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                  <text>Page--:-16 The Daily Sentinel

Local news briefs...
Continued from page 1

Three forfeit bond in court
Three persons forfeited bonds on speeding charges in the
court of Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Kelly O'Brien, Pomeroy forfeited~ $48; Julia Moodlspaugh,
Po"1eroy, ~45, and Fred Jones, Rio Grande, $48.

Fine fined in Middleport Court
In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
night, live were fined and two others forfeited bonds.
Fined were Mary Ellen Sheets, Racine, $10 and costs,
improper license tags; Thomas Hoffner, Middleport, $10 and
costs, running a red light; Pearl H. Edinger, Cheshire, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner; Mark J. Hall, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, going the wrong way on a one way street; and Greg
Laudermllt, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly conduct, and
$100 and costs, assault.
Forfelting bonds were Perry Edward Hughes, Fort Myer,
Fla., $450 OWl; and Jack K. Sprles, Syracuse, $450, DWI, and
$50, running a stop sign.

Tailpipe...

continued from page 1

contracts to run the testing
centers, the vote on the amend·
ment was 5-5, meaning It did not
become part of the blll.
Without objection, amend·
ments were adopted to exclude
from the program vehicles run
primarily on fuel other than
g'llSoline, to provide for self·
repair by mechanically inclined
motorists and to strengthen
enforcement provisions.
The bill would require the
director of the Ohio EPA. to
establish and Implement a motor
. vehicle tailpipe emissions in·
spectlon and maintenance program in Cuyahoga County by
July 1. 1990.

With a few exceptions, vehicles
·registered in Cuyahoga County
would have to pass an annual
tailpipe emissions inspection before theY can be reregistered.
Visual Inspections are cur·
rently required In all five coun·
ties, but the federal EPA. has
Instituted sanctions against
Cuyahoga County to force adoption there of a program bllSed on
actual exhaust testing for carbon
monoxide, a precursor of ozorie.
The proposal would continue,
with some modification. the
existing visual · inspection pro·
grams in Lorain, Lake, Butler
and Hamilton counties.

· ' Wednesday, February 15, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Freezing rain, sleet drench Ohio Valley
degrees below zero at Warroad,
16,000 people 25 miles east of counties.
By United Press International
Temperatures
ar
ound
the
na
Minn ., to 75 degrees at Key West,
Residents In Tennessee braced Nashville. One woman drowned
tionat2
a.
m.
ESTrangedfroml7
Fla.
lor more flooding Wednesday, and 250 homes and businesses
riATIOtiAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECA S t IU 7 AM EST 2·1&amp;-89
while freezing rain and s leet were Inundated.
A. 4-foot wall of water surged
drenched most of the Ohio Valley
through downtown, sweeping
. and the Plains states.
Roads were reported to be away cars and trapping dozens of
slippery early Wednesday from families In their homes. Volun·
Kansas to Illinois as the rain teers tied themselves to !Ire
coupled with cold air spread a trucks with ropes to save
stranded motorists and families.
sheet of ice over the asphalt.
Ear ly Wednesday, the flood·
The Kansas turnpike was slick
in many spots as well as the main w~ter s were recedlnj\ despite a
roads In and out of Wichita. Ice steady rain. But the ·National
also was reported on Interstate Weather Service warned that the
70 east of Sallnl! and on many storm had stalled over Tennesroads around Concordia, the see, and up to' 8 more Inches of 40
rain were possible through Wed·
National Weather Service said .
Snow and freezing rain spread nesday night.
The weather bureau said rain
across the northern third of
Missouri with rain across much and thunderstorms were widesof the remainder of the state, pread from west Texas through
northern and central Arkansas.
forecasters said Wednesday .
Up to 3 Inches of snow was Ralnsbowers covered much of
expected overnight in southeast the lower Ohio Valley.
Some of the rivers and streams
Iowa, and I inch of snow was
recorded at Burlington early · were out of their · banks late
Ost~ow
r.!RAIN
DsHOWERS
Tuesday in central and western
Wednesday.
Kentucky,
and
up
to
7
Inches
of
Flash flood watches were In
FRONTS: . . Wirm "Cold
. . Sialic
Occluded
effect early Wednesday In parts rain was recorded across the
Map shows minimum l'9mperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
of Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, region since Sunday night.
to rece1~J e preCtp!lalton indtcated
UPI:
Flooding continued over parts
Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois,
•
WEATHER MAP - During early Thursday morning, snow Is .
Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia, of extreme southern Illinois and
forecast
for parts · of lhe northern lntermountaln Region, the
western Kentucky . More than 1
the NWS said.
northern
Plains
and parts of the north Atlantic Coast States. Rain
Nearly 6 inches of rain fell inch of rain fell at Paducah, Ky ..
Is forecast for parts ol the southern Plains, the mid Mississippi
from midnight to dawn Tuesday overnight, and several roads
Valley, the Ohio Valley and the north Atlantic Coast States. Raln Is
In Lebanon, Tenn., sending Town were reported flooded in
possible In the mid to northern Pacific Coast and most of the Ohio
Creek rampaging from Its banks McCracken and surrounding
Valley with showers and thunderstorms possible In the Gulf Coast
through the center of the city of
Region. UPI

Daily Number

153
Pick4
2489

------Weather-----South Central. Ohio
Tonight: Occasional rain, with
a low near 35. North winds 5 to I5
mph. Chance of precipitation is
near IOO percent.
Thursday: Rain ending during
the morning, becoming partly
cloudy. Highs will be near 40.

Chance of snow is 40 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Generally dry, with highs
malnly in the '20s Friday and
Saturday and ranging from the
mid 20s to the mid 30s Sunday.
Early morning lows will be
mainly between 10 and 20.

Page 3

4-8-14-22-3743
Kicker 022266

•
Vol.39, No.1 97
Copyrighted t 989

Area schools remain
closed due to flooding

JDf COBB SAYS DAR.I

CHEVROLET C-1500 1/2 TON

'10,981
sI

Middleport police
release report

CHEVROLET S·1 0 EL PICKUP

,, .,,.INCLUDES

Hospital news

8

----·..,..-~-

PER

MONTH

-----·-·
.
··- .

-~-- ---~-

'·
-- ·-

-'

By United Press International
and OVP stall revorts
Urban and small streams
warnings were In effect Thursday In several counties in south
central Ohio, where heavy rain
forced the closing of roads and
schools on Wednesday.
In Gallla County, schools
. closed were Gallla County local .
scllpols, Buckeye Hills Career
Center, and Ohio Valley ChriS·
tlim School. School districts
closed In Meigs County were
Meigs Local and Eastern Local.
Students returned to classes
today in Mason County.
High water closed sections or
roads in Gallla County on four
state routes, Including
218.
south of SR 553; SR 554, between
Porter and Cheshire; SR 141,
south of 233; and SR 775 south of
SR 14I.
Sections of roads closed in
Meigs County are SR 124, between Rutland and Langsville,
and SR I43, between SR 7 and
Harrisonville. 1\11 Mason County
roads are clear.
According to the readings at
the Gallipolis Locks and Dam,
I.28 inches of rainfall fell within
the past 24 hours, forcing the
Ohio "River to rise .25 an hour, for
a total of 4.3 inches since

:m

Ohio Senate scheduled to
vote on school tax request

MHS wrestlers complete
regular season over weekend

2 -Sections . 12 Pages 25 Cent a
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday. February 16. 1989

Roads ... Continued from page 1

--Area deaths

Clear tonight. Low In mid
20s.Frlday, cloudy. High In
mid 30s. Chance of rain 50
percent.

Super Lotto

ft

fall predicted !or extreme south·
People in central and southern
ern Ohio. Forecasters said that "~Ohio living, working, or traveling
area included Clermont, Brown. close to flood -prone waterways
Highland, Pike, Adams; Scioto, were urged to remain alertto the
Jackson, Vinton, Athens, Wa- possibility of flooding.
Continued from page I
shington, Meigs, Gallia and Law Over northern Ohio counties,
•••
renee counties .
light rain !ell early Wednesday.
Lamm said. But approval of a gram, TRIP, a research institute
Some schools and roads were In northwest and northeast Ohio
gas tax increase would set a bad based In Washington.
closed in Lawrence, Gallia and the rain was mixed with light
Tillnols Transportation Secre·
precedent, he added.
Meigs counties , au thoritles said, snow and sleet shortly before
•' ...$40 billion to $50 billion wlll tary Gregory W. Baise wlll be
but Dept. Isaac Mohler of the dawn.
be needed the following year to ' accompan~ by representatives
Meigs County Sheriff's DepartOvernight temperatures were
meet Gramm-Rudman'' require· from Michigan. Wisconsin, Min. ment described the high waters in the 30s and highs Wednesday
ments lor deficit reduction and nesota, Iowa, Indiana and Ohio.
were expected to be between 35
as "nothing serious."
the gas tax mighi again look Uke TltiP said In a news release.
"We nave a few roads closed. and 45.
Like the Highway Users Feder·
an attractive option, he said.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The wet weather was caused
Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland, but thai's normal wbenwebavea
atlon.
the seven officials oppose
Transportation officials from
The Ohio Senate is to vote Cleveland Helghts·Unlverslty little rain down here," Mohler by a statlonary front , located
seven Midwestern states were the proposed gasoline tax hike · Wednesday on legislation autho- Heights, Columbus, Dayton, Ely· said. '.' People here know how to from Virginia across Tennessee
scheduled to meet Wednesday to because It would harm the
rizing most Ohio school districts ria, Euclid, Hamilton, Kettering, get around it."
to east' Texas. Low pressure
discuss the gas tax proposal. said economy and cut into their local
to place on the ballot a local Lakewood, Lorain, Mansfield,
"There is some flooding ," said moving along the front was
The Road Improvement Pro- gas tax revenues, TRIP said.
Income tax of up to 1 percent.
Parma , Springfield, Toledo. Merle Howard. a deputy in the sending the rain lnto Ohio.
High pressure was to move Into
The measure, which exempts Warren and Youngstown school Galli a County Sheriff's Depart·
I9 big-city school districts, was districts.
ment. "Two of our state roads the Great Lakes region by early
reported out of the Senate Ways
The lone opponent was Sen. are closed and we have high Thursday. resulting In an end to
and
Means
Committee
Tuesday
,
Michael
White , D-Cieveland. water on some others . There has the state's precipitation. HowReynoldsburg. Friends may call
Thelma Ashworth
6·1.
despite
strong
opposition
by
who
said
the
legislation "sets a been no property damage or lives ever, colder air was expected
at the funeral home on Thursday
municipalities
on
grounds
it
will
very dangerous precedent" for lost. "
early in the weekend.
from 3 to 5 and 7 .to 9 p.m.
Thelma Harman Ashworth, 85,
cut Into their revenues.
pitting school districts against
of 100 Maple Drive, Pomeroy,
Meanwhile, two state senators cities for Income tax money.
died Tuesday at Veterans Mem·
John Thomas
said they will try to help school
"This is a .back door proposal
orlal Hospital.
·
districts further by allowing thai won't really help anybody
She had worked ·at ihe Athens
Jacob Earl Thomas, 77, for- them to capture the inflationary and sets up confrontation beMental Health Center as a r.urse
merly of Mlnersvllle, died Mon·
growth on any future property tween school districts and municbefore her retirement. Born on day at Riverside . Hospital In
The Men of Meigs High, the Pl&lt;~clng second hi TVC competl·
tax levies.
ipalities," said White.
April 13, 1903 at Hurricane, W. Columbus. He resided at 3538
A.nd Ohio House Republicans
Finan and Sen. Richard Marauder wrestling team, fin- tlon were Eric Heck 112 lb. and
Va. she was the daughter of the Karl Road, Columbus.
issued a statement saying they Pfeiffer, D-Columbus, proposed Ished the regular season this Aaron Sheets Heavy Weight.
late Frank W. Mitchell and Sarah
Mr. Thomas served in the U.s.
will oppose any major state tax a constitutional amendment al- year with a record o~ 26 and I2.
The Maraud~r Maulers are
Jane Beckett MitchelL
A.lr Force during World War II.
increases In 1989."
lowing !u ture property tax levies The Marauder wrestlers rolled coached by Kevin Sheppard and
She was a member of the He Is survived by his wife; Lou
House Speaker Vernal Riffe to grow with the rate of inflation. over teams during the entire Jim Sheets. Decker CuUums,
Jehovlah Witnesses, Rutland
Thomas, Columbus, a daughter Jr., D-Wbeelersburg, said tha t
Under a constitutional amend· season winning duals and tris who was unable to wrestle due to
Kingdom Hall, the Farm Bureau and son-in-law. Jeanette and
would kill Gov , Richard Celeste's ment adopted in 1980, school and taking first and second "place a knee injury, kept stats and ran
and the Grange. Besides her Robert Strong, and a grandson,
hope of getting an education districts may not collect the trophies in several major the clock for home matches.
parents she was preceded In Brad Strong, Roanoke, Va.;
Even forfeiting five of thirteen
Initiative with a 1 percent income portion of taxes that result !rom tournaments.
death by her first husband,
three sisters, Letta Spencer and
Senior wrestlers Jared Sheets, weight classes, the Marauders
tax on the statewide ballot this the increase In property values
William Clarence Harman In . Edith Schwab, Pomeroy, and year, since the effort must be · due to Inflation.
Jeff McElroy, Wess Howard, and were able to finish fourth In the
1955, and her second husband,
Mildred Haw.k, Coolville.
bipartisan.
"With today's emphasis on Rod Stewart all had outstanding TVC . Although M&lt;¥gs may not
Dayton V. Ashworth in 1964, a
He was preceded In death by
seasons. Other members of the
The school district Income tax Increased educational spending, team who had excellent seasons have the large program or great
daughter, Martha Lewis, a son, his first wife, Thelma Dains
number or wrestlers ·that some
this
adds
another
weapon
to
the
Boyce Gene Harman, and two Thomas, four brothers, Foster, was law in I981-82 . Six districts fund raising arsenal of the local were sophomores Aaron Sheets other schools have, the Ma·
Melvin, Edward and John, and e nacted an income tax and five
sisters and two brothers.
school district," said Finan. "I and Eric Heck and freshman Joe rauder Maulers possess the lndl- .
She Is survived by two sons and his parents, Seth and Mabel still have it. The authority for
McElroy. A.lso wrestling for the
school districts to enact an don't know If this will pass, but I Marauders were Dave Swanson, vidual pride, spirit, and stamina
daughters-in-law, Lenville R.
Bowers Thomas.
that it takes to build a great
think It's got a chance."
and Mabel J. Harman, Rutland,
Funeral services will be held at income tax was repealed In 1983.
Jeremy
Heck,
Burt
Kennedy,
wrestling
team.
House
Republicans,
who
con·
"If we're not going to be able to
and William J . and Diane Har· 11; 30 a.m. Thursday at the
Scott
Barton,
Dennis
Edmlnston,
This
weedend
the team travels
trol
40
of
the
99
House
seats,
said
man, Sunberry; a daughter and Schoedlnger North Chapel 5554 raise taxes, then we have to give there Is little or no support for a Anthony Miller, and Jerry Jacks. to Warren High for the Sectional
son-In-law, Saralyn and Don Karl Road, Columbus. Burial the local boards of education tax ltiltlative in their ranks.
Several Meigs wrestlers tournament. The folloWing weeDrenner, Pipersville, Pa.; two wlll be in Union Cemetery, some tools to do their job, " said
placed
In the TVC tournament. kend team qualifiers wlll be In
Celeste's
initiative
.would
rebrothers, Ralph Mitchell and Co.lumbus. Friends may call at Sen : Richard Finan, R- quire 60 votes to clear the House,
First
place
winners were Rod Landcaster for tlle district tour·
H,allle Mitchell, Alum Creek, W.
the funeral home Wednesday,, 7 Cinclnnatl, chairman of the but Democratic leaders would Stewart 135lb., Wess Howard 145 nament tournament.
Ways and Means Committee.
Va .. 10 grandchldren, 13 great· to 9 p.m . .
lb., and Jared Sheets 189 lb.
The school districts could Insist on some Republican votes.
grandch!ldren, and five great·
enact income taxes in incregreat-grandchildren. along with Dolly Wolfe
ments
of one-quarter percent.
several nieces and nephews.
Finan
said
a one-half percent
Funeral services will be held at
Dolly Wolfe, 84, of Route 2,
Income
tax
would raise the
• 1 p.m Thursday at the Ewing Racine, died Tuesday at the
equivalent
of
5 to 10 mills of
Funeral Home. Mr. Albert Holzer Medical Center following
proper!~
tax
.
He said small,
Tromm wlll officiate and burial a short Illness.
rural
districts
could
use it.
will be In Riverview Cemetery.
Born on Sept.1904 at Millwood,
The
legislation
exempts
disFriends may call at the funeral W. Va. she was the daughter of
home today from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 the late Millard Sayre and Etta tricts with at least 75 percent of
their territory In municipalities
p.m . today (Wednesday.)
· Mae Burton Sayre. She was a of 50,000 or more people.
STARTING AT
homemaker and also worked as a
This would exempt Akron,
school cook.
She was a 111ember of the Apple
Shirley Cooper
Grove United Methods! Church
for 65 years and served as
Shirley T. Cooper, 84, of the Sunday school superintendent
POPULARLV EQUIPPED!
MONTHLy PAYMENTS PA't'IIENTBAIEDON
Columbus area, died Tuesday at for 38 years. She was also active
The
Middleport
Pollee
DepartSAL£ PRICE PLUI
•V-8
ENGINE
•SLIDING
REAR
WINDOW
Mount Carmel Medical Center In In the Apple Grove United
FREIGHT Wl'llt '2,11110
ment
made
69
arrests
during
Columbus.
DOWN OR
•AUTOMATIC
•PS
PER CASH
Methodist Women.
January, according to the report
TAADIICMI"Y,"-UI
Born A.ug. 4, 1904 In Wellsville. ·
• AM/FM STEREO
• PB
Surviving are three daughters presented to Middleport VIllage
llfONTH! APPAOPIIIATED
she was a daughter of the late and sons·ln·law, Dolores and Bob
TAXES a F&amp;8 FOR
•GAUGE
PACKAGE
•MUCH
MORE
.
M IIOHTH8 AT 11'1.
Frank D. and Mittie M. Ogdln Casper, Columbus; Jane and Council Monday.
APR.
A.
total
of
86
meals
were
served
Nelson and was raised In the Dale Hill, Moore Haven, Fla.,
Pomeroy area. She retired from and Donna and Dallas Hill, to prisoners by the resident
publiC high school teaching In Racine: one son and daughter-In- dispatcher, and six accidents"
A.shvllle, Ohio and was a member law, Carl, Jr. and Della Wolfe, were Investigated . Parking meASL9WAS
or the First English Lutheran Waverly; a sister-In-law, Eliza- ter collections totaled $989.785,
and
472
parking
tickets
were
Church In Ashville.
beth Sharpnach, Columbus, I5
She Is survived by her husband grandchildren, and 24 great· Issued. Cars 20 and 21 were
driven a total of 4,466 for the
of 60 years, Kenneth C, Cooper;
grandchildren, along with sev· month, It was noted.
three brothers, Clair 0., A.rchle eral nieces and nephews.
'
.
REBATE!
E. and Edwin F. Nelson; a sister,
Mrs. Wolfe was preceded in
Mrs. Vesta I. Canode; and death by her parents, her husOil MO.NTHLY PAYMENTS AS LOW AS
several n~ and nephews.
band, Carl Wolfe, Sr. In 1951, a
In addition to her parents, she great·grandchlld, one brother,
Veterans Memorial
was preceded In death by two and lour sisters.
PAYIIEIIT IAIED Of! 8AUO PRICE PUIS~ W11M
Tuesday A.dml&amp;slons - Terri
•t.CAMt DOMI AT TRADE EOtiTY PLUS ""ROPRio
sisters, Grace Martin and Nina
Hall,
Middleport;
Joyce
Manuel,
Funeral services will be held at
ATIDTAXUaFm-M-ATn"APR.
Macomber.
the Ewing Funeral Home at 1 Racine; Nora Pearson, Racine;
Services will be Friday, IO p.m. Friday. The Rev. Carl E . Connie Morris, Racine,; Elver
a.m .. . at Schoedinger Hilltop Hlc]!:s wlll officiate and burial Fox, Clifton, W.Va.; A.lva Luck·
Chapel, 3030 West Broad St .. will be In the . Letart Falls eydoo, Letart, W.Va.
Columbus, with Pastor William Cemetery. Friends may call at
Tuesday discharges - Frank
E. AbernathY officiating. Burial the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 Musser, Mary Page, Sheila
wUI be In Glen Rest Cemetery, to 9 p.m. Thursday.
· Dickens.

Groups

Ohio Lottery

Southern in
·IV Sectional
cage finals

WATER AT SHADY COVE - Tuesday's flash
flooding has some Meigs County residents In the
Rutland, Dexter, l,.aligsvllle areas blocked In by
the rising waters. As high water in these areas
recede, residents along Shady Cove Road below
Middleport anticipate thai Leading Creek alonK
their road will be coming up IU1d blocking them In
for a few days, as Shady Cove catches the back
water from the Ohio River. Shady Cove residents
have, In the past year, gone !rom the U.S. Corps of
Engineers lo the Ohio Department of Natural

Resources to the Meigs County Highway Department to the Salisbury Township Trustees and
others, trying to find someone to help them put a
stop to their flooding problems. Although no
funding sources have been located, promises have
been made to clear the creek of this !allen tree
(pictured here), so at the very least, in case of an
emergency, rescuers coukl reach residents by
way of ihe creek. As yet, the tree has not been
removed.

Tuesday.
The dam rollers are out or the
water allowing full flow. Read·
ings .at 10 a.m. today were 14.2
feet on the upper gauge of the
locks and 37.6 feet on the lower
gauge.
Raiilfall thus far in February
registered at the locks and dam
totaled 5.67 Inches. According to
the Gallipolis Waste Water
Plant, .71 Inches of rain have
fallen in the past .24 hours ,
· totaling 5.06 Inches for the
month ..
According to the Oliio Department of Natural Resources,
water dlvlslons, 3.20 is the
normal rainfall in the Gallipolis
area !or the total month of
February .
Ralilfallln. the area decreased
Wednesday afternoon but began

again Wednesday night, causing
m~ny small streams to overflow
their banks, the National
Weather Service said.
In Athens County. where 1.72
inches of ral n was recorded
Wednesday, !loading forced the
state unemployment office in
Athens to close and threatened a
shopping center.
''I'm up to my ankles in
water," said Pat. Pidcock , manager of the Ohio Bureau of
·Employment S ervices office In
Athens . · "It's a mess In here.
There's three or four Inches of
water throughout the offices."
Firefighters were called to the
Unlverslty Mall in Athens after
water runoff from a hIll behind
the mall flooded a parking lot.
"A. considerable amount of
water In the rear o! the mall had
Continued on page 12

M~igs

officials
invited to attend
council sessions

The Meigs County Commis· Company, Cambridge, was at the
stoners have been Invited by commissioners' meeting with
Mason, W.Va., Mayor George County Engineer Philip Roberts
Nichols to support and attend and Highway Superintendent
meetings of the newly-organized · 'Ted Warner. Roberts reported
Bend A.rea Economic Develop- that RuUand Township Trustees
ment Council. The group, com- have contacted him about comprised of representatives from bining their State Issue II funds
Mason, Hartford and New Haven with highway department money
in Mason County and Pomeroy to mak~ repairs to two township
and Middleport in Meigs County, bridges. Larrick viewed the two
which victims were struck by • lias been fotmed to promote bridges with Roberts and Warner
passing automobiles, have been
development that will benefit to provide them with es tlmates
flied in Meigs County Common
communities on both sides of the on repair costs and determine If
·
Pl!a:u~ 0h':,";been filed by Charles Ohio River.
the township is In the ballpark
Nichols initiated the group with State ls·s ue II funds. No
W. McKinney • a minor, by his
which met !or the !lrst time last estimates were reported
parents. Jeffrey R. and Jennifer
week in Mason. A second meet· Wednesday.
L. McKinney, Racine, charging
lng Is to be held in about a week In
Commissioner David Koblentz
negligent driving on the part of
David W. Woolard, Pomeroy, In Pomeroy and Nichols has invited has received notification of a
the county commissioners and meeting on Feb. 24 of the
an accident on Sept. 7, 1987 In
Meigs County Development Dl· settlement committee of the
C
Syracuse. On that date, harles
rector Klm Shields to attend.
Buckeye Joint-County SelfMcKinney was struck by- a
The commissioners feel the Insurance Council. The settlevehicle being driven by Woolard. Bend A.rea Council may be "a ment committee must meet prior
Requested in the suit are In· good thing" for the·area.
to the March 10 meeting of the
Commissioner Manning Roush Council. Koblentz Is Meigs Coun~~:.~_ ~~J~~~ f:~~~n~:
reported Nichols' request for . ty 's representative on the
tory damages for pain and support at Wednesday's regular Council.
suffering and future pain and meeting of the commissioners.
Meigs County Extension Agent
suffering, and a trial by j~Jt A.
Requests from area residents John Rice was reappointed by
Charles, Rh · and Jud tl · have prompted the commission- the commis ~loners to a threeWoodall, -.t ens, are req ues ng ers
. to consider opening the year term on the Private Indusa $75,000 judgment in a suit shopper's lounge in the court·
try Council.
bouse on Saturdays. Arrange- ·
Four bids were received lor a
ments are to be made as soon as
1977
Ford pickup which was
are charging that on Feb. 13, I987 possible to open the facility for
advertised
for sale by the comon State Route 32 In Meigs
· the public on Saturdays. How- . missioners. However. two of the
County, Hearn negligently drove ever, once construction of a
sealed bids were exactly the
her vehicle against Charles R. courthouse elevator starts, times
same.
The cornmlssl1mers must
Woodall, an adult, as he was
when the lounge Is open may
now
consult
County Pro,secutlng
riding a bicycle. The plaintiffs have to be limited temporarily.
Attorney
Steven
Story to deterContinued on page 12
Ray Larrick of the Ohio Bridge
mine bow to resolve the situation .

