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March 19, 1989 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point

Times· Sentinel

0 at s... _ _ _

Latham. gets
promoted by
Ohio -Coal
ALBANY. Ohio- Jim Latham
has transferred to Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
to assume the responsibility for
the company's management sys·
tern · functions, according to
James F. Tompkins, vice president and genera 1manager for the
company.
Latham previously worked for
Southern Ohio Coal 's Mar tinka
Division located In Fairmont,
W.Va. He joined the company on
a permanent basis In 1981, after
working four summers at the
Martinka No. 1 mine while
attending college.
Afler starting as a general
Inside laborer at Martinka, Latham was promoted to section
supervisor - longwall In No·
vember 1981. He began performIng proJect engineering work for
the mine superintendent and
general manager In 1986. The
past yeilr he has served as the
management systems coordinator lor the Martinka Division.
Latham earned a bachelor's
degree In mining engineering
from West.Vlrglnla University In
1980. He and his wile, Lisa, are
moving to Athens from th e
Fairmont .area with their show
dog, Jam Master Jay, a pedi·
greed Great Dane.

'•o•
numb• of people.
·
Whtn working in the accounting

Super Lotto
6-8-9-13-24-30
Kicker 996532

Page 6

Chance of rain 100 percent.
Low tonight in mid 30s.
Tuesday, variable cloudiness.
Chance of flurri es. HIgh ncar
40.

•
Vol.39. No.219

Copyrighted

tldUt. and pertonelity 'dtM intpirl truat tn
the firm's integrity.

. The SoutheMttrn Bulin•• College atu;dentt I h•• empkryed pot,... Ml of thoN
quellti•. South...t•n m-r nothwegiven
them their .tfllbla p•aon.wtitl, but tttw
The ttudanu h•• highly rwoommtnded
the school, and so do I.

BEGIN TRAINING FOR YOUR
CALL US TODAY!
FIIANCIAL .W AVAJLAIL( FOR THOSE WHOOUAUF'I · AEGtsmt- FOR !ll'llttOOUAIIfEA

~;; Stndi•fonnatl;,;--Aboui1~PrDI"~And'C.;-~AISoulhe-;;;;

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farni, featured by the GaiDa Son and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
GaiUa County. Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do ~ by guessing tile
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop oil your guess to
the GallipoUs Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave. ,
GaiUpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
CourtS!., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win

a $5 cash prize from the Ohio Valley Puhllllhlnr
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number With your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
be turned In to the newspap!lrol!lce by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Meigs County
farm will be featured by the Meip Son and Water
Conservation District.

''BARRED'' OWL HOOTER

''PUSH BUTTON YELPER"
BOX CALL

•

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE

1986

CAMAIO

1986 CHRYSLER
LEBARON GTS

"100,_ WAIIINTY"

"100,_ WlUAN1Y"

0 nly 31,000 low miles, tilt, cruise,
reer defogger, automatic, A/C, local
one owner.
WAS
$1495

A very low 20,000 actual miles, au·
tomatic, air conditioning, AM-FM,
light blue, 4 door.

