<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11662" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11662?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T20:03:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42632">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c06dcca821d2fe9f3c16cc6af087da83.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d350bc32c617a58ebb11b8662f22e707</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36707">
                  <text>•

Page-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va.

February 19, 1989

Southern
loses, 77•72
to Trimble

GENE JOHNSON CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE

'

•

THE NEW N E IN CHEVROLET!
THE NEW NAME IN OLD OBILE!
TH-E NEW NAME ·IN USED CARS!

•

Ann Landers

..

'

Award presented

Page 4

6, 7, 9, 12, 15, 21

at

e
Vo1.39, No.199
Copyrighted 1989

·School district tax
scheduled in House

BANK AND GMAC FINANCING NO MONEY DOWN TO PRICE AND SELECTION
ON THE SPOT!
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS!
ARE HERE!

•

.
1989 OLDSMOBILE 88 ROYALE 4 DR. SEDANS

'

..

,,
•

•

Now In
Stock!
•

Other Price

Levels
Available
Rear Bumper
Vinyl Bench Seat
20 Gal. Gas Tank
1000 lb. Payload

THE FAMILY OF GEO CARS ARE HERE NOW!
1989 GEO Metro

STOCK #1525

Buy Now For ...................................... 0 8,107
General Motors Rebate .......................... -500
NET SELLING PRICE .... !.~~ .·.~~.~i.'!!.~~!~~-

FACTORY ROAIL

57751

Buy Now and Gel'400.00 Cash Back
or 4.9% APR Fmanctng!
Financing far
Finan&lt;ing far
24 Months
36 Monlhs

57607

REME_MBER! Out trucks haverearstapbumpars, full size
spare tores and 20 gal. gas tanks.
.

4.9°/o

FACTORY FRESH l JNITS!

-1989 GEO SptKtrum 2 Dr.

STOCK #1509

FACTORY lnAil

NO

Divided Front Seat
Pulse Wipers
Cruise Control
Tilt Wheel
Convenience Group

ADD 0,0NS • NO GIMMICKS

'

~ene Johnson Chev.-Oids. Discount .... '1. 700
ALE PRICE ......................... ............ •15,200
General Motors Rebate .......................... -500

Buy Now and Get '600.00 Cash Back
or 4.9% APR Financing.
Financing far
Financing for
48 Months
60 Months

6.9°/o - 8.9°/o

514,700
A TOTAL SAVING TO YOU OF
. S2200 .

USED CAR PRICE BLAST!
1985 CHRYSLER LEBARON 4 DR • .

Two-tone gray tern. auto. trans .. air cond.. AM·FM with
tape. Only 48,239 miles.
WASS2495.00
PRESIDENT'SDAYSAlE

SJ289

1984 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA 2 DR.

Air. auto. trans., sable brown, one owner. 52.925 miles.

PRESIDENT'S DAY SAJ.E

WAS 14995.00 ·

speed, air cond., only 47,915 miles. Must see to
apprecoate.
WAS IS995.00
PRESIDENT'S DAY SAJ.E

S3389

S4489

1980 FORD LTD
Family sized. Priced to Go. V·B,air, auto., maroon exta·
rior.
WAS 12495.00
PRE$1DENT'$ PAY SALE

$1689

1982 BUICK REGAL 2 DR.

Cream beige, V·6. air. auto .. 63,802 miles.
WAS 1399S.oo
PRESIDENT'S 9AY SALE

52 89

WASS199S.OO

S4489

S2 389

L.

~gAhS\4b21une5, V-8. extraPRnfic;.e,D·fwNTon;~ DlaA·v~An9E·
•

•

1985 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

.

$5889

r • l1

S3 789

1982 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE 2 DR.

Air eond. Priced Right.
WAS 1249s.oo
PRESIDENT'S

DAY SAJ.E

S1689

:~~ ~;9s.:.od basic t'lilllo'l'Nr~s·DAY SAJ.E S389

..
.
:

1971 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.
PRESIDENT'$
DAY SALE S789
1979 CHEVROLET 2 DR.

WAS
11195.00

.

I'

