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--

f

Ponwoy-Middlaport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Durables. ..

Farmers told...

continued from page 1

February, the department said.
The February declines were
spread widely across most major
Industries, with transportation
orders accounting for a major
share of the downturn. Transportallon orders fell 8.5 percent to
$33 billion with both motor
vehicles and aircraft contrlbutlng to the decline.
Primary metals fell3.3 percent
to $12.7 billion - the largest

decline since a 14.1 percent drop
In January 1988 with the steel
Industry accounting for most of
the decline. Non-olectrlcal rnachinery decreased '2.3 percent to
$21 .9 billion, the department
said.
Within capital goods indus·
tries. ·orders for non-defense
capital goods fell 8.9 percent to
$36.7 biUion.

Continued from page I
fertilizers. They also will get lists
of farmers and research organizations that can supply additional information and answer
questions.
A survey released by The New
Farm eal'ly this year said that
organic and low-Input farmers
list other farmers as their No. 1
so urce of Information

Si.gnup Tuesday

Good Friday services are announced
Good Friday services will be
held at 6:30p.m. at the Mt. Union
Baptist Church located off State
Route 143, two mtles south of

To meet Thursday
Meigs County Alcoholics Anonymous and AI- Anon will meet
Thursday. 7 p.m .. upstairs In the
Community Action building, Second St.. Pomeroy.

Ohio Lottery

Rozelle steps
down from
NFL post

Wednesday, March 22. 1989
The second and final signup
day for the Pomeroy Youth
League Program will be held
Tuesday from 5 to 8 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
The fee Is $11 and for those who
have 110t previously participated
in the program a birth certificate
A window, in computer terminol· . must be presented. The program
ogy, is a portion of a video display Includes everything from T·ball
that
specifies
categories
of through pony league Including all
information.
girls softball teams.
Carpenter. The Easter sunrise
services wlll be held at 6 a.m.
with Sunday School at 9:45a.m.
and the evening service at 6:30
p.m. The Rev. Joe N&lt; Sayre,
Invites the public to participate
In the services.

Pick3

569
Piek4
5082
Super Lotto
4-l 0.16-30-36-39
Kicker 7700970

Page 3

Scattered showers tonight.
Low near 40. Chance of rain 50
percent. Friday. cloudy, showers. High near 60. Chance of
rain 50 percent.

•

Your Friendly Kroger Store
Will Be

Open Easter
Sunday

Vol.39, No.222
Copyrighted 1989

Bam Til Bpm

Kroger -Wishes ·
&amp;
Your Family A Very Joyous

ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY

Each of these advenised items is required to be .
readily available for sale in each Kroger Store.
ucept as spetifically noted in this ad. If we do run
out of an advertised item, we will offer you your
choice ot a comparable item , when available.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Starr

reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which will

entitle you to purchase the advenised item at the
advEtrtised price within 30 days. Only one vendor
coupon will be accepted per item purch~sed .
COPYRI(;HT !989 · T.HE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . MARCH 19. THROUGH
SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1989, IN (JALUPOUS

HERRUD ROYAL CROWN
14-17-LB. AVG.

Whole
Sem~Boneless

Smoked Ham
. ) /~· )_

U.S ..GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF, BONELESS

U.S. GRADE A .10-14-LB. AVG.

Frozen Young
Butterball Turkey

DISCUSS FLOOD PROBLEM - .Flooding on
Shady Cove Road and possible funding sources to
eliminate the flooding were again diSI!ussed
during Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs County

Bottom Round
Roast

Pound

Pound

..

Kellogg's
Frosted Flakes

KROGER

Gallon
RED, RIPE SALAD OR

U"\,-,..,~

Slicing Size
Tomatoes ..... ,.................

lb.

'

KROGER

WASHINGTON (UP!) -In a
final revision that revealed a
more robust economy late last
year than previously reported,
the government said Thursday
that real gross national product
rose 2.4 In the final quarter of
1988.
The 2.4 percent Increase was
0.4· percentage point higher than
reported in two preliminary
estimates ,of growth in the
nation's output of goods and
services. adjusted for inflation.
In dollar terms, the economy
grew by $24 billion from October
through December to $4.33 trillion. The GNP was up 2.5 percent
in the third quarter, according to
the Commerce Department's
Census Bureau .
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
The fourth-quarter revision
was based on larger government
purchases and stronger business
Investment, with the largest
downward revision In net
exports.
Although the 2.4 percent increase in economic growth is still
the smallest hIke since a 1. 4

percent gain in the fourth quarter
of 1986, the greater strength
reflected In the revision could
prove worrisome. The Federal
Reserve Board has been banking
on slower economic growth to
stunt rising Inflationary pressures seen in recent wholesale
and comsumer price figures .
The -GNP fixed weights price
index rose 4.2 percent In the
fourth quarter compared with 5.3
percent in the third. Butthe GNP
report's Implicit price deflator,
another measure of Inflation.
Increased 5.3 percent In late 1988,
up from 4.7 percent In the third
quarter.
Corporate profits after taxes,
another component of the GNP
report, increased 2.8 percent in
the fourth quarter, down from 3.9
percent from July through September, the department said.
The bureau said losses in crop
and livestock production because
of the 1988 summer drought
shaved about 1.1 percentage
point off of the fourth quarter
GNP after taking a 0.5 percen·
tage point bite out of the third
quarter.

Farm output Is expected to
return to normal in the·current
quarter, which should add about
2.5 percentage points to first
quarter economic growth, the
department said.
Personal spending In the fourth
quarter increased $22.4 billion.
Business fixed Investment decreased $3.6 billion while residen,
tial Investment Increased $5
billion.
Net exports of goods and
services fell $11.5 billion. That
included a $8.1 billlon hike In
exports and a $19.5 billion Increase In Imports, the depar tment said.
Federal government purchases Increased $15.4 billion
while state and local government
purchases were up $6.6 billion.
Final sales Increased 3.5 percent to $34.5 billion In the last
three months of 1988, the department said, while business Inventories Increased $29.1 billion, the
department said.
Domestic purchases of goods
and services Increased 3.5 per·
cent or $35.4 billion In the fourth
quarter.

High-definition TV on the Way

,.

'

Commissioners. Taking part In the dlseussion,
from left to right, are Sallsbuty Township Trustee
Nathan Biggs, Shady Cove residents Loretta
Tiemeyer and Debbie Engle, and Commissioners
· Maiming Roush and David Koblentz.

Gross national product up
2.4 % in final quarter of '88

•

Homogenized or
Chocolate Milk

21hz.

NONRETURNABLE BOTILE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

Grade A
Large Eggs ......... ..

Maxwell House
Ground Coffee
36-39-oz. Can

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) High-definition television Is the
wave of the future, and the Public
UtiiiHes Commission of Oh.lo Is
get ling ready for lt.
The PUCO held a seminar
Wednesday with experts on the
new technology, which Involves
the use of satellite and fiber-optic
transmission systems to produce
a picture that co ntalns roughly
five times the detail of a normal
TV picture .
Joel · Engel, . assistant vice

president for applied technology
of Amerltech Services, Schaumburg, Ill., said the high-definition
television screen Is one-third
wider than normal. He said there
are twice the number of horizon·
tal and vertical lines generated
by a conventional cathode ray
tube.
The result Is large- screen
sharpness and color precision
which cannot be obtained when
the color Is " laid over" the
images, as in conventional

television.
Engel said the new technology
will require different cameras;
transmitting equlpment and re-.
ceivers. He said television sels
will be more Uke computers.
Engel said the new technology
results in regulatory problems,
such as broadcasting standards,
the terms and conditions for
constructing systems and offer·
ing service, and whether the
broadcasting must be compatl·
ble with existing receivers.

Easter hijack threat warning issued
by ~ederal Aviation Administration

2-Ltr.
t2-PAK 12-0Z. CANS

r

.. .

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Residents told money
for· grants is "limited'

Re-Open Monday And
Resume Normal Hours

.

2 Sections. 1 6 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 23, 1989

LONDON (UP!) - The Fed·
eral Aviation Administration has
Issued a warning that three
Lebanese Palestinians may try
to hijack a U.S. plane In Europe
during the Easter holiday, a U.S.
official confirmed Thursday.
An FAA memo datedMarch17
and obtained by The Dally

•

Express names the three men asked not to be Identified. "They
believed to be traveling on forged go out to embassies and then are
passports and warns all airlines passed on to governments and to
and security forces in the United U.S. airlines."
States. Britain an(! Europe.
The official said the warning of
"The story In the Express a possible hijacking was "Issued
(shows) a bulletin that went out and sent" by the FAA and had
from the FAA," said a U.S. -- been received by the U.S. Em,
Embassy official in London who
Continued on page 8"

.t '

,·

"With the exceptio n of the
Community Development Block
Grant program, the money out
there in grants for projects of this
type are limited; and CDBG is
only a partial solution at best,"
advised Meigs County Commissioner Richard Jones to Debbie
Engle and Loretta Tiemeyer,
residents of Shady Cove Road,_in
Wednesday's meeting of the
commissioners.
The two women and Salisbury
Township Trustees Nathan Biggs
and Richard ·Bailey met with the
commissioners to again discuss
the !looding problems on Shady
Cove Road which is located just
below Middleport.
The group discussion became
somewhat heated as Engle· explained her frustrations with
being told different things by
officials In Columbus than what
she' is told by the commiSsioners
and trustees here .
"I'm tired," said Jones , "of
some high-falutin. 'self-servjng
politician in Columbus who
doesn't know what he's talking
about and who won't even take
the time to come down here and
explore the problems, trying to
tell -the county how to run Its
business ."
Engle told the commissioners
that a man- In Columbus - Pat
McDonald - who Is thought by
the commissioners to be a liason
officer to the state's lieutenant
governor - told her the commissioners could take a more active
roll In forcing the Salisbury
Township Trustees to submit a
CDBG application to help fund
Improvements to eliminate flood Ing on Shady Cove Road.

House seeks
w~y .to raise
mmimum pay

it was a $25,000 problem. it would

be easy to solve. But it's not. It's a
$100,000 problem ."
Improveme nts to eliminate the
Shady Cove Road flooding have
been vaguely es timated at
~100,000 by everyone who has
reviewed the sltutation, includIng the Me igs County engineer.
Ohio Department of Natura l
Resources personnel, Soil Con·
servallon Service personnel and
others:
Kim Shields, Meigs Co unty 's
director of development , said he
has been trying to come up with
possible alternative funding
sources but at the present lime.
there just aren't any gra nt
opportunities available for a
problem like Shady Cove Road.
"But things change," Shields
MAKES POINT - Meigs
said, meaning that new g.rant
County Commissioner RIopportunities may become avail"
chard Jones makes a polnt
able in the future.
'
during Wednesday's regular
" We have to lake the monies
meeting that he does not
out of the right place," said
appreciate Columbus trying
Biggs.
to tell Meigs County how to run
Even If . the trustees submit a
its business, expeclally when
block grant application for Shady
Columbus doesn't seem to
Cove. there's no guarantee the
understand the roles by which
application will be accepted by
the county must operate.
the state.
"The most we could probably
"He says you guys don 't care," get out of CDBG Is $10.000,"
Biggs added.
said Engle.
Salisbury Township's last ap"And he doesn't know what
he's talking about." countered proved CDBG project was for
$9,800.
Jones.
As yet. Me igs Co unty has not
Any project to help Shady Cove
Road "must be initiated by the been notified by the state as to
what the total of the county's next
Sal~bury Township Trustees,"
block grant allo.catlon will be.
Jones said. "It's their road,"
With the exception of the
"I think we've asked for help
and the commissioners have county's last CDBG allocation,
given us what they can," com· which was used In Its entirety to
help fund construction of an
men ted Bailey.
''They've told us what It would elevator In the courthouse, the
cost" to Improve the road, said
Continued on page 8
Biggs, and "the issue is money . If

Elderly spend 18 % of
income for health care
·

WAS!j]NGTON (UP!) - El· the head of the Office of ManageWASHINGTON (UP!) - The derly Americans personally ment and Budget to testi fy on
House, mindful of President spent $2,400 last year - 18 administration health policy. He
percent of their Income - on said It appeared the budget
Bush's threat to veto a higher
minimum wage without a sub- health care, the chairman of the office, not the Department of
minimum "training wage," has House Aging Committee said Health and Human Services. "Is
taken the first step toward higher Thursday, criticizing proposals set tlng overall health policy.
especially for Medicare and
pay , debating a com prom lse to cut the Medicare budget.
Rep. Edward Roybal, D-Calif., Medicaid. "
·
Bu~h may find more acceptable.
released
the
report
"Health
Care
, The president has proposed a
"OMB's heavy hand In direct Costs For America's Elderly,
minimum wage of $4.25 an hour,
Ing
administration health policy
1977-88" as his Select Committee .
up 90 cents over three years from
Is
extremely
troubling for those
on Aging prepared to open a
Its current level of $3.35 of
us
trying
to
protect vulnerable
Including a lower "training" hearing at which budget director
of
all ages," Roybal
Americans
wage for new employees. House Richard Darman was expected said.
Democrats support a bill for a to explain the Bush adminlstra·
The committee study. Roybal
minimum wageof$4.65 but do not lion's proposals to cut $5 billion
said,
is based on a study by the
want the subminimum salary from the 1990 Medicare budget.
department's
Health Care Fi"Continuing the tradition of his
included.
nancing
Administration
a nd docHowever, a bipartisan mea- · predecessor, President Bush's
uments
"that
Am
erica's
elderly
sure was ready that could set the Insensitivity to the health cost
are
getting
Into
deeper
and
pressures on America's elderly
stage for later negotiations bedeeper
trouble
even
without
tween the House and Senate, and
is reflected In his proposal
requiring Medicare beneficiary further budget cu !backs."
Congress and the White House.
Highlights of the report
The compromise could be more
Part B premiums to cover 25
Included•
percent of program· costs - a
acceptable to Bush.
-The elderly's 1988 total
The bipartisan proposal set the proposal expected to cost benefl·
wage level at $4.55 - 'speeding up ciarles an extra $13 per month by health care costs total ed $175
billion -an average of $5,749 per
its timing and setting a 60-day 1994," Roybal charged.
person.
Roybal said It Is the flrst·tlme
"training'' wage at 85 percent of
Continued on page 8
the minimum wage; the provihis committee has called upon
sion for lower wages would
expire Jan. 1, 1993.
Votes on the various proposals
were not expected until
Thursday.
. House Speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas, told reporters before
A Nelsonville juvenile was taken Into custody and a vehicl e
the session that he expected the
taken
from Gribble Chevrolet In Athens recovered by the Meigs
compromise plan to win
County
Sheriff's Department Wednesday evening.
approval.
Sheriff James M. Souisby reported that his department
Reacting to Bush's threat of a
received an all-points bulletin at 8:27p.m about a youth who had
veto !or any measure without the
taken a 1988 Dodge Datona from Grll,&gt;ble Chevrolet in Athens for
lower "training" wage, Wright
a test drive and had not returned the car.
said: "I don't want to speculate
At 8: 50 p.m . the juvenile was spotted by Meigs County
on that. I think the president
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell traveling north on State Route 7
ought to have a more open mind
by,pass. By radio he contacted the sheriff' s deparmtent for
than that."
assistance. Offlc(als went to Route 7 at Five Points to Intercept
Wright termed $4.65 "a modest
the vehicle and a chase from there followed to just north of
increase," noting the minimum
Chester where the youth was stopped .
wage has not been raised since
The juvenile was released to the A!hens pollee and the vehicle
1981 and Its buying power has
returned to to Gribble, the.sherlff reported.
been eroded by more than 30
A trailer owned by Jack Miller, Keller Road, Rutland, was
percent.
entered and several Items taken, according to Sheriff Souls by .
Bush sajd Tuesday that In
Miller reported the Incident to the department Wednesday .
making his proposal of 1\ $4.25
Continued on page 8
·
Continued on page 8

Nelsonville youth in custody

'I

-~-

-

�.•
Thursday, March 23, 1989

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

~~

~mRI ~._-r•r""T"'1501=·"""
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WJDTEHEAD
Publisher
Assistant Publisher/Controller
CHARLENE HOEFUCH, General Manager
A MEMBER of The United Press Inte rnational, 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 edt ling and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUl be pub-

lished. Letters should be in good taste, addresslng issues, not personali-

ties.

Drug war's first
Murder City
battle
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - There's trouble right here in Murder City, of
course. but you know the sltuallon really Is desperate when while
business leaders and politicians dare to criticize the black mayor.
White members of the establishment in the predominantly black
Dis trict of Columbia usually withhold any criticism that might
conceivably seem racially inspired.
·
But when cr ime threatened to damage tourism and business they
joined sbme influential blacks in speaking publicly against Mayor
Marion Barry, who is under investigation by a grand jury and denies
allegations he uses cocaine.
·
Until recently, the Republican federal administration pretty much
left the predominantly Democratic capital alone. But now the GOP
lawmakers and federal officials are among Barry's sharpest critics.
President Bush and his drug czar, William Bennett, are grabbing
headlines by vowing to win the first bat lie in the federal wa~ on drugs
right here in the district, whose homicide rate Is the nat_10n s highest.
So far. the only action has been a barrage of rhetoncal artillery.
including reports that federal troops might be committed to
,
..
s temming the city's wave of drug-related crim~ .
·'All options are open as far as the presJdent s concerned,
s pokesman Marlin Fitzwater said solemnly.
. ,
But before anyone hinted darkly of B-52 strikes on the ctty s
notorious outdoo~ drug markets , Fitzwater acknowledged the use of
federal troops was "most unlikely," which was a polite way of saying
.
it was a dopey idea. ·
Bennett's aides privately have outlined other possible federal
actions, including imprisoning drug dealers on barges on the
Potomac.
One theory is that the adminis tration- with its leaks about federal
troops and floating slammers - Is sending the mayor the message
that federal authorities will intetrvene if the city can't curtail crime.
There has been talk in Congress of limiting the district's home rule.
Rep. Stan Parris of Virginia. ranking Republican on the House
Committee of the District of Columbia, said the city may need an
appointed federal director of safety.
' . .
.
The Greater Washington Board of Trade, m 1ts first major public
break with the mayor, this week sharply criticized district
government.
·
.
· Banker L. Ralph Hicks Jr. said board members were dnven to act
because the city's crime problem is damaging the area's business
climate.
.
"People are beginning to keep track of the murder rate like ball
scores, " Hicks said.
Meantime, the embattled. mayor fights back by calling for a
" full-scale military invas ion" to destroy cocaine "at its source" In
South and Central America .
·
Most of the 119 killings so far this year have been confined to
low-incom~ neighborhoods . Tourists need no !fear being gunned down
when they visit monuments.
But William Sinclair, the trade board' s president. was concerned
enough by the nega)lve publicity to Insist that the city is "a safe place
to live, work and -visit."
Perhaps those who live, work and visit in affluent and
predominantly white Northwest Washington will agree, but
Washingtonians who are black and poor know that is baloney.

Berry's World

•

•

EASTERN AIRL
OUT ,

_· GOING
:OF 8USlNESS •
· ··-~--·

............ '

•· ·.·.·..... . ..::i
• '

•

•
" Mr. Lorenzo saved a few bucks by using the
same signs he used for Continental."

•
•

· Today in history
By UnHed Pre1111 lnteraalloaal
Today Is Thursday, March 23, the 82nd day ofl989with 283 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Us last quarter.
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 Aries. They include
cu Unary expert Fannie Farmer In 1857, peychoanalyst Erich Fromm
. 1n 1900, actress Joan Crawford In 19«11, Japanese fUmmaker Aklra
Kurosawa in 1910 (age 79), rocket scientist Wernher von Braun In
1912, Roger Bannister, the first person to run the mUe In less than four
minutes, In 1929 (age 60), and former Atlanta Mayor Maynard
Jackson Jr. In 1938 (age 51).

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 23, 1989

U. S. needs a better mousetrap
WASHINGTON - Half a cen·
tury ago, America was helping to
rebuild war-torn Japan. In a
cruel trading of places, the
United States now finds Its
economy In disrepair. We are
slipping behind Japan In the race
for technological preeminence In
the 21st century. What the
. country needs Is fewer people
telling us how to mimic Japan
and more people telling us how to
recapture some of our unique
magic.
We have just the person In
mind - William Seidman, who
recently showed he had the
confidence of the Bush administration when the president
handed him the sickest savings
and loans in the country and told
him . to take care of them .
Seidman Is chairman of the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp., which Insures commercial
bank deposits. His bailiwick Is.
not savings and loan, but the
president recognized the right
touch in Seidman.
His no-nonsense philosophy Is
summed up In a book he
co -authored with Steven
Skancke, "Competitiveness: The
Executive's Guide to Success"

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

(M.E . Sharpe) . It reads like a
Marshall Plan for rebuilding the
American economy from the
ground up.
Seidman ayolds the popular
genre of adv ising Americans to
take up Zen and eat more raw
fish . Instead, he believes In a
blueprint for how American
business can succeed without
excuses or hocus-pocus formu las. Seidman Is easy to recognize
In the llalls of Congress. He is the
financial regulator who isn't
being excoriated in the savings
and loan fiasco.
The essence of his book is how,
on a national scale, the United
St a tes can build a better
mousetrap.
Seidman writes that most
managers find productivity Is the
cornerstone of our American
entrepreneurial system and the
foundation for our competitive
position In the world. Our productivity as a nation determines how
well we live, for rislngproductiv·
lty remains the only 'free lunch'
In economics.''
Instant gratification Is one of
the weakest links In the Ameri·
can economy. Seidman thinks we
may have forgotten a lesson

learned by early humans: " Don't
eat your seed corn or use your
fence posts for firewood .''
Capital Investment lor tools,
education and research has always meant " less now for more
later," Seidman says. "But today, as the speed of change
accelerates, investment requirements are increasing exponentially . .. But even the most
sophisticated computer system
is useless without trained opera tors; It Is peaple that make
technology work. A computerized accounting operation can be
worse than a pen-and-ledger if It
Is operated improperly ."
Investment In research and
technology was once an Ameri·
can hallmark. It was the engine
that propelled American Industry, that made America a superpower. Seidman points out that
as our ability and Inclination to
remain the leaders has declined,
so has our competitive standing
-challenging the old notion that
the United States can out·lnvent
the rest of the world combined.

NaTioN~l.

SeCURiTY
IS TMe

L~ST ReF'U~e

oF' THe
ScoUNDJleJ.

Rich

ki~sch

KOELE, Hawaii (NEA)
Once the headquarters of a
thriving ranching and farming
operation, this community on the
Hawaiian island of Lanai Is a
ghost town today.
StU! standing are only three of
the town's original structures the headquarters building of the
Koele Co.: a house that provides
shelter to a pati: of aging
cowboys; and a church awkwardly relocated 'to the front
lawn of a hotel now under
construction.
Both and relocation and the
construction are the work of the
Castle &amp; Cook Co., which owns 98
percent of the 141-square-mlle
Island and for much of this
century has devoted its Lanai
holdings almost exclusively to
agriculture.
With 14,000 acres planted in
pineapple and an annual harvest
that accounts for one·fifth of the
crop's global production, Castle
&amp; Cook boasts that the island Is
"the world's premier pineapple
plantation."
Now, however, that Is chang·

comes .to paradise _R_ob_er_tW_a,-lte_rs

lng. Scheduled to be completed
next year are the 102-room Lodge
at Koele on the cool upland slopes
at the center of the Island and the
250·room Manele Bay Hotel on a
bluff overlooking one of Hawaii's
most spectacularly beautiful but
least visited beaches.
Those hotels will drastically
change the character of a bucolic
Island that never has had phony
luaus, ersatz hula dances, fast
food restaurants, sidewalk jewelry peddlers and other manifestations of "civilization" that
have overwhelmed portions of
other Hawaiian Islands.
At the center of the controversy over the future of tourism In
the state Is hotel developer
Christopher Hemmeter, Hawaii's answer to Donald Trump.
Like Trump, . Hemmeter Is a
master of compensating for
tastelessness with gaudiness.
Like Trump, he is making money
almost faster than he can count
it.
Hem meter's $350 million Westin Kaual has a Immense reflect·

lng pool that covers more than
two acres and houses seven
llfe·slze marble horses constantly bathed by a 60-foot-hight
geyser of water spewed from a
54-ton fountain.
The hotel on the island of Kauai
also has a $2.5 million coilection
of Oriental and Pacific art, five
Jacuzzis, dozens of Clydesdaledrawn carriages, swarms of live
swans and artificial Islands beIng stocked with cranes, ga·
zelles, wallabies, kangaroos, zebras and llamas.
But Hemmeter's most extravagant projeclls the newly opened
$360 million Hyatt Regency Waikoloa, which modestly describes
itself as both the most expensive
hotel ever built and "the most
spectacular resort on Earth."
Standing atop a lava bed on the
Island of Hawall, that hotel has
eight restaurants , lllounges, 20
massage rooms, 27 live pink
flamingos and 1,640 transplanted
palm trees. Guests are ferried
around the resort in mechanl·
cally propelled boats or on a

Bush shouldn't be ·fall guy
George Bush is discovering, as
did Jimmy Carter years ago, how
instinctively the media gravitate
toward a congressional point of
view.
Worse luck for the president,
there Is no way he can satisfy
contradictory expections laid
down by cynical members of
Congress. No matter bow he
proceeds, he will be assailed for
either doing too llttle or too much
- and sometimes, remarkarbly,
for both at once.
On one hand, the president is
expected to lead. Presumably
that means stepping out front on
Issues. But he must never ques·
lion established practice, either,
for io do so riles powerful
members of Congress, who must
at all costs be appeased.
Lead the country, but say and
do nothing unexpected.
Bush's treatment of the sav·

The VCR Is an American
Invention, but once we had It, we
didn' t run with it. " When Ameri·
can companies decided not to
pursue the market opportunity,
the Japanese developed it,"
Seidman says. "The challenge to
many American businesses now ,
therefo re, is to regain contr ol of
their great American inventiveness and technology to create the
r ight products."
Seidm11 n' s 10 commandments •
should tie hung In every board
room In America, starting with
government agencies :
l. Pr oductivity programs start
at the top. The Dana Corp., a car
c o mpon e nts manufacturer,
makes sure every worker meets
with a se nior manager at least
once a Ye ar .
2. More productivity means
fe wer layers. One U.S. steel
company has 32 levels of managers, contrasted with Apple Computer with only three.
3. A good productivity plan
spreads accountability throughout the organization. ·Responsibility should be pushed down the
organizational ladder to the
hands-on employees.
4. Competitiveness Is an Integra l part of the corporate
culture.
5. Successful productivity pr&lt;&gt;grams evolve piece by piece.
Start small and build.
6. Productivity should be
quality- and customer-oriented.
Customers demand quality and
that is the price a company pays
for excellence.
7. Consideration breeds success . "Respectful, considerate
and even gentlemanly conduct
lletween managers and workers
Is a common characteristic
found In · successful organizations ," Seidman says.
8. There Is always a better way
to get the same results. The
we-know-best approach is out the
window . New technologies are
being developed dally.
9. Judicious Investments must
be made In equipment, new
techniques and technology.
10. Good training assures the
success of productivity
· programs .
It Isn't sushi, but Seidman's
meat-and-po-tatoes approach is
more suited to America's tastes.

ings and loan crisis offered early
evidence of this Catch-22. The
easy fix, politically, was always
to conscript taxpayers Into bail·
lng out the industry, And that Is
indeed the route Bush eventually_
chose. But the administration
also floated a more interesting
idea early on to offset part of the
bill: Impose a fee of 25 cents for
each $100 deposited In banks, In
exchange for federal insurance
on the money. The concept Is
hardly new: It's called a user fee.
Not only did Congress dismiss
the Idea out of hand, many
commentators quickly rose to
admonish Bush !or lack of
political "realism" for even
entertaining the Idea.
· How dare he disagree with
Congress at all, for that matter.
Consider the John Tower fiasco.
Virtually no one - probablY not
even Sen. Sam Nunn -expected

the nomination to explode when it
was first launched. Yet no sooner
had the candidacy staggered
than dozens of writers scolded
Bush (or John Sununu) for falllng
to foresee the unforeseeable.
Bush's real sin, In each case,
was lo have ruffled congressional feathers, nothing more.
According to this Capitol·
centric view of Washington, a
president's first duty is to "get
along" with House and Senate
leaders. Never put them on the
spot or question their judgment.
Never expect them to risk a
speck of popularity in the national interest.
It Is no longer news, for
example, when Congress skirts
the touchy Issues of deficit
reduction. We Indulge or even
excuse congressional cowardice,
concluding It Is ordained by
nature. Yet when the president
ducks the same deficit Issues (as
George Bush has), our under·
In 1765, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act !or taxing the standing wanes and eager critics .
American colonies, an action that became a major grievance !or prime their guns.
rebelllous colonials.
The president has become
In 1942, Japanese-Americans were forcibly moved from their America's all-purpose fall guy,
homes along the Pacific Coast to Inland Internment camps.

monorail train.
Tourists willing to pay the fees
can sign up for a safari to hunt
wild boar on the slopes of Mauna
Kea, a helicopter visit to the
windswept mouth of the active
Kilauea volcano or a romp In the
·water with the hotel's eight
dolphins.
Meanwhile, an Australian
firm, Qlntex Ltd., has paid
almost $58 million for control of
the Sheraton Mirage Princeville
Hotel and a surrounding 7,000
acre resort on the north shore of
the island of Kauai.
Although that hotel is only 3'h
years old and charges at least
$200 a night for most of Its rooms,
Qlntex will spend $250 million to
renovate It Into a lavish resort
catering to even wealthier
tourists.
Here on Lanai, th.e two new
hotels are likely to strain the
island's limited water supply
while the need to Import employees has exacerbated an
already intolerable housing
shortage.

Vincent Carroll
accountable for everything,
while Congress plays hooky In
the park.
Ironically, however, there is
opportunity In such a hopeless
presidential role. After all, If a
president will be savaged
whether he acts decisively or not,
why not act decisively? As
George Bush scurries about
trying to Inject momentum in a
precldency that never possessed
any, he might consider the
liberating wisdom of Margaret
Thatcher.
"Do you think," she once tartly
told a questioner, "you would
ever have heard of Christianity If
the apostles had gone out and
said, 'I believe In consensus?"'
She meant that if you want to
make a difference, you trust your
beliefs and follow them, come
what may. If you're president,
your actions will sometimes goad
other members of the political
establishment into angry .fulmination. Well, so be it. Remain
resolute, Ignore your fain·
!hearted friends, and head for the
center of the ring.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.RoZelle retires from NFL
post after 30 years senrice
PALM .DESE RT, Ca li! . tUPl )
- P ete Rozelle, who he lped
transform the Nat ional Football
League from a n uncertai n e nterprise int o a' multibillion-dolla r
indu s try, resi gned as commissioner after hold ing the job 30
years.
In a s tartling and tearful
announcement at the NFL
owners' meeting Wednesday,
Rozelle said he would remain
commissioner until the league
finds a successor. A league
committee will try to find a
replacement for the .man often
considered· the mpst powerful
official in American sports.
AFC President Lamar Hunt of
the Kansas Cit y Chiefs and NFC
President Wellington Mara of the
New York Giants will head the
search .
Rozelle , 63. said he made the
decision last October because he
wanted to spend more time with
his family . After notifying the
owners. Los Angeles Raiders
chief executive Al Davis, a
longtime adversary , embraced
Rozelle. The commis sioner then
went public with his
announcement.
"Now I'd like to have some fun
for the rest of my life," said
Rozelle, who will re tire to the San
Diego area. "I don ' t want to be a
lame-du ck commissioner. I feel
so lucky. I've seen great changes
in growth ."
Rozelle became commissioner
in 1960, shortly before the NFL
entered ·its golden age that
culminated with a $1.4 billion
television contr act with the
networks.
Under Rozelle. the NFL
m erged wi th the American Football League in 1967 and expanded
from 12 teams to 28. The move
represented the biggest sports
merger and brought football into
contention with baseball as the
counlry 's mosl popular sport.
However, the NFL's financial
success ha s been tempered by a
spate of drug violations in the

- - - - - - - Spons hri&lt;'fs - - - - -- -Detroit ... . Th~ Cincinnati Ben
Cycling
Pedro Sau l Morales' or Co lom- gals lost th&lt;:&gt;ir eighth fre~ agent
bia won the third stage o! the when cornerback Daryl Smith
Semana Catalana tour in Spain. signed with the Vikings. The
Ralmond Dietzen of West Ger- Bengals say they would not be
m a ny took the overall lead from surprised to lose two or Ih rPe
more free agents .... Ohio State
Britain's Ma lco lm Elliot.
may open Its 1989 football season
Football
Th e Lions s igned Chris Gam- aga ins t Northwestern in Vanbol, a 6-foot -7, 303-pound offen- couver, The Columbus Dispatch
sive lin eman, the sixth unpro- repor ted.
tected free agent to sign wit h

Highlights of Roselle's reign
NEW YORK (UP!) - Highlights of Pete Rozelle 's reign as
NFL commissioner:
1900 - Rozelle elected NFL Commissioner and moves league
offices to New York.
1963 - Rozelle suspends Green Bay halfback Paul Hornung
and Detroit defensive tackle Alex Karras f11r betdng on their
own teams as well as on other NFL games. Pro Football Hall of
Fame dedicated In Canton, Ohio.
196t -Signs a SIU million per year TV contract with CBS.
1966 - Announces merger with the AFL Qn ~une 8, expanding
the league to 1!4 teams.
· 1967 - Green Bay defeals Kansas City 35-10 In Super &amp;wll.
1969 - AFL champion New York Jets defeats NFL champion
Baltimore Coils In Super &amp;wl III.
1910 -Signs 4-year television contracts with NBC and CBS.
1974 - Seattle and Tampa Bay are awarded franchises to
begin play In 1976.
197'1 - NFL Players Association and NFL Management
Council ratify a collective bargaining agreement through 1982;
signs new four-year TV contract .
. 1980 - NFL sued by the Oakland Raiders for violation of the
Sherman Anlltrul Act.
.
19!12 - Season red11ced to nine games as a result of 57-day
players' strike; jury rules against the league In the antitrust
trial, clearing Oakland's move to Los Angeles; NFL signs a
five-year contract with with the three television networks;
coUectlve bargaining agreement reached with union.
1986 - U.S. District Court in New York awards the USFL one
doUar in its $1.1 billion antitrust suit against the NFL;
substance abuse policy Invoked.
1987 - Season shortened one game by 24-day players' strtle;
new three-year TV contract announced, including first clble
contract.

