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Part 9

The Raccoon Creek Story.••
As mentioned before, Raccoon
Creek Is made up of many deep
pools, and shallow riffles. therif·
!les are made up of stoney bot·
toms with a depth of perhaps two
to six feet. The length can be
from ten feet to a few hundred
feet. The way to tell the differ·
ence, when viewed from the
shore Is by the rate of flow of the
water.
In shallow water the flow of
water Is much faster, than were
the water In deep.
The deep pools are mostly the
same length as the shallows but
much deeper. They range in
depth from perhaps ten totwenty
feet or more.
Some 50 years ago, we boys
found ad~ pool upstream from
the village of Cora. Even though
we dove out of the boat and swam
straight down we were not able to
find the bottom. So, we got a cot·
ton string and tied a weight on
one end, then lowered It Into the
deepest part and measured the
string. That way we found the
depth to be 32 feet. Today the
same place measures only 10
feet. This Is characteristic of the
entire length of the stream.
Besides being more shallow
than It was In former years, the
creek's shore line, where there
'are high walls, Is being shoved
closer together. This Is making
the creek's shores closer to·
gether, which In turn Is lessening

the creek's capacity to move wa·
ter down the stream.
As we have written before, thIs
high wall Is the creek's edge of
the primary plate. As this plate
moves its load over the creek
edge, It also moves the trees
along with it. The roots of these
trees hold this mass of earth to·
gether. However, some of It falls
loose and Is washed down
stream. Often there Is a primary
plate on the opposite shore of the
creek. When this condition oc·
curs the creek channel Is nar·
rowed, thus lessening the creek's
capacity to move water.
To understand these features
and many more, which your Rae·
coon Committee is trying to
·solve, folks must walk the shore
line of Raccoon and all streams
In the hilly portion of Ohio to un·
derstand the numerous obstacles
we are facing.
'
To help you understand our
problems, we can use the 1913
flood as a base. The 1927 flood
was one foot higher than 1913.
1936 was two feet higher than
1927. The 1949 flood was four feet
higher than 1936. Then we
skipped several years and then
1968 flood was four feet higher
than 1949.
In order to reverse this trend of
higher flood waters and sed!·
mentation, we need to make ev·
ery effort to sta bllize the creek
banks and to control the erosion
coming Into the creek.

spring.., -~-..:C;;:o:::.nt:.:ln:.::u:.::ed:..::.fr:.::om::::...:D....:·l:...__ _ _ __
lng service conservative figures,
beef cattle contribute more than
2.5 million to the local economy In
cash receipts.
Economists say these dollars
will turn 6 or 7 times before they
find their final resting place.
Production cost for this years'
crops are expected to rise.
Nat!Pnally, U.S.DA has pro·
jected that this years expend!·
tures for inputs will be up 4·6
percent from 1988. This year's
total crop acreage Is expected to
Increase by about6 per centfrom
last year.
Some economist see this
spring's fertilizer prices exceed·
lng year earlier prices by 6 to 9
per cent. Pesticide prices may be
up by 3-5 per cent. Some of that
blame Is being put on tlie
Increased cost of liability
Insurance.
Overall, seed cost may cost
11H5 per cent more this season.
Seed should meet needs, but
particular vaileties may be in
short supply and command a
much higher ~rice. Energy cost

Is expected to Increase by 7 per
cent.
That Is without any new fuel
tax. Machinery cost could In·
crease five per cent on the
average, wlt.h small equipment
taking the larger upswing.
Interest rates are being
nudged up by the Federal govern·
ment to gently brake the econ·
omy, I am not sure how all of this
shakes out to a 4·6 percent
Increase, but it may give farmers
an Idea of what to expect when
pricing their 1989 crop Inputs.
Spring seeding time Is here.
The traditional frost seedings
have served many Gallla County
farmers well over time. The
timing is critical-too early you
can get freeze damage- too late
you can have annual weed
competition or limited soli
moisture.
Now may be the time to go for
it. Two no·tlll drills are available
on a rental basis through the
local soU and water conservation
dis trlct. Both drllls have been
completely repaired .this winter
and are ready to roll. Take time
to call the Gallla ~WCD (446·
8687) for detalls.
A special thanks to all who
helped with the recent pesticide
training and testing sessions.
This is a very difficult aspect of
my job, and I really appreciate
everyones cooperation. I will be
working with O.D.A. In trying to
get the test results as soon as
possible.

7\ T
•
'
11atlon
s...
Continued from D·1
which Is continuing to cle~r
discontinued merchandise lines
Including home electronics and
hard sporting goods, said sales
rose 5.3 percent to $814 miiUon
from $773 million. Same store
sales rose 2. 5 percent.
ANGElA

March 5, 1989

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) With snow on the ground, it
seems hardly the time to think
about landscaping, but a lands·
cape horticu lturis says spring Is
the ideal Ume to plant' trees and
shrubs.
Planting properly and water·
!ng regularly gives tltem a good
start, says Elton Smith of Ohio
State University.
Most trees and shrubs are sold
in one of three ways: bare· root,
in containers or with the roots In
a burlapped soli ball.
At planting time, dig a hole two
feet wider than the soil ball or
container, Smith says. For bare·
root plants, dig the hole 'wide
enough so you can spread the
roots"Out to full length.
Larger holes mean more le»
sened soil and that helps the roots
grow. Fill the extra space In the
hole with good planting soU.
One-third of It should he organic
matter sucp as peat moss or
composted cow manure and the
rest should be high-quality
topsoil.
Watering newly planted trees
and shrubs, especially during
their first two years in .the soU, Is
the best way to ensure their
survival, Smltlt says. New plant·
lngs are eas Uy damaged when
soUls dry.
Soak the soU enough to get to
the base of the roots, Smith says.

Water twice a week during hot
weather If your area receives
less than 1 Inch of rainfall
weekly. Measure the water app·
lied by placing an empty,
straight-sided container in the
area being watered. A light
watering is of little benefit
because the water may not reach
the roots.
Once the soil has warmed in
late spring and early summer,
put 2 to 3 inches of mulch over It,
which will conserve moisture,
reduce weed growth •and keep
soil temperature more unifOrJll.
Peat moss or bark from
hardwoods , pine or. cypress
makes good mulch. Shape the
mulch into a depression around
the tree or shrub so water will
flow toward the trunk and roots.
Smith says pre-planting care is
also Important. He offers these
tips:
-Bare-root. These may be sold
with roots tightly packed in a
material that retains water. If
bare-root plants can't be planted
Immediately after purchase, put
them in a shallow trench, cover
tlte roots with loose soil and then
water thoroughly.
Prune the tops of bare-root
trees and shrubs that suffer root
damage. This balances the
amount of branches with the
volume of roots left undamaged.
You can remove up to one-third ,

Com, soybean, wheat crop futures up
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Consider contract lng part of
· 1989's cor·n, soybean and wheat
crops now.
Dean Baldwin, agricu It ural
economist at Ohio State Univer·
slty, says futures wheat prices
are above $4. Corn and soybean
futures are well above the
respective 'loan rates but are
trending downward.
That trend may continue If

normal weather prevails and soil
moisture is replenished.
Farmers could set price floors
above production costs by using
hedges, puts, forward contracts
or forward contracts with calls.
Put and forward contracts with
calls let farmers take advantage
of any price increases from
abnormal weather during the
spring or summer. They also
avoid margin summons.

Make ••• _ _ Continued from D·l

..==.::....:.:=.:...::..-=---~-

testing doesn't cost- It pays. I
will be glad to work a least cost
fertility program for you. Herb!·
cide selection Is very Important.
Know what weeds from 1988 you
did noi have good control on.
Select herbicides that are effec·
tlve and the most economical for
you. Again, we have a herbicide
program we can tailor to your
needs.
Production Costs
Almost all production costs
will he up In 1989. Prices have
already shown some Increase
~nd may he up about 10%.
,Nitrogen or urea will probably be
$!ill per ton higher than last year.
Pesticide use will increase and
supplies may be tight. Compan·
les manufacturing chemicals
have seen an Increase In their
costs, partly due to the Increased
cost of liability Insurance. You
probably will not see markdowns
or rebates. Seed costs will
Increase and you may not get the
varieties you want. Look for 15%
Increase In cost of seed.
Fuel costs will he up 10·15¢ per
gallon and Interest on loans will
he up. On the other side - corn
prices should be in the $2.25 per
bushel range. Favorable cattle
prices of S741n 1989 are expected.
It seems likely that bovine
growth hormone will become
comrnerclaily available in 1990.
. This will cause production to
Increase faster than it would

otherwise. There will probably
he lower milk supports and lower
milk prices In 1990.
Field Day Set
The Murray Grey field day will
be Saturday, AprU 1 at Jackson's
Mill; West VIrginia.

of the branches by pruning them
back to a bud or side branch.
Before planting, prune broken
and damaged roots. If the roots
appear dry, soak them in water
for 30 minutes before planting.
-ContaIner-grown. Be(ore
planting, leave them In the
container and place them in a
sheltered location. Water fre·
quently and thoroughly . Remove
containers before planting.
Roots of contalner·grown plants
tend to dry very. quickly after
planting and may require more
frequent watering than balled
and burlapped plants.
Sometimes roots of container·
grown plants grow around the
Inslde of the container. Loosen

the roots !rom tnts circu lar
growth so they will grow down. If .
the circular growth continues,
the roots may eventually wrap
tightly around the plant and kiU
it.
-Balled and burlapped. To
prevent soil balls from breaking
or cracking, carry ·them with
both hands directly un(lerneath.
Don't carry these plants by their
stems or branches.
If the plants can 't be planted
soon after purchase, water them
thoroughly and cover the soil
balls with mulch. Att planting
time, cut slits in the burlap to
allow the roots to grow through.
Remove any wire mesh or plastic
burlap, bags , twine or netting.

Vol.39. No.209
Co

NOW.

Maybelline
AND

BEFORE APRU. 1, 1989

include the Homeowners Extended Lahor
part.~ ~ha(Jic5 un all 1'\:f\llir.-i.

'Only

Ill,. . 4.........

watch· was Issued for parts of
nortltern Ohio.
Sunday's rain turned to snow
as temperatures fell, and by
midnight, a thin layer of 'snow
covered slick roads. Numerous
school districts In central Ohio
called off classes Monday, in·
eluding Columbus Public
Schools.
The winter storm warning
extended from the Dayton area
to Zanesville.
"Roads are pretty bad," said

little later."
The area targeted for the
heaviest Ice and snow appeared
to be 40 miles either side of
Interstate 70 where four inches of
snow was expected by daybreak.
As much as one Inch of Ice was
expected In tlte southwest part of
the state.

Ice on roads,

overpasses,

bridges and sidewalks made
walking and driving difficult In
the Greater Cincinnati area. By
early morning, Ice ranged from

one-half to one Inch In parts of
Indiana, Ohio, and J{entucky In
the tri-state area.
The Greater Cincinnati Inter·
national Airport report reported
six-tenths of one Inch at
midnight.
Sheriffs departments In Butler
and Hamilton counties In southw·
est Ohio reported about one Inch
of Ice on county roads.
The snow Is ex pcted to taper off
to flurries and diminish Monday
night. Lows will range between

15 and 25. It wlll be partly cloudy
Tuesday with highs In the upper
20s In the north to near 40 In tpe
south.

Schools closed
Schools In all three Meigs
County Districts were closed
Monday due to the prediction for
Ice and snow. Both Meigs and
Eastern Districts also reported
that flooding of roads traveled by
buses contributed to the decision
for the closings.

observed by Meigs schools

"Great Easter Basket Stuffers"

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669
271 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

RJGttr T() READ PROCLAMATION - Meigs
Local School Dlstrld reading teachers gathered
Friday at the Central Building In Middleport to
·sign a proclamation on the 12th aanual Ohio Right
tt._Relld , }Y~elt., Vlckle Fink, ~tland . vllJ,age
council lilemlfer, seated center, ·1olned ,lames
Carpenter, superintendent, and Wendy Halar,
Chapter 1 director, seated, for the sign log. Other
reading teachers who signed the proclamation,

1983 BUICK LESABRE
LIMITED

RACINE - During its last
regularly scheduled meeting,
Racine VIllage Council took
action to make Improvements to
Its boat launching ramp and
access road at the "Ole Ferry
Landing Park", located at the
end of Main Street.
Meigs County Game Warden
Keith Wood was present at the
meeting and informed council
that several local organizations
had Indicated they would be In
support of promoting Improved
Improvements at the levy In
order to support and promote
Ohio River fishing.
Many local fishermen use the
Raclne boat facility, as well as
many visitors from other counties and states.
Wood noted that during the
unusually warm weather this
past month as many as 33
vehicles with boat trailers were
parked at the facility while using
this ramp for boat launching. He
also noted that the Racine
facUlty was the closest and most
convenlen t access area !or those
wishing to !Ish In the Ohio River
pool below the Racine Locks and

your choice of "2" local "one
trades. Both with power seats.
lwind•ow·s. etc. low miles.
' STAlliNG. AT

S4 99 5

1982 FORD 4 W.D.
F1 SO PICKUP
NOW ONLY ...

S5 ,500
$5995

Sheriff probes accident
An accident which occurred about 3: 30 a.m. Sunday on State
Route 143 was Investigated by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department. Roger Hayes, Middleport, was cited to Meigs
County Court for driving under the Influence and falling to
maintain control of his vehicle which was northbound on Route
143 when it went off the road on the. right and overturned.
Hayes was treated and ·released and Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Deputies took a report of a deer-car accident on Sunday
· morning. Lester Wise, Smith Run Road, Rutland, was traveling
north on State Route 143 and struck a deer that ran Into the path
of his vehicle. The back legs of the deer were broken In the
accident and the animal was destroyed after a 45 minute search.
There ~as no damage to Wise's vehicle.

Shot S11lth'a For ABetter Deal

RY PURCHASE: 7 TO CHOOSE FIOM
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SAVINGS UP TO

Dam.
This ·area Is an excellent
fishing spot on the Ohlp, and has
become more popular since the
"fishing wall" and adjoining
recreational facUlties were In·
stalled at the hydroelectric plant
at the locks.
This past weekend 25, boats
were launched on Saturday.
When asked, several fisher·
men using the levy said that even
though they would like to see the
Racine facility developed, they
already preferred It over other
river access areas.
Wood, showing Interest in the
recreational fishing aspect of a
possible project, also Indicated
that In the future, recreational
boating on the Ohio Rlver Is going
to become Increasingly popular.
Wood Inquired If council would
he Interested In an Improvement
project.
Council was overwhelming In
support or such a project and
thanked Wood for his concern
and Interest.
Council members. indicated
that In the fall of 1987, $1500 was
appropriated to pave the levy

,.-- Weal news briefs-----.

We sold it new .. Features factory T-top,
auto .. air conditioning, AM-FM-cassette,
tilt. and only 14,000 low miles. Sporty
red finiah.

•

were, iert to right, front standing, Jonl Jefters,
Pomeroy; Cindy Allen, Rutland and Harrison·
ville, Elizabeth Story, Middleport; Jo Dunn,
Bradbury, and Kim Oliphant, Rutland; and back
row, Jeanne Bowen, junior and senior high
IIChool; Janet ' Hoffman, Pomeroy; Barb Ma:'
thews, Salisbury; Vlckl Haley, Harrisonville;
Cheryl IJghtfrltz, Salem Center, and Marsha
Radabaugh, Middleport.

Racll,e Council will improve boat
launching ramp and access road

sssoooo

B &amp; E probed by police

Ask us about it!

A breaking and entering at the home of George and Mary
Morris, 124 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, Is under Investigation by
Pomeroy Pollee. ·
According to Chief of Pollee Gerald Rought, tbe Incident
occurred sometime between Feb. 22 and March 3 when It was
Continued on page 10

WAINER

HEAnNG AND COOLING

Clllml, OHIO
'

.

· He said what few accidents
occurred Sunday were mostly
fender benders, but with four to
six lnchea of snow expected by
morning rush hour, he doubted If
he'd get off work at 8 a.m.
"! expect when people start
getting ready for work this
morning we'll have our share of
accidents," he said. "! get off at
eight o'clock, hopefully. Maybe a

OFF

H~--~

'

Patrol Sgt. Tom Perry of the
Day ton Highway Patrol post..

50°/o

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, March 6, 1989

1989

R~ght . to Read Week being

1987 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

and PdllsPflllllam(H.E.LJ~)', ano-worry, 5
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'

By United l'l'ess International
The March Lion arrived late In
Ohio, but brought with' It winter
storm warnings and watches,
and the threat of up to four Inches
of snow throughout central Ohio.
After a weekend of temperatures In the 50s, a storm system In
the Tennessee Valley began
moving north with a mixture of
precipitation.
.
A winter storm warning covers
southwest Ohio and the central
third of.the state. A winter storm

l985 CHEV. S10 EXT. CAB

NO LABOR OR PARTS

Chance of snow 70 percent
tonight. Low In mid 20s.
Tuesday, cloudy, high In mid·

Parts of Ohio under winter stonn wa•nings

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Granddaughter of
Patriot residents
receives honor

Daily Number
450

Page 4 .

Pre-Easter
Savings!

. SELECTED

Ohio Lottery

SUS athletes
are honored
Saturday

Spring always a good time to plant trees

J~CKSON

PATRIOT - Angela Lynn
Jackson, a junior at John Glenn
High School, Westland, Mich.,
(.near Del roit) was recently
selected one of the Outstanding
High School Students of America
for 1988.
Daughter of Roland (Bud) and
Linda Jackson of Westland,
Mich., she is the pranddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jackson and
Mr . and Mrs. Carl Stewart of
Patriot.
Miss Jackson is one of five
percent of high school students
nationwide singled out for OHSA
honors.
She had a 3.9 grade-point
average through her sophomore ·
year and Is maintaining a perfect
4.0 average through the first
semester this year.
·
In addition to her top grades,
Miss Jackson has served for two
years as a student co·uncll
representative. She Is also the
manager of the John Glenn cross
country and junior varsity base·
ball teams and a member of the
school's SADD (Stud~nts Against
Driving Drunk) organization.
Outside of school, Miss Jackson
has been on the YMCA swim
team and Is a member of the
Young Leaders Club at theY.
She 'plays the flute and works
part-time at a local video store.
Nomination to OHSA means
Miss Jackson Is eligible for a
number of college scholarships.

I

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

Page D-8 Sunday limes-Sentinel

road wl th hot mix, but last year
was spent preparing the road
with a foundation of limestone to
support the asphalt.
Councilman Scott Wolfe, who
has pushed Improvements at the
levy, was chosen to oversee a
fundralslng program to solicit
donations for the project. Any
Individuals, businesses, and local civic organizations are In·
vited to donate to help build and
maintain a quality facility.
Already the Meigs County Fish
and Game Association, the Ken
Amsbary Chapter of Izaak Wal·
ton, The Racine Gun Club, and
the Racine American Legion
Post have pledged donations.
Council noted that Increased
use of the facility should enhance
local businesses as many boaters
and fisherman buy supplies In
the village; not only fishing
supplies, but gasoline and
snacks.
Lee Layne, , a local resident,
Indicated that his son was start·
lng a bait shop In town behind his
residence on Elm Street. Eber' s
Gulf also has fishing and bunting
supplies, whll~ Roy's Bait shop
near the locks carries supplies.
Planned Improvements In·
elude lengthening the boat ramp
with reinforced concrete, an
Improved approach turning area
to be black-topped, and a paved
roadway.
Also a general clean-up and
some landscaping are In store.
Game Warden Wood was
pleased to hear of council's
Interest and Indicated he would
help the vUiage In the quest for
grants the project may qualify
!or.
Council ,noted that although use
of the ramp Is free, that they
hoped the "users" would contribute · to the project. Several
sportsmen bave Indicated they
would gladly help with the
project. Much volunteer labor
wUl also be need for this and
many other village projects
corning this spring and summer.
Donations may be sent to
Wolfe, any council member, or
Clerk-Treasurer Jane Beegle.
Checks are to he made payable to
Racine Vlllage with some nota·
tlon to designate It for the levy
fund.

stories about clowns as well as
be read to by the older students.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
reading ones fro111 the library, a A computer program on dina· ·
Sentinel Staff Writer
big top day where the upper saurs will encourage students to
The 12th annual Ohio Right to
grades will read to the lower write a "book-sauras." There
Read Week, March 6·10, kicked
grades, a day when students will will be class switching, number
off today in the Meigs Local
be encouraged to bring their and alphabet games for the first
School District wl.th a variety of
stuffed animals to school, and a and second graders, and a
special activities in each of the
read,a·cap day with story prob·
newspaper scavenger hunt and
seven elementary schools, the
!ems to be judged, along with badge work by the third and
junior high school and high
decorated doors. Sustained read·
fourth graders. The week wll)
school. .
lng
and
activities
where
the
cone! ude wl th a movie on
In announcing activities to
teachers
will
read
to
the
stu·
dinosaurs.
promote reading which will be
dents, as well as a student
Pomeroy Elementary started
carried out in tlte schools, Wendy
contract
for
parents
to
read
to
thler campaign early with
Halar, the district's Chapter I
their children will also be a part
"Think 1,000 Pennies for Books."
Reading &lt;)!rector, encouraged
of the week's program.
Students have collected 3,662
parents to get Involved, to read to
At Middleport a "Count on a
pennies to purchase books for the
their children, to listen to their
Book·a-Sauras" theme will be library. This week will feature a
children read, to discuss current
carried out with a dome tent to be bookmark contest, a decorate the
events, to work toward helping
set up In which the children will door contest, and a reading nest
their children feel the lmpor·
read. Kindergarten students will
lance of reading.
Continued on page 10
Friday Mrs. Halar met with ·
James Carpenter, superintend·
ent of the Meigs Local School
District, the district's reading
teachers, and a Rutland village
official to sign a proclamation
designating March 6·10 as Right
to Read Week.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -An
According to Mrs. Halar,
Ohio
House subcommittee has D-Wheelersburg, and Rep. Wil·
school districts which have Iota)
I lam Hlnig, D-New Philadelphia,
participation in the program will recommended that a variety of chairman of the House Finance
programs In primary and secon·
automatically be eligible to re·
dary
education, trimmed by Gov. Committee, is to be released
celve the Medal of Honor Plaque.
Tuesday.
Individual schools will receive Richard Celeste In his 1990·91
Rep. Daniel Troy, D ·
the Reading Hall of Fa'me Award budget, ·be restored to at least Willowick, chairman of the edu·
for participation. In conjunction their current funding levels.
At the same time, the subcom· cation section of the Finance
with Right to Read Week. Meigs
Committee, said his group had to
Local is also·havlng a math week mlttee shaved $23 million to $30 take from the basic school aid
to promote the Importance of mlllion a year off the governor's line to collect up to $25 million for
recommended level of basic
math in everyday Jiving.
state
aid to local school districts, existing education progra~
"Pig Out on Books" Is the
which totals about $1.5 billion a which had been "zeroed out" of
theme at the Bradbury Elernen·
Celeste's budget.
year . .
tary School where "Wheel of
Celeste left tlte items unfunded
The subcommittee left alone
Fortune" and "Win, Lose or
In
anticipation of an education
Draw" games , using titles of the governor's outlay for higher Initiative on the statewide ballot
education, but strongly recom·
books in the library will he used.
later this year, lnclucllng a 1
There will also be a book sale by mended that If additional money percent Income tax for educa·
the students, as well as sustained can be found, that It go first lion. That proposal has been all
sHent reading periods, one group toward instructional subsidies at but written off by the General
or students reading to another, colleges and universities .
University presidents and Assembly.
and leisure reading time.
''We couldn't move any slgnifi·
other educators said the subs!·
cant
amount of money from other
The Harrisonville Elementary
dies In the governor's plan are
agencies,"
said Troy. "We had to
School will use the theme, "Let's
about $200 million short of
draw
down
the basic aid line."
Clown Around with Books" for
covering lnfiationary Increases,
Troy said that instead of a 7.1
various activities. There will be
and that tuition hikes will he
percent
inc,rease In basic aid In
an "elephant day" with a movie,
necessary.
flscal1990
and 5.5 percentln 1991,
stories, and guessing games, a
A substitute budget, as·
schools
will
get between 5.1
day for dressing as clowns when
sembled during the weekend by
the emphasis will he on writing House Speaker Vernal Rlfte Jr., percent and 3.5 percent.

.School aid rearranged
in Celeste's budget

SECTIONAL CHAMPS These senior
memben of the Melp sedional champion
Southern Tornadoettell wei'!! honored SaturdiQ'
evealng at the Souther• winter aportll banquet at
the Charles
H~Q"man G)'DIIIIIIIum In Racine.
Seated are (L-R) Tracy Beettle, Dawa .Johnaon

w.

and Becky Evans. S&amp;andlng behind them are
Crylltal Hill, Becky Winebrenner and De bble
Grea&amp;houe. Each of these seniors aleo earned
special recognition. (See Page 4 for additional
details)

�Monday, March 6, 1989

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
· Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~j;b

~s:m~
~v

...-......_.,...,,...._=·-=-

ROBERT L. WINGET!'

