New Moon Mobile
Home 12 x 8&amp;, 2 bdroom,
S# F180T2COR .
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Pomeroy. Ohio, reservesthe right
to bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above collet·
aral prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company teserve1 the
right to reject any or all bids
aubmitted.
Further, the above collateral will be sold in the
condition it is in with no
expr-ed or implied warranties given.
For more information
contact Scott Shank 9923293 .

(

Authorities continue search for victims of Azores crash
By ALEXANDER SLOOP

.

Carlos Aponte (6-5, senior, 15.3
points, 11.4 rebounds) for the
Demons.

Although Dyke has traditionally been a victim of I he Redmen,
the string of losses ended for
them last November when they
defeated Rio Grande 86-85 in the
opening round of the men's
division of the Bevo Francis
Classic. Dyke went on to play
Shawnee Slate for the tourna·
ment championship, falling to
the Bears 117·86.
Following Thursday's game.
the Redmen renew Mid-Ohio
Conference play Friday at 7:30
p.m. against Walsh on the
Cavaliers' court in Canton
Walsh, a 7~-72 loser Ia Rio
Grande at Lyne Center Jan. 14,
fell to 10-15 overall Tuesday after
dropping a 73-61 deci s ion to
Wilmington. Dan O'Connor's
club is seventh in the MOC with a
3·9 standing and 12th in the
district.
The Redmen enter the game at
filth • place in the conference
(5·6) .

· 1986 Pontiac Sunbird 4 Door
Tilt, cruise, a1r, AM·FM stereo cassette,
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WE SOLD IT NEW!!

LISBON, Portugal (UP!)
The search resumed Thursday
for more bodies in the wreckage
of a U.S.-owned charter airliner
that slammed into a fogshrouded mountain and exploded
while trying to land In the Azores,
killing ail 144 people aboard .
The 21-year·old Boeing 707.
bound from Bergamo, Italy, to
the Dominican Republic, plowed
into the 1,794-foot-higll Pico Alto
volcanic mountain Wednesday
as it was about to land for a
regular refueling stop .In Santa
Marla, southernmost island of
the Azores chain in the Allan tic,
900 miles west of Portugal.
Authorities said none of the
seven American crew and 137
Italian passengers survived.
More than 50 bodies were
recovered from the mountains ide by late Wednesday, the
Portuguese news agency LUSA
said, and the search resumed
Th1.1rsday.
LUSA ear her reported that one
passenger had not been listed on
the manifest, but the report later
proved Incorrect.
LUSA said the pilot had requested a clear runway for an
emergency landing moments before the crash. But Azores
airport authorities said the plane
had received permission to land
and the pilot had reported no
trouble.
Manoel Vicente, a pollee spo·
kesman in Vila Do Porto, the
town closes I to the crash site,
said the plane crashed and
exploded in a fireball on the
mountain about 10 miles from the
airport.
"Never in my police career
have I seen such a horrendous
thing," Vicente told United Press
International by telephone. ·
Local officials sa1d the top of
the mountain was covered by fog
but that it was not known if the
we~ther contr!bu ted to the crash.
In Washmgton, Federal Avla-

tlon Administration spokeswoman Theresa Greco said prel iml·
nary information from the site
indicated there was 5 miles
visibility with scattered clouds at
500 feet and broken clouds at
1.200 feet. Winds were clocked at
15 knots.
The National Transportal ion
Safety Board was sending three
investigators to the site and the
FAA was sending one, Greco
said. A Boeing expert wtli also be
part of the investigating team
The Boeing 707 was owned by
Independent Air Corp., a small
charter company based in
Smyrna, Tenn., and under charter by the Dominican Republic's
Dominair company.
In Seattle, Boeing spokesman
Richard Schleh said the crashed
707 was one of two delivered to
TWA in March 1968, adding that
the aircraft company does not
know when TWA got rid of 1t or
how many ,times the plane may
have been bought and sold. The
last commercial passenger version of the 707 was delivered in
January 1978, but Schieh could
not say how many are still in
service.
Independent Air President AI
Pittman said the plane had been
inspected in December and no
problems were found.
,
"It was one of our aircraft,"
said Pittman. "The crew of seven
was based in Atlanta and they
were Americans."
Pittman said the plane was on
approach to the Santa Maria
airport and had been cleared to
descend to 3,000 feet when the

It was the third crash of a
Boeing jetliner in less than two
months. A Boeing 747 jumbo jet

control tower lost contact with
the airliner.
"No distress signals were sent
from the airplane, and no radio
traffic indicated any problems,"
Pittman said.
"I'm shocked. I'm some kind of'
hurt ." said Pittman, who bought
the 15·year·old charter company
four years ago. " We have not had
a serious accident before this ,
and of course, it hurts us ail "
Pittman said the charter company, which owns two planes and
has 60 employees, had been
flying passengers from Bergamo
to the Dominican RepubliC in the
Caribbean once a week for about
three months on trips organized
by tour ' companies in northern
Italy .
The director of the Orio AI
Serio airport In Bergamo, In
northern Italy near Milan, said
al l 137 passengers aboard the
plane were Italians headed lo
resorts near Punta Cana in the
Dominican Republic.
The chartered plane !eft Bergamo at 11 a.m., two hours
behind normal departure time
because it was late in arriving at
Bergamo, the officials said.
Lissete Cabral, a spokeswoman for the city of Vila Do Porto,
told UPI by telephone the Boeing
707 .crashed into the mountain
about 1:30 p.m. local time (9: 30
a .m. EST), three or four minutes
before it was to land. She said
city officials dispatched 20 to 30
rescue workers to the scene.
Two Portuguese naval frigates
and rescue aircraft were also on
their way to the Azores.

was blown apart by a bomb over
Scotland Dec. 21, ki!Ung ail 259
people on board and 11 on the

ground. A Boeing 737 crashed 30
miles north of London Jan. 8,
kllilng 47 people .

Pilot, flight
attendant
engaged

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Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1989

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992-2156
The Daily Sentinel
••

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP!) The pilot of the Boeing 707 that
crashed in the Azores Wednes·
day was engaged to be married in
May to a young flight attendant
also aboard the. doomed flight ,
friends said.
The jet, leased by the charter
flight service Independent Air
Corp. of Smyrna, Tenn .,
slammed into a mountain on the
island of Santa Maria en route
from Bergamo, Italy, to the
Dominican Republic, killing all
145 people aboard.
The pilot, Capt. Douglas Leon
Daugherty, 41, of NashvUle, and
his fiancee, Yvette Murray, 26, of
Marietta , Ga., were among the
seven American crew members
aboard the flight with 138 Italian
tourists.
"They were going to be married in May ," said Richard
Thomas, a radio traffic reporter
for radio station WSM in Nashvllle who had known Daugherty
since childhood.
"He had given her a ring at
Christmas. He had never been
married before and she hadn't
either. They had contracted with
a guy in Atlanta to build them a
house," Thomas said.
Daugherty's mother, Robbie
Daugherty. said she and her
husband first learned of the
crash while watching television.
"My husband was sitting here
this morning and saw the report
on television that an Independent
Air plane had crashed in the
Azores and that everyone on
board was killed ," s he said.
"I walked the floor until I
couldn't take it any .more, then I
called the Independent Air office
in Atlanta. They told me he was
the pilot. We never worried too
much about his job. He loved h1s
flying."
Daugherty was a chief warrant
officer in the Tennessee Army
National . Guard. Col. Robert
Whitworth, director of . aviation
for the Guard, described Daugherty as "a very good aviator."
"He was very professional and
competent, and, as far as we are
concerned, was never anythin~
less than a very good aviator,
Whitworth said. "He took things
to heart. When he went to do
something, he really put himself
Into it."
Maj. Hooper Penuel, the
Guard's state publk: affairs
director, said Daugherty had
logged 8,800 hours in the air,
which he sal.d showed considerable experience.
Daugherty had been with Independent Air for two years, said
the company's preslden I, AI
Pittman. He also was a Na'shville
policeman In the 1970s.
"He liked law enforcement
work " said Assistant Police
Chlei Rob~t Kirchner. "But I
think his real love was aviation."

'

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side on this mld-AIIantic Portuguese Island, after
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�'
Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 9, 1989

Thursday, .february 9, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the bend

As John Tower waits, neW evidence examined
W.ASHINGTON !UPI) - Defense Secretary-designate John
Tower's foundering bid to win
confirmation wlll have to walt at
least another week while lawmakers investigate lingering
questions about his finances and
drinking habits.
Tower's nomination - on the
verge last week of a Senate
Armed Services Committee vote
- has lurched to a halt, and
Chairman Sam Nunn, D-Ga. ,
said Wednesday a new probe of
financial matters during Tower' s
Senate tenure will take a week to
10 days.
After meeting for 2 'h hours

I
.
with a senior White House
official, Nunn also said an FBI
report on Tower that examines
allegations raised last week of
drinking and womanizing still
needs some finishing touches.
Nunn said until he sees that
finished report, he still has
concerns about Tower's confirmation. Nunn's concerns stem
from the position the. defense
secretary holds in the chain of
command contro!l!ng the na·
t!on's arsenal, including nuclear
weapons.
President Bush, meanwhile,
launched a strident defense ofhls
nominee, saying allegations

Judge slaps down
'frivolous' effort
to halt North trial
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
judge In the Ira!l·Contra case
slapped down a late, "frivolous"
government effort Thursday to
stop Oliver North's trial and
proceeded toward selection of a
12-member jury.
In a dramatic at-tempt to halt
the proceedings, Rim Noble, an
acting deputy assistant attorney
general, as ked U.S. District
Judge Gerhard Gesell for a stay
until the Justice Department
could appeal a Wednesday ruling
in which Gesell had rejected
administration complaints about
the handllrig of classified information at North's trial.
The judge, in denying the stay
request Thursday, said, "This Is
a very frivolous motion," and
moved to have defense and
prosecution lawyers begin shap·
!ng the jury to Hear the felony
case against the former Whlte
House aide.
Gesell then brought in a
45-person pool, created during
seven days of laborious questionIng, for the process of finally
selecting 12 jurors and six
alternates.
However, the judge said he
would not swear in the jury
immediately until he hears from
the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
of the District of Columbia.
The Justice Department has
said It would appeal Gesell's
Wednesday ruling to the appel·
late court - a move that w!!l
likely stall or end prosecution of
North.
The retired Marine lieutenant
colonel Is charged with 12 felony
· charges - Including lying to
Congress, shredding documents,
tax fraud and accepting illegal
gifts - arising from the U.S.
arms sales to Iran and the
diversion of sales profits to the
Nicaraguan Contra rebels. If
convicted on all counts, he faces
a maximum 60 years in prison
and $3 million in fines.
Thursday, Gesell told Noble
that he believes only independent
pr,osecutor Lawrence Walsh who won North's indictment
March 16 - has the standing to
appeal In the case.
North's chief prosecutor Job!)
Keker, representing Walsh, told
Gesell he had no intention of
appealing Gesell's secrecy rulIng and was prepared to more
forward with the jury selection.
As of 10 a.m. EST Thursday,
the Justice Department had not
filed an appeal, but Wa!sh, in a
pre-emptory action, told the
Court of Appeals, "Just as the the
Independent counsel .has no
power to order declassification of
information he believes could be ,
disclosed, so the attorney general has no standing to appeal an
order that he may disagree
with."
In 1his order denying the
department's effort to stop the
trial, Gesell said the Justice
Department's appearance In the
case justasajurywasabouttobe
picked "is wholly misplaced."
The Justice Department is
alarmed that procedures Gesell
has established for the release of
classified Information at North's
trial wlli not adequately protect
national security.
Late Wednesday, Thornburgh
told United ·press International
the administration was unhappy
Gesell has not followed all
provisions of a 1980 law allowing
extraordinary measures to pro-

teet state secrets during sensi·
live cases.
"All we're trying to do Is
conduct the trial in accordance
with the law," Thornburgh said.
"We want a definitive ruling on
whether the law Is going to "be
followed or whether some other
procedure is · going to be
adopted ."
Thornburgh decl!ned to say
whether the administration
would demand that Walsh drop
the case if the appeal Is rejected.
At the hearing Wednesday, the
judge, a veteran of the Watergate
trials, told department attorneys
the government either can go
along with rules he already has
established for handl!ng classified material, or It can demand
that certain secret Information
not be used at al!.
He told the Justice Department
to choose quickly because once
he swears in the jury, the trial
w!ll go forward .
The government wants the
right during the trial to object
every time it believes a piece of
classified mater1al Is dangerously exposed; such a right
would bog down the trial in
possibly hundreds of interruptive
hearings and stretch It far past
the expected two to five months
In length.
Gesell said that would create a
"cuckoo-clock tr!al".threaten!ng
to North's constitutional right to
a fair trial.
·
·
"Some information cannot be
put baok in the bo,ttle," Deputy
Assistant Attorney General Stephen Saltzburg warned Gesell . .
But the judge scolded Saltz·
burg for waiting until the seventh
day of jury selection before
raising such broad concerns.
"You can't ride this horse In
two directions," Gesell said.
"You either move to protect
national security or move to a
fair trial."
In court papers that signified a
direct challenge to the handling
of the case . by Walsh, the
department said Gesell "dis·
abled" the administration by
falling to decide what specific
classified materials "are relevant ... and whether they may be
used at" trial."
The defense and prosecu lion
each have said they wlll need at
trial about 300 &lt;locuments, the
majority of which contain classified Information. The judge has
spent much of the last six months
determining the procedures
under which the classified mate·
rial can, be used at trial, relying
on the 198() Classified Information Procedures Act.
That law allows prosecution of
sensitive cases without exposing
state secrets. An inter-agency
committee has been reviewing
the data in the North case to
determine whether their release
would be detri!J1ental to national
security.
Security qualms by the interagency committee forced Walsh
to drop the two biggest counts
against North on Jan. 13 conspiracy to defraud the governrnent and theft of government property.
But Gesell generally has been
liberal In deciding what kind of
material can be used and In what
fashion. He ruled In December,
for example, that the names of
people and countries involved in
the case could be revealed unless
the government wants "to raise
further objections.

Bentsen comments on Bush budget

l.
I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen, one of two Texans
tapped to offer the Democratic
response to President Bush's
budget speech Thursday night,
praised him for moves "in the
right direction," especially regarding defense cutbacks.
At the sa~ time, however, the
former vice· presidential candidate renewed a theme from last
year's bitter Democratic campaign against Bush- warning or
Republican attempts tocutMedlcare - and predicted a budgetary confrontation.
Bentsen, In a television Interview hour!l' before his televised
response to Bush's ~ p.m. EST

speech to Congress, suggested
three J?rlor!t!es for Democrats In
the C!scal 1990 budget plan:
Medicare, education and affordable housing.
,"One of them Is going to be
Medicare, seeing that that's
taken care of," he told the CBS
"This Morning" program.
"(Also,) trying to do the things
that have to be done for education. We just have to have an
educated workforce to be internationally competitive today.
"I think those are important
ones; to try to make housing
affordable again," he added, "to
help that young couple to buy that
first home."

against Tower have been "shot
down in flames."
And Tower, at his request, met
Wednesday evening with Nunn
and Sen. John Warner of VIrginia, the leading Republican on
the committee, but did not speak
to reporters.
Although Nunn and Sen. James
Ex on, D-Neb., the second·
ranking Democrat on the corn·
mittee, expressed concerns
about Tower· and said they had
not made up their mind, neither
Nunn nor Warner said they had
done any cheeklng with committee members about how they
would vote . .
Nunn said that If Tower sur·
v!ves the Intense scrutiny and
wins confirmation, "lor my part,
no matter what my personal
position is, I'm going to be
supporting the secretary of
defense."
"I think all of us share the pain
of this process," Nunn said. "The
president certainly doesn't enjoy
this process and neither do we."
Tower's nomination ran head·
long Into trouble last Thursday
when, on thedayNunn'scomm!t·
tee had been expected to vote,
last-minute allegations of drinking and womanizing came in .

Nunn abruptly delayed the process so the FBI could check out
the charges .
1
Tuesday - after Nunn told
Bush, that with the allegations
unresolved and no look at a llnal
FBI report he would have to vote
against Tower If forced Into an
immediate vote - the financial
allegation arose and both Nunn
and the White House agreed no
vote should be taken until that
matter was checked out.
Wednesday morning, Nunn
sal!! at a news conference he bad
not reached a conclusion about
Tower and would not until seeing
the final · reports. Within hours,
the White House announced that
the FBI report was headed to
Nunn's desk, even though it
arrived Incomplete with some
work left to be done.
''The question there is whether
there has been an alcohol abuse
problem. If there has been a
problem in the past, Is there a
point where it has been recog·
nized by the nominee and dealt
with effectively. That Is to·say, is
It a continuing problem," Nunn
said. "I do not have an answer to
that yet.
"The secretary of defense, In
my view, has to have clarity of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In support of Medicare

thought at all times. There Is no being thorough, but hoped for a
such thing as anelght-hourdayln vote soon on Tower.
that job."
And Sen. William Cohen, RExon voiced similar concerns Malne, a senior Armed Services
and, In an Interview with ABC, Cornmltee member, defended
said "There are some others (on Tower, saying he had never seen
the committee) that have some , Tower drunk or unable to do his
reservations.''
job.
Tower - whose expertise on
Senate Republican leader Ronational security Issues has bert Dole of Kansas said Tower
never been open to question was "upbeat about the nominaassured the committee last week tion. He h11s no qualms about
he did not have a drinking taking on the additional allegaproblem, saying, "I am a man of tions. He thinks his nomination
some discipline. I think that It ls wUI be confirmed, and is hanging
essential that the secretary of ', in there."
defense be at all times capable of
Tower left the Senate in 1985
exercising the duties of the after 24 years, the last four of
office."
which he was• chairman of the
Bush termed the relentless panel now considering his conflr·
stream of charges jumping in the matlon. He then served as a
path of confirmation for his strategic arms negotiator for
nominee "a little unfair."
President Reagan 8Jid ·for the
So far , Bush said, there was past two years was a consultant
"not one substantalve fact that to major defense firms, earning
makes me change my mind about $750,000 lor his work.
about John Tower's ablllty to be
His consulting work raised
secretary of defense and to be a questions with some committee
very good one."
memberS' a bout the potential for
"There's always some other a conflict of lnter.est, but Tower
allegation," Bush said. "To my gave repeated assurances he has
knowledge, each one of them has severed his ties with the Industry
been reviewed and shot down in and would bend over backwards
!lames."
to avoid even the appearance of a
Bush said he thought Nunn was conflict.

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Meigs County honor rolls are _announced