PETE ROZELLE

BOSTON (UP!) - Rumors
about the Boston Red Sox trading
batting champion Wade Boggs
heated up Wednesday as t~am
officials expressed anger over
the slugger's upcoming television Interview and general man·
ager Lou Gorman conceded he
has been spending a lot oftlmeon
the phone talking with other
teams.
Boston television stations re·
ported that Red Sox Chief Executive Officer Haywood SuUivan
was furious that Boggs Ignored
the team's wishes and agreed to
be Interviewed by Barbara Walters for ABC's news program,

league, civil suits with Davis and
Roi elle served as public rela th.e Raiders and the U.S. Football tions director and _general mim·
League, and labor struggles
ager of the Los Angeles Rams
between management and the before being named commisplayers' union. During Rozelle's sioner after the death of Bert
tenure the players waged two Bell.
strikes, the last two seasons ago.
"I am shocked that Pete Is
"It just seemed like they were retiring as commissioner of the
never going to end," Rozelle said
NFL," said Arthur Watson, presof the thr.ee trials involving Davis ident of NBC Sports . "He Is a
and the USFL. "The '80s have not
man of the times who In the past
been a pleasant time for the 30 years has done more that any
owners, myself and the people of single Individual in changing the
footi)all."
face of sports. During Pete's
Rozelle, a member of the Pro tenure, no sport has enjoyed the
Football Hall of Fame, has two · success that the NFL has enjoyed
years remaining on his cont_ract under his direction. He' ll be
and a retirement settlement will sorely missed ."
be worked out by the league.

Michigan State, with six
straight points from Smith, ou-tscored Villanova 9·2 In the next

three minutes to go ahead 46-41
on Todd Wolfe's three-pointer
with 12: 13 left in the game.
Villanova went back In front
55-54 when Kenny Wilson sank
two free throws with 5: 441elt, but
Michigan State went ahead to
stay at 58-57 when Parish Hickman hit two free throws with 4:04
remaining.
Wolfe and Ken Redfield added
10 points apiece for Michigan
State. Doug West led VIllanova
with 17 points and Massey had 12.
"We thought we had to control
Doug West." Heathcote said.
"We didn ' t want him to get his
rhythm because he can hurt you
from both inside and outside."
In the other quarterfinal game
Wednesday night , Alabama Birmingham downed Connecticut85-79.
Alabama-Birmingham 85
Connecllcu t 19
At Storrs, Conn. , Andy
Kennedy scored 22 points, lnclud·
ing six 3-polnters, to lead
Alabama -Birmingham past the
defending NIT champions .
Kennedy scored two of his 3· point
field goals during a 19-9 run In the
second half that gave the Blazers
a 66-55 lead with 9: 27 to play.
The Huskies managed to trim
the lead to 3 points on John
Gwynn's 3-pointer with 56 se·conds left, but the Blazers sank 6
of 7 free throws fn the final
minute to seal the victory .
Reginald Turrier added 18
points for the AlabamaBirmingham, 21-11. Connecticut
finished 18-13.
Dylan Howard and freshman
Alan Ogg each scored 11 for the
Blazers, who held a 45-41 lead.
Ogg also had seven blocked
shots.
Connecticut's Cliff Robinson
led all scorers with 23 points in
his final college game, while -Phil
Gamble added 20 points, lnclud·
lng six of se ; en 3-polnt attempts,
for the Huskies. Robinson and

Bucks face Redmen again
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Oh io State Coach Gary Williams
is really rolling out the welcome
mat for the St. John 's Redmen
and former Big East rival Lou
Ca rnesecc a .
The Buckeyes and Redmen
meet Thursday night . in the
quarterfinals of the National
Invitation Tournament In Ohio
State's sold-out St. John Arena.
·Tm going to tell him , 'we
heard you were coming, Lou, so
we changed the name of our
place.' He' ll like that ."
The rejuvenated Buckeyes,
who have won twice in the NIT
over Akron 182-70) and Nebraska
(85-74) after closing the regular
season with an eight-game losing
streak, take a 19-14 record Into
the game against St. John's,
17-13. A berth in Monday night's
NIT semifinals at · Madison

••

Square Garden goes to the
winner.
The Redmen beat Mississippi
170·67) In their NIT opener and
Oklahoma State 76-64 Tuesday
night, with Jayson Williams
scoring 25 and 27 points In the two
games.
Ohio State already holds a 77-72
decision over St . John's this
season. The Buckeyes beat the
Redmen in the title game of the
ECAC Hoi
Festival In
December.
Then, however, Ohio
led by senior guard Jay
rson,
whose career ended Feb.1 when
he fractured a vertebra in his
neck.
Burson scored 60 points In
tournament wins over Florida
(37) and St. John's 123), lnc!Ud·
ing 16 of the Buckeyes' final 18
against the Redmen and was
named lournament MVP .

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One unnamed team official
told The Boston Globe, "Don't
think we can 't trade (Boggs) we can," and Gorman told the
Boston Herald, "There Is some
basis for a trade, but no complete

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Boggs would be with the team a
week from now, I'd say yes,"
Gorman told the Herald. "But If
they (other teams) change their
position then that can change."

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Gorman said the greatest
obstacle to trading the controversial third baseman Is that no
team so far can afford him.
Boggs Is on the last year of a
$1.8 million deal and his agent.
Alan Nero, has said he would like
a three-year extension worth
close to $9 million If attempts are
made to deal Boggs, the Herald .
reported.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

271 NOITH SECOND

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The Daily Sentinel
IVSP81411-"'l
A Dlvlllon of Matdmedla, lae.

I

V AIISI1'Y B-'IIEBALL
DATE-TEAM
LOCATION
March 23-Galllpolls .. .......... ........ ........ H
March 27-Nels&lt;~~.vUle .. ....... ....... .. .. ..... H
March 29-VIntM ........ ...................... .. A
March 31-Federal ...... ............ ...... ...... A
AprU 03-Belpre .. .................... .. .......... A
April 05-Alexander .; ...... .. ........... ........ H
April 06-Polnt Plesanl .... ... ...... ........... A
April 07-Wellston .... .. .... ...... .............. . H
Aprlllll--Trlmble ........... :........ ............ A
April 12--Athens .. .... ........ .. ...... .. ... ..... .. A
Apri113-Ravenswood ..... .... .... .......... .. H
Aprlll4-MIIler .. ............ ........ ...... .... ... H
Aprii17-Nelsonvllle .. ..... ........ ..... ........ A ·
Aprtll9-Vtntm .. .... .. .... .. ..........: .. , .. .. .. H
Aptll 20-Potnt Pleasant ........ .. .... ....... . H
Aprtt 21-Federal .... ........ ........ .... ...... .. H
Apr1122-Warren .... ...... ........ .. ............ . A
April 24-Belpre .... .. .............. ..... ..... .. .. H
April 2~Aiexander ................. .... ........ A
April 27-Ravenswood .... ...... ... ............ A
Aortl 28-Wetlstoo .. ........ ........ .... ......... A
APrll29-Warren .. .. ........ ... ... ........ .. ..... H
May 01-Trlmble ..... .......... ..... ..... ...... H
May 03-JAcksm ......................... .... .. H
May 04-Galllpolls ............................. A
May ~Miller ... .......... .. ................... A

RESERVE BASEBALL
DATE-TEAM
LOCATION
March 23-Galllpolls ....... ..................... A
Matth 29-VInlm .......... ........ .. ........ .. .. H
April OJ.... Belpre .... .. .... .. .... .... .. .. ........ .. H
April 05-Aiexander .... ... ......... ............. A
April 06-Polnt Plesant ................ ........ A
April 07-WelJstCil .. .............. ..... ... ... .... A

Apriii2-Atllel1s .......... .. ...... ................ H
Aprlll9-VInt!ll .................... .. ...... .. .... A
Apr\122-W•rren .... .... .. ...... ........ .. .. .. ... H

Aprll2f--Belpre .... ...... .............. .. ...... .. A
Aprt126-Aiexander .................... ......... H
Apr1128-Wellstm ............ .... .... .. ......... A

Aprtl29-Warren .. .. .... ....... .................. A
May 03-JackSon ...... ............ .. .. .... ...... A
May Of--Gallipolis .............. .... .. .... ..... . H

Published every afternoon, Monday
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo, by the Ohio Valley Publlshlna Company!Multbnedl•. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohfo 45769, Ph. 992·21~. Second class postaae paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

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basis.''
"If you asked me today If Wade

Gamble were the only Connectlcu t players to finish In double
figures .
Both teams had an off night
from the floor, with the Blazers
hitting on 46 percent of their
attempts from the field, while
Connecticut sank just 41 percent
of Its shots.

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Boggs trade
talks heat up

MSU, UAB gain NIT semifinals
By United Press International
Michigan State got the ball In
the right hands to advance to the
semi!lnals of the National Invitation Tournament.
Steve Smith scored 22 of his 34
points In the second half Wednesday night to lead the visiting
Spartans to a 70-63 victory over
Villanova .
"Steve Smith Is our best
offensive player and we tried to
set him up," Michigan State
. Coach Jud He athcote said. "We
tried to get the ball in hiS hands in
the second half because he can
make things happen. "
Smith 's 18-foot jumper gave
Michigan State,18-13, a 60-57lead
with 3: 34 to play and the Spartans
made 10 straight free throws in
the last three minutes to clinch
the win.
"We finally started getting
some calls and we were at lhe
line when It counted," Heathcote
said.
~·
The triumph advanced Michl- •
gan State to the semifinals to be
played Monday night at Madison
Square Garden in New York.
Villanova , 18-16, got no closer
than 64 -61 on Doug West's two
fr,
hrows with 58 seconds to
pia, .
"Smith played great down the
s tretch ." Villanova Coach Rollie
Massimino said. "That was as
good a game as anyone has
· played against us a ll season. He
did everything he had to do .
"They c ame up with a great
game. Give th em credit . They
made all thei r fre e throws down
the stret ch."
Tralling 37-30 a t the half,
Villanova scored nin e unanswered points to take it s first lead
s ince the opening basket at :r,J-37
on Gary Massey's re bound with
15:19 left in the game.

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Thursday, March 23, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

first NBA points.
The victory enabled the Pis·
tons to retake first place In the
Central Division by percentage
points over Cleveland. Detroit
reached 30 games over .500,
47·17, for the first time In
franchise history and took a .007
lead over Cleveland when the
Cavaliers lost at Philadelphia. ·
The Pistons have won 11 of their
last 12 games.
"They are great," San Antonio
Coach Larry Brown said of the
Pistons. "They play within them·
selves and they are unselfish.
The thing that bothered me wa~
their aggressiveness. When it
came time to play they did not
make the mistakes.
"They do not care who scores.
that's why they are one of the
best teams in the league. I don' t
see them with a lot of weakness.
They have a tremendous team
attitude."
In other games, Philadelphia
defeated Cleveland 100-97, Mi-

ami surprised New York 107·103,
Indiana topped Washington 101·
92, Chicago nipped Phoenix 112·
111 and, and the Los Angeles
Clippers turned back Dallas
116·112.
76ers 100
Cavaliers 97
At Philadelphia, Charles Barkley scored 27 points and grabbed
21 rebounds and Mike Gmlnski
made two free throws with eight
seconds to play. Leading 98-97,
the 76ers missed two shots in the
last 30 seconds but got the
rebound each time. Gminskl was
fouled after the second and made
the free throws.
Heat 107
Knicks 103
At Miami, Kevin Edwards
scored 26 points, including six in
the final three minutes to help the
Heat break a three-game losing
streak.
Pacers 101
Bullets 92
At
Indianapolis
, · Detlef
1
Schremp! came off the bench for

22 points and four Indiana
starters scored In double figures
to lift the Pacers to their third
straight victory. The Pacers are
9·0 this season when holding the
opponent under 100 points.
BuDs 112
Suns lll
At Phoenix, Michael Jordan
capped a 32·polnt performance
with four free throws in the last
seven seconds to lift Chicago.
Horace Grant added 25 points for
the Bulls. Tom Chambers led
Phoenix with 31 points, followed
by Kevin Johnson with 30.
LA Clippers ll6
Mavericks 11%
At Los Angeles, Benoit Ben·
jamin scored 23 points, Ken
Norman added 21 and Quintin
Dailey and rookie Charles Smith
added 20 apiece for the Clippers.
who snapped a 13-game losing
streak against Dallas. The Mavericks, losers of eight straight,
got 24 points from Rolando
Blackman and 21 from Adrian
Dantley.
·

Rose hot topic; Reds lose tilt to Cards
By United Press International
Cincinnati Manager Pete
Rose, target of a baseball probe
into his gambling habits, tried to
refocus attention on the Reds
Wednesday and said the in·
creased media attention makes
him feel "like a fresh piece of

betting on baseball games and a
lifetime ban if the betting in·

valves one's. own team.
"All I worry about is my
' team,'' said Rose, who was
suspended a month last season
for making contact with umpire
Dave Pallone during an argu·
ment.'Tve got the utmost re·
spect for them, the old one and
the new one."
Commissio ner Peter Ueber·
roth will yield next month to
National League President A.
Bartlett Giamattl, who ruled on
Rose's 1988 ~uspension.

meat."

GRABBED FROM BEHIND - DallaS Maverick center Sam
Perkins ( 44) Is grabbed from behind by the Los Angeles Clippers'
Gary Grant in the first half of Wednesday night's game in Los
Angeles, Perkins scored on the play, but the Clippers prevailed
116-112. (UPI)

Meigs dominates. All-Academic Team
ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
Marauders dominated the Tri·
Valley Conference All· Academic
Team for winter sports that was
relea sed recently ·by co nference
offica ls.
The Marauders placed 15 on
the tea m to easily outdistance
runnerup Miller who finished

with 8. Federal Hocking placed 7
on the team, Vinton County 6.
Wellston. Trimble and Belpre 4
each , while Alexander and
Nelsonville·York each had l.
Marauders making the team
were: Eddie Crooks, Todd Po·

well, Lesley Carr, Beth Ewing.
Kelly Smith, Jennifer Taylor,
Jody Taylor, Missy Nelson, Amy
Wagner and Tricia Baer in
Basketball.
In wrestling making the squad
were Jeremy Heck, Joe McEI·
roy, Wess Howard. Aaron Sheets
and Jared Sheets.
Only 1J out of the 60 named to
the squad had 4.00 grade point
average from Meigs maintaining
a 4:00 gpa were: Joe McElroy,
Jennifer Taylor. and Aaroon and
Jared Sheets.
•

More than 50 members of the
media descended upon the Reds'
spring training home for an
afternoon exh ibltion game
against St. Louis, dogging Rose
before Cincinnati' s 7·6 Joss In 11
innings. After the game, Rose
again addressed writers and
camera crews in the Cincinnati
dugout but would not comment
on the probe.
"Me and my shadows ... I feel
like a fresh piece of meal," said
baseball's all-time hit leader.
The commissioner's office an·
nounced ln New York Monday
Rose is under investigation for
"serious allegations." Rose, . 47,
readily admits to betting on
horses and dogs, but Sports
Illustrated, in its issue dated
March 27, has published a story
alleging the commissioner's of·
lice has informa l ion Rose may
have bet on baseball games .
Baseball personnel are al lowed to make legal bets at horse
and dog tracks, but are prohi·
, bited from bet ling on baseball
games. Major-league rules stipu·
late a one-year suspension for

In spring training games:
At Winter Haven, Fla., Dwight
Evans drove in three runs on a
pair of hits and Jody Reed scored
three times til lead the Boston
Red Sox to a 10-2 victory over the
Detroit Tigers.
At Yuma, Ariz., OddibeMcDowell hit a two-run double to
climax a four-run fourth inning
·and Bud Black allowed a single
run In six innings to lift the
Cleveland Indians to a 4·2 victory
over the San Diego Padres. Black
notched his third triumph of the
spring.
At Orlando, Fla., Mike Woodson went 3 for 4 with a home run
and three RBI to lead the Los
Angeles Dodgers in a 6·1 triumph
over the Minnesota Twins. Ore!
H~rshiser, 3·1, pitched five innings, allowing two hits and one

unearned run.
At Plant City, Fla., catcher
Todd Zeille hit a lead·off homer
in the 11th inning to give the St.
Lollis Cardinals a 7·6 decision
over the Cincinnati Reds and
regain the Bay Town Classic
Trophy. Zeiile' s homer , his first
of the exhibition season, made a
loser of rookie Jeff Gray.
At Mesa, Ariz., Mark Grace hit
his second spring home run and
Greg Maddux allowed. three hits
over seven innings to pace the
Chicago Cubs to a 3·0 triumph
over the Seattle Mariners. The
Cubs have won only six of 21
exhibitions, but four have been
shutouts.
At Bradenton, Fla., Gary Re·
dus hit a three· run homer In the
seventh inning to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 7-6 victory
over the Philadelphia Phillles in
a game delayed by a third·inning
brawl. The pushing and shoving
came In three waves and delayed
the game for 15 minutes . No
punches were thrown, but homeplate umpire Bob · Davidson
ejected Pittsburgh Manager Jim
Leyland. Bonilla, Bonds and R.J.
Reynolds and Philadelphia shortstop Dickie Than.
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Mel
Hall singled home Roberto Kelly
in the eighth inning to break a 4·4
tie and give the Yankees a 5-4
victory over the Montreal Expos.
The Expos announced that left-

handed pitcher Rich Sauveur had
an ln.Jection for a bone spur in his
left elbow and will be sidelined
for seven to 10 days.

--Sports briefs-Golf
Tom Kite has a chance at the
USF&amp;G Classic in · New Orleans
beginning Thursday to become
the first golfer since Gary Player
in 1978 to win three straight
tournaments. Kite, the tour's
leading money winner this year,
posted consecutive victories at
the Nestle Invitational and the
Players Championship.
Hockey
' The Pittsburgh Penguins
signed right wing Jamie Leach to
a multiyear contract. Leach, 19,
was Pittsburgh's third-round selection in the 1987 entry draft.
Law
Red Sox star Wade Boggs has
offered to settle his suit with
former m !stress Margo Adams
for $20,000 to avoid further
embarrassment to his team·
mates, Bas ton newspapers reported. If the case were to go to
trial, Boston players might be
required to testify about the
affair as well as their own sex
lives .... Michigan's Bo Schem·
bechler testified in Chicago he
never would have allowed two
players to stay on his football
team had -he known they signed
agreements with sports agents
Norby Walters and Lloyd Bloom.

JUST ARRIVED
A ,l AlLER LOAD OF EW TA

The Daily Sentinel. Page- 5

It's 'open season' on Rose

Pete Rose continues to avoid
questions on gambling probe

Pistons use three-guard lineup in victory
By United Press International
Detroit Coach Chuck Daly
went to a three-guard lineup out
of design , not necessity.
"I dldn' t want to get In foul
trouble," Daly said of why he
went to a lineup that had Islah
Thomas, Joe Dumars and Vinnie
Johnson In a ll5·94 victory
Wednesday night over the San
Antonio Spurs. "(Dennis) Rod·
man had two fouls and (Mark)
Aguirre had three. I didn't want
to get In any deeper with just a
few minutes left."
Daly went to the alignment
while clinging to a 48·46lead with
3:40 left in the first half and the
Pistons outscored San Antonio
17·3 the rest of the way to take
control of the game.
Dumars had six points while
Johnson and Thomas split four In
the run. The three big men who
split time in the 3:40 scored the
' other seven, Bill Laimbeer hit·
ling a three, James Edwards
gettiQg two and Jim Rowinski
sinking two free throws for hls

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

blted from betting on baseball
PLANT CITY. Fla. iUPll Cincinnati Reds Manager Pete games. Major·ieague rules stipu·
Rose, target of a baseball lnvesti· late a one-year susl?"nsion for
gat ion Into his gambling habits , betting on baseball games and a:
said the Increased media atten· lifetime ban if the betting in·
tlon makes him feel "like a fresh
valves one's own team.
In addition, the New York Post
piece of meat" but refused to
comment on the probe.
reported Wednesday that the
More than 50 members of the Internal Revenue Service. the
media descended upon the Reds ' u.s. attorney's office in Coium·
spring training home Wednesday
bus , Ohio, and the FBI are also
for an exhibition game against interested in reports of Rose's
St . Louis, dogging Rose before · gambling.
Cincinnati's 7·6 loss in lllnnings .
The Dayton Dally News said
After the game, Rose sat with last month Rose took out a second
arms folded in the Reds ' dugout mortgage for $150,000 on his
and warned approaching repor· home. The newspaper also said
ters that the first non·basebali Rose sold a · Corvette that Reds
ques tlon would trigger his depar· owner Marge Schott gave him for
lure to the batting cage.
breaking Ty Cobb's career hit
"Me and my shadows .... I feel record and added that It had been
like a fresh piece of meat," said told ·by a sports memorabilia
baseball's all· time hit leader. "1 collector that the bat and ball
don't even knowwhat'sgolngon. used to get the record hit had
I don't read the papers and my been sold for about $175,000.
car radio Is turned off."
" All I worry about is my
The baseball commissioner 's team." said Rose, who was
office announced in New York suspended a month last season
Monday that Rose Is under _ for making contact with umpire
inves ligation for "serious allega· Dave Pallone during an argu·
tlons." Rose, 47, admits to ment. "A ll I worry about Is the
betting on horses and dogs , but Ci ncinnati Reds. People find that
Sports Illustrated, in its issue' hard to believe. The commisdated March 27, published a sioner is the greatest man in
story saying the commissioner's baseball. I've got the utmost
office has information Rose ma y respect for them, the old one and
have bet on baseball games.
the new one."
Baseball personnel are al·
Commissioner Peter Ueberlowed to make legal bets at horse roth will yield next month to
and dog tracks, but are p'rohi· National League President A.
Bartlett Giamattl, who ruled on
Rose's 1988 suspension.

Soviets deployed
drug-testing ship
during Olympics

MOSCOW (UP!) -A Commu·
nisi Party magazine said Wed·
nesday the Soviet Union set up a
secret drug·testing laboratory on
a ship anchored off South Korea
during the Seoul Olympics in an
attempt to pre·screen athletes
who might fail official drug tests.
The move was aimed at
preventing a scandal that might
embarrass the Kremiln, the
magazine Zmena said, adding
that at least one athlete was
barred from competing because
he was believed certain to fail
official drug tests in Seoul, the
publication said.
Zmena, whose name means
"change" In Russian and which
Serves as the official magazine of
the Central Committee of the
Communist Party Youth League,
said the laboratory on the ship
Mikhail Sholokhov was kept
under heavy guard and was off
limits to non·athletes and
journalists.
The article Implied that because the laboratory was ofli·
clally sanctioned by the Soviet
Olympic . Committee, the Com·
mit tee condoned drug taking and
t oak great pains to cover It up .
There had been rumors of a
Soviet drug testing laboratory at
the Summer Games, but the
Zmena article was the first
Soviet confirmation that the lab
actually ex is ted.
The twice-monthly color magazine named only one athlete who
actually was found by the Soviets
to be in violation of Olympic drug
rules, but it hinted that there may
have been more.
Zmena identified the athlete as
super-heavyweight welghtlifter
Leonid Taranenko, 32. a former
t;;uropean, world and Olympic
champion.

While Rose awaited the •·es ults
of the investigation, Cincinnati
players tried to brea k the tension
for an embattled manager. In
pre·game warmups , pitcher
Danny Jackson , who wears No.
20, instead donned Rose's famli·
iar No. 14 uniform, complete with
the name " ROSE " stitched on
the back. Jackson held mock
press conferences with Reds•
players who portra ye d
reporters.
·
The only time Rose bristled
came in response to th e ques tion,
"Do you believe yo u're a Hall of
Farner?' '
"I got 4,256 hits , I've scored
2,165 runs -yeah, I'm a Hall of
Farner, " said Rose, eligible for
Cooperstown in 1992. "Nex t
question."
Rose 's ·reluct ante to addres s
the ongoing investigation has
prompted a new posture for one
of baseball's most outspoken
personalities.
' 'I'm not used to saying ·no
comment' but I hope you all
understand this is a different
sit uation," he said.
Schott said she was saddened
by Rose's problem s.
"It's something we don't need
right now ln baseball, " she sa ld.
"I feel strongly about what
affects fans ' thinking and young
people. I'm . very big on the
example players set for the
young children . Pete's a man·
ager and he has to set an
example."

PETE ROSE
Rose 's daughter, Fawn , mean. while, was quoted in !he Ap r il
issue of "Gentlemen's Quar·
terly" magazine a s saying, "My
father ls theworld 's worstlather.
I will never understand why he
never had any time for us."

--Sports brief's-Soccer
West Germany scored ln the
final minute to defeat Bulgaria
2·1 in an exhibition game in Sofia.
Bulgaria has never beaten West
Germany.
1 Tennis
Jimmy Connors an&lt;! Gabriela
Sabatini highlight a field of eight
men and eight women In the
$250,000 Gu nze World Tennis
Tournament in Japan July 12·16.
The first three days of the
tournament will be held in
Yokohama

pa rty that anybody's tal king
PLANT CITY, Fla . ( UPIJ It' s b!'Come open season on Pete about," added Rose.
Rose previously said he hopes
Rose.
In the 48 hours since the the investi ga tion co ncludes be·
baseball commissioner 's offi ce forP the start of the regular
a nnounced its Investigation of season April 3. However, the
"serious allegations" Involving . commissioner's office has not
indicated when it expects the
Rose, criticism has run rampant
investigation
to end .
about the Cincinnati Red s manIf
Investigators
find that Rose
ager's personall life.
-"Sports Illustrated" maga· has bet on baseball games. he
zl ne reached newsstands Wed- could be suspended one year. If
nesday with a story saying it had he is found to have bet on the
been told ''the commissioner has Reds. he co uld be banned from
information that Rose .may have baseball for life.
bet on baseball games."
-Reds owner Marge Schott
Schott said she was saddened
said Rose must realize "he has to
by the Investigatio n of her
set an example" for children.
manager.
-Rose's daughter was quoted
"It's something we don 't need
as saying Rose was the "world 's right now In baseball ," she said .
worst fat her ."
" I feel strongly about what
-A newspaper reported that affects fans' thinking a nd young
Rose sold a Corvette automobile people. I'm very big on the
that Schott gave him for break· example players set .for the
ing Ty Cobb's hit record, may young children. Pete's a manhave sold ttie bat and ball ager and he has to set aN
involved in the record ·breaking example."
hit and last month took out a
Rose's daught er, Fawn, was
second mortgage on his home.
quoted in the April issu'e of
-Reports of Rose· s gambling "Gentlemen·~ Quarterly" maga·
has caught the aqention of zlne as saying, "My father Is the
several federal agencies. accord- world's worst fathe r. 1will never
ing to published reports .
understand why he never ha d
. As for Rose , his only comment any time for us ."
J
Wednesday was to say he.)lopes
The D'ay ton Daily News re·
the commissioner's invesli!(a- ported Wednesday that last
tion concludes as soon as momh Ro se took out a second
possible.
mortgage for Sl50,000 on hi s
Rose told listeners on his home. The newspaper also repre-game rad(oshow , ""Alllcan ported that Rose so ld a Corvette
tell you is that the commiss.lon· that Schott gave him Sept. ll ,
er's office is doing the investiga - 1985. for breaking Cobb:s hit
tion and my people are cooperat · record .and added that it had been
lng with them 100 percent.
told by a sports rrtemorabllla
"The faster this thing gets collector that the bat and ball
resolved, the better off I'm going used to get the record hit had .
to be, and the Reds, and every been sold for about $175,000.

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Schembechler testifies
CHICAGO (UPI) - Michl·
gan's Bo Schembechler testified
Wednesday he never would have
allowed two players to stay on his
football team had he known they
had signed illegal agreements
with sports agents Norby Wal·
ters and Lioyd·Bloom.
Schembechier, athletic director and football coach at the
University of Michigan, said he
kicked Robert Perryman and
Garland Rivers off the team as
soon as he confirmed they had
signed professional representa·
\ion contracts with Walters and ·
Bloom.
In the spring of 1987, Schem·
bechler, Michigan's athletic dl·
rector and football coach, said he
confronted Perryman and Riv·
ets when he heard rumors they
had taken out loans and signed
agreements with the agents,
violating NCAA ellgi)&gt;illty rules.
Both players denied the rumors,
he said.
· "I called Perryman into tny
office arid I said to him that I
heard that there were rumors out
tbere that he' had signed a
contract with an agent prior to
tile season- 'is that true or not?
...:. and he denied It," Schem·
bechler said.
Rivers Initially denied the
rumors, Schembechler said, but
later in the spring, when FBI
agents Interviewed Rivers and
sthembechler ln the coach's
office, Rivers admitted he had
taken money and had signed an
agreement.

•

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�'
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 23, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

... /

SMITH TALKS TO MEDIA - North Carolina head basketball
coach Dean Smith talks with reporters during a news conference
Wednesday at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky. Smith chose not to
have his team practice In the arena. The Tar Heels wlll take on
Michigan In the NCAA's Southeast Regional semifinals tonight.
(UPIJ

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
Nobody expected the Ar izona
Wildcats to be in a position to
return to the Final Four this
season after they were deci·
mated by graduation. So guess
who's within two wins of an
invitation to college basketball's
most exclusive party?
Arizona, the top ranked team
In the country entering this
year's tournament, arc preparing to face Nevada-Las Vegas
Thursday at McNichols Arena in
Denver and that doesn't surprise
Coach Lute Olson.
"We're a team on a mission. "
Olson said.· "Everybody on our
team enjoyed the experience of
playing In the Final Four last
year.
."People said that because we
lost three starters from that club
meant we didn ' t have much of a

cha nce to get back to th e Final
Four. But I think weare at the top
or our game. I think we are as
ready as we will ever be."
The other semifinal in the West
will send the Big Ten champion
Indiana Hoosiers against the
Seton Hall Pirates.
Arizona, 29-3, has won its last
11 ga mes and 21 out of 22- the
on ly loss in that stretch being a
two- point setback to Oklahoma In
Norman. Since the beginning of
March , the Wildcats' seven victories have been by an average of
18 po ints.
Arizona bea t Nevada-Las Vegas, 28-7, in December by 11
point s on the Wildcats ' home
court .
"But there won' t be any
revenge factor on their part, I
don't think," Olson said. " Once
you get this far in the tourna·
ment , you don 't need any

motivation .
" I know Vegas is a better team
than they were when we played
them before. They pound the ball
Inside more than they did then.
But we are better, too. We have
been steadily improvi ng all

year."
In Thursday's Southeast semifinals In Lexington, Ky ., Virginia
meets top-seed Oklahoma and
Michigan !aces North Carolina.
In Friday's Midwest semifinals. it's Illinois-Louisville and
Syracuse-Missouri at Minneapolis. At the East Regional In East
Rutherford, N.J ., It's MinnesotaDuke and Georgetown-North Carolina State.
Minnesota will have the servl·
ces of forward Richard Coffey,
who has been sidelined for
several weeks with-a knee injury.
Coffey, a 6-foot -6 junior and
co-captai n, has missed eight
games since he suffered llga-

NCAA Division II tourney opens
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2

Toronto vs. Texas at Port ChW'IQtl(',

33 :Jt .51iii "ID Y,

ChW"Iolle

llo.~to11

.,,_,, 1: :mp.m.

NAT IONAl. BASKE;TBALL ASSOC.
Ellliif'r n Co nJCM'nl-e

Phlbtdriphllll

Hartford .f.

Ba!;eball E:w:hlbltion
Philadelphia ''1:1, St. Louis al Sa.
Pcter!iiUI'IJ,. Fla., I p.m.
N~· )'ork (NL) VII. Moolno!d at We!!~ I
Palm IW•h. F1a .. 1:05 p.m.
Bo11ton u . HoulllonatKIMI4immee, Fla .,
!: OS p.m.
Chit·II.~ I AL) n. Ph l~l'Jbld: Bradenton, f1a ., 1: 05 p.m .

