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Wednesday, Man:h 29, 1989

Pomeroy-Micktleport. Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

--Local news I;Jriefs ...- - Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
contlnued from page 1
which will have eventng hours, both Wednesday and Thursday.
Ms. Frymyer noted that those who have moved need to update
their address with the board, and anyone who has changed his or
her name must also report that tnformation In order to be
registered to vote In the May primary.
According to Secretary of State Brown, registration remains
open after April 3 for elections other than the upcoming May
primary. ''To become eligible to participate In our democracy
takes only about two minutes," Brown said, "but people can't
vote If they're not registered."

Passenger hurt in accident
A passenger was slightly Injured In an accident at 8:10a.m:
Tuesday In Meigs County, on !:R. 12, 4.1 miles west of SR. 7, In
Rutland Township, according to the Melgs·GalllaPost, State
Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Gregory B. Carpenter, 17, Langsville, flagged
Ronald F . Reynolds, 17, Middleport, to stop. Reynolds pulled
over, stopped on a bridge and Carpenter's car struck the rear of
the Reynolds' vehicle. Damage was moderate to both vehicles.
A passenger In the Reynolds vehicle, William D. Doczl, 16,
Middleport, was Injured and taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by his mother.
The patrol cited Carpenter for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance and Reynolds for stopping on the
roadway.

School funds distributed
Meigs County's total payment for March, 1989 from the State
School Foundation Subsidy Fund was $587,562.47, according to a
report from State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
The breakdown of funds shows that Eastern Local School
Dis tr!ct received a net payment of $124,491.01, that Meigs Local
School District received a total of $335,915.75, and Southern
Local, a total of $127,155.71.
In addition to that amount a total of $26,629 was put Into the
school employees retirement fund and $80,5321nto the teachers
retirement fund.
,
The allotment to the Meigs County Board of Education was
$31,496.25 for the month of March.
The total March State School Foundation Subsidy payment to
612 Ohlo city, exempted village and local school districts and 87
county boards of education totaled $167.835,646.56, according to
the report. Of that amoung the State Teachers' Retirement
System received $42,951,340.83 and the School Employees'
Retirement System received $11,343,689.09 as the employers'
share of the pension program for March, Ferguson reported.

Grand jury session cancelled
A session of the Grand Jury scheduled for Friday has been
cancelled and jurors need not report.

Woodrow Engle Sr.
Woodrow Wilson Engle Sr. , 73,
Shady Cove Rd.. Middleport,
died Tuesday at Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospital following a brief
Illness.
Born July 1, 1915. in Pleasant·
ville, he was the son of Wilson and
Myra Nelson Engle. He worked
as a farmer and construction
worker. and was an army vete·
ran of World War II.
Preceding him In death were
his parents, his son, Fred Allen
Engle, and two grandcl)lldren,
Tracl and Susie Cooper.
Surviving are his wife, Julia
Engle, son and daughter-In· law,
Woodrow W. and Debbie Engle
Jr., two daughters and sons-In·
law, Mrs. Darrell (Peggy)
Krautter, all of Middleport, and
Mrs. Gary (Marilyn) Cooper, as
well as daughter·ln·law Sue
Engle, both of Portland.
Also surviving are two broth·
ers, Earl Engle, Grove City, and
Ernest Engle of Athens, Texas,
and two sisters, Anna Cox and
Dorothy Dllcher, both of Colum·
bus, a step daughter, Dorothy

Taylor of Chesapeake, three step
sons and daughers-ln law. Jack
and Cheryl Nelson, Proctorville.
Richard and P,atty Nelson, South
Point. and Charles and Judy
Nelson of Tampa. Fla., as well as
several nelces and nephews.

HW8t AITOwood
Hurst Arrowood, 67, of Route 1
Gallipolis (Bulavllle·Addlson
Road) , died Wednesday at
Holzer Medical Center following
a sudden Illness. He was retired
from the UnltedStatesNavywlth
21 years service. He saw active
duty In World War II, the Korean
conflict and Vietnam.
He was also a self-employed
carpenter and fonnerly was
maintenance man with Banntng
and Pickett Company Real Est·
ate Developers In Columbus. He
was also manager of Marples
Barber Shop at the Amos Shopping Center fn Columbus.
He . attended Bulavllle Chris·
II an Church and was a member of
VFW Post4464, American Legion
Post 27 and the Naval Fleet
Reserve Association, Branch 199
In Columbus.

He bas been a resident of Gallla
County stnce 1978.
Born Jan. 12. 1922 In Johnson
County, Ky., he was ·a son of the
late Ulysses G. and .Oia Mae
Pack Arrowood.
Surviving are his wife, Bonnie
L. Woodard Arrowood; three
stepdaughters, Yvonne Reiser, .
Cindy Hatcher, both of Golum·
bus, and Shaleen Mercer of
Gallipolis; six stepgrandchlld·
ren and a special nephew, Mike
Massie, and several other nelces
and nephews.
Also surviving are four sisters,
Dorothy Massie, .Becky Lane.
both of Gallipolis, Vlrgtnla Hen·
son of Addison and Glenda Rife of
Cheshire; one brother. Jackie
Arrowood of Huntington. W.Va.
He was also preceded In death
by two brothers, Ralph Ray
Arrowood and James 0.
Arrowood.
Services will be conducted 2
p.m. Friday at Bulavllle Chris·
tian Church, the Rev. Ron
Hammond officiating. Burial fol·
lows In Addison-Reynolds Cemetery. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel

Thursday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9p.m .
Military graveside services·
will be conducted by VFW Post
4464 and American Legion Post
27.
.
The body wUI be taken to the
church one hour prior to:
services.

NOW OPEN FOI
SPIING SEASON

1:·

Complete. Une of Veget•bte .,
&amp; Bedding Pt•nto. Azeleu lo
Fruit Tr-. Ger•niumo,
Hanging B••keto, Shrubbery t
endTr-. .. ·

I

Common pleas
eourt

I

An action for $5,441.55 has been
flied In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court by the Motorist .
Insurance Co. of Columbus
against Greg B. Roush, DBA
Roush Cons tructlon, Syracuse.
and John Electric Co.,
Columbus.
The plaintiff charges that the
defendents negligently per·
formed repairs on property
owned by Melvin Forrester at
Racine Which was Insured by the
Motorist Insurance Co. The ac·
lion by the Insurance company Is
to recover the amount which was
paid to the 'property owner as a
resull of the alleged damages by
the defendants.

Papers filed
Articles of Incorporation have
been filed with the office of
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown by Ingels Electronics,
Inc.. Middleport, with Jason
Ingels as Incorporation and
agent.

Hospital news

992-5776
SJIACUSE, OHIO

~

•

•

'·

•

REGIONALIZE - Markettng by reglonallza·
lion was the topic of an ail-day seminar sponsored
by the Southeast Ohio Regional Council Wednes·
day at Rio Grande College. The seminar attracted
community leaders from 11 counties. Here,

Dennis Mlngyar ol the Governor's Office ol
App!'IIWhla tells the 50 participants to practice
what they've learned and follow through with
regionalized marketing of the area to overseas
businesses'. ( OVP photo)

Floo~ing

follows heavy rains
in eastern section of country

$2,00000
MINIMUM TRADE

WE WILL TRADE NO AlTER
WHAT. CONDITI.ON!!!
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

The National Weather Service
Issued flood watches for through·
out the day over ~outherri Vet' "·
mont, much of New York state,
the southwestern third of Pennsylvanla, the northern panhan·
die of West Virginia a nd southern
Ohio.
The flood watch over north·
central New York state was due

Southern district
evaluated by state
Evaluation of the Southern
Local School District has been
completed recently by the Ohio
Department of Education, according to a report from G.
Robert Bowers, assistant super·
intendent of public instruction.
Purpose of the eva luation, he
said, was to determine the
degree to which the schools
comply with the minimum standards for elementary arid secondary schools.
Under the mlnnmum stand·
ards, schools must be evaluated
at least once every five years.
Bowers advised that evaluation
reports have been sent to the
principal of each school and to
the superintendent. and to the
president of the b&lt;iard of education. He said that the evalkuation
reports are public record and
available for examination.
Evaluation reports Include a
checklist for each school and a
district overview.

The checklist is provided to
identify any standards that are
not being met. Any deficiencies
are required to be corrected
immediately. he said. or a plan to
correct them Including a time·
line, is to be prepared. In either
case, a response to the Ohio
Department of Education is due
by the specified date, according
to the assistant supertntendentof
public instruction.
The overview inc! udes a des·
criptlon of the programs and
services that are similar in the
sc hools throughout the district.
An evaluator may offer sugges·
\Ions or reocmmendations In the
overview for enhancing or
strengthening the school program. he concluded.
Standards require that a public
meeting be held within thirty
days of the receipt of the reports
to discuss the result of the school
evaluation, according to Bowers.

Pomeroy to lwve new fire listing

•

*OFFER GOOD ON ALL NEW FULL SIZED
CARS OR TRUCKS AND SELECTED USED
CARS. (PRIOR SALE PRICES EXCLUDED.)
*ALL REBATES AND PROMOTIONAL CONSIDERATION TO OEALER.

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

·By United Press International
Heavy rain deluged the East
Thursday, creating the,threat of.
flooding in some parts. and
winter weather persisted in
northern New . England, the
Great Lakes area and the North·
ern Plains, while Texas and
Louisiana recovered from
tornadoes.

Local news briefs--

NO DEALERS PLEASE

Here's a report from To·
peka, deacribing an accident:
The telephone pole waa ep·
proeching feat. I attempted
to move out of ita way. but it
hit me. A men in Shreveport
waa sitting in hia apartment.
lietening to a recording of the
aong. "Cry of the Wild
Goose". wl!en a live male
gooae crashed through the
window. Coincidence? Maybe, but who knowe7

Beginning at midnight on Friday, the Pomeroy Fire
Department will use a new telephone number, 992·6663,
according to Danny S. Zirkle. chief.
Zirkle advises that the Pomeroy Fire Department on that
date will join the county-wide dispatching system. This, Zirkle
says, means that no longer will fire calls be handled through
Pomeroy v!llage hall, but will go to the Emergency Medical
Service office on Mulberry Heights. with trucks being
dispatched through there.
Pomeroy has been the only fire department which has not
been using that central system.

No one cited after mislwp
Moderate damage was Incurred to the right side of a Limited
Leastng Inc. truck parked at the Beacon Station, Nye .Ave.
Pomeroy, about 4 p.m Wednesday.
According to Pomeroy Pollee, .David Friesen of Aylmer,
Ontario, driving a truck of Laidlaw Carriers, Inc. struck the
Limited Leastng. Inc. truck as he pulled from the service
station. There was no damage to Laidlaw Carriers, Inc. truck.
Driver of the Limited truck was Bufford Smith, Ravenswood.
No citations were Issued by the officers Investigating the
accident.
Continued on page 5

_......,

____

P•u• 25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. N8WIPIPet'

Regional marketing
SEORC seminar topic

'

Mike Fox Can't Believe Jim Cobb
Allowed $2,000.00 For This Trade-In!!!

2 Sections. 12

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 30, 1989

1989

Hubbard's Gr•nhouse :

Veterans Memorial
Admtsslorill - Curtis cau:
thorn, Reedsville; Alma Hayman, Racine; Eliza Hayman
Racine; Michelle Barrett, Dell:
ter; Georee Pullins, Racine·
Mlah Maxey, Tuppers Plains:
and Michael Shuler, Langsville:
Discharges -Curtis Cauthorn,
Frank Oark, Edna Davidson,
and Howard Damron.
·
f'"""-

.

ClOSD IASTD SUNDAY

'

Dally stock prices
(As ol 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

iAlY.C\.A
. .

Vot.39. No.227

OPEN DAILY I AM TO 5 PM
SUNDAY 1 TO 5

COBB'S
PUSH, PULL or TO
SALE

Low In mid 40s toniJht.
Chance of rain near · 100
percent. Friday, high near SO.
Chance of rain near 180
percent.

•

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

Stocks

Am Electric Power ............. 26\1,
AT&amp;T .......................... ...... .31')8
Ashland Oil ..... .. ................. 39 )i
Bob EvanS.. ........................ 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul. .................... 53
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 46'h
Heck's ................................. 'h
Key Centurion ....................13\1,
Lands' End .......................... 34
Limited Inc ....................... .28\1,
Multimedia Inc ................... 87%
Rax Restaurants ........ \ ......... 23,4
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... ...... 16%
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8¥.
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6\1,
Worthington Ind ................. 21\1,

.Page 3

A marriage license has been,
Issued to Clifford Richard Icen· •
bower, 24, Coolville, and April:
Elaine Br!ckles, 22, Coolville. · :

Eight calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Tuesday.
.
At 12:41 a.m. Middleport squad 14 went to Shady Cove for
Woodrow Ingle who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:51 a.m. Tuppers Plains squad 86 went to Reedsville tor
Curtis Cauthorn who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then to Holzer Medical Center.
At 3:10 a.m. the Racine Fire Department was called to a
brush fire at the residence of Rodney Nelgler. At 10:49 a.m.
Syracuse squad was called to Landaker Rd. lor Norman Wood
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. Atll: 24 a.m. Rutland
squad 44 went to Meigs Mine 1 for Jerry Kovack who was taken
to O'Bieness Hospital, Athens.
At 6:49p.m. the Racine squad was called to SR 124 for' GeOrge
Pullins who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
8:13p.m. Pomeroy squad 1 went to SR 7 for Beulah Maxey who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and atlO: 53 p.m. the
Salem Fire Department was called to Old Dexter Rd. for a
structure fire on Eddie itadd's property.

Continued from page 1
percent compared with 2.4 per·
cent during the previous 12
months, according to the depart·
ment's Bureau of Economic
Analysis.
Eight of 11 Indicators contributed to the decltne last month.
Investment In plant and equip·
ment, building permits and
orders for consumer goods had
the blgges !Impact tn February.
The other negative factors
were, In order of magnitude,
money supply, consumer expec·
lations. weekly claims for state
unemployment Insurance,
vendor performance and
changes In unfilled factory
orders.

Pick3
178
Pick4
1481
Super Lotto
12-13-19-35-38-41
Kicker 777299

Ucense issued

Meigs EMS has eight calls

Economic...

Ohio Lottery

Boggs,
Rose share
laughs

..

to the threat of heavy rain along
with a ra(lld melting of snow.
Tliere '· was floodtng· aireaoy In
northern Vermont with several
roads closed near Cambridge
and Jeffersonville, the NWS
reported.
Winter weather was not yet
finished as snow, sleet and rain
fell over much of northern . New
England. Winter weather advlso·
rles were posted for Thursday
afternoon and night over portions
of Maine, northern New Hamp·
shire and' northern Vermont.
Snow also ex tended across
much of Michigan, northwest
Continued on page 5

Woman is
arrested on
B &amp; E charge
Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that 31
year-o ld Debra Lynn Estep,
Harrisonville. was arrested Wednesday evening on a North
Ca rolina warrant charging
breaking and entering and grand
theft.
The Yad kin County. N. C.
warrant charges Estep with
feloniously breaking and enter·
lng a building used as a kennel in
Boonville, N.C .. on or about Jan.
19 and taking seven Australian
shepherd dogs valued at $4,000.
Several dogs were recovered
at the Estep residence In Meigs
County on March 1.
Estep was to have been taken
before the Meigs Common Pleas
Court this morning (Thursday)
for an extradition hearing.
Sheriff Souls by reports that the
department Is Investigating the
damaging of a 1981 John Deer
bulldozer owned by 3-R Indus·
tries of Langsville.
The dozer was on Titus Road
and headlights were shotoutand
the hydraulic lines were also shot
out with BB's.
Over the weekend, a building
on Jones Road in Columbia
Township was entered and ca·
bles from an electric welder and
wiring from a house were taken.
Tuesday evening, the depart·
ment was notified that a 50 gallon
tank had been taken from the
porch of a house owned by
William Rapp In Harrisonville.
The theft occurred Sunday night.
Souisby also reports that Rl·
chard Starr, owner of one- of the
cabins In Boston Hollow that
were vandalized the weekend of
March 18, has offered a $1,000
reward for lnfonnation leading
to the arrest and conviction of
persons Involved In the vandal·
Ism. Information will be kept
confidential the sheriff said.

By LEE AJI(N WELCH
OVP News Staff
Be prepared may be the Boy
Scout motto, built's also a good
idea In regional economic
development.
Approximately 50 people at·
tended an economic develop. ment workshop Wednesday to
learn about coming together as a
region, rather than trying to
entice business as Individual
communities. It was sponsored
by the Southeast Ohio Regional
Council, and conducted at Rio
Grande College.
There's strength In numbers
and, if the counties In the
Southeast Ohio Regional Council
work together as a unit, the
probability of enticing Industry
and jo)&gt;s increases dramatically,
according to Bill Snyder of
Columbus a·nd Southern Power.
Snyder, and several others In
private business, work with the
Ohio Economic Development
Council in presenting the state to
overseas co ncerns.
The Japanese are being innundated with information. not only
from Ohio, but other states and
even countries, aboutlocatlon. If
you present a package with 15
counties as a region. you have
Increased your chances · that
many times. Snyder said.
• "If ybu present a package,
you'll be taking a quantum leap ' '
ahead of much of the compel i·
lion, Snyder said.
According to Snyder, and the
other presenters. reglonalizatlon
is "smart money" both now and
in the future.
Individually, small cities don't
have the resources to finance the
search for new business. If rural
areas , like southeast Ohio, pool
its money and people, the search
Is easier.
One good Idea for the regional

Kennard of Ohio Power, another
member of the OEDC team at the
seminar said.
Kennard told · the group a
regionalized approach develops
a solid marketing program
geared toward the small to
mid-sized business and research
shows rapid growth In the service
'
industry.
In actdltlon, Kennard said to
not forget about the existing
businesses and monitor thelt
trends.
·· '
When the communities markei
the area. "regional rivalry•:
must be forgotten. according to
Dennis Mlngyar of the Gover·
nor's Office of Appalachia.
"We talk regional, but don't
practice It," he observed.
Eac h area within the reglOI\
must be knowledgeable a bout not
only that community, but the
DENNIS MINGYAR
ones next door.
Paul Clappsadle, ·another
marketing is an Information OEDC member, who works for
book. Snyder said the Japanese Columbia Gas, said each com·
want printed materials on areas
munlty within the region needs to
and the OEDC will send to the be articulate on the others, and
have rapid access to the person•
Regional Council a guide for
nelland Information.
·
compilation of such a book .
In the binder-ty pe present at ion
Sometimes, the economic de·
should be maps of each potential velopmel\t office may call and
site, that area in relation to the say they're bringing a potential
region, the region to the state and client to view a site one more
the stale to the nation, according time - ln about 90 minutes, he
·
to Cindy Bunfll o! the Ohio said.
It's that clme you' need to know
Department of Development.
She also suggested accessing about that site. and have rapid
Informal ion on the port au thor!· access to the other Information
ties, utilities, transportation, ed·
the client may want.
ucalion opportunities, tax strucBeing prepared and undertures and a workforce profile.
standing economic development
There should also be a list of are the keys to regional market·
communitles and ·counties with ing and the area has a readythe names and numbers of the made organization to achieve
contact people, she sa Id.
that In the Southeast Ohio Re"Smart money takes the re- gional Council, and according to
gional approach and keeps the Carl Dahlberg of SJCORC, they
communities' identities, while will be laking advantage of lhi!
maximizing resources ,.. John concept.

'Rain Man' dominates 61st
Academy Awards ceremony
By VERNON SCOTt'
UPI Hollywood Reporter
LOS ANGELES "Rain
Man," the touching story of an
au tis tic man and his greedy
brother, dominated the 61st annual Academy Awards, winning
four Oscars, Including best pic·
ture and best actor for Dustin
Hoffman.
Jody Foster was a surprise
winner over some of the biggest
names in Hollywood as best
actress in "The Accused."
Geena Davis was named best
supporting actress for her role In
"The Accident~! Tourist" and
Kevin Kline was best supporting
actor for the comedy "A Fish
Called Wanda."
"I'm supposed to be jaded by
this point," said an emotional
Hoffman on accepting his second
best actor Oscar Wednesday
night. "(But) I'm very honored.
... I wani to thank all the autistic
people I talked to and their
families," he said, referring to
the research he did for his role.
"It Is for us a Cinderella story.
The picture was literally canceled three or four limes," said
Hoffman, who was joined back·
stage by co-star Tom Cruise and
Barry Levinson, who won the
best director Oscar.
Foster. who has been acting lor
24 of her 26 years and was
nominated for supporting ac·
tress for "Taxi Driver" In 1976,
said of her role as a rape victim, .
"I'm very proud of the movie'.
The movie Is true and It's honest
In a way that's not pandering ....
It takes the truth and It smacks It
In your face."
''Rain Man' • had more nomina·
lions than any other film with
eight, and .picked up a fourth
award for best original screen·
play. The film got Its name from
a mispronounced Raymond the name of Hoffman's character

-in the childhood memory of his who Immigrates to Denmark to
brother, played by Cruise.
give his son a brighter future,
"Dangerous Liaisons," a lush was named best foreign ian·
story of sexual fencing among guage film.
the aristocracy in pre·
The big loser of the evening
revolutionary France, was nomi· was "Mississippi Burning,"
nated In seven categories. II won based on the FBI Investigation
for best art direction, costume Into the murder of three civil
design and screenplay based on rights workers In the 1960s.
material from another medium. Nominated for seven awards, It
Davis played a free-spirited won just one for best
dog trainer In "The Accidental cinematography.
Tcrurist" and said she was
The Oscar show at the 6,000·
surprised at winning the Oscar. seat Shrine Auditorium ran 16
" I felt I had a one In live chance minutes over Its scheduled three
at least," she joked. "I'm rather hours. and was broadcast live on
stunned."
ABC to an estimated worldwide
"This is astonishing," said audience of 1.5 billion viewers,
Kline. who played a trigger· according to Allan Carr, prohappy jewel. thief In "A Fish . ducer of the program.
Called Wanda" and was a sur·
"Who Framed Roger Rabbit:·
prise winner for his non· which combined live action with
dramatic role. "So often comic animation. won awards for film
performances are overlooked," editing, sound effects editing and
he said backstage. " I think this Is visual effects. Animation direcvery encouraging."
tor Richard Williams was given a
"Pelle the Conqueror" from special achievement award. The
Denmark, the story of an old movie made more money at the
Continued on page 5
Swede played by Max von Sydow

DUSTIN HOFFMAN

JODY FOSTER

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

glb

cs:m~ ~._..,...,,..,._c;:;~,,::o

"q!v

ROBERT L."WINGETT
PAT WmTEHEAD
Publisher
Assistant Publisher/Controller
CHARLENE HOEFLICH, General Manager
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Lettets should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

Smokers cry
'discrimination'
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- In a welcome backlash against zealotry, state
legislatures have begun to give smokers some needed protection
against discrimination.
Those who value clvU liberties should have been alarmed when
Massachusetts last year became the first state to prohibit new pollee
officers and firefighters from smoking on or off the job.
· Fortunately , In other states the pendulum Is swinging back toward
reason.
·
Maryland legislation Is expected soon to be slgnea Into law that
would prohibit employers from firing or refusing to hire those who
smoke - even In the privacy of their homes.
It was written by Bruce Bereano, a lobbyist for The Tobacco
Institute, which In its other activities In defense of smoking often is
dead wrong.
.
Smoking kills people. The Tobacco Institute to the contrary
notwithstanding, the evidence that clgatrettes kill Is overwhelming.
But smoking them Is not against the law. So employers should not
be permitted to discriminate against people for engaging at home in
a11 activity that is legal.
The Maryland legislation would large!, among other employers, a
f{re department ln Washington's suburbs that requires newly hired
firefighters to agree not to smoke on or off the job.
What Is wrong with that as a condition of employment? Don't
firefighters Inhale quite enough smoke on the job?
Perhaps, but the prlmary Issue here is the right of privacy.
A citizen's home is his castle. What goes on there, If legal, is not
government's business.
·Stuart Comstock-Gay, execu live director of the Maryland branch
of the American Civil Liberties Union, said The Tobacco Institute
asked the ACLU to support Its bill.
The House of Delegates approved It 74 to 52- just three votes more
than the needed majority.
.
''We supported it because It protects the right to engage In a legal
activity In privacy at home," said Comstock-Gay. "It also protects
smokers In their work place from being tired merely because of their
slat us as smokers."
The ACLU ln the past has joined The Tobacco Institu.te in opposing
blms on cigarette advertising which It believes violate the First
Amendment. .
But Comstock-Gay made it clear that the issue that won the ACLU's
support ol the Maryland legislation Is privacy, pure and simple.
''We need more laws to protect privacy," said Comstock-Gay. "An
employer ought not to be able to !Ire you because you like to swim
naked In your pool at home. If you run around naked at your work
place, that's different."
; Opponents of the new law contended that It would give smokers
greater rights to sue employers for dlscrlmlnatlon than are now
enjoyed by blacks, women and other groups protected by Maryland
l:]lw.
• They contended Irrelevantly that U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms, the
conservative Republican from the tobacco state of North Carolina,
''would vote for this bill."
:.Delegate Samuel Rosenberg, a Baltimore Democrat, said, "Jesse
~elms cares deeply about the tobacco Industry. Jesse Helms does not
oore deeply about protecting people from discrimination because of
their race."
• Majority Leader John Arnlck noted that Helms does not "work,
shop or Jive In Maryland."
• · Arnlck said If an employer can get away with asking If you smoke at
home, "pretty soon he'll ask you If you rent smutty movies for home
v' tew l ng. "
.