Good second car. worker•s spe -

cial.

~~~5.00 ~~~s~~w·s S889
1984.FORD TEMPO 4 DR.

4 speed. &amp;lr cond., compact •ized. priced to Gol
WAS 12995.00
PRESI9ENT'$ DAY $ALE
.

Engine noisy. as is tpecial. Priced
below NADA whol-le.
WAS
PRE$/DENT'$ $
1
1985 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY 1495 DAY SAl(
ADMarkFMbu.rgundy. just traded, 48,810 miles. Air, auto ..

.·

...•

$1489

1982 OLDSMOBILE C~UJ~:$5 SUPREME 2 DR.
•

S1889

1~83 FORD ESCORT ST. WAGON

Air, auto .. miles a little heavy but Priced to Sell I

PRWDENT'S DAY SAJ.E

DAY SALE

Wolfsbug Edition. Air cond., AM· FM cassette, only
48,080 miles. locally owned.
· •
PRESIDENT'SDAY SAlE
WASS499S.oo

Just Traded. 4 Dr.. only 69,000
miles. Good work car.

Loght blue, locally owned. air, auto .. AM-FM tilt cruise
only 50.903 miles.
' '
'
PRWDENT'SDAV WE
WASI6995

1983 FORD LTD ST. WAGON

WASS2995.oo

PRESIDENT'SDAY SAlE S12 89

Red, locally owned, runs A·OK.
PRESIDENT'S
WAP249S •

.

Cream exterior. vinyl interior. only 59,781 miles.

PRESIDENT'S 9AY SALE

Gold exterior, good startercar, air. tilt. cruise. Must go!

•

•

•

1978 MERCURY ST. WAGON

1980 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR.

1985 MERCURY LYNX ST. WAGON

S

1985 FORD LTD 4 DR.

WAS 15995.00

1985 DODGE LANCER 4 DR.

Black,~

~

~

1984 V.W. RABBIT 4 DR.

1983 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE 4 DR.

S42 89

~

S3889

.
WAS 15995.00

889 __ ~

PRESI9ENT'S DAY $AJ.E

-.

$4489
·-

-·-

.:-

Qene John1on
I

OF
THE OHIO VALLEY

f

cHEVRa' Fr- O!dsmob!!e

1616 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OH.
44 6-3672

"WE CANNOT TELL A LIE"

TRUCKS: 446-6400

families In the waltiDIJ area. Becky.Anderson of
the Fabric Shop and Jim Anderson of Andersons'
Furniture and AppUance Store are laking active
roles In the redecorating and refurnishing of the
upgraded facility. The Improvement Is a joint
project of the Administration of the hospital and
the hospital's Ladles Auxiliary and Is expected to
be completed within the next 38 days. (Sentinel
photo)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Senate-passed legislation per·
mlttlng school dlstrlcls to levy an
Income tax of up to 1 percent will
begin Its journey lp the Ohio
House of Representatives this
week .
A House Ways and Means
subcommitlee is preparing to
receive the proposal, cleared by
the Senate last week, and tailor It
to lhe liking of representatives on
that side.
On another tax issue. propo·
nents and opponents of a 10-cenl
hike in the cigarette tax are
expected to offer conflicling
testimony In a House
subcommittee.
Meanwhile, more subcommit·
lee work continues in lhe House
on Gov. Richard Celeste's $25
billion budget for 1990·91. But
there are no hearings scheduled
on his proposed educational
excellence initiative, which fell
flat upon introduction last week.
II calls for a 1 percent Income tax
·
for education.
The Senate is scheduled to
reconvene at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday,
while the House will meet
Wednesday.
The House Is expected to vote
on legislation requiring a tailpipe
inspection for carbon monoxide
emissions on a11 re-registered
motor vehicles In Cuyahoga
County.
The inspection program is
required by the U.S. Environ·
ment.ir Protecfion 'Agency 'to
reduce harmful pollution levels

in the Cleveland area. The state
musl pass the Jjill by next month.
The school dlstrlcl income tax.
which received some resistance
in the Senale. is aimed at giving
school boards an alternative tool
to the property lax for raising
money .
Rep. Dean Conley, D·
Columbus. chairman of the
House Ways and Means Commit ·
lee, said the Senate bill, spon·
sored by. Sen. Robert Cupp,
R·Lima, will be sent to subcom·
mi!tee, which already has ap·
proved a similar measure au·
lhored by Rep. Marc Guthrie.
D·Newark.
Conley said the subcommittee
would lake the best features of
bolh bills. "I'm not going to rush
anything through," he said.
Cupp's bill allows school
boards lo ask the voters for an
income tax of one-quarter, one·
half, three-quarters or 1 percent.
School districts In the eight
largest cities rover 100,000 popu·
latlon) would be forbidden to use
the tax because of complaints
thai !hose cities rely heavily on
income tax revenue.
But Guthrie said this llmitation
will be scrapped in the House. "I
firmly believe that ail school
dislricts should have access to
the option." he said. "I have a
question whether It's evenconstl·
tutional to provide for a tax for
one district and not for another ."
Gulhrle also said senior cit!·
zens will be offered a $50 annual ·
tax credit on their school district

income tax liability. One objec·
tton in the Senate was that
pension income would be taxed at
a higher rate than the state
income tax.
Budget subcommittees will
find the Ohio Department of
Development testifying Tuesday
·evening. along with the Ohio
House and Senate; elected state·
wide officials Wednesday, in·
eluding I he governor, lieutenant
governor, treasurer and ·secre·
tary of stale; and the auditor,
attorney general and Depart·
ment of Highway Safety Thurs·
day morning.
The education section of the
House Finance Committee will
hear Wednesday afternoon from
college and university presl·
dents, including Edward Jennings of Ohio State University
and Charles Ping of Ohio Unlver·
slty, on the higher educalion
appropriation.
Jennings and Ping are ex·
peeled to issue dire warnings
about tuition hikes at . their
Institutions unless the level of
spendl'ng is raised.
The Senate Health and Human
Services Committee will conlinue to receive proponent testlmony on legislalion requiring
the Ohio Department of Health to
set up education and treatment
· progra(lls ior acquired immune
deficiency syndrome.
r

Nine ki-lled
. in weekend accidents

NET SELLING PRICE ..~~~.~~?.T!'.'~-~~~~~

9.9°/o

'

Air. auto .. maroon in color, only 54,658 miles. locally
owned.
WAS 15995.00
PRESIDENT'S DAY SAlE

REM(IDELING
Work is underway at
Veterans Memorial Hospital for the complete
remodeling, redecoratlniJ and refurnishing of the
lobby for .the first time in some 2:i years. Two of
the hospital's maintenance crew, which will do
practically all of the labor Involved, are pictured
workblg on one wall of the lobby. The project Is
expected to provide a warmer atmosphere to the
room In addition to giving more privacy for

Factory Retail Sticker ........................ $16 901

58270

1 Section. 10 P•gn 26 Cents
A Multimedl1lnc. Newipaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, February 20, 1989

NO ·REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

2.6 liter Tach 4 Engine
5-Speed Manual Transmission
P196/76R14 Tires
Full Size Spare Tire

Periods of rain. Low near 40.
Ught soulh.e ast winds. Toes·
day, periods of rain. lllgh of 45
to 50.

•

•

-

Air Conditioning
Rear Defroster
Wire Wheel Covers
AM / FM/Sterao
w / Cassette

Super Lotto

Page 6

.

1989 CHEVROLET S-1 0 PICKUPS - EL MODELS!
"9" NOW IN STOCK!

Daily Number
284
Pick4
8174

Page 6

We Wsnf To Mske You A Cu1tomet
So, We A,e Sts,fing With Oa~ 111 Annusl
PRESIDENTS.DAY SELL-A·BRATION!
.

Ohio Lottery

By United Press International
• At least nine people were killed
in weekend traffic accidents
around the Buckeye State, In·
eluding two Sandusky teenagers
who were hit by a ltaln, said an
Ohio Highway Patrol
spokeswoman.
Michelle Wrlghtman and Kar·
rle Wieber, both 16, were killed
when struck by a train after
driving against the signals and
gates al a crossAng Sunday.
Also killed this weekend were:
Friday Night

•

tionof U.S. 24 and U.S. 6 in Henry
St. Marys: Karen Cornell, 43,
Wapako)leta, in a two-car crash County.
Hamilton: Ellen Millers, 33,
on Ohio 5011n Auglaize County.
Hamilton,
struck head-on by a
Ottawa:. Mal thew Schwleilfirt,
car
after
she
sideswiped another
17, Deshler, when the car he was
vehicle
on
Ohio
128 In Buller
driving went into a ditch along a
County.
Putnam County road.
Piketon: Dave Wynn, 31, PI·
,I
Saturday
Brunswick: Tracy Milkovich·, keton, In a one-car accident on
20, Garfield Heights, in a three- . Ohio 104 in Pike County.
Sunday
vehicle crash on U.S. 42 In
James Mas·
St.
Clairsville:
Medina County.
ters,
41,
St.
Clairsville,
when.hls
Napoleon: Alfred Jones, 65,
car
went
of
the
road
and
rolled
Fort Wayne, Ind., In a two·
over
several
times.
vehicle accident at the lnlersec·

40,()09 gallons of fuel spill
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
brisk current of the rain-swollen
Ohio River was expected to dilute
an estimated 40,000 gallons of
g-asoline lhal spilled Into the
river when a group of barges
crashed into a railroad bridge.
The accident occurred Sunday,
when seven barges carrying fuel
for the Ashland Oil Co. broke
away from their towboat and
struck a bridge piling, said Petty
Officer Greg Gunnell, a Coast
Guard spokesman.
Authorities said thai since the
river was high and the water was
~lowing more quickly than usual,
the possibility of environmental
damage was minimized.

t.:arller tnts month, Ashland
pleaded no contest In U.S. Dis·
trlct Court in Piltsburgh to
criminal charges filed after last
year's spill of diesel fuel, which
forced river communities In
Pennsylvania; Ohio, West Vtrgl·
nia and Kentucky to close their
water Intakes.
·
Ashland Oil spokesman Roger
Schrum said most of the fuel
spilled from a J.foot·wlde gash in
one barge carrying unleaded
gasoline. Each barge is capable
of carrying 450,000 ga)Ions .
''II could have been a whole lot
worse," said Seaman Alison
Riley of the Coast Guard.
The incidenl occurred just

west of Cincinnati, downriver
from the Intake for the city's
water system, and the fuel was
flowing toward Indiana and
Kentucky, Gunnell said.
"Therlvertsmovlngsorapidly
it will probably dilute mostolthe
oil. Since the river is way up,
there will probably be no signlfl·
cant impact to aquatic resour·
ces," said Richard Carter, assl·
tant chief of the emergency
response unil for the Ohio Envlr·
onmental Protection Agency.
Homes along the riverbank
were permealed with a strong
gasoline smell and an oily sheen
was spotted on the river near
Lawrenceburg, Ind.

Power outage caused by accident
An accident Saturday on prl·
vate property near Racine re·
sulled In an Injury and a power
outage.
Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that Clarence
Wickline, Hoback Road, Racine,
lost control of his 1987 Chevrolet
while in the driveway of his
home, went across the yard and
over an embahkment, slrildng an
ele&lt;:tlc power pole guy wire. The
pole snapped and fell against lhe
vehicle. Power Jines were also
snapped.
Wickllne was taken by private
vehicle to the Racine Fire Station
and then transported by Racine
EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospita! where he was treated and
released.

\
- - ·--I t -----

There was moderate damage Pomeroy, reported on Saturday
to his vehicle.
evening that a four-door white
The sheriff's department re· Chevrolet Nova, traveling east
spondedtoacallonSundayfrom . on Union Ave., struck and
a friend who could not get Into the damaged mailboxes at his home
Raymond Holsinger residence on . and at the Delbert Fridley
Success Road near Reedsville to residence. The vehicle did not
check on him. When deputies stop and continued on to
arrived, Holsinger could be seen
Pomeroy.
lying on the floor. The door was
The departmenl Is lnvestigat·
forced open but Holsinger had
ing a rash of mailbox vandal Isms
already died.
that occurred in lhe Great.Bend
Dr. R.R. Pickens, Meigs
area on Saturday night. Joe
County Coroner, was called to the
Foreman, GregMcKinney,Kelth
home. The body was later re·
Sands and Ray Wilson ail removed toWhlte'sFuneraiHome,
ported their mailboxes
Coolville.
damaged.
Holsinger, 82, had just recently
Anyone with Information con·
been released from Holzer Medl·
cernlng incidents such as these
cal Center.
are asked to contact the sherlfrs
Harry Pickens, of Union Ave.,
department.

EXAMINING VEHICLE - Gallipolis Pollee
Sgl. Ro1er Brandeberry and Gallla County
Prosecuting Attorney Brent Saunders examine
one of two vehicles Involved In a mulll-county

stolen vehicle ring. The 1884 Pontiac Flreblrd,
reported stolen from Clark County, aad a 1980
Oldsmobile Cutlass, reported stolen from Colum·
bus, were recovered.

Two arrested in alleged theft ring
Two Columbus juveniles were
arrested Saturday evening by
local law enforcement officials In
connection with an alleged multi·
county stolen vehicle ring.
Through a joint Investigation
of the Gallla County Prosecuting
office, Gallipolis Police and
Bureau of Criminal Investlga·
tlon, the two juveniles were
arrested and charged with re·
celving stolen property, a third
degree felony.
The stolen vehicle ring is a
mulli·county operation, lnclud·
ing Franklin and Clark counties,
said Brent Saunders, prosecut·
ing attorney .
Saunders said he received a tip
about three weeks ago from other
county Jaw enforcement officials
when he began the investigation
In Gal !Ia County.
.
The juveniles sold the first
vehicle, a 1984 Pontiac Flreblrd,
valued at $5,700, to undercover
agents last week on Spruce Street
Extension.
The juvenUes attempted to sell
a second vehicle, a 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass, valued at $1,900,
Saturday evening on Spruce

Street Extension when they were
arrested.
The vehicles were being sold
with no lilies. The money which
paid for the second vehicle was
recovered.
The Juveniles are being held In
a Lawrence County juvenile
confinement. They will appear
before Juvenile and Probate
Judge Tom Moulton on Tuesday .

Saunders said more arrests in
Franklin and Clark counties are
possible.
"The BCl and the police
department did an excellant job
in assisting In the investigation,"
Saunders said. "Auto theft is a
serious charge. We were able to
act on the Up quickly enough to
make the arrests."
·

Middleport funds distributed
AILMiddleport Village funds as
of Jan . 31 totaled $173,510.92,
VIllage Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Buck reports.
Receipts, disbursemenls for
the month and the balance of
each fund, respeclively, making
. up the total Include;
General: $20,336.16, $25,288.71,
$701.66 deficit; street maintenance: $5,230.09, $4,737. 99,
$1,201.59; income tax: no reclepts, $1,498.87, no balance
reflected; fire equipment:
$1.400, $534.07 $1,125.69; fire
truck: no receipts, no disburseme~ Is,
$35,821.42; sanitary

sewer escrow: no receipts,
$8,452.06, $23,880.15; envlronmel)tal development: no receipts, $1,909.97, $10,065.77; public transportation: $3,895,
$19,655.85, $11,606.07 deficit; water tank: no receipts, no dlsbu r·
semenls, $69,886.81; water:
$12,651.06, $9,334.97, $24,335.62;
sanitary sewer: $10,188.29,
$12.210.18, $5,825.66; swimming
pool: no receipts, $8.85, $22.98;
cemetery: $961.14 , $1,135.46,
$1.96; water meter trusts: $600,
$405, $13,958.51; miniature golf:
no recelpls. $240.81, $307.51
deficit.

�)

.

--

•

•

! . ,.

~

N

•

o

..

.

·~

tl

~

•••

• ••

,.

...-

.

- ..

·-""

•
Monday. FebrUary 20, 1989
'

Commentary
WASHINGTON - Haiti bas
had three coups and four leaders
In the past three years. Now, the
country Is ripe for another coup
unless the current president-ofthe-month perfonns a miracle.
The future of the Caribbean
nationa hinges on a meeting
today (Feb. 9) when 48 representatives of political and military
factions discuss ground rules for
a democratic election.
A Haiti Insider told us to expect
the worst. The meeting will likely
break down Into chaos and Lt.
Gen. Prosper Avril, preslden't of
Haiti for only five months, will
blame the pollcltlcal factions for
delaying an election.
Avril is performing a hlgh-w(re

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJGS.MASON AREA

~l'b

r:s:m;:::~

qJv

'
'
t"T"-'._-.-. ~=·-=­

ROBERT L. WINGETT ·
Publisher

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 20, 1989

Haiti ripe for yet another

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/ControUer

A MEMBER o! The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Th'l' should be less than liO words
long. All letters are subJect toedltlng and must besl,gned wltb name, address and
telephone number. No unsignEd letters wUl be published. Letters shoukl be In
good taste, addressing issues, not pers(l'lalltles.

act. He has to appear to be
serious about a democratic election If he hopes. to get any more
money from Uncle Sam. But he
also knows that he will probably
lose the election. And, If today's
meeting doesn't end with the.
promise of an election, Avril will
likely be forced out of office
anyway In another coup that
could happen before AprU.
That would make It four coups
In three years and a s !ream of
presidents who bave left Haiti
Impoverished and hopeless. The
Ignominious Jean Claude "Baby
Doc" Duvaller fleeced the country and fiead In 1988, overthrown
by a military junta headed by
Gen. Henri Namphy. In January

;Past."

,

·

-· Legislators seem to want to hold education accountable first,
;@specially In the Senate, where a report Issued last week s'ald the
-~ystem can be Improved by giving "Incentives'' to teachers, students,
school boards ,and other educators.
:; While walling for the budget to come over from the House, the
·Senate took steps last week to let the air out of Celeste's plan.
:• Senators adopted a permissive school district Income tax to allow
'ocal boards to raise money that way . They also prepared to consider
·4 way of letting schools collect taxes on the growth In property values
:- forbidden for the last 13 years.
:: "This Is going to be a slow process," Celeste told reporters.
·:'Obviously, it's going to be slower than I'd anticipated."
: • In fact, Celeste probably will no longer be governor by the time his
:'Jea Is accepted.
.

•

:Letters
to the editor
•
•

Expresses appreciation

•

'·

[!ear Editor:
:. We would like to express our
appreciation to the Pomeroy
Pabrlc Shop for the use of their
Ills play window during Niitlonal
'Wcatlonal Week.
We would also like to thank
everyone who has helped us with
our activities these past weeks.
We also hope all the staff at

Meigs High School enjoyed their
breakfast.
And a special thanks to Mr.
Fenton Taylor, principal, at
Meigs High School and Mr.
Gordon Fisher, assistant principal, at Meigs High School lor all
of their sup[lort.
Slncerly,
Meigs FHA Member
Becky Baer, Adv.

Support greatly appreciated
Dear Editor:
Recently the National Honor
Society and the Quiz Team of
1\felgs High School held a euchre
teurnament as a project to raise
riloney. Flnanchil support was
nl!eded to give as prizes for the
winners. The students approached some of our local
~slnesses for help and they
donated to us without any hesltati&gt;n at all. If Is greatly appreciated by both organizations that
tie local community recognizes
~ need and value of academic
o;gantzatlons at our school.
. 1be businesses that so genero)lsly contributed to us were Ace
Hardware; Corner CollectiOn;
aomlno's Pizza; Farmers Bank;
~ng Funeral Home; }\Qbby

Horse; Porter, Little, Sheets &amp;
Lentes Law Firm; and Powell's
Supervalu. In addition Marilyn
Meier and Jim Ollphantgaveusa
day o! their time to serve as
judges.
We had sixty people participate In the tournament. All of
them enjoyed the competition
and many expressed their thanks
tor the opportunity to play In such
an event. We also raised enough
money to llelp run our programs
for this school year.
Thanks again to our sponsors.
We could not have been successfull without you.
·
·
Sincerely yours,
Beth Ewing, President
National Honor Society
Meigs High School
l .

WVU continues streak
for nation's longest

coup_lac_k_An_de_rso_n_

1988, Haiti held an election,
widely assumed to be fixed, and
Leslie Manlgat was elected president. Namphy didn't like that, so
he ousted Manlgat In a coup In
June. Then Avril, who had helped
Namphy with coups No . .1 and 2,
threw him out In coup No. 3 In
September.
Haiti Is being ripped apart
again by competing political
factions, Including a recent surge
of leftist leaders. The potential
for a communist regime has
alarmed officials In the neighborIng Dominican Republic. At a
meeting of the Organization of
American States In November,
the Dominican Republic's for-

Celeste's education plan
is 'dead on arrival"
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- If ever a proposal arrived In the General Assembly
In a coffin topped with a spray of carnations and roses, it was Gov.
Richard Celeste's educational excellence plan, as Introduced In the
House last week.
Minority Republicans termed it "dead on arrival" and said their
40-member caucus will not furnish a single vote for. a major tax
Increase this year. That's Important, because Democrats have only
59 votes and It will take 60 to pass the education Initiative.
But even the Democrats are morgue-cold toward it. House speaker
Vernal Riffe Jr., D·Wheelersburg, and Rep. WUllam Hlnlg, D-New
Philadelphia, the chief sponsor, tried their best to be charitable,
saying the package will receive "fair hearings."
But Riffe and Hinig could not conceal their true feellngs that the
plan Is going nowhere. Hlnlg jokingly referred to It as a "dead horse,"
then begged reporters not to print that.
Celeste, naturally, does not share the view that his plan Is dead. He
believes the Ohio voters should be allowed to vote on a constitutional
amendment earmarking a new 1 percent Income tax for education,
raising about $600 million for higher education over the next two
years. and $1.2 billion for primary and secondary education.
The governor asked about 1,000 Ohio teachers demonstrating In the
Statehouse rotunda not to dismiss his proposal out of hand. "!hope
you will study it before you respond too quickly," he said.
Later in the week, he met at length with teachers, school
.administrators and board of education members in Reynold~burg, a
Columbus suburb. As always, he made a convincing case forhls plan.
But Celeste was "preaching to the choir." If he is to make any
headway, he will have to convince legislators, and the public, that
more money should be spent on education.
Riffe and Hinig said the state's 1990-91 budget will be considered on
its own merits, without a thought of Celeste's education plan.
Trouble is. the governor based his budget on the passage of an
education Initiative. In anticipation of the $1.8 billion, he left out
important programs in both primary and secondary and higher
education. Chancellor William Coulter of the Ohio Board of Regents
said colleges will need $200 million more just to meet existing
spending levels.
So If Riffe and Hinlg are not going to pass the education Initiative,
they will have to reshape the budget to balance It out for education.
This means either raising other !axes or c,utting elsewhere. .
''We're going to work o~ the basis of available revenues," said
Hlnlg, who also happens to be chairman of the House Finance
Committee that will rewrite the budget.
"I don't see any tax passing this Legislature that deals with the
General Revenue Fund,'' agreed Riffe.
Celeste said he will play no part In restoring education funds In the
budget, but conceded there will be "considerable jockeying" over it.
"I think li would be a mistake to try to bend this budget In a way that
;oolves educat lon' s problems at the expense of other essential services
·Ot Ohio," Celeste said.
: ; "I thlnkaswt'lookat whateducatlonneedsversuswhat the budget
•provides, the legislators will arrive at the same decision I arrived at
-::- that we must Increase taxes but we must do so In a way that holds
;education accountable, no.t In the same old way as we've l,lone In the

elgn minister relayed those fears
to our outgoing Secretary of State
George Shultz.
The Haitian government is
reportedly broke. This year, the
United States has earmarked
about $50 million In humanitarIan aid, but will not give the
money to the government. Instead, th~: money will go to
volunteer organizations In Haiti
which have promised to help the :
flalttan people directly. The :
United States has refused to give a11y aid to the Haitian govern- ment until a legitimately elected
president Is In office.