The third six weeks grading Tobin, Heidi Matson.
period honor roil at the Bradbury
Second Grade: Philip Burch,
By BOB HOEFLICH
Hospital in Point Pleasant and is School has been announced. Jessica Caie, Austin Carr, Jenn!
Mr. Smith went to Washington. just now getting back on her feet . Making a grade of B or above In Howerton, Jessica Johnson, Pat
And so did Mr. Scott Lucas,
You know Betty. She can kid all their subjects to be named to Martin, .Josiah Rawso n, William
long-time ad a bout it. She comments that had the roll were:
Scanlon, Sean Srn !th, Mel!sha
Fifth Grade: Chris Chapman, Swisher, Sara Williams, Amy
ministrator at
she landed on any part of her '
Veterans Mern·
body other thanr her head, she Alison Gerlach, Donald Goheen, Yonker, Miranda Howe, Tiffany
orial Hospital.
probably would have been dead. April Halley, Jill Burch, Michael Al!ensworth, Joe Davis, Jessica
Yep , Scott
She thanks the emergency Franckowiak, Mark M!lls, Laura
Evans, T.J . King, Beth Kn!tht,
was in Washingsquad !or such good care and Penborwood, Tanya Phalin, Paul , Sarah Larkins, Joshua Lynch,
ton, D, C., last
friends lor cards, prayers, flow - Pull!ns, Brent Hanson .
Jessica Matson, Bradley PerSixth Grade: Robbie Baker,
Monday, Tuesers and gifts which helped her
rine, Joshua Price, Jeremy
day and Wednesday morning to positiv e . attitude towards Becky D!les, Becky Meier, Walt Rowe, Rusty Stewart . Kyle
W!l!larns, Wh!lley Ch!ldress, Va·
attend the annual meetings held , improving.
Werry .
,
By the way, Betty picked up nessa Compston, Sam Cowan,
bY the American . Hospital
Third Grade: J .R. Deem, Chad
Association.
some mylar balloons at a special Kevin Logan, Stephanie Tl)omas,
Hanson, Tara Michael, Tory
The main gathering spot was price recently and she is turning Adam Wyatt, Melissa Wilfong.
Swartz, Jennifer Vining, An·
DH: Carl Carmichael.
the Washington Hilton but there well over 100 of them over to Iva
thony Whitt, Matthew Williams,
were side meetings all around Sisson for favors or decorations
Michael Wyatt, Rachel Ashley,
The third six weeks grading Stephanie Burton, James Hudthe city with numerous sessions for one of the teen dances held
period
honor roll at the Harrison- son, Mariana Staats.
being held in the offices of weekly at the Pomeroy Village
ville
Elementary
School has been
Congressmen for administrators Hall Auditorium.
attending from across the nation.
And speaking of kindnesses, , announced. Making a grade of B ·
Fourth Grade: Ryan Baker,
Scott at tended the meetings Carrie Kennedy, active member . or above in all their subjects to be Amy Clonch, Libby King, Ml·
held in the office of our Congress- of the volunteer women's auxil· ' named top the roll were:
· chael Parker, Darrick St . Clair,
First Grade: Raina Bennett,
man, Clarence Miller, and hand- iary at Veterans Memorial Has·
Stacy Stewart, Ryan Baresw!lt.
delivered petitions carrying pita!, says that friends have done Denise Cotterill. Joshua Cre- Lucas Compton,_ Anna · Fink,
many names of our residents everytl\!ng you can imagine In means, Amanda Hamon, Crystal
Kristina Grate, Brandi Meaurging continued support of the being supportive and helpful with King, Jason Miller, Matthew
dows, Amber Slaven, Stephanie
Medicare program.
her husband Bill's recent health Myers, Kristy Six , James Stan·
Stewart.
There were sessions on health problems. Bill has undergone ley, Kyle Smlddie, Harmony
care problems and the latest surgery at the St. Joseph Hospi- Thobaben, Adam Walker, Hollie
The third six weeks grading
developments in health care.
tal and is doing well at the Weich, G!!lian W!lt.
period honor roll at the Pomeroy
Second Grade: Christopher
Scott reports that such well Kennedy horne on the Rock
Elementary School has been
known figures as Lloyd Bensen Springs Road. Carrie and Bill are D'Augustino, Brandon Morris,
announced. Making a grade of B
Jason Preast, Franco Rornuno,
and Henry Kissinger were very so grateful for all of the help.
or above in al! their subjects to be
Shannan Stevers, We!n D!l!on, named to the roll were:
visible during the sessions.
I had heard that Edison Hob· Matthew Dillon, Kristina
First Grade: Ryan Well, WhitCongratulations of Mrs. Glada stetter wa:s !II at his home on Kennedy, Jennifer Lamber t.
ney Thomas, Cl)ris Snouffer,
Third Grade: Michelle Bissell, Laura Sharrer, Justin Roush,
Davis who will be observing her Lincoln Hlll but I just didn't
Jerrod Clark, Joseph D'Augus- Christy Phal!n, Ryan Pratt, •
realize that he was THAT !II.
96th birthday anniversary on
Sunday, Feb. 12.
·
Edison was such a help over tlno, Scott Dodson, Robin Do· Michelle Painter , Jennifer·
Mrs. Davis'.children are Clyde
many years to members of The nohue, Rusty Haning, Jeremy · Nease, Charlie Neal. M!st!e
and Kenneth Davis, Rutland;
Daily Sentinel staff when they Lowe, George Mlller, Melissa
Musser, Tim McGraw, Sara Ihle,
Mary K. Holter, Bashan; Robert
were doing articles on by-gone Reeves, Jessica Wheeler.
Melissa Davis, Tod Daniels, Kim
Fourth Grade: Laura Ar!x , Bush, Jeffrey Brown, Amber
Davis of Middleport, and Ronald
days in Pomeroy. He and his late
Davis, Dexter . All Meigs County
wife, Marcia, were newspaper Jessie Blackford, Jesse D!llon,
Blackston, Tiffany Barnes,
residents, you'll note.
savers and many times Edison Cheryl Jewell, Timmy Stearns.
Grant Abbott, Jackie Buck, CelFifth Grade: Amber Bennett, ena Dillard, Patrick Erwin, John
Mrs. Davis would appreciate could supply excellent backBethany
Cohee, Gary Stanley,
ground
information
and
mten
H!l!, Melody Holliday, Joshua
birthday cards and they can be
Donald
Yost.
photographs
of
events
which
had
Hooten, Ashley Hoover, Missy
sent to her in care of Ronald
Sixth Grade: Sonja Bateman.
taken piljce in the community in
Lehew, Ryan Powell, Adam
Davis, Dexter.
Shank, Jenn!!er Shr!mpl!n, Julie
years p&lt;jst. This was always such
The third six weeks grading Spaun, Wesley Thoene, Richard
a help to staff members in
Weli, I didn't know ihat.
Warnecke, Michael Williamson,
Betty Farrar, East Meigs bringhig some of tHe old stories period honor roll at the Middle·
resident, is just now beginning to back to Ille. I know ·the staff will port Elementary School has been J.P. Boling.
Second Grade: Missy Darnell,
get around a little after a serious surely miss his helping hand. · announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be Tara Hawley, Ricky Hysell,
accident at the Farrar home on
named to the roll were:
Jessica Laudermilt, Corlney
Jan. 5.
First Grade: John Ambrose,
By the way, Edison, I'm sure
Scarberry,
B.J. Smith, Jennifer
It seems that Betty was on a six
would be pleased to know that his Seth Baker, Halll Blower, Stacey
Heck,
Chrlssa
Branham, John
foot ladder storing her outdoor staff at Bank One are still Brewer, Melissa Cremeans, Mi·
Davidson,
Brandy
Snider, Jona·
Christmas decorations overhead creative people. For my depar- chell Cundiff, Jennifer Eakins,
than
Wyatt,
Andy
Kitchen.
in the ga,rage when she appa r· lure party from The ·Dally Chris G!!key , zac Meadows,
Thtrd Grade: Michael Brown,
,ent!y fainted and fell onto the Sentinel, members of the group Nicholas Michael, Tommy
Danlelle Grueser, Erin Hag·
concrete floor.
created .a big banner which was Roush, Chuckle Shamblin, Ni·
gerty, Sheila Neace, Roy Powell,
Her husband, Jack, adminis- used on one of our walls for the cholas Smith, Joshua Sorden,
Amy See, Scott S!!liers, Wendy
tered mouth-to-mouth resusita·
party.
Renee Stewart, Adam Thomas,
Shr!mpl!n,
Adam Thomas, Jared
tion and she was taken to St.
It read: Old Newspaper Men
~u11e~, David Anderson, Wayne
. Joseph's Hospital. ln .. Parkers, Don'J .Die; They .Just. Keep On Charla Burge, Janie Compton,
Brant Dixon, Mfudy Halley, · Barnhart, Jer!ca Clark, Wend!
burg by the Tuppers Plains Smlllrrg.
Chris
Imboden, Scott Johnson,
Daniels, Amy Smith, Steven
Emergency Squad. She then was
And that's what I want you to ' Ian Mullen, Seth Rawson.
Michelle Rams·
McCullough,
hospitalized at Pleasant Valley do · Keep On Srn iling!
Stewart. Br&lt;lndlv
burg, Jessica Wright.
Fourth Grade: Taryn Doidge,
Whitney Haptonsta!l, Shawn
King, Jessica McElroy, Chad
Molden, Stacey Price, Stacie
Reed, Paul Epperson, Benjamin
Freeman, Tara Grueser, Erin
Krawsczyn, Leigh Mash , Kimberly Petrie, Jodie Sisson, Nate
Sisson.
Fifth Grade: Travis Abbott,
Kim Crites, Dorey Darst, LeDeana Grover, Bert Mash, Wade
Pooler, Lee Wllllams, James
White, Anne Brown, Suzanna
Henderson, Israel Grimm, Todd
Hawley, Heather Knight, Amy
Harrison.
Sixth Grade: Amber Blackwell, Jerod Cook, Kel!ey
Grueser, Adam Krawsczyn,Reggle Pratt, Adam Sheets, Jaclyn
Swartz, Michelle Ward, Sara
Anderson, Jeff Darnel!, Tara .
Erwin, Benny Ewing, Jason
Taylor, Julie Young.
D.H. I: Carlisa Barton, Mi·
chelle Hart, Mark Haynes.
D.H. II: Adam Barton, Lester
Bush. Eva Crabtree, Lynn
Kennedy.

---------

FACTORY AUTHORIZED REBATES EXTENDED!

'

------T--

•

81000

1989 .F ORD ESCORT

WHAT IS A FRIEND? - These junior and
Heck, Heather Burch, Stephanie Lee, Jared
senior high members of the Middleport Church of
Stewart, Julie Buck and Tara Gerlach; third row,
Christ youth group wlll define the word, friend,
Sherry Johnson, KrlsAsh, Dawn Hockman, Heidi
this Sunday night, at 7 p.m., when they perform In
Caruthers, Chris Stewart and Brenda Ash. Also to
the contemporary Christian musical, "Friends
perform but not pictured are Missy Nelson, Jeff
Forever." And you know what? The kids learn
McElroy, Michelle Grimm, Steve Martin and
that It's not as easy to define the word as they
Middleport Church of Christ Youth Minister
thought II would be. The public Is welcome to
Richard DuBose. The musical Is under the
attend Sunday night's presentation which will
direction of Shelly DuBose and Sharon S~ewart.
Include performances by, seated In front, Sharla . The presentation wiiJ be repeated Monday, 6: 30
Cooper; first row, I to r, Chad Carson, Susan
p.m., at the church, for the Youth Rally
Houchins, Kristen Slawter, Joe McElroy, Cheryl ~lendshlp Banquet for area Churehes of Christ.
Stevens and Seth Wehrung; second row, Eric "'--.
·

Stock No. 9472

Stock No. i353

SALE PRICE - *7187
11.9 APR Flud lilt. lor 60 Monilia.
Ta, Tllt, LlctMt, Ftet ExcWtd. DNitr
To Rtllln Rtbott.

1989 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

l $22,999 .$ 3 .

STICKER PRICE SALE PRICE

PER MONTH

$26,547

SAvE

'

548

PVH nurse gains certification

No Dealer Participation To Affect Consumer Costs

250 NEW CARS &amp; TRUCKS AVAILABLE

·~

•

.

'

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Jeri Sue Kitchen, R.N., head
obstetrics and pediatrics nurse
at Pleasant Valley Hospital, has
recently been certified by the
Council of Childbirth Education
Specialists as an educator In the
field of family-centered and
psychoprophylactlc (Lamaze)chlldblrth preparation.
Kitchen, a registered nurse at
Pleasant Valley Hospital since
1975, was named head O.B. nurse
In 1983 and jltst recently assumed .
the responslblltles of head nurse,
of pediatrics. She earned her·
Associate Degree in Nursing
from Parkersburg Community
College and has had additional
training In pre-natal nursing,
fetal monitoring and other obstetrics pursing practices
. through W'est VIrginia Nurse's
·'

__• ___,_;____.-- -=--!•

Association programs accredited by the Eastern Regional
Accreditation Committee of the
American Nursing Association.
The Council of Childbirth Edu- '
cation Specialists, established In
1971 to promote professionalism
and excellence among teachers
t&gt;f childblr"th education, is a
professional association of registered professional nurses and
obstetrically qualified registered
physical therapists who work
with childbearing couples. A
pioneer In the research, design
and administration of the first
nationwide teachers training
progra·m for childbirth educa·
t!on, the Council also developed
,the first national program of
certification open exclusively to
health care professionals.
It's main goal Is to provide for
the professlo~al development of

Its members- through quality ·
continuing education programs.
Seminar attendees participate In
discussions, technique sessions
and practical laboratory groups
led by teachers who have had
extensive experience In conduc·
lng development programs for
health care profe.sslonals workIng with childbearing couples.
Kitchen w!ll teach early prenatal, labor and delivery classes
at Pleasant Val!ey Hospital, as
well as the hosj&gt;ltal's popular
"Big Kids and Babies" class
designed for chlldren 2 to 12
years of age expecting the
arrival of a l!ttle brother or
sister.
For more information about
the obstetrics program at Plea·
sant Valley Hospital, call Kitchen at (304) 675-4340, ext. 230.

The third six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Rutland
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
· named to the roll were:
First Grade: Robert Birchfield , Levi Burns, Pam Cade,
Josh Cremeans, Josh D!stlehorst, Tamera Dugan, Heather
Ferrell, Sara File, Patricia Garey, Max Gellert, Tiffany · Halfhill, Christina Hirth, Amy Hyseil,
Shannon Michael, Amanda
M!!Ier, Erin Myers, Mathew
Peckham, Michael Ramsburg,
Levi Searls, Kevin Snodgrass,
Art Tobin,' Shawn Workman.
Second Grade: Janie Barrett,

Robby Diddle, Ben Fowler, Kelly
Gilkey, Amanda Hays, Justin
Jeffers, Matthew Jus ti ce. WayIon McKinney , Tanya M!ller ,
Amos Mills, Alyson Patterson,
Tanya Powe ll, Melissa Pr iddy,
Shannon Smith, Brandy Stanley,
Clayton Tromm, Clark Van Ma·
Ire, Kasey William~. Stacy Williamson, Jason Young, Bambi
Breeding.
Third Grade: Carly Chasteen,
Emily Fowler, Nathan lclalfh!ll,
Ronnie Hirth, J!ll Lemley, Sean
(')'Brien , Dan!elle Peckham, Lisa
Snodgrass, Jon Stewart , Melissa

.

Titus, Aaron Vaughan, Melissa
W!ll!a ms, Sa ndra Young.
Fourth Grade: Chad Bartrum,'
Elizabeth Ellis, Sha wn Fife,
Michelle Miller , Beverly Sfe·
wart, Morgan Vanama n, Jamie ·
W!ll!amson.
Fifth Grade: Phyll is Clark,
~ereiny Coleman, Vanessa Har·
less, Brandl Hysell , Angie Po·
wen, Lori Ru ssell. C! nd! Stewa rt,
Roxanne Wl!l!ams.
Sixth Grade: Bridget Davis,
Phillip Edmonds , Tra vis Grate,
Lori McGh ee, Sher r! Ra m sbu ry,
Adam Hendrix .

••••••••••••••••
•
•
•

Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce •

•
VALENTINE'S DAY
• . DINNER ANDDANCE

•
•

• . SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1989

•

•

•

_ ROYAL OAK PARK

•

DINNER 7 P.M.-RIBEYE STEAK
DANCE 8:30 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT

•
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Music By BUTCH WAX &amp; THE GLASS PACS
ADMISSION '25 COUPLE-SIS SINGLE

..
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•

Valentine's Day
Tuesday, February 14th!!!
You'll Find Savings On
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" '"

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271 North ·s.cond, Micltlleport, Ohio

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FIEJGHT'MTH•t,JXDCASHDOWNATTRADE
EQOOY PLUS APPAoPIIATEO TAXES '

FEEl FOR II MONTHS AT 11% APR.

J

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, February 9, 1989

Literary Club meeting conducted

Thursday, February 9, 1989

woman on earth.
After his abdication of the
throne, Edward became the
Duke of Windsor, and Wallis, the
Duchess of Windsor when they
married In 1937. Mrs. Wallace
concluded her review by reading
Edward's abdication speech.
Mrs . Wilson Carpenter pre-

Pomeroy

'

The annual Ash Wednesday
Lenten Quiet Hour was held at
Trlnity Congegatlonal Church
yes terday morning.
Mrs. Elaine Freeman was the
program chairman and used "A
Time for Prayer and Fasting" as
her meditation theme. Diane
Hawley gave the welcome and

' t

COMPETITIVE EVENT
Practicing their
· skUis In the computer accounting program for the
competitive event Thursday night are Chrl&lt;itle

A series of siX week classes for
weight c&lt;int~ol will be offered by
the Meigs County Health Department beginning on Feb. 14,
The classes · wtll be held on
Tuesday and Thursday nights

,_

·'"

i

~r=·

/I
REFRESHMENTS - ·Tiffany Bennett, Heather
Glbeaut and Jami Shuler of Home Economics 1
class at Meigs High School are making cookies for

the vo,:atlonal open house to be held Thursday at 7
p.m. Coo•tn~ and baking Is an area In which home
economics students are trained.

1988~ 1NDIVIDUAL
Ft~ncil: &amp; Mertha

Joe &amp; C..-yl COOk

. Th•on &amp; Mary

And«aon

~\ 1/~:r-----'------"'--''#;

""'

Twill Cl•k
Thelma Alhworth
Lot• Cl•k
lrtne Amold
Reuben • Thllm1
Willia• ktt\'Anthonv
Collins
Alpha Oougl•
Clyde All ...worth
Trudv An*ew•
Peg Oougl•

Ell..., Jultil
Vloi•Jarntll
Marg. .t Johnson
lloyd Jenkins

Dora. Ad1m1
Mimi a Bueklev

Willie O.vis
lla Darn•l

Elth• Klu ..l
Mtrg•et KostNal

' • " ' Bvw

Jem• • Ida Diehl

AnneJ . Kinc.de

Ll"'ina Brennon
Burdell &amp; EffltBIKk

Meigs County CouncU
on Aging, Inc.

..:.--:
~

Star Jr.
Grange meets

A valentine exchange and
program was planned for next
week's meeting when TOPS 570
met at the Coonhunters Building
on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
The partners will exchange
·val en Unes and each one is also
asked to give a reading or poem
on the holiday .
·
At the meeting the best loser
will be named the Valentine
sweet heart of the club.
Lennie Belle Alelshire opened
the meting with prayer and the
pledge. Vlrignia Dean discussed
the Area Recognition Day observance ln May and the problem of
transportation. She noted the
weight cards had been mailed to
the chairman.
Best loser of the week was
Teresa Wood who also won the
fruit basket. Maida Long was
runner-up and the surprise
package was won by VIrginia
Smith. It was suggested by Julia
Hysell that the best loser each
week put her cash donation Into
the ARD fund .

Sauters and Dena Hall. Competition In the various
vocational programs will begin at 7 p.m.

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

AT THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER

A lzhelmer's Dlsease/Relatell
Disorders (family caregiver tmtit·
tng and support groups)
Care Support System (assess·

ment of hOspftaltzed seniOrs ftX
foUow·up care after discharge)

Case Management (Identifying
problems arid obtaining assts·

tance)

C enter Dining (nutritious meals)

D.ay Activities
,; Educational Programs
Health Assessment
Health Clinics

George &amp; Vytlce

, Ar1na Nbton
1

Edith Jividen

Audre Nict1

Sellw1

Mllllred Ohling•

l Anna Oil•
MulneOwene
Ro• Ohlingtlf
Nellie P11k•

J, Allen &amp;
OorOI:hy Smith

Ada W•ner
Judson • Helen White

Edna Pi deena

Mynle Stanlt¥

Baullh Ward

a

.!";

v..

R ecreatlanal/ Social Activities

Doug C~rde
Eno• • Cl•• Conroy
Carl ClltO
Cl•a Crie'Miti

Mary Gilkey

mediCal forms and answering
benejit questions)
..

Helen C.rp•
0 c.
L~l•

Ci:
Edna Cl•k
Mtria Ch

All' C

IP

man

Transportation and Escort (eight
. vehicles, tilcluding one LlWI with
a wheel chair lift. are ava!lahle
·

Retired Senior Volunteer Program

Donlld • PeuNne

Myert
Eth.. H tfield
Ev.tyn Main•
M
•
.
Gertrude Mitchell
lry &amp; VlriJII H1mm Jauie Martin
011 HyMII,
J•tie Molden
LouiN He•n•
Jot. Mitch
Roteoe • E~t Hollon Donlld • Betty

Mildred H1rrtt

lonnie Conde

• '"•
RtVmond &amp; Eileen
Hatfield
Emme H-vmtn

Elhal Hugh•
Fode HIIYmtn

MMINr
P•dina Mo,.rity
Margwat Metcllf
Ruth MorN
P•la AN .. HeBernice Nlfson
F 1N
•