1985 CHRYSLER FIFTH

1986 MERCURY
COUGAR GS

~~~5

AVENUE
"100,_ WAIIINIY"

local1 owner, 89 Park Avenue tradein, Arctic white with blue leather inte·
rior. Full power on· Chrysler's "Top of
the line". EXTRA SHARP.

$8995

WAS
$1495

1986 BUICK·PARK

"'lhat ...

.

$10,900

1988 BUICK LeSABRE

"100'- WAUINTY"

CUSTOMS

Charcoal grey, features. full power,
articulating lumbar support seats,
power windows, door locks, cassette, 16" wheels, $18,000 new.

Choose from "3" low mileage, full
size Buicks. fully equipped with
power windows, door locks, tilt,
!)ruise, etc.

NOW

$12,900

$l2,900

Load"

1988 BUICK ELECTRA

ST. WAGON
"100,_ WADINTY"
The flagship of the Buick fleet I 8 pauenger aealing, power evtr'flhlng. This factory "demo" baa only 8,000 low mil11
and Ia beaullfully finished in woodgrain
and cheatnut paint.

ot nortnoi11J111&lt;S '

• U.rgmhot provide! mergy a1
.. extert&lt;kd ranges
• 12-ga~gt 2.\l~ and 3· Magnum •
Loads - 2.&lt;6. 8&amp;4. 2.&lt;4, 4x6
• Made tn U.SA

SAVE THOUSANDS!

~CALL

11• IM na5 • Spllng Vliltr PIIZI
.
Golllpaii,OIIIo 45131
STORE HOURS: 11Dat1ttJ thN ,.,_1¥.11::10
I::IDt.m.·l

fields , eradicate those coca
leaves ... stop it at Its source,"
the mayor sald.
Barry, under scrutiny lor his
past involvement with a con·
''These murders are driven by victed cocaine dealer and for his
drugs, by crack. Cocaine and friendship with a former city
heroin ls not grown In America. employee accused of drug deal·
It's brought here from abroad, " lng, brushed aside questions
Barry told ABC 's "This Week about the quality of his leader·
with David Brinkley ."
shlp In the drug war.
' 'The national government .
''The Issue Is not Marlon
needs to go to these five or six Barry. The Issue Is that these
countries In South and Central murders will continue If Marion
America, send the Army, the Barry were not the mayor ... they .
Navy, the Air Force, Marines, are drug-driven. You would still
the Coast Guard, burn up those have these murders because they

'

'

ROCX·CIIEWJNG MONSTER - An 84-ton
rock-chewing monster tunnels tbrough the ground
to connect two coal mines, Meigs No. 1 and
Raccoon No. 3. The project Includes drllnng

'
throurh a 700-loot
sandstone wall, 24 feet wide and
10 feet tall. The mines are being Joined as part of
tbe $3.8 million Investment In Ohio's coal
economy.

At least 10 deaths caused
by measles thus far this year
By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
As many as 2,000 Americans
have developed measles this
· year and at least 10 victims have
died - an unusually high rate
that has prompted health officials to consider new strategies
against a disease once hoped to
be ex tinct by now.
"We are havln'g a very large
measles year this year," said Dr.
Laurl Markowitz, a medical
epidemiologist for the federal
Centers for Disease Control In
Atlanta.
.
Only about 400 measles cases
officially had been reported to

~Local

the CDC so far this year, but
Markowitz said, as of last week,
CDC officials had heard of at
least about 2,000 cases and 10
deaths nationwide.
Measles, which Is caused by a
virus, usually al!ects children,
causing a rash, fever and cold·
like symptoms. Patients usually
get better alter about a week. But
the disease can lead to more
serious, potentially deadly compllcallo!IS such as pneumonia
and brain Infections.
About 500,000 cases of measles
occurred annually In the Urilted
States until a vaccine was
developed hi 1963. Health offl·

news briefs_,
.
'

"Great

• Dloelood oiJ1111kr shOt to
· ddlvl' cJw&lt;. unllonn patttmo

IIWJWIII•.Looolld nullo ..._ County Foirgnlunds
1'1111 PI lit ll, wv 25550
1T0E HDIIIS: 1i1an111tr tlw
t.30 a.m. • I p.m
12-5

AVENUE

1 'local owner, top of the line fam·
ily sedan. Medium red metallic
finish. power everything. Balance
of factory warranty.

WAS
$J4,900

-

$J995

Arctic white with blue velour trim,
Premium sound system. We just
installed a new GM Goodwrench
engine. 41 ,000 low miles.

GRAND PRIX SE

Only Ran..... DuptuN -~~
caoiolri two -~tyand._

NOW

"100,_ WliiANTY"

1988 PONTIAC

Turkey

ment should focus its attention on
New York, Los Angeles and
Nll1jmi - supposed drug-Import
capital!;.

SALEM CENTER - Its work
done, an 84-ton, rock-chewing
monster of a machine Is slowly
· backing out of the second tunnel
It · has ground through ancient
.sandstone beneath these rolling
hills.
Only 4 feet tall, but 40 feet long
and 12 feet wide, the machine has
helped In connecting two coal
mines here - Meigs No. 1 and
Raccoon No. 3. The mines are
being joined In a $3.8 million
Investment In Ohio's coal economy that will improve efficiency.
Now that the rock formation,
part of a prehistoric riverbed,
has been cut through, mining
machines are digging through
the coal seam to connect the
.·-' mines later-this year.
Both mines are part of the
Melgs .complex, three mines that
form one of the largest underground coal producers In the
country. The complex Is owned
by Southern Ohio Coal Co., a
subsidiary of American Electric
Power Co. Inc . (NYSE: AEP) .
In growling Its way through
nearly 700 feet of sandstone (and

$699 5

"100'/o WAIIANTY"

$8995

Remington Duplel'".lad SlloUhdls

NOW

"100,_ WliiANIY"
Only 41,000 low miles. local one
owner, new Pontiac trade. Wine fin·
•
ish with cloth bucket seats.

2 DR.

The Pattern Of Power

efforts to control the drug trade
in the nation's capital. "We did
not declare Washington a high·
Intensity drug trafficking area.
We are looking at whether we
should or not."
The key, Bennett sald, will be
to redeploy existing resources
"to get hold of this situation In
Washington."
District of Columbia Mayor
Marlon Barry disputed the notion
that the drug trade In the nation's
capital should be the focal point
of the administration's efforts,
arguing that the (ederal govern-

· are assassinations," he sa id,
noting that most of th e city
slaylngs Involve gangs or acqual ntances fighting over turf.
District of Columbia poUce
have recorded 114 murders this
year. nearly double the number
of homicides that had occurred
by this time last year. In 1988, the
city had a record 372 homicides.
Bennett cautlqped mayors of
other cities about asking to be
designated a drug war bat tieground, saying: "People ought to
be careful before they sl?ek that
!Jeslgnatlon. This Is not a good
thing to be.

AEP joins two mtnes

1985 OLDS 98

$10~ 9

GALUrc&gt;US, OIUO 45831

529 JACKSON PIKE

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Drug federal level - to get In, to help
czar William Bennett says he Is and then to get out, so that the
mulling over "a whole range of District of Columbia can run Its
things" to battle the growing own affairs."
drug problem ln the nation's
Although Bennett did not go
capital but stopped short of Into detail, The Post reported
divulging specific plans.
that Bennett hopes to put a strike
But The Washington Post re- . force in the nation's capital by
ported Sunday that Bennett was early next month to target repeat
"moving rapidly to make Wa- drug offenders, try to shut down
shington his first 'testcase' in the the District's 90 open-air drug
drug war."
markets and to take measures to
Speaking on NBC's "Meet the reduce the city's soaring homiPress" news show Sunday, Ben- cide rate.
nett said: "What we want to do ls
"We're looking at a whole
to offer some help from the range of things," Bennett said of

•

•,

. i .

,

AICS

WILDTURKEYr

H~S~ STRUT. x~~OR1ES

J

IN A M E • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I
IAOORESS:
I
I
I
~ONE: - - --_·::J
Du""'"' Colk-ge.

1 Section, 12 Pages 25 Cents
A Mullimedie Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 20, 1989

198~

Bennett considers drug-war plan for D. C.

certainty aught them the right tllillt.

DAYS

$} OO OFF

~nl·

n•a. one mutt pos. . . the knowltdge.

TURKEY
TALKIN'

DIAPHRAM CALLS

2346

My bulin•• nwy not empkly • huge
ttlft, but we cetllinty offer a ..,.vi"' to •

~

WILD 'lllllDY BOX CALL

•·

Pick3
341 '
Pick4

KNOWS THE VALUE OF
A QUALITY EDUCATION

WOOSTER. Ohio (UP!) - A tables can still be viewed In their
computerized version of the Ohio 1 original form.
"To get the same Information
Co rn Performance Test Is now
using
the printed version would
available to help farmers pick
require
not only a good know!·
the right corn hybrids.
edge
of
statistics
but also a lot of
Dave Jordan, an agronomist at
time
and
effort,"
he says. "The
the Ohio Agricultural Research
main
advantage
Is that this
and Development Center, says
being able to quickly sort data for ' program allows selection. of a
specific characteristics makes hybrid with character is tics that
are Important to the farmer."
the difference.
"These might be yield, mots·
Jordan compiles corn performance results at six test sites lor· ture, stalk lodging or other
agronomically Important
the Ohio Corn Performance Test.
characteristics."
Printed results are organized In
Growers who use the program ·
tables by hybrid name and
perfo rmance characteristics. can specify performance levels
This Is a handy reference, built's of characteristics that they think
up to the reader to compare the will best suit their field condl·
!Ions and local weather, such as
data, Jordan says.
grain
moisture level, plant
With the computerized verear
height, silk date and
height,
sion, growers can ask for lists of
test
weight
or
density of the grain
hybrids with specific perforat
harvest.
mance characteristics. And the

"ffiiU) CHAMPION''

NCAA's
· "Sweet 16'

Is an annual grass. Preemergent
herbicides stop the life cycle by
killing the crabgrass shortly
after it sprouts. Preemergent ·
herbicides come .in liquid and
granular forms . Some products
also combine preemergenl herb!·
clde and fertilizer.
Most herbicides for cra bgrass
control shouldn't be used on
newly seeded lawns because the
herbicides will kill new grass.

Dennis Brumfield
Ctrtifittl Public Accountant

Computerized tests available

.JIM LATHAM

(From, OATS, page Dl)'

_;__~";"'"'".
· _:_::'----~

be In April.
Lawn care begins In early
spring. That 's when you can
apply apreemergentherblcldeto
keep crabgrass from sprouting.
Crabgrass sprouts In the spring
after five to seven moist nights
when soU temperatures are at
least 50 degrees.
Apply a preemergent herb!·
c
clde now on the lawn. rabgrass

••

Ohio Lottery

Youth faces charges'
1988 BUICK CENTURY
. 4 DOOR
"100'- WAHANTY"

We've juot.traded for '"2" extro clean locally
owned mtd- ~lze Iuick&amp;. Both have only
9,000 low molea, power windows and door
locka, till, crulaa, AM-FM -caasette, and V-6

engine&amp;.

·

.

"Save the 1st Year's Depreciation
OIJ. These Uka New Buicks"

A 15 year-old Little Hocking youth will be charged with
entering a camper and taking Items belonging to Foster Niday,
Reedsville, according to a report from Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Souls by.
The theft occurred last Tuesday evening. The youth ran away
from home on Tuesday·, reportedly stole a boat at Hockingport,
and· then went to the Reedsville Locks. Tuesday evening he.
entered the camper and took various camping Items. On
Wednesday he crossed the river In the stolen boat and hopped a
train to Parkersbl!rg, W.Va. The young man was caught In
Parkersb\trg by Parkers bug PtiUce. On Friday ,lock employees
found the boat against the dam. On Friday night, the youth told
his parents about entering the camper and they In turn, notified
authorities.
.
The stolen Items were recovered and returned to the owner on
Saturday.
·
Three Incidents of vandalism to cabins In Boston Hollow In
Olive Township were Invested by the sheriff's deparimenl on
Sunday afternoon and evening. Charles Harris, Reedsville, was
Continued on page 12

clals once had hoped the vaccine
would enable them to eradicate
the disease from the United
States by 1982.
But between 3,000 and 4,000
cases have continued to occur
annually on average, apparently
because some pre-school age
children do not get vaccinated or
fall to respond to the vaccine for
the highly contagious disease.
The largest outbreaks this year
have occurred In Houston and
Loa Angeles. Other outbreaks
have been reported In North
Carolina, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Missouri, Ohio, Kansas,
llllnols and New York State.
About 1,000 cases have occurred In Houston and at least
four victims have died since the
outbreak began In December,
officials said.
Since an outbreak began In Los
Angeles las,tsummer, there have
been at least 800 cases or
suspected cases and eight deaths
- Including 315 cases and six
deaths this year, officials said.
The most serious cases In Los
Angeles have occurred ·In the
Samoan·Am eric an community.
Most of the outbreaks have
occurred among school-age
children. But several Northeast
colleges, Including Siena College
near Albany, N.Y., and the
University of Hartford In Connecticut, were forced to play a series
of basketball games In empty
gyms In an attempt to stem a
measles outbreak that began at
Siena In February.
~he University of Hartford
Continued on page 12

Acid control
legislation is
anticipated

other types of rock and shale), 36-mlle-an-hour draft. The mathe electric-powered mammoth chine's mechanical arms gather
used twin cutting heads mounted the fallen rock and dump It on a
on Independent shafts that move conveyer belt that moves forup and down, side to side. Each ward with the machine.
head, or drum, 4 feet In diameter,
All of this Is carried out under
Is armed with carbide-tipped harsh conditions- grime, water
steel cutting bits, or teeth.
and, usually, mud underfoot Together, the drums can by a crew of nine men who run the
create a hole In a solid rock wall machine, pick up after It and
24 feet wide by 10 feet tall Install heavy steel arches and
almost large enough to drive a thick wooden beams that strengbus through.
then the tunnel's roof. On averIn motion, the drums cut age, the crew punches the tunnel
through the rock In a small storm forward through the rock by
of rock chips. The dust Is sucked about six feet In an eight-hour
away Immediately through a shift.
,
30-lnch-wlde vacuum duct by a
A tough eight-hour shift .

·Winter weather-~
greets first day
of spring today
state and Into Pennsylvania
By United Press International
Spring began with winter-like Monday.
'In the West, between one and
weather across much of the
nation Monday With snow falling two lnche~ of snow fell over
over many parts of the Ro-ckies southeast Wyoming late Sunday
and a rapidly developing storm and early Monday, and up to 8
system moving east over the . Inches was expected to accumu·Ohio · Valley toward late by ' noon along the storm
system In Colorado, the NWS
Pennsylvania.·
Spring officially started at said. A wlnte~ storm warning
was In effect for the northern
10:28 a.m. EST.
,
According to the National foothills of Colorado. Snow adviWeather Service, the 1988·1989 sories were over southeast
winter season was warmer than Wyoming, the northern moun·
normal over most of the eastern talns of Utah and much o!the rest
half of the nation and colder than of Colorado, and winter storm
normal from the Rocky Moun- watches were over parts of New
Mexico and northweSt Texas.
tains to the West Coast.
Some power outages were
Precipitation was relatively
reported
In San Antonio due to
light over the central Gulf Coast
lightning
strikes.
region, the Atlantic Coast states,
Temperatures around the na·
portions of the Great Lakes
tion
at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 8
region and the Pacific Northwest. Rain and snow was heavier below zero at Houlton, Maine, to
than normal, however, from the 74 at St. Petersburg, F1a ., the
southern Plains to the Ohio NWS said.
Over the weekend, balmy
Valley and over the central
conditions that had surprised
Rockies.
Sunny weather and skimpier residents of many parts of the
clothing would have to walt, nation for several days ended,
however, as snow and thunder- and cold weather records fell in
storms touched off by a low many locations.
Marquette, Mich., registered
pressure system over the Texas
11 Sunday, shattering a
minus
Panhandle socked the Rocky
of
2 degrees below zero for.
record
Mountain states. In the Midwest,
snow fell over much of Illinois, the day set 25 years ago. Other
Wisconsin, Indiana and Into records broken or tied were In
Alpena, Mich., (7 below), Green
'upper Michigan.
The storm system was develop- Bay, Wis., (5 below) , Muskegon,
Ing quickly and NWS forecasters Mich., (5 above). Rochester,
Minn.. (5 below ) and Traverse
said It had entered Ohio and City,
Mich ., (1 below).
expected It to move across that

WASHINGTON, D.C. (UPI) Lawmakers In western Pennsyl·
vanla, West VIrginia and Ohio
say they expect Congress to pass
add rain control legislation this
year that could hurt high-sulfur
coal-producing districts.
The lawmakers have begun
trying to limit economic damage
that controls may cause In coal
regions In the three states. Sulfur
dioxide Is the major component
· of acid rain.
President George Bush has
pledged prompt action on acid·
rain controls.
Acld·raln control backers said
Saturday there has also been a
change In Senate leadership that
should pave the way for acld-ral n
control passage.
Sen. Robert Byrd, D·W.Va.,
who .resisted the measures, has
been replaced as Senate MaJorIty Leader by Sen. George
Mitchell, D-Malne. Mitchell has
beeli a leading sponsor of the
control legislation.
Northern Appalachian coal
mined In Pennsylvania and
northern WestVIrglnta has some
of the highest sulfur content, 1.9
to 2.1 percent, of any coal mined
In the United States.
Chris Farrand, vice president
of governmental relations for
Peabody Holding Co. Inc., the
nation's largest coal producer,
said an Industry analysis of
major pending acid-rain bills
Two Pomeroy residents were
shows all would signlflcan tly
In a one-car accident
Injured
change coal markets and cause a
Sunday
at 11 a.m. In Scipio
loss of mining jobs In high-sulfur
Township on S.R. 681, according
areas.
The United Mine Workers has to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
•
estimated 20,000 jobs will be lost State Highway Patrol.
The
driver.
Cindy
L.
Hayes,
24,
due to the acld·raln controls,
of
38402
Peach
Fork
Rd.,
and
her
union officials said. The U.S.
Environmental Protection passenger, Tom Sievers, 31, of
Agency estimated 9,000 jobs , Peach Fork Ro-ad, were taken by
would be lost from the controls, ambulance to Veterans Memor·
agency officials said.
Ia! Hospital, where Hayes was
Thecoalindustryhaslostmore treated and released for facial
than 70,000 jobs since 1980, bruises and scrapes. Sievers was
according to Industry experts.
. treated and released for multiple
Peabody Is based In St. Louis, scrapes to the chin and face and
Mo.
lumbar bruises.

Pomeroy residents
hurt in Scipio wreck
Hayes, dr lvlng a 1971 Chev·
role! Caprice, was traveling east
when she ran off the right side of
the· road. The car overturned,
causing It to bUrst Into flames.
Though Hayes and Stevers
stayed In the car, neither suffered burn Injuries.
Hayes was cited for failure to
control and driving without a
license.
A Tuppers Plains youth was
cited In a car-truck aC:cldent
Sunday at 11 :25 a.m. on C.R. 36,
about a mile north of S.R. 7.
Crystal D. Reed, 16, was clled
Continued on page 12

�---Mondl!v. March 20. 1989

Page-2-'--The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Micklaport, Ohio

Commentary_
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~~

ISlm~
~v

I"T'L..JL-""T'"U'"T"-=·""'

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
PAT WHITEHEAD
PubUsher
ASsistant Publisher/Controller
CHARLENE HOEFUCH, General Manager
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers 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 wUI be pub-

lished. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!tles.

·

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
party to the agreement. President Bush has vowed to keep
funding the rebels until the
MarxiSt party reaches a political
settlement with them.
The airfields may be the
Soviets' ace in the hole.
Recent top-secret CIA reports,
relying on satelllte photography
and spies on the ground, have
confirmed that two airfields are
taking shape at Bengala and the
capital city of Luanda. Adding to
the mystery, the Angolans are
dredging a larger port on ·the
coast at Namibe.
The pert may be to attract

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Last week's Ohio House approval of a casino
gambling bl II fewer than three months Into the legislative session was
nothing short of remarkable, given the historical conservatism of
Ohioans.
Admittedly, the bill limits casino gambling to the city of Lorain, and
then only if the voto;!rs approve.
Still, three months Is a quick trip for such controversial legislation.
Ohio is slow to accept change, especially when it involves morality.
It took at least six or eight years to repeal· the "blue laws" and to
ga in approval of Sunday liquor sales for restaurant and convention
business.

I

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Monday, March 20, the 79th day of 1989 with 286 to follow.
Today is the first day of spring t vernal equinox at 10: 28 a.m. EST).
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Roman poet Ovid in43 B.C., adventurer and writer Edward Judson,
originator of the dime novel, In 1820, Norwegian dramatist He-nrlk
Ibsen In 1828, psychologist B.F. Skinner in 1904 (age 85). actor and
bandleader Ozzie Nelson in 1907, former New York Mayor Abe Beame
In 1906 tage 83), British actor Sir Michael Redgrave In 1~,
comedian, producer and director Carl Reiner In 1922 (age 67), Fred
Rogers ("Mister Rogers") in 1928 (age61), hockey player Bobby Orr
in 1948 (age 41), and actor William Hurt In 1950 (age 39) .
On this date in history:
In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's anti-slavery novel "Uncle Tom's
Cabin" was published.
.In 1963. a volcano on the Island of Bailin the East Indies began
erupting. The eventual death toll exceeded 1,500.
In 1976, San Francisco newspaper heiress Patty Hearst.was found
guilty of bank robbery.
In 1977. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her son, Sanjay, lost
their parliamentary races in India's general e-lections. The Congress
party also was defeated and the state of emergency In India was
lifted.
In 1986, the House rejected a $100 million aid package for the
Nicaraguan Contras, a major Reagan policy setback. That same day,
the Dow Jones Industrial ave-rage closed above 1,800fortheflrsttlme.
In 1987, the federal government approved the sale of AZT, which is a
treatment but not a cure for AIDS. It's still the only approved AIDS
drug.
•
A thought tor the day: Psychologist B.F. Skinner said, "Education
is what survives when wllat has been learnt has been forgouen."

t·

Akron HobaD rijps North Colle,g e Hill in
double overtime to win Division III title

New Angolan airstrips puzzle CIA
field. The Soviets, using Cuban
WASHINGTON - Allalysts at
soldiers, pay the price of keeping
the Central Intelligence Agency
the Marxist party In power. The
are scratching their !leads over
two alrfil!lds being built in · United States, along with South
Africa, funds the rebel group.
Angola. Unless the mystery t.s
But successive American adsolved to their satisfaction, the
mlnstratlons have tired of the
airfields could hurt relations that
war. Last December, assistant
are flrially on the mend between
secretary of state Cheste'r A.
the United States and Allgo Ia.
Crocker broke-red a peace agreeThe oil-rich nation on the
ment tor Angola, Cuba and South
southwest coast of Africa has
Africa, funds the rebel group.
been in turmoil since achieving
But successive American adIndependence from Portugal In
ministrations
have tired of the
1975. A Marxist government was
war.
Last
December,
assistant
lnstalle with the help of Cuban
secretary
of
state
Chester
A.
troops, causing the United States
·
Crocker
brokered
a
peace
agree.
to break diplomatic relations
and
South
ment
for
Angola,
Cuba
with Allgola.
Africa. Keeping an ace in the
Since then, Allgola has been a
hole. the United States was not a
surrogate superpower battle-

commercial shipping, but why
does Angola need tbe airfields
when It already has adequate
commercial airports? ·
More cynical mlhds In the CIA
think the Marxist government Is
building the airfields to welcome
AN-24 "Condors," the large
transport planes of the Soviet
Union. A massive airlift could
quickly restock Angola with
troops.
The Soviets, although financially strapped at home, 'have
spent enormous sums to keep
Cuban soldiers In Allgola. According to one Intelligence estimate, they spent up to$1.5 billion
last year for military equipment.
At the same time, Mikhail
Gorbachev scaled back aid to
other African nations. trimming
the ilst of charity cases from 221n
1983 to seven today.
With a dash of chutzpah,
Angola's Marxist President Jose
Eduardo dos Santos has secretly
asked the United States to help
finance the Cuban withdrawal.
Our sources say Gen. Antonio dos
Santos Franco, head of Angola's
general staff, has estimated the
cost of the troop withdrawal at
$800 million.
Bush lsn' t giving Angola much
hope of a handout. He is too busy
backing rebel leader Jonas Savlmbl who has vowed to keep
fighting. Convert U.S. aid to
Savtmbl's group has avera&amp;~ed
$15 mllilon a year since 1986. It
has been funneled through Zaire.
CIA sources predict Bush will
Increased the funding to make up
for the loss of support Savlmbl
had from South Africa. Under the
peace pact, South Africa had to
stop funding the rebels.

WEHRLE REPEATS- Uma Central Cathollc'sBret DeCurtlns
{24) shoots over Columbus Wehrle's Mark Johnson and past _

Anthony Johnson In the first half of Saturday night's Division IV
boys' state championship game at St. John's Arena In Columbus.
Wehrle knocked off Uma to repeat as state champions. {UPI)

Scoreboard ...
Majors

IJ~~ordonl

'

BJ Unlkd Pl"l'Ss lnlerllllkual
Ballthllllli:xhfNUon Staaclnp
AMERK:AN t.EAGUf:
Tum
\\' L
Toronto
13 .t
Clt"Veland
13 5
Nf'w \'ork
10 1
Texu
&amp; i
Kuuu City
8 i

&amp; 11
10 9

Mlnrr.ljota

Oakland
Mllwau Ire

Callfornht
Detrok
Scldtle

10 10
II t
II t
II t

ChicagO

II

7

It would be nice, though
probably wrong, to think that the
delay was occasioned by the fact
that they had to abandon, at least
temporarily, another great liberal shibboleth they have been
using lately to· smite the unworthy: the. principle that we
ought to be extremely "sensitive" toward the feeilngs of
others - or at least other In
certain specialty protected
categories.
It was just a year or so ago that
Jimmy the Greek was summarIly fired by CBS for expounding
the theory that black basketball
players are taller and huskier
than most whites because preCivil War slave owners bred their
ancestors for size. True, Jesse
Jackson didn't call for Jimmy's
assassination for making that
assertion, but the man's abrupt
sacking by CBS struck many
people as a wldly excessive
punishment for an offense that
was hardly In Rushdle's (or
Scorsese's) league and was also,
unlike theirs, almost certainly

When my mom was a little girl,
she and her friends in the
Epworth League ofthe Methodist
Episcopal Sunday school took the
Temperance Pledge. I believe It
was prose written by the
Women's Christian Temperance
Union, and went something along
the "!Ips that touch liquor... "
line. She dldn' t remember how It
went exactly, and broke it as soon
as she was old enough to know
what it meant.
The Temperance Pledge was a.
thing of the past by the time I was
coming along, but has sort of
. enjoyed a renaissance with
Nancy Reagan's "Just Say No"
campaign. And I guess If modern
kids don't feel !Ike a "Just Say
No" button says it all for them,
they now have the option to the
"Tower Pledge," a today kind of
abstinence vow with one lmpor. tanl difference: the element of
bribery. When you take the
Tower Pleljge, you get something
In return. Like, an appointment
as Secretary of Defense, If you're
John Tower. Perhaps a lengthened curfew or a better car, If
you're a teen-ager.
"I promise If you'll just Jefme
be defense secretary, Ups that
touch liquor shall never touch
mine, even sitting around The
Monocle swapping stories and
checking aut babes.
"I promise If you'll just a{ let
me stay out an hour later, and b)
buy me a '69 Charger with a 426
Hem I Instead oUhis '74 Pinto, so I
can look cool going around
McDonald's, then I'll just say no
to booze, at least untO the senior
trip when we're on ,the bus and
none of us has'to drive."
I.

Personally, I find the bribery
Ideas extremely appealing. If
good works, good looks and a
great resume won't get me a job
- and on several occasions, ihey
haven't - perhaps I can bribe
my way to a better position:
"So, you've ·h eard I'm not the
greatest speller? Well as luck
would have It, I've just enrolled
In 'Spell Your Way to Success' at
the local community college and
bought a SpeliStar program for
my computer. If you hire me, I
promise to read only the dictionary and Roget' s Thesaurus in my
free time, and work all the 'It
Pays to Increase Your Word
Power' puzzles in Reader's Digest. And since you're right on my
way, why don't I drive you to
work every morning, too?"
My 55-year-otd friend Carol
tells me the older you get, the
scarcer the men get. ("Let a man
get a divorce, all the stngle
women over 40 head for him like
a school of piranhas," she says.)
An adaptlon of the Tower Pledge
sounds !Ike It just ought to work
on the singles scene, too.
•'Marry me and anything from
Julia Child's 'Mastering the Art
of French Cooking' set in yours
on demand, along with every
trick. I learned In 20 years of
reading Cosmopolitan and your
name on my CD's. You want me
to shed a few pounds? Hey, lips
that touch chocolate layer cake.
and Kentucky Fried Chicken
shall never touch yours ... "
There's only one thing I don't
understand about this whole
bribery tblng, and the guy who
started It all, John Tower: In
order to bribe someone, you have
to give up sozpethlng. I trade you
all of my free time and a ride to

work every morning, and you
give me a job. A bribe is not a
pleasant barter, but one you
enter because you don't have any
other options.
If he doesn't have a drinking

Pd .

.7S:i
:r.l'l
.11\!l

.513
·" '
.$:!9 ·
.5~6

.SOO
.~71

.-IH

Edmonl:oa 3, NY blluuk&gt;rs 'l
Chlca(o5, lid roM 3
Mo..tv 'M Gamf'll
St. Lo•IB at NV Ranp!tll, 1:3:a p.m .

Va.ncouwr al New Jer_...)', 1:45 p.m.
Ruffalo at Wln..,peg, II: » p. m.
Pltlrburxh at Mlnii.'KO(.a, 8:35p.m.
1"\lesd-.y'M Game~
l !dander.; at Cal prJ, Dlr;bl
Lo!i r\nl('les a1 Edmon&amp;on, nlpt '
~'\'

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.
SaiUrdll,)' ' !i fk,!lult...

,•n I

Wae;tinpon 1!3, PhUadelphlall-1

13

.-I ~M

t

.-1311
.313

II

~

.61111

San Dh•«&lt;
Allant.a

10
8

~

.1167
.Iii I

Clnei•111ll
PUttilu ~h

9

i 10
7 II

.H'!

Golden Slatt~ l'lf, CluuioUe IIi
l'ie\\ York 1%!1. Mllwaw ~e 10~

l

II

.aM9

6 10

.3"l5

Mon&amp;rt'ltl

l\

Chlc~tKf!

l\ 13

.351
.27!1

~

II

N,\TIONA.L· LEAGUE

Lo11

•

ti
II .l\2!1
II· .52&amp;
9 .50tt

9

AnKe~es

!I

Nl'W l'ork

Hvu!Con

unintentional.
Yet where were Norman
Maller and the other vigilant
guardians of the First Amendment when Jimmy went over the
side? Nobody heard so much as a
peep from them about the need to
prote.ct the poor devil' s freedom
of speech, let alone about the
need being . "all the greater"
because his statement was so
offensive. Instead, he was swept
straight out of television on a
wave of pious blather about the
need for "sensitivity" to the
feelings of others.
Don't devout Moslems, and
even devout Christians, have
feelings too, to which we should
all be "sensitive"? Are their
most sacred beliefs fair game for
any cheap opportunist who
thinks he has found a way to
make a buck by rldlcu.Ung them?
And If our answer to that question
Is a painful and costly "Yes,"
hadn't-we better quit crucifying,
for their "insensitivity," people
who tread on some toe that
happens to enjoy our personal
protection?

Tower's pledge was really a bribe

Boston~

Indiana Il-l, [h\t•agol03
Huu!ion I'll, Portland 113
San Antonio I H . Utah 911
MUwaultec 11'1', DetruiiiOO
Dcnvrr Ill. MIIM'l\1105
t'hofonlx 1!2, Joleaitlt' 10-t

Balllmore
Bo:;ton

Being Sensible about insensitivity_:__
, _Rus_he_r
merely help to publicize and sell
lt. It certainly never occured to
him that the Ayatollah Khomelnl
would respond by ordering a hit
on him.
So now Rushdle Is In hiding
"somewhere in Britain," under
the protection of Her Majesty's
police (who, by the way, were
also kicked around In his book),
and may have to stay that way
for · the rest of his life. No doubt
the current uproar will die down
sooner or later, but Rushdie can
never be sure that some Moslem
fanatic isn't biding his time,
waiting for a propitious moment
to strike. The novel Is reportedly
doing well In the bookstores, but
Rushdle: s heirs seem likelier
then he does to enjoy the
royalties.
.Jt took most Western Intellectuals a week or more to decide, not
only that they were on Rushdle's
side In this !lap (that was easy) ,
but that a proper devotion to the
principles of free speech required them to say so, loud and
clear.

Su.-18,11'. Rc.ults
3.,

Phltadt'lplllllll, Toronto 6

St. Luullil

Martin Scorsese must be profoundly grateful that his recent
!lim version of "The Last Temptation of Christ" blasphemed
only Jesus and not the Prophet
Mohammed. The Christian principle of turning ·the other cheek
r.uaranteed that neither John
Paul II nor Jerry-Falwell would
put out a contract on him.
Instead, as he undoubtedly calcu·Jated, the picture merely stirred
up enough anger among the
faithful to hype the box-office
proceeds a bit.
It would be Interesting to know
whether It was Scorses' s successful example that inspired Salma•
Rushdie to spice his latest novel,
"The Satanic Verses," with a
thoroughly offeslve caricature of
the Prophet Mohammed and to
depict a dozen prostitutes as
Mohammed's wives. Rushdle, an
Indian-born citizen of Britain
who &gt;yas raised as a Moslem,
must nave known how throughly
his book would outrage devout
members of that faith . But he
apparently thought this would

San Franci iiC"O
Phl.llldelphlll

,389

9

{Splk·liqUifd &amp;"IUTll'N t'O ulll ID 14an din~;
l"OHf'~t' ~aune10

do noll .

1

Monlrul and ,\li1U1~ fled Man.' h ~
Detroit and Philadt&gt;lphla tle'd /llal't'h 9
sa,. m .,xo and f 'lt'\"t&gt;land tlt&gt;d Mal'l'h 9
Kan~ CIIJ and lkndon tied Mau-c h IJ
Kll.n~ City and Clncinrall tledMill'c h

...

Sahml"v·~ Rcli ult ~;
'

TCJ~LLS !1, Bo!iiOR [!l~) ..

Boston i~li) 4, llou"'on ~
Sl!w York ( A.L l 7, ('h leap ti\LJ t .~ sl 0
Los Alt ,;ei('frll!, Montn•.u.J I f lllnli.)

PhlladPiphla 7, Detruk 81 10 Ina.)
St. Louis~ . MlnnrstU3
To~onto 7. Nf'w \ 'ork !N L ) 5
Clndnrlltl ~. Kans.!t CII y:l 1II Inn. )
Atlanta 10, RalllmnR' :1
Cblc»ICO (NLJ II, Oakh&amp;nd II

San Franci!K'O 6. San Oil'~ 2
Callfo,-Jja 7. Sul:lk&gt; G
Mllwaukl.'(' 3. Q('vtlund :1
Pitt'ihu'Jb 5, Chka.~o {ALl

(b)

Sll-Ci"umerllo 100, D11.Ua s 91
Su•h,y'!i

tJ

U(o!jit.. ,_,

.r.. r._'Y

Clf'w~land 101, New
91
Athanbl 113, LA Laktrs Ill

Monday '111 GamM
Sl&amp;ll Antordo at BoM011 , 'l'; 31 p.m .
Sf'"' l "ork at PhUaddpiWil. 1:ao p.m.

\\'Nina1on AI fleve iW1~ : i : 30 p.m .
:'o1laml at Phoenix, 9; :10 p.m .
fh artoue M Sllcram,~ nto, ll : 30 p.m .
Dalla.~ at Portland, 10: 3t p.m .
TuC!'id llV'M Games
Indiana at N~"· ,JerMCy. nlgtit
Df'troH at "diU\ta, nl~eht
Bu ~ lon al Mllwuu ll:'t•, nill'hl
Denwr at llourcon , nl""ht
Utah al Sclloltl~. nl~
Chic'~o 111 LA LllkP'n., nl~
Portland al Golden Slllh•, nll{hl

Pro results
~lorlhi.Y'"

Spol1!0 l'alcndar

Due hall Exhlbltkln
l~iu!ihu ~h

Surd llV'!&gt; .Re11ulls
Ne¥t· l ' ork (NLJ -1, Rl. Louis 1
PhUaddpWa-1, Ka.ll~" Cit_,·a
Pltt!iltUf'Kh 8. Toron1o:!
Ro!ilon 1, Undnmtl!
Lo!i Anllt!il'S ~. Houi'C o n I
Montrul Ill; Nrw l'ork tAL) K
Mht~nf'llofa :i, 1\ltlln~.&lt;~. 1
Dcr.roil 1, Chica~o tALl!'.
Tt&gt;loll." U, Baltlmore 10
Ollkliurd 1. Mllwaukt•P tssll
f "lf'\t' llll"ld :}, l:bll · a~~;n l ~" I.) (sli) 4
('blt•a~~;u (NL ) (~K) 6, Mllwau k •r (~:o. JO
Sun Dlc,t~:fl K. St&gt;nJIII' 6
S~~on Fnlnt..J,;(.'U I! , f'llllforllhPI ':

(li-')

\ ' li.

St . Laul!!i 111 St.

Pcll•rshurJI, Fla .. I p.m.
KanSl\S Cit.\' u. Soliton at ~lniCr
lla.Hn, F1 a.., I p m .
lk&gt;trolt vs. Cii"K'Innul al Plar11 Cit,·,
tla., I : D~ p.m.
St&gt;w Vork CNLI ,. ~. Philad elphia llt
fll'an~olll.t&gt;r, na., I : 0!1 p.m .
Pllhiburxh \~. C'hlcailio (AL) (S~t&gt;) Ill
Slll"ol!iobl,

Cage scores
'

Ohio Hi Jt"h St•houl Billllrlball St•oft's
Ry l 'nitl'd Prt'!illlnler,.lioftlll
Slat1• Tvunutmenl Anal~
March Ill
Dlvl~lon I
To I M aoomher n, Ot" StdOM'ph 72 t 01 1
lllvlfjlon II

Lexlnr;ton lit, M"t&gt;ht Gt'W-lll: 11 Si

· ,'Uf;r Hoh1111

Dlvi:o~ton Ill
~2. ~· f'ollt•••·

Hlll49 (2ul)
DlvLsi. . IV
•
("ol \\'t•hrlt• 11:1, Uma l~t·n l 'Wh Ill

problem, tossingdownatewonce
in a whlle won't Impair his ability
to lead. If he does have a drinking
problem, a stack of pledges won't
make any difference.

.~. La~~o

An gele~at \ 'ero ~a.: h.

fla , 1: :JO p.m.
Hallimo~ · v~ . ~lont~·al at Wt-.;1 1• a.1m
fk&gt;arh. Fla.., I: 30 p.m .
Mlnn•Mta vs. \'t'w York (AL) ul Fori
Laudcnla.h•, •la .. 1 ::~11 p .111.
Hout4on ' '"· Toronto at Dull('dln, fla .,
1:35 p.m .

Mll'olo'UU ll:e ,,,., Sah Dicj(U at V'uma,

Pro results
\' .o\TIOSU HOfHF.\'

LEAGl:t~ .

Sit.hrrda,v '.!i Rt·~ ult ..

ftuKiun 6, Phlladdphl11.3
( "hit-ago 3, NI'W ,Jrrtll'y I
\\a..hln~MK , HaJ"IfOrtl '!
Qut'hfo(' ~. Nl' Rllll~r~ 3
~IOIII:n!al ;, Pllbibu~h '~
\ ' IUK'DIJWf ~.

fll'l' bilandt'rli I
"lnnlpPjt It, Torurtlo :l

Berry's World

Mlnnt'suta !1, Ruffalo 0

St. LoUIJi3, Detrotl

~

C11.lgary 9, Lo" All~eo~ :1

San Frand~t:o \ 'S. ("hlcllii;O tSLI at
MNOII., r\.rtt: ,, :1: 0.\ p.m .
·
Ch•wland '"- Ca lllorqla IU Palm
Sprln.:s. Calif., -I : Ol\ p.m .
Chicago ( ALl {!&lt;~!oi) '"""· T.-.-.a.o; at SlUt
.Juan. Puerto Rico. M: 0~ p.m .
lbii!.;M.hall
San ,\nt oolo at Bui'itun, i: 30 p.m .
~- ..,... l ' ork at Philadelphia. 7: :tO p. m .
"' WIIIin~on

at Clt'Vf'land . 1::10 p.m .

Miami at PhOt.•nlx, 9: 311 p. m.
fharlolte at Sac"'mt'nto. 11 : 30 p. m .
Dalla.'i al Portland, 10: 30 p.m .
f11m p~

C:olh•~~;c
sKP!i ~r r

1'nurnament

(M'l.Vrd round )
N1UA fhamplor.;hlp G11.me - Eil.!it
('{'nlrnl (Okla.) V!O. St . MW"y'li (Te;~~M),
9:30 p.m .
t' oolha.ll
Palm Sprin~~;S, Calli. - NFL ·" 'cecln(I;'N
NoC'k(',}"

st . Lou\" at :toO\'

RWl~·rs,

7; 35 p.m .

\ 'Mt'OU\'Cr at Nc"' ,Jcr:coy. 7: -tS p.m .
Buffalo at Wlnrllpcl{. M:3$ p.m .
Pltl!oibllrah al Mln~sow.ll: 35 p.m .
Soccf'r
MISL
No game-~ !k:ht'lfukd

j

East Central, St. Mary's meet

.'

DEATH THREATS. "

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) The result o! one of college
basketball's newest rules will
haunt the Wisconsln-Eau Claire
Biugolds for many years.
Pete Paraphronis tipped in a
missed shot with 1: 15 to go for
what proved to be the winning
points Saturday, lifting the East
Central (Okla.) Tigers to a 58-56
victory over th e Biugolds in the
semifinals of the 52nd NAIA
Tournament.
·East Central goes into Its first
championship game since the
runnerup season of 1950 and will
face St. Mary"s (Texas) Monday