Letters to ·the editor
•

members or friends that did not
appear on the list should contact ·
or write to the American Legion
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middleport, Ohio 45760, giving their
name and the .war in which they
gave their life no later than
March 30, 1989 In order for these
names to be printed by the
unveiling date.
,
Mike Floccarl, Cmdr.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128
Middleport, Ohio 45760

-~--

WASHINGTON -The recent
arrest of the powerful godfather
of Mexico' s oil worker's union
may lead to unprecedented violence against the new govern·
ment of President Carlos Salinas
de Gortarl and anyone who tries
to clean up the corrupt union.
Salinas put Joaquin Hernandez
Galicia behind bars in January
for murder and weapons
charges. No other single act
could have persuaded Mexlcao
and Washington, D.C. , that Sail·
nas wants to tackle his country's
endemic corruption.
Hernandez. known as " La
Quina" (Little Joaquin), has
made Mexican presidents tremble since he first took over the
200,000-member oil workers unIon In 1962. Salinas' predecessors
feared that any move against the
popular La Quina would result In
sabotage of oil wells, or at least a
strike that could further cripple
the already troubled Mexican

money from the union. Garcia
also wrote to President de la
Madrid claiming that La Quina
had resorted to assassination to
retain control of the union.
While La Quina was letting
Garcia take the fall, he was busy
shoring up his power base. De Ia
Madrid began to notice · that
crltlcs of La Quina kept dying.
One, Oscar Torres Pancardo,
was killed In 1983 when a truck
crossed the road and struck the
car In which he was riding. The
driver ot Torres' car was shot to
death during the bizarre
Incident.
A few weeks after the car
accident, the leader of one union
local was forced out of his post at
gunpoint by 50 of La Quina's
thugs. The local leader had been .
an outspoken crltlc of La Quina
and his buddies.
In Nevember 1983, three people
who were distributing anti·La

Quina pamphlets were dragged.
Into the office of a local union
leader, robbed and threatened
with death by "car accident."
In the spring ot 1984, three
union members were killed In
Salamanca during a power strug·
gle between pro- and anti-La
Quina factions.
Finally, on May 31, 1984, the
chief media critic of La Quina
was murdered. Manuel Buendia,
one of Mexico's best·known jour·
nallsts who had been dubbed the
"Jack Anderson ot Mexico," was
expertly assassinated by a lone
gunman near his office In Mexico
City.
De Ia Madrid threw In the
towel. He flew to La Quina's
hometown and made a speech,
praising the union for making the
oil · Industry "a model of honesty." La Quina began calllng
de Ia Madrid "our good friend,"
and the violence ended.

•

ISOC.'cer

MISL
No ji;rutlt-.:. l!l' ht!duk!tl

R)' United Pl"i'!OS lntrrrMtloul

Swlinmln~o~:

Ra!lr hall Exhibition Standn~
1\MERICAN I.Er\GVE

lndlanMPolls - Nf ,\A mt!n'!o S" ·lm
mlog and Dlvln~~: Ch~Ut~pkuwhip..

Prt.

Ten~s

"'

.111&lt;

ll' L
fln·f'IIUI d

T""a."
Mlnt..... ola
{ ' hy

K~tn!IIL.;

Oakhnd
Sridlk•

l i Ul

.630

K('y BhH•a,Yne, .,,"" - !.2.1 million
Lipt o n lnl('rnaliorud Pl~yu "

13 10

.64lit

fhampklll!lhiPS

16 II
J.l ID
16 13
13 J.l

.MI3

fhlcaRfl
Rn~ton

II JIJ

.-IOi

Houston at N cw .J cr!IC)' , i : ;10 p.m .
Gotdcn:Stalf' 111 Charlolk. 1: 30 J).m .
Dallwo ul Nl'" \'ork, x: :lO p.m .
Sf&gt;llltlf' at Denver. 8: :10 p.m.
San t\rlt onlo at LA L11krr~ 10::.10 p.m .

l'l 1-1

7
9
12

:an
.l'l'l

Clndnmti
I.Al" An~f'lll'!&lt;
PIU!Ohu ,.,;h

U
U 1..
15 U

.517
.517

.4.1hmta

12 I'!

.$Gil

Mnntrul
San Frand!'(·o

11 1:1
l!l IG

.u~

Nf'w \ ' tJrlo:
Phlladf'lphia
Hou!ilon
O!icaf(O

It 15
lfl I~
!I lA
II '!0

.·117
.3:!1
.ttHi

. ~:JII

... 51!
u~

~€'h!oda,w'll ltt•!~-ull!!i

PUHI, Hawaii (NEA) - DurIng the heyday of sugar earlier in
this century, the Kliohana estate
here was the center of a thriving
26,000-acre sugar plantation
whose wealthy owners occupied
an opulent 15,000-square-foot Tu·
dor mansion.
The most expensive home ever
built on the Island of Kaual was
fllled with custom-designed furnishings from San Francisco's
best stores and art from through·
out the Orient and the paclflc.
The surrounding 36 acres
abounded with . lush tropical
gardens.
Today, much of Kliohana has
been restored and preserved but sugar Is no longer grown
here. Instead, the grand mansion
and Its expulslte grounds have
been converted Into a shopping
center catering to upscale tourists Interested In purchasing art,
antiques, jewelry and clothing.
Kilohana's metamorphosis Is

emblematic of what has hap·
pened to ihe sugar Industry not
only ln Hawaii but ln the 20 other
states where just under 7.3
mllllon tons of cane and beet
sugar were grown ·during the
1987·'88 crop year.
Sugar's markets have been
liwaded by synthetic and natural
products claiming they are su·
perlor sweeteners. Its growers
are constantly criticized by freemarketeers and consumer
groups Insisting that federal
Intervention has allowed producers to Impose artificially high
prices.
But consumer demand for
sugar remains remarkably res II·
lent. After more than a decade'of
declines, yearly domestic sugar
usage Increased modestly ln
1987, to an average of62.4 pounds
per person. Every artificial
tabletope sweetener that has
come along has faced challenges
because of proven or suspected
health hazards.

Tun·e to take SI.des

'

Montrt•al 1:1, [n,. ,\IIJI:I'In II
Ro!liton 7, f'lndnnatl 5
Philadelphia~. Sl. Lnul.!'l 3
Plll!ollufXh .\. (' hit.IIJil'O [,\L) I
Mln~r~;olllli , 1'\ic-w \'ork INI.f ~
'l'rxa.~ -1, Balllmoft' ;t
Kan:.s ('Ky 7, Hou~on 1
Toronto 1~. Oet roU :1
flL'\'t•l».nd II, .'\1111 f'runcl!j co ISs I ;1
Ollklund ( list :t. Mllwaukc t&gt; :!

Robert Walters

There are, however, no sugges· backs ln recent years, 180,000
!Ions that any adverse health acres remain cultivated In cane.
effects result from the ingestion ·
But the Industry's troubles are
of high fructose corn syrup and increasing. The Hamakua Sugar
other natural corn sweeteners, Co. last year was forced to turn to
whose domestic consumption has the state government for a $10
exceeded that of sugar In every million emergency loan to pay
year since 1985.
the Interest on $85 mUllan owed to
The emergence of those sweet· the federal Land Bank and
eners as widely used sugar Production Credit Association.
substltutes ln soft drinks, candy,
Castle &amp; Cook Is phasing out Its
baked goods and other products Waialua Sugar Co. operations
has produced economic disloca- because of $12 million worth of
tions In the four states where losses In the past five yellfs.
sugar cane IS grown - Hawaii, Amfac, the state's second largest
Florida, Louisiana and Texas.
sugar producer, has been pur·
A similar adverse impact has chased by a Chicago real estate
been registered In the 17 states firm widely assumed to be more
where sugar beets are produced, interested ln selllng land than
Including California, Minnesota, growing cane on lt.
North Dakota, Idaho, Washing·
In 1960, at the beginning of the
ton, Colorado, Michigan, Ne·
sugar boom here, there were 12
braska, Wyoming and Montana.
plantations. By 1865, the number
No state Is as dependent upon has grown to 32. Today, there
sugar as Hawaii, where It Is by again are 12. The industry that
far the leading agricultural crop long dominated Hawaii's eco·
and one of the principal Indus· nomic, cultural and social life Is
tries. Even after repeated set· struggling for survival.

sunk' t

'

'

.'

...

later.
What on earth will we decide?
A recent poll by the Los Angeles
Times revealed that while a
majority of Americans consider
a bortlon Immoral (57 percent
even called it murder), most also
say the decision to abort should
be left to Individual women.
Polling data going back to 1972
suggests overwhelming suppoft
for abortion when a woman's life
is endangered, she becomes
pregnant by rape, or a baby
would otherwise be born badly
deformed; but those same sur·
veys show most people oppose ·
abortion as a form of birth
control for women who simply
don't want a child.
How these attitudes will slit
Into policy is anyone's guess, but
the result Is likely to vary from
state to state. As recently as last
fall, voters In Arkansas and
Colorado rejected use of state
funds for abortions whlle Michl·
gan voters took the opposite
stand.
In one memo unearthed by
Woodward, Justice Harry Black·
mun admitted that the opinion's
focus on a trlmester structure
was "arbltrary"; Potter Stewart
worried about the decision's
"Inflexibly legislative" sweep.
Whatever you think of abor·
tlon, the court obviously over·
stepped its mandate ln 1973,
eroding the foundations of representative democracy In the
process.
Only a masochist or realot

t

...

Today's events
faltndar
Ba..; ehall Exhltitlon
\lontl't'al V.'\. A.tlant11 at Wl,..l l':llm
Bt•&lt;tdt, Fla. , I: G3 p.m .

Houson 11t

Ki~ " lmm t•t• .

Fla. , 1:115 p.m.
Roston ws. Dt"l roil al LU}jt'IJUid, Fb..
1; 00 p.m .
'reJia.'" \ "."i, ( "hlt'lll:ll !AL J !U SUI".J sota.

Fla. , 1: :10 p.m.
SL l..oul!« v,;, 'roronto aiiJIII!f'dln, Jo1a. .
I : :MI p. m.

( 'indn"mti \s. Kun~~ City 1U HulrM'l'i

flty, Fb... l::tl p.m .
N,.~. \" Ork 1i\1.1 \'.'\. Baltimol'l• at
Miami. 1:3:'1 p.m.
( 'lnl•hnd v .~ . Mllwuu k('(' Ul f 'h ~~~&amp;dlf•r,
,\rb: .• 3:15 p .m .
f'hkai{O I NLI \'.'\, ~t· W:th• ;II Tt&gt;rnpt•,

p.m.
Phlladt'lphi a v.~ . l'llbhu rJ:h at flt•artWter. Fl.IL, -::a., p.m.
_,
San Dlt'I{U st. 111 San Dh•I(O, J{i: (Hi p,111,
f'•IUornia at LOI" ,\ng{')t'S, H\ :05 p.m .
Bas kf&gt;lhllll
Hou!4on al ~· rw ,Jt•rll(')", 7::10 p.m .

,\ri:l.., :1 : 1:11

•
'

that Is the price of a free people
asserting themselves on an issue
of great moral moment..
Those of us balancing on the
fence had better get ready to
jump.

r.oldrn Stair at rh6U'IoU(', 7: 30p.m .
Oalla.o.; 111 !'it'W \ ' orJ,;, 1! : :JO p.m .
Sot•:tUI•· at Dt•nvcr. 9: ;ru p.m .
~an Antonio at LA Lllk&lt;'tN, Itl::!O p. m .
PIHK•nix at Sl&amp;tramt'nto, 10 :30 p ,m ,
&amp;:dna:
Colur.ado SprlnJCS, f41D. l'.S.
( 'h amplonshtps
HI'UV)"WNJhll"
\ 'o•w \ ' ork - Alex Stt~WIIrt \ .. . 1\rllwl
l.uwhor•·
Golf

Rant·ho

''

Mlru~r:t•,

Phocnl11.111 Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
Frldll.)''s Gam('S
:'lricw .Jt•r ,..,.y at A.tlwlta, nlll;:ht
llou91anal Boston, n\~
Miami a1 Phllad{'lphia. nlltfll
INIIa.o.;lJ.tlndiana, nlji;ht
rarlian d al "a....tJlnlton. nl~r:ht
rle,·el~~nd 111 fhlt·aco, nlji;ht
Gol&lt;k'nStalt' at New York, nill:hl
Mllwauk'c at Phot•nlx , nla;tu:
Dctrott at St·~llc , nla-ht
San 1\Jli!Wiio at LA flippers , nl,;hl
NATIONAL HOCKEY I. EAGUJ::

" 'P dJwsd IC' ' )j Re"!Jtt"'
Dt•Jrolt

~.

S\' R tml&lt;lf,'r-" 3

Toronto :1, Mlnfti.'!'Oolll I
NV lshuu~rl" l!, ~"~'" ,Jtr!«!)'

~ (OT)
Oll caKo 3, QUt'IIO.•t· I
Los t\ngt'lt"' !, \\'lnnlpt'k I(OT)
Edmonton 5, \ ' idlt-'Ouwr 2
Thur.tda,y' " G:uneo

Wwo;hln~on"l

Phlladt'lphlu.

C.ilil . -

:S:'!Ot,IIOII •

U'C'iA nlnuh Shon·
Tht• \\'nndiMd!i. TrxU.'I - ~O.OOIII'G 1\
lndfopcndt"ftl Jnsurun ce :\ft t•nt Opm
Ho&lt;"k &lt;.'.\ '
Montn'ullll Bufll\lo, 7::!5 p. m .
Hurtforti al PIU:olbU1111'1 , 7: : 1~ p.m .
W~tjn~onll.l Phlh!.delpN~

7::U p.m .

Qtlt'ht'&lt;· at Kt. l~ul~.11: :111 p.m .

Lakers' ace fined

'

.