•c•

Goldie H1ndrtn

H

e~~ t;rr:'."n

Tax AssiStance

a

f!:t'v~ :;,..rv

Pll'ry Mitch
Chriltin• Me•

~~rd·"·.r~

Th•me Campbell
D1it. Telitha Ca1to
Bertha Conde

J0Nph ~ Eloi11
Connolly
FI"""'
Clrcl•
J" '1e urtil
Manlllt' • Mtlind•
Jem.- • Emm1
Cl~~
~~~· Yo••

ow:C,d1..,• 0.n••

Oril Hubbll'd
Maude Holcomb

H

Ktthal H8tfield
MildrH I hie
Berth• Johnton
Jam• V1nCoonev

Alme N'!::on
Marg•M: Nicfta ..
Pe•l Norrll
Virgil •Kathryn Hill

Jaclda Hlld ...and

Chriety

U~1n .:::P•
td •

.,~ 0

J

uan

Itt

Eliza birth Willford
Mtb.e Waddell

Merg..-t P•sons
Norma Park•

a

Blrnica H1wk
Helin Hidte
Lui• HlmptOfl
Doyle
Nldine
Hud•on

o0 ,.. Wining

Freda. Welling
Marg. .tWinebrennlllf
Sam a Cl•• Willianu
Hel«1 K. Will

'6t=:a'=:::

Mtt CrouMr
Norma ~ · Colwnan

BernloeWinn
Wilbur &amp; Dorothy
W~rn•

Vivitnne Wllddell
Homtr. Betv1
Willard
Mae Web•

Biii&amp;GeorgltW8tson

Nell w..n ..
Georgia Wehrune
Betty Wevertmiltr

Otna&amp; OiantWarn•
AIICI Weloh
Hal an W1ddell
Rwmond w•burn
Soni1 Wolle
Nell Will on
GlldysWelburn
Vtrglni1 Witton
'H.. tn Williwna
Henry W•ry
Mldntd Withee
Minnie Wooten
Mtbel Waddell
Neli WMton

F..,• Will
G;rald &amp; Feye
Wilct.muth
Audr• Wen
Ev-.n Wolford

Fr;;.~ Wil•on

Anna Wolfe
Virginia W1tton
Nellie WM.h•holt

Mary Weblter

l.ftiad• Woo~erd
Edna WtYiand
Flor.nca Wooctv•rd
Gwinnle White

Merg•et 8 . Weber
Nina Wy1n
NaUieZ•Ida
HallleZ•III•
Jo.ph Zwilli""

C11h Zlmmarmtn
VIda &amp; Welter Green

John Cotwell
Cec:il EIMittein
Rl c:hard Bl•tlng

Cummins' Fermt

Anonymou•

OIGANIZAnGNS

.

Columbio Gronge #2436
Scipio Senior Cltlltno Club
Eogl• Club MeiDl Aerie 112171
Southorn Ohio C011t Company
Vinton County Extenlion Service
Tho Bridge Club
Feoney Bennatt Po11 #128

CH.CIIS

~1/~r--~-:-----=---

~~
/'l

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

IN THE HOME
Chore SeiV!ce (cleaning·lallTldly)
Homemaker/Health SeiV!ces
Home Delivered Meals
Home Maintenance

(minor

home

repairs)

Outreach
Respite Care (assistance for
families wlw are cartng fiX an
elderly famUy member in thetr
home).

Duckett's Pl1nt1
Mr. and Mr1. w1tter
Morr61
Mary Rumsfilld

1988 ORGANIZATIONAL CONTRIBUTORS

,

Meigs County CouncU
on Aging, Inc •

Monad Wilson

Dextor Chuich of Chrill
Hooth United Methoclot Church Afternoon Circle
Mt. Morleh Boptlot Church
Recine Unltwd Mothoclot Church Women
Ttmplt United Mothodiot Church
Mt. Union Boptlot Church
Pomeroy United Mothodiot Church
Recine Bopttot Sundr/ School Cion #4
Trinity Church
Flr11 Boptitt Ch .. Htorthtlono Ciao Mlddlopon
!'dockdtlprina. Unlttd Methodilt Sunday School
M• aport Ch. of Chriot Loyol Women a. Men Cl
Dorea United Mothodiot Church
·

$ A MONTH CLUB
CHECK ONE
I wish to join the
$1.00 Club (
$6.00 Club (
S10.00 Club I
$20.00 Club (

)
)

l
)

I will pay monthly (

Starting ................................. ............... (dote)

I will pay yearly (
Starting .................................. : ........ ~ ... (datel

NAME: ........................................,.......... ;........ ..
ADDRESS : ........... .......... , ....... .. .... ..•...

. .·······. ·--. ---- ----.-- ---

..... "· .........................................

PH. NO. : ...................................... ..... .

Support The Senior Citizens Center
With Your Membership
Just $3 a year!

~--------------.
.
1 I want.to eupport the Senior Cittle";;"aC;n;;-.;;.;;tth;;;.;.;;;hi;-·1

'

.

................, ........."'................ .. ........................................ ,1 ,

Meigs County Council on Aging, 1nc.

~'W~.aCetS:Xer~ FloorP
... ' - oy,(S1,!_;:sa-457821619

-v~
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~~~~~~~~~~

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

'

•

-

A bowling and pizza party was
held recently by the Middleport
Child Conservation League.
The group met at the Mason
Bowling Lanes and then went to
the Pizza Hut for refreshment s
and a business meeting.
Peggy Harris read correspondence which the club had received. Nancy Broderick gave
devotions and , the traveling
prizes was awarded to Clarice
Kennedy.
.
Members signed a valentine
for Thelma Sines who is ill, and
were urged to remember their
secret sisters throughout the
year. Others attending were
Nancy Morris, Peggy Houdashelt, Helen Blackston, Ann
Colburn, Kitty Darst, Becky
Broderick, and Sylvia Blake, a
guest.

Community support for . ·seniors important
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'' We just can't over-emphasize
the Importance of contrlbu lions
from local Indiv iduals, organiza·
lions and churches, to the overall
program of services to the
elderly in Meigs County," commented Eleanor Tlwmas, executive director of the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
As explained by Mrs . Thomas,
certain state and federal monies
require local matching funds and
contributions and fund raising
activities are one wa y of meeting
those requirements.
Last year a total of $44,171.50
was donated .
Some of that money was. from
organizations In sizeable donations, but most of it came from
the senior citizens who contribute on a regular basis , and those
who receive special services
such as home delivered meals,
transportation to the store or
doctor. nursing or homemaker
aide services, or minor home
U is these extra donated
dollars that have made a difference in the services which the
center is able to provide- those
along with a variety of moneymaking projec ts carried out by
the senior citizens and the Center
staff which last year brought In a
total of $14,361.27.
Last year transportation was
provided for 6,760 passengers
and there was 870 escort trips
during the year, rna king a total oi
110,946 miles driven during the
year.
A total of 190 persons were
served with the chore service. an
average of 2.5 hours a month ,
making a total of 5,;;61 hOurs m
housecleaning and laundry being
provided for the e lderly who
needed the service, Roofs were
repaired. plumbing and painting
done for 112 homes, and sometimes other projects needed so
that the person could stay In the

nome. ·

A memberohip entitte. you to receive oix bi-monthly;...... of the newoletter
whore you'll 9111 up-to-dille informltion on iaueo of lnter•t to tho .. over 66.
... oociet security end other benefit Information
... health programo
.... ooclet ectivitlea
... box eosiabonce
... planned tripe
... volu- opportunitieo
...special wen1o
Mall the coupon bel- with your t3 memb•ohip fee to the Melgo County
Sen•or Citlzent Center, Box 722, Pomeroy, OH 4117&amp;8.
..

Meigs County Council on AgiDI· ContrlbuUons to
the various programs in 1988 totaled $44,171.110
with another $14,361.27 b•lng raised lhrou'gh
various activities at the Center conducted by
volunteers and staff. An effort to step up donations
Is u1Jderway by the local Council on Aging.

ELDERLY AT HOME CARE - Giving older
Meigs Countlans an alternative to nursing homes
through providing a wide-range of In-home
services -chore, transportation, laundry, health
services, delivered meals - is a concern of the

repair services.

·.

!L-~!~!!~N_!&gt;~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;·
=~::~;;; .: ·:·: :·: : :·: : : : : · : : : : .:. : . . : : : : : : :.: : : : : : : : : :.: : !·
·

are. ...v.orai
These Include Pagevllle, Portland and Long
Bot rom. Additional funding and volunteers would
make It possible to Include these communities Into
the regular dally meal delivery schedule. Here
staff member Allee Wamsley displaY.• a map of
Meigs County showing current delivery routes
(blacked out se~tion 1.

Ice cream cone ·cupcakes were
judged at the recent meeting of
Star Junior Grange at the haiL
Placing first in the 5 to 9 age
category was Les Ue Dennis,
second was Eric Montgomery,
and third was Mike Macomber.
In the iO to 14 age group, Denise
Shenefield placed first , Crystal
Vaughan, second, and Reachel
Ashley, third. There was a a total
of 10 entries.
Members made a dried apple
craft and enjoyed a soup supper
with Star Grange me mbers fol·
lowing the meeting. Next meet. lng will be held on March 4 at 8
p.m. There will be a tun night on
Feb. 18 with a potluck s upper to
be held at 6:30p.m .

with those enrolling to have a
choice of night to attend. Ali
classes are free to Meigs County
residen ts.
Each class wi II be of two hours
duration. Attendance Is required
at only one lwo hour sessio n
weekly. Classes will Include
nutrition education, stress management. weekly weigh-Ins, relaxation techniques , recipes, diet
recall sheets, exercise techniques and other phases of

prayer of self-surrender In unison. Pastor Richard H. Freeman
gave the benediction.
Preceding the program, the
traditional Le nten breakfast was
served by women of Trinity
Church to the 110 persons
attending.

Health services provided by
the Center staff Is an Important
part of the overall program. The
economically and socially dlsad·
vantaged are targeted for the
health services and each year as
the populatlo,n ages and more
emphasis Is made on keeping the
elderly In their own homes,
requests for health services
Increases.
Medication Instruction· and Intervention, blood pressure monitoring, health education, as well
as transporting and accompany·
lng elderl~ clients for their
doctor or hospital visits Is a part

of the health services offered.
·The home aides during the past
year served 40 persons a total of
2,984 hours. This Included assistance to the elderly after being
discharged from the hospital, a ,
service which Is available to the
low income who do not have
family available to assist during
the day .
The request tor home delive red
meals has nearly doubled over
the past five years. In 1~8.1 12 , 421
meals were delivered. ln 1988 a
total of 24,389 meals were ·
delivered.
Last year relief .was provided
to 24-hour caregivers in 26
families . a total of 2,530 hours by
the aides working in the Alzheimers Disease- Related Dis orders. In addition family caregiver training and support group
activities have taken pla ce at the
Center.
While contributions make up
only a portion of the needed local
monies required in carrying out
services to Meigs Coynty's elderly, other ' local funding sources are the Meigs County Com missioners, the Meigs County
Department of Human Services,

Woodland Centers, and the
Gallla-Jackson-Meigs Mental
Health Board. Numerous other
organizations COOIJI'rate in providing specialized services at no
cost to the Council on Aging.
There are many unmet needs ,
Mrs. Thomas reports. A particular need Is to expand the home
delivered meals program. CurrentlY there Is no delivery in the
Pagevllle, Portland or Long
Bottom area.
There is a need for morf' ald.es
In the chore service which cannot
be · offered due to Inadequate
money to hire an additional
worker. There need to be more
drivers In the escor t service
progra m to ta ke the elderly for
their hospital or doctor visits, to
the drug or grocery store.
There is a particular need for
adding more respite caregivers.
Due to the lack of funds , there are
now only three and several
families are on a waiting Jis t; •
With 18 percent of Meigs
County's total population being ·
over sixty, and 28 percent of the
elderly living on Incomes at or
near poverty level and more than
600 without any tra nsportation,

the importance of the personal
service programs provided by
the Meigs County Council on
Aging cannot be overemphasized.

Seventy-five percent or all
funds received by the Council are
now channeled Into services to
help keep the elderly in their ow n
homes.
The life span is lengthening,
thanks to medical technology,
but with more people living into
their eighties and nineties there
is an increased need for services
which will help the elderly s ta y
where they prefer to be- in their
own homes.
But there is a cost, part of
which ca n only be covered by
increasing local contributions,
Mrs: Thomas concluded.

weight control.
There wtll be a limit as to the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which will be held In the confer·
ence room of the Meigs Multi-purpose building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
Residents are to register as
soon as possible due to class size
limitations by calling 992-6626
indica! lng a preference for Tuesday or Thursday evening classes .

This
Valentine's Day
Give the Perfect
Gift ... A Med
Module Membership

ONLY$600

CCL party held

Willilf'A• Mone
Sorden
GretUI Simp.on

T•...

J•m• Cotterill

Supportive Assistance (for example, filling out insurance I

Fern Stlhabury
:Jack &amp; Joan Sorden

Hel.n Kennedy
Eml Pllc:trt.
Doll• Sa.key
John Kedc
In• Pool•
Huel Smhh
&amp;K
Ietty
GtM»rge &amp; MK-..ff Eva ..._1Emily Sp•-•e
N1th1n a
E,...n
... h...ligu- Ev1 [)n;-'*
-'
,... -..... ,n
Glldyt Dillon
Marvin &amp; Burnaltne Cl•• Phllllpt
Jw• SIUnd••
El Bachn•
Mllfle &amp; Frede Cavil
K~ty
Offw Page
Eve SchreiHr
Vir";:a -=~:,
D.vkla Ct . . Dorst Ch-r. Annan.
Mwllyn Pow.ll
H~try. Edith Schwab
Ella. Buck
lortna Dl"idlon
Knight
Mabel Pa•rNin
April Smhh
GtnA'IW.e Oemotkey Vttvay K-vs
H. .N Queen
Mifdftd Sp.,ce
Jane Brown m
Leo Davidson
Ada K•--•
Lule Moo Ou"·E~·
"'•'
....... .,n Summtrfilld
B
ln
J.m- rew •• on
Oorothv Dwil
Willillll. Goldie
Dorochy Reibel
Dai.y 5-w"nt
Ao~
• en.
O.nwleve
Manr
Krackenb.-Ch•l• •
a ret
·' Dwidlon
•-- Eve "•o~on
.,.
Bt•n'::. lell
H-'ena Oanial.l
Evil• &amp; Jem• Kelty Fran011 Aoulh
Schad
Walter Brown
Marcia Dennison
Grace Krld•
Mary Rurnafleld
Doyle 6 Nallie
Dorothv Downie
Elizabeth Kell•
Artie R-..ter
Swgent
C•l• .I•H B111nnan Sybil Eb•lblch
Alberta Koefll•
wane Roach
L F. &amp; Edn•
=B=~~~
Mary_ Vitglnl1
O.lm.s K••n•
M•iiAOV
Scho.,llb
Robwt Blllav
EMterder
Maurice Lott
Orion. tc.ie Routh Helen a . Smtth
Adl , . .
Marion Eltterd._,
l.wrence 6 Mlljorie H.. lf'l R~noldl
Myrtle Sleeon
81
11
Ch•l•&amp; Freda
Leonard
Arnold6 Florence
Dorothy ShNts
Mtre-et Bowl•
Edwarde
CIJI. Pe•ltne Ue
Rh:hdt
Er~n~ Smith
Helen ~blln
Mary Loudn•
Dorothy Robert•
Jo Stl•n•brook
Manr F. Blumg•dn• Kl'lh•.n• Ev•n•
M1ry Lyon
Albert• YlllleAouth M1rM S~n•
-,
Edw1rd &amp; Edn1
M.. lynch
Roa.t Reiber
Ktthl_, Scott
WMI•d.
N1tde8oyer MEvans
H•old 6 Eliltbeth Marv 11 in_.._
n--......
So•~
Floyd Brown
1o Eb lib
La
.... , " ..... ,
._."_0
•
John &amp; Henri., n
•
tch
hH
Herold • Mtrgie
Lawrence a Mary
Ethel Eul•
Norm~ Lie
Roulh
Stewart
.
8 •• 1_,
Blithe Ev1n1
Eb• Llwil
Mery V. Reibel
Mildr«&lt; Spencer
Chw 1• a Dtity
G111ee Elch
Evelyn Lucke
Frenldln a Wlftda
Dorothy • Devid
Em!!~d'.:
G1r~• Ervin•
Kathryn Lambert
Rizer
llYN
Nellie Brown
Virwnll Etttep
Mil lightfoot
lAwrence. Roxie
Aan•. Clll'lflce
Willam Fotm•
C1lvln lane
Aiipp
StWIInl
C I .Br~zk•
H .. trnhill
E:ie
E•rl&amp; Ullh Freck• Virgil McElroy
L.t« • Cethwine Flor.-»ee lmhh
Lucille Brtl.,
Anna A. Fttch
Kermit McElroy
Ruueet
R•ph Mulne
loll a M
••
Grtce French
Daytan McElroy
Ao• Revnotdl
Shein
Hetan Fi.e h•
Gena McEir..,
Edith Avth•
~
Be11l1 Turt...
•
ary u.flev
:~~~~:.-~.
Ruby Fnck
M11 McPeek'
Mrs. lAI1er Roualt
Doris ThorN.
A
Be d'l
loran• fredcar
lea &amp; Baullh
Ullle Robin tan
Tholftll Turner
M':,'n.rd.lthr
Willl.m &amp; Hazel Fox
McCom11
Rus•ll• Goldie
H. H. Tipton
Mary Buck
Sarlh fowl•
Roll McD•d•
Redditt
Edt• &amp; Grett:t
AI .. _ e-·o
Rlchwd &amp; Glenna
S•lh McCany
Nonfl Aobtr'la
Thomu
i:;o:dt.
~ltty
Hu.. McHifftt
Mary K. Routh
Wilbur &amp; Lucille
Elm• C . lfllndt
Plulom..• Fot!Jod
Frtd1 Mcfenn
WMbur • Mllild1
Theobald
Edgw&amp; 8etty8ulehlf AnnaFrenk
C1rolinaMillw
Rowt.,
MwiaTh••
Irene Christy
~ FIMTIII
EliubMh Mauming Jo~~phlna Rhchle
Blyth a Thein
Betty C.riiY
Wllhem &amp; Ruth Grete Ml¥l Mort~
L..urt Ritne
Edn• Tr's»lltt
llulll Court
fl'ld &amp; Frand•.
Nan Moore
Ullia Rtndolph
S.clle Tru .... l
leny Chriltoph•ton
Geoglein
loulee My1r1
Erme Routh
Ch..• Thurlton
Evety C
Hrem., Gro..,ldde Dorothy Monil
Edne SchMf•
Huel VIACOOnl'f
c"h•oohto
Jot OUitl
~WI Moore
Flfndora I V•n
P••l &amp; Maru V-J. •- o,ldaO~
Ch..•&amp;EHtnGibbeMIIclr
.. Mo~-wo
S tory
-• ••
u .... a Ch • • Goldie
Grthlm
_,
Coon.,
H•
Gayntlle Cl•k
~ Byrl Qrjffin
Oltv. Millard
EHia land••
Chitter VenMat•
Eliubeth C.man
Gettrude Greenlee
Viol• Mllhone
Joeephlneltl•
Donald VMC:oonev
Eman • Sadie Carr
William &amp; luana
M• Moore
MHdrtd L. Smhh
V•• VanMeter
Perrv Sytvi• Curtle
Grunw
Jo~n Morri1
Cl•• SIMerr.
Mary Ann
Sweh C•tctwen
Mabel Goff
ChWI• • Marg•et Atbafta Cl..
Coon~!;'
Bernia C1rpanttr
Vona GillenWittr
Murr~~y
Burton lmitb .t:•IM-Whit•

Protective/Legal Assistance

HOME DELIVERED MEALS- Many ol Me,lgs
County's elderly residents are able to remain
their own homes or go to their own homes
foUo~ng hospitalization because ol the many
servtces provided by the Meigs County Council on
Aged. Home delivered meals Is an Important
aspect of this and In 198S 24,389 were taken out of
the Center Citizens Center Into homes. Still there

CONTRIBUTORS

a

I.nfonnation and Referral

, for personal/medical trips)

Aob.-t • Virginie
Duckworth

John1on

the service opened with a unison
grace. Pat Holter was pianist for
two hymns, "All for Jesus" and
"Have Thine Own Way Lord."
Scripture by Mrs . Maye Mora
was from Matt. 4:1-11.
The program opened with a
call to worship and closed with a

Weight control classes.will begin

meets

lll1

The Daily Sentinel Page 11

Middleport, Ohio

TOPS
tlf lll

.

Lenten services planned for Meigs

sided at the meeting welcoming
the · members and Mrs Ira
Butcher, a guest. The club collect
was given in unison .
The resignation of Mrs. James
Clatworthy from the club mem·
bership was read . The March 1
meeting was cancelled and Mrs.
Robert Fisher's review was
rescheduled for May 3.
. For roll call members com·
mented on a difficult historical
decision . The hos.tess served
cracker snacks , and candy.

their overwhelming passion for
eac h other. She said that the
author details the transforma·
tlon of Wallis from an ordinary
matron to the most talked about

Mrs. Danny Thomas reviewed
the book, "Wall!s and Edward.
Leters 1931-37" by Michael Bloch
at the Wednesday meeting of the
Middleport Llteray Club held at
the hOme of Mrs. Chester Erwin .
Mrs. Thomas described tile
book as the story of the most
scandalous love affair of the
·cent ury , that of Edward Vlllfor
Wallis, an American divorcee,
for whom he gave up the throne of
England.
In her review, Mrs. Thomas
noted that the book details the
extra-ordinary love letters exchanged by the lovers and of

.

•

ule'M
Health Desk
For your good health.
Jlhat Is "llltd Module"?

· Metl Module is an 11dting
new concept to help you
kHp track of your own
good health. insert your
"Health Card" and Metl Mo·
dule reads your blood pressure and pulse. Plus it gives
you important health infor·
matian in a variety of ways.
What Dau
Mtd lllodulo Do? ·
•checks your blood pressure
and pulse.
•helps calculate your idHI
weight.
ehelps evaluate your risk of
a heart attack.
•gives you information about aerobi&lt; conditioning.
•provides you a personalized stress analysis.
•provides information about prescription medications.
•analyzes yo..- lifestyle - so you can make improvements that
contribute to your good health.
•provides you valuable information through its "Health Facts
Digest."

.:•,

·.

..•

·.
.
..
'.

·,

·.·.
•

•
'
.,

Prescription Shop.

'

992-6669
271 NORTH

•

MIDDUPOR1

·,

·.

OHIO

..,

•

·.•

Aarom Boonsue, M.D.
· Succulent
Charbroiled Shrimp

wishes to announce
his retirement
with his practice to be assumed on
February 20, 1989
by

•

•

•

·.
.

•

KIDS EAT FREEt

Each seafood dinner

Robert M. Holley, M.D.

Kid• 5 and under chOOK
from "1peclal kids menu"
Onr FREE with each adult
rntrrc purcha~.

includes our New

AII•You•Can•Eat
Grand Buffet and Baked

Family Practice

BONUS COUPON

HURRY! Offer

new patients are being accepted
past and present patients are welcome
2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
UPPEI IIVU ID.
IT. 7, GAWPOUS
lAcross fr- the Airport)

Telephone 304-675-1675

,,

••

.••

e 1989 Pondtrtba, Inc .

Potato or Wild Rice!

2125189,

:

I :
I ·.
I
il
I
I .: II

ll .:...,

.Pflllii::::I'.._.:::L j ·:
1
-'
~ ::·:...~ - ··

�r

I

Page-12 The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapte( of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m., at the E piscopal
Church parish house.
RACINE - Souther n Band
Boosters wil l meet Thursday ,
7:30 p.m., a! !he Southern High
band room. Parents of a ll band
students are urged to at tend .
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees wil l have
their a nnua l budget meeting
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station. The public
\s invited to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thurs·
day, 7:30 p;m., at the haiL
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Re turn Jon·
l).than Meigs Chapter , Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday, 7 p.m. a t the Heath
United Methodist Church, Mrs.
John Rose will present the
American Histor y essay
winner~. Hostesses will be Mrs.
Nan Moore, Mrs. Danie l Tho·
fnas , Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Mrs.
Everel t Hayes. and Mrs. Larry
Wiley.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens are sponsoring
square and round dancing on
Friday, 8 toll p.m ., at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
Music by True Country
Ramblers. Admission $2. The
public is invited. Bring snacks.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Baseball League will meet 7 p.m.
Friday at the Rutland American
Legion building. Anyone inter·
ested is welcome to attend.
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Amer ican Legion is holding a
Valentine's Day Dance on Fri·
day, at 8 p.m., . at the Legion
Annex. Admission, $3 single, $5
couple. Music by Bob Es tep and
the Western Travelers.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
America n Legion Js holding a
Valentine's Day Dance on Friday
evening, starting at 8 p.m., at the
Legion Annex. Adm ission is $3
single, $5 couple. Music will be
provided by Bob Estep and the
Western Travelers.
SATURDAY
WILKESVILLE - Sweetheart
dinner will be held Saturday,
s tarting at 4 p.m. , at the
Wilkesville Pythian Hall. Eve·
ryone welcome.

POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen will have a
potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. on
Saturday at the hall in Bur·
lingham. Those a ttending are to
ta ke thei r own table service.
Several door prizes will be
awarded.

WILKESVILLE - A Sweetheart Dinner wtll be served
Sat urday, starting at 4 p .m ., at
the Wtlkesvllle Pythlan Hall.
Everyone welcome. Proceeds
from the dinner will go the the
Pythlan building fund.
SUNDAY
., •
POMEROY- The lllm, "The
God Makers," will be shown at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ,
212 West Main St ., on Sunday at 7
p.m. The public is welco~e.

--Soup supper

RACINE -The Racine United
Methodist Church Is sponsoring a
soup supper on Thursday, Feb.
16, with serving starting at 3:30
p.m. Ch!l!, vegetable soup, bean
soup, cornbread, sandwiches, pie
and drinks w!ll be Included on the
menu. Everyone welcome.

Rev. Don Archer showed the Avis and Meghan, and Michelle
··
!lim "Unquenchable Fire" to O'Naile.
Allred Administrative Council on
James Kelly received word
January 26. He announced the
Mission Saturation program In
April. The Lloyd Brooks family
accepted patterns to make a
banner lor Alfred UMC to be
displayed at Mission Saturation.
Rev. Archer wUilead a Bible ·
study on the Book of Acts
beginning tn March at Alfred
UMC. Those wishing to partie!·
pate are to contact Rev. Archer
or Nellte Parker.
MarUyn Robinson and Nellie
·Parker assisted at the clothing
distribution held January 24·26 at
Meigs Co-operative Parish.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Stearns
returned .recently from a bust·
CJN Tjj!
T I'~
ness trip to Fairborn . While ·
there, they visited their daugh·
ter, AprU Neely, and family.
Flu su!!erers In the neighbor·
hood Include Mr. and Mrs. Tom

January 31 of the death of his
daughter-In-law, Barbara Kelly,
·
of Williamstown, W-Va.

CLEARANCE
C()'\TI'l 'ES
Some Winter Merchandise

1/2 PRICE

REDUCED

•'

,1j_

.:.,ll'f t iIJJ .f,.,

I

--

+...

.

--------

___

----·-~-

•c:.

v~

COPY DEADliNE MONDAY PAPER

Ntw Wuhtrl From . . . . .
Ntw VCR1 From . . . . . . . .

'8"
sgoo

~·'"'

REMOTE CONTROL

$378

aS399

Public N alice

-

,. .

"~~'';&gt;41
LE30DII

SHARP

*L•go Cap"'ity
Dryer
*2 Tamp•atura

V.C.R.

*IAirgt Iiiii Fit•

WIRELESS REMOTE

$248

CONliOL

~,._s .~,~~"(\~

DAYS ONLY
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
&amp; SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 10, 11, 12

S249

S19
3 DAYS

Budget
Priced

ONLY

$99

(8 cu. ft.)

18 cu. ft.
No Frost

I

Ice &amp; Wattr
in Door

$799

'.

$269
FH08

Subltantlal Penalty

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

NEWJL\VM
882-2135

If you buy IOmething from Ellott'1, •nd
within 30 day1 find It fof 1811 at 8noth8r
loet~lltoclclng duler, 'Eliott'• wHI refund
thtl difference plu• 211" of the difference
upon proof of lower price.

Washor

S28

CIOSLEY 15 cu. ft.

Refrigerator
•

$995

For Early Withdrawal

125% PRICE GUARANTEE!

LA3400

Capacity
2 Cycle

(Frost Frttl

Medtl DUI100

$299

r~j~Y.l .
~~- ~: Heavy
D~tv
Largl!

\ __j

Refrigerator

Elliott's
SIVa IIIDGI PLAZA

Merchandise
61 - HouNhold Goods
52- Sporting Ooodl

3 - Annoucementt

53 - Antiques
54 - Mite. Merchandise
55 - Building Suppti•

4 - Giveaway
5 - Happy Ads
6- Lott and Found
7- Yard Sal a (paid in advancol
&amp;..,.. Public Sale &amp; Au ction

56 - Pett for Sale
57- Musicallnttrumentt
58 - Fruitt S. Vegettbl•
59 - For Sale or Trade

9-Wtn\ed to Buy

Employment

Farrn SuptJiies

Serv1ces

(Subject to Change
Without Notict f

•1 COPI'EI-.... - .... 86• no.
U COPPEll _ ........... 65&lt; 1~

13- lnturance
14- ButinMt Training
1 5- Schooh: S. Instruction
16- Radio, TV II CB Repair
17- Miscellaneous
1 8 - Wanted To Do

61 - Farm Equipment
62- Wantad to Buv

63 - livenoclt
64- Hav 15. Grain
65 - Seed &amp; Fertilizer

71 727374-

Real Estate

Autos for S1le
Trucllt for Sale
Vent &amp; 4 WO 't
Motoreycl•

75 - Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
·76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acceuori•
77 -- Auto Repair
?S - Camping Equipment
79 - Campert &amp; Motor Homes

31 - Homes for Sale
32 - Mo~Ue Hom at for Sale
33- Farmt for Sale
34- Bulin•s Buildings . '
36 - Lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Rnl E1tete Wented

e;tunrna

SlEETS ..................... 47&lt;

t1o.

CLEAN AlUIIIINUM
CAST_...................... 40'

t~

SlEET ....- ...... 5' to 30• ..

submitted.

Further, the above collat·
eral will be sold in the
condition it is in with no
expr••d or implied warran ti• given.
For mora information con·
992·

$399
NEW HOURS

Mon. tlru Thur,
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Fri. 9 A.M. til I P.M.
Sat. 9 A.M. til 6 P.M.
Sun. I P.M. to S P.M. '

Sold ulo to aubjoct to •P·
proval by the Common Ploeo

Court. Meigs County, Ohio.
Jomeo M . Souloby,
Shariff,

Mo!go County. Ohio
APPROVED:
t. Caraon Crow. Attorney

for Plaintiff. The Bartlett
Farmer• Bank.
Bonlott, Ohio
121 2, 9, 18, 3tc

Public N alice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
THE BARTLETT
FARMERS BANK
P. 0 . Bo• 67
Bartlett. DH. 46713

witt roqu011 (1) Van Type A,
VA· 11·0 Standard van wkh·

out ,Pecill proviliont for

Written comments and/ or
proposal• mua be eubmit·
tad within 30 doyo to the
agency •ddrH 1 given above
whh a copy to tho Ohio
Qepertment of Traneportetion, 25 South Front St.,
Columbuo, Ohio 43218·
0899.
121 9, 16, 2tc

wheetchetro. t11 pea-gar)
11 io projoctod that (45) 1-------=---~
handicapped and/ or dove·
tojpmontolly diooblod clionta

will uee the service •even 171
daya per week for trantportation to employment, habilitatton. socialization, recreational, · medical and other
tpecialized profestional
services.
Meigt lnduatriBI Inc. invrtes comments and•r proposals from all Interested
public, prNate, and paratran·
tit operators for the provision of the tervice propo~ad

...

Munloln•1111 Su,....
...... Gun Supplia
Guns • Ammo • Slugs
22 Anllno
Rt. 124 E11t of Ruttond
-HeppyH-Rood

Ph. "4·742-USS

8/20/tfn 1 mo. pd.

also intereated in -coordinet·
ing the u" of this vehicle
with any public. private. and
paratranait operators In the
Public N alice
ar ... Anyone lnterlfted in
'"'bmitting a proposal or
PUBLIC NOTICE
coordinating transportation
Meigs Industries. Inc .• a sarvicea can t,~~btain the neprivate non-profit corpora· cessary deta•ll~ by contact·
tion. Intends to submit an ing; Keith 0 . Black, Bus.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Factory Chalco
12 Gaugo Shofgoms Only
StricHy Enf1"Ciil

HOUIINQ. APT. PROJECTS
SINCE 1969

992

TIIUIS. E.L 6:45 P.M.
SUII. E.l. 1145 P.M.
DODIPIIll

•oos.//r Gamo

2-3-Hn

f.fW lltJMt
~~~ !\1t):li li"'JI.l
llR\1\i,, I
IN II HI!\H I'AIN!ING
'•\'1-\ll Pi'., Pi: fllr\G
KEITH RO"'IN! X
URRY RO"'INI