night for the title. The Rattlers
topped Central Washington in its
semifinal.
Parahronts' tip-In was contested, but the! original shot by
VerneII Kemp 'I'as not -as East
Central put the ball in play as
soon as possible after a time-out,
while the Blugolds were saunter! ng onto tM court.
Eau Claire's Tom Blair connected from 3-polnt range with
3:32 to play, giving Wisconsin. Eau Claire a 56-54 lead, but the
Blugolds, 29&lt;4, did not, score

COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPI) Dan Heideman and Aaron
McGhee scored 15 points each to
lead Akron Hoban to a 52-49
double overtime victory over
North College Hill in the championship game o! the boys
Division III state high schOol
tournament Saturday night at St.
John Arena.
The Kn igh(s. who wound up the
season with a 20-7 record, used an
18-7 third quarter, with the
6-foot-8 Heidemman scoring 10,
to overcome a 24-17 halftime
·
deficit .
Hoban, which wonltsflrststate
championship, held a 37-31 lead
after McGhee hit a 16-footer to
start the fourth quarter.
But Dave Harmon. held to just
two points the first three quarters, hit a basket, followed by a
3-polnt play to make it 37-36.
Neither team led by more than
three points the rest of the way as
regulation play ended in a 42-42
tie.
.
Harmon had given his te-am a
42-41 lead with 36 seconds remaining with a pair of free
throws and Heideman, with a
¢hance to win it for Hoban. hit the
llrst but missed the second with
three second left, sending the
game Into overtime.
· The first overtime period ·
ended at 45-45 , with McGhee
hitting a 3-pointer with 30 seconds left after three Harman
free throws had given NCH a
45-42 lead.

again. About a minute later, the
Tigers.' Bobby Shelton knocked In
a missed shot to tie the score.
East .Central called time-out
with 1: 19 to go. After the warning'
buzzer, Wlsconsin-Eau Claire
was slow to come out of the
huddle and the Tigers had an
almost uncontested shot from
underneath. Even though Kemp
missed that opportunity, Papahronts managed to slap the ball in
for the game-winner.
Wisconsin-Eau Claire missed
three chances alter that, with
East Central pulling down the
rebound each time.
Kemp fired In 24 - but was
scoreless after the 11:'24 markto lead the Tigers and none of his
teammates reached double figures. Wisconsln-Eau Claire got
14 points from Blair and 13 from
Eric Davis.
'

YIHAT'S AT
98.3 FM? .

In the second overtime, Hoban
scored the first four points on
baskets by Anthony Stewart and
Beau Sloan.
Harmon went to the line with
six seconds lett and his team
trailing 51-48. He made the first,
then Intentionally mlsseil the
second. The rebound came directly back to him, but he was
unable to get control for a s hot.
McGhee was fouled In the melee
and his free throw with two
seconds to play made the final
score 52-49.
Harmon finished with 17 points
for North College Hill, which
ended t he season at 25-2, while
Eric Sears added 11.

10 of his 15 points In the third
quarter as the Knights overcame
a seven-point halftime deficit. He
also had 10 rebounds In playing
the entire 38 minutes.
Named to the all- tournament
team along with He ideman were
teammates Derrick Owens and
Aaron McGhee, Eric Sears and
Dave Harmon of North College
Hill and Matt Miller and Kurt
McGraw of Wheelersburg.

Wehrle 83 Uma CC 81
Columbus We-hrle won the
Division IV title, its second In a
row and third In the last four
years. with an 83-81 victory over
Lima Central Catholic.
The Wolverines' Larry Harper
Hoban held . a 43-32 edge re- broke a 60-60 tie with a 3-po!nt
bounding, led by McGhee·wtth 12 field oal With 5:57 left In the game
and Heideman with 10.
and LCC never caught up.
llarper -led Wehrle In scori ng
Heineman MVI'
with 20 points and also had seven
Dan Heineman, who rallied rebounds.
'
Akron Hoban to a 52-49 double
"This one was really special,"
overtime win over North College Wehrle Coach Chuck Kemper
Hill Saturday night in the cham- said of the championship,
pionship game of the boys achieved despite the absence or
Division III state high school 6-foot-8 Lawrence Funderburke,
tournament, was selected the the MVP of last year's tournamost valuable player.
ment. Funderburke was disThe G-foot-8 Heideman scored missed from the Wehrle tea m In

'

December a !fer a series of
conflicts with Kemper.
Brett DeCurtlns led all scorers
with 21! points and Eric Volbert
had 20 for LCC ,
"They (Wehrle) played championship basketball the last thr~e
or four minutes when they had
to," said LCC Coach Bob Seggerson. "We took them to the limit.
but they were the better team."
Harper MVP ,
Larry Harper, who sparked
Columbus Wehrle tn it s second
consecutive Division IV boys
state high school basketball
championship Saturday night.
was ~elected the tournament's
most va luable player.
Harper. ,a 5-foot-8 junior guard,
scored 20 points and had seven
assists In Wehrle's 83-81 win oyer
Lima Central Catholic in th.e
finals.
Two of Harper's teammatesjunior Anthony Johnson and
sophomore Chuck Perry ~ jOiJl,
him on the ali-tournament, along
with Brett DeCurtins and Eric
· Volbert of Lima Catholic and
Maurice Houston and Richie
Griffin Qf Springfield . Catholic
Central.

Tom Kite
wins second
title in row
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. tOP!)- '
Texan Tom Kite, winning on the
PGA Tour for the second week In
a row, captured a one-stroke
victory over Chip Beck Sunday in
the $1.35-mllllon Players
Championship.
"This is better than last
Sunday," said Kite;who needed a
sudden-death playoff then to beat
Davis Love III in the Nestle
Invitational in Orlando, Fla.
" Then, I couldn't get it to the
house. Today I did."
Kite, 39, posted a 1-under-par
71 in the fina l round for a four-day
total of 9-under 279 over ihe
tough, wind-whipped TPC 'al
Sawgrass course. His triu.mph ·
was .worth $243,000, giving him
$387,000 the past two weeks;
vaulting him into first place on
this year's money lis t at $561,723;
and raising his career total to
$4,767,136 a third of the way
through his 18th Tour year.

na.. 1:30 p.m.

.\ilanlil \

,\rb. ., :t : U ~ p. m.

Overstreet

"We would be Interested In publishing your
diet book, if you could arrange for some

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Wehrle claims IV crown

Monday, March 20, 1989

Casino gambling hill
moving far and fast

The original proposal for a state lottery was defeated twice In the
House and Senate before It was even allowed to go to the ballot.
"Oh. my God!" exclaimed Rep. Joseph Secrest, D-Senecavllle, In
admiration of the lobbying job that was done on the casino bilL "I
applaud those folks," said Secrest, even though he is opposed to
cas ino gambling and voted against the bill.
"Those folks" were Alan Spitzer, Elyria developer and automobile
dealer, and several sidekicks who did one of the most amazing
amat eur lobbying jobs seen around the Statehouse In years.
Spitzer and · friends , accompanied by Rep. Joseph Koziura,
D-Lorain, plowed the ground for most of last year when the bill had
hearings but went nowhere.
They set up shOp in a hotel a block from the Statehouse and went
one-on-one with each of the 99 House members every day the
Legislature was in session.
" He visited me three times," said Rep. Thomas Johnson,
R- Ca mbridge. "and I told him from the beginning I would not support
th e legislation."
Johnson sai d Spitzer promoted the bill by saying it would bolster the
eco nomy of Lorain by attracting tourists and creating new jobs. Hi!
used the soft -sell and didn't strongarm anyone. "People liked him, "
said .[ohnson.
One of Spitzer's disarming taclics apparently was his candid
approach. He made no promises of political contributions In return
for votes; one observer said he left the room when a legislator brought
up the s ubject.
"They made every at tempt to satisfy everybody's complaint about
the bill," recalled Johnson.
As the bill stands now , Lorain voters t10ld the key to the casino's
fate. It will be a five-year experiment, wh'lch the people can ca ncel if
they don't like the res ults. The state attorney general will screen
cas ino license applicants for unsavory backgrounds.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe, D-Wheelersburg. who halls from the
· southern Ohio "Bible belt ," was able to support the proposaL "It
· doesn't per tain to my area." he said. " It pertains to an area that's
tryi ng to so lve problems on its own."
Riffe, who went through battles over Sunday liquor sales, the bl ue
laws and the lottery, believes attitudes have softened on gambling.
"Society ha s changed. there's no question about It," he said.
Still. Spitzer' and Koziura have the roughest part of their journey
ahead of them. The Republican-controlled Senate is more
conservative than the House. And opponents will redouble- their
efforts. Legislation is easier io block in the Senate. only one-third the
size of the House.
Senators will hear that Lorain is the "foot in the door" to casino
gaming throughout Ohio. Already, Cleveland City Council Pre-sident
George Forbes has complained about competition for his city.
And as for the "nice" Mr. Spitzer who'll run a clean operation,
··once it's legal up there, he'll be pushed aside so fast by those~ guys
from New York apd New Jersey it won't be runny," predicted one
observer.
" 1 think he' s going t6 be in trouble in the Senate because all the
opponents will come out of the woodwork." said Rep. Rpnald Mottl.
D·Parma. "He' s got a long road to go."
Mottl s hould know . He's the "father" of the state lottery who as a
senator fought the same battle in the early 1970s that Spitzer and
Koziura are fighting now .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

"Although I've won a Jot of
tournament~ and a lot of money,
everyone says Tom Kite has
never won a 'major,"' Kite said.
" They are going to have a hard
ttme convincing me that The
Players Championship Isn't a
major."

Kite began the final round in
second place, one shot behind
Beck, but quickly forged Into the
lead as Beck, his playing
partner. bogeyed three of the
first four holes.
Beck, after playing the front
ntne in 5-over, started out on the
back with three straight birdies
and made a 25-foot birdie putt on
the final hole to wind up at 73-280,
and second place, worth $145,000.
"It was one of the worsts tarts I
ever had," Beck said. "I just got
b~hlnd the 8-ball and It was really
hard . I couldn't get In synch.
Nothing seemed to be working
forme ''

On a day when Hal Sutton, with
a 69, was the only one of the 74
golfers able to break 70, Kite
played steady golf for the most
part, but struggled down the
stretch.
He lost a stroke from what had
been a three-shot lead when he
flew the green at .No. 14 and had
to settle for a bogey. Then, he got
In and outoftroubleat both No.l5
and No. 16, where he saved pars.

night. Befor!' that game the last double-overtime
In a slate championship game was In 1958. (UPI)

The Daily Sentinel

Error costly as Reds
drop 7-2 tilt to Bosox
PLANT CITY. Fla. (UP!) - .
An error with the bases loaded In
the seventh inning led the Boston
Red Sox to a 7-2 win over the
Cincinnati Reds Sunday In an
exhibition game.
The Reds had taken a 1-0 lead
In the sixth on Luis Quinones'
third home run in four games
when the Red .Sox loaded the
bases in the seventh inn ing off
starter and loser Rick Mahler.
With one out, second baseman
Jeff Treadway bobbled Jody
Reed's gound bail and two runs
scored. Norm Charlton replaced
Mahler and gave up three runs on
three hits in that inning.
Boston's Mike BOddicker
worked six Innings and gave up
four hits, Including the homer in
the sixth. Hegotthewin,hisflrst
after two losses. Mahler dropped
to2-l.
Indians 5, Cubs 4
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!)
Tommv Hinzo singled home

Toledo drops race
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)
Safety concerns and high insu·rance premiums have apparently stilled the roar of International Grand PriX speed boats
after five years of racing on the
Maumee River.

YOU LIVE IN TWO
STATES LAST YEAR?
.

ID boys' •State title game In Columbus Saturday

DIVJ,SION Ill CHAMPS - Tl\e Akron Hoban
baskelbali team walls to receive Ihe team trophy
and game ball after taking lwo overtlmes to beat
Cincinnati North College Hlll52-49 In the Division

t USPS 1411-&amp;lltl)
A Division of Multimedia. Inc.

· Oddibe McDowell with the decid·
ing run in the seven th inning
Sunday as the Cleveland Indians
l:ieat the Ch icago Cubs 5-4 in an
. exhibit ion game.
· McDoweii opened the inning
with a walk and stole second.
Hinzo. who replaced Jerry
Browne at second base the inning
before, singled to center to give
the Indians a 5-3 lead.
The run made the difference
since the Cubs came back to
score of! Tim Stoddard in the
ninth to ma ke it a one-run game.
Greg Smith blooped a twp-out
single to center to score out·
fielder Derrick May who had
·tripled. Stoddard go t the final out
for the save.
The Indians overcame a 3-2
deficit with two runs in th e sixth.
Cory Snyder, who tripled twice,
tripled home Joe Carter and
Dave Clark singled home Snyder
with the go-head run for a 4-3
lead .
The Cubs scored twice in the
sixth on RBI doubles by Phil
Stephenson snd Damon Berryhill
for a 3-2 lead.
'
Clark drove In two runs for the
Indians.

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�•

Monday, March 20. 1989

Page· 4-The Daily Sentinel

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�Monday, March 20. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Sixteen teams· remain in '89
NCAA post-season tourney

Hazel Barton celebrated her
birthday recently with a surprise
party at the Reedsville fire
house.
Hostesses for the party were
Greta Donaldson, Kay and Dar·
lene Barton.
Refreshments Including cake,
sandwiches, chips, pop, nuts, and
mints were served toJanieeNull,
Jamie Null, Bonnie Jackson,
Barry Jackson, Larry Barton,
Rick Barton, Angle Boring, Jody

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to
Lose Weight

Cats' Sutton resigns under pressure

a

WHAT'S AT
98.3 FM?

Pulls off upset

Bucks face Nebraska five
in NIT contest this evening

COMPlETE PAYROll
PROCESSING AND
PAYIOLL CHE(I( .
WRinNG.

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991-7170
6111ast Main StrHt,

Monday, March 20, 1989
Page-7

.,

power the Wolverines. Rice hitl6
halftime.
By MIKE RABUN
of
25 from the field, grabbed 8
UPI Sports Writer
rebounds and handed out 4
The Missouri Tigers and Syra·
Diet Pills
assists. Michigan, 26·7, battled
cuse Orangemen advanced to the
back from a 4744 halltime deficit
NCAA regional semifinals
to gain their second victory
thanks to a very Important
under Interim coach Steve
factor.
Fisher, who · replaced Bill
They were the best teams.
Frieder last week when the head
Although the NCAA tourna·
coach
went to Arizona State.
ment has so often shown in the
East Regional
past that the best team doesn't
At
Providence, R.I.
always win, the overwhelming
Georgetown
81, Notre Dame 74
superiority of the Orangemen
Charles
Smith
scored 28 of his
and Tigers provided them rela·
U.S. Gov't. AppnMIS Plltent
34
points
In
the
second hall,
lively easy triumphs Sunday.
Claims for New Diet Pill
advancing
the
second-ranked
That set up wh.a t should be an
Hoyas,
28·4,
to
amatchupagalnst
entertaining conies t next Friday
BEVERLY HILLS. CA-(Speciai)night In Minneapolis between 'North Carolina State Friday
An amazing new weight loss pill called
night at the Meadowlands. Smith
Sunday's two winners from the
"fdt-magnet" has recently been develhad scored only 4 points In
Midwest Region. In the other
oped and perrected by two prominent
Friday's one,point first round
docto~ at a world famous hospital in
game at Minneapolis, Louisville
victory
over
Princeton.
·
Fresh·
Los
Angeles that reportedly "guaran·
meets top seed Illinois, making
man
center
Alonzo
Mourning
tees"
you steady fat loss and calorie
the Midwest semifinals perhaps
also
had
a
big
second
half
again~!
reduction
by simply taking their tested
the toughest of the four regions.
the
Fighting
Irish,
scoring
10
of
and
proven
new pili.
Missouri got 32 points from
The
U.S.
government
has justappi'OIIhis
17
points.
·
sophomore center Doug Smith
ed
the
doctors
claims
for
a hard·ta·get
and shot 60 percent In rolling past
North Carolina State 102, Iowa 96
patent
that
confirms
"there
has never
the Texas Longhorns In Sunday's
(20T)
been
anything
like
their
fat-bonding
pili
second round, 108-89.
Rodney Monroe scored a
process
before."
It
is
a
totally
new
major
Syracuse, with star forward
career·high 40 points and forced
scientific breakthrough and is revoluforward Derrlc.k ·coleman · re·
both overtimes with clutch shots
tionizing the weight loss industry.
turning from back problems and
lOu Can "Eat Normally"
for N.C. State. The 6-foot-3
guard Stephen Thompson scor·
·
Best
of all , "you can continue to
sophomore hlt a 10-loot jumper
lng 21 points, overcame the
eat
your
favorite foods and you don't
with four seconds remaining in
slowdown approach by Colorado
have
to
change
your normal eating
regulation to tie the score 75-75.
State to whip the Rams, 65·50.
habits.
You
can
stan losing fat and
With four seconds left in the first
The Missouri-Syracuse winner
reduce
calories
from
the very ti~t day.
overtime, he hit a 16-foot jumper
will be within one step of the
until
you
achieve
the
ideal weight you
to tie the score again, 83·83. In the
Final Four.
desire
without
exercising".
second overtime, Monroe hit a
"I think it will be a good
Flushes Fat Out of Body
palr of 3-polnters and completed
matchup," said Colorado State
The
new pill is •P.propriately called
a 3-polnt play as N.C. State pulled
Coach Boyd Grant. "Missouri
tile
"fat-magnet"
pdl because it breaks
away. Iowa, 23-10, was paced by
into thousands of particles. each acting
has the kind of athletes who can
Sunday's NCAA East Regional tournament gaJJie
DISHES OFF PASS
Georgetown's Jaren
Ed Horton's · career-high 32
like a tiny magnet, "attracting" and
play with Syracuse.l!Coleman is
In Providence, R.I. The Hoyas bypassed the Irish
Jackson (21) dishes off a pass around Notre
points.
trapping
many times it• size in undiwell,
I
can
see
them
being
In
the
81·74.
(UPI)
Dame's Jamere Jackson In the ·second half of
West Regional
gested fiu panicles. Then. allthetrapped
Final Four. But Missouri will be
At Tucson, Ariz.
fat and calories are naturally "flushed"
a great test.·
Indiana
92, Texas El·Paso 69
right out of your body because they
"When I saw Missouri·early in
No.6 Indiana, playing much of cannot be absorbed.
the year. I didn't think anybody
the game with their starting
Within 2 days you should. notice a
could beat them. And they are
entire coaching staff would sub· following the NCAA
LEXINGTON, Ky. tUPI) guards in foul trouble, recorded
change
in the color ofyour stool, caused
starting to come back to that
mil their resignations.
Eddie Sutton resigned under
Tournament.
their
second
straight
rout
of
the
by
the
fat
particles being eliminated . .
Roselle told a news conference
"C.M. will move with dispatch form, too."
pressure as Kentucky basketball
tournament. The Big Ten Cham·
"Automatically"
Lose Fat
Colorado State, 23·10, worked
he had accepted Sutton's res igna· to employ a coach who can
coach Su nday, sHll professing his
pions were led. by freshman Eric
According to one oft he invento~. Dr.
the shot clock to perfection in its
lion because il was best lor the restore the tradition of Kentucky
innocence of alleged NCAA rules
Anderson, who matched his William Shell, heart specialist and
first
-round victory over Florida,
program.
violations nearly a year after a
basketball," Roselle said. "I am
associate professor of medicine at
care~r-hlgh with 24 points on 11 of
bul against Syracuse, 29-7, the
·'Circumstances sometlmes confident that we wlll be an·
paakage to a recruit burst open
UCLA medical school, "the new fat17 shooting. Jay Edwards added
create a need for a change that Is nouncing a new coach of whom Rams fou.nd themselves in a hole
and revealed cash.
bonding process is a "lazy way" to lose.
17 points, and all five Indiana
early.
in the best interest of the all Kentucky fans will be proud.
weight because the pills alone
University President David
starters scored in double figures.
A 16·4 run by the Orangeman
institutlon," Roselle said . ·:This We now have the opportunity to
"automatically" reduce calories by
Roselle indicated at a news
Indiana. seeking its second na·
is very much the case with Coach begin rebuildinbg our basketball six minures Into the game gave
eliminating
dietary fat. It is 100% safe
conference Sunday night he was
tiona! title in three years. will
not
a
drug."
and
Sutton's situation at UK."
program, a fresh start for Syracuse 23·12 lead. Thompson
prepared to move to oust Sutton
meet No. 11 Seton Hall in the
The fat-magnet pills are already
had he not quit.
regional semifinals Thursday
Roselle said if Sutton had not University of Kentucky got Inside for two dunks and three
layups
as
the
Orangemen.
built
sweeping
the country with glowing
·. Sutton leaves one of the most
basketbalL"
resigned, he was prepared to
night at Denver.
their
lead.
•
reports
of
weight loss from furmerly
For several weeks Sutto.n had
prestigious jobs in coaching present a report on the manage·
overweight
people in all walks of life
"It's
important
that
you
get
in
(allowing the Wildcats' ·first
remained
steadfast
in
his
refusal
ment and recruitment problems
Seton Hall 87, Evansville 73
who
are
now
slimmer. trimmer and
front
of
a
team
like
Colorado
naming
of
to
resign,
despite
the
l!J~ing season in 62 years. Ken·
at Kentucky at a meeting Tues·
Third-seeded Seton Hall, 28·6,
more
auractive
again.
State,"
said
Syracuse
Coach
Jim
him in at least two potential
tucky, owners of five NCAA day of the University of Kendominated the bQards in gaining
Now
Awilable
to the Public
Boeheim.
"Even
when
they
got
titles. has mote basketball victoallegations raised In theunlversi·
tucky Athletic Associatipn.
Its first ever Sweet Sixteen
If
YQU
are
trying
to'iose
20. 50, 100
behind they stuck to their sloW·
ries than any sc hool In history
Roselle said Vanderbili Coach ty's response to the NCAA.
appearance.
Daryll
Walker
pounds
or
more.
you
can
order your
· Sutton met with Roselle Wed· down approach. And If they are
with 1,466.
C .M. Newton, who will become
scored 8 of his 16 points in an 11·0
supply
of
these
"
no-risk"
highly
suc. "After much thought and co n·
Kentucky's Athletic Director on nesday to plead his case, but doing that when they are ahead,
run to open the second half and
cessful
faHnagnet
pills
directly
from
the
slderaHon and consultation with
April 1, will immediately begin Roselle remained unconvinced, it can frustrate you."
Andrew Gaze sank a 3-polnter to · doctors' exclusive manufacturer only
Missouri and Syracuse met
iny family and a lot of praying, I
search ing for a replacement. sources have told United Press
trigger a game-ending 13·0 burst
(includes optional calorie-reduction
ear
lier this season with the
Oave decided I'm going to resign
InternationaL
Roselle
felt
that
Roselle said he did not expect the
plan for even better results). Send $20
for the Pirates. Evansville, one
from the University of Ken·
search to be completed until like Athletic Director Cliff Ha· Orangemen winning by 2 in New
for a 90pill supply ( +$3 handling) , or
of the top outside shooting teams
t.ucky," Sutton said on a live
ga n, who was forced to resign York.
$35 fur a ISO pill supply ( +$3 handling).
in the nation, missed its first 1l
"Missouri didn't play ali that
national television hookup on
last year, Sutton bore ultimate
to: Fat·M81met, 9016 Wilshire Blvd.,
second-half shots and went score·
CBS from its affiliate, WKYT·TV
responsibility for the integrity of well in that game and we barely
Dept. W705, Beverly Hills. CA 90211.
less for 4 'h minutes after
beat them," Boeheim said.
(n Lexington. "And I do It for one
the program, the sources said.
(Uncondilional money-back guDIWI··
reason, the love I have for the
Roselle confirmed Sunday he "From what I have seen of them
tte if not 100% satisfied.) Visa,
University of Kentucky. for the
had Indicated to Sutton his lately they are a whole lot better
MasterCard and Amencan Express
Kentucky basketball program
OK . (Send card number, expire date,
feelings. When asked whther he than they were then."
Southeast Regional
and signature.) For fastest service for
a.nd the poeo pie of the
had asked Sutton to resign,
At Atlanta
credit card orders ONLY call anytime
Roselle responded, "the Indica·
Commonwealth."
North Carolina 88, UCLA 81
24 hours, toll free 1(800) 527-lYiW,
The NCAA and university
tion was clear what was good for
ext. W705.
r:r' F· M 19H9
The Tar Heels, playing without
the program."
launched investigations into the
program following the package
Sutton, who came to Kentucky leading scorer J.R. Reid, were
Incident, and Kentucky faces 18
in 1985 from Arkansas, compiled led by Kevin Madden's 22 points.
fonnal NCAA charges ranging
the first losing record, 13·18, Fourth-ranked North Carolina
from recruiting violations, to
since the 1926-27 season. He O'{ercame an 8-point halftime
deficit to advance to face No. 10
academic fraud and lack of
leaves with a 90-40 record.
proper lnstltulonal control over
Besides the turmoil of the Michigan Thursday In Lexlng·
investigation, shortly after the ton, Ky. Reid was serving a
the program.
Sutton said he was innocent of
probe began Sutton was beset one-game suspension by Coach
imy wrongdoing at the u~lversity
with the defection to the pros of Oean Smith for missing curfew
but said his resignation would
star Rex Chapman. His sole following Friday night's 93-79
returning starter, Eric Manuel, opening-round victory over
help prevent innocent people
from being hurt and help the
voluntarily sidelined himself af· Southern University. The Tar
program emerge from the
ter questions arose about his · Heels, 29·7, trailed 52-44 at the
shadow It has been under since a
college entrance exam. Manual half but hit four long 3·polnt
package from assistant coach
has subsequently been charged baskets to take a 72· 70 with 6: 31
left .
pwane Casey to the father of
by the NC.A:A with academic
Mlchlpu 91, South Alabama 82
now-freshman Chris Mills broke
fraud.
GIE!n Rice scored 36 points to
open In a Los Angeles shipping
Both Sutton and Roselle denied
center to reveal $1,000 in cash.
reports that Sutton had offered to
Sutton said he also assumed his
fire
his entire staff in exchange
EDDIE SU1TON
for Sutton keeping the post,
although Roselle said there was
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Andy
discussion of the assistant
Gabel of Northbrook, Ill., pulled
coaches.
an upset In the National Short
Sutton said he would remain in
Track Speed Skating Champion·
Lexington, polish his golf game, • ships this weekend.
fish and spend time with his
'G abel edged Brian Arseneau of
there, we have enough team
COLUMBUS, Ohio · (UPI) family as well as meet with those Buffalo Grove, Ill., in the senior
speed to get out on the break,"
Ohio State hosts Nebraska Mon·
supporters who have written him men's competition In suburoan
said
Williams.
''Jamaai's
day night In the second round of
letters. He said he hoped to
During all of 1919 WI are ell•
(Brown) Increased confidence remain In the collegiate coaching Brook Park. Arseneau had won
the National Invitation Tournathe
championship
the
last
four
tbrating our 4Dth year at bring·
with the ball is beginning to show. ranks.
ment, with the Buckeyes looking
years.
don't
think
there's
any
question
I
ing litHer heanng to our
(or their second win over the
we
can
run."
.
friencls-dients.
It is gratifring
Cornhuskers this season after
Coach
Gary
Williams'
other
to know that w1 ha¥1 dtwtl·
snapping an eight-game losing
three starters likely will Include
streak in their NIT opener.
oped a reputation ,for intttritr
6-foot·S Perry Carter at center
Ohio State, 18·14, beat Akron
and diJ*IIIability. W1 wert
and 7-foot Grady Mateen and
81·70Wednesday night In St. John
htrt restenlar. lllptct to be
6-foot·5 Jerry Francis at the
Arena, the first win for the
htrt tomorrow; a!HI our obligaforwards.
Buckeyes since leading scorer
tion to you is to be availalllt
Nebraska. coached by fonner
Jay Burson went down with a
lewerr clay) as pu 111111 us, with ·
Ohio University coach Danny
fractured vertabra in his neck on
Nee, lost 103·'16 to Ohio State on
tht most up-to-clatt ttchnolo·
Feb. 13.
gy
thtt is to bt found. Hlaring
14.
Dec.
Although still .struggling, the
The
Cornhuskers
finished
only
111'0~?
Hearing aid problem? .
Buckeyes showed signs of lm·
4·11
tn
games
against
teams
In
provement, w.tth 6·foot·6 fresh·
Call tht reliable - WE
the Big Eight, . but were 13-4
BILL DILES
man Chris Jent joining 6·foot·4
CAREl
outside the league for an overall
Jamaal Brown, another first
17-15 mark, Including an 81-79
SEE US EACH
year player, in the backcourt.
WEDNESDAY IN THE "PM"
win over Arkansas State In their
IAil A. 111111 II, CPA
AT HOLZER CLINIC
NIT opener.
Brown had a career-high 18
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
The. Buckeyes' game against
points against Akron. Seven of
Akron drew 10,831 to St. John
Jent's nine points came In the
Arena on short notice and Ohio
second half when the Buckeyes
State o!flclals said more than
rallied to win, using the trans!·
:.
'
1614) 59f-~571 .
TOll-flEE IN OHIO 1-IOD-237-7716
9,000 tickets for the Nebraska
tton game to get some easy
Pon~eroy,
contest had bee!! sold through
!astbreak baskets. •
126 Wm UNON $TIEET
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
Saturday.
"It d~sn't matter who's In

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Mr. and Mrs . Terry Pickens,
Zanesville, are announcing the
birth of their third child, a
daughter, Lyndsee LaDonna.
Born Dec. 30, 1988, she weighed
eight pounds four ounces, and
was 21 Inches long.
Grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Thomas Schoonover, Ru ·
tland, and Larry Pickens,
Pomeroy.
Great grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Wilt , Middleport, Mr. and Mrs . S.G. Pickens,
Pomeroy, and Bonnie Miller,
Middleport .
Mr. and Mrs. Pickens also
have a daughter, Jill, age 10, and
a son, Terry , age nine.'

and Jeffery Donaldson, Scott
Danaldson, Kevin Barton, Shelly
Wood, John and Marjorie
Brewer, Ernestine Hayman.
Forrest Kibble, Nell Wilson,
Ruth Anne Balderson, Ada Con·
grove, Sheila Westfall, Michelle
Westfall, Heather Westfall, Lisa
Foster and Jessica, Tracey West·
fall , Fairy Bell Roster, Sue
Rockhold, Louise Posey, Eliza·
beth Brooks, Opal Harris, Alee
Mays, Martha Bailey, and Adam
Barton.

Boy Scout committee meets
Summer camp and workday at
Chester was discussed at the
recent meeting of the Boy Scout
committee.
It was noted that leadership is
DERBY WINNERs - Pictured here are the winners In the
recent Pinewood Derby ollhe Salisbury Cub Scout Pack 246. First
row ,left to right, Bert Mash, Adam Jenl!lns, Jamie Broderick, and
Chris Ball. Second row, left to right, Vincent Broderick, Jason
Lawrenre; Ryan Ramsburg, and Erron Aldridge. Back row, left to
rlgbt, Sbawn While and Joshua Broderick.

Pinewood Derby winners named
The annual Pinewood Derby
was held recently by the Sails·
bury Cub Scout Pack 246.
Winners from the tiger group
were Shawn White, first; Joshua
Broderick, second; and Matt
Milhoan, third.
Wolf group winners were Ryan
Ramsburg, first; Joshua Dod·
son, second; and Erron Aldridge,
third.
Winners for the bear group
were Chris Ball, first; Vincent
Broderick, second, and Jason
Lawrence, third.
Webelo winners were Bert
Mash, first; Adaf'!l Jenkins,
second; and Jamie Broderick,

third.
Overall winner in the derby
was Chris Ball.
Other scouts attending were
Ryan Dill, J.T. Humphrey, Da·
iliel McDonald, Joshua Wilson,
Aaron Panglo, Erron Aldridge,
Brandon Larkins, Bllly Young,
Michael Leifhlet, Michael Fry·
mer, Seth McDonald, Joshua
Leach, Chad Folmer, J.D. King,
Evan Struble, Mlck Barr, Shawn
Harris, Nathan Haynes, Timmy
Peavley, Joshua Witherell, and
Adam White.
Leaders at tending were Jeanie
Witherell, Blll Young,. Adell
White, Linda Broderick, and
Becky Broderick.

CAT scan

tech hired
Glendon Michael (Mike)
Sharp, Ironton, has been em·
ployed as Cat Scan technologist
at Veterans Memorial Hiosplial
wlth Cat Scan equipment ex·
peeled to be Installed at the
Pomeroy hospital In the near
future. The scan · equipment
produces a series of Images of the
body detecting many conditions
that do not show up In conven·
tlonal x-rays. Sharp graduated
from St. Mary's Holpital School
of Radiologic Technology in
Huntington, W.Va . In 198~. For
the past two and one-half years,
Sharp .has been employed as Cat
Scan technologist for Medical
Consultants Imaging Co., Cleve·
land. In that employment he did
approximately 3500 scans at 27
hospitals In Ohio, Indiana, Wis·
consln, and Michigan. Sharp is

needed In the Middleport troop
245.
Interested parties should call
992·6890 or 992-6168.
·

David Medert, Albany, was the
speaker at the recent meeting of
the Ewings Cha ter Sons of the
Arne!
vol tlon held at the
Mel County Museum.
Medert's topic was Gen. Ar·
thur St. Clair, first president of
the United States under the
Articles of Confederation and
governor of the Northwest
Territory.
The chapter welcomed Bob
Titus as a guest of the chapter.
Keith Ashley, president, an·
nounced the 200th anniversary of
the Inauguration of George Wa·
shlngton In AprU. It Is also the
100th anniversary of botll the

M~mbers were remindedd at
the reeent meeting of Ohio TOPS
1456 Rutland group that new
officers will be elected at the next
meeting to be held Tuesday.
Best losers were Eva McKln·
ney, Linda Bailey, Nellie Haggy,
Kookle Gaus, Sherr! Darst,
Sharon Thacker, and Terri
Smith.
"Words of Insplrallon" and
"Children Needn't Make You

Fat" were read by Mrs. Smith.
Information on .TOPS can ·be
obtained by calling 742-2847.

A~

. 10 WEEK SPRING SESSION '42.00
HIGH SCHOOL DISCOUNT PRICE '36.00
SESSIONS BEGIN MARCH 27, 1989
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 7 P.M.·B P.M.
TUESDAY-THURSDAY 5:30 P.M.-6:30P.M.
FOR REGISTRATION CALL....
JOY KING, INSTRUCTOR 992·3794
JEANIE OWEN. ASST. INSTRUCTOR 992-6893
OR YOU MAY REGISTER AT FIRST CLASS

Onie. (fS&amp;il

CANDY FILLED

Prices Goocf ·
Monday, March 20
Tbru Sunday, .
March 26, 1989 ·

EASTER
BASKETS

We R...rve The RtKhl
To Umlt Quantltl•.

DISCOUNT PRICED
EVERYDAY!

Not Responllbte For'
TJpocnphlcal or
lttultratlon Error

MIKE SHARP
residing at Route 1, Gallipolis:
Before entering the health care
field exclusively, Sharp was a
sports writer for the Ironton
Trlbu ne for eight years.

at the Meigs County Museum. A
dinner will be at 6:30 p.m. The
cost is $6.50 per person.
For reservations, contact
Keith Ashley at 992-7874 before
Tuesday.

Arose", and Mrs. Wilcox "Good
Morning."
·
Members were requested .to
write their state representatives
In support of Eldercare.
Ladles Day at Kentucky Chris·
tian College was announced for
April 6.
Denver Rice presented the
program with music from the
"good ole days" and refresh·
ments were served by Marlyn
Wilcox, Mildred Riley, Dorothy
Roach, Ben Stewart, and Farle
Cole.

IIDUSE OVERFlOWING?

CUAII UP WITH
ClASSROAOS

.-.63,. ·. ·e

WADE, M.D. Inc:

PUASAfiT YALUY HOSPnAl

EAR, lOSE I THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARIMI AIDS"

12COUNT
MARSHMALLOW

120UNCE
BRACH'S

EASTER
EGG '
CRATE

JELLY
BIRD
EGGS

2 .I:
1Q!ty

Refreshments were served to
the 10 members attending with a
St. Patrick's Day theme carried
out.
Rev. Dom;1y Zuniga dismissed
the group with prayer.

'

JOH.N

WHAT'S AT
98.3 FM?

CARLETON SCHOOL, SYRACUSE. OHIO

s~ ~• Ohlll. I&gt;IPIMI!Itl'll or •nwr ai'CI. Cllf'lrrnc• ol ComP~a'!Ct-11\e •~·
~ ~(li lf'IIIJIIIO~ !he SIN ol ()lu. ~ttJr Certrhilll•
PEtitt .UTUM.ISE IN$ COol P~~llltipllll , St11t ol ~~ly\drlot, M11 Clll'l·
j)lttO w•~ N !IMolrQ S•l ~OI:Iible II) ~ 111dilluhiriltd during ll'lt CUI
!III'IIJ"II II! 1!..-:1 i1 thil ~-ill~ tk.tlo~ o! IMU&lt;Inct Ollll'lt
mu~IIJI ~n "'5nlnCIII C&gt;DI'd•IO\ II WICIWI'i by Ill n'IAI•t!nn 10 11M t&gt;ten
ll'ilullooot on o.:.mbtr31, 1917' Allm~ 111111.. s-.ovt 45,41IQ0 1liaD"iiUtt.
SJ.J2W4S!700. St!pU, l11U1 0»'1.tJ;I, IIICOIM, ll.o!6,1'12,Crli.OO. IN WIT.
NESS wt1EilEOf, I t..... ht&lt;WIIIO t~~WC r oOtll "'1 nllflf 11M tt11Md my lUI
10 till lftr.- IICOIIUII~US , 01'1\a. !llil 411•'10 0111, a.o.g. Flbt, S..p: ol l!\1.1'1·
II'ICI ()!

Evans, Faye Westfall, Diane
Buckley, and Marlene Putman
were appointed to the nominal·
lng committee.
Catherine Johnson, head
teacber, thanked members for
their support of the candy sales.
It was also decided to purchase '
a record player for the school
with the carnival money.

DANCE FOR JOY
AEROBIC DANCE CLASS

TOPS meeting conducted recently

FOR

24COUNT

Philathea Women's group meets
Plans were made for Instal Ia·
tlon of officers at the next
meeting of the Philathea Women
of the Middleport Church of
Christ when they mel recently at
the church.
A potluck dinner will follow the
Installation at 6:30 p.m. Phyllis
Gilkey, Dorothy Baker, and
Regina Swl(t are on the Installing
commmlttee.
·· Named (o the prayer list were
tarl Nelson, Clarice Erwin,
Regina Swift, Kenneth Carson,
Wendell Grate, Brenda Shuler,
Marie. Francis, Jack Conroy,
TQmmy D11vls family, Pearl
Gilkey, Allee Brown, Allee Koepig, Wilbur Theobald, Dayton
McElroy, and Evelyn Spencer.
. Devotions were given by
Mildred Riley "Legend of the
' Raindrops", Bea Stf!wart
"Spring Promise" and "He

' Money making projects were
discussed at the recent meeting
of the Riverview PTO that was
opened with Brownie Troop 1079
saying the plegde of allegiance
and singing a song.
tentative plans were made for
a fourth, fifth, and sixth grade
dance scheduled for April 7.
Students from Chester and
Tuppers Plains will also be
Invited.
A steak and chicken dinner has
been scheduled for May~ with a
gospel sing to follow.
Nancy Larkins and John Dou·
glas were appointed to the
auditing committee, and Teresa

Ohio Society S.A.R. and the
National Society S.A.R.
The next meeting will be
Thursday at the Meigs Museum
and it Is the annual Douglas G.
High Historical Oration Contest.
Any local high school 10th-12th
grader may enter. The subject
must be five to six minutes long
on some aspect or person of the
American Revolution.
A dinner will be at 6:30 p .m.
The cost Is $6.50 per person.
Reservations for the meal must
be received by Tuesday and can
be made by calling Ashley at
992·7874.

Afternoon circle meeting held
Betty Fultz presented a pro·
gram on the book of Ruth at the
recent meeting of the Afternoon
Circle of the Heath United
. Methodist Church.
Hostesses were Jen Cheshire
and Nellie Zirkle.

Riverview PTO has meeting

SAR meeting conducted recently

Ewings Chapter plans program
The program for the next
meeting of the Ewings Chapter
Sons of the American Revolution
will be the Douglas G. High
His torlcal Oration cons test.
The meeting will be Thursday

LYNDSEE L. PICKENS

ACTIFED
TABLETS

49:~
3 ....
Pile&amp;

CLAIROL
QUffiTTOUCH
HAIRPAINTING

6

99~~
....

Pile&amp;

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DUCOIM

1/20UNCE

AFRIN
NASAL SPRAY

99
~~~
2