Two huge
lawsuits filed
in Meigs court

Election -board eliminates five
.
C
.
.
.
Metgs ounty v~tmg precmcts st~~.:glza~!nla::cui~!~tsbo:~
Five voting precincts have
been eliminated in the red islrlcting process carried out at .a
recent meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
According to Jane Frymyer,
director. reducing the number of
. preelnctsfrom34to29wlll
vo tmg .
·
save about $1,000 per ·election.
Every voter in precincts affected by the change will be
notified by postcard prior to the
next election.
As explained by Mrs. Frymyer, the changes allow elections
to be more efficient (lnd less
costly to the taxpayers. The
precincts eliminated were where
voter registration Is low or
facilities In poor condition.
To point up the need for

economic cohslderations by the
Board of Elections, Mrs. Frymyer noted the cost of the past two
speclal .elections. She said that In
Meigs Local School District, the
August, 1988 special election cost
$3 per voter, whlle the Eastern
L I
· 1 lectio held Feb
oca specia e
n
·
7, cost $2 per voter. The figure
represents only voters who went
to the polls, according to the
Board of Elections director.
The changes as released by the
Board are as follows :
-East Bedford and West Bed·
ford combined to form Bedford
Precinct; voting location, Bedford Township Building.
-East Letart and Letart com·
bined to form Letart Precinct;
voting location, Letart Township

Building.
-Pomeroy lst Ward and
Pomeroy 2nd Ward combined to
form Pomeroy 1st Ward) voting
location, Pomeroy VIllage Hall.
-Pomeroy 3rd Ward name
change only to Pomeroy 2nd
Ward·, voting location, Pomeroy
Elementary School.
-Pomeroy 4th Ward name
change only to Pomeroy 3rd
Ward; voting location, Pomeroy
Fire Department.
·
-Harrisonville and Pagevllle
Precincts combined to form
Scipio Precinct ; voting location,
Scipio Volunteer Fire Department building.
-Olive Precinct, redistricted
Into North Olive with the Tuppers
Continued on page 12

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) _
Tl)e Ohio Senate Wednesday
approved. 23· 10 . a permissive
local school district Income tax
despite claims from municlpalities that it will pit education
against trash col Iectlon.
The bill, which now goes to the
House, was advertised as an
additional tool for financially
troubled school districts to seek
funds from property tax-weary
voters.
,
Urban Jawm~kers complained
that big cities also rely on income
t.axes, and the bill wilt force ttiem
to compete against schools tor
revenues. .
Meanwhile, Gov. Richard Ceteste's so-called "education lnltl·
alive" - a 1 percent income tax
earmarked lor education, with
accountability for spending the
money - was introduced in the

House. It was given an extremely
Poor chance of passing. House
Republicans termed It "dead on
arrival."
The House Energy and Ehvlr·
onment Committee approved a .
new au to emissions testing program for Cuyahoga County to
reduce carbon monoxide levels.
The full House Is to vote on that
bill next week.
Sen. Robert Cupp, R·Lima,
chief sponsor of the school
district Income tax, called It "a
measure to help taxpayers and
children" by let Ung local school
district voters decide how they
want to tax themselves.
Cupp said the tax has been
effective In the six districts
which enacted it In 1981·82,
before It was annulled at the
insistence of municipalities. One
district repealed Its tax; five still

nave ~t.
Cupp said the Income tax Is fair
bee
1 1 b d
bllit t
ause
Y
H t ldsIt ase
11 on
f a
pay. esa
a ows or revenue
growth over the years as income
d
d 1 d 1 o s 1 r ral
expan s, an s es r u n u
1areas
d tawhere farmers are against
an
xes.

24

•
l
blll
Senat e passes schooI mcome
ax
~~~~~~~~~~~%:a~Tll~~~~al~!

Local news

°

.----------------_!...------::

brief:~___,

Theft probed by sheriff
Theft of a ring, necklace and change from the Herbie Grate
residence, south of Tuppers Plains, is being Investigated by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department. According to the sheriffs
report, the Incident occurred Tuesday. Charges are expected to
be filed. .
.
On Wednesday evening, deputies took a complaint from
Jamey Jones, Racine, that while he was 'parked at a Racine
service slatlon, another vehicle took off and spun gravels on his
vehicle, chipping the windshield. Charges are pending.
Finally, Sheriff James M. Soulsby has suggested that all
businesses In Meigs County file :W,Itll the sheriff's department a
telephone number where a representative of the business may
be reached In an emergency.
Continued on page 12

BOARD MEMBERS JiOig!Ei)

Memorial Hoepltal' s Board of Trustee~~ were honored at a
recopldon dhmer staged In their honor Wednesday evening at
Rolly Hill Inn, Pomeroy. Tbe two members In acconiBDCe wltb
board policy have each served tile maximum two thre&amp;yearterms oa tbe board and are Ineligible to serve again anUI a! least
one :rear
Trlbutea to the two board members were paid by
Admlniltrator Scott Lucas. In the photo, Lucas, on the left,
pre~~enta personal engraved plaques to the two honoree~~, Paul
Beegle, Racine, center, who bas been serving as chairman, and
David Weber, Reedsville.

pas-.

•

'{

'

WELCOME NEW MEMBERS - Two new members were
welcomed to the Board of Trull&amp;ees of Veterans Memorial RosJIIIal
at a board dinner mee&amp;lnl held Wednesday even lng a1 HoQso BID
Inn. Pomeroy. David Fox, board chalnnan, left, welcomea tile two
new members, Jollll Rice, Tappen Plains area, center, and Rn
Shenefield, Langsville area, who wllllll!rve three year terms en Ule
board. Other board members attending the event Included Paul
Beegle, David Weber, retiring members; Bill Nease, Gary Norris,
Tom Wolfe, Tim King, and Wayne Roush. Sentinel photos by
Charlene Hoeflich.
-

....

~-­

•

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
\

·111 Court Street
PomerGy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~

rs:m~ ""'-'..._-....~=·"""
~v

t

'ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Assoclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcom e. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and mu st besfgned with name, address and
te lephone number. No unsignEd letters wUl be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, nol persoo.alltles.
•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

good for America. Congress Is
preparing another Irresponsible
budget that will compound the
debt problem. The nation's pollti·
cal leaders seem oblivious to the
compelling evidence that a catastrophe Is just around the bend !f
they don't curb spending.
Both the new president and the
new Congress also seem quite
content to finance their overconsumption by sellJng off Amer·
lea to foreign Investors. If foreign
acqulstions continue to Increase
at the same rate as they have
during the past five years, the
United States will be completely
foreign-owned before America 's
leaders
their eyes.

chaos.__::J_:_._a~k_A_nd_ers_on

The Japanese are eagerly
Investing the profits they earned
here to buy U.S. properties. The
fru!ted plains and amber waves
of grain that Americans inherIted from their ancestors are
acquiring new owners. Yet , the
greedy Americans continue to
gorge themselves on Japanese
Imports.
They takf their example fr om
their leaders who, year after
year, have spent more money
than they have brought ln. All too
much of their tax revenue has
gone for foolish and fr ivolous
extravagances. Now , Congress Is
back at work on another overstuffed budget larded with waste.

January industrial
production up
WASHINGTON - The F ederal Reserve Board released two reports
Wednesday that showed th e nation's factories moving toward lull
capacity, reflecting a robust economy that poses the danger of rising
Inflation.
One report found monthly industrial production rose 0.3 percent ln
January on the strength of greater 04tput In construction supplies,
non-durable consumer goods and durable materials. The other report
showed capacity utilization was unchanged last month at the nation's
factories, mines and utilities, at 84.4 percen t, while utilizalion in
manufacturing rose 0.2 percentage point.
The figures were further signals that the nation 's factories are
straining toward full capacity; the Fed watches such indicators
closely to determine inflationary threats ...,.n overheated economy
results in factories running at full tilt,leading to resource shortages
both in materials and workers.
·
With other economic Indicators in recent weeks reflecting a rapidly
growing economy, the Fed has pushed up short-term interest rates in
an effort to slow the expansion and inflation.
President Bush; however, has sent some mixed signals by saying he
is tess concerned about inflation than abou t a slowdown in the
economic expansion.
January 's unchanged capacity utilization followed a 0.3 percentage
point rise in December. But the operating rate for primary
processing grew 0.5 percentage point to 89.1 percent- matching a
high set during the lwo years beginning in 1978, the Fed reported. The
biggest area of growth in primary processing came from metals
producers and petroleum refining.
Operating rates at producers of Industrial materials declined 0.2
percentalie point to 85 .percent. the ("ed said. Rates for both mining
and utintles also felt, with the situation at mines reflecting a sharp
drop )n coal output and oil and gas extraction.
The monthly increase in industrial production occurred despite a
downturn in production of motor vehicles. Total manufacturing
output was up 0.5 percent in January while production at mines and
utilities declined, the Fed said.
The 0.3 percent production increase followed a revised 0.5 percent
gain in December, according to the report. The index that measures
output, with a base oflOO In 1977, h!t 141.1last month, 5 percent higher
than in January 1988.
_ ·
Car assemblies decreased In January to an annual rate of 7.5
million units , down from 7.9 million in December. although
production oft rucks for consumer use conf!nued to rise. Production of
business eq uipment climbed 0.3 percent, reversing a decline in the
last three months of 1988, the Fed said.
Output of transit equipmenl , sii'Ong in the fourth quarter of last
year , declined in January. But production of both manufacturing and
commercial equipment offset the decline.
Output of materials was unchanged last month while production of
durable and non-durable materials rose. largely on the strength of
steel and chemicals .
Output of energy materials fell almost 2 percent, reflecting the
declines in coal mining. oil drilling and electricity production; the.Fed
said.
Overall, production of all major Industries except transportation
equipment and paper rose last month. Production at utilities fell 0.8
percent, mostly because of mild winter weather, while mining output
dipped 1.2 percent.

Letters to the editor
Against bar location
Dear Editor,
This is in regard to the bar !bat
th ey are trying to put in at the old
Elberfeld's Warehouse on Mechanic St. in Pomeroy.
I live at 329 Mechaptc St. just a stone's throw away. I have
two sons, age 8 and age~; as well
as the neighbors having chlldren
who play here along the street
and at the nearby park. .
The problem is that the people
who are trying to put this bar In
are saying that the park Is not
used and Mechanic St. Is considered a slum area. These SO·
called high society people, as
they call themselves , went as far
as taking pictures of our dog
houses, our garbage sacks that
we set out for trash day and bare
bushes along the hill side and
road way. They' re claiming that
these sights would be greatly
Improved if they put a bar or
night· club in the old warehouse.
Also. there would be jobs (I can

imagine what kind ).
The petitions (ail of you who
s igned the petitions against the
bar know who you are) were
denied and thrown out of court. It
seems that we taxpaying citizens
do not have a. voice in anything.
And if a bar is going to improve
a place's environment . boy , did
·we wake up on the wrong side of
the bed!
It's pretty good when someone
has to sloop as low as taking a
picture of someone's dog house.
In regard to a bar looking better
on a street than a dog house, I
would choose a dog houSe ins lead
of a bar any day. By the way, isn't
that where the ones who go to
bars usually end up? .
God knows we don't need any
mort' bars or night clubs. They're
both the same.
Please, let's hear from you .
Thank you,
Suzan Gilmore, 329 Mechanic
St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

Today ·in history
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Feb. 16, the 47th day of 1989 with 318 to follow .
The moon is waxing, moving toward lull.
The momlng stars 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
historian Henry Brooks Adams in 1838, orchestra leader Wayne King
and actor Chester Morris, who created the role of film detective
Boston Blackle, both In 1901, ventriloquist Edgar Bergen In 1903,
slnger Patti Andrews of !he Andrews Sisters In 1920 (age 69), singer
Sonny Bono in 1940 (age 49), actor LeVar Burton In 1957 (age 32), and
tennis player John McEnroe In 1959 (age 30).
On this date !n history:
In 1923, archaeologists opened the treasure-laden tomb of
Tutankhamen in Egypt's Valley of the Kings.
In 1933, a patent for the synthetic fiber nylon was awarded to the
DuPont company.
In 1959, Fidel Castro was sworn In as Cuba's leader.

•

~~~~\~.NFA.

Members of Congress expect to
continue spreading manna from
Washington around the country.
They're busily preparing to bequeath a few million here and a
few mllllon there, with their
. usual reckless abandon. They
are seeking an awesome array of
special appropriations for places
you have heard of and a few you
haven' t.
They are trying to initiate
dozens of unnecessary projects,
knowing that the planning costs
won't add much to the budget
now, but will obligate thetaxpayers to pay huge construction
costs later.
Once the beneficiaries get their
mitts on some federal cash,
enough is never sufficient. Then
the add-ons begin, Soon, every
project needs to expand, every
staff needs more employees,
every office needs more paper to
shuffle.
In fairness , the outgoing
budget director, Joseph R.
Wright Jr. , has worked heroically with wastebuster J . Peter
Grace to purge- from the budget
an !mpressibe SUO bllllon In
sheer waste. But the Grace
Commission uncovered much
more that only Congress , can
eliminate .
Meanwhile, the national debt
will soon reach $2.5 trillion. The
annual interest rate alone on this
, staggering debt Is now $145
billion, which amounts to 15
percent of the federal budget.
That means $145 billion In taxes
collected this year cannot be
spent to house the homeless, feed
the hungry, educate the chlldren
or provide health care for the
needy and elderly, The money
must go to service the debt that
our spendthrift leaders have run
up.
And 30 percent of those interest
payments wlll go to the Japanese
who now hold a mortgage on
America .

Congress must watch its waste line
Suppose you were the chief of a
Fortune 500 company and earnlng a million dollars or more a
year. Would you care terribly If
President Bush broke his promlse and raised taxes to reduce the
federal deficit?
Based upon the opinions of
actual CEOs, the answer Is no.
You wouldn't care. Of more than
200 chief executives surveyed
recently by Fort_une magazine,
two-thirds favor hiking taxes
(although they conveniently exempt Income and capital galhs
taxes, which tend to h!t the rich
where they live).
Predictably, Fortune presen ted Its survey as proof that
hard -headed chief executives
were willing to bite the bullet for
the national good. Here's another
possibility: Like man-darins of
old, CEOs rarely trouble them·
selves with obstacles to vertical
mobility. They've already ar·
rived at the summit , so the
question of whether others make
It Is not of crushing Importance.

Siphoning several hundred doltars off average Incomes through
extra gasoline and sin taxes, or
through a national consumption
tax, wouldn't even dent the
lifestyle of the average CEO. But
!t could matter decisively to less
prosperous Americans aspiring
to a better existence. It couW
mean, for example, the difference between saving ·for the
future or not.
John Makin, director of fiscal
pollcy studies at the American
Enterprise Institute, put his
finger on what 's at stake In the
tax debate In a recent article
discussing the federal deficit: "If
we want to hold the government's
share of national income to about
20 percent ... we must slow
spending growth to 4 percent lor
the nextfewyears. If, instead, we
raise taxes, · the fede.r al government's share wUI reach 25
percent very quickly and we
shall as Individuals lose control
over an additional 5 percent of
our resources."

The debate over whether to
raise taxes is often portrayed as
between courageous reallsts on
the one side (the tax-hikers) and
bUnkered Ideologues on the
other. Yet at Its most basic level.
the faceoff pits people who wish
to see government grow (or who
are resigned to such growth) and
. those who've witnessed too many
concessions to expanding government In the past, often In the
name of "rea\ism," and have
decided to draw the line.
One of the enduring myths of
the Reagan presidency Is that
Congress cut federal spending
and taxes. In fact, Congress
trimmed or eliminated only a few
programs, such as housing subs!dies and local revenue sharing.
Most programs grew -and In
many cases, such ai for the
m!lltary, agriculture, health,
veterans benefits and Income
security, they grew at an alarmtng rate .
The federal government has
expanded during this decade by

Vincent Carroll

·

3.3 percent annually, In constant
dollars , a pace only slightly
slower than during President
Carter's years. Meanwhile, hikes
In Social Security taxes alone
outstripped savings from the 1981
rollback in income tax rates.
Nevertheless, many In Congress Insist they can't trim
spending, except perhaps at the
Pentagon. Not only can't they
find savings, they want to spend
additional billions on education,
the homeless, housing, day care,
scientific research, Jaw enforce·
ment, environmental cleanup,
mass transit and so on. Without a
trace of a smile to acknowledge
the joke, they insist government
has been starved and now must
begin to beef up.
Beef up? Pork out is more like
it. Congress resembles a glutton
who thinks self-restraint Is stopping after the fourth piece of pie,
Either we put this creature on a
diet or, eventually, it will eat us
out of house and fiome.

Race may tip party balance~-~Ro~be:..::_rt.::..!Wa!!:!!lte~rs
MANASSAS, Va. (NEA) - If
racial considerations are about
to assume Increased Importance
in the competition between the
two major political parties, that
disturbing development could
become apparent first In
VIrginia.
There are only two major
statewide elections during this
odd-numbered year- the gubernatorial contests In New·Jersey
and Virginia. In the Garden
State, both the major party
nominees are expected to be
white politicians.
In Virginia, however, a black
candidate ts virtually certain to
be selected at the Democratic
Party's June 10 statewide convention, wh!le four whites are
vying for the Republican party's
nomination In the June 13
primary.
Seeking to become the first
black elected governor of any
state In the nation in this century
Is Lt. Gov. L. Douglas Wllder,
who already has achieved the
status or being the first black
elected to statewide office !n the
South since Reconstruction.
When he ran lor lieutenant
govenor In 1985, Wilder was
written off by many politicians as
a hopeless contender in a state
that is 82 percent white. On
Election Day, however, he carried seven of . Virginia's 10
congressional districts and captured 44 percent or a II ballots cast
by whites, as well as 97percentof
all black votes.
But his vote totals were slgnlfl·
cantly lower than those of his
white Democratic running
mates. Mary Sue Terry was

Southern, Trimble gain sectional finals

Thursday, February 16, 1989

Officials ignore financial
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
government cannot continue
squandering money and living on
borrowed yen without risking a
crash that could spread economic devastation, political
chaos and Incalculable misery.
Already, Japanese investors
,finance 30 percent of the U.S.
budget deficit. They are also
buying up America ' s farms,
factories, banks and businesses
at an alarming rate. The Japanese are astonished at how eager
Americans are . to sell their
birthright for pottage.
Yet , President Bush Is trying to
tell associates that Japanese
acquisitions In this country are

elected attorney general by 22
percentage points and Gerald L.
Ballles was elected governor by
10 percentage points, while
Wilder won by only 4 percentage
points.
An Important symbol!c change
In the na tlonalleadersh!p of the
two political parties couW affect
the outcome of VIrginia's guber·
natortal race this year and
contests In other states, especially in the South, In future
years.
The Democratic Party now !s
he11ded by Ronald H. Brown, the
first black ever to chair either
major party. The Republican
Party is headed by H. Lee
Atwater. a veteran of virtually
all-white South Carolina Republican politics.
The combination has the potential to dramatically accelerate
the pace of political realignment
In the South, which Democratic
pollster Brad Bannon notes "is a
product of 30 years or racial
conflict."
At the end of World War II, the
region was so overwhelmingly
Democratic that there was al·
most no Republican presence In
many Southern states. In recent
decades, however, the South has
voted consistentlY for the Republican Party's presidential
candidates.
A top-down realignment also
has made its mark on guberna·
torlal and senatorial contests in
the region, where the Repubii·
cans now are approaching parity
with the Democrats. At the next
level - elections for House seats
- GOP victories bave been more
limited.

Finally, there are the races for
Senate has changed from 38-0 to
dozens of state and local offices. 30-8. The ratios are similar in
A comparison of the 1969 and 1989 other states In the South.
political divisions In the region's
If the grass-roots perception of
Democratlc·controlled state lethe leadership of the two pollcltal
gislatures Illustrates the extent. parties focuses on racial consld·
lo which Republicans have estaberatlons, many Southern white
lished a political presence bu ~ voters who now vote Republican
still face a daunting task In their
In national election couW begin
bid lor equality If not superiority.
voting for GOP candidates at the
In 20 years, the Alabama
middle and bottom of the ticket.
House has gone from 101 DemoAt the same time, Virginia's
crats and 4 Republ!cans to 89-16,
unusual black-white gubernatorthe Mississippi Senate has
Ial contest could be directly
shifted from 51-1 to46·6, the South
affected by changing voter attiCarolina House has moved from
tudes and shifting political
119-4 to 86-37, and the Louisiana . loyal ties.

Berry's World
HOW A80U'ti

BAILING ME
OU.T ?

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tlltbyNEA,Inl;;

Boys ratings

lh!trak II, Vo ..ptowa Sl. 17
f'lllrlllay Iii, DtU.-w.t" 71

t'OLUMBUSt OhiO ( UPI J - T-.ls
"l'ek' a Unlltd Pret&amp;lnle r .. uo•d Ohio
HIJh School Board •I Coaches' boy!!
hukethlloiJ n.tlnp ( wtih ftrM ·PlAtf \'IWH
lllld won-lo~ot l'f'rords k1 parendlt"'it''ll );

GUIIU.\· -11, (.on:onlla 1~
Hopi! Kt, Oll...et ll (OTI
IUP·l• 11...-polh 1!, T_,lor 13
Ka.luna1100 ltl. A.lma81

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Tenm
Polni!i
I. Tol edo Mal.'Gmbt&gt;r (tl ) ( IK- 1!303
2. Lorain Senior Ul t 19-1)
U1
:L Cl n Wlthro~ ( 3) ( lt-1 )
2!3
.J. Clndn•U M'oodwatd t 16-11
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3. \\'arren Hardin&amp;: ll&amp;.l)
IU
li. Lorain Ad mint! Kln1 ( 18-t)
l2t
"1. Tolt'do Scott (11 -:t)
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II. " 'a.rtt!n WMIE'r n HHoerw ( ll-3)
lOS
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61
ICI .Newark (Ill-!)
"
Secollll ten ; H. Trutwooi:I-Mu.dh;on t7:
, l2. Canton Mt'Kintcy '5: 13. Cotumbuli
Rrooldla~en 18; U . Tule!do \\'hltmer Ill:
1~. Onctn111U 011.11 Hills fl: 16. Barbf&gt;rton
7: 11. Beavet"4:retll II: Ill. LoP."' f ; IIJ,(t,le l
Shakt'r Hei eNs 14nd Toledo St . Jo' ran cls, )
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Division II

Tum

I. " 'rsl Gf' ..r;a (2f) (21.,.11 )
'l. \'ounplown Moont'y (H ( 1&amp;-0l
3 . l'ou~t.own

Po ints
355

'till

Uberty ( 3 ) ( 211-11 )

2olM

I. Orrvlllt' ( 3) ( 11-tll
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ti . lk•ln~on 1 IIHI

195
IM
1&amp;1
1. &amp;y vn•a-tdl ) t1 S-t J
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II. Day Or.amlnadl" ( 1) U11·21
l.t7 .
9. Hillitboro (!0·11
!19
II.CAmbrld&amp;e (17·3 )
511
Secord ten : ll . Ponsmoulh and WavC"rl)'. :n each; 13. Unclnnall lo'or..,.t Par II
29; 14. Bellairt'l 'lll; 15. Ro11!dOrd 25: Ill .
Van " 'erl 12: 17. Spnrtu Hl~thiO.nd II; Ill .
.4-:thta.buia 7; HI. No""·al k-1 ; 20, Cl nclllnt.ll

FruWin 81 , Andt'rMn M

K.an . . Wslyn K1, SL MarJ'S·PiaiM 11
Kl!'n.Y•III. Cut&gt; Re!wr~ 11
Malo.-! tx, Urhau 81
Mar~te !II. \' ala-rai.!l oKS

Mt Ptlerson 67, QUawa Sl
Miti110Uri· Rolla1,, UMOin511
Mtsaourt..Si. Loalli 11, SE MlsJiOIIri '711
·" 'ount. Union 11. Ohio " 'l'liieyan li ~
Ohio U. 81, E. M.lcWkan Ill
'
Oklahofl"'l. ·lt, &amp;aaM!I "'(OT)
ott.erbeln I!K, Marlriia n

Sleaa llelptdl, Northwood 13
SoulhwP.SII'r n IU. Belheii\J
St. ThollllUi 75, Carleton S3
St. Jo ha's ·1 Minn.) u. st. Old St
W. M14!hi!I;Ml 65; C. Mlc:hiKM 51
WabMh &amp;t, l'hncheslt!r II
Wftitmlnslr.f 11. t\\'Ua U
WI!ICOada 1'!. Norl'lwesil"r o 60
Wh~e•bei'J 51, Ohio Norlhl'rd4
Woos&amp;er 114 , Denllw)n 55
So.thwe~~~t

Arkansas IU. SMU &amp;S
Houlllon 10$, Texa~~ 81
Rlee 70, Ts111s Chrltillan 81
Te:w.:all Lutheran II!, Mar,- Hardln~lor

1t
Texas A.A:M 1i. BQbr 15
Texas Wesleyan Ill, St . Edward's ~~

Wl'tit
C . W~hlnK(oo !lt. StiiiCUC \J , 11
ChrbU.IUI Her ..11e lOG, WhltU~r 9'!
Kaai\IIS St. 117, COiondo 7t
. Puc. Lutheno 11, st. Martin!&gt; 68 (OT)
Pomoi8·PitJer gt, C~an DleJI:')it

SMta Clara lUI, San F.-anciM:O 50
St. Mary'lo ((.'aUf.) 70 , Sun Dleco -15

Purecll 3.
Dl\!lsiOtllll
:ru.m
PolntN
I. Pet:l.'rsburK Spl'ngfld ( U ) (20·0)
233
2. 8e'Vnly Fort fo' r)'t' (1) i 19..0)
2U

:1. Bucynas " 'yltord !JJ (17-1)
-l. North CoUe~e Hllltl,.l )
5. Hamilton Badin ( 11-3 )
li. Oberlln(l&amp;-31

1. Coltmbus Academy ( 11-:J )
K. Akron HohM ( 1!-i)

9. lrookvlllt! (15-4)
3'7
lo.tVbeeler!lhu 1'K I IHJ
3&amp;
Sews! ten : 11. Cb~ea.lu• !2: 1~ .
Tlll!Canwas Val ley 31; 13. Cadiz II ; 1-t.
Gihi&amp;nllui'! U ; U. Huron 13: 1&amp;. Minford
8: 11.0nbulo7; llt Elyrt.Catholk:G: 19.
(lie) Pr1•hlf' Shawnee and O nclnmtl
McNichollUi, 4 eWJh.
Dl'l'lslon IV
Tt!llffi
Points
J. Sprinlflcld Caih {I&amp;J (20.0)
t.!'l
'!. St!l:rlnJI" l!;lt:Kinll&gt;y (I ) (IK·D)
1116
3. Canal Wlnchl'!lier (3) ('19-1)
UIS
1. Kalida ( lfi-2)
UJ
5.CinCouliryDu,v ( J7-2)
16
6. Lttwty Cen&amp;er (16-1 1
'9
1. Nt'whury \ IK-1! )
52
!l Jo'or1 Loramie ( 11-3)
46

9. Man!JIIeldSI . Peter'!i ii •H l
10 . .\nl~rp(IK· I)

Sf'oond

trn:

II. Cle'Vthand

Prep scores
Boys Ohio iil~hlSchOol RM.'llethall
By Unltlld P~"e~s lntt&gt;r1111t klml

J!H
1111
1!9
119
101
6'

41
2!1

Ht&gt;I~N

l.&amp;lthel"liiR Ji:a,;t 36; 1%. Colun11M1 s M'C"hrlt!

:11: 13. TUl!Cai'KWU!I t'atholk• !9 ; U . Tltfln
Cathrert 't4 ; 15. Um11 t t&gt;nlral ( "atholld l:
16. St. JlenrJ 17; li. AshtabuM. St . •John

Wt~~q .