That Is why today's m·eetlng In
Haiti Is under the State Depart- .
ment's microscope.
•
Haitian sources told our associate Jim Lynch that Avril is a
world-class schemer. He has ·
worked for every regime since
Duvalier and emerged un scathed from l!ach coup. For the
first couple of months In his own
regime, he basked In popularity.
But soon It became clear that he
Intended to do no more for his
starving people than his predecessors had done.
Haiti has had enough coups
that Its leaders know when one Is
coming by tracking events In
major cities. There Is a saying
among Haitian leaders that goes
like this: "If you have troubles In
Port au Prlnc.e, send money. If ·
you have troubles In Gonave,
send troops. If you have troubles
In Cap Haltien, leave."
Avril has troubles everywhere,
Including Cap Haitlen, the birthplace of most Haitian revolutions. There are dally power
blackouts In Port au Prince. U.S.
companies crucial to Haiti's
economy are pulling up stakes.

MORGANTOWN , W.Va. (UPI) - Chris Brooks scored 22
points and all West Virginia statters finished In double figures
Sunday, leading the 14th-ranked Mountaineers to a 90-66
Atlantic-10 victory over Rhode Island and extending the
natlon:S longest Division 1 winning streak to 21 games.
Ray Foster scored 17 points, Steve Berger had 15, Darryl Prue
13 and Herbie Brooks 10 for West VIrginia , 22-2 overall and 15-0
In the Atlantic 10.
·
Rhode Island, 11-13 and 7-8, was led by John Evans with a
game-high 23 points. Herb Dixon scored 17 and Kenny Green
had 11. ·
The game was tied after the first five minutes before the
Mountaineers went on a 15-2 tear that gave them a 24-lllead
With 11 minutes left in the first half. The Rams cut the deficit to
39-32 at nalftlme.
West Virginia outscored Rhode Island 13-4 In the first seven
minutes of the second half and grabbed a 52-361ead. A layup by
Prue with 3: 13 left gave West Virginia Its biggest advantage at
79-54 .

Texas-San Antonio -ball player
charged in strangling attempt
SAN ANTONIO (UP!) - A He was released on $10,000 bond
basketball player for Texas-San Saturday and returned later In
Antonio charged with trying to the day to San Antonio.
Horne declined to talk to
strangle a woman In a Florida
hotel bathroom returned to San reporters Saturday , but Robert
Antonio butdecllnPd totalkabout Garza, a San Antonio attorney,
spoke on his behalf.
his arrest .
"He Is Innocent, and we are
Keith Horne. 19, was arrested
preparing
for the day that he has
shortly after the 3:15a.m. attack
to
go
to
trial," said Garza.
Friday at the Deland, Fla.,
''Anyone
who
knows Keith Horne
Hilton Hotel, where the team was
knows
that
this
could not be
staying following a Thursday
true.''
night game against Stetson.
Horne's status as a member of
The pollee report says the
the
team and a student was
woman was attacked by a man
· who hid In a stall in the women 's uncertain. Immediately before
· bathroom. The ·at tack was Inter; UTSA played Georgia Southern
rupted by two people who heard a in Savannah, Ga., Saturday
commotion, entered and held the night, Roadrunner coach Ken
suspect until his -arrest, the Burmeister said he had made no
decision.
report says.
UTSA dean of students Dora
The woman was not seriously
Hauser
said Friday that Horne
injured.
·
could
be
suspended or expelled.
Horne was jailed and charged
21
games
this season, Horne,
In
with attempted murder, which
a
redshlrt
freshman,
averaged
carries a maximum penalty of 30
5.8
points.
years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Prep scores

Terrorists areri't freedom fighters
It's often said that "One
person's terror.t~t Is another's
freedom fighter -the lmpllcation being that whether a given
person Is one or the other Is
merely a question of whose ox is
being gored. Ifyouapproveofthe
goring, he's a freedom fighter; If
you don't, he's just a terrorist.
The problemHs adm,tttedly a
complex one, but It lsn t beyond
all analysis, and It yields to a test
that Is only marginally more
difficult than asking whose ox Is
being gored.
In a 1973 hard-cover "debate''
on the rights of Vietnam War
deserters and draft dodgers, I
suggested that a democratic
society (like the United States)
has, unlike a totalitarian state, a
moral right to punish ~hose
whose disobey Its laws, because
dissenters have, In a democracy,
the right to work for change In
those laws with which they
disagree.
Pushing the point to Its logical
conclusion, I added that If the

majority, In a democracy, were
to "effectively destroy the rights
of minorities to work for
change," that society would "of
course lose any semblance of a
moral right to punish" those who
disobeyed it.
Such an analysts pretty clearly
Identifies the IRA forces In
Northern Ireland as terrorists
rather than freedom fighters,
because they have every right to
work for change In a basically
democratic society (Indeed,
their spokesmen are elected to
Parliament from time to time).
They are simply In the minority
and are resorting to terror In an
effort to get their way.
But what about the Palestinlans_? Here, it seems to me, It Is
Important to draw a distinction
between military blows aimed by
the PLO at the Israeli state,
which many dispossessed Palestlnlan Arabs believe Is denying
them their rights, and the PLO' s
well-known penchant for acts of
violence against Jews and other

perceived "enemies" generally
outside the borders of Israel. '
Yasir Arafat has recently
pledged, If I understand him
aright, to avoid henceforth conduct of the latter kind. If so, he
and his PLO may make some
progress toward the status of
"freedom fighters." Up to now,
however, they have most cer·
talnly engaged In many acts that
were, strictly speak 1ng,
terrorist.
What about the African Nationa! Congress, which Is banned
In South Africa and engages In
acts of violence? Most such acts
occur within South Africa Itself,
and thus are at least free of the
criticism to which Ararat, Gadhafl and certain others are justly
subject for their global
terrorizing.
But a· proper evaluation of the
rights and wrongs of the ANC
(lepends, at least In part, on what
one believes Is the true situation
In South Africa today. Here tn the
West, we live under a barrage of

Where did Ted Bundy go
Ted Bundy loved the limelight.
From the time he was 1ailed
and first suspected as a serial
killer who specialized In the
torture o! women, be reveled In
the attention his theatrics won
him. A few years ago a journalist
coaxed (?) Bundy Into telling
how he murdered some of his
victims, and what he was thinkIng while he was doing It, by
saying, "Hey, Ted, you're a
smart guy; what do you think a
guy would be thinking while he
did something like this? How do
you think he did It?"
And now, supposedly, Ted
Bundy has bequeathed us this
legacy, this deep insight Into the
psychopathic brain: He dldn' t
commit his heinous acts because
he was Incapable of feeling
anything for anyone but himself,
or because he didn't care how
many lives he either snuffed out
completely or damaged beyond
repair, just as long as he. was
entertained. Noooooooo. He did It
because he was "addicted to
pornography."
And not' just the sleaze-bag
sewer variety that depicts violent acts, . mind you. He contended he started with soft-core
erotica, which then reached out
and grabbed his eyeballs and
made him look for something
that degraded women as well.
Pretty soon he had this lrreslstl·
ble desire to torture and mutilate
them, too.
Conservative antipornography activists took Bundy's death-eve confessions as
gospel, hugging Bundy to their
bosoms as If he were the 13th
disciple. The Interview he taped
with televangelist James Dobson
Is already gaining tame as the
· new "proof' that all pornography leads to the grisly conclu. slon to which It led poor, hapless
Teddy Bundy:

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I think Charles Whited, columnist lor The Miami Herald, may
have said It best: "Without
defending or condemning porn,
I'd say t)lat It sexually explicit
materials triggered Bundy-style
violence, placid, porn-plentiful
murderers. Nothing can restrain
the Bundy type of
psychopath .... "
This we know: Ted Bundy got
the deathbed-confession urge
only when It looked like be could
cheat the R~:.aper no more. First
Bundy puUed In his "spiritual
adviser," former defense attorney Jobn Tanner. He convinced
him that It he only has a little
more time, he sould solve
murders form coast to coast,
provide the necessary details to
relieve the agony of the unknown
for the famUies of all those poor
girls. The telling could take as
long as several months, Tanner
appealed.
Bundy was not the first prisoner to get jall110use religion
when faced with the alternative.
In fact, during my 10-year career
In journalism, I've received
letters from several such misunderstood men, who were able to
discern that I was someone who
could see the truth of their
predicament. Each of them was
the victim of amazingly extenuating circumstances that ca.joled them Into crime. One man
claimed be was "brainwashed"
by cohorts. He hoped I would do
an expose on how easy It Is to
"brainwash" an Innocent man
h1to committing crimes.
Ted Bundy was a consummate
user. When the using of women's
bodies and lives for his own
twisted pleasure landed him on
death row, be used the Interest he
piqued among journalists to keep
alive the posalblllty of his lnn(!cence or derangement. When
that failed, he tried to use the

Ro~· 'i

·

Rusher

assertions that South Africa Is
lntranslgent)y hostile to selfdetermination for Its black citlzens. If that were true, the case
for regarding the ANC as terrorlsts would be much harder to
make.
But those who look at South
Africa closely and objectively
know that It simply Isn't true.
The South AfriCan government Is
actively seeking discus ions with
black leaders, looking toward the
goal of black self-determination.
The ANC however Isn't seeklng self-det~rmlnatlo~; it Is seeklng power, Including power over
that majority of South African
blacks that opposes it. (That Is
why so many of Its acts of
violence, even today, are aimed
at black South Africans.)
Such considerations gravely
undermine the Image of the ANC
as a noble assemblage .of freedom fighters. Remember the
test: Can change be pursued
democratically?

Dl\' klon 1\'

flo,·.-r &amp;2 , ('an S til

lludson\hnllol \ A.t· a 7-1, Un!d)' ( " ' \ ' ) fi:! ·
Uma Sh&amp;nrnl'l' llfl, Umu Sr 37
Ushon "'· folumhi R&amp;l-17
M;ll'i!!oillon ,JMdoulft 0!1, lndllPl ( Pa) U

Ornii!•H, Akr( 'rm•nlrytil
()Uuwa lUll&gt;~ H , OIUihury l.lllu!tilrk•

'I

Pwldlnl{':t, Rryan 58
SIUidu!ilcy MaryliKl'l. Loral• Calh 11
St Hf'nry !It, Um11 Pt&gt;rr)' 33
Tol Em Bapt &amp;H, To I C'hr 5:J
T'ol " 'hHmcr tilt Tol fentnll 67
Tuslcy· \ ' aile}' ifl, f\l:f'W!'II'IHMI1o,u• H
1\Jslaw ~7. Smllh\·llle$4
Twin~ rl( 1J. Parma Pj&amp;tkl i'l

Warren Hartllna:K. MWiM Pf'rry '3
" ' ft!o•lk'flfleldGG!4hl"R 113, N('W KROll:\1114·

"

\ 'oUJ• C&amp;l ( 'hr Ill, Klnl!'i

Be~Wf'n.•rt'f'k

01\'iK.UI
.-.. Lfomott-Monrot• 5:!

fin Aileen 74, Glen tAll' U
fin foleraln n, BamUton fi
Cln M'o~ilrd iK, On " 't'Mif'rll Hills 15
C'ols " '{'!oil i t Worthlnl(ton 11
Delawue l3. foho lndf1M'nden«&gt; 511
Lanc:a.ooter &amp;e. Mar~lll lit
l.oi(M •• C'hiiHoott. 57
Mlamlr!burl( 51,\\' f'arrollon H
Mltldlecown MI. On N\\' 5·1
Porhmoulh 63, lrontotl 55 I'!OlJ
ft' CbeKter Ukollti oo. an Syumon• .a,.;

IM\'bdon II
Ci11 f t\PE 'H, N.w Rh·hmolld U
(In GrN!tl Hills 81, (-osht•n .JO
C'h•rmo• NE 7:\, " 't&gt;slern Brown 61
C'ol~ WaUersoo i-1, London -It
Eid on itt Urtum11 8:1
lrlclu V~lfo)o II, Rl . . .eod -Ill

M•klnRI\'er Val 7i,&lt;C.hl('~nw-n nlalli':
Sller:hiiYI 7JI, Atlte•" 57
Sparll. lll(•an• 13. t'ol10 Brll(l!'i -14
Sprln~:N"' 50, Bellefo.-.lne t&amp;
Sprln~~;Shilwnt'e 57, TlppOIJ 55
Sprilll( Grf'enon 51'1, kenton Rldl(f l&amp;
Su rfMiry Bll( " 'alnat MI. Mary!WIIIe 77
W Unkln KM, \\' &amp;&lt;~lllillltOR ('h 70

" 'a11dns Ml"mortal ICI, (:OIK DeSal4'!&gt; S5
Dl"hlonlll
Bel hook il, Mltllletown MadiKon 55
Cbl'!lllpt'akf' to, Calli GroW' 1-1
Hamiii011Badln •· Kf•p 5':
Retls 71, Ad c. . U

~rln11: NE lit
New 1¥111¥111 ~ Jpffer~on 55
l"rl'hii'SIIawnr.e 11, 0ty Oak~ 66
Tu~IQ' \'allt"f ':0, Newcomt•nlvwn 4-1
W Uhl'rt .~ Salll'm M, Trl(' ou•y N ll

NaU TraJI 55,

•

f"orl Lonlmlt" 71, Anna -111
Gihtonhu~

, , UUIIWII lUlls -Ill
· Hol~f' U. Uher1)' C..nll"r :n
Marion ( 'Uh K-1. t 'alrtuanb S;J
Marton Loc· ~ H. Ml'ndo• Union 23
MC"t·hllnlaohur~ U. .JacbOII C'C"nk'r 31
Mlllerspll't il. LJ hrrly Cllr M
~ ialttmo~ 55. Norllwoocl U
Porhmouth E 60. New Bolt&amp;on 51!
Rl\'f'tsldr "'"· Slcft')' Falrkwn ti!
Sky,tt&lt;" 11. Bl'aiiKvlllr n
Sl H«-nr)' .tK, Parkwa)' -13
Trtmhlf' 77, R11chM• Soulltrn 7%
Walerford it, " 'oo4'411eldf5 , .. ,
" 'orth C'hr M. G11llon Nol'lhmer til
Glrbl Ohio HllhSt•hool BaKWthall
By Unkl'd Prf'fiK lritl'f rMt to lUll
Saturdl\f, Ft"h. 1K

Tounuuntonl
01\' blkllll
Akr Sprlnll: 36, Akr ll'nmo"' 33
BarhPrloalll, AkrGarfleld-18
(la Withrow i-1. On Alk!ll 31
Col SoudJ 71, Col Mulon Fr1111UO
('ol Bruokhln'f'n 5I. \\'tti&amp;er\'lllp N -11
[)(oh&amp;war~· 1fi, Col WaJn .. Rld«e !1
Find~· B. BowHn~~:Grl'f'n 4fi
G•lloway Weo~llandll. lllllla ... U
Uma Sr tii, DefiMt'f&gt; :13
Lopn 51. Chllll.'Othe 41

Ml'dlna 51, fie MarMiaJI .M
Muullll Vermn 7K, Grow flly .10
Nt'W Phlla Kfi, ZaoesviiiP U
Qrp CIQ" 87, To I MacombH 57
Parm! Huly Nam• '75, Parma \' 11.1
For~·

Cln Bllt'On&amp;:J, Harrt10on :11

HunUn~on

t\rt&gt;ildla MI. Hope"'e/1-kludon :19
lk-al!avlllt&gt; 511. Shad) !!Ide tM
Botldn.'iK!I, TrllLd 11
( 'ol " 'rrhlt• ill. Herre Un io• 46
Fayeltf' 63, To I ( 'tlr ::1

Ac~t6'!

Toum~tn,..nt

despicable If Bundy's "addictedto-porn" routine throws a smokescreen around the portrait of
what he really was: a 'psychopathic fiend who cared only about
gratifying his perverted Inpulses, and would use anyone, or
any excuse, to gain his sport.

Berry's World

Ohio HI ~hSt• hool 811.0i ..•thall
By l lnilf'd Prt&gt;S!'IInll• n•llntt~l
.
SM:urdl\\', ••f'h Hi
lh&gt;~bu S.• IWoi(m Rt.,.Uill'l

,\shlall.•la Chr .i!!, Akron rhr 17 (ot 1
Burhj•rlun HJ'. Map k&gt; HI,. M6
.( ·an lll•rita,;(' ( 'hr 56, \ 'oullft ( 'hr ~
Celina 54, Krnlon 1!1
(\iy VII.! l'hr s.t. FM.Irpon Hardin~~; .'U

wro~g_ov_er_stre_et

'tortuous knowledge of unsolved
murders as a bargaining chip;
and when that failed, he turned to
the televangelists. Perhaps they
could stay the executioner ...
Pornography that depicts and
promotes violence and torture
against any human being Is
despicable. !3ut It wUI be a just as

W Muslda,._m U, !)hl'ftllnltlllh .tit
ZllAf' Tr&amp;cf' 52, Ross St: !II

80

Pld:erln~on

71, Mar_,n Hardin!( 21
Rey noliWMI 'I' 7-t, fol MIIRI• &amp;4
S~mdu!lky 70, J\!ihland .tM
Syl Nerli\'lew 18, Tol Whtlmt'l' 3i
Tol ( ' C &amp;e, Tot ScoU ~
To I Nd &amp;4, Holland Sprinalfl
Upp!l' Arlln~oa $3, Jhlhlln 31
Dl\'lsklnll
lk&gt;lle\' Ul' U, Norwalk J1
Brfl'R til, Mllhi'J Lakf' 41
Cen FuMon Nw S!, Nanrr't' Falr~MU

Canleld 11, $lRet!lboro U
Cia MerCJ II, On .b*r80n ~

CopiPy ,, CIUI S Ul
Do"er 51, N«rW Concord 'lM
Eul
liS, Ore Sl rltch -114

woo•

Ell ..... Cell• 5I
Kan,.. Lakala "'· Gfon• U (ot )
Uma a.h 11. UmaShawne• 55
"' . . mee 5t, Koatford Sf
MIIJs\'llle SS. Pltlla ft
Me •wbrctek 47, Dre!ldm TrJ. wllt&gt;y 40
OU llarflor 51, MIU'J(aretla 5t
Pa rk:k Ht-•ry II, Delta U
Ke l(l.na -It, Beamtonl :U

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:
PLEASANT VALlEY HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
· GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARIIIO AIDS
11

No "Magic' in Lakers-Celtics matchup .
By United Press International '
With Larry Bird and Magic
Johnson sidelined, a matchup
between the Los Angeles Lakers
and Boston Celtics provided less
intrigue Sunday than a Mllwaukee Bucks assistant coach or
even the NBA 's worst te am.
Los Angeles' '119-110 victory
over Boston marked the first
time this decade that neither
Boston's Bird nor the Lakers'
Johnson participated. Bird, still
rehabilitating following surgery
on both heels, Is expected back In
March. Johnson, out with a
partially torn left hamstring,
niay return late this week.
"I'm so used to this being the
game of the season ," Johnson
said. "It 's always hard to sit
out. "
Byron Scott scored a seasonhigh 35 points and keyed a 16-2
run that powered the Lakers to
victory.
"Anytime you play without
Larry and Magic, something is
missing," Scott said. "But this
game seemed llke every other."
The NBA 's other two games

Sunday provided surprise. The
Miami Heat, who lost 42 of their
first 47 games, won their second
straight game Sunday, beating
tne Atlanta Hawks 124-115.
Chicago beat Milwaukee 108-106
In the other game, a contest In
which Bucks assistant Mike
Dunleavy played 11 seconds,
hours after signing a ]0-day
player contract.
At Miami, Grant Long scored a
career-high 30 points to pace the
Heat , who Improved to 7-42.
Miami beat fellow expansion
team Charlotte on Friday night.
• 'Our confidence level Is so
high right now we feel we can
beat anybody," Long said. "This
win is great for 'o urego. "
Miami snapped Atlanta ' s
three-game winning streak and
posted its highest point total of
the · season. The consecutive
victories decrease the likelihood
Miami will finish with the worst
record. In NBA history. The
1972-73 Philadelphia 76ers went
9-73, a mark Miami had a good
chance of breaking before beat -

lng the HawkS and Hornet s.
'
"This was by far the best
coaching job against us this yea r
and no team has played harder
against us," Atlanta Coach Mike
Fratello said. "There were no
negatives for them. They outplayed us hi every phase. The win
was no fluke."
At Milwaukee, Michael Jordan
scored 23 points and Scotti e
Pippen added 22 to lead Chicago.
The Bulls have beaten Mllwau kee In all four of t)lelr meetings
this season and have won 11 of
their last 12 games against the
Bucks.
Milwaukee fell in back•to-back
games for the first time since
losing Dec. 16 and 17 against
Atlanta and Chicago.
The Bucks signed Dunleav y,
34 , to a player contra ct because
of several Injuries at the guard
position.
_
Dunleavy has been a Bucks
assistant coach since June 19,
1987,afterplaylngwlththeteam
from 1983 to 1985.
"Everyone who knows me

•

DAYTONA BEACH , Fla .
(UPl) - Playing it safe, even in
the best of cars, liad never
worked for Darrell Walt rip In the
Daytona 500.
Waltrip had come close to
winning stock-car racing 's prize
jewel before, but a myriad of
circumstances kept him from
crossing the finish line first. So
during Sunday's 31st running of
the 500, Waltrip and cr~w chief
Jeff Hammond decllfled to
gamble.
They opted to try and go the
final 53 laps without a pit stop, a
roll of the dice that paid off with a
triumph.
''That's what poker's all
about," said Waltrip, a threetime Winston Cup champion who
won the 74th race of his career.
"We played poker today and we
won. We felt to gamble and win
was worth it."
The victory plugs the last
remaining gap in Waltrip's
hugely successful career. He has
won nearly'$9 million, more than
any other stock car driver, but
had longed for a Winston Cup
victory at Daytona's 2.5-mile
tri-oval.
"Are you sure this Is Day-

tona ?" Waltrip asked repeatedly
during the post-race ceremonies.
" Is this the Daytona 500?"
Waltrip could be forgiven for
being shocked at winning the
Daytona 500. For years, he l)ad
come close to victory, only to
have bad luck rise up and strike
hlm at the · most Inopportune
moments.
Highlighting his frustrating
past at Daytona was last year's
500, in which he clearly had the
best car In .the race, led 69 laps,
but experienced engine troubles
late in the race and limped home
to a disappointing lith-place
finish.
"Last year down here, I came
into this race with the best race
car I have ever driven at
Daytona," Waltrip said. "I left
here last year, again, feeling like
this place owed me something."
But last year's race was a
turning point, Waltrip said. He
came to Daytona In 1989 determined to map out a plan and stick
to it, and when he and crew chief
Jeff Hammond realized their car
was getting the best fuel mileage
of any of the top machines,
Waltrip's plan was set.
He would run the last part of

the race in a draft to conse rve
fuel and let leaders Ken Schrader
and Dale E¥nhardt get away,
knowing they would have to pit
for fuel.
"I came back this year with a
different attitude. " Waltrip said .
''Our best success comes when
we have a plim and stick to it."
Waltrip said he did not know
how much fuel was left in his car
after a cool-down lap and a drive
to victory lane, there was barely
anything left in the 22-gallon
tank. A NASCAR Inspector who
examined the car after the ract'
said he didn't know how much
fuel was left either, but quipped:
"For $5, I'd drink it."
Waltrip came to Daytona this
year believing it could be his
lu~ky year. He was driving the
No. 17 Tide Chevrolet in his 17th
Daytona 500, and his daught er.
Jessica Leigh, turned 17 months
old on Feb. 17, two days before
the race.

Il l JACKSON

PikE

RT . JS WEST

•

"Seventeen years. Seventeen
years ," Waltrip said In victory
lane . "It took me 18 years to have
her (Jessica ) and It took me 17 '
years to win this race. I'm slow, .
but I'm diligent. "

The. Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1U·8·)
A Dl\'lllon of Multimedia, lac.

Published every afternoon, Monday

thrwgh Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company /Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Ne"Nspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, U1 Court St.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 4.1768.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motar RoaM!
One Week ...................................$1.40

One Month ............. .. ... ......... .. .... $6.10
One Year ....... ...... ....... ....... .. .... $72.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
[)atly .................. ................. 25 Cents
Subscrt~rs not deslrlng ro pay the car·
rter may remit In advance direct to

The Dally Sentlnel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basls. Credit will be given carrlereacb
week.
No subscrtprtons by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service Is
avallablf.. ·

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

Mall Sublcrlpllo•
llllkle Melp County
13 Weeks ..... ........ .. .. .. .... ........... $19.24
26 Weeks ............... .... ....... .. ...... $37.96
52 Weeks .... ................ ....... ...... , $74,34;
Ouudde Melp CouMy
13 Weeks .... .... ... ........ .. .. ........... $20.80
26 Weeks .. .. .... ..... .. ...... ...... .... .. , UO.:JO

992-6669
MIDDLEPORT,
OliO

52 Weeks . .. ..... ......... .. .. ............. S75.t0

FREE DELIVERY IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:

Hardware

MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVILLE,
RUTLAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W.VA.

!ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3:00P.M.)

FUE DELIVERY ON ALL PRESCRIPnONS
IF YOU DON'T NHD A PRESCRIPTION FILLID, WE
WILl DEUYEI ANYTHING IN THE nOIE FIB ON A
$5.00 MINIMUM OlDER.

Do•'t For11t To c•eek The Low Prleu 0•
Oar Preeriptlots

Going Out of
BUSINEss·
SALE!.

-What do an
·elephant and a
microwave have

0°/o

inco1mnon?
,
... '

..

OFF

ALL MERCHANDISE
ALL SALES FINAL
NO RETURNS

'

Hardware
They Both Work For Peanuts. A microwave and all
the appliances in your house work for just pennies
a day with low-cost electric energy. Today and tomorrow, electricity is your best energy value.
.

FORMERLY
ACE HARDWARE

S.
"v-Bnd could we get an order of pork rinds?"

•

Waltrip takes a gamble on wtn tn Daytona 500

(304) 675-1244

I

knows how much I like to play the
game of basketball," Dunleavy
said. " I figure If I'm stupid
enough to do it, I'd might as well get paid for it."
The Bucks wanted to take
adv antage of Dunleavy 's three- :
point shooting ability. Coach Del '
Harris inserted him Into the •
lineup for Terry Cummings with
11 seconds to go and with
Milwaukee trailing 106-103.
But Dunleavy, who hit 34
percent of his three-point shots
du r ing his career. didn ' t get a
chance to shoot and Jay Humphries missed a three-point at tempt
with five seconds to go.