NBA results

Ruston

NY Run~n ii. MlntM'Solll. 1
W118hln~on 5, Plthbur,;h 4
Toronto5, VMl'ouver 3 ·

Thund~cy'to Spons

t'hi t:liJO /NL I 3. SP,illliiP D
Han Frant:I!4C:o t.Oakla.nd4 II linn )

vorli

39

\\'t'dnt'IKIM.Y'S Kt'"!Wl"

Tod~~;y's

Clt'\ll.'lllltld 4, SiUI Dlt'KU 2

fa1Jforllla4,MIIwaukr e 3
Hou:-Con 5, KanMaN City :1

7'l

Calpr)· al Wlnmpe"- nlctat

. 2~6

\\'eeeMdiQI'" ~ulh

311 HI!
e32 229
28 1 329

Frld"''M G~t.ml.,.
\IUK:ouver at BuHtlo. nl~
Tnronto at Deho6t, nl~
Philadelphia at Wa~~lllnl(ton. nlghl

.Ut

II

:JM :Ill

1!0

WlnlliiM'J at E•monton,9: 35p.m.

II

l'hUadclphiM

tl'l

:lfl

1A11 Anl(el.s at Clll,;ary, 9 :3:i p.m .

..f71

Nt•w \ 'ork

G

36 :J'l II
VMrouwr
3'l :J5 II
\\'lnnlpt-,;
24 :J8 II
.:-cllnc:hf'd playoff herth
)'·dlnchl'd division til k'

MlniEt~ota

II

San Frlillclst.'O

• - ~~~ AnKd
.: · Edmonlon

H•rtlonl at Qut&gt;bet:, 7:35p.m.
•t Nl' lslllndfor"- ~:05 p.m .'

.1157

.S71

1\Uanl.li.

12 281 311!
216 U 6 611 t4~ S%2
Smyllht' Dlvltktn
J · l'all{'.trJ
tt 16 II 107 3'lfl 10

ThuMI~'s Gamel
Newler_.y at Bo!tlon; 7: :i:t p.m.

.S71

Ci ncinnati

t71

Buffalo I
Mo.-real II, Qucbrt• 0
Phlladelptd _a 3, Chlca,;o,~

.:lOti

NATIONA. L LEA.GUE
st. Lcu11.~
II
S1111 01"11:0

:'~~'.-~·

~&amp;0

2-16 1!64

~ . Lollis\!,

.421
.40"1

ll

1\or;ton

1\llanlk

7G
''

Toro•o

AMERil' AX LEAGUE
\\' L

I

Ztl H U
\!8 :1:1 15
'!3 38 u

' Chh·a~~:;u

R.\' Unitt&gt;d PrH~r; lnh•r .. Uonal
Exhibition SIIUI4n~

Ba~rtlal l

K 1tnsa.~

Lou~!'!

Mlnrsnlll.

,.;.St,

'

Wt'!iilern Colllerence
Ml~' DivisiOn
W L Pet . 011
Utuh
~I !5 .UJ 31 ~ .554 ...)r
Hour4on
lh •n\~·r
:tC 3(1 .545 5
lhillaM
31 3s .no 10
San 1\nlonlo
111 .JM .na 23
Miami
1J 55 . Ill 31
Plldnc Dl"lalon
1.1\ l.akrJ'Irl
U Z0 .IM
l'hat'nlx
.a! 1!4 .838 3Yt
Goldrn Sllllt!
lit r7 .51111 7
SH 27 .5115 j
St'WIIt•
Porthu1d
3:! S3 .4&amp;! 13
~ramcnto
II n .t!IH 211~
L,\ fllppeu
II U .1!15 ll
X-t!llndlt'd playoff herth

Wt•dne!lidiii,Y'"' lk&gt;•ull8
Phlllldelp~a 101, t1evt'land87
lnchna 101, WMhlnstonll!a:
De-troit 115, San Aator*l t-1
MIIAI111101, N~w York 103
( 'hlca.«o 11'l, Phoenix 111
LA Cllpp~~•rs 116. DaU•8 ll:l
Thun.Miay'll G~~om~
M'wohln.:toull 'hllll'lotu-, 1: Slp.m.
Milwauliet' al Clt&gt;nland. l : SU p.m.

FrancltK'O

\'s,

MllwllUk~ e

. al

Chwuill'r, Arb.., 3: 85p.m.
Chlcuo {NL) n. California IU Palm
SprlnW', Calif., 4:01p.m .
Detroit VII. ClndnlllU at PIMI Cll)',
Fh1.. 7:85p.m.
Atlanta VM. New l ' ork (AL) ai Fori
Lauderdale, Fla.. 7::10 p.m.
Oalr.lilnd ""· SIU1 Dlep at Yun~~t, Ariz.,
9:05p.m. '

Basketball
WMhlnAton at Charlotte, 'f:SO p.m.
M!lwauil!e at Cleveland, 7::t0p.m.
LA (llp~n at Se all~. 11 p.m.
Phwnl'lat Golden State, IG:H p.m.
LA Lakcnat Sacnmn&amp;o, 10: 111 p.m .
Co11~1 e

Cami)M des -

NIT TourMment

( q~artrrih•lll }
Auh.lm, AI&amp;. ; A.t!SUn. Teu1; Bowlnr

Green. Kc.lucky ; RuMion, La.. Women'• NC..tl\ Toumllment ~re.:lu.ii

sl'mlh.Ws)

lk!•\'E'r; Eut Rulhtrlord, N.J. : IA!x ·
MlaneapoUs - NCA..t

lnKton, Jb,;

Tournamt~~l (re~otallll!mlllnab)

Foo&amp;ball
Palm Sprtnp. Calif. - Nfl. Meetlnp
Golf
Nllw Orleans - S~,OOI PGA USF&amp;G

CIM~tlr

Phoenix -

utiO,OIO LPGA Turqolse

ClMHk

Hockey
.New .Jer!ll'y a1 8oKton, 1: n p.m.
Hartklrd a1 (luf'hef:, 7:35p.m.
MlntEI'iota u NV Islanders. H:iJ~ p.m . .
Wlnntpec at Edmonton, 9:35p.m.
Lo"' An~es at Calpry,t:as p.m.
SOCct'r

MISL

San Dlt'lO 111 DaU•11, 8:35p.m.

Li\ fllpprri'i Ill Seatlk. 10 p.m.
Phoenh: lU Gohlt'nstat~. 10: 30p.m .

·

LA Lllkt'rM at Sat•nmeneo. 111:31 p.m .

Frld..,. 'H G111me"M
Nrw Vork at JkMlon, niP~;
San Antonio .u Phllll.delphl.». nl~
Utllh lll HouM:on, nip!:

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Wale~J fonlert&gt;nef'
Patrick Divllllon
WLTPbl. GF GA
~ -M'I&amp;Shlnl(ion 3M 21 10
H 278 tU
II

K!

x·Pitl!lhu ,.-h

36 3%

1

it

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34 33

l

75
i,!

25 37 J'l
1\.'\' lslandl&gt;rt&gt; U 15 S S3
Adam..; Dhl!i~O
y·Monlrul
51 Ill 7 109
.\• BuFfalo)

x· Hartford
Qu f'bl't:

3l ~ II
:l.a 33 l
3-1 35 $

1\0
71
73

12 l 57
Conferetu'i!
Norris DIVI!!Ion
2:5

m

tHO

3'lt !125
2115 "i I
I!S.f ~l

t41 HI

303 t il
2till
2'11
t13
2o11

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2ll
3n

f~~ompbcll

x· Ot&gt;lmll

Wt·dnl'!ld~ '~' SportR Trantw~ctlom

-

rt' Mall(lltrn!Dt.

NHL results

X· BoHIOn

$2.1 million

Ba8f'ball
Sl!nt pltchen Jade
1\rm!ltronc. Mike RoeNIH 11.nd Mike
Grllfln to their minor le~ camp for

O.:•nwr Jtl Dala.,., nl.lhl
fhlua:o ut Portland. nl~tht

Nl'~~&gt;' ,J~uey

Kf'y Dbca,ynf', F111. -

Upton Pl•r" ctumplonshlps
...
Clnl'lnnatl

Nt•w Jrr.'il.'y at Det roU, nl«h!

li·Nl' RIIIII~U !l ~

TenrM

W L T Pb. GF OA
:IZ :tO I'! li tiS ~3

Jla.oil.altall
Miami- Slped forward Dan
Pop80n to~ IW.v COnlracl; pl11.ce d Pat
Qlmmlnp on Uw InJured ll8i.
Pldladelphla - RtiChl'd a1reemen&amp;
w•h e~nler Mllu&gt; Gmlnakl on a four- )'lear

co•net.

Colk&gt;re'
Paee- N lltnedVIcJames, Jo hnPer~z,

GPOI'Kf' Dreyer, Boll Aude\'llrd, Da•

Mu U.lland, Doua: BtellnK" 1tnd o..
Me Ken Ill ..u... nt lootball coaches.
Ro~Je-B•Iman -

Baaf!hall COIIICh Jim

Rendel1'8ipd.
Xa~ll'l' llnhoeuky (Ohio) - Eslen~d
tiM&gt; l'O .. ral-1 ol bMkrthall coat·h Pete

Ollloen.
Football
NFL - C4mmiAMoner Pete Ro~lle
announct!d his reUremtnl .
Del roll - S6 ~d frll':e' a,;ent Uneman
Chrl8 G•ml»l.
Minnesota - SIPfd oorwrbiL(.-k Daryl
Smith.

OSU-Northwestem football tilt may
be played in Vancouver this fall
COLUMBUS. Ohio !UP!) -A
report Wednesday said Ohio
State may open its 1989 football
season Sept 2 in Vancouver,
British Columbia, against
Northwestern.
The Co lumbus Dispatch said
the game against the Wildcats,
presently scheduled for Nov. 4 In
Evanston, Ill., would be moved to
Vancoqver and played as the
Vancouver Classic I! plans are
s uccessful. .
Ohio State Athletic Director
Jim Jones refused to com ment on
the proposed switch, but another
source In the athletic department
told the paper, "I'm 80 percent
sure at this point lhe game will be
played Sept. 2 between us and
Northwestern."
The newspaper said Karen
Lantella, marketing and promo-

lions director for Vancouver's
B.C. Place Stadium, a 60,000·seat
domed facility, admitted such an
event Is possible, but would not
confirm the OSU-Northwestern
connection.
.
The present Ohio State scheduled has the Buckeyes opening
at home Sept. 16 against Okla·
homa State, followed ~ a road
game Sept. 23 at Southern
Calltornla.
The USC game, however, is
still up In the air, with the schools
stU! negotiating a switch to Sept.
9 to accomodate national
television.
Because of Oklahoma State's
three-year probation for recruitIn~ violations handed down re·
cently by the NCAA, the
Buckeye-Cowboy game cannot
be televised.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. I UP!) n.ess, :·,Chapman said. "It's about
:-. The etg~t-team NCAA D1v- llme.
1s1on II mens basketball tau rnaThe tournament quarterfinal
me~t th.a~opens Thursday at the round opens Thursday with
Spnngf1eld Civic Center is ex· Wiscon s in-Milwaukee facing
peeled to produce some high- Southeast Missouri State, !ol·
scoring games for fans in the city lowed by Sacred Heart (Conn.)
tha t has become home to the taking on North Carolina
annual showdown.
CentraL
" Ba~ketball \~ just heading in
that di rection, sa1d Kentucky
On Friday, Kentucky WesWesleyan Coach Wayne Chap- Ieyan meets Jacksonvllle State
man, who pred1cted consistently (Ala. ), and Millersville (Pa.)
high-scoring games during the matches up with California·
to~.rna~ent.
Riverside.
. Were tur~ing the.game back
Southeast Missouri Is the only
mto a players game mstead of a team to make to the final eight
coaches ' game. Thank good- last year, losing in the quarter-

'R edmen look to· better
current 5-5 standing
Holding a 5-5 overall sta nding
enterin·g play this week, the Rio
Grande baseball team will be
looking to improve wheq it hosls
West VIrginia Tech on Friday In
a 1 p.m. doubl eheader.
Two home games set for March
18, one against Geneva , Pa., and
the other with Capital, were
postponed due to rain .
Balmy late winter weather
allowed the Redmen to open their
season on schedule March 11 with
a do,ubleheader at home against
Bluffton. Rio Grande split with
the Beavers, winning the first
game 10-4 and dropping the
nightcap 5-2.
In the first encounter, Bluffton
Jed 4·0 until the sixth Inning,
when a homer by Brent Bissell
(freshman, Tuppers Plains)
sparked a Redmen rally that saw
the hosts score all of their runs
during that inning.
Shawn Haning (freshman, Logan) supplied one of the key hit s
!or Rio Grande. Al Sieradzkl
(senior, Westerville ) pitched the
game for the Redmen.

The Redmen were again down
4-0 in the sixth period of the
second contest. Scott Gheen
(senior, Middleport) hila home
rlln to help the Redmen trail4-2,
but the has ts failed to advance
any farther and were unable to
stop Bluffton !rom scoring its
game-winning run at the top of
the seventh.
Pitching for the Redmen was
Jerry Hester !senior, Greenfield). whose season record to
date went to 1·1.
West Virginia State came to
Stan ley L. Evans Field on March
14 and handed the Redmen a 15-2
,loss In a single 9-inning game. On
the mound for Rio Grande was
Dave Cantwell (senior, Lancaster) whose season slate also went
tol-l.
The Rio men then travelled to
West VIrginia Wesleyan on
March 16 and In another 9-lnnlng
affair, lost to the Bobcats 5-4.
Sieradzki took the loss, putting
his record to date at 2-2.
Within District 22, the Redmen
are currently 4·4.

Rio begins .season in track
Mary Dowler (senior, Jackson) finished a\ 18:18 In the '
women's 5,000 meter relay to
highlight the first appearance of
the men 's and women's track
teams at Rio Grande in spring
competition In the Early Bird
Relays March 18 at Marshall
University.

In addition, Lisa Schmeltzer
(senior, Lancaster) and Marcy
Copley (senior, St. Paris) fin·
ished second in the javelin.
Eleven men's teeams and 10
women's teams competed In the
relays.

In addition, Eric Norris (sophomore, Newcomerstown) ran
an "outstanding:' leg of the
men 's 800 meter relay event,
Coach Bob Willey said.
Willey also had praise for the
performance of his 5,000 meter
relay team for the men, who "all
did a nice job" against other
'teams.
The Rio Grande team In this
event consists of Tony Fatica
(junior, West Farmington),
VInce Fatica (sophomore, West
Farmington) and Doug Horne
(freshman, Worthington).

final round to Florida Southern.
Missing from this year's field Is
Lowell_ last year's champion
and the only Massachuset~
school and second New England
college to win the Division II
crown.
Sacred Heart, which is returning to the tournament after a
year's absence, Is the only other
New England school to take the
division's top honors (1986).
Since 1977, all but two Division
II tournaments hav~ been played
In Springfield, which is alre~dy
gearing up for the 100th annlversary of basketball invented In
189i In Springfield.'
Th·e relatively new success of
New England Division II teams,
plans for an expansion o! the
Springfield Civic Center and
support from the Basketball Hall
of Fame have all contributed to
keeping the tournament In
Springfield.

L:Ai:U ,
liTHE

ADS}

they would like to donate or
By BOB HOEFLICH
anyone
who Is interested In
Bob Byer, director of the Meigs
joining
the
quilting group, Is
County Emergency ~edlcal Ser·
asked
to
contact
Terry Stotts at
vices, is pretty
the center, 992-6472.
busy these days
In preparing for
Laurie Sheridan, Ohio Vice
the fourth an·
President of the Future Farmers
nual Meigs
of America; will be speaker at the
County EMS·
annual banquet o! the Racine
Fire SchooL
F .F .A. Chapter. The annual
Not only does
dinner
has been set for 6:30p.m.
the school offer classes to local
on
April,
6.
emergency squad and fire department members but it offers
The Rev. William Middlesthe classes to other squad person,
warth
is retiring from his duties
nel and fireli ghters !rom out of
at
St.
Paul's
Lutheran Chruchthe county so you can look !or a
it's
been
a
tong while - but
lot of visitors here on the
Easter Sunday will not be his last
weekend or May 6.
Headquarters for , the school Sunday in the pulpit at the
which is on both Saturday and churc h.
ACtually, he will be staying
Sunday will be the Meigs Junior
until May 1. Hopefully , he wfll
High School in Middleport.
A wide range of subjects will be hang on to us and stay In the
community"following his retireoffered to squad men and firefighters and some of the top instruc- ment. He has been active in so
tors in Ohio will be on hand to many directions and many or us
do appreciate the role he has
teach the classes.
played in the community .
Things just keep moving along
Kenneth Michael, commander
and this year Daylight Savings
Time will enter the picture abo'ut of the Rutland American Legion
2 a.m. on Sunday, Apri12. Since It Post 467, extends a blg thanks to
is spring, that m eans we spring everyone for their donations to
ahead - meaning that you will the fish fry and bake sale held by
move your clocks ahead by one the post on March 11. He also
es peclally thanks the workers
hour .
You see. this gives all of us and most of all , those who came
mqre daylight in the eveni ngs so out to enjoy the food and support
that we can cut grass, grub the project.
around in the yard and all of that
As we grow older, are there
good stuff alter work .
niore of those little accidents like spilling a ·glass of milk In the
kitchen or a cup, of coffee in the
The Activity Department of bathroom- or does It just seem
. Overbrook Center Is In the process like it? An(! why does it seem like
. of starting a quilting circle.
It's at least a gallon when you try
If anyone has a large rectangu to clean up the spill? Bul we will
lar floor qulltlng stand frame
keep smiling won't we?

NEEDED
URGENTLY
27 Oualil.-:1 Homeowners
to Display Thermally Sealed.

ln1ulaled Fleplaeemenl Windows.

DELUXE PACKAGE

$99~!lrindow

COORDINATOR
Rae
Ann Mills Gwiazdowsky, Mid·
dleport, has been named pa·
tlent coordinator at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. In tbat
position, Mrs. Gwlazdowsky Is
responsible for utilization
management, quality assu·
ranee management and Infection control. A na&amp;tve of
Middleport, Mrs. Gwiazdowsky is the daughter of
Russell (Bruz) and Allee
Mills, Middleport. She is a
registered nurse having received her training at Lorain
County Community College at
ElyriL She returned to Middleport In 1980 and has been
employed at the Internal care
facility at Lakin and at Veterans Memorial Hospital on a
part-time basis before accept· '
ing her new lull-time post a&amp;
Veterans Memorial.

Cut Your Fuel Bill
up to 50%
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED

7 Windows - $49 monthly
FIRST CALL I FIRST SERVE

1-800·422·9872
AMERICAN WINDOWS
'

ZETOR TRACTOR #5211 LOW PROFILE
3 eye., diesel engine, 1 0 speed forward,
2 speed reverse, power steering,
external hydraulic, differential lock with
air compressor.
OFFER EXPIRES MAR. 31, 1989

'

vides a lot of nutritional value at
a minimum number o,f calories.
One egg provides about 80
calories. It provides about 16% or
the dally recommended allowance for Iodine, 15% R.D.A. for
protein, 10% R.D.A. for rlbo·
flavin and phosphorus and
smaller amounts of potassjum,
VItamin A and D, calcium Iron
and B vitamins.
The cholesterol content of eggs
Is high, one egg has approxl·
mately 260 mgofcholesterol. The
cholesterol Is found In the yolk of
the egg. Two eggs are equal to
one serving of meat as a protein
source.
(:ost wise eggs are generally
considered a good buy for their
nutritional value. If eggs are
priced at 85 cents per dozen that
averages out to 14 cents per
serving as compared to 30 cents
per serving for chicken at 60

By Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extenllion Agent
Easter Is just around the
·corner. For many families, this
includes a variety of family
traditions such as a special meal,
visit from )he Easter bunny,
beautiful smelling flowers and of
course coloring hard cooked
eggs. This week In the SpotUght
focuses on the nutritional value
of eggs, techniques tor hard
balling them to Insure quality
and purchasing ideas.
Nutritionally eggs have been tn
the news a lot recently with
regard to their cholesterol level.
With all .t he concern over high
cholesterol levels, we as consumers are more conscious about
the foods that we eat and levels at
fats and cholesterol. Eggs are a
nutrient dense food .
This means that an egg pro-

SALEM STREET

The honor roll !or the Letart
Falls Elementary School has
been announced by Robert Beegle, principaL
Those receiving a grade of "B"
or above in all their subjects to be
named on the honor ro!l were
Jane Hill, Carrie Stobart , and
Rebecca Wolfe, second grade;
Julie Hunnel. Jennifer Roush,

RUTLAND, OHIO

742·2455

Hillary Turley, and Ran etta
Wheeler, third grade; Adam
Roush , Kimberly Roush , Lora
Sayre, Vanessa Shuler, fourth
grade; Jason Barnett and Jason
Shuler, fifth grade; and Tracy
Pickett, Brandy Roush , and
Karen Saltsman, sixth gradet
The honor roll system is not used
in the first grade.

AAUW will meet on Tuesday

USDA CHOICE

CHARBROILED
SIRLOIN TIPS
'DINNER

The Middleport-omeroy Area
Branch of the American Assocla·
lion of University Women will
meet Tuesday at 7: 30p.m. at the
Racine United Methodist
Church.
In observance of National
Women's History Month, the
program will feature a discussion o! famous women with Dr .

Marcella Barton, Rio Grande
Co!lege to speak on "Women In

cents per pound, 85 cents lor pork
chops at $1.70 a pound, 33 cents
tor ground beef at $:1.30 per pound
and 28 cents tor peanut butter at q
$2.29 per 16 ounces.
At the grocery store compare
price tor size. It there Is more
than nine cents diHerence in the
cost per dozen at two similar
sizes of eggs buy the smaller and
less expensive eggs to get the
most lor your money . For exam·,
pie large eggs at 79 cents per
dozen and medium eggs at 69
cents per dozen, the medium
eggs are a better buy.
Look at the grading on the
eggs. Grade AA and Grade A
eggs are generally used tor
trying and poaching where ap·
pearance ts Important. Grade B
eggs have thinner whites and
spread out more: they are good
for general baking and cooking.

All grades of eggs· are similar In
nutritional value. Brown eggs
and white eggs contain the same
nutrients.
At home, eggs should be
refrigerated to avoid loss of
quallty and storage. When the
time has come for hard cooking
the eggs thls easy procedure
works well. Cover eggs with cold
water and bring to a near boil.
Reduce heat and simmer for 15
minutes. Cool at once by draining
and running cold water over
them. Crack the entire shell for
easter to·peel. The eggs which do
not peel easily when hardcooked
are freshly laid and those that
have been stored !or several days
wlll generally peel easter.
Cooling the eggs immediately
after cooking Is one key to easter
peeling. Rapid cooling also help
(See EGGSTRA, page 12)

•

Family medicine

Origin of chronic iruligestion vartes

By John C. Wolf, D.O.
Assocla&amp;e Professor of Family
Medicine
Ohlo University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: What causes chronic
Indigestion and terrible trouble
with belching and burping? All
the tests have come back
negative.
An!lwer: Indigestion- dyspepsia in medical terms - can be
produced by conditions of the
stomach, esophagus, gall
bladder, pancreas, heart, and
other organs. Obviously It has
been difficult for your doctor to
track down the specific cause of
your complaint. I'm sure that he
or she started by obtaining a
history of your complaints, by
asking questions like: When did
It start? Wher does It burt? How
bad is the discomfort? What
makes it better, and what makes
It worse? The answers all helped
Identify the likely cause. The
additional Information obtained
from examining you helped your
doctor choose which tests would
be the most likely to identify the
cause of your problems.
You said that "all · tests have
come back negative," but you
didn't tell me which tests were

can produce the same belching
performed. We physicians have a
problem . The "fizz" of a carbo·
difficult task. There are many,
nated beveragl' is produced by
many tests available which can
indicate a problem that would carbon dioxide bubbling out of
cause all or part of your Indiges- tbe drink. If much "fizzing"
tion. The test, or tests, which wlll occurs in the stomach, a burp will
give the answer to your question result.
I think that you should discuss
just hasn't been done yet.
your
problems with your doctor
The belchlng/burplnlf' which
again.
Perhaps It Is time lor
you experience makes me conother
tests.
If you are still unable
cerned about your gall bladder. A
to
get
help
with your problem,
poorly functioning gall bladder,
you could see a gastroenterolowith or without gall stones, can
gist, a specialist In digestive
produce these symptoms. Problems ln the stomach or the problems. I'm sure your family
physician can recommend one In
pancreas can also produce belch·
lng, but there are usually other your area.
Question: Would changing my
complaints along with the burps.
I Imagine that the normal !lnd· diet or lifestyle decrease this
lngs you reported were from Indigestion?
Answer: While few people can
tests your doctor ordered to see If
these more common problems eat cucumbers and onions with·
might have been the cause of out burping, there are many
other foods that cause problems
your complaints.
for
at least some of us. For
There are other less serious
instance,
caffeine is a common
conditions which may be respon·
ingredient
that can be upsetting
slble. Some Individuals have the ·
lor
many
people. Caffeine ls
habit at swallowing large
found
lit
coffee,
and In lesser
amounts of air with their food.
This can be due to poorly tlttlng amounts ln the so-called "decafdentures, emotional stress, or feinated" coffee. It ls also round
just a "bad habit." This extra air In tea, most cola drinks and
stretches the stomach, and the chocolate.
One more word about coffee.
pressure from this stretching Is
For
some people who get stom·
ultimately relieved by a belch.
ach
upsets when t.hey drink
Drinking carbonated beverages

IRAS.

coffee, the problem is not the
caffeine but the acid that is In the
coffee.
Alcohol . and aspirin always
cause stomach trouble. Healthy
individuals that occasionally use
these products usually don't have
enough stomach Irritation to
notice, but if there are already
stomach problems, aspirin and
alcohol will certainly make matters worse.
rcan't give you specific recam.
mendations because I don 'tknow
the specific causeofyourdyspepsla. Talk to your doctor about
your specl!ic problems. Diet can
make a dllference in the way you
'feel, but It is not very likely to
clear up the cause of your
symptoms.

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

(ompltte lint of Vegetable &amp;
Bedding Plants, Hanging
lasktll, Shrubbery &amp; TrHs,
Easter Flowers: l~ios, Tulips,
Azaleos, Hy*angeos, Hyacinths,
·
etc.
0p• 9 A.M.·5 P.M. Daily

Hubbards Greenhouse
992-5776
SYUCUSE, DHID

CENTS

AGE.

Honor roll announced by school

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

.

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT
ACCOUNT
Amount In IRA At Age 65
Assuming An Average Yield of 8.30%
MONTHLY
INVESTMENT

$50
$75
*100

BEGINNING
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*122,614
*183,921
228

$49,816
$74,724
632

$17,801
$26,702
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History.'~

~

Winners of the poster and
essay conies twill be guests at the
meeting and at that time wlll be
presented awards. New officers
will be elected and a silent
auction will be held .

Easter services; set at Heath

''

The Middleport Heath United
Methodist Church will celebrate
The Lord's Son Maundy Thursday (tonight) at 7:30p.m.
On Easter Sunday, church
activities will begin with the
sunrise service at 6:30 a.m.
• followed by a church wide

With coupon

below.

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£
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£
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spotlight gg stra, egg stra.
ggs, aster, nutrttton

SEE US TODAY ON DISCOUNTS FOR THIS MODEL

has sef

All interested parties will be
given an opponunity to be
heard. Further information
may be obtained by con·
!acting the Commisston.

Training personnel...

DIAMONDS

ThurSday, March 23, 1989
Page 7

In the

Beat of the bend

LIKE

"SPRING SA~IN8S"

LEGAL NOTICE
The Pilblic Utilitie~·
mission of Ohio
ior
public hearing Case No.
89-02·EL·EFC. to review
the fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of Colum·
bus Southern Power Com·
pany. the operation of its
Electric Fuel Component
and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 27, 1989, at the of·
flees ol the Public Utilities
Commission, 180 East
Broad Slreet, Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.

ment damage in his left knee.
Coffey led the Big Ten in
rebounding in 1988 and his
addition to the Gopher llneup
would .great ly improve their
chan·ces against the favored Blue
Dev il s.
Gophers Coac h Clem Haskins
said Coffey ran through offen sive
plays in practice Tuesda y without a ny trouble. Has kins sa id
Co ffey " did OK" But he added.
" We' ll see more tomorrow. It ' ll
probably be stiff arrd•sore."
"! ga ined a ·tot of confidence in
it ." Coffey said. "There' s not
that much pain at all. It 's stil l
tender In areas: It (loesn't bother
me as long as I have th e brace on.
In the game Friday. there will be
a lot or contact."
Georgetown guard Charles
Smith missed practice Wednes day , complaining of a re&gt;~er and
nausea, but he is expected to play
against North Carolina State.
Smith leads Ge 0 rgetown in
scoring, assists, steals and fr ee
throw percentage, and Is tt)e
player the Hoyas turn to in the
clutch. In Georgetown's second
round victory over Notre Dame.
Smith scored 28 of his 34 points in
the second hal! to rally his team.
If Smith Is unable to play
Friday against North Carolina
State. Thompson likely would
s tart either junior Mark Tillmon,
or senior Bobby Winston .

"People shortchange t.he basketball !hat's J?layed in New
England," said Don Doucette,
who coached last year's champlan Lowell, but has since moved
up a division to North CarolinaAshville.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Post-season hardwood playoffs resume

Compttte dinner Includes USDA Choice
Sirtoln T1pe with grilled onions and mushrooms
yourchcMce of baked potato or fries, and Po~osa's
AII·You-Can•Eat Grand Buffet •• with over 80 items.

fellowship breakfast. Church
school for all ages is at 9:30a.m.
and Easter morning worship
starts at 10:30 a.m. Choral
selections will be provided by the
Chancel Chair. The Rev. Sonny
Zuniga, pastor, Invites the public
to attend.

· .Fund raising event set Friday

Kids 5 and under choose from our

special kids menu, one FREE w«h
each adu~ entree purchased.

Darrell Dugan, Ricky Sellars,
and Raymond Pierce, all cancer
,
victims, will be honored with a
•- · lund raising evfnt at the South·
; ern Jr. High School on Friday
from 7·9: 30 p.m.
AdmiSsion to the event will be
by donation and all proceeds will
go to the three famllles to assist
with costs associated with the
disease.
"•

Upper River Rd.
( aeroee from the Airport)

The event wlll be emceed by
Jim Carnahan and Dan Smith.
MusiC will be provided by the
local band "Country Blend,"
gospel music by the group Wilber
Dona hew and friends, Ripley,

THE PUBliC UTiliTIES ,
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito.
Secretary.

W.Va., as well as appearances by
the Midnight Cloggers.
Anyone wishing to make a
donation may do so at the Home
National Bank ln Racine.
For more informa!ion contact
Lois Moore at 949-2324 or
992-2276.

In addition, an LRA offers tax Incentives that you can take advantage of nght now. The Interest
you earn Will be tax-exempt until you use the money. Many people are st1ll ellglble to deduct all or
part of their annual contribution from their current Income taxes.
Let us show you how to reach your reUrement goal with a Peoples Bank I.RA We make it easy!

The Deadline For 1988 Tax Year Contributions Is April J tJ, 1989

OPLES
Your

Omitted
The na~e of Joe D'Augustlno,
a third grader, was unintentlon·
aUy omit ted from the honor roll
released by the Harrlsonvllle
·Elementary SchooL

'

,,

Whatever your age, monthly contributions to an Individual Retirement Account will significantly
_
Increase your retirement Income.

·I

MASON
773-5514

K

Good Neighbor

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121

NEW HAVEN
882-2135

MEMBER F.D.I.C. • SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

�I

Thursday, March 23. 1989 ·

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Local news briefs••.

Most of nation's mid-section weather is fair

Continued from page 1

EMS has 3 calls Thursday
Three calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Wednesday.
At 8:15a.m. the Pomeroy squad went to Am eric are-Pomeroy
Health Care Center for Mary Casto who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10: 20a.m the Rutland unit took
Paul Jewell from Meigs Mine 1 to O'Bieness Hospital In Athens;
and ad 11:36 p.m . the Middleport squad went to Grover Road for
Lowell Swisher who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center.
1
Resl"dents· · ·Continued
- -from
- page
----

CDBG funds are normally
shared among as many entities
in the county as possible.
Jones reiterated the position of
the commissioners that "we're
willing to d6 anything we can as
far as exploring the problem and
when it comes time to apply for a
grant on behalf of the trus tees .
we'll do it." But the county
cannot financ e Improvements to
a township road. Jones
explained.
In other business, Sidney Edwards. director of the GalliaMe•i gs Community Ac tio n
Agency, and Tom Reed a nd Joan
Culp . of CAA's JTPA program.
attended Wednesday's meeting
to explain briefly to the commiss ioners some minor JTPA
changes for this year. and to
request the commissioners to
approve modification of this, the
seco nd year, of the two-yea r
JTPA plan.
Locally, JTPA has proven very
successful, Edwards reported.
Proof of this is that JTPA has
received incentive dollars which
. are offered only to programs
which meet or exceed goals, he
said.
"We don't give people jobs,' '

said Reed. " We help them find
jobs."
According to Edwards, approximalely one-third of Meigs
Couniy residents are at or below
poverty level. "We try hard to
serve the hard to serve. We' re
taking people off welfare rolls."
"JTPA provides opportunities
for people to make changes, but
those opportunties require committment from the people. JTPA
Is not a giveaway program," said
Culp.
'
.
;
The commissioner commended the successful program
and approved the second year of
the program as requested.
Finally, lhe commissioners
passed a resolution adopting ITT
as the interchange carrier for
public pay telephones on county
premises, as suggested by the
state County Commissioners As sociation. The only pay telephones on county premises are
two in the courtllouse.
Next week's county commissioners' meeting will be 1 p.m.
Friday so that the commissioners may attend a. special Southeastern Ohio Regional Devel·
opment Council seminar In Rio
Grande on Wednesday.