Olun 614

wv.

'l'/1.6ql6

:!04.882 2788
1

BH

Jf)

1

'IH'

lolpro, Ohio
CONSIGNMENTS WBCOME

lADIES WANTED!
PERM, CUT, STYLE

a stone; thence south 1 DO

foot to an Iron pipe; thence
out388 foetto on Iron ptpo;
thence north 100 loot to tho
ploco of beginning, baing
39,600 oquore loot, moro pr

''}"'' write your
mes•age in 1/ae hearr
of your loved one and
show ahaf you care ."

!Oil.

REFEREI!ICE DEED: Vo·
tumo 284. Page 643. Malgo

County Deed Record•.
ALSO the following do·

ONLY

ecribH rNI •tate:
Sltulit•d in the Townahip

•Yard Ornaments

PH. 304·428-7245

Rin1 Door Bell for Service

mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Mino,
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Cenifi8d LICIOnSIOO.

oflotNo.1168ondthocen·
ter Une of State Route 111 24;
thence wnt on the north

1

eMt 100.00 feet to en iron

I

.&gt;

.

I

Middleport, Ohio

t
I

Valentine Love Line!

PEl LOAD
DEUVER£D

tl

-ao

a-

UGHT HAUUNG DONE

BILL SLACK
9_92-2269

PH. 949·2801
or les. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY

WELDING
AUTO 8c.
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY 8c.
WRECK REPAIR

985-3844.

1

40 VAS.

·t

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
Reaaonable Rates,
Fully Insured

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

CITY ......................................... •lol.-s
~~.................. ~~ .............,.1I
Clip and MI~~::O:.:"'.=.:~I~A~~-=~~,:r=:,d______ ..J
MIM.I

"'""

-----------

\l.l.o.,_....CUA;,N'-Y&lt;:A!!C-"~~-«.C""-=-'~b..ljlllfj""'~~-6::;0=;.,v..a&gt;-~u...--&lt;N.~'
""

vouc:h••· We can give yoa
prompt deUverl•. Excell.., Salt
Inc. Pomwov. Ohio:

Works,

514-992· 3881 .

HovooRoonv
Jack W. Caraev-Reettor.
814-992·2403"' 114-892-

2:708. Call for Hating~ or ul•.
Baton elM•• of all -u• on Feb.

14th, at 7p.m. Rutllfld Civic

Center. For more lnformltJon
,call Angle Rua.ell at 814-742·

3118.

PUIUC
IECYCUNG

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

IIOW ONII fOR

Mastic &amp; Certainleed~

,.,., . . st.

Roofin&amp;

•••ss
............. ve.
W• Buy Aluminum

eana.or•a. B,..a.
Copper llld Moro

304·6~61

•• . . .

!loll

I· 4-'11-1-

Vinyl Sidinc

Seamless Gutt•

Replactment Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

Giveaway

Free pupplea to good home-part

Gennon Shophord. Coli 814387·0429,
Kitchen fauMa . Good cond.

Coli 814-446· 707&amp;.

•

8 mo. o4d maiepup-Mother Min.
Sheph«d, F1thtr Germ .. Sh•
phord. Call 814-248·5811 .

Part Doberman end part Bo•1r

puppiee to give MlfV . 114-849-

3087.

CALL 992-6611

••

6 Lost and Found

FOUND : Beegladogwh:hooll•.
Petriot area, Feb. e. Call 114-

448·0198 or 448-8310.

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associates
PUBLIC
RELATIONS
108 Hish Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone (~14) 992-2922

2·3·'89-1 ....

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIYICE

814-448· 8128.

•

Found: Monday. ferntla Btegtc
About 1 v••r Old. On Vine St.!

Middleport. Call
2213.

814· 992 . .

Found: Bl~cle found on New
Uma Rd. in Rutland. 814-742- '

2969.

.:

coli.:

LOST:Biac:k Cocker Sp.,laf
neme "Biedtla" with red
Letart area. Cal1304-8915-3450..
lOST btond mala alub 1an

Cock• Spaniel pup, lround .
Meson Chevron, chlld' 1 p.c ·

REWARD, 304-n:J.8911
773·5615.

GUYSVI1E, 01110
614-662·3821

8

Authorized John
Deere, Now Holland,
Buah Hog Farm
Equpmont Deeter.

hra E41ipa"l
Sitae &amp; Sar•lu

GREENHOUSE
Foliage Plants
Baskets

$6 AND UNOiR

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN All DAY ON
WEEKENDS

St. lt. 1

Southon~

Ill. past
Scllool

·

LOST: 2 male Beag!• pupt-8
mos. old. Black. tan, &amp; whit'
Mt. Cormelllo Ttck Ridge Rd . CalL

U. S. IT. SO EAST '

J

IION•.fB.o 9 1111•6 prn
SAT• I 1111·12 No.

dog.
18'01" ieot398-IO
~ piece of beginning con- .,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
llew
luilt
"Free Estimates"

I

COMPOSE YOUR OWN MESSACIE BELOW

Human ServicM, end HEAP

1-13·'89-Hn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1 MI. East af St. lt. 7
on 2•1 at Choster

ADDRESS ........................................................ ,............................. .

1I

Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy. Ohio •

t-31 ·'88·1

LASHLEY
SERVICE

t

N~ME

992-7479

319 So. 2nd Ave.

etus ou'"'

rt
rr

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

DESIG.R BOUTIQUE

20¢ PER WORD-MAIL CHECK OR BRING AD TO

I

.-t

MOBILE
HOME PARK

·•

.

3 Announcemanta
We will hllul coal for erneroenc:v

INC.

MESSAQES WILL RUN AS LINE ADS .
,-------End;.~-;-;.;;;;:;;;-;.,;;i.iP,;;;.-:- -------i

t

Aunoun ce men Is

HEAP. Melli" Coumv Dopt. of

992-6282

1-1-'11-tfn

February 14th. s-endm••D• to your ~aWed on•~ndfri.,..dllrl

linti of Lot No. 1 1 68, 28.70
feet to an iron pin; thonce
aouth 18 cloareo, oz· 01"

2-7·1110.

AND

and

111 Coun St .• Pomeroy, OH. 45769
8 A.M.TO 6 P.M . MON.-FRI.
t814) 992-2t66
DEADLINE; FRIDY. FEBRUARY 10Ttj. ~P. M .
Val.-.tinem . . ._g•wll beln ourTu•d.,. dian on V.. ...t1n~ sMOay, Tc'*~·:

nlng for reference at the In·
teri8Ction of the north line

12 Gaugo SlootguM Only
Factory Cllokt
STRiffiY ENFORaDI

Because of Cold Weather
Everything Inside.

TOP OF THE STAIRS

$27

The Dailv Sentinel

of Olivo, County of Moiga
ond Stole of Ohio; Bogin·

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

SYRACUSE. OHtd

I Sollion at Fit I Trim

S3S

Rood whore It
crosii!MI the line of Section
1 1; thence wMt398 feet to

•ill• and Salem Conttr

Everything Marked
Down
•C11ment !toms
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

County

Rt. 124 lttw"n WilkiS·

Jo's Gift Shoo

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

FIREWOOD

Range 11. Ohio Coml)llny'a

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUI

PAT HILL FOlD

PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCTIONEER

1/26/1 mo.

'Purchlle. Beginning at a
atone on the w11t elde of tha

SER~ICE

We con repoir and re·
cor1 radiators and
heater coriS. We can
also acid boil .and rod
out radiators. We also
rtpair Gas Tanks.

GUN SHOOT

4

992·6720

in Section 10. TC'wn 4,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio
~iiii:~~~~~==t'ii
8·!31fn
·-.

OF BUSINESS

HOWES GROVE PARK

1-11-'1'·1

or ,at

.

1·11·'19·1 mo.

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT -6:00 P.M.