Ohio Collcg1• Bru. ~ha.llitestlts
8)· Unllt&gt;d Prt':!ti"' Inter rntl1•rul
Wedn ~ dfl.."· Fe h. n

Ball $tute H, To Indo 69
Rowlin,; tfrt1•n 16, 1\ti 111nl 6ti
Ohio Unh· Ill. Eastern MichiKM ill

" 'rirlll Statl,.7t. ~wrn Kf'ntwk~· 6S
DriroH 91 , Vourwotown Stair 6'l
Hal d..._in-W alt.ict• 11, Ht&gt;IO!illl'rg 113 (ot )
Ollt&gt;rhein K!l. MnrH\tlll 1:!
WUWnhPrx 59, Ohlu l'Ourtht'rn54
Caplal 65, Musldn~m S3
Allekheny ( r ill 94 , Ohl'rlln 11
Krnyon IU, faM• Rl'!Wrw il
\\ oO!!U'r Jlt,l}(onfitUt 5!i
1\tuunl Union 'ii, Ohio M't..,.,k•)an 6i
Malone 9\!. t lrhllftll K!l
A"'hiMRd 79. ShaWII{'l' Slutt- 63
Flndl M.\' 110. Dt&gt;fluncr 18
.lohn l:arroiiii S, fk&gt;thany ( W Va) 1111

Nat!oaLI (ol lcJtt.'
Ba&gt;&lt;ldhall HC!iiuk"'
fu~l

1\lbr lght ;:-1. Drew $9
A!i"'m-tpUoo 10'!. ML•rrim!h ' 7!1
Bentlt&gt;y !t/i, Bryal1l ~"
llloomshn~ 05, Kulzto.,.,•n 70
Bustuo U. ill, Vcrmu1lt fJ5
llutknriiiU. Rl tter i~
Clario o 5!1, J.ock llal't'n 511
Qllhy 103. Ba1ts )11
Ik'laware 111, To"-· ~o St. 7-t
Dlckln.!!on 62, ~Junn • ian 511
Ft:1n kiln &amp; Mar!-111111 ill. 1\tuhlenht.•r ~~;69
Hvr~ ..._. il, Drt!•el tl/4
Holy O'oss 17. t ' alrft('ld &amp;II
Huward 72, Md .- Ea.~tern Shorr 71
Ltlfoll,\'("f:k' 82, Lt'hlll:h &amp;9
fA&gt;hman 16, fky Coli. of Nl' 70
~l~~.ntuUaovllle!l&amp;, RPI 11
Man!lfleld 108. Plll ·JO hn.~IO'I'o' n fl2

Marht N, Lonx l&lt;t~land l!. n
MillerS\-111(' 74. East St roud~obuFJ:: ill
N....-• Vork U. Kll, K.lnAJj Point i·l
Rlctunord &amp;I, Anwrl.-an 51
Stton Hall t~, ( 'onrl'clk'111 69
Shlpp!n,t,u 1"11: 66, t\tllr. ( Pa.) 60
Sllppfry Kock lltl/, IIIIIU~Ja (I' lL l 71
Sprlnxfil:!lil Coil. 110, AIC 71
Urslnusfl6, swarthmol"f' 1a
"' a~~hlnl(tQn &amp; ,fl•ll••n;on 7i, Thlto! 71
Weo-;t Cheslt-r 71, flttt•ynt'y Sl . 75
" '!!bhnhnder 91, Plli· Brlldford 60
' 'ork 11. Sll~quc ha.nM ft1 \

ScJuth
¥.'. \1 u. T t•l•h d7

1\I~ .· BrOHddu ~ 119,

('orJ:ord 79, Rlurllcld 07
Florida 90, Auburn 19
l'1orlda A&amp;M 101. t\lahama St. 97
F1orlda Memorial M'f, No\u 71
Gil"nville /11, FatmuuK it f'lOT l
.JarbonvDif" M1, Fl~l"r !\S

LSU 99, K.-nta:ky 1141
Mem.,.-s Sl. l\1 ,

l'lndn~Mll11

Mbl!lll'irdppl St . 61 , Ahahwna S7 (OT )
Nav.)' 73, "llllam &amp; Mury 10 (0T )
Xl'·{..llur loUt• KI. 8oulh •1orlda 1G

Nl" Stat" ,0, O cm11on 75
Si. Thnmil.l' (f1a. , 101, flll.rryill
S. ( 'IU'olim ~I, \' lr~thda T1~~:h 10
S. Mi~o'*-lilppl1115. SW Loul:-.huutiO~
Souihert192, ~E Lold!!hma i 2
Ttnrr.s~t'

11:1. ~11.~!4~slppl11

Vandl'rhllt II~. liell'XI" 1!!
W.Vu. " 'e.!ile.J:.m 1111, l)a..,l&lt;tl&amp;f:Jidno;'i$
Wi'!&lt;IIIJhcrty 10!1, " '.Va. Stnlf' IOfl
Wht&gt;t._•UnK Jt!,.ull 122. O.uleston 1110
Wrl~~:hl St. 10. E . K('nlll:ky 6$

1\lldvtcst
j\lle-JIK'IIY 91. Obt'f'lill 77
,\o;llllMMI 19, ShnwrM"e Sht.te til
Au~bu

r.- Ktl, Sl. Mary's 81

Halft1n-Wallact' 11,

Hrl*lhl"l'll: ill

(OT)

Ball ShU~ "H . Tok"do ill
&amp;..thel 9'l, Harnllne 61
Hetha.n)' A-t, StcrHn11: 12
Hradley 9G. AJ•. · •rmia~am 90
RowUnr: Gnoen 16. Miami (Ohio) lifi
{.'apllAI 65 . •ltu .~ld nprn li:J
l'entnd MI!I,.;Ourl !HI, SW BuplbolltS
l)(&gt;l'au"' Kl . H11.n owr $8

Bob Uecker has
mild heart attack
, BURBANK, Cal!!. !UP I) Actor and Milwaukee Brewers
broadcaster Bob Uecker was
resting comfortably Wednesday
after suffering a mUd heart
attack, his agent said.
Uecker, 54, complained ·of
chest pains Tuesday and was
; aken to a Los Angj!les-area
hospital. · The former majorleague catche•· is expected to
return to work in about lour
weeks.
"The doctors said he's In
extremely good shape, so the
prognosis Is excellent," agent
Deborah Miller said.
Uecker, one olthe stars of the
television series, "Mr. Belvedere," played six seasons with
the Braves. Cardinals and Phil·
lies during the 1960s. He recently
finished a film entitled "Major
Leagues." with Tom Berringer
and Charlie Sheen.

fi eld goals for ni ne poin ts. And y
chipped In with seven
markers as Souther n pulled
away for the victory .
Sou thern hit 9 of 18 lrom th ree
point ra ngefor50perce nt.Tay to r
was 5 of 9 from lo ng ra nge while
Andy Baer was 3 of 5 .Tay lor lead
the way wi th 22 po int s. He was
joined In double figures by Baer
11 ith 17, Grin dsta ff wit h 16 and
May nard with 13. So uth er n hit 15
of 34 two pointers for 42 percent .fr om the line th ey we re 17 of 29
for 57 perCPnt. Th e Tornadoes
collec ted 28 rebounds, wi th Maynard getti ng eight a nd Ri chard
Deav~;r wi th seve n.
Den ney scored a ga me high 32
poi nts for Coac h Br uce Wilson's
Pirates. hitting 14 or 25 from the
floor . He was jo in ed In double
figu res by Steve George and Don
Mays wit h ll eac h. No rth Gallla
hit 24 of 53 from the floor for 43
percent, a nd 3 of 9 from long
range. The Pirates hit 7 oflllrom
the line for 63 percent. Mays ha d
11 of the Pira tes 33 rebound s,
while De nney ha d eight.
The gam~ ~ nded on a sour note
as a light br oke out betwee n fan s
Bat'r

of the two schools , wit h &gt;orne '
Trimble 86 . Eastern 55
p layers joining in with seven
In the second game, .Je ff
si'COnds remaining. After o•·der Holbert , Scoll Aufllek an d Jo hn
was restored by tournamen t Down s combine d tor 61 points as
offlcals , school personnel a nd the Tomcats rolle d to a 86-55
sheriff' s deputies a nd a discus- victory.
slon tastin g five to seven m inutes
Ho tber i showed why he is one
it was decided to e nd th!' game at of the premie re players In
that point.
so u1heas1er n Ohio as he ripped
North Ga llia , ending its hard· the ne t s lor 27 poi nts a nd added
wood season a t 12-7, sa id good· five assists. Mike Martin, th e
bye to seniors Ru sty Denney, Eagles' 6&lt;l senior , saw limit ed
Steve George, Greg Glassburn, playing lime early. Martin Wh o
Chester Hess, Don Mays and bro ke hi s rig ht wr is t In prac tic e
Todd P etrie.
Monday night sta rted the g ame
Score by quarters
but ca me out with Jus t over thre e
Souther n............ 15 22 15 22-7&lt;
1 minutes gone. Th e loss of Martin
Nortl1 Gallta ...... 13 21 16 H-64 hurt the EagLes In a big way a s
SOUTHERN (74) Chad th&lt;' Tomca t s gaithered in an
Taylo r 2-5-3·22, Andy Baer 2·3·6- amaz ing 61 re bounds to the ·
17 , ToddGrindstaff4-1-5-16, Bra d Eag les 22. Auflick, a 6-3 sophoMayna r d 5-0-3- 13, Ri cha rd more. gra bbed 23 missed s hot s to
De aver 2·0·0-4. TOTALS - 15-9- go along with 18 point s a nd lour
t7 -74
blocked shots. Rya n McClelland
NORTH Gi\LLJA (64 ) - Rust y added 12 re bound s.
Denney 14-0-4-32, Don Mays
It looked like the Eag les were
5·0-1-11. George 0-2-2-10, Brian go in g to make a ga me of it e arly
Stout 2·1·0-5. Darin Smith 2·0·0·4. as Trimble he ld a 16·11 at th e e nd
Glas sburn 1-0-0-2. T01'1\LS of the firs t qua rli'r. But Trimble.
24-3-7-64
Continued on pa ge 4
•

ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP AND PARTS

Fe.h. U

Toumameat ReH ~ s
DIV~ion

I

Co l South 59. Dublin 51
Col Nrthlnd 6!1. CGI Fnt.nldln Hit S5
Upper Mllngfon tl , Col Eul 'r9
Dh'lslen II
Rork 1111133, Galltpoilbt :It
Sprln11: Sha•lMlP 1!, Milton Vnkln 55
'11pp City &amp;3, Benjamin IAl~ ~9
Uhrl cM\-il le CI.,Yrnont SfJ, W Hol11~ 11
" 'elision 39, JaC'kson 36 (ot 1
\tr' ~l Unlo•llt, Hlll!llboro 53

•FREE ESTIMATES
•DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN

lH..,INion Ill
Broolc\'llle,99, 'rlppnty He(lll'l-19
Cin McNicholas 6Q, Geo~own G2
liamiton Badin 75, East Lllni:on 5ti
Klnp Mill• Tl, Dixie iB
New Ml ami"· Greent'\'IL'W -1:1
Prf'lllt~ Sh~twnte 1m, Cllnlo n Mwo!l6e 54
\'ers-lllt!!; ~.Miami E1Uil49
Division IV
Cin CouNr)' Dl.y IDt, Rlpk',\' 50
Cln Summllll, St Ber•rd 511 (OI)
Racine Soutlll.'r n 1-1, N G11llla IU
Siytnml'li \ 'ul 98, H11nran Trat!IP G'l
Trlmhle 1!1. Rfoech\'llle Ell!l&amp;r-r n U

•ALL INSURANCE CLAIMS
'

•AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AT
WHOLESALE PRICES
We Feature Frame Repair On The

CHIEF E•Z-LINER
•

Tournament Rf'!li!.MM
Dl\'1810•1
c..-:e n~r,illf' .t9, Mltietown .tl
Cln Aiken 6t Harrtsnn 56
Cln Withrow H. Glen Esh• 4S
Cln Oak Hills 1!7, Lemon ~o aroo :r.
Oeflan~e .U. TQIIle Vllhhtll 44
Hoi lund Sprln11: 51, To! "' oudw~trd Ill
Mo&amp;Std.llon Perl'y49, canton Tlfll~n .JII
Nord!; C:u~lon Hoowr ti.'i, Wad!lwortll .~l
Ore,;on Clay iO, Tol St Ursulu -li
~ ldJM&gt;)· 64, SprinR South 51 (ntl
Tn l Miloomh('l' ta, Per~·!Wur,; 311
Tn! Notre Daunt• 5%. TniStart S.J
Troy ·1-1. Sp rlntcfleld N ~•
W Cur"*l\on 65, Da..v Dunbar ~9
\\" Chl.'!lk&gt;r Lakota 511, Mil lord 1\li (ot )
Wlll'ren HowiUid -17. W~~.rn:on Hardlnx

30

•

1\lolulw~

773-5024
GRINDSTAFF RE BOUNDS - SouUH'rn guard
Todd Grindstaff (left) pulls
llown a rebound as teammate
Brent Shuler (42) reaches for
the ball in Wednesday night's
semi-final sectional . lournament game against North
GaiUa at Meigs lfigh Sc·hool.
The Tornadoes earned the
right to play In Saturday' s
championship game against

!ill

{Ooshen 52", Nnrwood 4i
Unta Bat h M. St Mllr)'~ 52
l.Jma Shuwnc1• 110, \'un Wert 5ii
Mali me .. ~:;, Napoleon •11
M~VMvilk- 88. " ' Mu~tldn~m 6'!
Mllaa Edison st. Huron 5:1
Nu\'lll'l'e Fairlel!l.ll-11, T11llntadll:t' 40
IUverdall.' ~1. Urnu Cath -II
Ros!llord 411, Foatorla 45

Wanull' Rh'f'r \'lf!W IIi, Mor,;IU\ 3i
Dl\·blkJn Ill
,-\lien Ea.'it 51, Wll.)'ne Traer -14
Bl'ooldteld 51, Uberty 23
Chl~P"n Falls~. Middlclleld Card 26

..

(USPS

I

II ,

145-900)

• Comes withaSO-month limited
lifetimewarranty.
• Fits most domestic and import
cars or light trucks.
• Meetsor exceedsoriginal
equipment requirements.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
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Pro results

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Thunda,y'a Sport .~ C::alt"'dar
Ba.!t llrl.hall
Mllwo~ukeeai Chicqo, ~::Jfl p.m.
Miami 111 Dallas. !1: 341 'p.m.
Ruston at
9: 30 p.m.
Golden Stall' at LA. Qlpp:&gt;rs, 10: 30 p.m.
lk&gt;troll at !t!11cnunento, 111;311 p. m .
L&lt;\ Laken IU Porte-d, ·10: :ill p.m.
Boxlnll'
Sun DI1'XU - Ollberl lltlptl!!l \f!i .
Kllh('rlo Ro~Urs, 12 rOUIId YACII.I'll \\18.-\
julior middl~'('i~ title hout : Wlllltl.'
" 'll1&gt;0n \'!i. Dln•ld Vl!dder, 10 round tiUpcr
middlc•cl~~:hl hout.
Sterllwa- Heldt&amp;!!, MlciL Stev1•
McCrory \'11. Mark H11.mmond, 10 round
!o Uper hJUJiamwelll:flt bout: Thm -l'ohnson
v~ . Toll)" Del..t.ftosj, 10 rea.- feathl'r·
welr;ht boul; Tyrolll!' Jack110n "''"· l'hll
ChariiKln. 10 rounl li1htwrl1ht boul.
~
Goll

uaa•.

One Year ... .... ... .:... .. .... ............ $7'l.80
SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
Dally ..... .. ... .... .. ............. .... .. . 25 Ce nts

(#5024, #5026, #5026R)

week.
No s ubsc riptions by m a ll pennltted In

areas wh ere home carrier set v1cc Is

$699

available.

Moll Subs&lt;rlplloM

l..earJin~~:

lnaide Melp County

Hawa.llln LadiM 0pll"ft

13 Week• ................ .... ....... ..... 119.2&lt;
26 Week• ...............,................. $37.96
52 Week5 ................ ...... .... ....... 174.36

Sun Dlep- PGA "-4)' \\1IIIJUJ1"0pcn
Tamaa . Fla.. - PGA Se11lo rs SUncow;t
(' lullior
Hoct~·

(hJtslde Melp County
13 Weeks .......... ....... .... ............ $20.80
26 Weeks ......... ..... .. .. ...... .. ....... $40.30

Mortrul at Phlladelphla.1 : 35 p.m.

St. Loum ut :'IJY blandera, 8:11p.m.
Qurhrc 11.1 VanL'OUWr, 10:35 p .m.

~2

Weeks ................................. 175.40

SMITH AND ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING

C!udes i.1 removable

plastictote that's
lightweight
and won'!

scratchcoun tertoPs ~

pleterangeof socket sizes in

metricandSAE
• Convenient metal box for storage
• 8nqu ick rclease(%"d ri ve) ratchet

• Spinner handle(¥." drive)
• 3' Extension (ll"drive)
~" toW'adaptor

• MadeofChrome!Van·
diomalloy steel
• Hcattreated

• Chamferedendson
sockets
#89-5534N

MAC's lniectorCare
or Thermo-Aid

"
9

MAC's lnjec10r

~ Care fuel injL'C·

Tht perfcct bdx for a
h! mtenrapartmcnt
stanertool ki to r a~a

secondkil to keep in
vourcar ortruck.ln·

• lncludcscom·

•

19" NAPA Uti&amp;tyTool Box

Subscribe-rs not desiring to pay the c ar ~
rler may remit tn advance d! rec1 to
Th e Dally Sent ln el on a 3, Gor 12 month
basis. CredU wlll be gi.\'c n carrier e-ach

34-Piece Socket Set

$44!~xcha~ge $1749 ~

New York, Ne,w York 10017.

Kidron Olr :15 , Mapll!ie~n :1-1
Lt-rtonill :1&amp;. Sehrln11.t~

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Fort Loramlr 711. \\' Uherly SWt!m 21
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Published eve ry afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohto, by the Ohio Vallt..'Y Pub·
Ushlng Company /Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 99 2·2156. Se·
cond claSs postage paid a t Pomeroy,

,

Riverdale 51, Uma Cath ~I
·
Division 1V
Brlsiol U, C11yahoga V~ fhr 3.1
Da.llon 61. lndePe ndfoncr 25
DeGntff Rl\lotrsldr 561 Ml'cln~nicghuf"ll

Ho•OiuN

21 0 South Second
'l 'rimblc with a 74-64

A DlYislon of MultlmedJa. Inc.

PeterNbu!'K SJtlt•a-G.'I. \ 'e1•nr Mooney

"

Bob Roush, Owner
Mason, WV.

The Daily Sentinel

SundusQ Sl Mary!liO, S~neca E :13
Shet""OGd Fainii.'W 83, Mo ntpellt&gt;r !l'i

Glrud 82, Maplewood 28
Kan• Lakata 5-I, "'oodmore &gt;14
Lhobon 61), Ealol Palestin e I~

•

ROUSH'S BODY SHOP &amp; PARTS

\"oun«s Eas1117, Stow $6
Dt\tisktn II
B e a\'er Lut·al 10, Nt?ll'lon t' a\1., 1\.t
Brl.'('llsvlllr 15, Nordonla ~II
Canton South 40. Gr~cn.!tlu rg (irCt.'tl ~
Cln Sl Urs•a 47, lln Bawon42
Cortland La.lwvlew 43, Huhhunl 34
Oelta U, TlhOI'II. 44
Gurflt.id Htg 1'rln 69. M~ .. na lllgh\Md

J9
.
G••n011 53, SJ('amoro

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Glrl&lt;o Ohio Hla:h Scttool Hlll'lrlhall
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Wedm~sd"', Ji"t'b- U

14: Ul. Ht•a\ter Eu.&lt;Hern 10: Ill. Buckeyt&gt;
Norlh tmd Gluu!!Wr·Trlmhlt•, 1 ra.:h.

College scores

By Di\VE llf\HRIS
OVP Correspondent
ROCK SPR INGS- Th e Sou th·
er,n Tornadoes outscored the
Nor tl1 Ga lli a P irates 22-14 In the
fourth qua r ter to pull away for
th e victory. The first hall was nip
and tuck all the way as the
Tornadoes took leads of 15·13 at
th~ end of the fi rst quarter and a
37 34 lead into the loc ker room at
the half.The half was a offensive
display be tween Rus ty Denney of
the Pirates a nd Chad T ay lor of .
the Tornadoes. T ay lor paced the
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\

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

All the right wrts in
all the nght places~·
@1989Natif'lnal Au tomoh..,e Part s Assocnu~on

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

'

Thursday, February 16. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- · Thursday, February 16, 1989

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Symmes Valley mounts comeback to upset Wildcats 69-62
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Symmes Valley overcame a
13-point deficit in the game's
early stages and mounted a
41-point assault In the second hall

to upset Hannan Trace 69-62 in
the first game of Wednesday
night 's Chesapeake sect ional
tournament doubl eheader.
" Tony Schneider's shooting
four three-pointers was the key to

HANDS TO HEAVEN - Ea~tern's Jeff Durst (lelt, in white)
reaches for the rafters as he tries to grab a rebound in the second
game of Wednesday night's sectional doubleheader at Meigs High
School. The Tomcats deleathered the Eagles 86-55.

the final quarter when senior
forward Scott Miller stole the
bali, drove down the near sideline and to the hoop for a layup.
The 49-47 advantage las ted 13
seconds, because after Robinson

our staying in it in t he firsr hal f," Trace's offense barely came to
said Viking skipper Terry Saund· life, though point guard Brad
ers. whose crew will, after ·Cremeens' second three-pointer
savoring their fourth win of their of the night gave the Wildcats a
season in 20 tries, take on 39-30 lead wlth 6:05 lefi In the
(Franklin Furnace Green or third quarter.
The Wildcats did quite well on
Ironton St. Joe) In the sectional
championship game Friday at the boards throughout the first
7:30 p.r11.
half throug h getting second shots
When Wildcat forward Bill and denying the Vikings similar
Ba iley hit a layup with five opportunities . In the second half,
seconds left in the first quarter to however, things changed. Bailey
give Hannan Trace a 22-9lead, It picked up his third traffic ticket
appeared that .the Valley would halfway through the period,
once again be staring at the while center Scott Caldwell was
ghosts of losses past. Few of the tagged for three fouls in round
Guyan faithful could be blamed three. Caldwell's fourth foul
for expecting such a result , as the came on a charge on a drive to
Wildcats used their quick hands the lane with 55 seconds left. The
on defense to defuse a number of score was tied at 43,
VIking drives in t he paint and
Speaking of driving , Symmes
ere'ate tu r novers.
poin t guard Paul Hayes did
But Symmes refused to roll
plenty, most of it to the baseline.
over and let Trace lock the door,
"Hayes drove the baseline on us,
as they hustled and kept their
and we dldn' t cut it off," said
compos ure in executing the task
Jenkins, who was witness to
of wlilt tling away at theGallla ns'
Saunders' motion offense, which
lead. Schneider, a 5-11 senior
the Norsemen used todrivetothe
forward who sank rhe first of his
hoop or to lay back and shoot
bonus bas kets In the fir st frame, , jumpers from · wl\erever they
lobbed in tv.;o more in the second
pleased.. That offense was Ins tru·
frame to help offsetthe absence
mental 10 the resurrection of
of center Carl Robinson, who was
Hayes' shooting, as the 5-7 junior
whistled for his third foul with
scored six of his team-high 19
2:51 left before halftime. It
points In the first 16 minutes .
helped the Valley's cause that its
The saying "you can't keep a
defense was able to hold explogood man down' ' also applied .to
s ive Wildcat guard t forward Tim
Brumfield, who led all scorers
Brumfield to one point In act two.
with 24 points and whose down
"We jumped on the m early, but
time lor his usual effective
we didn't put them away, " said
shooting was confined to the
Hannan Trace chief Mike Jensecond quarter. He scored six of
kins. "They hung in there, and in
Trace's 13 points in the third
the last two and a half quarters,
period and broke the 43-43 tie
they were better than we were. "
with a long jumper that dropped
After scoring only 12 points in
in with 31 seconds left.
the second quarter, Hannan
The Valley took its first lead in

committed his lourth foul. Bailey
hit a jumper in the Ia ne to tie the
contest at 49. Cremeens dropped
in a long jumper 19 seconds later
to give Trace a 51-49 lead.
Continued on page 6

,•

STAYING CLOSE- Symmes Valley guard Paul Hayes (left)
slays close to Hannan Tra.ce counterpart Brad Cremeens as
Cremeens searches the court for the open man in the second
quarter of Wednesday night 's sem i-final sectional tournam ent
game at Chesapeake High School. Cremeens scored 17 polnis in his
. final game lor the Wildcats, who lost to the Vikings 69·62. (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Southern
...3
Co ntinued from
pa~e

behind Holbert's 13 secondquarter points. pulled away TO a
40-281ead at the ha lf. In the third
quarter the Tomcats exploded
for 30 points to take a 70-43 lead
into th e final period. Auflick had
12 points in the quarter for
Trimble, while Holbert and
Roget' Bingham had eight each.
Shawn Savoy led a trio of
Eagles in double figures with 13.
Freshman Jeff Durst added 11
and Scott Fitch had 10. Easter·n
hit 21 of64 from the field fora cool
34 percent, and only 7 of 16 from
the line for43 percent. The Eagles
had 35 rebounds, with Durst
getting 11.
TheTomcatswere 38of74 from
the floor for 51 percent and 8 of 15
from the line for 53 percent.
That was the last game for
· se niors Chris L11nce, Mike Martin and Chad Si!lclair.
Saturday night's championship game between Southern and
Trimble will starr at 7 p.m. at
Meigs High School. The winner
will adva nce to district play at
Ohio University on Feb. 22.
Southern has won the sectional
crown 12 out of the las 113 years.
Score by quarters
Trimble ............. 16 24 30 16-86
Eas tern ............. Ill? 15 12-55
TRIMBLE (86) -Jeff Holbert
8-2-5-27, Scott Auflick 9-0-0-18,
John Downs 5·2·0·11, Bingman
4-Q-0-8, Ryan McClelland 1-2-0-8,
Moore 1-0-0-2, Richman 1-0-0-2.
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(All games)
TEAM
W L P OPSc uther n............ .15 8 1465 1364
x-North Gallia .... 12 7 1329 1195
x-Eastern ........... 11 9 1448 1478
Oak Hill .. ...... .. .. 11 10 1261 1283
x-Scuthwestern .. 9 12 1426 1518
x-Hannan Trace. 9 12 1252 1260
x-Kyger Creek ... 5 16 1313 H76
Symmes Valley . 4 16 1134 1399
(x-complet.ed season)
· Wednesday's results
At Meigs H.S. - Racine
Southern 74, North Gallia 64;
Trimble 86. Reedsville Eastern
55
At Chesapeake H.S .
Sy mmes Valley 69, Hannan·
Trace· 62; Franklin Furnace
Green 69, Ironton St. Joe 49
Friday's title games
At Chesapeake H.S.
Symmes Valley vs. Franklin
Furnace Green. 7; 30 p .m.; the
winner will advance to the
district tournament at Ohio University's Convocation Center and
face the winner of the Lucasville
Valley seer tonaL
.
At Roc~ Hill H.S.- Oa(lilll vs.
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winner will claim the upperbracket title a nd advance to the
district tournament at Ohio Uni·
verslty's Convocation Center,
where they will play the Portsmouth secti6nal lower-bracket
winner.
Saturday's title game
At Meigs H.S. - Trimble vs.
Racine Southern In sectional
championship, ·7 p.m.; the
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~ooners

hard-pressed
in 94-89 OT triump-h

By United Press International
Oklahoma brought the Kansas
Jay hawks out of a slump, but not
out of a losing streak.
Kansas had lost five straight
games heading Into Wednesday's
tilt with the top-ranked Sooners
and gave the mighty visitors
plenty of fight, but fell 94-89 In
overtime.
Oklahoma was the team that
appeared somewhat down, due
perhaps to wins last week against
the then-No. 3 (Mis&amp;ourl) and No.
1 (Arizona) teams In the nation.
"It dldn' t surprise me," Oklahoma Coach Billy Tubbs said.
"We didn't go into the game
thinking they were In a slump.
We kind of bring people out of
slumps."
Oklahoma, trying to become
the first team In five weeks to
protect the No. 1 ranking, came
back from a 6-polnt second-hal!
deficit to Improve to 22·3 on the
year and a league-leading 8·1 In
the l:lig El ght."
The Jayhawks, who upset
Oklahoma last year ln the NCAA
. Tournament title game. lost for
the sixth consecutive time to sUp
to 16-9in all games and 3-7in the
Big Eight. Kansas has not won
since recording school victory
No. 1,399 on Jan. 25.
Mike Bell came offthebench to
score 22 points and Tyrone Jones
chipped in U after intermission
to help the Sooners survive poor
shOoting nights by Stacey King
and Mookle Blaylock,