PAT WWTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Publisher

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish- ·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wllt be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, March 6, 1989

that Ronald Reagan gave the
contras, opting for a more
peaceful push for democracy In
Nicaragua.
Yet Bush's choices lor key
diplomatic posts In Latin AmerIca show that the executive
branch hasn't been cured of

"contra fever ."
Bernard Aronson Is Bush's
choice for assistant secretary of
state for Inter-American affairs.
In that crucial post, Aronson's
precedessor, Elliot Abrams, was
blamed for creating bad blood
over Central American policy

·LetterS·to the editor
Says S VA C board makes decisions
Dear Editor:
In addressing a news article
appearing on page 5 of the Dally
Sentinel's sports page on Wed·
nesday, March 1st, I am writing
the following letter as It has given
me several Ideas of Irony.
As coach of the Eastern High
School base ball team I propose
an ultlmatlum lor all schools In
the SVAC other than Eastern to
give rnY team 20 runs prior to
each contest or my team wlll
withdraw !rom the league.
All schools In the league should
notify rne before the season
begins on March 20, 1989.
Does this sound absurd? It
certainly does, and was only
written as a satire to scrutinize
the unfair demands placed on
Oak Hill as established by the
superintendent of Gall1a County
schools and the Gallla County
Local School Board.
I am president of the Southern
Local School Board In Meigs
County and at our board meet·
tngs we have more Important
things to discuss that greatly
el!ect our students and their
educational needs. Besides the
SVAC has a Board of . Control
which Includes all the high school
principals, Including those In
Gallla County.
My baseball team at Eastern
won the SVAC In 1986 and 1987
with respective 20-6 and 21-4
records, Including' victories over
Oak Hill. We can compete with
Oak Hill.
OakH111' s strong In football, no
one knows anymore so than some
of Southern's athletes, who on a
couple occasions have made a
respectable game of the contest.
Ills a detriment to Oak Hlll to be
In the SVAC In football, because
of the points system.
In all other sports the SVAC Is
competitive with Oak Hill.
Southern Is dominant In basketball. Is Southern next to go?
Rumor has It that West Vlrgl·
nla may secede from the union If
Moamar Ghadafl doesn't step
down as the leader of Libya. You

see, certain delegations shouid
not overstep their boundaries.
In regard to discipline at ball
games, the InstructiOns to "pull
players from the court" Is In
direct violation to rules set fortb
by the Ohio High Scbool Athletic
Association.
Each school Is required to have
pollee protection (usually 2 depu·
ties) hired by. the home school,
and also hires Its own officials.
An official may place a technical·
on any fan enticing or antagonlz·
lng a player, and has full
authority to remove a fan from
the gymnasium.
At this point school admlnlstra·
tors and pollee take over, and the
home team is responsible. If this
Is a problem, then each school,
Gallla Co. schools Included,
should hire new pollee and/or
officials. (Only If THEY aren't
doing their job! ) Obviously they
are doing their job or action
would have already been taken.
Take care of the real problem,
don•t run!

An official could forfeit the
game II a team is pulled of the
court or If a rowdy fan refuses to
leave.
Eastern and Gallla County
seemingly have the same ab111ty
to over-extend administrative
boundaries.
Yes, It Is against the law to hit
someone, but freedom of speech
Is guaranteed In the constitution.
Sincerely,
Scott D. Wolle
Racine, Ohio 45771
P .S. This letter Is not directed
towards the many fine people In
Gallja County; but to rather
address an Issue that proclaims
that proper channels should be
used at all Urnes. not political
clout or lack thereof. Also,
certain negalive behaviors are
not condoned by me, but!reedom
to cheer for one's team Is.
Finally. In closing I hope the
residents In the Southern Local
District do not allow their school
to fall Into the financial despair
as Eastern has.

Proposal beyond comprehension
Dear Editor:
Doug Hull, Sports Editor of the
Wheeling Intelltgencer, keeps an
accurate account of high school
statistics across the country.
Included among these ~listlcs
are current losing and winning
streaks. Perhaps the admlnlstra·
tors of Gallla Co11nty school can
. get In touch with Mr. Huff and !Ill
their athletic scbedules with
those schools currently on mam·
moth losing streaks. While they
are at It they might demand that
Southern High School withdraw
from the SVAC. The Tornadoes
have won 12 out of the last 13
basketball championships.
The Gallla County school's
attempt to Ioree Oak Hill out ol
the SVAC Is beyond comprehen·
slon. What has Oak Hill done to
harm the league? Win too many
football games? They should be
the one looking to get out. Despite
one loss In two years the Oaks
have failed to qualify for the
OHSAA playoffs. They have not
made the playoffs because the
league schools, those In Gallla
County Included, failed to win

enough games to provide Oak
Hill with enough second level
points to quality.
,Maybe Oak Hill should leave
the SVAC. I'm sure they can find
a league where the competition Is
better and their chances for the
football playoffs are more'l"eaiJs.
tic. I'm also sure they can find a
league where the administrators
won't be sniffling and whlnnlng II
theY. happen to win a couple of
chalnptonshlps. If not, they
might consider spotting the Gal·
lla County scbools a lew runs or
points.
If an arrangement can' I be
worked out, then good riddance
to Gallla County. Let them start
their own league. If one school
happens to dominate, throw
them out. Eventually the league
will be down to one team. They
can then start an Intramural
program. After all, this seems to
be what their administrators
want.
Sincerely,
George Gagal
Eastern High School

Responds to letter
Dear Editor:
I feel compelled· to respond to
the letter of March 1st In which
Iva Sisson reported being of·
fended by the American Legion
dance ad.
First of all, I wrote the ad. I
take full responsibility for lt. So If
you're azotng to be upset with
someone, let It be me. The
American Legion has shown It's
support for the youth of our
community, and of our country,
by provldln&amp; leadership training,
·SCholanblpe and youth support
pi'Ofll"aml for hundreds of thou·
sanda of yo1111g people lor many
years. Their Integrity to youth Is
proven by tbe test ot time. Your

'

letter Implying that we would
Invite kids to bring a bottle and
come to our drunken party Is
as lnlne and ol!enslve to all
Legionnaires.
The purpose of the ad was to let
those who regurlarly attend
know what band was scheduled.
Many of our regulars like to bring
their kids with them. At least
they then know where their kids
are.
Lots of people enjoy a relaxing
evening with music and a few
drlnka. It's legal. Most people
who drink prefer to do so In front
ot tbelr children and realize full
well that they cannot bide the
real world from them. The

By GENE CADDES ·
Ul'l Sports Writer
COLUMBUS - Although his
newly purchased T-shlrt proclaimed "I'm not 101," Brian
Haring had lots of doubts.
Haring, a junlor from Twinsburg Chamberlin, saw he was to
become a statistic at Saturday
night's .52nd annual state high
school wrestling championships
- the l01st consecutive victim of
Genoa's two-time state champ
Nick Cianciola In the Division II
119-pound weight class.
He had read It In a newspaper
Saturday morning, a quote from
Cianciola saying "tomorrow

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Mexico.
The match Is not made In
heaven. Mexicans have always
recented U.S. meddling In their
government, and Negroponte Is a
natural·born meddler and not the
type to spend his tenure in an
armchair at the embassy.
His pending appointment Is an
example of the puzzling way In
which the Bush administration Is
birthing its Latin American
policy. Bush and Secretary of
State James Baker are showing
signs of a kinder. gentler approach to our neighbors. For
example, they are quietly spurn·
lng the blind military support

with Democratic leaders in Con·
·gress. Aronson is a Democrat,
but llke Abrams. he Is a fervent
contra backer, and that is likely
,to• breed distrust among the
members of Congress who want
to throw the last shovelful of dirt
on the dying contra war.
The covert operatiOns Involved
training and arming Nicaraguan
exiles to tie up the flow of arms to
left-wing rebels In El Salvador
and to undermine the Cuban·
backed government of Nlcara·
gua. Some news reports said
Negroponte even had the Honduran military commander, Gen.
Gustavo Alcofo Alvarez, answer· ·
lng to him like a lleutenant. U.S.
aid to Honduras skyrocketed
while Negroponte was the envoy
there.
Negroponte Is lying low until he
Is officially nominated and confirmed to the Mexican post. He
did not return our phone calls. A
State Department spokesman
told us that It Is unfair for critiCs
to blame Negroponte when he
was only carrying out Reagan
administration policies In Cen·
tral America.
Mexico greeted the news about
Negroponte with hesitant diplomacy. The Mexican government
waited a week alter nearing the
announcement before formally
accepting the appointment.
Highly placed Mexican sour·
ces told our associate Scott Sleek
that therelssomewarlnessabout
Negroponte. Mexico has never
seen eye to eye with tbe United
States 'over the contras, and
many Mexican officials believe
Negroponte stepped out of llne 1!1
Honduras.

Saturday's
remits

US Pound!!
Babt&gt; Sidon. Martins Fl·r ry. dn ,Joe
dull••· Ott!8terland West Gealtl{-. M·!l. .
1ft PourMb

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPit- Rl'!l.._s or
Sat urd 19' .. lhl' 1 chwnpku~~hlp m•tchet;

of tale UIMI aaMal llatl' hi~ IIChooL
wi'Htla~t t~rnament a1 st. John AreM:

Dhlllion I

IUPounds
Ga,y ~t'lne,JWulllllonPtrry,de c Matl
Stout, Up per Ari ..Pon. f.O.
II! Pound!i
Juon L•flha, Fairfield, le4.!h fiLII Chrl1
Russo, AmM'St Sit"el. IIU.
Ill rounds
ShiiWn Nl'l&amp;on, North Royalton, del'
Sieve Sl. JoM,llt&gt;\'ela.adSI . .lo!Wph, ~·:I.
12:5 Pou..8111.\' Lally, Solon. der Ken Powf'll,
CIACinllltl PrhiCt.&gt;l on,.

~4.

'"' Poundti

148 Pound.'!
AliVl Fried, Lakewood st. Edward, Lech

filii Mill'&lt;' Alherl.

Bru~~twh·k,

t.t-t . .,.

J.U Pourllh

Grea: Gentn't'!&lt;e, Solon, dt-c .JO!Ihl"
Rotmlns. Clncln•ll Sl. X awlrr, S.-1.
1$2 Poundloi
Chrk&lt; Corso, S•llusky, det · Scott
P~c•r.,

( '1("\'f&gt;l..,... st.

Jo~ph, -t- ~ .

IIIPounll&lt;! ·
KevAn Randleman, SanA.INky, det·
'\'IIIIMR Splfte, O~ei!VId St . .JU!ir.ph,
'0,
G

Pound.~

*"
12-10.

President's. budget sound.______:;w_ill_iam_R_us_he_r

alternative Is to sneak around
behind their ba~ks and that's
hypocritical. Then you really
have problems. Several families
come to our dances on a regular
basis and don't drink. They bring
their children. They all have a
good time.
Sincerely,
Bob Gilmore

Mention "education," ' the
4

homeless'' or "the environment"
to the average Dem9Cratlc polltl·
can and he Instantly' understands
you to be Inviting hlm to a party.
How many b1Illons are you
talking about? His eyes widen
and glow. his mouth parts In a
hall-smlle of anticipation, and
his saliva glands quicken.
Take the homeless. How much
does the president propose to
spend to house these poor souls?
Well, President Reagan's final
budget suggested spending $479
million. Mr. Bush ups the ante-

the employee's own medical
problem.
You have to look at this as a
movement whose time has
come; If we're going to have a
human race, we've got to have
families. If we don't have a
human race, we don't need jobs,
and Industry can quit worrying
about the bottom line or the
stockholders' pleasure. But
while It's always been a given
that we must perpetuate the
human rac,e, It has never been a
given within Industry that to do
that, sometimes· those humans
will require a little special care
and extra time.
When Industry has had to grant
employees time to give that
special care, It has traditionally
cut Its losses on the backs of the
other employees. I can under·
stand my fellow employees'
waning sympathy when my Ia·
ther was dying: Nothing else at
the newspaper stopped In my
absence; not one page was cut,
not one deadline set back. The
bottom line was met because the
other employees took up my
slack.
I have taken up the slack of
others; I've taken over classes
for sick fellow teachers; and
worked wltl!out pay lor a widow
who needed to work, said she
couldn't quit smoking and sui·
fered several bouts of pneumonia
every year because of lt. At the
television station where I work
now, we fill in lor sick employees,
stay late and produce an extra
show lor someone, cover a city
council meeting for someone,
anchor a news broadcase lor
someone. We don't degrudge lt.
We're Just tired of the same thing
happening that bappens In bust·
nesses everywhere: We take up
all the slack, and the company
Isn't out anything.

'

Hl'i!.VyWl'll(hi

Dllv ld Ro"pert, Nol'\\·alll St. Paul, d1•t•

would freeze (this year only) at
by just $165 million. Do you have
present levels, corrected for
any Idea just how contemplble a
Inflation.
figure that Is on Capitol Hlll?
Perhaps the most revealing
Instead of turning on tlie federal
difference
between Bush and the
faucet full-bast, Mr. Bush procongressional
Democrats, howposes (just for one thing) leglsla·
ever, Is over his proposal to cut
tlon allowing surplus federal
buildings to be used to house the the capital gal,ns tax sharply.
Because a low capital gains tax
homeless.
encourages economic activity, ;
Or how about the environ·
the president wants to reduce the •.
ment? In the words of The New
tax - a step that he estimates ··
York Times. "The tone of the
would bring In an extra $4.8 ~
Bush budget Is strongly environbillion in revenues during the .:
mental, and several objectives
coming fiscal year alone.
are a departure from those of the
But, Incredibly, the Democrats :
Reagan adminiStration. But It
are opposed to the Idea, because :
would provide hardly any more
the cut would benefit mostly ·
money than what Mr. Reagan
wealthier people who have hold· .:
proposed."
lngs to sell at a profit. The tax, in .
To be sure, In some areas short.
may be downright countere.g. Medicaid- the Bush budget
productive, but Its real purpose
Is substantially more openhanded than Mr. Reagan's. But · Isn't to raise revenue anyway- it's to harass the rich.
Mr. Bush carefully maintains
Mr. Bush Is off to a good start.
financial discipline by Insisting
Now watch the Democrats yell
on cuts elsewhere: notably In
lor bigger expenditures.
defense spending, which he

workers .need family-leave time _
I'd !Ike to get something right
out on the table here, first: I don't
know how working people with
families manage.
I am a single woman with no
children, and there have been
weeks when I couldn't even
manage to stay home to meet a
repairman. Getting the dog to
and !rom a kennel to go out of
town for a weekend took the
equivalent of a morning's work; I
have no Idea how a parent
manages a job AND one kid with
flu and another with chicken pox.
I remember when my father
was dying, when he slipped In
and out of a coma for several
weeks. Love and just plain
decency required my attendance
at hiS bedside as often as I could
make It there: yet any sympathy
among my co-workers wore off In ·
about three days. There was
never any sympathy from my
employer; the employee's hand·
book only listed "death of a .
parent" as a reason for my
absence, not "dylngofaparent."
So It Is with mixed emotions
that I consider the "familyleave" legislation galnll)g force
In both houses of Congress. Both
proposals would guarantee job
security lor employees who miss
work because of family and
medical emergencies. Under
each bill, large employers would
be required to grant limited,
.unpaid leave for the birth of a
child, a parent's serious Illness or

189 Pound.-.;
Mike BudcUe, (]t&gt;Yei!Vld St. lf{mtlull,
plnN'd VIIICt ('urlaiC'. Lidtf'Wood, I :Ot

'

Supporters · of these Congressional bills have been very vocal
In reassuring Industry that "famIly leave" will cost companies
about $4.35 a year for every
employee. That's basically the '
cost to businesses of continuing
health Insurance premiums for
employees on leave. Yet many
business organizations still oppose the bills. They say they
oppose them on .' 'philosophical
grounds," questioning the "ap·
proprlate role of government.''
I say, good for you, Congress.
Faml)les sometimes need time

,Ja~~~~

Lowlller, \\'elllnjCion, 10-A.

DlvWkln I

Tum &amp;!o~s
1. Lakewood Sl. Edward IIU : ~­
Uf'\'l"land st. -'o!ll'flh 1!1.~ ; :J . ~andu~;ky
Ill: -1. Solon 41; 5. Maph&gt; HtldM~ .JU: 6.
C:::lnclnrall Prinr:I'Con U; l. l'ilow :11: 11.
Fairfield 3U; !. UnklnhMn l.-lllkel&amp;: 10.
Mtntor 33: II. Fairborn. Mv.t'f'donla
Nonlonl"- Ul'\·t'laad S.. l111*'tN"- ~
nch; H . Lakt'woori 'H: 15. North
Koyaltan lllld Wad!n!oorlh, %.'1 nell; n .
( 'lncln..al&amp;. Xxvk.or tU.
Dlvk&lt;kln II
~HI3

Poullds

0..011: Wrl~, Muhlll C~h4oood, d•'L'
Charlfl' ·Samp!l(ln, AIIIIU'It:l' Murlln-'on,
~.112

Pounds

Orlan Slate&gt;~,

Ca~naJ

VIctor Volnovlch, Mentor L».lit- l ' ll·
tltoll~. de(' Andl't"w Canen, C'h Al{rln F•lls
Ken!llon, 5-3.

U$Pou.DuasMha YeU$. Sleuhen\ille, det•
Ja.'lion Mu:well, lllaA"In Falls Krnlllon.

....

'

IU Pcufnds
Chad Miller, Oak Harflor, dec .John
VolpP. Mentor L~kf'('lll llllk • ( 5-.5) 6·' lOll
(cr llf'1'1a3) .

,

180 hunch

Dal~ Kapros)', Menlor Lakr Carbolic,

dec Jame~~ Gllhert, CAPE, II-!.
m Pound!!
.lim St·avur.zo, Rlchftcld Rf'wen, df'c
Mike Atldll!!i, Olm!i~d Fa\1,;, ~!.
18t Pounds

1\udle t\llenu., Maple Hf'l ~~~. ieeh IIlli
Dav ld Grot, We~JiervUI~ North, 1'-2.
IUPounds
Dan n.l' MartiiM"l, un~nt.wn Lu.llc, dt•t•
JtJe Oyer, W~lervUie Sou&amp;h, 13-11.

171

possible like a moderate Democrat while holding.actual spendIng to near·Reagan levels and
putting the emphasis, wherever
possible, on voluntarism (the
famous "thousand points of
Ugh!") and other Inexpensive
kinds of activity. Also, where
Increases In spending are proposed, they tend to be small by
Democratic .standards.

(Saturday) will be 101."
So, during a morning walk,
Haring bought the T·shlrt and
wore it out on the St. John Arena
floor prior to the match.
He was down in tbe match 5-2
when his prayers were answered, a mistake by the seem·
ingly Invincible Cianciola led a
second-round pin at 3: 59, one
second before the end of the
second round In one of the biggest
upsets in recent tournament
history.
''When I think about It , I guess!
didn' t really think 1 would win,"
said Haring. who finished with a
32-4 record and became his

Prep wrestling ..

Tom Swet'ncy, Lakewood Sl, Kdwllrd.
BriM Lowery. N"'· Phlhtdelphla.

The more one looks at It, the
craftier piece of work George
Bush's budget turns out to be.
All through last fall's cam·
palgn, the Democrats - and, of
course, their Sancho Panzas In
the media- laughed themselves
blue at the Idea that Bush could
seriously propose any budget
whatever and still stick to his
pledge of "no new taxes."
Then, having taken a soberer
look at the ligures, they began
admitting (alter the election)
that maybe he could do It alter all
- but just once. Currently the
official liberal line Is that Bush
wlll probably be ab\e to avoid
new taxes "this year."
The fact Is that Bush and his
numbers crunchers have Indeed
come up with budget proposals
that are comfortably within the
Gramm-Rudman limits - and
entail no new taxes.
Bush's basic strategy, It now
appears, Is to sound as much as

Fulhm Nurthwt.,.l,

drt· Scott Bower'!!. Rocky Rtvrr. 10·8.
lUI PoundM
Brian Harill•, Twlnlhlr• C'hamtH.'rUn,

pln..-d Nick Cilllk'lnlll, Gl'RRII.,
1!5 Pound!'~

~:51.

Sh•wn Maih~.I'Hcuhrn\illt. dl'l·,lohn
Mti'umht'r, HoSflllord, 1-f.
UO Poundf'i
Mario Marinelli, rolumhu" IJt&gt;~;d~
det· Sf.ewl' Futo, Twlnl!hu fl l 'hliJlltw...-lln,

...

lll'ath Eddletllulc, Vhtel'nt W arrt&gt;n , dt•~:
Matt Plunkeii.Carrollton {~51 6-ti (OO

(criteria 3).
He av )Well(bt

Dtail Jen ldns, l..,eo.t.·IJIIown In clan Lake,

dec Aaron

t-M

Relit~.

Mt•diM Bucb)'C (!1-3)

(ot}.

lHvbl•nll
Tt' am S.:o rt'li
I. Mrntor Lalu~ Catholk-111: 2. Cha«rln
Fall!! Knlllon 5&amp;: S. Steuhenvllll' II ; -1.
4i .~;

\ 'lnc.-nl M'arren

S.

Twln!lbu~

Ch amht'rU.-1~.5: '-. Sl. r...-I!IGrah.., t:l;
1. C•lambllll Jh!-Sxltw, Lt!wl!ltuw n In !I an

Lake andOakHarbor,34('11l'll: 10. CAPE
and U•bon Beaver, 2t e•h; 1%. Medlllll.
Buckeye 26: 13. Canal Fulton Norllwesl

and Ma~n-. Cre•t•·nod, 2.~ rach.: 15.
Rosafonl 2ft 18. MIU'tillli Ferr)' 1Utd
Rlt!hfirld Revue. 23 t'.acht Ill. Genaa and
Olnlliled Falls, 2Z 1'110/t; 2tl . AIIIIUI~e
MarUn~~;ton. Bellaire and Milan Edison.
21 eat•h; 2:1. Sprln~lt:ld NnrdlweAh:rn Ill;

U. Byt'!'ll'illt.&gt; Mll adot~.·hrook
Dlvtskln Ill

1H .~.

10~ Pound~

Mi chae l Mwlln, Dtlla. dt1' Rh·ky
Mokr~. Shad)' side, IH.
112 Pound!i

Mall \ ' l"«f'r. Nel~onwllk&gt;- \'ork, d••t·
Sl""'" Fl't:kanln. Thump~~~on Lett,r;emollll.
10-4.
119 Pound..~
Mall ()(ornlan, " ' e81 Libert)' SaJem, del'
Ethan Moran, Vf'nallle5, ~2.
IU Po undo!
Domini&lt;· DISa~mto. CollllllhUJ;; Rudy,
dt't' Tom Nelldrll, Mlddlell~d C'an'llr~tl.
'!-I.

Ia&amp; Pound!!
Brian Miller, Sl-y Le lun~t.n , dec Mall
MuHMrnt, Rlt•hmond Heljthl!!, f .:.,.
Ul Pour*
Alleu t;\'t'l'elt, Wf'"!il Salem Northwl'SC ·
ern, der Tudd lJwenpod, ArvhhJid,

n-:t

Ht••·d

fa.~.

ltiPou'*
fadb, ... ~ n .. rh ,\elkin!!,

Rlchmolll Ht•l«hfN (.1-3t9-ii too .
l-IS Pnund!l
P161 ('ampullr-tl, Wrhmond Ht•ltthtl'lt
drc Rldlllrd Wohleber, [olwnhl aSUIIon,
l-~.

15~

Pounds

,\jll'oo Moran, \ 'eNillllll'l'l, dt•t• Todd
Burk, BrldJI:epori, .f-t.
HiD Pounds

Emil &amp;lehnlt&gt;ln, Lou.b•villl' A.qu.lna!ii,

de-t· -Iaiit Hosli'llcr. Appte&lt;'l'f'l'k Wa)'lll'·
dalt', 12-i.

Ohio Outdoors

Walleye tournament sign
of suc~ess for Lake Erie
be represented, and the team
By JERRY PICKRELL
members will sign autographs at
Outdoor Writers
the walleye festival In Port
Association of America
Clinton that weekend also.
Distributed by Ul'l
The Walleye fishery on Lake
If you're interested In being a
contestant, you can contact
Erie Is a phenomenal success.
L.E .C.B.A. at P.O. Box 5278,
From the brink of eradication
Toledo. Ohio 43611. The entry fee
the walleye has come to be more
per boat for amateur
is
abundant than anywhere else In
teams of three members plus one
the hemisphere - maybe the
observer. The lee lor pro's Is $300
world. The strength of this
per boat, but It Includes six
fishery has created a great deal
anglers ·and one observer. The
of Interest in fishing the lake.
One of the offshoots of this observer you supply will not be
Interest Is the annual Lake Erie on your boat.
"Professional" in this case
Charter Boat Association's •'Pro'
Am" walleye tournament. The . means the size of the team and
event creates almost as much the boat rather than the occupa·
lion of the member. You needn't
Interest as the fishing.
Onlookers last year were as- be an actual professional fishertonished to see the top 13 man. You will be fishing against
professional fishing teams check people who are, however.
II you just want to be part of the
In catches of 10 !Ish each day with
a minimum length of 25 Inches .festival and maybe even charter
per !Ish. Seventeen Inches Is the a boat for the day while the
fishing Is so . great, you can
minimum keeper·slze walleye.
contact
Art Jones. President of
This year the fishing promises
to be just as good, according to the L.E.C.B.A. at 4285 Balllette
VIcki Snyder, as pokeswoman for Drive, Port Clinton, Ohio 43452
the association and a licensed for information on the avallabll·
lty of a charter boat lor the
charter skipper.
tournament.
An added attraction for nonThey aren't as solidly booked
contestants will be the entries on
as you might think. It's a fun way
the · pro side of the tournament
from the NatiOnal Football to !Ish against some of tbe best
walleye anglers In tbe country
League. The Bengals. Browns,
wlt'out
risking anything.
Bears, Bills, Colts and Lions will
,

_::___Ov_ers_tre_et

off to care for themselves. I'm
just warning you. you still
haven't gone far enough and
you're playing with an Issue as
potentially divisive as affirmative action and busing. Untll you
devise a system that will divide·
the burden equiilly between .
worker and employer - some·
thing that forces employer something that forces employers
to accept some of the lnconven-·
lence by somehow compensating
employees who work overtime In.
a co·worker's absence - you
haven't protected the worker
from exploitation.

n50

Berry's World

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Wilt Mtlin St.