---Area deaths-William Barnhart

·I

Lena Weekley

Temperatures were In the 50s
and 60s across California, the
southwest deserts, the southern
tip of Texas and along the eastern
Gulf Coast, the NWS said. Read·
lngs were In the 70s along the
Florida peninsula.
Forecasters said an area of low
pressure moving across the
northern Gulf of Mexico early
Thursday spread rain· across .
much of the eastern Gulf Coast
region, the Tennessee Valley and
the southern Atlantic Coast

By United Press International
. Two high pressure systems,
one In New England and one In
the Southwest, brought fair
weather to most of the nation
Thursday, the National Weather
Service said. ·
Much of the country had
temperatures in the 30s and 40s
early Thursday. The coldest
temperatures were over northern New England with readings
ranging from below zero to the
teens.

------Weather··- - - - -

House ...
Continued from page 1
hourly minimum wage with a
six-month "training" wage, he
was making his "best offer
first." Bush Is armed with
enough Senate GOP votes to
sustain a veto of any plan without
the lower wage.
In opening debate. Rep. Jim
Kolbe, R-Ariz .. argued that the
$4.65 rate would "tragically
result in a loss of jobs, and more
tragically in a loss of job
opportunities for people just
coming into the job market."

Continued from page 1
-1n personal expenditures for.
health care, the elderly spent an
average of $2,394 per (ierson nearly 2.5- times the costs In 1980.
Out-of-pocket health care costs
averaged $712 in 1977 and $966 in
1980. Total out-of-pocket costs
were $73 billion.
-As a percentage of elderly
Income, the out-of-pocket costs
grew from less than 12 percent of
Income in 1977 and 1980 to more
tha'n 18 percent in 1988.
-From 1980 to 1988, the elderly's health care payments rose at
a rate that was 1.5 times faster
than the rate of increase In their
income. · Specifically, the elderly's share of health care costs
climbed at a rate of 12 percent,
while their income Increased at
an annual rate of only 7 percent.
If past trends hold, the report
speculated that elderly health
care costs may reach 20 percent
of the elderly's income In just a
few years.
Roybal noted that Medicare,
Medicaid and other government
programs are the largest combined payer of elderly health
care costs and cover a bout
three-fifths of those costs.
The committee "Is pressing
hard !or answers on how the
administration's proposal will
impact beneficiaries directly
and Indirectly," Roybal said.

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elli' &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26¥.
AT&amp;T ................................. 31%
Ashland Oil ........................ 38%
Bob Evans .......................... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 153;.0
City Holding Co ................... 18
'Federal Mogul ..... _............... 51%
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... .......... 45%
Heck's .............................. .. . 'h
Key Centurion .................... 13%
Lands' End .. ....................... 33V.
Limited Inc ........................ 28%
Multimedia Inc .................... 86
Rax Restaurants .................. 2l;.;
Robbins &amp; ,Myers ................. 16
~honey's Inc ...... ...... .......... .. 8%
Wendy's Tnt!. ...................... 6%
Worthington Ind .................. 21

Heck's to close
Jackson store

Strong winds also were blowing along the North Carolina
coast, and high surf and gale
warnings were In effect for I he

area.
Elsewhere, snow was widely
scattered over the northern
Rockies and over the upper
peninsula of Michigan. An inch of
snow fell by early Thursday in
Sault Saint Marie, Mich.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 5
degree.&gt; below zero at Houlton.
Maine, to 76degree~ at Key West,
Fla.

not confirmed."
The memo gave the names of
the suspects as Jamel Hahmud
Talid Muhammed, Ahmed Muhammad Saltm Abuzaynl and
Khalour Muhammed · Jatar. It
said they may be using passports
of Bahrain, Pakistan or North
Yemen.
. Airport check-In desk have
been told that passengers with
the names of the three Lebanese
or similar ones "will be automaticallv classified as high selectee,-~ which the tabloid said
meant they would be challenged
and possibly detained.
All males aged between 15 and
50 traveling on Bahraini, Pakistani or North Yemeni passports,
unless accompanied by family ·
''must be reported to the check-In
supervisor," the memo said.
Government and airline offlciats would say little a.bout the
warning.

Ohio's jackpot grows to $6 million
CLEVELAND I UP!) - The
lack of a jackpot winner In Ohio's
Super Lotto drawing Wednesday
night means the top prize will
grow to at least $6 million for
Saturday's game.
There was, however, one
$100,000 winner In the accompanying Kicker game. a lottery
commission spokesman said
Thursday.
None of the tickets sold !or the
Super Lotto drawing llsted the
six winning numbers - 4, 10, 16.
30, 36 and 39. The jackpot was
worth $3 million.
There were 106 players who
picked five of the Super Lotto

numbers to win $1,000each, whlle
4,837 players selected four of the
numbers, winning $75 apiece.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,505,126 and the total prize
payout was $468,775.
In addition to the one ticket
that had the six Kicker numbers
in order, three players had the
first five, which pays $5,000; 49
had the first four, which pays
$1,000; 522 had the first three,
which pays $100; and 5,344 had
the first two. which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$593,884, while the prize payout
totaled $269,640.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

--

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Depoy birthday is observed

•

Continued from page 1

bassy in London.
In Washington , FAA spokesman Bob Buckhorn refused to
confirm the memo, which also
was reported in the London
tabloids The Sun and The Dally
Mirror.
"We don 't comment on security bulletins, " Buckhorn said.
"Security eQuid be
compromised."
.
However, a Trans World' Airlines spokesman in London 'told
United Press International thai
the warning "was received, Is
genuine and we have taken
appropriate steps." He refused
to say what steps had been taken .
Seccurlty sources contacted by
UPI also confirmed the memo
had been sent but refused to
elaborate on its implications .
The Daily Express reported
the memo said, "Possibly three
Lebanese Palestinians may try
to hijack a u.s. airliner in
Europe.'" The memo described
the threat as "credible, although

Elderly...

William Dale Barnhart, 83 of
Lena Weekley, 76. ParkersBradbury Road. Middleport,
burg, W. Va .. formerly of the
died Wednesday at Veterans Coolville area. died Wednesday
Memorial Hospital. .
at St. Joseph Hospital In
Born at Snowville 'on Sept. l.
Parkersburg.
1905, he was the .son &lt;)f the late .
Born on Sept. 8, 1912. she was
Herbert and Luella Hull Barnthe daughter of the late George
hart. He was retired after having and Amanda Pennybaker Sams.
worked at the Columbus and
She atended the Baptist Church
Southern Ohio Electric Co. for 43
and was a member of the
years, and was a member of the
Parkersburg Senior Citizens
Bradbury Church of Christ.
Center.
Mr. Barnhart is survived by his
She is survived by seven
wife. Elsie Douglas Barnhart,
daughters. Betty Rood and San·
Bradbury; a son and daughter- dra Brentlinger, Lancaster: Ann
In-law. Ronald L. and Zoe Ann Owens, Beechleaf, Va.; Patty
Barnhart. Lancaster, six grandKing, Joyce Bonar and Jane
ch ildren , l l greatCoffman, all of Parkersburg, and
grandchildren. a brother, ChesRoberta Bonar, Tuscan, Ariz•
ter Barnhart, Xenia, and several
ona; three sons. Charles WeekCHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!)
nieces and nephews.
ley, Guysville; EdWard Weekley, - The bankrupt Heck's departBesides his pat·ents, he was
Vienna, w. Va.; and Richard ment · store chain . has sold ·
preceded in death by two sons,
Weekley, Charlotte, N, C., 42 another seven vacant facilities,
Ernest and Kenneth .
grandchildren, 59 great-grand· including two in Ohio.
Funeral servcies will be held children, four great-greatThe Nitro-based chain has
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Rawlings·
grandchildren.
closed two-thirds of its siores
Coats-Blower Funeral Home
Also surviving are four sisters, since declaring bankruptcy two
with Tom Runyon officiating.
Louise Kaufman, Belpre, Kat - years ago, and is trying to sell
Burial will be in the Burlingham
hleen Camp, Eunice Wigal, both some of those properties.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
of Parkersburg, and Edith
Heck's officials said they have
the' funeral home Thursday (toSchultz, Grove City. She was
accepted
$6,335,000 for a Nitro
night) 6 to 9 p.m.
preceded In death by her huswarehouse
and closed stores In
band, Thayer in 1963, one
several
cities,
including CamRoger Meadows
daugthe4r, Barbara Jean, one
son, Samuel Neal, three brothers bridge and Jackson, Ohio.
Roger Gail (Bo) Meadows, 39,
But the company had less luck
of 620 4th Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio and three sisters.
this
week in another property
Funeral services will be held at
died Wednesday, March 22, 1989 in 2 p.m. Friday at the White auction, receiving bids for less
St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, Funeral Home. Cecil A. Morrison than half of the 25 buildings on the
W.Va. He died from injuries susblock.
tained in an auto accident. Funeral will officiate and burial will be In
The company received bids for
the Torch Baptist Cemetery.
arrangements will be announced by
stores
in Proctorville, Ohio;
Friends may call at the funeral
Wilcoxen Funeral Home when they home after 6 p.m. today.
Georgetown, Williamsburg,
·are complete.
Inez, and West Liberty, Ky .;
Rocky Mount, Va.; Richwood;
and Madison, Ind.
Lowell E. Swisher
The bids must be approved by
the bankruptcy court, Heck's and
Lowell E. Swisher, 63, Rt . 1,
Veterans Memorial
the company's creditors before
Cheshire, died this morning at
Wednesday admissions
sales can be finalized.
Holzer Medical Center following Kathy Ellis, Middleport; James
an ex tended illness.
Perkins, Pomeroy; Leland SaxMeeting set Monday
Born Jan. 15 , 1926 in Cheshire, · ton, Pomeroy; and George Johnhe was the son of the late Leo and son, Mason.
The Board of Trustees of
Vale (Scott) Swisher.
Discharged - Brooke Willi- Columbia Township will meet In
Also preceding him In death ams, Emma Hayman, and Rayspecial session Monday at 7:30
was his first wife, Geraldine mond Pierce.
p.m at the fire station.
(Ward) Swisher, whom he mar·
ried in 1947.
He is survived by his second
wife, Bonnie (Howard) Swisher,
whom he married Dec. 12, 1964.
Also surviving are three
daughters, Mrs. Keith (Connie)
Drummond ; Mrs. Richard
(Lena) McFann, and Mrs. J.D.
(Carolyn) Taylor, ail of Cheshire; one son, Michael L.
Swisher of Syracuse; two stepchildren, Yvonne Jacques of
Pomeroy, and Dwanna Jett of
Marietta; one brother, Robert
Swisher of Bidwell; six grandchildren; and five stepgrandchildren.
He was retired from Federal
Mogul. He was a World War II
U.S. Navy veteran, and a
member of the VFW Post 4464.
Services will be Saturday, l
p.m. at the Willis Funeral Hqme
with the Rev. Steve Fuller
officiating. Burl'll will follow at
the Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday 6 to 9
p.m. at the fhneral home.
Pallbearers will be Ed
Swisher, Randall McFann, VInce
Hill, Elwood Howard, Jr., Raymond Swartz, and Jim Folmer.
Honorary pallbearers wlll be
Luther Smith and Gar landWard.
Mllitary rites will be conducted
at graveside by VFW 4464 and
American Legion Post 27.

Easter...

showers. Highs will be near 60 .
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Fair Saturday, with a chance
of showers Sunday and Monday .
Highs will be In the 50s Saturday
and In the 60s Sunday and
Monday. Early morning lows
will be between 35 and 45.

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with
scattered showers. Lows will be
near40. South winds 10 to20mph .
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday: Cloudy, with scattered

states.
Thunderstorms dumped up to
an inch of rainfall across parts of
northern Florida Wednesday evening. A line of thunderstorms
was moving Thursday toward
the western coast of the Florida
peninsula.
The storm system was forecast
to bring rain, sleet and snow to
parts of the southeast, Including
the mountains of western North
Carolina. Up to 2 Inches of snow
was expected to accumulate aver
the northern mountains of North
Carolina, the NWS said.

Thursday, March 23, 1989

Trevor Joel Depoy, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Nick Depoy, celebrated
·his second birthday recently will\
a party at his home.
A Mickey Mouse theme was
carried out with favors and an ice

'

cream cake.
Attending and presenting gifts
were maternal grandparents Mr.
and Mrs. Don Thomas, pa.ternal
grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
James Depoy, maternal great-grandparents Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Graves, as well as Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Thomas, Danielle and
Michelle, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Thomas, Capt. and Mrs. Mark
Morris, Brad and Greg, Mr. and
Mrs. -Walter Thompson, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Price, Stephanie,
Stacy, and Shannon, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Foster, Shane, Travis, and Stephanie.

TREVOR J. DEPOY

Hendricks birth is announced
Tina Hendricks, Middleport, is
announcing the birth of her
daughter, Jennifer Lynn. The
Infant was born Feb. 23 at Holzer
Medical Center and weighed
seven pounds, 10 ounces and was
21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Larry and Bess Hendricks,
Middleport.
Great grandparents are Mrs .
Neva Gary, Columbus, and the
late Cllvace (TippT Searls, and
Mrs. Lucy Hendricks and the late
James E. Hendricks.

CHAMPION- Michelle Zirkle, fonneriy of Middleport, was the
women's division champion In her class at the West Virginia
Power Lifting Association's two day competition held at Glenville
State College, March 11 and 12. Here she receives her trophy.
•

Former resident becomes champion weightlifter
....

('')

--..:;_

*

JENNIFER HENDRICKS

Jenkins birth is announced
. David and Johnetta Jenl\lns,
New Haven, W.Va., ate announcIng the birth of a son, David Earl
Jenkins II. The infant was born
Jan. 18 at Holzer Medical Center
and weighed six pounds, 11
ounces and was 20 Inches long.
The Infant has a sister, Misty
Clendenen,
Maternal grandparents are
Johnnie and the Rev . Mitzi
Oldaker, Hartford, W.Va. Paternal grandparents ar~ Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins and the late David
Owen Jenkins, Middleport.
Maternal great-grandparents
are the Rev. Homer and Velma
Hicks, Ripley, W.Va.

IN COMPETITON - A business administration major at
Concord College, Michelle Zirkle, granddaughter of Lennie
Haptonstall, Middleport, Is pi~tured as she competed at Glenville
State College In the West Virginia Power Ll fling Association
laking first In Women's Division 105 pound class.

Michelle Zirkle, Nitro, W.Va.,
formerly of Middleport, was the
first place winner In the Women's
Dlvis ion 105 pound class of the
West Virginia Power Lifting
Association held March 11 and 12

at the Glenville Stae College.
The five foot four inch power
lifter weighed In at104 pounds.
She competed in three categories, squat, bench press and dead

lift. Michelle bench pressed 110
pounds; squat led 181 pounds, and
dead lifted 187 pounds.
She is the daughter of Michael
Zirkle of Nitro and the grand -

daughter of Mrs. Lennie Hap tonstall, Middleport. She Is a sopho·
more at Concord College
majoring in business
administration.

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Forest Run women have meeting
A wmte elephant sale was
conducted at the recent meeting
of the Forest Run United Metho_dist Women Held at the home of
Carolyn Salser.
Kathleen Scott conducted the
meeting and had an Easter
reading and the Lord's Prayer,
as well as reading the social
principles in · the book of
Disciples.
Devotions were given by Erma
Roush who read "The Hope of
Easter" and closed with prayer.
Evelyn Hollon had the program "Peace, Like Bread Must
Be Made Dally" focusing on the

beliefs and attitudes toward
peace.
· Scripture readings were by
Mrs. Salser and Mary K. Roush,
who also gave a special reading
on Lent and famlly meals.
'This Is My Song" was read by
Edith Sisson and Faye Wiggins
told a story about peace.
Hllda Yeager had the Lenten
meditation and Mrs. Sisson
closed the program with an
Easter prayer.
Refreshments were served to
the 10 members and guest, Mary
Hamm.

Middleport church has egg hunt
!Jleprlmarydepartmentofthe
Middleport First Baphst Church
had an Eas teregg hunt March 18,
sponsored by the Board of
Christian Education, despite all
the rain.
_ A musical Easter egg game
was played with each child
receiving a pnze. After the game
Sharon Seddon had a devotion for
the children.
Each age group hunted for
eggs htdden by Rhonda Tyo and
participated ,In a sing-along led
by Cathy Riggs.
·
The children enjoyed refreshments _of cookies, ch1ps, and
kool-a1d.
Door prizes were won b~· Keri

Caldwell, Jeremy Dingey, Holly
Broderick, and Claudina Riggs.
Other children present were
A~am, Shawn, and Andy White,
Shawna and Jeff Tyo, Jennifer
Heck, Tina, David, and D.J.
Riggs, Anna Fink, Autumn and
Amber Thomas, Penny, Ellen
and Cindy Lewis Adam and
Jordan Shank R~chel Ekllch '
Michelle French, Hannah Woo:
lard, Sherry Seddon, and Courtney Haines.
Other adults attending were
Carolyn Davis Darla Thomas
Jeff Tyo, Faye' Wallace, Debbl~
Dingey, Nancy Broderick, Adell
White, and Peggy Lewis.

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�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 23. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Community calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Alcoholics Anonymous and
AlAn on will meet Thursday, 7
p.m ., upstairs in the Community
Action building, Second St. ,
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Holy Commun·
ion to be held at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church on
Maundy Thursday, 7:30 p.m.;
special music and meditations
will he provided throughout the

service.
POMEROY - The Ladles
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital wlll stage a bake sale In
the hospital lobby. Friday begin·
nlng at 10 a.m.

Sorority, wlll met Thrusday at 7
p.m . at the .S enior Citizens
Center.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club wlll meet Thursday
at 7: 30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Pauline Myers with Mrs. Mar·
lene Putman a• co-hostess.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT FeeneyBennett Post 128, Middleport,
wlll hold a dance Friday night at
the annex on Mill Street, 8 p.m. to
midnight. Music will he provided
by the Bob Estep and the Western
Ramblers.

SALEM CENTER - Salem
Township Trustees wlf! meet
Friday, 9: 30 a.m. , at the fire
HARRISONVILLE - Harrl··" house, for the regular March
sonvllle Holiness Chapel, State meeting.
Route 684, wili have a special foot
washing and communion service
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
oil Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. A Bottom-Reedsville Community
weekend revival with Rev . Wil· Good Friday Service will he held
iiam Cantleberry will be held at the Long Bottom Methodist
Frid~y through Sunday even·
Church at 7:30 p.m. Everyone
lngs . Easter s unrise service at welcome.
the churc h will be held at 6 a.m.
Pas ter David Farrell invites the
RUTLAND~ Rutland Church
public to attend the meetings.
of the Nazarene will present the
cantata, "His Last Days," on
RACINE - American Legion Friday at 7 p.m.
Auxiliary , Racine Post 602, wil l
meet Thrusday at 7 p.m. at the
GREAT BEND- Services will
halL
be held 7:30 p.m., through
Saturday, at. Bethlehem Baptist
POMEROY - XI Gamma Church, Great Bend.
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi

Church of Christ seminar slated
A family sem inar will be
co nducted &amp;t the Pomeroy
Church of Christ on March 29, 30,
and 31 from 7·9 p.m.
Dean Mills, a graduate of
Kentucky Christian College,
Grayson, Kent tAB), Ohio Uni·
verslty, Athens, (MA), and Clay.
ton University, (PhD ) will be
leading the semjnar.
The seminar will be ofpartlcu·
lar interest to everyone who is
rearing children or those who
desire to have a bet ter family
life, according to Leo Lash,

Derenberf!,er
_promoted
Jerry A. Derenberger who was
recently promoted to private
first class has been stationed
wit h Charlie Co. 8th E ngineers at
Fort Hood Texas for the past six
months. He completed combat
e ngineer training at Fort Leo·
nard Wood, Missouri, before
being sent to Texas. The son of
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Deren·
berger of Pagevllle, he is a 1988
grad uate of Meigs High SchooL
- -

· -

pastor of the church, Ills open to
the public a nd there will he no
charge although a freewlll offer·
ing will be taken.
"We hope that the people of
Pomeroy wlll take advantage of
the opportunity to receive valuable information on raising our
famllles the way God would have
us to do . The problem in many
homes is their is no love ex·
pressed in the family, and this
seminar will help each one to
learn to express love for one
another," Lash commented.

Highway proje&lt;.ts
&lt;:&gt;recently awarded
The Ohio Departrnen t of Trans·
portation recently awarded 38
highway improvement projects
totaling $17.4 mtlllon.
Meigs County was one of eight
counties Included in a $453,152
project awarded to Neat· Line Co.
of Twtnsburg for applying fast·
dry alkyd paint for pavement
markings on various sections of
US Route 33.

Church of Christ services set

RUTLAND - All·nlght gospel
sing wil he held March 24startlng
a17 p.m. at the Rutland Freewlll
Baptist Church. The sing will
feature Practical of Charleston,
W. Va.; Fellowship Singers of
Vinton; Christian Sounds, Lo·
gan. W.Va.; Reflections Trio,
Heaven Bound Four and Narrow
Way.
POMEROY - Unity Singers
directed by Sue Matheny will
have Good Friday services at the
South Bethel New Testament
Chu rch , 7 p.m. The public is
invited to attend.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Round and
square dancing will be featured
Friday night , 8 to 11 p.m., at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pome·
roy. Music will be by the True
Country Ramblers . Everyone is
welcome and those planning to
attend are asked to bring snacks
for the snack table.

TUPP.E RS PLAINS - There
will be a round and square dance
sponsored by the VFW Post 9053
from 8 p.m. to midnight. There
Will he no alcoholic . beverages
permitted.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 is sponsoring an
Easter Egg Hunt on Saturday,
beginning at noon, at the post
home. Children of all ages are
welcome.

RACINE - Sign· up for this
summer's Racine Youth League
will be Saturday, March 25, from
9 a. m. to noon; Tuesday, March
28, from 6 to 8:30 p.m.; and
Saturday, Apri11, from 9 a.m. to
noon. at the Southern Kinder·
garten building. Registration is
$10 per child and a birth certlfi·
cate is req uired.
RUTLAND - There will be
square, round and slow daricing
Saturday night, form 8 p.m. to
midnight, at the Eli Denison Post
of the Am erican Legion, Ru·
!land. Live music ami refresh·
ments wlll be featured. Everyone
welcome.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club is
sponsoring its annual Easter Egg
Hunt on Easter Sunday, March
26, at Hartinger Park in Middle·
port. The hunt will start at 2 p.m.

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POMEROY -The Hysell Run
Holiness Church will hold a
sunrise and communion service
at 6 a.m. Easter Morning.
Sunday school will be held at 9:30
with worship service to begin at
10:45 a.m. The Sunday evening
service will he held at 7 p.m.
William Justis, pastor, invites
the public to attend.
HAZEL- There will he special
nightly singing at the Hazel
Community Church Revival
from March 26-April · 2. Rev .
Lawrence Gluesencamp and
Rev, Edsel Hart will be the
speakers. The Grubb family
singers will he featured Aprlll.
HARTFORD. W.Va.- A revival at Fat her's House Church In
Hartford, W.Va. will start Sun·
day and co ntinue throughAprill .
The evangelist will be Rick
Weaver and services start at 7
p.m. each evening. Special sing·
ing will he featured ,e ach night.

of love ra ther than of betrayal , to
Ther e will be a prayer brea k·
use it as a mean s of expressing
fas t of ham and eggs after the
our
love and gratitude to God for
6:30a .m . Easter Sunrise servi ce
th
e
price
He paid to redeem us, "
at th e Pomeroy Church of Chr is t.
he
concluded.
The men of · th e church will
The of fering will he used to
prepare the breakfast.
help
finance a new roof for the
There will be specia l music by
churc
h building. The public is ·
the church choir and Keith
invited
to attend.
Shaffer. Shaffer travels around
wllh the group called " The
Klngdon Build e r s,"
_ Steubenville.
"Each year at Easter, the
The Middleport Heath United
church attempts to provide a way
Met
hodist Church will celebrate
for each member to.express their
The
Lord's Supper Maundy
love for Jesus in a very special
Thursday
I tonight) at 7:30p.m .
way. Ali too often we become
On
Eas
ter Sunday , church
guilty ofthesameattltudes as the
activities will begin with the
religious leaders of Jesus's day,
sun
r ise service at 6: 30 a.m.
in that we just go through the
followed
by a church wide
motions, we never go ·beyond the
fellowship
breakfast. Church
norm with Jesus, " Leo Lash,
school
for
all
ages is at 9:30a.m.
pastor, said.
and
Eas
ter
morning worship
" Judas betrayed Jesus for 30
starts
at
10:30
a.m. Choral
pieces of silver into the hands of
selections
will
he
provided
by the
the chief priests and religious
·
Chancel
Cho
ir.
The
Rev
.
Sonny
leaders, so the church the pas t
Zuniga, pastor, invites the public
two years, has chosen to use the
to at tend.
30 pieces of silver as a n offering

Easter services

POMEROY -Hemlock Grove
Church will have Easter sunrise
service at 6: 30a.m. with break·
last following at the grange hall.
Morning worship will be at 9:30.
The children will be having a
program a nd a mini-sermon by .
David Prentice.
TUESDAY
RACINE - Donald Genhei·
mer, an African Evangelical
Fellowship Missionary, .will he
speaking and presenting a slide
show at the Antiquity Saptist
Church, State Route 338, Racine,
on Tuesday,· March 28, at 7: 30
p.m. The public is invited.

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ATLANTA (UP II - A televi·
sian news helicopter cras hed in a
recreation field Wednesday mo·
ments after taking of! from the
statio n. ser iously injuring the
pil ot.
"Chopper 2" had just taken off
from the WSB helipad shortly
after 6 p.m. , when a witness said
it appeared to wobble in the air.
then nose·dived toward the
ground, hitting some utility wires
before cras hing on its side in a
recreation field behind the Jew·
is h Communit y Cen ter on Peac h·
tree St reel.
Atlanta Police Sgt. R.T. Shaw ,
the first person on the scene,
feared the cho pper would ex ·
plode and unstrapped the unco ns·
c ious pil ot .and pulled him to
safety.

to actually kill yourself. Why
deliberately risk illness or death
with drugs?
Obviously, it's smarter-and
healthier-to say no to drugs .

0 EASTER LILLIES 0 HYACINTHS 0 HYDRANGEAS
0 11JLIPS 0 c
s
AND
FOR ALL YOUR LAWN AND GARDEN NEEDS ...

There was no fire a nd the
: 64 -year-old veteran pilot wa s
· rushed to nearby Piedmont Hos, pita!. He was listed in serious but
. stable co ndition , suffering !rom
· head injuries.
The cause of the crash was not
• immediately known and Federal
· Aviation Administration and Na·
tiona! Transportation Safety
Board investigators said it may
take months before they know
· exactly what happened.
Carmlchal' s colleagues a t

BEAUTIFUL BLOOMING
FROSTPROOF

4 VARIETIES SEED POTATOES
•KENNEBEC
•RED PONTIAC
•KATADHIN
•IRISH COBBLER

people allegedly saw him setting
fires. He said an investigation
was underway into other un-

solved fires in the area.
She r rod , a former city council·
man and head of the Coolidge
wa ter and sewer department,
became ch ie f of the volunteer
fi re department last year after
servi ng as a fireman.
An in vestigalion began , Geer
sai d, after city officials com·
plained of "an inordinate
number of fires in th e past six or
eight months , abou t the same
period of time tha t Mr. Sherrod
had been fire c hief."
Geer said little damage oc·
curred in the live fires, which
included an old house converted
into a commun ity center and a
vacant house, because She rrod
a nd his men responded quickly to
the alarms.
Coolidge is a town of about 750
people located about halfway
between Thomasville an d
Moultrie.

TV News chopper crashes
•
near communr,ty
center

BOB'S MARKET AND GREENHOUSES

SPRING GARDEN SEEDS

ALEXANDRIA . Va. i UPl) -A gunm an took five hostages in
a home Wednesd ay in a standoff with pollee that ended with a
bloody shoot out in which the gunman and a pollee officer wer.e
killed and a second officer was wounded, police said .
The dead officer , Cpl. Charles Hill, 40, a 13 ~-year veteran of
the cit y's pollee force, wa s shot in the head at about6 : 35p.m. He
died at Washington Hosp ital Center at 8: 12p.m. , said police
spokesman Donald Hayes .
The gunman , a suspected drug dealer, entered a residence in
the Washington, D.C.. suburb. around 4 p.m. and took the
hostages, Hayes said. One report indicated the gunman
demande(l c ra ck cocaine after he went inside the home.
He released four of the hostages, one at a time, hut then
emerged from the rear of the home at about 6:35p.m . holding a
sawed·off shotgun to the head of the filth hostage. Hayes said .
"The SOT !Special Operation Team ) members were out back
waiting for him when he came out ," Hayes said. "He ordered
them to drop their weapons. They wouldn' t.
" One of the SOT members fired a shot.lt hi t the suspect. The
hostage fled, " Hayes eKplained . "The suspect then fired and
strucR two of the officers. The suspect was then fired on and
killed."
The gunman. who was not identified, was dead at the scene.
When the shooti ng began the hostage ra n. Hayes said pollee
later found him unharmed, and were questioning him and all of
the hostages.
;
Both wounded officers were taken by helicopter to the
Was hington Hospital Center, where Hlll died. The second
officer wa s in stable condition undergoing surgery for gunshot
wounds to the legs.
Alexandria Mayor James Moran and City Manager Vola
Lawson went to the hospital. Moran said of the gunman: "We
believe (him) to be a drug dealer."
Hayes said the gunman released four hostages in the two
hours after the incident began, .and police were not aware there
was a fifth hostage until the gu nman emerged from the back
door of the home in the city 's Old Town section.' ·
A relative of ope of the hostages told a reporter for WUSA ·TV
that the suspect allegedly demanded crack cocai ne after
en tering the home.
Police released no motive.

PANSY PLANTS
STRAIGIIT COLORS OR MIXED

WSB Channel 2 described him as
a safety co nsc ious pilot- "not a
hot shot."
Carmlchal was licensed to fly
both he licopters and fixe d-wing
aircraft and had logged more
than 16,000 hours of flyi ng,
including ·two tours of duty in
Vietnam as a chopper pilot .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Study strengthens drug pregnancy link

Cop, gunman k·illed
after hostage taking

COOLIDGE, Ga. !UPil · Resi ·
dents of this smal l sou th Georgia
town were shocked to Jearn how
Fire Chief Robert Wayne Sher·
rod and his vo lun teers responded
so quickly to fi ve recent fires .
Police said Sherrod set the
blazes.
"Something must have
s napped in him ," Hazel Jones,
who operales a restaurant where
Sherrod freq ue ntly ate. said
Wednesday.
" I think he need s help a lot
mo re than he needs punish·
ment." added Edward Harrell,
who has known the volu nteer fire
chief lor 25 years.
Sherrod, 42. was jailed without
bond on multiple arson charges
after a uthorities sa id he signed a
confession tha t he set five fires,
· including two houses and three
grass and woods fi res.
Robert Geer. chief investlga·
tor for the Thomas County
sheriff's office. said Shcrro.:l was
arres ted Monday night after two

Revival services
APPLE GROVE - Revival
services will be he ld at the Apple
Grove United Methoidst Church,
March 30 thro~gh April 2 at 7
p.m. each evening. TheRev.Carl
Hicks, pastor, will be the speaker
and invites the public to attend .
There will be special mu sic each
· evening. On April 2 the special
singers will be Dan Hayman and
the Fallh Trio.

A recent survey from the
Southeast indicated almost 25%
of high school students and 6%
of sixth to eighth graders have
smoked marijuana, with nearly
one in ten high school students
being a regular user, About 5%
of the high school students had
used cocaine, along with nearly
1% of sixth to eighth graders.
There are vinually an infinite
number of ways to die by
accident or disease. Fewer ways

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Fire chief charged in arson

679

Deso;ned IO be W l up any)"1'1ere
'" il!ppro••m&lt;llel~ 30 rno r. ~,~tes

lolllngs Can be

t.:"Ul~

County wlll sing at the Sunday 10
a.m. worship service of the
Davies GrOYe Baptist Church,
Happy Hollow F\oad off Route 2,
near Polnt Pleasant.