2 H.D. FREE with COUJIOil and
pun:h. . of min. H.C. Pack·
~~~ Limtt I coupon per cus·
1011111' per biRJI SIUtOIL
w. hv •50.00 ,_ Gam•
Over ItO hopto 165.00

:t (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
!! Gallipolis. Ol)io 45631

Middleport,

PUBLIC
AUCTION

224 E. MAIN ST.
982·9978

9,;!~~~1!1

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ .Licensed Clinical Audiologist

992~2196

DUSIY ST., SliACUSI

POMEROY -EAGLES
CLUB

II 1 lll•t Stcollll, Pom•oy

of Olivo. County of Meigs
and Stoto of Ohio; Bolng

pin, uld point being the
ploco of beginning for tho
tract heroin
deocrlbed,
which point lo olao tho
- - o f real . .
10
1110 owned by Bobby 0.
Johnoon ond Edna M. John·
aon ond recordod In Votumo
2114. Pogo 543, Deod Rooonla, Metgo County. Ohio;
thonao oouth 11 dog. 02
01" _ , 101.B8 foot to on
iron pin; thonao nonh 88
dog. 118' 01" weotopprOKI·
motoly 3811 to on kon
pin·
non-tertv
oppi'OII. 101.88 fHl to on
iron pin· ti"IIICI oouth 89

.----------~
BINGO

Plus FREE.....
1 r...int Sonion

D .• on the front stepa of the
Meigs County Courthouee.
Pom•ov. Ohio, the follow·
ing described reel ostllte:
Situlted in the Townahip

COIIIIERCIAL
•METAL BUILDINGS

·11·19-1 ••.

ONlY

BOBBY G . JOHNSON ,
ET AL
Dofandonta
CASE NO. BB·CV-240
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
Ao Shariff of
Moigo
County, Ohio, I hereby offer
for aalo 11 10 ;00 A .M., on
Friday, March 24, t 989. A.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

.CUITOM klfCHI!NI. lATHS
eiXTINIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL IIDINQ • . ADORNO

CONSTRUCTION

Basham BuHdlng

We Sarvice ~~.l!~.!'-~!!"

-

915-3350

Uc.

in the t 8jbl (21 application.
MelgJ! lnduttries, Inc. is

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
915·3561

'

Television Listening Devices
Dependable Heariog Aid.Sales &amp; Sen1ict
&lt;.:J 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

•Washers •Dryera
•Rangea •Freezera
•Rafrigl!rators
"Musf Ia Ropair..lo"

OWNII: GIEG I. lOUIN
GENERAL

CHESTER, OHIO

LARRY HOFFMAN - PH.

DEAD 01 AUVE

,'!!,

Nl!'s

FOI A PIICE QUOTE CALli

I,

WANTED

LUBRICAnON
OIL FILTER
$1695

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE

Meigs Industries, Inc., in addition to provld·
ing general office end commercial cleaning,
now offers
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
es a service.
We will contract to clean your home on a fixed
schedule. attending to items you desire..
We provide fu II liability coverage. work'!&lt; a
compensation, and pay all tax
requirements.

. IUSINESS PltONE
161'1 992-6$50
IESIDINCE PHONE
16141

IILUIDE MUZIU
LOADING.

Business ~-----------·I
ROMINE
Services
~;::=======::;1
GUN $HOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEn.

11 ~ 18·'811-ttnA

References

Pay Your Phone
Cable Billa Here

located Off Bypaat
At
of Rta. 7 a.

Public N alice

Act of 1984. u •mended, to
provide trantponation aervlcn for the handicapped
and/ or development•ltv disabled citizens within the
county of Maigs, State of
Ohio. The grant applk:lltion

985-4141
GENERAl CO.NTRACTORS

We Carry Fishing Suppll•

992-5114

83- E•cavating

Section 16tBI 121 of tho
Urb.n Man Tranaportation

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

IIONY CAST-· 3• ro 20• I~
ST AINIESS _,....- .... 20 1 lb.

84- EI8(1lrictW S. Refrigeration
86- Gen••l Hauling
86 - MobUe Home Rep1ir
87- Upholstery

Mgr .. ot tho Meiga Co. Bd.
MR / DD, P. 0 . Bo• 307,
Syracuoo. Ohio 46779 .

Prices"

Now Lotafion:
·168 North Second
Middleport, Olio 4 57 60

IIONY

81 ~- Home lmprowmentt

application for capltalatlttance under the provision• of

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING 8c. REPAIRS

PLUMBING I HEAnNG

AI.UitiiiUM
.VEIAGI CANS -·" 46' I~

82-Piumbing &amp; He•ing

Public N alice

CHESTER, OHIO

CLEAN AlUMINUM

Services

41 - Houtet tor Rent
42 - M(Ibil!t Home~ for Rent

"

PH. 949·2801 ,
or les. 949-2860
Day oi Night
NO SUNDA¥ CAUS

MODEIN GUN
SUPPUES

22 - Monev to lo•n
23- Prof•sionej Servlc•

MARCUM CONTRACTING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

&amp; Livestock

1 1- Help Wanted .
1 2- Sttuation Wanted

43 - Ferm• for Rent
44- Apartment 1or Rent
46- Furnittled Rooms
46.:...Sp•c• for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49- For L•••

Sevlnp Companv, Pome- •ppralaed at Five Thou'CY¥· Ohio, meNtl the right und ond 00/100 Dottaro
to bid at this sale, and to l*II.OOO.OO). and wilt be
. withdraw the above collat- oold 11 a oingto un~ .
eral prior to tale. Further,
Sale of uld real eollte to
The Farmers Bank and Sav~ be for not ieu. than twoings Company re~ervn the thirds 12/31 the oforeooid
right to reject any or all bids eppral1ed value.

tact Scott Shank.
3293.
12) 8 , 9. 10, 3tc

19" COLOR TV

GIBSON FREEZER

Pt. PleUant
Laon
Apple Grove
Maton
New Haven
Letart
Buffalo

PUBUC NOTICE
taining 40.344.48 aquare
NOTICE io hereby given felt, more or len. Said real
that on Saturday, February oat81o ·being ·• pan of One
11, 19B9. at 10:00 a.m., a Hundred Aero Lot No. 1168.
public oata wilt bo hold at Town 4. Range 11. Section
39143 Suc:coao Rd., Roedl· 10 of the Ohio Com....,y' 1
ville. Ohio, to loll for Cllh Purchao, Olivo Townohlp.
tho following collateral;
Moiga County, Ohio.
1989 New Moon Mobile
REFERENCE DEED' Vo·
Homo; 12•86, 2 bdrm .• S# lumo 280, Pogo 886, Molga
F180T2COR
County Mongogo Recorda.
The Farmers Bank and
Sold root 01\810 Wll

vs.

•o•;:•u $1 58

Annou nee men ts
1- Card of Thll'tkt
2 - ln Memory

Public N alice

Plaintiff

COLOR

"GOOD
NEIGHBOR''

949- Recine
742- Rutland
867- Coolville

ads.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"A I Reason• Ia

SUNOCO

t('f.o" '\O.,.
\t',o~

13" DIAGONAL

liMON
773-ISIS14

843- Portlend
Z47- Letlir1 Fat11

304

8et Resultc Fast

SHARP 25"
COLOR CONSOLE TV

PEOPLES BANK

245- Rio Granda
258- Guvan Dltt.

875468676773882896937-

•• ...

RCA

IDteree~.

367- Ch•hire
388-Vinton

992- Middlaport
Pomeroy
985- CtlHter

••••·
•• ...

Ask About
Our 5 Year
Product
Protection
Plans

Pharmacy

Simple

446 - Qallipolls

379·- walnut

.qA"
.... . .~~'o
v
.
'".
'o"

SWISHER LOHSE

122 DAYS·
$10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

Area

._-..s~

li------·-

•

Muon Co .. WV

AreaCode6,4

'7" ••••

..._,\.

fnr ew.h n.., at

21 - Butin•• Opportunity

Meigs County

~ode

$5.00
$8.00
S13.00
$21 .00
$51 .00

OPEN 7 DAYS
9Ail·7PM
Paying today
Jan. 13, 1989

ljhhhiMfiil

Gellla County
Ar:eaCode614

643-Arabia Ditt.

Valentine's Day - February 14th

CERTIFICATE
. OF DEPOSIT ·

2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M . THUASDAY

-

follo.wing telephone exchanges ...

Don't Forget.....

Poin•O¥. Dh.

- 2'00 P.M. TUESDAY

Classified pages cover the

SEE OUR SELECTION TODAY

O,en Welk Nlgh'11 til I

2:00P.M . MONDAY

-

- 2'00 P.M. FRIDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

For Laughing, Loving
Caring and Sharing!!!

IE . M•ln

- 11 ,00A .M. SATURDAY

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

~,

l•rtl~

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION

$4 .00
$5 .00
$8 .00
• 13.00
$33 .00

26· 35 WORDS
$7 .00
$10 .00
$15.00
$25 .00
$60 .00

Rata.t~re tor conMCUt"'e runt, broken u pdava will ~ch11ged

•A claitified advllrtiHmant pl11ced in The Daily SentinellP·
capt - cl•tified diepll'f, Bualn•• Card and legal noticnl
wlll alto appe• In the Pt. Plea~ant Register and the Galli·
polis Dally Tribune, reaching over 18,000 homet.

FRIDAY PAPER

Ntw Color TVa From. ....

,,,_ely

i•solntl••~ Ia not respons ible for errors after firS1 d.,. . (Chadc
for errors first dey ad runt in paper\ . Call before 2:00p. m.
dll't after DUbliclltion to make correction.
•Adl that mutt be peid in edvance ere
Card of Th.,kt
Happy Adt
In M11morlam
Yard S.al•

1:HURSDAY PAPER

sgu
Rtlrlgeraton From . .

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

.

•RecliNe 1 .60 ditcount for ads peid in advance.
•frtt ada - Giveaway and Faund adl under 16 wot dl will be
run 3 dars 1t no ch •ge.
•Price of-a'i:t for all capitalllll:ters is double price of ad cost,
line type only uled.

(~~t' -·p~{{;'

Homemakers
SYRACUSE ,.... The Syr.acuse
Homemakers Club w!ll meet
Wednesday, Feb. 15. Members
are reminded to bring scissors
and thread for making a min·
!-friendship quilt.

0- 15 WORDS 16-25 WORDS

•Adl outaide Meiga. Gallla or Mason counti• mu st be pr•
paid.

MllJ[)l fPOHl

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
RATES

- TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
'MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

13

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

LICIE&amp;

The

Ohio

Classifie

\YI~TER

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Cha mber of Commer.c e is sponsoring a Valentine's Day dinner· ·
-dance at Royal Oak Resort on
Saturday starting at 7 p.m. The
s:eak dinner will be followed by
dancing from 8:30 to midnight to
musi c by Butch Wax and the
Glass Pacs. Tickets, $15 single,
$25 couple, are available at
Pomeroy businesses and at the
Chamber of Commerce office on
East Main Street.

kenneth McCuflou-.. R.Ph.
ct!•l• Rltfle. R.Ph.
RoNid Htnnlrtg. Jill. Ph.
Man. thttalet . t :OO 1 .m. ta 9 p.m.
'
(lunct.y 10:00 • .m. ta 4 ~00 tt.m.
PREICPUPTIDNI
PH. 892-2911

Thursday, February 9, 1989

Alfred community happenings ·

Community calendar
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangel!ne
Cha pter No. 172, Order of Easter n ;&gt;tar, Middleport, will meet
7:30p. m. Thursday. Officers are
to wear s treet dresses.

Thursday, February 9, 1989

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

I

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

0; .

•

Rick P•••on Auction... "· :
cenaed OhiO 1n d W•t Vtrglnla. .
Estete, mtiQue, t•m. Uquld••

tion Hl81, 304-773-1!1715.

·

Movh'1g Stla Mutt Sell, 4 pe
ltvlng room lUIIe. 2:1 cu 1ft_
Amen• I ide 11t lid• r.trlgWMGr
freaer, fuM abe book e•a be4.

choln - · riding mowo.,
304-258-6505.

9

Phoni
'

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH pold lor '13 moclil,,
and nMet' uHd c•s. 8m~

Bulclc-Pomloc. 1911 Eoot~
Ave .. Gotllpolto. can 814-441'
2282.
-

Compt•• houooholdo of t:rnl-'
turo • ontlquoo. Aloo Wood 'lo;

coal he.twa. SW11h1' • Furnlht"

• AUC1ion, Thtrd •
614-446-3189.

Olivo,.

�Page 14 The

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

W•nt-' To Buy

9

LAFF-A-DAY

Merchondise

44 . Apartment

. 51 Household Goods
T•a Townt.ou• IP.-tmtnl• 2
IRa., 1 ~ b•hl. CA.. dlt·
hwaah.-, dll,_.t. private .,...
clo•• pOlio. pool plorground.
.-wer, • trllsh in-*.ulecl.
81:.-ting It t 289 p• mo. c.•
81 ... 317·71110:

W••·

To

Buv·Good UMd
kttcMn Mnk wfth eebinet•. Als4il
for ......... el oil house fu,...,
fu.t .. ehop hett• • .,_. ••

Modtrn 1 BR. downtown. cornplele kil:ch ... llr, c.plft. Dep-

CU... - ·· CoM 814-25H.
Us_. furntture

osit, no ptlt. Clll 814-"S.
01 3!1 evenings, eft• 5.

b'f the piece or

SHADY LAWN APT$- 729
Seoond Ave. FL.-Mhed efficienci• •rtlng It t1?1 • mo.
lnd..lclrtg watw &amp; ~t.ge.
Sinale ICl.otts ontv. Call 61444IIC4907 or 44.. 2802.

entire howtehold .tlso ..ttln•
814-742· 2465.
Top llfioe for used furnltuN.
g....,lf houtehokl l n t • •
and ......,..._. All tv.-. Cal

_, ,_del_.

1 8A . opt.
Appl. tur•hed. ld•alloc.t:ion-1
block from downtown. c.ll
81 ... 44&amp;-.U9.

81 ... -4111.

,)t~r

\i ;.;L:

"The soup is vichyssoise. It's
SUPPOSED to be cold."

r;;;:;;;.;;;;:~~;;::::::r.::;:;::::;,::;;::::::::"i

H'e lp Wanted

11 W8nted to Do

1
Port· -MLTivr """ _...,... r- - - - - - - - - -

Phytk:lilft' t Office Latxwllt..,..
Apptv IR peraon to The .......

32 Mobil• Homes
. '
for I ale

Al*tment
. .• HUD acciPiod. Coli will
30""8711-5104.
~hod 2 3

4

•

8lC40hou•tr.W•InMidd:eport.
11"-892-7807.

80NUIINCOM!
· locellent rof,.onceo Coil
Eern •JOO.IIOOwMktp. M........ 11..,258-1878.
lng tiH - • .,,_rOI ' moreln..,mllion .,.dst.-np.. •
houtecle~~ning. C.lt
env...... to: INC. P.O. 8MI131 ., ..... 8463 ·
Mi . . l -33-1
"
•• ·
C wtom we 1ding. 2!5 va•tmcpe-

19JeCommunity 12x10troilor.
2 bedroom•. furnished ,
'4.100.00. Pllono 30 ... 17113019.

11 ... 44.. 1519.
Moct.n 1 BR . IPirtrnent. C•ll
81 .., 44.. 0390 .

2be*oommDWiehDTM14•70.
3 bedroom moble hOme home
14x70. 304-895-~27.

3 BA.· &amp;CourtSt. Kh:chenwJth
stcwe•retrl ..r t250...,•sd'f4•
.-..
rwf. No Pett. Clll 114- 6-

North of Racine on
Ctrlfttl Road. Cell 814-949-

riWIA

1491
75. 473. Col I••
·
fu nct.llt e) 1 -31 &amp;- 733-1082. ....,.. T• prep•Mions. Nan,_
ext. F-2732-A.
....,. 114-949-2690.
_.,
Potitien
"'•il•ble-Ch .... '-1 1--.;..;._.;_:_:.:..:_:___
Comp-.y h• optning f8r.,.
,.._ ,.....uattvt. Est...._MII

t10.213 to

acaDUnD with growth pot-*WMutt "•tlf.motWeted 111d ,_,"

reilllletrantpot~Mion . Senti,..
sumeto: 8ax Cla187, c / o(JIIIt-'

~ ·

Doilr Triiomo B28 'lllird
A.... - . ..... Ohio 411-131 .
G!T
'AIO "" . -9 la9bl
, 1 ot,..tttle.Write:~J3D .
1811.Linooi-. N. A - . I l
soM2.
L 1 I Ill A A 'f' C LEA It ~
IOOKMOBtLE

Ent"-'-1iG ,..-, wmt .. lu
suhtttute o~ IOIHrd UllrlrY
Boola ....... C..IOII.,cl......
r•paaiM•. Part-tfme•RniD
.nd Wifilll:wu~. t&amp;.ll , . .......
A----lenl bet
lk
M1
...,_
ngt • •
Second
Awnua.
G811ip.W.,
Ohio.

Landfor lite. 1to5110ep•CII•.

3641

••tlfLil 2 BAt. equ.,p.t kitcha tow utilki•. heel lent

P••·Call

Fwnlohod opt. In 1.,..n. Coli
·81""44.. 1423 for on appt
Real

~stete

Nl ce 11 o-; .....
-c; tnww 1c•p 01.

Wanted

Famitvinte.tldinpurc:h•W.a•
bJildlngtotoncreeoeinGalllpolit or R6o GNnde ••· No

pi-•

Realtor.,
C811 114-4416911 • evenlnga.

For1or2personsonThlrdA ....
UIO o mo w / dapooll Coli
c-hio
"' 814-44.. 50&amp;&amp; t.e,.••~
fore 6 PM. 448- 8071 aft• 5
PM.
2 be*oom A--. for ,_..1_
Cll'p•ed. Nice
la8 ndry
faciii:J. . . . . . . C.ll 114--

.".fting.

•

Gr-=lout lving. 1 •d 2 beef.
room op-~
....- .. 1 ot VHioge

41

Hom es

for Rent

... 1·900.327-6919.

Mll'lor In d Rilf. .kle Apwt~
menta In Mldcl;!:ort. From

•182. Coli 814-99 ·7787.
21 Galli a St. 13M a mo. 1200
deposit. C.tii14-44&amp;-J:20&amp;.

F..nilhed 3 rooma ll'ld bath.
First floor, prNate antrance, no

........... Oh;. 45640.

3BR.hou•.-.... AC. *3&amp;0a
mo. C.ll 304-175-1104 or
6711-8398.

- · CoK 11 ... 941-2253.
Ap..trnent for rent. Bedroom.
Uving room, kitchen. b•th.

8 t....,. AMF Howling Lane for

3 BA . houM. D. . .lt Nquhd.

Corn. of Cole .,d Third in

eole. Mason, W. Va , ExceUant
h1n • ._..,. liner. You ;ttt ~ ..,,..,....,., .-nell down payment,
financing avl!ilable.
to..,
o t.w ._,.
• """'· fir~ tn quick sale to settle
C1lt
114-...,.2370.
Let metwn
your .....,..11• In to dollas. ftti'M. 1-614·992-2403
C1ll
e•• the hour~ of 1:00 ......... 2780.
PM te t t 00 PM swen d.,s ~
Businau For Sala
WHir. .... fDr Faith.
Telephene Sllea .,d Service.
GOVEIINIIHNr J089 Sou.-. llusm••!or 6 veers with
111. . . ..-tlt,2JO. yefr. How pad IU1onw bM&amp; Low 0\ltfhirin9 CoM 111 8011-687· 11000 MM "'d good loCIIton. Good
Ext. ,. . .eQr; fof current fed•ll -nitv fo, gnowth. Will give
traintnw for naw comer. MUtt
Mot.
hiv e bftlic electronic back·
Get .,.W for rNding ~-1 ....... for appomtment cell
t100.00 ,_ tftta Wtite. PAl£ ..... f7S-32&amp;3
310. 111 S. Llncolnwoy. N .
" " ' - 1110542.
'f•
Avon e..ing Went to do ,.,,.,.
. thing nBW •d •citing? · FIGB
ltert- up ktt ct.rN'Ig monttl of
Fe ........,. 814-992· 7180.
Homes for Sale

10 Old Fort Trail. CMI 114-44f.
21583. 9 to 15 ditty.

t... . . W.Ukl you ike te ..n
extr11 .....,1 Are you ....,._
nr . . ..,lng• home. You .....,

._net"

ill Eslale

:h

E..,._,eedtllephone•o4hiter.
Ae~~tillfe hour~ . Weg• plus bOnus. 114-992-7711.

curr•.,

YWy lftraetft.oe brictc 4 bedroom,

2 Ntt\ famity room with fire-

tlf.., ..,mal dining. l•ge ltving

The Mli• Locel School 0 itJtriel -...m. 31 ft cu •tom oak kitchen
is
tlllllng IPJ'IIe•t.,. ...-..n- oell: woocMtork. finiSh
from c.rtHl_. IIIPPiiCW~tt t.r 1 tlwiamant, 2 car g•ege. llwal
lot, 4 mile~ from
Ho.,. -Mil Cooch "" tho
19. . . . eftol year . ~ . ..., Hospital off Rt. 3&amp;Olntl .-..: hold a valid •tria . ~nrtot: SubdN is ion. Call
,......_ .-tit•• end ..,. 114-441-4189.

.._._td

rflult .....
certifl-ien requinwnenu .t
ohio fir .,ns mddne •"

011 . . . . . . , . .• •, .

""onl
co......a .MmCerpent•. s.....-.
ten . . . fill ..._ local Sc:.ho•
01 121 ...th lloiod A...

lnt•wt.al • ._..
In

MhNIQ

t. Ohio.

Olilw.s 3 8R . house for ~Ale.
o.r ... llntYloa. Call 304-676-

1104._ _ _ _ _ __

fter Stfe l¥ Ownet-3 BR . houte
Mth 2leiS. Citv limits. I 13. 000.
he dt 37 Smitt•a. Gallipolis.
b«..-n 10 AM &amp; 6 PM .

AVON · AI ...... Call M•l""

w••• 304-882-214&amp;.

AVON . . . . . n Shiri 91 Sp'""'·
30 ... IU-1421.

2 $10fT, 3 bedtoom, 2 births, on
,..,. in Middleport. Call Cl1~
986-,.134 evenings .nd week-

one.

rien• r•••· non ......

t. flvmtroy lWftO del &amp;d, 2 ItOl'f,
I ~m. 2 bath. new wiring.
ttltll,...• car pet, and C'.abintflls.
Alrlo -.e. rafrig•ator, washer
.. t1 *Y•r. Full baument.
nt.• . low downandpl'flike
- . Clll 814-949-2526 or
81 ... 191· 2545.

"

... .-.a •t•te. Ha~te te~t•-'

Mat..,. ,_poMible ~·•on t•
babp.. in ..... heme. m.,_ •tl
tochle. ,..... . . . lnd Mf'C•

profon&amp; 30 ... 17S.741J.

ch.....

-•M• - ttt

WANT.:
3 . . . . . for 2

mo Md IVt yrs. FOJ .....,e
infvrm~tion

call 304-87&amp;-6816

art.- 4:00.

- -· (Sinal a dw~lna) . Some

ap.-tment houses. rMuhtple

.., ..... tl

Severa! busineu
bwl ..... Th•e propeni• in
,.,._. Middh,oort. An good
lnvaeiA••t propertl•. All priced
fer ...... llltto qualified tuyers.
ff r• wwkl'nt afford to buy a
...... now vou em. For more
lat._.,n call Jack W. C.rs-w• 11•·192-2403 or 814-992-

1719.

IIAOIOLOGY

tmm. .• • openint hr ., "*'Sound .,d or Radoloeic T..,._
nolotlft. W lifttwhhNn••·

rtPtv •JadctonGen•ll.._..
tel, ~ .0 . - 720. Rip lor, W.Va.
25271.

Got ,.... lvr r - g t 101. • p.- till a Write; Mil

- 1110 . 161 S. Lincol-oy, N .
Auror1. U 10642.

MT or MLT ASCP
Flolt tedt .. secttoM lfttM M

able to w«k dart• .nd allahtft. 3
ta I,._.. •JIIIri'"ce pttfarJM.
Call ,..onn• office 304-t7&amp;
.340. AA·EO E.

2 N 1 • "· fu II batement. fiu 1
•
,..en from pt.,.graund.
~ ..... "' ..... 023,500. 326
...,....... 614-992-8139.

t

yr. eN tti-lf'Nel. Close to town.

0t1 lk 1 by past. 3 bedroom. 2
..._.. ,_,..,. room. manv utr~~.

...,..1!9' ~tppointment . Tim lhle

.,.....1'11974.

IR*eu;""· 2 baths. fuM ftnshed
trtae;aot, newv furnKe •nd
ctntrel •• a• age. t .. ced yerd,
.241.&amp; M!. V'•nan A..... Pt. Ph.,
.,iced on Inspection 304-8761774.

15

..._ _ w .v • . 29510.

- - - ----·
.-on

•t·TIIAIN NOW!
IOIITMAIITfiiN IUSINIIS

OOIUOI. 121

Plloe.

Coii-43117. Rog. No. 8.. 11 .
10-.

18

W•nt-' to Do

2 hou ...: 1-41As, kilclten, tA,
&amp; b•h. t -5 r.."" &amp; 1-th. Call

614-843-2717.

7v•• old. 3--••'*·llinVI

""a--

30 .., 17 &amp;-~677.

L»lornilhod 2 ...,......, houoo
New Heven. one c:Nid · KC~Pted.
renter must be employld.
t 175.00 month, 304-8822683.
42 Mobile Hames
for Rant

Now .cc. . tnv applicatons for
2 bedroom ip.-tmentt. fully

c•peted. IPPII..,.-. Mt• .nd
trMh pi.,pt provided. Malnt•
n.nce tr•INing dote to lhop.
ping.
and schools. For
IJIOrelrtforn.tion call 304-8823718. E.O.H.

.,_,kl

j;roq~u~ir:od.;:30=·"";8~7:&amp;-:;:27;2;2:.==
45

Furnished Rooms

1----------

Rooms

zo.

90 Deyt ,.,.,, " Clllh wtlh
epptOVId credit. 3 Mil• out
Bll...,lHe Rd. Open 91m to 15pm
Mon. thru Sit. Ph. 114-4460322.
Vlllev Furniture
New and used furnhure and

appllcances. Call 814-441·
7672. Hours 9-6.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete houtlhold furniahings. 'h mile-Jerrlcho. 304-e7&amp;1UO , 614 · 388·9773.
eveninga.
Vi'Aa Furnitura &amp; Appllences
Opon Doily,.&amp; AM·&amp; PM
Sunctev. t2 noon-5 PM

81 ... 446-3156

Ntrwtv demrBied. 2 11'1: ., fuUy
sec. ..,. requtrect.

••rMect.
Col 11..,441-951111
5850.

"" 441-

Mobile Home, 2 bedroom.
$185. In Ken. Call 114-3889604.
2 br.• furnished. w..M • dryer.
h mile - t of Port•. •250 per
mo. t200 dep. plus utlttiw. C. II
1

61 ... 398-9983.

2 SA .. ~r•htd. •225 1 mo.
t110dtp. 'hmMe . . . dPort•.

Coli 81 ... 39.. 19e3.

2 BA . mobile home loalled in
Bldwel. A *Illite Feb. 1 t . Cal

61 ... 44.. 9911.