The guard position has been
depleted, as Humphries suffered
a deep thigh bruise Thursday and .
Ricky Pierce missed two games
with a sore lower back. Both
players returned Sunday.
"!didn' t know until game time.
whether Pierce and Humphries
could play or how long they could
play,"Harrissaid . ' ' (Dunleavyi
knows the system and he's In
good shape:"

982-3662
I

\\tdogood lhinp kgdher.

407 PEARL ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

P011181 0)'-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 20, 1989

Trlmble beats Southern 77-72

TITLE GAME ACTION- Trimble's Jeff Hoi' bert drives toward the basket during the district
tllle game against Racine Southern. Southern

went down to defeat at the hands oiTrlmble, 77-72
at Meigs High School Saturday night. Holbert, an
all-state candidate scored 32 points on the night.

I Cage standings I Rio men look to shut down
scoring threats at Lake Erie

By DAVE HARRIS
OVP Correspondent
ROCK SPRINGS - A.ll-state
candidate Jeff Holbert scored 32
points to lead the Trimble Tomcats to a 77-72 victory over the
Southern Tornadoes Saturday
night, giving the Tomcats the
Division IV sectional
championship.
, The Tomcats will now advance
to the district tournament WednC$day nightat Ohio University's
Convocation CentEtr against
Franklin Furnace Green.
The game, played before a
packed house at Meigs High
School, was everything a champiohshlp game should be and
then some. Both teams played
outstanding ball through out the
game. The win by Trimble
makes It only the second time In
the last 1a. years that the
Tornadoes have failed to advance to district play.
In the first quarter the Tornadoes fell behind 5-3 at the 6; 30
mark but reeled off six In a row to
take a 9-5 lead. From then on the
teams traded baskets the rest of
the way as Southern held a 24-23
lead at the end of the quarter.
After Trimble took a 25-24 lead,
Soutllern came storming back.
With 6:56 remaing Andy Baer hit
a layup and was fouled. He hit the
free throw to put Southern up
29-25.
Southern built the lead to nine
as Richard Deaver hit a bucket of
a rebound and was fouled.
Deaver missed the free throw,
but Trimble coach Paul Pettit

(SEO,Opponents)
tAll-Games)
TEAM
W
L P OP
Shutting down the scoring
points and five assists per outing.
Chesapeake ... . 19 2 1556 1163 prowess of Lake Erie' s Jackie
Facing them from Rio Grande
x-Waverly ...... 19 3 1595 1172 Watters and Melvin Selmon will
will be Anthony Raymore (5-11,
Portsmouth .... 19 3 1626 1n7 be the main goal of the Rio
senior), the Redmen's high point
Wheelersburg .18 3 1353 1154 Grande game plan Monday when
man at 15.7 a game and leader in
Logan ...... .. .. ... l8 3 1401 1124 the Redmen face the Storm on Us
assists with a 4.5 average. Also
x-Athens ......... li 5 1343 1221 home turf.
starting at guard will be Jimmy
Game time will be 7:30p.m. at
x-Rock Hill. .... l4 8 1560 1359
Kearns (6-1, senior), who is
x-$outhern ...... l4 9 1537 1467 the Lake County, Ohio campus
averaging 11.4 points and 2.3
x-Greenfield ... 13 8 1160 1092 headed by former Rio Grande
assists each time out.
GAFFNEY, S.C. Betsy
x-Vinton .... .. ... 10 11 1251 1226 presldent Clodus R. Smith.
Brad Schubert (6-3, freshman , · Bergdoll connected on all five of
.x-Warren ........ 9 ll 1224 1228 .. The Redmen previously en9 points, 2.6 boards) is the first
her 3-point attempts to power the
x-Marletta ...... 8 13 1183 1265 countered Lake Erie last Deprobable player off the bench for Rio Grande Redwomen to a 72-59
x-South Point .. 8 13 1436 1462 cember at LyneCenter. A.lthough
the Rio guards.
win over the Limestone Saints
x-Gallipolis .. ... 8 14 1019 1140 Rio Grande won 83-76, Selmon, a
At forward for the Redmen are Saturday.
Pt. Pleasant ... 6 13 lll3 1243 junior from Mansfield, and Watexpected to be Larry Benning
Bergdoll, a 5-7 freshir\Jln from
x-Meigs . ......... 5 16 1129 1318 ters, a . junior from . Akron.
(6-4, fteshman), who is averag- Gallipolis, led all scorers with 23
x-Jackson .. .. .. . 4 17 1248 1397 attributed for most of their
ing 9.9 points and 6 rebounds, and points and had four rebounds as
team's scoring, recording 24 and
Mike Tidwell, a 6-3 sophomore Cheryl Fielltz's club record went
x-Completed se~on
22 points, respectively. Last
currently adding 7.6 points and to 16-9. Limestone, under the
week, Watters was ranked eighth
3.5 boards to fhe Redmen effort stewardship of first-year coach
Saturday's results:
by the NAJA in Individual scoring each game. ·
Dennis Bloomer, went to 8-14.
Trimble 77 Southern 72
for an average of 28 points per
Their opposite numbers from
Senior co-captain Lea Ann
Logan 60 Chillicothe 57
game.
·
Lake Erie are expected to be Mullins supplied 19 points, four
Lancaster 60 Marietta 59
Watters and Selmon have been
Doug Irwin (6-5, forward, 5.5 boards and six assists for Rio
West Union 88 Washington CH 70 the backbone of Lake Erie' s
points, 4.6 rebounds) and Greg Grande. Fellow senior HoJ.ly
Portsmouth 631ronton 55 12 ot)
premiere season in District 22.
Szczecinski (6-5, freshman, 3.8 Hastings, while scoring eight
Chesapeake 90 Coal Grove 64
Coached by 1959 Ohio Universi1y points. 3 rebounds).
markers, led her teammates in
Sheridan 78 Athens 57
graduate Wll Shuster, the Storm
Center slot for Lake Erie is rebounds with ll.
is 5-25 entering play against Rio expected to be taken by Shannon
Center Ann Barnitz completed
Di•ision I
Grande. The team won its first
Ru~ker
(6-2, freshman, 7.9 the Rid ladles' high scoring with
Sectional Finals
game In several weeks on Feb.
points, 4.3 rebounds 1. Marc Go- 12 points and three rebounds.
(AI Athens)
14,
posting
a
96-32
decision
over
thard
(6-4, sepior, 7 points, 3.5 RRio Grande was 41.2 percent on
•
Feb. 25:
Kent State-Ashtabula, but fell
boards) will continue at the post field goals (26-63) and posted 68.1
Logan vs. Lancaster. 7 p.m.
107-79 to Central S\ate at Wilberfor the Redmen.
percent at the foul line for 68.1
force, Ohio, on Saturday.
Monday's game will end the percent.
Division II
Rio Grande enters the game regular seasop for Rio Grande.
The Redwomen complete their
Distrid Tournament
with a 95-79 weekend victory over · Currently at third place in · the -regular season play Monday at
(AI OU)
Cedarville, its third straight for a district, the Redmen are ex - 6:30p.m. against Wingate, N.C.
Feb. 23:
20-11 record.
pected to make an appearance in Box score:
1
' •
Portsmouth vs. Sheridan. 6:30
Watters (6·3) and Selmon (5- the district playoffs, set for the
LIMESTONE
(59) Jvey,
p.m.
·
11) are expected to start against first week of M-arch.
2-1-5;
Hardin,
4-4-12;
Kidd,
2-1-5;
\fest Union vs. Wellston. 8:15 Rio Grande at guard positions.
p.m.
Statistics show that Watters is
•
Division Ill
averaging 6.8 rebounds a game,
'
District Tournament
DINNER FOR FOUR
while Selmon is credited with 18
DOMINO'S
(At. OU)
LARGE 10" 5-ITIM PIZZA
PIZZA
\'. With Pep . . oni, S.u ..... Mu1twoome:, .
Feb. 24:
Onkl• .nd Gr..n '-P~•
DEUVEIS
&lt;;lay vs. Belpre, 7 p.m.
PLUS 4 · ~6 oz. Softdrink•
FREE.
Alexander vs. Chesapeake, 8:4&gt;
P-oy, OH.
u
..
~.d
DtliY•r
p.m.
Wts! Maio St.
Area
.
Feb. 25:
POIIIOf
• II .w.t • s.....n.n:
992-2124
STOll OlllY
1
rn..s...
iane Trace vs. Huntington Ross .
1;30 p.m .
DINNEI FOR TWO
CLEVELAND (UPI) - OutRECEIVE .2 FREE
Wheeleersburg vs . Peebles. 9:15
fielder
Joe
Carter
won
his
p:m.
2 MEDIUM PIZZAS .
PEPSI'S
arbitration bat tie with the CleveDivision IV
WRH A PAN PIZZA
land Indians, gaining a club(At OU)
'
$1.63
million
salary
for
record.
ORDER
feb. 22:
Lurd' Onty-11 AM -1 PM
1989
after
rejecting
a
5-year
{ireen vs. Portsmouth East. 6:30
POIElOT
POiliiOW
MDURs.
"
11 M·l • 5M.·Tllln.
11 ..., Ms...n..,.,
STOll UlT
SlOti OJilY
11 ... ., . . Fri.·'-'·
'F)"imble vs. Beaver- Eastern- contract estimated at about $9.5
I .. .J AM frL..J.!,
million.
White Oak winner, 8: 15-The award, granted Saturday
after an arbitrator in New York
spent the previous day taking
testimony from both sides, Is tlle
,
(All games-final)
highest single-season salary in
·
11EAM
· w L P OP the baseball team's history .
"We don't believe he's worth
~utllern ............ .15 9 1537 1441
llforth Gal Jia ....... 12 7 1329 1195 what he's getting, but the system
Eastern ... .. .... ..... ll 9 1448 1478 says he's going to get it." club
is pleased to announce ·
Oak Hill ............ 11 11 1311 1342 president Hank Peters said.
the establishment of his
SOuthwestern ..... 9 12 1426 1518 "You've got to accept it, close the
Hannan Trace ... 9 12 1252 1260 issue and get on with the game,'·
private medical practice
Peters said.
~yger Creek ...... 5 16 1313 1476
Symmes Valley . 4 17 1176 1456
Peters pointed to some of the
in New Haven, West Virginia
(a-still active)
record contract players have
Saturday's title result ·
signed In recent
weeks as
At Meigs H.S. - Trimble 77, prompting the large settlement
for Carter.
Racine Soutllern 72

was slapped with a technical
foul. Baer hit both free throws,
and Southern was on top 34-25
with 5:16 to go in the half. The
technical seemed to fire up the
Tomcats, as they went on a 19-8
run to take the lead at the half
46-42. Holbert led the charge with
11 secood-quarter points and
went into the locker roorp with 21
first half points.
In the third quarter Southern
fell behind 51-44 at the 5: 30 mark
as 6-3 sophomore Scott Auflick
started hitting underneath after
.Southern cut the· lead to 54-51
Trimble once again took control
going back out on top 58-51 . Roy.
Johnson brought the local fans to
their feet as he hit a 24-foot
jumper to cut the Glouster lead to
58-54 at the buzzer.
In the fourth quarter Trimble
on·c e again tried to put the
Tornadoes away taking a 68-60
lead with 3:30 left. But the
Tornadoes , who have battled
back the entire year. showed
once again they would not roll
over and play dead. With 2:00
minutes to go Baer completed a
three point play to cut the
Tomcat lead to 70-68. Holbert hit
two free throws at the 1:48 mark
to put Trimble on top 72-68. After
a missed Tornado shot. the
Tomcats looked as though the
would run the clock down, but
Baer came up with a steal and
Todd Grindstaff hit a bucket to
put Southern back in the game at
72-70. But in the last minute
Holbert hl.t five of six free throws
to seal the victory.

Bergdoll powers Rio
ladies to 72-59 victory

-

$9.99 .

Indians' Carter
wins arbitration

I

ATIENTI
BUSINESS

Dr. Dan Trent

•

We understand the tax
businesses. Put your

'
•

SOUTHERN (72)
Maynard ........... .. ...... . 6
Taylor ....................... . 2
Baer ............. ..... : ..., .... J
Grindstaff .. ...... ... .... ... 2
Deaver .. ............ .. .. ... .. 2
Johnson .. .. .... ....... .. ..... !
Shuler ........ .. ...... ........ 2
Murphy .. ....... ............. 0
TOTALS .. .. ............... . J8

0
2
0
0
0
I
0
0

5
8
3
2
I
2
1

I
3 27 72

TRIMBLE (77)
Holbert. ...... ... .... .. .. .... 10
Au!lick ..................... . 3
McClelland ........ ... ... .. 0
Leeper .................... .. 4
Bingman .. ... ....... .. .. ... 3
Downs ..................... :. 1
TOTALS ...... .............. 21

1
0
3
0
0
1
5

9
5
2
2
2
0
20

Appointments and Walk-Ins Welcome
9 a.m.· 5 p.m.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a.m.- Noon
Wednesday

,.

I

for you.

'f\GRICULTURE'S LEADING

17
14
7
6
6
6

PHONE 992-8874 - POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN 9 AM·B PM WEEKDAYS, 9-6 SAT.
Appolntmenhl Avell•ble

•

32
11

11
10 .
8
5
77

•

•
•
•

.

'•

..•

•

DILES HEARING_CENTER

..
..'

.,...............................................
............................................
1614) 594-3571
TOLl-FREE IN OHIO 1-800-237-7716
326 WEST.UNION STREET
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
•

••

~~

'

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS INC.

.,•

II&amp;Ra.GCit

.,.,
•'.,

.'••
•

'.'
•
•

1989
BONNEVILLE LE SEDAN

•

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

+ (304) 882-3134

Formerly 8end Area Medical Center

.

Power Door Locks, Reclining Seats,
Rear Window Defogger, Gauges,
Tilt Wheel, Delay Wipers,
Lamp Group, ·Cruise, Aluminum
Wheels, Split Front Seats,
AM-FM-Stereo-Cassette, Automatic
Transmission With Overdrive.

•

'•

·.•
..'
....
.
'

'

.•
'•

.•'.
•

~----------..J

.

•

992-6669

.•

·'J

--••
•
••
"

.
'
...
..
. 992·2196

Motors, Inc.

992-2174

__....______....,____,
POMEROY, OHIO

'
•'

Ill .... ~ .. f!rJit

K&amp;C
Jewelers
.

Pat Hill Ford

State Farm Insurance

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-2039 - 992-6454
POMEIOY, OliO

.

Veterans Memorial Hospital

I

POMEIOY, OHIO

992-2104

Ewing Funeral Home
992-2121

MillE SWIGER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

992-6685

'

.

POMEROY, OHIO

992-3785

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-5141

-

Fruth Pharmacy

CHESTER, OHIO

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY, OHIO

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

985·3301

'

.• 992-649.1

I:

CENTRAL TRUST

The &amp;nkThar Makes Things Happen

Baum Lumber

· Adolph's Dairy Valley

•

I~

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6661

POMEROY, OHIO

•

;
1

pi!:..

Fabric Shop

..• 992·2556
.

I·

992·2174

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-- '

992-2214
•'

Smith. Nelson Motors, Inc.
--

:'
.'.

POMEROY, OHIO'

992-2115

Prescription Shop

.•
'

POMEROY, OHIO

SALES AND SERVICE
Your best buy for the long run.
POMEROY, OHIO
992·2975

.

•

•

Sugar Run Flour Mills

'i'iiRAVELY TRACTJ)R

1:•
..

t-.......................................•~
500 EASY MAIN

..•
.•'

.•

'S•LE PRICE INCLUDES F..CTORY REBATE

New Haven, West Virginia

Empire of Pomeroy

' 992-3307

,;

~

-

;

,'

..'

Smith~Nelson

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSES

.,'

$]4,400

Family Practice

IT'S THE .HEART OF YOUR FUTURE

•

AS LOW AS

Daniel R. Trent, D.O.

E"

•

BILL DILES

618 East Main Street

'

5 17

During all of 1989 we are eel·
ebrating our 40th year at bringing better heanng to our
friends-clients. It is gratifying
to know that we have devel·
oped a reputation for integrity
and dependability. We · were
htre yesterday, expect to be
here tomorrow; and our obliga·
tion to _you is to be available
(ewery day) as you need us, with
tht most up·to·date technolo·
gy that is to be found. Hearing
problem? Hearing aid problem?
Call the reliable ones - WE
CARE!

(304) 882-3134 ,

II

-

hands of the nation

finn. Let H&amp;R Block

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Holbert led the way ·with a
game high 32 running the Tomcat
offense to perfection. Au!llck and
Ryan McClelland each scored ll ,
while Sun Leeper came off the
bench to score 10. Trimble hit 21
of 48 from the field for 44 percent,
but hit five of nine three-pointers
for 56 percent. Trimble hit on
20-33 free throws for 61 percent .
Brad Maynard led the purple
and gold with 17. He was joined in
double figures by Chad Taylor
with 15 and Baer with· 14.
Southern hit 18-41 from the floor
for 43 percent , but 'hit on only
three of 11 three pointers for 27
percent. The Tornadoes hit on
27-33 free throws for a hot 81
percent. ,The much taller Tomcats out rebounded the scrappy
Tornadoes 48-28, with Auflick
getting 14 and Roger Bingman
getting 11. May nard led Southern
with 10, while Brent Shuler added
eight .
Southern, after a rocky start
came back to win yet another
SVAC title, lose only one senior in
Mike Amos , and with the entire
starting five coming back, the
Tornadoes will look to take back
the sectional crown next year.
We tip our hats to Southern and
head coach Howie Caldwell for
another outstanding season.
Score by quarters
Trimble ........... 23 13 12 19-77
Southern ............ 24 18 12 18-72

S8.88

-

I;svAC standings

Crocker, 2-0-4; Wade. 10-0-20;
Jones, 1-0·2; Luster. 4-1-9; Belijse, 1-0-2. TOTALS 26-7-59.
RIO GRANDE (72) - Hastings, 3-2-8; Mullins, 3-13-19; Coil,
3-0-6; Barnitz, 6·0-12; Bergdoll,
9-5-0-23; Snyder, 2-0-4. TOTALS
21-5- 1~·72.

Monday. Febru.-y 20, 1989

POMEIOY, OHIO

t

992-2057

'

•

.

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BAM&lt; ONE. A rHENS. OHI() NA t ONE PA,.T OF THE CARING

re-•~M

M,.~nl.. ,

FDIC

Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser
Insurance
992-2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Crow's Family Restaurant
992-5432

PO MElOY, OHIO

Brogan-Warner ,Insurance

POMEIOY, OHIO

.

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6687

·Valley Lumber &amp;Supply Co.
992-6611

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

Rid-enour Supply
985-3308

'
'

CHESTER, OHIO .

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry
992-2635

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

-

Middleport Trophies
992-6128

,.
~

'

•
'

•.
I•
I•

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

Home National Bank

Pleasers

.

BANK:ON£

949-2210
RACINE, OHIO

.

-

992·6333
SYRACUSE, OliO

..
.
•.
-..

•

')

•

'

�..

4

••

I

'"

•

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, February 20, 1989

Community calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
hold a special mee)lngMonday at
tO a.m.
MIDDLEPORT - A Demolay
meeting will be held Monday,
7:30 _p.m., at the Middleport
Temple. Election of officers will
be discussed.
POMEROY - Meigs Coul\tY
Churches of Christ Men's Fellowship will meet Monday, 7:30
p.m., at the Zion Church of
Christ. Everyone welcome.

•

PRESENTATION - In appreciation for tile
support of Veterans Memorial Hospllal In tbe
staging of supervised teen acllvllles, several
members of the Big Bend Parents Dance Committee presented Scott Lucas, Hospital admlnls-

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International

' near ADa Landen: What I
feared most has happened. My
mother died before I had a
chance to say, "I'm sorry."
Several years'ago I went away
to college and never returned. I
·wrote to her now and then and
:sent gifts.
• When I 'was growing up, we

• Allsha Duncan and Jan Roach,
both of Meigs County have
compleed the nursing assistant
training at the Tri·County Adult
Education Center.
Both girls were on the honor
roll for their final grading period,
according to Bonnie Allen,
Instructor.

Graduates named

PHOTO SPECIAL

.ANN LANDERSe
"'1988. L. An1elee

Tim~

Syndit.. e,•nd

CreMen Syndit•e

pregnant with my fourth child.
My darling mother-in-law suggested the perfect comeback:
"The boys will bring us some
wonderful girls ... all raised."
And they .did! - La Salle, '111.
Planninj{ a wedding? What 's
right? Wlaot 's wrong? "The Ann
Lfmdcr.'&gt; Guide for Bride.~" will
reliPIJt:&gt; your anxiely.

copy. send $3

plu .~

To

re ceitJf&gt; a

o ~ e lf·addressed.

stamped business-size envelope (4.1
cenh po.stagc) to Ann Landen, P.O.
Box l/562, Chirogo, 111. 6061/-0562.

DOUBLE PRINTS
EVERYDAY flLM

WE RFSERVE TIIEJUC:;:nTj
TO LIMIT QUA.'I TITlES.
NOT RESP081BLE FOR
TYI'OGRAPHICAL OR

FROM COLOR 110, 126, 13:; AI\D

Ctl PROCESS

RA
1 DAY
3 DAYS

O-f5 WORDS

$4.00
ss.oo
$8,00
$13.00
$33.00

6 DAYS

tO DAYS
1 MONTH

WORDS
$5.00
$8.00
$13.00
Ht .OO
SSt .OO

11-28

$7.00
sto.oo
St5.00
125.00
$60.00

for ear.h fiiW as separatf! ad!

Meigs. Galli a

i

Of

Muon counties must be pre.

run 3 day• at no ch•ge
•Price of ad for all ceph:ellmtars is double price of ad cost.

•7 point line type onl't used .
•sentinel is nol retpontlble for euorsafter tint dav !Check

lot error• firat d~ ad runt in paper I. Call before 2 :00p .m.
day aftef publicMion to make correction.
"Ads,thl'l must be paid in ad\llnca are
In

Happy Ads •

Mert~oriam

V•d Sales

·A classified adYer11sement plaoed in The Daily Santinfll!eJC ·
capt - classified dlapley, Rusin•• Card and legal notices)
will al1o appear In lhft Pt . Ple111ent Regist.. r 1nd tf11 Galli ·
polis D•ily lribune, ruching over 18.000 homes.
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPEP
WEDNESDAY PAPER
'[HURSDAY PAPER
FR !DAY PAPF R
SUNDAY PAPER

...

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M. MONDAY
- 2o00 P.M . TUESDAY
- 2o00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P .M. THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M. FRIOAY

· Public Notice

Public N otica
PUBLIC NOTICE

Public water supplies are
required by State Regula·

lion, Rule 3746·81-21,

Ohio AdminiatratiYe C...-. 1e.
to routinelv monitor the
microbiological quality of
the drinking water in their
diatribution system in order
to insure th1t aafe water is
being supplied to the
consumer .

The Vlltego of Rutland is

required to collect and exam.·
ina a minimum of Qne
r'nicrobiologicel umple each
month. Ona pmple was
collected and analyred for
~he mdnt~ of November,
1988 and was notabteto be
analyzed for coliform bacteria. A check Ample
req~,;~ired but waa not col ~lected. In addition. no aemplee were analyzed during
the month of December,
• 1988. A sate •natylls was
--made in January, 1189.
. The water depanment ha
· taken atepa to lnltlre that
adequate monitoring will be
; performlld in the future.

w•

fo.l21 6. 13, 20.

&gt;'·

3t~

Project Length: 0.00 feet

or'O.OO mile.
Work length: various feet
or various miles.
Pavement Width: varies.
The OhiO Depanment of
Transportatton hereby noti·
fies all bidders that it will
affirmatively insure that in
any contract entered into
pursuant to this advertisement, minoritv busine11 en·
terpri1111 will be afforded full
opportunity to submit bida in
reaponae to thla invitation
and will not be discriminated
against on the grounds of
race, color. or national origin
in considarationn for
an
award.
"Minimum wage ratea for
this proiect heve been prede·
termined as required by law
and are •t forth in the bid
porpoul."
··The date set for comptelion of this work shell be set
forth in the bidding
propoul."
Each bidder shall be required to file with his bid e

certified check or"cNhl•'•
check for an amount equal to

.. ---:::-:-::---:'-:c-c--- five.per cent of hia bid, but in

'

Dl~

Public N otica

~1...--------Bids will be accepted until

"'
right to reject anv and ~•II
~. ·---------1 bids.

TYLENOL

,.

GELCAPS

• · legal Copy No_ 89-1 28
• ; UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
•
fFG·DOOF(38i
'
RSG·000Rt29tl

·; Sealed propoule will be

U7

BERNARO B. HURST
DIRECTOR
12it3, 20
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On February 4. t989. in
the Meigs County Probata

Court. Cue No. 26t60,
Noncy Krei~. 2080 Onawa

,.received at the office of the· Drive, Circleville, Ohio
, Director of the Ohio _Depart* 431 13 was appointed Exe·
!'· ment of Traneportat1on, Co· cutrix qt tha estate of Esther

175COUNT

:'&gt;lEW 8 Ol.':'&gt;lCE

FACIAL
TISSUES

JIIIRMACK
SILVER
IIAIR SPRAY

KLEENEX

WITH

Contract Sal•

,..

299~ii

LIP THERAPY

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Fobruorv 3. 1989

•"
::-·•'

2

' lumbus. Ohio. until 10o00 A. Bukey, doceaoed. Iota of
" A.M.. Ohio Standard Time. 6t704 S.R. t24. Long Bot•·Tuesday, March 6. t989, tom. Ohio 45743.
~ for improvement in:
., ,
Robert E. Buck.
-. Athans, Gallia, Hocking,
Probate Judge

66 CT. SM. • 48 CT. MED. • 32 CT. LG.

HUGGIES SUPERTRIM DIAPERS
YOL'R
CHOICE!

9~

ELASTIC
WAIST TO
IIELP STOP

8.1

Ul

Ol~CE

COLGATE ·
GEL TOOTIIP ASTE

------

wtnl I1IEE TOO'TIIBRUSII

LEAKINCI

70UNCE

BARBASOL
SIIAVING
LOTION

_,

179

PHOTOGRAPHERS HOURS 11 A.M. 'nL 7 P.M.

PLACE: Vaughan's Cardinal

GEL

89tJl'~
.

Pklfl
1.11

Middleport, Ohio
PHOTOS BY HONEY PORTRAITS

•

8- PublieSale&amp; Auelion
9- W•nted to Buy

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 1
Southern

992-'6282
'

319 So. 2nd""'·.

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING .•
CHESTER. OHIO

INSTALLATION AND SERVICE OF
HEll ENERGY EFFICIENT HEAT
PUMPS, AIR CONDITIONING. AND
95% EFFICIENT FURNACE.
985-4222

Middleport, Ohio
·

'

DAY OR EVENING

l-Is-t mod. pd.

1·28-'88-tfn

EmploymRnt
Fum Suppltes

Serv1ces
12 - SitUIIIion Wanted

NOW OPEN FOI
BUSINESS

u .:.. Ftrm Equipment
&amp;2 - Wanted to Buy
63 - Livntodl
64 - Hay &amp; GJtin

1J - Insurant!•

14 - Busineu Training

11 - Schools &amp; Instruction

55 - Seed &amp; Fertilizer
1

Transportation

21-Susin•s Opportunity
22 - Mon~ to Loan