PT. PLEASANT- Dan Hayman the The Faith Trio of Meigs

t

THE LATEST

Thursday, March 23, 1989

BOSTON iUPI) -Women who
smoke marijuana or use cocaine
whlle they are pregnant are more
likely to give birth to smaller
b~b i es, increasing the infants'
chances of serious health prob·
!ems , researchers reported
Wednesday.
In the largest study of its kind
and the llrst to use urine testing,
researchers found women who
tested positively for marijuana
or cocaine use while they were
pregnant tended to have lighter.
shorter babies with smaller
heads.
"I would argue it's the best
study on both (marijuana a nd
cocaine use) for different rea·
sons," said Dr. Barry Zucker·
man, h ead of the study and
professor of pediatrics at Boston
University medical school.
"The take·home message is
don't smoke marijuana or lise
cocaine duri ng pregnancy,"
Zuckerman said.
Th'e s tuqy also indicates co·
caine and marijuana use a long
with other unhealthy lifestyle

habits, such as cigarette smok·
lng and poor nutriTion. combine
to increase the risk of giving
birth fo underdeveloped babies,
he said.
Based on the study, the re·
searchers calculated a woman
who gained only 10 pounds while
she was pregnant, smoked one
pack of cigarettes a day and used
cocaine and marijuana could be
expected to give birth to a baby
that weighed about 1 pound less
than a women who did none of
those things.
''Women should be advised
that marijuana use and cocaine
use during pregnancy ani each
independently associated with
impaired fetal growth. Mo·
reover, as compa red with women
who do not use these substances,
women who do use them during
pregnancy are more likely to
have other factors, such as
cigarette smoking and decreased
weight gain, that are associated
wit)) depressed fetal growth,"
the researchers wrote.

Previous s tudies had ind ica te d
using marijuana or cocai ne dur·
ing pregnancy could be danger·
ous fo r the fet us. But previous
marijuana st udi es had produced
mixe d result s and studies exa·
mining the e ffect s of cocaine use
involved women whO mig ht not
have been rep resenta tive of the
gen!'ral population, Zuckerman
said.
The new study, publis hed in
The New England Journal of
Medicine, is the fir st to e xa mine
marijuana use by tes lin g preg·
nan! women 's urine for the dr ug
and the firs t to test th e e ffect of
cocaine use In a re presentative
. sample of women. he said.
The researcher s st ud ied 1.226
women who sought prenat a l care
at the Boston City Hospita l from
1984 to 1987. The women were
questioned about a variety of
aspects of their lifestyles and .
. underwent urine testing whil e
they were pregnant or jus t after
they gave birth.
When all other factor s we re·
taken into consideration, the

women who tes.ted poslth·ely for
marij ua na use gaYe hil"t h to
ba bies who were about :1ouncPs
lig hter on average than thos&lt;'
delivered from mothers who
teste d negative!)· for mar ij uana
USC,

T he women ·who te"lc-d posi -

tively for cocaine use gave birth
to babies who were about 6
ounces lighter on a"eragr than
those d elivere~ from mot hN s
w ho tes ted negative ly forC'ocain(l
u se.
Ba bi~s whose mo thers used
coca ine or m ari jua na also te nded .
to be shor ter. In addi tion, babies
Whose mol hN S had used Coca ine
also had smaller head siz&lt;ls.
possibly indicatl n!( they had
sm aller brai ns.
Zu ck ~rma n specu lated mari
jua na use may impair fetal .
gr owth by reducing th e amoun t
of oxygen they receive a nd
because th e ac tive drug in
ma riju ana mav hP to~tc . Coca ine
may inhibit 'retal growth by
redu cing oxyge n a nd proper
nu tri tion to the fetu s. he sa id .

Police, courts brace for anti-abortion protests
'

LOS ANGELES iUPI) - A
planned series of potentially
volallle anli·abortion protests
triggered denunciations from
elected officials. warnings of
arrests from pollee, and promp·
ted authorities Wednesday to
take the unusual step of ordering
courts to remain open Sat urday.
The expected protests by the
militant Operation · Rescue
group, which has refused to
disclose t he locations of its
demonstrations, a lso prompted
police to plan on manning an
emergency comm a nd post under
City Hall and order the doubling
of the number of officers de·
ployed in some areas.
"We're just hopin g th at both
sides of the issue are go ing to
express their views in a calm and
quiet manner," police Capt.
Glenn Ackerman sa id on the eve
of the pr:otests,
Operation Rescue held a rally
Wednesday night at the Melody ·
land Christian Center in Ana·
helm at which about J,5(J0 people
were instructed in what to expect
when the prates ts begi n.
"The enemy is beginning to
take us seriously," said Randall
A. Terry, founder of Operation
Rescue. a coalition of largely
, evangelical Chri stians and Ro·
man Catholics. ·'This is not a
joke. 1'his is not a game. This is
war. They are killing children· .. .
We ar e the las t wall between the
abortionist, the killer, the execu·
tioner, and these children."
A pamphlet di str ibuted at the
rally advised protesters to go
limp when arrested in order to
s low police, and to "stand and
lock arms only in order to block
clients" from e nt ering clinics,
but not to avoid arrest.
,.
· Terry held a brle f news confer·
ence earlier Wed nesday at a n
Orange County hotel at which he
presented a coftin containing a

dead embryo.
·'This is Baby Choice," he told
reporters. "She was killed at 19
weeks gestation by a saline
injectio n, and she will answer ali
your questions."
Terry then abruptly departed
without answering questions. In
the hote l parking lot, he told
pursuing reporte r s : ''The ques·
lion is, 'Will yo u show the
American people tha t baby
girl."'
In response to the planned
protests, Mayor Tom Bradley
said that police would arrest
protesters who try to Interfere
with women entering aborTion
clinics.
"The public needs to know that
we're not going to permit some·
one to come into this town,
violate the law, disrupt this
community and think they're
golng to get away with It,"
Bradley said.
Police Chief Daryl Gates has
p !edged to uphold a court order
obtained by pro-abortion groups .
that forbids protesters to demon· '
strate within 15 feet of a cllnic
entrance or exit .
The American Civil Liberties
Union, which represented the
pro-abortion groups in court ,
sai\l Wednesday it planned to
seek contempt c harges tha t
could result In fines against at
least 15 anti-abortion demonstra·
tors at a hearlng next month.
Meanwhlie, Municipal Court
Presiding Judge Larry Fidler
ordered courts to remain ope n on
Saturday to deal with an ex·
peeled flood of arrested protes·
ters. " We're going to try to have
sam e-day arraignments ... so
there won't be too many people
spending the night in jail," Ci ty
Attorney's Ofllce spokesman
Mike Qualls said.
Police Cmdr. William Booth
·id the department 's Emer·

gency Control Center at Cit y Hail
Lowell P a tter so n, a spo k~ s ·
would he activated Thursday
man 'for the group . sa id, " We a re
along with satellite command
a pea c,e ful a nd non·vloient organposts "where and when needed."
lzatlon. We expect violence only
because it has been ex pressed bv
The number of officers dethe other s id e."
·
ployed in Hollywood , Wes·t Los
Angeles and In the Wilshire
District. with their high concen·
Pat terson sa id the group pl a ns
tratlon of clinics offering abor·
to
violat e the court order forbi d·
tions, will be "do uble what we ·
ding
the blocka ding or clinics
normally run," Ackerman sa id.
because
it belicv~ s "a n in junc.
Operation Rescue gained
tion agains t an unjus t ta borti on l
national recognition whe n 1,217
law
is an unjust in junct ion."
of its supporters we re arres ted
during the Democratic National
·: w e' re not going to be intiml·
Convention last summer in
dated
into cooperat ing with ba bv
Atla nta . The group has tallied
killers."
he said. " We don' t reel
more than 20.000 arre sts since
we
are
breaking
th e law, we feel
it began blockading abortion
we
are
saving
lives.··
clinics in 1987.

LI~E

ENTERTAINMENT!

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
MARCH 24th and 25th

FIRESIDE INN
Come Dance to the Solid Gold Hits of the
50's and 60's!!
SERVING FINE FOOD AND SPIRITS

"Come Join The Fun"

FIRESIDE INN

SANDHILL ROAD
POINT PLEASANT, WY.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND iUPI) - Wed·
nesday's winning Ohio Lollery
numbers :
PICK·3
569.
PICK·3' . ticket sales totaled
$1,362,558.50, with a payoff du e of
$726,840.50.
PICK..J

5082.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled .
$257,653.50, with a payoff due of
S83,100.
Super Lotto
4, 10 , 16, 30, 36, 39.
Super Lotto ticket sa les totaled
$3,505.126.
Kicker
700970.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$593,884.
On a local scale, a tornado is the
most destructive of all atmospheric
phenomeaa.

RUSSEL STOVER AND
WHITMAN'S CANDY!!

•

,EASTER CARDS
. The Toght S•t ia H-1 The problem is solved! No more
wonying with 3 CUihionl IOOVing up and down and
around. The
look.

Ia aM one cuthion with a 3 cushion
in place. (AI shown below)

IICUrely

531 JACKSON PIKE
ROOTE 35 WEST.

NAME BJ;AND
FRAGRANCES

by
CAIUTON

"JEWELRY AT REASONABLE PRICES"

Phone

4464524

ONION
SETS

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rr1t••

AND

RED

If&amp;.

MASON, WV

'64t.tS

1/411111 North Of

Pomeroy·Muon Bridge

call (304} 773-5721 or 773-5900

S49995

OPEN EASTER
10 AM- 12 NOON

SUJISHER LOHSE

u........ Wt.

WHITE
YELLOW

TIMEX WATCHES
IN STOCK.

Pharmacy

!Aft

•uo

lttfl_,. MIC ....... II.PIII.

a.... "'"'., ...Ph.

. . . . R. ...
Mo"' tin hi. 1:00 • ·"' to I , .m.

The Daily Sentinel

• Ill .... t0:000 .M. M4 :00p,M.

"'"C"Wl50NI
t . M""'

,,....

.,.~

o,............... .

PM . ttt.tlle,
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OPEN MONDAY- SATURDAY, 8 A.M.-7 P.M.; SUNDAY, 9 A.M.-7 P.M.

STOP IN TODAY!!
j .

·---''--.

----2-----~~-----------------------------~·~---------------------------------~·

-- -

�-

--Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 23, 1989

Fawn Hall returns tO take witness stand in North trial
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Oli ver North's ex-secretary
Fawn Hall has told the jury
hear! ng the felony case against
her former boss that she helped
him destroy hundreds of docu ments in the now -famous November 1986 "shredding party."
Hall, who was to return to the
witness stand Thursday, also
testified that she did "a very
stupid thing" when she smuggled
secret documents !rom the White
House and' passed them to her
just-fired boss.
In addition, Hall, 29, said
Wednesday that four days before
North was fired from the National Security Council on Nov .
25, 1986, stfe altered original
documents, at North's request, to
remove material about his secret

work for the Nicaraguan Contra·
rebels .
Whlle.llttle of what Hall said
was new - she gave generally
the same story to the 1987
congressional committees investigating the Iran-Contra scandal
- her presence generated fresh
interest in North's trial, now five
weeks old.
About 100 spectators and reporters, alerted that Hall might take
the stand Wednesday afternoon,
packed the courtroom of U.S.
Dis trlct Judge Gerha rd Gesell to
hear from the former secretary
turned television personality,
given immunity from
prosecution .
North, the retired Marine
lleutenant colonel, is charged
with 12 felonies, including lying
to Congress, tax fraud, destroy-

ing official documents and accepting an illegal gift . If convicted on all counts, he faces up
to 60 years In prison and $3
million in fines.
In a gray-green suit, puttycolored blouse .and pearls, Hall
recalled under questioning from
prosecutor John Keker the
events of November 1986 when
the Iran-Contra scandal was
unfolding.
"Did he tell a joke about going
to jail?" Keker asked.
Pausing, Hall sald with a
stammer, ' 'Colonel North made
jokes, and there were jokes made
about thai."
"About going to jail?" Keker
said.
''If you had anyone else up here
who knew Colonel North for four

knowledgrnent by both sides in a
years," Hall said, becoming was fired , White House o!!lclals
case
that a set of facts is not In
defensive , "they would said ... he began sealing North's office had a great ability for relieving but Hall spotted papers she · dispute and neither side will
bring witnesses on the charge In
tension. He had a great sense or thought her boss should have,
humor."
·
question. The jury must decide :
· including computer messages
whether the facts merit ;
Unlike her 1987 testimony to and copies of the papers she had
conviction.
Congress, Hall said she could not altered.
The stipulation in North 's case .
specifically remember the day
"I was concerned lor securconcerns one of the 12 felony
and time North asked her to alter ity," Hall told the jury. "It was a
charges . against him - conver·
live original NSC documents that very stupid thing I did that day."
sion of traveler's checks.
he wrote about his secret work
North had lett the of!lce, bu I at
North got abOut $9,000 In
lor the Ccmtras at a llme when some point, the secretary spoke
traveler's checks from Adolfo
official U.S. aid was banned to with her bOss by telephone and
the rebels.
Insisted he return to the White Calero, a leader of the Nlcara- :
North's former boss, Robert House. As he did 'SO, she stuffed guan Co ntra rebels. The money .
that bought the checks came
McFarlane, testified last week the papers into her boots and the
from a $32 million donation to the .
that he considered those papers back of her skirt.
"problem documents" as early
When Hall met North ou'tside Co ntras from Saudi Arabia in an ·
as August 1985 because if Con- the White House, she gave him offshore account.
·
gress ever saw them, lawmakers the papers .
Abou t $4,000 of those checks :
would more deeply question
Also Wednesday, the prosecu· were spent in Washington-area
North's operations.
lion read a "stipulation" to the stores for groceries, car ·ures. ,
Hall agreed with Keker that
jury describing how North used hosiery and other goods. Calero •
North asked her to alter the more than $4,000 ln traveler's told North's jury In February he ·
documents on Nov. 21, 1986, and checks on personal items.
did not care how North spent the .
sald that alter she changed them
money.
The "stipulation" is an acto water down the details of
North 's work, she shredded the
originals.
She said she spotted North
feeding papers from an office
safe Into the shredder and
stopped her altering work to help
him destroy the documen ts.
"We shredded every day, but
never In that volume," she
testified. The papers fed in to the
machine were appare ntly a
lengthy detailed record of
North's secret activities for the
rebels during the congressional
Off&amp;
aid ban.
EXP.
McFarlane also testified las t
J/291 ..
week that his onetime aide
warned him earlier in the day of
Nov. 21 that "there would have to
be a shredding party" to clean
In case of accidental poisoning, know what to do!
the files of possibly incriminating papers.
Time is vital. Quick action can save a life!
On Nov. 25,1986, the day North

• The Area's
Number 1 Marketplace
. TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY A.M. to SP.M.
~.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

a.

a

p1id.

CAN'T GET FAIR TRIAL - Civil rights
attorney William Kunstler Sl!id Wednesday he
would as k a New York state court to drop
disci plinary proceedings against C. Vernon
Mason, seen in a February 1988 file photo, because
ol alleged judichil misco nduct. Mason Is the

lawyer for Tawana Brawley. Kunstler said
charges traded publicly about Mason by presiding
Justice Francis Murphy Jr. and Michael Gentile,
the disciplinary panel's !onner chief counsel,
made It Impossible for his client to gel a !air
he~ing. (UP I)

run 3 dw• 1t no ch•g•.

•7 point Nne lype onty UMd.
•sentinll il not rnponslblelor lfrort •her fint d-v . (Chedc
for errors first di!W' •d runs In pipet) . C1ll before 2:00p.m,

•A cl111ified edliertiument placed in Tht D1ily Sentinel (u·
cept - el•sifled displ~~y. Buslne.. Cetd nd leg II notic")
wil~ sl•o. eppe• In the Pt . Ple•lnt f'tttlster end the G1lll·
pohl D11ly Tribune. reeehing o,ver 18, 000 homn.

COPY DEADLINE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
MONDAY PAPER
- t1 ,00A.M . SATURDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2 ,00 P.M. MONDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2 '00 P.M. TUESDAY
~URSOAY PAPER
- 2 ,00 P.M. WED.NESDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2 '00 P.M. THURSDAY
SUNDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M. FRIDAY

RATES
0 -Hi WORDS

1 DAY
30AYS
&amp;DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

54 .00
15 .00
18.00 .
S13.00
133.00

lnr -e~ diW as •perellft eds.

Former Marcos cab.i net member
arrested in Honolulu Wednesday
HONOLULU fUP li- Former
Philippi ne Education Minister
Jaim e C. Laya was arrested
Wednesday when he arrived in
Hon olulu so that he could appear
as a m aterial witness in 1he case
against that nation' s ousted
leader. Ferdina nd Marcos.
La~· a was one of five former
Philippine Cabi net ministers
who rame to Hawaii to vis it the
ailing Marcos, who remained in
guarded condition at St. Francis
Medical Ce nter recovering from
lung and ot her ailments.
The former educatio n minister
was arrested by U.S. Customs
and FBI agent s after he disembarked !rom United Air lines
Flight 830 at Honolulu in ternati onal Airport. said E ugene
Glenn, in charge olthe Honolulu
F B I office.
Lava was arres ted on a mate·
ria l 'witness warrant issued by
the Sou thern District of New
York. Glenn said. Lava Is consl·
dered a necessary wiiness in the
federal r a cketeeri ng case

Egg-stra...
(From EGHSTRA, page 7)
prevent a dark outer surface on
the yolk of the egg.
If you decide to cook a few
extra eggs in addition to those
you plan to color for Easter,
mark them with an X before
returning them to the refrlgera·
tor. This will separate them from
the uncooked eggs.
Refrigerate the hard-cooked
eggs in a covered container.
For a different egg salad, this
recipe is a possibility.
GARDEN EGG SALAD
{4 main dish or 8 salad servings)
~ cup mayonnaise or salad
dressing
1/3 cup sweet pickle relish
~ tellspoon celery salt
~ teaspoon Instant minced
onion
8 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
1 package (10 oz.) frozen peas
~ cup chopped celery
Lettuce leaves, optional
In medium bowl, stir together
mayonnaise, relish, celery salt
and onion untU blended. Toss
with eggs, peas and celery until
combined. Cover and chlll to
blend !lavers. Serve on lettuce
leaves, if desired. (To separate
peas, rap package against coun·
ter edge.)

••

against Marcos, his wife , Im·
eld a , and other defendants. an
FBI spokesma n said.
Laya was ta ken before U.S.

Magistrate Bert Tokairin and
bail was set at $100,000. He was
th en remanded to the custody of
federal marshals.

Public Notice

8

rado 80462, yvaa appointed

MARGUERITE SHOES

Going Out of Business Sale
Continues!!

70 °/0

Probata Judge

Lono K. Nouolrood, Clerk
t3) 9, 18, 23. 3tc
Public Notice

OFF STOREWIDE

.. You'll Save on Shoes for the Entire Family"

MARGUERITE
SHOES
992-3639
102 EAST MAIN

Executor of the estate of
Grace E. Campbell, dacaued. late of 1 18 Peacock
Avenue , Pomeroy, Ohio
46769.
Robert E. Buck.

POMEROY, OHIO

NOTICE OF SALE

By virtue of an Alia Order
of Sale is1t1ad out of the
Common Pl... Court of
Meigo County. Ohio. in tho
case of Bank One, Athena.
NA, Plalnt;ff, vs. Oewayne

Stutler. at al. , Defandante.
upon 1 Judgment therein
rendered, baing Case No.

88-CV-96 In ooid Coun, I
will offer for oolo at the front
door of the Courthou• in
Pomeroy.
Meigs County,

April, 1989,
10 :00day
o.mof
..
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • ' Ohio,
on theot 2111
the following Iandi and ••

'

nement1. loeited on Stltl

THE CENTRAL TRUST

SPECIAL
6 MONTH
CERTIFIC·ATE OF
DEPOSIT
Sullet..U_. PenM!y for _Early Wlr~dl'llw•l

RATE 8.35°/o-8.68°/o ~=AL
$3.000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

THE CENTRAL TRVST COMPANY
OF SOUTHEATI:RN OHIO . N.A.

The Bank That .'¥fakes Things Happen
MIDDLEPORT
992-eecu

GAWPOUS
441-0802

a.-.. FDIC

I

.Route 124, Elm Strott, Ra·
cine, Ohio 46771, th01treot
to the tMt ia Oak Grove
Road; the street bounding
on the west It 1111 unnamed
ttreet and there is no atreet
bounding on the north. The
complete logo! doocrlption
of the real estate it as fol·
lows:
The following real Ntate,
situated in the County of•
Meigs, Townahip of Sutton
and bounded and d•cribed
11 follow a: ''Being in Sac·
tion No. Slatoon 1181, Town
No. Two (2) ond Rongo No.
Twolvol12)ond Lot No. Five
(6):

Beginning at the Eut
corner of the Buffington lalond Rood wKh o 30 181Ft
otroat S. 88 dog. 5&amp;' W. 330
foot from tho lnterHCtion of
tho North oldo of nid Rood
with the center line of the
Cro11'1 Mill Road In corporation line; thence along the
o11t olde of tho Thirty foot
rtrHt N. 8 degreoo 15' W.
1114- to the a.w. corner
of IIOIC Hoopa lot; thene S .
;s aogr- 30' Eoot 115 fHt
to tho North olde of tho Buffington ltlond Rood; th.,ce
olong tho north olde of oeid
rood 8 . 88 dog&lt;- 65' W.
187 foot to tho ptoco of beginning. contolnlng 83/ 100
acr• of l.,d.
Rooorvlng to the Stoto of
Ohio, howwor, oil ol, goo,
..,.. and other mln-.lo,
with tho right of entrv for the
purpooo of pro-lng tor.
cl...toplng. operotlng or
prolluclng tho oomo ond the

·

for-·

~:~FOR;w,~~NTAWU·ABD:_c

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE
MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.

WANTED

Events...."

Reasonable Rates:-·
Fully Insured

CALL 992·6681

llerth~

RACINE
GUN CLUB
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

ONLY

3·2·'89 tfn

·-

·-

BINGO
POMEIOY -UGLES
CLUI
224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9978
DOOI NilE

U&lt; 1005·32

Downspouts

949-2168
2·10-'81:1 mo. pd.

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We Clrry Fithlng Suppli•
Poy Your Phone
Coble Bills Here

. IUSINESS PHONE

Public . Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
1HE HOME
NATIONAL BANK
Plointitf ,
WILLARD WAMSLEY
AND
DEBRA K. WAMSLEY, AKA
DEBORAH K. WAMSLEY.
ET AL
DofOflden!•
To Wlttord Womoloy end
Oebro K. Womoloy olio Doboroh K. Womoloy. whoso toot
known addrMa wu 49620
Eoglo Ridge Rood, Long
Birttom. Ohio 45743; you
oro h•eby notified thot you
named defend·
hove 11111 in a legal acdon entitled
Homo Notlonot Bonk, Plein·
ifff, va. Wlttord Womoloy end
Ooblo K. Womot.y, oko Oeboroh K. Womot.y, ot ol., DofondMta. Thlt oction hoo
.,... uaigned C•• Number
§B·CY-321 Md lo pending
In the Court of Common
of Molgo County.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45719.
Tho objoct of thlt com·
pleint io for [udgment on o
note and farecloeure of the
rut _,. mortvlllll•lfllinot
rut Mtate oituoted In ChM·
. , Townahlp, Melr. CounOhio, Bectlbn • Ronge
12 of the Ohio Compony'o
Purchooe ond dMcrlbod In
cieod recorded in Volume
Z17.
P11111• 513. Melga
County DMd Rocordo. ond
the P111Y"' io to toroc:lo• on
Int-I owned by you end

rt-

w.

farcoata.

You ere requr.d to anthe complolnt within
Z8 dfl'll otter the IMt publl·
cetlorl of thio notloe which

lf(TEitOI•EXTERtOI

ROOFING
Joe &amp; lobert Brown

Call EYinings....

·

992-3101
992-6347

16141 992-6550

Public Notice
will be published once each
week for
six succea8ive
wHkl . The laat publication
will be made on April 7,
t989, ond the 28 doyo for
answer will commence on
thai date.
In case of your failure to
an1wer or otherwi1e ret·
pond u required by the Ohio
Rules of Civil Procedure,
judgment by default will bo
rendered against you for the
relief demanded in the complaint .
Doted: Fobruorv 2B, 1989
Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Court•.
Meigs County Common
PloM Coun
(3) 2. 9. 16, 23 , 30:
C41 7, &amp;tc

RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 '92:WS4

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNII: GREG I. ROUSH
GENERAL
CONTRACT
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
.CUITOM KrTCH ENI I lATHS

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1·13-lfc

MOBILE
HOME PARK

STONE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On Morch 1. 1989, in tho
Meiga County Prqbate
Coun, Cooo No. 26156,
Walter Wayne Leifheit .
41280 Storchor Road ,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4&amp;789, waa
appointed EKecutor of lhe
ootato of Hugh Loifholt.
doceMod, toto of 412BO
Starcher Road. Pomeroy,
Meiga County, Ohio .
Robert E. Buck,
Probote Judge
Lono K. Nouolroad, Clork
(3) 9. 16. 23, 3tc

S7,50 PO TON

GAWA CO. AliA

Contact llalne Taylor

614·2U-9557

3- 10 - "89·1 mo.

Public Notice

NOTICE OF .
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On March 1, 1989, in tho
Meig1 Countv 4'robate
Coun, C11o No. 261B1.
George J . Korn, Jr., 302
Wright Street , Pomeroy ,
Ohio 41789, woo oppointod
EKecutor of the •tate of..
Henry L. Korn, docootod,
loto of 140 Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lono K. NooMirood. Clerk
=.....,,.,....,_,,.,...--,-...:.13...:_19. 16, 23, 3tc
11 Help Wanted

1----------1

CLASSIFIED ADS
8•rmarket
•

for everythIRgp

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opening for p.rt .time registered
nurae1 to work In Special Care Unit, Acute
Cere and Emtlt'gency Room. Salary commenIUme with experience. Excellent fringe benefltl.
SEND RESUME TO :
Rhonda Dailey, R. N.
Director of Nu,.lng
Veterans Memorial Hospitar·
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 46789

1814) 992-2104, exten1ion 213.
PPOIITUNITY EMPLOYER

Middleport, ~hio
1·28·'88-tfn

Hand Woven
Baskets
Basket Weaving
Classes
Basket Supplies

LoCIII ftrm oft•lng c • • or
J*t·tirna Dpportunlty . No •pe·

rtence required . To .-r•nae •

eonftdenlllll Interview c•ll 814-

Ann oun r.e Ill en ts
3

4441-1081 .

Sal•person needed. E~CP•Ienoe
required. Mike up to 1~0.

Announcements

IIOOowk. Colt 514-245-59t9.

SHOOTING MATCH . Sl-a
guN. 7:00p.m. Mile Hill Rd.,
R•dne. ev.-y B1tunt.y night ..
Gift• fDr E81ter. Behind City

Hall. 324 Eeet Meln, Pom•oy.

HAVE REFERENCE

992-2284

614-985-4180

BOGGS

Por LIPI
INSURANCI call:

NIASE c.rtifi.. Moch..,ic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

PUBLIC
RECYCLING

Certified Li'ic~;;;.;d_'Sihop

OF BUSINESS

Jors Gift Shoo

NOW OPEN FOI
IUSINESS

14th &amp; llaln St.
Point Ploaoant, W. Va,
We Buy Aluminum
Cans. Glaae. Bras,

COflpor ond More
MON•• fll.: 9 om-~ pm
SAT• 8 om-12 N-

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

R•p•ira

mo.

.

304-675-3161

Far More Information
tO.'B 1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
...._ CO.-

...

SYRACUSE, OHid
Everything Marked
Down
•Cement ltemo
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Y ard Ornoments

Because of Cold Weather
Everytllin1lnside.
Ring Doot Bell for Service
2-7-1 mo.
- - ::
,

________

FIIEWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

S35

P£1 LOAD
DEUVEim

"Free EatlmMH"

UGHT HAUUNG DONE

PH. 949-2101
or ln. 949-2a60
NO SIIIDAY

LINDA'S
PAINTING

110 Wost Main. Pomwoy

A/ C Service
All Mojor &amp; Min or

5

Giveaway

Ktrtent, 8wkl. oid. 8onlefeed&amp;
814-~8-

litter tratnod. Coli
9256.

8t4- ~tl-

AN potKiont avlillble. •erting
hourtv rlt•l10. 7&amp;. LPN post-.
do01 w•llable. ltllrtlng hurty
rM•t7.4&amp;. Dtff•entill for experience . Excellent benefits

...-.UIIble. Full or plrl time .
Contect Director of Nuralng.Ptnecr_. Cere Center. 814-

448-7tt2.

GOVERNMENT JOBS

Cute puppi• to 1 loving horne.

Plrt Lab.

Rot. Cell alter 8 PM

02711.

P•rt Hu•lcy .

814-379-2741 .

111.040.·169,230. yeer. How

Colt (11 806-687-8000
r..n hiring.
&amp;t. R·IIO! for currant fad•ll
lilt.

C"'• E11ter puppl•. Motta.
pure brect reglderlld Germ..

Shap.,d. fllther unknown. 814-

988-4405.

2 m1llft Beegle R•bblt: dogs to
goad hom•. 4 end •&amp; vaar• Did.
V«v .. otty. 814-742· 21121 .

•.

',-

'

Job Huntlng7 Need • eldll? We
train p.-ple for jobl 11 Auto
MechtniCI, C•rpentere, Cotm•
toloaiet•. Dlv ...tled Medlt81
Worbre, EleetrlciM'll, Food s.r.
\Ilea WOrlans. Electronlca Technlcl..a, inlllttrlti M•int.,lnce
Workers, Nurslnu A-'.t•ntt•nd
Orderll•. Ml.chlnlete, Office
Wor•s end Welders. Ret itt.,
now for a..... beginning Mer ct.
27th. Clll TrJ. CountvVocedon.l
AckJII: ClfttM'It 81'-753-3111
at. 14. A verlery of fUnding
tourc• to PIV for train lng are
avallllbte for thou eligible.

VERY IEASDNAILE

SYRACUSt OHIO

PAM MILHOAN · OWNEI

4

Blil:r(llttlr needed tor e yr. &amp; 2

yr. olds. :J1h d.yt a week-day.

FABRIC SHOP

Molt Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles

OPEN SATURDAYS
10:00 'TIL 5:00

Medical Sorv-. lnc. 614-~89840. (EEOM/FI

l.oet: March 18, Su~n• Rd . Udt the lldlis7 Ne•d • Job? We
•r•. m.:tlum el11d white house trairt: people for jobe •• mechl-

Ftr• E••lf•et:t
SliM &amp; ··~!l~.!••.

THE
BASin WEAVE

Ohio oortiflod EMT'o, Adv.,ced
EMT's, Par.,.:th:t. Pen· dme
potition• •v•ll•ble. Fle•lble
houn 14» to 38 hours per week.
Athens. Vlmon, Jleklon, Llw·
renee. VInton cound•. Cont.:~
SoutheMt Ohio Emergency

FREE ESTIM4TES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let mo do
it for you.

Deere, Now Holland.
Buoh Hog F1&lt;m
Equpment Dealer.

. 992· 611

mo~

6 Lost

Authorized John

DUllY n. nam11

DAY OR2· 15·1
EVENING
mod. pd.

Arm on the

INTERIOI-EXTEIIOI

U. S. IT. 50 EAST
. GUYS¥111, ONIO
614-662-3821

SINCE 1969

985-4222

Plu rnbing

Ne•d• uperlened plumbar.
Mlntgemtnt beckground help.
ful. Qood pav. E,_ellent ben.rtt .. Send r.ume to: Plumber.
P.O . Box 801, .J•cklon, Ohio

MASTERS TUlmO RENTAL
DRY CLEANING SEIYKE
SCISSORS SHARPENED
USm SEWING MACHINES
ALTEilnONS
SINGER AND WHIT£
SEWING MACHINES
SINGER KNITTING
MACHINES

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

•Mobile Home -·
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

DELtVEIID &amp; SPIEAD

.....
,®
..:!/!:..

3- 13- '89-1 mo.

lt. 33 North of

Public Notice

EOUAL

We can repair and recare radiators -and
heater cores. We con
also odd boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

•!'lfTAL BUILDINGS

""

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

,..• ...,. _ _ ,.

II£XlENIIVE REMODELING
•VINVL IIDINO A RODANG
HOU8\NO I A.PT. PROJECT$

CHESTER, OHIO

387·0248.

onty ..
ltU. C•l 114-

(3t3154:Z.8400. Eat. 3384.

8 t4-992· 7204.

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

~-hlr•Kyger

Act in TV Comm•dela. Children, TMns, You~ Aduttt, 1tnd
Mliture Pwple needed. Higt. pey
TV edvertillng. Cell fof cllltlng
lnfofm.tfon: Cherm Studio•

319 So. 2nd Ave.

. i
,Dependable Hearillg Aid.. Sales &amp; Sentic4
~ Hearing Evaluations Foi All Ages

Need b•b¥•1tt•, devs

48840.