4.6 OUNCE TUBE
AQUA-FRESH

¢

PIICI
)M

WIDE
SELECTION

50%
OFF

LIMn' I

,...

90UNCE

r/lrbn.

HAIR SPRAY

79

IVIIYDA.Y
DUCOtJM'

Pita
2.1t

CLAIROL

NICENEASY
HAIR
COLOR

329

IVDYDA.\"
DIICOUNT

....

PIIQ

(30., 67$-12••
t

EVERYDAY
DISCOUNT
PIICI

•.

I

.

�.

.

.

-

·-......

":&gt;;•

...

•

..

"-··~-··-'-"""

,

----------

.
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- S- The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street
Freewtll Baptist, Middleport, .
will be In revival Monday
through Saturday, 7:30 eac h
evening, with Norman Taylor.
Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
PTO w!ll meet Monday at 7 p.m.
A guest speaker !rom the Meigs
County Health Department will
speak on ch!ldhond diseases. The
public Is Invited. ·
POMEROY - There wUI be a
meeting Monday, 6:30 p.m .. at
Main &amp;treet Pizza In Pomeroy, of
1969 graduates of Meigs High
School who wish to help plan a
20th reunion o! classmates.
DEXTER- The Meigs County
Churches of Christ Men's Fellowship will meet Monday at 7: 30
p.m. at the Dexter Church of
Christ.
POMEORY - The American
Red Cross Bloodmobile wiU be at
Meigs High School on Monday .
March 20, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Donations will
.. be taken In the

drafting room at the school.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Leading
Creek Conservancy District's
regular monthly meeting which
was canceled this past Tuesday,
has been rescheduled for Tuesday, March 21, at 9 a.m.
THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harr!sonvUle Holiness Chapel will
have a special communion service on Thursday, March 23.
·weekend revival services will
take place at the church on
Friday, March 24, through Sunday. March 26. Everyone
welcome.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Church
of the Nazarene will present the
Easter Cantata, ' "His Last
Days, " on Friday, March 24, at 7
p.m. The public Is Invited.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Is
sponsoring Its annual Easter Egg
Hunt on Easter Sunday, March

King birthday
is observed

J

1

Kylen James Allen King re·
cen tly observed his first birthday
with a celebration at the horne of
his grandparents, Jim and
Nancy Carnahan, Racine. Carna·
han also observed a birthday'.
Ice cream and cake was served
and gifts were received from the
following, grandparents Mr. and
Mrs. Allen King, Middleport;
maternal great grandparents
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Shuler,
Racine; paternal great grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Ed King,
Letart, W.Va., and paternal
great grandmother Irene Han·
son, Middleport; Tony Carnahan, April King, Ada King, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Alkire, Rl·
chard, Anna, Brian and Zachary
Shuler, Jim, BOnnie and Sandy
· Unruh, David Hanson, Nina
Miller, Cindy Ellwood, and
Brenda He!nerman. Sending a
gift was Lor! Powell.

Thousands flock
to see stvaltotvs

--·

Gospel sing
. RUTLAND- All-night gospel
sing wll be held March 24star ting
at 7 p.m. at the Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church. The sing will
leaturP Prod!cal of Charleston,
W. Va.; Fellowship Singers of
Vinton: Christian Sounds , Logan, W.Va.; Reflections Trio,
Heaven BOund Four and Narrow
Way.
Firemen's dinner
RUTLAND - A firemen's
dinner for all.firemen who have
served In the Rutland Fire
Department will be held Saturday, April 22, 6 p.m., at the
Rutland Fire House ..

wna a ra•

MEDIUM PIZZAS

sa.aa

SPRIM8 IS HERE

····~

tic.

.............. Dally

Hubbards Grllllhouse

m--.
'"·'"'..

Nteigt Coumv
Ar. . Coda 114

Muon Co. , WV
Arh Code 30•

448-Gelllpolis
317- Ch•hir•
318-Vinton
2•U-Rio Gr•nde
211- Gu.,.., Di1t.
143-Ar•bi• Oi1t.

992- MiddiiPOrt

115- pt. PI HUnt
.. 58-Uon

379- W ..nut

POLICIES

.

.

•7 point line type only ulild.
.
•sentinel is not '"ponaibee for errOfs after first dav . fChedl

~ii~~~8;8~2~-~N~MO~H~•;":..J~~io~'~"'~to~n~i~it~ot~d~~~·~·=·u~n:•:in~p=IP:M:I·~C~o~ll~b~~o~•e~2~,0~0~p~.m~.--~
895- l.etart
937- Buffalo

da¥ after publicsuon to m11Meconec1i0n.

Public

Public Notice

46779. Term• of
NOTICE OF
on day of sale. I reaerve the
APPOINTMENT OF
right to reject any and an
FIDUCIARY
On Mardt, 1989 in the bldl. Robert W. Foster,
Moigo County P.-e Coull. United Stateo Ma11hal.
C.e No. 26,188, CM!fo&lt;d Wil- Southhern District of Ohio.
Subject to real •tate taxes,
fiom Smith. 2707 Frederick.
Plttlbutgh. Pa. 15212. • op- penBhias aand ueeumenu
n01 yet due and payable.
poinllld e........ ollhe - · 13113, 20, 27; 141 3, 41c
of
Clifford Edwonl Smith. de- · late of 422 Weo1Moln
Public Notice
Slreol. Pomorov. Ohio 46789.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
NOTICE TO
Len• K. Nesselro.~d. Clerk
CONTRACTORS
f31 13. 20. 27. 3tc
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Public Notice
Columbln, Ohio
March 10. 1989
NOTICE OF SALE: By virtue Contract
Salu Legal Copy
of lin Ord• for Sole isoued on
No.
89·230
the 14th day Df December.
UNIT
PRICE
CONTRACT
1988, bv lha United Stal•
Sealed propoula will ber•
Dlotrlc:l Court lor the Southern calved • the office of the DiDlotric:l
of .Ohio, EMtlm
Dhtllion. .. Columbuo. Dllio in rector of the Ohio Departof Transportation, ColClvl No. C2-18·0660, UNI- ment
umbuo. Ohio. untl 10:00 A.
TED STATES OF AMERICA M., Ohio Standard Time.
-vs- JOHN IE C. DO - Tuwdoy. Aptil 4. 1989. for
NAHUE tl. e1 al .. I will offer improv.mants in : Athens,
lot solo to lho hlgh..t bidder Gallia, Hocking. Melgo, Mot&gt;on April 12, 1989 at 12:00 roe. Morgan, Noble. Vinton
Noon at the front door .o f thll

Molgo County Courthou•.
Pomeroy. Ohio, the follow·
lng deocribed tool property:
Situ1ted in the State of

Ohio, County of Meigs: The
tonowlng real os1a1e. being
In Svrocuse v•toue. and in
100 Acre Lol No. ~95.
Sutton Township. Meigs
County, Ohio; and deKribed

u follows: Boglnnlng ol a 2
inch pipe on the aoutheMt
corner of • 9.6 acre tract of

land d..- from John
McCoy to Archie Lee. r•
corded In Deed Book No.

239, Poge 783. 0-d flocordi ol Meigs County,
Ohio: thence Weo1 3•6.55
feel; thence North 13.9
tho place of beginning
thlo d•crlpllon; thence
South 78 de g. 11' w..t 1 OO·
feet: 1hence Nortll 5 dog.
24' w..t 83 !HI; lhonco
north 87 deg. 11' e... 100
fHI; lhMce loulh II dog.
24' Eat 83- to the placo
of beglnnlnng, conulnlng
ICf...

.

w..

more or IMa. The

• - d..crlption
fur·
nishod by Homer Hy•ll.
Registered Suurveyor No.

2274. PROPERTY
AD·
DRESS: Syrocuse, Ohio

Plans and specification•
are on fila in the Department
ofTransportatio~ a lid the office of the District Deputy
Director.
The Director reserves the
right to ra;act anv and all

bids.

Director~

(31 20. 27

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 1206·89
An Ordinance to authorile
the sale of Village Real Estate not needed for any
Municipal purpose .
Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of

Middleport. Ohio, as fol Sec. I. That the following
real estate. belonging to the
Village of Middleport. is not
needed for Municipal purpose. to ~it :

PARCEL NO. 1: Begin-

n!ng at the northeut corner
of lot No. 132; then-c e south
along the eut side of Third
Street. a distance of 50 feet;
thence at right angles and
eaat along the aouth line, of
uid Lot No. 132 a distance
of S6V2 feet ; thence at right
angles an~ north a distance
of 50 feet to Race Street;
thence weat along the south
side of Race Street a dll'tance of
feet to tha
place "of beginning; s~d lot
being in Philip Jones' Addi-

Ohio, on oection ATH·USII·
33-&amp;.BO on Unhed States
Route 33 In Athens County
and other various routes and
sections In Athens. Gallia.
Meiga. Monroe.
Morgen. Noble, Vinton and
Washington Count•. by
Hocking,

and

,

lo~s:

and WMhington Counttes.

lumiahing

Bernard B. Hurst.

&amp;av,

instlllling

railed pavem«rt marker ma-

terialo.
tion to tho Village of MidcleProject Length:' 0.00 feet port, Meigs County, Ohio,
..- 0.00 mil... Wo•k Length: and facing 60 feet on Third
Various feet or various
mil•. Pavement Width: va·

Street and eKtending eat- .
tetly at that width a distance
of 56112 feet .
A lao t,he following reel estate situated in Middleport,

.....

''The date aet for completion of thl• work ohall be ao

sel forth In the bidding pro- Meigs County, Ohio : BeginpoNt."
ning at the northWest corner
Each bidder oholl be ro· of Lot No. 133: thencaoouth
quited to file with his bid a along tha eut aide of Third
certlflod check or caohier'o Street a distance of 60 feet;

check for an amount equal

10 five per coni Qf his bid. but
in no event more then fifty

thousand doll••· or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid.
payable to the Director. ·

Bidders mu01 apply, on the

proper forms. for qualifiCation at .._t ten days prior to
the dataset for opening bidl
in accordance with Chaptar

5625 Ohio R..,ised Code.

thence at right angles and
east a dlatan ce of 83'h: feet;
thence at right angl• and
north a diatance of 39 feet
end 6 inches; thence at right
anglea and weat a distance
of 8 feet; thence at right an gles and north a distance of
10 feet and 7 inchet to the
north line of aaid Lot No.
133; thence west along the
· north line of lot N . 133 a

Now for Pro1111, .
Sulllllltr W...ngs and :
Vacations.

distance of 76 feat and 6 In-

ches to the place of beginning. Said ebove lot being a
part of Philip Jones Addition
to the Village o~ Middlaport.

DEED REFERENCE: Volume 228, Poge 961, Meigs

County Deed Records.
Save and t.l{cept 1 parcel
conveyed ·to Citizens Na ·
tionel Bank,
Middleport.
Ohio. by dead of evan data
herewith.

311 N. 2nd AVE.

PEIICEL NO. 2: The fol·

lowing real utate situ1ted in
Mlddlepon, Meiga County.
Ohio: That pert of Lot No.
132 deocribed u lollowo:
Beginning at the northwntarty corner of the ••• one-

992-21

half of lot No. 132; thence

south a distance of 50 feet at

right angles to the norfh line

of Lot No. 132; thence e••

County Deed Records .

EXCEPTING the teal es·

tate conveyed to Citizens
National Bank, by deed recorded in Volume 230, Pag~

325. Moigo County Deed

That the Council
of the Village of Middleport,
by its President and the
Mayor be and hereby is
authorized to sell said r•l
estate to the best bidder ao- ·
cording to law upon terms
that are agreed upon by
council on date of sale.

SEC . Ill. This Otdin.,ce
ohall lake effect and be In

•Mobile Home Parta
•Plumbing Supplies

•Eiectricol Supplleo
MON.·TUfS.-WED.·FIL

9 A.M.·6 P.M.
TIIUIS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON
SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
Call lttftl•o Day or

llp1

992·6135
lrlao ........ holt.
3nl St.,

lleot date permitted by taw.
Pu ..d the 1 31h dey of
March. 1989.
AttHt: Jon P. Buck, Clerk
Dewey M. Horton,

P••ldent of Council
Marc::h 20. 27. 21c

o....

1 Card of Thanks

The family of
louise Eden would
like to express our
thanks to everyone
who sent food, flowers,· cards and con·
tributions to Meigs
Senior Center in her
memory. •
We especially wish
to thank the ladies
who cared for her and
those who could be
with us in visits and
praytrs.
Thelma Garrett
Mary Ann Myers
John A. Casto
5

Happy Ads

EVERY SUNDAY

Ntw ~Mallen:
161 N.-th .....
Mi•••put, Olio 45760

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

SALES &amp; SERVICE

RACINE, OHIO

12.GAUGE SHOTGUNS

MIDDLEPORT- 2 umt apartment building in Middleport.
Good rental income. Gotxl neighborhood. OWNER WANTS TO
SELL NOW. $24,900.00.

MIDDLEPORT- Nice street. 2 story home with 3 bedrooms,
dining room, vinyl sidin&amp; Concrete front porch and storage
building. $20,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- SMALL HOUSE in Middleport on a good
street. Small price would make good ~ental in~estment.
$8,900.00.

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER- Chester-Sumner Road. Aneal
3 bedroom home w~h large recreation room, full basement,
2 baths and approx. 3 acre lot wrth stocked pond and storage
buildin&amp; Good location. $43,000.00.

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.
CALL 992-6611

DANVILLE -like new modular in the country. 2 car garage
dh shed on a nice lot. Plus an addHion added on modular.
$31,900.00.

RUTlAND- Nice Ranch type home on a level lot. 3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen, close to schools, all in good condi·
lion. Assumable loan! ASK FOR DETAILS. $29,900.00. ·

PRICE REDUCED - OWIIER WAIITS OFFER - MIDDLEPORT - Really nice older home in town. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, full basement, I car garage and a nice big lot.
$37.500.00.

SYRACUSE -:- Really nice 1982 doublewide, 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, deckmg and many other features . All in good condi·
lion. WANTS $34,500.00.

IIIDOLEPORT- 2 story home that has had some remodel·
in&amp; Nice k~chen, 3 bedrooms, attic area and much m.ore'
$26,900.00.

RUTlAND- 3 year old house wrth large garage free g;s to
house plus a 1978 Holly Park Trailer 14' x70' with ex panda
and room added on. large metal barn, satell ~e dish and
many other features. Must be seen to be appreciated All in
good condition. $79,500.00. ·
·
TUPPERS PLAINS- Very neat 3 bedroom ranch with at·
!ached garage. 1 acre of ground. FmHA approved.
$39,900.00.
.

were the cutest thlll
had seen,
But cuter still, at seventeen

H•m ,,,.~•• ,

Fro11 Oad, Grandpe &amp;
Grandme Donohue

Public N otica
PUBLIC NOTICE
On Solurdoy, March 25.
1989. al 10:00 A.M.. The
Home National Bank. Aa·

·

cine. Ohio, wHI offer lor selo
at public auction on the bank

·

RT. 33 MAIN~NANCE FREE 7" Well insulated. new wiring.
excellent conditiOn. The work ~done. You move in! 2 bedrooms. full basement. modern kitchen w~h bar, nicesttKage
shed and I car garaga Look at this one! $35,000.00.

•

POIEROY - FLATWOODS AD. - 10.73 acres of vacant
~ound . Woold make nice home sne. Call for more information. $21,500.00.

lfTAAT- 2acreminifarm with 1978 modular home. 3 bed·
rooms. sunporch, shed, sateiiHe dish. OrNied wale• well.
$8,500.00.

HENlY£. CLELAIID ....................................... 992·6191
JEAII TRUSSELL.. ..........................................949-2660
DOniE TUR.ER ........................ ;................... 992-569?
JO HILLL .........,............................................. 915-4466

POIIEROY - 5 acres, ~aCIDt ground on top of a hill near
town. Great IOCJ!ion for house or lfliler. $3,900.00. FIRM.
IIDDLEPOIT- Nice lloor ranch home located on aeood

NEW LISTIIIGS NEEDED - We have lllytrS for leip
Countr Property. List with us for bat mutts.

street 3 bedrooms. bath, nice level lot. $23,000.00.

t

1 1 Help Wanted

Seamless Gutter

Middleport, Ohio

Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPSREPAIRSOVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS.
ROTOTILLERS.
ETC.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gunars
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Replacement Winda'!Q EVERYONE WELCOME
llown 1-lation
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
aUND
Siorm o-s &amp;
~
AY 7: 0 0 P.M.
Willllows
WEDNESDAY 7:00 P.M.
FREE ESTIM
. ATE.S
p 811or Jamea·
· t=..
v K eetee

L_c_a-11_9_9_2_·_2_7_7_2-~--.....:~~::._J.I
Listening Devices
. ·. O.pendable Hearillg Aid.. Sales &amp;Servic•
c!l :tiear1111 Evaluations Foi All Ages
1

- ~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
~· .Licensed Clinical Audiologist
2: (614)446-7619 Ql' (614) 992-2104
:il 417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
t
Vaterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

DAVE'S ENGINE
REPAIR

949-2168
2-10-'88-1 mo. pd.

992-6506

&lt;UITOM KITCHENI • IATHI

"At basonablt Prices"

•VINYL IIOINO. IIOOANO

PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949-2160

SINC£"1969

sr•at•

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

PAINTING

CARTER'S

WITH

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

PROFESSIONAL
. CARE

992-6282

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

319 So. 2nd Ave.

742-2328
l-2.'i9 tfn

WANTED
WBIDING GOWNS, PIOM
DRESSES, FORMAL Atnll

Body Talk Tanning Salon
20 SESSIO~S $35,00
20 session signup, bring a
friend to sign up, and .
'II receive one "FREE
i

Open Monday-Saturday
9 A.M.-9 P.M.
Call For Appointment
949-2433
"All the Comforts
of Home"

BODY TALK
TANNING SALON
RACINE, OHIO

,..,,®
..-.::/!;....

,......,,..,....,_,.

OF BUSINESS

Jo's Gift Shoo

SYRACUSE, OHid
Everything Marked
Down
•Cement llem•
•Flower Pols
•Bird B.eths
•Yard Ornemen1o
Because of Cold Wellh11
Everythinelnside.
Rin&amp; Door Bell for Servica
2·7-1 mo.

Public Sell
&amp; Auction

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

hWits.... "

IU~Dt ... Sayss

Monty
fOI IIFOIIMTION
-. 614-992-7521
. 614-992-2661

I 08 High St"'"
Ohio 45769

North

s...'!.4.'!1!~!~.,..,rf

BINGO--., 1-;::::;:::::::::::=.
POMEIOY-EAGUS
CLUB

I
I
1

224 e. MAIN ST.
992-9976
1
TlttiiS. 1.1; ••u '.M. 1

SUIIjJ;~ ~~~P.M.

2 H.O. FREE lrilh caaJIOII•d
pulthao of min H.C. l'lcl:Ill'- limH 1 coupon per cust - per lllllfl ses11on.
Wo,., sso.oo •• Gomo
a... 1to
•u.oo

'"p!t

2·1-1fn

GUN SHOOT
UCINE
FIRE DEPT.

I

.. ...

BISSELL
SIDING
.._ CO.
"FrM Elt!_matel''

PI, 949·2101
or ln. 949-2160

CALL 992-6756
5-25-tln

WANTED

ROOFING
Joe &amp; l ...rt Brown
CaH Ew•lngs.."

D.lD OllUVE
•Weahera •Dryera
•Rangel •Freeztra
•Refrigerators
"Mus! .. ltpai ....lt"

992-3801 ·
992 ·634 7

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
. Paying today
Jan. 14, 1919
l!ubjo&lt;t to ChaRfll
Without Notkt J
#I COPI'Dt ............ 86• lb.
#2 COPI'Dt _ ........... 115 c lb.
CLEAN AlUMINUM
!lilTS_................ 52' lb.
CLEAN AWMINUM
CAST_.............- ...... 40' lb.
ALUMINUM
llVRAGE CANS ..... 50' lb.
IIONY
SIIIU .....- ..... S• to 30&lt; ._
IIONY CAST ... 3' io 20' lb.
ST MUSS ............... 20• ._

Phone

R.,..wtoOd,

....

IEJCI. 11-tiOIIor ,..,..,. -~~

Job Hunlingl Nood • olclll Wo
Min PIO!IIo for )olio oo Aulo

M.cftenla Clrp.m .... Coem~ ·

tologlllo. Dlv. .llod - ... .
_....._ E-lol-. Food lor&gt;loo _....._ El ... ronlal Tochnlol-. lnct.tm..a MMrt•••

TOP
for '83 m- WDrklrt. NuralngAIIiltenttlnd
.,d CASH
nowor pold
uooct .... lmkh Or•H-.
Machlnllts. Otfl!»
8ulolc-Pon11oc, 1811 Eoll•n - - .,d Wohlers. lloglotor
Avo.. Ottlllpolo. Coli 814-&lt;t46- now lor d-MboglnnlngMordi
~212.
27tiL Coli Tr~CoumyVocMionol ,
-~ Cont•otl14-713-3111 •
Compl•• houooholdl o1 -.rn&gt; •t. 14 A "rilly ol -.nc~~n,
tu,. • .......... Aloowaod • toura. to .-v fDr tl'lllnlng are
coel heel.... I Min' 1 Fwnllure owloblolor ihooo ollglltla
• Auelion. 11t~d • Olivo.
114-&lt;t46-3111.
luNd., your trture. le•n both
....... .,d llnloh -pontry et the Adult Educ:.tk&gt;n Cent•-Tri-County VacotiotW -

'

,. -~

"*'•

Antlquoo,

lurnlluto,

eetatM, MltOL oo,....a home

lutnls..,gs. M..ltt Wodom-.
114-2..6-1112.
w.,tod to luy-2-3 - . . .
ho11111. OttHipoll ••· Con p0y
c•h. Coli 114-&lt;t46-1312.
W.ANTEOII Old "1100'1 log
cobln. Cooh pold. Coll114-2419448.