PHOENIX [UPI) - Los An·
geles Lakers cenier Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar was fined $500 and
ordered to pay $845 In restitution
Wednesday on two misdemeanor
convictions stemming from a
scuffle with an Italian tourist at a
Phoenix shopping center last
year .
The NBA star appeared' before
Phoenix Municipal Court Judge
John Wlehn, who convicted him
Feb. 28 of one count of assau it
and one count of crlmlnal
damage.
Abdui-Jabbar, who wlll retire
after this season, had no com·
ment as he appeared ln court the
day after the Lakers lost to the
Phoenix Suns 127-104.

~~~
ID 1111 b~ NE.t., Inc;
·
"Hold my calls for s while."

''

,.
'

..

In a pregame ceremony Tues·
day night at which he was
honored by the Suns, AbdulJabbar made reference to his
pending court appearance.
After accepting a set of golf
clubs, a bronze statue of himself
and a plaque, Abdul-Jabbar said,
•'I was told there was going to be
one extra gilt here for
a get
out of jail free card."

me-

I~

p.m .

FrldM,V'!&lt;i Ham~
Mhna•!&lt;ioUI ~~Ot-t noll, night
\\'innlpt•JI: at (\dpr~ , n IJr:ht
\\'t•dnl"'d"-v'!&lt;i ~urh •rran sacl lon10
·
&amp;..t•haJI
MII""AU iaot• - As~pd pitt.'hCnl Odl'll
-IOIWII, Tom Fllt'randRa,v Krawt·z)il lllld
t' lllcht,.'l" RuhPn Rodrigoc-t t o minor
ICIIIJ'H' l'amp.
1\it'~' \'ork {AL) - PlaCPd ol tllflf'ldr r
Oil\(' Winfield , ~ h11ck) and l~:~nddl•rs
Wllo..Yftl' To!Won and Rafuel !o\antanu on
th e diM&amp;hlf'd ib;l.
Nt&gt;w l'ork ( NL) - Ouj riKitli•tl inllt•ldt•r
frai~Shlpl~· andt•uit·ht'r Phill.omhardi
toTidl&gt;watt'r of thto lntPrmtlomiiA• ap•
(,\Ai\); ,opUoned plleht&gt;r .Jadt Sa\'1111;1' to
T1di'WIIIt'r: m umed plt~ht•r ll'ffln nl&lt;O to

Tldll"·att•r.
Phlhulelphla - Dt&gt;l&lt;;lpalt'd lnli~ldl• r
Tom Bllrreltandoulllt&gt;ldcr Eric Bullock
for rt!:l.'lsll{llmt'nl to tht&gt; minor lt•af!:ut'll :
rctumt&gt;d pitcher Todd Frohwlrih lo
St:riUitonM' Ilkt&gt;fi· Barn• of tin• lniHn;l·

ttoral

lA'~

S('~th•

(Ai\AI .

Purcha~Wd lht' cunlrnd

-

of

oudlrtck&gt;r Kt•n Grllft•)" ,Jr.; optlo,.._•d
outflrhk&gt;r ·Ill,\' BuhRPr llndpth•ht•r R•· a;~t·
Doblt' to f~ti!IIU'Y of 1tw Pacllh: Co..~t

I.I'».Pe (A.t\AJ: oulrll{hlt'd outflddfor
Mt ke Klnll:fr~·, pKt•her 8111 " ' llldn110•1U1 d
plt('h&lt;'f ('olin Ml' LMUI(hlln lu fiiiFY ·

'fi'K:L~ RI'II!IIIII{Ded pltchPnl l)r., ...
Hall 11nd Dllrrel ,\kerfl•ldoo lu Oklahornll
ftl ~of the i\mf&gt;ri('IIP Allliut:l !dkln ( AAA t •
Toronto- Sold pltt' hf'r M:trk Eh·hhorn

to J\II;UIIU.

Colltol{f'
rtndn,.tl - Namf'd Boh HuK~~:In!O of
r\krtm mt'll's hWiktthall &lt;.'Oa&lt;·h.
OIIL~I'Ihuro Shu"- N11mt&gt;d .John Glan•
nl~

men' !i hiiS~thall cuuh .

HofMn~ N'anwd Rh•hard
.~Ol· t· er COIICII,

Nuln11.1l

SC. Francl~ (Pa.) - Named Funk
Pf'rl'OIIz:d head foothall t-'Ou c h anti
a~~!4ol\iul1 athiPih.' dl"'ctor.

.l

Berry's World

~ : :Ill

Qu1•twt.' aA St. Lolil!&lt;i , M: !!~ p. rn .

Thtu~ta,\' ' ~ ~ons

i\1irJntsMa ""·

Thursda,v's Gumt'!O

Munt"·al L1.l81•fllllo. 7: :Jl!p.m.
Hartftml 111 Pttt.'lhu r)th. 7: :!5 p .m .

OakiUnd Ills It. Sa11 Fr~n c bt•u (s.; J:!

Vincent Carroll

looks forward to the hysterical
campaigns, rough-and-tumble
lobbying and statewide referen·
dums that will become standard
fare If the Supreme Court trims
the scope of Roe vs. Wade. But

( 'hlcll(u I~Lt

San IJit'ICO 6, Oalllornlia1
,1\Uanbl G. Nt•w York I ,\L I'.!

----------------------------

Rt•,uJl ..

.~~::
.H-1
.-1'!1

I'! H

l"ATIONAL LEAGUE
san DirKO
IM
St . Louill
I~

'

Wednt•~».Y·~

INSTITUTE , W.Va. - Scott pitched all seven Innings . AlexGheen and Mike Coman each had ander had the loss for WVS.
Th e win improved Rio
home runs Wednesday to boost
the Rio Grande baseball team to Grande' s record to 8· 7 overall
a 5·1 defeat of West Virginia Stat e and 7·6 In District 22.
Coach Dave Oglesby said he
· In a single nine·inning contest.
Gheen, a senior catcher from was encouraged by the victory
Middleport, andComan, a sopho· over WVS, which has been a
more infielder from Chillicothe, powerhOuse within the WVIAC In
led the Redmen in hitting by th ~ 11 seasons Bailey has
going two for four and two out of coac \ted there.
1n addition, Oglesby said he
live . respectively.
was
pleased with the record
Ifl their ea r lier meeting this
weighing
more heavily in the win
season, Cal Bailey's Yellow
column
following
last weekend 's
Jackets defeated th e Rio men
twin
losses
to
Marietta
.
15·2 on March 14 at Stanley L.
"We picked a good tim e to
Evans Field .
Leading the hitting for WVS break ou t of it,' " he said. " It's just
was Holden, who was two for what we needed. Beating a team
three, including a home r un tha t as good as West Virginia State is
put the hosts on the score boa t'd th&lt;; thi ng we need to pump us up
prior to opening play in the
for the only time.
Mid
-Ohio Conference. "
In his first appearance lor the
The
Redmen return to action
Redmen on the mound , Darrell
Sunday
at West Virginia Tech in
Marcum (sophomore, Hamilton )
a doubleheader to begin at l p.m.

Wilmington hands Rio ladies
two losses in district action

NATIONAL Bt\SKETBA.LL ASSO(' .

J.l 17
12 13
l.f 19

1:1 Iii

l'h&gt;l roll

I

li&amp;~

Bo:.ton I ll~. Po rt\:v1d !17
!\llanta I:tO, Wastin~on IO :l
In dlnna 16. Ml amlllt c
f'hlua:o 106, Mlhn~uket• 102
Dt•trott lOS, Utah IM (OOTJ
1•.\ Cllppl'I'S 111. Sllcramt&gt;nlo lOti

Mllwutli~Pl'

.

.5113

.-1111
.16-1
.162
.-182

New Vorl.::
Ballimol"t'
Callforma

o,..tlook for sugar remains sour

currently being sued by his
former mis tress , Margo Ad ams,
cha rging breach of contract.
"II It wasn 't for us two. these
people wouldn' t have any thing to
wri te about ," Boggs said toRo se,
gesturing to a group of reporters.
Since the commissioner's of·
lice acknowledged Its Investigation Into " serious allegations"
concerning Rose, baseball's all·
time hit leader ·has faced a dally
regimen! of writers, radio repor·
ters and camera crew s dogging
his every move.
Boggs spent five minutes In the
Cincinnati dugout chatting with
Rose, a three·lime National

Gheen, Coman hit homers
as West Virginia State falls

Tort~nlo

a"::

.l ... , .. .{ •, .

lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Exhibition

Today in history

..'

economy.
We conducted a three-year
Investigation of La Quina and It is
clear that Salinas will need
nerves of steel to keep La Quina
behind bars. The last president of
Mexico, Miguel de Ia Madrid,
started out with the best lnten·
tlons, too. But after two years of
trying to clean up La Quina's
union, de Ia Madrid gave up.
De Ia Madrid was elected In
1982 on promises of "moral
renovation." La Quina did the
new president a favor by throw·
lng him a sacrlflclal lamb,
Hector Garcia Hernandez, an
aide lo the union leader. Garcia
was charged with stealing millions of dollars from the union,
and decided he didn't want to be
the fall guy. He fled to Texas, but
armed thugs hauled him back to
La Qulna'shouselnMexlco, from
which he was whisked Into a
Mexico City prison.
Garcia turned the tables, blamIng La Quinz for skimming

By United Press International
Baseball's two most notorious
boys of spring met and shared a
few laughs Wednesday.
Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose
and the Boston Red Sox' Wade
Boggs, sat tog ether in the Reds'
dugout befor e the sta rt of the
Clnclnnat I·Bos ton e xh ibl tlon
game.
Rose , who is being investigated
by the commissioner's office for
allegedly gambling on baseball
games, ·was sitting In the Red s'
dugout when Boggs jumped ln
and grabbed a seat next to him .
Boggs, a five· time Amer ican
League bat ling champion, Is

PREVENTS BRAWL - Chicago Cubs first baseman Lloyd
McClendon (left) Is held back by Seattle catcher Dave Valle as
McClendon tries to approach the mound to talk to Mariners pitcher
Mark Langston while home plate umpire Gary DarUng looks on In
Wednesday's Cactus League game in Mesa, Ariz. No brawl
resulted, and ifie game continued. (UPI)'

It's one of those unexpected
ironies: The 16-year debate over
legalized abortion has vented a
volcano of passion and bitterness
- but also a steady current of
uncertainty.
Not only do Americans remain
far from agreement on abortion,
a great many of us haven't really
chosen sides. We awkwardly
avert our eyes while a core of
combatants from each opposing
•
army - " pro·llfe" .and "prochoice" - targets its enemies
with withering rhetorical
broadsides.
-:
Yet soon the rest of us may be
•.
By United Press International
•.
drafted Into battle. Within a few
•
: Today Is Thursday, March 30, the 89th day of1989wlth 276tofollow. · weeks, the U.S. Supreme Court
wlll hear a Missouri case that
: :The moon Is in its last quarter.
could result In reconsideration of
:~~n:: s:~s :ae:sc~~· ~~~~:rand Saturn.
Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 opinion
legalizing abortion throughout
:Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They include
the land. The court has four
Spanish painter Francisco Jose de Goya In 1746, English author Anna
probable votes to overturn Roe
~well ("Black Beauty") In 1820, English social reformer Charles
(Justices White, Rehnqulst, Sea·
Qoolh In 1840, Dutch painter VlncentvanGogh ln 1853, Irlshdramatlst
and Kennedy) and four
lla
Sean O'Casey ln 1880, former CIA director Richard Helms and singer
opposed
(Blackmun, Marshall,
~rankle Laine, both In 1913 (age 76), actorWarrenBeatty In 1937 (age
Brennan
and Stevens): Sandra
5jl), and British guitar virtuoso Eric Clap ton in 1945 (age 44).
Day O'Connor, known to hold
•
reservations about Roe, Is likely
;:oa this date ln history:
to determine how tar the court
·:In 1867, Secretary of State Willi lam Seward reached an agreement
proceeds If It reverses direction.
Wtth Russia tor the purchase of Alaska for 17.2 mllllon In gold.
If Roe falls and regulation of
:In 1923, the Cunard liner "Laconia" arrived In New York Clty,
abortion devolves to the states,
becOming the first passenger ship to circumnavigate the world, a
the ambivalent majority (myself
cl'rutse ot 130 days.
1
Included) wlll have no place to
;.In 1975, the South Vietnamese city of Da Nang fell to North
hide. In many states, we'll
VIetnamese forces.
probably find ourselves casting
;·In 1981, President Reagan was shot and wounded by John Hinckley
votes
In .referendums on whether
Jj. White Houle Press Secretary James Brady, a Secrel'Servlce
to
restrict
abortions, and If so by
aaent and a Washington policeman also were wounded In the Incident
how much - and then facing the
olltslde a Washington hotel. Hinckley was found not guilty by reason
same decision two and four years
rf/, Insanity.

::i:::

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3 :

.:.:.:::=~:::..:::::....:==--.......----R-o
_s_e..:..::,:.::.:B:.!....o=g=gs~s:;..h-ar-e~la_u_g-=-h-s_p_r--=-i-or____:.to-----:ti:-;-lt~.

Page-2-The Deily Sa•tiuel
·Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio
Mad'l30. 1989
, Thursday,
__

Arrest of 'godfather' spells ~ouble

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Dear Editor:
'o n March 20th a list of 148
mimes appeared ln the Dally
!kntlnel of those veterans from
Qelgs County who gave their
ltyes In W.W.I, W.W.II. Korea,
and Vietnam.
;:The American Legion FeeneyBennett Post 128 of Middleport Is
p{annlng to·erect a memorial to
tl!ose who enlisted from Meigs
eounty and gave their lives in
these wars.
: Those persons who have family
•

Pomeroy- Middl~. Ohio

Thursday, March 30, 1989

The Rio Grande women's soft ball team los t Its first doubleheader of the season to Wilming·
ton .College at Wilming ton
Tuesday, 22-4 and 11 -2.
The opener for the 1989 Redwo·
men team had been set for March
23 at home against Capital , but
the two games were postponed.
In the first game against
Wilmington, the main hitters for
the Redwomen were Julie Fot·
ten bury (freshman , St. Paris),
Kathy Bell (freshman, Wh eelersburg) .and Marlo Kistler (sopho·
more, Sugar Grove ) with a single
hit each.
Top hitters lor Wilmington
were Anderson, with a home run,
triple, double and single; Neal,
with a triple, double and single;
and Gregg with a double.
Fottenbury was the pitcher for
Rio Grande. She surrendered 22
runs, 14 hits, two doubles, one
triple, two home runs , three
strikes and seven walks In six
innings. For the Lady Quakers,
Sprinkle gave up four runs, three
hits, two 'strikes and two walks
within seven innings.
The Redwoinen recorded three
hits and four errors and Wliming·
ton netted 19 hits and six errors.
In the second game, the Redwomen had slightly bette r luck
with Laura Clellan (senior, Lan·
caster) who had a triple, double
and a single, and Jennl Couch
(sophomore, Pomeroy) who re·
corded a single.
Wilmington advanced with the
help of Anderson, who had a
triple, double and single, and
Neal's triple and single.
Pitchers were Fottenbury for
the Redwomen and Dumburgh
for the hosts. Fottenbury gave up
11 runs, eight hits, one double,
three triples and five walks In six
innings. Dumburgh surrendered
two runs, four hits, two strikes
and two walks.
In this game, the Redwomen

·VCR
REPAIR

1989 SCHEDULE
i\prti1- Whrelln£: JPsult ..... .............. ... ll

April 8-"'est Liberty .......... .... ....._....... H
1

Aprl1 11- 0hlo Domini~ .. ................ .. A
t\prU l:l--()l.lerbeln ........... ... .. ..... .. .. ..... A

April 15--Mt. Vertlon Nuarene ............ H
Aprill7-Morehead State ......... .... ....... A
April 18-Charleston ...... .... .. ................ H
A1•rll 20-Wust VIrgin~ Tech ............... H
April 22-Urbana .. ........ .. ... .. ................ H
~1&gt;-Conconl .. .............. ................ A.
April Z7-8hawnec State .. .... ................ A

April

i\prtl 28-Toumament .............. ........... A
Apr1129- Toumamenl ....... ................... A
May ~1\tarietta ,. ............................... H

Boston edged Cincinnat i 7-5, Toronto blasted Del rolt 12·3,
Texas edged Baltimore 4·3, Min·
nesota nipped the New York Mets
6·4, Pittsburgh shaded the Chi·
cago White Sox 5·4 and Montreal
outscored Los Angeles 13·11.
In the Cactus League, Cleve·
land slammed San Francisco
11·4, Seattle nipped the Chicago
Cubs3-2, theOaklandA 'sdowned
Milwaukee 5·3 and San Diego
clipped California 6·4.

Court rules San Diego be
disqualified in cup race
NEW YORK (UPI) -A judge Schuyler was the only orlglnal
has sent yachting's top prize cup owner still alive when the
"Deed of Gift" vaguely spelllng
from Sari Diego to New Zealand,
ruling that Stars &amp; Stripes out cup competition w~s updated
skipper Dennis Conner created a In 1881 and 1887.
Clparlck found that Conner's
"gross mismatch" last year by
club
"violated the spirit of the
racing a sleek catamaran
deed."
against the challenger's more
"San Diego was well aware of ·
traditional yacht.
the
risk It ran when it chose to
"It Is clear that a catamaran
may not defend lnAmerlca'sCup foUow the unprecectented course
of defending In a catamaran,"
· competition against a monoshe said. "Barely paying lip
hull," state Supreme Court Jusservice to the significance of the
tlcp Carmen Clparlck said in a
competition, its clear goal was to
ruling Issued Tuesday. "Accord·
retain the cup at all costs so that
lngly, San Diego shall be dlsqual·
it could host a competition on its ··
!fled in the September 1988
own terms.
competition."
America's Cup holder Conner
had defeated New Zealander
David Barnes, 2-0, Ina three-race
The Daily Sentinel
series off San Diego.
Conner's Stars &amp; Stripes easily
(USPSUJI.tM)
A Dlvllh;ta of Multtmedla. Inc.
defeated the New Zealand, a
single-hull sloop stretching 90
PublishOO every afternoon, Monday
feel at the waterUne, with his
lhrqh Friday, 111 COurt Sl., Po·
mercy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
twin-hull catamaran, which,
Uahlng COmpany/ Multtmedia, Inc.,
though smaller, was much faster
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 99'1-21:56. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
than the larger Kiwi yacht.
Ohio.
''To sail a multi·huUed yacht
against a mono-hulled yacht .. . Is
Member: United Preis International,
Inland Dally PressAssoclatlonand the
to create a gross mismatch and,
Ohio Newsp.~~~per Assoclanon. Nat tonal
therefore, Is violative of the
Advertising Representative, Branham
donor's primary purpose of fos·
Newspaper Sales, 733 Tbtrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
terlng friendly competition," Cl·
'
parlck ruled.
POSTMASTER:
SE-nd address changi!S
to The Datly SenUnel, W Court St.,
The dlsqual lflcallon stripped
Pomeroy, Oblo 0769.
San Diego of Its right to the cup
and awarded it to New Zealand's
SUJISCIUPTION KATES
By Carrier Or Mot• Route
Mercury Bay Boating Club One \\'eek............ .... .... ...... .........$1.40
though New Zealand was beaten
One Month ...... .... ; ......................$6.10
on the water.
One Year ......... ....... .. ............... $72.80
"The court Is mindful that
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
forfeiture Is a drastic remedy,"
()ally ....... .. ................... ...... . 25 Cents
Clparick wrote, but said her hand
Subscribers not deslrtng to pay the car·
was forced because neither party
rler may remtt In advance direct to
suggested an alternative.
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit wm be gtven carrier each
The United States, which lost
week.
the cup to Australia In 1983, had
No subacrlpUons by mal\ ~ltted ln
only regained It In 1987.
areas where home earner servlce ts
The judge urged the Mercury
avaHable.
Bay club to fulfill Its obligations
Mall Subocrlp!loM
of America's Cup competition
Inakle Melp CountJ
' 'In the spirit of friendly competl·
' 13 Weeks ..... ,..... .. ...... ............... $19.24
26 Weeks ....................... ........... $37.96
lion" established by George L.
52 Weeks ..................... .. .. .......... $74.36
Schuyler, one of five men who
Out.We Melp County
founded the competition at the
13 Weeks ..... ............ ............. ... . $20.80
2G Weeks ................. ...... ........... $40.30
New York Yacht Club in 1857.
52 Weeks ............................. ..... $75.40

Next Year, Worry About Your
Tan Line Instead Of Your Bank Line!

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'

had lour hits and one error. whlle
Wilmington recorded 12 hits and
live errors .
The Rio ladles were scheduled
to play a doubleheader Thursday
at West Virginia State and ar e
home Saturday for a twin bill
with Walsh.
REDWOMEN SOITBAt.L

League batting champion and
lifetime .303 batter who has
always enjoyed talking about the
aN of hitting.
' 'If 1 was a manager pitching to
you with two strikes , I'd lob the
ball in underhanded," Rose said
to Boggs. "You're a .350 hitter
and with two strikes , you're a .450
hitter. "
In Grapefruit League action ,
Philadelphia routed St )-outs 7·3 ,
Kansas City clipped Houston 7-4,

ATTENTION BUSINESS OWNERS/MANAGERS: WE CAN AUTOMATICALLY""~
DEDUCT VACATION CLUB PAYMENTS FOR YOUR EMPLOYEES.

Please Call Us For More Information.

·-

HOME
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�Thunday, March 30, 1989
Thursday, March 30, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs... --..

St. John's captures NIT cage tournament
By MIKE WElL
UPl Sports Writer
NEW YORK - St. John 's
victory In the National Invitation
Tournament was as much a
tribute to Its rich past and
promising future as it was a
reward In the present.
"We suffered a tragedy with
the Joss of Katha," senior Matt
Brust said of Katha Quinn, the
school's late sports Information
director, after the Redmen defeated St. Louis 73·65 In the
tournament final. "People call
me the spirit but the real spirit

was her."

•

"

NIT CHAMPS - Lou Carnesecca, St. John's coach, gets a big
hug from his star Jayson Williams after the Redrnen won the NIT
by defeating the St. Louts Bllllkens 13-65. Williams was named the
. tournament MVP. (UPI)

Quinn died of liver cancer last
month at age 35. Since then, the
Redmen have rebounded from
their worst finish ever In the Big
East to take the NIT final for a
record filth time.
Jayson Williams scored 28
points, grabbed 18 rebounds and
overpowered a smaller St. Louts
llneup Wednesday night.
Freshman point guard Jason
Buchanan added a career-high 21
points for the Redmen,lncludlng
14 In the first half on 7 of 9
shooting, and handled St. Louis'
constant fullcourt pressure with
little difficulty. Buch3nan twice
missed the front of 1·and-1s, with
2:45 and 1:35 to go, to allow St.
Louis to get back In the game, but
converted 7 of 8 foul shots in the
final minute to seal the victory.
"It's easy to sit back anil say
now we did it, butnowtheworkls
going to start," said St. John's

Coach Lou Carnesecca. "More is
going to be expected next year."
St . John's starts three fresh·
man and loses only Brust among
Its pivotal players. WllUams,
who was named tournament
MVP, said no one ever expected
him to be MVP, but that too w111
change next year when he Is a
senior and es ta bltshed star.
"This Is only the SI!COnd MVP I
ever won," he said. "The first
was at boys club."
Roland Gray scored 21 points
.to lead the Blll1kens, 27-10, He
became the leading scorer in
school history as teammate
Monroe Douglass, who scored 25
in the semifinals and came into
the game leading Gray by 16, was
In foul trouble throughout and
finished with 2 points. Gray
wrapped up his career with 1880
points, 3 more than Douglass.
"I'm happy for Roland, sad for
Monroe," St. Louis Coach Rich
Grawer said. "In an ideal world,
they would have wound up tied.' •
St. John's previously won the
tournament in 1943,1944,1959 and
1965. Bradley had also won it four
Urnes.
The Redmen, 20·13, reached
the final with NIT triumphs over
Mississippi, Oklahoma State,
Ohio State and Alabama·
Birmingham following their
worst finish ever In the Big
East's 10 years, eighth-place at
6-10. Last year, Connecticut
came back from last place in the
conference to capture the NIT.

'Continued from page 1

Driver injured in accident

lead. The pair accounted for the
Redmen's final 20 points of the
period as the Bllllkens' struggled
offensively with Douglass playIng only three minutes because of
two quick fouls ,
"They had too many wea·
pons," Grawer said. "We take
Wllllams away, Buchanan goes
nuts. We take Buchanan away,
Wllllams goes nuts."
St. John's led throughout the
second half. The B!lllkens cut the
advantage to 44·39, but Williams
scored over three defenders in
traffic and and Malik Sealy, wllo
finished with 11, scored on a
breakaway dunke to push the
margin to 19.
The Bllllkens cut the margin to ,
66·61 with 1: 08 to play, but
Buchanan's 7 free throws sealed
the trtumph.

With the last two rounds on a
Madison Square Garden court
they often use for home games,
the Redmen went on the road just
once In the five-game tourna ment, coming back in the second
half to defeat the Buckeyes in
overtime at Columbus. St. John's
missed the more prestigious
NCAA field this year for the first
time since 1981 ,
The BIIUkens, who faced a
hostile crowd of 12,511 at the
Garden, played at Wisconsin and
New Mexico in the NIT before
reaching New York. But they
seemed more shaken by the New
York crowd, going 1 for 8 from
the foul line in the first half after
shooting 70 percent all year.
Buchanan scored 14 points and
Williams had 12ln the first half to
lead St. John's to a 34·28 halftime

One driver was injured In an accident at 3:30p.m. Wednesday
on SR. 124, 0.3 miles east of mile post 29, In Sutton Township,
according to the Me!gs-Ga!Ua Post, State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Shirley A. Holland, 41 Pomeroy was stopped
In traffic when her car was hit !rom ~hind by a~ other vehicle
driven by Ernest Baker, 16, Racine. Damage was moderate to
·
both vehicles.
Baker suffered a minor visible injury and was taken to
Velerans Memorial Hospital.
The patrol cited Baker for failure to stop within the assured
clear distance.
One driv~r was cited in an accident at 12:25 p.m. Wednesday
at the juncuon of SR. 7 and CR. 5, near Middleport. according to
the patrol.
Trooppers said a car driven by Gerald J . Overturf, 72,
Rutland, pulled from CR. 5 onto SR. 7, Into the path of a car
driven by Robert E . Fox , 60, Lexington, Ky. There was heavy
damage to both vehicles.
The patrol cited Overturf for failure to yield the right of w_ay.
- Another Meigs County accident occurred at 5:24 p.m.
Wednesday at the US 33 exit at SR. 7 where a car driven by
Ronald E. Jividen , 63, Cheshire, pulled off the ramp and collided
with another vehicle driven by Karen S. Sloan, 46, Pomeroy.
Damage was moderate to both vehicles. No one was Injured.
There was no citatiOn.

Two applications from Meigs County farmers totaling $80,000
have been approved for reduced·rate financing through the
Agr!-Linked Deposits program, according to a release from
State Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow.
In the 87 counties of the State 1,474 applications from Ohio
farmers were approved.
Withrow pointed out that after last year's drought, this year Is
critical to the recovery of many Ohio farmers. "A large number
of our appUcants stressed their need for agrl-link funds because
of losses Incurred during the drought," Withrow said.
The average agr!-Unked deposits request was $64,179. Funds
will be available to farmers and their lenders on Aprll 3,
In its fifth year of operation, more than 2,650 applications
were received for the $100 mlll!on available this year. To date, ·
$500 million has b~n committed to the program.
The Withrow Plans of Agricultural Link-ed Deposits is
modeled after a similar program for small business. The farm
program offers reduced fixed-rate financing up to 4 percent
below current borrowing rates.

EAST MEIGS- Boasting the
confines of a beautiful new field
the Eastern Eagletess softbali
team Is looking forward to an
outstanding year, having a! ready won back-to- back league
games with two no-hit pitching
performances,
Returning from last year's
club are seniors Trish Spencer,
Lisa Dr !ggs , Amy H ager, and
Heather Fin law; ,Junior Amy
Murphy; Sophomores Edna
Dr Iggs, T o bY Hill, Mandie Har·
r!s, Lorrie Baker and Mary Ann
Kibble.
These 10 girls will be looked
upon for leadership said EHS
coach Pam Douthitt. "Throughout our pre-season practices our
returning players have shown
some leadership, but l hopetosee
a lot more leadership !rom our
seniors In the future."
Lost to graduation were three
outstanding seniors who all
played major roles in Eastern's
starting lineup. Amy Bissell, a
pUc her and thlrd·basema n was a
first team all-SVAC, All· District,
All·State honorable mention
honoree.
Melanie Mankin, shorts lopcatcher was first team aii-SVAC
and All -District , while Bonnie
Koenig, outfielder. was honora-

ble mention all-SVAC and
all-Distnct.
Eastern was second last year
to Kyger Creek, EHS had an 11-7
overall record and a 9·3 mark in
the league.
Working hard to crack theEHS
lineup are pitchers Trlsh Spencer
and Lisa Driggs. who both have
pitched consecutive no-h itters
'
wlth re 11e f f rom Man dle Harris.
Amy Murphy and Edna Driggs
also figure Into the pitching
rotation.
Catchers are Amy Hager and
Lorrie Baker, whlle Edna
Driggs, Lisa Driggs, and Tina
Connolly weigh In at first.
At second base are Tabby
Ph111ips, Trish Spencer, and
Toby Hill; shortstop, Lee GliUIan, Julie Riffle, and Trlsh
Spencer; and at third are candldates L. Driggs, Spencer, Hager,
or Connolly.
The outfield turf is covered by
Heather F!nlaw. Amy Murphy,
Toby Hill, Mandie Harris, Mary
Ann Kibble. Lisa Pooler, Christina Pooler, Mary Jo Reed, Amy
Well, Lisa Golden, Carrie Gil !Itan, and Michelle Laughery,
Douthitt continued, "We need
to gain more confidence on our
defense. This team Is young and
not much experienced starting

out. We have some very good
athletes and I feel once we get In
some playing time and more
time on the field, that we will see
a lot of Improvement."
Our offense is coming around
as we have some strong hitters. I
have seen Improvement in our
batting everyday, butweneedto
polish 1up on
S
I our baserunnlng '
evera
g rls have played
summer ball, which is slow pitch
and has no stealing ' so stealllng
Is new to many of them. They're
working hard on when they can
leave and when they can steal a
base."
Concluded Douthitt, "Like 1
said before: 'We have 22 girls on
the team, 10 returning, and we
are lacking varsity experience,'
But we are young, and we will
give everyone we play a run for
it . The talent and potential are
there. I look for this team to be
the team to beat In a couple of
years. Wlthalotofhardworkand
dedication this group of young
players can go places."
Eastern Is coached by head
veteran coach Pam Douthitt and
veteran assistant Don Jackson.
Eastern Is looking for a bright
future, and with some luck that
future can be now.
Below Is a team roster:

EASTEkN IINI!l

VARSITY SOFTBALL
~"~roa-~.4.M
LOCATION

A~~~~ ~sy~~~vaiiey

:···: · ::· , ~
Aprii!IG-Federal Hocking ., ,, .. A
~P'll J~-~uthwestern ,,, .,, """" .. A
A~~~~~~r::,•;;;.,·: .. ::.:: · · · · - ~
~~~ll lt~~~~~ g:wk ·
· · · ·· A
Aprii22-Watertoro ." ..': .::.:: ,"'.'.' ::. ~
Aprii24-Hannan
Trace....
.
A
Aprll2s-Fort Frye.
.
H
Aprii26-Southern .
· '
H
~rii27-Wahama .. ,, , :.... , ,,, .:· ·: ·: A
May
Valley, ,,"
.A
ay 0°!-SoSymhmes
,_ ut western
, ·
H
May 04-Federal Hocking
:H

'

c!als would be convening In June HilL Fort Frye and Waterford
to consider expansion posslb!l!- would be two-hour trips.
ties, Invitations have been Issued
"We're just playing a waltto several other area schools . and-see game and we are willing
which might be Interested in
joining the SEOAL fold.
Planning to stay
·
Oak Hill's conference standing
is even more shaky than Jackson's. Not too long ago, Oak Hill
received an ultimatum to get out
of the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference. The message: leave
the conference voluntarily or the
remaining seven schools will
withdraw themselves (and pre·
sumably form a new league sans
Oak HUI) ,
Bill Haines, .O ak Hill's princ!pal, considers Oak Hill a cont!nu·
!ng member of the SVAC with no
current plans to withdraw.
However, Haines realizes the
Oaks have to look for another
home in the event that Oak Hill
gets the roundabout boot from
the SVAC.
Oak Hill, Haines said, is
looking ar the posslb!lltles cit
joining the Southt;!rn Ohio Conference - Ironton St. Joe is
dropping out - or the Scioto
Valley Conference, from which
Columbus Westfall may
withdraw,
Although he hasn't heard the
details of the TVC proposal,
Haines welcomes It as yet
another option. "Once we get the
letter, I'll probably go to their
meeting," he said.
An obvious downside to the
TVC proposal for the Oaks Is
travel. The majority of the
current TVC schools are more
than an hour's drive from Oak

EASTERN Jtll9

PLAYER

\'EAR

rrlsha Spencer• ........ ....... , ............ 4
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to pursue all the options " said
Haines. "If we make a m~ve we
want It to be one that will b~ as
good in 10 years as 11 Is now "
·

ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP AND PARTS

.THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
~iS

Fire destroys Meigs home
,I

•·

•DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN
•ALL INSURANCE CLAIMS

.'

On

. box-office than any other film In
' 1988, but was not nominated for
,, any major awards.
•: Other films in the running !or
best picture were "Mississippi
: Burning,"
"Dangerous Llal• sons," "The Accidental Tourist"
and "Working Girl."

The

CHIEF E•Z-LINER
•

••

~

•

ROUSH'S BOD SHOP &amp; PARTS
773-5024
lob louah, OwMr
21 0 South Second
.ICin, wv.
WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BILLING FOR THE FOllOWING:
OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
GENERAL REUEF
UNITED MINE WORKERS
BOILERMARIERS
PAID
.P.C.S.
MEDIMET
ADYACARE

.

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

10°/o DISCOUNT
TO THOSE 60 AND OYER.
ON ALL PRESCRiniONS

Wisconsin , northern Minnesota. stretched from New England to
.
northeastern North Dakota, Florida .
Up to 6 Inches of snow fell near
western Wyoming and south
central Montana, including 3 International Falls. Minn., Wed·
Inches at Billings by 7 a.m. EST. nesday and early Thursday.
Scattered heavy rain and thun·
derstorms were widespread
from Oklahoma across the easter n half of the country to the
re~rt
Atlantic Coast. where It

Hoffman, who has been nom!·
nated six times for best actor,
previously. won for his role in
"Kramer vs. Kramer" in 1979.
Challenging him for best actor
were Gene Hackman, Tom
Hanks, Edward James Olmos
and von Svdow.

Six forfeit bond in Pomeroy court

Stocks

'1lUISHER LOHSE

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ... ........... 26
AT&amp;T, .. ,...... , ......................31%
Ashland Oil ........................ 40¥.
Bob Evans ...... , ................... 15V.
Charming Shoppes ..............15%
City Holding Co"""""""'"" 15
Federal MoguL.. ....... ...... .. 51%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .46%
Heck's ....... ,...... , .. ,............... %
Key Centurion .................... 13%
Lands' End .. ..................... .. , 35
Limited Inc .................... .,.27%
Multimedia Inc ............ ..... .87¥.
Rax Rest;lurants ..... ,............ 2"11
Robbins &amp; Myers ... ....... .... 15'4
Shoney's Inc ........ ................ 8%
'wemty's Inti ..................... . 6V.
Worthington Ind ................. 21¥.

' ' ' \ r' J

OPEN DAILY 8 AM TO II PM
SUNDAY 1 TO II

'

__ _

...... MeC...... fi.PIII.

a.... Mil&amp; fii."'-

twa'*'•ll .....

,

au.-, tO:OO•-• to•ao,...

'

PRUCII.nGNI

MAn VAN VIANIEN. OWIIII
61

v

Ro. .
Men. ..,.. .... 1:00 •·"'· to I p.m.

I

CLOSED EAS1U su•AY

r '1
' ''J \,'

.........

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

PH . 112-ztll

'-"*or.Oh.

To meet Tuesday

-------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Tonight: Rain, with a low In the
mid 40s. Winds north 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain near 100
percent.
Friday: Rain, with highs near
50. Chance of rain near 100
percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday

Fai r Saturday and Sunday,
with a chance of rain Monday.
Highs will be mainly In the 40s .
Saturday, ranging from the;
upper 50s to the upper 60s·
Sunday, and In the 60s north to:
the 70s south Monday. Early •
morning lows will be m the upper
20s or in the 30s Saturday and
Sunday and in the 40s Monday, '

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
Elver Fox, Clifton, W.Va.; Helen
Kennedy, Middleport; Debbie
Coffey, Pomeroy,
Wednesday disch arges
Ralph Marshall, Alma Hayman,
Flossie Prunty,

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the EAatern Star, will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m at the
Chester lodge hall. All officers
are asked to wear their chapter
dresses .

"SUPER SAVINGS"

PEPSI

$279•

PLUS TAX
12 PACK

LONGHORN AND
$229
MOZARELLA CHEESE.........................
LB.
SUBS &amp; CHIPS
COOKED HAM

S2

69
$169
MIDDLEPORT GAS PLUS

:Middleport man
on 3 charges

1988 CHEVY S-10

1988 HONDA SHADOW

Stock# 93072, 4 cyl
NOW

WAS
NOW

S5995

S]Z95 IS6995

1977 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

1983 DODGE AIRES

# 941 12, 4 doors, sedan, front
cyl , arr cond, v1nyl roof,
l~!t trans.,
PS, PB, bit wheel, crurse

# 96701, 4 doors, sedan, V-B, aJr
, auto. trans., PS, PB, power win•
L.ntr1JII AM!FM radiO, stereo tape, rad1al
power seat, power door locks, tili
, while walls
INh-eel, cruise control, AMIFM radio, ra.WAS
NOW
tires, rear window delog,
drive, 4

szzgs

$

WAS

1985 PONTIAC TA

1984 PLYMOUTH
VOYAGER

l31ock # t22tl, 2 doors, coupe, V-8, air
10:ono ., auto. trans., PS, PB, power win·
power seat, power door locks, btl
crurse control, AMIFM radio, stetape, radial tires, gauges, buckel
rear window defog

# 964 II, air cond, a~io. trans',
, PB, tilt wheel. cruise control
·
WAS
NOW

S4995

5
1977 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

1987 DODGE DAKOTA

..

&gt;driving under suspension.

Othel'S fined In the court were

..
I.J.._-.___".:.:..__~~---~----r .::__ --h

.

-

38 and 41. a lottery co mm ission •
spokesman said Thursday . The:
jackpot was worth $3 million . ::
However. 91 players picked:
five of the nutnbers to wm $1,00()
each, a nd 4,200 players selected
four of the numbers, winning $75
ap1ece.
•

CLEVELAND tUPl) -There
was no wmner of the jackpot in
Ohio's Super Lotto dr awing Wed·
nesday night, boosting the grand
prize to $6 million for Saturday's
·game.
None of the tickets sold !or the
midweek drawing listed the six
wmning number s - 12, 13, 19, 35.

Hospital news

commitment to providing
your family
with quality health care.

and costs, disorderly manner,
• and Mike Hlndy, Middleport, $50
!. and costs, disorderly conduct.
;
Forfeiting bonds in the court
•• were Ronald L. Dalley, Portland,
~ $450 bond on DWI ; Camilla
Morris, Rutland, $450 bond on
., DWI, • and Wesley L. Wise,
::: Cheshire, $50 on failure to control
• his vehicle.

'••

No one claims Super Lotto jackpot

State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson announced today the public release of 14 audits of local
government units. The Meigs
County Board of Education was
Included In the list of audits of
eight schools, three townships
and three counties.
Ferguson said copies of the
reports have been mailed to the
Involved local and state officials,
at least three days prior to this
date.
"Advance release to 'the In·
volved pub! ic officials serves two
purposes," the Auditor said,
"one, to provide notice to local
officials of the Impending release
of audit reports, and, two, to
provide them opportun!t)' to
study the report prior to Its public
release and any Inquiry from the
news media concerning the contents of the audit reports.