992-6282

3·20-'88-tfn

Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

SER~ICE

Now lo&lt;ation:
168 North Second
Mitkflopol'l, Ohio 45760

(3!' 19, 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. &amp;tc

Choke

ROOFING

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

.

6:30P.M • .
Fottorw

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

992-6772

~· .licensed Clinical Audiologist .
::t: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
3 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at

SAT. NIGHT

Commercial
Residential

Gutters

108 High St.,. ..
Pom«oy. Ohio 4.5769
Phon• (6 14) 992.2922
2·3· '89 oln

!r: liSA M. KOCH, M.S.

EVERY

SYUCUSI, OHIO

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

WANT ADS bring
Vacatim Money

0

Basham Building

~---------Howard l. Writesel

For more information call Bud Spires
614-374-2119
AUCTIONEERS: Bud Spiras &amp; Dan Smith

EATS

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

2·l·llt!

NEW-REPAIR

POSITIVE ID

GUN SHOOT

4441-4882 ... Co•el 4441-4397.

RELATIONS

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

.

&amp;rn -.1ramoney forvOurspring
Werdrobe . .Awo. Call Bel 81 ...

PUBLIC

Masti&lt; - Cortaintoed ®
Vinyl Siding
525 North Second
Middleport, Ohio
Seamless Gutter
EVE
RYO NE WELCOME
Replo&lt;emtnt Windaws
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
Blown lnsulalion
SUNDAY 7:00P.M.
Storm Doors &amp;
WEDNESDAY 7:00P.M .
.Windows
FREE ESTIMATES
Pastor James E. Keesee

Call 992-2772

32742-2203.

&amp; A880clale8

mo .

742-2328

Wrtte: Jo-El Ent•pril• P .0 .
Bo• 2203. Klulmmee. Fl .

Lee8a Murphey

Call AI 742-2328
INSULATION

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLERS. Earn monev es·

Doy Ill' Night NO SUNDAY (AU$

J&amp;L

Set VH:t~s

sembling Mu1ICII Tedtt( B•••·
Motorlolo ouppllod. No uUing.

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

E111 plu vnwnl

11

or ln. 949-2160

WITH
PROFESSIONAL
CARE

.,;,_bolnupold. C.Ii814-~e-

3158
.

LIMESTONE
HAULED .

Prices"

1:00 P.M.

EVERY SUNDAY

Avo., Oolltpollo. 1911
CoM 814-~tiBuldr.·Pomtac.
E••...,

2Z8Z.

3· 20· '88· 1 mo.

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PAINTING

TRACTORS, FARM EQUIPMENT, SKID
STEER LOADER, LAWN 8o GARDEN
EQUIPMENT, GOOD WORKING TOOLS

.

11 -18·'818 -tfn

!..o:~:~·.::..~~~3 ~~~
f;."\"':..';..~;! ~.!'J't

•

GENERAl COHTIACTOIS
Reforenceo

Wanted To Buy

cool-. .. &amp;woln'oF.,nkUN
• Auction. Third &amp; OHYo.
114-4*31&amp;9.
Junk c.ro with ., without
mot.,.. Coli Lonv Uvtlv· 8t43 ee- 9301
Furniture and IPPII.,.OM bv tht
p i - "' .,tiro ho&lt;Joohold. Fol•

DAVE'S ENGINE
REPAIR
992-6506

985-4141

BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT

SAT., MAR. 25, 1989-11:00 A.M.

at any time.

REPAIRS OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTlLLERS,
ETC

WEDDINGS &amp; EVENn

1· 31 -'88-1 mo.

Wo Pay '50.00 P• Gamo
0¥1r 110 Pooplo '65.00
Per Game

PUBLIC NOTICE
On Soturdll'/. March 2&amp;,
1989, ot 10 :00 A.M., Tho
Home National Bank, R•~
clno, Ohio, wHI offer for solo
at pu~ic auction on the bank
parking lot, 1he following:
1987 Chevrolet S-1 0
4 whoel drive pickup buck
Serial Number
1GCCT14RHZ115431 .
The terms of the sate •re
coo h.
The Home National Bank
rnervn the right lo bid at
the aale or to remove the
item or items from the aale

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KI'FCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG. REPAIRS

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

PH. 949·2801

2 H.D. FREE wrth COUJlOII and
pun:hase of min. H.C. Pack·
11e. Limrt I coupon per customer per bii1J) sess1on.

Public Notice

CHESTR, OliO

Complete Smell
Engine Service
TUNEUPS.

MARCUM

SB1ER .....Makot Monoy
IUfEI...SaYII Money
fOI llfOIMATION
614:992·7521
614.992·2661

"At Reasonable

r---------~

u the Nmeeaeenttaltotuch

1-:--:--------

Dwnor
Qh.

FAClORY CHOKE

LOCATED ON THE lROUNDS OF THE MARlEnA
UVESTOCK SALES AT 104 WESTVIEW AYE.,
MARlEnA, OHIO
Consignments will be taken
friday, March 24 and Saturday,
March 25

Public Notice

two--

Irion
3nl

RACINE, OHIO

Public Sale
llo Auction

· CASH

April, 1989, ot 10:30 o.m.. 113, Pogo184, to Rode AI·
the following Ianda and t• len, hw heirs and Maigna.
proapecting. developing, op- nementa, loc.tad In Midcft• thlt in CM8 the or they d•
erating and producing: Allo port Vtllogo, Mllga County. tired to o•tond the North
re~erving to the State of Ohio
Ohio. wtth the following Wolt of tho Hotll Allen,
the u • of Streams flowing 1tn1at oddr•-:
137A beyond tho prooll'lt torminuo
through said l.,dl or abut- NorthSocondA.....uo: 1378 of ooid builclng .toword the
ting upon tha ume and to North Second A"""uo; 137C alloy, oithO&lt; tho or they
much of tho benlla thereof 11 North Second Avtlfluo end could buHd 1 four C41 inch
m.., bo noceooory for ouch 137E North Second A_,uo. wail or o well of greater
enjoyment and the protfH:. The 1treet bounding on the width. • may be d•bd.
tion of such streams from Ult
It North
Second from the pr•ent termlnua of
~ration.
cont.mlnation or Avenue; tho otnMII to the tho North woll of the Hotel
depolil of oodimont.''
woot it Nonh Third ~venue; Alltr1, 1 dlttance of ooven (71
Raferance Dead: Volume tho "'""" bounding on tho foot ton Ofld ono-holf (1 OV.)
218. Pogo 302 ond Volume south it Race Street and the inches or to the terminus of
299, Pogo 231, Deed Ro· · otreat to tho nonh it Coal tho 8 inch by 72 foot otrip
cordi Meigs County , Ohio. StnMII. Tho complete togo! oold in deed recorded in VoEKCept from the above
doocs-iption oftho rooiMtato tumo113, Pogo184.
p8rcel of real estate the fol· io .. followo:
Either oho or they oholl
lowing :
The following described have the right and privHage
Situate in the Township of real •tate aituata in the Vii· to tie or faaten aaid wall to
Sutton, Village of Racine logo of Middleport, County tho well of tho Edwin C.o ok
ond more peniculorly do· of Moigo end Stoto of Ohio,
BuHdlng, ot thio point.
scribed u follows: Located to·wit :
without •nv colt.
in Section #1 6, Town #2, PARCEL NO . 1:
PARCEL NO. 2:
.
Ronge #I 2, Lot No. 5 ond
Beginning ot tho nonhoMt
Being Lot Nv. 72 in the
beginning at an iron pin corner of Lot No. 71 on So- Villogo of Midllopon, Meigs
which it located on the eat cond Street in uid Village;
County, Ohio.
tide of a 30 feat street at a thence Wnt 113 feet to an
Al•o. Lot No. 71 in the Viipoint 101.2 feat Nonh 6 alloy; thence South olong logo of Mlddlopon, Meigs
deg. 16 min . weat of the ooia IIIII'/ 42 feat; thence County. OKCept 42 foet off
point of beginning on the EMt 113. loet perollol with tho northerly oide proviouoly
Buffington Island Road in said firat line named to Se· conveyed to S•mu.t Allen.
dood recorded Moy 20. cond Stroet: thence Nonh Sold tract of lond being
t 963, ot Pogo 301 of Vo· on Second Stroot 42 fHt to tocotod on Socond Stroot of
tumo 218 Meiga County tho place of beginning. Sold IOid VNioge of Mldllopon.
Dood Rocordo; thence Nonh real Mtlte herein d11cribed and compr..ing all thllt par8 dog. 15 min. - • o dit· being 42 foot wide by 113 cot oflend lvina botwoon '""
tonco of 82 .8 foot to on Iron fHt long,
Hotll 41ton on the nOrthorly
pin locetad along the eaat
EXCEPTING that out of oide of IOid Lollnd tho twotide of aforesaid 30 foot tho obovo dotcrlbod root II• ot&lt;lr( brick bulclng -nod
ltroet; thence north 88 dog. toto, the following d•crlbod by 4 . Coldorwood on the
2 min. east a diat8nce of 1715 t111ct told to Edwin Cook. hlo
ooutherly lido of sold lot.
feet to an iron pin loc8tad on heir• and al8ign.. u ia de·
Being part of the real et·
the wast line of whit wu ocrtbod In Volumo113, Pogo toto c:onveyod to Huntington
the Weaver lot now known 184, Meigs County Deed
Notional Bonk 01 Tru-.
11 the Elaie Crosalot thence Roc:ordo. to-wit: Beginning from tho Henry Swift Eatoto
aouth 3 deg. 30 min. Hit a at the north...t corner of in 1961.
diatllnce of 82.8 feet to 10 Lot No. 71 ; thence Wotton
DEEO REFERENCE: Ao
Iron pin locetod 102.2 foot tho North line of Lot 71, o to tho oouth 23 feet of Lot
from tho north tide of tho diotonee of 72 - : thence 72, Deed Book 187. Poge
afor. .id Buffington Island South o dlt-co of 8 lnchM;
678. Meigs County Doodo;
Rood; thence South 88 dog. thence OMt ond porollol with
Porco! No. 3 .
56 min . Wott o dlotlnce of tho Nonh line of Lot 71 . 1
Aotothoremolndoroftho
obout 173 foot to on Iron pin diotonce of 72 to So·
root ottato, Volume 22Q,
located at the place of begin~ cond Strolrl; thence North
Pogo 831. Meiga Count'(
ning on tholfo,..lld 30 feat on the Weat oldo of Second Oood Rocordo.
rtroet. contolning 0 .25 oc· Strolrl, I dlotlnce of 8 in·
PRIOR
INSTRUMENT
rn, more or le8a.
REFERENCE: Votumo 21&amp;.
choo to tho plo.. of bogln·
Apptoi .. at: 816,300.00. nlng.
Pogo 883 ond Volume 249.'
Pogo 837, Deed.Recorda of
ALSO EXCEPTING the
Tho . - - · cannot bo oold
Meigs County, Ohio.
for ... then
the II&gt; one-holt (V.) of the Nonh
proioodEXCEPTING from th&lt;i
welt of whot io known 11 tho
TERMS OF SALE: C•h Hotel Alton, hoving o Iron- obove doocribod. the rooloton dlllvorv of deed.
tltl• of 8 Inch-. toeing on tole ond the Right of Wav
JomM M. Souloby, Second Stroot end extend- ond E • - • gront•d olong
Sheriff of Meiga County lng boclc at thet width • clo·
with tho oomo. oo doocribod
(3) 23. 30; (4) II, 3tc
tonco of 14 IHI, 1 'AI lnchM. in Volume 304, Pogo 701 of
In oold deed found in Vo·
tho Meigs County Deed RO:
lume 113. Pogo 184, 11\ero cordo.
Public Notice
wMglv.,the right ond prlvlAPPRAISED AT:
' - t o Edwin Cool!, hie holro
tiO.OOO.OO. The reo! - t o
Ofld Mllgno. If end connot bo oold for leu then
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on Order of whll'l ho or they dooired lo two-thlrdo of tho opprolood
Sole io.,od out of tho Com- utond tho well of hlo or their voluo.
TERMS OF BALE: Cuh
mon PI- Coun of Meiga bulclng to o third atorv.
County, Ohio. In the CMo of olthor he or they were to on dolivorv of deed. .
Jom• M. SO..Ioby,
Bonk One, Athono, NA, hove tho right end prlvHoge
Sheriff of Molgo County
Plolntlff. vo. Yvonne H. of pu-ingot o prloe to bo
8oolly, ot ol., Defon-o. IIIII'"~ lheon•holfof 13123. 30: (4)8, 3tc
upon a Judgment thM'IIin
the
wtllt of tho Hotel
rendorM. being C11o No.
BS.CV-214 In Mid Court, I A U I I ' I t h l l t - · - t h e l .
bulllng.
tine which
ot theEdwin
two-Cool!
•orv
will offw
at the front root
woo
erecting
ot
thllt
time.
door of the CourthouM in
T..... wM oloo ,__,.in
Pomeroy. Moigo County,
"C'AS!l
Ohio. on tho 21ot dll'/ of tho dood recorded In Volume

$7.00
$10 .00
$15.00
$25.00
560.00

'

right of occupancy in to far

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Moreh 3. 19~9. in the
Maiga County Probate Court
Cuo No. 28183. Robon G .
Milnor, 1801 County Rood
422, Idaho Springs, Colo-

-INit.

992-6135

FARM EQUIPMENT
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

992·6669

Public Notice

llipt

THURS. E.l. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 ii;M.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
Public Notice

28-35 WORDS

Get Results Fast

"WE CARE ABOUT YOUR HEALTH
AND YOUR SAFETY ... "

MIDDLIPOil, OH.

SAT. 9 l.M.·Z P.M.

Cal Aoyti- lay or

~M;;;;:;;tNiiiii;;jftj:=======::::;~

WEDDING GOWNS, l'ttOM
DRESSES, FOIMAL ATTIRE
AND ACCISSOilfS
"Just In Tirno For Spring

.9·19-lllfn

1-800-762-(172'7

271 NORTH SECOND

11-UWOROS
$5 .00
58 .00
S13.00
$21.00
551 .00

Rlt• Ire for eonteeutNe runi, broken upd.ayswill be ch•ged

DAYTON, OHIO

1" Wnt S.Cend St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

•Mobile Home P•rt•
oPiumbing Supplioe
•Eioctrlcel Supplies
MON.·TUES.-WED .-flL
9 l.M.-6 P.M.
THIJIS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON

diV 1her publlcMion to mllkecorreetton.
· •Ads thM mutt bs peid in edvence ere
C1rd of Th.-.ks
Heppy Ads
In Memori.m
Y .,.d 514•

POISON PREVENTION CENTER

992-5995

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY

9

M•son counli• must be pr•

•Prl~ of 1d for 111 capitelllltters il double price of 1d cosl,

"SYRUP OF IPECAC
"FREE" PAMPHLOS While Supplies Last.

CATHY IEIIIHIMEI

Of

"Aec.We • . 50 discount lor Ids paid In actllanee.
"Fr. . .ct. - Givuw1y 1nd Found 1dt: und• 15 Wt'rds will be

While Supplies Last

SMITH and
ASSOCIATES

e

POLICIES
•Ads outtkte Mei91. Geltl•

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 13

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classified

"FREE"
•INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
•INDIVIDUAL
•CORPORATE
•PARTNERSHIP
HOUIS
9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.
EYEIINGS &amp; SATURDAY
BY APPOINTMENT

s
.
•
8 us1ness erv1ces

Thursday, March 23, 1989

JEFFERY J. WARNER
REPRESENTATIVE
302 W. 2nd St,
Pom•ay, Ohio 45769
Ph. 614-992-5479
Rog. 614-992·24771)
Claims:
1-100-421-3535

==

1...- ... - - - - -

WANTED

DEAD 01 AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
oRitfrigerators
"Mvtf Ia Ropairolslo"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

(Subjt&lt;t 1o Chonge
Without Noti&lt;o)
#I COPPER_........... 86' t~
#2 COPPER _ ........... 6S&lt; I~
ClEAN ALUMINUM
SIIITS _ ................. 52 c II•
ClEAN ALUMINUM
CAST ......................... 40' I~
AWMINUM
IEVIIAGE CANS ..... 50' I~
IONY
SICHT ............. 5c Ia 30• • ·
IONY CAST ... 3' 11 20' I~
ST AIIIWS --...- .... 20' lb.

M•le Bau.ne hound, eppro~cl­
m.. etv 3 v•rs ·old. 304-1576-

2628.

and Found

dog. No cotlw. Coli 814-9863887.

nl•t• In our machine technolo9r
progrwn. Ne•ty ..,., product

Found: Wlllk• Coon Hound.

of Industry, from cornflak• to
turtMn-. II med• ell her u1ing

INch Grove Ad., Lang1ville m.chlnetooll otutingmlthloll
114·742·2121 .
nwdewHh m~~ehlnetaol• . ln the
machlnt technology pragr11m
youwll !Wn how to u•v•rfout
7
Yard Sale
tv.- of miChlnay tueh u:
lathe. drill pr-. milling ma·
chine, grinding mechlne end
puneh pr•. We h.ve a v•rietv
of funding eoun:.a IIVIII..,.e for
eligible •pNcante. Clll1t. Adu It
Educetfon Center··Tri·Countv
JVS .. 114-753-3511 l11tl. 14.
&amp; Vicinity
.................................. Spring qu1rter begins Mllrch
lrN.

.. .....Gallip.oliii ........ ..

27th.

Open Fri.·S•t.-Sun. Have 'f'_OOr A11emblers. Eernmonayes"m·
Y.. d Slletrt Ed'1 OllllpoMs Fla. bllng Mu1ICIII Tadd'{ • • •·
Merkllt. Buy~trt wtn1 your cut M.. •lelt supplied . No 11lling.
offl. S.tl 18ft own 10 Deal••· Wrtte: Jo-El' !nterpriiM, P.O .
Qo . home wtth nothing but BoK 220 3, Ki..immee, Fl
maney. No P•mit. Calli 114- 32742-2201
448-7037.
GOVERNMENT JOBS
t11.040.·•159.230

8

Public Sale
• Auction

Coli M•ltn W.damovor. Auctk&gt;
n... Llcen11d • londtd In
State of Ohio : LiquidMionl.
f•ma. nt81•. entiqu.,. lite:.
8t4-24&amp;-5t82.
AUCTIONEER

Edwtn

spring

s....

Wln1tr now booking

17 ya.,. • .,..

rlenee. Phone 304-273-3447

RIYtnwaood. W.Ve.

Ext. R ·9801 tor current _fed••l

Nit.

Ne•dsomeonato live in .,dhelp
Mdwty wonwt. Pref•
Chrlltlan or good mor11 per•on.
Po.•lbfy could h•e own fur·
ri1hld IP . . man1. Room end
bo•d plu1 lova off•lnu Md
wtth

othM berurflto. 6t4· 742·2004

•tter 8:30p.m. C.lvln 0 ' 0111.

E•rn money et hom. I A•1n1~e
Jewelry, toyt, electronict, othen. FT • PTwarktNiileble. Cell

w.v.. State

lrofundoblol t -407-744-3000
Ext. S -1822 24 hours,

Ohio andWNtVirglnl .. Booking
Auctlono. 304-n3-57111

AVON · All tr-. C.ll Merltyn
Weaver 304-882·2146.

9

304-576-1429.

Chempkm Aut·
lfon•. Aick Pe. .on. Lic:Ms.:i In

AVON •11•••11 Shirl111 Spe•e.

Wanted To Buy

Will buy or IPP,....•

~nythlngt

Antlqu... furnlluN~pii.,CIII,

nta111. autot. oo
furnlohlngo. Morltn
lt4-24tl-1152.

Jul1 w•nt to ••n 1 littfl Mtra
mone¥1' Or would you Nkt to
NY• • eer_.7 Etthet wfiY Awn
c., hllp you be 1 he bn1 you c:en

eta home
tel..._.
_ ,.. to Buy·2·3 -•m
homo. Oetllpolto oroe. Con p.,.

boll! Colt Morllyn We'"'O!· 304882-2845.

Went to Buy-Aluminum 14 or 11

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF
NURSING

••h. Coli lt4--8312.

ft. John INt. Alto 15HP motor.
Coli 8t4-2etl-1431.
NOOd t20 tono of fill dl". Colt

114-379-2377.

U11d "rnllu,. b¥ thl piece or
.mira houllllhold IIIIo leliil;'g.

814-742-2415.

ATTENTION: EXCELLENT IN·
COME for horne ...embfy work.
lnlo. celt 504-84ti-1700Dopt. P
2303.

12• bH mutti lwet care nursing
center..-.Aegltt•Nursewlth
supetvlsoryelltperience. a cepectty for 1Nehin!ilo ewing and
genuine lnt•Mt In Geriatric
nureing. hctUent opportunity
tor nuning •dmlnittr~~tlon. ca-

r.., growth '"d d... elopmen1.

H,.,.,

Milke inquiry Care
of
T••• Vlilt¥, 590 Popl• Fork
Act. H .,,,can, wva. cell 30 4717· 7821. Con11et pert on
David Wilbur Admn.
()~Its

"'o1140 qutltl. Arry concltlon. Sho nev• Ant. now tllliing eppiiC..h DllcL c;otl 814-982·5557 CIItktnt for nlghl ~ ehlft. dining
.f'OOm m~nea•. !lppty Mon or
.. 814-112-2411.

u...

furnlturo .,d houoohokl

BILL SLACK

992-5114
Located Off Bypa11

oppllon-. Pllono 8t4-742·
201"

992-2269

AI Jet. of Rt1. 7 •
143, Porner•ov

Wont .. -dlnlll~....,· poylnu
top pri.., 304H24 eft•

.:..·... ""

v••· Now

hiring. C.Stl 11) 806-887·8000

-----

1:00PM .

Tu• betw-. haurt 1 0:00
AM-4:00 PM. Point pte•ent.

w.v•.

Now tlklnlepplcMione on 111

pooMionL ho_-L 1:00 PM
.,d 4:00 AM . Paint Pl-ont,

w.v•.

�Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel
11

Pomeroy- M iddleport.

Help Wanted

LAFF·A·DAY

46

Cortlflod Nuraint A.at.,.
3 C.N .A.'o. lui limo
pol-loi\ 3-11, 11- 7 lhlft

Roonw for ..-t:-WMk or month.
8tlrting et e120 I mo. G1H i1

HotoU14-441-11180.

Care ....,., Tnt• v.n.,.. Qu.flfled epplcwdt tnooumgH to

F~MMhld

opplv &amp;10 Popllr Fork Rood.

room. t71t mo. AI

utiMiel pold. Shwo blllh. 119
S.ooncl· Avo.. Coli 814-4413UII.

Hurrlcan . WVa . M - F .
8 :30-4:30. Compttkhte w-oe.
benllfttt pede• off•ed to
quallftld C.N .A.o.

W.Vo. a_,ood I'I.N. noodtd for
Uv lhift w~ C.re HIIY'" Tallf•
V.lljff, 2 d'fl Willie .,.,., mtw
w .... ond off, A..... HO Popllr
Fork Aold or cont.ct RhiV
Wllk• D .O.N. 30 ... 717-7121.
- F . 8:30--4;30.
Situations
Wanted

E~ man tooldng to

hDm1. Wlt~fDrroam•bo•d.
Coli 114-448-31158oltwiPM.

15

"Mom! Pop! George popped
the big question ... can he
move in with ·us?"

School•
lnetruction
RE-TRAIN NOW!

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE.
&amp;21 '*bon
Pika
Coii4411-4387. Aog. No. 81-11·
IOHI.
Untt .. True* Mut•
Tn.lck Drio.l• Tr*'fng
D.O.T. Conlflellion Job P l Aallt1n,. Home St.,ctv/ Resldlnt T...mmg. Fln.,al•
Aid Avall•blt, Accredited
NHSC. Col Toll Froo
1· BOO- l4fl. 11141 1. L.ocol office.

"'ent

-.,blr

,.,.k....,ro.

Clw.. Fl.

w.

Ve. Hdqrs:

1 8 Wanted to

Do

George's Pon:lbla S.Wmll
Don't h.,l your loll to •
-m11. con 30 ... &amp;711-1957.
llbvolltlng In mv homo. Aff'l
-ue. any ahtft. W..Uendl. live
In M•I*VIIe ,,... Clll 814258-&amp;529.

Gen ••I &amp; Commwd .. dHnlng
now avellable. Coruct I renda't
Ctatnlng Service. 11 ... 4413184.

21

f~;:;:::;~:;;:::;;:::::::::::-r----=::::j
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

18801p.,on 14..10, 2 81'1 •• 2
blthl, ol olodrlc:. CA. woodllur-. 10.11 dldl. 121&lt;14
wood buH..,JJ .eon 114-2411&amp;028.
14xSO. 2 11'1 . Good oond.
aw......dngwilhlow-n
JWtmmt. •210 • mo- 3 v••
lo ... Coli 81 ... 441-7104.
11718hullz, -lloo.. 211A.,2
ful btl hi. ntw c•ptt. 12x20

Bueinaas
Opportunity

!NOnCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO .. ....,.....,dl thot y&lt;&gt; :
do bu•ln- wllh people you
know• ..,d NOT to lind money
throuah tM man unll you h••
lnveltlgllted the off•lng.
Turn kay OJ*'don. Downtown
. , end tounge wJih 22 ....
din•. 2 two bedroom u.,.,..n
ap.-tm.rta. Own• h• otMr

lnt•••· f7G.OOO. Neg_otiable.
CAl Ron M 114-992-9972.
Retlil bualn. . for •le. Midct•
port, Ohio. Johnlon'• V•l.tv
Store 11., F,..Unl. 1· 30"'
77:J.fi305•tt•I5:00p.m.
.. LI 8ERTV FASHIONS, INC.
off••
non-tranchilleipp•ll~nd
thot ttora. RtrtiiM .. •10. t20

Con 814-448-43117.

814-441-0&amp;tJ ottw 2 PM.

141.10 Win dlor, Jet up a retdv
to f'1101t'eln. 7 ICI'• In oounlry.
' ' Aintld lof... Mnutel from
llprlng Vllll\l. KM-Horrloburg
Ad. t12.800. Coli 114-241&amp;305worl&lt;: 245-&amp;&amp;&amp;love.

For rn. 2 Br. ml• In the
country. Col 814-3711-2187.

18811roadmow.moblehoime.
1:41&lt; 72. 3 lr.. 2 bllhl. AIIUme
1o... eon &amp;14-441-130&amp;
1979 Monllol\ 14170, 3 bod-

Double wide moblt home. on
fou nd•lon. epprox. 2 • •
to town .,d schook I• g.
ldtch.._ llundry, 3 -oomo. 2

do••

b•hl. MW : ; : •· aoncnle
porch-wolko.
- . . polio.
r.tlnllhld cell•. he• pump,
•aall.m oonlll:lon. t..rge b•n
with oon«•e ftoor, 114-HJ.
3218 ..,.,lnDI aft• 1:30 or
..dl.
Moble home on one IICI"tlot et
01-ood. 304-571-2487 or
oltw 1:00PM &amp;711-20 18.
1984 Knollwood 14x70 3-

Cot-..

be'*oom.

ceiling

olr.
1711-4881
35

Lote &amp;

t~ns.

centf'll

colllnvo 304-

Acreage

O.J . W.Mo Rd.- 2 wooded
buH ...9 Iota APP'... 2 - •
ooch Col 814-2411-11188 oltw
5:30PM.

Real Eslale

15
atf Rl. 2. Re~ tor
tral•. All hook-ups. •11 .000.
Coli 304-9111-3335.

DeluJCI 3 BA . hou• for •lt.
ONri• fin.n~. Cell 304-875&amp;104.

GOVERNMENT HOMES! From
•1 ,00 tu .._., lir). Foredosu,..,
RepoJ., Tax Dellnqu.m ProD•
1101. NOW .SELLING THIS
AR EAI Col fRei\Jndoblej , 1315-733-SO... Ext. G2732A
FOR CURRENT USnNGSI
Brick &amp; frtm•7 roo,.._ 4 BA .
c• t•aue. 2 acr•. Mid
t40' 1. CoH "614-445-9780.

CA. 2

2 dory, 6 roorN • bMt\. rurlf
Kyg• Cl"'iik School cllt.
9/ 10 ~ere. Manly -..... 1 mi.
off Storys Run Ad . Ctll 614-

wet•.

367-7891
House for • • tJ, owner. A nice

home loCited of 51h A..,. ..
Ktn llJQI. Large lat. elr ooncltion«&lt; 11t00nd floor, .....,_, Ill
1\!rnKt. Ecelld for tm...
young flmily or In oldr.- couple.

Home h• mtnV ftoe r..rura

For IPPointment- ellll 614-448-

0820.
For Sale by Owner, Nice brldt
home.

Deb~

Cl..-vJM Subd.-7 mil• lOUth
of Olll.ollo. AU u nct.rooncl
- ' •· Rootric..,d. Col 81444.,. 348 fl.

10'•

V.-y •ttriCtiv• brick 4bedroom.
2 b«h. ftmlty room with fir•
pilei. forrMI din In~ t.geliY lng
room. 30ft. custom Dllk kttchen
~b6nat1. o• wooltNorlc. ftnllh
ballmlnt, 2 c• 1•-ae. 1.-11
ltndlalped krt, 4 ml• from
HoiJor Hoo,-11 off Rt. 38Pt&gt;rt•brook Subdtvilkm. Clll
814-4411-4189.

Dr. Subdtvilion.

3800 sq. ft. totll. 3 or 4 BR ., 21h
bill~. LR , OR , 2 c• g•ege.
much more. Tot.tly .-ne In
pMt 4 yn. Priced to sill to
H9.500. Coil 614-445-2800
eve. &amp; weelundl. 441-2129
weekdlrt'•·
Good houll for 11le in belt
nelghborhoodofRutl.,.dvll.;t.
Prlcer-.cetteeooo. Matt. In
Rest Home 1nd need to ..n.
Colvin O'Ooll. 814-742-2004
6:00p.m.

Lot for lila. ant pk.lt IICI'a hlff
Rold off Routt2.
phone 304-175-1200 •tter
&amp;:00.

mMeoutOre~r

1---------

&amp;038.
2 bl:clroom.
furri1Md. w•slw end..,.,, •lr.
FCM'

rn or ...._

Hom as for Rant

--------3 BR . hou •· dcofu •• AC. t350o

Ho1pttal on Rt. 110. A.\llll.a.e
(Jiclr.sont.tft• 7p.m.

hotl•.

Pom•ov. 2 bedroom
Mulberry Ave. 1Chch1n wfth
.,.,.. wtd rofl'lgonrtor.lull booom.n. ._th• ., d chyer hook·
up. oft lti'IIM: parking. ldelf tor
worillng-.. tte or,...... couple.
No IMtl. •225 month end
dopooll. 814-882-&amp;292 ....
&amp;p.m .•

Smell completely turnlst.d
hou• . Prefer conslfuctlon
wor••· 114-992· 7751 .

IUrtlng· egg , Recliners .
...rtlng- •11.
USEDdr. . . .. bedroom
auh-. O.lka, wringer washer, e
complete line of uud furniture .
NEW- Wwl•n boots- •3&amp;.
Wortcbooto 018 So up. {Stool So
10ft too). Coli 114-UI-3159.

a.•.

AoDI~nce. Inc. Good
u... IPPII.ft'* tnd TV •••·
Open BAM tQ IPM. Mon lhru

County

Sot. 814-448-1899, 827 3rd.
Avo. GolllpoHo. 0 H.

-GOoD USED APPUANCES
W•Mn. dl"'en. r.trlgentort.
In Tu ppere Pllllns. 2 bti*ooml· una•• · Sktggs Appliances,
t171. ... month rlu• depotit Upper Rtver Rd. -Ide Stone
ond utMitloo. Col 814-887- Cr_. Motel. 814-U8- 7318.
3417.
LAYNE"S FURIIIITURE

44

Apartment
for Rant

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATE&amp;, 531 Jodllon
Aka from •113 1 mo. Wlllk to
lltap Mid movloo. 814-44!12&amp;&amp;1. E.O.H.
T•• Townhou11 ep . .nwntl· 2
BRo .. 1\lo bllhl. CA.. dll·
hwoohw. dll-1, privlte .,_
cloood plllo. pool pl.,groond.
Wlter, .wer, &amp; 11'11h Included.
St.,lng ot • 288 . . mo. Col
114-3117-7110.

Daw,.own 1 BR ,

ipt. niiNiy

potl. Oopollt. CIH 114-4410139 .
SHADY LAWN APT&amp;- 729
S.oond A\!e. Furnllhed .md..,..
cl• ...-rtlng It t175 • mo.
Including Wilt• a prbltge.
Slnalo o«Jb only. Coli 8f444~4107 or 441-2802.
N.wty remodeled 1 BR . tpt.

Appl. lur.Wohocl. ldolfl-n-1
bloak from downtown. c.n

814-441-48311.
2 BR. IP1 .. nWt plulh c•pet.
nM' ~Int. ulllll• plrtllf._, Plld.
t 171omo. Coli ~871-&amp;104.
8711-1381. 875-7731.
Ap.-tment avslllbta HUD •ccoplod. Coli 304-875-8104.