W..t toluy·Aiurrinum 14or 11
lt.JolwiBoot. Aloo IIHPmot...

Coli 814-211-1 ..31.

Notd 120 - - "' Ill
114-3711-23n.

Strol•.

"'lk•

&amp;

dltt.

Call

pl .. .-

Itt

good condllkJn. Call 814-44•

9111

Uted t.t;nlture bv thl pi~ or
entlr• houllhold
•lllng.

81 4-742·2411.

FREE ESTIMATES
Tab tha poln out of
painting. Lot me do
it for you.

SAUS &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. IT. 50 IAn

GUYSVW, o•o
614·11112-3121
Authorized John
Deere. New Hollend,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.
,.,. f••l••'"'
IIIII &amp;

lEN'S lPPUlNCE
SERVICE

For UFI
INSURANCI call:
JEFFERY J. WARNER
IEPRISENTATIYI
302 W. 2nd St..

"'"'""'' Ohio 4S 769
Ph. 614-992-5479
• . . 614·992-247711

••o

__ .............
==

915-3561

FIREWOOD
STONE .

S7.50 PO tOll
Cont•t lltiM Taylor
61C·245·9557

3-10-'88·1 mo.

MASTas ruxmo lENT At
DIY CLEANING SDVKI
SCISSORS SIIAIPINID
USED SIWING MACIINIS
ALTIIAIIOIIS
SINGII AND Wllll

S1W1NG MACHINES
SINGII IIIIITTJHG
MAC liNES

992-5114

FAIIIC SHOP

Located Off Bypau
AI
of A11. 7.
1.3.
Oh.

1 TO W•t 111i11. P-.-oy

992-2214

3·13·'18·1 mo.

'

lroinlne

OAK. '-OCUST.
CHERRY

s35

I'D LOAD
DEUVERED

UGH' HAUUNG DOftE

BILL SUCK
992-2269

»·n-111

A11111111111.1: 1111:1r Is

A•.mbln. Earn mont¥ ......,..

bllng
Muolcol
Todclir
•••·
•uoollocl.
No ulllng
_ _..
Wrllo: Jo·Ef !nt_._ P.O.
lox 2103. K.f lllmm•.. Fl
32742-2201
Frt.nclrHom•Pif'tl•tt.~

••n.

lnga _, tNI • • for """" . .
.. d
F,.. tra,nlng. comrr'llnlan up ta 21 ptr01nt. ...
override up lg. 7 P•c.rt. no
~· wortc. no deiN•Ing Of
collecting. hlghMt hotteu .
aw•dl. No htncllng

oetoioe collt-ti00-227-1510.
GOVERNMENT JDIB
111.040.·111.230 yw. N'*lne Coli 111 101-187-IOOO '
Ext. II·N051or ..,...,. -ol

11

..... bonsftt•
oft• 1:30 p.m.

Earn mont¥' .. homer ANirnble

Help Wanted

,.,...,, 111\'1. oiOc:lronl... oth-

La•n Inventory •d ttodl control Llm~od op....... F.. p ..
whle training. If you are in top

plfvolool ..,ncltiot\ under ago
21, tnd •• wlllng__to work

Coli 1·100-212-1314.
Mon.-Thuro., I AM-2 PM.
AISEMILBIS. Eom mo.., . .
oomllllng M - Toddv. len.
Motorl• oUDDIIod No aolln~
wrh: Jo. Er tmorprlo-. P.o.
lox 2201 KlsolmmH. Fl.
32742-2201
herd. ..

Help wanted . ApplY. 11

MoCiuro't Oalty lolo In Md~•
- · Btlng ,_,_ In MonflovFridov. -ell 20th-2..th be-

tw~

3:00 .,d 4:00 p.m.

Uctt oY« 38 with IJ(perltnceln '
aonwenlena.•tor&amp;

a.n d riiUrne

to11to~-lttol.80k72tF.

io.

A&gt;msrCI'{.

.

AVON· AI ••-· Coli Motllyn
w• .,. 304-882-2141.
AVONoll•-lllhi-1.. tlt&gt;slfO,
304-171-1 .. 28.

••n

n-

your

belli Coli -IIVn Wow•. 30411!!-28&lt;18.

&amp;rn •lrl moniJW' for
sprtng
warchbe. A \Oft. Cll lh I 14-

4..6-oiiiZ,. Clrol -.4317.
EMT-''o .,d !lilT-A's
lun ondpott d - 111 ,...._
Ploco. limo. Ohio. 411-2220188.

MT- mk

Ft.ll time l'!fenmg •hlft p01ltk)n
ben.titL na cell tim•. reptv to
Jeckaon Oen•ll Hotpkal, P .0

..x 720, Alpl ... W.Va. 25271;
CRNA
Ft.ll time PQ~ttlon with beneftts.
RIPtw toJ1qlc1on Gen•al Holpl-

E-..

tll, P.O. Box 720. Ripl- W.Vo
2127t
~'

Plumbing Firm on t .. tnowe•
Needl uperlen•d plumMr.
Met.esmest bec*wound
IUL Good,_,.
ben of.
b. a.nd _ ,.... to: ..........
P.O. l011 108. Jo...on. Ohio

h•

&lt;tl140.
RN. !MT PIILEIOTOMIIT
Nlltionol lrm hos opmlttg lor
people in ... Gellp......totlo
inou..,• PIIW- Call 1113781-1211 eol&lt;torllob.
AI:! In TV c-.-. Cltll ..
,.,, THill. You._, Allulto. Mid
Moturol'looplo- Hlth poy
TV .... -in· Coli lor ...,.,,
lnlor-ion: Cftor01 ltudloi
I3131 142- ti40CI. ht 3384
Ohio ..,..... EMT't. AdvMclod
EMT'o. ,.,..,....._ ,.,.d_
po11tlona ••••le. Pl•lble

....... Ull to-31 .......... -

Alhlnl, VInton. -...., Uw•

r.,..,
VInton-- C6rtl...
louthol01 Ohio l111or-"''

IHOOnNO MATCH. 81-o ......., 11 _ .... tloyo. 11
7:00p.m. Mlo ... lid.. - · - · . ,.. 12pold .......
II•* II IMurlnMMIIr-*....-rt.
.. .,..., .......... night.

II"•·

114-N2·720"-

PTworkwaNI!bta Cell

l•olundoblol 1·407- 7.... 3000 '
Ext. 8-1122 24 hauro.

Just w.m to
a lkt.. •tra ·
mo_,.,7 Or would you ... to ,
hate • _. . .1 Ett._ wey A won
c.n hllpyauHt._a-tvouc.,

---------1 llmt.
LP.N.o«R.N.o.--or"l
Progr-1HIIodi.C .F.
HtiL 224 loot Moln. l'umoroy.

« ..vm.

ch•ga Over 800 dynemlc
tt..,.IO'ft. glfta. hom• decor
and ChrtltiTIIt decor. For fra

bo.-d pluo 1... offsrlng ., d
114-7·2·2004
Colvin 0'01111.

St:l VIC!:.,

1AiiniUi1ciiiiiiiiiiiiB_I_
-. ........ ....
J
11140.........
I!!OMIFI

Olflo lor EaOI•. lohind Cllv

•

Chrietlln or good morel pnon.
P'Oialbly could h.,• own furnilhed IIPwlmft. Room and

IIIIIJiilyllll'ill

Claim~:

We Service

DILIYIIID &amp; SPRUD
GAWA CO. AliA

71:UII

OUIIto
Otfloo SoaotOtY. pott time.
Pro I 140 ,.-. """ ooncltion. Tvolnt poyroll. ftHng. Compu10r
Cooh oald. Coil 814-N2-8117 knowlellge hllpt..l tart nat .n•
"'11&lt;1-8t2·2411.
CMIIrY ~ Send rellifiM to P.O.
BD• 121 a. Pom•ov. Ohio
Used lutnllu,. .,d houoohold 41718.
.IPPIIInCM. Phone 114-74220&lt;18.'
Needaomeoneto •..,, in andhllp
wflh old.. ly WOIIWI. Prtf•

1-100-421-3535

_..,..

for

lbout our vtritly ot tundlng
IOU"* wellble to p., for

.,., F1' •

BOGGS

regia~•

....

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCE

614-985-4180

1Nd1 worlllrt. To

bealnnln' -oh 27tl\
..,pl..,_, ol-•
coli 1141 •t. 14. Aok

WQI buy or ..,p .......ythlngl

2-15-1 mod. pd.

INTEIIOI-EXTEIIOR

...

vtn~tle N
c.p.,.n
up tho lor... '""'" of .... din,

DAY OR EVENING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

-- _

wll provlcleyou w•htrainlngto
berarne 1 c..p..... c.rpintfV
•~ are to lmportent •d

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Ucanaed Shop

INTIIIOieEITDIOR

9AM-7PM

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

Commercial
lllidentlal

EVUY
SAT. NIGHT
12 G111!J1 s~:.':t Onlr
StrktiJ I

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

SYIACUSI, o•o

OPEN 7 DAYS

Factt&lt;y Cholrt

Moat Foreign and
Domest lc Vehlcfn

1&amp;1 PAINTING

lasham luHdlng

6:30P.M.

SYRACUSE, 01110

WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS

2.3.'891fn

985-4222

OOV!RNMENT JOI8
304-373-3447 111,040.· fl8.230. - - "'*In&amp; Coli 111 IOI-M7-1000
W.Ve.

Eclwin .....
- -17- y. . .booking
IDrinSI
•pe-

rlonoo.

WAR EHOU IE TRAINEES

srun_..Mok., Maney

PUBLIC

NOSMAY

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

AND umsons
"Just In r- For Spring

Leesa Murphey
&amp; A8sociates

u, rioos.flr Gamo

CHESTER, OHIO

Day :r Night
NO SUNDAY

1

Pomf'l'oy~

WARNER HEATING&amp; ·
COOLING

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GliAGES

Phone (6141 992-2922

3 Announcem.,ts

•

525 Norlh Second

·31 1

Howard L. Writesel

NSII' ST.

Immediate opening for part time registered
nurse to work in ICU/CCU. Salary commensu; rate with experience. Excellent fringe benefits.
: Send resume to:
•
Rhonda Dailey, R.N.
.
Director of Nursing
:
Veterans Memorial Hospital
;•
115 E. Memorial Drive
!
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
&lt;
(614) 992-2104, extension 213
•

, .... ,....... w.v•.

YinrJ Siltl..

1-31·'88·1 mo.

._.

REGISTERED NURSE

•

Mastic - Certtintlltle

Wo Buy Aluminum
Cont. Gl•o. Braoo.
Copper end More
MON.-FM.: 9 am·ll pno ..
SAT.: I am·l2 Noon

Reasonable Rates, ·
Fully ln1ured

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

NOW OPEN POl
HSIRISS
T.tll &amp; . . St.

RELATIONS

'
••

J&amp;l
INSULATION

RECYCUNG

diiTAl -.,ILDINQI

13!'19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 61c

•

8

., .....

. AUCTIONEBI

PRIYATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

HOUI'INO. APT. "'OJECT ..

rnei'Vel the ·right to bid at
the aala or 10 remove the
item or items from the sale
at any time.

•'
•
'
••'

!Dot:.,.._ ........... ,...,d.
192·311...

Call AI 742-2328

ONLY
.9-lHa ttn

~X~NIWER!MODEUNO

POMEROY - FIATWOOOS RD. - 10.73 acres of vacant
ground. Would make nice home srte. Call for more information. $21,500.00.

CARPENTER - N1ce doublewide sitting on 1.86 acres in a
country settin&amp; 11\ car garag~ deck, eq~ipped k~chen,
fenced yard. $32,500.00

"-'ndnil

•:0o. 114-9t2·

Ill•

pot1 . . .. . .

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.

FACTORY CHOKE

The Homo Nationol Bonk

NEW LISTING - MINERSVLLE RD.- RACINE- 2 story
house with 2 bedrooms, bath, carpet. panelmg and in
Southeln school district. Recently remodeled and in good
condition, $29,500.00.

Coli
11-n.
dog.

LIMESTONE
HAULED

PlUMIING I HEAliNG

The terma of the ule ere

POMEROY - Cute little house !hat needs some fixing up. In
town location. OWNER WANTS AN OFFER. $24.900.00.

6 lost end Found

Founll: ,...... mole

cash.

t•

GENEIAL (ONTIACTOIS
11-16-'IIB·Ifn

Loot: Ptmolpllon ,•::- Chtlo
11~
2071.

COIIMEICIAL

NEW LISTINGS NEEDED We have buye1s lor Meip
County Property. list with
.us for best resu~s.

RUTlAND - LONG STREET- llloor house, 3 bedrooms
· bath. Needs some repair. $.7,900.00.
'

• 915-4141

BUILDERS

parking lol. lhe following:
1987 Chovrotot S-10
REAL R 4 wheel drive piclcup truclc
J.:---------' · Serial Number
10CCn (IIHZ1 1&amp;431 .

NEW LISTING- Abeautiful brick ranch w~h full basement
on a nice 14 acre lot. The appearance ofthe inte~ior from the
slate foyer entrance shows the excellent care given this
home. Such features as a JennAire 1ange, dishwasher, raisoo
tub in main bath, marble window sills, electric heat pump.
central ail, fireplace w~h Heatalator, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms,
family room. formal dining room, Ill car garage. located
near Meigs High School adds Ia th~ appeal. Call for appomt·
ment. $78,500.00.
·

horn.. loGIII •• , . "... c.l

114-N2·1001.
Femololmontholdll,.,.._ II
Wlrtll..... td Tont«. CAl 114112·2117 .. 114-9t2-2222.

2-17-'11-1 mo. · ·•

JUST OFF SR 7 - 41h acres
of vacant ground. Electric
and telephone available.
Close to city water. All mi·
nerals. $7,500.00.

· .,

Llttl&amp; lofto-holrod doG to good

GUN SHOOT

s,,..... Oh.

MIDDLEPORT 1978
Modular Home s1tting on 2
lots in town. 2 car garage.
NGFA heat. garden area.
Also has sell contained A/C
unit. Many other nice fea·
lures. $39,500.00.
Henry E. Cleland
992-6191
Jean TIUSstll ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
Jo Hill ......... .. ...98S.44&amp;6
Office ................ 992-2259

force from and after the •r-

992-7U9
lt. 33 North of

"*"" -· ....

....
z , ...tlfolold. Colll14--1110.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KI"FCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING • REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

2-27-19-1 mo.

MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
home that has had some re·
modeling. Nice kitchen, 3
bedrooms, att ic area and
much more! $26,900.00.

Records.
SEC. II.

CHESlD, 0110

•Mobile Home Part a
•Mobile HOme
Rental•
•Lot Rantala

992.6155

SYIACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY

PRICE REDUCED - OWN·
ER WANTS OFFER- MIDDLEPORT - Reall'j mce
older home in town. 3 bed·
rpoms. 2 baths, fu ll base·
men!. I car gal8ge and a
nice big lot $37,500.00.

the an..,.
OEED REFERENCE: Volume 230. Pae 323. Meigs

MOIII.J
HOME PARI

Hand Woven
BMketa
Baaket WNving
Cleuea
Beaket Supplies
OPEN SATURDAYS
10:00 Tl L 5:1Jj)
PAM ._NOAH • OWNII

AI_,_

to
Coli lt4-44e-807.

• ... -

• ....... Coli

QANVILL£- like new mo,dular in the country. 2 car
garage with shed on a nice
lot. Plus an addition added
on modular. $31,900.00.

6 feet and 6 inci'IBI; thence
north 50 feet: thence west 6
feet and 6 inchn to the
place of beginning, and being a parcel of l1nd 8 feet
and 6 inches in width off of
the west side of tha . .t half
of Lot No, 132 and leevlng a
. parcel of land 50 feet on
Race Street and 50 fHt on

C...od out ottiol

lASlO WEAVE

Middleport,

MIDDLEPORT - SMALL
HOUSE in Middleport on a
good street. Small· price
would make good rental investment. $8,900.00.

~:
.
't
'' &amp;

IAIIGSVILLE- Commercilll store bu~ding 100' x 125' lot.
Has water and electric availabla Has had some remodelin&amp;
$8,500.00.

992-3667

PAT HILL FOlD

Ml DDLEPOAT-Nice street.
2 story home w~h 3 bedrooms, din ing room, vinyl
sldin&amp; Concrele front porch
and
storage buildin&amp;
$,20,000.00

•••

MIDDLEPORT - 197~ Modular Home sitting on 2 leis in
town. 2 car garage, NGFA heat, garden area. Also has self
contained AIC unit. Many othE!I nice features. $39,500.00.

_ B~~,e~
·Boutique &amp; Tanning Salon

..... _

NEW LISTING - MINEASVLLE RD.- RACINE2 story house with 2 bed- .
rooms, bath, carpel. panel·
ing and in Southern school
district. Recently remodeled
and in good condition,
$29,500.00.

Real Estate

JUST OFF Sl 7 - 411 acres of vacant ground. El ectric and
telephone availabla Close to city water. All minerals.
$7,500.00.
.

EVENING APPOINTMENTS
AVAILABLE

OH .

NEW LISTING- Abeautiful
brick ran ch w~h lull basement on a nice 14 acre lot
The appearance of the interior lrom the slate foyer
entrance shows the excel·
l~nt care given this home.
Such leatures as a JennAire
range, dishwasher, raised
tub in main bath, marble
window sills, electlic heat
pump, central air, fireplace
w~h ·Heatalator. 2 baths, 3
·bedrooms. family 1oom, formal dining room. Ill car garage. Located near Meigs
High School adds to the
appeal. Call for appointment. $78,500.00.

"Free 1dt- Ghteeway and Found ada undar 15 words w11t be
run 3 d~l at no ch•ge.
"Price ot ad for all c::eprtallattetl '' double pnl(t ol ad C:Oit.

!571- Apple Grove

Public Notice

•19

--

We can r~ and ,..
cart radiators en!
heottr cares. We can
alio acid lloil and rod
out radiatan. Wt also
repair Gas Ta•s.

99l-22159

.

pa•d.

773- Meson

~

i&gt;OM~OY,

"Ads ouuide Meigs, G.tlia or Mason eoum•• mu~ be pr..
"ReceNe 1 , 50 discount tor ads Plid in advan~:e.

SEIWICE

!. -

:: gg

O.llie County
AruCodel14

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

THE

Middleport Literary Club meets

... _______________________ _

........
llasbll, Pllllh,
... try'
lnis,
r.ttr Fltwn: a.., Tulipl.
AI lm, lfl. ...... Hy..nlhl,

•.

to

following telephone exchanges ...

Pomeroy- Middl8port, OhiO

11 Help Wanted

The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
thru

HORNSBY AT HOME IN VIRGINIA: Pop music star Bruce
Horll8by's new home on the range will cost him $1.2 mUllen.
Hornsby and his wife plan to build a home on the 33 acres of
undeveloped land they are buying from Colonial Williamsburg,
which operates the historic VIrginia area. Hornsby Is a native of
VIrginia and he agreed to certain provisions Intended to
preserve the area's character. Proceeds from the sale w111 be
Invested In the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation's reserves,
which support Its educational programs and provides for future
Investments In lac!UIIes and protective property.
DON'T MESS WITH TUTU: South African Arch!blshop
Desmond Tutu says his honorary degree from Harvard
University won't be much of an honor If the school does not
divest from companies that do business In his racially divided
homeland. Tutu told The BOston Sunday Globe he will give back
the honorary doctorate of laws he received In 1979 If Harvard
does not take a stand against apartheid. The archbishop is
campaigning for a spot on the university's Board of Overseers
and says lf.he's elected to the board by the school's alumni, he
Will use his Influence to withdraw the $230 mlll!on the school has
Invested with companies operating In South Africa.
KENNEDY FUND-RAISER: Young Patrick Kennedy rel!ed
on the luck of the Irish to help retire part of the $80,000 debt he
ran up In winning a seat In the Rhode Island House last year.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., sponsored a $250-a-ticket
fund -raiser In Hyannisport. Mass .. Saturday, hoping to raise
about $10,000!or his ~oungestson's expenses. The gala featured
Irish dancing, Celtic music and other St. Patrick's Day
traditions. Patrick, 21, a Providence CoUege student, spent
$87,000 to win a $300-a -year job and oust 10-year General
Assembly veteran John Ske!f!ngton Jr. In the Democratic
primary.
·
GLIMPSES: Toledo native Jamie Farr will have something
In common with two other hometown boys, singer Danny
Thomas and comedian Joe E. Brown. Farr, whose Klinger
character on "M·A-S-H" always made plenty of references to
Toledo and the Toledo Mud Hens baseball team, visited the
Glass City Saturday and o!!!clals showed him their plans !or a
new softball diamond that will be dedicated In his name this
spring. Another baiHield Is named alter Brown and a
neighborhood park carries the Thomas moniker ....An1ela
Lansbury was the hostess of an AIDS research fund-raiser that
brought out the big names In Dallas Saturday night. Among the
guests were defense secretary reject John Tower, Lad): Bird
Johnson, biiUonalres H. Ross Perot and Harold Shmnoll8 and
the show Included Carol Channing, CoDen Dewhurst, Mellllsa
Manchester and Chill Rivera.

I

C11 ;I It lila tf Yt1111L11 &amp;

Monday, March 20, 1989

REEDSVILLE
- for
A men's
softball
tournament
eight t~------------------,---------:::-':'"'------"1
RATES
teams will be held April 8-9 at
Reedsville. Registration fee Is
TO Pl ACE AN AD CALL 992 • 21 S6
o-1 s woRDs 16-25 woRos 26·36 WORDS
s7.00
$70 plus two softballs. Shirts will
MONDAY
FRIDAY 8 A.M. S P.M,
j g:~s
!~:gg
S10.00
$15 .00
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
sa.oo
s13.00
be awarded for first place, and
6 DAYS
$25 .00
hatsforsecond. Asponsortrophy
10 DAYS
013.00
s21 .00
$60.00
will be given to the third place
1 MONTH
533.00
ss1 .00
team. For Information. call 378· Rat• are for co n .. cutive runs. broken uuda'VJWIII be charged
Cla~sified pages cove r the
for ear.h n.- as ...,.,,, • ads.
406.

r--------·--·--·-··+·:::.:::::•

NOW OPDI FOI
SPIItGSUSON

•

Softball tourney

Mrs. Roy Holter reviewed the ett, Jr.
Mrs. Holter also reported on
book "West With the Night" by
the
construction of the new
Beryl Markham, at the recent
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO.
l!bbrary
which should be finished
Calif. (UPI) - A small flock of meeting o! the Middleport Litersoon.
The
dedication Is planned
swallows arrived· on schedule ary Cub held at the home o!Mrs. !or June.
Sunday at Mission San Juan . Nan Moore.
Refreshments were contribMrs. Wilson Carpenter preCapistrano, !ulfU!ing a 200-year·
uted by Mrs. Daniel Thomas and
sided
over
the
meet.ing
In
which
old tradition that Is seen as a
changes · to the constitution were Included candy, crackers, and
welcoming o! spring and a
discussed by Mrs. George Hack- snacks.
tribute to a saint.
More than 1,000 · people
NOW
IN POMIIOYIMDUPOIT
crowded In front o! the domed
adobe church to see the mornDOMMO'S
Ing's first lew birds fly Into the
PfiZA
hls1Drlc courtyard, and by evenDlums·
Ing ''many more than 10,000'' had
fill,
Pomeroy, 0H.
passed through the mission's
gates, said mission docent Mary
Wnt Main St. Li.mittol Dtli•wy
Arta
Anne Nleblas.
992-2124
"It's nice and sunny and many
.'~~~=-~~':;·-·
birds came In today, so this was a
I
RECEIVE 2 FlEE
DINNER fOI
great day to see the swallows,"
1
PEPSI'S
2
N!eblas said. "Last year there
were !ewer swallows and only
PillA
about 6,000 people turned out."
I
01111 •
I Lunch Only -11 AM-1 PM
Thousands more people mUled
II'
r(IIIICJI' . ~-1 • .... ......
I .._..,. -11 a1 • s... .......
about outside and throughout the
n• OMY 11 111·1 • M Set,
1,
1 STOll o•t 11 • ., • '"- ""·
q)l&amp;lnt coastal town.
At 7:57 a.m .. Paul Arblso, 93,
the mission's groundskeeper,
rang the mission bells - as he
has done for more than 30 years,
officially signaling the forktailed birds' return, an event
celebraied every year on St.
Get Ready
Joseph's Day, March 19.

WHAT'S AT
98.3 FM?

•

Classi II

26, at Hartinger Park In Middleport. The hunt will start at 2 p.m.

,_·People in the news-------

KYLEN J.A. KING

Monday, March 20. 1989.

Continuing ••cation

~tr•

motoct. c - Lollin Haapllll.
...ln. w.v.. 304-871-2230.
..t . 31 .

ATTENTION: EXCELLENT IN·
ln!D. coii504-8.... 1700Dopt P
.
2301

COME for hoFMMI.-nbty work. •

ASSISTANT DIA ECTOR OF
NUIIIING

124 bed muttl lwei c.-e nurting
a.nt• MlkJ RegietlrNurlewlth
Npr~ilorynperlenat, a c., totry for teachln g. c•lno and
lm•tl't in Geri•rlc
nurolttr. E_.l.,. opportunity
lor
odtnlttlstmion, c. .
gr
.,d dwoioptnOnl. ' •
Mlll;e Inquiry Clre Haven of •

,..,an.

'"''::3,

Toovo Voll.,.. 510 Poplor Fork
Rd. H..rle.,. WVo, coli 304717· 7128 . Contect per1on
Dovid Wilbur Admn.
Cottlflod Nursing ANISI...
3 C.N.A.'~ illll time
- .... 3-11. 11- 7 •hill.
Car~ MMten T•trt• v... .,. Quellfled IPPiolnt• •oouraoect to
t11Piv 510 Popl• Fork RoiCI.
Hurrlc1n , WVa . M-F
1:30- 4:30. Comp•~lolo woga
ben.tlts lll«lkage off•.t to
......odC.N.A.o.

"
•

••
•

'

:
•
i

'
'

•

PI11T1meA .N.
W.Vo. U-od
R.N. n-1or ,'

dw llhtft w•ll.Care Haven,,.,,

"= •
1•

w_. ....., - •

w_.

vs11ov. 2 ""'"
.,doff. Apply 110
Fork Rolcl Of' aont•
"'
Wolkw 0 .0 .N. 30 4-717· 7121, :
~
M-F. 1:30- 4:30.
'

'

�Page-1 0-The. Daily Sentinel
12

Situation a
Wanted

Wll do

tvoina.

73
51

SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
Olivo SL, Oolllpolo.
NEW- I pc. wood poup- •:1111.
I.Ningroom-. ,,. . .
..,k ...... wtth boddlng- •zea.