Thursday, Februay 16. 1989

Pomeroy-Middaport. Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

•

Falcons top Redskins'; Bobcats top EMU

second place tie with Kent State. a 3-polnt goal with one second to
team last season.
By GENE CADDES
.
Larranaga said he picked his The win was the eighth in a row play.
UPI Sports Writer
The
Rockets
were paced by ·
Eowl!ng Green coach Jim starting lineup based on perfor· for the Cardinals, now 21·2
Craig
Sutters
with
16 points and
"That's what It is, It's a team," Larranaga scrambled hls lineup mances in a Tue-sday overall and 10-2 In lhe conferAndy
Fisher
with
15.
ence. Both Toledo and Kent
Kansas Coach Roy Williams said Wednesday night against Miami scrimmage.
Memphis State handed Cincln·
"The group whO started to- State, idle Wednesday night, are
of the Sooners. "Jones and Bell and the results were "Moore"
natllts fourth loss in the last five
.
night won the scrimmage," said 7-4.
just killed us. But with them you · than he could have expected.
games,
81· 71 In Metro ConferIn
other
MAC
games,
Western
Larranaga,
"but
I
feel
the
key
to
can't just concentrate on Stacey
The Falcons, led by 6-foot-3
ence
play.
Eliot Perry scored 22
Michigan
the·
game
was
the
other
guys
who
beat
Central
Michigan
and Mookle."
sophomore guard Joe Moore,
points
and
Cheyenne Gibson 18
66-57
and
Ohio
University
beat
responded
to
their
ro.
l
es
off
the
Tubbs also pointed to his making his first start since Jan.
for
the
Tigers,
who led 30·24 at
Eastern
Michigan
81·68.
bench.lf we don't get nine points
lesser-known players.
1, reversed a 65-42 humiliation at
,
halftime.
Ohio
U
got
23
points
each
from
"We got great play out of Mike the hands of Miami earlier In the from Bllly Johnson, 13 from
But the Bearcats came back,
Bell tonight," tl)e Sooners' coach season with a 76-66 Mid· Gregory and seven great min· Dave Jamerson and Paul
cutting
the lead to 30-24 with 3:15
utes !rom Tom Hall. we don't win "Snoopy" Graham in its win over
said. "Tyrone Jones came In and American Conference win over
to
play
in the first half when
Eastern Michigan, snapping a
the game."
gave us big baskets when we the Redsklns.
Louis Banks, who fin·
forward
BG trailed much of the !lrst three-game losing streak for tl\e
really needed them.
Moore, who replaced slumping
!shed
with
18 . points, scored
half and was •down 39-37 at Bobcats.
"But then Stacey King made . sen !or Joe Gregory in Larrana·
halftime, but the Falcons went
Ohio U led 65-47 with eight Inside.
quite a turnaround In the second
ga's revamped lineup~ scored 24
Memphis State led by 20 twice
ahead to stay 63-61 on a basket by m'lnutes to play, but a 20-5
half."
points, hitting nine o!12 field goal
Eastern Michigan run made it in the second half, and the closest
Kansas forced the extra period attempts and six of slx free
Gregory.
Miami was led by Cedric .70-67 with 2:24 remaining. The the Bearcats got was 70-63 with
on a Kevin Pritchard drive and throws, and also led the Falcons
Vanleer's 12 points and 10 by Bobcats then went on their own 3:53 remaining.
the score was tied at 89-89 with
in rebounding with nine.
Louis Banks led Cincinnati
12-l run to put the game away.
Karlton Clayborne.
2:051eft ln overtime.
"Joe Moore was sensational all
with
18 points.' while Cedric
"I
thought
they
outplayed
us
At Toledo, Ball State overpoOklahoma led 89·84 with 2:45 night long," said Larranaga.
Glover
added 17.
every
way
possible,"
said
Mia·
wered the Rockets behind Paris
left in the extra period, but "He's been nursing a bad
Detroit
sent Youngstown State
ml's
Jerry
Peirson.
"Bowling
McCurdy and Bllly Butts, whO
Kansas got a J.polnt play from
shoulder lately, but he's a tough,
down
to
Its
19th loss in 23 games,
Green
really
took
the
game
to
us.
Sean Alvarado and a fastbreak hard-nosed kid. His 24 points •
scored 18 points apiece. McCurdy
91-67,
led
by
Calvin Winfield's 19
They
were
hungry,
needing
a
also grabbed 16 rebounds as the
bank shot from Lincoln Minor to speak for themselves, but his
points.
YSU,
which trailed 42-26
win. They looked !Ike a team Cardinals held a 51-38 advantage
tie the score.
defensive intensity and rebounds
at
halftime,
was led by Vince
playing for first place with a lot o! on the boards.
The Sooners went Inside to reaily helped us."
Intensity."
Ball State led 33-27 at halftime Marrow with 15 points.
King and the senior center drew a
Beside his rece.nt shoulder
In Ohio Athletic Conference
Ball State, a team already In and Increased Its advantage to
foul and made lof 2 free throws.
problem, Moore began the seagames Wednesday night, lt was
first place, stretched Its MAC 52·39 with 10:48 left In the game.
King went inside again fol' . son with a foot injury that
Baldwin-Wallace over Heidel·
lead with a 74-69 win at Toledo, Toledo cut the deficit to 56-50, but
another field goal for a 92-89 edge hampered his play after being
berg 71-63 in overtime, Otterbein
dropping the Rockets Into a got no closer until Chad Keller hlt
with 1: 031eft. A Bel! dunk as time named to the MAC all-ireshman
over Marietta 88-72, Wittenberg
wound down closed out the
over Ohio Northern 59-54 and
scoring.
Capital over Musklngum 65-53.
King rebounded from a 6-polnt
Wooster remained atop the
first half to total 19. Jones
North
Coast Athletic Conference
chipped In 16 and Mookle Blay·
By
GENE
CADDES
1', Chesterland West'Geauga in II Cham!nade-JuUenne, Hillsboro with an 84-55 decision over
lock 15 for the Sooners. Kansas
and Cambridge. Hillsboro, at
and Sprlngfleld Catholic In IV.
UPI Sports Writer
Denison, while Allegheny (Pa.)
was paced by a 29-polnt effort
Macomber, a 135-79 ' winner 20-0, is the lone newcomer.
COLUMBUS
Petersburg
from Mark Randal!. Milt Newton
Springfield Catholic, 20-0, downed OberUn 94-77 and Kenyon
Springfield seized the No. 1 spot over Toledo Rogers on Saturday,
beat Case Reserve 81-71.
added 23 and Pritchard 19 for the
in this week's United Press garnered 26 of 31 first place votes stretched its lead In Division IV
In other games. it was Wright
Jay hawks.
International Ohio High School in Division I and held a 303,247 following Canal Winchester's 58- Sta.te over Eastern Kentucky
Board of Coaches i:Jivlsion III margin over runnerup Lorain 57 loss at Teays Valley last week.
The Irish received 19 first 70-65, Ashland over Shawnee
Senior (19·1), which lost for the
boys basketball rat lngs.
State 79-63, John Carroll over
The Tigers, who wrapped up a first time Tuesday high!, 63-48, to place votes and 222 points to 186 Bethany tW.Va) 115-88, Findlay
points and a lone first place nod
20-0 regular season with an 80-39 Lorain Admiral King.
over Defiance 80·76 and Malone
Cincinnati Withrow, 19-1, re· for this week's No. 2 team.
win over Columbiana Crestview
over
Urbana 92-89 in a Mid-Ohio
Saturday night, took over the top malned In third pice with 223 Sebring McKinley, which edged
spot !rom Beverly Fort Frye In points, followed by Cincinnati out Canal Winchester by a single Conference contest.
the closest of the four divls tonal Woodward In fourth and Warren point.
Harding in fifth.
races.
King advanced one SPPt to
Springfield held a 233-224 lead
over Fort Frye heading into the sixth, followed by Toledo Scott,
final week of balloting, with a 14-7 Warren Western Reserve, which
fell from fourth to eighth after
edge In first place votes.
Fort Frye, 19-0, begins tourna- back-to·back losses to Harding
ment play Thursday night, but and Austintown Fitch, Pickeringalso has a' regular season rna· ton and Newark.
' West Geauga, which wrapped
keup giime Feb. 21 at Caldwell.
Bucyrus Wynford, 17-1, again up a 20·0 season Tuesday night
He'somon
finished third in this week's with a 56-41 win over Kirtland,
ofpecx:e in
Dlvls!on Ill balloting with 184 held a 355·275 lead over second
a savoge land...
points and three first place votes, place Youngstown Cardinal Moo·
u s
followed by North College Hlllin ney in Division II. The WolveN'tdt
HOFFMAN
fourth and Hamilton Badin in rines had 24 first place votes to
Nolte
T
0
M
four for Mooney.
fifth.
CRUISE THREE ~Youngstown Liberty (20-0)
Rounding out that list were
Ober!!n, Columbus Academy, again was third with 248 points,
RAIN MAN
Akron Hoban, Brookvllle and ' with Orrville (17-0) advancing
7:00 ·1 9:20 PM DAILY
one notch'. from fifth to fourth and
newcomer Wheelersburg.
The other tl)ree leaders re· Willard (18-1) from sixth to fifth.
Rounding out the II list were
malned the sanle as ·a week
Lexington, _Bay VIllage, Dayton
'l'nl,P&lt;ln J11a,com,l;ler in Dlvlsicm

..
Beat of the bend
---

By BOB HOEFLlCH
Well, 1 didn't know that.
After years of absence In Meigs
County due to
their work In
law enforcement in Gallla
County, Bob and
Viola ,Hartenbach have moved
back to Meigs.
Of course, before that the
Hartenbachs certainly were very
involved with law enforcement in
Meigs County when Bob was
sheriff.
They're now living close to his
sister, Mickey Russell; near
Pomeroy.
Welcome home.
I'm not really turned on with
tne recent increase in breaking
and entering offenses are you?
: I'm' a(ra!d we've all grown too
secure in Meigs County and its
communities feeling basically
that a lot of crime is reserved for
the cities. Not so.
It's time that we move Into an
alert mode and begin observing
what's going on around our
neighborhoods. Law enforcement J:lersonnel can't be everywhere iit once so look around you
and if you see anything suspl·
claus report lt to officials. And,
by the way, a license plate
number from a vehicle which
might be on the scene would also
be helpful.
Do get involved. You can be a
big help and who knows? In the
long run you may be saving
yourself from eventually getting
ripped off.
-