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'OI[IOJ
STOlE Ollf

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•
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MADISON, Wis. 1UP II - Four
players fouled out and 51 fouls
were called in a basketball game
that Wisconsin Coach Strvc
Yoder likened to a boxing match.
And with Danny Jones deliver·
ing a knockout punch In the form
of a career and game-high 32
points, Wisconsin beat Ohio State
77-65 Saturday in a Big Ten game ·
that ended the Badgers homE'
season.
"Those were ·two teams that
understood the importanec of
that game." said Yoder, whose
team kept alive its hopes lor Its
first NCAA berth since 1947.
"They went 15 rounds out therP.
They kept us out of our rhythm
most of the game. II It hadn't
been for our defense, It would
have been a disaster because
they killed us on the boards. "

school's first ever stale champion. "Our whole plan was to
make something happen to get a
pin.
"I just pretty much wanted to
keep it close and not get blown
out," added Haring . "I couldn"t
believe It. l wan ted to get of! the
mat as quickly as 1 could before
they (the officials) changed the ir
minds. I heard them cou nting,
'four , three, two.· I just squeezed
real hard. I prayed all night for
something like this to happen and
It did. "
,
The team titles went to Lake·
wQod St. Edward in Division I, its
11th in the last 12 years, Mentor
Lake Catholic in Division 11 and
Delta in Division Ill, the first for
both those schools.
St. Ed piled up 111.5 points to
69.5 for rpnnerup Clevelan'tl St.
Joseph, which was sl\ut out In
Saturday's finals . Sandusky,
with Ch~is Corso winning the
152-pound title and Kevin Randle·
man at 160-, was third In Division I
with 60 points.
Heath Eddelblule, veteran
Warren Local wrestler, Vincent,
captured the 189-pound division
title with an overtime decision
over Carrollton's Matt Plunkett.
The Southeastern Ohio League
mat team finished fourth In the
state tournament standings.
Lake Catholic, getting a last second victory by Dale Kaprosy
at 160 pounds, edged Kenston 68
points . to 66, with Steubenville
third with 61. Lake Catholic's
Victor Voinovlch also captured
the 140-pound title.
Delta, with Mike Mattln winning the 103 title and Rob Sintobin
at 189 with four consecutive pins,
had 96 points to 69.5 for runnerup
Versailles and 67.5 for third place
Richmond Heights.
St. Edward's Alan Fried at 140
pounds and· North Royalton's
Shawn Nelson at ll!l both won
their third . consecutive state
titles. Fried won in a technical
fall over Mark Albert of Brunswick and Nelson decisioned
Steve St. John of Cleveland St.
Joseph.
Tom Neikirk of MlddlefielQ
Cardinal, also looking for his
third straight title. lost in the
Division lii 125-pound class to
Dominic DiSabato of Columbus
Ready, 2-1.
Two-time winners included Columbus DeSales' Mario Marinelli
at Division II 130 pounds, Steu benvllle:s Dunyasha Yetts in the
II 145 and Cleveland St. Ignatiu s'
Mike Buddie at Division I 189.

BLOCKS SHOT - Southern Conference Basketball champion·
ship game was played Sunday bight In Asheville, N.C .. by East
Tennessee State University and Marshall University. E.T.S.U.'s
NQ.22, Keith Jennings, biOilkS the lay up of Marshall University's
No. 31, Omar Roland. East Tennessee State University dominated
the boards the ~nl;lre evening, giving Marshall the lead only once.
E.T .S. U. defeated Marshall in the championship game and bid for
·
the N.C.A.A. play !Ills 96 to Marshall's 73.

Illinois edges Indiana
on desperation shot
By United Press International
Nick Anderson of No. 9 llllnols
performed feats previously
thOught Impossible In the Big Ten
this season, lifting his team past
Indiana and outshining Hoosiers
guard Jay Edwards in the closing
seco nds to do so.
After Edwards hit a baseline
jumper under heavy pressu•·e
with two seconds left to tie the
score. · Anderson ·san~ a 35-foot
shot at the buzzer Sunday to give
Illinois a 70-67 victory over No. 3
Indiana, keeping the Fighting
Illinl's Big Ten title hoi&gt;es alive.
"That's the first like It and It
will probably be the last,"
Anderson said of his clutch
basket. "That's a shot I'll always
remember."
Anderson scored 23 points, but
the most spectacular of them
came when he took a 45·foot
inbound s pass, then turned Inside
and shot a 3-point attempt over
Edwards just before time
expired.
.
" I saw Jay guarding me but 1
'
h' kl
bo
hi "
wasn t t 10 ng a ut
m.
Anderson said. "I was thinking
about getting a shot off and
seeing what my chances were to
hit It. When it got close to the rim,
1 thought it was good."
Anderson's 3-polnt effort
swished lhrough and prompted
the other llllnols players to
joyously pile onto the 6·foot-6
j unior swingrnan .
Edwards , who had hit las t·
second shots to defeat Purdue
and Michigan earlier this season,
san k an ·. 18-footer with two
seco nds left to tie the score 67-67.
His baseline shot arched over two
defenders and the right corner of
th e bas ke t b e fore s wi s hing
throughbasket
the net, but
Anderson's
final
dimmed
the
achievement.
"That's not th e first time Jay
has hit a shot like that," Anderson said. "We knew he could do
thai. We've watched him do it on
television. I respect him for
that."

Reds cop
first win
of year
LAKELAND, Fla. tUPI) Van Snider grounded a two-out
eighth inning single to right!leld
to score Marty Brown from third
and give the Cincinnati Reds
their first win of the spring
season, a 3·2 victory Sunday over
the Det roil Tigers.
Tim Blrtsas earned the win and
John Franco picked up the save
for the Reds, now 1-2. Mercedes
Esquer suffered the loss for the
Tigers, also 1·2.
L,uls Quinones led offthe elg11th
inning with a single but was
forced out at second by Brown.
After Esquer balked Brown to
second, Jeff Treadway singled
him to third, setting up Snider's
game-winning hit.
The Tigers opened the scoring
In the first inning when Lou
Whitaker drew a two-out walk
and rode home on Alan Trammell's double (o center field.
Cincinnati broke through In the
fourth inning against Tiger righthander Ted Power . Treadway
led off with a line single to center
field and moved to third on Kal
Daniels' base hit to right.

The loss dropped Indiana,
which already has clinched a
share of the Big Ten title, to 24-6
and 14·2 In the league. The lllinl
rose to 25·4 and 12-4 in conference
play. lllinois Is the only team that

During all of 1919 we ar1 celebrating our 40th year at bringing better heanng fer our
friends-clients. It is gratifying
to know that we ha VI dttYeloptd 11 r1putation •for integrity
and dependability. We were
here yesterday, e1pec:t to be
here tomorrow; and our obligation to you is to be available
levwy day) as you nttd 111, with
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Oh, YEAH? Well, I ssy MY dad's honorariums
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Buckeyes ·.
lose sixth
•
10 a row

Warren Local wrestler .wins
Division II Ohio mat crown

Cowboy to be envoy to Mexico
WASHINGTON - You could
say John Negroponte Is the G.I.
Joe of the diplomatic corps.
As U.S. ambassador to Hondu··
ras In the early 1980s, he
reportedly directed a covert
ca~palgn by th,e charter class of
contras to topple the government
of neighboring Nicaragua. Ne·
groponte gained a reputation as a
mllltary commander instead of a
plnstrlped peacemaker.
When Geotge Bush won the
White House, liberal Central
America watchers feared Negroponte would end up calling the
shots again. Bush will repay
Negroponte as ambassador to

The Daily Sentinei'- Page- 3

Warriors' Heath Eddelblute

· Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Commentaryc

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

L.un~:n O;n_ly; 11 A~:1 PM

POIEitn'
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BILL DILES

DILES HEARING CENTER
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can match Indiana for the crown
and that would require the
Hoosiers to lose next week to
Wisconsin and No. 11lowa while
the Illini beat No. 10 Michigan
and Iowa.
"We've won a couple of close
games at the end," Indiana
Coach Bobby Knight said. •''To.day we lost one at the end. 1 don't
have any complai nts aboul

JamaaL Brown had 17 points to
lead the Buckeyes, who lost their
sixth straight game to fall to17 -12
overall and 6·10 In the Big Ten.
Tim Locum added 191orWiscon·
sin which improved to 17-9
overall and 8-8 In the Big Ten.
"This was an Important game
for us because It may mean we
finish In fifth place In the
co nfererence," said Yoder.
· 'Who knows? If we win a couple
more. we could finish tied for
fourth ."

The Buckeyes outrebou.n ded
the Badgers 41-28 but only shot 40
percent from the field. Ohio State
also had 31 fouls and three
players fouled out - · Perry
Carter, Chris Gent, and Tony
White.
Ohio State Coach Gary Williams said his team has been
plagued by poor shooting since .
losing star guard Jay Burson to a.
neck Injury Feb. 13 In a gameagainst Iowa.
"Since Burson has been out
we've had trouble with our
shooting percentage and lransl·
lion game. And of course our
team leadership, that was evident today," he said.

The Daily Sentinel

that.. "

(VSPSIU·t168)
A DIVI1lon or

Elsewhere on Sunday, No. 6
Syracuse nipped No. 2 Georgetown 82-76 In overtime, No. 8
Duke beat No. 5 North Carolina
88-86, No.15 West VIrginia routed
St. Joseph's 79·59 , a nd Santa
Clara · upset No. 18 St. Mary's
63-61.
.
Also, Louisiana Tech CIalme d
the American South title with an
·
·
84-62 v1ctory
over New 0 r 1eans m
the tournament final. East Ten
nessee Stale won the Southern
Conference crown and an auto·
malic NCAA Tournament bid
with a 96·73 victory over Marshall in the · title game of their
co nference tournament.
At Syracuse. N.y.. Derrick
Colema n scored 5 of his 21 points
in overtime to help th e Orangemen e nd a six-game losing streak
against Georgetown. Coleman
pulled down a rebound and
converted a 3-point play to put
Syracuse ahead for good 78.76
with 1:10 left in overtime . Syracuse, 25-6 and 10-6 in the Big East,
used a full -court press to rally
from a 14-point deficit In the
second hall to force overtime.
G
d
eorgetown dropped to 23·4 an
13_3 In the league.

M•ltlmtldl~a,

Inc .

Published every afternom, Monday
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Monday, March 6, 1989

The Daily Sentinel

By _The Bend

Monday, March 6, 1989

.

-Page-5
r

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-_j
RITE AID fiiABMACISTS
~liKE

SPECIAL AWARD WINNERS -The members
of the SVAC champion Southern boys' basketball
team were honored Saturday evenbtg at the
Southern winter sports banquet. Receiving
special awards were (front row, IrK) Brad
Maynard, Rebounding and Most Improved

Braves
hold 'team
•
-meettng

Awards; Mike Amos, Senior Award and 110
Percent Award; and Brent Shuler, 110 Percent
Award. Behind them are Chris Murphy, Best
Defensive Award; Chad Taylor, Coach's Award;
Todd Grindstall, ~t Defensive Award; . and
Andy Baer, Best Foul Shooting Award.

Southern athletes are honored
RACINE - Members of var·
tous championship winter sports
teams and cheerleaders from
Southern High School were ho·
nored with a superb banquet-and
awards ceremony here Saturday
evening at Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium In Racine. The fete
was sponsored the accomodated ·
by the hard-working Southern
Athletic boosters. who decorated
the gym along with the
cheerleaders.
Following a fine meal and
invocation by Reverend Steve
Deaver, the awards ceremony
: began.
Cheerleadlng awards were
presented by Mrs. Sandra Baer.
who praised the girls · for an
outstanding job throughout the
year. Senior cheerleaders ho: nored for their final year of
· participation were Christina
Cooper, Carrlsa Hill, and Tracy
Beegle.
All Cheerleaders received a
"Regional Plaque" for their
outstanding effort In winning the
regional cheerleadlng crown In
national cheerleading competition during the past year.
Junior Varsity cheerleaders
are Amber Cummings, Jody
• Hayes. Marcy Hill, Michelle
McCoy, Chris Harmon, and
Robyn Siou t.
Varsity Cheerleaders Include
Carissa Hlll; Tracy Beegle, MonIca Hill. Cristina Harrison, and
Aimee Wolfe.
Girls ' resl!rve basketball
awards were presented by Coach
Blll Hensler, who praised his club
for the 1988-89 season.
Senior awards went to Tracy
Beegle, Dawn Johnson, Becky

Evans, Crystal Hill, Becky Winebrenner, Debbie Greathouse,
and Leslee Dudding.
Special recognition was given
to Crystal Hill and Dawn Johnson, members of this years
all-SV AC basketball team.
Other special awards went to
Dawn Johnson, Best Foul
Shooter; Becky Evans, Best
Defensive Player; Leading
Scorer, Crystal Hill; Best Rebounder, Becky Winebrenner;
and Coach's Award to Debbie
Greathouse and Tracy Beegle.
Freshmen basketball awards
were presented by Coach Ronnie
Quillen, while the reserve
awards were made by Coach
Scott Frederick.
Coach Howle Caldwell then
made presentations to his 1988-89
SVAC championship team.
Coach Caldwell stated, ."I have
two stories to tell wh&amp;t Racine·
Southern basketball is all about·
... what makes It special."
Caldwell cited a time earlier In
·the year when a player had to
make up a days worth of 13 line
drills and numerous sprints after
practice. When It came time for
the player to run his extra
sprints, all 37 players (lrosh,
reserve, and varsity players In
the program) voluntarylly ran
the addition set with him.
Caldwell said, "That's What
It's all about. That's not just
teamwork, that's family ... something special."
Caldwell also reflected, "After
our loss to Trimble In the
Sectional finals we (Southern)
returned home when I noticed the
llghts coming on In the gym. I
wondered what In the world could

be going on.
Every night after practice we
·always end with the OU drill,
where we must make 25 lay-ups
In a row without the ball hitting
ihe floor. Well, this team. after
getting beat In the tournament,
took oft their jackets, and In their
sweat suits went to work and
made those 25 lay-ups. That's
what makes Racine-Southern
special!"
A special senior award was
presented to the lone senior Mike
Amos.
Special Awards went to Andy
Baer, Bes I Free Throw Shooter,
who has already etched his name
In the Southern record books by
posting the second best FT
percentage ever at the school.
Baer' s 84.5% placed second behind 1978 grad Richard Teaford,
the all-time SHS leader with 88
percent. Formerly In second was
Kelly Winebrenner with 82%. ·
The Kenny Turley Rebounding
Award went to Jr. Brad Maynard; Brent Shuler and Mike
Amos, the Jonathon Rees 110%
award; Cousins Todd Grindstaff
and Chris Murphy, Best Defensive Awards; Chad Taylor,
Coach's Award; and Brad Maynard, Most Improved.
•
Brad Maynard, Chad Taylor,
and Andy' Baer each were recognized for earning all-SVAC honors: Maynard, scoring 13 points
per game and averaging 9.8
rebounds, was mistakenly ommited from the all-SVAC line-up
after placing second In MYP
voting. Maynard also earned
all-district honors.
Southern finished at 14-9.

CoUege scores

.

ColteKt S.ldball Re!idt!.i
By 1Jnlted Prea8lnter ... lonlll
ToumamMh
Amerk'u South Conlf'nm~e
Champ..,Mhlp
Loul8lana Tee• !St. New Orleans I!
AUIUIUC II Conltrence
Qllarterflna.ls
Rhode liiiMd 18, PrnaSC . fl
RuiKtU 101,81. BoMYrnture &amp;7
Tempkof4, Duquesne: Ill
Wesl \ 'lrl(lnla 1'&amp;, SC. Joseplfl CPL) S!
Colonial Coalert'nc:e
SemUina&amp;l1
GI'OrK"I' Muon 15, EaMt L:aroiiiUI 5ll

~n~r at

Del•""

st.

278

230
21\!
277

ant~~ Division

45 II "'i 97
:ID 24 12' 12
30 Sl 6 aG

Rn!ilon
· Bullalo

Odcai{O

Ut
2111

!'
Ad

Mona real
Hartford
Quehec:

GA.

:l(JSt

..

!66 1!11
%31i 2011
219 28i

~2~2240

U 311 I J-1 2.13 29-1
Cam(:itell Conf.e renct'
Norrili Dh·ll!lion
WLTPh1. GF GA
:10~11'71
269 2415

ttnn

lAid.~

5H
:.7
56

U 22 II
21 31 J.l
%! :18 6 uo
Sm)'lfuo Dl\'l!'ion
C111lpr)'
4-1 15 M t6
Edmonlon
35 t1 &amp; 16
Lo~ Anlele!i
31 t7 8 7-t
\o"anco11~r
211 33 7 6.1
Wlnnlpe~
21 3!1 II 53
5huft.,-'11 IW!uiiiA
Buliloni, Vancouwr-1
Mlnra&gt;11ota ,., NY blllndt&gt;r!i 3
MoMreal I, HIU'.ord I
Mlnnuota
Toronllo

:156 !'76
2~ 'l-16

:m

U.5

205 t7H

28-1 IIIH
284 ~~~
330 Ul
\!1-1 Wl
2~

~0

Quehe1• 11, BuU.Io 2

Ollclloi(O 3, Toi-onto 3 (tie)
Detro*~.

St. l.oWH .. rOTl

Lo1 Anre{t1116, PhUa~elptUa2
Su n:I!Q''M RetuM.o

WM1qton3, Vanceuwr 0
Nl' llllaadt'rM 4, "' lanlpe~~: 3
New Jeney 2, Mlnrrt~oU. e
Hardonl :1, Torolto 0
Quetw ll, Buffalo 2
8o11to• 5, NY Ran!lllrS 0
Edmonlo• 4, Plllllbur&amp;"h!
St . LAiuh 3, Ollc:aao 3 (tie)
Mondar 's Games
No ~ramftl •hetklled
'l'unday's Game10
Toronto 11 Que !woe, 7: &amp;:. p. m .
Edmolioa at Philadelphia. 7:3~ p.m.

Mlhnw'ee 113, a t&gt;w.lud 18
Ho••on U. lA Lakers 83:
WHin~on 114, Ol•lolte Ill
IMtol lit, Miami lOG
ladlaaal21, Portlandlii(OT)
SacramNtu Ill, Gvlcll•n SlatE' 16

Detroit, 7:3llt p.m .
NewJer•y atllalla!!, llo: 30 p.m.
Tut:'Jid.,-'s Gam('S
Phoenix at New York, niKftt
SfoaUif- at Indiana, nl!fhl
~A L11kel'!l al A tianta. niA"hl
Phlladclphla at ('hlca~o. nl l{ht
" '.mlnlfun ae Mllwau IIL&gt;e, niA"hl
Purtl1111d Ul San Anlonlo, nl~;:hl
LA Cllpp.ors at Gold!.., State, niJ:"hl
Cle"l'llland ut Sacramento, nl~

Pairings
fOLUMBUS. Ohio CUP() - Palrlnp
HI~ School !ilal e
ha..;lietball tournament:
Dh'L'iiOn I

for lhf' rtrL"' Ohio

Parmu. Hl51 Holy NMJJK' (111·7) "" S

C'llnton Glt'nOak (24· 1~.11 a.m. Friday.
Uma Sentor ~U-IJ liM Clncin•li
Molhtor of Mercy (22-3 '· I p.llJ . Friday .
Finals: :1 p.m. !oialurday.
Dl\'bllon II
WMidns Memoria! (U· I J lli'i Clnrln,.ll
Mounl Noln' Uamto i'H4 ). 3:30 p.m.

ThPnwiiQ'
Garleld Hellhts Trainlty (24-1) ll!i
Copk'y i 2t-.1), S: 90 p.m. Thu1"Sd1Q' .
Fl ... s : 10 a . m. Sllolw'th,y .
·
Dh· l~ loa Ill
Sherwood F~tlrvh.•w (tl-41) vs Ushon
(2-t-2,, 10: 30 a.m. Thun;tlay.
Swan1011 O~:J-3) "" Unlol.o (t1-2) 2:3&amp;
p.m. Thun;dl\y.
fl!llls: R:30 p.m. Frldu_v.
Dl,·hdon IV
Kllllda (~$-OJ v~ . ~ Chlll'll'slon SOu ·
dlr851forn (1$4), 7: 30p.m. M' edneMIQ .
ArciUllat (U·2J Y", Bcrln Hl~d
(#21. 9: ;«1 p.m. Wednfsd.!Q'.
t 'IIIIIJs: 9 p.m. Thuniday.

Cage scores
Ohio ('ollf'JIT Bwok.&gt;thaU Sl'011:'!i
By Unlt£&gt;d Prt"Ss lnlrrrtHkiMI
Munh_.
\\'l'lt•oMin TI. Ohio Stah• fi!o
Kt'nl Stat1• 116, Ohlu Unln•rslty 70
Bowltnr Greco liS, Tol('d{l 66
MIILMI 9!:1, EAAW.r n MldtiKata II':
Alr.roo 92, Mt'ct..r State 50
X1wter ~ . Dayton 7H
Ml!i!IOIUI·Kf 7'2, \ ' oqna!ltown ·a
Chl\'&lt;'IIWid SC 10"1". Valparlllsoll7
S Carolina ti9, nndnnati8H

M'rl!!:ht State. IDS, Wi!OC'·:\tllwuuk'.- ~6

Nt\IA Pla.l'oH!I DIMlrid ~
At Fl•dlay
ronsolallon
f'lndlay MM, Shllwnep State 7~
t\t 'nffln
Tiffin 711, Mo•nt \lt'rtmn 16
NCAA Dllllslonlll
Grcld Laker~ He ~oRtl
i\.1 S1Jt1n~lrid
thavnploMhlp
OUt&gt;rhcln 76, WIUenberl 66

,..,

ConsolatiOn

{"alvin (Mit:h ) tiS, .1\JieKheny (fa. ) 117

Butcher top coach
GIRLS' ALirSVAC -Senior Cryslal Hill, Southern's leading
scorer and a lop rebounder, joined teammate and fellow senior
Dawn Johnson In being named aii-SVAC. The duo was a vital part
of this year's Tornadoes' sectional IItle team.

Williams top Division I performer
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS - Lima Senior's
Tammy Williams, a virtual
coach of the floor for the Lady
Spartans, heads the 1989 United
Press International Division I
girls all-Ohio basketball team.
Joining Williams on the UPI
all-Ohio first team were Monica
Taylor of Elyria, Erin Kenneally
of Parma Holy Name, Tina
Eddie or Galloway Westland and
Pickerington's Susie Cassell, a
junior and the ony non-senior on
the first team,
The 5-foot-6 Williams. a threi&gt;year starter, led her team to a
19·1 record this regular season,
averaging 23.3 points per game.
She also averaged five assists
and six steals per game.
''Her two biggest assets are,
one, her passing ability and, two,
her court sense and awareness on
the floor," said Lima Senior
coach Ron Boedlcker.
"I've seen a lot of boys
basketball and she's about as
good as any boy I've ever seen
play the game at passing the ball
and running the show.
"She runs our show," added
Boedicker. "We give her tthe
freedom to change what we're

NATIONAL HOCKE\· LEI\GUE
Wale&lt; £'onfe.-enc_~
Pahlt·k Dlvb&gt;kln
W L T Pt!i. GF
NY RaniP'n
U 25 II 71 27!
W•hla,;ton
32 25 10 74 z.t~
Plltsbu rrh
S3 26 7 ;:~ 292
rht .. dt'lt*l• :n 31 -1 u 2~
New dert~ey
U 3Z 12 511 237
N'l' r,lulderM
40 -1 ..II 222

Su•hw's Reuthl

Confere•ee

..

Monda]''" Games
Phonlk aa Philadelphia, 7: Ill p.m.

\ltah 8D, Atlan&amp;a 83

~OT)

SemlfiMII
Crel pton $&amp;, Drake II
S. llllnol• 8, IIIIM'ii Sl.. Iii
!Southern Co nft"n!!lce
Dl.mpkH.tllp
E . TenEIII!Il!l' st. II, Mar!Jhall'7ll
SUn Belt Conlereoce
SemiPnal"
Jacksonvllle 71. W. Kenha:k)' 1%
Soutb Alab.una 183, Ala.·lllrmlnrtuun

Pro resuks

Satw'II.-'A Reaull5
Nt&gt;w \'ork It%, O.il'IIP 104
Nf"'r' JerWf Ill, _,.,,.,_ 95
w•tnatun 111. n.u. liS
SM ..\IlioN• IOC1 Dt'nwr 1\8
Phoenb: 133, LA OlppPn 91
Seattle liS. PhladclpWa 11-1
Golllen Statr 155, Sac"'mento 143

&amp; ckM4181, Hollltra U (OT)
Mt!ljji)Url Valle)'

Scoreboard ...

NATIONAL BASKETBALL 1\S!I)C"'.

Stmlnnalli
Lafa)'eUe 81, Tuw•nSt. 1t

SENIOR CHEERLEADERS - The senior members of
Southern's regional cbeerleadlng championship squad, present at
the Southern winter sports banquet Saturday evening are (front
row, IrK) . Chrlslina Cooper and Carissa Hill. .Behind lhem are
Tracy Beegle and adviser Sandra Baer.

Boston at NV l.!llanden, 8: 0.5 p.m. ,
New olert~e,t' at St. Louis. 1':35 p.m.
D«roM at Mlnnr.ulb., H: 3S p.m ,
WlnniPE".- at Cal pry, 9: 3S p.m.
Ftul'ilurwh .a Los An~le., HJ:.'J.5 p.m .