Schools
Instruction

a

Full .._ men..- foundlltion
•••rting· 188 . Recline,.
•rtlng- . . ..
USED- . . .. dr•lllrl. bedroom
• •. Dnkl. wringer . . . .. .
ao,...._ line of u..t ~rnlture.

R~-TRAIN

NOWI
SOUTHEAST!~N BUSINESS
COLLfOE. 521 . - . . , Plko.
Clii&lt;Ua-43&amp;7. Aog. No. 86-1110111111.
.

NEW· -lorn boolo- U5.
--~~ .,. • up. !Stool •
""'1&lt;»1. Coli 114-446-31 . ..

~Mod Truak Mootor
Trude Drfvw Trllnlng
D.O.T. C..HICIIIon Job Ploce-

~•lrt8nae Home Study· .
/ AIIIdlnt Treinlng. Finenol-'
Aid Awll•ble, Accredited
Momb. NHIC. Coli Tan Frw

ment

Collnty Al)pMMoe, Inc. Good

u

1-BOQ.M8-11411. LOCO! olllao.
,.
.. ..,,g. W. Ve. Hdqrs:

Clw .. Fl.

CI IM.._,_.,._..,,. ,.,...,...._.... l ·10

18

."This meal isn't square .. .it's

Wanted to Do

· George' I Portlbl1 8awwmll

Don't hCol
.. I 304-1711-1917.
your ~~~~ to •
-noll.

2•

hour Doy Clr•AI oaoo.
Mello • onodoo provided. Lorge

~";;;:;;:~~;:;:===:'1"";;:;;~;;;::;:;:::::;:=::-t
32

b1dl vtrd. Structured Pit¥ time.

42

Mobile Homee
for Sale

Coli onytlmo. 114-446-083$.

:;:::VInJ.:
::..":.=..'i.z,
r. MerC~~VIte .,... C.ll 11 .._

2 5 • 1529.

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY . PUBLISH-

2

lcnow. end NOT to ..wdmo..,.

Mobile Homee
fOr Rent

A•
utl-1• plld · - oiiCirlalty.

mobil• home~ for ••:

F!Aiy furMhed u•eu• ept.

ono-10•11. uooo. Ono12x51. •2100. Both,.,llilt'( Nlwlv IMeoarwted • cw,.ed.
lurnllhod. Coli 114-21 1117. · Dop. Aloo 3 bedroamlrd•. Coli
. 114-446-8588. 446-89110.
. 1980 Sp..,on 14.K70. 2 IR ., 2
bit hi. •I tllldrl~ CA. wood- 2 lA ., e1blewvelllbl .. beattHul
bur-. 10.18 12&gt;&lt;14 rlv• 111- In Kon1Ugo. Footwo
wood buHdlng. COl 114-246- Moblo Homo Pwlo. 114&gt;4465 0 2 8 . 1·.:.10.:.2::.·- , -- - - - 1811Redm., S.ci'iunlll28xH. Nlot 2 BR., Wge privet• "(8rd.
3 BR .• C1 . To be moved. C•• ~1h mil• from 0.116Dolll. No
114-446-8594oltor I I'M.
polo. Colll14&gt;446-1038.
-lvlurnlohod. *280 per mo.
.,DO dop. In Rio Orwodo. eon
114-245-5111. ·

Muot 8111·1984 141&lt;70 """'"''
moblo ha- Ooll 114-4460159ollor I PM.

ING CO. nJOOmmlndl thai you
~ butlniMI &gt;Mth p~M»~Jie you

through the m-!f untl vou hw•

44
33

Farms for Sale

ch*'

•311 to
e8n.
T•bl• •ao•310
•nd
up.,
0128;
Hldlo-1-bldo
to •IH. .... . . t221 Ia
•375. lAmpo 028 to •125.
om..... • 109 end up to 14911.

eutt•.

90 Deya 11me

a

c•h With

oppnovod «odh' 3 MH• out
Bul•llle Rd. Open 91m to &amp;stm
MDni. thru S.. Ph. 114-441-

0322.
New Md uHd turnlture . . d

*'

"""""*''

acr-.

317-7891

For s.le br' Ow111r or nell for
amlll• hou•. 2 ltOfY
4
ecr• or mo,., 20x40 ln~..t
pool, Solei•• dloh. ~n City

hou•.

school dilt. Cll 814-44~0112.
Hau• for •'• bJ owner. Ani~
homo locotod of lith A•..
ICiniOJge. Lorge lot. •lr condlt~
onaf 11100nd naar, rM~N SJM
turnece. Elllelln for tmll,
young flftlilv ar 1n elder oouple.
Hom• h• mlnY ftn.e t.llurM.
~1 114-448l'&lt;&gt;r IPP.....,_,_ ••

NIOitt turnilhed ..... hou•.

""•· co • h... ooGiho only. ool.
Coli 114-446-0338.

3 aA ~~au ... -..., ... noo
mo. p~o ~. 2 8R hou• 218.
• 175 mo. o~• .... C.H 11425&amp;1719.
In 8yrecuat. 3 be*oom.clo.. ta
IOhooll. •ue. P• month. C•l
814&gt;992-8038.
1-- old. 3boctoomlorld&lt;·vlnyl
.,._
.

F.....hod oflloltnOI"· 807 a..
cond. Clolllpolo. ••eo. Sh••
b.,h. eon &lt;Ua-44111111•7PM.

M•vt•v W11her,

Oryor. Coll114-992·3010oll•
5 :00.

In•.

1"1 ft.x10 ft. m...l .tcnge
buHdlng-.,00. 100 ft. of n,.,. . .40. 13 ·-~~~ loJntlng

v••

-·•1
plp. . t300 or belt offer. Cell

114-241-5891.

a.-..tlful JDIId wood bedroom
I!Mt• with king abe w•t•bed.

Uko n-. 114-H2·7014 llll.4p.m.

Romina!on Model 1 100 ahot
Gtn f2 -~~~· Sm"h ond
w.... 38 Spoclol. 114-992·
211~
'
Prom gown h-om Mley's' of
Ati..U for ule. Size 8-10.
814-912·

tion. •30o. o.n 114-1112-3911.

24•24. 4 ft. dloop ""m=~
pool.

AI . . . .- .

condition. CAll &amp;t4-H2·704Z.

55

BuHding Supplies

8 ulldlng Mltorloll

Blook. brlok. - • plpoo. wlndowl. ltnt•. etc. Cl.,de Win'"'- 111o o-•· o. Col 1142411-1121.

Conerec• bloc:Q. 111 . - . .

~d

or . .tvery. Muon_,d. o.lllpollo Blook Co.• 1 23'11 l'lno lt..

Oolllpollo, Ohio. Coli 114-44.
2783.

56

Pats for

Hao- ......... Wllhor. 0100.
oocn. Firm. Ooiii14-H2-B207.
Ga .tow, dlnlt18 lit Chin 1
Hutch. 1m1R c~&gt;ver lor •lo. Coli
114-742-3148.
.

VInyl •4.87 '/d. com-clol
n .99 yd. loti. lOOm ....

~~

lnd roll. Wpet. hilt

Groom .,d Supplv 8hop-PM
Grooming. AU brMdl ... All
otyloo. lome PM Food Doll•.
.NIIo Webb Ph. 114-446-0231.
Dr190iiW"jiid Cottory Konno!.
PereNrl end Sl~m. . lnd HlmeIO¥., ldii..L Chow llud vice. Colt 114-4411-38441111•7
PM.
Bu!*lor Quollty AKC Cook•
&amp;p. .lol pupo. - · ..... od.
wormed, V•te.ted. •110•ct1.

1.-=========.J.;;I:/:1:1.=====;;;;;;~

rmm

14oll0. 2 IR . Good oond.
Ow_ ....... with--·
"""'"""'
t210 • "'"' J 1o
... eon 114&gt;446-7104.

2 IIIII ..... !u&gt;. .hod. ..., 1----,..-lor--------..
--......
-p«. AC. AI 111 •1• pold 01 e120 1 mo. Gillie
- - 11"" • goo. Collie tv Hotol-f'14-441-IIIIO.

. . . . . Ow-...,.-·

_
.. plllloup. .... dop,
• rfll. &lt;V10 of .... 11om ally
1mb. Coii14&gt;441-771J.
2 - - moblolla- .,~

• •280
w.,••-

t.;. ~ ~..~-:.~r·:

·-~~~-.I'M .. -... '

-•lot

-.

Z be.._ Mollllollamo. UIIIO
month. 304-17&amp;-8814.

1114 _ . _ , .. '1'0- 71121

_, .....
u.........

......... · - 2 .....

.47 - · lot.
USIOO. 304&gt;1711-1143.
Col -nol I P·m·

r

S~ for

Onion Mt:l. -.d potetHI, vine
rlpltometOII. ....... fruit end

_

&amp;.cldlngpl. . . . .d
fiOIA"'f'' COm4ng loon. J•cb
Mil, AI. 31. -dll'lon. 'I!I.Vo.

.... _

1983 Horllon. 1984 Choorotto.
2-1111 Horlz..,_ 11111Horllon..
11eo Toy. . C - a '1910
Toy• Torool. 1911 Omoga
1984 Choorotlo. 1980 Hondoo
Civic. 1918 Plvmoullo. 1985
Toyca Van. 1i83 Ch.w1tt1.
-·"""·Col 114&gt;446-11775
bol-968 . .
1113 Unmln Town ·e er. EJCel.

ooad. FUll lnj., ... o ower dirve,
ftM' tlr-. NW a.tt.ry, A11J

ow-. n .soo. c.•

3111.

f ,IIIII SiiPIJIIt·~
6. liVI:oi:JIJ

61

114-44&amp;

1982 Cut1111 Supreme
Brougtoom. Very nice . . lnoldlo
6 OUL Lo- CoM 114&gt; 8821841.

Farm Equipment

UTILITY ILOO. IPL:30"•40"•9"
• ., .. 1w1~ ... sliding door,
1·. .1k -·4998.ERECTEOIRON HORSE llDRS. 814332-974!1.

c.. •

del• el trector

w /toadlr, •2111 firm. Late
mocW .._.lnt.-n•loneltrllator,
plow• • ell c. 2 rowa.n

pl.,.•.

3ptopr.,outfll. 111. buohhaa
•41eo. Owner •• tnll'lca C.l
114-216-U22.

19n Mont• C.rto. Second
ownw
He¥1 ... piiPerl. H11
been ... .,. •cell ... c.e of.
Cuot&lt;&gt;&lt;npolnt- lrwh. 327-·-·
Tao nuc:h to Hilt. VfiiY dtpenct.
ble ..,g~n, tnd e;.-. "Shwp"
•21100. IIIII· Will trodo. 114246-8224 "'" 5::10 pm.

c•.

1814 Tr-Am. Uke new. AC.
•uto. tilt whML a'\1 ... control
AM.fM

c••.n..

*•

fin.,-.

'71 Manti C.rto V·B eutometlc.

480•380JohnD-•-do•- · T-top. good oond. 11,200.00.
laodor. -hao. H01 1. HOZ1, 304&gt;171-2128.
HOe. AC doa.,._ D40 Cot., TO
20 Int. Hoontlnllllon. WV. 304&gt; '77LinooolaTown . . . ..., ...._
738-781111 I 81oldot-lood.._ ohadol ltldtu,..p. ooolar bl"*lo-: Ford. Cooo • -"''·
12.100.00. 304-112-2041.

-

lnt.I30PTOM1n.,re8pr...,,
141 l&gt;u. liNd very Mill• ••
n .aoooo. - ldu
323. oooo•--nplokor. pldood
l•• tfwl 10 ec. l!m aond
•3.200.00. L.E. Sluon. J04&gt;
17&amp;2131

'"'"&lt;l

~;::~:;:==:;::==
~
63 Liveltoclc

'11 CheVett• 4. apeed
"· 100.00. 304-8711-4140.

1880FI., XII. phano304-1753011.
!leo \Wy 'i!logollo good lhopt.
- goad .,..,. n - Md.
304-112-3321.

72

Trucks for Sale

Atloonl LN_,ook Sol• Alboroy- , 1971 FrolgtottlnorC.Ioo- 290
Solo wory Bolunloy-1 PM. Comnolno.
U opood. 38 owo.
u.......
-~~~ ""• 4 I'M Oiii!d oondltlon. Prlood to ...
w...,
F~oloy. I milo _ . 0J1
•1100. Coli 814-lllla.IM&amp;.
AlbMy on St. Rt. 80. Col AlbMy.
114· 192-2322. &amp;11·31131.
1910 OodgoD-80........ •100.
horN rlclng m - . oloctrlc
llooort• Horoo Golding lor ..._ 8
--1280. Hooooolo ao Mopedlrolnod. Coli 814-742- like ,_. UOO. Col 114-44621104.
.
11111.

..-...

Bold Faoo. I yr. old CAll 114-37a.8211.

w-

· tiiOO.

1171 Dodge W.la .. pl-.p.
Auto-lc&gt; oouloo. RWL to-.
dor111.000 OGiuol
mil•. lo•tllol. N200. Col
64 Hay 8t Grain
114--32117 .. 114 4460303MiolorMro. - ·
Hoy lot olio. 800bol• .1.00. 1177GMC11ooo-. Orlglnol
800 bol• ••. 110. 100 bol•. """"· loodooywol-- Hoi
2nd .,d 3rd oootllnQ. f2.38.. Nil.
.,od. e1too. 814114-742-2013.
742-211411111or 8:00p.m.

no•

79

1977 20ft. Coachmll'l Cllftp.&amp; awning. ..... I .
E.col. oond t:!IOO. CoR 114446-3820 IIIIer 4 PM.

*

\I

1171Ao.. eTrweftf'fll•. Oood
cond. Aoldng •IJ.OOO. CoN 114.

.' '/

.t NEVEIt: 5AW A
PIJ~Pt.E cowi :t HopE
Ni!:VE~

IIIII

.Sff ONi,. ..

.:r
11

··THIS STUFF MU..ST Bl
PRf •TEP iURNER.

1978 81.-allll Olio 23 ft mini

motor hol'l'l&amp; pneltor ., d 1ft

•c&lt;*loriw, low mll~t. e.cc
cond. phone 304-876-2185.

.-...

bolo.

81

Auto'a For Sale

•u:;•

"ana •-

Coli 114&gt;441-

I

weapons. C

.
WATEA~OOFfNG ·.

Unc:onclt\anll lf.alme

@ MOVIE: Tho Wild LHe {R)
(1 :36)
I!Jl Murder, Sho Wrota
Naahvlle Now
8:051ll MOVIE: Sparta~ua {NR)
(3:04)
8:30 I) (2) I!)) The Hogan Family
David moves into Bun and
Rich's bachelor apanment.

ou•*'"

t • LoCII rtllr•~ t.r•hed.
FrM . . tm••· Catl oollec:t
1-114-237·0488. dor or night.
Rooer•l•••m•nt

a

r'M ·TIGH\EIJIOO CREDrr
·-ro Sl.OW DCWIJ

Wot•proolloog. .

SWEEP at end IWII'Ing ma:hlne
rtp.r, pM'tt, •d tuppll•. Pldt
up •d dllury, OM Vec:uum
Clean•. one h.. f mil• up
OoorQII Crllk lid . Coli &amp;14-

lkJR..ATIO~

~

electr~, IMIDU....,I ann•

pl .... Col814--7829.

s.tlc T.,k Poomplng.•IIO. ClotNo Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jookoon. Ohio 1·800.
137-11128.
RON'S ' t•lwlalon l•f"'lce.

...,_,1. Col 304-1175-1331.

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

, ..0

Hcooon collo on RCA. G..-.
GE. SpODiolln' In looolh. Cal
:104-576-231 or 1114-44624114.
Fetty Trw 1Hmrrin.. lbimp

·--: MYeAANDPAeAY6THEY
"1 DIDN'T HAVE SCHOOL. EILJSE5
WHEN HE WAS A KID.

11U D - 110 ZX 1 - lior .... 1W ,.,_ 1177 CJ.e

*"'" - • J• - ........
"''*••--•IIOO.Col
__noao.oo
,...,u,-.

'*!111M -

:104-171UIIII.

I
•

WHEN H5S PUTT!!'&amp;

ME: ON.

.

RON"B APPUANCE SERVICE.

hou••
c.. l a.vkma OE. Hot
Paint. w•Mr•. 'dry.,. •d

'Deooperodo: Afalanch• at
Oevll't Ridge' NBC Monday
Night at ttoe Movlea Q
(1) It Cll 'Tho Women of
Brow•i•r Piece, Part 2' ABC
Novel lor Tolovlelon C
(!) lil The Congre" Dsing
diary enlrias and in1ervlews,
1hls film chronicles 1he
personall11es, evems and
issues 1hat hove animated
1ha first 20Q_yaars of
Congress. 1iJ
llll Ill \1)) Muophy Brown
Murphy dates lhe world's
smartest man . Buck Henry
·guos1 stars. Q
llll Lorry King Llfll
I!Jl Primo Tlmt WrooUing
9:30 I]) Collog• Blakotboll
llll 8 ~ Dealgnlng Women

i

...... 304&gt;571-2388

Holiday Oourm•t Spinach

Pie

Myoro IIODirtop .,d - g .

-dlroon. WVo. Wop111o(lrlw ..
porlolngloto. llollng. ,,..
ntl--. 304&gt;87a.2417.

LOOK AT MY
REPORT CARD,
AUNT
LOWEEZ:Y !!

Plumbing
Heating

8t

CARTER"I PWMIINO
ANOHEATINO

SdON AS 1 GIT
CARROTS
IN TH' POT

SINCE YOU
FETCH ME

DIDN'T
ENNY
POSIES--IT MUST

THESE

BE PASSABLE

Cor. Fourth Wid Pine

Gollt":'·3888
Ohio or 114-

, Phone 814446-4477

10:00 ill 700 Club
llll Ill !12) Newhart Dick and
Joanna receive a megabuck
offer for the Inn. C
Ill 1!D Areanlo HIU
IDI Evening Newt
®Newa
. 10:30 ill N•wawa1Ch
lil The Othlr Sldl o1 Eaor
StrMt Examine the plight of
the alght million people over
age 65 In this coun1ry who
survive day 1o day living only
sliglo11y above 1ha poveny

8t

Electrical
Refrigeration

'.

•

General HauNng

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

•
J • J Wot• lorvlcoo. llwlororoolro 1
-clri--PII.81424a.l21l
•
R

we• Borvloo. -

cl1tern1. well•. lmmtdl••
1 .000 or 2. OOOIIIIIo• dol.. ory.

·"i&gt;ur

'Birthday

Coli 304-17a.l370. '

Merch20,1-

·
•·

87

Upholatery

Two advantagaoue rela11onshlpa may
be formed In 1116 year ahead . Each will
!lave far-reaching ellecta. Knowledge
will be acquired through one contact ,
and a new group of friends 1hrough 1he
other.
PIICE8 (Fob. 211-Mr ch 20) Gonerelly
opeaklng. your one-to-one relation·
ships should too r_.rdlng for you 1oday.
you might have 1o conlend wflh one Individual who could mar
your record. Major changes am ahead
lor PIIIC88 In tho comli'ig year. Sand for

Ho-.

•.
·

''

BRIDGE

your As1ro-Graph predlc11ons today. you II you 1aka 11me 10 poln1 ou1 how it
Mall $1 to Astro-Grlph, c/o this news- will beneiH them. Don't a88ume they
paper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH understand .
44101-3428. Be sure to stale your zodl- UBRA (&amp;opt, 23-0ct. 23) Your chances 1
ac sign.
, lor succen will be grea11y enhanced 1o- 1
ARIEl (Morch 21-Aprll 11) Your work- day II your objectives are clearly de· .
load might. be a trifle heavler1oday than fined and 11 you do not disclose your ln- i
Ill 1!D Love Connoctlon
usual, but 11 can be lightened substan- . ten11ons prematurely 10 uaociales who •
IDI Monayllno
tlally II you use your brains as well as aran'1 dlrec11y Involved.
®"-ymoon•rt
your back. Think.
. SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nof. 22) Condl11ons
I!Jl Miami V1ce
TAURUI"(Aprii20-Mey ZO) II mlgh1 be , look favorable loday for lmpot1ant af.
You Can Bl a Star
wise 1o take a back seat aoclally 1oday II ,. lairs you manage personally. Don '11ake
you crOll paths wl1h a forceful lndlvld· I gambles on developments that shill 1he 1 11:308(}) iiJI Tonight Show
I]) lpartaConllr
ual who"H want the center s1age alone. A , · control to someone other 1han yourself .I
Cll Cltesro
low prollle will anrac1 more anen11on. . IAGmARIUI (Nav. 23-Dtoc. 21) Be l
(!) European Joumel (0:30)
Ol!biiNI (Moy 21.Juno 20) All should be flexible ond prepared 10 al1er your 1ac-·1
heard 1oday regarding a manor 1hat : ·•tics In a career manor today In case
8 Cllu•~.. Q
1111
..A Today
concerns 1he en11relamlly. 11 could lead · •someonelrlee to pu1 roadblclcksln your
® NawiJwad Orome
to problems later II one member of the , Jpa1h.ll you're not loc:f&lt;ed ln1o a specific
ID!Iporta fonlght
clan dldn"1 get two-cants wot1h ln.
procedure, you lhould do well.
8 0 PM 8aJa1C 8how
CANCER (J-21-.Iuly 22) I! your posl-' iCAPIICOIIN (Dec. ...... 11) Don't
IS Hll 1WM lluH Say It As
11ons or Ideas are opposed by others 1o-• .put limitations on your 1hlnklng 1oday or,
n
Playa
day, don"t respond In an angry fashion.! anempt to do thlngt In a manner that!
8 American Magozlno
Use your wH and 1act 1o sway people tO' ·your pu1exper- have shown to be'
your way of thinking.
·unwortoable. It's time 10 experlmon1 ' · 11:10 (JJ N.-1 Geographic
.
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) In your lmpor- with new methods.
Psrlorw
tant butlness deallnga 1oday, don'
AOUAJUUa (ol8n. 2111-Foll. 11) Your n- ·
I 2:00 ()) The Flrot Olymplct:
leave anything up to chance. Instead In
nanclal poal!lon can be atrenglhanecl at 1
Alllane, 1. . • Part 1 (NR)
slst upon a complale dlacloaure o1 al
thla time H you locue on wll)l8 10 o --· ,
(2:00)
.
come unntoce888ry. small expei1888.i
relevonl f~ta and flgul'88 .
I]) Pto Flauro aa~~ng
VIRGO (Aug. 23-8opt. 22) People with Collectively, 1rlv!al lmprovemen1e can
Discover Card Stars on Ice
whom you'll have crl11cal dealings toda
save you big bucks.
rrom KnoKviHe or Chicago (T)
,•
.
will be more eager 10 coopera1e wl1h
(1) N!ghtllna Q

e

3·10·81

• 7643

.AK
+K 7

.

By James Jacoby

WEST

EAST

+J976

+5
.AKQt098 5 2
• 43 2
+J

---

Even if North and South did not play +98785
five-card majors, South should proba- +Q 54 2
bly have bid four spades, not five •
SOUTH
clubs. over East's four hearts. Not sat·
+K 10 2
isfied that South was able to muster up
• Q J 10
a bid, Norlh carried on to six - a rash
+Al09863
action that produced an interesting
problem in play.
Vulnerable: North -South
West failed to lead a heart for an obDealer: North
vious reason. So declarer won dum\
my's diamood kins, cashed the club West
Nortb East
South
I+
5+
king , played a club back to his ace and
6+
Pass
Pass
led another club. West won the queen Pass
and continued diamonds. Now South Pass
came to his hand with the king of
Opening lead: +9
spades, picked up the remaining
trump, and played the spade 10. Of remaining trump alld, to 1mprove his
cou~ West covered with the jack, count of the hand, cash his other high
and declarer had no way of returning diamond. He will then know that East
to his hand to take a spade finesse to started with ooe club, eight hearts and
at least three diamonds. That makes it
dummy's eight-spot.
South overlooked the play that a percentage play for South to now
would have succeeded. When he led lead the spade 10 from his hand. The
the third round of clubs, he should play loses only when East's singleton
have discarded the diamond ace from is the jack, and wins against all other
dummy. Now West can return a dia· combinations. Should West cover, demond as before, but declarer will win clarer comes back to his king and then
with his jack. He can then. pick up the plays up to the A-8 in dummy to bring
in the suit.

.J

4.

CROSSWORD
by

JOSEPH
2 Macbeth

THOMAS

ACROSS
I One type
of mining
6 Position
11 Aegean
volcanic
island
12 Malediction

was one

3 Spree

4 Wrath
5 Flair
6 Alarming
7 Pull

8 Time
period

9 Snake
10 Scottish

13 Poe bird

14 Astonished
liS Countdown

Yesterday's Answer

river
Macaw

17
20- party
21 Stannum
22 Say

word
18 Swiss
river
18 Fencing
dummy
19 Fine
glllllll
24 Shinto
temple
215 Current
28 Savor
29 Tibetan

27 Prepare
ror war

40 Mr.

e.g.

33

Andrews

film

closet

31 Soprano

24Julle
26lndo- ·
Chinese
tribe

36 Oldtlme .

28 Drink
39 Athletic
28 Monsignor,
wood ·

, further
23 Gr111111y
ground

pet

34
. 35

Wallach
Outfit
Night
· before
44 Kingsley
or
CroBS

41
42

Turner
Aquatic
mammal
Solo
Biblical

city

30

Rerralli
atLa
Scala
31 Work unit
32 Ameliorate
34 Gynt's
mother
37 Cymbals
In India
38Humble
39 Pierre's

cap
43 Dwelling

48 Adversary

I!)) .....
(!) Jopan'e Orond Kabuki In
Anoortca Dick Cavatt hosts
this program dOcumenHng
the u.s tour of lhelorgest
Kabuki 1roupe ever 10 appear
outalcle of Japan.
(I) Sign Oft

NORTH
+AQ843

Can this slam
be saved?

a

discovers a condom In the
pocket of Chlp"s jeans. Q
New Coun1ry
.
'
11:00 ill Remington Steelo S1eeled
wilh a Kiss. Par1 2

a

-"

Bodily- Match - Karan - ln;ury- {)AY JOB

After giving our order 16 lhe kid behind 1he las1 food
counter, we no1iced there was no one lo prepare lha food .
" Well," shrugged lhe kid. " I did MY JOB! "

18 liZ Kot8 • Alh Allie

• m m e Cll 11111 111 tl2l

; . ,.r

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
1

415 VIvid
46 Purport

line.

11r

11.446-1120- 41'M.

T NEVE:RKNON

HE 5A'IS HI: RODE
Hl5 PET DINOSAUR
TO 5CHOOL....

Rotory or oololo tool , dr..,s
-Amop.·
. .oompl.,ldoorno~or.
. . d . . . loo. . , .
191-3802

82

Ill \1)) Heartland Q

9:00 II (2) llll MOVIE:

ltnCiowY4WD "'*'"Goad
e1.1100. Col 114-47M . .•IPII.