2 BR ., cabfew.-11111-. beaAtltul
riv• vt..v in Ken ..... Faet•' 1
MobRe Homt ,.,..._ 114=4411802.

FOJ rent
1..._70. C.ll14-2583 ... . Mint
oond.
t250tmo.
6&amp;15 ....... 1211 .

Truett ~s of nM .,rnlure
have jus1 arrived. Bring your old
furnhure • TRADE-IN for new.
8 piece wood group. t319 .
Sot• • chon. t289. 7 !Mcoumrv dlnnett;e set, t&amp;50
(lndud-. hutCh). I pieoe bedroon suite, 1399-eKtra nice.
Mattreu-helf oft '•"'• pfice.
Bunk bedl wlbeddlng. t229.
Rt. 141 inCentenarv. 14 mlleon
Unc:oln Pike.

Pickens Furniture
304·876·1460 or 814·3BB·

9773. eve.

6 pc. miPI• dinnette, t91.
Dinning tlble • I chain. 21 ln.
gu ttove. 120. 2 pc. ltvingroom
suh•. Coffee • end llbl•. a
d•b. 3 pc. bedroom tutte.
Bunk bedt·complete. 1815.
Badl. bedding. heldbQ•da. •s
• up. Hollvwood frorneo t10 •
Up. BtiJV bed. o,....,... Ch•t.
many mare items. "'h mile out
... rlcho Ad .. Pt. PIHiant. W.Va.

For 11le. Hom•t•der coel end
wood burner-almost t'IIIW , 1100.
Coil 614·4411-9468.
Couch &amp; chlllr, 1 Md t1ble. 2
lamps, rvtl-aw-v bed whh m•trea. full atze bed. queen aRe
mattr... .... Cllt eu.-44&amp;-

1171.

Antique sewing mechine and
dresser. envelope~ ., d lett. .
over 100 ve•s old. old cork

bottle•, cheat of dri'Nm. com-

plete bedroom suite. mise.
1tems. 614-949-2803.
2 pc living room suite wtth
matching releiner t100 .00.
30 ... 8711-4928.

53

Antiques

80 yr. old Oek hwld earved bed
w / boJI spring~ • m.nr. ..

'200. Cell 614· 448 ·8821·
dav1. 245-9135 aft• 6 PM.
Buy or SeU . Rtverine Anttqu ...
1124 E. Main Street. Pom•ov.
Hou,.: M,T.W tOa.m. to 8p.m.,
Sundry 1 to 6p.m . 814-992·
2&amp;28.

St.-tina at tt20 • mo. GeHle

SIMPint roomt wfth cooking.

64 Misc. Merchandise
WhNiche6r•new or uMd. 3
wheeled tlectrlc scootera. Call
Ros-s Mobittv collect. 1-114-

46 Space for Rent

for Nit t30 pickup,
dellvlfed. 125 U-haJI. Raccoon
Rd . Coli 814-4411-4982.

rent•.

870-9981 .
Flr~J~Nood

flrMood for

•I• 125 to t30

delivered. David HIH. 614-388-

9138.

1973 Yamaha 250.

47Wented to Rent
Couple with one chid to rent or
I. . e. Larga2ar llr. hou•wlt:h
stngle or double gel!ge. Pets
etcepted wtth dep. Neiahbo,.
hood .......... eon nJ-44..

ean.

.

Calltol'ft Mat\or, 2 BR ., 12x80.
r.... lg.. VIII·
ehlr/ lhyer. niM' etr condftloner.
t54QO. Coli 814-2511-52&amp;8.
Mobile Homa 110x12.
Air aondltioner, niM'

¥1110.,.

tiiOO. 814-192·2387
•or 11"H2· 34B8evenlng.

54 Misc. Merchandi~a
Big Dakote Firm home bulh on
your lot. t13.9915 • up. Su our
model. Coli 1-814-11.. 7311 .
Nt'IIV trMdmlfl &amp;

•cerise bike.

Kenmore wesh• 3 cyde hewv
duty. Looks i'IIIW', Nntlikt new-.
Celfl14· 317-0322.

64

Hay

&amp;

•c·

chlin, Chine closet. •7150.
Chest fr-er. e150. Sears 10
Indo,_. .. .awendtable. t250.

Call

'

Far 11le: 01111 firMood. Call
304-875-27&amp;7 oft,. 4 ,30 p.m.

Mixed hl't' 81 .35 bile. Orchid

Gr'MI t1 .60 bale. Ear Corn

SUAPLU$-Origlnel Army, Qo.
nim. Rental Ctof:hlng. green
camoufta~ pa lbfacll- white) . s.,..
SomerviHe • Old Route 21·
Junction fndep.,denoe Road.
~Naw ERAJ , (East Ravenswoodl.
FriNf, Saturdly. Sun-., only
Noon-8:00P.M., 10 percent off.
Carhart clothing. Camouflauge
ln•ulated Coveralls. 304-2735865.

04.00. BU . 814-742-2331 .

Mixed h.,, f2 .00 bale. Otm•

Roy

Oak firewood for sale. 304-4581&amp;83.

Cook~

30""882· 2767

Conditioned h.,. for •le. Call
614-44 .. 4344.

Firewood t30 .00 load call
Wovne Melton. 30""418·1981.

fit•-

Zenllh console color tv. " • •
good. •eo. Coli 81 ... 3417· 7246.

rL-----------1----------~
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

71 Auto's. For Sale

dows. lntell, etc. Clatde Wontit'S. RkJ Gr.,de. 0 . Cal e1~
2411-5121 .

Gov•nment Seized Vehh:l•
from I 100: Fords. Merced•Corvana. Chewy. Surpk.lt. Buy-

•• Guido 111 8011-887-aooo
Ext. S-10189.

Concrete bloClkt- all alz... .,.,d
ordlnv'"". Masonllhd.-Oellip~&gt;­
lis llo(lk Co., 123'1! Pine St.,
Gelllpolio. Oh;., Cell 81 ... 44..
2783.

1984Dodue0mnL 4* .. Sapd.
52.000 mf•. 02200. Coli 814379-2726.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channlll RuatJc
and lift tied lap Sicln g
• Deck Met•lalt
Guorontood Ouellty
CETIDE, INC., Alheno· 814·
19 ... 357B

1982 Monte Corio. PS. PB. AC,
AM-FM~Cess. E.:el. oond. Call
61 ... 38.. 8589 ... 38.. 97411.

56

1986 Pontiac Sunbird. •m·fm
••eo.
ac. 14700 negotiabte.
Cell 81 ... 387·0505.

Dregonwynd C1ttary Kennel.
,.,.,.,. andSiarn•eandHim•
18'fM klttMt. Chow stud ••vice. Clllll1ot-4ot8-38441ft• 7
PM.
...,
AKC C_.rn Terri• puppiM . Call
114-387· 7700.

19B7 Dodge Ch•a-. 2.2.
air. 32.000 mil•. can
81 ... 379-272e.

a~to..

19815 DodgeAri•. PS, PB, AC.
.... &amp; ........ '2. 700.
1982 PlymoohhReli.,W~n.
PS. PB, AC, 68.000 miiM .
01.500. 1981 Plymouth Re·
llinl, 2 doo•. t1.400. Coli
81 ... 44 .. 8218 olter Spm 0&lt;
614-44.. 3839.

1987Fireloird. t·top, •c. •8995
or trade for true* 01 HD
motorcycle. Cell 614-441&amp;_4_8_4._ _ _ _ _ _ __

1

1971 Oldl Delta 81. 2 dr, Good
Dog houaa for Mit. ti!J mil• tir•. Goad cond. t1200. Call
out 141 . Coll814-44.. 0193.
"814-379-2746.
2-AKC

Reg. eo.ton Terri•
puppl• 1 male • t female.
nooooch.Coil814-397-7422.

1917Ch.,ySS lmp ... oonvertible. •500. 1973 Ch..,y in gin e.
454. 400 turbo, $500. Coli
814-3B&amp;-84&amp;2.
1977PorwlacFirlblrd 350eng.,
•to. trans .. PS. Pl. n., ~&amp;nt ,
n., ttr•. .Asking $1200. Call
81 ... 44 .. 7371 oltor 5 PM .

Regiltered Cockw Sponiel puppi•. Regilt•td Siam•• Btue
Point klttena. Cash. No ctoecb. 1985VWGotf. 4door. &amp;tpeed,
Cell 814-912-2807.
lir, AM·FMc•sttte.lowmif•,
•cttfent ooncltion. t4700. Call
AKC Regiotorod Shih Tzuo. 2 8:_':_"":_99:::2:_·2::9:_:8:9:_
. ----ve• old femal-. 812&amp;. Two 6 1I"
ofd male puppiM. tt75. 1982 Pontiac J2000. Good
ea. 32300 St. Rt. 143. condition. Automatic, AC .
..._,.,.
01500. eon 614-992·&amp;085 at·
ter 8 :00 p.m.
Flah Tonk. 2413 Jocl&lt;son Avo, I--_:.:.__ _ _ _ __
Point Pt. ..nt 304-675--2083. 198t Road Runns. No drive
10 pltM up t14.99and 10 gel train . 1976 Chrvtl• 440. Runs.
corio&gt;IOie '43.25.
Coil 81..,992-3733 weekondo.

we*•

Musicel
Instruments

Jeff Wlmlley

446-1077. limked op.,ings.

F&lt;~rlll SUIIIJIII'o

&amp;

L1v1::;1ock

Late MoMIIIOOitll•wl plaws.
rotary hoe. cornplll'lt•. mawlng
macNne. h., conditio,., N H
bll•, t31180. 9020 JD w/ Cioi·
llo plowo. 14 II. -.y hoe.
tl7110. o__. •• ftn ..ce. Call
81 ... 21.. 11122.

Unto...,_

...,.Hift
•-oo

10311 Cooo w / cob 2700 hro. ,
•41eo. I081nt•notionel-el.
•39110. 241 lnt......,nel round
.,..••• 2110. ,.....,., lolder.
.11110. Long blckt..o. .1100.
21 .. 1122. ""-Coli .....

Fwnil'*' I
mollie
homo 1t1r - .
olu•
utllltl•. t10 • . M tlepOtll,
pt..no .... 871-1912 • 1713100.

o..--

1982 Chl'!llette. 4 speed, 4 cyl.•
2 doO&lt;. 814-992-7907.

ur•

b~rrell.

2457.

1375.00. 304-e76-

Carn.-o '12'. PS, PB, titt wheel,
AM-FM CIIUtt . 310 V- 8 ,
u.ooo.oo. 304-fi76·2324.
1 ,00 PM tl 8,00 PM Co...,.
1113 ChrvsJer E -Class ,
•2.200.00. Phone 304-871144110.

72

..Trucks for Sale

1984 S -10 Ch.,.rol«, eu..ded
cob. 80.000 mil•. very good
shape. '3900. 1979 Subeu. 4
wheel ..... W.OOI\

mn-. t1910.
7351.

eon

eo.ooo

114-44..

-01 -·

1817 FOJd A.,ger XLT 4•ot.

d . low.
n'lllltle.· fakeIOiellv
cw• -p~rmenta
Colt ......... 4325.
· 1979 Chwy lion. DUIIwh-.
350 laur laooo mi •.
ODod aoncltlon. t310o. Call

Apartment

forR..u

......... an.

198CIMaehl, 17'Bowrider, 120
hp 110. Eeellent conlltion.

Alking $6996. Call 614-44 ..
9366.

·.'

2457.

'79 II Comlna. whooli,
good O»nd. ooll 30""1711-111341,

II

LOAN DEPT.

402 big block Ctl..-y motor.

MY

HOU.$C

---------- cAMfE WtTH
FLOOf?•TO· CEll. lNG
WIN/101/115 At-JP ·

Pat
Morlgages

For ..r.. Re•oneble. 3-mud.,d
snow tir• and rims. Gooctr. .
tradter-et-10..15 Lt. Flr•tane
H78-15lr. UniRoyal 78 MS L7&amp;-16. Phone 61 ... 992·1036.

Here

6AC:,.:. ·TO· iHE ·WAl-L.
fiNANCING.

Poor Boys Tir•. Hen darson, W.
Ve. Cheap.t tir• around. Dunlop, Firettone, new and used.
30 ... 875-3331 .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

~ SporttLook

New Country
6:35 (l) One Day at a Time
7:00 ()) Our House
II (2) PM M1111azina
(!) College Baokotboll
Cil 0 (I) Current Affair
ID CD MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewtHour 11 :00)
liJJ 18 1121 OJ) Wheel of
Fortune Q
Ill I!Jl Three'• Company
1!21 Monayllne
®Cheers
l!!l Miami VIce
USO Celebrity Tour.Pelly
LOVIIIII and Rendy Travis
This special features two of
county music's brlghlosl
stars performing for U.S.
milllary personnel in ·Alaska,

Japan and Korea .
7:05 (l) Andy Griffith
7:30 II()) Family Feud
CiJ Entertainment Tonight
I) (I) USA Today
liJJ • 1121 IHl Jeopardy! Q
II)Q]l M'A'S'H
l!2l Croaeflnt
® Night Court
7:35 (l) Sanford and Son
8:00 ()) The Blue and lhe. Gray,
Part 41NRJ (1 :00)
II (2) (!!) The Coaby Show
Rudy complains tha1 she has
to abide by too many rules.

~ College Batketball

1977 Motor Home. Good oond.
tssoo. Low miiMga Call 814245-5768.

II) Ethlca In America

Panolls1s dicuss the right to
B fair trial and fair

1978 W~nnllluogo motor horne.
•s.ooo.oo. Phone 30~1754480.

punishment.

C

tiJ (I) A Fine Flomance
Louisa thiriks Michael's a
double agent; he thinks ~he's

Serv1ces

a murdress.
Germany attacks the Soviet
Union wl1hout wami"JJ. (1 :00)
liJJ Ill 1121 48 Houra t:;J
Ill Q]l College llllokotbeli
l!2l PrimeNewt
® MOVIE: Psycho Ill iRJ

Home

81

Improvements
·'

BASEMENT
w•TERPROORNG
UnooncltloMI llf•lrne gu~ren­
tee. local ret• ..
l.lr,.hed.
Free •imat•. Cell ooftect
1·6 1 4- 237- ot88. dl¥ or night.
RogersBaaement

EEK &amp; MEEK

'

'

I!Jl Murder,

She Wro1e
Naehvllle Now .
8:05 (l) MOVIE: The Naked Spur
i NA) (1 :31 I
8:30 II (2) (!!) A DiHerent Wo~d
Dwayne suffers his first
broken heart when he and
Suzanne broek up. Q
9:00 11 (2) 1111 Preaident Buah
Addrell
(j) College S.tketball
ClJ Mylteryl Miss Marple
investigates the murder of
Colonel Lucius Pro1heroe. Q
Ill til D,nuty Sable scuttles
shipping empire . (May be
l!!;eempted by Pres . address)

a

'IRI¥5PONSI81.£•...

Wat•proofing.

SWEEPER .,d s•lng mechine
raplir. parts. and auppli•. Pick
up Md delivery, Davis Vacuum
Clcianer, one half mite up
Geors- C - Rd . Coli &amp;1""
44.. 0294.

Fetty TrH Trimming. ltump
'r em-1. COli 304-875-1331.
Rotary or cable tool drlllin 9
Most well completed 11me d..,..
Pump Ill• .. d IINfce. 304895-3802

..'
'

'

:l·9

• '

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
OR Ei'RAPE vEL.LY
IN HE;R E&gt;LJNNY

I:N\ NOT BUREO ... I'T5

MYNOM'5
REAL MAD
AT ME..

WHY':?

EITHt=R A BRO::EN VASE
IN THE L.IVING- ROOM ...

SLIPPERS.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
hou •• call s.-vlcing G E, Hot
Pblnt, WM h•s, dryers and
ttovea. 30~&amp;78-2398.
Akers Tree TrimminfJ and Stump
Removal. Free l!llt•rnatea. Call
30 ... 675-7121 .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

HOW DID
YE LIKE MY

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Faur1h Mld Pine

Glllipolis, Ohio
Phone 81~446-3888 or 81444.. 4477

84

&amp;

SISTER Z.ONIE,
PAW?

TELL
TH' TRUTH
NOW

NOW AIN'T TH'

TO

TELL

TIME

IT!!

DiU•d WJter Service: Pools.
Citt•ns. Weill. Oeliv.-y AtJV·
tima 0.11 e14-44&amp;-7404-No
Sund., ellis.
J &amp; J Wat• Service. Swimming
paola, cisterns. wells. Ph . 814-·
245-9285.
R. • R W•er Service. Pools,
costerns. wells. lmmadiat•
1. 000 or 2,000gellonsdelivery.
Coil 304-675-6370.
1000 gel. wster ......,ice, Um•tone tpreld. We ha~l Qfwet . .
•*'~ coat. etc. Call 114.-992-

5275 ..

Patrldcs Wllter Hauling Service,
Phone 304-&amp;76-2311 or 81444&amp;-4088.
Wmenon's W«• H11.1Ung. re•
sonebl" rat•. voturne dla.
count-. 2.000 to 4.000 c•ac-

87

wells, .. c.

Upholstery

Mowrey's Upholatering a.vtng
tri CDUntylrM23ye. .. The tat
Jn furniture urhoJttftog. Cal

30.4 - 1715· 4 84 for

l lltimet...

.

II)@ New•
(f) Republican Response 10

takes a lie detector test;
Greg and Ab!11 'o1Urn from
honeymoon. t:;J
• Q)l Araento Hall
l!2l Evening New•
Croolt and ChaM

a

General Hauling

30 ... 57.. 2911.

depression. Q

tho State Addresa

Electrical
Refrigeration

ttv. c'-t•ne. pools.

Protheroe Is found murdered
after going to the vicar's
office. C
®J Ill all Pnotiden1 Bush
AddntiiC
(!)) Larry King Llvel
I!Jl MOVIE: The Deserter iPGJ
(1 :44)
9:30
VldeoCountry
10:00 (I) 700 Club
:
11 (2) (!!) L.A. Law Sales of
Arnie 's divorce ~,~ideo climb:
Brackman meets unfriendly
skiGs. C
CiJ Q (I) HeartBeat Nalhan
and Joanne disagree over
1roa1men1 of ~stpartum

liJJ 18 1121 Knoll Landing Jill

10:05 (l) MOVIE: The Law and
Jake Wade iNA) (1 :26)

Residtntill or commtrcill wiring. New 1wvlce or repairs.
Ucenud eled'riei~n. Ridenour
EJedricel, 304-875-1788.

85

/E Myttaryl Colonel

a

Rona Chimnet' Sweep Special
lhru January. 30~ 773--&amp;348.

82

lree

I

N-.!

Manners are a sensitive
awareness of the feelings of
others. If you have that
awareness, you have good
~---------. manners no matter which -

I

I

E QI VUR

you -.

~-.;,~:!,,,..!_,;.\~:,.~.;.6.:..,1..7~ Q

Complete 1he cl-luckle ~uoled
by F!lling in ti-l~ mininQ words
you de.,.elop from step No. 3 below.

I._.J._,l__L...J.-.l.--1

8

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

•

I

·.

"

•

3

I I I I ~o~ I I I

f)

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS
fOR ANSWER
.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

10:30 Cll M11terpleca Theatre
CD Dlfl-1 Drummer:

Q

Hammer on the Slammer

ASTRD•BRAPH.

Bernice Bede Osol

a New Country
11:00 ()) Remington Steele
• CIJ w 11 w l!ll el12l
GS Nne
(!) &amp;pottacantar

'Your
qftrthday

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 18) Take lime
today 10 size up critical career developments. Don'tlel yoursell be drawn Into
a situation where you are championing
an unrealistic cause against heavy
odds .
Fob. I, 1111
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In your
dealings with others today try to keep
In 1ho year ahead you may became In- all that you do oul in tho open. If you'
volved In several small enterprises ttlat associates think you are withholding in·
.,MI be designed lo contribute to your formation from 1hom, II could coa1 you
malorttl well-being . Individually they their support.
might notloolt like much, but coliecllve- QEIIINI (MaJ 21.June 201 Condi11ons
' could undergo a reversal today and
ly, thell'impacl could be substantial.
AQUAIIIU* (.lan. 20-Feb. 11) Evon people who were previously easy 10 get
though whal you do today will be done along with may now cause problems.
lor the good of everyone concerned. Oon't let your friends think you're tak1ner.'s a poSIIOiilty your 1actlcs will not lng lhem for granted .
'!'In 1helr approval or gratitude. Trying CANCER (.luna 21.JuiJ 22) Disagree10 patch up 1 broken romance? The At- ' menta be1Ween you and your mate
lro-Graph Matchmaker can help you to llhould be resolved as promptly as posu-and whllto do to make the rei&amp;· olble today, becaUII&amp; with lime those latlonllhlp work. Moll $2 10 Ma1chmaker, ..,.. could magnify In Intensity and
P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101- .Importance.
3428.
UO (.IUIJ :ZS.AIIfl. 22) II you do not 81·
PIICII (Pelt. .......,., 20) This might 1 - to your dU11M and reaponalbllltleo
not be 1111 rlghl day to bring a prCJPOMI Mr1y In the day, there Ia a good chance
you'nt ~ponoqrlng to 1111 attention ol you will not ge1 ~round to 1Jiern. later,
your lrlenda If It will end up coating I hom and what you negloc1 could create a

.,

logjam tomorrow .
VIRGO (Aug. ZS...S.pt. 22) There's a
chance you mtgh1 be caught off guard
today when you are refused a request
by an aasocla1e for whom you'd do the
same thing 11 the roles where reversed.
· LIIIRA &gt;(llepl. 23-()ct. 23) In ardor to be
effective and productive today you
must rely more upon yourselt and less
upon others. People you· re hoping will
back you up might not be thoro when
needed.
BCOIIPIO (Oat • . . - . 22) Not much
of substance Ia apt to be accomplished
~you MleCt only the lines of leal! resistance. 11 wUI1ake a detwmlned effort to
win ,_,.dt today.
IAOITTARIUI ( - . 23-0ec. 21) Be
prudent and cautious In bUslnea des!·
.Jngs today as well as In the manage_,, of your own resources. II you get
there's • posstblllty It could
hurt your b.nk balance.
CAPRICOIIN (Dec. ........ 11) You're a
reuonably good llarter 1oday, bU1 you
1might not be a strong finisher. Unlesa
you ..-a dedicated and determined,
loose threads are likely to be left
hanging.

car-.

Captor - Anvil - Fable - Nudism - FIRST
" How did you ge1 into the luneral business?: : the man
asked the funeral director. The director answered, l1nhented
il trom my FIRST customer."

"

BRIDGE

NORTH

Z.l·lt

.QJIS
• Q 75

A subtle
inference

•

t97

By James Jacoby
No one doubts thai defense is the
hardest part of the game, a point well
proven with today's deal. Place your·
self in the East position, defending
against four spades. Try not to peek at
declarer's hand or the West cards, and
just assume 'that your partner has led
the ace of diamomb and now contin·
ues with tbe 10. You win the king of
diamonds. What next?
·
Even with full consideration of the
possibility of artifice on the part of the
declarer, it's not too likely that partner was leading from A-10 doubleton
of diamonds . (U declarer held J·9·•·•·
x, he would probably hold back the
play of the nine to leave you with the
suggestion that West was leading from
an A·10-9 combination.) Therefore, if
West is leading from length, it would
be with the thought that you might be
able to rufl the second round. And so it
makes sense that the 10 of diamonds
suggests the lead back of the higher of

dummy's side-suits, in this case
this deal, if West held

WEST
tA

EAST

.K942
tAIOI6!
+a 6 2

.,0 6 3
K4 2

tt&amp;

+

tKJ 1043

• A7

tJP
tAQS

,.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

West

Nortlo

Eut

Pass

2+
P...

Pass
Pass

Pass

Soetlo

4+
, .;""

Opening lead:

t

A

the same distrlbullon with the queen "'
of clubs and no king of hearts, the play
at the second trick would be the three
of diamonds rather than the 10. So, lol- · ·
lowing the useful rule of suit-prefer- • .
ence and the more important rule of
compliance with partner's wlebes, you
return a low heart and set the
cootract.
·,

11 (I) N'!:ll'lno Q

~~Today

by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 Common

· 1 Landing 6 Survey
10 Untied
11 "The

suffix
6 By the
hundred
6 Adhesive
Tempest"
7 Mining
role
lind
13 Spiritual
8 Italian
14 Tennis
cash
term
unit
16 "- the
9 Actor
season .. ."
Eugene
16 Margay, e.g. 12 Charlie 25 Colorado
Indian
18 Yes
Chan's
26 Indian
19 Basic
son
weight
precept
17 Emmet
21 Scholar
19 Candle 27 "- to
Remember"
2&lt;&amp; Brownish 20 English
(1960
color
river
song)
28 Modify
21 Rested
29 Delay
22 Com- 29 Order
30 Lug
moUon 31 Remote
33 Primeval
31 Fancy duds 23 Large
Yale
32 Respond
barrel
34 Nigerian

34

35
36
38
39
40

Baby's
second
word?
Czech
river
Custom
Brink
llikdik,

•,

. e.g.
Munch
Storage

&lt;&amp;2
U

box

city
37 Skill
38 Became

a

benedict

41 Type
of beer

43 Dwelling
46 Perfect
46Hue

&lt;&amp; 7
&lt;&amp;8

Bohemian
Matriculate

DOWN

·,

1 Use a
letteropener

2Tennllle

3 Guidry
and Cey
Ill

DAILY CRYPI'OQOOld- Here's bow to work It:

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

i1J1 HIH ltnel ..,., Low

ill American M1111azlne

'PD

IIID Pat fllllak Show
Blow

,_

11:50 (I) MOVIE; 'fJI8
Amartcenlzetlon of EmHy
INRI (1 :50)
12:00()) The B1111and the Gray,
Patt 4 (NR)(I :00)
fi) NlglltiiM Q

ClJIIign Off

II til Ent-JNnenl Tonight
111 Pat a.!ak Show
111 QJl Twtllgtll z1!2l NewaNtght

..

AXYDLBAAXR
IIILONGFELLOW

•.,

11 Q]l New!) wed Game
(!)) 8porta Tonlahl

.

CROSSWORD

a

Cil Clteera

·.

'

(!)) Mone,ttne
® Honeymooner•
i1J Miami VIce
You Can S. a Star

(l]OnaonOne

,

SOUTH
tKQ8532

111 Q]l Love Connection

11:3011(2) I!IITonlghtShow '
(!) College S.tk81ball

.

tJIOH

ACROSS .

11:36)

1H£Y JUSf CM-1£.. OJr WITH
A IJWJ ~Mf. CAU£D

*

RON'S Telev ision' Service.
House calls on RCA, Ouazar,
GE . Speci.lng In Zenith. Coli
304-57&amp;-2398 or 61..,446245•.

I ·1 1· I I l
1 -~F~A~W...;R;.:..:H.:,....-ll
s •
1 IIII
3

hearts. Thus, in

CD The Wo~d at War

money.

I

a

·a

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