NC·WIImlnpon Ill, Rlehmolld :16
Eut Coa5t ColllermCII'

doing at her discretion. She does
it very well. I have never even
thought about taking that responsibility away from her."
Williams Is one of the state's
outstanding players who hasn't
already signed to at tend college,
el~ting to walt until after her
season ends to make her recruitIng visits.
Those In the picture Include
Ohio State, Bowling Green, Ohio
University, New Orleans,
Purdue and Tennessee.
"With the kind of slats she has,
you know she's a gym rat,"
Boedlcker said. "She's the first
at practice and the last to leave.
She's played basketball all her
life, prlmarUy with boys when
she was younger.
"She's a treat to watch," added
her coach. "Her reputation has
gotten around and when people
come In to watch her play,
they're amazed.
"She's a great player and we
have three or !tour other kids who
are good players. With that
combination, their attitude and
their friendship with each other,
they've turned Into a heck of a
ball club."
The 6·1 foot-1 Taylor, who
already has signed with Ohio

State, was second to Williams In
the player-of-the-year voting.
She averaged 19.8 points per
game.
Kenneally, at 5-foo-8, was the
leading scorer on the first team
with a 24.7 points per game
average.

AMOS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Dave Butcher, who guided Pickerington a 20-0 regular season and
the No. 1 ranking, has been voted
the United Press International
Division I girls basketball coach
of the year.
Butcher received half of the 30
votes cast In the coach-of-theyear balloting by Division I
coaches from around the state.
Beavercreek's Ed Zln finished
second with five votes, followed
by Gary Isler of North Canton
GienOak with three and Bill Bird
of Elyrla and Ron Boedicker of
Lima Senior with two each.

By Untied Pre~s International
The Atlanta Braves, holders of
the worst record In the National
League In 1988, Sunday became
the first team in 1989 to hold a
team meeting based on their poor
performance.
Following the Braves 7-1 loss to
the Montreal Expos, Manager
Russ Nixon called the team into
right field at their springtraining complex In West Palm
Beach, Fla., for a brief lecture.
"There wasn't any effort today," Nixon said. "I don't Wftnl
to sleep on something like this ..
My God, we've only played three
games."
Nixon was mast unhappy with
the performance of pitcher
Tommy Greene, who allowed 5
hits and 5 runs in two Innings of
work.
"He wasn't in the game,"
Nixon said . "A pitcher takes the
tempo of the game in there with
him. If his tempo isn't any good,
then everybody else falls right
into place with him, The pitcher
controls the game, not only by
throwing the ball. but the way he
goes about his buslnessoutthere.
It wasn't very good at all."
Nixon also was upset with third ·
baseman Ron Gan i, who made a
throwing error in the fourth
Inning on a slow ground ball that
cost the Braves a run.
"You can 'I hide anybody In this
game," Nixon said. "We couldn't
hide him at second base either.
He's working hard, but he's got to
work harder. We've got to get
him thinking more about the
position."
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., ·
five-time New York Yankel!s
manager Billy Martin had his
duties for 1989 spelled out by
principal owner George
Steinbrenner.
A news release said Martin,
who was !ired as manager last
June 23, will be a "top-level
advisor" with the club. His
lm(lledlate duties will center on
the evaluation of young talent
within the organization.
"Billy will be working with us
for a long time." Steinbrenner
said. "We (lnallzed some things
today that we had been discussIng for a while and outlined his
role In talent evaluation."
Elsewhere around the Grapefruit and Cactus leagues:
- At Haines City, Fla., Bo
Jackson hit a mammoth two-run
homer In the second Inning to
lead the Kansas City ~oyals to an
8-7 victory over the Boston Red
Sox. Jackson's shot cleared the
left-center field scoreboard,
which stands 71 feet tall.

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.
NEW ACQUISITION - Members of the Albany
Volunteer Fire Department look over a lire truck
they recleved from Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division vla a lottery with three
•.

..

\
·:
'.
other local volunteer units. T·he 111181nternatlonal
Pumper Is checked out by, from left, Mike Bean,
Chief Jim Ferguson, Warren Keirns and Terry
West.

I

Fire truck given to Albany department
It wasn't the same as winning
the Ohio Super Lotto, but fire
fighters with the Albany Volunteer Fire Pepartment went home
from Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division last week
with the title to a fire truck.
The Albany departmen I received the truck as a donation
from Southern Ohio Coal via a
lottery with three other local

volunteer fire departments, says
Fred Zirkle, administration
mana~er.
.
The 1958Internatlonal Pumper
had been used at the surface
facilities at the Meigs Division's
three underground mines. The
truck Is no longer needed at the
mining complex, now that there
are four departments In the
surrounding area, Zirkle says.

When the Meigs Division began
operation In 1972, only one !!re
department In Wilkesville
existed.
Jim Ferguson, lire chief, ac·
cepted the title on behalf of the
Albany department. He says the
Albany Board of Trustees will
need to discuss the subject before
It Is decided how the fire truck
will be used.

Rutland Garden Club meets recently
Pauline Atki'ns presided over
the Feb. 27 meeting of the
Rutland Garden Cl.ub where she
reported on the special county
meeting of all the garden clubs to
plan for the spring regional
meeting at Nelsonville on Apr. 8.
Mrs. Atkins opened the meet·
ing by reading the poem "The
Magic of Snow! all." Margaret
Parsons gave devotions by read·
lng from the May Issue of Ideals.
The creed was repeated by all
and roll call was answered by
each member naming special
house plants.
A letter was received from
Betty Lou Dean, regional director, stat!Dg the theme of the

regional meeting will be "All
Things Bright and BeautifuL"
All clubs are responsible for
sales tables and the Rutland club
Is to make table favors. Each
club is also to provide a door
prize.
ReservatlQns for the
regional meeting should be made
to Mrs. Roy Miller by Apr. 4.
Margaret Weber reported on
the arrowhead vine and the
development pf the Amert Flora
Garden being constructed on the
east side of Columbus. Pearle
Kennedy reported on the Thomas
Jefferson Center for Historical
Plants at Monticello.
Plans were made for the

therapy program to be held at the
Gallipolis Development Center
on Marcb 23, and Neva Nicholson
demonstrated some ideas for
·therapy with natural materials
for the residents.
Bernice Nelson read an article .
on how to force branches, and
Ruby Diehl reported on how
various plants can be hurt due to
changing temperatures.
It was also reported that Stella
Atkins and Ruby Diehl prepared
and delivered valentine plates to
the Meigs County Infirmary.
The next meeting will be at the
home of Anna E. Turner. on
March 27, 7:30 p.m.

AA UW finalizes . celebration plans
Plans to celebrate National
Women's History Month, March
1·31, and the American Assocla·
lion of University Women
(AAUW) Week, March 5-12, were
. finalized at the Feb. 28 meeting of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch of AAUW. The meeting
was held at the Racine United
Methodist Church.
Celebrating both events slmul·
taneously gives local AAUW
members the opportunity to
emphasize AAUW's contribution
to the recognition of women's
historical heritage, says Lee Lee,
president of the local chapter . .
A poster and essay contest Is
being sponsored In grades three
through eight In all school
districts In Meigs County .

Cindy Oliveri Is chairman of
the contest with Rachael Downie
helping to select awards for the
winners. Instructions and judgIng criteria have been sent to all
participating schools .
Also, judges from all three
districts have been selected and
notified. Prizes will be awarded
and recognition of winners will
b'e noted at the appropriate time.
Election of AAUW officers will
take place at the March 28
meeting. A, nominating committee has been appointed with
Kathryn Knight, Jenny Manuel
and Jane Manuel serving on the
committee.
'
In a report on the Educational
Foundation Program Fund. Car-

Community calendar
MONDAY
CHESTER - A special meet. lng of Chester TownshlpTrtistees
will be held Monday, 7:30p.m., at
the town hall.
RUTLAND
The Meigs
County Holiness Association will
be holding their yearly Indoor
· camp meeting, continuing
-through March 12, at the Rutland
. N·azarene Church. Services
begin 7 p.m.
RACINE ..,. Sutton Township
Trustees will meet Monday. 7: 30
p.m .• at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT-Anlntroduc·
tory course to round dance will be
starting on Tuesday, March 7, at
the old legion hall on Fourth St. In
Middleport.

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FOREST RUN -Forest Run
Methodist Church Is sponsoring a
rummage sale Monday, from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m., and Tuesday,
from 9 a.m. to noon.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls Elementary PTO wlll meet
Monday, 7 p.m.• at the school. All
parents are urged to attend.

men Manuel said that AAUW this
year Is doubling the amount
usually sent to the Foundation.
The Foundation money Is used
for scholarships •. grants, etc.
A past president's pln and a
book was presented to Christine
Napier by President Lee, on
behalf of the group.
Virginia Carson, program
vice-president, Introduced the
evening's speaker, Ruth Powers,
Pomeroy librarian. Powers discussed "Censorship." A video,
"Empty Shelves, Empty
Minds," was also shown, with
librarians, teachers and parents
voicing opinions on the subject of
censorship.
Refreshments were served arid
hostesses for the evening were
Lucille Haggerty, Christine NapIer, Kathryn Knight and JUdY
Arnold.

m-~!!1

CENTRUM
VITAMIN
TABLE1S

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion,
Pomeroy, will meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday.

TUPPERS PLAINS- Orange
Township Trustees will meet
Monday, 7: 30 p.m., In regular
session, at the home of Clerk
Dorothy Calaway·.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will meet
Monday, . 7 p.m., at the ortlce
building.

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Pomeeoy-Midclaport. Ohio

Peg a 6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 6, 1989

------People in the news-----....,
'

" He does not dance, duck, dodge or beat around the burning
bush; he simply walks up to the subject of divin ity ~d br iskly
smites It, hip and thigh."
SNORTIN' MORTON: Morton Downey Jr. got physical with
one of hls guests du·ring a taping Friday . He was involved in a
scuffle with artist Mark Koslabl, who mocks his customers for
paying such outrageous prices for his work , but there was no
word on whether the show will ever be aired. Mort suffered a
s lightly Injured thumb in the tussle. ·
GLIMPSES: Teen queen Debbie Gibson filmed part of the
video for her song "Electric Video" at her suburban New York
hOme and used her Uttle cousin, Daniel Slcuso, in It ... Mother
Bates, the mummified corpse that co-starred with Anthony
Perkins In AIJred Hitchcock's original ·'Psycho." is now part of
MCA 's touring Magic of Hollywood exhibit ... Vice President
Dan Quayle and President Bush's chief of staff, John Sununu,
were at a White Mountains ski resort during the weekend for a
celebrity ski tournament to raise money for the Christa
McAuiiHe Sabbatical Fund, which is named for th e Concord,
N.H. social studies teacher killed In the 19~ explosion of the
space shuttle Challenger ... The Rev. Jesse Jackson jumped Into
the Eastern AI rUnes strike Sunday on thesideofthe strikers. He
appeared at Hartsfield Airport in Atlanta Sunday, urging the
striking machinists "not to let them break your spirit ."

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United l'ress International

MAKING ' l'IANS - Jeaanlne Marcam, RD, rt~~:ht, Holzer
dietician, tallks with Allee Miller, left, Volunteer who asalsts the
stall development department In diabetic patient follow-up, about
the Importance ol controlling cholesterol by proper diet.

Senior seminar set
"Cholesterol and Dlet" w!ll be
the subject of the March 1989
program of the Health Malnte·
nance series, sponsored jointly
by Holzer Medical Center and
Clinic.
These Informational presenta·
lions, specllically for community
residents who are age 55 and
over, are designed to encourage
wellness among Meigs County's
senior citizens.
Featured speaker for this
month's program will be Jean. nine Marcum, R.D ., membef of
Holzer Medical Center Food
Service Department staff.
Mrs. Marcum is a native of
Dayton, and holds her B.S.

degree in Home Economics/Dietetics. She Is a graduate of the
University of Dayton and served
a one-year dietetic Internship at
St. Francis Medical Center In
Peoria, Ill.
Upon completion of her internship, she was a clinical dietitian
at St. Elizabeth Medical Center
ln Dayton, a position she held
until joining lhe Holzer staff in
September 1986.
Mary Harrison, R.N., staff
development coordinator at the
hospital, along with Allee Warnsley, director of Senior Citizen
Center activities, is making the
arrangements for this commonlty information service of the
hospital and clinic.

AN EDUCATED CARTOON: Life is a cartoon at Stanford
University. "Doonesbury" cartoonist Garry Trudeau wili
handle the speaking honors at Stanford' s commencement on
June 18 and a university official said he was a very appropriate
choice.
··Trudeau is someone who, I guess you could say, captured the
essence or our time," said Marlene Wine, who Is an assistant to
Stanford President Donald Kennedy and a member of the
search committee.
Wine said the committee gave Kennedy a list of six possible
speakers and Kennedy went with Trudeau. "We have had
reports that lie has iiOne commencerrieiillallcs Before and is
excellent," she said.
NOT A HORRmLE REVIEW: Stephen King likes John
ln&lt;ing's new book, "A Prayer for Owen Meany ." King reviewed
the 543-page book in Sunday's edition of The Washington Post,
saying Irving writes with "verve and gusto" about Owen, who Is
.
a Chrlst·ilke figure.
"John Irving, who writes novels in the unglamorous but
effective way Babe Ruth used to hlt home runs, deserves a
medal not only for writing this book. but for the way he has
written It," King says in his review.

Quirks in. the news _________
Secret document found In a
junked sale
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A
40-page government defense report marked "secret" turned up
in a safe a Columbus firm
purchased from a Cincinnati
surplus company .
The document, bearing the
seal of the Department of
Energy, was turned over to the
FBlwhichwilltrytodetermineif
it is stili classified.
The Columbus firm, Johnson
Safe .Co., had purchased five
safes from a Cincinnati surplus
ouliet. A Johnson employee
found the document, dated May
24. 1988, between two shelves In

one of the safes. The word the careless handling of th e
"Destroy" was handwritten dl- secret papers. He said he wanted
agonaily across the cover pa~e.
to make sure people charged
Th.e report conlalned referen- with destroying secret reports
ces to cruise missiles and pay close altention to their
bombers and charts of weapon duties.
FBI supervisor David Hanna
stockpiles , and workers told the
Columbus Dispatch that at least said his agency did not immeeight people at the company diately know if national securit y
looked at it.
was jeopardized. He said hl s
"You 'd have to be an expert in agents will try to determine if the
that field to know what it's ail document is stili classified, who
about." said Eva Johnson, wife saw it. and how it wound up in the
of the company's owner . "The safe. ·
average )ayman wouldn' t under- Woman's head found hy golfers
near creek
stand anything In it."
Company owner Chuck John·
HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP .
son said he wasn't trying to get N.J. iUPil - Two golfers
anyone in trouble by pointing out . Sunday found a woman's head

~eport: Health group Immigrant's classes running out of money
unport unapproved
•-AIDS drugs·
antl
.

.

NEW YORK ( UPil -A health
organization specializing in
treating AIDS patients plans to
import Into the United States
anti-AIDS dr·ugs currently
banned by the U.S. government,
The New York Times reported
Monday .
The People with AIDS Health
Group, headquartered in New
York, said through a spokesman
that it planned to reveal details
on Monday of a network that will
soon begin importing and distri·
butlng anti-AIDS prescription
drugs not legally available in the
United States.
Derek Hodel, the group' s executive director, said the group will
take advantage of a Food and
Drug Administration policy allowing people with lifethreatening Illnesses to import
personal supplies of unappproved drugs.
·
The People with AIDS Health
Group had not yet discussed Its
distrlbu tion plans with the FDA,
the Times said.
Agency officials general'ly
have tried to block sales of drugs
that might · prove useless or
harmful. But pressure Is increas·
ing to grant American AIDS
patients access to the same drugs
available to persons abroad who
have the disease, the Times said.
Frank Young, an FDA administrator, declined to say how his
agency would react to the prescription drug network. However,
he told the Times that the
department would at tempt to be
compassionate towards AIDS
sufferers and that much would
depend upon which drugs are

importe~.

The-health group currently Is
Interested foremost in obtaining
supplies of fluconazole, a substance used to treat cryptococcal
meningitis, an Inflammation of
the lining around the brain
affilcting about 10 percent to 15
percent of AIDS patients.
Fluconazle Is sold In Enlgand.
Ireland, Denmark and France. A
monthly supply costs $800, but
Insurance companies In the United States wili not pay for the
drug because the drug is not
approved by the FDA.
Hodel said the organization
initially will rely on doctors In
England , West Germany,
France and Japan to send the
drugs to the United States .
To receive the drugs, AIDS
patients will have to present a
letter from a doctor In this
COI&gt;nlry to the People with AIDS
Health Group, which in turn will
forward the request to one of the
doctors abroad. Tbe overseas
doctors will send the drugs back
to the organization, which will
then funnel them back to Amerl·
can patients .
Previously, critically ill patients had to travel outside of the
country to meet personally with a
doctor abroad.
The Times said the health
group has the backing of many
doctors who work closely with
AIDS patients, and of such
organtzat ions as the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force, the
Gay Men's Health Crisis, and the
AIDS Coalition to Unleash
Power.

Reduce fat to rut risk

SACRAMENTO, Calif. IUP!l
-A shortage of public money for
English classes Is threatening
continued legal status for thousands of Mexican Immigrants
granted conditional amnesty In
California.
The state's newly legalized
aliens must demonstrate they
are learning English by a No·
vember 1990 deadline or face
deportation if stopped by officers
of the Immigration and Natural!zatlon Service.
Education authorities say the
state needs at least an extra $541
million for English courses and
will use up its $104 million budget
. tong before the fiscal year ends
June 30. To get more funds they
musl compete with Immigrant
public health services, which
receive most of the $1.8 blillon
federal aid allotted to the stale
for five years.
The English program is
further threatened by a Bush
admlnls tration move to rescind
$600 million of a total $4 billion In
funds that have been appropriated for use nationwide.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·
Mass., introduced legislation In
the Senate Wednesday that
would take an additional $200
million from the same pool of
immigration funds and use It to
provide emergency assistance
for 25,000 Soviet Jews and other
refugees awaiting entry to this
country.
"A lot of us are getting
nervous," said Arnoido Torres,
the national political adviser for
the League of United Latin
American Citizens.
Torres, who is representing
various community-based organlzations offering the English
courses, said an extension or the
deadline set in the Immigration
Reform and Control Act of1986ls
unlikely. He noted that Congress
did not extend the deadline for
applying for amnesty despite
some delays In setting up programs to Invite people to apply.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Echo· vented if Americans would
Demonstrating an interest in
ing the findings of scores of change their eating patterns for
learning the language, Califorresearchers, a high· ran king go- the better.
nia's newly legalized aliens have
vernment panel Wednesday
urged Americans to eat more
But If everyone heeded the been taking an average of twice
fruits and vegetables and cut
recommendations on tbe Intake as many hours of English classes
down on fats to help prevent
of fat, cholesterol and saturated as required tobecomeellglblefor
heart disease and cancer.
fatty acids, the panel predicted permanent residency status.
A report pending before the
In a report billed as the most
the change could lead to "a 20
comprehensive, scientific study
percent reduction In coronary
of the links between diet and
heal't disease risk in the United
health, a National Research
States beyond the 1987 levels."
Council committee called · on ·
Members voted to set a goal of
Americans to reduce consumpThe experts offered no similar $10,000 for their share of extion of fat to 30 percent or less of
estimate for cancer, but noted penses in the remodeling of the
their daily calorie intake. Cur"several countries with dietary lobbY of the Veteran's Memorial
rently, the typical U.S. diet
patterns similar to those recom- Hospital at the recent meeting of
consists of about 37 percent fat.
mended in (the) report have the organization.
The hefty, 1,300-page study
about half the U.S. rates of
It was voted to make a $7,000
reiterates many of the recomd-Iet-associated cancers."
first payment during the meeting
mendations made last year by
•
presided over by Mary Folmer .
Other chronic disorders linked
the Surgeon General's Report on
Carol Ault, activities director of
Nutrition and Health, and like to diet include high blood pres- . Extended Care, was a guest.
sure, liver disease, dental cavithat report, advocates a moderFund raising projects were
ties and the type of .d iabetes discussed and a bake sale has
ate, balanced diet rather than
associated with obesity, the been set for March 24 In the lobby
emphasizing any particular food
19-member panel said. But the at the hospital beginning at 10
or nu trltlonal supplement.
The committee did not support experls added there was not a.m. It was also reported that the .
sufficient evidence to link eating new chairs for the lobby have
the use of most dl.etary supple·
patterns to kidney disease or been selected.
ments including multiple
osieoporosls, commonly known
vitamins, calcium, fish oU and
The meeting was hosted by
as "brittle bone disease.''
fiber - saying most "not only
Betty Sayre and Helen Hill.
have no known health benefits for
A silent auction Is planned for
The committee contends the the next meeting to be held
the population, but their use may
fat-reduction goals produced by March 21, 1: 30 p.m. In the
be detrimental to health."
Its three-year study are workable conference room. The hostesses
The committee did not make
·an overall esUmate on how much
"wlthln the framework of the wlll be Mary Frecker and Carrie
average American lifestyle."
chronic disease could be preKennedy.

California Postsecondary Education Commission says there
are waiting lists for half the
programs In the state that teach
English as a second language.
Because of the shortage of
funds, some state officials are
suggesting limiting participants
to the minimum 40 hours needed.
Educators say that would be a
missed opportunity. "Why kick
them out just when they get
going?" asked Bill Honig, the
state superintendent of public
schools. He said th e state should
make teaching immigrants
enough English• to get jobs its
highest priority.
State Sen. Art Torres. one of 12
members of a national commission overseeing implementation
of I be 1986 immigration law, has
Introduced a bill to require the
state to set aside $50 million in
federal funds for emergency aid
to the state's English program.
The biii faces its first legislative
test this week.
Torres said the money is
needed for classroom facilities
and to ensure that schools and
community-based organizations
offering the classes will get ·
reimbursed. "People are being
forced to go to classes at 2 in the
morning here in Los Angeles," he
said.
Los Angeles has about half of
the state's estimated 1.3 mililon
to 1.6 million newly legalized
aliens. Up to 900,000 of them wili
be required to take English
courses to galnpermanentresidency status.
Costs of the program ·have far
exceeded Initial expectations because the state had anticipated
only 655,000 newly legalized
aliens, said Ann Sutherland, an
educationconsuilantforthestate

Senate.
Th&lt;' stat e al so did not count on
one- third of these immigrants
being illite1·ate in their native
Spanish, which has presented
additional difficulties in teaching
them English . .she said.

But the administration of Gov.
George Deukmejian believes estimates on how much money is
needed may be high, said Ri chard Eps tein, specia l assistant
for immigration at the state
Health and Welfane t\gency .
Deukmejian has given th at
agency the role of planning how
the state's Sl .R billion in federal
immigration money should be
spent through 1991. So far the
statP Education Department ha s
been allotted $351 million.
The Bush administration is
likely to limit expenditure of the
federal funds to ensure that all
newly legalized aliens get the
minimum 40 hours of English
required before the money is
spent on extra English training.
Epstein said.
·'There are many programs for
which this money is avaliabie,
and we cannot consider their
(English) needs in isolation of
other needs," he said. "These
same people also get gravely ill."
SchOols chief Honig suggested
that the state, because of a fiscal
crunch. may use federal funds to
pay for immigrant health costs
that were financed by the state
treasury In the past. "I think the
temptation is there," he said.
The state Education Department, in turn, has been criticized
for being slow in reimbursing
community colleges and
community-based organizations

r--"'!!""'!""'--------------------·1
Pre-Easter
• I
Sav1ngs.
STOCK UP

NOW.

Auxiliary meets

SELECTED

Maybelline

Colognes

AND

50°/o

OFF

Cover Girl

50°/o

OFF

"Great Easter Basket Stuffers"

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669
271 NOITII SECOND,

IIIDDlEI'()RT, otl.

New Doctors Disccwery

'Lazy Way' 1o Lose Ml/ghl
Already s_.plng u.s:
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Speciai)An amazing new weight loss pill called
"fat-magnet" has recently been devel·
oped and perfected by 1110 prominent
doctors at a world lamous hospital in
Los Angeles that reponedly "guaran·
tees" you steady fat l_oss and calorie
reduction by simply taking.their tested
and proven new pill.
The U.S. govemmenthasjustappw;·
ed the doctors claims for a hard·t&lt;&gt;-get
patent that confirms "there has never
been anything Iike their fat-bonding pill
process before." It is a totally new major
scientific breakthrough and is revolutionizing the weight loss industry.
You Can "Eat Normally"
Best of all. "you can continue to
eat your tdvodte foods and you don't
have to change your normal eating
habits. You can stan losing fat and
reduce calories from the very first day,
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desire without exerdsing".
Flushes Fat Out of Body
The new pill is aP.propriately called
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks
into thousands of panicles, each acting
like a tiny magnet. "attracting" and
trapping many times its size in undi·
gested fat panicles. Then. all the trapped
fatand calories are naturally "flushed"
right out of your body because they
cannot be absorbed.
Within 2 days you should notice a
change inthecolorofyourstool, caused
by the fat panicles being eliminated .
''Automatically" Lose Fat
According toone ofthe inventors. Dr.
William Shell. 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% sa(e
and not a drug." The fat-magnet pills are already
sweeping the country with glowi'ng
repons of weight Joss from formerly
overweight people in all walks of life
who are now slimmer, trimmer and
more anractive again.
Now Available to the Public
If you are trying to lose 20. 50. 100
pounds or more, you can order your
supply of these "no-risk" highly suc·
cessfullill-magnet pills directly from the
doctors' el!Ciusive manufacturer only
(includes optional calorie-redu~tion
plan fbr even better results). Send $20
for a90pili supply (+$3 handling). or
$3Sfbral80pill supply( +$3handling).
to: Fat-Magnet, 9016 Wilshire Blvd ..
Dept. W705, Beverly Hills. CA 90211.
( U~~~:OIIditlonal money-bad: ptllllll·
lie If 1101 100'1/c s•tisfied.) Visa
Ma.~ter&lt;:ard and Amencan Expres;
OK. (Send card number, expire date,
and stgnature.) For fastest service fOr
credit card orders ONLY call anytime
24 hours, toll free 1(880) 527-9700,

ext. WJt5.