West Geauga Division II poll champ

~~~~

DENNEY SHOOTS- North Gallla center Rusty Denney goes up
against Southern forward Richard Deaver (30) at the side of the
lane In the first game of Wednesday night's semi-final sectional
tournament game at Meigs High School. Denney scored a
game-high 32 points, but the Tornadoes elbnlnated the Pirates
74-64.

S7295

With 6: 02 left Viking forw~rd
Danny Justice tied the affair at 51
with a pair of one-and-one shots.
At the 5:37 mark, Hayes, who stili
found the baselines to his liking,
was fouled .by Wildcat forward
Craig Rankin. Hayes missed the
first free throw but connected on
the second shot, giving the
Vikings a 52-2llead.
Eleven seconds later Cremeens was fouled by Hayes, and
Cremeens sank both one-and-one
\Shots to give Trace a 53·52 lead,
its last advantage of the night.
From that point forward the
Vikings, who.witnessed Caldwel!
and Rankin foul out, connected
on nine of 13 free throws while the
Wildcats tried to claw back Into
the game. A turnaround jumper
by Bailey brought theGalllans to
within three, at 65-'62, but the
Norsemen held on to their
advantage with their hustling
defense and attacKing offense.
Hannan Trace, who ended the
1988·89 basketball season with a
9-12 record, bid farewell to
seniors Bill Bailey, Tim Brumfield. Scott Caldwell and Brad
Cremeens. "
Quarter 'totals
·
Symmes Valley .. 9 19 15 26-69
Hannan Trace ... 22 12 13 15-62
SYMMES VALLEY (69)
Paul Hayes ........... 5 1 6 19
Tony Schneider ..... 1 4 4 18
Scott Mlller ...... .. .. 5 1 4 17
Carl Robinson ....... 3 0 0 6
Danny Justice ...... 1 0 2 4
Kevin Nicholas ..... 1 0 2 4
Larry Large ..... .... 0 0 1 1
TO'lAUi ............... 16 6 19 69
Field goals ·- 22-47 (46.8 pet.)
Foul shots - 19-28 (67.9 pet.)
ReboiDidS - 35 (Schneider 8)
S&amp;eals- 6
Tumovel'll - 15

Scott Caldwell ........ 1 0 2 4
Riehle Cornel! ........ 2 0 0 4
Craig Rankin .......... 0 0 1 1
TOTAUi ................. 22 3 9 62
Field goals - 25-59 (42.4 pet.)
Foul shots - 9-16 (56.3 pet. )
Rebounds - 22 (Brumfield 9)
Assists -15
steals -12
Turnovers -13

8J0,88&amp;

A Sarasota man re·
parted he parked his car
tust outside a circus tent.
Somehow an elephant got
loose and sat on his car. A
driver in Cleveland ex·
plained she was trying to
make an 0-tum. When the
adjuster asked, what's an
0-turn, she said, that's a
U-turn where you change
your mind.

1988 FORD TEMPO
G·L

'

Stock 1 80542, 4 doors, sedan, 6 cyl.,
air ..,.,d., vinyl roof, auto. trans., PS,
PB, tih wheel, cruise control, AMIFM
radio, stereo tape, radial tires, while
walls.
NOW
WAS

85495

NOW

83885

1,495

1981 OLDS
CUTLASS

Stock • 89362, 4 doofs, sedan, v-a.
auto. trans., PS, PB, power sel&lt;l, lilt
wt-1, cruise conllol, AMIFM radio,
radial tires.
WAS
NOW

8J799

*995

Stock I 96571, 4 wheel dive, 4 cyt., 5
stand. trans., PB. power windows. ra·
dial tires. AMIFM radio, stereo tape,
rear step bumper, sliding rear glass.

Stock I 95821, 4 wheel drive, 6 &lt;yl., air
oond., auto. trans., PS, PB, AM/FM
radio, storeo tape, t/2 ton picl&lt;up, rear
step bultlfl9f', 30,000 actual miles.

S7U5

- ~

"

'

Members of the Midnight
C!oggers are making the rounds
these days recruiting support for
their upcoming scramles golf
tournament - for both men and
women - to be held April 15 at
the Riverside Golf Course at
Mason. W.Va.
Proceeds from the event which
is expected to be the first
tournament this spring will go to
help tl\e cloggers make their trip
to Disney World in Florida come
June. 0! course, the dance group
will be performing during their
vislt to the theme park.
Pat Holter of near Pomeroy
has been named to the Board of
Trustees of the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
Pat serves on the Meigs County
Public Library Board and wl!l
represent the Meigs libraries in
her new post.
Meigs County receives book·
mobile and other services and
.programs through the Ohio Valley Area Libraries which in this
day of lnltlals is known as OVAL.

---------

Resa J. Sawyers of Racine and
Hobart A. Barker of Rutland
have been Inducted Into the
Alpha Mu Delta Chapter of Ph!
Theta Kappa Honor Fraternity
at Hocking Technical Co!lege in
Nelsonville.
Phi Theta Kappa Is the o!flclal
honor fraternity for two year
colleges and to be ellglble,
among other requirements, stu·
dents must have achieved an
accumulated grade point aver·
age of 3.5 or higher.
Sawyers is a second year
· accounting student and is the
daughter of Olin and Henrietta
:SOothe, Pomeroy, and Barker, a
second year ceramic engineer·
ing technology student, is the son
of Bea Luckett, Rutland, and the
late Al Barker.

WAS

NOW

88995

FLAT BED 24000 LB

I 9542t, 2 doors, V.IJ, 4 spead
1uan•., long wide bad, 2 ton.

'NOW

81995

1979 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
112t4 t, 4doors, sedan, V-8, air
, auto. trans., PS, PB, racial tires.
WAS

*995

NOW

Sayre Missionary group has new officer election
New officers were elected at
the recent meeting of the Bertha
M. Sayre Missionary Group at
the Racine Baptist Church.
Elected were Nancy Carnahan, president; Dorothy Badgley, secretary; Dortha Salser,
assistant secretary; Barbara

Plans were made for a base· planned for Feb. 20 by members
men! sale to be held on March 4 at attending. Fonda Thomas.
the Pomeroy Trlnlty Church Eloise Drenner, Janet Eblin,
when the Mothers of Twins Club Gail Patrick, Barb Logan, Linda
met recently at the Pomeroy Faulk and Debbie Gilmore. In·
formation on the club may be
United MllJhodlst Church.
obtained
by calling 992-6396.
A mo1,6'ers' night out was·

Elected to three-year terms,
Holter and Chevalier join David
Gloeckner, Thomas Thless and
Ron Eastman in admlnlsterlng
the Meigs District' conservation
programs.
Holter and Chevalier agreed
that one of the major challenges
facing soil and water conserva·
lion districts throughout Ohio
and the nation Is finding solutions
to nonpoint sources of water
pollution. Nonpo!nt sources or
water pollution include all land
surface runoff from agricultural
land, construction sites, mined
land and urban areas, among

ALL PCS CARD HOLDERS
Swisher and Lohse
Pharmacy will f~ll
prescriptions on all PCS .
Cards. You only pay your
co-payment.
WE WILL BILL PCS FOR THE
BALANCE

--------------.....
SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
·Samsung ... MultiTech
Shin tom ... Zenith
DynaTech ... Emerson
HOME
WE
ENTERTAINMENT REPAIR
CENTER
ALL MAKES
391 WESt MAIN STREET
AN D
POMEROY, OHIO
992·3524
MODELS
10 AM· I PM MON.-SAT.

PAT HILL FORD

V-6 eng .• 4 speed trans.,
XLT Package.

ONLY

$9250

AniiiDATE
Tax • title not induded.

01 AS LOW AS

4.9°/o

ONLY

A.P.R.

Yo• &amp; tlite not lnoduded.

THE CENTRAL TRUST

1985 FORD' LTD
WAGON
Power seats, locks, windows, cruise .
eontrol, tilt wheel.

Y·6, cruise, tit wheel, powll' windows,
locks, All/fM canotte, 13,000 llllln.

6 speed transmission, AM/FM 'ra·
dio. 16.000 mllas.

1-LOCAL OWNER

1987 FORD
ESCORT GT

1987 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

t1,00115i111, .....w• .

1-LOCAL OWNER

1988 MERCURY
TOPAZ GS 4 DR.

Air, tit wW, AIIIFM canotte, rHr
defrost, 11,000 .U.s.

FOlD FACTOIY SALE CAR

1987 NISSAN SENTRA
4 DR.

1-LOCAL OWNEI

Air clllll., u uoef, All/,. · -ott•,

$ubrtantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

1988 FORD TAURUS
FORD FACTORY SALE CAl

1·1ocal owner.

SlO1 500

am11EiATE

FINANCING

•

1987 BUICK LESABRE
LIMITED 4 DR.

-.

1989 FORD RANGER 414

1989 FORD RANGER 412

Like naw condition

6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
RATE $3,000
8.00°/o-8.30°/o ~='L
MINIMUM DEPOSIT

administrative secretary, reports that volunteer board
members are needed. especially
from the counties o! Meigs, Noble
and Hocking. Additional ln!ormat!on may be obtained by
calling Ms. Cline at 592-3025.

AMERICA'S BEST SELLING COMPACT PICKUP. AT

LOADED

SPECIAL

The Southeastern Ohio Regional Council on Alcoholism
.which serves eight counties in·
eluding Meigs will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at. th~ office, 5018
Richland Ave., Athens.
The public Is invited to attend
the meeting. Patricia Cline.

FORD RANGER.

Legion to meet
Post everlasting services will
be held at the Wednesday night
meeting of the American Legion,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, and Its
Auxiliary at the Mill Street
annex. Dinner will be served at
6: 30 with both meetings to be held
at 7:30p.m.

Salt."
Mrs. Gheen read a letter from,
a mission in Kodiak, Alaska. ·
Next meet !ng will be held on May
5.
It was reported that. the theme
for tl\e 1989-1990 year is " Reflect
God's Image."

ATTENTION:

I thought the weather was rea!
yukky until I talked to Mel
Ramsburg at PowellS. She says
most of us can cope with It a lot
better than we can freezing cold.
She's got a point. Hold that
thought and keep smiling.

others. Because It doesn't come
out of a pipe, this pollution often
goes unrecognized by the general
public, but is a serious threat to
water quality.
"With the help of the people In
the district we will coordinate the .
work of our staff with that of the
Soil Conservation Service and
other , local, state and federal
agencies to bring the people of
Meigs County an efficient and
effective program. We are
elected by the people In the
county and serve without pay.
We are committed to helping our
community," said the two super·
visors.

prayer by Nancy Carnahan.
Officer's reports were given. and
Emma Adams reported on the
sunshine fund and an offering
was taken for that. Shea!sonoted
that bandages for white cross
were ready to mal!. Mrs. Carnahan read "Love Gifts are Like

Regional alcoholism council meets

Mothers of Twins dub meets

Holter, Chevalier
are named supervisors
Alan Holter and Rodney
Chevalier, both of Pomeroy,
recent)y elected supen1sors of
the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District. were sworn in to
office by Ohio's Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court Thomas J.
Moyer at the 46th Annual Meet·
lng of the Ohio Federation of Soil
and Water Conservation Dis·
trlcts in Columbus.

Gheen, vice president of inter·
pretat!ons; Marth&amp; Lou Beegle,
love gift; Em'm a Adams, sun·
shine fund; Lillian Hayman and
Mary Kay Yost, leadership.
Mrs. Gheen opened the meting
with a reading, "A Heart Filled
with f Gladness" followed with

1986 RANGER 414
4 cylinder. 6 speed transmission. AI\II/FM radio.

I-OWNER

1987 FORD RANGER
PICKUP

LOADED
Like naw condition

Y-6, auto. tr-., AIIIFM radio, tvton1
........._. wheeh.

I-LOCAL OWNER

1-LOCAL OWNEI

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

PAT HILL FORD

The Bank That Make&amp; Thing&amp; Happen

HANNAN TRACE (62)
Tim Brumfield ....... 9 1. 3 24
Brad Cremeens ...... 4 2 3 17
Bill Bailey ............ .. 6 0 0 12
----~- - --;i - - -~

8450

1986 FORD
RANGER

1985 FORD F·150
4X4

Page-7

89115 1968 INTERNATIONAL

1978 OLDS 98

Stock I 94391,4 doors, sedan, 6 cyl.,
auto.llllns., PS, PB, tilt wheel,
IANvw~·AMSradio, radial tires, wh=•·

WAS

8J0,495

NOW

88415

*6295
-------t$2295

1983DODGE
MAXI VAN

1988
SABLE

Stock • 12160, 4 doors, sedan, florll
wheeldrive,4cyl.,alrcond.,auto.trans.,
PS, PB, tihwheel, AMIFM radio, radial

bucket seats. .
- -----------ttires,WAS

1984 OLDS
DELTA88
ACCIDENT REPORTS!

Stock • 89392, 4 doors, sedan, front
wheel drive, 6cyl., aircond .. auto.trans.,
PS, PB, power windows, power seat,
power door locks, tih wheel, a11ise con11'01, AMIFM radio, stareo tape, radial
tires, while wails, rear window defog.
WAS
NOW

I 12150, 2 doors, coupe, 6 cyl.,

, auto. trans., PS, PB, power
win1lows. power door locks, tilt wheel,
control, AMIFM radio, bud\et
rear window detog.
NOW

89995

19860LDS 98

988 FORD T·BIRD

2,995

-C\-A

•10,995

Lawrence and Shirley Jean
VanMeter Theiss, Route 2, Vin·
ton, are observing their silver
wedding anniversary today.
Shirley is the daughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Glu·
esencamp of Portland and the
late Rev. Ross Van Meter and
Lawrence is the son of the late.
Herman and Hattie Theiss,
Racine.
Congrats and wishes for many
more.

fUGITIVES

Stock 1 95881, v-a. air cond., auto.
PS, PB, power wincbws, tilt
lwheel., cruise control, AMIFM radio,
stereo tape, 314 ton pickup, long wide
bad, rear step bumper, aux. fuel tank,
gauges, sliding rear glass.
WAS
NOW

• 94092,6 cyl., auto. trans., PS,
AMIFM radio, 314 ton pickup, long
bed, rear step bumper, gauges.
WAS
NOW

Symmes valley... _C;:;,;'o=nt=ln=ue:..:;,d.::...fr.::...om_;p,_a;;;,.ge_4_

i

-

Thursday. February 16, 1989 ·

.

.Back home again...

c.

• MU.Lf•I'GI'o ••~

The Daily Sentinel

By The .Bend

GALLI PO US

MIDDLEPORT

446-0902

992-1811'

461

Member FDIC

-- '"'

-

--~--

so.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

992-2196
\'

•

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 16, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
American Legion Is having a
dance on Friday at 8 p.m. at the
annex. Live music by Sweet and
Sassy. Everyone welcome .

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Child Conservation League wili
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., at the
home o! Linda Broderick. All
members urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport United Pentecostal Church
wlil be serving chicken-noodle
dinners on Friday, from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Eat-I n, .carry-out.
Free delivery.

POMEROY - Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, State Route 143.
Pomeroy, wlli be having a
missionary service on Thursday
evening with David Jones, of
Papua. New Guinea. Everyone

SATURDAY
RACINE - Southern High
boys basketball teams are sponsoring a 'double-elimination independent men 's basketball tournament on Saturdays and
Sundays Feb. 18-19 and Feb.
2~-26. Entry fee, $90 with a
lO-man roster. For information,
call 949-2025.

welcome.

PROMOTED - James E. Morris of the U. S. Air Force was
recently promoted to maj or. Shown pii:Jnlng on the Golden Oak
leafs, symbolic of the rank of major are Col. Ed Grillo, vice
commander, 410th Bombardment Wing, K.J. Sawyer AFB,
Michigan, and Morris' wile, Mary Katherine.

Army promotes Morris
James E. Morris, so n of Carl
and J anet Morris of Rutland, was .
recently promoted to major in
the U.S. Air Force.
Mr and Mrs. Morris traveled to
Michigan for the ceremonies
which took place at the K. I.
Sawyer Air Force Base. A
reception honoring Major Morris
was held following the pinning
ceremony.
A grad uate of Me igs High
School in 1970, Morris received a
bac helor o( science degree in
education in 1977 form Ohio

University, Athens, and a master's degree in business admll\istratlon from Ball State University in Muncie, Ind. in 1984.
Before being assigned to th e
410\h Bombardment Wing at
Sawyer In Michigan, Major Ma r·
ris was stationed with the ~1st
Combat Support Group at Osan
Air Base in Korea.
He is married to the former
Mary Kather ine Wood and the
couple have four children,
Steven, Laura, Jeanne and Me·
Ussa .

PLACING EPAULETS- Carl and Janet Morris, Rutland, plate
the Golden Oak leal·epauiets, symboUc of a major, on their son,
James E. Morris.

Family medicine

RACINE -The Ra cine United
Methodist Churc h is sponsoring a
soup supper on Thursday with
serving to start at 3:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
RACINE - Racine United
Methodist Church is sponsoring a
soup supper on Thursday wit.h
serving starting at 3: 30 p.m. The
menu will include chili, vegetable s·oup. bean soup, cornbread,
sa ndwiches, pie and drinks.

.RUTLAND - Rutland Civic
Center Is having a volleyball
tournament on Saturday . Entry
fee, $20. Trophies will be
awarded . . Call 742- 2826,
742-2688 or 742-2279 fo r
information.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepor t

defense system Is not working
optimally. In your son's case,
this Is probably just due to his
age. It takes several months fo r
babies to develop a very effective
immune system. At the time of
birth the baby has antibodies
from the mother's blood, but
these don't last very long. Your
son probably developed thrush at
three weeks because ln that
period of tlme the antibodies
used against the fungus he
re~eived from you had been
exhausted.
Thrush Isn't confined to Infants . Adults who have diabetes,
AIDS victims and individuals on
cancer drugs frequently have lt
too. The cause is the same in
these situations as it is for your
son - inadequate immune system function. Thrush is also
sometimes · seen in adults with
poorly fitting dentures.
Those with properly working
Immune systems may get thrush
or other fungal Infections when
they take antibiotics. The antibiotic kilis the bacteria which is
causing the iliness, but it also
kills some of the normal bacteria
which provide part of the protec-

Q: Our son Is now nine weeks

old. He has had thrush since he
was three weeks old. We have
applied nystatin three Urnes a
day and wiped his mouth clean
once a day with sterlliz~d gauze,
just ilke the doctor told us . We
sterilize all of his bottles, nipples,
pacifiers. etc. What causes
thrush?
A,: Thrush .Is an infection
caused by Candida albicans , a
fungus which is one of a number
of small organisms that nor·
mally Jive in the human digestive
system. When the fungus grows
in unusually large numbers lt
causes problems - in the m9nth
we call this infection "thrush ."
As you know, thrush produces
white spots In the mouth. If not
treated, these spots can turn into
shallow ulcers and the Infection
can spread to other parts of the
body -especially the skin of the
groin and buttocks ..
Thrush occurs when the body's

__lblar..Aftn-I.inders: My. beautiful, )Jright 27-~\Q...appeared
at my doorstep one evening last
year with her 18-month·old child
in her arms. She had lost 30
pounds and was flying lligh on
cocaine.
We put her Ina hospital, but her
"connection" kept bringing
drugs to her room.
·
Three weeks into the program,
her doctor called me an.d said,
"Come and get your daughter.
She is not responding to treat·
ment." I knew she was dying, so I
sat and prayed. I picked up the
phone, called a substance abuse
clinic and told them my story.
That very day I said to my
daughter, "Pack your clothes.
I'm taking you to a place where
you are going to get well." I
prayed for 200 miles.
Today my daughter is six
months clean. From the clinic
she went to a halfway house. She
now has a good job, lives with two
recovering addicts and wlil have
her little girl with her within
three weeks. She goes to Alcoholics Anonymous every day and is
very happy .
The message for your readers

with loved ones who are addicted
Is DON'T GIVE UP! Remember
ihat addicts are powerless to help
themselves. They need help from
someone who is clear·headed and
wili stick by them and insist that
they get treatment.
Thanks , Ann,. for listening to a
story with a happy ending. No
name, please. - Austin, Tex.
Dear Austin: Beautiful. I'm
sure your letter will give encour- ·
agement to those who are struggling with the agonizing problem
you faced a while back . They
need the kind of hope you have
given them . Bless you for
sharing.
1'

"

tlon against fungal Infections.
For instance, a vaginal infection
from Candida alblcans - oflen
referred to as a "yeast infection' '
- is the most common example
of antibiotic-induced fungal Infections . Just ask almost any
woman who has taken
tetracycline.
Q: What can we do about my
son's thrush and how long willlt
last?
A: The nystatin you have been
using is usually the best treat·
ment. Infants do not often have
serious problems with the thrush
Infection spreading beyond the
mouth. There are some other

medications which may be of
benefit, but his doctor is best
qualified to decide lf a change is
needed. Time Itself usually takes
:care of the problem. Your baby's
!defense system should continue
~0 develop over tile next few
•months until it is able to control
~he infection without medication.
In the meantime, continue to
thoroughly scrub, then sterilize
his bottles and pacifiers. This
removes thefungusfrom them so
they won't make the problem
worse. You should also continue
with the use of the nystatin, just
like his doctor recommended.

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~MElOY I

What are th e ,~ iJCn .~ of al co hr•lim1 ~
Hvw car1 you lf•ll if .m mt•om• you
Jo vl' i.~ an alroholi c~ "'Alcnhnli.~m :
How lo R PCOJ(ni:::P It, Ho w to Deal
With It . How '" Conquer It '' will
giv1• you tht&gt; nn swl'r.'l. Tn rf'rf' it'f' u
copy, .llf&gt;nd S3 and a .i elf-addre.uC'd.
stamped bu.~it~r.u·s izP '' fl'lJf.&gt; /op e (4!i
C f&gt;ht .~ pU11l01(f') to A n11 Landf•rli, P.O.

Classified pages cm;er th e

Ann
o\.NN tANOlo;RS4t
· 1988, Lott An~~:f'l~
Tilnt'll Sy ndir11tr and
&lt;:•eat ~ S~· mllcolllt'

Bnx /J.S62, Chica!l'n. Ill . 606/1 -0562.

Robert Holley, M.D.
is pleased to announce
the opening of his

Family Practice
February 20, 1989
2500 Jefferson Avenue

Point Pleasant, WV
(former office of Dr. Aarom Boonsue)

Appointments &amp; Walk-Ins Welcome

(304) 675-1675
New Patients Are Being Accepted

-Patients - Past and Present

Galli a County
4.t6- Gallipolis
387 - Ch•hira

Meigs County
Area Coda 614

Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

992- MiddiiPOrt

675- Pt. Pl•aunt
468- Leon
'
678 ~ Apple Grove
773- Malon

• Pom11oy

318- Vinton

981~Che&amp;ter

245- Rio Grandt
256-;GuYJin Oist.
6'3- Arebla Dill .

843247949742 -

379- W.. nut

:~ec.-.,es . 50 diacount

PorUand
Letart Falls
Racine
Rutland

nu ch•yu,
all c:apit•lletten 11 double pr~ce o f ad cosl
•7 point One
only uaad .
•&amp;entln• ·
, .. ponlibla lor urror1 aher firsl difV. (Chec*.;
for erroralllst dart ad'1un1 in paper} Call before 2:00pm.

·•v••

d~ after public ... ton to make correclion
•Ada that musl be pid In advance are
Card o t Thlf'lkl
Happ~ Adi
In Mam ufiam
Y•d Sales

H~an

882 - N.w

896- Letart

clauified 1dvert~ament placed in Thu D•ilv San11n!lllle.o.
upt - clauified di1ploy , Busineu Card and legal notices)
wiM also appaar In l h&amp; Pt. Pleesanl Raglscer and l h&amp; Galli
polis Dllily Tribune, ru ching D'ol&amp;f 18.000 homn.

~A

otic a
PUBliC NOTICE

application for cop~llltoilt·

The Meigs County Health
Department would like to
isaua the following adviaory
as directed by Chapter
3701 -29 ·03 of the Ohio
Administrative Code.
(A} Any person proposing
to create a subdlviston shell
submit to the board of
health, for approval, plans
clearly showing that the
provisions of rules3701·29·
01 to 3701·29·21 of the
Ohio Sanitary Code can be
adequately met, before any
of the lot$ in the subdivision
are sold or offered for aale.
whether or not auch sale
entails a transfer of title or
deed.
(8) No person shall lnst.ll
household sewage dii~:d'~~t
systems in new 11
sions, unless It is to ·
impracticable or inadvisable
by the board of health and
the Ohio Environmental Protaction Agency to install a
centralsewage system .
IC) If houaahold aawage
,diapoul systems are pro· posed, the plans shall show:
'
{1) The total land area to
be used;
(2) Location and size of
lots;
(3) The properties and
characteristics of the soils In
the subdivision;
• 14) Depth to n.ormal
' ground water table and rock
~ strata;

ance under the provisions of

Urban Mau Transportation
Actof1964,asamendad, to
provide transportation aarvi·
ces for the handicapped ·
and / or developmanteltv disabled citizens within the
county of Maiga. State of
Ohio. The grant application ·
will request (1) Van Type A .
VA-11 ·0 Standard van with·
out special provisions for
wheelchairs . (1 1 p&amp;nengar)
It Is projected that ·· (46)
handicapped and/or deve·
lojpmantally disabled clients
will usa the servk:a seven (7)
day a per week for transportation to employment, habit·
itetton. socialization, recrea tlonal, medical and .other
speCialized professional
18rvicea. · ·
Meigs Industries Inc. invites comments and•r prop·
osals from all Interested
public, private. and paratran sit opBJators for the prpvilion of the urvice proposed
in the 16(b) (2) applicatipn.
Meigs Industries, Inc. ia
also interested in coordinat·
ing the Use of this vehicle
with any public, private, and
paratransit operators in the
area. Anyone interested in
submitting a · proposal or
coordinating transportation
services can obtain the na·
cessary details by .c ontacting: Ke'ith 0. Black, Bus.

I

(61 location of all bodies Mgr.. at tho Moigs Co. Bd.

· 29-01 to 3701-29-21 of the

: Ohio San~ary Code;
(6) Existing and finished
grade of all lots.
'· ~ (OIIf the proposed subdi ~
vision is to be served by
1 either a sanitary sewerage
· System or a water supply
• system '?r both. plans shall
. be submitted to the Ohio
· Environmental Protection
; Agency as requ!red by aacttion 6111.44 of the Ohio
1
Revisad Code.

(2113.' 14, 16, 16, 17, 6tc
Public Notice

5

Defendants

CASE NO. BB-CV-240
lEGAl NOTICE
· SHERIFF'S SAlE OF
REAl ESTATE

Section 16(BI (21 of tho

of water, ttre~tms; ditches.
sewers, drain til_,, existing
and proposed potable water
supply sources and lines on .
: this or adjacent lots within
· one hundred feet of ti'¥J
· proposed subdivision, or any
other Information which
, may affect the installation or
oparition of hou~&amp;hold sew·
: age disposal sySiema or the
, onforcamant of rulet 3701-

PUBliC NOTICE

MR / DD, . P. 0 . Box 307.
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 .
Written comments and / or
proposal• must be submit·
ted within 30 days to the
agency addreu given above
w~h a copy to the Ohio
Department of Transporta·
tion, 25 South FrOnt St ..
Columbus, Ohio 4321 8 0899.
(2) 9, 16, 2tc

As Sheriff of Meigs
County. Ohio, I hereby offer
for ule at 10 :00 A.M ., on

Friday, March 24, 19B9. A.

0 .. on the hont staps of the
Meigs County Counhouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, the follow·
lng described real estate:
The address of said real

estate ia 6BOBO SR 124.

Reedsville, Ohio. Said real
estate is bounded on the
north by the south line of
Sactton 11, on the east by
State Route 124, on the
south by Ian ds now or
formerty owned by Howard
L. Barber and/ or Barbara
Barber, and on the west by
lands now or formerly
owned by Howard Barber, at
al., and more fully described
as follows:
Situated in the Township
of Olive, County of Meigs
and State of Ohio: Being 'in
Section 10, Town 4, Range
11. Ohio Company's Purchase. Beginning at a stone
on the west side of the
County Road where it
crosseS the line of Section
1 1; thence west 398 feet to
a stone; thence. south 100
feet to an iron pipe; thence
eut 396 feet to an iron pipe;
thence north 100 feet to the
place of beginning. being
39,600 sqUare feet , more or
less.

REFERENCE DEED: Vo-

lume 284, Page 543. Meigs
County Deed Records .