One was fined and six others Terry Derenberger, Pomeroy ,
LB.
LB.
- forfeited bonds on speeding $113 and costs, public Intoxicacharges In Pomeroy Mayor Ri- tion; and Donald H. Call, Pomechard Seyler's court TUesday roy, failure to pay parking
992-3397
MIDDLEPOIT, OHO
tickets, $421n the ticket charges,
. night
·
· • Fined was Thomas Re!tmlre, and $50 fine.
;: Ona, W. Va., $48 and costs.
:·. Forfeiting bonds on the charge
were Thomas Bowen, Pomeroy,
- $45; Roland Dague, Columbus,
$46; Jennifer Parrish, Worthing·
ton, $47; Michael Rossler, North
Lawrenee, $50; Arthur Smith,
Chauncey , $47; Ricky George,
1
Rutland, $46.
,
Others forfeiting bonds in the
' court were George Atkins, Jr.,
, Pomeroy, $63, driving under
, suspension. and $63 giving false
information to a pollee officer;
That's what Dr. Dan Trent brings to the people of the Bend Area
Johnnie Harrison, Route 2,
with the establishment of his private medical practice in New Haven.
Pomeroy, $50, no financial reIt's the same commitment he's made at Pleasant Valley Hospital, where
• sponslblllty; and Sharon Long,
he's been an Emergency Care Center physician for the
Point Pleasant. $63, expired
past four years and where he continues as an active
license.
Others fined in the court were
member of the Medical Staff.
A West Virginia native, Dr. Tr-ent graduated from
•'
Marshall University with a degree in biological and
general science. He earned his medical degree from
the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in
1983, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
: ~ fined
City Osteopathic Hospital in Michigan before
Randy L. Stewart of Middlere-locating with his family, wife Linda and children
port was fined on three charges
Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
• when he appeared Tuesday night
Dr. Trent is looking forward to bringing a
• • in the court of Middleport Mayor
continuity of care to his patients and their families,
: : Fred Hoffman,
and working with the community for the good health
~
He was fined $10 and costs for
and welfare of all its residents. Appointments and watk-ins are welcome
~ expired registration, $100 and
from 9 a.m. to 5 p .m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and 9 a.m.
• · cos.t s on a re;ckless operation
to noon Wednesday.
; , charge, and $10 and costs for
·

Complete Une of V110etable
Bedding Plantl. Azel- •
Fruit Tr-. Oer11rtlum1,
Hanging Ba1kete, Shrubbery
andTr-.

counts, Romano sa1d.
Under lhe Racketeer lnflu·
enced and Corrupt Organizations •
Act, the defendants !ace forfel - ture of the $1.85 billion In :
"proceeds of their unlawful •
sc hemes," plus fines of double
that amount, or $3.7 billion,
prosecutors said.

been rocked by Insider trading
scandals.
Milken. 42. whose net worth
was estimated by Forbes maga·
z!ne to be about $800 m!lllon ,
would face a prison term thai
would " them-e! ically be in excess
of 500 years" if convicted on all

State auditor
releases

~ Terry Matthews, Middleport, $25

a.

continued from page 1

_c_o.:_n_u_n_ue_d_f_ro_m_pa_g:_e_1_ _ _ _

•AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AT
WHOLESALE PRICES
We Feature Fr- Repair

A fire Wednesday night destroyed the remodeled two story
wood home of the Ronald Barr family, Price-Strong Road, In
Salem Township. The Salem Township Fire Department was
called to the _scene at 7 p m . Wednesday . Origin of the fire Is
unknown, according to Salem Township fireman Stanley
Hutton. Hutton believes the home·was Insured. No injuries were
reported. Firemen were called back to the scene at 10:20 p.m.
when the fire rekindled.

In a very significant segment of
the American financial communlly," Romano said. "The investIng public has every right to be
cynical about the markets not
operating on a level playing
field."
But Mllken, who along with his
brother was granted a leave of
absence by Drexel after the
indictments, said said he would
plead innocent to the charges.
"In America, an indictment
marks the beg!nnmg of the legal
process, not the end," Mllken
said In a statement. "After
almost 2 % years of leaks and
distortions, I am now eager to
present all the facts In an open
and unbiased forum. I am
confident that in the end I will be
vindicated."
The 98·count Indictment
handed up In U.S District Court
In Manhattan was believed to be
the largest case brought in the
two years that Wall Street has

NEW YORK tUPI) -Prosecutors said It took the most
ambl tious federal probe of Wall
Street ever undertaken and the
help of convicted Inside-trader
Ivan Boesky to bring about the
Indictment of Michael Milken,
head of Drexel Burnham Lam·
bert Inc.'s '' junk bond ''
department.
Milken was Indicted Wednes·
day on federal charges of fraud
and racketeering In Insider·
trading schemes that a lleltedly
yielded $1.85 billion. Also In·
dieted were Mllken's brother,
Lowell, a semor vice president of
Drexel, and Bruce Newberg, a
former member of the firm's
junk bond department ,
U.S. Attorney Benito Romano
said the probe provided a rare
look at the dark side of Wall
Street where the rich get richer
at the expense of small investors.
"This three-year investigation
has uncovered substantial fraud

·:,LRain
--------------------------.J
man...
~-

•COMPLETE COLLISION WORK
TO YOUR SATISFACTION

NOW OPEN FOI
SPIING SEASON

991-5776
SYIACuSL. 0110

•

•FREE ESTIMATES

END OF MONTH SALE

Hubbard's Gree ...ouse

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Wednesday; ' Syracuse at 4:05a.m., Syracuse to Bashan
Road for Becky Winebrenner to Holzer Medical Center:
Middleport at 9:02 a, m. to County Road 5 for Harry Garten to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: later to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 9:52a.m. to Route 143 for John Stout to O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 12:37 p.m. treated Gerald
Overturf and Robert Fox at the scene of an auto accident at the
Intersection of Bradbury Road and Route 7: Racine at 3:42p.m.
transported Shawn Baker from an auto accident on Route 124 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Salem Fire Department at 7 p m.
to a structure fire at the Ronald Barr residence on
Price-Strong Road; Racine at 9:04 p.m. to Cross St. for
Rebecca Hill to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Salem Fire
Department at 10: 20 p.m. was called back to the Ronald Barr
residence for a rekindled fire.

SOFrBIILL ROSTER

Jackson, Oak Hill invited to join TVC
(The foUowlng Is an abridged
werslon of the article by Pete
Wilson, editor of the Jackson
Journal Herald, which appeared
In that newspaper's Friday,
March Z4 Issue)
The Tri-Valley Conference
(TVC ) is seeking to expand into
big-school and small·school dlvls!ons by adding as many as six
new members . Current
members are Wellston, Vinton
County, Albany Alexander ,
Nelsonv!lle· York, Trimble, Fed·
era! Hocking, Meigs, Miller and
Belpre.
TVC President and Federal
Hocking High School principal
Richard Roberts said letters of
lnv!tat!on were sen tin the mall to
Jackson, Oak HilL Waterford,
Fort Frye, (Reedsville) Eastern
and (Racine) Southern High
Schools. Representatives of
those schools will be asked to
attend the TVC meeting to
discuss the proposal.
Keeping Its optlo118 open
Jackson has been a member of
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Leaguefor64years, butJHShas
attempted to get out of the league
several times In recent years,
Including an aborted entry into
the South Central Ohio League
(whic h Includes Washington
Court House and Miami Trace) a
couple of years ago.
"I'd have to see the arrangement ," said Jackson principal
Tom Slater said of the TVC
proposal. "We're certainly not
closing out any options."
Although the SEOAL gained a
sixth member In Warren Local
several years ago, Slater termed
the current league situation
"unstable" and hinted that one or
more league schools were think·
lng about joining other leagues.
When there are only six teams
In a league, the loss of any
member- certainly two -could
very well doom the league and
send the remaining teams
scrambling to find new homes.
But while the Individual
SEOAL members have to constantly be looking over their
• respective shoulders, the league
has not given up on Itself.
Slater said that SEOAL offl·

EMS has 8 Wednesday calls

Page- 5

If convicted, Milken could get 500 years

Flooding...

"' ApplicationS are approved

:Eastern girls have 10 back from last year

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Daniel

~.

Trent, D.O.

Family Practice
138 Main St., New Haven, West Virginia + (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

_ __:,- - -· - · - - _ ______,_____ .!11- ----·------ -

,.,

--

1:::- ...

L

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend.
Family medicine:

Question; My mother, who is

86, has been bothered for years
' with what we call "fidgets In her ·
' legs." We have also heard It
called "restless legs." They
don' t hurt; they feel funny and
the sensation keeps getting
worse until she has to jerk them
or rub them. This makes them
temporartly better. The problem
Is usually worse at night and

disturbs her sleep. What's the
cause of this problem?
Answer: It sounds like your
mother has what's called restless
legs syndrome. I'm sorry that
she's affi!cted with this condition
which can certainly make her
uncomfortable but Is not serious
In the sense of being life
threatening.
The human body Is a marvelous and complex creation. In
normal situations our legs move
as commands are sent down the
appropriate nerve path unill they
reach the target muscles. At the
same time the nervous system

monitors this movement as It
occurs through a number of
"'eedback" mechanisms some of which we are conscious
of and some of which we are not.
For Instance, each time your toot
touches the ground as you are
walking down the street, the
sensation of pressure on the
bottom of the foot triggers
additional nerve commands that
start the next phase of the
walking action. While you are
generally aware of this process
and can alter the speed or
direction of your walking at

subconclous and almost
automatic.
In restless legs syndrome there
is something wrong In the nerve's
command and / or feedback
mechanisms. The funny feelings,
the leg movements you call
"fidgets" and the sleep difficulties are all the result of this
disordered functioning of the
nervous system ..
The pathways that nerve signals travel actually Involve a
number of different nerves.
When you decide to move your
finger, the signal to "move"
leaves the brain on a nerve cell

which must communicate the
signal to the next nerve cell. This
process Is continued until the
signal finally reaches the muscle. Medical science Is still
learning about the way nerve
cells pass signals along, but we
have discovered that they use
chemicals which travel across
the junction between the cells to
cause the next one to send the
signal down the line. Restless
legs syndrome may result from a
problem with the way these
chemicals - called neurotransmitters- are able to do their job.
Question: Mother's doctor has
given her nerve pUis, but they
dido' t help. She rubs her legs
with rubbing alcohol, bu.t this
doesn't make much difference
either. Her doctor has told her
that he doesn't know what to do
for her. Do you know what
treatments are available for th is
problem?
Answer: Some Individuals

Harrisonville community notes
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gibson and
. sons, Columbus, were weekend
visitors of Mrs. VIrginia Gibson.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. James·
Hewitt, Columbus, visited Sun-day night with Mr. and Mrs.
· Robert Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs . Denver Rawllngs, Albany, called on Mrs .
· Frances Young on Sunday .

Mrs. Frances Alkire visited
Thursday afternoon with Mrs.
Charles Byers, Middleport.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Stlementz were Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Dill and sons, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Young and son, Mrs.
Nancy Phillips and granddaughter, David Stlementz, Penny
Pridemore, and Barbara Young.

Plans were made to ·plant done.
shrubbery and to Install a sign at . ' Concern with losing the ReedsvOle voting precinct was dis· the Reedsville Cemetery at the
cussed
with members feeling ·
recent meeting of the Reedsville
that
voters
will not travel the
. Community Builders Club held at
extra
miles
to Long Bottom or
the home of Donald and Paullne
Tuppers
Plains
In order to vote.
Myers.
Retreshrnen ts were served to
Ronald Osborne presided at
those named and Lillian and
the meeting In which Grace
Warren Pickens, Ernest WhiteWeber, Ruth Anne Balderson,
head, and Denver Weber.
Ella Osborne, and Maxine WhiteThe next meeting will be at the
head were appointed to commithome
of Mr. and Mrs. Osborne.
tees to get the cemetery work

·: Riverview Garden Club meets
It was voted to assist the

• Reedsville Community Builders
: Club with the expense In mailing
: letters to secure money for
~ shubbery, a sign, and other
: repairs at the Reedsville Ceme. tery by members of the Riverview Garden Club at their recent
. meeting held at the home of
: Paullne Myers.
Hosts for the meeting were
; Mrs . Myers and Marlene
: Putman.
:· -Mrs. Putman presided at the
; .. meeting In which she welcomed
. Phyllis Larkins, Nancy Wachter,
Pauline Baker. )'4arllyn• Hannum, and Susan Whitmer.
Devotions were given by Ruth
Ann Balderson who read "AI the
Rising of the Sun" and "True
Meaning of Easter."
·
Roll call was answered by
members naming their favorite

•

Easter song.
Easter favors were made for
the patients at the Arcadia
Nursing Cen't er at Coolville.
Rabbits were made from small
milk cartons and these were
filled with Easter candy.
Games were played with prizes
awarded, and Marilyn Hannum
received the door prize.
Refreshments were served to
those named above and Mary
Alice Blse, Betty Boggs, Janet
Connolly, Mary Grace Cowdery,
Delores Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Ella Osborne, Grace
Weber, Janice Young, Kila
Young, Nell Wilson, and Opal
Harris. Favors of plastic eggs
filled with candy were given to
each one attending.
The next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Connolly.

~: Chester Council D of A meets
Laura Mae Nice was Installed
as outside sentinel, and quarterly
birthdays were enjoyed at the
recent meeting of the Chester
•• Council 323 Daughters of AmerIca held at the hall with councilor
Virginia Lee in the chair.
Pledges to the Christian and
American Flag were given,
Psalms 44:1-6 was read, and the
• group sang the first stanza of the
"Star Spangled Banner." ·
In April, the Past Councilors
Club will meet at the Pythlan
Sisters hall in Long Bottom at 8
p.m.

Chevalier
- birthday
•

,•

Mrs. Lona Chevalier was honored recently with a surprise
birthday at the Tuppers Plains
United Methodist Church. Mrs.
Chevalier recognized her BOth
birthday.
She celebrated with a decorated cake and received gifts and
cards from Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Reed,
Brenda, Lea, Roy Lee, and
Becky, all of Tuppers Plains, Mr.
and Mrs. Zenith Chevalier, Eric
and Amy Jo, of Belpre, Inez
Martenlz of Marietta, Mr. and
Mrs . Dennis Rucker, Danleile
and Brltiney. of Reedsville. Scott
Chevalier, Carla Powell, Daisy
Provance of Athens, and Rev.
and Mrs. Delbert Murphy of

\..,•

Vienna, W.Va.

~

Carmel
notes
Rev. and Mrs. Richard Young,

•

David and Allsia, of Sidney, were
the weekend guests of Mary
Roush.
Martha Lee, Becky Bentz and
the family of Mrs. Ethel Orr,
Chester, spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Greuser In ,
Logan.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Barney O'Brien,
JunctiOn City, recently visited
Eunle Brinker.
Phyllis Circle and her il'aDdson from New Haven, W.Va.
were Saturday visitors of Eunie
Brinker.
There were 80 people In attendance for Sunday school on
Easter.

•
•
•
•
•

.•
•
:
'•
•

•

~ •

.

~~

:•
•:
::
··
:
•

••

~
~

•.
·: ;
~ :
'·

"Do Not Let Reading Become
Extinct" was the theme for Ohio
Right to Read Week at Racine
Elementary.
Activities of the week Included
a trip to the Center of Science and
Industry (COSI) In Columbus,
having a dinosaur lunch, a
balloon launch, a dinosaur cookie
party, and book writing by every
student.
Displays including a large
Tyrannosaurus Rex replica were
featured on the bulletin boards in
classrooms and hallways.
Mrs. Mary Hlll's first graders
participated In silent reading,
book writing, dinosaur booklets,
making a "Land of Dinosaur"
.mural, learning to spell dinosaur
and reading stories about them.
Top winners were Tara Rose,
Brandon Wolfe, and Kim Ihle.
Top winners In Mrs. Karen
Hill's second grade class were
Josle Jarrell and Crystal Rose.
Their activities Included doing
' bulletin boards, writing short .
sentences on the Importance of

Erma Cleland thanked everyone who brought and sold
things at the district spring rally.
It was noted that Ada VanMeter Is In Overbrook Nursing
Center In Middleport and WO)IId
like to hear from her friends.
JoAnn Baum baked the cake
for the quarterly birthday observance. Those honored were Opal
Hollon, Mrs. Baum, Pauline
Ridenour, Sadie Trussell. Mar·
cia Keller, and Genleve Ward.
Others present were Sandy
White, Ruth Smith, Helen Wolf,
Doris Gre)lser, Kathryn Baum,
Mary Holter, Bulah Maxey,
Ethel Orr, Thelma White, Everett Grant, Esther Smith, Charlotte Grant, Eva · Robson, Betty
Roush, ' Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell, Dorothy Ritchie, Lora
Damewood, Alta Ballard, and
Virginia Lee.

have had relief from restless legs
syndrome while taking a medication called L-dopa. This drug
helps one of the neurotransmitters to do its job more effectively.
Nerves also have opiate receptors, areas whlf!h are stimulated
by a natural chemical similar to
a neurotransmitter. Some Individuals with the syndrome have
been helped by taking small
amounts of opiates which aid the
functioning of the nervous
system.
Rubbing medication on your
mother's legs will !lOt help.
Nerve pUls may make her
drowsy, but they will not change
the condition. Special medication
Is needed, and It may not give as
much relief as we would like. I
.suggest that your mother see a
neurologist, a specialist wl\o '
deals with this type of problem.
I'm sure that your family doctor '
can assist you In finding one in
your area.

FASHION
SCARVES

:Reedsville CBC meeting held

AT

1/2 PRICE

" Our Dinosaur Friends" were "
sung in music classes under the
direction of Ms. June Buchanan,
and Mrs. Debbie Hill's art

classes made dinosaur murals,
clay dinosaurs, and paper mache
dinosaur eggs which were given
to each classroom.

OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER

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'

Portland Elementary
notes COSI anniversary
Students at Portland Elementary participated Wednesday In
the Statewide Science Workshop,
"Science In a Balloon," In
ce)ebratlon of the 25th birthday
of COS!, Ohio's Center of Science
and Industry.
An estimated 2.1 million school
children from every school
across the state took part in the
specially designed "Science In a
Balloon" workshop activities.
Keeping In COSI' s tradition of
exciting, hands-on workshops.
"Science In a Balloon" challenges students of all ages to
investigate and discover the
nature of an Intriguing phenomena - the behavior of a coin
rolling around Inside an inflated
balloon. Now In Its 25th year,
COS! has served over 7.1 million
visitors, many ,of them school'
children.
The Portland. Elementary students were accompanied by Mrs.
Debra Harris, third and fourth
grade teacher, Mrs. Mickey
Kucsma, fifth and six grade
teacher, and Mrs. Patty Strub-

ble, first and second grade'
teacher.

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WALL MURAL AaTISTS - These second
:- gradestudents at Racine Elel)'lentaryhelpedtodo
&gt; this mural called "Digging Dinosaurs." Pictured

are, left to right, Aaron Abbott, Bobby Johnson,
Joshua Ervin, and Jesse Little. Right to Read
Week was recently observed at the school.

1: People in the newS.--------

Alzheimer group
POMEROY - The Alzhelmers
support group will meet at the
Overbrook Nursing Home on
April 4 at 3 p.m. The topic for
discussion will be "Joys and
Guilt." Refreshments wlll be
served.

$3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

2 DAYS
ONLY!
(While Quantities Last)

observed Right to Read Week. They are Stacy
Lyons, Amber Maynard, Rosalynn Elkins, and
Amber Huddleston.

STORY WINNERS - Pictured here, left to
right, are the story wrltlnc winners from the llrst
grade at Racine Elementary who recently

'

RATE 8.35°/o-8.68°/o ::~:AL

recent Right to Read Week. Pictured with hbn are
Barbie Layne, left, and Brandon Floyd. Porter
talked to students In all the classrooRl8.

. LISTENING CAREFULLY - Frank Porter
explains the various aspects of writing a book to
fourth graders at Racine Elementary during the

MANY PAnERNS,
COLORS AND SHAPES.

winner In ihe 13-week brandarama being held by Vaughans
Cardinal In Middleport. Here Ruby Vaughan presents a $100 gift
cerllllcate to her.

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pin the tall on the dinosaur,
making big books and reading
stories about dinosaurs.
Dinosaur songs, including

GET SECOND

6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT

Merna FDIC

fifth grade class were Faith Rose
and Jamey Nelson. Class activities included each student writIng letters to favorite authors,
reading and making reports on
Newbery Award Winner books,
creating dioramas, reading at
home to parents and siblings,
dinosaur reports, story starters,
and sustained silent reading. A
dinosaur cake was also used In
the celebration.
Jeremy Guinther, · Courtney
Roush, and Shannon Morarity
were top winners In Mrs. Deborah Roush's sixth grade class.
Activities Included sustained silent reading, book reports, magazine articles, making Iron-on
dinosaur shirts and a cake In the
shape of a dinosaur, reading to
the primary children, creating
new dinosaurs, writing essays on
women In . history , and singing
dinosaur songs.
Joyce Ritchie's Chapter I stu·
dents enjoyed making dinosaur
cookies . for the school, playing

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reading, writing stories, making
a dinosaur dictionary, writing
balloon launch annoucements,
Illustrating a favorite story,
making a dinosaur mask, doing a
dinosaur rap song, flannel board
stories, and silent reading.
Third grade activities In Mrs.
Jan Norris' class, assisted by
student teacher Mrs. Karen
Lyons, Included ,making dinosaur masks, writing dinosaur
stories, reading a book on dinosaurs everyday, and word
searches. Top winners were
Mat thew Hill, Amanda Theiss,
Danny Sayre, Tyson Evans, and
Kristen Hill.
Mrs. Donna Norris' fourth
grade class participated In dinosaur coloring, writing a paragraph on COSI, sustained silent
reading, writing a dinosaur
story, reading a biography, makIng a book, and doing book and
dinosaur reports. Bobby Wrltesel, Angle Carleton, and Ryan
·
Norris were the top winners.
Winners In Mrs. Donna Sayre's

•

THE CENTRAL TRUST

GALLIPOLIS

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Right to Read week observed at Racine Elementary

Thursday. March 30, 1989
Page-6

'Restless ·legs' not serious problem, just uncomfortable .

By .Joha C. Wolf, D.O.
Auoclate Professor of
Family Medicine
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine

•

Thursday, March 30, 1989

"JUST TRY NOT 10 WVE THESE STEAKS."
AI parliapoting locations.

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By WILLIAM C. TROTr
United Press International
THE ANTI-OSCARS: Sylvester · Stallone still hasn't won an
Oscar but he's cleaning up on
Razzies. The Golden Raspberry
Award Foundation gave its worst
actor award to Stallone for the
third time in five years because
of his performance in "Rambo
3." Razzies, which were officially announced Wednesday
while the Oscars were being
passed out, also went to "Cocktail" for worst movie and worst
screenplay, Llza Mlnne111 ·for
worst actress for "Arthur 2" and
"Rent-A-Cop," Dan Aykroyd for
worst supporting actor In "Caddyshack 2" and Krlsty McNichol
for worst supporting actress in
"Two-Moon Junction." The
worst new star was Ronald
McDonald, the fast-food chain
clown, for , his appearance as
himself In "Mac and Me.' '
KENNEDY AWARD CONTROVERSY: Ethel Kennedy is
In Na.irobl to talk with Kenyan
President Daniel arap Mol about
her plans to honor one of his most
outspoken critics with the Robert
F. Kennedy Memorial. The
$30,000 award is to be presented
Thursday to human rights lawyer Gibson Kamau Kurla, who
was jailed without trial for nine
months In 1987 after he filed
lawsuits charging three political
detainees had been tortured In
custody. Mrs. Kennedy decided
to go to Kenya to make the
presentation only after Kurla
was dented permission to travel
to the United States to receive the
award last November. U.S. Ambassador Elinor Constable acCfilmpanled Mrs. Kennedy to see
II

endures" ... Dianne Feinstein,
who was mayor of San Francisco
for 10 years, Is thinking about
running for governor of CaliforIRISH ROCK: With Irish acts nia. She's concerned that the
Iike U2, Slnead O'Connor and state's Democratic Party ·Is
Hothouse Flowers selling tons of getting too liberal.
records, organ lzers of the Third
SPORTING NEWS: Two baseIrish Rock Week will be showcas- ball stars with tarnished Images
ing the talents of a new crop of shared a light moment In Winter
Irish bands In London Apriii0-16. Haven, Fla .. Wednesday. CincinDirector Robert Stephenson said nati Reds Manager Pete Rose,
big crowds of fans and music whose gambling habits are being
executives are expected to at· Investigated, chatted briefly
tend what he said is now with Boston Red Red Sox third
recognized "as a musical event · baseman Wade Boggs, whO Is
of major s lgnlflcance." Irish being sued by his ex-mistress,
gu ltar legend Rory Galagher will before an exhibition game. "If It
open the show, which Is spon· wasn't for us two, these people
sored by BMI. the American wouldn't have anything to write
performing right organ lzatlon, about, " Boggs said to Rose as
Its Irish equivalent, IMRO, and reporters swarmed around ...
others.
Los Angeles Lakers star Kareem
POLITICAL NOTES; The Her- Abdul·Jabbar's scuffle with an
Itage Foundation, a conservative Italian tourist In a Phoenix
Washington think tank, Is creat- shopping center last year cost
Ing the Ronald Reagan Chair In him $1,345. He had to pay a $500
Public Polley to ensure "that the fine and $845 in res tltutlon to
legacy of the Reagan presidency Fernando Nlcolla, 40, of Rome.

Mol and a diplomat described the
talk as a " good , cord-ial
meeting."

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Friday &amp; Saturday 9 PM·1 AM
D.J. FRIDAY NIGHT, DON BROWN, MARlEnA, OHIO
D.J. SATURDAY NIGHT, J.J. MUSIC MACHINE

SIDE INN
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SAND HILL ROAD
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

'

~

�•

Pomii'Oy-Middflport, Ohio

'Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Thunday. March 30, 1989

Community calendar
THURSDAY
RACINE - A special me eting
of the Southen School District
Board of Education has been set
for 7 p.m. Thursday In the high
school cafeteria.

APPLE GROVE - Revival
services will be held at the Apple
Grove United Metholdst Church,
March 30 through April 2 at 7
p.m. each evening. The Rev . Carl
Hicks, pastor, will be the speaker
and Invites the public to attend.
There will be special music each
evening. On April 2 the special
s lngers will be Dan Hayman and
the Faith Trio.
HARTFORD, W.Va. -A revival at Father's House Church in
Hartford, W.Va. will continue
through April 1. The evangeliSt
will be Rick Weaver and services

RUTLAND -Faith Taberna·
cle Church, Bailey Run Road , the
Rutland area, will be In revival
Thursday through Sunday at 7: 30
each e vening . Everyone
welcome.
POMEROY - Meigs County
AA and Al-Anon meet every
Thursday, 7 p.m., in the basement of the Sacred Heart
Church , Mulberry A ve .,
Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - A birthday
party for all residents of the

LtLeche meeting
scheduled Apri/6

ERINNE N. KENNEDY

Kennedy birth
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kennedy,
Peach Circle, Middleport, announce the birth of a daughter,
Feb. 28, at the Holzer Medical
Center. The eight pound, one
ounce infant was 21 Inches long
and has been named Erinne
Nicole.
Maternal grandparentrs are
John and Anne Leahy, Hilliard
and the maternal great grandmother is Helen Morbltzer,
a! so of Hll liard.
Paternal grandparents are
Eva and Lawrence Kennedy,
South Point. Pa.ternal great grandmother is Ruth Kennedy,
Vinton.