71 - AuiOI for Sale
72- Truckl for S.le
73- Vtns 6 4 WD 's

23 - Profeuiontl Sarvieet

Real Eslate

We BUy Aluminum
Cent, Glau, Brau.
Copper end More

MON.-FIII.: ' am·6 pm
~AT.: I om-12 Noon

·31 1

74- Motorcyclel
75- Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale I p;=
. 75- Aulo Pert I &amp; Accauori•
77- - Auto Rep1ir
78- Cimping Equipment
79- Camp•• 6 Motor Homes

31 - Hom• lor S1le
32- Mobile Hom" for S1le
33- Farms lor Sele

Jo's Gift Shoo

l;t§UIJI

Services

41 - Houses for Rent
42 - Mobile Home~ lot Rent
43 - Fermt tor Rent
44 - Apartrnent for Rent

81 ~- Homelmpro~~ements
82 - Piumbing &amp; Healng
83- Eat..,lting

45- Furni•hed Room•
4&amp; - Space tor Rent
47 - Wantfld to Rent
48- Equipment lor Rent
49 - For Lease

84- Eiectrical 8. Refrlger1lion
85- Gen••l Hauling

86- Mobile Home Rep1ir
87- Upholslety

SYRACUSE. CHid
Everything Marked
Down
•C8tTient Items
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments
Bec1use of Cold Weither
Everything Inside.
Rine Door Bell for Service
2-7·1 mo.

Public Notice

Public N otica

PUBLIC NOTICE

Hun1inmon Township, Sec-

Southern Ohio Coal Company, P. 0. Box 490,

Athens, Ohio 4570t has

submitted a renewa&amp; application for coal mine Permit

0-0463 to the Ohio Deport·

ment of Naturel Resources,
Division of Redamation.
The permit area is located
Vinton County, Wilkesville
Township, Sections 3 and
15, Township SN. Ranoa
16Wi Fractions 24. 30. 33
and 36;
Township 8N,

in

Range 16W: Meiga County,

Salem Township, SecUons

25, 30. and .32: Township
7N end 8N. Range 16W, on

the prop·a rty of Southern
Ohio Coal Company: with
underground workings in
Vinton County. Wilkesville
Townahip, Section• 1. 2,

tion 1; Township BN. Range
15 W. The permit contains
322.3 ecres and is located
on the Mulga and Wilkesville
?Y2: Minute U.S .G .S . Quadrangle Meps, approxima·
tely 2 .6 miles wett of Wilkeaville. Ohio . The applicant
has obtained a road permit
to mine within 100 feet of
lhe righl-of-wey of Salem

Townihip Road 333. Wilkeavilht Townthip Road 4
and State Route 124 which
will remain in effect unlil
coal mining and reclematton
operations are completed
under the coal mining permit
iuued pursuant to this permit . The renewal applicalton
will allow Southern Ohio
Coal Companv to continue
the mining operations on D·
0463 for up fu five years
past the expiration date of

2E, .3, 4, 8, 9, 10,t5 ond 16:
Fractions ~4. 30 and 36:
Township BN. Range t6W · April 8. t990.
and 18W; Meigs County,
Salem Townahip, Sections

t3, t9. 25, 26. 30. 31. 32,
33 ond 36; Fraction• 7, t3,
19 and 25 ; Township BN,
Range 15 W; Gallia County,

The application is on file at
the offices . of the Meigs
County
Recorder, Maigs
County Court House, Second Str8et. Pomeroy, Ohio

45769. VInton County Re-

corder, VintonCountyCoun
House, M•n Street, McAr-

eoe

E. Mom . .olloli~w.l. .

POMEROY. OH.

992-2259
- --~ .. ..

Ohio 43224 within thirty
date of publi-

..

MIDDlEPORl - SMAll
HOUSE in Middleport. on a
good street. Small price,
would make good rental in·
vestment. $8,900.00. ·

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S ClUB
Rt. 124 lelw"n Wilkes·
•Hie an~ Salem C1111er

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

POMEROY - 2 16ts l'(ith
possibilities' Sept1c and
eiec. available. lots ol shade
trees. $2,500.00.

5

Happy Ads

-az:

-~

LUBRICAnON
OIL FILTER
S1695

~-·s
SUNOCO

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK
lelpre, Ohit
WB.COMf

CON~IGNMfNTS

PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCnONEER
PH. 304·428·7245

!levision Listening Devices
Dependable Heariog Aid Sales &amp; Serlic4
Hearing Evalu'ation.s For All Ages

liSA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
J: 417
Second Avenue. 89J1 1213
3 Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 ·

-

BILL SLACK
992-2269

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy.' Ohio

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE

Melga lndultries, Inc .. in addition to providing general office and commercial cleaning,
now offers
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
as a service.
We wil contract to clean your home on a fixed
schedule, attending to items you desire.
We provide full liability coverage, workers
compensation. and pay all tax
requirementa.
FOI A PIICE QUOTE CALL:

LAIRY HOFFMAN - PH. 91fa·U!Il

•Mobile Home Parts
•Plumbing Suppliea
•Electrical Supplies
MON.-TUE~ ••

W!D.-Fit.

9 A.M.-6 P.M.
THUI~ 9 A.M.-12 NOON
SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
Colt Any !I- Day or

Night

992·6135
lri• HeudatiNft, Own..3nl St., SynKUH, Oh.

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING

MOBILE
HOME PARK

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

•Mobile Home
Pans '
•Moblla Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

Ia Chango
Wilhaut Notice)
#I COPPER_............ 16' 11r.
#2 COPPO ............. 6S• 11r.
ClEAN AlUMINUM
SHEETS .................... 52• 11r.
ClEAN AlUMINUM
CAST ......................... 40• ltr.
AlUMINUM
IEVEIIAGE CANS ..... so&lt; ltr.
•ONY
.
SIIET ............. S• to 30&lt; •·
•oNY CAST--- 3&lt; to 20• ttr.
~1AINl£SS ...- .......... 20' tb.
CSubjlc t

992·7479
Rt. 33 North af

1-17-'88-1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

GUN SHOOT

OWNB: GREG I. IOU!II
~
GENERAl

~
.CUSTOM KITCHENS

a IATHI

.t:XlfNIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDINO a ROOANO
•METAL IUIUMNQS
HOUSING. APT. PROJECTS

S/1'/Cfi 1969
DISIY 51., SYUQI.

LASHLEY

SERVICE

lADIES WANTED!
PERM, CUT STYLE

Basham Building

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

EVERY

MEIGS

SAf. NIGHT

INDUSTRIES,

6:30P.M.

INC. ·

Faclory Choilt
12 Gouge Shotgun• Only
~tri&lt;lly Enforctd
10-7-tfn

Raa10nabla Rates.
Fully Insured

RADIATOR
SERVIOE

We can r~air and rt·
core rodiators and
hea ttr cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out rotliators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2198

Mlddlapon. Ohio
1-13-lfc

GUN SHOOT

I

ONlY

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PAl HILL FOlD

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

.,. flflr·•l•7

"

UGHT HAUUNG DONEI

SYRACUSE
SU ....LY COMPANY

985-3844

fl' 10111 1•t fDar
kicks, lOW that fOI

985-4141

PER lOAD
DEUVEIIED

PUBLIC
AUCTION

WELDING
AUTO&amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY &amp;
WRECK REPAIR

MIDDLEPORT - Garage
apartment. 2 bedroom, off
Hartinger Pky . $12.500.00.

S3S

EVERY SUNDAY

S27

Plus FREE.....
I Taming Soui011 ond
1 S.tsion at Fit &amp; Trim

Fre• f••r l~tl•t

TOP OF THE STAllS

·Wife

DESIGNEI BOUTIQUE

AND

111 Wost Soceod, Pom•oy

BusinetKI Services

992·6720

WANTED

ROMINE
CONSTRUCTIO N

1/2611 mo.

•

GENEUI. CONTRACTORS
References
1 1-111- 'll8··tln111

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

CHESTEI, OHIO

1 Mi. last of St. Rt. 7
on 241 at Chester

POMEROY - JUST RIGHT
FOR THE BIG FAMILY- 4
bedroom home sitting on approx. 6.47 acres ol ground.
Nice big din ing room, car·
port, lamily room and much
more' $29.900.00.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Fo&lt;lory Choilo
STRICRY ENFORaDI
1-11-'19-1 mo.

'

ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

U. S. IT. SO UST
GIYSYilE, OliO
614-662-3121
Authorized John
D-e. New Holland.
Bush Hog Form
Equpment Dealer.
Fer• E••lt••t
••,.. &amp;

CHESID, OHIO

1-B.'U. Ifn

GUN SHOOT

thur, Ohio 45651. and tho

Gallia County Recorder,
Galli.a County Court Houte,
Locus1
Street, Gellipolis.
Ohio 45631 for public view·
ing. Written comments or
requests for an Informal
conference may be sent 1o
the
Division of Radamation,
Fountain
Square,
'Building
8 ·3, Columbus.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

FIREWOOD

OF BUSINESS

34- Busin•• Buildings
36- Lots &amp; Acreege
36- Rul Ellete W~nted

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SEIVICE

14th &amp; llaln St.
Point Pleasallt, W. Ya.

18 - Wantad To Do

'

RECYCUNG

&amp; Ltvr. stock

11 -- Help Wanted

1:00 P.M.

RACINE

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE 9HOTGUNS

ONLY

.9-19-U tfn

992,·5114

Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rta. 7 &amp;
143, Pomeroy, Oh.
1-t2-'89-Hn

Lo~ated

CALL 992·6681

1-3t-'B8-t mo.

HIUSIDI MUIZU
loADING
1111

MODEIN GUN

Leesa Murphey
&amp;. Associales
PUBLIC
RELATIONS

SUPPLIES
Muztloloading Suppli•
....._. Gun Supp(i•.
GuM • Atttmo • Slugs
22 Atttmo

Rt. t24 Eost of Rutland

108 High St..,rt
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Phone (61·'1 992-2922

Acro11 Hoppy Hollow Road

Ph.

r------BINGO

'&amp;I

POMEROY -EAGLES

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

CLUB

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976
THUIS. E.l. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. 1.1. 1:45 P.M. 1
DOOI PIIZI
2 H.O. FlEE with coupon and
P&lt;l!th . . of min. H.C. Paci-

SYIACU~f.

1

I
11•· li111M I coupon per cus· I
tomer per biltlll sess1on.
1
Wo Pay •so.oo Pw Gamo 1
Om 110 PHplo '65.00 I
...Uo IOOS.I!Per Game Z·l·lfft

OHIO

Moll FOreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C SeNice
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs

NIASE

Cenlfied Mechanic

_______ _

CALL 992·6756
"DOC'"'Li c~~~=r:,
Certified

LINDA'S
PAINTING

A1111 ounce men 1s

......

II.H

NO AGE UMIT
UMIT 1 PER PERSON
ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
SINGLE OR GROUPS TAKEN

S6 AND UNDER

51 - Household Goodt.
52- Sporting Ooodt
53- AntiQues
54 - Mite. Merchendlse
55 - Building Suppli1111
56- Ptts. for Sale
5-7 - Musie.r lnstrum·e nts
58 Fruin &amp; Vegtrtlblee
59 - For Sale or lflde

lena K. Neuelroad, Clerk

CLASSifiED ADS
8CHINII'A18Jkef
f .....,...
everyth'mg

....

6 - Lo1t 1nd Found
1- Yard 'Salelp•id in advance)

MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
home that has had some re121 20, 27: 131 6. 3tc
modelin&amp;
N1ce kitchen. 3
tionATH-60-19.06onU- S. 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
bedrooms. attic area and
. Route 60 in Athens County
much more! $26,900.00.
" and other varioua routn and
, sectiono in Atheno, GaiiU..
IANGSVILU - Commercial
, !locking. Moigo, Monroe,
store building JOO'x125' lot
~&lt; Morgan, Noble. Vinton and
Of'
Woohington Countioo, by
f
Has waler and electric availai&lt; jlpplying retrorollectlve po·
ble. Has hill some remodel~"'IVester pwement marking
in&amp; $8,500.00.
~material for canter lin• and 1 .Card of Thanks
,, lane linea.
RUTlAND - ! 'acre sh ady
:+.•
tot
to build your dream
,:x2--.:ln:-.M'-a=m=-o=-r:;ia=-m=-home on. Elec. available.
The family of Damon
$2,500.00.
.,·•'
Ferrell wishes to thank
the friends and carin&amp;
LETART - 2 acre mini farm
people who sent cards,
IN REMEMBRANCE
wrth 1978 modular home.
flowers and other kindOF
3
beO'~
s~nporch, shed,
nesses durin&amp; our recent
HOMER B. SMITH
sateMe
d~h.
Drilled water
lou. It WIS appreciated
Thoro'a been at least a
well?
$24,000.00.
very much. Also we would
million tears
like to extend a special
Whenever we think of
ftEW liSTING - Peacock
thinks to all employees
you;
Ave. -Pomeroy- Aneat
ol Ameriure of POIIIIIOY
2 story 3-4 bedroom home
And to think back on
and Overbrook Center of
with basement. Gas F.A.heat
all the years
Middleport
for
ucellence
'
-carpet
throughout. large
• You were always by
in cue and carina.
yard
for
children.
Call lor
our side.
Appointment.
$17,900.00.
01 all the love wa Iaiii
2 In Mei'I)Orlam
Inside
Henry E. Cl~111d
It will never leave our
992·6191
Je
..
Trussell
..... 949-2660
hearts.
In Loving Memory of
Dottie
Turnar
..... 992-5692
But the pain Is what
My De.- Father
Jo Hill .............. 98H466
we cannot hide
CLINT BIRCH
OffiCI................ 992·2259
Who palled -ay 1 o
When we realize you
ve•• ago
era gone.
NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDFeb.
20. 1 979
You will always be
We
have buJtrl for leip
Dear Dad, I mlaa you
Coullty l'loplrly. Ust wHhwith us
more and moraae
us for b•t mulls.
And we could never
the d-ve. months and
y-ego by .
forget
I love you etlll end In
How d ...'wa got to be
my heart you will
And just how strong
never be forgotten.
our love remains.
Sadly !lliiMd by your
From Your Loving
lolring daughter;
·
Fam
Lao1a Birch
· Meigs. Monroe. Morgan.
Noble, Vinton and Waahing1on Countlea. Ohio, on aec-

79bWJI\!l

5 - Happy Ads,

Bidder mull epply. on the
proper forms, for qualifica·

~ Syracuaa, Oh. 46779.
office of the Diltrict Deputy
: fEB. t3. 20, 2tc
Director.
.,.,---:P::-u""b""l,...ic-N~ot-i,..c-a--1 Tho Diroctor resorvu the

50 COUNT
EXTRA -STRENGTH

Card ot lt1anks
ln Mftmory
Annoucements
Givl!laway

no evern more than fifty
thouund dollara. or a bond
for tan · P• cent of hia bid,
payable to the Director.

tiona at least ten d8'fS prior
to the date HI for opening
bids in accordance with
Chapter 5626 Ohio Revised
Code.
Plena and specifications
are on file in the DepartmtMlt
of Transportation and the

Foliage Plants
Baskets

Merchandise

H5 - Radlo, TV 6 CS Repair
17 ·-·Mlscelllneous

ceiYe S.50 discount lor ads paid in advance.
•Free edt - Giveaway a~d Found ads under 15 Wt'rds will be

. Card of Thanks

1234-

28-35 WORDS

Rates are for eonsecuttve runs , broken upd,.,swiU be ch•ged

:,Truck offered by the Village
Of Syracuse. Bids, inside 1
'•IBaled . envelope marked
:"Dump Truck Bids" , are to
..be aubmitted or mailed to:
'"-Janice lawson. Clerk-tree·
~A surer, Village of Svracuse.

DATE: Tues., Feb. 21, 1989

•

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED
Y

r-12:00 noon EST on Thura-

89¢

FREE

Ann ouncements

' day, March 2. 1989, for a
• 1972 Model M-80 Dump

CLIDE-QN APPLICATOR

•

MIAMI AND VICES: Don
Johnson and Melanie Griffith are
now planning an April weddingif Griffith can wait that long. "I
wish it was tomorrow," the
pregnant Oscar nominee told
People magazine. "He'$ wonderful. I believe some relationships
are fated and ours was probably
one of them. I'll always love him.
He was my'flrst love.' ' Johnson is
bubbling, too. "It's wonderful.
We're just like an Ozzie and
Harriet family down here. " he
said from Miami, 'where he and
Griffith have been spending their
time since getting back together.
"I got completely stupid (over
Griffith). I've been mu sh-faced
ever since." Johnson and Griffith
were married to each other once
in their wilder days and last year
Johnson bailed her out by urging
her to go through alcohol rehabilItation after problems during the

through May at the Fair Grounds.
fiimtng of "Working Girt " "I
Race
Track and another site.
never drank when I was working
along
the
Mississippi.
_
but I drank at night ," she says.
'LEGS' LIMPS OFF BROAD"It was a never -ending story ....
WAY: Just how big a rJopwas the
It feels so good to be out of that.
The more time that goes by, the Broadway musical "Legs Dia-.
more life just looks better and mond? " "They're going to close;
this theater and make it Into a
bet.ter."
church."
says Peter Allen, th&lt;:&gt;
SOUNDS LIKE NEW ORcreator
and
·star of the ill-fated'
LEANS: The New Orleans Jazz
show
that
closed
Sunday after 136
and Heritage Festival is becom·
performances.
"And If that
lng one of the top musical events
makes
the
critics
happy, that's
in the country. The lineup for the
fine.
Maybe
next
time
I should
20th annual festival features top
perform
a
show
in
St.
Patrick's.''
acts from &gt;everal genres such as
jazz men Miles Davis, Max The record-shattering bomb
Roach, George Benson and Wyn- opened on Broadway with pre:
ton Marsalis, blues performers views Oct. 25 without the usual
out-of-town performances to per·
like Robert Cray, Etta James.
feet
the show and there was a
John Lee Hooker. Bobby "Blue"
llurry
of rewriting and editing.
Bland and the Fabulous Thunderwas an avalanche of
The
result
birds, pop and rock stars Jlnimy
bad
reviews
and a financial
Btdfett, Santana and John Qlatt
the
show's backers;
disaster
for
and purveyors of the indigenous
to get $20,000
Allen
originally
was
New Orleans sound such as the
a
week
and
a
percentage
of th"'
Neville Brothers. Fats Domino,
·
profits
but
he
ended
up
making
the Radiators and Dr. John. The
music starts April 28 and runs $5,000 a week after taking pay
cuts in an effort to save "Legs.'.'

PRICES GOOD
MOI\'DAY, nmRUARY
TIIRU
FEDRUAR Y 26, 1989

8 x· lO
IN LIVING COLOR

or by contacting your Joe:; a I Aglow'
Chapter. The retreat will be held
March 10-12 at Deer Creek State
Park Lodge, Mt. Sterling. Jeanie
Balwin, from Seattle, Washing.
ton , will be the keynote speaker,
A special teen girls retreat will
lilso be held.
,
VFW cr10lt show
:
TUPPERS PLAINS - Plans
are being finalized for crafi
shows to be held March 4 an(j
March 18 at VFW Post 90~,
Tuppers Plains. Hors for both
shows will be 9 a.m_ to 3 p.m,
Tables will be furnished at $10 for
each single table and $15 for 11
do ubi e_ Concessions will be avail.'
~bl e and the Post Auxil tary wiH
have a bake sale. There are still a
few tables left which can he
rented by calling Mary' Bryant at
985-3376.
•

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

GREENHOUSE

-

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplate

----People in the news-----io

.The price is high for
:muscles, achievement
lived in low-income housing and I
was ashamed to have friends
over even thoqgh .o!lr place was
clean and cheerful. I don't
remember my father. He left us
when I was very young and Mom
never talked about him. I can't •
remember her going out with a
man although she was quite
pretty. All she was Interested In
was her job and me.
When I left home I decided to
start fresh and cut all ties with
the past. Mom didn't fit Into my
new life style. When I married I
sent her pictures. I never Invited
her to come visit and meet my
husband. She didn'tlet on butl'm
sure she must have suspected
that I was ashamed of her.
The day -1 received word Mom
died it hit me like a ton ofbricks. I
know now that she sacrificed her
life for me. I kills me to accept
the fact that she Is gone now and I
will never be abletomakeit up to
her .
Writing this letter has helped. I
hope it will save some other
daughter from making the same
mistake. Sign me - Regrets
Galore In Pittsburgh
·near Regrets: Obviously you
are aching with guilt, and small
wonder.
I'm glad I was there for you,
but one letter to Ann Landers
won't solve the problem. You
need to get into counseling at
once. The road ahead is going to
be rough and you will need a
great deal of help. Get moving
and good luck.
Dear Ann Landers: I, too, was
subjected to stupid remarks
from empty-headed friends after
I had three sons and was

POMEROY -The Meigs Cooperative Parish , 311 Condor St..
Pomeroy, is sponsoring a free
clothing distribution Feb. 21-23.
Good used clothing for men,
women and children will be
available to the public from 9: 30
a.m. to3p.m_eachday. Formore
Information, call992-7400.

Spring retreat
ZANESVILLE -Registration
Information for the Women's
Aglow International, South Central Ohio Area Spring Retreat, is
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster . available by writing Corrine
Post 39 of the American LEgion Hartmeyer, 1046 Country Club
will hold its regular meeting Drive, Zanesville. 43701 , or cal·
Tuesday with dinner to be served ling Hartmeyer at 614-453-4635,

trator, with a personalized engraved plaque
Thursday afternoon. Committee members, left to
right, making the presentation Included Tammy
Searles, Shirley Yoder, Barbara Wilson, and Iva
Sisson who heads the parents' commlllee.·

Dear Ann Landers: We are
worried about our son. Jimmy is
17, a high school senior, a really
good boy, but he keeps to himself
a lot. He Is a fine student, plays In
the band and has a lew nice
friends. He always wanted to be a
great athlete but never was able
to excel In any sport.
For the last six months Jimmy
has been working out at a gym.
He spent his Christmas money on
barbells so he can work out at
home as well.
.
A few days ago when I Was
cleaning his room I found some
pUis. I showed them to my
brother, ·who is a pharmacist. He
said at once, "The kid has been
' taking steroids."
Ann, please tell us how to
handle this. I remember reading
about a fine Canadian athlete
who had to return his Olympic
gold medal because It was
discovered that he had been
•taking these same pills.
: Why are steroids dangerous?
:what do they do? Please tell us so
· we can speak to our son lntelll·
:gently. Thanks for your help.- Syracuse Parents
Dear Parents: For openers.
mm-prescrlption use of steroids
:Is lllegal, but like all such drugs
· they can be bought on the black
:market.
: People who take these pUis
should be aware that they could
pay a big price for those bulging
muscles and improved perfor-mance on the track, football field
:or wherever physical prowess Is
·measured. The side effects can
·cripple and kill.
Long-term abuse of this substance can produce liver cancer,
heart trouble and Impotence. In a
nutshell, steroids are dangerous.
·. Anyone who takes them Is risking
. his health and maybe his life.

at 7 p.m. A special invitation is
extended to new and transferred
members.

Sentinei- Page-7

The

Business .Services

Classified

Monday, February 20, 1989
Page-6

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio_

•

DEAD 01 AUYE
•Wuheri •Dryer•
•Ranga1 •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mutt .. llplli.Wie"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SUYICE
915-3561
We Service .., •.,_:•.-:"-"
1

:'l.ifVV

~ll._l~..-1f

CUSTOM IUIT

:~ f

M I) I 'f I '\' ,
i}H\'.'./•1!
!N1f tilllH f·/•.I''ITi\·1

Wlu L
~FITH

l't~f~!

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
1

i{lr,,r 1

PCIMI~.!

,.~

lARRY Rl'MI'&lt;'
Oh 1o 614 q9).691(,
wv 304 882 278 8
1 ."lC&lt;

HH

1

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•:H'

"At leronable Prices"

PH. 949·2101
or 111. 949·2160
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY

INTEIIOI-EITDIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Taka the pain out of
palntlftl. Lat ..a do
It far you.

YIIY RIASOIIIULE

HAYIREFIIENCI

614·915-4180

3 Announcements
B.L.· H you love tomeone. I•

him tr• and H he corN~ badl 1o
you- he·• youn for eYer, and if he
'do•n't. you wll ttill hwe the

mo•t wond.-,._,1 rMmorl• of ..

vour lite. Afweyt- l.B.

We wil heul ooal for em•gencv
HEAP. Meig~ County OeDt. Of

Human .Servicea. and HEAP

vouchera. We Clrt give you

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
. . . . . Wt

"Fr.. Eetlmllt81"

PH. 949·2101
or liS. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CWS
J-11-Hn

!toward L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Outten

Downepouts
Gutter Cla~nlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
2-10·'88·1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L

INSULAnON

prompt detlv.W. E JICiltlor Sah
Works, Inc. Pom•ov. OhiO.

814-992-3891.

Mastic &amp; Certlinteed 1
Vinyl Siding
lfoofin&amp;

Seat~ltss

Gut!«
Replam•t Windows

4

Blown l..ulllion
Storm Doors &amp;

e

Windows
Free• ~:.2~;'2
CeliS

Giveaway

week old puDPf•. Mixed
breed. Cute, will" ·be tnedium

olzo. Csll lt4-742-22Dt .

15 months old tam... Collie

PUpfl¥, 304-178-43t2.

•

�___ ,..

--.----------'-- ---6

lost and Found

42 .Mobile Homes
for Rent

LAFF·A·DAY

46 Space for Rent

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry

72

Wright

Trucks for Sale
Aan~

lOST: Wom.n braclet- Gold

Country Mobile Home P•k.

1917 Ford

with orientll printing. If

Route 33, North of Pom•oy.
l.Ms, rem:ek, f*'tt. •I•· CaU

mlleege. Tillie ovtr pevmenta.

~ll•m

F.A~

found pleueeall8, 4-446-2200
or 44$-3131 . Reward.

utlitl• paid •C~Pt electricity.
Newtv ,edecorated &amp; c.p•M.
Dop. C.H 114-446-18110. 446-

LOST:Beagle type dog-light
broWn &amp; wh;.e wwing red
eoll• w / Gallla Countv t~.
Chilc*en'a pet. Lon irl vtcinrtv d

I

Africa Rd. $100. Rewltfd. CaU
814-367-{)1125.

8

Pawson AuctiQnec, licen ..d Ohio ll:'ld West V lt{Jinia.

tion seiM o 304-773-5785,

now booktng

rience. Phone 304-273-3447
R811enwtood, W.Va .

Movmg Sala Must Sell, 4 pc.
living room suits. 25 c:u inch

c.......

9

2282.

Comphilte households at furniture &amp; entiquea. Al1 o wood &amp;
c~al heaters. Swlin' s Ftl'niture