1H1Ioalo ..4.d...,L.d.o.-

{R )

(!)) PrlmeNewe

BASEMENT

I'M. - . . . -

111l1 ............._,4 ........

his own,

llll Ill \12l Live-In Q
milD MOVIE: Oymkata

.,.10.

1-a.-···-·-4-..-. . . . Wllh . . . . .

pat or

(1 :30)

R •

c_,...

7:351ll Sanford and Son
8:00 I]) Tho First Olympics:
Atheno, 1896 • Part 1 (NR)
(2:00)
8 (}) llll ALF After bugging

comes to oftice determined

Home
Improvements

30 4-1112-SJII.
--..:.....:....:..__ _ _ _ 1 11a2 Toy.,. d•lol lorog bod
.,.. with-· 11111 ,_d
hllftonlftlok.'J04&gt;41a.1111. .
1
11771'oord oloooot bod. Y· l .., ..
1878
-eo.
-......
- ·304-117a.
· 1117
--1
7118.

Crook and Chi••

to reduce the number of

85

•z.oo,..

Hoy lor -

no

a

ALF gets an an1 farm . C
(l) a Cll MatOY"er In his
hometown, MacGyver gets
involved wl1h evil crack •
dealers. (A) Q
(!) lil Wor ond Peaca In
Tho Nucloar Age Cat1ar

For Sele or Tr.Se. 8 toot tNOk
comp• UOO. 00. 304-,765091.

4048.
Maino- p11oot.
______
..:.___ .,.lo

N«.llllolt
-*'•
ltld
ralb..
e4.000.00. 304-IIZ.2041.

® WKRP In Cincinnati
I!Jl Cartoon l!xpreu
C!!1 New Country
6:351ll One Oay at a Time
7:00 I]) Our House Off We Go
0 (}) PM Magazine
(!) SportaConter
(l) Ill Cll Current Allalr
(!) lil MacN•II/ Lehrer
NeW10Hour (1 :00)
llll Ill \12l llll Whesl of
Fortuna Q
181!D Threto"o Company
llll Moneyllna
®Chesro
I!Jl Miami Vice .
C!!l Fandango
7:051ll Andy Griffith
7:30 II(}) Family Feud
I]) Cotleg• Baaketbllll
(l) Entertainment Tonight
GCil USA Today
llll llll Jttopardyl Q
ID [ll M•A•s•H
llll Croullro
tllllll Joopardy
® Night Court

Willie for a

•:aoo.

oome I hid to
the lilt pet80II to die
from somelhlng ~ found a cure for?l;'

11

256-12311

1178 1-21 Coni- . , _ 1171 Cloir........ - ·
Colll14-llll-1&lt;110.
. • ,110. 114-147-Qit.
.

,...,

II

'""1\ iT111i

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

"'II•.

eau,... Mollie -

......

.FRANK AND ERNEST

Joint•••
...... Coli 114-3792220 or 304-1711-8718. ,

84

*12110. 114-14,.. . .2.

--~---

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·
Uud &amp; rebuilt ell type1.
Worronty-30 oloyo. Prl- •119•
up. Uood • -IM torgue
COA\fWtlrl. .-ncWd duiC:I'I•.
pr•.ure pi••· • thraw' out
be• In g. W•rMtv· 12 mo.. CVC

Ooodmt.edhaffar•la *2. Jilt 1181 f•d Ringer. 4 cyl., 15
bolo. Coiii14-H2-1151.
...-. nuoo. CAl 814&gt;7U3143oltorllp.m.
Oraund ehehd aurn •a.oo .,..
100cwt. Mor-Form. Rt. 311. "88 4oc4 S10 plolcup. outo V-1,
Pllnor. 8:00 Ill 12:00 acopt AM-FM•-.-tlr•. 44.000
. , _ J04-837-201a.
•1.150.00. 304-87114140.
Hoy lot •lo. Iorge raund .,d _:..;.::._~----oquoro boloo. )04&gt;8711- "77 Ford 41.• lftlok.l4 400

hlloll _ _ .,..,,._...

-----

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuorias

CorptnlrY work by tho Job or
hour. .-oollng. dry .... pkom~

*·G-~s0!10Mltt-

114-IIJ.7471.

j

For BoloI 1972 17 II. S..,.«olt
Trt HoUIIoot. 121 H.P . E,.,dlo
tinalno. ..,mpl.,o top. now Ul&gt;holitory. f3500. eon oft or 7:00
p.m. 114-216-131 IS.

76

Q

lil HlghUy Buolnesa Report
llll ID \12l CBS Nowo
1D 1!D WKIIP In Cincinnati
llll Showllz Today

446-0294.

Clll., ....... , . .

"''ll:Si

114-992-2770.

t8000. Will

............... for .....
1.180 - - :10 - I
"""""· 011114-441-1413.

II. - h ol ...

(l) Ill Cll ABC Newa
(!) Body Electric

t983 Ofdoloooblo Cololo. Goad
·. Loodod. CoR 814-114124411
.

p.-ilollrodo. 814-11415000 Ford dl•tl treator with .._
111FordDyno .... _ _ lng 3003.
mtcHna. Ford bel« • h• ,...
'3815. 220 AC tl•ol ,_.,. 1884 C,.,., 810. VI. 5 , . c ..... pull. •ueo. 1800 oo1o1 PS. P8, Ill', ntiN'
35.000
Round bolor. •2175. NH her mil•. hcellent aendldon.
ueoo. 304-773-11189.
bind. tltl. Own• wl
Coli 114-ZII-1822.
1818 Cougor L8. I 01"1.. lullv
ONv.- aeo ln ... .,doonl. lvo equipped. low mNoogo. Coli
- · .,900. Col 814-44. 814-11112-2712.
00011.
1180 Mercwry Muqull
BoougloM Nloo. cl.., cor. Fool
PGWM'· E..U• aancll:lon 302
VI . .,818. lt4-1192-11711.

• w- 0171 ••rlll:a

·
- Col 114&gt;881-4140 •
441-1711.

/j\ Sport•Look

Mor• AI in good ODn.lan. Clll

w/roof

-·-...-.-.-

Rent

Boats and
Motors for Sale :·

POWM' window• • doon. One

-

=t-:''*
........ .,._,
111111 n fDr ..a1....,.

-

I

8t

al• 1100. ChloryL
·- - 73
W_
· pluo.
Guido loor(111-_
_. _ , _
.._4_
•D_._
101-11?- 1·10111.
1171 _,.. CJ.e. -·
1178 01&amp; - · .. """'"' .....
Col 1140nt - · boot. • • · ,._ 441-&lt;1141.

CWcw•ullll lal w/lmll lluU-

z b e · - 1.. 711. ••
... dH.IIood. 304-~IIM.
Moblollame onIll
C l - - 304-1171-2417 or
1111• 8:00PM 171-2011.

48

1178 Ford LTO. Col 814-4467704.

Fruit
Vegetables

OOVERNMINT IIIZID wlol-

... h ..-

lti,,M81onWV.

....... •280 ... -

~Nio,...

nol•·

58

71

..
AIIOTrill.- AI-CAll oft• :ID.m. 304-773-

·- -

get 1halr parents to listen and
understand.
lil Square One TV
ID I!D Happy Doyo
® Facto of Lilli
I!Jl She·Aa
C!!l American Mogazine
6:051ll Allee
6:30 0 (}) llll NBC Nightly NIWI

SORR'( MA'AM .. I SOUND
L1 KE 't'OUR FATHER OR
SOMETHIING. DON'T I

·-·aot-1887....,do01 15'1"".
1917 Moroory35 '-» motorwlh
- l r l m ..diUIDallnjiCIIol\
1887 M01111ry Trollng motor,
1117 Shoreline trllll• pk.l1

In g.

wet•.

Wll'lt MW moble horne for hltf
ptl..l 1172 Hll.,...._ 1:z.eo.
tatol """· llr oond. Coli 114446-0178. 11210.

1111 Chwy Molll&gt;u Btotlon
'l!logon. 92.000
AC. PS.
... - . allor. Coli 114-44114430.

Sale

"'"*""-"-

'*'' --

.••oiOQ.

eon 1111.- 1:30.

130·
king II• wet.-bed for • • with
Wllv..... m.nreu. Nftl' condi-

1878 Ch.,., lmpolo 380. V-8,
n.., llroo. 78.000 noloo. Aoldng
eon 114--4041.

1983Aooollll00().8 , 4 dr: .....o..
CIH., . .n roof, Spod. . oond.
t3.878. OoH 114-2116-11017d..,L 246-1111-0VMingo.

thM: herd Mrnld Cllh.

,.,QOd.

-Ired.

IIIUIIlol KlmboiiC-pl.,o,
like new. allk fln-fah. no
ICfltChM, phone 304-171·

IIVIIO'I Utile lt0&lt;1. Orlglnol P.
J Oddl•ndEndllhoJI' now open
ot 113 N. Bocond, Mlddl_..
Uood lumlturo. -~ ool'tort ltem1 end otorill• Ju'*,
Come In end btow• end rMt
hello toJao.,dPollv.Wlloolon
co-mont. Lato of -oriel.
luy-8oll-Troclo. I f - don"t hove
h. we wltl lnd tt. •d _,. you

'*

In

_...,.,lilrloi.IN~

1920't Wllnut bedroom Ht.
••eo. Cotl ollor7p.m. 814-9923188.

-L

~

lnd..,kllol gulor 1-ono. bo-

with glou - . 2 brlok

:k':"id.':":

Mo--

•uu

"-'"" tl50. Wood or co .. 1tov11

lnc:tl pod .,.71¥&lt;1 wMh-.
Hoopllol on AI. 180. A•lllllo t."t~ :.~~
Mollatwn t: ..-niture
Colt 114-3811-8890.
0820.
Mlrc:tl 1. 1350 por -.,h. II oil or 7 PM.
~'"-nl
o ·.vnw mutt .... e
old lntwl.t:.t. CAlf 814-216-1311
E011• 1111n1oo. n o - w~h
Modorn.l l l - 1 IR. Iurnolhod
tr&gt;!-.oL 3 bedroom. 2 bol ho.
IJoclooonlllllor 7p.m.
122VI.,dSir_,
Pldlvr•· Aloo ....,. - ··eon
PINnt PI_,., W.V•.
opl • • 2 IR. 111 unlu~
lwge t.mly tOOm. A• eleolrlc.
Pomw.... 2 be*oarn houoo. nllhod
814-4411-8087.
opt. Rot. • dop. COM
304-1711-11498
Meny at.J'III. 4 ICI'• dole to
--.
IOWOO oilS!. Ro. 7. Col Tlmlhlo Mulborry Avo. Kllclo., with 114-446-1071.
Sl.-n-kltt•l. I•IIPolnL taO
fDr appolnt....nt to .... . 8141 IIOW.,drllfrl..-•or.... ttbll•
Up,_ Alv• Roed
'""'· Coli 814-379-2111
Edre
nloe
21R
.
EJIDIII.
toc:.tion.
Oitllpal1,
Ohio
992-1874 or (5141 742-2 ID.
::"~~=
""""'' p•klng. Equipped kit- 114-44&amp;-7444.
AKC Rog. 'oooonlhold. ood. mole
Good hou• for Mle In beit worklngU.ttlorrellredc:ouple. chen. Ltundty 100m. No plla.
Chow Chow puppy. ••eo. Col
~- fA 111 •-d •
No . . . •221 manth •d O.ooM. Coli 114-4411-1117.
IMto ooctlonol ooooolo • . 114-379-2741.
neighbor~•
- · v 100· d•ool. I14-H2-I-• -.,
one .,.., WfY good cond.
Prlc.,oduaool UOOO. Mather In
-• A• Home lftd nNd to ..... lp.m.,
llr..._ Mlddl_.. Ohio. 304-112-:M32.
Ragb:lci4d Cack~rlp•ltl pupa.
2 - .... lurnlohocl•"""*"R c' Nied blue point Item . .
C""ln O'Dell. 11 4- 7 42- 2004 2 bectoomhouoo*doroo. 11&gt; utllll•
peld. Nf•~noe~. Phon.
•II• 8:00p.m.
b•ho. g•lilo. e175. oo pot 304-112·2518.
Cuh. No ch-. Col
814-112·2107.
· d 1 t 0110 ha
month. HomM!IId Roooolly, 30463
Antiques
d
1
!lpoclouo .. • "
. ..
8711-5540 or 304-112-240•
Now - l n t opplcollono kH'
~
3000 oq. ft.. 3 - - 3
RogloiWod 1 - o puppleo. MO.
2 bedroom ..,..,,_.._ fully
Colt 114-H2-2712.
bllt.. ~Wing room. dllwlng room.- 201 Popl•. 2 br "" t.emlnt. c•piii.S. IPPIIftOie, 'Mt• Wtd
ftmlv room.. , . rOIMII,. ful *200 monch. 30~111-3812 lrooh plolcupo pnrotlciod. Molnt• 8uy or Soli. Rlvorlno Aoollqu.._
bll ernent. 2
prege. on ·
1124 E. Moln llroot. Pomeroy.
Floh T~t~lc. 2413 Jockoon A...
approx. 1 aae. In Po.m•O¥· CIM _•ft--•_•_:30~
. - - - - - - ........ llvlnt ..... to !hop- Hou,.: M,T,W 10..m, 1D lp.m ., Point PI_,_ 304-1175-2083,
114-742·3092.
3-oomhouoo.,.hlnwolloln• marelnforiNtktn
ping. -ko Md elll
- 304-112· · For loondlo¥ 1 to &amp;p.m. 114-19210 IIIIN114&gt; '14.H.,d 101111
2521.
co~e43.21.
2 t.•oom. full"-ement. 2 e• dlltln~» Mirth Paint •d tllfl 3711. E.O.H.
g•eo• 2 lot1. Wll 1 e1 on '-nd lctloot. lnqure 1700 Jeff .....
2 -oom Atrto. kH' ..-.
contf'Kt or rent. Cell 81~992·
Blvd. Point Pl. .lftt. W.Va.
C.p-. NlconttlnQ. U.ndry 54 Misc. Merchandise
7791.
3 - - lui ........... ,....... ........ Clll 1144yo• old 24o55doublowldoo. 1 ~~t loCIIIol\ e ml• north 982-3711. EO H.
57
AelnbOw Vea~um Clelftw rune
Muaical
Pl. .w. 304-87&amp;-1078.
1 a-a Wilt.- well, ~r"~c.~edonCo.
like new wJth •ttachment•
Groclouo
lvlnf.
1
Md
2
bodInstruments
4
Ad. 35. ApprOK. ml• from 4 bldroom houN l'tolnt Pl ... room ..,_,...... , It VII ... .,.9.00 oooh "' ••Redne. If krt..-wtaf clll 8 14- nnt. 2 b1th1, b1aement, - o r ond A"'oroldlo Aport·
304-1711-4418.
'330.00 pot moooth. HomMiood menta In Mld•epon. From
94&amp;.21 18.
Point Pluo Plllooburglo Polnto lot · Curr'- Spin• pl.,o. E -.
0182. Coli 114-HZ· 77117.
Reilly, 304-175-5540.
4 bedroom bridl.
oft your pointing n -. Ho- , ;'~.Coiii14-441-07HIIII•
32&gt;&lt;30 g.-liiL 2 ktt-.. 3
2 bedroom opt, In Mlddlopoo1. m - - . co...ctor or piMt
blthl. tr• o• aounty
,,,. por month. cloDoolt ,. mlllutwnenae. Oom.at u1 for ,
•mill -=reeve or 110 ecre. 42 Mobile Home•
Prl.. Ouoto. Point Pklo. 2411 Kimbell pl.,., !..t. '"'"d.
qulrod. No p«o. Doy e14-H2·
30 4-41. 1 175.
Jo'*- Avo. 1:1041 175-4084.
• 1100 F~on. Coli 114&gt;441for Rent
2311...- g 814-. .2-2808.
3 bectoom ton""- prl..ot 80"
.,tro nlao.
AddlOne bedr- opt. lot ...,
I'
tlol\ ""• I:OO .,d....,_ Mco21R.moblohomolot...,, M1ddlopoo1. e180 , . moooth
011
llol. • ""'·
CAll 114-1112SNAFU.., by Bl"'lce Beattie
Coli 30·1-7438.
:::::•::•:::::r:::::::::::::::-=!_2 81+-08t71ftor 2 PM.
1141 71o.m.-4p.m.'or 114-1148,..
~
2217oolt•llp.m.
Hol1r"*kmoblo-l'rlvoto 1;,;:::;::::::;:;:::;::;==
32 Mobile Homes
lot. Aclu~l only. No peb. Col. 1[
for Sale
&amp;14&gt;117-7743.
45 Fumlahed Rooms

C: 44.44"fti

ln--·ments

M1ytag part•ble dryer 1nd

F•nttuN lnd Clrpet

Furnlohld opt.· 1 IR . 243
38

~:;=::;;;:::;:::;:==:,-;.~~~;:~~;;::=1
I 57
Musical
71 Auto's For Sale

K•nmore

STOP AND CHECK OUR PRICES

totll llec:trlc. rMd\ ttyle horM.
c•p•ed throughuut. 1 Hrl
f1n oed In bKtc y1rd with deck
Loc•ed 7 ml• from Hair•

75

1 2&gt;&lt;24 4 II. dooP ...1 pool,
ev-,tlllng Included. - . wecum, n.w
Ito- • aaver.
noo. Coli 114--1422.

worn.

Learn what teens can do t o

TI-\AT FELLOW '&lt;OU LEFT
W ITH ... DO WE KNOW
A60VT HIM"'

1173 -or Dovldlon &amp;pcoit ..
•... t1100: 114-742-2241. .

gln.....

Nwer betn

OUR GAME LAST WEEK .. AND
I SAW 't'OU GET INTO THAT
OTHER CM AND LEAVE ..

· 1981 8uzulol700 1 - . Loto
of c:flr-. .,800. Coli 114446-3083.
.

mowing mochlno. 8ooro LT 10
lor ...... Coli &amp;1 4-3792730.
.

7434.

'1'E5. MAAM, I SAW 'iOU AT

317-0397.

Jofl
446-8077.
-·Limited
""
op'....
-· go.
814-

•110. MEtr
orbax.,...ng~
lui or twin •11. flrm •78. ltld
'88. ou- •280 • up.
King *380. 4 dr-cloMI 188.
Gun Clbln• 1. 1 • 10 ·gun.
loby men- U5 • •41.
lid !rono• e20, UO • ICing
trorno •80. - . . - · " '
bedroam
mM:.e e~~tNn•a.
heedbo..:l1 •30 lind up to til.

•uh•.

mo. OoU 304-875-5104 or
175-5388.

•

Itt

cln•.

3 8R . hou •· dllluae, AC. •380•

·

Tractor Pulling Association
(!) The Powor of Choice

whoolor. Coli 814-387· 7897 or

*215andupto~m~~&gt;t':

~ complet

•ppllctncel. C•ll 814·448·
7172. Hourt 9-1.

Efffcl~nC¥ IIPC-·1 man. MobMe
hum. Wow t:Mn overlooldng

4--

e- pooo~o ..,_,., .4 ft . ..._

I]) Trac1or Pull National

1987 Hondo 250 4 Tr• 4

0

..dlo Muolc. 114-446-0117,

I'ICKENS USED AJANITURE
158 Kre f•m. 3 811 . hou• with · BUIJTlAJL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET ~ ..ICEI AT JACK· Camp ...• hou•hold furnlth·
borl\ big ohop•. 1 - · lainlng SON
ESTATES. 538 Joclooon ' lngo. J&gt;miiO&gt;Jorrlcho. 304-8711wllh IIMII 3 BR . hou•. New
Rkolr&lt;&gt;&lt;n*IIJomo.'l!lolkta 1450, 114-381 · 9773.
PwlrktL No .. nd.y C.l1 Pl. .t.
........ t71.000. fNaotleble. 8 14-379-2178.
ohop .,d
ovMioogo. _ _ _ _ __
25&amp;8
E.Q.H."""'"'· 114-4&lt;&amp;8- --:-.;_
CAll Ron It 814-Hll-11172.
VIAe Furrollowo. AooiiM31&gt; A. Good l•m lond with 850
Tw• Townhou• apertrnent• 2
()p• DeNy I AM-I PM
lb. toblcao b.., Poaelble home
8Ao., 1 I&gt; b.. hi. CA.. dlo·
Sund*' 12 Noo,_l PM
.Mo. n.ooo. Clll 114-837·
hwoohor, dlo-'• prlwto .,.
114--3151
1081 oil or 5 PM ..
doold p.,lo. pool, plor-ood. e pc. wood living room . , _
w.w: •• .wet', • ttllh Included. . , . ,_Alllofe"•• dlllrl'm•lled
Sl..,lng 01 • 299 per mo. Col down. I&gt; price mOll- oolo.
35
Lots
&amp;
Acreage
31 Homes for Sale
114-387·7880.
Hoovv duly bunk bode with
l&gt;oddlng-U29. Froo ......,...
v.,., •nracttve bridl4bedroom. O.J. I'Wiht Rd.- 2 wooded Downtuwn 1 8R, • · n.,tv Ht with purah•• of a.uln
7 pc. wood
2 b•h. t ...lty room with ttr• building loto. ApptOK. 2 ..,. redeoorlted, c•pet. compleie ~m
pl-. kH'mol dining. '-ge living ••ch. Clll 814-24S.91815eftw kltch1n, AC. Perking. Adultt. No po.t ter bedroom •ult••749. 7
petl. Dlpo.lt. C.ll 114·441-pc. cauntrv dlnnette set (lnroom. 30 ft. cullom
ldtchen
0139 .
.
cloodoo hutch I· .550.
cobin.._ ook woodwoot&lt;. 'flnloh 5:30PM .
bllerntnt. 2 c• g•-a&amp; l.,el
l•diCIIPed tot. 4 ml• from Trolorlollor..., inMidll.an. SHADY LAWN APTII- 721 All oppll.,,.. hove 30 doyo
O.ooM roquood. C.II114-H2- Sooond A•. Furnlohod lfllcl.,. a...,.,,•. TRADE-IN8 • loyo·
Holzer Hospttll off Rt. 3&amp;-. 78113.
cl• ltllrtlng • t171 • rno. vnye w.lcomlt. Lote of n_,
Pbrtwbroolc lubdllril!lon. C.l
inducing Mt• • _......_ MTiwla. AI. 141 Cent~n..-y. '.4
514-44.4189.
t...d w~h good bldg. or mollllo Sinale eduth ontv. Clll lf4- mle on Uncoln Pike.
oM• bot- R1. 87 •
4411'4107 .. 446-2102.
Delux• 3 BR . hau• for •Ia homo
Ref on County Ad. 10. 1
Oood u..d color t .v's for •1•.
Own• fi".nce. C.l 30.._.175- Tribble
eere •8.1500. 00. 3 -•en• ... -doled 1 IR . opt. Coli 814-441-1149.
5104t1o.ooo.oo. a •Cr•• App~ lur,.hld. ldool_,_ 1
GOVERNMENT HOMESI From • 1&amp;,000,00, po11jble DW'IW bloc* from dawneown. C::.ll Very good furntture-Couc:h. cof..
f • •bit. end t8bfe1, curk), etc.
t1 . 00 (U Aep..,. Faredoa~n~. fl.,clng. noo.oo - ·· 10 114-448-4139.
ecr• rov-ltl•. MI,OOO.OO.
Coli &amp;14-446-1778.
R~poa. , Tu Dtlinquent PfOI*Countv
_.,..
wolllllo.
3042 lA . . ... • • pkoolo corpot. .
1111. NOW SELLING ·THIS 416-1875.
nowr.Jnt, ullltl• ..rtllfty peld. · Kenmore HWtna mi!Chlne wtlh
AA EAI Col fAolJndolllol, 1315-733-eoM, Eat. G2732A. Ono hoi! oc:rolot Comp Conlor, •17 • mo. Coli 304-176-1104 llloclo.....,. • aorrylng caoo, 1
yr. old• . . - 5 yr. -·· noo.
FOR CURRENT UST1N081
Rouoh Forrol Rood. 304-117~ 11a.uee. 175-7738.
CarOM 17 K•otene hNter,
ovololllo. HUO 000&gt; •80. Coli 114-441-8452.
5 roome • bath.. Corn• of 7111 '"" 5:00.
Coptod. Coli 304-175-11104.
Ch•horn • Sm~herL *15.000.
Uood •pll.,-. Woohoro, dry·
Coli 114-446-0322.
FurMhed 2. 3, or 4 roo.,. •
..... tilnga. IWfrlgeratOI'I, rnlcro-Rentals
t.th. CIM1. Adutt1 antv. No ~· OYWII. Ken' 1 Appll. .ce.
lridt &amp; fram• 7 roonw- 4 BR.
polo, Ref. • dop. ooqulrool. C.U
217 E. 2nd St.. IIOmoroy.
CA. 2
1•11e. 2
Mid
l14-44a.1519.
814-H2-5331 or 114·985t40"1. Col 114-446-8780.
3511.
41 Homee for Rent

,;,.,,
" - c9/ 10 -o. _.,. 111111. 1 mL
aH Story1 Run Rd. c.• 81 ~

0

Wood tlble w-1 cheln t21S to
0715. Dnll 0100 up to t371.
HutchM .400 •d up. Bunk

'TUrn kw op.Rktn. Downtown
lar ll'ld lounge With 22 lilt
2 two bedroom upitlfrl
1Pa1mentl. Ownw Ml DChlr

2 ltory. I roomt • bMh. Nr.i
School dtot.

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11 · pu.....
3118 Dirt ...... Coli

FRY U PI

em ro a Cll llll • \12l
llll Newe

1113 Hondo Sh- 800. Juot
tuned upl.,4eo. Coll114-4411118•fi•IPM.

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priced from

I

6 :00 ()) Bonanze: The Lo•t
Epiaodea The Prisoners

FO&lt; Solo : Concr- Md Pl.,lc
ooptlc l.,ko. AJ oliN. RON
EVANS ENTERPRIIEI. Jook·
•on. Ohio. 1-800-137-11121.

For Sol .. llo«lond • VIP 'l!lorld
Rnort. Membership te~••·
Good dlool. Ooodhlldnv-llohlng.
• oomplng orluot
Coli
114-441-8412.

20 •

EVENING

Flr-ood to&lt; ooleooplil hor~
wood. Plolcup well. - - 130. Col 114-44&amp;41a2.

0000 UIED .APPUANCEI
w
....... ""'"'· rolrlgorotoro.
range1. 8kagge Appllenc••·
Upper River Rd. booldl Stone
Croot Motel. 114-44&amp;739S.

laf• 1nd

MON., MARCH

WOlD
GAM I

Motorcycles

fit• • ..,.....,. .......ft •
ftn.,olng Ml""o. Col 24 hro..
1-1100-M&amp;-0841.

'I!IHITE"S METAL DETECTORS
RonAIIoon.1210-A• .•
Clolllpollo, Ohio. 114· 448·
4338.

Vlll81f Furniture

Apartment
for Rent

lrlll•lplod tho offering.

c•

...~--··"*•·

-loll-fill-paola.

LAYNE"S FURNITURE

GREEN!"