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
THE HOME
NATIONAL BANK
Plolntlfl

WillARD WAMSlEY
AND
DEBRA K. WAMSLEY, AKA
DEBORAH K. WAMSLEY,
ET AL
Oefondonto
To Wlllord Wemoley and
Dobro K. Womoley oko Dol&gt;
oroh K. Womoley, whoHIMt

Overbrook Nurs ing Center with
bir thdays In March will be held
Thursday. Fa mily a nd friends of
the residents a re invited to
attend the par ty. Ice Cream Cake
will be fu rn !shed by Da try Queen.

Athletic Boosters are sponsoring
a baked steak dinner on Saturday , with serving starting at 5
p.m ., at the Tuppers Plains Fire
House. Dinners, $3.50. Everyone
welcome.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square D~nce
Club Is sponsoring an open dance
on Friday, March 31 , from8 to 11
p.m., at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Caller will be
Kent Hall. All western square
dancers Invited.

TUPPERS PLAINS
The
Eastern Athletic Boosters are
sponsoring a dinner on April! at
the fire house In Tuppers Plains.
The menu will Include baked
steak, mashed potatoes and
gravy, green beans, coleslaw, pie
and a drink, all for $3.50. Serving
starts at 5 p.m . Everyone
welcome.

start at 7 p.m . e ach evening.
Specia l singing will be fea tured
e ach night.
MIDDLEPORT - A birthday
party will be held Thursday,
March 30, at the Overbrook
Nursing Center, Middleport, fo r
all residents of the center having
a birthday In March. Family and
friends are Invited. An Ice cre am
cake will be provided for the
party by Dairy Queen.

The La Lee he League will meet
April 6 at 7 p.m at the Presbyterian Church, 8th and Main Sts . In
Point Pleasant. At the meeting
emphasiS will be on weaning,
starting solid foods and family
nutrition.
Topic will be "How do you
Wean a Baby?u According to
LaLeche League members, ex . perts warn that methods Involving abrupt weaning, separation
of mother and baby, or let ling the
baby "cry !t out" are not In the
best interests of the child or the
mother.
Additional Information on
meetings may be obtained by
calling 675-4439.

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club is sponsoring an open dance
ori Friday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. Caller will be Kent Hall.
All western square dancers are
Invited.

The name of second grader
Michael Ables was unintentionally omitted from the most
recent six weeks hnnor roll of
Letart Falls Elementary' School.

Public Notice
The following rul MUte.

oltuotld In tho County of
Mol go, Townohip of Sutton
and bounded end doacrlbed
a• follows: •'Being In Section No. 81xtewo t1111. Town
No. Two 12) 1nd Range No.
Twotvol121ond Lot No. Five
(5):

agreed upon. tho on•hotf of
tho north wall of tho Hotel
Alton that .. tendo above the
roof line of the two-otorv

Public Noticti

erecting
It Edwin
th1t time.
buldlng,
Yl()llch
Cook
· There wu •lao reserved in
the delld recorded in Valume
113, Pogo 184, to Roda Allan, her heirs 1nd ••igns.
that in cue ahe or they detired to extend the North
Woll of tho Hotol Allen,
beyond the pretent terminua
of ..id building toward the
alley. either aha or they
could build a four (4) inch
wall or a wall of greater
width, aa may be d11irld,
from the present terminus of
the North wotl of the Hotel
Allen, a distance of aevon 171
fill ton and one-hoff 11 O'hl
inches or to th• terminus of
the 8 inch by 72 foot strip
IOid in·dMd r8corded in Volume 113. Page 184.
Eilher aha or they shall
have the right and privilege
to tie or fMten nid wall to
the wall of the Edwin Cook
BuHdlng, It thil point.
whhout 1ny coat.
PARCEL NO. 2:
Being Lot No. 72 in the
VIllage of Middleport. Meigo
County, Ohio.
Also. Lot No. 71 in the Vii·
logo of Middleport, Moigo
County, except 42 foot of!
the north.-ty side previoui!IY
conveyed to Samuel Allen.
Slid tract of land being
loc•ted on Second Street ot
uid Village of Middleport,
and comprising 111 that pereel of lend tvinQ between thA
Hotel Allen on tho northerly
aide of said Lot lnd the twollory brick buHding owned
by A. ColdrHwood on tho
oouthorly aide of Mid lot.
Being pan of the real et·
tate conveyed to Huntington
N1tional Bank 11 Truatee.
from the Henry Swift E11ete
in 1968.'
DEED REFERENCE: Ao
to tho south 23 fOil ol Lot
72, Ooed Book 187, Pogo
678, Molgo County Dooda,
Parcel No. 3 .
As to the rem8inder of the

.'

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
Solo i11uld out of the Common Pl... Court of Maigl
County, Ohio, in the cMe of
Bank Ono. Athans, NA,
Plaintiff, v1. Yvonne H.
Scalty. et al .. Defendlntli.

w.

u•.

l•.

•tm•

Ilion-..--

·-

Wll

reel Htate. Volume 229,
Plfltl 831, Moigo County
Deed Recorda.
. PRIOR
INSTRUMENT
REFERENCE: Volume 296,
Pogo 883 and Volume 249,
Pogo 937, Dood Rocordo of
Molgo County, Ohio.
EXCEPTING from
t~a
above dllcrlbed. tho root . .
toto ond the Right of Wev
and EaaMner.t gr•nted along
with the ame, 81 delcribed
In Volume 304, Pogo 701 of
tho Moigo County Dlld Recorda;.
APPRAISED AT:
180.000.00. Tho reel oatoto
c.nnot be aold for lets th.n
two-thlrda of the 1ppraind

value.

TERMS OF SALE: Coah
on dollvory of dlld.
Jom11 M. Souloby,
Sh•lff of Motgo County
131 23. 30; 14) 8, 3tc

Thingo• - ' I n tho

~ADS

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Expires March 31, 1989

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Middleport, Ohio

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~-a'l!.!f Co1ble Bllla Hera

IUSINISS I'IIONI
1614) 992·6550
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core ratllators and
heater cores. We can
alsG acid boil and rCMI
GUt radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FOlD

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RACINE
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FOR EVERYONE!

Facttry CWo
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The nurai.tg staff on ,
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.IR CONDITIONING

1989

for uo during the lllneoa
and time of death; the
Middoport Em•goncy
Squad; to my noighbora
for the food and beaut~
ful flowers; tho lldi•
of t~o Calvary Bible
Church for all tho food
and also the flowers; to
friendo and family for
t~e beautiful flowers;
the Rev. Alan Block·
wood for the consoling
sermon and Terry Blockwood for l~e beautiful
music: to the Ewing Fu·

•.._.ftc.
Atr 0 SCIIIIIM"'

1988

•J-tr~l-

• ltlfSntiR 1• 'Sfwtlltlttd Tlrn
t Rftlftlnprlct

.

$7,188,
*7,988.

nwal Home, especially

2

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4ililtf
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•a ·--

1988
CADILLAC

.....

~

, . .••• 1111

.....,._,11¥111

If' ran gementt

were conducted and to
the Feonev Bennet Post
128, Middleport Americon Legion for thoir
beautlfuiMrvicet at tho
cemetery.
If I have missed anyone
I am very sorry.

Goodwin 1nd Famity
and
l~S~a;dl~y~m~i~o-~d~by~N~o~rm~a~J.!~~~~W~If~e~,~~~

Reward for information leading to the
arrest and conviction of person or persons involved in the · vandalism of
Richard Starr's log cabin on Boston Hoi·
low road. Incident occurred around the
18th of March. If you have information,
call Sheriff's Department at 992-3371.
All information will be confidential.

1988
•Automati&lt;Troran'nb·
PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
•Awc-RIOnlnt
OLDSMOIILEDELTAU
PONTIACGRANDPaiX .-r::f'! \- ~·~~~
BUICKLtiAIRE
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'-~

$12,988
·-WI- *17'988
·--L.otlll
·--- *17,988
AIIIFII
• 31.
Ton Ct II·
Ill

• Ron,_

. .h - 1
·--~
.~

.

•·~­
LHtlllr fntw...

•VII.....
•LOAD801

---------------------·---------------.----------------·-~---

TOM PEDEN
PPiotlltiltl• •

-............