'10Fordpldoup302. - • - .
good O»nd. · - · 00. 30 ... 8711-

"H you spot a shoplifter, pick his pocket
end remove whatever the Item cost. "

.·
..·'
·~

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Instructor. 114- '75 Morrte Carlo, 3&amp;0 V-8 two

61 Fann Equipment

3 1cre priwlte mollie home lat.
dose to Cenl~wy . Cd morrtlngo. 81 ... 14Z.2U2.

whHI•. Eicellent condtion.
01200. Coli 61 ... 992·7312"'
.. ... 367·0276.

Transporlalwn

2 Myen Capttlt•ir wttw ,.,kl

I•••

1988Kawualdlayou . 18~four

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block, brick. 18Wer pipis, win-

and Tanya learn how to
make new friends . 1;1
CD Dr. Who: Monster of
P411odon
Ill Q]l Happy Dayo
® Factt ol Lifo
l!!l Sho·Ra
American Magazine
6:05 (l) Laveme and Shl~ey
6:30 II (2) (!!) NBC Nightly News

I

NUSKK

a

·•

·'

175 round b,.• h., 800 lbs,
good feed, 304-458-1542.

(!) Motorweok llluatrotad ·
II) Shining Time Station Matt

@ WKRP In Ctnclnnoti

61 ... 992· 7807.

Ear earn for •le. $3.25 buthel.
Robert V.w1 ce. Leading Creek
Roed. 3'h mil• west off Route
7.

4111!21

l!!l Cartoon Expnosa

Motorcycles

Grain

•le.

e w l!ll

74

gr~e

\\t!HI straw for
814-379-2789 .

(J)

:•"~"'~6~·30~·===;===

8419.

e arn.-

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds ... All
nyl•. lams P8t Food Dell•.
Julie Webb Ph . 81..,4411'0231.

CHIP
COOKIES ..

nice

Mlxed ,gr•• hay. Call614-388-

ceptlld. Pldc. up or deliver. Call
814-7'2·2428 orovdm•

Pets for Sale

CHOCOL~TE

• C2l

1!51 Nowo

Cil tiJ (I) ABC News Q
ID Body Electric
CD Nlghllr Buaineu Ropo~
@l 18 1121 CBS News
18 Q]l WKRP In Cincinnati
l!1l ShowBiz Today

76

Firewood for •le. Mixed h•d-

Coll814· 742-2395.

•

Boer Pig wtnted for breeding.
Coil &amp;1 ... 441-3025

buncle. Contaln~g appro~~: . 1Y,
ton. Ohio Pallet Co., Pomeroy,
Oh;.. &amp;1 ... 992·8461 .

Dark pine trutle ttble.

TO LIFE Tt&lt;AN

BOBR .AS

6:00 ()) Bonanza: The Lost
Epltodea

6378.
.
w._.,
truck. 304-81&amp;1978 Chevrolet Bluer .
$1,900.00. Coll30 ... 67ti-5&amp;27

Nubian
gents. Sreedln a .,I.-vice. Timothy hoy. Cell 114- 39&amp;- a&amp; .a.
Regist.-.d

Mbtad t.d wood slabe. t 12 P•

w.. ".. •

wx203. t..rge
Wit•
used 8 monttoa.
t 100each. Call814-2.t5-9218.

SORR.'t'.. 'IOU 'LL
NEVER CONVINCE ME
T\4~TTt&lt;ERE'5 MORE

1980 GMC, ••4. L.W.B . llelly

75

For •
dell on anew oruud
c.-. trudc or van, .-.Ken nv Ban
It Jim Mink Ctlevrolet·
lndhtklual ~Iter l•sona. be- Ofdllmob61e. 814-o44&amp;.3e72 or
~nn ... .-ious guttarillt. IN._ 03_o_..._n_3-:...&amp;_1..;3_4_
. ----CM'dil Music. 114-1114•0887. 1·

area . Cell 814-251·
1 490.evenh•g•. 311- 8292 .

8EAIITIPUL AI'-NTS AT
8UOQfT PIIICII .T JACI(.
SON E8T.TQ, 1:11 .-oon
Aloe"""' 11111 mo. Wllk to
lhop
- - - · 114-44..
2511. E.O.M.

evening~.

1871 John Deere 3150.8, 8 way
btade, new kl. ., rallei't. &amp; raila.
c .. 814-25.. 1117.

wDOd. HEAP VOUCHERS

Livestock

Athensllveatodl: Sal&amp; AlbWIV.SIIe wery Saturdlv· 1 PM .
UvtMtodl. accept:«&lt; lfl• • PM
ev.-y Frid.,-. 1 mile e•t of
Ala.- on St. Rt. 50. Coli
814· 692-2322 , UB· 3631

Coli 814·4411-390B.

2-mo.. e homet. IIM ..·Port•

44

63

57

. . .rNC.dOW,

ttn

~~:&lt;&gt;:•:"'3'r:•:"':'"'=====~=========~

814-44.. 6764.
model

;
•
!

1978 Chwy V.n. 1175 Nove.
1978 Chwttte. .ao Pontic
motor with trensrnilllon. 2&amp;0
Fo•d ongina &amp;1""887·8420.

d'"' for moble home. C.ll

- -· 10.18 dock. 12x14
louildint Coli 81 ... 2411-

MlJI.

'

25BCI.

Allo Tnlle .,.c:e. AI tooolt-'-"'·
CAl oltw 2p.m. 304-77311151 . M•on WV.

Country Mobile Home P.k.
Route 33, North of Pom•oy.
PI'IL HI•. Call
!ms.
..... 992· 7'79.

'

Chow puppiill, red or btac:k, 6
wks. ald. tl50. Call 114-.379-

tor rtnt·w.ek or month.

Hotel-114-4411-9580.

Trol••·
Coupleo.
amlll chi*• ao.-ed: At. 1,
Locust Road. Pl. fiiMUnt, behind Klo II. .... 171-1071.

.,_,on 14x 70. 2 BR .. 2
...._ d efedric. CA. wood-

loodo Str- MiddlopOII. Ohio,
2 be*oom turnilhld IIP.nmtnt.
util•l• l*d. rtf•.,c.. Phone
30 ... 88:!-2188.

•a•
d.._

• • • 175-3431 .

1-

·Midcleport. t135. plus depotit.
No P•L C.H 114-h2-2403 or
814-99Z.2710.

e4ectTic. ,_., ttyte horne. I room apt, t t 81.00 month.
c•p•ed throuthowt. 1
lel.lhs ~. 1101'1:1 Jottt••on.
fenced in He* yerlf with
loc1hd 7 ml• from Holz• phone 304-1715-2884 after
Hospttal on Rt. 110. A•Hiblt 8:00PM .
MDIIrch 1. t310. I * month. If Furnithed lower IPt. 11.1.,-c on
lnt•eM.t. cllll 114-286-1318 Mt. V•non A,., smel one
(Jicklont efttr 7 p.m.
bectooft\ c•p•ed. ak cond.
A
"' ho
~. l&gt;'elor linglo -king odult.
I"Umerov. nrect •
u .. t215.00 month pkls electric.
'""'· 197 Mulloony Avo. 2
be*oom, l•ge lhting room. ref•~DB •d d"'oalt raqured.
kitchen. dining fOOR\ .,dolld 304-171-2111 .
sunparch. elwlth~~Oind Furnltt.t tffleiii\Of dow,.own
• • •· Stow end refrigerator. apt, Ill utlki• p•id. dapooit
W•t.-dryer Molt-. in till
.,...,.., ..,....,..,. .wu•~ no , _'"'~.:_u_lrod.
__
30_...
_89_&amp;-.:..._34_5_o:...._ _
peto. U211-oluadopooit.
Furnltt.:l one bed room IPf:,
Phone 114-HZ-5292.
uoo.oo ...... _ , .. t100.00
N-o, ..,., ...., 3 "' hou• in dopooit. 30""8711-3900.
Maaon. t210. p.- month. Pey
·
own utlltti• . .... 77S..He4.
One 3 room fur,.hed utltti•
paid v.-y nlca ,......,011 r•
House in M•sotl. lll"t:IIIDhed o-· qulred. Two bedroom, 4 rooma
lgll , . hMt. . . . lot arttlble
andblftoooundl.,tl, m . . .c.
tOI ..

=. ., . ,

3Tlhbile Homes
for Sale

SChools
lMtruction

Nicety furnished 3 room hou ..,
one bectoom." ift town. No ~Mta.
Oep. • rei. Coll814-44.. 2843.

......
.....:--------u

lo1 Me udowbrook
..., 3 bedrooms, 2 bait., .
. ..,..... and garage. mdlced.
POll li'N poohion, p i tend r-me to Rt. 1 Bo• 311, .,.....,., Raalty . 304-875·

-

28R . locMed-IIM•cr-wlth
t110amo. '715
dop. Coil 11 ... 446-3870 ...
44 .. 1340.

or nov•••.,..

'*'

us

992-3711. EOH.

lnt•·

tlmalt spsclaUty store in sou..._._.,. Ohio. Ownen trantt.rr... fl'rincipl• onty . Send
;..ttl,.,.._ to: P.O. Bo• 848.

i~'t~0 f38 ~••· Ref. Call

1875.

J:lpJ150011month.Parttlme.
.
n&amp;~;ettary .

Motol .... offlaen 01. 1 mole
ontv. Moble home. 1 mile below

lot*lon Sec. dep. No
114-446-1817.

•
MtabUthed accounts.
..........., no cornpetit5on. &amp;rn

••ence

rooma

3 acr• wtrh pond. B acretr8Cit,
90 acr•. own,.r witt lnanoe

-I •

C

R•. 1o1., ..... ""'"'"· ... ..,,..,...._..ell 1Gb lrowtt.tg

Ne" m ... c•h7 Cell Awn.
81 ... -43970&lt;44&amp;-4982.

Acreage

r. RutlandTawrwhlp. 114-192-

!NOTICE!

T . . OMIO VALLEY PUBLISHtNeoo . rooo mmendt that vou
•
-... . . wiih people you
....... .,d NOT to tend monev
...,..,.. the mall untH vou h.,a
....,.....ed the offering.
TUM KEY BUSINESS

• • or

city OV*foolcing riv.,. Adulta

36

..:...:.._
..,_,____, I - - - ..ln.....
v-..!:::naftt
• • ,!~lrt u2p4
s•• ___
,._..ion:CfammuNcariiMI
,..,..
.,..,
11 ,, ... ....._241 1

&amp;

wit~ down payment, 304-458-

Business
Opportunity

polio

'

blth. Cletn. Adultt ontt. No
ptt1. Ref. &amp; dip. .equlred. Call

4926.

35 Lots

\

Sot• .,d chllra priced from
U96 to 0995. Tobl• 050 ond
up to
1126.Reclln
Hld••·bedl
t390
to
1595.
... t226
ta
U75. t.ompo
to •121.
Dinette• •109 and up to '415.
Wood table w-e chairs t285 to
t796. Desk •too up to 1375.
Hutch• 1400 .nd up. Bunk
beds campi•• w-m.nreuet
Ul&amp; ondup to •391.11obr bodl
t110. Mattr. . . . orbo~~: sPrings
fun 01 twfn tea. firm 111. Md
tU. Queen Mil t210 &amp; up.
King t310. 4 drawer chest til.
Gun cabin•• e. 8 &amp;. 10 gun.
Ia by mlttr-• t 31 &amp; t45.
Sed tram .. I
t30 • King
frame •50. Goad Hleetion of
bedroom auft•. m•ll c.RMn•s.
hMCI»oerds t30 end up to tea.

4581 .

he• F.miiV atmoaphere. 1
.,..,. a.peritw~ce. ReMonabte

GOV!"ANMENT JOBS!
N(tw Hlrin: THIS ARI-I

Ave. Gollipolia, OH.

ont;'.
Notown.
pet..C.rpet.d.
CaH 114-446m.,t,ln
Aduhs

r

1987 Ford Aarostlr Mini V111 .
loMted. Lar-'neComersion. Exceeln condition. 30,000 ml•·
012.000. 81 ... 9911-4338.

used eppl..-.on wod TV a••·

Open lA~ to fSPM , Mon thN
Sot. 81 ... 44 .. 1899, 827 3•d.

I

EVENING

1978 Dodge v ... htr• long.
8-300. Clptlin chen • sof•
btd. Good for t-Inting. fithingor
cwnping. ·Mutt be IIW'I to
apprielta Call 814-241-5232.

County ApPliance. Inc. Good

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

wn..

W.O.

1982 FO&lt;d F-150 4x4. 300. 8
cyl., 4 spd.. t2900. C•ll et4387-0581 .

USED· a.dl, ....... be*oorn

l01t.rnilh••l2BA .g•... op ....

F

&amp; 4

19M Fard SronCG. 302 fu•
inlected. ov• drtve, air, am -fm.
c••·· mora Exc«i. mnd. C1ll
814-387-0859.

sutt•. O..ka. wringer wether, •
corr.,lllte line of used fu rnitu,..
NEW· WHtern boot• 135.
Workbaatt • 18 &amp; up. {St... •
oolt loa). Coli 814-44.. 31119.

=~~55~"':~~~-~"3:75. 510 "'

t wll•e fot" the eldtl"..,. in my

PI••· . , J1c*1un Pike ""
tw._ 1 :30-4:30..

Vans

1983ChwvV'an . Belt off•. ean
814-44.. 7180.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olive St .• Gellipolt.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- 1399.
living raam. auh•· t199- t&amp;l9.
Bunk beds with bedding- 1249.
Fl,dl 1ize rn.nr... • foundltion
starting- t99 . Recliners
ttarting- •91.
.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
W•hers. d,..,.,., ,.,lgaratort.
renges : Sk•ggs AppllencH.
Upper RNer Ad. beside Stone
Crat Motel. 814-448· 7398.

2 IR. ·tPt.. nwwo l)lu1h c•pet.
n•
point. utl!Mi• oortilllv ooid.

' '101{1 \o ''1t '

CPR.

73

Wright

19 88 Oodae Dokolo, 4 WO . Coli
11 ... 44.. 1538 oft.- 8 PM.

38.. 1313.

11

KIT N' CARLYLE® by, Larry

for Rent

Junll Cars wtth or wfHirlwl
moton. Cell t.arrv Livef¥'-114-

W-"ed

Thursday, February 9, 1989

CRYPTOQUOTE
p .I

YPNQ

QMJPQF
MZ

WAFYPNQ
EPIIPMK

y..._ .....

QZQKO
M

DA

WAF·

DBMZ

DA

WFPQZL

HIMXQ
IU. NOT LISTEN TO

c..,.e041 aot~

REASON, REASON ALWAYS MEANS WHAT SOME·
ONE ELSE HAS TO SAY. - ELIZABETH GASKEll

...,
.,
'

I

�..
•

'

•

6-The

Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs

Cold spell continues across most of nation

B &amp; E probed at SHS
A breaking and 'e ntering occurred sometime Tuesday night at
Southern High ' School in Racine. The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department received a report of the breaking and entering on
·
Wednesday morning.
According to the sheriff's report, suspects entered the school
building by breaking out a pane of glass In the boiler room door.
Once inside, the suspects went to the mal n offtce and entered the
room that co ntained the vault. Two large holes were punched or
cut In the sate door, using a large bar from the boller room,
authorities said. The door was then unlocked.
Prior to damaging and unlocking the vault door, the suspects
attempted to bust through the concrete wall of the vault.
Other offices, Including the treasurer's, were also entered.
No other details are being released by authorities at this time.
In other police matters, Keith Searls, Bradbury Road,
Middleport, reported to the sheriff's department on Wednesday
evening that he had caught a s ubject In his semi-rig. The subject
had also beeri in Searls' unlocked garage.
Arrested and charged with criminal trespassing in
connection with the Searls' Incident was Donald E. Russell, age
28, of Wo ll Pen Road, near Pomeroy. Russell Is presently In
custody at the Meigs County Jail.
Charges are pending In a breaking and entering at the Rick
Lunsford trailer on Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy. Some Items
taken in the breaking and entering have been recovered.
More details on the break- in at the Lunsford residence are to
be released, pending completion of the investigation.

EMS has 5 Wednesday calls .,
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Wednesday; Pomeroy at 4: 52 p.m . to Bailey Run Road for
Marie Thomas to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport Fire
Department at 1: 44 p.m. to Pearl and Ash Streets tor a trailer
fire at the Starcher residence; Paul Casto was transported from
the scene of the fire to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
Middleport EMS; Pomeroy at 4:33 p.m. to Chester Road for
Simon Jones to Veterans Memorial Hospital, later to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 8:25p.m. to Meigs Mine No. I for
Michael Lambert to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 8: 26
p.m . to Railroad Street for Judie McHaffie to Holzer Medical
Center. .
'

~ir~ ... _c_o_n_t_in_u_ed__rr_o_m_p_a~g~e-1~------------------home owned by Angellque
Starcher and then spread to a
pickup truck owned by Sherman
Hoschar which was parked
nearby.
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff
Darst reported that Middleport
Fire Department responded to
the call at 1:44 p.m. Casto was
inside when the fire started , he
reported. The lire remains under
lnve&amp;tigation as to Its cause. No ·
estimate as to the loss was

reported. Starcher was not at
home when the tire started,
Darst reported.
On Tuesday afternoon at 2:17
p.m. Middleport firemen were
called to the Railroad St., storage
shed owned by Mitch Meadows.
Chief Darst set the loss of the
building and Its contents which
included a tractor at $12,000.
There is some Insurance, he
reported, noting that cause of the
tire is undertermined.

Mojave Desert and In Palm
Springs. where flakes melted as
soon as they touched down.
A low pressure system o!f the
coast of California, coupled with
colder·than·normal tempera :
tures, was responsible for the
surprise snowstbrm, the Na·
tiona! Weather Service said.
The NWS said• for the second
day in a row, downtown Los
Angeles registered a record low
high temperature or 51, breaking
the former record for the coldest
maximum reading of 52 set on
Feb. 8, 1895.

By United Press International
Wilh Southern Cailfornla still
abuzz about a rare snowstorm,
much of the northern part of the
country continued to cope Thurs·
day with blowing and dr lftlng
snow and frigid temperatures .
Up to 5 inches of snow fell in the
San Fernando Valley in · subur·
ban Los Angeles Wednesday,
knocking out power to thousands,
stranding motorists In mountain
passes, closing highways and
schools and delighting children.
Snowfall also was reported In
the Antelope Valley, the· western

Road... Continued from page 1
the appropriate time, the job will
be advertised according to
RC&amp;D requirements. If any
Meigs County contractors are
Interested In bidding the job they
should contact Meigs County
Engineer Ph illp Roberts who will
submit their names to First. The
contractors may then request
that they be sent bid packages on
the job.
First said construction Is antic·
Ipaled In July or August.
In other busineSs matters, the
commissioners approved a request from Robert Byer, director
of Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services, to construct a
radio tower and a building in
Olive Township, and another
radio tower In Columbia Town·
ship. Costs for these Improvements to the county's EMS
system will be $9,500 per year
over a five-year period. Money
for the improvements has already been encumbered by EMS.
The commissioners rejected a
recent bid from the Vlllage of
Middleport to supply office space
for the Meigs County Department of Human Services and
entered into a four ·month extension of an existing lease with the
Village for office space, at the
same rates.
A resolution naming persons to
the Meigs County Community
Corrections Local Planning
Board was passed. Named to the
· board were Donna Boyd, H.E.
Cleland Jr., 1: Carson Crow
Middleport Pollee' Chief Sidney
E. Llltle, Meigs County Adult

Probation Officer Phil McKin·
ney , ArthurW. NeaseJr.,George
W. Nesselroad,lrls Payne, Larry
Powell, Pomeroy Pollee Chief
Gerald Rought, Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulby, Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney
Steven L . Story, Karen S.
Wheeler, John T. Williams, and
Comm)ssloner David Koblentz
as chairman of the board.
A bid of $21,995 from Southeastern Equipment, Gallipolis, tor an
extendahoe for the Meigs County
Highway Department, was accepted by the commissioners
upon recommendation of Philip
Roberts, engineer. The. bid from
Southeastern Equipment was
higher than the $2,500 bid from
Falrplain Tractor Sales, Ripley,
W.Va. !-Jowever. Roberts said the
bid from Fairplaln did not meet
specifications.
Finally, Pomeroy business·
man William Quickel reported to
the commissioners that he has
second floor office space avalla·
ble in his insurance building on
the corner of Court and Second
Streets, across from the courthouse. Quickel said he Is aware
that adequate ottice space is
becoming .a problem at the
courthouse and wanted to_ apprise the commissioners that he
does have space available.
Present forW~dnesday's meet·
lng were Commissioners Manning Roush and David Koblentz.
Co.mmlssloner Richard Jones
was at a State Issue II meeting in
Marietta.

--Area deaths--- -----Announcements----James Plants

James Wesley Plants, 83, Point
Pleasant, died at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1989 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
He was a retired employee of the
C&amp;O Railroad and attended Eddy
Chapel Church.
.
He was born Nov. 5, 1905 in
Leon, a son of the late James L. and
Maggie Knapp Plants. He was also
preceded in death by one son,
James Wesley Plants Jr. in 1959,
and by five sisters.
He is survived by his wife,
Luella Smith Plants; one son, Larry
William
Plants,
Leon;
four
daughters, Clara Francis Rollins,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Sally Vem Hill,
Dunbar, Mary Margaret Stephens,
Point Pleasant, Jenetta Lorene
Durst, Point Pleasant; one sister,
Charlotte Plants, Wellsburg; 14
grandchildren;
seven
greatgrandchildren.
Services wiD be at 2 p.m. Satur·
day at the Eddy Chapel Church
with the Rev. Herman Jordan
orliciating. Burial will follow in the
Eddy Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the CrowHussell Funeral Home after 4 p.m.
Friday.

Howard Brewer
Howard S. Brewer, 81, Route I,
Point Pleasant, died at 11:55 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 7, 1989, at the Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was a retired carpenter on
consb1Jction and fanner employee
of the Marieua Manufacturing
Company. He served in World War
II in the Navy (U.S. Naval ConstruCtion CB 's).
He was born Feb. 20, I 907, in
Tyler Mountain, to the late OUie
Brewer and Mamie Mackley
Brewer.
His wife was the late Thelma
(Irene) Bowser Brewer.
Surviving are two daughters,
Nelda Jane GiUey, Point Pleasant,
Stella M. Hill, Middletown, Ohio;
four sons, Howard W. Brewer Sr.,
Point Pleasant, Raben S. Brewer
Sr., Leon; Oliver A. Brewer Sr.,
Kingsland, Ga., Charles E. Brewer,
Logan, Ala.; 15 grandchildren; 2 I
great-grandchildren.

Service will be at 1 p.m. Friday
at the Crow-Russell Funeral Home
with the Rev. David Kopp, and the
Rev. Louis A. HusseU officiating.
Burial wiU follow in the Suncrest
Cemetery.
Friends may call Thursday after
6 p.m. •

sponsoring a chili dinner at the
Pomeroy MunJcipai Building this
Saturday from 11 a .m. to 4 p.m.
The menu will Include chill,
sandwiches. pie, co!fee and soft
drinks. The dinner Is being held
to raise money for the Midnight
Cloggers' trip to Disneyworld to
perform In, June.

Southern High School boys
basketball teams are sponsoring
a double-elimination independent men's basketball tournament
on Feb. 18 and 19, and Feb. 25 and
26. Entry fee Is $90 with a lO·man
roster. · For information, call
949·2025.

Glen Blake

The Midnight Cloggers are

Glen Blake, 76. ,of Coolville,
died Wednesday at his residence
after an extended illness.
Born in Athens. he was the son
of the late Sherman and Nora
Buchanan Blake. He was a
retired Parkersburg Steel Co.
truck mechanic and served in the
U.S. Army In W. W. II.
Mr. Blake is survived bv his
wife, Grace M. Baker Blake, two
sons. Donald Blake, Coolville.
and Gary E. Blake, Mrytle
Beach, S. C., seven grandchild·
ren, two great-grandda~ghte~s.
and two sisters, Gladys Riggleman, Parkersburg, and Sadie
Cubbison. Coolville. He was
preceded in death by three
brothers and one sister.
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. on Saturday at the While
Funeral Home In .Coolville. The
Rev. Robert Markley will offi·
elate and burial will be in Eden