., &gt;·M ,.,

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

'Ads o utside Meigs, G11ll ia pr M111on count iM must be prep•id .
~
'f' e ceive t 50 discount for ad1 pa id in ad\.oance.
'free ads - GN..wav 11nd Found tds und.- 15 w ordtwitl be
run 3 d&amp;tft tl no ch..-ge
•Ptice of 1d for 111 capital letters is double price of ad con
•7 point line type ont)r uNd .
"Sentinel is not r"pon1ible tor euors 1tter firs1 dl'\' . !Checll
for errors f irst d&amp;tf ad run• In paper} " Call bciJfore 2:00 p, m .
d., 1ft.., publicMton to mllke coHection.
"Adt thM fT'IUII be peid In ld'dnce 1re
H1ppy Adt
Card of Th1111kl

Ytrd Sal•

'A clt~sif i ed advertisement placed in TheD•tlv Sentinel (fJJt·
ee pt - classified display, But lneu Card 1nd legtll nftticas)
will 11110 appear ln thfl Pl . PieM1nt Regis tar and the Galli·
poli1 Daily Tribune, ruching I)YIIIr '18,000 homes.
COPY DEADLINE -

MONDAY PAPER

Painting

0· 15 WOAOS 11·21 WOROS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

84 00
$5 .00

se.oo

f!J.OO
833 .00

. $5.00
$8.00
$13 .00
S21 .00
$51 .00

21· 35WORDS

$7.00
"0.00
et5 .00
$25 .00
$60 .00

Ann ou nceme nIs
1 - C•rd of Th.,.kl
2 - ln Mt"!Ory
3 - Annoucem~~ntt

4 - Give.way
5 - H.. ppy Adt
8 - Lott and Found
7 - V•d S.le (ptid in aWance!
I - Public S1le6 Auction
9 - Wented to Buy

949-2168
2· 10-' 88· 1 mo . pd.

'tHURSDAY PAPER

-

HHDAY PAPER
SUNOA Y PAPER

-

2 ·00 PM . WEDNESDAY

- 2'00 PM . THURSDAY
2·00 P ,M , FRIDA¥

1 1·- Help W1nted
12- Situalion W1nted
13 - lnsur•nce
14- Bualn•• Training
15 - Schoftll &amp; lnttruction

Aidio, TV &amp; CB Rep sir
r'--------------------~ 11
17 -- Misc:etlaneoua

18- Wtnted To Do

Cla.~sified

pages

Galli a County
Area Code 614
Gallipoli•
ChMhire
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guven Oist.
Arabia Oist.
Walnut

. Meigs County
Area t:;ode 814

M1.1on Co .. WV.
Area Code 304

992 - Middleport

676 - Pt . Pleas•nt

Pomeroy
985- Ch•ler
a•3 - P.ortland
247- Letart Fill•
949 - R•cine
1•2 - Rutl1nd
667- Coolville

458 576 773 882 -

L&amp;on
Apple Grove
Maaon
New Haven

896 - Let•rt
937- BufiMo

21 - Buain•s Opportunity
22 - Mon., to Lotn
23 - Ptof••lanal Services

Real Estate
Hom" for S111
Mobile Homet for Sale
flrms for S1le
Butln•s Buildings
31 - Lott&amp; Acre-oe
31 32 3334 -

Sporting Gaodt
AntKtuu
Misc . Mar ehandiu

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service

51- htt tor S1l11
57 - Muticallnsuuments
58 - Fruit• • Veget•bl•

4i 4 4 47 -

Aptrtment for fhnt
Furnlthed Rooms
Spece tor Rent
W11nted to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 - For Lease

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo. Ohio
Februory 15. 19B9
Contrec:t Sales Legal
. Copy No. 89·176
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Department of Transportation. Co·
lumbus, Ohio. until 10:00
A.M ., Ohio Stendard Time.
Wednesday, March 16,
1989, for improvements in;
Gallia. Hoc:king, Meigs.
Monroe, Morgan, Noble,
and Washington Countlel.
Ohio, on sections Galli•
S .R. 7 • 11 .37·19 . 63.
26 .13-33.49. 34.60). on
various routes and sections
of Gallia. Hocking. Meiga.
Monroe. Morgan. Noble and
Washington Counties, by
herbicidal spraying.
Work length • 283.66

pany,
P. D. Bo• 490,
Athens. Ohio 45701
submitted a renewal
cation for coal mine Permit
0 -0463 to the Ohio Depart·
mant of Natural Resource~~,
Division

of

Racl~~mlltton.

The p'e rmit area is located in
Vinton County. WilkesVille
Townsteip, l Sections 3 and
15. TownshiP SN. Ranoa
16W; Fraction• 24. 30. 33
and 36;
Township BN ,
Range 16W; Moitll Count';.

Salem fownship, Sections
25 , 30. and 32: Township
7N an~ IN . Range 15W. on
the property of Southern
Ohio Coal Company; with
underground

workings in

Vinton County, Wilknville
Township, Sections 1, 2.
2E . 3. 4. B. 9 , 10, 15and 16;

Fractions 24, 30 and 36;
Township 8N, Range 16W
and 18W; Meigs County.

Salem Township, Sections
·~· 19, 25 , 26, 30,31.32 ,
33 and 36; Fractions 7. 13,
19 and 25 ; Township 8N .
Range 16 W; Gallia County,
Huntington Township, Sec·
tion 1; Township 8N. Range
16 W. The permit contains
322. 3 acr• and ia located
on the Mulga and Wilkesville
7 Yl Minute U.S.G .S. Qua·
drangle Maps. approxima·
tely 2 .5 miles west of Wil·
kesville. Ohio. The applicant
has obtained a road permh
to mine within 100 feet of
.the" dght·of· way of Salem
Township Road 333. Wil·
kesville Township Road 4
and State Route 124 which
will remain in effect until
coal mining and reclamation
operations are completed
under the coal mining permit
issued pursuant to this per·
mit. The renewal application

will allow Southern Ohio
Coal Company to continue

the mining operations on Q .
0463 for up to five years
past the expiration date of
April B. '1990.
•
The application is on tile at
the oftices of the Meigs
County
Recorder. Meigs

chapter 6525 Ohio Revioed
code.

Plans and specification•
are on file in the Department
of Transportation and the
office of the District Deputy
Director . .
The Director reserves the
right to reject anv and all

bids.
BERNARD B. HURST
DIRECTOR
Feb. 27, Morch 4

County Court HouJe, Sec·
end Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
46789. Vinton County Re·

E. Main

POMEfiOY, OH.

--MIDDLE·

992-2259

-·...

~~~·~-.,STING

2 story flame
~~~;~.:!; 3 bedrooms, bath,
F.A.N.G. heat. reI remodeled and in
condition. $47,000.00.
-

NEW LISTING - IN THE
COUNTRY - 5.96 acres
with 1\? story frame house
with 3 bedrooms, bath, carpet, elec. B.B. heat and
woodburner. New drill ed
well. Barn and pasture area.
$29,500.00.

SYRACUSE - Qualrty shows
in th~ 3 bedroom ranch
. home. l bath. beauti(ul family
room. nice krtchen w~h all appliances 1ndud mg dishwasher, washer &amp; dryer. Large
yard with ch~n link fence.
New wood storage bu il din~
$45,000.00.

House. Main Street, McAr-

can~

you?

MORNING STAR ROAD -A
lresh newly built home is
just the ticket to en joy the
coming sprinJI, Qualrty construction ranch with 3 bed·
1ooms, 2 baths, elec. heat
pump, Andersen windows,
beautiful front porch, and·
garage on a large lot.
Located in a growing d!Nelopment on Morning Star
Road. $59,900.00.
Henry E. Clt11nd
992-6191
Jell! TrusHJl ..... 949-2660
Dottle Turner ..... 992·5692
Jo Hill .............. 985-446&amp;
Office... :............ 992-2259
NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe h1n buyers for Meip
County Property. Ust with
us for H&lt;t ruu~s.

9 AM· 7 PM

Aulosfor Sale
Trucks for Sale
Vans S. 4 WO ' s
Motorcycles
loatl &amp; Moton for S11e
·76 - Aulo P1rts &amp; Aee euoriM
77 ·-Aulo Rep lit
78 - Camping Equ ipment
79 - Cimpers &amp; Motrn Hom~s

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u. s. n. so un
GUYSVILE, OHIO

Services

614-662-3821

81 · Home Improvements
82 - Plumbing &amp; Hell•ng

9384858687

EIIIC..,a1ing
Eiect rical &amp; R&amp;lrig er ation
Genera I Haulirlg
Mobile Home Repa ir
Uph oh1 erv

.J

Authorized John
Deere, Now Holland ,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer .

BILL SLACK
992-2269
8-8-U li n

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On February 4, 1989. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Case No. 28160,
Nancy Kreisel, 2080 Ottawa
Drive, Circleville , Ohio
43113 was appointed Executrix of the estate of Es1her
A. Bukey, deceased. late of
6t704 S.R. 124, Long Bottom, Ohio 46743 .
Roben E. BUck,
Probate Judge

Basham Building.

EVERY
$At. NIGHT
6:30 .....

PUBUC NOTICE
On Seturday, March 11 .
19B9. at 10,00 A.M. Tho
Home National Bank. Ra Ohio. will offerfor pub·
lie sale, on the banJc parking
lot. the following:
1982 Chev. Citation
1G1AXBBRDCT104568
19B1 Datsun P/ U
JN6MDOIY7BW00998t
1985 Ford Escort
2FABP042XFB1B8045
1979 Pontiac Trans AM
2W87K9N128614
1982 Pontile Trans AM
1G2AW87HOCN619333
The terms of the sale are
cash .
The Home National Bank
reserves the right to remove
any of the above named ve·
hicles from the sale at any
time.

J3l 3, 5. 6. 7 . 8, 9 6tc

utD

Mutdolaading Supplios
Modern Gun Suppli•

Guns · Ammo . Slugs
22 Ammo

Rt . 124 Eoot of Rutland
Acroso Hoppy Hollow Rood

Jo's Gift Shoo

COMMERCIAL

Everything Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments

Because of Cold Weat.her
Everything Inside. ·
Ring Door Bell for Service

SINCE l QtJ9

2·7*lmo.

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY

We can repnir and recore radiators and
hta ter cores. Wt can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

•Mobile Homo Parts
•Plumbing Supplies
•Electrical Supplies

MON.·TUIS.·WID.·FRL
9 A.M.-6 P,M,
THURS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON
SAT. ' A.M.- 2 P.M.
Call Anytime Day or

Middleport, Ohio

3rd St., Syracuse, Oh.
2-11·'88-1 mo.

B&amp;B
PAINTING
1

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SYRACUSE, OHIO

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A! RHsonabl• Pric1s"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2160

(all Evenings ....

992-3801
992-6347

INSURANCE call:

JEFFERY J. WARNER

SALES &amp; SERVICE

..
II

&amp; Associates

We C1rry Flthlng Suppliw

Oi

16141

l'h. 614-992-5479

RELATIONS
108 High Stn-ei
Pomt~rO)', Ohio 45769

4

. Giveoway

mo.

Puppies to good home. Mixed
breed, 8 Wk• . old. Clll1514· 742·

304-675·3056.

6 Lost and Found

.............. -~~­
!-11-'1'1·1
11&amp;0.

INTERIOI-EXTEIIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCE

BusineM Senices

PAINTING
WITH

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

PROFESSIONAL
CARE
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

742-2328
3+'89 tfn

THE
lASKO WEAVE
Hand Woven
B81keta
Baaket Weaving
Cle11e1
Baaket Supplies
OPEN SATURDAYS

10:00 lll 5:00
PAM MilHOAN • OWNIII ,

992-6855

2-~7- 89-t

' 614-985-4180

mo.

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major 8t M i nor

Repairs
NIASE CertHied Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC""Li1 c~~~~~~~l
Certified

MOBILJ
HOME PARI
•Mobile Homa
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479
Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy. Ohio "
t-l:J-'19-un-

I

J&amp;L

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.

RACINE ·

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.9-19-88 tfn
•VINYL SIDING

w.-

Found: keva IIi c•e l•t
around Sug• Run Mill. Inquire-.•
at O.lly Sentinel Office in

Pom•ov .

..... 114-742-2148.

8

Public ·sale
&amp; Auction

Call Marlin WedemevM. Al£tloneer, Licensed &amp; Bonded lr(

N1wN..,.. ...t

INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certainteed:
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
. Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

8115/ tln

.-----------,
BINGO .

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNPAY CAlLS
3·11-tfn

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

Ower 11 0 People su.oo
Per Game

U&lt; ~OOl-32

2·3-ltn

~----------

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohi.o

1-31-'BB-1
~.

'I

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH peid for '83 model

end newer used c••· Smith
Buick·Pontlac. 1911 Eutern
Ave .. Gallipolis . Call 614-446-- .•

2282.

CompiM&amp; hou18holdl of ~rnt­
ture &amp; antique•. Also wood &amp;.
coal ,.,eaten. Sw1in't F urnh:ure
It A.uetion. Third &amp; Oli\te,

614-448-31 59.

Furntture M1d fiiJplilnOIJI by t~
piece or entire hou1thold. Fair
prices being peld. C1ll 614-448-

992-6282

CAU 992-6681

9

TIIURS.Ii.l. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. U. 1:4S P.M.
DOGI PllZE
2 H.O. FREE wtth coupon and

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

rlence. Phone 304--273-3447
R.wenwsood. W.Va.

Junk Cars with or without
mot ors. Cell t..rry Lkl11fv· 614388-9303.

CARTER'S

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.

AUCTIONEER
Edwin Winter now booking
aprlnu ••1•. 17 yew• ·~

CLUB

puiChase ot min. H.C. Pack~~~ lim~ I coupon per customer per bin110 sess1o~
Wt Poy •so.oo Per Gam•

"Free Eatimataa" ·

Uquldattons.·

614-245-6152.

224 E. MAIN ST .
992 -9976

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

of Ohio :

f•ms, ntatet, ant1Qu111, etc.

POMEROY -EAGLES

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

'

lo1t: female grav Gre.t Dane.
H11 bl~ spo11. 8 monthl old,
an1wets to Sathe. Call 614698-4781 . Reward.

State

LINDA'S
PAINTING

• ,,

· Free Peek-a-POc / Pqm&amp;renlan
mix puppies. Cell 814· 4488908.
.

=.:c.,•

Phone (614) 992-2922
~ 2·3-'19-1

ahip onty. A-.,tv P .O. BOk 317,
Point Pltl!llrtt, W.Vt. 251560. · \

lost; Oobernwn. I months old. ,
Female. Bled • tan. Has
padlock on coli•. LeadingCI'Mk

Rtg. 614-992-2477 ~
Cloim1: ·
t -I00-421 -3S3S

PUBLIC

Pay You• Phone
• and Cable Bills Here

IUSINIS! I'MONE
(6141 992·6SSO
HSIDINC! PHONE

REPRISENUTtVE
302 W. 2nd St.,
Pom.-oy, Ohio 45769

l.eesa Murphey

n8't'Y home, would Ill•• to meet
worldng l*'v mid 20s to mid
301, no hV pe, lllrious rel.t'ort'

Call 614-446·1504.

2-27-89-1 mo. d.

4·16·86-Hn

45760

Single White M81e 37. Mriou., •

secure, property owner, bldg

FOUND: Voungfemelep.,Lab,
black with white 1pot on chest.
VIcinity of Washington Hem. ,

For LIFE

Middloport, Ohio

SHOOnNG MATCH . Sl....,e '
gun~. 7 :00p.m, Mile Hill Ad .. ~
Racine, every SaturdaV night. ~

Bleck and white, brown on ·
brown puppies, a weeks old,

INTERIOR• EXTERIOR
ROOFING
Joe &amp; Robert Brown

NO SUNDAY CALLS

New lCKalion:
161 Narlh Second

Hayes Realty
Jack W..CarslfV·Aeettor.
614-992-2403 or 614-992·
2708. Cell for lis11nga or taiM, , ,

2201 .

Commercial
lesidtntial

Day ::r Night

PlUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

Beauty Plgeent Cont•t All
ages &amp; stzes. Call 814-367·
7412 eher &amp;pm.

•

Irian Houllashtlt, Ownw

992-2196 .

LadiM. Gents. Teens and Pr•..
Teena:Wanting to start 1 TOPS
Welgtrt Club In the Qalllpolts
Area. If YOU Ire int••tld in
tskingofpounds sensibly , pleeae
contact Mary at &amp;14--448-1863.

Night

992-6135

PAT HILL FORD

9/ 20/ tfn 1 rna. pd.

3 Announcements

SYRACUSE , OHtd

RADIATOR
SER"ICE

"-· 614-742-2355

1· 12-' 89-tfn

AnnounGements

OF BUSINESS

1-13-tfc

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

992-5114

2·24·'89· 1 mo.

992-7

lOADING

-

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

North .Sat;ond, Midcltp.Drt

DUSKY ST. SYMOI!I

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

ISubjt&lt; I to Change
Withaut Noti&lt;t I
# t COPPER .............. 16' I~
#2 COPPER .............. W 1~
CLEAN ALUMINUM
IHfETI ..................... 12' I~
CLEAN ALUMINUM
CAST ......................... 40' I~
ALUMINUM
lEVERAGE CANS ..... 10' I~
IRONY
SHEET ............. I ' to 30• • ·
IRONY CAST .... 3• 10 20• llo.
STAINLESS ................ 20' lb.

614 -992-7521
614-992 -2661
WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS

•METALIUIL01NGS
HOUSINGS. APT. PROJECHi

Fac11or1 Choke
12 Gauge s7n::~;~d Only
Stri&lt;tly I

lena K. Nesselroad. Clerk
121 20. 27; 131 6. 3tc

Pub Iic Notice

FOR INFORMATION

.CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS
.eKTENSIVE REMOOELtNO
•VINYL SIDING. ROOFING

ftrM E~oit••••
· Soleo &amp; Sotil"

WEDDING GOWNS, PROM
DRESSES, fORMAL AntRE
AND ACCESSORIES
"Just In Time For Spring
Events•.•. ' '

~

"""

WANTED

S£ll£R .....Mokes Money
IUYER . .. SavH Money

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
DWNB: GUG I. •ouSH
,r:t,
GENERAL

~

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

LIGHT HAUUNG DONE

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy. Ohio ·
I
B-L3tfn

71 72 73 74 75 -

OPEN 7 DAYS

DEliVERED

11·16 - '88 -tfn

-

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

PER LOAD

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

Transporlation

2· 15·1 mod. pd.

$3 s

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

63 -~ Uvest ock

64 - HIV &amp; Grain
85 - Seed &amp; Fenlizer

POMEROY - One s!Of'l
frame house. five looms. 2
bedrooms, and bath w1th carpe!ing Approx. 150' frontage
wrth 4 lot~ Cable available
ASKING $13,000.00.
POMEROY - 2 story frame
house wrth 2 bedrooms and
bath, wrth wood tloors and
some vinyl covering. ASKING $6,000.00.

corder, Vinton County Court
thur, Ohio 45651 , and the
Gallia County Recorder.
Gallia County Court House,
locust Street. Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 for public view·
ing. Written comments or
raqu1111ts for an informal
conference may be tent to
the
Division of Reclama·
tion.
Fountain
Square,
Building
B-3. Columbus,
Ohio 43224 within thirty
days of the last date of publi·
cation of this notice.
12) 20, 27; f3J 6. I 3 , 4tc

001

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

-az: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

&amp;1 - Farm Equipment

62- Wtnted to BU\1

985 -4222

DAY OR EVENING

roor. rl'rG I"'IIIXU'rs

FIREWOOD

Television Listening Devices
Dependable HeariDg Aid. Sales &amp; Senric•
Cl Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Farm Sllil)Jiies
&amp; Livestock

Public Notice

PRICE REDUCED - MIDmiles
DLEPORT- Beautiful colo"The date ut for campi•
tion of this wortc shall be set
nial home! level lot, 2 car
forth in the bidding prop- ' garage, has ornate trim, attic
out."
stud1o w/skyhghl. Well in·
Each bidder shall be r&amp;sulated. $49,900.00.
quired to fila with his bid a
certified check or cashier's
MIDDLEPORT - Unique 3
check for an amount equal to
bed1oom
home in good confive percent of his bid. but in
dition. Equipped kitchen,
no event mora than fifty
thou11nd dollars, or e bond
washer &amp;dryer incl uded. Fifor ten per cent of his bid,
replace, II on t s1ttmg porch,
payable to the Director.
I 17 baths. $11 ,500.00.

Bidders must apply. on the
proper form. for qualifica·
tions at least ten days prior
to the date set for opening
bids in accordance with

,.... I'JIIrirG •

GENERAl CONTRACTORS
Refereoces

GUN SHOOT
Public N alice

...,®
..,..:f!:..

59- For Sale or Ttsde

l;lijdi'AI

I

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

985-4141

Buitding Supplieia

1-3· '88-rfc

Public Notice

CHESTER , OHIO

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

31 - Anl btete W~~nted

43 - Farml for Rent

Cet Results Fast

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •F reezers
•Refri11erators
" Must le ltpairabil"

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
•R.EMODELING 8t REPAIRS

Household Goods

51 52535455-

lili61114811

cot,er 1/te

following telephon e excltnnges ...

DEAD OR AUVE

MARCUM CONTRACTING

MerGhandlse

Employment
Services

- 2,00 PM . MONDAY
- 2 ,00P .M. TUESDAY

FREE ESTIMATES

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

CHESTEI, OHIO

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY

TUESOAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

"48 3673882•5 256143379-

Gutter Cleaning

RATES

Rtt:M ere fo r eonMeuHve w ns, broken up d .,. , will be ch•g ed
far e1r.tl riiiV at separate ads .

POLICIES

Southern Ohio Coal Com-

Weight Loss Pill
Approved for
U.S. Gov't. Patent

ROOFING

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY $ A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY ·
CLOSED SUNDAY

WANTED

Howard L. Writesel

41 - Houtes for Rent
42 ·-Mobile Home~ for Rent

offering English classes to immi·
grants and for not making sure
the classes are offered where
needed.
·
And community-based groups,
many .of which operate on shoestring budgets, say some of their
teachers are going without
paychecKs.

The Daily Sentinel- Page 7

Business Services

Classifie

In Memoriam

near a creek Sunday as th ey were
playing at the Hopewell Valley
Go if Club. authorities said . .
The golfers were walking near
a creek when they saw the
woman 's head at 12: 15 p.m.,
police Lt. Michael Chlpowsky
said. " No other parts of the body
were found , " he said.
Chipowsky said the woman
probably died within the past few
days, but he said a medical
examiner would have to determine the cause and time of death.
None of Its local residents had
been reported rriissing. and a
nationwide alert with drawings
or the woman had been released,
the officer said.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

,

.

1·28-'88-ttn

3158.

Will buy or appr~lu anything!
AnUquet, furnhure, aprfli~r~cea , '
estet.. , autos. complete home 1
turni.shin(JI . Marlin WedemfJ'Ver
614-245-5152.
'
Wanted tO Buy-Dozen H8wy
Hena. Cell 814-446-8987.
Warned to Buy· U•..:t Mobile

Hom•. Caiii14-448-017S.
Uaed t.Jrnlture by tt. p1ece or
entire houtehold alto uNing.

614-7•2·2455.

Top price for u1ad furnitur ..
houeehold. ani iq4 ... •
and appliance~ . All typn, Call ·

g -*•1

614-985-4396.

. '

Quilts

,..e1940 quilts. Any condition.
Caoh paid Call814-992-5657
"114-592· 2401 .
Adult ~ir of wtdt• G.ckt Alaq
1emale Mutcovy . 114~ 992· ·.

8083 or 81.4-387-a.zt .

�•

Page 8- The Daily Sentinel
f.mpluvment

44

Apartment
for Rent

S~rVICe~
11

Help Wanted

SON ESTATES, 638 Jackson
Ptke from 8183 a mo. Walk to
shop 1nd movies. 814-448-

e10.2 13 10 t76••73. IMME~
Dl.lTE OPENINGS! Call (Relu n-

25&amp;8. E.O.H.

1-316-733-8082. ••t.
f.2732·A.

dobl~

T•a Townhou .. apa1ments· 2
BRa.. 1 'h bllthl. CA., dilhw'ash•. ditpONI. Pfivate en·
closed p .. lo. pool, plllfground .

WAREHOUSE TRAINEES
la•n Inventory end stoc* control. limited o peni ng~. Flit P"Y'

Wllf.er.

Downtown· 1 BR , apt. newtv

herd. .. Coli 1-800282-1384.

redeeor•~ed.

0139 .

aembllng Mu•l~ Teddy B11ra.
Mater!•
supplied Nc selling.
2203. Kltt lmmee, Fl.

work

in Mason.

Meig1,

Sal• rep. will be pMd on a
commisston b•il- SendrMume

Single 11duttt onty . Call 8f4-

"I take it this company 445-4607 or 446-2602.
tv remodeled 1 BR . apt.
doesn't have much of a sick New
Appl. furnished. Ideal
1
block from downtown. Call
leave program?"
614-445-46 39,
~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'lr;;;;:~;:;;::::;:;:;=-==-12
BR.apt., new plush c•pet,
I
36 Lots
Acreage
n- point, .,.;o~; .. poniollv poid.

Now ac:ceptiong IPPiications for

GOVE ·RNMENT JOBS

.816,040.· 869.230. YfW. How
hiring. Call (1) 805-187· 11000
Ext. R· 9806 for c:urr.-.t fed.-..
fiot .

Job Hunting? N. .d a sk111 We
trtin people for jobe • Auto
MeehMiCI,

Carp~W~t•a.