&amp; Auct ion. Third &amp; Olive.
614-446-3159.

992-3122-

down."

3 bedroom.tocMedinsv...ou.t•·

wfthOOt

motors. CAll lany LiveN-614-

3U -9303piece or entire houllllthold. F1ir

prices baing paid. Caii614-4-46-

Aaistan1 OireetorNLWSing. 12•
I'IWII~Iwel

bed

c.e nu,..ing
&lt;;ent .. s - . regilt•ed nurse
with supervisorv 8XJ*Ience.

Capoblll!v lor tooehln.o .,d

c•ing. genuine int•aat in Geriatric nu111irlg. E.:ell.,t opportuAky fur Nutting APinilt•
tlon cereer growth end

Govern,..,. Homt~l •1 .00 (U

Will plrf cas h. Guns. knft.tet.,
watchet, &amp; f•mmaehlnery . C.U

61 4-379-2160.
Wilnled To Buy-Uted mobile
t'w:lrnM. Cell 614-446-0175.

Junk cars &amp;: trucks. 115- t50.
Bodies to'Nid eway. Call 614245·9264 or 682·6750.

rtUa

arMI Cel! fRefundebltt

for listings.

Top price for used furniture,
general hou.ahold. antiques,
and epplian(lllll . All typaa. C.U

614-985-4396.

Employment
Serv1ces
Help Wanted

1980 Spirt on 14x70. 2 BR ., 2
batt.. el electric. CA. woodbur-. 10.11 dod&lt;. 12x14
wood buihing. Clll 81 ... 245-

Situations
Wanted

BONUS INCOME

Earn t201&gt; •600 weekly. Mail·
ing 1989 treVel brochn-. For
mora infornwtion aend stemped
envelopeto: INC. P .O. Bo• 2139
Miem ~ FL33261.

WiU «b gen•al housekeeping.

Coli 114-992-3808.

Expa-ienced babt' sin•. In own
home. Referencn aupplled.
Pom•ov aru. Clll 814-992-

.

314~

Will do J)Mntlng, c•ptnl•work.
gen•at repair. Cll 814-992·

2 becWoorn,121156moblehome
for •Ia. undwpinning. ewnlng.
POrCh, lndudelttorttge bJHdno,

t 4600- CoN 814-266-8494 cw
2&amp;6-H&amp;3.
CA•H for your u..:l honw. C.lt

w... 800..

14x70 mobile home, 3 bedroom, 2 bM hi. central air, tot..
electric. 19000. WHI consider
le•e or ..1, of Iota wtth the

1 8 Wanted to Do

1984 Eloonl, 10x50 with ex·
pando. compt•etv turnilhed.
S.16 pordl. 10•10 buWdng.

•175a mo. Cell 304-17~6104.

675-6386. 876-7738.

Ap1rtment IIVIhbla HUO accepted. Coli 304-875-610ol

F tl'nl:shed 2, 3. or 4 roomt &amp;
bllth. Clean. Aduhs ontr. No
pets. Ref. llo dep. required . CoH

&amp;14-446-1&amp;194 rooma &amp; b•h. c::•~" e.
-'Pii.,ca. AduHs onty. ~If . &amp;
dep. VtlfY cltln. C•ll 614-448-

Ot"

1183.

0hio-Certifiud EMT ' s , Ad ·
vencud EMT' s, Paramedlca.
Pert· time poattlons available.
F181:1bla hours uPto38 hr./wk.
Athens, Jackson. Lawrence.
Vinton. cou n11e1. Contact Southe..-t Ohio E m•gencv Medcal
Ser\lk:•, Inc. 614-446-98~.

Nicety furnished SMII. hou ...
Effh:ill'la, apt.- 1 men. Mobile
home below town overlooking
Muhs only, ..t.

rtv•. c•• h•.

I 1 4-446-0839.

1972 v .. o,...110.12 . u8oo.
Mldcl- locotion. 814-9923488 doy . &amp;14- 992-2317

Coli &amp;14-446-0338.

Furniohod offici.,.,. 607 Se-

Acreage

cond. GIHlpolie. t17&amp;. Sh•e

bolh. C.H 441&gt;441hfi.,.7PM .

~-·~
1
one BR ·· fu r.-..._.
lpt. n
'""
Roc* Sprln1111. Pom.,.ov. Ohio
3841
Coli 614-992· 6304 "' 441150 INlr• on Rt. 141 7 mH• 88 98·
from Pomeroy . Free gu. I-E-xtr_o_n_lc:e_2_8R
_ _.-,-.,-,-~~~-,.,-.,-o-m.

IM'Idfor Mia 1 to!Sacrep•c::et..
t'1 AutiMd Towns~. 814-992-

-

Excellent kK::Mion. Low urithle~.
S.c. dep. No pita. Aef•enOII.

*21.000. 114-892· 8239.

21

Coll614-446-1817.

Rentals

Buainess
Opportunity

Nlc;:e Ill QM .rfletenC¥ w lc•pet

-·e

fof one or two P«IOf'l on Third
Aw. 1190amo. w / dapo.n. Call

Cvnthltt. 114-4411-7483
I PM . 446-4082 oil• 5 PM -

EEOMI F

I NOTICE !
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

41

Help W~nted- FUI tlma. midnight. LPN tar 35 bed fKility in
Galllpolil ICF/ MR . Call 814448-7148 between 8 &amp; 4 :30.

ING CO . reconvntndlthlt you
do busln• wfth p.,ple you
know, and NOT to tend moner
throu .. the mel und you h•a
invett•g•ed the off•lng.

3BR . hou .., deluxe. AC. I350• z bedroom ApU . for rent.
mo. call 304-878-6104. or Cerpeted. Nlee setting. Laundry

Go-Go girla Wllnttd. Cell Collect

304-67.2083 "' 676-2447.
atk tor Jeff.

Hair dr••ers with Manag•' •
llcenu. Call 614-446-3353 or
44a.. 8362 ask for Joann.

Bab¥ sitter needed AI hours.

Reference required. 2 p r•
tchoo lera. Call 814-446-6162.

FIJI timeSai ... EJII)Irience h ..pfuL A PPtv in penon Tu11.-Fr+ .•
10 AM-4 PM . Rlv• Front
Honda. aak for Chua.: or Kelly .

POSITION AVAILABlE
Subtl'lilutelnetructor· Bach ..Ort
degra. t50.00 per dt¥. Hold •
le111t one wild t•chlng certlflc8te ill toed br the Ohio Oepa1·
ment ofEduCIIklor\ A ..illblefor
1988-89 progr.., ye•. PI••~"
tend reaume to GaUia Countv
Board of MR/ 00, P.O. Box 14,
Ct1eahira.~ Ohio 46820 or ~;Ill

TURN KEY BUSINESS
Comp-.y ..U.bUshltd -.coounts.
Abs®tetv no COrnp.tMion. Earn
up tp 11100e month. Part time.
No ex peri en oe nec.s.-y. lnt•
Kt free. .. .,.,.ion lft•start up.

t89110 ..........._ Coli
""'"'· 1-800-327-8919.
CO-OPERATIVE
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
High

'A)Iumt

24

roule tor sale in

Gellipollt. Avtr•ga income
'28.000 to •&amp;3.000 Plus. P1rt
lime to llll tlrM. Sell for

t23.600Cooh. Coi1 -80D-476-

8 383 anytime.

TURN KEY BUSINESS! Oiotrlbllte Frito-lay, Nebtloo. Her•hlr{

end other n..-e brand snack
foodl. No nllng. Sifvlce oomp.,y owned account&amp;. fndepw~dent NMional Ctntut shows
....1198 inoome of I 2. 757.00

monthly . You will need
11!. 000.00 CMh for equ.,_
m.rt. Call tol-fr• 1-800-7821 &amp;50enytima. Oi*ltor 41 .

816, 040.- 169. 230 . .,.... How
hiring. Cell (11 805--887-6000

Real Estale

c:urrcwn fed.-11

list.

AttMtion. RN 's·LPN'a
Amerlcer.,.Pomer~

h• lmm•
dille openinge for pan time

31

Homes for Sale

vwv enr.cUIII'e brldt 4bedroom.
2 bitt\ famlv roum with fir•
pi- lormol dlnlna .... livinG
room. 30 ft . cuttom oall: kh:dlen
cebtn •a. 1oa11 woodwlft. flnilh
bMem.-rt. 2: c• o•eua. ,., ..
landlctped lot, 4 ....... from·
- - HoopMIII off At. 36Port .Uook Subdl\r ilion. Call
814-446-4189 .
Deluxe 3 lA . houaa for •le.
Qrwon• finance. Cal 304-875-

1 104.

GOVERNMENT HOMES! From
t 1.00 iU
Fcw-•urw.
Rep ... Tu bollnq.-1 P r 11". NOW " SELLING THIS
AREAl Col IRdnololll ... 1316-733-8014. hi. G·273:Z.A.
FOR CURRENT U9nNGSI

Rep..,_

31111 .. 2--. ........."~~.. Rt.

218. lmmec:N•epo~:MUion. C.N

2 oh1ry. 3 boltoom. Z bol Ill. on
rfvor In Mldcleport. Coft I 14ondo.

AVON aU •eaiiShlrllr(Spen.

2 bedrOCNn.
Mument fttt 1
e•. Aenao from ol1111goaund.

h.,n c• • ' A·\SHIC*' hllpyou
bl the Hat vou c.-. belli Clll

Marilyn Wor~or. 304-81221411.

at American Mopzlne
1:01 ([) ... _
Shllley
1:30
(2) 1(1) NSC Nightly Newe

e
~SpottaLoot.
(I) e (JJ ASC Newt Q

SundiV. 12 noon-&amp; PM

Truck lod of nt~~~~ furniture
._, juot.,.lved. Bring your old

furniture &amp; TRADE-IN for new.
e
wood group, • 389.
So • &amp; chairs, 1289. 7 piece
country dlnnette •et. t!SSO

f.'..,.

llneiluloo hutc:ft).' I ploc:o bodroan tuh&amp; u..-..e:tr. nloe.
Matt,....halt off r..,sl• price.

Bunk beds w/ beddlng. 1229.
At. 141 inCenten.-v. 1AmHeon
Uncoln Pika

plng. banks

.,d tc:hooil. For

814-448-3648.
2 BR . hou•Maln St. Crvwn

Furnilhed one bed room IPt.
1200.00 pk!ae4ec:tric,. t100.00

39,..0_0_·.....,t176omo. Coli 814-4411- lcd:-op;..ooll
__
. 30
_"-_1..,7_&amp;-_
11511.
One 3 room furnitlhed utlttl•
'*d veri nloa refrtn!:* r•
2 Br., tr, dr, bMh. utltly 100m. quirllt. Two bedroom, 4 rooms
City.

180. Col 614-446-9817 llfl•
1:30PM.
Queen tir:etofa bed. Good con d.

t125. Coll614-246-9518.
Wllhe goo Teppon R.,IJII-

fu•

POicod lo loll. U3.800. 321
Spring A.... 814-992-8138.
HouN for

••• or fW1't. 2
bed'oom. Yt acre ground. in
PDm•ov· Adultt onty. No .,...

814-992-3122-

IMI~e

MontgomervW•dWMher. G .E.
Electric Dryer. Clll 814-992·

3146.
53

Pl.::.m. Good locotmioen. ~ .. _:.
--

enoae • soc. d.,. ~aqUirad. Can
814-245-9688.

One bet*'oam..,t. tur'*hed •d
1 1 ut..i• paid. Nf•tnOII ,..
quifed 304-816-2722.

7v•• old. 3bodroombrleil-&gt;inyl

·

total electric. Mnch ltylt home.

e•po~od 11troughou~ 1 ocr•
fenced In back 'fllrd wtth deck.

46

Loe•ed 7 Ml• from Holzer
Ho1pUI on Rt. 180. Aw8abfe
MDarch 1. 1310. p.- momh. If

Fum1"shed Rooms

54 Misc . Merchandise
23

~ch

RCA color T.V .• 150.
SeY•al dtff•ent lind tlr-.
*15.00 and up. 2 snow 11r-.
practlcatty rew, on whMII, C.H

I 14-992-2801. Eldon Wolllurn.
380 Sooth Third. Middleport.
Pecan wood din.W ..r:. Large
nWtt
t•ble. padded chair~.

L••

eondhlon. A*lng *200. 114742-2728.
.

{..t.ckl~ - . . 7 p.m.

192-3881

For •le: Oek firMood. Clll

304-87.27171111• 4:30p.m.

SURPLus-on 1no1 A

g
nny, ..,...
nhn. Rentel Clolhing. green

=:r.(~':'·;::·•~

Junction lndllpenct.nce AoM.

AlloT rail• IP'f:e. All hooh-upt.

Naon-I:OOP .M .. 10percent elf.
Cerh.-t clQthing, Clmoufla~ga

•ft•

IN-ERAI. IEootRov.........., ,
Frida¥. Saturdev. SLincWf onty

~H~td Cov...llt. 304-273-

~=========:..L::=========j

3 or 4 bedroomt. Stovt~ 8ftd
r.tria-Mor fur,.hed •175 per
mantk. plu•lllllltl•.,ddlllosfl.

1973 Y1maha 210. W•h• &amp;
chytlr for mobile

I 14-4411-8784.

ho~ .

Cell

For•le. Klngsilehidea.d. 6HP
rototiiiM", d•humidtfler. Call

814-446-2al7.

MiKed ,_.d wood siB. 112 P•

b.lncle. Containfno appro,.. 1%
ton. Ohio P..lel Co .. Pomeroy,

Ohio. 814-912-1481.
Royal O.k RMort membenhip

lor •lo. t6000. Colll14-9926816.
McDaniel Custom Butchering.

Open 8 days 1 week. Monday

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

3224.
55 Building Supplies .

f9 P~IN T

74

f)

all

Grinder Mbcer, both good Cl3nd.

304-273-4215.

.,......,

Boats and
Motors for Sale

-~

Setunt.v· 1 PM .
Uvea1ock acctpted aft• 4 PM
ev.-y F rid.,.. 1 mile e•t of
Albany on St. Rt. 50. Cell

&amp;14- 592-2322, 898· 3631

()) College ieokolbllll

Cll Entertalnmertt Tonight

'!f

,.

pow•trim.-.da~tooilinjectlon.

1987 Mer1;11ry Trotting motor,
1987 Shoreline tnil• pku
mora AU in good condition. Call

/

814-992-2no.

THf

evenings.

76

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

E.MI•r'
werageail:uqU8t'e
bel•
h~ . C.ll 814-379-

Chavrotet 3015 eng. , 345 Int.
truck en~ . dump bed It hoist.

Mixed hay for •le. t1 .50 P•

79

Ground ah.tl corn •a.oo p•
100. Alfaite hart . Morgan'•
Fo&lt;m. Rt. 36. PHny. 307-937-

06200. Coli 614-367-0643 •f-

2839.

0

'M!Ai MAtcf.) you
THIN}( THt&gt; 15N 1T
O~IGINAl-?

~~----

Coil &amp;14-245-6067.

bolo. C.H 614-742-2270 ofl•
4:0()p.m.

0(JJUIATodly
all
IDI JIIOplll'dfl

ec

ei!JIM•A•S•H
4JI Croooflre

tBl Night Court

a

Crook and CheM
7:3511) Binford and 8on
8:00 (2) llenlllmln Banneker: The
Man Who Loved till 111ert A
tribule to mathematician,
awonomer, abolltlonlsll and

..

first black to receive a

prasldendal appointment
This film captures lhe lila ol
Banneker. (NRI
(2) 1D1 ALF ALF
ghostwrites love letters to
help Jake Ochmonek
impress a girl. !;I

e

ALLEY OOP

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

'

1975 C l•s A Motor Home.

(I)

"'

.... 8 PM .

2018.
'

Concrele blodtl· ..1 •Rh· yerd
or delivery. M•onund. Gellio~
lis Blodc Co.. 123~ Pine St••

Golllpollo. Ohio. Coli 814-4462783.
WESTERN REO CEDAR
• ChWIMI Ruatlc
ondllovelodU., Slclng

• Dedc M.t•l•
G_.,
..od
CETIOE. INC .. Alh..,o· l14·
auo~~~y

194-3178

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and SlJpply Sho~Pel
Grooming. All breeds ... AII
ttyt... IMII , . Food Deal•.

Jult. Wobb Ph. 814-446-0231 Dr-nwynd con.., -nol.
Pll'llen •nd Slem•e Md Him•
I-van lltnena. Chow stud ....

AKC Englloh l!lrln. . lll•llolo.
ll w. 8 wb. old. VIII c:ilod&lt;ed.
Chomp. podlgooo. 0200. Coli
,814-2111-1180.

4. 1988- 0175. Coli 114-2469548.
8 mos. old male Poocle. brown.

Coli 114-446-4209.

Alllri 2109 wl 21 ..... 070.
Good eond. Coli 814-4463551.
FlJI blooded whfte German
Shepherd puDDI• end oolor IV' &amp;
Col1114·44~1149.

AKC . ., . . Hound pup .nd

odulll. Ul. to 0100- Cell
814-187-8957.

Fltlh T.,k. 2413 Jod&lt;o.., Aw.
Point PI-t. 304-875-2083.
10 .... 1111 .. t1419 .. d 101101

complete t43. 25.

...... 1 fomolo.ful-·nol

registered. t60. 304-1715-

5311 .

57

71 Auto's For Sale

.

,,

d• for $100. Fords. MercedM.

lndlvkll~ • • • l••ana. beginn... •rious gubMI. lruicarcll Music. 814-441-0187.
Jeff
inltruGtor. 114-

w.....,

446-8077. Llm*od -1n1111.

f .!'II Sill'llill·:,

,,1.,1.,

61 Fann Equipment

boo_.

1'&lt;1 otory. quiot
loc:Miol\ I ml• North of Pt. '

19M Oodgo Ch•aor- 70.000

mila AC. AM·FM. auto. NHdl

work. 01200. Col 114-21i69H4 •fl• 8 PM.
1979 Ch..., Mellbu. E~~:ollont
eond. V-a . C.ll14-378-2194

1973 Plymouth a.-do. If
llltnotod coli 614-256-1411
llfl• 1:30PM.

""*

1980CU11Mt.
engln• Au..
or•· Looksgoodln•ldeandout.
03000. Nog, Coli oft• I PM.

114-4411-llt20.

1982 Dotoon 28D-Z . 42.000ml.
Excellent condlllon. C.ll 014-

246-111&amp;7-

1977 Tovotl Corola 2 door. 4

eyl. 5 opel. t4110. Coll114-2161844.

1977 Grond Prtlc Pontioc. T·lop.

r~lt

motor, n.W pelnt job,
good tira 1111 Ch.,llleConvertlbl• Oood tJr-. Jntertor.

Run• good. 814-742· 2905.

19B8 Clullloc El Oo&lt;odolorrllz_
bcellent oondltion. 41 ,000
mR•- To 11ttJe llt81e. c.n

1912 Ford Eloort "L', 4 door.
AC , PS , AM·FM d._ c•a.

manulll. 4 sp..ci. 11 ,8915.00.

304-175-1731 .

2 boltoom mo ..e homo. holf
mlo out Jorrlc:llo Rood. 30417.1082-

G~ndor Mb&lt; ... M.,u"Sproed·
ert, lldd lt. . LoN•
Modol 213 . , . _ 108 ...
OZ71l00.
Modol 213 .,. _ _ 138 ...
*2. 8110.00Modol 114
1n 1111
e:uoo.oo.
Model 304 llurl'( Sproed.,
1.:121 ... t7.-.oo.
·Hill .... Model L-114 . .
12 hp fhpo 421 hn,
110.100.00.
Model .. 442 . . 30 "" 1,000
"'" t7.100.00.
N . H . - :IN. 100 ...
GllndorMkw ...~ oool• .,d
hl'd ...... t10.800.00 ....
modolwlhm...,.,lcolctln.,d
oeol• ti.OOO.OO.

2 bt*oom ,._.rniiMd moble

·~ ~~~ 17Polnt- .. d

""*•

2 be~oom.
and dryer, air. 1225 fMr month
lllk.la dlpoeit .,.. d utlfU• Cal

t14-992-7479.

. .. u..,,... _
cou•mafl chihhn acOIP'ed. At. 1,
rro~

RoMI. Pt. PINHnt. , .

hlndK.K. 304-175-1071.

-•. .,. . c_.

"'Roaches are the staple of this tribe's
d lel? Hey , they'd never go hungry here!"

Rllllor Aood
-no 304-116-3874

iiJ MOYIE: ArthufiPG) (1 :37)
II) WWF Wraotllng
1.111 Neohvllle Now
8:05 (I) MOYIE: The S.nd
P"abblal (NR) (2:59)
8:30
C2l OJ The Hopn Family
David Ia altracted to gl~ he
constanHy clashts wflh_ D

I WISt\ 1 HAD ~
ATII"U'£ 10.IJ\Ii.'D f«.JEafOO

e

all

1:00

&lt;

614-992-:M97.

• ..

RON'S Televi1ion Service. ·

~~'; :~.'~inon :c~~uuC:~ ;
304-1~.239, "' 814-446- ,
2464.

Wr=.'R&amp; i:;ETTING O£.:J&lt;. NEW
CAR NEX'f WEE!&lt; ...

Fetty Tr• Trimmln g, 11ump
rwnovtl. C•II304-8715-1J31 .

Rotary or cat;, tool ctlllng. ·~
Mostwels complltedt.-nedi¥': ....Pump Ml• end service. 304- ~

895-3&amp;02

A YELLOW ONE .

MY Cl-\0 SA.'rS IF

ITS ElQINt'i-10 f!&gt;E-

IT MI6HTA5WELL BE
THE RlaHT COLOR.

AN011-1EI=! LEOMON •. .

-

'

RON"$ APPLIANCE SERVICE.
........ 304-17.239&amp;

Ak. . TrM Trimm!nu Wid Stump
AemOYal. Free 811lmMM. Cd

Jo.....,_

Cor. Fourth .,d Pine

(lollpolo. Ohio

Phone 814-441-3888 or 814- •

_4 46-4477

&amp;

GIVE THESE TWO
DOLLERS I WON AT
TH' CARD GAME TO
YORE AUNT
LOWEEZY.
JUGHAID

WHY DON'T
YOU GIVE 'EM
TO HER
YORESELF?

(!)Newtntch
all ec ~ 0n1wn

Electrical
Refrigeration

1980Com•o:IIIO..,o..... pb.

30 4-1711-H&amp;B.
1910 Tr-

4m

400 black on

...... - Rod I !rd. ...,.. po. pb.
- " " 8 ....... t1.800. 304176-3818.
dow a.

a~Noat,

oood • ..,.

c•Mtte. cruM control. •king

t2.1100.00. 304-882-2319.

1877CIIrtolorLoloronwrod&lt;od
In . -• . _ .. rt oul. 304-1763024.
3110 ...,. .
auto. ...,... PI, PB, ,._ pelnt,
11200. Con
114-. .6-7371 llflorl PM .

,_ *•· "-•

72

Tructcs for Sale

1182 Delaun TNck. 4 wheel
drive, ... loob and run1 good.
*31100. Colll14-992· 38tz.

1881 Chwrolol "' ton pldt up.
exc cond, 32 , 000 mllea.
II. 700.00. 304-178-44» of.

General Hauling·

'

twi:OO,M.

--!on.

24&amp;928~

W••

R &amp; R
Service. Pools.
cilterna, wellt . lmmedltt•

1.000"' 2.000golloMdllllv.-,_
Coli 304-176-8370.

, - : : - - - - - - .'
1000g.t. w .. • .-vloe. Lim• .

tone lpr•d- We h.,l gr•t(
s.,d oolll, ate. Cll 814-992- ,,

12711.

w.n ....on' s WM• HatJIIng, ... .

sonablee rat•. votume d• ~
oounta. 2, 000 to 4,000C-'10;
pooll, weltl ,

30~5711-2819.

etc.
•

-:-~~~:----:- d

,_,Idea W•• Hauling Servlct.

1113 GMC. 111 pldc up. 1
.. d NN

rod·

*3.1100.00. 304-876-284 .

A

phono 304-17.2311 or 814- ,
44.408&amp;.

Mowrtrt' • Uphotltwing .-ving
trloountv•rM23ye. .. Thebllt
In furr*u,. uphoa.tering. C.l

304-871-•184 for "••

. .knet ...

-

8

•JW••

J
S.Vioa Swimming
DOOII. dlterns. well. Ph. e14-

bod with ................. d

opood. -

--

limo. Coli 114-446-740.No
Sundlr, c.U..

187. OMC" Anro 3110 c ....
. . .-inalhiMdmtnulll
13 ......
,....,
......... 1171F-142fllol : •a"""7----.U""p-.ho::--::-.-:lst=-erv=c--lllndlro.
2· muot
HI • u'*.
n5.000.00.
304n:t-1088 • 304-8711-8882.

Bernice Bede Osol

Oll•d w... Service: Pools.
Clat•na. W.. ll. Oell'tfery A"f·

q§rthday
FH. :10, 19111

In lhe year ahead you are likely to pul
more emphasis than usual on your social involvementS? This won 't be a frivolOus procedure, because the lriends
you'll ml!&lt;e will help you malerlatly.
~SCE8 (Feb. 20-lllorch 20) This could
bll a frustrating day for you if you ge1 ,
too closely ln..,olved with a person
wbose objeCtives are no1 In harmony ·
with yours. Try to learn up with kindred
spirits lnsload . Major c~anges are
ahead lor PisceS In lhe coming year.
S.Od for your AS1ro-Graph predlcllons
1oday_Mall $1 lo Aalro· Graph, c/o this
newspaper. P .O. Box 91428, Cleveland, f
OH 44 101-:M28. Be sure lo sta1e your
zodiac sign.
. ARIES (llerch 21-Aprll11) II your boss
1ells you 10 do 1hlnga a cer1a1n way a1
work today ll's besl you don't improvise
on your own or depart from Instructions. It things go awry . your excuses :
•:«Dn'1 hOld up.

"

a-Counlry

'Your

TAURUS tApril ZO.Mar :10) Circum- LlaiiA (Sept. D-Oct: ll) Olhera aren't
s1anceo mlgh1 "be a !rille unusual 1oday likely 1o pick up lhealack today regardwhere your social life Is concerned . lng responalbllllleo you thoulcl be laking
Don'1 be discouraged If you feel you care ot you~ - If you dlsmlas thorp
don'l Iii in properly. I his is merely a _, from your mind, lhlnklng they'll do
fleeling condlllon.
1hem, you'll be disappointed .
GEMINI (Mar 21-Jtlnl 20) Even though SCON 10 (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Thlnga you
your efforts may be dedicaled 1oday lo do on your own today thould work out
lrylng to do more tor lhose you love, rather well for you. However. In your
don '1 e•pec1 a ny pals on the back, be- , group Involvements you mlghl run Into
cause you're not apt to get them.
oppOSition
from
laast..expected 1
CANCER tJune 21-Julr 22) Heavy lop- · -quarters.
. ·
ics like polillcs, philosophy or religion , IAGmARIUI ( - . 2S-Oec. 21) Your
should be sld&amp;slapped today. Keep Image Ia ralher fragile loday, so be oxyour rap sessions llghl to lessen the Ira mindful of your
In public.
Someone who wan1o to get even wflh '
possiblllly of a biller ••change.
LEO (Jutr D-Aug. 22) Forego purchas- you hu been walling for you to pull • lng expensive merchandise loday If you •faux pu In fron1 of olhera.
sllll have some old bills you haven't ; CAPIIICOIIN (Deo. 22-oiM. 11) Do nol
cleared up _Don't pu1 yourself In a posl· -lake credl11oday for lduo or ao~ggao
lion where you're weighed down by llonll lhal _ . crealed by aomeone
1ong-1erm obllga11ona.
- · If.you don'l give credl1-e orad-,
VIRGO (Aug. D-lept. 22) Today you 1118 due, you could - a l e a friend . 1
may find yourself In ales1y arrangemenl, AQUARIUS (Jail. . . , . . 11) Your fl.
wllh a slrong-wllled associale. Don'tlet nanclaJ lrenda lOok ralher encoureglng
this person make decisions for you thai allhla limo, but this could bll a down
do no1 .erve your bestlntareals.
. day, 10 bll vttr'f prudent In the manage. menl of your I'IIIIOUI'.,_

-vtor

Hal..,.__

01 Mauefill..

11)-VIce
1:111 You Can Ba a lllar
11:30

e &lt;11

OJ Tonight Show

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West

Nortll

Ea1t

Soatb

I•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2+
2NT

2+
3+
3
6

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

+
+

3.

4+

Pass

Opening lead : • 9

per, but he was certainly showing the
ae&lt;l of hearts with his belated heart
bid, and so the play for slam would be
good. Let's hope that the rlext lime you
·are dealt North's cards and bid them
as well as he did, your partner will
play the band like Charlie rather than
Willy.

nr lltu•\'
ancl I A/tlit•

15 -

4 Yc&gt;tl («er.)
f) Lrhannn

is nnf'

6 ~..nrnwr
&lt;;·erman
st.;• I•'

7

Khan

16 lla~wml

Woc:Hlc n

Yesterday's Alll&amp;111rer

•rf'
8 Mnxim
t ·~

ltOVf'l

24

9 Wrath
I 0 lsh•l
17 llold it!
20 Valley
21 Hill

18 Tropkal
19
24

him
t wic·e
hPai

1_1 Nrws
nwdium
12 Cily in Iraq
13 Estuary
14 lll'lllf iVI'

wrratll
llan~in~
Sushi
saucP

25 Nnun

22

surtix

nfson~

!14 llwclling
35 llush·s

26 Thes pian

huilcll'r
Nonnnnoflkrr
(ahhr.)

:lo Pray.-r

YPmt'n·H
•·a pifal

27 "I -

missionecl

26 Assaih•cl
29 .John

CamPra"

36

28 Snuggery

39

29 Otnlo-

S!'llSi&lt;lt•

gist's
c:·o m ·prn

31 Favnril.&lt;•
33 C'nunl.ry
SUII~SI.rt ' SS

2:1 X

~cn~t.ary
of state
Watc hful
Adriatic

n\sort
40 First. lac:lv
41 A vPrR'l&lt;' •
42 Trnulth,
44 lloodoo

wnrd
31 ··- .Jury"
32 Storr hnss
34 IM~wycrs
tL"l.'m .

37 I 'I"' -

lime

38 Fmwh
danc·p

39 Grt rven
will!
43 .IPWI'Iry
piPPP

sd10ol
~ Mr . TPie -

vision ''

48

Bring
I o hrar

IJOWN
I - ancl
t'rrnr

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

2' 211

•

One letter stands for another. In tllis sample A is n~ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etr_ Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of Ut e words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differe111 .

~=-

2-20

ei!JI NI,Wd Olme

MRQ

1111 ...........

J EQ

I::::="".,_

tQ8 6 3
+A J 86 3

2 Sc·ope

Ill Ellnl p 11n Journal (0:30)

.~,=1;1

+10 5

•As

3 llwighl ll.

Lilll'r
EssPIIfial

Earthlr llueon
• &lt;11 ro • ()) 111 ec
1D1 Newt
())Sign Off
IHl

SOUTH

I
6

11:00 ()) No

.IIJI u.v. Cor.-11C11on

• 10 5

ACROSS

47

n Jlo One
Wanled FOllow thll 8101)' of
the Invention lhat changed
the face of Amartcan ·
business, photocopying, and
tho man who Invented ~.
Chester C.rlson .

t K 10 9 52
+712

AJ 7

by lHOMAS JOSEPH

4JI Evtnlng Newt

Ill 11111 lm.

'

.2

+H3 2

CROSSWORD

Joey sa- 1 man's l~e lnd
biK:ornea a hero.

10:30(!)1rown=D

a ... rieol. 30 .. 17.1788.

ttv. cln•na.

shortness in diamonds, South made a
good decision to stay out of three notrump. From North's point of view,
South just might have a diamond stop--

45 11•P
4611ehrpw

QJI Newo

Lleented el.mld.,. Ridenour , .

1911 Mercury Cliprl OS. •c

oond. 16.000 ml•. llntod win-

strength in three suits and obvious

.IIJI AI'Millo HolM

'

R•idtntial or comm•cial wir- ·•
in~ New str#ice or rtP'*•· ~

B5

eo OMignlng women

Hoping lo make extra
money, Charlene becomes a
Lady June saleSlady. D
1:111 Mtrrfll Oamond: wMt I
Like Louis Mandrell, The
Jets, Tanya Tucker, Jessica
Boucher, and Helen
Cornelius join host Merrill
Osmond for his firs! solo
performance spaciaL
10:00 ()) 700 Club

Plumbing
Hilating

CARTER"$ PWMBING
AND HEATING

84

e (1)

all

&amp;

Willy Nilly would quickly go set in
toclay's aggressively bid slam . He
would draw trumps and then go about
setting up tbe heari suit, intending to
ruff tbe third heart But when he discovered that he needed to ruff two
hearts to set up tbe suit, he would also
find that he was short the necessary
entries to make 12 tricks.
Careful Charlie would do better. He
would look for a way to make the contract even though hearts might misbehave. So be would win the opening lead
in dummy, play a heart back to his
ace, and then play two more rounds of
spades, 011 wbich he would throw a
heart He would ruff a heart, get back
to dummy with a trump, and ruff another heart He could then draw
trumps ending in dummy. Beginning
-with the king, the heart suit would
then run.
The bidding was excellent When
North bid to show concentration of

m aor Kina

OJ MoVIE: 'O!Iglnal
Sin' NBC lloncfar Nlghl.t
lhl Movlae Q
(I) • ()) 'Gideon Olivet'
ABC Mf11111Y llovle Gideon
Oliver discovers a n~htmare
world of Satanlsm.
Ill ()) CllaaJng I Ra nbow:
Tha Llf1l of
Baker
Josephine Baker's career Is
traced: as a dancer ot lhe
Folies Blrgera. 1 member of
the French Resistance and a
civil rights campaigner.
all
Murplly 11rawn
Murphy Is Incensed by a
men-only club and uks Jim
to help her get ln. !;I