AlSO the following des-

cribed real estate:
Situated in the Township
of Ollve, Coi.mtv of Meigs
and State of Ohio : Begin·
ning for reference at the
intersection of the north line
of lot No. 1168 and tho
center line ot State Routa
-~~;-;;---;c;-:-;--- #1 24; thence wast on the

Public Notice

north line ot lot No. 1158,

- - - - - - - ' - - - 28.70 feet to an iron pin,

thence south 16 degree 02 ''

IN THE
01" east 100.00 loot to an
COMMON PlEAS COURT iron pin. said point being the
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO place of beginning for the
THE BARTlETT
tract heroin described ,
FARMERS BANK
which _point is also the
P. 0 . Box 67
southeast corner of real
Bartlett. OH . 45713
Plaintiff
8
Public Sa Ia
vs.
BOBBY G. JOHNSON,
8t Auction
ET Al

5·

LARGE ANTIQUE &amp;

Happy Ads

COUECTIBLE AUCTION
SUN., FEB. 19
12:30 P.M.

Charlie Hallllofe
fOU

Partial listing; Oak, walnut, primitives &amp; other furniture· &amp; collectibles:
Furnrt111: Oak wash stand
w/towel bar &amp; mirr&lt;J, oak
dough cabinet, 54·· round oak
tabl~ 3 sets ol oak chairs, oak
wall telepoon~ wrcker tabl~
oak ladies desk w/2 dfdwers, 5
plank bottom chairs, . Circa
118481. oak stands. scales
w/brass scoop. oak &amp; ather
rockers, (5) oak dresseosw/mrHJS, oak highboy. clock sh~ (
square oak table. wicker str~·
ler, pressback child's rockeo.
gossip bene~ trunk5, surpentine oa\ lowboy. spi[ ·oott(ITI
rocker. brass stand w/oak 10\),
old cu!Doard, pie sal~ oak &amp;
other wash stands, oak princess
dresser w/mtrr &lt;J. walnut bed,
mahogany des~ child's dresseo,
oak flat wall cu ~Doard, oak
server, oak wardrobe, primlive
stand, parlor chairs, walnut
platform rockeo, old bene~ oak
office ch~r. Wonds&lt;J style chaio,
kiche11 table w/drop-leal. iron
bed. marble insert dresser,
k[chen cabinet oak sidelxlard,
Empire chesl, blanl&lt;et oox.
Clocks: Regulat or, ·krlchen,
humpback &amp; others.
Coca-Cola Items: Blotters,
trays, signs. other rtems.
Be• Sicns: Piasler of Paris
Eatapol~ Sun Drop, Hrghers
black board.
Coliectibllos &amp; llisc.: Slone
churns. brass kettle, farm b~l.

IIIII' Ifill

thoath rou're mr
the hill.

Happy Ads

MED MODULE
HEALTH DESK

MEMBERSHIP

$600

Prescription Shop

Happy Birthday from
me and mine
We won't tell you're
forty- nine I
Carol, Del
and Kids
11

Birthday

·

Len,

Yoar you•t !flft,
A•t•l•

Help Wanted

WANTED:
Respite Care Providers; In-Home and
Out of Home care needed on short term
basis (ranging from few hours to few
days) for Meigs County adults and children who hava mental retardation and'
developmental disabilities (M.S.P .R .).

Pe~s i carrier, vintage clothing,

Daisey churn, dOll high chaio,
small vinyl horse on w he ~ s.
postcards, pict ures &amp; flames,
stone jars, crocks. Oonagghos,

Call David MUiiken or write c/o
Meigs Co . Brd. MR/DD; 1310
Carleton St.; Syracuse,OH. 46779.

brown &amp; whit~s. &amp; others,

Foster-Care Worker: Provide long-term
residential services to 1 or 2 Moig1
county adults who have mental retardation/ developmental diBabilitie1 (M.
S
.). Mu1t be willing end able to
na•ve.•to•~r home (no trailers) meet Ohio
· Dept. R/DD licensure requirement•~

About 100 to 150 pieces of
furniture. plus collectibles
&amp;primitives.
Patrick H. Blosser,
AuctionHr
Ph. 304-428·7245
Eats Available
Not responsible for loss or
accidents. Consiplments
welcome.

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.9·19·18lln

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL.·
SIDING CO.
New Homos Built

"Free

Estimates..

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2160

NO SUNDAY CAll(
3-11-tfn

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

Sa~le

of sai.d real estate to
be for not less than two·
thirds · (2 / 3) the aforesaid
appraised value.
Said sale is subject to
approval by the Common
Pleas Court, Meigs County ,
Ohio.
James M . Soulsby ,
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohj o

APPROVED:

NOW OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

12)16, 23; (3) 2, 3tc

14th &amp; Main St.
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
We Buy Aluminum
Cans, Glass, Bran.
Copper and More

•

us1ness
Services
-----------..
BINGO
I

MON.·fRI.: q am-6 pm
!AT.: 8 om-12 Noon

304-675-3161

F.. More Information
t-2• ~· aa. 1 'mo.

I

OF BUStNESS

I
I

Jo's Gift Shoo

I

SYRACUSE , OHid
I Everything Marked
1
Down
•Cement
Items
1

1
I

•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments

1
I Because of Cold Weather
I
Everything Ins ide.
I
' Per Game
Ring
Door Bell lor Service
1 1;., noos. J2
2- J - ~n 1
2-7-1 mo.
-=- ...· - - - - - - --·

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

FIREWOOD
OAK.

LOCUST;

CHE RRY

$3 s

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

992-6282

LIGHT HAUUNG DONE

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Bill SLACK
992-2269

1·?8-'88-tfn

PERM, CUT. STYLE

$27

FREE .....

1 r Tanni119 Stssian aiMI

&amp; Trim
TOP OF THE STAIRS
1 !ouion at Fit

AND

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
11 I W11t !oCllnd, Pam.-oy

8-8-'88· tfn

Now location:
168 North' Second
Middleport, Ohia 45760

· SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Flthlng Suppll•

Pay Your Phone
Cable Bills Here
- ...P!r- IUSINISS PHON!

(6141 M2·6SSO

$1695

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associates

N-'S

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

SUNOCO

108 IIi gh Strt'OI
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone (ljJol.) 992·2922
2-!-'19-1 MO.

985-33
,.
I

MOBIL~

HOME PARK

SYRA(l!Sf, OHIO
Moot F01oign end

•Mobile Home ·
Parts
•Mobile Hon\e
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

Do.tna.tic Vehicles
A / C Service

All Major 8o Minor
Repairs

NIASE Certlfilkl Mechanic

992-7479

CALL 992-6756

Rt.

"ilOC" VAUGHN
Certified licen sed

33 North af

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
::t
or at
Veterans Memorial Hm:pital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy.

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE

Meigs Industries. Inc., in addition to providing. general office and commercial cleaning.
now offers
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
as a service .
We will contract to clean your home on' a fixed
schedule, attending to items you desire.
We provide lull liability coverage, workers
compensation, and pay all tax
requirements.

FOR A PIIICl QUOTE CALL:
992~-lleoB

LARRY HOFFMAN - PH.

Howard

L. Writesel

·I

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

ROOFING

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS"
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING 8t REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Gutters

Downspouts

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
2·10-'88·1 mo. pd.

985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
11 -16-'18B· ttn, ;Jt;

OWNER. GREG I. ROUSH

1 Mi. Ea111 of St. Rt. 7
on 248 at Chester
WELDING
AUTO 8t
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY 8t
WRECK REPAIR

985-3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1-5-'89-1 mo.

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mu11 Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes
1122188/dn

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
. Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

·(!ubjKf to Change
Without Notice I
nI COPPER .............. 86&lt; 1~
#2 COPPER ............. 65&lt; I~
ClEAN AlUMINUM
SHEET! .................... 52• I~
ClUN AlUMINUM
CAST ......................... 40&lt; I~
ALUMINUM
lEVERAGE CAN! --... 50' 1~
IRONY
SHEET ............. !• to 30' 11.
IRONY CAST ... 3' " 20&lt; 1~
SUIN1ES! ................ 20' lb.

.~h

M

•EXTENSIVE REMODEUNG
•VINYL &amp;IOINO. ROOFING
•MEI"AL BUILDtNGS
HOUSING Bo APT. PROJECTS
'
SII\'CF: 19f1 Q

DISIIY

n .. SYIACUSE

992·

PUBLIC
AUCTION

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK
Belpre, Ohio
CONSIGNMENT! WELCOME

PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304·428-7245

~::;:;;;'·;l;t·;'':9;·1:··:·~=!1

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and re core radiators and
heater cor1s. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repcir Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

992-2.198
Middleport,

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
Rt. 124 BetwHn Wilkesville and Salem Center

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

GREENHOUSE

FREE ESTIMATES
Toke tht pain out of
painting. let me do
it for you.

YEIY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCE

Foliage Plants
Baskets

S6 AND UNDER

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY 01\1
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 MI. palf
Southern Hltlh School

614-985-4180

CLEANING

SERVICE
MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,

MODliN GUN
SUPPLIES

Alii

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

CAU 992·6681

mo.

HEAP. Meigs County Dept. of

Work•. Inc. Pomeroy, Ohio.
614-992·3891 .
Hayn Aellhy
Jack W. Carur-Realtor.

614-~92· 2403 "'614-9922708. Call for llltlngs or salet.

Nature' s Sun1hine N•tural

Herbs ara available et Uptown
Video in Middleport. Also vitamIn• and minerals. Th•aare pure

herbs from Spanish Fork. Utah
and hiiVa mlfiY medicinal usee.
Free literature is available.
Brenda Naigler. Phone 814992-8636.

4

Giveawav
_,

3 vr. old full blooded fenlale
Beagle. Good famtty per. eau

614-367-0171 .

Male Betsert Hound, 3 vn. old.
Tan end b(l(;t(. No papeu but •
full blooded. Alto Border Collie.
10 month• old. Bleck ~r~dwhtte.•
Been wormed. had 1hot1. Call

614-992·3694.

Fluffy grey kitten, to good home
trained. phQne 304- 67~
8414 after 8:30.

li«•

6.. Lost and Found
LOST: Woman braclet-Gold
cfl•m with oriental printing. If
round Pleue call&amp; 14-446· 2200
or 448· 3131 . Reward.

Lost Mondav night. fat female
Beegle. BIIICk. whh:e IW!dtan. In
laurel Cliff •ea. Call 614-9923026.
LOST set of his and "" weddln g
rings betw.en Murphy• and
Court Houu. 304-896-3827.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pe•t on AuctionMr licensed Ohio and W"t VirUinla. ·
~1t1111e. antique. farm, llqvida- '
1100 18111, 304- n3-&amp;785.

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid for '83 .model
1nd n..ver used cars. Smh:h .
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Ent•n
An.. Gallipofis. Call 614- 44&amp;-. ~
2282.
Compllle 'households of turni.
ture &amp; antiquet. Also wood &amp;
coal heat••· Swain's Furniture
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Oltve
614-446-3t59.
.

.

~88·9303.

HILL$1DE MUII).E
LOADING

INC.

We will haul co.a tor emergency

Junk Cart with or without •
motors. Call Larry Uvety- 514-

2-15-'88-1 mo. d.

PRIVATE HOME

3 Announcements

Humttn Services, end HEAP
vouchers. We can give you
prompt daliveriM. Excel1ior Sah

Located Off Bypass
At Jet . of Rts. 7 &amp;
143, Pomeroy. Oh.

INTERIOI-EXniiOR

An11ouncements

COMMERCIAL

eCU&amp;TOM KITCHENS II BATHS

12 Gouge Shotguns Only
factory Chaltt
!TRimY INFORaDl
1. 1-'89·1 mo.

1 ·31 · '88·1

CLASSIFIED ADS
asuper market
1or everything?

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

LASHLEY
SERVICE

1 ·12·' 89-tfn

. LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

1/26/1 mo.

992-5114

IE!IOINCI PHON!
(6141

2-15-1 mod. pd.

Listening Devices
Dependable HeariDg Aid. Sales &amp;Sonoi'•
C!l Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

992·6720

Gutter Cleaning

PUBLIC
RECYCLING

I. Carson Crow , Attorney
for Plaintiff. The Bartlett
Farmers Bank,
Bartlett. Ohio

LADIES WANTED!
PIUI

DAY OR EVENING

coa..._.I"'IUUI)C',

6:30P.M.

ONl.Y

985 -4222

3 417 Second Avenue. Bo~ 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Deere. New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpmen t Dealer .

1-3 ·'86· tfc

,.Ail'o!Gt

EVERY

NEW-REPAIR

Still &amp; Sonlct

,..,..
•
.,®
..:!!!;..
~

GUYSVI.lE, OHIO
614·662 · 3821
Authorirad John

Fer• e•• ,~...,

INSTALLATION AND SERVICE OF
HEll ENERGY EFFICIENT HEAT
PUMPS, AIR CONDHIONING AND
95% EFFICIENT FURNACE.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

factory Chakt
12 Ga"11" !hatguns Only
Strit ~y Enfor&lt;ed
10·7-tln

4-t&amp;-86-tfn

·c ootiNG

GUN SHOOT

Day or Night

185,000.001 .

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

RACINE

SAt. NIGHT

lume 280, Page 965 , Mei gs
County Mongag e Records.
Said real estate was appraised a1 fiV e Thousand
and 00 / 100 Dollars

cookie jars; old tools.

1:00 P.M.

CHESTER. OHIO

EVERY SUNDAY

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

Ohio.
REFERENC E DEEO; Vo-

POMEROY -EAGLES
CLUB
22 4 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.
DOOI PRIZE
2 H.O. FREE with coupon and
puot:hase of min. H.C. Packaga lim~ 1. coupon per custamer per bingo sessmn.
I W• Pay •so.oo Per Game
Over I 10 People lbS.OO

WAHNER HEATING &amp;

Basham Building

NO SUNDAY CALLS

cords. Meigs County, Ohio;
thence south 16 degree, 02'
01 " east 101 .88 f&amp;et to an
iron p in; thence north 88
d'gree 59' 01' ' west approximately 39 6 feo1 to an iron
pin, thence northwesterly
approximately 101 .88 feet
to an iron pin; thence south
8~ degree 18' 01 ··east 396
feet to the place of begin·
nlng containing 40,344.48
square feet. more or less.
Said real estate boing a part
of On e H Ltndred Acrtt lot
No. 1158, Town 4, Ran ge
11 , Section 10 of the Ohio
Co.mpany' s P~rch ase. Olive
Township, Meigs County,

GUN SHOOT

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A I Reasonable Prices"

264, Page 543. Coed Ra·

CHEmR, OHIO

adv. items, plu! misc. coins,

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

estate owned by Bobby G.
Johnson on d Edna M . John·
son and recorded in Volume

qui«s. comforts, baskets, dolls,
draw knife. lolling rule. bloc k
planes, lanterns, linens, sterhn~
cand~aln &amp; sa« &amp; peppers,
Glassware: Fenton, dep.esSion, cut &amp; pressed &amp; other
glassware. adv. boxes, other

992-6669

OHIO

BISSELL
BUILDERS

937 - Bufflllo

Cet Results fast

Meigs Industries, Inc .• a
privata non-profit corporation, intendS to submit an

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Med Module is an exciting
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11
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egives you information about aerobic conditioning.
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lor 1ds pard 1n adv.. nce

- Giveaway and Fo und ad$ under 16 words Wtll b e

687 - Coolv~le

of Dr. Aarom Boonsue
Are Welcome

STOP IN TODA¥!!

·Mastic &amp; Certainteed!
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772
8/15/Hn

Meigs. G1llia or Mason counties lnust be pr·e·

following telephone exchanges ...
Arwa Code 614

Spring retreat
ZANESVJLLE - Registration
information for the Women's
Aglow International, South Central Ohio Area Spring Retrea t, is
available by writing Corrine
Hartmeyer, 1046 Country Club
Drive, Zanesville, 43701, or calling Hartmeyer at 614 ·4~3-463~ , '
or by contacting your local Aglow
Chapter. The retrea t wiU be held
March 10-12 at Deer Creek State
Park Lodge, Mt. Sterling. Joanie
Balwin, from Seatt\e. Washington, will be the keynote speaker.
. A spec ia l teen girls retreat wlil
also be held.

J&amp;l
INSULATION

• The Area's Number 1 ·Marketplace

WANTED:

EliTE
SHOES
·
992·3639
102 EAST MAIN

TUPPERS PLAINS - A craft
show will be held March 18, from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at the V.F.W.
Post in Tuppers P lains. Display
tables may be rented for $10. For
information, call Mary Brya nt at
985-3376.

RICE'S OUT DISCOUNTS
THE DISCOUNTERS

RECLINERS

0

SALEM CENTE R - Star
Grange and Star JUnior Grange
wili hold their regular potluck
supper and fu n night this Sa~u r­
day, starting at 6:30p.m., at the
grange hall.

Dear Ann Landers: I hate
being pestered by people who
intrude on my privacy and try to
sell me something over the
telephone. Many of these calls
ot·iglnate in other cities. How can
I escape these pests? - Torrance, Calif.
Dear Torrance: Write to:
Telephone Preference Service,
Direct Marketing Assn., 6 E . 43rd
St., New York, N.Y.l0017 . (Must
send .complete name. address
and phone number.)

SA YES ISO

MARGUERITE SHOES

RACINE -There will be round
a nd square dancing on Saturday,
from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, at tll,e
Racine American Legion. Music
by the True Cou ntry Ramblers.
Children under 12 admitted free.
Everyone welcome.

Business Services

II

SUNDAY
RACINE
Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Churches wlil
be boWing revivals services
beginning Sunday, Feb. 19, at
7:30 p.m., and co ntinuing
through Friday, Feb. 24. Servl·
ces will be held at the Sutton
Church, Racine-Bashan Road, on
the first three nights. and at '
Carmel Churc h the last three
nights.

Don't give up on your addicted loved ones

Breakdown of defense causes thrush

By John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor of Family
Medicine
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine

RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing will be featured
Saturday evening, 8 p.m. to 12
midnight, at the Eli Denison Post
of the American Legion, Rutland. Everyone welcome.

•

The Daily Sentinel

. Mu1~oloading Suppll•
· Mad•n Gun Supplito
GuM. a...... Slugs
22 Ammo
Rt. 124 Ent of Ruttend
Acr011 Happy Hollow Roed

Ph. 614·742-2355
9 / 20/ tfn

Furniture tnd appliance~ by the
piece or entire housetlold. Fair
price~ being paid, Call 614--4463158.
One own• 2 door car or truck.
Will pey c•h. Guns, knlti"'
watchM, &amp; f•mmacldnfllf'V. Call
614-379-2t6o.

I

Would like to buv front blade to "
flt Wheel Hor.. IIWn tractor

'

Calll14o24&amp;-9398 aft.- 6 PM:

Top price lor used furniture.'
general houMhold. antiqu81
and ~plitnces. All types, C•li
~14-9815-4396 .

0

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f

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�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel
9

Wanted To Buy

44

LAFF·A·DAY

Used lJ rni'ture b¥ lhe piece or
entlra houuhold atso ulling.
114-742· 2455.

2 Br. unfurnlahed g•eu• .,t. No
Pets. Aduha cnty . Call 614-~6-

. 3748 ... 251!-1903;

BONUS INCOME
hrn S20(). f500 wHkly. Mail-

In g 1989 trMrel broch.lr-. For
mot"e inforrr.don lltl'ld stamp«t
eov.topeto: IN C. P.O. Bruc, 2139

Ml.m l Fl 332fJ1,

GOVERNMENT JOBS!

2 bedroom A.pta. for rent.
Carpeted . Nice senlng. Leu nctry
facilitl• available. Call 614992·3711 . EOH.

Positlo,;
I!Vallabl~t-Chemlcll
Comp.,y h• opening for areli
Mun beself.motWtted .,dh.,e
reliabfe transportlltlon. Send r•
surne to: Box Cla187, cl oG aliipolis Daity TribJne. 825 Third

"Where
socks?"

.a ..... Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

Need edra c•h7 Call Awn.

0

21

Fi ..ta Heir Fashion1, the l•geat
salon chain in the Midwest. h•
!full or p~rHim• posHiontevailable Jot profeuion&amp;l Stylitt(l).
W.'re.loatdng for people who •e
enthuai•tie and llfliOV working
with people. We offer ul.wy plua
oommiasion and a generous
benefits package. If you' re tal·
entad, auecess-orlented. and
looking for a greet opportt.mjty,

41

Business

TURN KEY BUSINESS

Company ettablithed accounts.

Absoknetv no compmition. e.rn
up tp •1500emonth. Pert time .
No el(perience neceuary . Interest free. expanskJn.tt• atart up .
889&amp;0 inyelftment. c.ll 24
hourt. 1· 800.327-6919.

APPlications •• bing accepted
fQr 1989 manager of Landon
Pool. Send .,plication~ . induding complete r81UmM and refer·
ences. to: Jan i r;elawson. Clerk·

Real Estate
,.
=
r-;;S.-a"le
,.-­
3~1,---"H"om=-:es:--.to

o hlo· C•rt lfied EMT ·•• Ad .

vaneed EMT ' s , Paramedica ,
Part· time positions waileble.
Fla~tll:,.e houn up to 38 hr. / wk.

v.,., attractive brick 4 bedroom,
2 bart\ femity room with fir•
place, formal dining. large living
room, 30 ft . custom oak kitchen
eebincs, oak woocMtork. finish
t.:lrinent. 2 car o•age. level
IWI dlctP ed lot, 4 mil• from
Hol2er Hoepltal oft At 36Port.-brook Subdiviaion. Call
614-446-4189.

Athena. Jeckaon. Lawrence.
Vinton. counties. Cont~ Sou·
thellt OMo Emerg.~ Madical
Servlc•. Inc. 814-448-984o.
EEOM! F
Help w.,ted·full thne. midnight, LPN for 35 bed f.tdlity in
Gallipolil: ICF / MR . C•ll 814446-7148 botwoen 8 &amp; 4 ,30,

Deluxe 3 BR . houee for •le.
Own• finance. Call 304-67&amp;
8104.
---------GOVERNMENT HOMESI From
t1 .00 (U Aepeil") . Foredosurw.
Aepot, Tex Delinquent PropeJ·
tiet. NOW SELLING THIS
AREAl Call IRelurdoblel. T·
315-733-6064. ElCI. G-2732·A .
FOR CURRENT USTINGSI

Go-Go girls wanted. Call CoNed
304-576-2083 or 576-2447.
atk Jot Jeff.
M~n-a•' •

ljc~nae. CaM 614-446-3353 or
446-8362 ask ior Jo.,n.

GOVERNMENT JOBS
$18, 040.- 159. 230. ye.-. How
hiring. C•l 111 805-687· 8000
Ext. A-9806 for currMt fedS'al
li.t.

Nice 2 br. horne In Pt. PleMant.
Utility roam. dining room, large
living room. b•ement It cwport
EXcellent NIM oppon:unily for on corner lot. Land contract or
car.., minded parsons fl Pom• assume loan whh small down
rw. Middleport area. E::.:cellent payment. Owners want to tell
benefit and oompf!NIIt:lon peck- now II SAVEUO. C.ll614-245age. In office .-,d loctl training 9588 altar 8 PM .
by quallfiad train••· For more
informedon conCII'ning this o~ 3 BA .. 2 ecr•. large garege. Rt.
portunitv and a P••onal int•· 218. 1mmedletaponeaslon. Call
yiew. cell bet:ween 9:00 a.m. 614-446-9232.
Wid 4:00 p.m. on Tuesd&amp;y or
Wedn•*t. Februery 21st and 2 story, 3 bedroom, 2 bat hi, on
22nd 304-422·0&amp;21 . E.O.E.
rNw in Middleport. C1ll 614-98&amp;.4134
evenings and weeka "cwernrnam Jobll 118,037. to
869,406. lmmedi.r:e Hiring! ends.
Vour an•· Cell (Refundable)
1·516-459-3&amp;11 EXT. F1622 2 bedroom. full b111ement, fits 1
c•. Acrott from pl,.,ground .
tor Federal Lil:t 24 hours.
Pricad to sell. •23.~0. 325
AYon calling. Want to do some- SprlngAw., 614-992-6138.
thing na.v Wid exciting? FrlltB
ttart·\C» kit cl.lrk\g month of To 1 ettle ntet~t-7 room home on
3.6 acr• In Rvtl.nd. C.lf
February. 014-992-7180.
614-992-7376 8\lenings or
lnorection. Qualified cWiddale weetc-endl.
wil ' h.-e 3 yn. •p•ienoe in
d'lec:klng mech-.lcaltlr:81. C•li- In SyriClJte. 3 bedroom raneh.
brate ~ag• and work wlh Alllltedrlc. nlrN vlnvl wfndowL
eleetrictll tpeeifiCilions. &amp;.rid air condttioned. equipped kit·
r•um• lo Box 372. Midd• chen. a"eched g•age. 1 acre
l.,d with 14)1 11ft. outbuilcin9
port , Ohio. 45760.
Coli 814-992' 5293.
Telephone s ..• peeplewanted.
Male or t.mele with ple•ent Hou1e for •le or r~~~nt. 2
bedroom, I!J atte ground. in
voice. Call 814-992-8329.
Porn•O¥· Adutts onty. No
AVON · AH ....... Cell ,_,ily n 81:4- 992·3122.
w• .,. 304882-2845.

P••·

Sp•••·

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

·
1980 Sprton 14x70. 2 Bfl ., 2
h•'-· all electric:. CA, woodburner. 10x18 deck. 12x14
wood building. Call 614-2455028.
For Sai .. Mobile Homa 12x65,
3 br., 1972 Darien. t4500. Calf

614-266-1638.

304- ?67-7826.
David Wilbur

1971 2 br. ttailer. 11.4 ICIM on
Evergreen·DudltiV Ad . Asking
•13,000. Call 614-•4&amp;-3654.

Baby attt• needltd • my home.
p11rt time job before and after
school and 3 weekt endt, 7 and
6 year old. after 5:00 call

19 80 81VYi.-v Dek.IU 1 41170,
A.IU lnn.. hed. EJCel. c:ond. Call
614-446-7603 or 44&amp;.5887.

Teav• Vellev.

Contact
Administrator.

14::.:.70 mobile home, 3 bedroom. 2 baths. central air. total
8al7f titter needed for toddlw Moctric. $9000. Will consider
and baby. ref.-ences required, le•• or ule of lots with the
home. 614-992·3068.
304-676-5358.

304-876-7349.

12

,964 ElooM. 10.1160 with ex·
panda. compl•elv furnished
8x16 porch. 10x10 building.
S4600. CaH 614992-6835 or
814-992· 7887.

Situations
Wanted

3 BR . house. Deposit required.
10 Old ForJ Trail. Calf 614-4462583, 9 to 5 dol~ .
Nice· 2 Br. house In Ctleahlra. 2

c.- garaQe. 8260 per rno. $260
dep., Ref. required. Call 614-

6693381.

Rent or sell 3 BR modern home

• Patriot. S260. mo plt.n dep.
Will help fin111ct. Cell 614-4461340 or 614-446-3870.

1988 Viorori.,, 2 beci'oom. all
electric mobile home. Garden
tub, bay window, bMied. Priced
Will do houtekeeplna, c•e for to ,.,._ E .::ellent condhJon. CaM
elder..,. t~ bebfslt. C11re 14-742· · 304-882-3481 oltOf 5,30 p.m.
29n.
1988 Sunthlne mobile home.
78x14. 814-949· 2072.

15

Schools
' Instruction

33

RE·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 629 Jackson Pike.
Clll446·4367. Reg. No. 86-11·
10558

18 Wanted to Do

Will do babV sitting in rnv home.
Aefer~r~on

6756594.

avahble. call 304-

t4ouaa Cleaning. general ,.,d
1pring. h.,e rt1erence~. 304-

&amp;76-7277.

FinanCial

Farms for Sale

MlnH•m. 6 rooms and beth.
barn. thid&lt;M coop. ponv ahad
and work thop. 5.96 acr•. An
fenced. New clritltld water well.
129, 600. 814-992-2143 or
614-992-8373.

F urnlshed one bed room apt.
8200.00 P'us electric. S100.00
d01&gt;ooh. 304-875-3900.

5 rooms &amp; b•h w / blsemant
c•pet appliartc81. Ref. &amp; dep.
No pets. Call614.44&amp;1163.

Two baci'oom apt, 4 rooms 1nd

For Rent•Nicely furnished 3
room cottage. Employed trults
or ratirad. No pats. Ref , I
deposit. Cell 614-446-2641

3 SR .. 2 bat'-. full ""'Potod.Call
614-446-7208.
3 BA . houee. full b•ament &amp;
garage. Acrou from Dairy
()Jeen. i276 a mo. Call 614
448-0039.
7ye• old. 3bed-oombrldt·llinyl
total electric. !'lr'lch style OOme,
c•peted throughout. 1 acre
fenced In back y1rd wrth deck.
LocMed 7 mile~ from Holzer
HoapRal on Rt. 160. A-..eilable
MDerch 1. S350. per month. If
int•.ted, call 614--28&amp;-,316
(Jackson) after 7 p.m .

2 bedroomhousund 2

be~oom

apstment. W-0 koola.Jp, rwnodeled Ssd.uky deposit. CaH
614-992-6886 eft• 6 :00p.m.

Newt; remodeled 3 bt- houee in
Meion. 8250. par month Pay
own utilrtiM. 304-773-95fl4.
For rent. 2 bed-oom unfurnilhed
houae. 507VJ 2nd St . New
Heven. $1&amp;0 mor1th plus dep-

osit. 304--675-5276.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

fully furnished g•age apt. An
utilit i• paid except electricity.
Nf!IW tt lftdecoratad &amp; carpeted.
0.,. Coli 614-446-6850. 448856B.
2 BR .. cable available. bea1tifiJI
river YiWI!' in Kana~ga . Fost.,-'a
Mobilf!l Home Perk, 614-446-

1602.

bat~

0110. 00. 304-675·2722.

One lie~oom ept furnished and
•II utiliti• paid, ,.r•ences requirad, 304675-2722.

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent· week or month.
Starting et 8120 a mo. Gellla
H otel-614-446-91580.
Sleeping rooms with eooldng.
AlsoTraUer space. An hook· ~··
CAll after 2p.m. 304-773·
5651 . Mason WV.

46

Space for Rent

Countr;- Mobile Homs Perk.
Route 33, North of Poma'oy.
lDtt, rentels, parts, salea. Call
814-992-7479.
Tuller lot for rent. $70. PEr
month plus utilitis. 30~882·