COim&amp;

tologilts, Diversified Mecical
WOrk••· ElectriciWII, FoodSer·
vice 'M&gt;rken. Electronic:. Technicilns. lncllstrill Meinten~noe
Wofluws. NurtingA ..-.amsand
Ordarll•. Machinis:ts. Office
Worh•• 1nd Welders. Regilt•
now for
beglnntng March.
27th. C•ll Tri-CountvVocational
Adult Center at 814-763-3611
• t 14. A Vllrietv of fundlpg
tource~ to pay tor tnlnlng ere
avallable for tM•e eUglble.

d•••

bv thenpid
in manut.eturint;~ technology . fhceN"e spec1aliaed
trlinlng in the mech~nical, hy~
dra~lle and electrical component• of factory equipmtnt in
the Adult tncl.lstrl,. Maint•
n~r~ee Program lit The Adutt
E.d uc.. ion Center- -Tri-County
Voc•ional School. We hiV'e •
variBiy of funding souroae avail~
able for eligible appllcanu .
Cl••• begin Mareh 27th. Call
814 ·7153 -361-1 ext . 14 to
Don't be left behind
ch~r~gf"

fe(lllflf'.

A'•embltn. Earn mqn..,. allembHng M~siCII Ted(tf
Materlall tupplied. No Salllnp.
Write; Jo· EI Ent.-priiM, P.O .
BiOx 2203. Kiulmmee. Fl

B&amp;••·

32742-2201

Odv•nment Jobl l • 18.037. to
869, 40&amp;. lmmedi8te Hiring!
Your area. Call (Aefundeble)

1·618-469-3811 Ert F1622

for Federal lilt 24 H ra.

IJII or pan tlmeBuut~
cill'l wh:h M~n-a•• License in

W~r~ted :

MiddlepOft. Pom•ov ar... Send
rewme to BOlt 729·T, Pom•ov.

Ohio 45789.

proc•slng phone
orders. People call you. No
"''*lenoe nec••.WV· Call fr•
fundable) 318-733-8013•t_.·
slon P-2748A.
t360·day

Orlv•awentad. ta'60 pa- hour.
Appt.. .. Domino• Pint. 12:00
noon undl 4:00p.m . on weak·
d flil.
AVON · AI ...... Call Mtrilyn
wa.,• 304-882·2646.
AVON Ill .... nShirl., Spe•..

304-875-1429.

Jutt want to e•n •llttle111tra
monev7 Or would you like to
hiVe a c••1 Either WflY Avon
can help you bett. t.t you can
belli CaU Mlrltvn WerNer, 304-

8Bz.2646.

lab¥ titter ln .rrrr home c;ab

Creek Road, O.llipolit Feny.
W.Va . 304-171-2318 after

6:00.
LPN
Ple•.rt Vallfi(Hotiph:al Nurting

C.re~ter

n. . . .,lltlmelPN,

coli p. .onnol 304-675-4340.
AA·EOE.
LPN: p.-t tirn•futltime. ..,ening
shift. rtwting t7.66 P• hour.

Contact Cattrt Wrrl(. R N· DO N,
Care ......,., of Point Ple...,.t,

304-876-3006.
Situations
Wanted
Place your loved one in "'I c•e.
Aoom tor 1 eldtrty ~., or
woman. Cat! 614--117· 3402.

15

Schools
Instruction

RE·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLlEGE. 529 Jookoon Pika
Coll44&amp;4387. Reg. No.88-11 10688 .
United Truck M11t• ·
Truth Ortv• Training

O.O.T. C_.lftcllton .Job Placement A11ilttnot Home Stuctv·
/ ~etid., Training. Fln.. otal
Aid Awllable. Accredited
Member NHSC. Cell Toll Free
1· 800..648· 6411 . Local office.
P.kersburg. W. Va. Hdqre:

Clw .. FL

Real Estate

o_

George' s Portable SMmll
Don' t ha.~l your loge to •

-mHI. CoH 304-175-1957.

8 1)0\tkelping lp.ci atzlng in altO

ralal:ed Jobs allo wll straight.,
out meesed up check books.

304-875-4330.

F1nanc1al
21

31

Homes for Sale

V,Y anractlve bridt 4 bedroom. ·
2 bal:h. family room with flreplace, tornW dining. l•ge living
room, 30 fl. cu11om oak lcilchen
clblnlll:a. olk woodwork. flnilh

baement. 2 c• g•age.

Busine8e
Opportunity

.,7581mo. Call 304-675-6104.

nr.

51 Household Goods

RON

SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Wooded bJUding lot 160x180, 6
mil• from Point Ple•8f1t, 304875-6541 aft« 5 :00PM.

.:_:_::._::.:..:.:..::.=_:::::__:.._ _

Rentals

614-446-1619.

lot, 4 ml• from
Hob:er Hoapttel off Rt. 35~rt•bfook Subdtvillon. C.ll

l~n.mped

814-44&amp;4189.

Deluxe 3 BA . hou• for •le.
Own• finMce. Cal 304-175-

6104.

41

Homes for Rent

3 BR . house. deluxe. AC. e350 •
mo. C.ll 304-675-6104. or

676-538&amp;

3 BR . house. Oepod required.

1988RidgoorKtCioytonB2K28
doubl...-ide. 3 SR ., 2 bath.
1&amp;x28 living rm, eentrellt:ereo
-vrt.-n. kitchen wfth g•Wue
ditpo•l, utMtty nn., front&amp; back
decklnp. centrel .., with he•

pump, 1n ground 1wlmmlng. baa·
kltball court. utJUty bulhth:ag
12x 1e. 1 outllide aecurfty light.
Pflvate drive. Setting on 15/ 37
acr•. Loc•ed just off St. At.
188 end Cora MIH Rd. in
Galllpolil ctty echool dittrlct.

Asldng U8,600. Cell 614-2469128.

2 story, 15 rooms. blltl\. rur11l
wtt•. Kyg• diet. .9 acr&amp;
mosttv fllll. 1 mi·Storvt Run Rd.

Coll614-387· 7893.

Nice 6 room bride hou• with

l•ge country kttdlen. brftle

Wly, 2 c• gw-ue. Set on 1 ecre
lot. HannM Trace tehool dit·

trlu. Coli 814-28&amp;1941 .

2 storiM, 4 BR .• full unflnilhed

baement. 20x40 in ground
pool. 2 plut acre~ In VInton. Call

10,.01d Fort Trail. Call814--446-

2683. 9 to 6 dolly .

fafm hou• for rent. 4 BR, city
wat•. ne• Cadmus. 8100
deposll. 8150 p• momh. Call

1·614-876-4014 •Iter 6pm.

7ye• old. 3 bed-oombrldt-ll'inyl
total alectric. *lch style home,
e•pet:ed throughc)ut. 1 ec:r e
f.,oad In back yard with deck.
Loc.ttKt 7 rNI• from HoiJ:•
Hoapital on Rt. 160. A~ilable
MO.rch 1. $3&amp;0. p• month. If
int•ett.:t, call 614-28&amp;-1316
(Jecksont after 7 p.m. ·
bedroomhouse~nd2be'*oom

ap ll'tment. w.o hookup, remodeled SeOJrky depoth. Call

Home In country for •le. With
HouM for 11le in South&amp;rn

3090

•,..c• 2
old. 3
be&lt;toom. 2 b•t\. khchen. family

Larg' houH in Racine 1r011. No

2831 .

3 bedroom houtlll for ule in
Ruatlc Hlllt. 814-992· 7449.
3 bedroamrandl · cent. hnt•nd
•o.
f8milv roomw·f.p. Nice lot.
lMge dedc. WOoden dorege

bldg. 304-875-7438 lifter 8
p.m.

3 bochomo. 2 bol ... fu II
flnshed baement,. nM furnace
and central air. g•~• fenced
v-rd. 2414 Mt. VernonAw .. Pl.
Ptt.' Priced on inlpect6on. 304-

876-1774.

32 Mobile H omas
for Sale
1 8R .. f•mltv .oom. add on wtth
fireplace on I!J 1cre lot. Tycoon

..... Col 814-448·0701.

Rocl.u:od 1984Sicylino14•70 3

BA .,1"A bMhl. E-'lentcondl ~
tkm. On rtnted lot. lndudet lnal

-Ina.

porhoo, 8•18 - d
aton(lle b•n. 21 ft. Hff con--

tlin.l camp•. Own•movlna•
mutt ..11. C.ll French City
Brolt•IQ&amp; 114-441-9340.

1978 14.&lt;70. 3 8R .. 1977
14&gt;70, 2 BR. Coli 304-8963427.
1978 Schultz 14x80 with
14d0 odd on (bu lit In 19871 3
BR .• 2 bMt\. Uving room. kit~
chen. h•M pump, wood burner.
10x20 buldlng. t14,000. Call

814-448-01102.

1954 mobil• t.oma 8x:38 Oe·
uoltar. Excellent condition.

I BOO Firm. Colll14-441·0863.

14x70 moble hotM. 3 bedroom. 2 bet hi, centrtl air, total
electric. t9000. Will contider
le•e or ul1 of knl with the
home. 614-992-3066. ·

14x?O moble home. 3 bedroom. 2 bet hi. central H . totat

Deluu carpeted 2 BR ..
equipped kitchen . lndividua!
p•ki.,g. Excel. location. No

peu. Soc. dep . Coli 614-448-

otft required. Phone 814-992·

Ptlt in hou11. Older cou pie
pref.-r.:t. Send referencet to
P.O. 8e»r; 729-Y, Pom•ov. Ohio

46769.

.

In Middleport and Pomerov. 2
bed-oom. one floor pl., lovely
home In Pom•oy with full
•ement. W·D hookup, furnace
heM, drapM, c•petlng. st(Mt
and refriv-ttor. t225 plu11
utiHI• ind depolil:. In Mldcleport lovely th.r • blldroom r•idence, nloe kitdlen, huge living
room. utility room. *2150 plu 1
utlltti• and depo11t. Wor.ldno
tdu Ita and will accept one child.
Sorry. nopett. Phone814-992tr2921NenJng~ or weeh .. ck.
.. For A_,t, 2 bedroom u nfur·
nllhed hou11. 807'/J Second St.
New Hav.-.. t110. 00 month

l*o•.cleposlt. 304-676-6276.

42 Mobile H()fli8S
for Rent
Fully furnished g•ag• apt. AJ
utlitl• plllid e~tcept electrldlv.
Newtv redeoorated S. carpMed.

Coll114-44&amp;6680. 44&amp;
8551.
,:.=::__
_ __ _ ,

2 be*oom apwtmenta. fully
c•peted, applianCes, water and
truh pietrups provided. Maint•
nMct free INing close to shopping. banks end schools. For
mo,e inforr:nadon call 304-882·

3718. E.O.H.

One bedroom apt; furnished and
111 utiliti• plld, ref•en~ required, 30~876-2722 .
fl.f'nilhed

aPt, a4Jtts only, no

,..•. 3\)4-876-2257.

3 rooms and btl h. S260. 00
month U1iliti• paid. 304-875-

3030 or 876-3431 .

2 belt'oom Apta. for rent.
Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
hcilitl• tvlilllble. Cell 614-

982-3711 . EO H.

Gr.cious lving: 1 .. d 2 bed-room ap.-tments at Village
Menor and Rivert~ide Apartments in Middleport. Frorn

•1u C•II614-982-77B7.
15

Furnished Rooms

Room~

for rent-week or month.

Starting at e120 a mo. r,Jellln

relrlg. Shore bclh. All uiH~Ie
J:ald. t126 'a mb. Call 814-441-39415 aft• 4 PM.
.
Sleeping r09m1 with cooking.
Alt:o Trail• II)Ke. AH hook· f.C&gt;I.
CAll tfter 2p.m. 304-7731851 . Meson WV.

46 Space for Rent

Mini firm with trll• in Patriot.

Coll614-379-2101 .
2 BR .

~~~

o•pet. AC.
eJ~eept

lurniohod. . _

An

utiiitled paid

elee &amp; 9•· Cable TV
ev•hb4e. Owner PIYI water,
s•aga ttath pidwp. Sec. dap.
B. ref.. 4 of mile from dty Mmif:a.

Coll814-445-7791

1,037 pound tobacco b•e, 30
cent a pound. Call 814-2156-

1431.

Coumry Mobile Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pom.-oy.
lDts. rentalt, paru, sal• . Call

814- 992· 7479. .

.

2 br. mobile home. All elec. DIIP.

1o rol. Adu~s. No polo. Coli
814-387-n43.

47Wanted to Rent

electric. 19000. Will consider
la•e or ule of lots wkh the
homo. 114·992·3066.

Nead to Nnt hout1 in Hann.,.
Trece School D i1trict. 3 BA . Call
61 ._ 2151-- 1739.

1871 Schulll Moblo Homo. 2
bactoom. ttp out In lht lng room,

2 Br. mobh homa furnished.
1250 o mo. t2150 dip. Adults
ont(. No pets. Water &amp; ••age

Famly ktoking for 2 to 3· BR
home to rent clotetotown. C.ll
814-446-2238 aft• 6 PM .

814-992· 3181 .

Pri• r...,codl 19n Schu~ .
Sttueted on 2 •c:r• or will
•••••· .,8,eoo. c•1 814·

948-3087oflor llp.m.

.. 1979 Elcondo 14x70, 3 bod-

lolol oloctric. vinyl un&lt;* "''"·
ing. porch, out bldg, on Nntllf
lot . t10.BOO.OO. 304-876·
2948.
.. 1971 ConOO&lt;d 2 -oomo

1b815. •2.1500.00. 304-1754118.

33

Farme for Sale

Olntlemen

f•~40

Tr·••torrent. t126monthnkJI
...
dapa~•. See on 3rd. St . Racine.
TrtH•s. Unfurmhed. Couple~.
smll childr• accepted. Rt. 1,
Lomoot
Rood.
Pt. Plo • .,l. behind
K&amp;K.
304-876-1076.

0322.

Vall.,- Fwnrture
New and uied furniture and

applicancea. Call 814-448·
7672. Houra 9· 5.

For Lease

Coli 614-446-1149.

Kitchen cabinets. counter top,
30 inch Tappan electric range,

range hood. Mutt sell. Reaona·

King wood burner w / insulated

?481 .

Used range and fefrigerator for
sale. Call Village Manor Aptl. at

614-992-7787.

0175.00. 304-676-6986.

Corner booth outfit with 42x29
tabla and matching chair. 2quiM
1ramn. 304-875--3244 aft•

6:00PM.

52 Sporting Goods
Browning Sweet 16 V.8 .. ntw.
Belgium- e850. Savage Model

24 22/ 20 gi.· 0150. Coli 614445-7019.
53

Antiques

Ouittsl Quilts! Quilts! "Buying
nice quilts since 1968'' Cash
paild. Jean While. 814-24~

9448.

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antlqun.
1124 E. Main Street, Pom•ov·
Hour~ : M.T.W 10e.m. to 8p.m ..
Sunday 1 to Sp.m. 814-992-

2526.

54 Misc . Merchandise

814-28&amp;1888 . .....

8t Acreage

Old Iron oomblnlllion •fe. ap300 lbt.. 20'' W X 31"tiiiK
20" deep. Good cond t360.
See 11t Thomu Ctothien, 364
Second Ave.. Glllllpotill.

8 ft. Lear truck t opp•. good
cond .~ $160. 13 in. Capllh.-t
color tv remote. excel. cond. Cal

know, Md NOT to Mnd mcm..ttrouah the mil until you twta

-lgolodlhoo-g.

Ut-221711ft• llp.m.

IMI.,dTow....,. 814-112·
3841

870.11881 .

Lo'vestock

1---------"" ..,.. Co1614-387· 7789.

Big Dakota Farm home bJIIt on
vourlot. • 13 • 991 •"~'· See our
model. Call 1· 81 ... 886· 7311·.
Swi~nf Poolt- tll9
New"ftover 9BIMoct.lpooll.
Huge 11 by 24ft. ..vim 1rea. 4
ft. deep. lndudll dedi. fenoe,
filter &amp; wernntv . lnlt .. IIUon &amp;
fin~ndng ••liable. Call 24 hrs.,

1-800346-0946.

(I)

Two tingle air mMtr••-. used
once. 120.00 each or both

71 Auto'·s For Sale

Corvenes.
Buildin M.teriail
Block, lrick. atWer pip•. win-

t••· Ato Gr.,de. 0 . Call 814246-6121 .
Com~·eta blodct· all siz"- 'l'lfd
or delivery. Ma1on11ncl Gllllpolil Blodl Co., 12]11.1 Pine St.,
Gallpolis, Ohio. Call 814--448-

2783.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Suppfy Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breedt ... AII
sty!•. lams Pet Food Otlaler.

Julio Webb Ph. 814-44&amp;0231.

Dragonwynd Cattay Kennal.
Per~ ian ..,d Slam•• md Him ..
lay., klttena. Chow ttud ••·
vice. Call 814-446-38441'ft• 7

PM.

for Salel 1972 17 tt. Stercraft
TriHauiBoat, 126H.P. Evinrude
engine. complae top, naN upholstery. t3500. can
7 :00
p.m . 814-28&amp;-1316.

I. WAS MA/&lt;ING $1oo,ooo
A '(fA{?. I .:t HAP 75 pEopLf ::.
UN¢1. ME, A COI\Il&gt;O IN

Ch~Nyt .

Surplus.

76

1987 Le81ron Coupe Turbo.
EKcet con d. AI optiont. 1 8, 000
miiM. Call 814- . .Pr8060-Keep
trying.

1988 Dodge 800. A~o .. air.
C.ah price. 83499. John"t Auto
Salaa-Rt. 7 IMMO'N Holidev-tnn.
Kln&amp;Jga,

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICOE-

:recognilad tefe &amp; effecthta by
U.S. a..-... of Vet«in.-y Medtclna eglintt hook. round &amp;
UlpMormt In doge • cttsl

BIDWElL CASH FEED JD
NORTH PRODUCE.
HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICOE:
recognized uft and ~active bv

o1 ve~:enn.,. Medtclne qainst hook. round md
.,...,orms in doge and clltsl

RloG Food •d SoJpplv 3.99 W.

UKC roglolorod Blue Tide pupo.
Dtm ill H..-nmer breeding. Slr•i•

L••

Night Ch1mp6on
Bfue
Th•e pupt hMo'e the
Hull•.., d Dixie eros.. 3 times
in 15 genlf'etione. 814·949Ao~.

24!3.

ASf!N, ANP WAS JEtNG
CON!IPf~Ep fO, 'rtfE
SENATf, .ANP TtffN J:.

Ford 200 8· cyl. · enF1e and 3
speedtransmiuion. 4000mi181,
call Wlflings, 61 ..... 247-4304

400 S.8. Chevv engine. COI'l'l"
plat.._, 11!1bJilt, 1850. Call 814-

992-8974.

--.;....o-:.· ..SWITCtfEP

614-446-3103.

1973 R•re h•dtop MG·BGT.

Body In good cond. lntlf'ior In
excel. cond. Call 11 ..... 379-

a

i

,.l
j

"I'

•

TO PECAf.

&amp; Campers

1974 Volkswegon. Aunt greet.
Needl brake work. $2150. CaN

1972 Scottie Camp•. 16 ft.,
tleepe six. gat. etectric. battery.
new refrigll'lltor. E.:ttllmt co~
dttion. Call 81~949-2479.

2424.

Services

1981 PhoeniK Pontiac. 4 eyl
Excel. con d. One own.-. 65.000
mil•. Loaded. 12500. Call

-

1982 Cutlua Supreme
Brougham In !Tint condition.

a

1984 Chysler Lea•. 5 speed.
48.000 ml•. Loltded wtth
Ieath« 1..C1. t4100 Flrm. Call

814-286-1982.

1979d•kblueM.-OJryMarquis
Stet6o~n with n. .ly owr·
h•ledB cyl 302.,gine Auto.,
air, PW, Mdott••tre'a. Needl
minor
CaH 114-992·

'liP••

5892 • • 8:00pm. Aoklng
81000.
1988 Pontiac Fi«o. E.:eii.U:
conditJon. 30.000 a(:tual mila

198&amp;FordThunct.l*cll3.000

Gorrnon Shop'*d puppl•. no
popor~ 304-468-1626.

mil•. UIIOO. 814-843-6304.
1919 Chovollo t7150. 080.
Auns or•. dec.-.t concltion.

Coli 814-742·2284 or 814742-2422.
1988 Couaor LS. V8 Mloino.

lo ...ed. uncf• 8000 ml•. a1.....

Kimball plano. Excel. COnd.
11100 Firm. Clll 814-446-

9778.

.

'•SON.

lndhl'kll.t gull•
blft..
ginn... •rtoua 9Uittritt. I Nf-

c.clt Mu•ic. 81 ... ~0187,
Jeff Wam11.., Instructor. 114-

445-8077.

Llm~od

op.,lngo.

992-2782.

1977 VW Aabblt. 2 door. 4
tpeed. 74.000 mil•. Auna

good. t300. 814-992·1120.

1184 BIM:k Century, 8 p. .
aeng•. likentw,lowmil-.miP
llg.._ Ill wheel. speed control.
lir. AM · FM at•eo. 114-843-

5235.
('; Livestock

. BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1980 Honda Civic W•gon.

Needt en gin• work. Call 30 4882-3&amp;92. evenings..

complete t43. 2~.

Musical
I nstru menta

Home
Improvements

614-992-6941 .

IDodod. 18200. C•ll 114-9863840.

Point Pl-ont. 304-875-2083.
I 0 (1111 ooc up 114.99ond 10 (1111

81

Extra cl..,.. int.-ior. 2 door. CaR

Fith Tmk. 2413 J•ckton Ave,

57

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

614-44&amp;2349, 9 to 9.

Uncondltlon• lit.l:lme guar ..-.
tee. locll ref•.,C* klrnilhed.
Free aatlm••· Call aollea
1·814-237·0488. diP/ or night.
RogeraBasement
W••prooflns.

•••ah"...

halt

Ford tractor w / buah
&amp;
P1owt. cullttntou, t2 10.
Own• wll fln•ce. Call 11428.1822.
·

-:-:~:-:-:-:--:-----,--

4447.

For 811~Tobecoo

paundla-.

Farm Equip"""'. z.torTractot"',
lilda,
F - Rin(ll. Buying aid bo1tor-

410 Allied front end loal•. Ftt
tboul.ny tNator. Llhnew. Aleo

400 bel• mile oct h.,. t1.28 por
bela -nol14-667-3464.

running cond.. phone 304-1571-

2481

..1979 Choov Mollbu

remod1U~g

pi•• CoR 814-445-7129.

LivBitock

AI,_. Uw_,odl ..... Alblnyllolo wory llolurdor·1 PM .
Uv•odl .._ .. oft• 4 PM
Wlrfl Frtct.,. 1 Mle • • of
A - on 81. Rt 110. Col

-

..Wll do...... . _ . ,_ _ hlullng
•nv-•
onvtlma loaol or lang
dltt•noe. Ex"'lenced with
l!t-112-2322. etl-3531 ,

"-lvooloclc.l14-848-270l

Jm C.rn.t.~n.

A·merican Hero Follow the
life and achievements of the

com-

man best known for leading
the legendary Tokyo Raid.

A and T Build4rt from founda- .
tion to roof· inside or out. Free
•lltm••· B Wget priee~. CaH

which struck a blow to the
Ja~nese

t1.
875-7388.

' 78 Ford Fairmont. atatlon
WIQOf\ e cvl. a.~to. 304-87&amp;-

1489.
72

II.

RON'S Televla:lon Service.
Houta ~IIIII on ACA, QuiUr,

Myth Follow the fascinating

C1J irohHo -- ltehind 1ht

IXlN 1T '10W I:Ve:R HAVE

GE. Spochllng In ZonMh. Coil
304-87&amp;2398 or 114-4482454.

study ol Japan·s emperor

ANVTHINE\ Pl&amp;'6ANT 10

Hirohito. who was protected
from public scrutiny

$AY10A PER60N'+

throughou1 nis lile.

Fetty Tree Trimrring, atumP
removal. Ctll 304-875-1331.. ,..

@I Ill il2) Murphy Brown
Murphy·s mother arrives for

Rotay or cable tool ~lllng.
Monwells oomplatedumed.,.
Pump • ' • and terVIce. 304-·

an unexpected, extended

;i;~~ollage Btlkttbalt

..

895-3902

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,

(!))

w•.,_,,

82

·i

Twlllgh1 Zone The
Passerby
Roger Miller Special
Musical Variety aboard 1he
Missis~ ippi Queen with
special guests Tanya Tucker,
Lyle Lovett, Libby Hurley and
comedians Williams and Ree.
10:00 CD 700 Club
illl llll!2llleouty 1nd tho
Beaat Catherine lives in
Tunnel World aher the

a

Plumbing

8t Heating
CARTER 'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Ptne

GoHipallo. Dhla
Phono 814-445--3888 or 814448-4477

8t

Tn.u:ks for Sale

1982 T.. oto pidtup. 2 whool

TH' SCHOOL MA'RM
SAYS THAT CAMELS
'CAN GO SEVEN DAYS
WITH NARY A DRAP

IF YOU
THINK THAT'S
SOMETHIN'--

WffTCH YORE
TON&amp;Uf II

OF WATER

sudden death of her father .

Electrical
Refrigeration

~ Evening News

@Newt
10:05 (]) MOVIE: Maotocre at
Centr11l High (1:25)
10:30 ffi Homo Fr.. : Tho Rotum
ol the Bald Eoglo C
. (f) Douglas MecArtltur. Tho
Defiant General This
documentary looks at the
emotional streng1h and
defiant nature of the brilllan1
general and lhe 1rlumphs and
downfalls these traits
wrought (NR) (0:27)
1211 New Coun1ry
11:00 (})Remington StHit S1eele
al Your Service
e
m CD • rn illl ew
\!5J Newt
(!) 8porleContor
m Sign Off
Gl II] Love Connection
il}l Monoyllne
@ Honeymooner&amp;
[! Mloml Vice
1211 You C1n Be 1 Star
11:308(}) l!5l Tonight Show
(!) College Baofle1blll

R•identill or comm•ct• wif.
ing. New a.-vice or rtplirl.

Ucent.:t electrh:i111. Ridenour

Boctrlcol. 304-876-1788.

drfvewlthtopp•. C.lll14-44&amp;-

·2350.

.

1888Chovy.l4 1ol\ t3150. 1972
F&lt;&gt;rd 'h ton. t86Q. Coli 814-

441-1431.

b•&amp; wihta •palle wheats,

85

General Hauling
Send for your Astra-Graph predictions

Ditl•d Water Service: Poolt.

Clol•na. Wolle. Dollvory Anytim&amp; 0&gt;11 614-445-7404-No

Sun~ ~Is .

U60.00. 304-175-2417.

-=====:;;::::;;;:;:;;::;=:
I ................. 73

Vane

&amp; 4 W.O.

1986 Ford XLT ""'ooUir Mini
Van . Excella"t condition.
I.Oidecl New tlr•, .... 1Wp.

II 4- 742· 3142.

J &amp; J Wilt• Service. Swimming
· Ph. 814-

2411-928&amp;.

1.000 or 2.000gollons delivery.
Coli 30 4-878-11370.

1000 gil. w8t:• aervica. Lim•
tone eprMd. We h ... l gr-.!,
aand. coal. Me. C•ll 814-992-

1278..

tl286. Coli 814-247·4212.

w.n ..on s W.t.- Hauling, ra•

runt good.

1980 Chw holllon 4x4. outo,
PS.IIIwhMI.AM-FMr-. 811
bed wtth tCip5Mr. chrCMM

weoon

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

R • A W•er S.VIce. Poolt.
cltterna, welle. lmmedi .. •

1979.DodgoRom Ch•gor. GdH
prd, _,g - - t1398.
1111 AM C
2 door hotel\·

Eoa••
looka end

1

son1blu rM•. Voklme dis·
counts. 2. 000 to 4. 000 c.,acity. citt•ns. pools, wells, etc.

'-\bur

'Birthday
lllorchl,1111

30 4-875- 2819,

wheel•. W-31·10 .10 tlr••·

t1891.oo. 304-175--1731.

'77 Dodge Vtn, 71.000 mi-.
311 ...... """ . .,..od, 4
lardtol-·
cnsloe COntrol. Pl.
Pl.. .4. -

o..--

w-

4 -Eoeiollr-.

PMrl&lt;b WM• Hauling Servica,.
phone 304-576-2311 or 114-

44&amp;4018.

87

Upholstery

IT nsmln' bo•do. t2,200.
304-875--B 23.
..'79 F 110, 4a4 t1.800.00. '80
Dodgo 0100 01.200.00. John
Dt•eA, do• .,at run •300.00.
- ... 304-1711-7397.

Mawr.,·o Uphololorlng oorliin;

._t

tri aounlyar•23ytf. .. The
In ltrntture uphotslering. C.ll
304-8715 · 41&amp;4 for free

eRtm••·

Larry King Live!

1[)1 Primo Time Wreotling
9:30 @I 1111!2) Designing Women

house c•U 1ervicing GE. Hot
Point,
dryers and

84

1981 c...., olclcu p trudc. Rool
good con d. 02100. Coli 814255-8278.

dunng World War

814-992-3497,

ototlon

good work car,
00 or beet off•. 304-

btdc.

63

protector.

m Jimmy Doolinlo: An

Cofi&gt;Cintry work ..,. tho job or
hour...neUna dry wan, plumbIng, electrical,

0 ilJ 'B.L. Slrykor' ABC

Mystery Movie Stryker musl
act as a queen ·s personal ·

1981 Oldo Cutl•o. V-1. uood

How~rd Aot•.Cort.

l•. M.,.lo Equipment, Rutlon4
Ohio 114-742-2411.

~ College Bukotboll

(I)

....,... 304-87&amp;2398.

.. l97l FOfdpidcupohortwhool

2.227 pounds. Col 814-2(89891.

cti ... IT:S
IIV ({')DE 1

-rgoo C"""' Rd. Col 814.
44&amp;0294.

wa~.

Good rumina ooncl Call 814-

money for nrmsell. 1;1
9:00 D I]) @ MOVIE: 'Thoae
She Lellllehlnd' NBC
Monday Nigh! at 1he Movieo

up and d..ht'ery, Davis Vewum
Cleaner, one half mile up

.. 1978 Pinto V·l. runt uood.

61 Farm Equipment

manipulates Chip to make

SWEEPER and a .wing machine
,.., .... J*ta. md euppU•. Pick

1375.00. 304-876-2457.

~:C:ol~l6:1~4-:38:4-::66:1~6:._ _ _ _[.:===:::=====~ hllcll.
J.D . 1010
dolor.
pl.
bodtma
CoM long.3
814-44&amp;

"II you think this Is a large dent, wait till you
see the o ne we put In your bank accountl"

a

02500. Coli 614-445-0602.