4JI ..., Klrig Llvel
1:30 (I) CaD1g1 llllaketbell

304-176-7121 .

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

KMe • Alii Bob

ec

houll call servicing GE, Hot
Point. w•hrwl. drv•• end

82

•c

and Allie lind lha pe~ect man
lor Kale: Chip has his firsl
crush. I;!

R and T Buildlrt from fou nd•
tion to roof · inalde or out. F rae ·
..e:lm••· B udglt pric:.. C••

304-875-4831 '

"78 Ford Pinlo. 4 &lt;YL 04715.00.
Phone 304-&amp;76-2417.

OPM11N1wt

Unoondlionlll llf•lme .,• .,.

•im•a

Fee.,...ry .... N1w Holland

Pl-ont. 304-176-1078.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

Carvwtt•. Ch.,y.. Surplue. ,.._ Locll rllf•tnces bnilhld.
lluvero Guido- 111 806-187· ' Free
Call collect
1-&amp;14237-041a d~ or night .
1000. - · S-10189. ·
Aoger· sBasement
1913 Chwy lmpolo. 2 dr.• h•d Wat•proofing.
top. ae. 283 enatna· EJC:ell.
cond. MUit .... l:.oo. Cell SWEEPER end ..wlngmechlne
rep•. p.-ts, end ·•uppll•. Pldl.
814-446-7059 - · • I PM .
up .,d deUv·.-y, D.vil Va~um
1974 vw 81.9 . ...... - · Cleaner, one hell mile up
eKcell• 'ft!Ork c•. *BOO or Qlorgea Creek Ad. Cell 614,...oneblaoH•. C•ll814-245- 44.0294
5040.

em·fm c.s. Vwy good oondition. ,.., tlrM. • 1.100 ftr m.

Muaical
Instruments

ec

Home
Improvements

-------- "•

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Veh&gt;

e ()) MlicOrver

MacGyver probes kidnapping
of a Phoenix Foundation
employee·s son. !;I
(D Ill War and Paeca In till
Nuclei r-Age E•amlne lhe 13
most harrowi~ days In lhe
nuclear age_ Q.
all
"NeWhart Michael
out of money may mean
Slephanle out Of hiS life. Q
.IIJI MOVIE: The Ewtl That
Min Do IRl (1 :30)

Tran~~orta11011
81

Q

EAST

WEST
+9876
.Q J 101

t

e

'

Bau Boet- 1987Landll..l 16'5",
1987Mera.uy36hpmotorwllh

tl
+KQ9

By James Jacoby

7:0511) Andy Ollffl1h
7:30
(2) Family FIIICI

FRANK AND ERNEST

Livestock

Athono Llveoto&lt;* Sola Albonv-SIIe

®a-..
iiJ Miami VIce

1-~1-lt

NORTH

+AKQ
.K976 53

A behavior
problem

4JI Moneyllne

01300. Coll614-38a.9679.

75

UNSCRAMBlE A80VE lETTE~S
TO GET ANSWER

BRIDGE

ec

,_Q

1984 V-30 Magna. Low mileaga Show roof11 condition.

NUM8!~EO lETIE~S IN

·' Remember dear," smiled 1he mother to her son . " Good
habils are as easy to form as· BAD ONES ."
·

•IIJI Thrite't Comp.any

N.H. 7 fl hoy bind. N.H. 352

the chuc kle quoled

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Unseal - Blaze - Opine ,.. Editor - BAD ONES

Ne--..t1 :00)
all Wheel of

Motorcycles

Complete

THESE SQUARES

e

304-882-

Ohio 114-742-241&amp;.

19nPont~oc:Firoblrd.

own utHttl•. 304-773-91514.

hQmo. 304-n&amp;-H12 or 171139110.

1978 Jeep CJ6
3201 -

0

'
by fdl,ng 1n the m 1SS1ng words
.__.._..._--"'---'--"'--' you de11elop from step No. 3 beklw.

Ill SpotlaCenter
(I)
(J) eun.nt AHalr
(!) (!) MlcNell/ LlhnK

i ... Morril Equipment, Rutl.,d.

Stadt. brick. .war pip-. ~
dows. lnt•. etc. ct .... • 'Mn·
tlrl, R~ GrMde. 0 . Cat! 814-

-~
br llou•
ln
_.,.,_ tomOdolod
0280. I*"3 month.
Pay

Loe~.~tt

5

a

13. 686.00. 304-175-1731.,

Services

(; !I'll

Ch••· 814-985-3922.

FoAl

Feeder Rinp. Buying old bolter-

TUE O.i ~DifJI'

wheels, W-31 · 10 .50 tire•.

thru SeturdlfV. C811 304-882·

~

mo. GeNie

CAll
2o.m. 304-7735181. MMon WV.

rima, 130. Coli &amp;14-448·07&amp;3.

, . , _ pupploo. 8 woeb old. 1

Sta-ting lit 1120

H01 ... &amp;l4- 446-llaO.
st...,ing I'OOI'nl with cooking.

lnt••od. eoll 814-286-1318

Qultt tops for •le. Call 814-

Rooms for rent:· week or month.
I

FarmEquipnwnt. Z.C:orTrectors.
Howerd Motavltora. Bledea.

OccMalonel chair, good cond.,
126. 2 mounted tir• on 15 in.

terlldlrtn.nySp•lel. born Dec.

•pr.

Pt

finance.. Cltl 814-288-8522.

63

Att.UkNI Hunt... AKC Regil-

fr-•

1817.

Coli 114-379-2839 .

vico. C411814·446-3844ollw7
PM.

Antiques

1918180 Cou Bock'- Ao 11
endhethgoundl.,.., ...,_.,.,. · • 3100. Needl10nw work. A"o
required, 304-875-2722.
.
15 cubic n.
nzs. 13
lnc:ft oolor T.V. 1100. 114-742·
2328.
Two bac*oom
4 rooms .-. d
bath. 1110. 00. 304-876-2722.

Niceyerd. clo111otown. 1250•
mo. No pet1. C.ll 814-44..

e. boom. 12915. Owner will

Pur18ble dl1twvashar &amp;. p•lent
Hoyer titter &amp; grab b•·both
n-..-!"'IVer uted. dlsmunted.

7- pc. dinn . .e slt· wood tabl ..
browfl ctworne lf91. Good con d.

304-882-21588.

ful~

cart

245-1121 -

814-446-315a

2528-

more inforJMdon call 304-882·
3718. E.O.H.

In

VI'Ra Fumkure &amp; Appll8'1c:.

2 bedroom '-'rnithed ip.-tmant.

2 boltoom .., . ....,...

I I 1I I

a

"I ·LOOK UK~ OCI'i.ETillf.lG

The best thing about having
secret ballot elections is that
you can claim you never - tor the jerk .

.---A-C_T_V_A_R_--,1

New Counlry
1:35 ([) One O.y .t a nme
·. 7:00()) Our HouM
(2) PM Magazine

~

1980 Ch...- halt ton 4:..4, auto,
PS, tittwhHI. AM -FM radio. 8ft
bed with topp•. chrome wegon

Building Moloriolo

Beoc:ft Sttoet. Mldcl-rt. Ohio.

For Rent or S-'•2 BA ., rnod«n
home. Cloee to town. 1300 •
mo. ..... dap. • ref, Clll

114-992·188&amp;ofi•I:OO p_m_

wening11.

1124 E. Main Str..._, Pom•oy.
Houra: M,T.W 10a.m. to lp.m ••
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 614-992·

c•peted, appfi.,cea, wet••nd
1r8lh pic::kupt provided. Malnt•
nencetreelllllng close to lhop-

*•
814-446-2369.

MF di"ef tractor w / 15 ft . bush

hog. UIIIO. Poot driver. U98.
JD go-oln drll( n96. Now Ideo
PTO drat., .,..._.,. ~raid•.
*591. 250 gol. ...,k w~h

1460 . 114- 388 - 9773 .

Buy or Sell. RNerlne AntiquH.

'*:rw eccepttng appUeMion1 for

F&lt;1r Roni-Nieely furNohod 3
room cottage. Employed .a..tta
or retired. No pets. Alf. &amp;
depoalt. C.N 814-448-21541

2 t.ctoorn~•llr'ld2bectoom
ap.-trn.rt:. W-D hookup, .-modeled. SeOolrltv dtpolk CIM

PICKENS USEO FURNITURE
Compl .. e houaehold '-'rnistt.
lngs. 1/J mii ..Jerrlcho. 304-&amp;75-

.,...,,.had, ._,._.,

w..... 304-882-2141.

..hJtt want to earn -.trupendtng
monev7 Or w:ould you lh to

polL Coll814-446-11&amp;1

1

VIII.,. Furnfture
New and used furniture and
lpplle~ne•. Call 814-4487&amp;72. Hours 9-&amp;.

t182. Coli 814-992·77a7.
utliti• ~id, ...t•enc.. Phone

IS roome 6 bMH w / balltment.
c•pet. ippll.,cea. Ref. &amp; dep.

2

0322.

ments In Mlddll!port. From

01 Potrlol. 0280. mo plus dep.
Will help ....eo. Coll814-446, 340 or 114-446-3870-

ho

90 D-v• same • Cllh wkh
IPProved credit. 3 Mil• out
BuiiHifte Rd. Open 9.n to Spm
Mon. thru s ... Ph. 814-4.g.,

Manor and Rtv . .ide APM1·

Rent or _. 3 BR modirn home

BR

•ea.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

AVON · AH .,... C.ll M1rityn 98&amp;-4134 "' .... 91 end weall-

304-&amp;7.1429.

loclkl• ovollttllo. c.n 814992-3711 . EOH-

3 IR . houao. Oepoak """'!rod.
10 Old Fort Troll. Coll814-446- Grodouo lvlng. 1 .,d 2 bed21513. 9 to 5 dally.
room apwtnwttl at Village

Llr

4

114--8232.

RN 's·LPN's on 1tlshifts.
Compedtlve salifY. ft-.lble
tehdllina .nd t..llffts
offered Cont-=t Laru• HI I.
RN·DO N. Am•Jcsr•Pom•ov.

3&amp;759 Rod&lt;lorinp Rd ..
Ft&gt;m•O\'· I 14-lllil·HOI.

Homes for Rent

17.13ell

No

1376. Lampo 128 to 1126.

Open Colly. 9 AM -5 PM

3748 0&lt; 2116-1003.

llg Dekow F8rm ham~ bulh: on
Your lot. t13,115 • up. SHour
modal can 1-814-888-7311 .
Pftoce dnk. c:redenua. 4
drtw•l.n.,.lfl-. dodtpl.r11.
4 niiW 18 ln.
Ia rima. C.ll

LAYNE"S FURNITURE

2 8 r. Lrl . . rnlshed o•IICJIIPt. No
pets. Adutts onty. C.lf 814-448-

evening.

8o

Crnt Motel 814-446-739&amp;

DinMt• t1091nd up to t4115.
Wood table w 6 cheirt $286 to
t795. D11k 1100 up to t37&amp;.
Hutch• •~o .,d up, Bunk
bedl complete w-mettr•s•
t296andupto139&amp;. Bab'( be$
t110. Mettr. .• or boa: springs
firm 178. and
full or twin
t88. Queen Mia 1210 &amp; up.
Klnu•31SO. 4 dr-.•ch•t •89.
Gun Clbinlltl &amp;, 8 &amp; 10 .. ,..
Bet.,r m.ttr.~• 131 &amp; t4S.
Bed fr.-n• $20, 130 • King
frame •60. Good •election of
bedroom autt•. m•ll cabmMa.
heedbo•dl $30 .. d up to •8&amp;.

2 BA . ept., n-.. ~ah c•pet.
new paint, tldlltl• .-nlllltv .,.td.

tneckl provided. Structure 1981 P•kwood. 14x70. Centrel
pl., time. Large Mdl yard. Arrv .rr condh:ioniflg. 2 bl•oom.
89•· RtMoMbie r.C• e. ref•· und.-plnning. ev,..-ylhing must
en OH_ provided. Call any time, go. Col J .D. ot 814-992·2174

35 Lots

nnv• · Skaggs Appliencea.

SHADY LAWN APTs- 729
Seoond A..,.. Furniahed efflolen-

814-446-4639.

homo. 814-992-3088.

14600. Col 114-992·&amp;836
814-992-7887.

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

Modern 1 BR . downlown, complete ktt.chen. atr, c.pet, Oepoatt. no peta. Clll 614-4460 139 ...... lnga. .... 6.

Appl furn'IMd. ldeallocation-1
block from downtown. Clll

your TAX REFUND! C.IELSEAHOMECENlERS Todovl Ohio Woto 80D826-0752.

Fmanml

delivered. Dnld Hill . 114-3a•
81H.

Sol• and chllirs priced from
$396 to •995. Teblea •so tnd
up to t12&amp;. Hid•a-bedl t380
to t&amp;96. Redin . . t221ii to

-~ remodeled 1 aR . opt.

1984 modela. Ohio

.

Rrt~~~~ood for •le · 2&amp; to llfJ

Upper Rlv• Rd. beside S1one

826-0712 .... 315.

DeiNery. Use

W!nting to do Qrpentery work.
Have own truc:lc &amp; toola. By hour
or iob. Call 814-448-8232.

87D-9881 .

hw.. her. di:I:J)OMI.. prNate enclosed ·pMio, pool, pl.,ground.
Wet•. . ..-. &amp; t,.ah included.

446-4607 or 446-21102.

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEGE. &amp;29 Jockoon Pika
Col1446-4387. Reg. No. 86-11106118 .

814-446-4397 "'446-4882-

1 "-A ~ri., af funding IOUrml
to pll( for t1111lning are eveAeble
for those eligible

OShii-Ra

4JI ShowBiz Tocloly
.!Bl WKIIP In ClnclnNIII
iiJ C.rloon Eaprwoo

Wuhara, my. .. refrlg•Man.

.. firotl Now buying 1972thru

Down on 30 Pr.Owned Hom•
in Stodc. We finance. F,...

Schools
Instruction

Need •tre c•h7 Call A von.

""''karL

SCHOOL

I ~
~--~=-1·"~-'1;. ;:;-1-TI--i ~
WELEJ

all ec
casIn ""'"
.IIJI
WKRP
Cincinnati

T•a Townhou ..
2
BRs., 1 'lh b .. hi. CA.. dis·

ci• llt•rtlng at $176 ·• mo.
lnci.Jdlng wat• e. gwblga
Slngla a5Jits ontv. can 6f ...

USED HOME SALEl T• &amp;Ti)le

tNell•bi•Chemlc•l
Company h• opening for •rtM
sal• rapr•entlltHe. Est.btilhed Painting.,dwaMpap•. 20.,.. .
accounts wtth wowth poumlal .. experience. CAll AI. 814--742·
Mutt betelf-motWeted .,d h.,e 2328.
refiable trantportetlon. Send r•
sumeto: Box Cia 187. c / oGelll- Will do bebv sitting In mv home.
Ref•tlflcn Mlallhla. cell 304pOill Dally Trib.ma 826 third
a7&amp;-&amp;514
A..,.,, Oalljp otis, Ohio 46831 .
Potition

Oivtftifled MediCIII

I Tl41loiK 11LL DROP M'(
LUNCK BOX ON 'fOUR FOOT..

Ill Nlglllly . . . _.. Report

St. .ing at 1289 per mo. C1ll

&amp;028.

•
24 hr. DIY Ctre.ln tCNVn. Me•

Work••· Elacl'rieiW. Foad Ser·
..Ace
Electronla Technicl-. lndlstrlal Melntan.,c::e
Work•s. NurtingA . . .enta.,d
Orderll•. Machin.t&amp;. Otfict
WDfk•s Jnd WehWs. Regilt•
now for dats•beglnnlngMerch
27th. Cell Tri-CountyVoc.tlonel
AduH Ctnt• et 763-31511 81lt.

8o 4 W .D.

'

Ill Sqwlra One TV
18IIJI Hooppy Dap
IHl Facta of Life

(!) llodr Elec111c

114-387-7880.

&amp;

tologit'tt.

DO 'IOU KNOW
WI-I'(! !-lATE
WAITiNG FOR
T~E

Wheelch*• new or usad. 3
w .... Bd electric scoot. .. Call
Roger~ Mobltv collect, 1· 614-

r

()) Sportralll

SUS7

a rno. Wllk to

..,.,rnem.

II II

(!)The P - of Choice Q

1----------

ahop •d mov•, 814-44625118. E.O.H.

12

15

81 4-742·2455.

Job Hunting7 Need • skM11 We
tr.ln p~le for jobl: n Auto
Mechanloa. Carpn ... Cwm•

61 Household Goods

Vans

8

•c

1(1)-

:::::::::::::=:::=;:==

Pike from t183

----------

7638. '

fundobl,j 1-311&gt;73J.8062EXI.
F27 4BA .

73

ro •

•

i

-------------,'
1976 Dodge PU . &amp;6,000 mH•·

M~rchand1se

of ttle
four
words be·
low to form fovr simple words

6:00 ()) Bonanza: The Loot
Eploodeo
• C2l
!ll 1!11

;
I'

No rull. 0360. C.H 114-375- •
2894.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES. 136 Jooboo

1· 5111-4119-3548 EKt. DH1622

Conuct D•vld Wilbur
Adminiltretor.

Uud' fum;ture b\1 the piece or
entire household also telling.

G,pvemment Jobl l Now hiring
thls aree! IS 1o. 213. to t75.473.
lmmediMa Opening~! Call (r•

I

814-446-3846

17.1435.

quant Property. Now S.Uing.

32 Mobile Homes •
Hurrictfl• WV or Ctre Hwen
for Sale
Te.,-s V1H~ . 304-717-7821 . .

One owner 2 door Clf or trvck.

Awn calling. W.-rt to do aom•
thing new _and 11tcftlng1' Fr11
start-up kit during month of
February. 614-992-7180.

or l•••BJiin••

For Sale
Buildin g.Store or Office tpiC•1101Jeff•son Blttd. Call304-

letters
0 Re,arrorige
JCrombled

EVENING

1976 Cem.o. 1978 Ford one
ton tNck . . , Ford tr..:tot. AM
good condttJon. 18 ft fllli: bed
traii•· MW ftoor &amp; paint. Call

Coli &amp;14-384-6815.

WOlD
GAM I
br CLAY I . POLLAN - - - - - -

l~lto~

NUA Q I T

814-38a.90110.

250'. loclled in linn Dock on
At. 7 aaa.s from.SkylineLM-.

S©\t~lA-~ £tf~ 8

TUI OliLf
PUULil
------

MON.; FEB. 20

11:

fiiiP*J Foredosuree. Tu.Oeli.,..

d8'11elopm•nt . inquire C•re

315B.

Ext. R-9806 for

8

C•ll 114- 992-7889 after

Furnfture _.d eppliW'Ic:et by the

JOBS

1987FordRiftger,.4eyl., 41pd.,
W• drftla hHifV bumpW, bed
cover, ,... tiding window,
am - ~c•sM'te. 1 ownw. E•·
tendedwatTanty, MurtSell. Ctll

For leas•

6 00
' =P-=mr
.
--.:
44 Apartment
for Rent

H.v.,, 590 Popl• Fork Road,

GOVERNMENT

Itt{ ~AT~!

2 be*oom tr-'1• for rent in
Pom•ov. Read;' Merch 1. 614-

~;:::;:;;:;;~~;==j;~=;;;~~::;;,~;;::-j
_731 Homes for Sale

and n.....-er used cart. Smtth
Buictc-Pontiac. 19 11 Eallt.-n
Ave .. Gallipoiis. Call 614-446-

614-3e7-7371 .

~~lfJ

point"*" only. C.H 114-19•
8341.

"I think one of my Zl'ppers t's

Wanted To Buy
- - - - - - - 11 Help Wanted
TOP CASH p.,;d fo• "83 model 1--:-----=--:--:::-:-----::c

with or

ure,y.'(

Television
.
Viewing

Ho

Amen•
. . can
aide ref.
Full sizaaide
book
bed. Chafn
saw . Riding . mower, phone
&amp;14-2&amp;&amp;-esos . •

-::::::;:;;:==;:::;:=;:==

14-ll?O, 2 be*oom. a•e;e.
front porch, back deck. Oepollt
•d rel•ence.. Shown b'( ..,.

.-.

spring sal811. 17 years 8ll pe-

BORN LOSER

Colll14-4411-2713.

Coil 114-446-1816 or 4461189.
.

~

AUCTIONEER

1'1

Comm.clll Lot tor Le•• 440'

2 BR . Moble Home. 4 mil•
nonh of Holur-Hwy. 180.
Adults onlv prllf...-ed. No pliCa.
1228 • mo. pl.Js •1&amp;0 .c. dep.

J
r

Eatate, antique, f•m. liq'uida-

Junk Cars

2 BR •• cable avllil ... &amp; be•tiful
rhr• vi-.v in Ken alga. Foater"a
Moble Home Pwk. 814-44-1-

2 BR .. 12d0. a.ildr., oocoplod. In E-go-. C411 &amp;1444.3e97 or 245-5221

I

Rjt*

Winter

49

-·

XLT 4x4,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

111&lt;1.. 01 pkg .• tolollv looded. low

814-992-7479.

8158.

1802-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Edwin

furnilhod o•"'l• ..... AI

Monday. February 20. 19~9

Monday, February 20, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

CR\'PTOQIJOTES

RJUIW

MRJM

RGXHQE

MRJU

RQXB
MRQ

Davenport In a StOrm
1:111 AnilltCM Mlgll'lnl

11:311 (I)

Hogan'• ..,_

12:80_~.=-~;.~~
trlbulll to l1lllhlml1lclln,

ub 01-. abollllonlatll 1nd
llrll black to ..-lYe a
presldtlntlel appointment.

XHBW

MRJM

BEJL. -EGZQE M

HUYQEWGXX
Y•t.Ur'• Crwt. .•otel . THE SECRET OF
, SUCCESS IN UFE IS FOR A MAN TO BE READY
' WHEN HIS OPPORTUNITY COMEs. - DISRAEU
I

�.

~

"•

•

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

four great-grandchildren, one
brother, Ambrose Kibble, Martel ta, and several nieces and
nephews.
~sides his parents, he was
preceded In death by two brothers, a sister, a grandson, and a
son-In-law .
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. Wednesday at the White
Funeral Home , Coolville. Mark.
Seevers and Scott Stewart will
officiate. Burial will be In the
Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the iuneral
home, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on
Tuesday. Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs
County Unll of the American
Cancer Society, Box 6~2.
Pomeroy.

Johnnie Ralph Kibbl e, 86 of
Reedsvli le. died Sunday at the St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
.
Born on June 12, 1902 at Torch,
he was the son of the late Lewis
and Belle Diles Kibbl e.
He retired from the FMC Plant.
in ·Parkersburg after being em·
ployed there for 38 years. He
became a Christian in 1943 a.nd
through the years has been
active in many chu rches in the ·
Reedsville and Long Bott.om
communities. He was a vo lunteer
for over 25 years with the Meigs
County Unit ·of the America n
Cancer Society.
He is survived by his wife,
Helen Ruth •Ki bble, Reedsville;
two daughters and sons·ln·law. Kent D. Campbell
Christina and Bernard Boston.
Kent Douglas Campbell, 73, of
Vienna, W.Va., and Delores and
Wtlkesvllle,
died Sunday evening
Harlis Frank, Long Bottom; two
at
Holzer
Medical
Center.
grandchildren. Cathy Spencer,
Born
June
4,
1915
In WllkesLong Bottom, and George
vtlle. he was the son of the late
Pickens, a missio nary in Africa;

Warren E. and Stella (Steele)
Campbell.
He was a retired employee of
the Kroger Warehouse. Poth
Road, Columbus. He was a
member of the Wilkesville United Methodist Church, and was
first master of the Wtlkes Grange
2716.
He Is survived by his wife,
Edith (Crabtree) Campbell.
whom he married Sept.1, 1937; Jn
Waverly, Ohio. Also surviving
are one ' brother-In-law, James
Baker of Phoenix , Ariz.; three
grandchildren, Mrs. Charles
(Bonnie) Amstutz of Westerville,
Ohio, Mrs. Ken (Penny) Drenten
ol Baltimore, Ohio, and Mrs. Ken
(Edye) Kendig of Columbus; and
four great-grandchtldren.
He was preceded In death by
his daughter, Barbara Jean
Baker, and two brothers, Warren
Eugene Campbell and James
Campbell.
Services will be Wednesday, 2
p.m. at the Wtlkesvitle United
Methodist Church wtth the Rev.
Robert Steele and the Rev. Kay
Puc kelt officiating. The body wtll
In state one hour prior to the
service. Burial will be In the
Wtlkesvllle Cemetery.
Friends may call Tuesday, 2 to
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m .

EMS reports 10 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend ; five Saturday and five Sunday .
Saturday at 9:29a.m., Middleport to Hysell Street for Wayne
Jarvis who was treated but not transported; Racine at 9:41a.m.
transported Clarence Wickline from the fire station to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire Deparbnent at 9:46a.m. to
Tan ner's Run Road to check on downed power Jines; Pomeroy
at 1:04 p.m. to Bailey Run Road for Guy Bush to Veterans
Me morial Hospital; Middleport at 4:22p.m. to the Middleport
Pool Room for Robbie Clonch to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday a t 1:54 a.m., Middleport to Holly Lane for Darla ·
Staats to Holzer Medical Center; Mlddleportat4: 41a.m. to coal
Street for Patricia Hill to Veterans Memorial. Hospital; Racine
at 10:27 a. m. to State Route 124 for Jay Carpenter to Veterans
Memorial Hosplta\; Syracuse al 10:02 p.m. to Dusky Street for
Everett Horner to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at
ll : 27 p.m . to College Street for Walt Laudermllt to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Admissions, discharges released
·Admissions and di sc harges at Veteran's Memorial Hospital
have been announced for the weekend.
Saturday admissions were Guy Bush, Pomeroy; Robbie
Clont'h. La ngsville; Charles Ohlinger Jr. , Middleport.
Saturday disch a:rges were Marie Thomas, John Coffman,
Bert ha P arker, Ocie Sears.
Sunday admissions were Ralph Jones, Racine; Mary Page,
Langsville: Nellie Connolly, Pomeroy; Everett Horner,
Sy racuse.
.
Su nday dischat"ges were Grace Allen. Zelda Weber, Steven
Eblin.

Ex-park manager in serious
condition following accident
For mer Forked Run State Park Manager Doyle N. (Skip)
Sma ll'S is In critical condition at Grant Hospital, Columbus,
following an auto accident on Feb.llln the Hamden, Ohio area:
Smales's wife, Ruth Smales, a vas sen~er In the vehicle he was
driving, was kllled In the head-on colllslon ..
Smales was park manager at Forked Run for over 11 years
before leaving to become park manager at Lake Hope State
Pa rk. Smales is now a district supervisor for the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, Dlvslon of Parks ·and
Recreation, overseeing 16 state parks in Southeastern Ohio.

CAA meeting slated Thurday
Ga llia-Meigs Community Action Agency wtll hold its
regularly scheduled meeting on Thursday, 5: 30 p.m., at the
Guiding Hand School in Cheshire. The public is Invited to attend
and provide community Input

No injuries in accident
There were no citations or Injuries In an accident on t!)e R. and
G. Supply lot Friday afternoon. Pomeroy pollee reported that
William E . Lewis, Syracuse. was parked on the lot when a
tractor trailer driven by James Hall. Pottstown, Pa. pulled
from the street and the right front bumper struck the rear panel
of the Lewis car .

Daughters of America to meet .
Chester Council 32E, Daughters of America, will meet at 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. Practice will be held for presenting the
colors at the spring rally, March 11, at New Lexington.

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 Boofi.Sue)
Walk~lns

Welcome

Neio Patients Are Being Accepted

-Patients - Past and Present
of Dr. Aarom Boonsue

- -· r--·

Ohio Lottery

Duke, Illini
•
•
wmners
agam

Robert Eason or Pomeroy was
elected president at a recent
meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation.
Eason, who served as vice
president In 1988 and has been a
member of the board since 1985,
succeeds David Weber who completed his second term membership in December 1988. Eason Is
serving his second term on the
board.
Elected vice president was
Denver Rice, Middleport, currently in his fifth ye.a r and second
term on tbe board.
Established by law In 1967 the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation is a seven member
board with five appointments
made by tbe County Commission'
ers and two by the Country
Probate Judge.

Daily Number
215
Pick4
2834

Page 4

Vot.39. No.200
Copyrighted 1989

As
Seen
On

Seyler, EPA to meet
on wastewater plant

•

•

.
I

;

us. Gov't.~Aifant

BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)An amazing new weight loss pill called
"fill-magnet" has recendy been devel·
oped and perfected by two promineru
doctors at a world tamous hospital in
Los Angeles that reponedly "guarantees" ~ steady fat loss and calorie
reducuon by simply taking their tested
and proven new pill.
The U.S. goo.oemmenthasjustapprov·
ed the doc:tors claims for a hard·to-get .
patent that confinns "there has never
been anything like their fat.!Jonding pill
process before." !tis a tolally new major
scientific breakthroullt and is revolutionizing the weight ross industry.
\00 Can "Eat NonuaDy" .
Best of all, "you can continue to
c:,at your favorite foods and you don't
have to change your normal eating
habits. You can stan losing fat and
reduce calories from the very firs! day,
until you achie~oe the ideal weight you
desire without exercising".
Flushes Flit Out or Body
The new pill is appropriately called
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks
into thousands of panicles, each acting
like a tiny magnet, ''attracting" and

1

'

\,

NOCIYER ii'UTe

Clllms for New Diet Pill

••
•'

HURRY IN

Auf&lt;lmotlc Hetgl11 Adjustment

2985

qfj

200

"""""""""""

. JIEAVY LOAD -It takes ae¥eral helping bauds
to manipulate Into place just one piece of the new
. digital swlkhlng equipment for Pomeroy's G:l'E

offtc:e, II Wall expe.cted to take two·daysto unload
alilbeequlpmenlneededforthePomeroyCentral
Office. (Times-Sentinel photo)

I

Mfg. Sugg.

Retail '134.94

•U--

IIIIU&amp;elllla ••"II
•O.U.rua _ _ _

.""""'""""..... -~

•

~~tft=~~~=
nd calories are naturally "flushed"

ceiSNl til-lllfllllelpillsdim:tJYfromthc
docton' w;lusiw: manufactUrer only
(includes optional calorie-reduction
MD beau reaulll). 5eDd $20

$3s':!.:,;f"Y
.
.
?-.~_3t-\
to: Fat-MIIilel.
Wlllh~.
Dept. W705, Be•CJ ly Hills, CA 90211.
(Ullco"lfliv•ll-.., lack~­

'" If ••t 100'1

•fiiii/W~.) Vin,
MasterCard and Americln Bxpreu
OK. (Send card number,lqlire elite,
and •.
) Por fiiiiCit terVic:e fur
credit~ra ONLY calllll)'liJne
24 hours, toll free 1(8110) 5lUJIIO.

EQUPMf!NT ARRIVES- GTE Central Office
Equipment Installers Buck Callaway and Chuck
Williams, assist In unloading pieces of new digital

U

llll'ftlll

1iitr · :r:t ? I
-

....

?

••••