2904.

furniture &amp; TRADE· IN for niiW.
8 f.leea wood group, t369.
So .. &amp; c h1ir~, ezea. 7 piece
country dinnette let, $660
(indudes hutch!. 6 pisce bedroon tulte. t399-extr~ nice.
Mattreu-helt off r•lar price.
Bunk beds w/ bedding. S229.
Rt. 141 in Centenary. 'l•mlleon
Un coin Pike.
·
7-pc. dinnette tet·wood tabl•
brown chrome leg1. Goodeond.
oeo. Coli 814·44&amp;-9117 aft•
6:30PM.
•

35

lots

&amp; ,Acreage

·'
Bea.lttful home site OYerlooiOOg
R•ccoon Ck.. comer lot In
Cle.vMiw E.tatot Subd. C.ll
614-448-tll157 eft• 5 PM.
Ulndfor •I e. 1 to 5acrepercels.
n Rutl.,dTownlhip. 614· 992·
3543.
12 ecr• Long Hollow Ro ad.
304-896-3929.

Rent~l~

B usinass
Opportunity

(

Oap . &amp; rfff. Adults onty. No pet I.

a·uy or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street:. Pomeroy.
Hours: M,T.W 10a.m. to 8p.m ..
Sunday 1 to 6p.m. 614-992·

2526.

54 Misc.

Merchandise

Reg. BuffCockwSpanlet male.
Approx. 4% mot. otd. t160. Call
614-446-0660.

1978 OhM. 98. 2 d-. Excel.
running cond. Tan. Call 6144489812. .
.

Beautiful Chow puppy, cinnamon. m .. e. purebrtcl. not reg.
3Y.! mo1. S1 DO. Cell I, 4-«•
4893.

1987FordRanger. 4cyl., 4spd..
over driYa. heiWY bumper, bed

Aegittared Sibtrl., Husky, 5

mos. Bladt &amp; whh:e w/ bh.Je
eyn.

•

41

Homes for Rent

21 Galli a St •300 a mo. 1200
ciBPosil:. Call 614-446-2206.
31A . hou ... dalu"'•· AC. t360a
mo. C.N 304-6755104. or
8755388.

good

femity .

C.ll

VVheelchlir• new or ul«&lt;. 3
wheeled electric aoootert. Cell
Roger• Mobilty collect. 1- 614-

814-367·0162 afl• 5 PM. or
387·0149.

870.9861 .

AKC Billett Hound pup and
aduhs. t25. to t100. Call

Fir8W'oocl for sale S26 to 130
delhlered. David 'Hill, 614-3888136.

814-687·6957.

Big Oakotfl farm home built on
your lot. $13. 995 &amp; up. See our
model. Ce111 -814-888-7311.

Fish Tank. 2413 Jackaon Ave.
Point Pleasant, 304-875-2083.
10 galtet up $1-4.99 and 10 gal
complm:e $43.26.

For lease

Mixed h•d wood alaba. •12 per
bJndle. Containing approx . 1 1/J

For Sale or lene-Busineaa

ton. Ohio P1llet Co .. Pomeroy,
Ohio. 814-992· 6461 .
21otaandvauhs in the Garden of
Veteran• in Memory Gardena,

M&amp;igt County. $1100. Call
814-867· 3B03.

Musical
Instruments

14x70. 2 be~oom . g•age.
front porch, back declc Depolit
and refarenca. Shown bot ap·
peintment onlv. Call 614-6986345.
2 be«oom. furnished. Waaher.

dryer, air. 8 225. per month plot
depatlt and utilities. 614·992·

7479.

2 baci'oom trell• for rent In
Ponuw~ . Readt'March 1. 614992·3122.
1 bedroom in Middleport. t226.
per month. furnithed, utAitiel
paid Call 814.992- 7807 or
614-992-7419.
3 bedroom. located in Syrac&amp;Jte.
Call 614 · 992· 7689 after
6 :00.,.m.
Trailers. Unfurni1hed. CouP!•.
small Children accepted. Rt 1.
lDru1t Ro.t. Pt. Ple,..,t. be.
hlndKI!oK. 304-876-1076.
f urnlshed 2 bedroom mobile
home for rent, $200.00 plu a
utilit ies. S100 .00 dep oe it ,
phone 304-675-6512 or 6753900.

2 beci'oom mobile h o me, halt
mile out Jtmicho Road, 304.
67!&gt;1082.

44

Apartment
for Rent

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
SUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 538 Jocb011
Pike from $1831 mo. Walk to
ahop end moviel. 614-4462568. E.O.H.
Tara Townhouse apartment•· 2
BRa., 1 % b11hs. CA., dil·
hw'esher. disposal. private en·
Water, petio,
lftW8r. pool,
&amp; trash
included.
cloud
plavground
Sta-ting at $ 289 per mo, Call
614-367-7850.

C ounty Appliance. Inc. Qt)od
used appKanoes and TV tets.
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon t hnt
Set. 614· 446-1699, 627 3rcl.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.

GOOD USED APPUA NCES

Weth6r1, dryers. refr igerflt(!rS.
ranges. Skaggs App'liances,
Upper River Ad . bM lde Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446· 7398.

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
$396 to 8995. Tables 150 and
up to S125- Hide-a-beds $390
to 8596. Aecline.'l 822&amp; to
• 376. Lamp a 828 to $126.
Dinette• t109 and up to 1496.
Wood table w - 6 ch lira 8285 to
$796. Oetk $100 up to 8376.
Hutchee 8400 and up. Bunk
bedt co mplete w-mattreiMI
t 295andupto t396. IJaiP( beds
S 110. M•ttraass orbo.11. IIPI'i[liJI
full or hMn S68, firm 178. lrid
$ ~8. Ouaen tett $250 &amp; up,
K1ng $360. 4 drawer cheat tlll9.
Gun cabinets 6. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
B•by mart,..." 835 &amp; 146.
Bed frtmel 620. $30 a King
frame 860. Good selection of
bedroom suites. metal cabineta,
headboards •30 and up to t86.
90 Oays sema 1111 c•h with
epproved credit. 3 Milea out
Bulwille Rd. Open 9am to 5pjll
Mon . thru Sat. Ph. 614· 4460322.

Army, c.,.
nim. Rental Clothing. green

camoutl&amp;~~
Somerville t

(bid-whitt$ Sn
Old Route 21Junetion lndepen,dance Rold
(New ERA). (East Ravenswood}.
Friday-, S1turd1V. Sunday ont&gt;;'
Noon- 8:0 0P .M ., 10 percent rlf
Carh art clothing. Camoufl auga
lntulatOO r.:overalls. 304-273-

5866

Another load of f.mous L.alke
Ontario llf)plet now in. Jack's
Fruit Mkt .. Rt. 3&amp; Henderton.

F~r111 Su~plies

61

Farm Equipment

H•y i ng equipment, Tillage
eqLtipment·, P .T .O . m1nure
spread••· whe• drHtt, corn

We h•• tht lownt priCtll on
Hom elite. Jontered and Huaqvarn• chllin saws and accMit&gt;
ria Sid•• EquipiTMifrt Comp..,y, 304-876-7421.

For aale. 1983 Pontiac T-1000.
Calf Jim It 614- 992· 2113.

'concrete btock•· ell aires.-

~d

ordeiNitfV. MIIon..,d.G•II olia Block Co .. 123'h Ptne
..

Golllpollo. Ohio. Coli e 14-4462783.
WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Channel Rustle
and Beveled lep Siclng
• Deck Met•ial•
Guaranteed Ou1lity
CETIDE. INC., Athens-114594-3678

~==========l========~=~

1985 Plymouth Horllon. Good
condttion. C•ll 614-742· 2071 .
1984 Chevy Caprioe Clauic.
614-949-2072.
For 1 gr8111 deal on a nM or und
car, 1Nck orvtn, aeeKenny Ban
at Jim Mink Chevrolet·
Ol•mollila 814-446-3872 or
304-773-5134.

Livestock

Athena Livestock Sele. Albenv .·

Sale Mlflly s.turdl¥·1 PM .
Uvootook ilc"""'od oltw 4 PM
evfii'Y Fridav. 1 mile
of
Albon'( on St. Rt. 60. Col
514· 592 · 2322. e98·3531

••t

evenings.

Aegittentd 3 ve• old aoh. Broke
to - · UOO. CoM 814-4462107 doy., 814-388·8504
eveninga.

lltiCK YAIW.'

out ol lltt• ol 14. t200.
814-992· 8544.

Hay &amp; Grain

- - -- - -- - - - -

72

1987 Ford f -110 4::.:•. !0, 000
mil•, toppeJ. E xcM. cond, Re clloed price. Coll614·246-5432
aft• 5 PM.
1975 Chwr if.zton pidl• up. for
sale or trade for good car. Good

100. AJhlfe hav. ' MorgM"~'s
""'"' Rt. 35. Piny. 307·137·
.
2018.

•"-.. 1ow m11... 814- 94&amp;-

300S.

1988 Chwrofllt ~ton FHc:k up,
ne cond, 32, 000 miles ,
... 700.00. 304-876-4435 of.
tor. 5~0 P!ll .

1rans~ortat11111

Ft.rnilhed 2 , 3, or " roomt &amp;
beth. Clean. Adultl only. No.
ptta. Ref. Ia dep . ..,qulred. Ctfl

71

814446-1519.

Baing on Dea1h Row had made Leroy
skittish about sitting In chairs."

Auto's For

Trucks for Sale

1987 ford R.,p XLT 4::.:4.
BiGfoot t*g.. totally loldod. low
mlraege. Take over p.,.ments.
Coll814-446-2713.

Ground shell corn •e.oo P•

HUO ac-

81

MINT.

I'P NEE&amp;&gt; oNE

PAY

jO

iHIS Ct1EC~.

N'

!:}
~

,_
I

1974 GMC Aotro 380 Cum·

Sale

minL 13 apeed tranamisston.
niW . . .ing tk• 1nd m.,uel
tt_.lnt- 1978Fruhauf42 ft fl•
bed with Ole tdt. 8 chiiM 1nd
blnderl, 2 tiMM• •rpa. mutt
ool • urlt. 115.000.00. 304-

1177PontlacFir_lbird. 310eng..
auto. nn1 .. PS, P8, ·new .-tnt
Alldng •1200. Cell
014-448-7371 ollwl PM.

,.... *•·

773-5068 or ~4-8785882. '

I

7:00 ffi Our Houee ·
ffi PM Magazine
(!) College llaoke1blll
(I) 0 (JJ CurrtJn1 Affair
(l) (f) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewliHour (1 :00)
nil e!IZ 1!11 Wheal of
FortunaiJ
ID I!J) Three'• Company
1m Moneylina
1!]1 Cheers
I!JI Miami Vice
CHI Fondango
7:05 (]) Andy Oriffi1h
7:30 D (]) Family Feud
(l) ·En1artalnmen1 Tonigh1
fl) !IJ USA Today
1!11
02) 1!11 Jeopardy! 1J
ID l!ll M•A•S•H
1m Croooflre
® Night Court
CHI Crook and Chase
7:35 m Sanford and Son
8:00
MOVIE: Mo1her Is a
F"reshman il~Ril1:21)
8 (]) 1!11 The Cosby Show

'!'

&amp;I

•

,.. .

e

0 (JJ A Fine Romance
World 's greatest assassin is

about to commit murder with
a trombone.
(!) E1hlco In America I;!
(f) The World a1 War Japan

ALLEY OOP
YEAI-4?
SOWHA.-r

attacks at Pearl Harbour &amp;

"'

conquers other countries .
(1 :00)
1!11 e!IZ 41 Hours Q
1D I!J) MOVIE: A Nlgh1mare
on Elm S1reet (RI(1 :33)
(1}) PrimeNews
@ MOVIE: The Enlorcer !AI '
(1 :36)

I!JI Murder,

She Wrote

8:05 (]) MOYIE: Gunfight a1 the
O.K. Corral (NR) (2:02)
1:30 II (2) 1111 A Different World
Whitley's mother visits
Hillman , set on lindln_9_
Whitley a boyfriend. IJ
9:00 II iJJ 1!11 Cheare The

EEK &amp; MEF.K

Cranes test fheir parenting

potential on Carla's genius
son.
(!) Collage Buketball
(I) 0 !IJ Dynaoty Blake and
Dex realize potential danger
ol wha1's hidden in 1he lake.

g

"'yoteryl Miss Marple

investigates the murder of

Colonel Lucius Pro1heroe. 1J
(f) Myo1eryl The Colonel's
wife and her lover confess to
the murder.
1!11 ID liZ Paradioe[J
1m Larry King Llvel
(!) Prime Time Wreo111ng

R end T Builders from founda·
tion to roof . Inside or out. Free
estimlt ... Budget pricea. Call

IJ

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I'VE ~E:E'N DOl~ A WT
OF 'THINKING: Aeot.JT

REINO.RNAT'ii?N .

I'vE DEODED I'DLII&lt;E

TO CVME 13PQ&lt;:.A5A
SCHOOL.. PRINCI~L...

9:30 It I]) 1!11 Dear John Gay
man whp joins the singles

I ALWAYS 5AY, "IF
YOU CAN'T LICK

club fa!ls in love with John.

'eM, JOIN 'EM!'
1o:oo

CHI VidaoCoun1ry
100 Club
Ill]) 1!11 L.A. Law McKenzie
helps woman reassemble
body ol her late husband . IJ
(l) II (II HeartBeat Nalhan

m

and Joanne disagree over
treatment of _EOstpartum
depression. Q
(!) IIJ) Newo
(f) Leg ..lotlvt Report

Ak•• Tree Trimming and Stump
Removal. Free e~timat•. Call

1!11 Ill liZ Knoto Landing
ID I!J) Areenlo Hall

304-8757121 .

IJ

@ Ev,t~lng NaWI
CHI Cr6ok and Chaoa
10:30 (!) Masterpiece Theatre
Maggie Smith stars as a

YORE HAWti5
SHORE DOll

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

bored vicar's wife

8t

reminiscing about her life. Q

(f) OIHerent Drummar Larry

Groce
CHI New Coun1ry
10:35 (3) MOVIE: Destination
f"okyo (NR) (2:15)
11 :00 ffi Remington Steele
It (2) (I) Ill (JJ 1!11 • a2l
1!11 Nowo
(!) SportoCen1ar
ID I1D Lo.. Connection
02) Moneyllne
IIJ) Honeyrnoonere
II! Miami VIce
CHI You Can Be a S1ar
11 :30 It (2) 1!11 Tonlgi11Show
C!J College Basketball
(I) Cheere
m One 011 One
fl) (JJ NlahllneiJ
(f) Sign Ott
1!11 USA Today
lllllD Newlywed Game
@ Sportl Tonlgh1
Ill 02) Pat Sajak Show
® HW S1JIIet Btueo Or. Hoof
&amp; Mouth
IB AmeriCIIn Magezln~
12:00 I]) MOYIE: Moth., lo a
,.-reahman (NRI(1:21)
, .
(l) Nlghtllne IJ .

Electrical
Refrigeration

A_eaidentl81 or commercial wir·
ing. New service or repairs.
Ucensad alec:tricitrl. Ridenour
Sectricel. 304-675-1786.

85

Bernice Bede Osol

General Hauling

- ..

9

Oill•d Wat• Service: Pools.
Cltt•na, Wells. O.liYery Anytime. Call 814-,...6-7404-No
Sund8tj clll1.

J It J W~er SMViee. Swimming
pools, cttterna. welts. Ph . 814-

245:9285.
R &amp; R Waler Sflirv tea Pools.
cisterna, wellt . lmmed lftt&amp;1.000 Of 2.000gMions deiN r;.
Coli 304-6758370.
.

Two projects that have been slow In developing could begin to yield the types
of results lor which you've been hoping

In 1he year ahead. 1ns1ead ot qul1tlng.
1hls lalhellme to redouble your efforts.
AQUARIUS (Jill.~ 11) This can
. be a very productlwt dey lor you, proVIded you are well organized and me1hodlcal.ll you a1111mpl1o do thlngo In e
plec«neallashlon, you won't be hsppy
wllh lhe results. Trying to palch up a
broken romance? The As1ro-Graph
Matchmekar can help you 1o undar·
11and wha11o do 10 make 1he reta11onshlp work. Mail $21o Matchmaker, P.O.
Box 91428. Cle¥eland, OH «t01-3428.
PIICE8 (fall. ~ Mr ell 20) Try lo
avoid a group of acqualn1ances today
the1 make you leal morellka an oulsldar
1han a member. You need them tar leas
lhan they need you.

W.nerton' t Waterliaulins. raasonablee rat•. volume dit•
counh, 2,000 to 4.000 capacIty, citterna, pools, w.lla, etc.
304-8752919.

Upholstery

M_owr~ · s

'Your
'Birthday
Feb.11, 1111

1000 gaL watsr service. limeslone spread. W• ha~l gr..,el.
san(!. colll, etc. Call 61'4 -992·
6275..

87

I
;

.

Up hol$tering serving

tr1 oountyarea23yalltl. The bast

in furnlturt upho ...erin9- C..lt
30•· 675 -415• for free
tltirnlt81.

•

could be a trllle lesty today where your
ARI£8 (March 21-April 11) Try not lo
aoclallnvolvements are concerned. Try
aggrava1e loved ones today by de1o Ignore minor lnlracllons tha1 dismanding too much of them. A few kind
p i - you, so 1hat small waves don't
words will be more effective than a bargrow lnlo alldaltorce.
,
rage of harsl1 directives:
TAURUS (April 20-MeJ 201 When mak· · U8RA (lepl. D-Oct. 23) There are indlca11ono today that you mlgh1 be a bl1
lng critical evaluations 1oday lei your
100 competi11ve tor your own good.
)ogle override your emo11ons and leelSubdue Inclinations to challenge o1hars
lngs. If you think wllh your ego lns1ead
ot your head. your judgments are apllo
o - manere - · a vlc1ory could be
meaning-..
be erroneous.
SCORPIO (Oct. :M-Nov. Zl) II you don't
GEIIIINI (Mer 21·June 201 Play your
haV'8 oome1hlng nice to say abou1 o1h·
hunches 1oday In si1Uallons 1hal could
be meaningful to you In malarial ways. . era 1odiY. h'a beet you keep your opJn.
Your lnstlnc1a are well 1uned and they • lonll1o youreelf, eopec:lally when talking
to a pertOn you know lrom experience
could help you spot advonlages that
.....•• repeat -vtNng you'll say.
your oboerva11ona ooerlook.
CANCER (.lune 21..IUIJ 221 01hers • SAGITTAIIIUe (IIIIo, • Dec 211 An lnWbi*'l tbat WM .....onebly IUCC"'
aren'1 likely 1o be 100 cooperative wt1h
Tul tor _._,. you know mlgh1 not
you today 111hey oenae you are lncUned
1o be too sell-a8rvlng. This condition
...,... oul as ""'' tor you. Betore you
1ake the plunge, h'l beet to get more
can be reweraed, howewar, If you are
uperl ..........
mollva1ad to share.
C.VIUCOIUI (Dec. IWM!. 111 Even
LEO (Julr 21-A... 22) Don't brood
1hougll you may be convinced your
about a wrong you teal waa recently
l-11t11 belter1Mn your ma1a'e1oday.
done to you by ano1her. If you can't
h'l belt 10
You could be on
sl1ake 11, bring It ou11nto 1he open 1oday
the right ti'IICk, but .your concep11ona
ao lhall1 can be resolved collec11valy.
may 1110 haV'8 oome ftows.
VIRGO (A... _D-llept. 22) Conditions

(l) Sign Off

Ill (JJ Entemllnment Tonight

l!ll Pat

:'J:,.Show

eilDT

I

c

L 0 FA
I 1. I

I

I N

I

I

II

1I I ,
7

8

IIJ Dreanet
a Noah.... Now
La1a Nloh1 w1111

" You 've got to keep my car
ru~ nmg until I find a rich
boyfriend,' '
1
told
my
mei:hamc . He stared at me
and said . " I hope you··- one

0 ~omole1•~

by hlltng

cnuc~le·

q uoted
the mi5Smg words

tf'!e
1n

de ... e lop from S~ep No 3 be low.

'iOV

PR INT NUMBERED
l ETTERS IN SQUARES

0

UNSC iAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Tavern- Avoid- Rival- Debase- SOLVED
When something wa s botherm~ me , Granny gave me !his
advice: " Mosl problems precisely deli ned are already par·
!Jally SOLVED ."

NORTH

BRIDGE

Z.lf.U

+AK7S3

.10 7
+AKJS4
+a

JAMES
JACOBY

WEST
.Q 1060
•K Q 8 2

+J9
.AJ 93

+Qs

tQ1076
+s 32

EAST

+82

SOUTH

A lead not made
is a vital clue

+8 ·

•ss4
193

+AKJ!0974
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

JJy James Jacoby

It was precipitous of North to jump West
Nortb Ellsl
right to five clubs after his partner's
vulnerable pre-empt. He might have Pass
Pass
first responded three spades. just on Pass
the oil-chance that South had three
' Opening lead : • K
.cards in that suit. (In standard meth·
ods. the bid of a new suit below game
is a forcing response to partner's pre· '---"7-:--.,-:-:--:---:--,.--.,.,.J
emptilie opening bid.) The final con· would certainly be playing a third
tracl would no doubt be the same, round of hearts in the hope that dumsince North was apparently convinced my would be forced to ruff, thereby
that South had a solid club suit.
preventing declarer from leading a
Against five clubs, West led the king club from dum~y lor a finesae. Since
of hearts. The defense then continued defender East dtd not force the durn·
with a heart to East's ace. Then at the m.y.Ws safe to say that be II perfectly ~
third trick East led back the jack of wllhng for declarer to take a IIDeSHID
spades. Is there some conclusion that clubs. Declarer should not fall Into
declarer should be able to draw from thattrap. Instead, South sbould simply
this sequence of defensive plays?
play out the A·K of clubs, droppln&amp;
One thing is certain - whatever West's queen to make his COillract.
· E asr s h an d , there lS
· no · •J.fCOby•C.nfGamel"(wrfteiDWjdllfl!ak
J.,.. J..,..J"' ·.IM!rrllf •llndfrr' •
e1se !~'~~ be m
posstbliity that he holds the queen and 1M ,.,. 0nr114 JO&lt;Oby) .,. onJJHit ;
two more clubs. Wilh that holdin~ he -......Borll.orepoi&gt;JIIIrd)J',...,.....:_

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2

ACROSS
I Whit&lt;'
heron
6 .lOS('
or .luan
9 •urlough
I 0 Cruslat'can
12 Pinki e's
r&lt;'lativc
13 Aqualic
beast
16 "One Day
- Time"
16 •' auccl
18 Swiss ·
canton
19 Makeup
pruduct
21 Criticize
22 English
river
23 Lessen
24 Outmode d
27 Reddy or
Hayes
28 Give off
29 Iota
30 Ivy hush
31 - ease
(relieve)
33 Exisl
34 Belgian
commune
35 Sunder
38 Shoelace

:J

Polite
tille
( ahhr.)
Eleetronie

"eyr"

4
l'i

6
7

8

Night
pr&lt;'t'&lt;'&lt;ling
Clothier's
concern
After gyro
or
mkro
Where
· 23
- thou?
"The-"
(Redford 24

lilm)
II Tonguelash
14. Mature

17 Iron
or Ice
Expel

Videocassette
choice
Flower
fragment
25 Ethically
heutral
26 Cocktail
27 Irascible
one
(sl .)

20
,.,.-,..-,.--..,.--.,.,.....

29 Joe Namath

31
32
•

36
37
39

was one
"1'he -Bug"
(1965 film)
FOR's

brain Unused
Equal
Wagnerian
heroine

41 Mendaelty

40 Baffle

42
43
44
45

Volcanic
overflow
Passage
Tried
for oflice
Restrain

DOWN
I l..amh's
ciP plume

DAILY CRYProQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

2118

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is liSed "
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of.the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CBYPTOQOOTE

·Zone

a2l"-Nigh1
12:30ern IBI

tFI

00

T I NS Ay

Ill (JJ ABC News 1J

m

I

Home
Improvements

82

I~

~

.
.
.
.
.
L-....1.-.L-l_...J.._.L...J

at Naahville Now

84

1986PontiacFiaro. 16500. Cell
304-878 4480.

614-441· 4639.
2 BR . apt., n8W plu•h c•pst,
nM paint, ucHitl• ,.rtltltv psld.
• 17&amp; a mo. Clll 304o875-6,04,
8755386. 8787738.

AN AfiER

J

Services

'78 Ford Pinto, • evt s 475.00.
Phonel04-175-2457.

1912 ford Etcort 'L', 4 door,
AC, PS. AM-FM tteroo cao:
mn.~al, 4 •P•d. 81,896.00.
304-8751731 .

200bol•Fioouo Hoy, 01 .25. 50
balM alfalfa. 12.215. Phone
814 · 988·3538. Poul Korr.
Chetter, Oh.

Appl. furniah$d. ldeal loea'llon-1

wovl.P .

C&gt;Jr&gt;~Nf~

Motors Homes
8t Campers ·

1979 .BulcO Regal. air, pow«
tt•ing- power brlk•. cruil8.
•1 .000. Coli 304-882-3675 or
304-882-2754.

1973 AMX J11Y1Un 304 aulo,
PS. eaoo.oo or beat off•.
304-456-1597.

Mked hi¥' tor Mle. 11.50 J*
bolo. Col 814-742· 2270 oft•
4'0()jl.m.

bl(lclc from downtow". Cell

t..Jt&lt;E

l

304-876-6987.

Coli 814-446-2874.

BR . . apt.

Yts,

Nomad 21 fl . caffiper. Sleept 4,
Self oontainad. Porch 8"Nning.
t1200. Ca11304-468-1042.

1973 Chevy Impala. 2 door,

Yorkahlr8 Bo•. 5 months old.

64

FRANK AND ERNEST

UNNORE

· I I I ll I

e

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CARTER 'S PLUMeJNG
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
Gallipolis Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446-4477

Squere bllledAHtlfah.,-for Mle.

SHADY lAWN APT&amp;- 729
Seoond Ave. Fwniahed tfflclen·
cl• tterting It 8176 a mo.
lndudlng Wlltw &amp; IJ8fbage.
SlngiB •du ttt ontv . Call BH·
446-4607"' 446-2602.

•

roor llOAT •~

fH~

h•d top. 350 arto. t1550, 00,

50 tql*'e bal11.1. milltd. eondttionod Hoy. Coll514-317·7727.

plete kitchen, atr, carpet. Oep-

1183.

'iZ·

1916 Charalle M11lbu 2 door . 814- 992· 3497.
h•dtop. All original. 283 auto.
mint condition. Low mileage.
RON'S Television Service.
Coli 614-949-2888 dwo ond Hou" calla on RCA, Qu1zer,
814-247·4161 .
GE . Spedatlng · in· Z..ith. CaD
304-576-2398 or 614-44&amp;·
1917Grand Prk Pontiac. T-top, 2454.
rebuilt motor, nM paint job,
good tires. 1969 Chl'olelle CGnFetty Tree Trimn'ing. stump
Yertibla. Good tfr-. interior. removal. C411304-676-1331.
Runs good. 614-742-2905.
Rotary or eable tool drilling.
1986Cedillac El OOraOOBarritJ: .
Molt well a completed a am a dav.
bcallant condition. 41 , 000 PUmp sal• and service. 304mila To tt«tle Mtete. Call 896-3802
304-8754131 .
RON·s APPUANCE SERVICE.
1982 ChfNett:a. 4 speed. • r:vl.,
house call servicing GE Hoi
2 doot'. 814-992· 7807"' 814Point, wahers, ' dryers' and
992-7419.
ltCNIII. 304.67t5-2398:

N.H. 7 It hw bin &lt;I N Ji. 352
Grinder MIJI:tr, both good oond,
304-273-4215.

63
Building Malerials
Block, bride, MWef pip•, windows, lintelt, Me. Claude Wintau, Alo Grarut&amp;, 0 . Calf 614245' 5121 .

o•tt. no pets. Call 614-446-

4 rooms &amp; bath, e arptt &amp;
applime.. Adul1s only. A•f. &amp;
dep . Vwy de~n. Cell 814-446-

WILDA

Poor Boys Tires. Henderson, W.
Va. Cheap•t tirBiaround. Dunlop, Fireatona. nEMi' and used,
304-876-3331 .

79

I

(f) Nightly Bu•lnuo Report
1!11
02) CBS News
ID I!J) WKRP In Clnclnna11
1m ShowBiz Today
1!]1 WKRP In Clncinna11
0 Cartoon Expreoo
OI'New Country
6:35 m One Day at a Time

YOOCAI-l'f

2-16
D I

0 T R I

DTE

AQZ

N U I

OaVId~n

(l) On Trial
.
e (JJ USA Today
llllriOVI!: The Hellllghten
(G) (2:01)
11J Edge of Nlgl1t
1:00 (l) Farnlly -leal Canhlr
III!IJWipeotrt

btl-.

lllllD Rawhide

OTB

DUQ

YQGXGE

FPCUIC

FTCN
PC.-YQKII
Yeat..da11'• Clflllltoq•otel RETIREMENT AT
SIXTY·FIVE IS RIDICULOUS. WHEN I WAS SIXlYFIVE I STill HAD PIMPLES. -GEORGE BURNS

© 1989 King Features Syndicate. Inc
I

•

low to fo rm lour ~ ~ mp le words

e

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Un concltional lifetime 9'-1 arWlt"- Local refwentes furnithed.
free at:timates. Call collect
63-84-86Chrysl•lmp.,ials. All
1-814-237· 0488, dav or night.
three 81350. Also 78 Chwy 22 . RogertBasement
PMsenger school bus. Runs Wat•proofing.
good Make good camp• or
churetl bus. S1200. 814-742- SWEEPER and leYoling machine
2323.
repefr, piWis, and supplies. Pick
up and delivery, Davis Veruum
3-1980 ChfNV Clutlonl bocl•. Cleaner, one half mile up
$60 each Cell Sarut,.·a 614Georges Creek Ad . Call 614992· 7403.
446-0294.

Building Suppli.es

-------- ·

APirtr'Mnt .vallllble.

(I)

1978 Pontiac BonntNitle. $700.
Cell llftllir 8 PM waakdlf(a or
anytime weekendl, 814-367·
0619 or 367·0149.

used equ6p..,..,.. Howe's Farm
Maohin..,, Rt. 124 &amp; MllyhM
Rd., Jackson, Ohio. 01428&amp;59 44.

w.-.ted To Sur, 2 metal clothes
reeks. phone 304-6?5-5247.

76

M

11) Body Elec1rlc

Boat-1987 LandaJ 16' 5' '
1987 Merrury 36 hp motor with
power trim and auto oil injection.
1997 Merrury Trolling motor.
,987 Shoreline trailer plus
more. All in good oondition. Calf
614-992-2770.

1984 LyM GS , 2 dr., PS , PB,

pi ant•a. hnMize 1preedtr1., post

1987 18 ft. Tanctrm Trailer.
7600 lb. e1peclty , electric
breaks and h.,d wench. t700.
SWI&lt;Jv'o 814-992·7403.

55

1974 VW Bug. Bladt. Make
exeeU ent work c•. $800 or
reuonebleoffer. Cell614-2465040.

hote digg••· other field r•ctv

Porteblellghted sign w"h lett&amp;rs
S329.00. FA EE OEllVERY.
plastic letters 847 60 boa, axpri es Feb. 22. 1-80()..533-3463.

Modern 1 BR. downtown, eo~

Newt.' remodeled 1

DID

I A5K '1'01!?

8.111$;1

1977 Dodge Cherger. . 318,
aJiomtrtic. dual e«haltt.· Call
614-446-8253.

Fruit
Vegetables

&amp;

H-111lf prlb!l ule, a...wetera and
blt.HJIP'J. t 2.00. The Attic Re·
tralo, 2486 Fifth Ave. Hun ting!cn. W. Va.

3224.

1978 Coug•. moon roof. new
l)lint. el(cel. cond. , S1000. Also
14 ft. etum. V·bonom bo• &amp;
trail•. 36 hp engln&amp; 8800. Call
614-379-2906aft• 5 PM .

58

FarmEquipment.ZIII:orTraetors.
Howerd Rouvaton. Bl ades.
Feed• Rtnga. Buying old bitterlea. Morril Equipment, Rutland.
Ohio 814- 742· 2455.

McDan iel C ustom Butchering.
Dpttn I days a week. Mond.,.
thtu S«turd!Pf. Call 304-882-

window.

1984 Bucik Reg~ limited. V-6.
auto.. PS . PB, PW, AC. cruise
control. tih. AM -FM redia, 2 dr.
48,000 mil•. S5895. Call 614446-0247.

&amp; Livestock

SURPLU~Origlna l

sNding

AC , 4 spd. Good cond. Call
614-446-3714 aft« 6 PM .

Household Goods

NEW· 6 pc. wood grout&gt; 8399.
Living room suites· 8199-$699.
Bunk beds wh:h bedding- $249.
FUI silt mattrest &amp; foundllion
slar1ing- 899 . Re c liner,s
stlrting· 899.
USED· Beds, dressers, bedroom
sultM. Oesks. wringer w•sher: a
complete line of uaed furniture .
NEW· Western boots· S35.
Workboots 818 &amp; up. (Steul &amp;
eo~ toe). Coll614 ·446-3169.

,...

1913 Ch~ Impala. 2 dr.. hlfd
top, at. 283 .-rgine. E.::ell.
cond. Must setl. 13900. Cell
614-446-7059 before 6 PM .

ginnera. 1&amp;:riou1 guiterltt. Brut-

Seara 6 HP gas motor. Good
condttion. Clll 614-742-2071 .

For sale: Oak firCMtood. Call
304-67&amp;2757 aft• 4 ·30 p.m.

cover,

em-fm· c•utte. 1 own•. E ::.: ·
tended warranty. Must Still. Cell
814-3811-9060.

CMdis Music. 814-441-0187,
Jeff Wamtl-v instructor, 614446-8077. Limited openings.

cepted. Call 304-875--6104.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recornrrwtdl that yoo
do butln... wtth peop4e vou
know. and NOT to ...,d monev
through thl m .. untl rou h.,e
invtttiv.. ed the offering.

To

49

SWAIN
AUCTION 8. FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gall lpofl1.

QUESTION .. W~'I

YOU'RE 'IOU.
8ROWN

.\~H,~r&lt;.LIIt

1••

2 Br. mobile home. A II alerxrlc.
Call 614-367-7743.

NOW. l HAVE ANOT~ER

BECAUSE

WOlD
GAM I

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

letters of the
fo vr scromb led wo rd~ be·

~ SportoLook

Amenarefrlg., Litton microwevel •...:=========:;:======~~:!~
~_~:_
oven, 11 , 600 m:u k•otene
' 78 Chtwy half to" 4 wheel
hnt ... tabl• • 4 chairs. Call
after 8 PM, 814-258-1878.
dri'le. low mlleaga. runs good
n eeda aome bo dv work .
.1.800.00. 304-876-2949..
Pickens Furniture
71 Auto's For Sale
56
Pets for Sale
304·875-1450 or 614-388·
1980 Chw hMf ton 4x4. auto.
9773 ....
PS, tiltw~. AM ·FM radio. 8ft
1987Linooln Tow nCar. Loeded.
Maple corner hutch. ~rlldenNL
bedwithtopp•. chromewegon
Groom .,d Suppty Shop-Pet leather interior. EJCel. eond.
dinnatte tets· aome droi; leaf.
wheels , W · 31 - 10 . 60 tirta,
butch• block eabfnM b•e. 2 pe. Grooming. All breeds . .. AII 26.000 mil•. Cell 614-446t3. 59!i00. 304-8751731 .
INing room auit•. hide-a-bed. ttyl81. lem1 Pet Food Dael•· e 157 after 5 PM.
coffee &amp; end teble set1. reclin- .!)Ilia Webb Ph. ~14-446· 0231 .