Cemetery, Reedsville. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Friday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Square, round and slow dane·
lng will be held Saturday, 8 p.m.
to 12 midnight, at the Eli Denison
Post of the American Legion.
Rutland. Live music and refreshments. Everyone welcome.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
Ellen Young, Racine; Ricky
Icenhower. Pomeroy; Marie
Thomas, Pomeroy; Paul Casto,
Racine.
f
Wednesday discharges Cindy Wolfe. John Wheeler Sr. ,
Leland Saxton, Carl Smith, Ivory
Bush.

Forecasters said Call1ornla's
low pressure system ccintlnued to
churn out moisture Thursday,
affecting a wide area of the
Southwest.
Snow aqvisorles were posted
Thursday for the Antelope Valley
and northern foothills and val·
leys In Soutl\ern California above
1500 teet. A wind advisory also
was in effect for the southern
mountains of the region.
In the northern part of the
state, a snow advisory was In
effect for the Sierra Nevada
mountains a11d the Lake Tahoe
basin.
In San Francisco, hail pelted
Nob Hill, Petaluma, Sausalito
and San Francisco International
Airport on Wednesday, and a
light snow dusted the upper
elevallons of Mount Tamaipais.
The weird weather caused
massive delays at San Francisco
Airport, and Golden Gate !lridge

Daily stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power .......... ... 26\-2
AT&amp;T ., .............. ................ .. 32
Ashland 011 ................... ..... 33~
~b Evans ..... :............... , .... 15%
arming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co ................. ,.19
Federal Mogul... ................. 52\!,
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... ............ 50')4
Heck's ................................. 'h
Key Centurion ................... .14~
Lands' End .............. ............ 30
Limited !ric .: ...................... 29\-2
Multimedia Inc ................... 85%
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16'h
Shoney's Inc ................... ..... S'l&lt;;
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 5%
Worthington lnd ................. 23*

The film. "The God Makers,"
will be shown at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ, 212 West Main
St., at 7 p.m. Sunday. The public
Is Invited.

Pomeroy Village Council ap·
proved Monday night the selling
of two 30,000 gallon storage tanks
and one 100,000 gallon storage
tank which are no longer used by
the village, not $30,000 and
$100,000 tanks. A legal notice of
the sale of the tanks will be
printed in "The Dally Sentinel"
In the near future.

Give
VALENTINE'S DAY

$5 g~~FESSIONAL

Mary Shrine of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem will meet at
7:30 p.m. Friday at the Rock
Springs Grange hall.

Memorial services for Hilary
Armand Turley, 65, of Lincoln
Hill Road, Pomeroy, who died on
Jan. 29 at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, will be held Saturday at
11 a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, The Rev. William
Mlddieswarth wil officate.
Interment of the cremainS' will
be at 2 p.m.' on Saturday at the
Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Plea·
sant, W. Va.
In lieu of flowers contributions
may be made to the American
Cancer Society, P . 0 . Box 692,
Pomeroy.

PROFESSIONAL AND AFFORDABLE

•Ella •Colhy •Chits

For

- 773-5362

Stock t ~54, 2 doors, 4 eyl., stand. Stock I 85611, 2 docts, hard top, 4
trans., PS, PB .
wheel, dive, 6 eyl., 4 speed, PS, PB,
WAS
NOW
wheel, AMIFM radio, radiat'tires, buc!&lt;etl

seats, gauges.
NOW

·s400 '8995

87985

1973 CHEVY MALIBU

Stock t 94482, 2 doors, 4 cyl., air COMIO.,I Stock t 40093, ~doors, PS, PB, AMVF~11
stand. trans., PS, PB, AWFt.l radio,
radio.
wheel base.
WAS

NOW

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1986
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WAS

NOW

'895

8400

1984 BUICK SKY HAWK

Stock I 94551, 4 doors, sedan, V-B,
cond., vinyl roof, aut&lt;&gt;. trans .. PS, PB.

Stock t 86574, 2 doors, coupe,
Wheel drive, 4 cyl., air cond .. auto. rra•1s.1
PS, PB, AMIFM radio, racial tires,

power windows, power seat, power door
locks, ~It wheel, cruise control, AMIFM

wans, bucket seats . .
WAS

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···········-·········-··-····

STOP IN 01 CAll-.MAIK, lEN, ED 01 J.D.

in every way that we can," House
Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas,
said following Bush's speech.
Senate Rel'ubltcan leader Bob
Dole, R-Kan., said Bush's budget
and his address to Congress
prove "he's a man of his word."
' 'The president has delivered
on his promise- no doubt about
it, this Is a George Bush budget, "
Dole said. "It reflects the commltments he made during the
campaign: no new taxes, more
money for education, child care,
the homeless, the war against
drugs, and the environment."

FDtST PLACE WINNE~- Abby Fry, left,
shown styling Aimee Rupe's hair, was first place
winner in the cosmetology competition held as a
part of the vocational open house at Meip High
School. Shown as they demo1111trated their skills
for haircutting, selling, blow drying and styling
were Fry, Wendy Phillips working on Judi O'Neil,

•

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (UP!)
·-Months of negotiations have led
to the fonnation of Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp. for the sale by
.Kais!:r Aluminum of its plants in
West V'll'ginia and Indiana and a
data center in Ohio.
Stanwich Pannen Inc., an ln·vesunent finn in Connecticut, formed the new corporation for the
sale, which was concluded on
Tuesday.
Last
week,
Ravenswood
Ai~minum agreed to honor exis~ng
umon contracts at the West Vrrgmia
plant and hire all current worken
with the completion of the sale.
Besides the Ravenswood, W.Va.,
plant, the new corporation also
bought a flant at Bedford, Ind., and
a regiona data center at Columbus,
Ohio, from Kaiser. The sale was
announced last year.
The new company is to be
headed by John R. Cady, who serves as its president and chief execu. tive officer. Cady previously served
as a corporate vice president with
!Qiser Aluminum and, for nearly
three years, has been located at
has
had
Ravenswood
and
managerial resoonsibility for the

500 EAST

·'"----------

'-

---·

'

.

three facilities mvol ved iii the transaction. .
The sale price of nearly $256
million includes some $168 million
..
in cash.
Ravenswood Aluminum will assume certain liabilities, and Kaiser
will retain some oC Ravenswood's
receivables and payables. The cash
collected will be used hy Kaiser to
trim debt and . to pay expenses
related to the tnlrisaetion.
"Today's announcement culminates many months of negotiating," said A.S. Hutchcmft Jr.,
Kaiser Aluminum president and
chief operating officer.
"The sale, as we have said
previously, is pan of our strategy of
selling selected assets while, at the
same time, preserving OW' competitive role as a fully integrated
aluminum producer."
"All of us at Ravenswood
dously excited by the challenge
presented to us," said Cady.
"We are confident that the
strength of our facilities - coupled
with our experienced work force
which is committed to producing a
quality, on-time product for our
customen - wiD assure our continued
prominence
in
the

weal news briefs--

Tht Melgs-GalUa Post, State Highway Patrol Investigated an
accident at 10:40 a.m. Wednesday in Meigs County on Twp. 59,
0.7 south of SR. 248.
Troopers said a car driven by Amy L. Hlil, 16, Long Bottom,
Continued on page 10

Inc~

POMEIOY, OHIO
I
---------~-----

sale completed

Patrol probes Meigs accident

992-2174

'
--- -------------

and Usa Gray, whose model was Renee Gray.
Second place winner was Wendy Phllllps and
Gray look third. The three winners were awarded
hair·styling equipment by the Portsmouth Beauty
Supply Co. Judlng the competiton were Susan
Sisson, Penny Burge, Becky Rl te, and Julie
Hysell, all licenses beauticians.

Ka~er

'

Smith Nelson Motors,

Dole said even critics should .
realiZe " the president has the
only budget plan In town. It's not
the final answer, It's a starting
point."
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas.
who joined Wright in giving the
Democrats' fclrmai televised response lo the president's speech,
said Democrats will work with
Bush, "but we will be guided by a
' set of enduring values. At the top
of- the list Is good jobs at good
pay."
Wright an.d Bentsen signaled
where .they might part company

.____,.

__ - - ----

'

.

with Bush on domestic Issues. '
"We would have to reject any
kind of 'flexible freeze~ that
would bend with fl ex ibilit y for
the rich and powerfu 1 but freeze
out the middle Income families of
America," Wright said, calling
for an Increase In the minimum
wage.
Rep . Leon Panetta, 0 -Calif. ,
chairman of the House Budget
Co'!'mittee, said Bush "clearly
wants to steer the ship of state
toward kinder and gentler waters. But there remain some
gaping holes In the financ ial and

soc ial fabric of that ship."
Bush "addressed some of these
problems. But many of the tough
choices on deficit reduction were
put off for another day," Panetta
sai d.
Senate Budget Committee
Chairman Jim Sasser. D-Tenn ..
said Bush Is "offering a min·
imum down payment on a kinder ,
gentler America but he can't tell
us how he proposes to meet the
annual Installment payments."
House Republican leader Bob
Michel of illinois called Bush's
proposal "a reasonable, respon.

sible and realistic budget and' I
believe the American people will
support it."
Bush's call for a cut In the
capital gains tax drew the
expected cr !tic Ism from
Democrats.
"Three years ago .. . Demo·
crats led the fight for tax reform.
Now. President Bush is trying to
turn back the clock on this
achievement" by reducing the
tax, said Rep .-Richard Gephardt,
D·Mo. " Working Americans
should not have to pay more
taxes on their hard earned
dollars than the wealthy."

Committee releases· report ,
• •
on state's longwall mm1ng

Meigs County Sheriff's Deputies and Federal Bureau of
Investigation agents are continuing interviewing and following
tips received concerning the Wednesday armed robbery of the
Home National Bank at Racine. No additional information is
available for release to the publiC .
Chief Deputy Jim mer Souls by reports that two juven Ues have
been charged in the Wednesday theft of items from the Rick
Lunsford residence on Laurel Cliff. Charges have also been filed
'against an adult male who was Involved in the theft. The name
of the adult Is being withheld pending arrest.
Items taken from the Lunsford residence have been
recovered, Including one Item which was turned over to the
Mldc;ileport Pollee by an lodlvldual wQ.o found It in his vehicle.

Ai! cond., AM-FM stereo cassette. tu-tone
pamt, auto. transmission.

Ttw: CH W1ll fit A11y

WASHINGTON (UP!) -President Bush's premiere appearance before Congress drew fa·
vorable reviews Thursday, but
some Democratic lawmakers
questioned whether his proposed
budget is adequate to the nation's
needs.
Dem~ratlc leaders pledged to
work with Bush · in his bld to
achieve a " kinder, gentler nation," while making It clear they
have their own Ideas about how
that can be done.
''The Democratic Congress
. wants to work with this president

Authorities continue search

'4495

•

President .Bush's revtews favorable

'

1985 NISSAN PICKUP

'

•

1985 JEEP CJ7

2 Section&amp;, 14 Pogoo 26 Contt
A Mu~lmodlo Inc. NIWIPIPet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 10. 1989

.

.Ravenswood

'5895

"Stot I•

Vol.39, No.193
Copyrighted 1989

,•
•

WAS

SHEAR DESIGNS
UNLIMITED

To meet Friday

•

plciined that he WCI$ not at
the wheel of his wrecker,
when it crashed into the car
he was about to tow. He said,
"my dog Booger was behind
the whell. I always trade
places with him, when I han
to operate the car lift." A
Peoria man reports, the indirect cause of his accident as a
little guy, a small car, with a
big mouth.

1980 AMC SPIRIT

Partly · cloudy tonight. Low
near 20. Saturday, variable
cloudiness. High in 40s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Page 3 4

TURNPIKE

1rodtll0f1Gl ,f IAteU H•trtltyln

886

8317

TURNPIKE USED CARS &amp;TRUCKS

PERMS

Daily Number
Pick4

Soulh Central Ohio
Tonight: Increasing cioudi·
ness, with a low between 10 and
15. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Friday: Partly cloudy, with a
high between 30 and 35.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
A chance of snow Saturday and
Sunday and fat~ Monday. Highs IA&lt;:::cJ:oENT REPORTS!
will be between 25 and 35, with a
·low in the teens.
A R~e ira~red ex-

Round and square dancing will
be featured Saturday, 8 p.m. tol2
midnight, at the Racine American Legion. Music by True
Country Ramblers. The public Is
welcome.

Corr~tion

Hilary Turley

officials said the middle of the
famed span rose 10 'h feet
because the giant bridge cables
contracted in the cold.
Meanwhile, strong winds,
snow and much colder temperatures poured into the Great
Lakes region overnight, the NWS
said. Over a foot of snow fell
Wednesday In parts of northern
Michigan, and drifts 6- to 10·feet
deep were reported on some
roadways.
In northeast Ohio, blowing and
drifting snow was so prevalent
that It hindered snow removal
efforts. The blowing snow caused
~rlodlc "white outs" that contributed to several traffic accidents In northeast Ohio, forecas·
ters said.
Snow squalls were developing
over western New York early
Thursday, the NWS said, as
colder air moved over Lake Erie
and Lake Ontario. Up to 61nches
of snow was expected.

W~ther

Stocks

Ohio Lottery

OSU drops
62-60 tllt
to Illinois

marketplaCe."
The Ravenswood complex en.tails a smelter capable of producing
about I65,000 short tons of primary
aluminum per year and a sheet and
plate rolling mill capable of
fabricating between 500 million
and 600 million pounds of
aluminum -'Products per year,
depending on product mix.
The Bedford plant reclaims
aluminum can scrap, and the data
center serves the information systems needs of both facilities .
Kaiser Aluminum is to sell
alumina, the intennediate material
from which aluminum is smelted,
to the new corporation and will
provide certain ongoing ux:hnical
services.

In reaching its conclusions, the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- In and water supplies In the area.
·committee
met for most of last
Its final report, the Ohio House
Coal companies say the benef·
year,
hearing
testimony from
Select Committee to Study Long- its of longwall mining far out·
people
on
both
sides
of the Issue,
wall Mining called Thursday for weigh the costs. By removing
damage
caused
by longviewing
sanctions agalns·t the state's 80·85 percent of the coal In a
walling
and
watching
a
longwall
longwallers but sai d its recom - seam, compared with 50-55 per·
mendations fall short of what cent In conventional mining, mine In operation .
Cera said he hopes to introduce
anti-longwalling groups had longwalllng is more efficient and
within two weeks legislation to
hoped for.
less expensive, they say.
Rep. Jack Cera, the panel's
In fact , the com pan les say Implement the committee's
chairman, called it "a balanced longwall mining is necessary to recommendations.
It will Include language requir·
report that takes Into considera- keep Ohio's coal Industry
ing coal companies to replace
tion the need for longwalllng to competitive.
keep coal com pan les competi·
Opponents say dramatic subsi- damaged water and pay the cost
live" while at the same time dence damages property, often of public water If used for
"protecting the landowners they beyond repair. They also say replacement.
The panel a,lso recommended
undermine. "
damaged water resources are
an
appropriation of up to $500,000
''I'll be surprised If this report irreplaceable and that longwalfor
·
a long-term sludy of the
makes anyone, really happy, " l!ng beneath farms does nothing
effects
of subsidence on
said fhe Bellaire Democrat. less than rob farmers or their
groundwater.
"That tells me we have reached a livelihood.
good compromise and we have a
good report."
Committee members recommended that current rules re·
quiring the repair or replacement of property damaged by
longwalllng be enacted into law.
year, the bureau said .
The Department of Natural ReWASHINGTON tUPI) -The
Over the 12 months ended ·in
sources' Division of Reclamation year got off to a bad start ·for
January,
the index rose 4.4
would determine whether the inflation as higher costs for food
percent, while prices for inter·
requirement Is being met.
and energy sent wholesale prices
mediate goods moved up 6
Longwalllng Is a technique to up 1 ·percent In January, the
percent.and crude goods were 7.8
remove coal from the face, or sharpest jump In nearly eight
wall, of a coal seam. In a years, the Labor Department percent higber than the year
~artier, the bureau said.
back-and·forth motion , .a me- said Friday.
Wholesale inflation was even
chanized shearer shaves coal
The I percent seasonally ad·
worse farther back along the
from a wall hundreds of feet long. , jus ted increase for finished
product ion pipeline, with prices
As work progresses farther goods in January followed more
tor intermediate goods jumping
into the seam, hydraulic s~ moderate advances of 0.3 per·
0.9 percent and crude prices
ports to hold up the mine's roof cent and 0.5 percent in November
advancing 3.9 percent on top of a
are moved forward In prepara· · and December, the department's
3.4
percent increase in Detlon tor the machine's nex,t pass. Bureau of Labor Statistics said.
cember.
the bureau said.
As the supports are moved
That was the worst month for
bureau
said ·wHolesale
The
forward, earth settles behind wholesale Inflation since April
inflation
&amp;I
the
finished
level was
them. filling the space where the 1981 , when the Increase was 1.1
broad-based,
with
energy
prices
coal was removed.
percent, the bureau said.
sharply
and
food
turning
up
As a result of this settling of the
For all of 1988, wholesale
prices
also
moving
up
more
than
earth, known as subsidence, prices rose 4 percent and If prices
In recent months.
cracks can develop on the earth's continued to rise at the January
Before seasonal adjustment,
surface, causing damage to the pace. wholesale inflation would
Continued on page 10
land, buildings on the surface total 12.7percentbytheendotthe

Whole~ale

prices up
1 percent in January

Area

development
explored
MASON, W.Va.
Civic
representatives from the both sides
of the Ohio River in the Bend Area
gathered at Mason Town Hall
Thursday night to discuss the future
of development and cooperation in
that area.
The meeting, coordinated · by
Mason Mayor George Nichols, is
tlie forerunner of what could become a Bend Area economic
deve~opment council. The group,
meetmg about an hour Thursday,
decided to meet again in two or
three weeks, with Pomeroy possibly hosting the meeting.
Discussion was wide-ranging
and miffiy ideas were broached on
what directions the communities of
Mason, Hartford, New Haven,
Pomeroy and Middiepon could explore.
Joining the civic leaders from the
Bend Area communities were
representatives from the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Business and service needs in
Mason and Meigs counties were
discussed and officials hope to
begin setting goals and strategies at
a future meeting.
In attendance were: Mason
Continued on page 10

DISPLAY FLAG FROM NATION'S CAPITOL
- Twelve-year-old Jessica Radford, a Chesler
Elementary sixth grader and a member of the
school's student council; teacher Uncia Sbultz, ,
student council advisor; and Ron mil, Chester
Elementary prillclpal, prepare to display a flag
which was sent to Jessica on behalf of the school

by Congressman Clarence Miller. Jessica wrote
to her congressman as part of a student council

project. The Rag which Congressman Miller sent
to Jessica along with a certificate, flew over the
U.S. Capitol In Washington D.C. on August 18,
1988. Jesllic&amp;' Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Radford.

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