~~~92~e"i~~~.' 28 . 0160o.eon 1 =79~~M~o-t_o_r_s~H~om-e_s_ _

814-285-1822.
::-::---------3010 JD lrocc... nlco w/ JD
groin drll. t43BO. Sh•o IN

In

1978 Baja Jet bo•. 454 cu. in.

•ft•

8uvo,. Guida 111 806-887·

Panobloo:,r.
· . •&amp;"'od 0329.00
lla~
• 9
nor&gt; d.m
I .00. Free loc-

182·1145 7a.m . - 4p.m. 81..._

Motors for Sale

8000, ext. 5·10189.

Uted ,...,ing machin• from
=~=·~eFabrlcShop. 114-912·

133- 34153. any1ime.

Boats and

Even1slllould uMold In a manner In the
year ahead thai will e1eva1e your hopes
and expec1a11ona. Condl11ona In general
are Improving and benell1a wiN come
through friends.
'
PISCES (Feb. - r c h 20) Your en1hualaam ahould be In harmony wllh
your pruden1 judgment today and 1hla
will matce a dynamic combination which
coukl raouH In something pertonally
gainful. Do your atulf. Major char.(llll
are ahead for Pisces In lhe coming year.

today. Mall $1 10 Astra-Graph predlctlonsloday. MallS 1 to Astro-Graph, c/o
1hla - · P . O. Box 91428, Clev•
land, OH 44 101·3428. Be sure 1o sta1e
your zodiac: sign.
ARIEl (Moorah 21-April 11) In cardevelopments today most of your associates will feel Inclined Ia cooperate
with you. Those who won'1 be persuad·
ed, can't be swayed, so dbn't waste
your 11me wl1h 1ham.
TAURUS (April 211-IIIIJ 20) An impor1ant maHer should no1 be handled in an
Impulsive fashion today, because you
could make mistakes. Study all ollts aspec1s carefully s.o tha1 you can proceed
with assurance.
GEMINI (IIIIJ 21-J..,. 20) Meaningful
objectives can be achieved 1.oday. provided you do not le1 them overlap. Begin with your moa11mportant goals and
lry to work down lhe line.
.
CANCIII (J- 21-.luiJ 22) People with
whom you'll have dealings t.oday will reoc1 In accordance to 1he example you
181. II your project a cooperative splrl1,
they'll do lll&lt;ewlse.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Supposedly confidential lntormatlon might be passed
on 1o .you 1oday. However, before you
auompt 10 utilize 11, check Its valldll)'.
because some ol 11s merits may be
exaggerated .

VIIIQO (Aug. 23-Bept. 22) II you are
presently helping a friend sort out a
problem, lt'a best to keep what you're
doing be,_n you and 1he party Involved. Inviting others Into lhe picture
could muddy the wa1ers.
LIBIIA (llept. 23-0cl. 22) Today you'll
be both a good s18rter and finisher, so
what you begin, you're apt to complete.
However. 1his mlgh1 not be true of associates

to

whom

you

delegate

asalgnmenta.
SCORPIO (oct. :M-Nov. 22) Companlonllllp will be lmportanl 10 you 1oday.
but don't pu1 socializing above your responslblll11es and dulles. Keep pliCa
with your work as well.
SAQmAlltU• (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) A
pleasant surprise could be In the offing
for .you 1oday where your ftnanclallnteresta are concwned. However, lt't not
likely 10 come through In sltua11ons
-·you take gamblea or loolllh rllks.
CAPIIICOIIH (Dec. 22-.18n. II) In moa1
types o1 competltlw oltuatlona, yoo
llloold fare quite well today, but you
mtl8t be wary ol a particular m111111a1c11
- . you might -looaly undereotl·
mate your oppoolllon.
AQUAIIIUII (.18n. - · · 11) Your ft.
nanclal proepectslook rather promising
today, 10 try to locuo yoor olforto In oreasthll have proftlable potential. use
your Ingenuity to fatten your bank

(IJ

D

ChHre
(I) NIQhUino

m Sign 011

1;1

L" 1

r. I I I 1 i
......;:.D....:I:.-..:..T.;.:.H...:.w~~ ;
2

.

-,Nr-OT.'L:...,:.D...;·B=.--11 ~~

~
y j
Ir-'T,.,;,-=,r:s,=--rl:.....::,,....:...,,r--l e
I. I_' I. I_

Homely girl to date : " What
do you like most about me - .
my natural beauty or my
gorgeous body? "
Date
replied , "Your sense o f -."

.

MU L 0 8

1;1

ShowBiz Toclty
@ WKRP In Clnch111at1
!!! Cartoon Expreot
Now Country
6:35 @ One Day at a Tlmt
7:00 Cil Our House Neighborhood
Watch·
D (}) PM Magazine
(!) Collage Bukotball
(I) 0 (J) Curren! Alfolr
ffi (!) MacNeill Lehrer
NowaHour (1:OOJ
®l 1!5) Whoel ol Fortune 1;1
18@ College Baake1blll
(!)) Montyllne
11)1!2) Billy Graham
@ChHrl
!!! Miami Vice
Fandango
7:05 ® Andy Griffith
1:30 D I}) Family Feud
(IJ En1ono1nmon1 Tonlgh1
0 (I) USA Today
illl 1!5) Jooperdyl 1;1
(!)) Cro11flre
@Collage Baoketball
Crook and Chase
7:35@ Sanford and Son
8:00 (]) MOVIE: Myoltritl ol tho
Sacred Shrood
D (}) I!)) ALF AMer ALF
fumb'es a phone message.
Lynn has two da1es lor the
dance. g
(I) 0 (IJ MacGyver
MacGyver investigates a
fr1end ·s inheritance·· a
haunled house. (Rj 1;1
ffi C1J War and Peace In
Tho Nucloor Ago Look at the
first major superpower arms
control agreements. r;1
illl Billy Grohtm
(!)) PrimaNawo
llll!2l Newhart C
!!! Murder. Sho Wro1e
Nuhvlllo Now
8:05@ MDV IE: Rock 'n' Roll
High SchOOl INRI (1 :33)
8:30 D (1) @ The Hogon Family
David and underage fr1ends
gamble in Las Vegas and
land in jail. C
IBI!}) Kole I( Allie Super
cool high school boy

614-992·2770.

Transporlation

v1G

.
_
_
_
.
_
C........J._....__c........J._.J..._

e
e

a

cl• for a100. Fordt. Mercedea ..