1988 Ford Rang.,:. SB496. Call ·
198BPontiac8onnevifteLE. AC,
ers. alll!l wood d• ks, bedding. Dr•90f1Wrnd C1ttery Kennel. PW.
304-6754480 ..
AM
-F.M.
cruise,
litt.
heal.
. bedt, headi;foerdl , frames.
Peraiat .,d Siame.t and Hime- 00r1d. 22.000 ml•· Call 614-metching walnut &amp; maple twin
btdt, bunk beds. night smnda, lay., khtena. Chow stud • • 446-8157 after 5 PM .
74 Motorcycles
chest. dr...era It many more vice. Call81 ... "8-3844efr:• 7
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Yehtitems. "h: mile out Jerrtcho Ad ., PM.
dl!ll for •100. Fordl. Mereedlll.
Pt. Pleaa~nt. W.Va.
Reg. Elk Hound. Pep•t. Squlrnl Corvettu. ChiWY•· Surplus.
19BBYZ-125. IS2000Firm. Call
Buyers Guide. 11) 805-887·
2 piee111 living room a~fte. rose dog. Cell 614-388-9335.
614-245-9398 aft• 5 PM .
6000,
ext.
S
-10189.
and blue floral on beige backthan 14
ground . Excellent condition. Cute little ..Totot"
198• V-30 Magne. Low mi·
lba. when fultt grown. Get for 1987 Lab•on Coupe Turbo,
•250. Coli 614-949·3084.
leege. Show room condrtion. ·
Valentinaa. 1.0. C1ll 614-246- 17, 000 mil•. Elite!. cond. AI
11300. ,Call614-388· 9179.
opetons. Mutt tel. Cell 6142 piece aectionel sofe. uHd 9157.
446-6050-keep trving.
about 2 montht. 304-882AKC Englilh Springer Spani .. s.
2904.
75
Boats and
1/ w. e wkl. old. Vet chedl;ed.
1978 Chrysl• Leb.-on S. W .,
Champ. pedigree. S200. Cell auto.• air. AM -FM ttweo. $660.
Motors for Sale
53
614-256-1660
C.ll 614-446-7604.
Antiques

Individual ~JJitar !•sons, be·

51

WJ.l'l COULDN'T I HAVE GIVEN
HER THE 60)( OF CAND'r', AND "
SAID,''HERE, THIS IS FOR
'IOU .. I LOVE 'IOU" ?

1979 Dodgfli 4 1( 4 for sale or
-odo. ·3 0•45°1641

tl&gt; 1telt b&gt; NEA.'Inc _

O ~ear range

Epioodeo
• (2) (I) 0 (JJ 1!11 Ill a2l
1!11 News
(!) Mo1orweek lllustrahld
(!) Shining Time Station IJ
(f) Or. Who: The Monster of
Peladon Dr. Who returns to
P81adon after lorty years io
find lhe king dead . (~:15)
ID I!J) Happy. Deyo .
1!]1 Foell of Lite
0 She·Ra
IB American Magazine
8:05 (]) Laverne and Shi~ay
6:30 e (]) 1!11 NBC Nightly News

PEANUTS

S@~~lA-~t-trs~

- - - - - - - fdit•d by CLAY R. POLLAN

G:OO m Bonanza , Tha Loot

.____ __.___

(

THURS., FEB. 16

THAT DAILY
'UIUU

EVENING

'79 Ch..,y CuttomVan, 83,000
"'" ... $3,500.00. 304-8963929.

David 8redllf/ lawn tractorw;th
euhivator , plows &amp; mowing
m•chine. $200. Call 614-2&amp;61289.

Merchandise

M

ado. tt'lnl., 3, 000 rpm. Std
front &amp; r.. lode
d lfferentl1l . 1971 Dodge
Dimon body &amp; engine " •
ia"- 1100. Inquire ac To nw 'a
tire, 614-446-3096.

Office Spec&amp; one. two or lhree
roorne. Central heal and air, new'
building. loear ed in Poim Pleasant. For more ,information
writ« Box S-14 e•e Point
Pleas a-rt Register, 200Maln St ..
Point Pie• ant. W.Va. 25 550.

675·1435.

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

CO nYertW,

57

Building-Store or OHiee lpKn

Television
Viewing

Customized Dodge 4x4 w/ lft

Pffoce desk, credenres. 4
drawer latteral filea. dock plat ea. '
4 n.,.., 16 in. dret &amp; rims. Call
614-4-46-2359.

1 608 Jeffe~on Blvd C111l 304-

BORN LO

ktt. n-.v paint. meg whMII, air
flow •U a•e. 440 eng. built.

heYe juat lrrtlted. Bring your old

The Daily sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport. O!lio

1978 Dodge v.,. Ellrtn long,
8· 300. Captain chain &amp; 1ofa
bed. Good tor hunting, fithingor
camping. Must be aeen to
appriclte. Clll 81,..245-6232.

814-4-41·3188

0139 evenings, after 6 .

•

21

Now accepling appllc.tiont for
2 bectoom apartment.. fully
c .a rpated. appli~ces. 'Miter and
traah pickups provided. Maint•
n.,ce frM liVing close to thop.
ping. banks and tchoolt. Fo·r
more Information call 304-882·
37 16. E.O.H.

One 3 room furnished ut~ities
paid very Nee, rlrfrencee r•
quirad. Two bedroom. 4 room•
and beth gou nd leY Ill, m.-.,cea
required. 304-67~2722 .

be~oom

Will do generel houlll!lkeeping.

C.ll 614992-3808.

utihi• poid. rot........ Phone
304-882·2586.

nflllt to lodge in
Crown City. •ns • mo. Ref.
Coli 814-446-1511 .

One

Tr. . urer. Village of Svr•wte,
SyraCllae. Ohio 45779. Applic•
tion deadline il March 1, 1989.

Atsiltant Director Nurtlng. 124
muttl-leJel c•e nunmg
center teekl reglatertd nurse
with tupervilory lr.p•ience.
Capability for teaching and
e•ln$J. genuine int•• fl Geri·
aerie nursing. El(celltnt opportuntty tor Nurting Administration career growth and
development , Inquire Cera
Haven. 590 Popl• Fork Aoed,
Hurricana WV or Cere Heyen

Homes for Rent

Opportunity

Calj 814-4.1(;-9152.

bed

brown

are

Greciout lvfng. 1 and 2 bedroom ap .-tmentt at Village
Manor end Rtven:ide Apart·
ment• in Middleport. Ftom
8182 Call 814-992-7787.

-;;;::::;;;::::::~~~l'~::::;:;:~:::;:::::::::f 2S.,ech
Street,
Midcleport.
Ohio,
bedroom
furnished
apartment.

614-446-4397 or 446-4182.

AVON o11 • - " Shirl.,.
304-675-1429.

1/b

73

. PICKENS USEO RJRNITURE
Compl .. e hou•hold furnith·
lnge. Yt mii•Jerricho. 304-67&amp;
1480 . 814 · 38S.- 9773 ,
evenlngt.

Truck la.ds of n.,.. furniture

Thursday. February 16, 1989

Trucks for Sale

1975 Chovv c .n , 366- 5 11o 2.
Mike Q004· log truck. No bed.
01100. Coll304-875-1370.

0 0

appli e an eet . Cell 81•-4•6·
7672. Houra 9-5 .

New one BA ., furnished apt. In
Rock Spr lnQt. Pom•oy. Ohio

ExceiiMt kx:ation. Lor-o utilities.
Sec. dep. No pets. ReferenoesColl 614-446-1817.

lf"''"C ... '"C"'ooot ...... .. -

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrigbt

NIIW lnd uat(i furMUN tnd

F urntthtd effidency. 607 Second. Gllllpoia. 1175. Sh••
bath. Call446-4416oft• 7P!II .

EJdra nloe 2 BA ., lau~ry 10om.

Now Hi ring THIS AREA !
S10,213 to 175,473. Call lr•
fundable) 1 -316- 733- 6062,'
ext. F -2732-A .

(l•_ ....,., ......."

Household Goods

Vi'R• furniture &amp; Appli•ces
Open Oeitv. 9 AM -6 PM
Sund.y, 12 noon-5 PM

Call 614-992·6304 ... 446es98

ul• repr....,tatkle. Estlblished
eeoountt whh growth potential.

51

72

Vallev furnrturw

Help Wanted

..... dr•a. . with

Apartment
for Rent

N icety furnished sm1H hou•.
Efficiency •p1.- 1 m.,. Mobile
homt b8llow town overlooldng
rivw. ct &amp; heat. acklhs only. ref,
Coli 61,4-446-0338.

Em~luynwnt
Serv1ce~

11

Thursday, February 16, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

�'

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

lhuiSday, February 16. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs...____,

' ..

,.

Continued !rom page 1

EMS has 5 Wednesday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Wednesday; Middleport at 8:15a.m. to Short Fourth Avenu e for
Betty Denny to Holzer Medical Center: Rutland a I ll: 06 a .m . to
Meigs Mine No . .1 tor Gary Hogsett to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 2: 46p.m. to Bas han Road !or Br ian Watson
to lleterans Memorial Hos pital ; Rutland at 6: 14p.m . to Meigs
Mine No. 2 lor Terrance Conlin to Holzer Medica l Center ;
Racine and Sy racuse squads at 7: 01 p.m. transported Johnny
Kauffman, Grace Allen and Donna Ross from an auto accide nt
on Slate Route 338 to V!!terans Memorial Hospital.

'

Drivers cited after accident
Both drivers were c ha rg!!d with dr iving und!!r the influence.
and three people were slightly injured, in an accident at 6:58
p.m . Wednesday on SR. 338, one mile north of the Ravenswood
br idge, according to the State ll!ghway Patrol.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Grace E . Allen, 68,
Portland, went left of center and collided headon with a truck
driven by John H. Coffman, Sr., 61, Portland. Damage was
heavy to both vehicles.
The patrol cited Allen for driving under the influence and left
of center; Coffman, for driving under th e influence and no
operator's license.
Allen, Coffman and a passenger in Coffman' s' truck, Donna
L. Ros!!, 48, Portland, were slightly injured and taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
No one was injured but .one driver was ci ted in a two car
collision at 5:41p.m. Wednesday on US33, 0.3mUes eas t of mlle
post 10, about one mile north of Darwin.
Troopers sailj veh!cte driv!!n by Herbert T . Lauderml!t, 18,
Racine, struck the back of a car driven by Dena M. Lawrence,
18, Pomeroy . There was minor damage to both vehicles. No one
was injured.
The patrol cit!!d Laud!!rmllt for following too closely and
fal!ur!! to W!!ar a s!!at belt.

--Area deaths--Delphia Fortney
De lphia MaeFortn!!y, 79, Little
Hocking, died Wednesday at
Camden Clark Hospital in Par·
kersburg, W. Va. She was taken
to the hospital from Arcadia
Nurs ing Center, Cootvill!!, aft!!ra
short stay there.
Born on April 23, 1909, In the
Dutchman community, Macfar·
Jan, Ritchie, W.. Va., she was th!!
daughter of the late Albert
Gilbert and Carrie Alma (Ryan)
Roberts. Mrs. Fortney was a
homemak!!r and a m!!mber of the
LitUe Hocking Church of Christ .
She is survived by her husband ,
William Joseph Fortney, of 61
years; two sons, Robert J .
Fortney, Reedsville, and Willard
L. For tn!!y ,. Dresd!!n; three
daughters, Mrs. Billy L. (Eva·
j!!an) McKnight. Coolville; Mrs.
David L. (Betty) Ross, Middle·
port; and Mrs. Wayne (Chris·
tine ) Lyons, Torch; 19 grand·
c hildren,
and
22
great-grandchildren.
Also surviving are thr!!e sis·
ters, Mrs. Lester (Myrtlf ) Cha·
dock and Mrs. Frank (Juanita)
Hupp, both of Macfarlan, W.Va.,
and Ora Roberts, Alliance.
&amp;sides her parents, she was
preceded in death by four broth·
e rs, Ira, Perry, Homer and
Donald, and three sisters, one
who died as an Infant, V!!lda
Strickling and Belle McRoberts.
Funeral services will be held at
1 p.m on Saturday at the Little
Hocking Church of Christ. Roger
A. Bush and Stephen Fuchs will
official!!. Burial will be in the
Coolvilie Cemetery.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Hom!! in Coolville, 7 to 9
p .m. Friday. and an hour prior to
the services at the church on
Saturday.
In lieu of !low!!rs, memorial
.contributions may be mad!! toth!!
building fund of the Little Hock·
ing Church of Christ, Little
Hocking, Ohio 45742.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ell is &amp; Loewi
.Am Elect ric Power . .. ... ....... 2€%
AT&amp;T ........ .. ............... .. ...... 31%
Ashland Oil ... ..... .......... ......34 %
Bob Evans .. .. .. .. ............ .. .... 15'!.
Charming Shoppes .... .... ....... 17
City Holding Co .. .. .. .. .... ....... 19
F!!deral Mogul ............. ....... 51')4
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .... ...... ... ..493-8
Heck's ... .............. .. .. .. .......... ~
Key Centurion ... .. ............... 14 ~
Lands' End .. .. ........... .. ........ 30%
Limited Inc .. .. .... .... .. .......... 31 %
Multimedia Inc .. ....... .... .. ..... 84
Rax Res taurants .. ..... .. .... ..... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. 16\it
Shoney's lnc .......... .. .. .. ...... .. 8')4
Wendy's Intl ............. .. ........ . 6 ~
Worthington Ind ................. 21)'8

James Romine
James Richard Romine, 72, New
Haven, died Wednesday, Feb. 15,
1989, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born March 5, 1916 in Syracuse,
Ohio, he was a son of the late
George W. and Margaret S. Crew
Romine.
Also preceding him in death was
his wife, Lillian P. Romine, Jan. 31,

1989.
He served in the United States
Anny during World War n. He was
a member of the Loyal Order of
Moose and DAV, both of
Anchorage, Alaska. He worked for
the International Operating Engineers Local 302 in Seattle, Wash.
Surviving are one step-son,
Harold Lee Howell, Grafton; two
sisters, Mary L. Hoffman, New
Haven, Sadie M. Marr, West
Columbia; several nieces and
nephews.
Service will be Friday at I p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral Home
with Rev. Clifford West officiating.
Burial will be in the Wells
,Cemetery, Harrison, Ohio. Mililllry
graveside .rites will be conducted at
the graveside.
Friends may call Thursday, from
6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Area
...
Continued from page 1
started to flood the rear parking
lot," said Athens Mayor Sara
Hendricker, who Inspected the
site with service-safety director
Ron Chapman.
Chapman said a water retention pool overflowed and drain·
age lines became clogged be·
cause of the heavy rains. He
estimated the water was about
two feet deep Wednesday.
Flooding also closed a portion
of U.S. 33 near Burlingham and
U.S. 50 west of Athens.

claim that Woodall sustained
permanent damages, pain and
suffering. Th ey request a tria! by
jury.
An amended ord er of conf!rma·
tlon of sale and orde r of dlstr!bu·
lion of proceeds from the sale has
lleen filed in the case of Central
Trust Company of Southe astern
Ohio against Thomas K. Woods,
et al. A deficiency judgment of
$15,883 .60 has beel) issued
against co-defend a nt , Mar y L.
Woods.
&amp;ne!!c!al Ohio Inc. , Pomeroy,
hilS been awarded a judgment of
$4,269.47 In a suit against Lar ry
M. Bissell, Rutland, and Patricia
Ann Bissell, Rutland.
In other court matters, Donald.
S. Mohler and Dave Jenkins have
been commissioned as special
d!!putles with the Meigs County

Ohio Lottery

Davis signs
· $1.35 million
Reds' contract

wo ••• ------------~~----------------------Continued !rom page 1

71
1 ~

Sheriff s Department for terms
expiring the fir s t Monday in
January, 1993.
A Meigs County Grand Jury
session has been scheduled !or
Thursday , March 2, at 10 a .m.

Daily Number
629
Pick4

8676

Page4

Finally, Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Judge Fred W. Cro'¥
III has stepped down as pres iding
authority In the cases of Hobart
A. Barker. et al, versus Howard
Frank, sheriff, et al; Shirley
Wallace, plaintiff·appellant, ver·
sus Souther n Ohio Coal Com·
pany, et a! , defendants appellees; James E. McKnabb
versus Christy L.. McKnabb;
Melania D. Barnett, now known
as Melania D . Holman, and
Wesley All!!n Barn!!tt; Donald
Gean Jon!!s Jr. and Sherrie Lynn
Jones.

•
Vol.39. No.198

M

GAWPOUS
446-1014

TRUCKLOAD SALE

•

hiATrRISS

REDil\TRICTING -The Meigs Counly·Board of Elections have
redistricted precincts In the Long Bottom-Reedsville !!e&lt;'tlon of
Eastern Meigs County. The three precincts of Olive Dale,
Reedsville, and Long Bottom have been disbanded with voters of
those precincts to vote at·lhe next election In either North Olive or
South Oll"e. The redistricting Is shown on the map above. In
addition, each voter will receive a card advising of the change
before lime to vote again.

Election ...

'

Continued from page 1

Plains Elementary School as the
voting precinct ; and South Olive
with the Long Bottom Community Building as the voting precinct . ..
As shown on the map, the
nor thern section of the Reedsville Precinct into Olive Dale
forms th!! North Olive precinct;
while the southern section ot the
Reedsville precinct Into Long
Bottom forms the South Olive
Precinct.

Ucense issued
Marriage licenses have bren
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court by John Kevin Arnold, 20,
Pomeroy,. and Patrtcia Ann
Wood, 19, Long Bottom; Marty
Dale Hart, 19, Ru tla'nd, and
Sandra Renea VanCooney, 19,
Pomeroy.

All committeemen will remain
in place until the next election for
committeemen which will take
place In May ,1990. Th!!y w!ll then
run for positions in their r!!spectiv!! new precincts. .

lUIUir filM

TWIN 10 '139 TWIN SO '199 TWIN SO 1249
fULl llT
199 FULl SO
249 FUU lET
299
QUEEN SO 229 QUEEN SET 299 QUEEN SET 399

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions- Aud·
ria Arnold, Pomeroy; Byron
Watson, Long Bottom; Jane
Oldaker, Pomeroy; Grace Alien,
Portland; John Kauffman Sr.,
Portland; Donna Ross, Portland.
Wednesday discharges
Juanita Harman, Terri Hall.

3DAVSONLV!

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

Middloporl

Ga!fipolis

'

_WATER OVER SHADY COVE ROAD~ As
flash Hood waters In several areas of Meigs
County recede, back water from tbe Ohio River
. cauBCS Leading Creek along Shady Cove Road
below Mldclleport to rise. Shady Cove residents
· begau a cam palliD last year to getloul officials to
help them alleviate the Hooding problem which
often keeps them "watered In" for several weeks

out of a year. When the water comes up, the oDly
way In and out of the cove Is by boat or by walking
a path throiJih the hillside. However, '• large
fallen tree blocks the creek, and another fallen
tree blocks the path, preventlag reseuers from
being able to reach Shady Cove residents In case
of an emergency.

Free Delivery - Credit Terms

TOM PEDEN HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!

Divorces sought
Divorce actions have been flied
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Ronald T. Holter,
Cheshire, against Linda L. Hoi·
ter, Racine; Judy Parsons,
Pomeroy, against Elmer Par·
sons, Racine; Donna Thomas,
Little Hocking, against James
Thomas, Pomeroy. Res tra! n!ng
orders have been issued against
the defendants in the Parsons
and Thomas actions.
Granted a divorce ' was Timothy A. Coats from Linda S.
Coats. The defendant in the
action was restored by the court
to her former name, Wilkinson.
Granted a dissolution of their
marriage were Michael Eugene
Cunningham and •Susan R.
Cunningham.

• AMIFM Stm-eo

• Power Brakes
• Body Side Moldinp
• Steel Belted Radial Tires
• Rack a Pinion S&amp;eerint
• ReclinlncBucketSeata
• Rebate Included In Price

LEMANS

• Automatic TranamiNion
• AirConditionin(

• Power Brake•
• Power Steering
• AMIFM Stered
• Steel Belted Radial Tires
•And More!!!

1988 CHEVROLET CORSICA
• Automatic Tranrnnisaion
• Air Conditionln1
• Power Steertnr
• Power Brakes
•AMIFMStereo
• And More!!!

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WORK PROGRESSING ON NEW LmRARYConstruction workers were busy Thursday
afternoon at the site of the new Meigs County

Ubrary on West Mala Street In Pomeroy. With a
construction lab of USO,OOO, the new faciUty Is
expected to be completed In June.

-Local news briefs,-Three wrecks probed in Meigs
The Gallia·Me!gs Post, State Highway Patrol. lnvest!gat!!d
thre!! accidents Thursday in Meigs County.
Kathleen M. Fryar, 38, Syracuse, escaped injury in a one car
accident at 9: 15 a .m. Thursday, on SR. 124, at mile post 29.
Troopers said Fryar's car went off the road. striking a
telephone pole. There was heavy damqge. to the car. The pole
was broken and had to be replaced.
The patrol cited Fryar for failure to maintain control.
Roscoe Fife, 66, Middleport, was cited for failure to maintain
control aft!!r an accident at 9': 50 a.m. Thursday on Leading
Creek Road, 0.4 west of SR. 7. The patrol said File's car wentotf
the road, striking two mail boxes. There was minor damage. No
one was injured.
Another acciden't occurred at 6:39 p.m . Thursday at the
junction of SR. 124 and SR. 338. The patror said a car driven by
Sharlee Evans, 44, Portland, struck a h!ghwater sign. There
was minor damage to the vehicle. No one was cited.

$17 988·

Courthouse to

clo~e

Monday

.

Grand jury session March 2

TOM PEDEN
---. -- ~ --

-- ------

&gt;:--------~--;------

Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W, Crow III
has ordered a session of the Grand Jury for Thursday, March 2,
at 10 a.m. It is expected that the Prosecutor's Otflcewill present
several matters Cor th!! jurors' consideration and a visit to the
~e!gs County Jail is also plan.ned for jurors. The visit to the jail
(Continued on Page 10)

--

By United Press International
and OVP Staff reports
Officials at the Gallipolis
Locks and Da m predicted the
Ohio River to crest today, white
the Winfield Dam r!!a ched it s
crest and Is beginning to dr op.
Rainfall registered at the GL&amp;D
was .05 in the past 24 hours.
. Ga!!lpolls Dam readings at 10
a .m . on the upper gauge were
20.2 .feet and 41 .9 fret on the lower
gauge, with the Ohio River rising
at .10 an hour. Dam roller s are
out of the water.
The Winfield Dam reached its
crest at 7 a .m . this morning,
registering at 27.4 on the lower
gauge.
In the three-hour period follow ·
!ng, th!! water dropped two feet ,
with water lowing in the Pitts·
burg, Pa., area, dam official ~
said:
S!!ctions of Gall!a County roads
remain closed today due to high
water, but Gallla County Local
students returned to school
today.

Parts of roads closed in Gall!a
County are SR 233, b!!twe en SR
141 and th!! Jackson County line;
SR 554, near Harrisburg; SR 141,
near the Lawrence County line;
SR 325, between Vinton and Rio
Grande, and between SR 160 and
the Meigs County line.
No roads ar e closed in Meigs
County. All schools in Ga!lia,
Meigs and Mason counties ar"' in
session.
Ohio Roundup
Cold and dr·y w!!ather Is being
forecast for Ohio this W!!ekend.
but some snow or rain might
move into the state by Monday.
Thursday night was seasona·
bly cold in the Buck!!ye State,
with minimum temperatures
within a few degrees of 15 In the
northern counties and In the
lower or mid 20s in the south.
Th!! lowest nighttime tempera·
ture rep 0 rted to the weather
service was 13, which occurred in
Youngs town. Ohio's skies expe-

•

r ienced var ia biec loud!nessove r·.
night , but no prec lp!ta t!on fell.
National Weather S!! rvice offi.
rials in Cleve la nd record ed near
record high pressure. Baromet ric r!!adings at Cleveland Hop·
kins In te rna t ion a 1 Air port
reached 30.90 Inches Wednesday
night , only 0.1 inch below the
record high pressure recorded In
Clevela nd In 1934.
Not much c ha nge in Ohlo' scold
and dry pa ttern is expected
through .Saturday, with highs'
Saturday from the mid 20s to the
mid 30s.
The late morning weather map
show!!d a systemofh!ghpressure
from the north plains, across the
Great Lakes to N!!w England.
This system is not going to move
much for the next few days, th!!
weather service said.
By late Saturday, however, a
low pressure center developing
off the Carolina coast will r!!pres- .
ent an Important new feature on
the w!"ather map.
Continued on pag"' 10

Fifteen candidates file petitions
for May 2 Meigs County primary
Primary elections will be h!!ld
Dewey Horton, Robert Gllmore
in both Middleport and Pomeroy
and Paul Gerard, all lncum·
with contests .for seats on. both
bent~. and Robert Pooler . Demo·
·. Village Councils and the Middle·
crats filing were Jack Satterpotl Board of Public Affairs, · field, incumber!. E . F. Glass, and
according to the Meigs Board of
James Hudson who withdrew his
Elections at ruing deadline
petition due to a conflict or
Thursday.
interest.
· hi add!t!on Pomeroy voters
Filing for positions on the
will vote on a new one mill levy
for lire protection and there will
be special elections in Scipio
Township lor a new ~ mllll!!vy
for ma!nta'!ning cemeteries, and
Meigs Local School District for a
new five mill continuing levy for
current expenses .
As of the 4 p.m. deadline, !!lght
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI)
candidates had filed petitions for
Backing away from any notion
the four seats to be f!lled on
that more money is ne!!ded, a
Pomeroy Village Council while
sharply · divided Ohio S!!nate
seven candidates, with one laiN
panel on school expenditures
withdrawing, filed for the four
recommended Thursday that
. seats on Middleport Village
puptl performance be raised to
Council.
tops in the nation with enly
Republ !can candidates filing
average expenditures.
for Pomeroy Village Council
The so-called "Schafrath
were W!lllam Young and &amp;tty
Panel on School Expenditures"
Baron!ck, incumbents, Mary Po·
recommended a hiJst of studies
well, Steve Price, Thomas J .
and pilot projects, but shied
Werry, John Blaettnar, and
away from any suggg!!stlons that
Barbara James. The only demo·
more money be pumped into
cratic candidate filing was Larry
education, or that class sizes be
J. Wehrung, incumbent.
reduced and teacher pay raised.
In Middl!!port, Republican can·
"Ohio should conduct an ex per·
lrnent designed to find the best
dictates filing petitions were

Middleport Board of Public Af.
fairs with one to be elected were
Robert Duckworth and Bruce
Fisher. both Republicans .
The validity of the petitions
filed will be checked at the Board
of Elections meeting on Tuesday ,
Jane Frymyer, dire ctor, an nounced.

Panel split on Ohio
school recommendations

Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III has
announced that his office and all other county of!!ces w!ll be
closed Monday in observance of Presidents' Day. Offices will
re-open o.n Tuesday at their usual 8:30a.m. hour.

1 --::---:--......,.,"'""7~------·-· -~·

2 Sectkms, 14 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. 'Newspaper

February 17. 1989

Expect Ohio River to
crest sometime today

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

MIDDLEPORT
"2-2635

Cloudy tonight. Low mid
20s. Chance of s now flurries 50
percent. Saturday , variable
cloudiness. tugh near 35.

l'

way to become the top state in
student learning while remain·
!ng an average state In school
spending," the panel conclud!!d. ·
The most noteworthy recommendation calls for the state
Board or Education to creal!! a
"world-class, rigorou s curriculum framework in English" for
kindergarte n through 12th grade,
pilot test it in S!!lect!!d school
district s, a nd meas ure results.
If it works, s!milat· fr a m eworks co uld be dev ised fo r
mathematics and othe r subj ects,
the pan!!l said.
·
"By 2002, "'e believe that Ohio
should be in the top 5 percent of
Continued on page 10

Overbrook
Center is
certified
Overbrook Center has been
certified as a skilled nursing
facility, according to an an· ·
nouncement by Dr. Harold
Brown, sponsor, and Mark Mui'·
· phey , administrator.
Notification or the certlf!catlon
was received by Murphey Thurs·
day from the Chicago Regional
Office of the U. S. Health Care
Financing Administration and
w!IJ be retroactive to Dec. 22
when the initial cert\f!catlon
inspection proces·s was
completed.
·
Ach!!!vement or such certlf!ca·
t!on, according to Murphey, now
enables Overbrook Center to
offer both skUied and intermediate care nursing services to the
residents of !Is service area,
Including all Medicare and Medi·
ca!d eligible patients.
Additional !nfomation regard·
!ng,the new skilled care coverage
may be obtained !rom either
Murphey, administrator, or
Carol Farmer, director ol adm!s·
slons, 992-6472.

TORNADOES SEC'l10NALCBAMPS- With a

48-41 win over Kyger Creek Tuelldar alght, the

Soullleru Tornadoes ctrls' basketball team
claimed the upper-bracket championship of the
Melp sectional and advanced to the district
tournament at Waverly IDI!'h School against

Franklin Fai'JI8(:e Green Monday at 8: 30 p.m. In
the fr011t row are (L-R) Micah Jones, Toaya
Ingels, Wendy Wolfe and Dawn Johnson. Behind
, them are Debbie Greathouse, Becky Evans,
Becky Winebrenner, Crystal lUll and Tracy
Beegle. ·

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