Chevrolet • Otte allllrl •

.,...__

Ja.ll-·11,..,

f7lllolllk Clnuatll-1

~~~.- .. s .....
ClC!ft!)IUNDAY ·

·- ---

9-19-881fn

Complata Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS·
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS,
ETC.

DAVE'S ENGINE
REPAIR
992-6506
3-20-'88-1

mo.'

NOW O'EN FOI
BUSINESS

14th I llaln St.
Ptlnt I'IMiant, W. Yo.
We Buy Aluminum
Cono, Gl111, Brooa.
Copper ond More
MON.-F Rl.: 9 am-6_ pm

ur.• 1 om·12

Noon

1

Hand Woven
Baskets
Basket Weaving
Classes
Baskat Supplies
~EN

SATURDAYS

'10:00 'TIL 5:00

PAM ltiUIOAN •' OW Nil

992-6855

2-27-99-1

Bu.lek, Inc.

3 Announcements

......,,
..

..
,,
'•
•,..

••

..

,.

.

•
"
••
••
,.•

...

"•
~

'

•
,.

•

,,,,

Cllt• rtlldenOI on I uck RldcM
Rd. Woteh for otgno"" At. 150.
Abo 1 'MIIolpool J10ld ......
dryer •zoo. Llkt ntw. , v•
ldtehtn rongo, 110. E-lnl
candltkm.

tlld

~;;;:::=··

rrd .....

.an . MMI •
-

3t·Aor11 5. 9-8. Sundt¥

•

Mondly 1-IS. Ewrythlng

~h. ..

·······PO·mero;;····-······
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Listen ina

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE

Hearing Aid Sales &amp; San1ictl
CJ Hearing Evaluations For AU Aces

a
::c

z
-

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"
CertMied

VAUGHN

Lic«~ted

Shop

PUBLIC
108 High Strr'"
romtTav. Ohio 45769
Phon• 1614) 992-2922
2-3-'89 :In

LIPI
INIURANCI caD:

WITH
PROFESSIONAL
CARE

JEFFERY J. WARNER

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
... .._lult

"Free Eltimates"

PH. 949·2801
or les. 949·2860

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

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must .. topainlllo"

•Mobile Home -Parts
•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rentals

KEN'S A"UIJICE

SDVICE

992-7U9

985~H61

lt. 33 North .of

We Service All

OliO

Commercial
Rellidtntial

FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCUST,

CHERRY

S35

COMMERCIAL
.CUITOM IC.JTCHENI. aATHI
.eXftNIIV£ AEMODEUNG

•YINVL SIDING ...OOANG
I

1~6fJ .

DIID ST. n•tull

PER lOAD
DEUVDED

UGHTHAUUNG

INTEIIOI•EXTEIIOR
IOOFING
Jae &amp; labert Brown
Call Evenings ...

BILL SLACK
992-22~~9

Body Talk Tanning Salon
20 SESSIONS $35.00
20 session signup, bring a
friend to sign up, and
II receive one "FREE
it.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutter•
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
2-10·'88·1 mo. pd.
MASTas ruxmo tENTAL
DIY CLEANING SnYICE
SCISSORS SHAIPENm
usm SEWING MACHINES
AITEIARONS

SINGER

AND WillE

SEWING MACHINES

SINGER KNITTING
MACHINES

FABRIC SHOP
I TO W11t Mal11, Po••ay

4

U. S. II. SO lAST

INTEIIOR-EXTDIOI

SALIS &amp; SEIVICE
OliO

FREE ESTIMATES

614-662·3121
Authorized John
0-o. New Holland,
Buah Hog Ferm
Equpmant Doolor.

Flr•E~elp•••

Take the pain out of
pointing. Let me do
It for you.
VDT IIASONAIU
HAVE IIPIIINCE

614·985·41 ao

sor·•"•

ALLEN'S
HAULING

OF BUSINESS

We HBul8nd
Spread
Umestone
Dirt. Sand &amp;.
Coal Delivered
1 ,000 Gal. Water

Service

992-5275
3-.?.R.
'.'1-"1·1

Jo's Gift Shoo
SYRACUSE, OHid

Everything Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•Fiowor Pote
•Bird Batha
•Yard Ornemonts
8ecau11 of Cold Wulhor

Everylhin1lnslde.
Rinc Door Bell lor Ser¥ice
2-7-1 ....

l!lf/,

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Malik - Ctrttintlllll'l

VICTORY

BAPTIST

FREE ESTIMATES

Pucar Jam .. E.

Work. a-d,.,...._ to P.O .

c;:

Bo• 721 Y, Pomtroy. Ohio.
A• .,.,.
Bo••r'k

lotlln11_ tllflo 1n •
ohop, Olilo dor-

oerdwlllk tncludtd.

lmmedl•• emplo;oment. rtrtv
ar IU~. Awr... ul.., ...00
wHk. Write for hfDrm.tlon Md

IPPIIC1Uon.lrtn•'s12311c.rd- '
March 31•ttMtlpi•WoodLik&amp;
R•dn•. Chll*ln'tclotlwl. prom
dr....,etc.

---·-·'Pt-PTe&amp;iinr·----

wolfe. AdontlcCity, N.J . 01&lt;101 .

Orivn. gr111n hou .. lllbor ...
•ndtrMiplll'lt ... Plckup•ppiJ.
.C.iol'll at Htrrlt f•rml. P9r- :
tl•d. Ohla.

AVON· AI • -· Col Morllyn '

w.... 3041112-2141.

S7.50 •• TOll

Jult w.nt to e.rn ellltle •tfll
moner,? Or would you • • to
hwl 1 aerMrl ElllwwwtAvon

614·245-9557

.8 12· 284fl,

a., hllp yau bett. Mit yau csn ·
btlll Col -lty n Wnrll'. 304-

.

A..d boob i2r .-rlt100•tttl&amp;
Wrilt: PASE-1170. 111 S .
Uncolnway, N. Auror•. IL

Anrwunce na: 111 s

101142.

Port ~mo LPN. AI ohlllo. E - .
lam - · .. d bon . . .. Col
CathY w..,., AN. Corolmo• of

3 Announcements

Pt. Pl-ont. 30~1711-3001.1

Aoclrco '""' Wottht· T*• .. _
Shopo Dlot Pt.," and E-Vop

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Avell.tll• Fnrth

We '-'• ths low..e priCII on
chain .... ., .. •rtnv tri,.....
ony-o. Sidon Equipment.

304-1711-742t .

EAII N WHILE YOU LEARN-

, FREE VOC. TIUIININO. U.S·
~of \Abo' ftCliW :a ; tle"'
Jlon1 from young men
Md women for enrol"*" in
Job Corp. Mutt be bllt1 •n 1t.
1ge of 1•21. out af 1Ghool or
WoriL Mlny trld.. 10 ahOOH
from - frN room a. bo•d
prahttd. mtdlael tnd denltl
ctre. apendtng llauAhoe and
uvlnga. lee R-v Palll¥ II tiM:

"""'leo.

225

lth It, Pt. Pl . ........... , hDuN10

a.m. - 3 p.m. Wed. 3-29. or cell
344-1058 coMtet.

4

8

lolryo.,., In my ho- Rt. 2

Flotr"'* ora Dt!:.,dobl• ..r.
• .., .. r.~td. 304-17.. 3114
or 57&amp;-3811.

c.ll M-'ln Wed"'"'*"· Auct:ktBondld in
- · ol Ohio ' Uquldotlono.
f•n.. eat.t•• .mlq.... trtc.
niW, Ucent.t •

514-2411-5152.

AUCTIONEER

'Mnt• ftOil¥ booldng
aprtng ul•. 17 .,.. . . ..,.
rltn,.. Phone 304-273-3447
Rwenwtood. w.v•.
Ectwk\

W.V1. State Ch.mpiDn Auctloner. Ride Pe••on. Llaens.:lln
Olllo . , d - Virginia. IOOI!Ing
Aucllono. 304n3-571&amp;

ESTATE SALE. 9 A.M, Mllr. 30,
31 . Apr. 111. Furnlturo, clohto,
V,tt5o" cookwlre. chln1 •trt.
lln.U, f1111. prtMUN OliO. . . .

IMnt&gt;t. drlt&gt;- clothln~ much
more. 1 mil• out Send HHI Rd.

Giveaway

Siano·

Oood wotch c1oa. holt-· 1

9

old molt. · - homo In
country. CoN lt4-4Q.I211

--------TOP CASH pold for '13 modo!

~ ctd mtlo -

Md ntwer UNCI

Oobtrmon

kin... Coli ""• lprn.
114-441-8419,
Full

ttM

m.-tree~

In good

condition. Coli 514-4Q.7075.
Fomolo l«dlr Colle to good
ho- ..,.tilly In COUntrY. Col
114-8t2-3121.

6 Lolt and Found

c...-

Found II'OUnd Svnn
brldgo. coctoor -111 typo c1oa

white with brown
114-251- t37fl. .

tpotl.

Clll

FOUND' lmlll br-n Dochohund mbctd c1oa. North Qolllo
ochool oroo. Cioll 114-3181711.

Wanted To Buy

c••·

Smtth

Bulcto-f'ontl.., 1911 Eootom
A.... Oolllpctitl. eon &amp;1 4 44&amp;2282.

Complalo hauooholdl ol lurnJ.
ture

a.

Wiquft, Alto wood A

coal heaters. lwaln' 1 F ""lture

• Auction, Third • Ollvt,
514-4Q.3119.
Junk Coro wtlh or wlthovt
moton. Coli IMrv Uvoty. 51438..1303.
_Fur.:.:.nllu.:.:.
..~..
-d-.-.-~~..
--....-~~~-.
PI- or lnllro hauoohold. F•lr
prl-boln;pold. Coll114-44&amp;3111.
WHI buy or apprel•• anything!
Andqun. turnltu~='*·
......._ auta&amp; co
«• home
lumbhlf191. Mtrlln
I 14-241-5152.

oyor,

c... plng troll• 1n IIOOd ...... ~
Foundo Sot ar kovo wlthCutl- lion. Coli 114-317·0448,
kl¥ ch .. n. httarn A-..nu&amp; C.l Utsd tun~ thl pl101 or
814-441-0120.
Intire hou
otoo oolllng.
Lori: lloclc ootwkhwhlttp-o. 1147f2·2481.
In Hyooll Run ••• on Moroh
Coll 814-112-11422.
Pro11&lt;10 qulho. Alrr aondltlon.
Coth Dofd. Cot! 114-1112·5557
Lori: 2 Wolklr Coon Oogo. or
814-512·2411.
Hornloct&lt; a ........ Tburodor.
Morell 23rd. Coli Jolwl Kotlll• Ulttd furnhurw Ml d hou..,.ld
114-III:Z.IOIII.
oppllon.... Plio no aI ... 742·
2 041
Found: In Pam-. bt-* .,d _:~..:...·- - - - - - ""h• eordlr Colle wkh olloln. W•tod otondln~~~.-. nln•
114-8t2·3tll4.
30
Ill Ill.
2
•

28. ----OU-IIt-,----

7

Yard Sale

····-··o-allljjolis--·---·--&amp;Vicinity

R•,.,tllll•m_. taat... brulh
from und• power In•

eta ....

wood. 304&amp;7&amp;-2707.

PtrttlrnoPhl-- ..... b.
experitnoecl Call PerHnnll at- •
fioo. 30~tl711-43&lt;10. AA-EOE.

or MLT ASCP. F.. limo
potMiona. Flo•- Ill I lOth!'",
mu.. be .bletowork.,• .,.....
ohlft. Col para...,.. offlco 304- '
.1711-43&lt;10. &amp;A-EOE.
MT

Botrr• ... - f o r 2 ahl. . .

og• 4 • 7. Prolor ot .., hoDoyahlft. AopJv to:IMC-22. Pt. :
Ple•.m. WV 21150 ~ c•t of .

the Regiltw. C.mp Coni., •••·
Pwf. diM Ulpltl c•e alv• tDf
tt. m.t•lr ,..,.-.., Ret..,.

PI--

'""' 1nd •Diritnoe

,_.lrtd.

Sendr-..me8oxC11 in c.reot
Pt.
R"l!lot•. 200 Moln :
St. Pt. "'-rnt. WI/ 21810.

OFFICE CLERK: lmmlll•t 01&gt; •
enlng for ofiiGI cl•k It the

W..t•n SoH Con~...-n D....
trtdlnPolntPfotoont.AII_..
bll~let would bt g«1wof olltoo
clJtloo. euch • tv~a -

·'*'""·.

tWd. booldr..,ing, • • pr•
-•Ina O'"'*'ltlon from hlgt:

ocllool«1dtwo-·
In
00,..._ otflctwOI•NqUired.
&amp;.nd m~rrtnt ...,,. •d ,.,.

ollntr...,atlon t o - ... lCD,
224C Flm ...... ,~ ,,_....
WV.
255110.
by Aort 12. · - ·'
lng ul.y
•11.300.

12

Situations
Wanted

lntertor Painting._ FrM Eltl- •

mota 304-57&amp;-3753.

15

Schools
Instruction

f · · 200 or 4pm.
210. Coli
51
424fl.l223111tr

:.m::: "'

fiiiiii11VIIII:III
SI'IVICI:'

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN IUSINEIS
COLLEGE, 529 ~on M•
Cotl44&amp;-4317. Aog. No. 1&amp;-11,
10118.
Unfl sci Trudl Min•
Trude Drlv• Trllnlng
D.O.T. c.tHictUon Job Pier.

ment AMittsnat Hom• ltuclf..

/Roold.,. Trolnlna Fln.,oltl

Aid Awllabl&amp;

Accredit~ :

Mtmbtr NHSC. CoN ToU Froo
1-100.1141-11411. Loco! olttoo, .

Plrk••bura
Ctw., Fl.

W. Va.

Hdqr~ :

18 wantiid to Do
0.0fgt't Port_,.• S.WmHI
Don' t hMJI your ~~~ to •

-mill. CoH

30~1711-1117.

8octchoo - o r . hury equipment oper•tor, pipe lin•

CHURCH

Vinyl Sidi,.
525 North Second
Middleport, Ohio
S..mleu Gllltor
Roplacsntlllf Wlnllows EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
llown IMulotiGn
SUNDAY 7:00P.M.
Storm Do«1 &amp;
WEDNESDAY
7:00 P.M.
Windows

F2748A •

mltOfll on

dlont.
tnlnoclr-rdl.
- -Cofllt4- ...
HIYI modlcol
37.. 2305.

BOGGS

Ill• I

&amp;om.,..• to do odd lobi. E..,
rlenoed ftnot buildlr, dMn up

ca•

and RMMv•. Neut-.d. oa.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

GUYSYIU,

llg Ytrd Solo! Fri.. Sot., Mon.,

GAWA CG. AliA

Pt. P t - Job

tin

SYUCUSE,

thbor•ll10,213.tat711.471
lmmedl•• oponlnflll Colt C~
lundtblol 1· 31fi.73:J.IOI2Ext.

AVON Ill wlltiiShlrlor Spooro. •
304-17fl.t429.

Will:• Plllt.
Ph•mle'f·

MOBILE.
HOME PARK

DEAD OllUVE

NO SUNDAY

B&amp;B PAINTING

'Goyemrnent Jobll NDw twlng

4 flmlly yOrdllltAprlt 111. 2nd.
:lrd. DtWIIIoRunRd ., Longbol·
tom, Olllo. F - • -

3-1 0· '89-1 mo.

Cllirnl:

WANTED

SINCE

College Ad., 8yr110.1se.

STONE

.

#¥¥#

•METAL .UILQINOI
HOUSING. APt'. PAOJECTI

IAillndoblol 1-511-41.. 1et7
Ed. K1122 7 doyo.

Contact llalno taylor

1·100·421·3$35

742-2328

U&amp;o.- OAY PAOCES81NO.

I

... 61f-992·24771J

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

GOVERNMENT J018
lt&amp;.CMO.· •ae, 230 yw. hiring. CoN ttl 10fi.BI7·11100
Elct. A-1801 for currant -~~

lnlldt. rein or-·

IEUVDID &amp; WIUD

IIPIISENTATIYE
302 W. 21:4 St.,
"""woy, Ohio 45769
l'tt. 614-992-5479

32742-2203.

Pho na ordln. People o..t you.
No aperlenot neceus,., . Cell

&amp; Vicinity

PAINTING

A~~~mbi ... Eern mont¥ ....,..

Mot.

T-.. Morell 31ot th""'gh AP.'I
4th. 33878 FI&amp;Owoodl Rood.
Come to I Points •nd w.tth far
lfon• to ftflllll' loti home.
114-192-7781 110 :00-5:00
p.m.)

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.
Call AI 742-2328

RELATIONS

lmmll•e..,lng tor mechanic. ·
Exp•ltnoe nettiii'Y· Alreool\
Inc. 814-44&amp;-0471.

rooldtnoo. CountY Rood 15.
...... Grove Aa... Autl~rul

t.mity, on• t.... lng • •·
Morell 311t and April 1ot. 1188

LIMESTONE
HAULED

&amp; Aooocialeo

g1.
Cr.-n~W~' •

om•

lolge hovll. Wotell foo llgno.

&amp;-25·'88-tfn

Leesa Murphey

Frid.,..
Morell 3t. t :OG-3:00,
1178 Chovy Novo, Mltlo glrl'o

tprlng~, Me.

446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
Avenue, Box 1213
Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hrts. Pomeroy, Ohio

814-44&amp;-3418.

8ok 2203. Klufmm... FL

ctotHn~
wtaw, bed a

l:icensed Clinical Audiologist

Hom• typo tlllr- Aat 411-15 to

lve ln. ''"room A bo•d. cal

bUng Muolcol To&lt;ldlr .....
Mirt•l• ouoollocl No · - •
Wrttr. Jo·Ef ~nt.,.,.• P.o .

olot?m a•ovwlo_.
-lnl

3: LISA M. KOCH, M.S. .

SYRACUSE, OHIO

ClotNng-ktfenta

WOI'NI'II ltl 1ft1.
Clll' twp, bu-~

Mlec. h..,.,

985·4222
DAY OR2-1.5-1
EVENING
mod. pd.

.,......, • . _ . , . _ , .

2-:1-tlrl

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

.$1000.00 REWARD

. . . . . . lnc:ludlllllaprkt

--,.

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONlY

992·3801
992-6347

• t10c1r- - -

1989
FULLSIZE
CONVERSION
VANS

way the

In Memoriam
IN MEMORY OF
OLAN E. GOODWIN
WHO PASSED AWAY
19 YEARS AGO.
MARCH 30, 19?0.

•T_G_

1989 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME, CUTLASS CIERA,
BUICK CENTURY, PONT1AC ORAH PRIX

. . . . . ., .

o....

Bruce Fisher for the

• Alr'Condlttonlnv
t POWtr ltttrlnt
•Powrtrlrebl

CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

1. coupon )llf CUJ·
1
I* bi!IIP SISIIOn.
I w. ,, •so.oo p., Gam•
I
10 PNpla '65.00

NIASE Certifi.:i Mach.,ic

THE
BASKET WEAVE

The Family of
MARVIN LmLE
would like to th1nk the
folluwing people lor
their · ldndnoaa during

6:30P.M.
w

1 II&amp; Lim~

I
P&lt;H" G.no
I ,lk lOOI·S2

3t. Aort 1 • 3. 1-5. Gtorvo

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

DOOI PIIZI

3·2-'891fn

1 Card of Tha.nks

EVRY
SAT. NIGHT

:::::::::::::::::::::::~..!=:::::::::::::::::::::::~

.,u .a.

Help Wanted

Large moving . .,..._ Some tn·
tiqu•. Fri., a.... &amp; Mon. M•rc:lt

CHESTER, OHIO

992·9978
THUIS. E.L
P
SUN. 1.1. 1:U P.M.

Rep~~irt

RACINE, OHIO

Middleport.

Basham Building

MIDDLEPORT1 OH.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

992-2196

'

~

II

Most Foreign and
Dom ... io V•hid•
A / C Service
All Mlijor &amp; Minor

RECYCUNG

SER~ICE

We Cerry Flthing &amp;uppll•

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

1·21-'il-ttn

RADIATOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.

1

4-16-86-tln

Now location:
168 North Stcantl
Middloport, Ohio 45760

992·6669

Pa•arey, Ollie

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Ukf
DIAMONDS

l
t

Day or Night

PlUMIING &amp; HEA1riNGI

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

SMITH and
ASSOCIATES

PH. 949-2801
or Rts. 949·2860

•

I

l

11

&amp; Vicinity

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

I 2 H.O. FREE with COU.PO!I ond
1 purth.. ol min. H.c. Pldl-

GUN SHOOT

"At R101011able Prices"

Loc1ted Off Bypaao
At Jet. of Rta, 7 8o
143. Pomeroy, Oh.
1·12-"89-tfn

~.,

r---BINGO
POMEIOT .UGUS
1
CLUI
I
224 E. MAIN ST.
I

· 1·31-'BB-1 mo.

CUSTOM IUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

992-5114

Just bring in any new prescription or prescription bottle
from any area pharmacy with the above coupon end
receive 83.00 off our already low prescription priceall

. IT APPOINTMENT

1~

!IIET ............ s• 1o 30• ..
•ONY CAST-· 3&lt; to 20• IlL
STAINLESS .............. 20' Ill.

•

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.
CALL 992-6681

BISSELL
BUILDERS

IIONT

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

HOlliS
9:00 A.-·4:30 p...
MHINGS &amp; SATIIIDAT .

Public Notice

on dotlvery of deed.
Jam• M. Soulaby,
Shertff ol Melp County
(31 23, 30: (41 8, 3tc

.

etNDMDUAl

TUPPERS PLAINS- Eastern

Public Notice

Iowa:

.,. her....,

'

PREPAIAnON

- -~

Omitted

1

·--· ---mlmp·ons·--·· ··· ··

~-------

CAST......................... 40&lt; lit.

AlUIINUM
IEYERAGI! CANS ..... 50•

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

Ra81onable Rates,
Fully Insured

992-6135
lrioe ~~:::~~
sn. It

#2 COPPER-....... 65' lk
.QUN ALUMINUM
SllfTS - ............... 52' lk
' •CLEAN ALUMINUM

I

l

ccu"'.:; Day or

"1 COIPEI-......... 16• ._

r-r--------------------------1
•COUPON•
. .

•INCOME TAX

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will
hold a regular meeting Saturday,
7:30p.m. , for work In the master
mason degree. All past masters
are urged to at tend.

POMEIOY, OHIO

$300 OFF
ANY NEW OR TRANSFERRED
PRESCRiniON

SAT. 9 A.M.-z P.M.

Without Nolico)

FrH Delivery to Middleport, Pomeroy,
Bradbury, Mlnersvlle, lutland, Syracuse,
and Mason, W. Va.
If you feel you have been paying too ·much for
your prtScrlptlons, give us a call. We will quote
you prlceslll

,I

THUI~ :~t.~fHOoH

ISuhjoct to Chango

•Fast Service &amp; Low Prescription Prices
•Quality Prescription Drugs
•Full Line of Generics Available
eMost Insurance Carries Accepted

,

MON.-TUIS.·WED .•fll

9 AM • 7 PM
Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

At The Prescription Shop
Prescriptions Are Our Business!

II

•Mobllo Homo Porta
•Plumbing Supplleo
•Eioctrlcol Supplies

. EN 7 D•ys
OP
"

MARGUERITE
SHOES
992·3639

Raising funds
RUTLAND- Rutland PTO Is
trying to raise money for fencing
aroung the Rutland Elementary
School. Donations for the project
will be accepted.

RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing will be featured
at a dance Saturday night at Eli
DeniSon Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland. Music will be
provided by a live band from 8
p.m to midnight. There will be
refreshments for sale.

RECYCLING

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

MONDAY
LETART - The Letarl Town·
ship trustees will met Monday al
7 p.m at the office building.

Ohio

:~T;;:R~I=-C~O=U=N=T=J:::;nfSU=PP=:s=l:~~~~USEANY

OFF STOREWIDE

102 EASY MAIN

1989

Services Offered

'

POMEROY - Coaches and
other Individuals Interested In
ass is tlng with the Pomeroy
Youth Leaglie are ·asked to meet
CHESTER - Chester· Town- - Sunday at 2 p.m at the Ohio
ship Trustees will meet Friday,
Power service building behind
7:30p.m., at the town hall.
the football stadium in Pomeroy.
SATURDAY
RACINE ' A round and
square dance wlll be held Saturday at. the Racine American
Legion hall, 8 p.m. to midnight.
Music will be by the True
Country Ramblers. The public Is
Invited.

March

Oolng Out of Butlnatl Sale
Contlnuatll

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Revival servi·
· ces will be held at the Asbury
United Methodist Church, Route
124, Syracuse, Sunday through
April 9 at 7: 30 each evening. The
Rev . Wesley Thatcher will be the
speaker and Invites the public to
attend. There will be special
music each evening.

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge No. 453 will meet Friday,
7:30p.m., for work in the entered
apprentice degree , Refreshments will be served. All master
masons are welcome.

Beginning at the Eoll
corn.- of the Buffington 1•lond Rood with a 30 foot
otreetS.88dog. 55'W.330
feet from the intertection of
tho North oldo of lllld Rood
known addreae wu 49520 with the center line of rhe upon 1 Judgment therein
Eogto Ridge Rood, Long Cro••"• Mill Road in corpo- rendered, being Cooe No.
Bottom, Ohio 4&amp;743; you rltion lin•; thence elong the 86·CV·214 in Mid Court. I
notlflod that you 1111 oido of the Thirty foot will ott. for sale at the front
hovo Mmod defend- N. a degr- 15'
door of the Courthou• in
onto In ologol oct !on onthlod 184 foot to the s.w. cor- Pomeroy,
Meig1 County,
Homo Notlonol Bonk. Ploln- of loaoc Hoopa lot; thono S. Ohio. on the 2111 day of
tlff, vo. Wlllord Womlley and 3 degr- 30' Eut185 foot April. 19BB, at 10 :30 a.m.,
Oobro K. Womoley, oleo Oob- to the North oklo of tho Buf- tha following Iondo and teoroh K. Womotey. at ol., Do· fington lolond Rood; tllonco nementa. located In Middlefondonto. Thlo oction h• olong tho north oldo of oold port Vllogo. -go County,
Molanld Cooo Number roodS. 81 dogr- 65' W. Ohio, with tho following
88-CV-3111 ond lo pending 1 117 feet to the ploco of b• .,,... a d - -:
137A
In the Court of Common . ginning, containing 83/100 North Sooond Avenue; 137B
PIOM of Molgtr County, 1cr• of land.
North Sooond A"""uo; 137C
R&lt;IHrVIna to tho Stoll of North Sooond Awnuo lind
""'-DY· Ohio 41719.
The objoct of thlo com· Ohio, - e r . oil oH,
137E North Second Avenue.
plolnt Ia lor judgment on o coal and other mln. .
Tho .,,... bouncing on the
nota ond foroctoou,. of the with tho right of ontrv fortho - t
lo North
Second
root - • • mortgage ogolnot pur- of prospecting for,
Avenue:
the ati'Mt to the
real
aiiUIIted in ChM- d11¥eloplng. operating or
il North Third Avenue;
Ier Town~hlp, Melgt Cou~ producing thoAmo 101d the w•t
the 1treet bounding on the
ty, Ohio, S.ction 3, Rongo rlght of occupancy in 10 far oouth Ia Roco St.- end the
12 of tho Ohio Com-·o M thll .. me•.ntiel tOIUCh . , . . to the north i1 Coal
Purcll- and doocrlbod In pr-lng. dovoloping, oP: Street. The comphrto logal
dold recorded In Volumo orotlng end producing: Aloo doocrlptlon of tho root Illite
287,
P - 883. Motgo - g t o lllo State of Ohio il 11 follow a:
County 0- Records, and ' the u• of St....,.l flowing
Tho following doacrlbod
the pf8yer .. to forecfoM 111 through llid l101do or abutreal •tate eitUitl in the Vii·
lnt-t ownld by you and ting upon the .. me .rtd 10 logo of Middleport, County
for COitl.
much of the benko -oof 11 Gf Meloa and State of Ohio.
You are required to an- may be - l l f ' Y for MICh to-wrt:
ower the comptoint whhln enjoyment ond tho protoc- PARCEL NO. 1:
28 deyooftor the IMI pull!~ tion of auch streams from
lloginnlng 11 tho northoaot
catkm of thl1 notice wltlch •oolon. contamination or
cor'*'
of Lot No. 71 on SewHI be publlohed once - h dapalit of Mdlment. ••
cond Stroot in llid Villogo;
Ref....,co Deed: Volume
for
olx publication
· - - 218. Pogo 302 ond Volume thence Woat 113 foot to an
-ko.
Tho loot
all-v; thence South along
will be modo on Aprl 7, 288. Pogo 231, Doed Ro- 11ld olley 42 foot; thence
1989. ond the 28 deyo for· cordo Motgo County, Ohio. E111 113 feet porollol with
antwer will commence on
Except from tho above •id firl'l line named to Sethot doto.
porcol of roll 01tote tho fo~ cond Stroot; thonco North
In a•• of your failure to lowing:
on Socond St .... 42 fMI to
enewer or otlwiwlw , ....
Sltuoto In tho Townohip of tho piiCI of beginning. Soid
pond • reqund by tho Ohio Sutton, VHiogo of Roctno reel Illite heroin deocrlbed
Au._ of ClvH ProclduN. ond m- porticulorly . 'de- being 42 feet wide by 113
judgment by def.,M bo ocrlbod • follows: Located feet long.
ronclorld ogolnlt you for the In Bectlon W18, Town U,
EXCEPTING that out of
roliel dem.,dld In tho com· Rongo W12, Lot No. II and the above deacrlbed real M·
plotnt.
beginning 1t an Iron pin toto, tho following doocribld
Ootod: Fobruory 28, 1888 wlilch Ia locoted on tho eat troct ooklto Edwin Cook. hlo
Larry E. Spen-. Of I 30 feet Stroot 11 a heira and uligna. •• is deClerk of Courto. point 101 .2 foot North I ocrlbld In Volumo113, Page
Mligo County Common deg. 111 min. _ , of the 184, Motgo County Oold
PI- Court point of beginning on the Recordl. to-wit: Beginning
(3) 2, 9, 11, 23, 30;
Buffington lotond Road In It the north. .t corner of
141 7, ltc
deed recorded Moy 20. Lot No. 71 ; thence W11t on
1883, ot Pogo 301 of Vo- the North line of Lot 71, o
lume 218 Motgo County dlatonco of 72 foot; thence
Public N otlce
Deed Recordo; thence North South o dlollnco of 8 incl111:
I
dog. 18 min. o dio- thence IMt and perallel with
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on All• Order tonco of 82.8 feet to on Iron tho North line of Lot 71, a
of Sole 1 . - out of the pin located along tho 1111 diollnco of 72 foot to So·
oklo of oforeoold 30 foot oond St.-; thenco North
Common PI- Court of
Mligo County. Ollio, In tho otroot; thence north B8 dog. on tho W11t aide of Second
cooo of Bonk Ono. Atheno. 2min. elltldl.tanceof175 Street. a diaUnce of 8 infeet to 1n Iron pfn k&gt;c:Med on chll to tho ptoco of beginNA. Plolntlff, vo. Dewoyno
thewett line of whet Wll ning .
Stutler. II ol., Delondonto.
tM
WNVtr tot now known
ALSO EXCEPTING the
upon 1 JuciQment therein
rondorld, bolng Cooo No. 11 the Elolo Croaolot; thonce one-holf 11111 of the North
oouth -3 dog. 30 min. _ , o wotl of what Ia known 11 tho
8B·CV·II In Mid Court, I
d-co of 12.1 fMt to on Hotel Atlon, hovlng o fronwll !of oolo at tho front Iron pin - o d 102.2 fMt
tage of I lncheo, foclng on
- · of tM Courthouoo In fram the north aide of tho
Second Btreot ond utondPomeroy.
Molal County,
Ohio, on the Zlot d8y of oforooold Buffington tolond lng bock at that width o dloAprl, 1918, Ill 10:00 o.m., Rood; thonco Iouth 81 dog. tonco of 84 feet, 1 'h lnch11.
In Mid deed found In Votho foH-tng Iondo and te- Ill min. Woot o dlotenoo of
n_.o. loOIIIod on &amp;toto about 173 fMt to on Iron pin lume 113. Pogo 184, thoro
Rou11t 124. Elm BtrMI, AI· locMid at tho ~ofbogln­ -given tho right ond prlvlolno, Ohio 411771, the lt.aM nlng on tho ofao-d 301M! loge to Edwin Cook. hlo hlin
to the ooot Ia Ook Grovo oti'HI, - n l n g 0.21 oc- ond Mllgno. that if on,d
'\
wllon ho cw they doolrld to
Rood; tho atreot bounding ,.., more or ••·
•;; ill' II: e11,300.00. ut- the wotl of hio cwtholr
on t h o - lo on unnomod
-ondttweltono- Tho--c-booold bulclng to 1 third otory,
llclundlnt on tho - . The far !oM
the. either he or they were to
_ , .... logo! doocriptlon
tho right ond p....,Mogo
TERMS OF SALE: Coah ofpumteolng 111 prioetobe
of the .... - 0 Ia .. fo~

•

MAI:;;:;GU==EI==ITE SHOES

11 Help Wanted

fortrnM·Needl wont. Call 1143111-11481.
Pipe and Trenching work av•ll•

bl• Coli 814-441-0189.

Wll btlrtok In my ho- Alo •
~andt •••· Coli 114·2ffl. ·
5441.
.

Ke.. eo

Call 992·2772

Open Monday-Saturday
9 A.M.-9 P.M.

WANTED

Call For Appointment
949-2433

WEDDING GOWNS, PROM
DIISSIS, FOIMAL AmRE

A II The Comforl• of Home
Lisa Smith

8o Janet Warner

Owners

~~

BODY TALK
TANNING SALON
OHIO

AND Acassons

"Jut! In Tltttl For Spring
htniL ... "

snut_....... Moilly
IUYEI-.IaV• Manly
FOI IIFOIMATION

614·992·7521
614·992-2661
WDD.GS &amp; IVINTS

lortlo ~~-~

21

MARCUM C

CHESTD, OliO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
oKilCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

PHONI DAY OIIYBMGS

915-4141
Ref•an-

GENWL CON11A&lt;TOIS
11-1A-':Ra.. ttn

Buaine1s
Opportunity

1 Nonce 1
THE OHIO VALLEY PUILISH-'
INQ CO . - - · tho! YOU
do lartln . . wtlh P-.lo you
know, .,d NOT to llftdmonet
through t .. mil untl you hate
'""•ltl•od tho ofl•lng.

·•

-

�Page- '1 0 - The Daily Sentinel
21

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Bllliness
Opportunity

51

LAFF-A-DAY

Household Good•
LAYNE'S RlRNITUIII!

Rotll ........ tot •lo. Michl•
port. ONo. Johnlon'• V...iery
..... lion ,..,klift). 1-30477J.I3010ft• I:OO!&gt;m.

Sof• •d chlirl prk* hm
t31&amp; 10 tl91. Tolrl• flO •d
up 10 t121. H..... - t390
to
RlcNn.. t221 to
t37&amp;. Lampo t28 to t121.
Dlnettw t10IIr'ldUpto •cte.
Wood tiDie w-1
•211 to
t791. Dook f100 up 10 t371.
Hutdl11 t400 •d up. l r i
bedl col'lll)lele w-m«treuea
t211MdUptot395. fllbrt11Q, MIUr- or box IPrinll
ful o r - til. firm t?t. .,d
tea. au- t210 • up.
King UIO. 4 dr-or _ , tel.
Gun
I. 8 ll 10 gun.
lolry m o l l - t31 • t48.
Bid from• 120, t30 • ICing
frame
Good ....ctlon of
bedroom .utt., metll ~~~~~~~n ...
htdJo•dlt30endupto til.

•ns.

ch*•

31

Homes for Sale

V.V -t..obrid&lt; 4bodroom.
2 boll\ , .... room with II&lt;•

"""'a

-or

bllemn. 2 c• o•ta&amp; ,..,.,

I••CIIIIP• lat. 4 rnl• from
HOOpltol off At. 3&amp;Pbn-ook Subdt&lt;lllon. Coli
114-4-4&amp;-4189.

AREA1Coi1Rolu•lobltl1 · 311733-8014, ht. 2732· A. FOR
CURRENT UlnNGSI
Prtoo rlduootU BA .. 2 both
home on &amp;ul.,fh Rd. Clll
814-4-4&amp;-8221 tot morolnlo.

· Prt~ Raduced·Lincoln Log
....,... 3 - ..... 2 b•ho.
log lldln~ flroploco. Fl·
ftM«*tg willable. Fr.,ch City
Mablt Hom•. C.R 814-4481340
.
2 BR houe on Chllt• Rd. In
Pam..,. •HOO.CIIte14-3877287 W-9

*•

4 BR, 2 bot hi. full booom... on
Y, IMI'&amp; Abov• •ouNt pool with
dod!. ,., cod In bod&lt; yorll CoM
114-3117·0194
2 ltorioo. 4 BR. full unlinllhd

b•.,.,..,t. 20x40 lnground

IIDQI. 2-llkla•CI'•. In Vlnton.caU
.14-311 .. 8194
.
5 room~ &amp; Wh. Corn• of
Cllllhom • 9m-hn. 016_000.
Colt 814-.WI-0322.

c ,.__..f.._.....,...:.-c ..,..,..._... )·Jo

ots "'

4

creage

90acr•, C.ln Rldga Allo2-one
Po"lble owner
C11130• 451-1875
1'inMclng.
...
·
One. hllif acre lot Camp Conl-v
Routh Forroll Rood, 304-87175t8 1fter 5:00.
.ere triiCta.

Ruttic cebln in unlc loCI!ion
20x24 under roof on hllf aa-e
shldild tot
500.00. a...

•e.

Band Perk. 10 miiMIOOI:hPoint
Pleasant, phone 304-!i78·

2026.

•cr•

2 acr• t1 . 900; 200
It
&amp;160. p.- acre. 10 mil• South
of Pl. PloMant. 304-.1 71-2028.

Rentals

3BR . hou•, deluxe, •c. t350•

:104-481-1839.

32

· Homes for Rent

mo. Coli 304-871-5104. or
871i-53B8.
1 BR hou• n•t to lodge hill fn
Crown Ctty . 1176 mo. Clll
614-.WI-1511 .
Smefl 38R hou•n•• Pltriot. 2

BR moble home tt E.,.rgrten.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1880 8pwtiM1 14•70. 2 eR .. 2
bMN. . . electric. CA. woodbur,... 10xte deck. 12K14
buNoln~ eon &amp;14-24118028.

14a: 70 Wln•or. lit up &amp; rMCtt
to move.ln. 7 ecr• In country.
"fllnted lot''. MnuM from
a»'lnl VIII.,. IC.etT·Hirrilburg
Rd. t12.800. Coli 814-241i1301WOfk. 245-l&amp;&amp;&amp;tve.
1.M81cylne1411.70, 3BR ., P h
bot" ..... od lot. E-l..t.
Fln.walngA,.IIIbla Cllll Frtru::t'
City ......... 814-.W&amp;-9340.

O_.,ooikodl Big Sovlngo-d
nM/ ueed. S6ngle wid• ltock.
Rn.,'*'IA..tlolllo. F ... chCfty
Mollie Hom•. Coli 814-4411340.

2 11R '1flil• ... d tot In Rutl~nd.
t9500. CIH 387-7287 .,..,_

......

18115 FOI'T_. P•k 14a70. 3 BR ,
u"1::'nnlng. 1tor1ge bldg.
cot
ol clllnll' LR • kMch.,,
OCM' •traa. Cltl 114-...159513 .. 814-441-39H.

Coli 114-379-2178.

For rent : 3 Bedroom houlll,
Evorgroan. CoM 814-3BI-9328
after 5:00.
8 room hou• tor rtnl. K1n.,91

area. C1ll 614-... &amp;-7444. ·

7 ve• old, 3 be*oom brick· vinyl
tote! electric. rtnch style home,

•a•

c•fHIIed throughout. 1
fen&lt;*l ln back 'flrd with deck.

loclted 7 mil• fTom Holz•
Hotph:ll on Rt. 180. A.,.lleble
Merch 1. t350 per month. H
int•etted, CJM 614-2815-1311
t.Jaekaon) eft• '7p.m.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

.

Fully furnlohod u•oa• • · AI
utilltl• plld Gctpt .t.ctrk:tty.
NM¥Jv fiKiecorMilf • c•pettd.
Oep . ...o 3 bllcWoomt,.l•. C. I
814-4-4&amp;-8558. 441-18150.
2 BA ., cablaevallebl&amp; be ..ttfuf
rhter view ~ K111&amp;191. Fott•••

Moble Home Pwk. 814-4481602.

Nice 2 BR . mobilehonwfor .-rt.
Rot. • dop. required . Coh

814-oW&amp;-0627 oftor 2 PM .

Two 12x80 1972- •&amp;.250 ..
1181-tl.480.. 2 BA oloclrlc.
g•both Mila,...,.. New Carpet.
Coll814-oWI-01711.
Doublle wklt moble home. on
foundltlol'\ appro.. 2 acr•.
.,.etotawnend1chooll.lw ..
llllcllen. llundry, 3 -...... 2
b•tw. nM' cerpM, concr••
,...... _

-

-

polio.
,........ cell•. hell pump,

......

•CIIn concltion. LM .. b•n
with aoncr.te floor. lf4- 8123211 wenlnga aft• 8:30 or

1171 Flomlngo 12&gt;186, 3 bod-

roonw. lo~ed n• Hlrrilonv•a UOOO. M•r ktl!lp on ktt

• 14-742-3033.

1179 EIIDno 14170. 3 bod'
1Yt batN, otntrat llr,
totlll .. ec:trlc. ~~~ undlrtldrt·
lng,. porch. out bl , one renCII
lot t10.800. Col 304-&amp;71i2t ...
room~,

For lilt ilrt dwnegt&lt;l trill•.
. loot Off•. 304-171-1078.

1178 Folrmont 14170. 10•31