1208 1nt .
IIO.otlo-ntlll
.
tor, 11 9
10
tnk
Chltlt plowa,. •171. lnt•._.
tionM 4 row Pilnt . . tlbaral . .
bCix:• •1815-latt modll2~0.
lnt•rna11onel round bal ...
129150. Ownerwl flntn• C.l

~~~;o'::·u~~~~~;.;~

C•ll 614-265-1922.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohf.

285-1989.

•nvtlm•

8t Grain

836.00. C•ll304-87&amp;1051.

5569.

44 M•onum Smith .nd W•son
and rek»lding kit. •3IO. C•l
81 4- 992• 3874.

Hoy.

Hay

(J) ABC Newo

ti-le
be·
to form four $imple words

I ri 1

(!))

Bus Boat-1987lendat18' 6",
1987 Mera.ny 36 hp motor with
power trim eh d &amp;Ito oil inject fan. .
1987 Mera.~ry Trolling motor,
1987 Shoreline trail• plus
mora All in good oondltion. Clll

830. Coli 814-44&amp;4982.

N-Hollond460hovlrlno 911.

61 .._ 992_

64

0

ffi Body Eleclrie

1980 Harlav Sportrter. 3100
mil• liken....,. EKCellenteondi·
tion. Call814--25&amp;-1304 aft.- 7

75

tow

C1J Nightly Butlntll Report
i111 11)1!2) CBS Newo
ID l!ll WKAP in Cincinnati

01500. Coll614-448-0602.

Two a ow• over 260 lbt .
S126. DOeach. 304-46S.1686.

Fira.vood for ul•eplil h•dwood. Pickup 1fUCk. d•tvered-

Olllo. 814- 992· 6481 .
Uken""· '•uo~ololuovo .. d

.Oolllpolo Fony, W.Vo. 4 mil•
from uw d8n ella New m«•
0.. Acing BOx100 ...,lno on holf
ten tot for aell or ..... Call

SomorvNio Roolty, 304-171·
3030. 878·3431. e?l-4232.

~ SportaLoolc

maha 660 Endro on &amp; Dff road
billa. 1000 mil ea. very clean, ,
t9SO. C•ll814- . .6· 4045.

63

•

a

Vf/IY Clelfl. t950, 1982 Y•

'

•i•.

t12 P•
bundle. Contakling IIPpi'OX. 1'/ t
ton. Ohio Pellet Co., Pomeroy,
Mixed h¥dwood

3 rooma and b•h. turnlehed.
1tt. floor. privat• entrmce. No

UndfDr .... 1 to 18CI'e,..CIIIt.

b•a CoW 114-2511-1774.

54 Misc . Merchandise

Wood. 836 pickup lood. Sol~ &amp;
delivered. Coll&amp;14-255-1982.

114-992-6777 or 614-992.
.
8218.

1 8R . opl. lor ..,llnMidchl'on.
1180 month pluo utllhla 814-

19B1 SuJ:uki 760, 5000 mil•·

FORTUNATELY, I Ti.IINK
IT'Ll PROBABLI( BE
M'I'STICAL CHCHCE

eeoo. Call 614-446~0502.
~~==::::!:!E:===:::!;:=====w~";:"::;:;;:::=.,..j ing..
1988 Honda Shadow 700 cc.

Far111 Suppl11::;

2 bedrooms. partly
In Pomeroy. Call

2'h Hre lind. lmlll toMcca

IT'S GOING TO BE A HISTOR'(
TEST, AND I NEED VOUR 14ELP

1976 Gl1000 Hundt Goldw·

614-445-1909.

poto. 114-949·2283.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINO CO . ,_mmondo thot you
do O..oln- with pooplo ...,

8

prox;

Ap~ment
for Rent

ond

1987 Suzuki LT230E 4wheeler,
good COI'Idition-.1800. 1985
Honda 250 4 wheeler-$1600.

Main St.

3 b&amp;G'oom treH• tor rent.
depod: .. d you Plrt utlhJ•.
phone 304-075-215315.

1

445-1636.

us lure..

304-175-1112 or 175-3900.

1urrjahed,.

:1

Good used color tv' 1 for sele.

Two bect'oom furnished mobile
home. e18&amp;.00 plua udlftle~,

44

1986 Y&amp;maha VZ·250. Power
band. 11000. neg. Call 81~

dows, llntell, Me. Claude Win·

t•s. eUvery. 1· 8()0..&amp;3 3- 3463

Commercial Lot for leau, 440'
x 2150'. Located In linn Dot* on
At. 7eaonfrom51cyllnel.an•.

Motorcycles

WORD
GAM I

O four
Rea rrange lette rs of
scrambled words

6:00 (]) Bonanza: The Loo1
Eplaodos The Desperado
o m CD o CD 1111 lll l!2l
1!5) News
(!) Sportraits
ffi The Power ol Choice !;I
C1J Square Ona TV
Ill @ Happy Days
@ Fat1t ol Lite
[! She·Ra
American Magazine
6:05 @ Allee
6:30 D (}) @ NBC Nightly Newt

/1

PICKENS USED RIRNrTURE

1460 . 814 - 388 - 9773 .

MON., MARCH 6

S©'-"J.llA- L£ r.;rs~

rNAT DAILY
,UZZLU
- - - - - - - ldlttd by CLAY R. ,OILAN

EVENING

/'

/1

Complete ho~o~aehold furnis~
lnge. 'h mile-Jerrleho. 304-876-

ecr-. Sat

up for hor ... or c.-tie. Good
b•n. hou• • poncl. B•a.~ttful
\A.w. lladt top rMCI. c.n

35 Lon

p11id. Ref. requ~od. &amp;elern
Ave.·citv. eon &amp;1+4411-3871
lift• 6 PM .
49

,.,.,pl.

90 Doya aame as c•h with
appJOVed credit. 3 Milef out
BuiMtllle Rd. Open 9am to Spm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 614-446-

tank. • 300 _ Call

2 Br. trail•. UOO • mo. pk.11
utlit i•. • 126 dap. &amp; ref. 4 mil•
from town. C~l 814-446-1812
aft• &amp;:30 PM .

pord'l. underplnnln(fo air condl·
tlonw. Oood aondlt10n. teooo.

d
065
h dbo d 030
ea
aJ •....... ~~.. up to
·

Whirlpool MJto we1 her and dryer

2 BA., cable available. be&amp;~tlful
riv • view i1 Klf'l &amp;I "'· Fott er' 1
MobiJe Home Park. 814-446-

Nice 2 BR .• large pr;..ate yard.
4 'h mil• from Gallipolis. No
pets. Call I 14-446-8038.

888. Queen seta 8260 &amp; up,
King t350. 4 dravver ch•t $69.
Gun cablnM• 6, B &amp; 10 .. n.
Batr.t mllftreues tlS &amp; t45.
Bed tram• 820. S30 &amp; King
frame 150. Good selection of
bedroom tuites. matal cabin as.

pipe. Good cond . Call614-387·

Fufnithed fOOm w / ..ove S.

2&amp; 3 8R . mobitehom•forrent.

t78. and

Now accepting applications for

Hotol-614-446-9580.

Coli 814-445-0B2711ftor 2 PM .

•&amp;a. firm

blo. Cell 614-446·2340.

Oop .

1602.

full or twin

Beech StrBIII. Middleport. Ohio,
2 bedroom furnithed lfPar1ment.
uUi'li11 paid, references. Phone

304-882-2688.

•

C•ll 614-446-.&amp;447.

74

• The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Television
Viewing

~~c~!e:~JO~~P
u•:. l~ :'~l:r•::c.~· ,:ot':'Ca~ ~~~-G_t ot:!~i::.,:.~t;~ ~
P~M~·=:::::===:::;::===
beds ·co mplete w -mattrelles Rog•• Mobilty collect. 1· 614notwlthcompll!lledptp•. Duck =

Pickens Furniture
304- 675· 1450 or 614· 3889773, eve.
2 &amp; 4 pe. living room 1uitea, 4 pc
Bauett bedroom auite, m.tc~
lng ooffee &amp; end tables, dinnene
His, 2 1et1 at bJnk beds. chetts.
dreuera. comnplete line of bedt
&amp; beddin~• · Many more item a on
ule. Y:! m1le outJerrichoRd., Pt.
Pleasant, W .Va.

PM.

/

8

821 Second Aw .. 2 BR .•
equipped kitchen, CA. Excellent
condition. No p•s. Dap. &amp; rei.
Nice llfflciency w / c!M'pet for one
or two persom. On Third A~ . All

\

5131 .

. LAYNE'S FURNITURE

evenings.

Coli 614-445-2158.

/

GOOO USED APPUANCES

up tO t126. Hld!&gt;O·bodl Ol90
1o 1696. Recliners 1226 to

BORN LOSER

198&amp; Ram Ch•ger 4x4, auto.
tockouts S. trant. air, wheets &amp;
white l8t11H' tirBI. C.H 814· 2415·

Washers, dryert, r~lgerators,
ranges . Skeggs Appliance•.
Upptf River Rd. bellde Stone
Crelt Motel. 614-446-7398.

Sof• and chairs priced from
•395 to t996. T•bl• S60 and

Pomeroy- Midcleport, Ohio

1981 Ford 150 4 WO . 36.000

mile~.

Coli 614-387· 0621 lifter 6 PM .

1817.

Two bedroom furnished ap ertment. Daposh S. ·rl!farBnoa r•
quired. Call 814-446-4571 .

lend. Coli 814-992-8846.

room. dining room. lvlngroom.
uUity room. t.tement. Cable.
avaltatMe. t3B,OOO. 814-949-

4425 or 44&amp;2325.

Nice 2 bedroom house, c•pet·
In g. full bMement, newly remodeled. ref•~~nce and dep01ft
required. 8226 month. 614-

Unlnnished, 3 beci'ooml, fullv
e•p8ted. No intide pets. Dep-

yrl.

1· bedroom url.,rnished
apartments. in Gallipolis. 1176
M d 8 225 per month. Stove ., d
nrfrigerator furnished. Conv•
nient location. References and
le•e raquiritd. Call 614-448-

614-992·88B81ft• 6:00p. m.

814-388-8194.

living

Furnlthed efficiency . 607 Second, Gallipolis. $176. Shll'e
batt\. Cell446-4416after7 PM.

g•. $190 • mo. With deposit.
Coli Cvnthio ot 614-445-7483
before5 PM or 44&amp;-4062 after 5

742-2728.

&amp;hool Dlolriu. 1888 Sq . ft.

Coli 614-44&amp;0338.

Two

7 room house. 2 births. 48 Oltve
St. lnquire'at 918 Second.

2

Nicetv 'furnished · ·mall houae.
Efficiency apt. · 1 mBn. Mobil B
home befow IOWn overlooking
river, caS. heat, adults mly. 18f.

&amp; 4 W .O .

Monday, March 6, 1989

0800. Coil 114-255-6504 or
2118-9387.

Ava. G•llipolit, OH .

6296onduptot395. 8•bVbodo
• 110 ·M•ttret~eeorboxspringa

ceptild. Coli 304-875-5104.

Vans

6, 1989

1979 Ch..-v "h ton short bed
4x4, 3fj0. t2000. 1978Cutl••·

Sal, 614-446'1699. 627 3rd.

Furnish&amp;d 2,3. or 4 rOoms B.
bsth. Cia.,. Adults only. No
pets. Ref. &amp; dep . .equired. Call

av~ilable.

,

~~y

March

73

County Appli.,ce, Inc. Good
uu&lt;l appliancet and TV •••Open SAM to 8PM . Man thru

HUD ac·

Ap.-tment

Larry Wright

No-PG511Git£ MmifoD oF C:!€T11N6.
~\tl cf UNWANTr;D IJ~ffA1\0N. ·.

Oliva St.. GalllpoNs.
NEW· 8 pc. wood grou~ $399.
living room IUhes- t199-t599.
Bunk beds with bedding- t249.
Full slae mattr811 &amp; foundlllon
ttanlng - 899 . Aeclinere
l11r1ing. t99.
USED~ Beds, drellert. bectoom
sult11. Desks. wringer washer. a
complete line of used furniture.
NEW- Western boot• •35.
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel Ia
soft toet. Call 614-446-3159.

1375. lamps 828 to 1126.
Oinllt81 S109and up to t496.
Wood table w-8 chairs 1286 to

676-5388. 676-7738.

I~Net

rooms. 1'A b•hl.· cent•l air,

18 Wanted to Do

KIT N' CA RLYLE® by

locatio~

to: Sp•kleSupplv co., Rt. 5 Sox
356-8 , Galllpalil. Ohio 46831 .
certified water safety lnnrueror.
Call 814-448-4812 ..t. 256.
Mon.·Fri., 8 AM..t PM .

LAWN APTS. 729

Second Ava . Furnllhad effidancl• rtar1ing et 8176 a mo.
induding water &amp; garbage.

32742· 2203.

Wuhington 8t Wood countie1.

.

SHADY

Write: Jo-El Ent•pril-. P .O .

Sal• person with • rell.tlle car

C¥pet. eompl&amp;te

kitchen. AC. Parkin g. Adults. No
pett. Depo1it. Cell 614--446-

ASSEMBLERS. hrn mOney aa-

to

&amp; 1r11sh includld.

814-367-7860.

Mon.-Thur... 9 AM -2 PM .

614-38&amp;9931 or 28&amp;6813.

llft'Wir,

St_.ing •t 8 289 p• mo. Call

while trelnlng. It you are in top
PhVIic.l co ndition. under age
28, end ere wiling to wort.;

Will do hou" cleaning. Re•oMbler•• Goodref•enc-. No
job too big or small. Call

Merchandise

8EAUYIRil APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·

GOVERNMENT JOISI
Now Hiring TH IS AREA l

Boll

Monday.

Pomeroy- Middleport .. Ohio

Complete . the chuckle QUOted
by ft\l.ng in the mtssmg words
you develop from st~p No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THE Sf SQUARES
•
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Urchin - Giver - Nomad - Ballot - ARGUMENT
Newl)pnarried woman to her husband : "You came up 'fii1n
lhe one single fact that spoiled our lirs1 ARGUMENT !"
:~.&amp;-11

NORTH

BRIDGE

.7

Does the level of the contract affect
how you play the hand? Today's deal
addresses that question.
North's cue-bid of four hearts
showed a heart control and slam interest, but South signed off in five clubs.
After West found the best opening lead
(tbe diamond jack), bow should South
view this lead? If we go back to today's opening question, obviously
there would be no cboice if the contract were six clubs. Declarer's only
hope would be that West was leading
from the diamond kln&amp;, and 60 he
would have to put in the queen and
pray. But tbe situation is different
wben the contract is only five clubs.
Since declarer can afford to lose one
diamond trick but not two, tbere is no
need to immediately ifll!4!rl tbe diamond queen. Instead be should go up
witb tbe diamond ace and draw
trumps. Then he can lead a spade. In
some instances, he may be right back
at the start. If West has the ace of
spades, he will win and continue with
another diamond through the queen.
However, !be biddlngsuuests tbat the
spade ace is more likely to be with
East (remember !bat two-level over·
call), and if East doea hold that key
card, the diamond queen will not be
subject to attack. Finally, if West does

.AQS
410 8 713

WFJIT
+10982
.JI432
• J 10 9
+Q

EAST
+AH3
.KQIOSS
t K8 7
+2

SOUTH

••

.... 9
• 64 3 2
+AKJ96S

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

Nortll

Ea•t

I+

2•

••

Pass

Souob
I+
3+
s+

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

+J

hold tile spade ace, it is even more
likely tbat East will hold the dlamo!lll
king, but it just may be king-doubleton. In tbat scenario, decfarer plays
spade as before,· but when· West takes .
tbe ace and plays a second diamond,
even though tbe king takes the queen,
East has no more diamonds to lead,
and the contract is still made.

a

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

42 ,huuit•

I A•·tor,

4

--- Curtis

(iihsn11 43 llnf.. h

-

•·onunune

lluhhuh

7 llurtin~
8 lnvnlicl
10 I.Ratllf'r
pi!'I'('
II"- My
Co-Pilot"

UOWN
I Marinnrw

tiT Cll'mPnt
2 Sra P&lt;tglt&gt;
3 Breed of
( lfl4f&gt; Olm)
chickrn
13 Melody
4 Viewpoint
14 Actor
18 Principal
5 Pair
Holbrook
216 Ub9Qiete
16 Collation
she
7 Calf
17 Windfront
blows!
Oower
9 German
22 Stainless
19 Ritual
art songs
response 10 Chinese
23 Sauce
20 Where
pagoda
for Osh
-thou? 12 French
24 Arrange21 Dennis
river
ment
O'Keefe
15 Tiny
25 Fragrant
movlt&gt;
hBIVester
hloom
22 81emiRh
25 Cronkitl''s
"You Are

27 Shinl.o
temple
29 Noisy
frolic
30 Chaplain
Sl Fencing
sword
32 Cof\iunc-

tlon
37 "All About

•

39 Lacerate

•

26 Mountain
lake
27 Ros.q
or Azov
28 Miscalcu-

hltP
29 Whet
33 Greek
letter
34 Golf
35

term
Mil.

address
36Type
of cake
38Command
40 Favorabl#
review
41 King's
address

DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES- Here'l how to work II:
AXYDLBAA.XR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In ulis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fDnnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.
•

CRYPIOQU011!8

EZ W HW
VYW

LZR

FHW

KFDC . VWR.

F UEWH

ZFQADT

HWVFADEWB EZW TFHBWD TFEW,

illl UIJA Tolley

18 II] Newtr•od Qemo
il1l Sporla 'tonight
IBI!2l Pot St.llk Show
(JJ Hll 8-tlllutro Hacked
to Piocaa
1211 Amellctn Mag..lno
11:50 (I) Nltlonll Qeognopltlc
EIIPIOiet
•
12:00 Cil MOVIE: MylloriH ol tho
Socrecl Shroud

account.

I

EFS W

EZWKXWYQWX

VFADEWHX . - UWHDFDB

ER

JW

VRADE
v...en~a,•e C~rY~Jt~aote: CHEERFULNESS AND
CONTENT ARE GREAT BEAUTIFIERS, AND FAMOUS PRESERVERS OF YOliTHFUL LOOKS. CHARLES DICKENS
I

•·

+KQJ 7

�. Peg a 1

o--The Daily Sentilel

Monday. March 6, 1989

Porr.aoy-Midclaport. ()Jlio

--Area deaths-- -----Announcements----- ,..-- Local news briefs...- Murl E. Hanis
Murl E. Harris, 72, Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, died Sat.urday lnYete·
rans Memorial Hospital follow·
lng an ex tended tllness.
She was a ret Ired cook from the
Gallla County L!!cal School system and was a charter member
of the Pine Grove Holiness
Church.
Born July 18, 1916 at South
Charleston, W.Va ., she was the
daughter of the late Claude and
Suda Escue Pauley.
Also preceding her In death
were her husband, Earl Harris In
1977, and one daughter, Phyllis
Booker.
She Is survived by one son,
Earl Basis Harris of Tornado,
W.Va.; two daughters, Mrs. Ben
(Barbara) Watts, Rt. I, EwlngtQn, and Mrs. George (Virginia)
Standish of Ovid, · N.Y.; 10
grandchildren; seven greatgrandchildren; two brothers , Orville Pauley of Scot Depot,
W.Va., and Glenn Pauley of
Jackson; and one sisters, Lealale
Hinzman of Romance, W.Va .
Services wtll be Wednesday, 11
a.m. at the McCoy-Moore. Funeral Horne In Vinton with the
Rev. O'Dell Munley. Burial will
be In Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call Tuesday , 7 to
9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Han-y Wheeler

of the SL Paul Lutheran Ch111t:h of
New Haven. She was a widow of
the Spanish-American War.
Surviving are one daughter,
Pauline E. Smith, and son-in-law
Arthur Smilh, bolh of New Haven;
one
granddaughter;
three
five
greatgrandsons;
grandchildren; and one great-great
grandson.

Graveside services will 'be
Tuesday, f p.m., a1 Graham
Cemetery with the Rev. George
Weirick officiating. There will be
no visitation. Fogleson Funeral
Home is in ~barge of the arrangements.

Right

tO...

Continued from page I

where students will be reading
during every minute of school
this week. Students wlll also
participate In SQUffiT (Super
Quiet Uninterrupted Reading
Time) . Dally trivia, Easter egg
coloring math bowl, and a guess
the number of candles wlll also
be featured activities. There will
be a movie and a food tastin g day
to complete the Pomeroy's "Just
Say Yes to Books"week.
"Reading Is Dlno·Mite" Is
Rutland Elementary's theme
with students beginning today to
work on the project of transferring dinosaurs onto T-shirts.
Students will be writing stories
on dinosaurs to be shared on
Friday, and will participate in a
dinosaur word contest. There

Harry C. Wheeler, 81, of
Gallipolis, died Saturday evenlag at Holzer Medical Center. He
was the owner and operator of
the Colony Theater.
Born Feb. 1, 1901i at Pleasantville. Ohio, lie was the son of the
late Fred and Ethel (Grover)
Wheeler.
He Is survived by his wife,
Hazel (Howells) Wheeler, whom
he married Sept. 10, 1951 in
Gallipolis; two sons, Fred
Wheeler and Tom Wheeler, both
of Gallipolis; and three
grandchlldren.
Also preceding him In death
were two brothers, Kenneth
Wheeler and Nelson Wheeier.
He was a member of the Grace
United Methodist Church. He
was a World War II Army
veteran and a member of the
American Legion Post 27.
He was a 32nd degree Mason, a
member of the Morning Dawn
Lodge 7 and a member of ., the
'shrine Club of Gallipolis. He\vas
a lifetime member of the Elks
Lodge 107.
Services will be Tuesday, 2
p.m. at the Grace United Methodist Church with the Rev. Joseph
Hefner. Burlal will be In Mound
Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call Monday, 7 to ·
9 p.m. at \he Willis Funeral
Horne. The bOdy will lie In state.
at the church one hour prior to
the service.
Pallbearers will be John SOwers, Marc Lawhon, Hal Edwards,
Ervin Criner, Jerry Howells and
John Holcomb.

Fish fry planned
A fish fry and bake sale will be
held Saturday at the Rutland
American Legion. Serving will
start at 11 a.m. All baked good
donations will be appreciated.
Dancing at Rutland
Square, round and slow danetng will be featured Saturday._ 8
P·Pl· to 12 midnight , at the Ell
Denison Post of the American
Legion, Rutland . Everyone
welcome.
Plan dancing
There will be round and square
dancing on Friday, from 8 to 11
p.m., at the Senior ._Citizens

will be prizes for the various
activities and all week long the
students will be visiting dlno~aur
land where they will read for five
or ten minutes. To emphasize
math, students will be taking
part In a guessing contest and
wlll be working on math problems on the dinosaur In the
hallway. There will also be
special activHy pages avalla ble
throughout the week on
dinosaurs .
Salem Center and Salisbury
Elementary Schools, as well as
Meigs Junior High School and
Meigs High School will be !laving
special activities this week In
observance of " Right to Read
Week." There special activities
will be detailed later this week.

(Contlnued trcm page 1)

Center In Pomeroy. Admission
$2. Music will be by True Country
Ramblers. Those attending
should bring snacks.
Orpnlzatlonal meet
Syracuse Youth Baseball
League will hold an organizational meeting Wednesday, 6
p.m., at Syracuse Elementary
School.

. discovered.
Entry was made by cutting a screen on the porch and then
prying the front door open.
. A quantity of sterling silver Items, Including many antique
family pieces, were taken, according to ~Uce .

Meigs ·county Emergency Medical Services reports-11 calls
over the weekend; two on Saturday and nine on Sunday.
Saturday at 2:03 p.m., Racine to State Route 338 lor Mary
Pickens to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10: 23
p.m. to Bradbury Road for William Barnhart to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 1:59 a.m., Middleport to Chestnut Street for Arlona
Quick who was treated but ~ot transported; Middleport at 2:29
a.m. to the Middleport Pollee Department for Keith Musser who
was treated but not transported; Middleport at 6:01 a.m. to
Stonewood Apartments for Mary Gilkey to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 8:07 a.m. to Front Street,
Reedsville, for James Swlgger to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Middleport at 11: 10 a. rn. to the Middleport Police Department
for John Hayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11:25
a.m. ro State Route 124 for Crystal Sellers to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:09 p.m. to Mulberry Avenue
!or Helena Brlckles to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
at 2:27p.m. to Arnerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Evelyn
Spencer to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire
Department at 4:59p.m. to an electrical fire on a utility pole on
Third Street.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Allee
Koenig, Middleport; Leland Saxton, Pomeroy; Benjamin Smith,
Racine ; William , Barnhart,
Middleport.
Saturday discharges - Elmer

inckling specwl
rrovd dea!J, dilcotm!s,
cash refurvls, as ..11 a.t
fra traveler's checks.

--

.......... .._..

Vol.39. No.210

"Dan~ keep paying
service ~·~es on )OUT
&lt;lleT)da, banking service.~.
Getlllue Max,"

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff Writer
Local residents and Pomeroy
Village Council are looking
ahead to next year's 150th
anniversary of the founding of
the village.
Mary Powell, Pomeroy resident and businesswoman, was at
Monday nlght'.s regular meeting
of council to request that council·
members C(mslder appointing a
Sesquicentennial Commission to
plan the celebration for the 1990
anniversary.
Powell explained that It wtll
take quite some time to put
together the Sesquicentennial
celetration.
Powell foresees the celebration as several events over many
months, rather than a one-shot or
one-weekend deal.
Since Pomeroy became the
Meigs County seat a year alter It
was founded, that 150th anniversary is coming In 1991. Powell
said that ·the two anniversary's
could possibly be combined over
the months of celebration.
In order to authe11tlcate celebration activities, Powell said it
Is necessary for the village
council, and the county commissioners, to proclaim the events
and approve the celebration
commission. By au thorlzlng a
commission to plan the celebration, grant monies from the Ohio
Arts and Humanities Programs,
and from oiher sources, may be
applied for by the commission
which would operate as a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization.
Powell said that several Ideas
have already been 'suggested to
celebrate the Sesquicentennial.
Mayor Richard Seyler and
members of council commended
Powell on her efforts to get the
ball rolling on the project and
Instructed her to compile a list of
Individuals wJlllng to serve on the
. commission, to be submitted !or
street. Eventually he was rescued alter Jimmy
Deem Jr., son of the lot owner, called The Dally
Sentinel office, which contacted lhe Spauns.
(Sentinel staff photo)

Dog trapped for ~ore than
24 hours rescued from ledge
By NANCY YOACHAM
Deem Jr., spent over an hour under the collar and lift him to
Sentinel staff Writer
with a ladder and cord, trying to safety. The little dog was soaked
Shadow, a three-year-old Cock- coax the dog down the hillside to , from his ordeal on the ledge
.a-pooownedbyBIIlandRuthAnn where he could be reached. But where water draining from the
Spaun, Pomeroy, wandered Shadow wouldn't budge!
hillside had trickled under him
away from his Oak Street home
The Deems then ca led The all night. But by 1 p.m. Monday,
around noon on Sunday.
Dally Sentinel office to see if Shadow was "lying on a heating
Evidently, Shadow got Into a anyone had reported a lost dog- pad on his mommy's lap,"
sUck spot on the ridge that runs which the Spaun's had - and reported a very grateful Ruth
behind Racine Motors No. 2, on after a phone call from The Dally Ann Spaun.
West Main Street. and slid 6 to 8 Sentinel to the Spaun residence,
feet down the muddy cliff before Shadow was reunited with his
coming t&lt;r rest on a little ledge.
family . Even though Shadow
The poor little pooch rested perked up as soon as his owners
from noon on Sunday until appeared, he was still afraid to
Monday when owners of the car try the descent down the hill.
Jot noticed from a window,
BIJI Spaun climbed to the ridge
A commemerative plaque In
Shadow shivering on the ledge. • above Shadow and reached over
The lot owner's son, Jimmy with a long stick to catch him honor of the late Pomeroy
resident and businessman, Kermit Wallon, Is to be set In
concrete on the corner of Lynn
and East Main Streets.
The plaque will designate the
location as "Kerm's Corner"
where Walton operated for years
The Meigs County Board of Elections office will be closed
The New York Clothing House.
Thursday, March 9, so that employees may attend a district
Walton's store will be rememmeet lng In Athens .
bered as a gathering place where
local friends could discuss the
weather and world matters all in
a matter of minutes or hours,
John Gregory Hayes, 646 South Second Ave., Middleport, was
depending upon the length of a
Involved In a motor vehicle accident about 3: 30a.m. Sunday on
visitor's stay. ,
State Route 143, not Roger Hayes, as was reported Monday by
Pomeroy VIllage Council voted
the Meigs County Sheriffs Department. John G. Hayes was
Monday
night to Install the
cited by authorities for driving a motQr vehicle while under the
commeratlve
plaque In Walton'
lnfiuence and failure to maintain control of his vehicle.
honor, In lieu of renaming Lynn
Street to Kermit Walton Street.
"After a few years, a street sign
Is just another name," com·
General Telephone Company Is inviting phone customers to
mented Councilman Franklin
have "coffee and conversation with GTE" on March 21 at the
Rizer, who suggested the plaque.
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy .
With a permanent plaque that
Company representatives wiJI be there from 4 to 7 p.m. to
recalls some of the history of
answer quesdons and talk about telephone-related Issues.
Kerm' s Corner, Kermit Walton
"We're. Interested In talking with our customers about
will always have a place In the
Continued on page 10
Continued on page 10

Local news briefs___,

A freeJllbike VISA Debircard for ea.t'J ac&lt;:ess

Election office to close Thursday

SYSTEM machines ...,/d.-Je.
8

One look at everything you can get with Blue Maxs", and it's
. easy to see how we can call it the best deal in banking, Blll! Max;
new from BANK ONE, rewards 'y:UU by letting )UU take advantage
of some of our most popular banki11g services, at Uttle or no cost.
Just kee11_ $2,500 or more in a BANK ONE sayings account or
Certificate of Deposit* and you'll be entided to achecking account with

no service charge. Plus, you can choose from these outstanding services as well: a credit card with no annual fee, bterdraft protection, cash
bonuses on CDs, discounted rates on installment loans, free travel services, and a lot more. Dr r =~
Get the ~for ~ur moru:y. Sign up fur uUJnf!ll\MX
Blll! Max at any BANK ONE office today.
'
i

Correction

GTE ·event set March 21

BANK OHE, ATHENS. NAIA I'MT 01' fHf f;AitiiiQ TlAM
.fllh«l~ Ohio
Membrer FDIC

-------

25 Cents

A Multimedia 1nc. Newspaper

Council hears request
for I 50th ·celebration ·

Plaque to honor
late Kennit Walton

to -p~.r acrow\1 at over 20,000 Jubilee Cll1d PWS

1 Section, 10 P•ges

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 7, 1989

Copy:iphled 1989

accounts.

A regular ctedit card with no annual fee or a Gold
card at half the normal fee.

Mostly clear tonight. Low In
mid J.e.ens. Wednesda~ .
moslly sunny. High In mid :Ills.

•

A HAPPY ENDING -Shadow, a lhree-year·
old cockapoo owned by Bill and Ruth Ann Spaun of
Pomeroy, 10t slucil on a ledge behind a ridge lhat
runs behind Racine Motors No. 2,. on West Main

one son, Daniel E. Workman. She
was a former employee of New
Haven Porcelain Co. and a member
-~-- -

2934

Fox.
Sunday admissions
Mary
Gilkey, Middleport; Vivian Coy,
Rutland; Hele na Brickles,
Pomeroy; Evelyn Spencer,
Pomeroy
Sunday disc harges - Evelyn
Stanley, Viola Violet, Linda
Persons.

Jack Seidenabel

Florence Workman, 97, of New
Haven, died· Sunday, March 5,
1989, at Holzer Medical Center,
GaUipolis.
She was born Jan. 30, 1892 in
Mason County, the daughter of the
. late William IIKl Maria Goodnite.
She w8s pteceded in death by her
husbllnd. George Wortman; and

Pick4

One IIWnlh&amp; ll&lt;1lenWII
tMt includes the status
of )UIAf Blue Max

Free travel5ervices ,

Mary Marie Hudson Bush, 60,
of 33705 Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, died Saturday at her residence following an extended
Illness.
Born on Oct. 8, 1928, she was
the daughter of Dewey Hudson
anp Cassie Adams Hudson. She
was a housekeeper lor the Meigs
County Health Department.
She was a member of the
Church of ~hrlst In Christian
Union at Hartford, W. Va.
Survivors include her husband,
Guy V. Bush, to whom she was
married 42 years; three daughters, Edith Jane Hysell, Deloris
Winebrenner, Pomeroy, and
June Murphy, Springhill, Fla.; a
son, Denver Bush, Pomeroy; 10
grandchildren, one great·
-grandchild, three sisters and
five brothers, along with several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Horne. The Rev. Dewey
King will officiate aotl burlal will
be In the Bradford Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Monday .

Florence Workman

984

Just keeping $2,500 or more in a MNK ONE CD or Slltlings tJroMll gill&lt;l 'PI- fee-free, unlimited check
writing. Wit/1 $5,000 or more, )OUr cW&lt;ing pays 11101\ey market interest.
,

Mary Bush

Jack Albert R. Seldenabel, 67,
of Pomeroy, not Jake Albert R.
Seldenabel as was earlier reported by Ewing Funeral Home,
died Friday at the Holzer Medical Center following an extended
Illness. His funeral services were
held today at 2 p.m. at the fUneral
home. The Rev. Lamar O'Bryan t
officiated and burlal was in
BeeciJ Grove Cemetery.

Daily Number

EMS has 11 weekend calls

To meet Thursday
Meigs County AA and
AI-Anon meetseveryThursday,
7 p.m., In the basement of the
Sacred Heart Church, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.
Sororlly lo meet
XI Gamma Epsilon Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy. Bring any necklaces you 've
made.
Herbalists lo meet
River Valley Herbalists will
meet Tuesday evenings, 7 p.m.,
at the home of Linda McCoy,
Millwood, W.Va.
Members
should bring plan·s for an herb
garden and a favorite recipe.
Auxiliary to meet
The Ladles Auxiliary of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles 2171,
will meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m.
The group will be having pot luck
at the first meeting Of each
month. Members are asked to
bring a covered dish.

Ohio Lottery

Camacho
captures
ring title

State has .
spent bundle
on legal fees
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze said Monday the state
may face another two years of
the legal battles that have
already cost the Ohio $5.7 million
In the fallout from the savings
and loan scandal of 1985.
However, Celebrezze told the
state Controlling Board Monday
that state may ultimately rec_over more than the $129 million It
lost In the crash of the Horne
State Savings Bank of Cincinnati
exactly four years ago.
"I wish this could be over as
quickly as possible," Celebrezze
said shortly before the -Gontrol·
ling Board authorized another
$350,000 for legal lees to special
prosecutor Lawrence Kane Jr. of
Cincinnati.
"My guess Is we're probably ·
looking at another two years,"
the attorney general said, ans·
werlng legislators' questions on
his ninth trip to the board for
money .
Celebrezze said that at $95 an
hour, Kane Is a bargain, and he
has obtained nine convictions
which are under appeal.
In addition, a federal bankruptcy court has seized $22
million of the assets of Marvin
Warner, the former ·owner of
Home State, which lost $145
million In the coUapse on March
6, 1985, of ESM Securities Inc. of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Warner Is fighting the $22
million restitution order of a
Florida court, Celebrezze said.
The attorney general said
Warner has asked !or a new trial
on his convictions of unau lhorlzed acts and securities fraud,
claiming juror misconduct dur·
lng his 1986 trial In Cincinnati.
The case has been appealed to
the Ohio Supreme Court.

approval at the next meeting of
council on March 20.
. . Council Is reconsidering plans
to eliminate insurance days from
village employees who do not
· enroll in the health Insurance
plan offered by the village.
Although no ordinance was ever
passed, action was taken by a
former vlllage council on May 2,
· 1977, to give employees who do
nol participate In the health
Insurance program, one paid day
off each month. ·
Jane Walton, clerk-treasurer,
as instructed by council in Its las t
meeting, prepared a resolution
eliminating the Insurance days.
The resolution was to have been
voted on last night.
However, since that last meet Ing, a letter was sent to council·
members by employees who now
receive the Insurance days, statIng that they will be taking the

insurance if the paid days off are
ellm Ina ted.
The difference between the
paid days off and the cost of
single insurance coverage for
these additional employees is
significant enough that council
has decided to mull the problem
over lor another two weeks
before making a final decision.
If council does ellen !nate the
Insurance days , additional employees could not join the health
Insurance plan until an open
period which Is In May or June, ·
said Walton.
Councilman Bruce Reed described briefly for councjl a recent
meeting In Logan of himself,
Mayor Seyler, Councilman
Larry Wehrung, and Village
AdminiStrator John Anderson,
with officials from the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Continued on page 10

.Airline industry is
braced for slowdown
MIAMI (UPI) -With all but
three. of Eastern Airlines' routes
shut down and more than 16,000
of Its workers either laid off or
refUsing to work, other air
carriers braced Tuesday for an
expected slowdown by pllots
SUJ!pOr-tlng the );:astern strike.
The Air Ll ne 1'tlots Assoc ia lion
asked pilots at other alrUnes to
adhere strictly to safety rules·
beginning Tuesday, the fourth
day of a strike by ground crews at
Eastern that Is being supported
overwhelming by the carrier's
3,600 pilots.
Having failed to persuade the
pilots to stop honoring picket
lines of the International Association of Machlnlsts,.representlng
8,500 mechanlc_s and baggage
handlers, Eastern said Monday It
was forced to suspend all but Its
three most lucrative routes and
thus lay off between 5,000 and
6,000 workers.
Other domestic alrllnes trying
to cope with the extra traffic
faced the additional burden of a
possible slowdown by their own
pilots.
On Friday, the eve of the
Eastern strike, ALPA President
Henry Duffy said the union
recommended that Its members
working for other airlines follow
procedures to ensure safe flight
operations In light of the Eastern
strike, and said the actions may
cause delays.
Some or the by-the-book safety
proceedures, typically bypassed

by ,a ir carriers as Industryaccepted shortcuts, Include forcIng air traffic controllers to
require greater . separation between planes when they land and
time-consuming safety checks on
the ground that could delay
takeoffs.
Eastern Is keeping only Its
Washington-New York and New
York-Boston shuttle operation
and the thrice-weekly service
from Miami to Buenos Aires,
Argentina, and Santiago, Chile,
because they are the most
profitable, Eastern spokesman
Robin Matell said. He also said
the shuttle Is the easiest operation to maintain because It
requires no advance ,booklngs or
ticketing.
"We deeply regret having to
take this action, but not erfough
pUots are comlhg to work,"
Matell said.
Asked about the possibility
that Eastern may file !or bankruptcy, Matell reiterated a comment he made earller Monday:
"Bankruptcy is not a desirable,
preferred course. It Is absolutely
the course of last resort."
Laid-off Eastern employees
greeted the news of the cutbacks
with tears and anger. lleana Gonzalez, a non-union
Eastern reservatlonist who was
laid off Monday, said, "We're
like a family, and I !eel \hat they
stripped us of that. We just want
them to get their act together so
Continued on page 10

COOKIE!!, COOKIES AND MORE COOKIES - Joyce Sls110n,
cookie cbalnnaa for Girl Scouting's Big Bend Easl Service Unk,
pauses amldsl638 cases of Girl Scout cookies which were delivered
lo her Syracuae borne shortly before noon on Monday. That's
nearly 8,000 sinJie boxe1 of coolde1. From Sls110n' s, Ihe cookies are
lmmedlaCely diBbaned to troop cookie chairmen, and from troop
cookie chalnnea lo lnillvldual Girl Scouts who will be delivering
!be cookies to customers durlnJ lite next two weeb.
(

.

'

·-·---------

\

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          <elementText elementTextId="36745">
            <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="36744">
              <text>March 6, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="13">
      <name>bush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1415">
      <name>goodnite</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="211">
      <name>harris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="735">
      <name>hudson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="575">
      <name>seidenabel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1052">
      <name>wheeler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="281">
      <name>workman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