Furnilhad 2,3, or • rooms &amp;

Nicely furnished l;mtl hou•·
Efflclonar opt,· 1 m•. Mobllo
home below town owrlooldng
ca &amp; hut, ackltt1 mty, ..t.

rtv•.
Coli 114-4411-0338.

..... Coli 304-&amp;75-&amp;104. OC'
875-53118
F"nilhocl offlcl•or- 807 Socone!, Oolllp .... t110. Sh.-e
2 IR .. 2 otcirv homolocotod In both. CIH448-4418oltor7PM.
dtv. t • - . U25omo. 381'1 ..
2 b.th homa , apprm. 12 mil• Two 1-be*oom unfurnlthed
fromcltv on Aocldldc Rd., 1300 .......... In Oollpoh. 117&amp;
e mo. Aef. &amp; Sec. dip. '*I· •d t225 per manth. Stav••d
'MI...., l'loll E-o. 514-441- refrlgeretor furMhld, Convenilf1t location. Refwance~ end
3&amp;44.
II•• ~ulred. C.ll 814-441,
7 .f-old. 3 bodroombrlclt- ~ff'll 442&amp; or 441-2325.
10101 11-lc. -ch otylo homo,
wpeted throughout. 1 ecr• Furnilhocl opl.· 1 BR . 243
fanoed In beck ytrf(l wfth deck. J.cltson f'tk• U31 • rno.
Located 7 ml• from Holter UIM•I• plld. Coli 445-4418
Mllrch 1 •• 310 p• month. If
lntoultod, CAll 814-281-1318

Bunk be* wllh ~c:Nng. I 249.
Full size mltlr. . • found.tion

Clll 114-912·7479.

blth. CIHn. Aduh1 onty. No
- - Rot. • ..... coqulrod . Coli
814-441-1&amp;19.

Renldls
41

2 bodroom trol•. lurnllhocl. On

Walnut St., In R•elne. 814-992-

redecorated, c.-pet. compttte
ldtchon, •c. Plrklna. Adult1. No

One hlff we lot Camp _Conlt¥.
Aouoh Focrol llold. 304-871171181111• 5:00.

Homes for Sale

Nlct 2 BA . moble hDnw for tent.
Aot. • ...,, roqulrod. eon

dedi,. woodburner. Mud • •

AND UNDER, MODEA,.TE, or
excluttie. Ov• 2.000 brand
nii'Y'I•· Onetlmef• f11 .IOOto
UI,0001ncludollnvon10f'/, fix.
turet. buying trip, ..DDII•.
lnstore tr.ining. mora cett .,.,
time. Sllirlltt Hunt• 409-832·
5561 .

31

21R ., a•bl• ....... bea~tlful
rtler YiWt ft bn.,ll· Foetw"s
MDblt Home Park, 814-C411102.

eft• 7 PM.

Modern 1st floor1 BR . furn~ll1ed
tpt. &amp; 2 BR. ht floor unturnllhod op1, Rot. • d.,. Coli
814-441-1079.

Sof• Md ch-.· priced from
13815 to •aes. T•bl• tiO and
up to *1211. Hlde-o-bodl t390
to 1195. Reeun . . e221J to
•371. L..mps 121 10 1121.
Dinlttn •1011nd up to '491.
Wood 11ble w-e ch*• •2815 to
*11&amp;. Deok t1 00 up to t 375.
Huteh11 '400 tnd up. Bunk
beds compl•e W·mlttr.... l
• 281Md up to t391. Bebv beds
t110. Menr ..... or box cwlnga
fuH ar tWn •e8, flrm 178. and
t81. au- t210. up,
King e36o. 4 drwter chett fl9.
Gun ceblnltl I . 8 &amp; 10 gun.
B•bv - - t:lll •
lid lnmoo t20. •30 • Klng
frMia 150. Good selection of
bedroom
m1111 e~~blneta.
hMdboards e30 •nd up to •16.

•u

luy 0&lt; Sill. Rlv.-lne AntiquH,
1124 E. Moln Stroot. Pomeroy.
Sundov 1 10 lp.m. 814-912Houn
2528.: M.r .w 10o.m. to &amp;p.m.•
Misc. Merchandise

~ ,.,. .., . ... ....,

~=:~:§;~;::::=r:;~=~~~~==~~
56

Building Mlllri•
Block. bricll. - . . pip11. wm.
dows,
etc. Claule Wilttin, Rio Orondo. 0 . CoH 8142411-8121 .

lnt•

Swimming Pools- 1999

·

Ntw left aYer1888Modtlpaols.
Hugo 15 bv 24ft. -'m .,.._ 4
ft . "-"· lncludol dod&lt;, fenc:o,
flit• &amp; w•rentv. ln .. tflallon •
finonclngllllllcoblo. Coli 24 hnl ..
1-800-345-0948.

56
Pate for Sale
- -- - - - - - lhopooPet
Grooming. All bre•di . .. AII
otylel. ,. ., Pot Food Deolw.
..lJIIo- Ph. 114-448-0231.

.30. Coli 114-4411-4982.

Drogonwynd Cottwv Kon nol.

For S•l• - Concrete .,d Plll'tlc
septic tanks. AN siz•. RON

Pwai.,. end Sltm. . •d Him•
,..,.. ldttant. Chow Rud ....
vice. Call 114-441-3844 eft• 7
PM.

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jocfcoon, Ohio. 1-800-837-9&amp;28.

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Alison, 1210 Second A .....
Oalllpolll, Ohio . 814·441·
4338.

Suporlor QuoHty AKC Coclcw

Sptnlel pupa. Shots ltM...
wormed. Vett_.ld, •150•ch.
Coll814-3118-8190.

C.thedr•l window qulttt for
Ellt• CoiOf'l.

Supp~

Groom end

Flrawood for .. 1. spltt herdwood. Pldtup truek.' dellv...._

E81t:er.

63

Livaetoclct

64

Ruby

E.:ellent thtp•RR tlet.. 18.50
ooch So wttiquu.,li'- U .BO
uch. eon &amp;14-441-0169.

Golden A•r6wer pupt AKC. 3
mMe. I femli&amp; EJCet pedlgr•
UOOooch. Coli 814-898-HS&amp;
Proetorvlle.

W•t• bed. super single. excel.
eond. Drop IMf table w / 2
choirs. Coli 814-2511-9315.

Eater Bunnies for • • 13.00
eec:h. Bul..,lfte Ad. Clll 8144411-711 1.

Compact dllc with 10 dilcs.
'IIYorkl good. Contact ..... .._

AKC Boaton T•rler. Mete. 8
wkl. old. t200. Coli 814-2&amp;593&amp;4.

614-448-7081 .
Two Treddle sewing machln11.

Prom gown, Ounne Sax size 3 .

Coli 614-441-7923.

Delbert Swisher
Uood Appll.,-314 Third St.
Kan.,go. 814-4411-7473. 3150II:hwethen, pric• sttrt ..
tao. 115- Auto washer•. pricee
ltllrt at •100.

&amp;

Grain

Chow-Chow pupo. lull bloocfod.
not "''lllt•td. Shota .wted a
worrntd. t100 11ch. Cell 8143811-B810.

So wot• pump. Coli 814-4410278 ott• &amp; PM, -ondl
IJf'ltimo.

AKC Reg. mele ~merenlan,.
0175. AKC Rog. mole Chow,
n5. Coli 814-37&amp;-2101

1983ALCii &amp;000-8 , 41i'., auto.,
cas., sun roof. Spotlen cond.
'3,975. Coli 814-285-5087d.... 241-9118-avenlngs.

441-9308.

Albbttl

Yell.,. Furnttura
New 1nd u1td furniture end

Graoary store ditplav CIIMmeat, ytgetlble • dalrv •
eerllmlcltifnforllle. Alhl.-.k. Ky
, -801-928·3818.

VIA• Furnitu,. &amp; Appi,_.C*
0p., Ooly 9 •M·S PM
Sundoy 12 Noon-&amp; PM

81 ... 441-3158
I pc. wood INing room suitet.319. Allsaf•'•&amp;ah..,..m•ked
ckMn. 'h price menr.. ..,.,
Heswy duty bunk bedt whh
beddtng- •229. Free matt:r_.
set wfth purch•e of certeln
bedroom IUttM. 7 PC. WOOd
poster bedroom 1uh:• t749. 7
pe. country dlnnette set (includeo hlriCh)- *550.
All IIPPiilf\CH hwe 30 d-vs
gull'ent•. TRADE-INS &amp;.1.-,a·
ways welcome. Lots of naw
trrlvllt . Rl. 141 C..tlf'lery, V•
mh on lincoln Pike.

Very good fli rnltu,.Cauch, co f.
f • •ble. •d •bl•. eurio. ate.
Cllf 814-441-1778.

tcenrnoN sewing m.chlne wtth
attiChm.-.ts &amp; ctrl"'lng case. 1

yr. old. under 15 yr. w.rr.• 8100.
C!aron.~ 17 Kerosene he•er.
tao. eo11 114-441-11412.

Oulh:llt'll Special- 90" wide mullin, t3.50 1 yd-20 yd. boh.
Batting, •4.99 Mch-mlnlmum
3. Coli 814-281-4041 .

mmr.... *200 080. Call 614-

Eoot•.

.

Used furniture, antlqUM. collec-

At~Cf¥

for

Hlllf Choclcwld 0'-

M'Id hllf California Gl111t . C.ll

814-985-4288.

IMga 10 manth pure bred
RoltMII•. f100. 8114-7422450.

Spring form~la. .variOus tlr&amp;l.
Coli 814-441-0931 .
.

Big gMt Llnle Store. Originel P &amp;
J Odds tndEndiShopnowopan
et 193 N. Second. Middltport.

tor •le.

· Floh T•l&lt;: 2413 Joc:fclon Aw.
Point PI-~ 304-875-2083.
10glloot up t14.991nd10gll
comploto t43. 25.

tors lt.,1 and glorified junk.
Come In tnd brow• 1nd ..,
hello toJoe MdPolfy . Will lei on
consklnmtnt. Lot• of m..arill.

57

Mueical
lnetrumants

Buy-S'eii-Tr.cie.lfwedon'thlve

It, wa wll tnd it, lll'ld liVe you
that herd Y"ned cuh.

Prom gown from Miley' 1 of
Ad•t• for ale. Size 8-10.
Nwer been worn. 614-9927434.

Nlntendo wtth control plds.
Ught Oun. 8

cartridge~ .

Cell

81 4-149·234&amp; oft.- 4p. m.
16 HP Garden Trt~etor . Cohl«
engina. Needs •••ambled. C.ll

614-949·2346 ott.- 4p.m.
2 Schwinn

Air·Dr•

••ell•

blk•. Very goo condition.
t400eoch. Coli 114-692-1144.
RototiH&amp;f,

31h

Kimbell pi.,o, Excel. cond.
• 1100 Firm. Coli 814-441-

1771. '

•••one.
•rlou•
Muolc. • 814-UI-0817.

lndlvlcklal CPJ Iter
beginnen.
gul1eriR. Bn.ll-

c•dll
Joff w.nol., lnotructor, 814446-8077. Llmkod op.,inp.

59 FOf'

Sale or Trade

For •le or nda. 71 Ford F100.
&amp; orl. t710. hdo. good cond.
304-871-..18.

HP. WorM fine.

1150. GM renge, 31 Inch,
white. Goodcondttion. t715. Call

814-992·7215.

Fmn Sli!Jillli:'
&amp; Live&gt; lll t.k

7 pc. living room suite·
dwanport, chair, 2 .,d t•bl•.
co- ,.bla 2 , _ t210.
,..,, •ke .n. c.n 814-44&amp;0839.

P•nt Plu1 Pltttburgh Paints tor
til vour petntlng n.... Homeowner, oont,.ctor or plant
melntenMce. Contact ua tor
Ptlce Ouote. Plint Plus, 2415
Jacfcoon A,.. 13041 675-.084.

UTILITY BLDG. SP~30'•.0'•9'
ewtl, 1· 15-xB' tNdlng __!laor,
1-wolk -114991. EA ECTED •
II'ION HOASI! 8LDIIS. 814332-974&amp;.

All tv~• M11onry Bride. Blodtl.
Stone end concrete. Free Estimate. 304-n3-9550.

130
w / lo-.

w,,.,_..,

U•td applilllon.
dry.... .. .nge&amp;. refrlgeratort, micro'Mve ovens, Kin's Apptl~nca,
217· E, 2nd St. , Pom•oy.
&amp;14-992-&amp;336 or 614-9B53&amp;81.

Gu dove, dlnatte Mt, Chin•
Hutch, omon dryer lor •lo. Coli
., ... 742-3149.

4ft. •bow ground pool, 24' oval
motor Md liner, lett then y..,
old. lndudtl en •cc. .ori•.
304-n3-9139.

81

1983
cond.

61 Farm Equipment

c...

dels•l trtctor
Ul8&amp; firm. Loto

modlll 4441nt.-nltk&gt;nllltractor.
plows • llec, 2 row_.n pl. . . ..

3 pL , . . , - · 8 f t. buoh ho!J
148150. Ownerwl ttnsnae. Cd
814-281-11522.

Atoenlx. Good
1191. Call 81•-245-

Fetty TrM Trimmln~ ttump
remOY•I. Call30 .. 871-1331 .

52811.

Aot~ry

11B8CIIwlttl. 2 dr., ••pd., air,
•2.200. 19B8 ChCIVV S-10
plcicup, 4 orL. 4 opd.. 14.000.
198&amp; Dodao Chwgw. 2.2. 5

or c•ble tool drilling.

Mo1twel1 oompi•••.med-r.
f\lmp •I• .- d ewvlce. 304895-31102

*3.200. Col 814-2111-1410.

'

1987 Oldl . Cololco. Loodod.
23.000 ml•. n .aoo. Coli
814-2&amp;8-1410.

tnd dedcl. Frw
ooti--. coli 304-815-342&amp;.

1988 Cougw LS. 8 cyl., fully
low miiHSJ&amp; Call
&amp;1 ... 992·2782.

82

equipped.

1173 Ford LTD 4 door ,
Brouglt.n\ PHI•ed h•d top.
Good condition. 814-992·
3880.
1978 Ford Elite. 351. good
concllion. 1978 Ch..-y VM. 8
cyl., bocly rougll. Coii814-843S2BO.

Remodeling.
porta.

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
GtHt.ols, Ohio
~,M~~4- 11,3888 or 614-

"71 MontoCorlo V·8 Mllomotlc:.
T-top, good cond, *1. 200.00.
304-178-2&amp;28.

R11identill or comm•cllll ~ir­
ing. Naw a...... ice or rep Ms.
Ucensed electrld~. Rldanour
Bectrlcel, 304-876-1788.

&amp;

3 bectoom~. 2 blthl. fuH
finilhed bii~W . n...., fur...:.

3 br ...... within wolklng
dillOn,. NC&gt;rthPolntondPPHS.
tlquh 1700 Jeff.,on Btvd.
111•1:30.

R a. R Water Service. Pools.
cistern• . wallt . lmm ldl•t•·
1, 000 or 2,000gallonsdeltvery.
Call 304-075-1370.

4.."

PMridts Weter Hmlllr1g Servtce.
1.000 or 2.000g•. dofivori•.
phone 304-871-2311 or 614441-.40811.

.,

for Sale

1871 Fr.igtrtllnoC.b ov•. 2110
c ........ 1 3 - 311-..
Not • •If ha~l•. Good oondltlol\ Coli Alblny, 114-SBI-

e1 ~

W•ttersan ' s W1ter Htullng.
Ae•ontbt• NtM, volume die·

aourwa. 2.000 1D 4 , 000 CIPIIC-

ity, cl.tarna. pools, wet11, trtc.

2 be*oorn Mo ..eHoma 1200
mon111. 30"'1711-81114.

184&amp;

Coli 304-&amp;71-2919.

2 or 3 bod , _ , hou• In Point
P I - or&amp; 304-875-7717
ottw 8:00PM.

1188 Ford F-110. PI, Pll.
running bo•do. - · ,_e. 4
lfld,. 4 br•d -llodl~ , • •
Con 814-387·0421.

87

--~------..!.'---------------

upholetary

-r111"• l..l&gt;holotlrinv coorvlng

tri oounty•r•23yen. Tht.,_.
In llrnlture upholetftg. C.l
304- 876 - 41&amp;-4 for frte

estl,.,. • .

--

--.

Soviets, or deals more
mighty blows . fNRI
llll .. 1121 NCAA Blleketball

ChamiiiOnohip 1;1

1D iiJJ MOVIE: Tlia Plflll of
Gw-lne In lila Land of
Ylk Yak fRI (1 :28)
iiJ) PrimaNawa
® MOVIE: RaourTectlon fPGJ
(1 :43)
I1JI Murder, She Wrote
12!1 Nathvllle Now
8:051]) MOVIE: Walking Tall, Part
:ftPGJ(1 :49)
8:30 II (}) !IJ) Day by Day Eileen
stoops to new lows 10 try
and get a quick career jump.

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

--

_

.

.

WH0!5HE

MY D'--D SAYS HE5 NOT
. $01N6' 'TO I&lt;OO'F R::JR THE

GOING; TO

L-.A . OO~R.E&gt; ANYMORE .

NOBODY. ..

HE :SAYS HE15 ~lNG 10
TRY E!&gt;6-IN&lt;a- A Fr:&lt;E:IS ~T

ROOT" F"a&lt; ~

FORAW~ILE.

TH' LED9ffiERS
GOT A BRAND-NEW
PLOWHANO, MAW!!

GLORY BE!!

A LEETLE
BOY!!

GUESS
AG'IN !!

ahead by maUing $1 to Aslro-Graph, LIII'IA (hpt. 23-0ct. 23J Even lhough
cto 1hla ~. P.O. Box 91428, your way of doing llllngs may be better
C - d . OH 44101-3428. Be sure to than your assoclaloo' proceduroo today. you mighl have 10 make certllln ad·
sla1a your zodiac sign.
•
TAURUS
(April
liD-Moor
201
Usually
you
jusimenls In order fo salvage their
BERNICE like to work a1 your own pace, but 1oday pride.
BEDE OSOL
you might not be able to do so because SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ntn. 22) You are
of demanda and responalbllllloo folaled likely to be extremely Imaginative 1o"
upon you by others. Don't rebel.
day, bul, unfortunately, you might use
GEMINI (Mer 21-.111... 201 Do not rely this splendid faculty to antiCipate negatoo heavily upon o1hers 1oday 10 ball live rooults lnatead of poaltlve OMS.
you oul of a snuatlon - e you have SAGITTARIUS (Ntn. 23-Dec. :11) Gen·
go11en In over your head. 11 looks Hke II et"ally -king, your flnanclat trends
will be up 10 you to correct the mauer · are ra111er encouraging, bul they could
yourself.
. be sublected to occasional severe
CANCER (.tu... 21......., 22) Evan · Slralna. Thla may be one of lhoee daya.
lhough your' ln1an11on• may be good, ' CAPRICORN (Dec. :az..len. 11) s.v.t'al
It's best not to rmtke malor declalons Important objeCt- you establloh 1otoday wllllout .llrat consul11ng the other ·day could be very dlfflcuh 10 achieve. '
Moorch 22, IIIII
people Involved. Their interesls might This might not be due to outalda clr· :
conflict yours.
curnatances. bert to your oiNn faulty f
Several lnvolve1'nents In joint venlures
LEO (...., 21-Aug. 22) Detllla are lm· tactiCs.
are Ukety In the year ahead and - h will
porlant today and they lhould not be AQUAIIIUI (.t.n. Ill-Feb. 11) You might :
have to be handled with extreme skill. overlool&lt;ed, bul be careful not to lei have to contend wl1h a e l l - today
One in particular will have excepllonal
lrlvlll points OO.CUre the big picture. similar to one you didn't handle too well '
potential.
Stand back a bit to gat a better In the peat. Try to profit from your ml&amp;ARES (Merch 21·Apri111J Your judg- ptllapec!MI.
18keslnllead of repeating them.
Ia questionable 1oday and steps V11100 (A... 21-a.pl. 22) Don't let• I'IICEI (Pel!. 2D TTl all 20) You are In
you tllke mlgh1 haW to be retraced. Be i your nlllural prudence and Clllllon de-· a cycle where your hopes and expecla. ·
- a Ilona can be realized, provided you pur•.
... prepared IO do with your you I 11er1 you t~ In
•· 1111 to do with your head. Arloo. trut ther8 Ia -hlng of ......, at ataka. 1hem In a rlllliSIIc manner. Be a
yourself 10 a birthday 6111. Send for your Fooflah gemblee aren't apt to get the practical doer, ln11ead of lUst a
Astro·Graph predictions lor the year job done.
I ·dreemer.

''*''

an,.....,._.

• ..

bur c al is called " Hare Ki t·
ty ': bec ause when we fo un d
her , Mom told us no t to na m e
her or get attache d to he r, an d

_

UJ R A H E

'"

I0

we 've

~-T,:.;_:;.,..;.;.,,-.,Ir'l7,..;..1narl

had he r ·- ···-.

Complete the ct,uclde q voted '
by f1ll1ng in the m1ss1ng words
L._.J........J._.J.._,JI.--L...:J you develop from step No. 3 be low .
..

.

_

,

PR IN T NUMBE RED

~ lETTERS IN SQUA RES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWtRS

Taught - Ught - NylOn - Rancid - CHANGING

BmDGE

~----------~

NORTH

:!~lam

Limited
·communications

.,.. K 3
•Ka 15

Despite the double heart-stopper,
three no-trump would have been rough
going because of the tricky communi·
cation between South's hand and dum·
my's high cards. Declarer would make
nine tricks by dropping the spade
queen, but would likely fail by taking a
first-round spade finesse. So lour
spades was not a bad contract.
Declarer won dummy's king of
clubs and finessed to his spade jack.
When a club came back, declarer won
dummy's ace, cashed A·K of diamonds
shedding a club and led the heart Jack
from dummy . East now .m ade a line
play, against all textbook advice ,
when he failed to cover. So West won
the king of hearts. Later declarer had
to lose the 10 of spades and another
heart trick, so the result was down

(f) Myoteryl British
Secret Service veteran must
· learn of Russian troop
movements . Q
I!J) larTY King Uvel
11J1 MOVIE: The Intruder
Wltllln {NRJ (1 :40)
9:30 II ()) IDJ Deer John A
young man claiming to be
John's son arrives on John's
doorstep. (R)
12!1 VldeoCountry
10:00 ()) 700 Club
11 (}) fiJI L.A. Law McKenlze
is thrilled over his candldllcy
for federal judgeship. C
ill TMOk end Tractor ~ull
From Eas1 Rulller1ord (T)
Marilyn's days ara spen1 al
the bedside of her dying
frlend. l;l
1D QJ1 ArMnlo Hall
I!J) Evanlng Newa
il) New1
121 Cfook and Cllaee
10:20 (5) MOVIE: Wilking Tell, The

.Q64
• QJ 8;

1!0 9
+QJI086

+7 ;
SOUTH
+AKJ986
• A 10 9
+7
+9 4 2

Vulnerable: Neither
Deater: South

Weot

Nortb

East

South

Pass

2I

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

Pass

3+

Pass

4

Pass

+

Opening lead:

t+
3+

Pass

+Q .

one.
South misplayed the hand by two
tricks. The spade queen will be with
East :;o percent of the time, but the
chances that the heart honors will be.
split or will both be in the East hand
are 7:i percent. It's then better for declarer to give up the trump finesse and
maintain the timing and comnunica-

tion to take two heart plays. So win the
king of clubs and play a heart to the
10. West wins and continues clubs.
Play A-K of diamonds, di"l'ard a club ,
and play a heart to the nine . That wins .
Now cash A·K of spades, dropping the
queen, and give up a spade to the 10spot, making one overtrick.

CROSSWORD
THOMAS JOSEPH
3 EggACROSS

by

I

Meat cut
5 Wild
apple
9 Float
11 German
river
12 Copy
13 Emhankmenl

shaped
4 Baseball

throw'
5 Boxwoodyleldlng
tree
6Poem
7New
stage

" " Rebecca

ill Auto Racing OH Road
Championship Grand Prix
from Anahein, CA (T)
f1l II Ill Dynaaty Mam
supports Alexis ' plan to ruin
Sable: Zorelli is reinstated.

EAST
+10 7 4 2

WEST
+Q5

By James Jacoby

f1l IIIIJHNrtlaat

(R)

3-ll-81

13

g

-

9:00 1J (}) 1DJ ChMra CIIH tries
10 change his personality
with electric shock device.

J -l t

My husband returned shirts that had been mono•
grammed wrong. The salesman smiled , " Would you
consider CHANGING your name?"

production
8 Where
16 Filipino
bock
tree
Is made
1 8 - Jima 10 Blue-pencil
19 Keep
1-&amp; Carry
21 Ex G.l.
17 Islet
22 Statute
20 Australian
23 Trim
marsupial
24 Barbecue 23 Early
rod
26 Trust (on)
27Genre
28 "High-"
29 Beverage
30Cordlal
33 Hellos
So&amp; Bloodshot
35 One Crosby
37 Entertain
39 Slur over
41 Grecian
theaters
42 Heavy
with catgo
43 Without
the chaser

1;1

Refrigeration '

pools, cldlrnl,. ..,.., Ph '
~45-928&amp;.

ra

The World at War No

Electric&amp; I

84

I1JI Miami VIce
7:05 (5) Andy Grltfilll
7:30 11 C2J Family Feud
ill NCAA Finlll Four
Hlghllght8 1988
f1J E-lnmant Tonight
II Ill USA Today
llll • fiJ IDl Jeopardyll;l
Glf!ll M"A'S"H
I!J) Cnlaaflno
® Night Court
Crook and Chaaa
7:35 (5) Slnford and Son
8:00 ()) MOVIE: Angel and the
Bellman (NA) (1:40)
II C2J IDJTIIa Coeby Show
Theo asks his bes1 friend 10
help him get a date. (R) 1;1
ill NHRA Supematlonalo
From Houston , TX
f1J II Ill MOVIE: 'Shaggy
!!all, Part 1' ABC Family
Claaatc IGJ Q
IZJ Ellllce In .lmartca
· Examine tile purpose of !rials
and obligations of lawyers.

Iiination suffers more than the

n.- 1ddtloR1. c•-

J &amp; J Wiler Servia.. Swimming

Z - - nllw. oarnplololy
llrnllhod. olr oond., - • ond
dry•. In -on -304-773&amp;7&amp;1 .

MAYa£ 1 t.IEED IT.' SHit.! lNG THAT
TI-liNG Ul' WILL GIVE ME SOME ·
:---~)....~,_.~11\JG T'OO!

a•-v•

4 blli'oom hou• Pblnt Pl. .
unt, 2 b•ths, b .. ement,
I 330.00 per month. Hom..u.d
Rufty, 304-175-&amp;&amp;.0.

32 Mobile H omas
for Sale

;-l.)

Oltlmll•, 304-875-2457.

1877 CldiiiiC Eldor.to. Runs.
•soo. Negotlble. 114- 992·
7300 wtnln• • \Wik1ndl.

tuM bMenwtt

2 boli'-. , ... 711. -·'"' ....
S..d Hll Rood. 304-175-38:14.

THA'Jr S

My81'1 Blldlop tnd PWvlng..
Hendanan. WV1. W.pwedrht•

w-vs. .. ~glota. INIInv. Frw

Tn~cks

....

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
hou .. CIU aevlclng GE, Hot
Point, w•tt.s, dry•• •nd
......... 304&amp;78-239&amp;

1185 luiclc P.,k Aw. Electr• .
LD- Gorogo kopl. Coli 8 144411-8834.

72

r'( TfiE PEEPHDLE,
ffl~ iHf fEEfHOLE:'

RON'S Television Servi.ce.
Hou.. cells on RCA. QuRtr,
GE. Spldtllng In lonNh. Con
304-&amp;71-2398 or 114-4412454.

Dill•d Wtt• S.-vlc:e: Pooll,
Cllt•ns. Wolll. Delivery Anytime. Clll 114-446-7.-o4-No
Sun.lly eMit.

Mobile H oma•
· fOf' Rent

®Chews

Tiff pEEfHOI..E,

Saptlc T1nk Pumping- •to. Gal-

2 or 3 W.oom g•eae. fult
b•erntnt l•el krt on Rt. 2..
Nice conci \Mil co.-ilt. mobRe
home trld•ln. Mik• 8.-cM'n.
30 ... 5711- 248&amp;.

2 or 3 M*doorM. g•ega fuM
b • .,..... lwtllot on Rt. 2. nlct
eond. wt1 oonaider moble home
•odoln. Millo a......_ 304-&amp;712488.

''oF

·

II)) M-yllna

ina eleatrlcal. remodlllng oom-

•h•

centre! M, g•~~ga f~nOid
y•d. 2414 Mt. VernonAw .. Pt.
Ae•IRI· PriC*I on Npldkm
304-875-1774.

\

f'ortuna 1;1

e QJ) Three'• Company

plllo. CoH 814-441-7829.

~ntt.c

1182 -a1ry Coogw Wogon.
Coli 814-441-1981 or 445-

New!IHour (1 :00)
llJl • fiJ !Ill Wheel of

WHff?E'.S THE Fll ANO THE C%A IN .
TlfE GON,S'TITUTIOr'J?

Carp.,try '!Work bv the job or
hour, J*tallng, dry 'tWI, plumb-

1982 Cutles• Supreme
•ou~em . ElCCel . cond. Wire
lpOke rlmt, 2 dr. Lo.cled. Call
814-912-8941 .

-,:

A

® SpontCenlef
f1J II Ill CurNIII Affair
II) ill MllcNell/ Lehrer

Cleaner. ane hllf mile up
Goorlfll Craok l'ld. Coli 114441-0294.

1970 Oldl. 98. 1n go.od reMortble condition. Coli 814-4457923.

LIEDV
s 1 16 1 1

!Ill NBC Nightly Nawo

Share tha fun of en faland
vacation wn.h Larry, Rudy,
and Steve Gatlin. In addition
to performing , the popular
trio scuba divas, paraaalls ,
and jet skis with their
families on Grand cayman
Island.
8:35 (5) One Dey at I Time
7:00 C2J Our HouH Famify Secrets
II C2J PM Mapzlnto

SWEEPER endiiMI'Ingmachlne
rep•. pert._ and euppll•. Pldt
up .,.d de~Wery, DIVIs V•auum

Smal iobl of .,Y ldnd. Ptlnting
inside. a. outtlda aU tdn• of
remodeling a room edtltions.
FrM ,Oiti-• 38 YOWl of
experience. Cell 814-.,418824.
.

i

12!1 Greet Gatlin Galhay

RogertBettment
Wat•proofin 9-

1987 Monte Clrlo. bur~ndy.
Loeded . 27,000 miles .
t10.800. Col 814-381-1258.

L-..l..1 ..J_
I .....LI-__._1'---~

I1JI C.rtoon e.......

FRANK AND ERNEST

the
be·

I

3

® WKRP In Cincinnati

ON SECOND TiiOUGHT, FtiGHT t.IOW

llo C9. RON EVANS ENTERPIUS ES, Jodllon, Ohio 1• &amp;oo537-11128.

-TI S O J

e

ALLEY OOP

1971 PontloC Sunblrd. Runo
good. t700. Coli 814-25&amp;·
180&amp;.

I

II)) ShowBiz Today

1-814-237-048&amp; dtl¥ or night.

c..,...,

K N A P UC

I

f1l II Ill ABC Newol;l
II) &amp;My Elecblc
ill Nightly llualneee Report
llJl II 1121 CIS Newa
QJI WKI'IP In Cincinnati

HISTORY
MUSEUM

Home
Improvements

I

.

WOlD
tAM I

form four sirnple words

t1)

I

~ SpontLDOit

tee. Local ,.,...,ces t.rnllhed.
• 1 - •. Con colod

19n Monte C.rto. Second
owner c.. H8ve .. PiliP••· Hu
been ._.,. eMcellent c.-e of.
point- freoh. 327-4boll.
Too much to lit. V.,y depende·
~. engine lnd cw. " Sh•p"
UIOO. nog. Will trode. 814245-9224 oltw 11:30 pm.

jobs aren 't as important as
big ones. 1;1
ill Dr. Who: The Arll In
Space
QJI Happy Daya
· ® Facte of Life
!lJISha·Ra
12!1 Amartcan Magulna
8:05 (5) Allee

e

Free

1983Eoglollm•od SW .. , . -1tr.:. VIr( clean. C•ll 814-C46-

EVENING

8:30 II C2J

qWII l~lon. 8 rNf• north
Point PI_..._ 304-175-1078.

~nd

COME S~CK,
. SHANE!

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcltiontf Hf•lme ou•an·

9339.

Kenmore washer, •so. GE
t121. Bathutntnlce&amp;
u•rtnteed. Call 81 4-387·

8322.

ISN'T ''5I-lANE"!

" •Mt .. IOI:•

1pd.,_air. AM ·FM-tlpa am root.

Portible Hoover wulw ..,d
dryer, Roll·tway bed wtth mattrea, bedroom tutte. ,..,lger•
lor, 1 vr. old. 814-992·7311&amp;.