lddlliol'\ epproa. 1 ICI'e lot. 3
be*oom. dtrt. wood room. lfl
ol-1&lt;. 201&lt;30 ou1bu Hcln ll co..... lloqr,
drt..-.
Cnll C.... Rd. U2.000. Firm.
:104-171-3044

bl_.,

Quid! Solo: 1173 1•70 Floot·
wood. 1 'h btl hi. 2 or 3

""o tot for
r - 304-782-2330.

Mctoom. •&amp;.ooo.

33

Farm• for Sale

14IICI't firm, wry moder.n. 5
IR.2a.hhauHon 218. Somt

""lpmtnt.

lobecc» bela out·

lallolngo. Col • 14- 25&amp;- 1822.

34

Busine11
BuHdings

llollfp. . Fe&lt;ry. W.Vo. 4 mil•
from nM dem .tte, nM m.tll
1Nioln1 110l&lt;100 olftlog on hill
ecl'e lat. IDr
or ..... cell
Som . . llo Roolly. 304-87&amp;3030. 87&amp;-3431. S71i-4232.

•I•

36 Lots 8o

Acreaga

0.:1 . Whitt Rd.· 2 wooded

Apartment
tor Rent

114-317-7410.

•'•

Moct.n1ttftoor11R .f\lrnalh.t
••· Ia 2 SR. 1et floor unfur·
niahed IIPI. Ref. • dep. C.ll
1114-448-1079.
1 8R . apt.

t319. AII•of•••&amp;ch . . m.uct
down. Yi price mlhr- Ale.
H•IIIV duty bunk bedl wtth

bodoln!l't221. Froo mottrVlllth purch•• of cM'tllln
bedroom aull.._ 7 pc. wood
P"t• be*oom tult•t748. 7
pc. country dlnnltte l.t (lncludM hutohi· UIO.

n Rio Ortndt. L..rgt~ ••

lw.rn. w• ._ a ~. AI
utlllll• paid. 122&amp; 1 mo. Call
114-256-1402...

Fwniahed 2 Br g•lll• ..,...
ment. ldell tor cou~e. No pets.
Call t14-448-2404
Sm•l tJrrUt.d ..,artrMnt. nice
for 1 P••on. 1 11 ltlte st. Cll
114-oW&amp;-33&amp;8.

AI IIPPHen ... h•t 30 d_,l
vu•... t•. TRADE-INS. 1_.1 •
Wr,a welooma Lot• of nM'
IITIIill•. ftl . 141 c.nten.-y, ,A
mle on Lincoln Puc ..
W•m morn6ng heat•. medium
olzo. 31.000 ITU. Uoo whh
nlturll or LP QM· Autom•lc
tPM!tlhCAtM. EIC..Ient ooncltlon.
.... Col 814-381-9883 ..
B14-3B8-9177.

lrlo. Coli 814-4411-0119.

2mtn' stub- llteMW. 1 blue.1
wNt• olio 34w·38l Coli oftr 4

76

WHEN WE PLAV C14 ARLES'
TEAM . SIR .AND W~EN C~ARLES

Cl"'

Third A ... t111. per

mo. Coli Rid&lt; 814-oW&amp;-2002
bofolo lpm or 814-182-3801
1_•ft_.,_:.1 P:..m..._ _ _ _ __
Now accepting tppl~ione for
2 bodroom opwtmonlo. fully
c•pet ... IIPPII ... ctl, "-''t• and
trooh pld&lt;upo provldod. Molnt•
n.,ce • • living dole lo Rppln~ b-.ko ond -olo. FOf
morelnforl"nntlon a•ll 304-8823718. E.O.H.

2&amp; ind'l RCA oolor coneole TV.
tao . Hot point
rekl g•retor~ IV 1c 1do. t1 0 0 .
Frtnd'l Proventlll blonde I tradl
atll'eo A 2 tlbl• •40. ~C.«'~ mort

coppwtan• w.her· •715, OE
dfy.,. t71. lot..
10\::n-. 2 gf.. •d
Nonh 3rd Aw. Middleport. 1 ch•.
talrl• • 2
loll.
tn d 2 be&lt;*'oom,furnilhed IPII. cholr·
t30. o ... no. Konmoro
304-882·2&amp;88.
.
ponlble dlthwt•'*" e21. • • •
wood or aoll stove-e200.
2 bedroom room ept lrtt tktor, belt
10.&amp; ......., _• . bullolnll'
kttch... furntahed lr'ld dming
,,.., Dff ltreet perking. ~d. no teo. Wood glldor • 2 ch..,..
t3S. 100 ft . of wcr.r. wire
...... 304-87&amp;-8387.
ton... t21. Col 814-24&amp;-1111.
coprptr"ton•

,_,..200.

Uood opph_, _ _ - - · dry·
en. -'1'1· rwfriglrlllar.. mlcr~&gt;
wave OYtnl. Ken' 1 ADDIMCI.
217 E. 2nd St. . IIOmwoy.
114-982· 1331

.A.-nmwrt. 4 roorne ... d b•h.
utllti• .,.,d. •240. montt..
-~... ..rnlohld. 304-1713100"' 17&amp;-5109.

2 - . . . . ........ "" r-.
Cerp•ed. Nice •.etlne. lalndry
loc:lftioo ovlllolllo. CIH 814992-3711 . EO H.

3881.

Mollot.l Fwnfture

Grodouo lvlng. 1 .,d 2 bodraom ap..artnwrt• 1t Vllip
Minor ~d Rllf_.... Alllri·
menu in Mldclepon. From
t182. Coli 814-892-7787.

UPTO BAT. S~ OULD I
CALL FOR A
'?

~

2 bodi-oom trll«. 1\irnllt.d. On
WilnutS t .. In R1clne. 814-992·
6038.
2 becWoom trill•, wet• tnd
1-..ver furnllt*', I tnll• Nontl
of town on Rt. 112. 304-1711078.

44

Apartment
for Rent

BE AIJTIFu L AP AIITM!NTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 131 Jod&lt;oon
Ake from t183 t mo. Willi to
ohop ond movioo. 814-.WI2518. E.O.H.

T••
Tcwnhoutt IPif'tment• 2
BAa., 1 'A bM hi, CA.. dla·
.......... dlo ....l. privotodoood potlo, - ' - plll'-nd.
W••· ..wer, &amp; tra1h ln~cttd.
Sltwtirlg 11 t 289 per mo. Col
814-317· 78150.

•-ltr

D-ntown ·1 IR . . ..
redtoorlted, c•plt. oompl••
khch.,, AC. Plrklog. Aduko. No
.,..,, Dot&gt;ooh. eon 814-.WI0139 .
LAWN APT 8- 729
Second A\00. Furnlohod ollld.,.
elM at~rtlng It 1171 1 mo.
inclullng - • ll gorbogo.
Sloglo IHt.Ako only. Col lf4U&amp;-4807 « 4-4&amp;-2102.

Apertnwrt IYIIIbl .. HUO ICcoplod. Coli 304-871-1104

54 Misc.

Rent

2,.. 3 bodr- hou•ln Paint
..._... . . . 304-871-7717
1111• 1:00PM.

...

Went_. to ,... nice houM.
prolor ....... 304-

771-1122.

-=-::;-;;=~=u-=-:-;c:51 Household Goods

lullolngMit. . .
Blodc.. bric*. sew• EMD•. w~
dow1, lint• •o. Cl.Udl Win•••· Rio Or.,do. 0 . Col 814241-1121 .

UIED- - · · - - liM I 1 . . . of ...... ..,........

an .a.

Ill lloolc Co., 12~ Plno St..
Golllt&gt;ollo. Ohio. Coli 814-4-4&amp;2713.

refri. .MOI' .. rntahtd.

I .... In """'Townohip. Wll
oil .., l.,d co-ot. Col
114--M04.

nl- -lon. Rot•.,- .,d
loou roqulrld. Coft 814-4425 .. 441-2321.
·.

•ft•

ml•. w•

19B7 F«d Tounro. 32.000
4 cyl , full ln)oc:tod. ....
cond. . •e
.-rment1. Call
814-317· 7512.

Merchandile

'N'Ieelllh ..... NW ar uMd.

1181 Chevy Covoll• Typo 10·
CL. 4 al)ltd 1t1nct.d tr••n·
olon. PS/ PB. AC, AM / FM rod!·
0/CMI .. cruiH. cloth Interior, .
lt... wheell, redinlng buck«
•••cuttom tw~&gt;tone p.mt.
One owntr-38.000 mlln.
t4, 700. CoM 304-67&amp;-7342.
1181 • Feirmont Futurl. Vtrv
good cand. Cal WW'IInga: end

_ ... .,• . 114-391-1028.

A••taoo
win-

ttnt wlp ... .,nroof.
dow louvara. Must ... .

~ ,'0'"1 olfw. Coli 513-592-

0

1177 T-llfrl •1000. Coli 114912·11843.
1181 F.,d E-rt. 43,000
ml•. •cella oondllion. Bleak
with "'"' Int-. t2100. Coli
814-211-1311 ""• 7p.m.

-Ford 3110 42.., dl•ol

1188 Flroblr4 good ooncl 380
outo. t1000 304-112-2711

10 monthl or a I•••
purch•• for qulllfttd buyera.

111• I .

lo...,,,

1875 Olcll 91. "- good 485
engine. mllte off•. 304-17531.,2.

1----------

• t•.

tlr•.

1----------

Uv-

3

Umouoln INIIo- Ono I* vo•

Ro..,. Mobllty oollocl. 1·114S?0--1.

&amp;:::'

llwlmmlna- · -ltrfl-fla-..-.
Hugo 18 1&gt;1' 24 ft. _,., • • 4

full-blood, Ono 1 y. .
ful-lrlood. Coli I 14-311Wentld ttud aervlol for mfni..
tYrw . , _ lnwnecl•ll¥'· 30417&amp;-2714 oflw 3:00p.m.

ft . ..... lndUdM ton...
Ill•
•
-·
lnot41otlon
fln.,cln11ovlllolllo. Col 2• hn•..
1-fiOO.MI-0148.

57

Rr...ood "" .... oplft hordwood. Pldtu p ......_ dllllv•odt30. Colll14-441-4912.

,.,dor gultM. • 100. Y•
"""• FG· 71 lot top aull•· t7S.
L&lt;rtuo ol-Io
tiO. Col
114-3n-2181 .

For Solo · Concroto .,d l'l.,lo
lonloo. AI oll4o. RON
EVANS ENTEIIPRIII!I. Jodt- . Ohio. 1·fl00.137·1828.

Mualclil
lnlti'Uments

.,lt..

lndlvklrol . . . . ~-- bo-

gln.............

-IN&gt;

- · Muolc. 114--0117.
Jofl w.n.lll' lnotnlot«. 114WHITE'S METAL OITECFORS
.4&amp;-8077. llnrflod _..._
RonA.on.1210-ndAIM..
.,..-._
Oolllpollo. Ohio. 114· 448· Good txrnd ' " " " ' - .,d
14:S31.::::::::::::::::=.,.L;c:;-;:30;;:+;1;7;5-;;II;;S1;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1

I"

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

72

Trucks for Sale

, 977 v. ,.., Dodt• pld&lt;u p.
Sl-ott
I -tlor4 PB. rldlol
J••ll' Cow "" .....
2 • .,. •now t .. • •
- - .......... D.. 10 . .....
- .. Good'""'•· Bhodo.Ohlo tootboK. Nnl good.
lpm. I,+ 211-,424
814-111-123-4.

tir•.

1911 Ford ......... Rongor 414
3 10 ..,, · 2 -ling King- Col 814-44&amp;-4801!.
Horolord hlll•o. Coll1+18531011.
1978FO&lt;d414pldtup. .....1...
conciUon. Mult tel. •1100.
Coli 114-24&amp;-1187.
84 Hay G rllln

a.

HAY FOR SALE. Coi1814-24S.
1292.
1879 Dodge tnrok, 311 oulomille. 1· 2ton. '979. 304-87&amp;1021.
.,..,..--,,.--..,....-----1t78C...,yCI020ft. bod.""'
U . IOO. 304-175·
11
Bundll' 304-113'7· 2011.
1·;;;
Mlo
~h
30 ~';.1'33;1~'- n .eo bol• 73 Vans 8o 4 W , D .

86 Seed S. Fertilizer

··.:r;;::::::;:;;:::::;;:::;::;::;:;::;;;=
..

1
-----1179 CJ.a..... d,,.. .....
~~on

• ombr41o •..,.. t2.000 firm.
Coli 814-251-1443 boloro I
PM.
Oooolb - n .,d ollolfoi-::,1:-71::-:0o::-dg-.-...
- .--.lnl--lo...
- 44
· 304-171-1808.
............... ..,. bod. 80.000
oct,.l mloo. t2391. Col 81424&amp;-8252.
lr ,lll':plli.:llilll
1 - l'o&lt;d A.,gor, t9.100.
304-87&amp;-4480.

-------·•
-tom NEW·
t88.
WIN- t1S • up. llleol •

71 Auto's For

C..Unty~- Inc. Good
•d TV • .._
Open
lo
Bot. 114-441-1HI.· Mon
127 llwu
3r4

GOYEIINMENT SEIZED - ·
.._ •om 1100. ,.,._ - ·
Cltowro. ....
pluo. I~• Gul4o 111
105-.l- 1·1011t.

--..,.ttl.
I

ooll ..... Coiii14-441-J111.

, 171 Chewy . . . .. ... pb, •.•.
t2.000. 304-87&amp;-4144.

Sele

- ·c..-.

I;;::::;;;:::;:==;:::==
74 Motorcycles

1----------

-fl.

Ave. 0 ' ' ab OH.

1182 Y..,oho loco 710. Ercol.
•nd. lltofl-. -*•Lito
- · t 1 - Col 814-4-4&amp;0114.

1fHCIIwott._2dr.. 4op4,olr.
t2.300. 11ea Cllwy S-10
411!1L, 4 ll"i· e4.-

Uood king .... bO• - · •
t180. Col ., ... 4-4&amp;-

8001.

"How dare you put the diet books 1
wtdaet aisle!".

' " ' DO!IIo CIW....,nraof,
1.2. I
0114.olr,AM--•

u.aoo. Col 114-. . . 1410.

1H1 ....... 410, Coiii14-4-4&amp;-IIOI.

1. .1 - - - . , _ ..mrot
- · - · ea.4R .....,. Col
114-:111-711• or 184-2212.

!0011
..140011~- 2'.310
.1.221.
•

.....

1113 H•• Odd-&amp;.280oa.
,,.,

I

MUSIC
SCHOOL

Motors Homes

yov

PLAGIA~I$M .

l'fo. I WAS
·..

JU.S'!" TAJCING
I"OTe,S".

!

!'

1977 AIPth Trtvll tAler. 23 '

, ........,,..• .._, ""'· u .eoo.
304-871-4144,

Serv1ces

..•

Improvements

.,,

BriiiEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unoanllrianll tt.tillle .....,...
._,,. .heel
Frte lltimll• C1:11 ' collect '

tee. loCII ,.,_.,•

1-114-237·0481. dll' or nlgln.
RogtraB•••ment
W.t •prooftn g.

A (l£AA 1Aa.A1101J
CE "THE FIRST AMEI.tlMWl'
RIGHT 1D FREE SPE.ECH...

SWE~EA ... da.wlngmechlne
r•*· pertl. end auppll•. Pldt
YP and delivery, DIYII Vtotum
CleMtr, ont h11f mile up
Olor(lll Cnok Rd. Coli 814441-0214.

MOM'S ~'55e5 6ECAI.l5E
HE 6ROKE HIS .

htty Tr• TrlmmJng. .wmp
romovol. Coli 304-871-1331.

WHioTLEPAi.

IT WAS
THE R05e'BL.lDSCN
THE EARPIECE.6.

stealing her boyfriends.
(!) Colfege Baoketbtlll

v ))

Rotory "' - · tool drlllng
Mo.t Mil• GOmpf•td•emed.,.,
Pump . . . . . . d • ...,let. 30489&amp;-3902

fttmodlllng, navlddUon.,·c•·
port1. 1•111• end deckll. Free

tttlmot•. coli 304-891-3421.

..
'

'•

Plumbing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAliNG ,
Car. Faurth •d Ptfta
OoH'Ite". Ofllo
,._,ne 1143118 or 81~
441-oW77

LUKEY?

Abby lnfiltra1es group
planning to fight her secret
oil-drilling plan. E;l
ID ([!) Aroonlo Hall
I!)) Evening Naw1
@NIWI
~ Crook and Chaoe

AN' MAKE

YORESELF
AT HOME

•:..

-

Electrica I

,a. Refrigeration

General Hauling

DIt •d W•• a.... tce: Pools,
Clltwno. Wolle. Dollvory Any·
tlmo. Coli 114-.WI- 7404-No
Sundll'collo.

ASTRO-GRAPH
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101· 3428.
TAUAUS (April 20-MIIJ 20) Making
last-minute cllanges In stra1egy 1oday
could turn out to be a counterproduc~
Uva measure. What you had In mind
originally Is likely 1o be your besl bet.
GEMINI (MIIJ 21-Juno 20) If develop·
ments warrant It today, befriend one

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

with whom you have established ties
rather than siding with a new acquaint·
once. Others will measure you by the
amount of loyalty you express.

J • J Wotor lorvlco. Swimming
PDOh. Dilt.rn.. weaa.. Ph . e 142.&amp;-12811.
R • R Wot• llorvloo. Poolo.
ci1tern1, well•. lmmedlat•
1.000 0&lt; 2,000glloNdollvor;.
Coli 304-871-1370.
Potrldls Wotor Harling llorvloo,
1,000or 2.000••· dollv ..-.
phono 304-57&amp;-2311 . . ., ..
441-4011.
Watterton•a Wltlf H1ullng•
All•ontbt• m-.. volume dltoounta. 2,000 to 4,000 CIPaelty,
..-. Coli .........
304-171-2111.

87

· ....

CANCEII(June 21·Ju1J 22) Today you
may be required to honor a commit·
menl that you'll find a bit dlfflcul1 10
keep . Regardlesa of lhe Inconvenience
Mllrch 30, 111111
you'll have more reapecl for yourself II
Y
d you a1and by your word .
ourg,...teat-1aln1heyearah4a
LEO (~u'" ZI-A,.. 221 Your ldasa lor
are likely to cortte from a venture or an"'
lerprtae that wiH be resurrected . Over handling a crllical arrangemen1 loday
lire coming months II should succeed are likely to be superior lo 1he well·
where 11 previously failed.
meaning advice of your co-workers.
ARIEl (March 21·Aprll 11) Try not 10 Give credence to your )udgmen1.
1 k full edl f
VIIOO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Make an e • ·
a e
cr I or something today that 1ra eftort lo e•erclse self-discipline 10·
an aasoclate was Instrumental in help-

Upholstery

Q

®l Ill Q2l Knott Landing

•

AHfdtntlll or commtrclel wir·
log. Now Mr'llico or ropolro.
Uctn•• e?eatrh:Un. Ridenour
B-lcol, 304-171-1718.

1 Onetime
4 Word
with
post or
light
8 Seaweed
product
9 Encore
11 Take to
the trail
12 End a call
14 Wallach
15 Jan., Feb.,
Mar., etc.
16 Nigerian
171nstructor
19 Energy
need
20 Grant
21 Betting
tenn
22 Empty
ZS Victim
24Herb
25 French
city
Z6Time
division
27 Fonner
Spanish
kingdom
SO Sea eagle
91 Neighbor
of Okla.
92 Him (Fr.)
SS Edit
S50ne from
Helsinki
S6Hades
river
S7Grape
disease

inspector. C
(f) Leglslatfve Update

HE'S FETCHIN' SOME
KINDLIN' WOOD-COME ON IN

..
'...

8o Heating

ACROSS

a

WHAR'S

Ing to bring about. 11 could scar a productlve relatlooshlp. Trying to patch up
a broken romance? Tho Aalro-Graph
Malcltmaker can help you to under·
sland wllallo do 10 maka lire relation·
ship work. Mall $2lo Malchmaker. P.O. ·
r

day in an area where you sometimes
1end to overindulge. It can be done
without laking 11re edge off of your fun .
i.IIIIA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be llrm regardlng your 1erms today If you have lo
negotiate a maller of lmpor1ance . ll you

'

are lax or Indifferent, you might make
some needless concessions.
SCOAPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) People
with whom you'll be involved today
mlgh1 be so wrapped up in Iheir own In·
terests that they won 't be receptive to
your propositions or proposals. If you
sense this, make your pitch at a later
date.
SAGITTAAIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) If you
have something critical to d iscuss with

someone else 1oday l hat dlreclly affe cts
your career or finances, Iron it out firs t
before you digress 10 ligh18r loplcs.
CAPAICORN (Dec. 22·Jon. 18) Guard
agalnsl 1endencles Ieday 10 suddenly
switch tactics in matters that are pre s~
enlly running 1o your advanlage. The
changes You're Ukely to introduce
aren'1 apllo be as ollecllve.
AQUAAIUB (Jan. 20-Fob. 11) Today
you may be in a rather gregarious
mood , and thlsls walland good, provided you do not openly discuss things that
were 1old to yo u In slrlcl confidence.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) You're in a
good cycle per1alnlng to the fulllllmen1
of hopes and expectations, provided
they are based upon praC11cal founda·
tlons. Oon'1 build castles on sand .

•

. ..

l

,

f

I

,,

NORTH
+A K 5 4
•Qs s

3-30-Rt

I A K4 2
+ 62

EAST

WEST
• 932

'

+J

10 8 6
. 7.3
t 953
+ A,K IO S

. 62
tQJI07
+ 98 4 3

'
'

•

SOUTH
+Q7

•

.AKJI09 4
+86
+Q J 7

••

.,

Vulner a ble: Eas t-West
Dea ler: North

West

Nortb
I NT

E ast
Pass

Pass

4•

Pass

5•

P ass
Pass
P ass

Pass

P ass

Ope ning lead :

.

·"

~

•

+Q

,,••

high club honor. In that eve nt, aeclarer would give up a club to East , thus
e sta blishing a club winne r for himself.
If East thre w a s pade, South would
play Q-K-A of spades and dummy's
lasl little spade would be the 12th
trick. What luck! South scored an un·
makable slam and still got his 100
honors .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

airs his true feelings towards
his young lover. 1;1
ClJ Campaln Agelnat
Choleaterol
ffi Newawatch Q
(I) HeartiHt The praclice
plans a surprise party and
awaits an insurance

Myws 81-01' . .,d Povln~
Htndlnon. WYa. wap._.e•iv•
woyo. ,.rlclng loll. -ng. Froo
e.w:l,.• • 304-1715-24&amp;7.

I

I'

~

·•

CROSSWORD

~ VldtoCountry
10:00 I]) 700 Club
D (}) 1!11 L.A. Lew McKenzie

RON'S APPUNICE SERVICE .
houtt can servicing GE. Hot
Paint, w11Mr1. dry.,. end
...... 304-17&amp;-2391.

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS

four spades, he would have to lhrow a

landlord. C
l!1l Larry l(lng Llval
9 ThuradaJ Nighl Flghta
9:30 0 (}) 1!11 Dear John Kale
tlfes of her sister con11nually

HE'THINKS

..

you de'o'elop from step No . 3 below ,

king, drew trumps, a nd the n pla yed
the diamond a c e and ruffed a di a mond. He then played t hree m or e
rounds of hearts, discarding a c lub and
a diamond from dummy . His hope. not
too far-fetched, was that East wo uld
hold the A-K of clubs and four spad es.
Sure enough, on the las t trump East
had to reduce to five cards. If he ke pt

M c Call about her abusive

HE. SA.'I'S E.VeRYWHEREc
. HE. WENT; HE ~T

L.__!.

give up. He won dummy's diamond

elderly woman contacls

MY ()1.[) ElORROWE.'D MY

l_. _

researche rs go? Do the ends

1!11 Ill 1!21 The Equoll1er An

;:.M~O~R~K~M~E!!EK~L!!E~~WINTRHOP

L.._ L.,- L
._

jus tily 1he means? 1;1
(!) Tire World at War
Anglo·American airforces try

traitor. C

c:•l•

..

lhe chuckle quoted
by fdl1ng in I he missmg words

where to imply interesl in s la m . Whe n
North failed to make such a c ue· bid,
South should have given up on s lam .
He either was greedy or th o ught his
100 honors would give him a profit r egardless . So he asked fo r a ces a nd bid
six hearts, apparently not ca r ing that
the defenders might ha ve two quick
tricks.
There would be no sto r y with a club
lead, but West led the queen of dia monds. Declarer menta ll y scolded
himself for sloppy bidding, but did not

(f) Mystery! Samson
tries to trace a suspected

AON·s T'elsvlslon Service.
Hou11
on RCA, Quuer,
GE. Spoclollng In z.n•h. CoN
304-871-239e or 814-4412414

I0

jor suit. He can simply raise it to
game, or he can cue·bid a conlrol else·

~

•ao.

·

Ever yone knows the old-fashio ned
way of showing a good ha nd with a
long suit a fter partner opens with one
no-trump: You jump in your s uit. What
is not so commonly under s tood is tha t
after such a jump , ope ne r has t wo
ways of s howing support for your ma-

learns the sec ret of the lake .

SeptlcT... k Pumping0.1·
llo Co. RON EVANI ENTER·
PRISES. Jod&lt;ICXI. Ohio 1-800.
137·962B.

·Z

1

-By ---- ------

BeokOibell
9:00 0 C2l 1!11 Cheera Sam iakes
impotency to consult with a
beaullful psychiatrist. Q
CIJ II (I) Dynatty Zorelli

-1.

1

BRIDGE

~ History of College

Co'l'- worll by tho job or
hoor. ponolln~ dry
pl,mbina- .. tdriCII. JM'IOdtling oomplota Col 814-.WI-7821.

.1

My husbana turn ed lhirty
and was feeling pretty old. Our
lhree-year-o!d daugh!er didn 't
help matters when she blurted
out, " Daddy, your hair is -

is my second," I a nswere d . "Good," he la ughed. "I' ll wear
the BEIGE ."

to win the war against

"B"1.---H;-;-:orn-:-::-e::---- ' ~

l
I
•
-l •

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Exhale - Aglow - Naive - Subdue - BEIGE
" Which color shirt do you li ke besl?" asked my
teenager. " The blue one IS my firs t c hoic e , and the white

Germany by bombing
1!11 Ill (12) 48 Hours C
Ill@ MOV(E: Code ~eme:
Oloaater (NA) (1 :32)
I!)) PrtmoNewa
®MOVIE: Dutiond !AI (1:49)
0 Murder. She Wrole
13 Naahville Now
8:05 (5) MOVIE: Macon County
Line (AI(1 :29) ·
~:30 0 C2l. 1!11 A Dllferon1 World
Freddie plans ·to dale Ganh.
the star of the baseball team.

':

86

8

a

•etf COntained, I..C, IW"'ng.

84

I

has a hard time dealing wllh
it. Q
ClJ
(I) MOVIE: 'Shoggy
Dog, Part 2' ABC Family
Cla•oic (G)Q
ffi Ethics In America How
far should medical

•

'

1971 Torry · 2 1' ol-o olx.
E ~«:elltnt condttion wllh IICtraa.
*2.000. Coi814-4-4&amp;-0014.

C U R MB

James Jacoby

Clair turns 46 years otd and

.SDrJGJ1

I

GAJ E L N
··'"
~-..;.~8;;...:.;.1..::...,:1~'...:;.1...:..:...,,~
Complete
L.-

r

"'

.STEALIN(;

/.._

1972 22 foot CIITiper, Mlf·
oontlln.t. ewnlng. Cell aftlll'
6PM 814-.W&amp;-3805.

82

I

a

"''

WE~E

It
:
Is I . :

l-- .=.-=,.,6 :..:...,l:...:..;,.
7

1;1

7:05 (5) Andy Griffith
7:30 0 I]) Family Feud
Ill 1988 EquMab!e
Old·Timero aeoeball
(i) Ente,.lnment Tonlghl
(I) USA Today
1!11 Ill 1!21 (!)) Jt10pardyl Q
18@M'A•s•H
l!1l Cronfire
@ Night Courl
~ Crook end Cha'*
7:35 (5) Sanford and Son
8:00 I]) Kane and Abel, Por12
0 Ill (!)) The CotbJ Show

.. o

8o Campers

C•• .,..

10HerefDrdoow&amp; 7wllhDMv-.

300 bol •- t1 oo
• •..,. · . . bolo.
Coli 114-892·7178.
Gnrund ohlllod -n ti.OO,..
100-. Mor-Form.Rt. 3 1,
.......
1:00 ill 12:00 . . . .

79

w.,

1984 C•mero 8erllnett1 .
LoedK IZ.OOOmll•. Beeuttlll
c•l e7.000. Clll 114-.t4155828.

'

Pontiac .C.OO big block racing
motor. ll1o tnlna. Beet off• or
trodo. Coli 814-311-e847.

Tiff SCHOOL Tti~E~
ME OUT' fop.

bt~ ·

I NNOPI

I• I

0 Miami VIce
13 Fandango

FRANK AND ERNEST

.

the

CNOKK

OJ Moneyline
® Chtoro

'

•lnk. 3
refl'igerelor, nove,
AC . only 11.000 mllea .
t1t.OOO. Col 814-4-4&amp;-0132.

~rectors

for

BUDGET TRANSMISSIONUud • rebuilt 111 1YPI•·
W•rlflty-30 d.ye. Prio. •99&amp;
up. U•.d • rebuitt torgue
oonvtrt.., n.tdlf'd clutch•.
pr 11 1urt pl•ae. &amp; ttwow out
be•lng. W•r...ty· 12'mDI. CVC
)olnto·•l ,.,... Col 114-379l -2.c.2.,.2_0 _"'_30
_.,_8_7_•_8_7_18_· _ _
,.
4-14 in . .._.minum tlot rim• &amp; ·dr• tor.Gr.1 product t180. Call
814-379-2181 .
.

1987 VW CtmP• wn. pop-top,

937· 2011.

•no.oo down P•·
ment end t218.00 ptr' month

Auto Parts

8o Accessories

1982 Muot.,g 01'. Bright rod.
5.0 It• hlth output engine. 4
•peed. cruile control. lntlrll'Wt·

r. blln. 1. bel• ..
tlddorl. A oompltto hll' Nne. N.w Hollend bal• twine '78 Buldr 81cyl•k. •eoo. oo or
10.000 ft. t21.00 7.200 ft. lot off«. 304-87&amp;-2980 Ilk
belltta .,.,., 100 fl.,moret.,.l lor Mlrlolom. 9:00 til 8:00PM.
ltr... gth t21 .00. 10 belli or
AKC Oobtflnen pupe. 9 wk1. · ....... '78LTO II , t400.00. 304-8915lorvlco
old• Tafll cropped, dlw CIIWI
St. Rl. 87Loon. WV. 304-89&amp;- 3808.
rllnOWd &amp; wormed. AI colora 3874.
ovollolllo. CoH 814-21&amp;-1320.
' B1 Ch..,ott« '81 Cftotlo" 'BI
Ford F150 with t -; '81
3o.. ........,..dpupo.Biock 62 Wanted to Buy
Cllryol•- York•. 304-17152711.
2 mila 1 fernel&amp; 4
montho old. ueo ooc:h. eon
814-241-1133 oft or 4pm.
78 MUitlng II while louven-tod:2 lood lop ooll. Clfton. •ooope, elum tho del. ntJW
B•...n pu...,._, fled Bone wv. 3034-773-1181.
3oz. ,... goo4 t t 100. 304puppi•. Willi• pu,...._, Moun171-2154
teln C"" puDCII-. end . o ....It
63
Livestock
Atdbon•. Wllk . . end Mourt1981 Chrysler Le l1ron.
toln Curro. 814-742·2412.
t 1.891. 304-878.4410.
Snowdert'l Kenn ... At. 1. Rutl.,d.
PontiiC Lem ...a. 2 door,
Alhonol.lvootodl lol• Albony· '79
t7110. : .,. Plymout" 4 door. e
1
PM.
Solo
wory
lotufdov·
Aoh T.. k. 2413 Jod&lt;o'"' A....
cvt.. art. tiOO. 304-175-8021 .
Point Pl-ont. 304-87&amp;-2011
- l d oil• 4 PM
wory
Frldor.
1
milo
•
.
,
of
10 goloot,. U4.19•d 10go1
1171 Mercury Monugo .
AI- '"' lt. At. 80. C.H 31 . 000 ~ mfln . ex c . cond.
...,.,,... t4125.
11 4· ·12·2322. 111· 3131. t1.800. 304-87&amp;-117e.
w•lnQI.

o... ...elotanf..wccdiRolld.

Furnlohod opt.· 1 8R . 243
1llll80tlll•. - ...... - " d - JKk1an Pika t221 e mo.
lnl!f, 11o21 . ._
Aolclnt UIA-1• oolll Coli -oW18
tZI.- 114-H1-1117. ·
7PM.

114-992·8941.

Alllo Cholnwo MZ 01-•· 4
row DDrn head p~1 13 fl. t.•
h - E..... -~~ Coli 304-

Pets for Sale

eonv.

. . . lnOhloTOWNhlp.Approx.

1•82 Culllls Supreme
lroughem. vrlliy 1t.p IDolma
c• Nlde ... d out 2 ®or. Cell

480.380John0..o - -on.
l o -. - - HD11. HD21.
HOI. AC dooon. 040 Cot .. TO
20 Int. H....l n _ WV. 304731-78911: I Slild · · - lo-··
lo-:
Ford. Cooo. -OV·

ConcrM• blo._
)Wd
ordtUvery, Mseon ... d. Wlp~

SWAIN
AUCTION • PUIIMTUIII! 12
Ollwo 11.. Qolllpollll.
NEW· I pc. wood_.,. •:111.
l.lvlog_, ..,._ t111-U89.

Nicely furnlohod omoll hou•.
Effi DiW'Ic, ept. · 1 man. Mobile
honw below -...n ovllfto(lldng

1881 Chwy Mlllbu cl••lc
ltetion wi(IOn. Uaht blu .. Rt·
bull ert~Ji!'a AM·F'"M recMo. AC,
PS. PB • chldl .-ftty gl••·
~1300. Colll14-4-4&amp;-7020.
19?2 Pontloc V..turo, now
Plllnt • viw;'ltop, cllll •Must,
runt good. good mlleege. Cal
814-387· 0337.

Ford Plow, 3-polnt. 2·12 Inch
bolt-. Buoh hog-· 8V.It ..
3 point, Ikon-. Coii814-Bee.
3101.

WhNI . . . . ectrlc ICIOCJI:. .. Call

114-4-4&amp;- oW21. 814-441-4249
or 114-441-2121.
'

to

Antiques

1124 E. Moin ...... Po-oy.
Hours: M,T.W 10a.m. to 8p.m,,
Sundo\' 1 to lp. m. 81 + 892·
2125.

Ltroe one-c. a.-eu•

- - wllfl _ . , . • - ·
Fulloln mllltr• • foUNiotlon
ltlttlng · •••· Recll"•r•

rtv•.

53

r.- of ladling on aar,_ of
SoiiJnd .,d Pin• Gift- Col

Fwnilt.d 2, 3, or 4 roo,.,. 6
both. Cl..,, Aduho oftlv. No
pltl. Rot. • dop. llqulrod. Col
814-44&amp;-1119.

bulclnt loll. APPf'*· 2 ~«•
ce. heet, N.!tta Cl'lty, .r.
...... Col 814-2411-98861111• Collll4-oWI-0331.
1 :30 I'M. .
1 :-~-----F..nllhld olllcionCI'. 807 loet.vleor lubcl.·7 mH• oouth co nd. Oolllpollo. •1eo. lh•o
of 0 . . . .. AI ·-...,,., both. Col 44&amp;-.W11ofi•7PM.
-Ito. R_,rlclod. Coli t 1444&amp; Mil.
Twa 1·bedroom unl.tr'*...,
opwtmonto. In Oollip .... U71
II'\ . . . In Ohio Township. 11 ~nd •ua.,., month. ltaw ~nd

11 Bolg. 1-nlng VR. Ero::.
Mil. 1100 - · ,. mod•
1981, VR. t398. Nil. Coli
814-4-4&amp;-7830.

Space for Rent

47 Wanted

t.o-.

Corrt•.

Buy or Soli. Rlvno Antlq....

SHADY

2 8R . . ... nfW pl,oh a•pot.
nowr.lnt, udlll• Plrtlaltw' ..ld.
017 omo. Coll304-178-8104,
87 li-8388. . ,.. 7731.

304-89&amp;-3101 .. 81&amp;-3071

CAn oft or 2p.m . 304-7735$51 . Mason WV.

1&amp;1•.

1980 Lincoln Continenti! .
UOOO. CoH 114-2411223 -"• 4pm.

w•

Petslan and IIM"'•e Md Him..
l..,.en ldtttna. Chow ltud .....
vico Coi1814-4-4&amp;-39Uof1•7
PM.

K.lfvln•Of e?ec~rlc rena• 40".
wry good wn4 t121.

'

Country Mollllo H - Plrk,
Route 33. North of Ftam8'0'(.
IDIO. - · -o.
Col
814-892-7471.

76

.,aln• •

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.

Golllpolil, Ohio
814-441-7444.

SIMPing I'OOfTII wtth oooldng.
At.o Tr-.• .,.:.. AI hqolf.upt.

For Rent :

,_,t•

At.o N.w Hoftend aid It_.

Upp• Rlv• Rold

Rooms for ,.,.•.WIItk or month.
Sllf'tlng et t120 • ino. 0.•1•

Trol• opoce .In Kygor Cnok
School 0 Ill rid. tea mo. lndrodM - · • gtrbog&amp; Col
814-317-7217-lnp.

Aluminum porch ewnlng.
10•30. Bought n-lot t1100. UTILITY 8LOO. 8PL:30'rt40'•1'
w111 ..n .., noo. 114-992· · - ·· , ., ..... - u tloor.
8801 « 114-992·1778.
1·- k doo•t4989.ERECrED ·
_:.:....:_::;_::.:..:_.:.:;_::.:,:..:.,::;__ IRON HORSE IILDRS. 814KenrnrHe Wllher, thr• cycle, 332-1741.
lwo apHd. Reel nice. •90.
114-387-0322.
4010 JD dl•ol troctor, 1400
hra .- •4 . 110 . Oehl
10 HP ..-,knock riolng lawn grlndorl ...• · t791!.0ol&gt;l 1800
m -. CAI814-114f1.2574
roundbol•t2.1180. 12011nt.,.
n~ionll trKtor· M.IIO. Ownw
Grovoly ~dlog - 12 H.P. will fin., co. Coli 814-2Bfl.
with BZ Inch mower. EJColl- 1522.
concltlon. Coii814-742·21B:Z.
John Deere 2 row corn piW•.
Pllnt Plue Pittaburgh
for t 1111. JoM o - . 1 11. "'"'"
111 your pelntlng nMdl. Ho· drll· t111. 41nch wotw pump
800 ft. 4
mmwner. Clllntmctor or pltnt w•h I cyl
INiiftttnlr'lot. Conuc:t Ul for "'"" ..... tf.800. Col 814.
"''co Quoto. Pllnl Pluo. 2411 211-1031.
Jod&lt;oon AIM. (30~ 171-40e4
T o - otldco. FO&lt;d 8000 dl•
Room full of cer~mlc l:)ilque Md ael. trldar toolt. Allo HIY·
polntolot •'• holt pril» ~ tolco t1/bola Col.,4-378-2704
oil, coH 304-182· 2011.
NH. JD. • lnt•notlonol hw
rail•. ·~uere bel ere. cu It I·
Elootr ....
' Whell drll!., dl1c.
Buy Electr...K Fectory dired
ohlppod 40 10 eo per _, ofl. plowa. corn phnttn. PTO m ..
sprtldere. I fl. pul roterr
_..,g wlllolllo. 304-1372722 onytlmo or 814-44&amp;- mow-, Ford mCNfW, ott. ltld
3371 Ono cloy oniV F~ctoy Nlldr equ.mlnt. Howe'• F•rm
Morch 31. , , :00 Ill 1:00.
Mtrclolnorv. Rt. 124 • MoyRd . Jod&lt;oon. Ohio. Phone 114'77 Chw 11- ..... 01 trede. 2SI-5944
• • Lib one ,_, mill• HI•
Ferm equlpnwrt for .... fllrmll
•eo.oo. 304-&amp;7&amp;-2785.
cub. Hr; rille. C1ll 1ft• 5:00
1I hp tractor. Fr.mlng lunVer .. . . .. '814-387-7143.
aizn. Telling orden for picnic
tobl•. 304-17&amp;-4004 oftor IN Fordtroctor. buoh hoa plow,'
cuttfvltor, •2450. 801 Ford
1 :00.
War~• trletor, t2850. &amp;
ft. flnllhld mow«. *795. 970
01. . top Ulble ..,d nmen &amp; Celt with ceb. 111!150. Verm_.
round bll•. •2110. Own•
bra.. chlira 1150.; kw1 seet •
ch* *1110.: Entertainment c.,.. lln.,oo. Col 814-21&amp;-1822.
ter •10.; ll•eowlthtwfrttablel
.......... fm rldlo t10. 304- FllrmEquiDment. z.torTractcn.
How•d Rotwltort, llad•.
171-7172.
-Ringo. Buylngoldblllt.,.
1•. Morr .. !qu!ltmtnt. Autl.,d.
Ohio 814-742·2451.
56 Building Supplies

56

I

Eloctric
(f) Nightly Bualnen Aeporl
1!11 • (12) CBS Newt
Ill @ WKRP In Cincinnati
I!)) ShowB11 Today
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
0 C4rloon Exprtt••
13 New Coun1ry
5:35 (5) One Dey at a Time
7:00 I]) Our Houae
0 Ill PM Magulnt
Ill SportaCenter
(i) Ill (I) Current Alfolr
ffi (f) MacNeil/ Lehrttr
NowaHour (1 :00)
1!11 1111!21 (!)) WhHI Ol
ForluneQ
Ill @ Throe'a Company

,

Groom "'d Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All brHdi ... AII
ltytel. lema Pwt Food Dtlf•.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-4-4&amp;-0231.

122 VJend Str•
Potnt Pf-ent. w.v•.
304-171-8498

Z381 . ovonlng 814-992·2809.

46

II.m Body
a

(I) ABc Newt

21oaellona

2 be*oom •ipt. 1n MlddtpOrt
t175 p• month. dlpoek r•
quir.t. No p•a. O.y e14-992·

Hotoi-414-4411-IIHO.

114-11&amp;-

•a.
.'*""-"•

erltortndttovtfurriahecl. •1315
p• month pkis deottt end
ulilhioo. eon 114-992-&amp;131.

- l y romodolod. t226 per
month. t100 depotit. In AkJ
Or., do. Coii814-241-B1&amp;1 .

01'

STOP AND CHECK OUR PRI·
CES
·
Furmture Md C.rp•
VInyl •417 yd. oomm•clol
c.p.t
II yd. lou, ~aam sll:e
end rol. c.rpet, half
Inch pld •1.78 yd with carp•.

In Syrecuse. 1 be~oom . Refrl__g-

2 Br mobile horne. Apptox. 2
mloo from Golllpollo on St. Rt.
588. Coiii1+&lt;WI-1301

BUT DON'T
J.lUI{T ~IM ..

CO~ES

n••

Nlco ol goo olllt:i"'IIY hlr 1 Of :t

penon.

CLOBBER HIM ,

WORD
GAM I

low to form four sirnple words

8:00 I]) Bononu: The Loti
Epi-1
• I]) (i) . . (I) 1!11 • (12)
(!)) Now•
ffi Shining Time Station Mr.
Conductor's afraid Harry
won't like hi m. Q
(f) Doctor Who: Sontaran
Experiment
Ill i!D HIPPY Daye
@ FIICit of Life
0 She· Ra
~ American Maga11ne
8:05 C5l Allee
&amp;:30 D ill (!)) NBC Nightly Newa

Boatland
Motors for Sale ·

pm. 114-4-4&amp;-3110.

pMIIt••·

..-.llrn. At&gt;t. 322'1l*dA,o. No
- · Coil 814-4-4&amp;-3748 or
211-1901

0 four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

EVENING

Pipe end Tr•c:Hna wortc .....

end

VIRo Furnlluro • AlfiiH.,_
()p• 0to11v 9 AM·I PM
Sund8J 12 Noon- I PM
81
31 11
1 pc. wood+441lilting room tuft ...

r ooms. tqu lpped kitchen.
la~Ntty room, ..,, convenient
locotlon. No poto. Coft 814-.W&amp;1117.

phone, TV cebl-. bus • md
btKtc top t'08CI 1·4 mile

(Jirlge.
extr~a.

u•• .,rnlture

Ntw and

Extra nice, qutlt, 2 l•ge bed-

41

cou...., .. ch• • 3 bodroom. 2 b•t.. 2 a..,tilllstone
flrtPIICI. 2 c•
e.5
aora Mlny
ue.ooo.

'!\ Inch """ ftlll . . .. Coli

S©\\&lt;iU}A-&lt;Z£trs~~

!HAT DAILY
'U ZlLU
_ _ _ _..;,.:._: l dirt d by CLAY R. 'OtLAN

30.

• THURS., MARCH