•

. 74

Hugo 11 by 2411. Mlm - · 4
II. doop ... dudN - .

uNCI IPPII.,._. Mid TV .....
Op.-1 8AM to
Mon thn.t
Sot. '114-446-1818. 127 3fd.
Aw. Goltlpollo. OH.

•u.

Television
Viewing

Ullt:a 1Im

304-171~

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER
rrA)1{ ~

8t 4 W.O.

Household. Good•

4073.

15

Vans

LAFF-A-DAY

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mending. phone

Monday, March 20, 1989

Monday, March 20, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Y......Ut'• C.W.tiNI•ote: I'M LIVING SO FAR
' BEYOND MY INCOME THAT WE MAY ALMOST BE
SAID TO BE LIVING APART. - E.E. CUMMINGS
- I

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-12 The Daily Sentinel

....--Local .news briefs...- continued from page 1
the owner of one of the cabins. The other two properties are
believed to have changed hands recently.
Investigation Is continuing and Sheriff Soulsby asks anyone.
who may have Information on the cases to contact Ills office
right away. Any Information will be kept confidential. Soulsby
says.

EMS has eight weekerul

ool~

Meigs County Emergency· Medical Services reports eight
calls over the weekend; five Saturday and three Sunday.
Saturday at 5: 38 a.m., Middleport to Batley Run Road for Guy
Bush who was dead on arrival; Pomeroy at 7:28 a .m. to
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Nursing (;enter for Emma Hayman to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2:49 p.m. to Page
Street for .S arah McKinney to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
later transported to St. Joseph's Hospital; Rutland.at 8:54a.m.
to Meigs Mine No. 1 for Robert O'Conner to Holzer Medical
Center; Tuppers Plains at 10:40 p.m. to the Arbaugh! Addition
for Gart Soble to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 8: 45a.m., Pomeroy to Sand Ridge Road for Charles
McElroy to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy EMS and
fire department at 11:02 a.m. to an auto accident on State Route
681 West; Cindy Hayes and Tom Stevens were taken from the
scene to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 12 noon to
Bailey Run Road for Velsla Roush to Holzer Medical Center.

---Announcements,--Trustell!l to meet
.
Salem Townshlp .Trustees will ·
meet Friday, '9: 30 a.m ., at the
fire house, for the regular March
meeting.
Good Frlllay service
The Long Bottom-Reedsville
Community Good Friday Service
will be held at the Long Bottom
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome. ,
Cantata Friday
Rutland Church of the Naza·
re11e wlll present the cantata,
''His Last Days," on Friday at 7
p.m.
Plan Sunrise Service
The . joint Reedsv!lle-Long
Bottom Easter Sunrise Service
will be held at the Reedsv!lle
Methodist Church at 6:30 a.m.
Everyone welcome.
Communion service
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel,
State Route 684, will have a
special foot washing and com·
munlon service on Thursday at
7:30p.m. A weekend revival with
Rev. Wllllam Cantleberry wlll be
held Friday through Sunday
evenings. Easter sunrise serVIce
at the church will be held at 6
a.m .. Paster David Farrell In·
viles the public to attend the
meetings.
Special board meeting
A special meeting of Southern
Local Board of Education wlll be
held Wednesday, 7 p.m .• In the
high school cafeteria.
Services planned
Sent!ces wUI be held 7:30p.m.,
Wednesday through Saturday, at
Bethlehem Baptist ·. Church,
Great Bend. Pastor Earl Shuler
welcomes everyone . .
Softball touraey slated
A men's softball tournament
for eight teams will be held Aprll
8·9 In Reedsvllle. Cost is $70 and
two softballs. 15 tee shirts will be
awarded for first place; 15 hats
for second place;. and a sponsor
trophy lor third place, wlll be

awarded. For InformatiOn, call
378·6406 .•
Plan egg hunt
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club Is sponsoring ·Its annual
Easter Egg Hunt on Sunday, at 2
p.m.. at Hartinger Park In
Middleport.
Revival scheduled
Middleport Church ofthe Naza·
rene will be In revival Tuesday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. each
evening, with Rev. Andy Grimes.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:311 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis&amp;. l,oewi
Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T .. :................. ......... ..... 32
Ashland 011 ........................ 40%
Bob Evans ................... .... ... l5~
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co .................. 18%
Federal Mogul... ....... .......... 51~
Goodyeaf T&amp;R .................. .46~
Heck's ............... .................. 'n
Key Centurion ..................... 13
Lands' Erid ...........,. .............. 32
Limited Inc ........................29%
Multimedia Inc ............ .. ..... 90~
Rax Restaurants ...... ............ 2'j4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15'n
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8%
Wendy's Inti ....... :................ 6%
Worthington Ind .... .. ........... 21%

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions -Emma
Hayman, Pomeroy; Mary Carr,
Coojvllle; Genevieve Meinhart,
Pomeroy; Tina Romine, Ru·
Uand; Tim Kaurr, Middleport.
Saturday discharges -None.
Sunday admissions - Brenda
Templeton. Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - Charles
Napper. Mar ada Ash.

____ Area deaths _ __
Mlln'in Little
Marvin Gus Little, 62, of 212
South Fifth Ave., Middleport,
died Saturday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital In Point Pleasant,
W.Va., following an extended
Illness.
Mr. Little was born Sept. 8,1926
In Cheshire. a son oft he late Vern
and Glenna Frazier Little. He
was retired from the Foote
Mineral Company and was aU .S.
Army veteran of World· War II.
Survivors Include his wife,
Juanita Little, Middleport; a
daughter and son·ln·law, Vernon
· and Sheryl Little, Middleport; a
daughter and son-ln·law, Mar·
garet and Johnny Endicott: Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; a stepson,
Robert Sayre, Milford; five
grandchlldren; three step grand·
children; one brother, Sid Little.
Middleport: six sisters, Dorothy
Little of Columbus, Geneva Wise,
Kathleen Clonch, Eulonda Ha·
ley, VIvian Phillips and Delores
Tyree. all of Middleport; and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to hls parents, Mr.
Lit tie was preceded In death by
three brothers, Don. James and
Sterling Little; and his first wife,
Betty Little.
Services will be Wednesday, 1
p.m .. at Ewing Funeral Home,
with Rev. Alan Blackwood offl·
elating. Burial will" be In River·
view Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.

Elwin E. Kemper ·
Elwin . E. Kemper, 60, Blain
Highway, Waverly, died March 3
In Medical Center Hospital, 'Chll·
llcothe, following a brief Illness.
Born on Aug. 6, 1928 near
Salem Center, he was the son of
Glen M. and Doris M. Butcher
Kemper. On April 28, 1948 he
married the former Annabel
Ward of Langsville, who
survives.
Also surviving are hls mother,
Chillicothe, sons and daughters·
ln·law, Danny E. and Shirley
Kemper and Michael A. and
Teressa Kemper, all of Waverly,
and a son, Scott L. Kemper, at
home; six grandchlldren, Toby,
Noah, Tracey, Kristina, and
Ashley. allot Waverly, and Lade
Jo, Chllllcothe, a twin sister.
Mrs. John (Emagene) Conger,
Lebanon; a brother-In-law and
sister-In-law. James and Donna
Ward. Chllllcothe; a niece and
two nephe,ws.
Kemper was an employee of
the Mead Corporal ion and a
member of United Paperworkers
Local 731.
Funeral services were held on '
March 7 at the Ware Funeral
Home with the Rev. Amel
Hughes officiating. Burial was In
Floral Hllls Memory Gardens.

::::::_

Dr. Charles Jividen
Memorial services for Dr.
Charles Jividen, 67, of Athens,
formerly of Meigs County, wlll be
held Thursday at 1: 30 p.m. at the
Athens First United Methodist
Chu,rch.
Burial of the cremains will be
at Riverview Cef!:.etery,
Middleport.
Dr. Jividen, son of the late Clark
and Lllllan G. Jividen of Meigs
County.. died on Jan. 19 at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital In
Athens following an extended
lllness. He had been a practicing
physician In Athens since 1949.

~

( ~ &gt;,, llld

Monday, March 20, 1989

Weather

Boster's bill approved. by committee
COLUMBUS - A blll spon· '
sored by State Rep. Jolynn
Boster (D-Galllpolls) to assist In
funding the construction of publie wastewater treatment faclli·
ties was approved by the House
Energy and Environment Com·
mlttee'Iast week. The blll, House
Bill 267, was voted out of
committee unanimously.
"House Blll 267 creates the
Ohio Water Pollution Control
Loan Fund, to provide financial
assistance to communities for
the construction of public sewers ·
and wastewater treatment,"
Boster noted after the committee
action. "Over the next six years,
the fund will receive a total of
about $562 million In state and
federal money."
The blll was amended by the
committee, to require the Ohio
EPA (who would administer the
loan fund) to make atleast 25% of
the loans In the second year of the
program available for refinancIng projects which have already
been started or completed. A
second · amendment adopted by
the committee requires the EPA
to set aside a portion of the
funding In each year for lowInterest loans to economically

which may be as low as two
percent, are vital to our rural
communities that do not have the
local resources to finance these
projects on their own," Boster
added.
The bill now will go to the floor
of the House, where a vote Is
expected after the legislature's
spring recess .

distressed communities.
"The changes made by 'the
committee may help make the
program especially beneficial to
Southeast Ohio communities. Cit·
lesllkeAthens,whohavealready
made the effort to comply with
federal clean water mandates,
will not be shut out of the
program. Low Interest loans,

Ohio Lottery

Rose has
no comment
•
•
on mquu-y

South Central Ohio
Tonight. rain continuing. Low
35 to 40. Wind becoming northw·
est at 10 to 20 mph and gusty. The
chance of rain Is 100 percent.
Tuesday, variable cloudiness
with a 50 percent chance or
flurries . High around 40.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thurs·
day, and a chance ofralnFriday .
Highs will be 30 to 40 Wednesday.

Pick3
328

.Pick4
6530

Page4

RITE AID PHARMACISTS

•

•

I'RESCIIIniDIS ANNUALLY
LET US PRICE YOUR NEXT I'RESCRII'TION -

Vot.38, No.22D

Council, historic group
.
agree on two.proJects

•iiiil

..
\

AFRII
IIASAL SPRAY
11.5 oz.

fXT1IA.S1BEIItl

LISTER/IE
ANTISEI'TIC
32 oz.

Consumer Price 1ndex up
slightly during February

TYUNOL CAI'LEJS
ttiD'$

79
DR.SCHDI.L'S
AIR·PIUO
INSOLES

ARRID

AMTI-flERSI'IIIAITI

DEIIDORAIT
40Z.

IMIR

WASHINGTON (UP!) - lnfla·
tlon at the consumer level
increa~ed 0.4 percent in Febru·
ary, the government said Tues·
day. a pace that was uncomfortably high bu 1 not as alarming as
wholesale priCe hikes In 1989.
The 0.4 percent Increase In the
Consumer Price Index followed a
0.6 percent hike in January . The
Labor Department said declines
In apparel prices and smaller
gains in prices for food , tobacco,
entertainment and energy ac·
counted for the moderation in
inflation last month.
Most economic forecasters had
expected a February consumer
price jump of at least 0.5 percent ,
with some saying It could go as
high as 0.8 percen I.
On an annual basis, consumer
prices rose 5.1 perceo_t In Febru·
ary and 6.1 percent in the first
two months of 1989, according to
the department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Many main·
stream economists predict lnfla·
tlon will Increase to around 5.5
percent in 1989. compared with
4.4 percent In 1988.
The department's Producer
Price Index, which measures
Inflation at the wholesale level,
has increased by a rate of 12.6

TUMS
AIITACID

JJBLETS
161'8

19·

Attends supper

•

PADS
«&lt;'S

PDLIDEIIT
DENTURE
CLEANSER
JJBU7S

DES/Till
DIAPER RASH
OINTMENT
4 oz.

tlf'S

NOUEMA
SHAVE

CIIEAM
11 oz.

coca cau .-....:rs
AT RITE Am

U'IICII

1Z OZ. CANS

69 ·

may be obtained by con·

!acting lite Commission.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito,

HERR'S

POPCORN

COLUMBUS- The Ohio Gen·
, era! Assembly is pre par lng for
another battle qver ridding,Ohio
highways of drunken drivers.
Legislation has been lntro·
duced in both the House and
Senate cracking down on first
and repeat offenders of driving
while intoxicated.
The Senate blll, sponsored by
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
allows a driver's llcense to be
lifted Immediately upon !allure
of a breath test on the highway .
The House bill, proposed by Rep.
Marc Guthrie, D-Newark, ex·
pands the fines and license
suspensions and limits occupa·
tiona! driving privileges for those
convicted of DWI.

79&lt;

HEAP Funding still available

,...,,, Pr/c. '"' ~••sit """" rrplrfd by /1Jt.

Funding Is still avai Ia ble for the Emergency HEAP program
and applications continue to be accepted through April14 when
the winter heating season ends.
The healing season began Oct. 31 and assistance from the
program Is limited to once per healing season.
Emergency HEAP provides heat-related assistance to
households that have had utillties disconnected, face the treat of
disconnection, or have 10 days or less supply of bulk fuel. The
. program 'allows a one·tlme payment of up to $200 per hearing
season io restore or retain heat for eligible households.
Applications are taken at the Meigs Outreach Office, 39350
Union Ave., Pomeroy, the Gallla Outreach Office. 220 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis; and the Community Action Agency Central
Office In Cheshire. Further Information may be obtained by
calling 446.()611 or 367-7341 In Gallla County. and 992·5605 or
992-6629 In Meigs County.

• ,ICES fFFfCTWE IIAIICH II THIIIJ .UIICH II, 1111 • lrf llfSfiiVf THf IIIGHT TO 11/IIHT OUAifTITIES •

.•

RITE

It is the first major assault on
drunken driving since 1983, when
Ohio supposedly enacted one of
the toughestlaws in the nation on
the subject. Within the next two
years, however, lawmakers wa·
tered down a mandatory threeday jail sentence for convicted
drunken drivers by permitting a
judge to send the violator to an
alcohol treatment program.
In 1986, ·the Senate adopted
legislation increasing the penal·
ties for driving while Intoxlcated,
but the House burled the
measure.
Neither the House nor the
Senate will be in session this
week, although the Senate has a
few committee hearings.

,.....-Local news briefs __

4.5 OZ. lAG

EVERYDAY IN
E .EVERY AISLE AT RITE AID!

percent In the first two months of
this year - a pace that has
surprised analysts and stunned
financial markets into sharp
selling sprees.
The bulld-up of. Inflationary
pressure also · has forced the
Federal Reserve Board to push
up Interest rates forcefully lnan
attempt to slow economic expan·
sion, leading to fears the econ·
omy will tumble Into a recession ,
But in February, prices moder··
a ted across a wide range of goods
and services with the notab.Je
exception of shelter costs, which
advanced more rapidly than In
January because of sharp In·
creases in the cost of lodging
while out of town.
All figures were adjusted for .
seasonal variations.
Apparel prices fell 0.2 percent
last month, a decline that reflected end·of·season sales.
Food costs last month rose 0.5
percent compared with 0.7 per·
cent in January, the department
said. Grocery store foods ad·
vanced 0.4 percent in contrast to
0.9 percent in January with most
food groups contributing to the
moderation. Smaller gains In
prices for meats, poultry, fish
and eggs accoun ted for 85 per:

cent of the moderation.
Beef and pork prices -both up
1.2 percent In January- rose 05
percent and 0,4 percent, respec·
lively. Fruit and vegetable pri·
ces rose only 0.1 percent last
month while cereals and bakery
products Increased 0.8 percent,
down from 1 percent In January.
Restaurant meals rose 0.4 per.·
cent while alcohollc beverages
rose 0.4 percent, the department
said.
Shelter costs rose 0.5 percent In
February, up from 0.2 percent In
January. · Homeowners' costs
rose 0.4 percent while renters'
costs and maintenance and re·
pair costs both rose 0.9 percent.
The large hike In renters· costs
resulted largely from a 2.8
percent jump In prices of out-of·
town lodging, the department
said.
Household fuels decllned 0.2
percent as a 0.7 percent decline In
electricity charges offset hikes In
prices of fuel oil and natural gas.
TransportatiOn costs rose 0.6
percent compared With 0.6 per·
cent In January. Gasollne prices
rose 1.7 percent lasi month, up
from 0.9 percent the month
before, the department said.
'

Legislature attacks DWI problem

. . _ EVEIIYDAY 01

LEGAL NOTICE ,

All interested parties will be
given an opporturity to be
heard. Further Information

From left to right are Mary Powell, Dorothy
Amberger, Ann Chapman, Bill Quickel and Frank
Porter ID. Also present · were commission
members Mike Struble and Carson Crow.

COMMS&gt;ION CONCERNED - Members of
Pomeroy's Historic Preservation Q)mlnlsslon
aired concerns over proposed new construction
during Monday night's village council meeting.

also closed all campus activities
to the public for several weeks
and vaccinated all students llv·
lng on campus before spring
break In March.
When outbreaks have occurred
elsewhere, officials have tried to
vaccinate all unvaccinated child·
ren and revaccinate certain
chlldren, such as those originally
vaccinated before 15 months

The Public Utilities Commission ol Ohio has set lor
public hearing Case No.
89-02-EL-EFC, . to review
the fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus Soutltem Power Company. the operation of its
Electric •Fuel ComponeRt
and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 27, 1989, at !he offices of the Pubfic Utilities
Commission, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.

'

.

AtContinued
leastfrom
... page 1

Members of Zion Church of
Christ, State Route 143, Pomeroy, at tended the Central Ohio
Bean Supper at the ~eath Chu reb
of Christ, Heath, Ohio, on March
16. Zion Church of Christ re·
celved three awards of checks for
their favorite missions. The
awards were for (1) the church ·
with the most men and boys In
their size of a congregation; (2)
the church that had never at·
tended before; and (3) the
church traveling the farthest.
Six hundred twenty-eight men
and boys attended the bean
supper. The speaker was Keith
Keeran, president of Kentucky
Christian College, Grayson, Ky.
Music was provided by The
Brothers Quartet.
Zion Church was represented
at the supper by Leo Davidson,
Kenny Grover, Art Hess, Rodney
Howery, Harley Johnson, Adam
Martin, Donnie Martin, Osby
Martin, Bob Purtell, Gene Un·
derwood, Jared Warner, Richard
Warner and John Williams.
An offering of over $3,000 was
given to two new churches In
Marengo and McArthur.

1 Section , 10 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimodiolnc. Nowopopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 21, 1989

Copyrighted 1989

Pomeroy...
Continued from page 1
for driving left of center when her
1985 Ford Escort, which was
heading north, went left of center
In a rlght·hand curve and hit a
southbound 1979 Dodge pickup
truck driven by Harry M. Ca·
rleton. 37, or Coolville.
Two Pomeroy residents were
cited In a car-truck accident
Saturday at 3 p.m. In Chester
Township at the junction or S.R. 7
and C.R. 26.
John E. Foreman. 34, oJ 36391
Flatwoods Rd., .was cited for not
maintaining assured clear distance after hls 1988 Ford Ranger
rear-ended a 1977 Pontiac Bonnevllle driven by Barbara A. Rupe,
29, of 36104 Flatwoods Rd.
Rupe and Foreman stopped at
the junction when Rupe moved
forw,rd and stopped, waiting for
traffic· to pass before crossing
S.R. 7. Foreman drove forward
and struck Rupe's car from
behind.
Rupe was cited fordrlvlng with
an expired license.

Partly cloudy tonight. Cold,
low In mid 20s. Wednesday,
sunny. High In mld 40s.

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
306 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROYI OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

Secretary.

Continued on page 10

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

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy VIllage Councll and
the village's newly formed His·
torte PreservatiOn Commission
have reached an · agreement
regarding two construction projects which are forthcoming In
the village.
Discussion among councll and
commission members took place
at Monday night's regular coun·
ell meeting.
The two projects which have
evoked concern among members
of the Historic Preservation
Commission are a proposed
parking lot for the GTE North
building on West Main Street and
a proposed Bank One drive·
through facility on the former
Meigs Inn property on East
Main. Leading the discussion of
the projects for the His torlc
Preservation Commission was
Frank Porter Ill.
Porter reiterated a letter to
council from the commission,
dated Jan. 10. In this letter,
council was asked to notify GTE
of a new Pomeroy ordinance
which provides guidelines for
construction within the village,
and to request from the telephone
company a copy of plans for the
empty lot that was created when
a home on the property was torn
down.
Porter acknowledged that
pla!IS to raze the home came
prior to the ordinance, but that
proposed construction of the
parking lot Is after the ordinance.
"The commission has no prob·
lem with the parking lot, but It Is
new construction and should
conform with the ordinance,"
Porter said.
Councilman Bruce Reed ques·
tloned whether the ordinance Is
so encompassing that it will have
a negative Impact on any possl·
ble development In Pomeroy .
If the actual des tructlon of the
house had been proposed after
the historic preservation ordl·
nance went Into effect, Porter
said the commission would prob·
ably not have rejected the plans
for demolition, but may have
requested additional time before
destruction took place. In the
·additional time, the commission
could have photographed and
documented the structure. and
salvaged materials which could

Meigs man
arraigned on
three counts

Preliminary statistics for 1988
show there were 733 deaths
related to alcohol, according to
the Ohio Department of Highway
Mark A. Searles, 21, or Pome·
Safety.
roy, was arraigned In Meigs
The department has recom·
County Court Monday afternoon
mended strong counter · on charges of felonious assault,
measures, Including the SO·
called ·,'admini s trative carrying a concealed weapon
and obstruction of official busl·
suspension' • of a driver's license.
· ness. and was remanded to the
Pfeifer, chairman of the Se· custody of Meigs County Sheriff
nate Judiciary Committee, said James M. Soulsby pending
his panel will hear proponent and
hearings.
opponent testimony next week on further
According
to Sheri!! Soulsby,
his blll, which proVIdes for a
Searles was arrested by Chief
pollee officer to lift the llcense of Deputy Jlmmer sOulsby and
a driver automatically If a
Deputy Jeff Miller Mooday
breathalyzer reveals a blood
morning about 9:15 a.m. follow·
alcohol content of 0.10 percent- lng an Incidental the Meigs Local
the legal threshhold for lntoxlca· bus garage In Rutland during
tlon on the highway.
which Searles allegedly pulled a
Currently, an 0.10 reading Is gun on another man.
automatic evidence ofDWI, but a
The department also re·
court must pass sentence. The sponded Monday to a call on
minimum Is three days In jail or Happy Valley Road In Columbia
an alcohol treatment program, a Township when Sam Darst, AI·
$150 to $1,000 fine. a 60·day bany, reported that sometime on
.llcense suspension and $75 to get. Suoday hls logging equipment
the license back.
had been vandalized.
Under Pfeifer's blll, a pollee
During the loves ligation by
officer could suspend the driver's Deputy Mark Boyd two juveniles
license Immediately for one were questioned and admitted to
year.
the vandalism. Restitution Is
•This provision has the ob- being made on the damaged
Vious ·benefit of getting the vehicles.
drunken driver off the street,"
Charles E. Dalley, Reedsville,
said Pfeifer. "People are simply reported that at 6:20 a.m. Man·
fed up with the carnage drunken day he was traveling south on
drivers leave In their path. The . County Road 25 In Salisbury
message this bill sends Is clear:
Township; when a deer jumped
Don't drink and drive."
into the path of his 1989 Ford
Pfeifer's bill Is even tougher on Escort. There was heavy dam·
the second offense. It requires age to the vehicle, the sheriff's
Continued on page 10
department reported.

PLANS APPROVED - At the suggestion of Bill Nease,
Pomeroy Bank One manager, plans lor a new drlve·lhrough
banking laclllty on the fonner Meigs Inn property were approved
Monday night by Pomeroy VIllage Council. If possible, changes
will be made to the existing plans so the drive-through facility will
better tltrhl with Pomeroy's existing historical slruc~ures.
·
have been used In other renova·
tlon projects In the village, he
sal d.
"There's nothing negative in
that at all," said Porter. "The
purpose of the ordinance is not to
restrict any property owner but
to preserve the Integrity of the
village as a whole. Historic
preservation Is a resource to the
community,'' he added. "The
Historic Preservation Commls·
slon wants progress and pride in
the community, but not rampant

destruction and construction."
"I think there has been a
misunderstanding," Interjected
Councll President Larry Weh·
rung. "Council always has the
final say In these matters, no
matter what the recommenda·
tlon of the Historic Preservation
Commission ."
As explained by Porter, even
with construction of a parking
lot there are measures which
can be taken to ensure that the lot
Continued on page 10

Gallia man injured in
SR 7 mishap Monday
The driver, Daniel E. Beaver,
A Gallla County man Is re·
ported In serious but "stable" 19. ESR. Ga!Upolls, was injured.
condition at St. Mary's Hospital, . Beaver was treated at Holzer
Huntington, W.Va., after a two· Medical Center for contusions .
car head-on collision at 7 a.m. He was not admitted to the
Monday on SR 7, 0.1 north of mile hospital.
past 12, near Cheshire.
Troopers said Beaver was
Hollis W. Watson, 41, of Crown headed north when the 1974 GMC
City, suffered a severe head .tanker went off one side the road
Injury and was taken to Holzei: then the other, struck a highway
Medical Center. Watson was marker and broke off a utility
transferred to the Huntington pole, owned by Buckeye Rural
hospital where surgery was Electric. The pole had to be
performed and he·was placed In · replaced. There was no citation.
the Intensive care unit.
No one was Injured In a
The other driver, Rebecca S. three-car accident at :i: 15 p.m.
Butler, 24. of Wakeman, Ohio. Monday on US 35, about one mile
was treated at Holzer Medical west of SR 160.
Center for contusions.
The patrol said Pamela F.
Bennett, 32 , of Gallipolis. stopped
The State Highway Patrol said
to make a left turn. Behind her,
the accident occurred when the Tina M. Garber, 40. Rt. 2, Vinton,
southbound Buller car went left ·stopped behind the Bennett
of center, colliding head on with vehicle.
the northbound Watson vehicle.
A car driven by Teddy Os·
There was heavy damage to both
borne, 40, of Oak Hill , struck the
cars.
back of the Garber car, forcing it
The patrol cited Butler for
Into the back of the Bennett car.
driVIng left of centet.
Da111age was minor to the Ben·
A Guyan Township Volunteer nett car and moderate to the
Fire Department truck was
Garber and Osborne veh icles.
heavily damaged In an accident
The patrol cited Osborne for
at 12: 35 p.m. Monday on SR 218 failure to stop within the assured
clear dls tance.
about three miles south Of SR 7.

Use of military best way
to reduce drug problem
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - An economics professor says
cocaine use In the United States could be reduced U the
govermnent would endorse muttary action to destroy cocaine
manufacturing plants In Colombia.
Julius Gyly"s of the University of Toledo said attacking the
South American facllltles woufd be more effective than the
domestic war on drup because II would cut the supply of
cocaine comlnrlnto the United States.
Gylys told members of the Toledo Downtown Rotary Club
Monday he believes the price of cocaine would soar after the
supply Is cut, making the drug too expensive for most users.
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