Wilt-.

f.IER NAME

Serv1r.es

1979 Oldl. Delta 88 Aoyele. 2
dr. OneawfW',E.:... bDdV.New
1t1rt.. •lt•nltor...dlllor. fuel

low

(0:30)

Auto Parts
&amp; Acca110rias

cH.. Corwtt-. Chevye. Surplus . Buyer• OUidt C11
805-&amp;17-IIOOOon S-10189.

MTHURS., MARCH 23M

II) Shining nma Station
Schemer claims that little

1979 S1•aalt Dbc 23 II - 1
motor homa. genlllor 1nd ell
ICOIIIori.. lOW' mlluge, •c
cond. phone 304-171-2181.

OOVER NMENT BEIZEO "8111al• fram t100. Fordl. Mar-

Rearrange lette rs of
0 four
scrambled words

!Ill Now•

SHANE!

S©ttoU~-l&amp;t.!rs~

- - - - - fd itod b, CLAY I . 'OLI"N

- -

® M o - lllu•trflted

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Far Sale

TU1 Dllll
PUULII

• C2J f1l • Ill llll • 1121

u•ors for Sale
M ....

BUDOET TRANSMISSION U~&amp;d &amp; rabullt •II types .
W..-Wlty·30 dll'fl. PriCII e99 &amp;
up. Uted &amp; · rebuilt toreJ.te
convarten. · ._,.d•d clutch.-.
pr••ure pillet, &amp; throw out
bewing. W•rtnty-12 mos. CVC
jointo-ol typeo. can 814-3792220 or 304-875-8769.

Trans pur I oil un

Television
Viewing
6:00 ()) Bananza: The Loot
Epl-e The Iron Buttertly

Boats and

76

ltrtw tor •I• Phone 304,87155081.

71 Auto's

75

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

Ohio

~V Il.... J

~0~
A~
1\-l $1)1.

p.m. 814-285-131&amp;.

Ground shilled oorn •a.oo P•
100cwt. Morlllf'l• Ferm. At. 35,
Plln~f. 8:00 Ill 12 j)O ......,
Sundov 304-137-2018.
·

Eelter l~nl•. •10 11ch with
oodl-. Alooocllh rctbblto. Coli
814-441-1017.

Crowford. Coli 814-3811-8701 .

Hay

Mon. thru Sid. Ph. 814-446-

USED .FURMTURE
Complete hou•hold furnlshlllfll. Mo mii.Jorrfcho. 304-87114&amp;0, 814-388 - 9773.
wenlngs.

1-\AI/i?-1--)'T

Tri Heul Boat, 125 H.P . Evinrude
en glne. complete top. ne.v uphoJotorv, t31100. Coli Iller 7:00

1-Roglot- Polod H1tolord
8uH. 2 yro. old. 2--1'111 Pollod
Hwolord buMI thor...,brodl
""' ""' 1011111-. f-younv
Pbllod Horolord Holler thorougllbrod but not rogil1-.
Coli 814-281-1431 .

King sin Wlt•bed. Semi-..wve

PIC~ENS

Aill.T WITH
1116

For Solei 1972 17 ft, StorerOtt

.

1971 Ch•rol.t lmplll•. Good
condition. Coli 114-31111-8701 .

eppllcences. C.ll 114-448·
7 572. Hours g.. e.

w.:oe

.... 1001· 1987 Londlu 18"5",
1187 _.,.ry 35 hpmotorw•h
power trim•d a~to olinjection..
1987 ,-..,OJry Tro•lng motor,
1987 Shoreline trller phu
more. All maood aondll:ion. C.ll
814-992·21'70.
.

Athonl Llv,01tocft Solo. Alblff'llllfo ..,_,. Soturdly-1 PM .
INMtocft occeptod Ill• 4 PM
•v-v F,.d.,. 1 mile e•t of
Alblny on St. Rt. 10. Col
814· 892· 2322. IU-3&amp;3 1.
llllflingl.

4 bodroorN, 211ory, rico porch.
on river front in Mldcltport.
uoo por monm. · 814-912&amp;6 '¥1 boforo 8:30p.m.

3 bedrooms,

Buldlng Supplies

Rog-ldl-opuppl•. •10.
Clfl 814-912-2'782.

0322.

~~

~m.~:.
~

1986 Hondo Gold WlniJ Aoponcodo. 448B ml•. t&amp;300. Coli
114-UI-0&amp;39.
.

9780.

90 Days tame u cesh wtth
approved credit. 3 Mlee out
B.Hvlle Ad. Op~n S.m ta lpm

l~Cl;t:.

814-UI-2185.

R11JIIt-Cock•8p.,lolpupo.
Rogllt- bklo point Siwn_._ Cooh. No chldao . Coli
114-112-2107.

tuit•.

:::::::::----,

OHde CIMiic. Low mil•. C.ll

Antiques

1---------SWAIN
AUCTION • FURMTURE 82
Olivo St.. Gill !poll.
NEW- &amp; pc. wood group. U99.
Living room euttet- e199-e599.

WHAT I? II
WiTH 'ltJU I

1987 Hlr1t¥ Olvl•on Tour-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
Fully lurnllhod gngo op1. AI
utMI• pold .,...., olodrlcity.
- l y - o t l d . . .pot....
Oop. Aloo 3 boli'oam ...1• . Coli
814-441-8858. 448-HIO.

BORN LOSER

1973 Hlrtl\l Devldlon Sport ..
t or. t1100. 814-742· 2249.

54

Mer cha ndise

Motorcycle•

Midcleport,

1988 S...ulcl700 1 -. Loto
of chromo. t1 BOO. Con 8 1...
·448-3081

51 Household Goads

rDDrne. al ....ric. undlrpinnlng
end porah. WIY good ooncltlon.
t7SOO. 814-843-.. 51

FilldllGitti

Young E•a~tlve looldng "ttr 3

IR . homelnOIIIIpo•ar• Cal
1114-441-0100 or 1117-31178
Coo!IIMa
·

.O .

Pomeroy-

NONTHS,

eot.ntrv Mobile Home "-t..

47Wanted to Rent

&amp; 4W

11711 .loop CJ-5. Oood cond.
tr• •1950. Coli 814446-4141 .

304-882-3432.

53

Vana

74

Fronch Provlndll couch ond
choir. Llkon... t160. 304-875&amp;222.

..m.... '*''· ..... Clll
1114-91:Z..7479.

•'*•

73

122v1..ds••
Point Pl...-t. W .Y1.
304-875-8498

Large ..ctlonll couch, u..t
one y... YflfY good CC!Ind. ·

I.Dta.

Tllll:lcs for Sale

19770MC 1 ton INclc. OriiJinol
$Ally foCSOf'/-lbod.Hoo
rust. ~ ... oood. 11100. 114742-2841 Ill• 8:00p.m.
0

Furnllure lnd Clrpet
VInyl U .97 yd, tx&gt;m-dll
....,. • 3.II yd. lou. IUOtn llill
remn.,.1 lnd roll, cerpet. helf
Inch p.ci t1 .79 wd wfthCII'pM.
Mollohan Furniture
Z locttions

Stor•a• building In town.
2"-10. eec:. wat• • 1e1
ovolobla eon 1114-441-71111.
Route 33, NDrth of Pom•oy.

23. 1989
Thursday, March 23. 1989

Uppw Rlvor Rood
Oolllpol o, Ohio
814-4411-7444.

46 Space for Rant

March

72

Household Goods

STOP AND CHECK OUR PI'! ICES

Sl-Ing roomo with cooidng.
AlloTrtlt•t~PKe. AI hook-~.
CAl oft• 2p.m. 304-7731111 . MMon WV.

PM:'nmeR.N.

12

Ftmished Roome

51

Thursday,

Ohio

facing

15 Favorite

Yesterday'a Answer

24 Wise ruler
25 Musical
piece
26 Short
poem
27 Fencing
cry
28 Golf

30 B'way's " White Way"
31 Reside
32 Ore
deposits
36 Crooked
38 Caspian
or Azov
o&amp;O Canon

,,

or Mae

DOWN
1 Token

2 Greek poet
DAILY CR YPTOQUOJ'ES- Here's how lo work II:

3123

Flnll Chapter (R) (1 :52)

AXYDLBAAXR

10:30 121 New CGuntry
11:00 ()) Ramlngton S!Hia Signed,
Stooled and Delivered

•® C2J
&lt;II Auto
II Illllactng
IDl - ·
USAC
Copper World Cluslc from
Phoenl•, AZ (RJ
IZJ Newlwelt:h 1;1

~~~eor'!::n

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter~ .
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.
CR\'PTOQUOTE

fiJ Monlyllnl

@Hot.., _

I1JI Mllml VIce
121 You Cln Be a Star
11:3011(2) 1DJ Tonight Show

Ill~·

1·23
I X 8

&lt;II Chews

c

~,~~1;1

XB

II) One-..n UIM

• QJI Converution
II)) lport8 Tonight
IHI Hll ' - lllues I Want

My Hill StrHI Blues
a - u n i i i J .....

12:00 ~1: Anaal and ....
n (NI'IJ (UOJ
illl'lo 8ldlng FOrd Collegiate
· Chlllllpionlhlp from Lake
Tahoe (T)

- f1l ~)Jhltlne 1;1

VU G R I
VJJZ

GBSQURUIB

PUIUA8F •. . UR

RXCTT

LUTT ·U" FV

KB
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CKTB
M Q T T

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I XC I
CFZ

XU R

LBUVXI.-IXBJZJGB GJJRBNBTJ
Y_.enlq'e Cat....eote: CHEERFULNESS IS
. 1liE BEST PROMOTER OF HEALTH, AND IS AS
; FRIENDLY TO THE MIND AS TO THE BODY.
, JOSEPH ADDISON
.

'

�Thursday, March 23. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-lhe Daily Sentinel

EPA reports long-temt decrease in air pollution_ _ _ __

.I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Environmental Protection
Agency said average air pollution levels have decreased na:
.Iionwide during the past 10 years,
but ozone and carbon monoxide
remain stubborn urban
problems.
In its annual report on long·
term air pollution trends, the
EPA said Wednesday that between 1978 and 1987, signllican t
reductions have been ac hieved in
the six primary air pollutants
regulated by the government ozone, carbon monoxide, soot,
sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide
and lead.
The most dramatic success
story involves lead levels, which
have fallen 88 percent during the

past decade. The reduction Is
largely attributed to the phaseout of leaded gasoline. High
levels of lead can permanently
damage the nervous system.
especially In children.
However, the agency said that
while Improvements have been
made, many cities still do not
meet federal air quality standards and that ozone smog, In
particular, appears to be
worsening.
Last year, the EPA cited 66
urban areas for exceeding federal ozone limits and preltrnlnary 1988 monitoring data show
another 30 cities may be added to
the list of ozone violators.
The agency listed 59 urban
areas In 1988 that violated the

carbon monoxide standard, but
the figure was six fewer than In
1987.
Don Clay, acting assistant
EPA administrator for air and
radiation, said ozone was an
especially difficult pollutant because It Is not emitted directly
from cars and factories. It Is
produced by the chemical reaction of volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxide emissions when they are exposed to
sunlight.
"Obviously, we are disappointed In some areas, such as
ozone, but overall the data
clearly show things have gotten
better over the long term," Clay
sal d.
The report said 102 million

Americans lived In areas which decade, partly due to abnormally
exceeded at least one federal air hot weather.
In addltlon to lead and ozone,
quality standard In 198'7. Some 88
mUllan Americans were exposed the report gave this assessment
to excessive ozone, more people of the other four primary
·
'than for the other five primary pollutants:
-Avera!(e carbon monoxide
pollutants combined.
.
Ozone Is beneficial In the upper • levels decreased by 32 percent
atmosphere, where It screens out from 1978 to1987. Concentrations
harmful levels or ultra-violet fell by 6 percentfrom 191l6 to 1987.
radiation from the sun. · but Car e.xhaust Is the major source
low-lying ozone Impairs brea- of this colorless, odorless gas,
which can damage the brain and
thing and Irritates eyes.
The report said ozone levels heart by reducing oxygen levels
decreased by 16 percent l!etween in blood.
-Total suspended particles, or
1978 and 1987. but showed a 5
percent Increase from 1986 to soot, were reduced by 23 percent
1987. The worrisome trend con· between 1978 and 1987. The report
tlnued In 1988 and preliminary said soot levels rose by 3 percent
figures showed that 1988 ozone from 1986 to 1987, but It attributed
levels were the highest of the that change to an increased

number of forest !lres. Soot can
cause breathing problems and
respiratory llliless.
-Sulfur dioxide levels went
down by 35 percent between 1978
and 1987. There was a 3 percent
reductlon from 191l6 to 1987.
Sulfur dioxide Is mainly prO'.
duced by coal-burning power
plants. It can Irritate the upper
respiratory tract and cause lung
damage.
-Nitrogen dioxl(le levels de,
clineil by 12 percent from 1978 to
1987. No change was recorded
from 1986 to 1987. Both motor
vehicles and power plants are
sources of this yellowish brown
gas, which can cause bronchitis
and pneumonia.

Eastent asks to order pilots back
By United Press International
Lawyers for strikebound Eastern Airlines were headed back to
court . Thur~ay In an effort to
force the company's union pilots
to cross picket lines and return to
work.
But a lawyer for the Air Line
Pilots Association said Eastern
has little chance of · prevailing
before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals.
Arguments In the case were
scheduled Thursday In Tallahas-

see, Fla.

'
FffiST TIME OUT IN PUBLIC - Bawang,
the
San Francisco Zoo's eighteen year old goruta
cuddles her 11-day-old son durlngthelrllrst public

"They (the company) are
asking the court of appeals to
Issue an Injunction," said James
Linsey, an attorney for the pilots
union. "I ·think they are just
grasping at straws. They should
be reaching not to courts, they
should be reaching to employees
for negotiations to settle the
dispute. "
•
Eastern previously asked U.S.
Dis trlct Judge Edward Davis In
Miami to order the pilots back to
work, but Davis refused, saying
he did not have the authority to
Intervene In the labor dispute.
All but 200 of Eastern's 3,600
pilots have refused to cross the
picket lines set up March ~ by
striking machinists, In a show of
solidarity that has crippled the
Miami-based airline.
The company contends the
pilots' action represents an Illegal strike, but the union argues
that Its refusal to fly represents a
sympathy strike, as allowed
under their contract and the
Railway Labor Act.
In New York, U.S. Bankruptcy
Judge Burton Llfland was expected to review Eastern's request for an examiner In the
case .. Eastern flied for bankruptcy on March 9, two days after
Davis 'ruled against the
company.
Eastern said ' It sought the
examiner to review transactions
between It and parent company,
Texas Air Corp. of Houston, to

appearance Wednesday. The baby, wbo Is still
unnamed, was born at 7:55p.m., Saturday, March
11. (UPI)

Investigation brings more defendants
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UP! )
- Five suspected chiefs in
Colombia's notorious Medellin
drug cartel, an associate of the
Bahamian prime minister and 24
others are accU,sed In a federal
indictment of importing 44,000
pounds of cocaine into the United
States in the past 15 years.
Although few suspected drug
kingpins in South America have
reached ArTierican courts, As·

s istanl U.S. Attorney' Ernst
Mueller said he was optlmlslic
defendants named in the Indictment unsealed Wednesday even-·
t ua ily would be brought to trial.
"It took us six years to get
!Carlos) Lehder to the Middle
District of Florida. We think the
chances that they will ultimately
be prosecuted are good,"
Mueller said.
Mueller said eight of the.other
24 people indicted were In
custody.
The indic tment traces
Lehder's development Into a
primary overseas transporter
for the cartel. and outlines the
methods an d people. involved In
building the largest cbcaine
sm uggl ng operation In the United
States.
It said Lehder was aided by
Everette William Bannister of
Na ssau , an associate of BahamIan Prime Minister Lynden Pin·
dling , who is accused of accepting payoffs in exchange for
let ling drug . planes use the
islands .
Bannister allegedly shared the
money with unnamed Bahamian
offic ials, but NBC News reported
it was told by federal law
enforcement authorities that
Pindllng was among the unnamed of[!cials.
The authorities told NBC that
Pindling's nitme was dropped
from the first draft of the
indictment after a review by the
State and Justice departments.
Also dropped were the names of
fugitive financi er Robert Vesco
and Panamanian strongman
Gen. Manuel Noriega. the authorities told NBC.
Edward Ward, the key prosecution witness In the Lehder

trial, said Bannister took money
from him destined for Plndling.
Bannister's son. Gorman, testified his father took the payoffs
from Lehder and Ward and gave
them to PI ndling.
The 12-cout\t Indictment grew
from a fqllow-up Investigation of
Lehper, a Medellin chieftain who
is serving a term of life In prison

without parole. plus 135 years,
for smuggling 3.3 tons of cocaine
Into the United States In 1979 and
1980.
'
Lehder was captured In Colombia In 1987 and extradlcted to the
United States.
Wedneday's Indictment
charges his associates, Pablo
Emilio Escobar-Gavlrla, Jose

connie_·__
I~
CO/lPORATE DASH.
Dash to the office Catch a bite to eat. Run errands.
Does it ever stoo? Well. no. but you can do it
atl in· style and comfort. in this corporate dash .look
tram Connie Shoes. Absolutely dashing in COLOR.~~

White wilh Nowy

20°/o off
An Connie

Spring Dreu
Shoes through
Easter

'

heritage house
THE SHOE PUCE

Gonza'lo Rodrlguez-Gacha,
Jorge Luis Ochoa-Vasquez, his
brother Fabio Ochoa-Vasquez
and Gonzalo Mejia, all of
Colombia.
All are belieVed to be leaders in
the violent and powerful cartel in
Medellin, Colombia, and many of
them are named In earlier U.S.
Indictments. Federal Investigators believe the cartel is responslble·for 80 percent of the cocaine
Imported Into the United States.
The defendants Include
Lehder's former wife, Yemel
Nacel of New York City, and
other alleged members of the
organization accused of helping
move the drugs through the
Bahamas, then distribute them
In the United States.
It alleges 205 separate Illegal
acts from 1974 to the present,
Including the Importation of
more than 44,000 pounds of
cocaine.
The Indictment also charges
that Escobar ordered the assassination of Colombian Justice
Minister Lara Bonilla In April
1983, and that the cartel leaders
fled afterward to Nicaragua.
Once there, the Indictment
said, they brought 1,400 kilograms of cocaine Into Nicaragua
and stored It at Los BrasUes Air
Force Base until It could be
shipped to the United States.
One of those cocaine flights,
pUoted by Barry Seal, resulted In
the ·seizure of 665 kUograms of
cocaine by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
Seal was gunned down In New
Orleans In 1984. The Indictment
alleges the cartel leaders ordered his murder after learning
he had cooperated with federal
drug agents to seize that flight.
The Indictment charges Es·
cobar, Rodrlguez-Gacha, the
Ochoas, Mejia and American
citizen Jack Carlton Reed with
operating a continuing criminal
enterprise. Known popularly as
"the kingpin statute," that
charge carries a penalty of life
Imprisonment.
Reed, one of Lehder's pilots,
was tried with Lehder and
convicted of drug charges.

dispel criticism of those deals
leveled by the unions.
But the temporary chairman of
the creditors committee in East.
e·r n·s bankruptcy case said the
group will ask Llfland to delay ·a
decision on the Issue by a bout 10
days, to give the group time to
evaluate the proposal.
The committee was named
Wednesday In New York by U.S.
Bankruptcy Trustee Harry
Jones. Among the creditors
named to the committee were the

Air Line Pilots Association, the
International Association of
MachiniSts, Airbus Industries,
General Electric Co. , Boeing Co.,
American Telephone and Tele·
graph Co., United States Trust
Co. of New York and Rolls-Royce
Credit Corp.
.
Jones left the creditors' meetIng shortly after It began. ''I gave
them a little pep talk, wished
them well," he said. "They have
a long, arduous task ahead of
them."

Lottery

St. John's
eliminates
Ohio State

Pirk3
Pick4

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near tO. Saturday, sunny, high
In mid 60s.

6300

Page 3

•
Val.39, No.223
Copyrighted 1989

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 24, 1989

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

•

Chemists discover fusion reaction
SALT LAKE CITY (UP!) Two chemists said they overcame their own skepticism and
developed an improbable method of sustained nucl ear fusion
in which a cubic foot of ordinary
sea water could safely generate
as much energy as 10 tons of coal.
"It had a one-i,n-a-blllion
chance of working , although it
made perfectly good scientific
sense," said Stanley Pons, chairman of the University of Utah
chemistry .department, who
made the diilcovery with Martin
Fleischmann. electrochemistry

And Fleischmann sa id, "The
professor at England's Universtakes
were so high , we decided
sity of Southampton.
While Fleischmann and Pons we had to try it," with $100.000of
focused the table-lop experi- their own money and working In
a chemistry laboratory at the
mentsonchemic.al reaction, U.S.
University of Utah. "We thought
physicists, financed with more
we wouldn'·t be able to ralse any
than $500 million In federal
grants this year alone, were
money since the experimen t was
so farfetched."
looking at fusion furnaces and
laser devices to power their ·
Although the applications of
experiments.
I his form of nuclear fusion were
not immediately evident, the
"Without our particular back·
grounds," Pons said, "you
scientists said the energy availawouldn't think of the combinable in one cubic foot of sea water
is equivalent to 10 tons of coal.
tion of circumstances required to
get this to work."
In commercial nuclear fission

reactors, large radioactiv e
atoms are sp lit apart, creating
smaller atoms, energy a nd"longllved nuclear waste. Fusion
reactors, still in experimental
stages, would combine tiny
atoms to produce energy and
only a minimum of radioactive
refuse.
Conventional nucl ea r fusion
research requires temperatures
of millions of degrees , similar to
temperatures found In the sun's
interior, to create a reaction.
Fleischmann and Pons said
they concentrate deuterium

from sea water to make "heavy
water" and place it in a vessel
containing platinum and palladium electrodes and use an
electrical charge. The palladium
metal electrode separates and
absorbs the heavy water's hydrogen Ions, which carry an extra
neutron. ·
The hydrogen atoms then join
together, or fuse, creating a
helium atom and an extra proton
or produce tritium, a radioactive
form of hydrogen with two extra
neutrons, and a proton - plus

•

heat energy in both cases.
"The fuel is heavy water,
driven by electric force into
enormo usly compact concentra·
lions in the holes inside th is metal
(palladium), " thus 11eating the
water, University of Utah President Chase Peterson said.
"You boil water. and when you
boil water you make steam. and '
when you make steam you run a
turbine, and if you run a turbine

you can create electricity. So this
has the potenHal to create
electricity," Peterson said.

Pilgrims mark Good Friday
today in Jerusalem's Old City

'88 RANGER 4X4 XLT TRIM
Stock I 8894
I 4Q01

14000

WAS
513,348

•

3 AT THIS Pi/CEI

SALE PRICE

$11 900

OR

$232

24

2DOORLX
I 81124

Lee Lee loves music, but started
out at OSU to be hospital dietitian
By NANCY VOACIIAM
Sentinel News Staff
Anyone who knows Racine's
Lee Lee, knows. that Lee Lee
loves music. But what they
probably don 't know Is that Lee
started out' at Ohio State University with plans to be hospital
dietitian.
"The only music I had~~ Ohio
State w~s as assistant accompa·
nist for the Ohio State Chorus and
as accompanist for music school
vocal students," she laughs .
Despite her obvious musical

SALE PRICE

$6950

row, Sharon Stewart, Debbie Carder, Christi
Lynch, JennHer Sheets, Gerri Hockman, Cathy
Baker, MarUyn Wilcox, and Dorothy Davis. Third
row, Denver Rice, Mac Stewart, Crenson Pratt,
Earl McKinley, Jim Sheets, Mike Stewart, Dez
Jeffers, and Glen Evans. Fourth row, Ron Ash,
and AI Hartson.

Personality Profile

'88 FORD FESTIVA

.tock

CANTATA - "The Fourth Cross" will be
presented by the cholrorthe Middleport Church of
Christ at the Easier sunrise service at 6 a.m. and
again on Monday at 7:30 p.m .. The public Is
Invited to attend. Pictured left to right, front row,
Mary Ash, Krls Ash, Trudy WIUiams, Donna
Hartson, Heldt Caruthers, Bea Stewart. Second

OR
JUST

'88 MERCURY TRACER

talents, she continued for a year
at Ohio State with her goal to be a
dietitian. Now, as she looks back,
she feels she may have been
Influenced by a brother. who is an
engine~r. and a cousin, who Is a
doctor, who tried to steer her
towards the scie'nce or medical
fields.
Fortunately for Lee, she had
what it took to buck the systemso to speak- and her brother and
cousin.
''I was active in music for as
long as I could remember. I had
always sung In music groups,

-Local news briefs~

4DOOR
Stock 1.8633

Annual Easter Egg hunt Sunday
The annual Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club's annual
Easter egg hunt will be held Sunday at the Hartinger Park In
Middleport at 2 p.m. In additional to the traditional gold and
silver eggs which carry cash prizes, others will have
merchandise certificates Inside. Dr. Nick Robinson Is chairman
of this year's hunt and advises that there is no age limit for
participation .

SAlE PRICE

$8555

OR

$161 33

JUST

PER MONTH

AU. PAYIEHTS QUOTED II THIS AD ARE BASED ON

was a piano accompanist, played
saxophone in band and drum s (a
whole set of drums -which was
unusual for a female) in orchestra at Mt. Gilead where I grew
up, " she recalls.
So finally, upon recommendation of her piano teacher, she
. made a decision to transferr to
Wittenberg University where she
spent five years majoring in
music and mlnorlngln English.
She sang in the university's
acapella choir, played sax In the
band and orchestra "and loved it .
I finally decided that music was
definitely my future career," she
says.
Lee graduated from Wit ten·
berg with a bachelor's degree In
music education and gave her
senior recital on the organ for
graduation.
She taught at MI. Gilead and
Athens City Schools before com·
Continued on page 10

VehiCles damaged by object
The interiors of two vehicles parked on the Butternut and
Second St. lot In Pomeroy Thursday afternoon were extensively
damaged when repeatedly struck by a heavy object.
According to Pomeroy pplice, a call was recelvec,l at village
hall at 3:02p.m. that a man had been seen Inside a vehicle on the
Jot hitting .the Interior with a hammer. 'A description of the
subject was given to the police who was reported later to have
been seen leaving the area on foot carrying a hammer. The 1985
Chevrolet damaged at that time was owned by Ralph Calvert,
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.
At 6: 54 p.m. Llnda Warner reported that her vehicle, a·1989
Pontiac. also parked · on the lot during the day had been
damaged Inside.
The Incident remains under Investigation and pollee report
that there is a suspect.
Continued on page 10

JERUSALEM (UP!)
Hundreds of pilgrims crowded
along the narrow alleyways of
the walled Old City on Good
Friday, retracing the path Jesus
took to his crucl!ixion along the
Via Dolorosa.
Soldiers armed with lear gas
grenades and guns stood watch
along the stone path, which
according to religious tradition .
Jesus was forced to walk to his
execution wearing a crown of
thorns and carrying a large
wooden cross over his shoulder.
"It's a spiritual experience,"
said Margaret Eberlein, 80, of
Erie, Pa. "It's be'e n my one wish
... taking the road that our Lord
took and feeling how he felt."
Throughout the morning of
Good Friday, small groups of
pilgrims crowded along the Via
Dolorosa, or the Path of Sorrows,
stopping for prayer at each of the
H stations of the cross where
,Jesus Is said to have stumbled or
received comfort while carrying
the cross.
Franciscan brothers, who each
Friday retrace the route Christians believe Jesus took from his
trial to his crucifixion, led the
main procession at midmornlng.
Amid hymns In Arable telling
of .Jesus's walk, dozens of Christian Pales tin tans from Jerusalem led another portlon of the
procession, one man carrying a
thin wooden cross before him
while several men carried an
8-fool -hlgh wood cross between
them - a replica of those uS'ed by
the Romans In their crucifixions.

Spidennan to
visit Pomeroy
The Amazing Splderman Is ·
coming to Pomeroy on April 29 ,
from 10: 30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., .at
the Kroger store on East Main
Street. Spiderman's appearance
is part of a 1989 Ohio Tour,
sponsored by the League Against
Child Abuse and the Huntington
Banks .
During his visit to Kroger,
Spiderman will use his unique
presentation style to teach children about emotional abuse.
Carol J. Edwards of the Community Assault Prevention Services Agency will be on hand to
answer questions about the Child
Continued on page 10

•

..'

I

along the procession Friday, far
fewer than the thousands who
crowded the Via Dolorosa in
years before. Despite the smaller
turnout, attributed mostly to the
15-month-old Palestinian uprisIng, no trouble er upted during the
procession and prayers at the
stations.
In · the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, pilgrims fell to their
knees before the stone of unction,
a slab of marble where tradition
holds that Jes us's body was
annolted with oils before buriaL
They pra yed in silence, touching
the stone and kissing it.
While pilgrims made their way
along the Via Dolorosa and
onlookers watched. Palestinians
sold beads, religious pic I ures and
other paraphernalia.
"Today you find them (tour·
lsts). Tomorrow you find it
empty and qui et ," said Mohammed, one store ow ner along
the Via Dolorosn . "Bu sin ess was
ver y bad last year and this year
the same. Wehopenextyearwill
be better in making peace."

Pomeroy to host
regional meeting
'

The Ohio Association of HistorIcal Societies and Museums will
hold their Region 8 annual
meeting at the Meigs County
Museum on Saturday. April 15.
The Ohio Association of Historical Societies and Museums is a
network of hi storical organizations which ex ist s to encourage
an appreciation for and an
understanding of Ohio 's heritage
by assisting in efforts lo collect.
preserve and Interpret local
history.
Mrs. Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County Pioneer
·and Historical Society, Is currently serving as .an alternate
Region 8 state representative,
and with Mary Anne Peters,
another Region 8 representative,
has planned the regional
meeting.
The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society will serve as
host to the 12 counties represented In the region. For the local
society's participation In the
· program, a presentation on
"Yesteryear" will be given . by
Mrs. Susan Oliver, director of the

Meigs Co unty Ret ired Senior
Volunteer Program.
Yesteryear is a program
where fifth grade st udents are
brought to the museum and in
hands-on demonstrations. are
tau ght crafts an d skills from
by-gone days by members of
RSVP . The unique program has
won state and nat iona l rocogni·
lion and an honora ble mention in

the OAHSM award s program last
fall. Th e offic ers and trustees of
the Meigs County Historical
Society bel ieve "Yes teryear" to
be one of the mos t beneficial
services and educatio na l program It offers. as it gives the
society and museum a n opportunity to serve the whole coun ty.
A self-guided tour of local
churches will be offered follow Ing the close of aclivites a1 the
museum.
Reser vat ions for the meet lng
are $8 and mu s t be received by
April 7. For further information.
visit the mu seum during regular
hours , Tuesday through Sa t ur day, 1 to 4: 30 p.m., or telephone
during the same hours, 992-3810.

Non-profit corporation to be fonned
for Pomeroy's sesquicentennial
A non-profit corporatioh to
make plans for the upcoming
celebrations of Pomeroy's sesquicentennial (150th) anntver·
sarles as an Incorporated village
and as Meigs County seat, will be
· formed In the very near future.
Pomeroy resident and business·
woman, Mary Powell, Is spearheading a 'campalgn to get plans
for the joint celebrations "dn the

road."

LEE LEE

The procession began at the
first station of the cross, the site
of the Roman fortress where
Christians believe Pilate con·
demned Jesus to death . It culm!·
naled at the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, considered by CatholIcs and most Christians to be the
site of JesuS's crucifixion, burial
and resurrection.
. ''ThIs Is something that Is very
close to your heart," said Franciscan Father Raymond Camilleri, shortly after leaving the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
"At this time of year you can
feel it much more. There is a ·
religious fervor," Camilleri said.
Holy Week starts with Palm
Sunday when Christians believe
Jesus entered the Old City and
culminates' with Easter Sunday,
the resurrection.
'orthodox Christians, who In·
elude the Greek, Armenian,
Coptic, Ethiopian, Russian and
Syrian churches, celebrate
Easter April 30.
Camilleri estimated more than
1,500 pilgrims made their way

Powell met Wednesday with
the Meigs County Commissioners who offered suggestions as to
forming the non-profit corporation which Is a necessary first
step before official planning can

begin. Powell had earlier met
with Pomeroy VIllage Council
which Is also In full support of the
sesquicentennial celebrations.
Pomeroy was Incorporated as
a village In 1840 and as the county
seat In 1841. Plans at this point
are to plan several different
activities to commemerate the
two separate events, over a six to
12 month period during 1990-91.
Formation of the non-profit
corporation Is necessary to handle all funding jointly, through
the village and the county,
Powell explained. A iarge group
of In teres ted people - 25 to 30
Individuals - will be needed at
...

I

•

1'71

first, which will later be trimmed
down to a number of sub·
committees to handle specific
projects .
Powell said she has been in
contact with other · counties
which have underta ken similar
celebrations, to gain insight as to
the direction Pomeroy and Meigs
County should take in their
celebrations.
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce has agreed to act as
"sort of an umbrella agency'' for
the joint-project, she added.
After reviewing information
which Powell had just received
Continued on page 10

- ·~

'I

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