~~~-.:.'?"'· I I •299• rsaa •

.0:c-.....-

--

Wait until study· complete, .AEP says

S2Q995J~
lb.
IIRIJ II?

J

......

-

{

Mfg

Sug~.

. . . . . . . . . RW.II .

'319'1

IT BE1TER

APPALACHIAN TIRE
426 VIAND .STRIET

PT. PLEASANT, W. ·VA.

Clf.M ""

- - ---

r·~------

--·-----

switching equipment at the GTE office In
Pomeroy. Acconllng to Gary Bates, also pictured,
It will lake two days just to unload the equipment
pieces. (Times-sentinel photos)

.

.. a Ita

I HOOVER KEEPS MAKING

today, armed with statistics to
back up previous statements by
him and others, that Pomeroy
cannot afford the multl-mliUon
dollar wastewater treatment Improvements that are being demanded by EPA.
"I'm not going to belabor them
with facts which they already
know anyway. I'm just going to
present the facts as we have
gathered them and see If they
feel they can give us more time, "
the mayor said.
Some of the facts which the
mayor will present are that of
Pomeroy's population of 2,728,
1,405 residents (or 51 and one-half
percent) are on Social Security .
Another 218 residents (7.9
percent) receive Supplemental
Social Security Insurance. Of the
vlllage's 1,101 water customers,
. 367 of those households (33.8
percent), rely upon public assistance payments.
The figures were prepared for
the vlllage by the Meigs County
Department of Human Services
and Seyler hopes the figures will
prove that customers cannot
afford to pay greatly Increased
rates for water and sewage ·
service.
State officials have strongly
suggested that the village raise
service rates to pay the costs of
the needed Improvements.
AlthOugh the mayor and other
'Village officials are hoping the

state will extend the compliance
time, none of them wlll be too
surprised If the answer from the
state Is no.
"But there's no way we can
afford to do anything without
bankrupting ourselves, " said
Councilman Franklin Rizer.
Ron Ash, manager of Ohio
wer Company's Pomeroy ofe. Informed Council that rates
electric power at the village's
In pumping plant and five lift
stations are increasing from
$1.526.58 per month to $1,831 per
month, a difference of $395.
Ash had notified Council on
Dec. 13 last year that the rates ,
were likely to go up since they
had not b~en Increased for many
years.
Discussed by Council was the
current practice of granting one
paid day off a month to village
employees who do not take the
health Insurance which Is provided by the vlllage.
Currrently, the vlllage pays
$128 a month for single · employees who are enrolled In the
plan. Employees with family
cover age pay the difference
between a single and a family
plan out of their own pockets.
II is Seyler's opinion that the
"Insurance days" should be
eliminated since the Insurance
benefit Is available to employees
If they want it, and if they do not

Thomas J. Stewart, operator of
the Ohio Valley Livestock Company, Galllpolis, has agreed to a
suspension from business and
cease anddeslstorderby the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, according to Calvin W. Watkins,
deputy administrator of USDA 's
Packers and Stocky~rds
Administration.
The USDA official said Stewart
agreed to the penalties to set tie
federal administrative charges
ol operating with shortages in the
auction market's custodial ac-

count for shippers' proceeds,
operating while current liabilities exceeded current assets, and
with falling to malntalnadequate
records.
Watkins, said the suspension
went Into effect Feb. 1 for a
period or 28 days and thereafter
until such a time as Stewart
demonstrates that the deficiency
in the custodial account has been
eliminated and the firm's current liabilities do not exceed its
current assets . He said a supple-

mental order termln!J.tlng the
suspension would then be Issued.
The cease and desist order,
similar to a permanent' Injunction, is to ensure future compliance w(th the Packers and
Stockyards (P&amp;S) Act.
The P&amp;S Is an antitrust, fair
trade practice, and payment
protection law. It is designed tO
maintain illlegrlty in the marketlng of livestock, poultry and
meat, and economic Jaw and
order in the market place .
·

-.( See§.lj:YLER.

page~)

A rea
' stock yard suspends business

Heavy rain along Gulf Coast,
tomado warnings are issued

--

18818

By NANCY VOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler was to meet today with
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency and Ohio Attorney General representatives In a last
ditch effort to persuade the state
agencies to give the village more
time to bring its wastewater
treatment system l.nto state and
federal compliance.
VIllage Administrator John
Anderson and Councilmen Larry
Wehrung and Bruce Reed were
also to attend the meeting at the
EPA district office in Logan.
The meeting In Logan was
discussed Monday night in Council's regular session at village
haiL
Seyler was notified In December of plans by the Attorney
General's office to bring suit
against Pomeroy unless immediate efforts were made to
_Improve the wastewater treatment system.
The suit was to be Initiated
around the first of February
according to tbe December letter
to the mayor from Ass istant
Attorney General Paula T.
Cotter.
'
However. the mayor 's arrangements for the meeting in
Logan have apparently prevented the filing of the lawsuit , at
leastfor the present time.
Seyler was · to go to bogan

'

Eal\t ....., . . cup
Edge cl• CI•IQ on bol'llldle

•

right out of your body because they
cannot be absorbed.
Within 2 days you s)lould notice a
chan@einthecolorofyoilrstool,caused
by the fat particles being eliminated.
"Aut0madc811y" l..o8e Flit
According to oneoftheinventors, Dr.
William Snell, heart specialist and
associate professor of medicine at
UCLA medical school. "the new fat.
bonding process is a ~·lazy way" to lose
weight because the pills alone
"automatically" reduce calories by
eliminating dietary fat. It is 100% safe
and not a arug."
The fat-magnet pills are already
sweeping the country with t::ing
reports of weight loss from
rly
overweisht PC&gt;Dde in all walks of Iii:
who are noW slimmer, trimmer and
more a"A::.n.;s:jq,
Now
to tile l'llbllc
If you are trying to lose 20. SO, 100
pounds or more, you can order your
illlpply of theae "no-risk" hiahly StK:·

2 Soctlono. 12 Pogos 2&amp; Cants
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesdy. February 21, 1989

TV

Doctors Invent l
'Lazy Way' to
Lose Weight I

Periods of rain. Low ""''• 311.
Cloudy, with scattered
Hurries. Wednesday , p.,,ttl.
cloudy , chance of snow.
In the mid 30s.
•

•

\

Raymond W. Hplslnger, 82, of
Rou le 1, Reedsville. died Sunday
morning at his home following a
brief lllness.
!;lorn June 22. 1906 at Reedsville, he was a .son of the late
Robert and Lilly Bailey
Holsinger.
He Is survived by a nephew,
Russ Holsinger, of Reedsville,
and several other nieces and
nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by tbree
sisters, Ellie Bailey, Emma
Schaffer and Minta Givens; and
four brothers, Alva, Roy, Frankie and Herald Holsinger.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Whtte Funeral Home,
Coolville, with Rev. Robert Webb
officiating. Burlai wlll ·be in
Pleasant Grove Cemetery at
Reedsville. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Tuesday
from 6 to 9 p.m.

ext. W705.

.. _. _
_

••

Raymond W. Holsinger

r:.lbr

(304) 675-1675

•

MR board names
new president

- - - -· Alea news briefs--.... lie

Appointments &amp;

Monday. February 20. 1989

Pomer:ov-Midclaport, Ohio

-----Area deaths _ _ _ _.;_
)9hnnie R. Kibble

+

'

~-

--"'"-'

---·-

,.

and Great Britain, 12 federal
:. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!)
agencies, four national laborato' - An Amerl~an Electric Power
ries, 11 state research agencies
~ executive has urged .Congress to
5walt until a 10-year acid rain and 18 private research Institu:study Is completed next year tions, Dowd said.
"It is the most comprehensive
:before acting on clean air
scientific study ever under) eglslation.
- "Not to wait would Involve taken," Dowd said. "By the time
·precipitous action on the part of of Its completion ... the American
:congress that could result in ' taxpayers will have spent $500
·imposing horrendous and, quite, million on this study."
;frankly, unnecessary costs on the
The NAPAP's final report Is
·:economy," Joseph Dowd, sen lor due in mid 1990.
'AEP vice president and general
"This will betheculmlna\lonof
:Counsel, told Marshall Un lversl- 10 years of comprehensive and
;ty's National Issues Conference detailed scientific endeavor,"
-on Acid Deposition Control Legls- the AEP executive said. ''This is
) atlon Monday .
exactly the kind of Information
• "It IS just common sense for
that Congress needs In order to
:the Congres~ to walt another
legislate rationally on this
~year and one-half until the
issue."
results of the NAPAP (National
Dowd noted that President
Acid Precipitation Assessment
Bush In his recent address to
Program) study are In," Dowd
Congress said the "time for study
said. "To do otherwise would
has passed," and new Environ:verge on the Irresponsible .... "
mental Protection Agency Ad• The study, ordered by Con- · ministrator William Reilly testipess In 1980, Involves nearly
fied In his confirmation hearing
J,OOO scientists from 40 unlversl·
that he would make drafting a
ties in tbe United States, Canada
rie.w clean air bill a top priority .

,,

Dowd said an acid rain proposal that was considered by
Congress last year would have
required AEP alone to spend
nearly $1.3 blllion by 1994 retrofitting Its older power plants with
scrubbers, forcing electric rate
increases of up to 21 percent for
some residential customers and
up to 48 percent for some
Industrial customers in a 7-state
region served by AEP
subsidiaries;
Dowd said the most promising
answer to the problem of air
pollution caused by the burning
of high sulfur coal Is technology
being jointly pursued by the
Department of Energy and private energy .
As part of the DOE clean coal
program, AEP Is to complete the
nation's first operating pressurized fluidized bed combustion
plant BrUllant, Ohio, next year.
The new plant Is expected to
capture 90 percent of the sulfur In
roal and reduce nitrogen oxides
by 50 percent as It bums.
(See WAIT, page 5)

rain and hall to the area.
By United Press International
used a helicopter to tote a
The rain was causing flooding massive pump tQ, the streets of
Moisture surging up from the
In an area already waterlogged Lebanon Ju,nctlon, 30 miles south
Gulf of Mexico and a · storm
system churning over Ken lucky from torrential rains last week. of Loulsvllle, and work crews
brought severe thunderstorms to Water in' the Florence, Ala., was reopened a 100-mUe stretch of the
high enough to seep Into homes Western Kentucky Parkway that
the Gulf Coast states Tuesday,
and forecasters warned resi- and flood roads after 2.71nches of was closed because of high water
dents of the region to watch for rain fell in the area.
since last Wednesday. More than
In · central Tennessee, where 100 other roads still were shut
tornadoes.
The National Weather Service about 2.5 Inches of rain was down.
·
said tornadoes were spotted near recorded in some spots, a highSchools In Lebanon Junction
Louisville, Ky., In east Missis- way !n Wayne County reported to and the nearby cities of Boston
sippi and In northwest Alabama. be under a loot of water.
and West Point, Ky., remained
Many small rivers were rising closed Monday .
Forecasters issued tornado
watches early Tuesday for the once again from Kentucky to
Elsewhere, rain was widesFlorida panhandle, parts of Ala- Louisiana . The Ohio River was pread along sections of the ·East
. out of Its banks from Louisville to Coast from the Carolinas to
bama and Mississippi.
_ Connecticut. Light rain covered
In Florida's panhandle, a C-141 Cairo, Ill.
F1ash flood watches are In most of Pennsylvania and -southmilitary cargo . )et with eight
people aboard crashed and effect for parts of Mississippi,
ern New York state.
burned In a heavily wooded and Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky,
A band of snow stretched
swampy area of Eglin Air Force West Virginia, Virginia and Ohio.
across southern Michigan across
Parts or Kentucky received parts of Illinois and Iowa to
Base Monday night while attempting to land, Air Force more tban 10 Inches of rain last Missouri. Snow was a lso widely
officials said. There were no week, triggering the worst floodscattered across the northern
Ing since December 1978. At least and central Plains.
immediate reports of survivors.
The 168-foot C-141 Star lifter, en four deaths In Kentucky and one
Most of the western third of the
route to Hurlburt Field from In neighboring Tennessee were
nation, meanwhile, escaped the
Colorado Springs, Colo., crashed blamed on the stormy weather.
rain and snow.
National Guard troops Monday
about 8 p.m. CST. Forecasters
reported heavy rain and golf
ball-sized hall in the area at the
time of the crash.
A severe thunderstorm struck
Jackson, Miss., Monday night,
packing wind gusts of up to 80
mph and downing many trees
Schools in the Meigs Local School District were closed today
and power lines, officials said.
(Tuesday) due to some nash flooding along county and township
· Power to several thousand
roads following heavy rains overnight.
homes was knocked out.
Today was tbe fifth calamity day allowed without makeup by
Authorities said a tornado
the
state for all schools In the district. Several of the schools
ripped · into Alexandria, La.,
have
exceeded that number due to electrical and other
Monday, damaging several
mechanical
failures In the schools.
homes and trees and cutting of!
Both
Eastern
and Southern Districts reported all schools in
power.
sessions
although
there were a few sections were buses were
The surly thunderstorms
unable
to
travel
due
to the high water.
moved across Birmingham,
Ala., early 'I'uesday, bringing

Meigs Local Schools close
due to area flash flooding

~·

I

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="123">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2695">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="36709">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36708">
              <text>February 20, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="649">
      <name>campbell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1024">
      <name>holsinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3013">
      <name>kibble</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