~~~~~~~~~~r;;:~~~::~::::~l:w~M~m~ao.~~~~~~~
1·
35 L
D. A
4

Hou" 19 ICI-. 2 beSooms.
Uttwoom. cltv w.ter. tele-

eo ft.

1181 matorcvclt Yemlh1 XT
210. good oand, tow miiMgt,.
teoo.oo. 304-171-4397 bo, _ , 12 .,d 1:00PM.

oppllcon-. Coli 114-441·
7&amp;72. H-1 9-1.
PICKENS USEO FURNITURE
Comploto
houoohold "rnlohlng~. 1h miiN•rrld'lo. 304-117814 50. 114-318 - 177 3 .

grown Up,"

W.likll"' • •

from town. 304-1715-4118.

Flr-ood fol ooi•Oolc • mlxod
horMood. Ill. pldtup-t20. CoM
814-44&amp;-1117.

Television
Viewing

Motorcycles

VMie., Furmlure

"S ee.? I t•S JUSt
•
l'k
1 e baby
•
th
r
PICtureS, eXCept
eyre all

7 room houll. In ground pool
F.A. furMCe. wood bur.w,
...... roomQVorho.oll 91tolfto.
Col 814-892· 39381111 .. 4 .. d

route.

74

90 Day1 Mme 11 c.h with
oppro..od croclt. 3 M._ ou1
lul•il• Rd. Op• a.n to !om
Mon. lhnr Sot. Ph. 11+4410322.

VI .

Col 304-17&amp;-

NOW SELLING THIS

u ..

Wright

•eo.

O...a• 3 IR . houN fDr •Ia.

GOVERNMENT HOMES! From
t1.00 fiJ ....,..,, Foredo•u,..,
.._,.,., , T• b .. nqu.t Proper-

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Merchandise

-oto

p1- totmololnlo~ wgo
room. 310 fl. a.~ttom oek klrehen
C8bln ... CMik wooMork. ftnilh

ow- "".,'*
51114

54 Misc.

The DaHy Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1989

Thursday, March 30, 1989

10:05 C5l MOVIE: Aetum to Macon
County (POi (1 :30)
10:30 m MalterpiiiCe Theatrtt
Stephen Sorrell's lite Is
transformed by a job al the
Pelican Hole! . 1;1
(f) Dlffarttnt Drummer
Appalachian Junkumentary
~ New Country
11:00 I]) ANIIngton StH!e
Dill Cil Ill (I) tiJ) Ill 1121
(!)) Nawe
.
18 ([!) Lovo ConnoctiOII
G)) MonoyUne
® Honeymooner•
I!JJ Miami VIce
12!1 You Can Be 1 Star

"

98 Country
dance
99 Fluidity
unit

"

DOWN
1 Nimble
2 Looking
at
S "- you
sure?"
4 City in
Pakistan
5 Turkish
titles
of honor
6 Hoffman's
"Rain - "
7 Jargon
8 Pause
filler
10 Nature
in the raw

••
"

Yeaterdar'• Anawer
19 Lech
25 Monopoly
Walesa
28 Baby's
Is one
weight
15 Get going
gain
18 Retread
29 Girl (Sp.)
21 Tract
31 Tooth
22 Tub
problem
23 AmusementS4 Consumed
place
95 Chemin de
24 Prophet
T---.r--r.-""'n'-

(f) Sign Off

,.

'I

•

•

....
..

3130

..
·•

...

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

1!11 U'A Today

.·.'

'

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

a

•'
•

'•

DAILY CRYYI'OQUOTES- Here's how lo work II:

11:30 0 (%) ~Tonight Show
Ill SportaCenter
CIJCh""
crJOnlon One
(I) Nlghtllno 1;1

.. '

.•

CRYPIOQIIOTE

aii!D ConverNIIOII

..

I!)) Spor11 Tonlght

1D 1D Pat Sejek Show
® HIU SlrHt 811111 Look

.

EWHYXQKNOCTCAF

Homeward, Ninja
12!1 Alltlllcan Mlgazlne
12:00 I]) Kane and Abel, Part 2
Cll Pro Tannlt Lipton's
lnternauonel Players·
Women's Semifinal Game 2
from Key Biscayne, FL (T)
ClJ NlgltUino Q
ffi Sign Ott
Ill (I) Entertainment Tonight
(II) Pat S.jllk Show
18 ([!) Twlltght Z0111
G)) -oNight
tiJ New Mike Hamnllf
12!1 NalllvUII Naw

WH

N

..

"

TCAFNU
XAC

XI

EWHCNHC.
FDC

NIIUWYFWXAH

WF

TXHF
XI

WH

YXTTXA

T NA MW AE.

-

HXQKYC
XLHYQKC
Ye•t•r•••'• CrJptoq•ote: KEEPING YOUR
UOTHES WEU. PRESSED WIU. KEEP YOU FROM
LOOKING HARD PRESSED. - COLEMAN COX

•

.~ I

f,,

" •

....

I

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 30, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Quirks in the news _________________
By Ualled Preu International
Hl,lhway baited to protect en dancered woodpecker
THOMASVILLE, Ga. (UPI) Transportation oftlclals have
halted work on a highway project
In southern Georgia to protect a
colony of endangered
woodpeckers.
The effort to widen U.S. 319 to
four lanes was stopped when
o!rtclals discovered a colony of
red-headed cockaded woodpeckers In the path of the
roadway, said TomBerry,superlntendent of Thomasville
utUities.
Berry, who Is In charge of
moving power lines for the
project, said state transportation
officials ordered him to stop
cutting trees In the road's rightof-way. He said a ietter from the
Georgia Transportation Depart·
ment says at least two trees In the
area are home to colonies of the
endangered species.
Until more studies of the
project's Impact on the bird are

Beat of the bend

complete, the road will remain
unfinished, he said.
The project Involves making
U.S. 319 Into four lanes from
Thomasville to the Florida line.
Plans call for the southern
Georgia road to be made Into a
parkway, with trees and vegetation preserved In the median.
Soviets winning race to put
billboards In space
MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet
.Union has signed a deal to sell
advertising space - In space, of
all places.
The Tass news agency said
Wednesday that Glavkosmos,
the Soviet commercial space
agency, signed a contract with a
Swiss firm that Includes selling
advertising space on cosmo·
nauts' space suits and painting
two 6- by 9-!oot advertising
messages on the hull of the
orbiting Mlr space station.
Billboards also will be bullt .at
launch pads at Balkonour, the
main launching area In Central

.

Number is changing
By BOB HOEFLICH
Now It's OK lfyoudon'twant to
keep my phone number handy.
No problem.
However, here's
one that many of
you wlll want to
keep track of like write It on
the wall near the
phone.'
Beginning midnight, March 31
- that's tomorrow, so you'd
better do It right now - the
Pomeroy Fire Department telephone number Is being changed.
The new number Is 992-6663.

who they are and I hope they
are wrong. Do keep smiling.

Asia.
Besides the advertising
patches on the spacesuits and the
outdoor space billboards, clients
wilt have the opportunity to have
a 3·mlnute commercial filmed by
cosmonauts onboard the Mlr.
Cltents also wilt each be
permitted to send up to 2. 2
pounds of cargo Into space. The
Idea Is that the cargo- postage
stamps or whatever - can be
promoted as having been In outer
space. Tass said the advertising
package, including the space
station murals, patch on a
cosmonaut's space suit, video,
cargo shipment and a billboard
at the launch pad, will cost
$620,000.
By comparison, a 30-second
television spot during this year's
Super Bowl cost $675,000.
A spokesman for the Berne,
Swltzerland·based firm Punta
was quoted as saying several
Western companies already
were negotiating for advertising
space In space.
The first space ad could be
launched as early as this !all,
Tass said.
The Soviet space program Is
facing possible budget cuts
because of the country's budget
deficit. Glavkosmos, set up In
1986, Is the commercial branch
of the program and is mainly In
charge of negotiating commer·

clal satellite launch clients.
So far only India has paid !or a
launch atop a Soviet rocket.
'Pime capsule to contain judge's
underwear
BALTIMORE (UPI) -A time
capsule to be buried at the
Colonnade residential and business complex will contain momentos from the complex's residents, including· a pair of
undershorts from a federal ·
judge, a spokeswoman said
Wednesday.
Mary Lou Hearn, a sales
representative for Hill &amp; Co, of
Bal ttmore, which is the residential broker for the project, said ·
she asked buyers of the units to
submit something they would
like to see Included in the time
capsule.
"The Items all had partlcu Jar
meanings. It meant something In
their Jtves," Hearn said.
Among the Items are soil from
the construction site, a Salvador
Dalt perfume bottle and a letter
from Ronald Reagan.

But the most unusual item Is a
pair of underwear !rom an
anonymous federal judge In
Baltimore.
"I don't know what it means
but I Imagine It could be very
exciting," Hearn said.
The time capsule Is to be
opened In the 22nd century.
Ceremonies to bury the capsule are scheduled Thursday to
mark the completion of the

Colo nnade Infrastructure, located near the Johns Hopkins
University's Homewood
campus.
The 600,000-square·foot complex, which includes 120 luxury
condominiums, a 125·room hotel,
conference and banquet facilities, gourmet grUI, speclaltty
shops and underground parking,
Is to be completed this !all.

•
·:~i~T~· ~
1

....

•

••

--------

It you are a history buff do keep
In mind that the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
doefl have SQI!le 20 publications
dealing wlth parts of Meigs ·
County. Prices vary so !!there Is
some area that you're Interested
In write the society at P.O. Box
145, Pomeroy, or call the Meigs
Museu111 lor a little faster action

They always say that there will
be one more snow aner the
forsythia blooms. I don't know

Vol.39, No.228

2 Sections, 16 Pages 25 Cent a

Copyrighted 1989

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Fast effkient servke.

O'DELL LUMIEI CO.

Pom-.y,ono

992-SSOO

REPAIRS START MONDAY - If the weather is good on
Monday, Pomeroy village workers will begin repairing this hole
which has developed near the corner of West Main St. and
Butternut Avenue. According to John Anderson, Pomeroy village
administrator, underneath where the hole has appeared is a 100
year·old rock culvert sewer which was laid by hand. As the shaft
for the sewer was dug by hand, the work was cribbed - or lined
wlth timbers thai are crossed back against the undisturbed earth.
The crlhbing was left alter the work was completed, and

apparently, the shaft was loosely flUed and the hole covered with
wood . A brick street was laid over the wood, and blacktop over the
brick. The wood eventually began rotting away and the earth
underneath settled, which allowed the hole to develop. A wate•·tap
leak In the vicinity ol the hole probably played a part In the settling
process also. Anderson says that hopefully on Monday, workers
will begin removing the loose material to get back to the
undisturbed earth. Then the hole will be back filled and a
reinforced concrete cap poured, before the final cover ol hotmlx.

Gallia man reported fair after surgery
According to Pomeroy pollee
Stanford 0. Cox, 38, Gallipolis,
Cox
,.was d~!vlnl{ an 8 and J
underwent surger.y Friday morn·
Lutnber·
·semi-truck south on
lng at Veterans Memorial Hils pi· '
Route
33,
when he lost control of
tal for treatment of Injuries
the
truck,
went off the right side,
suffer&lt;;&gt;d In an accident Thursday
struck
a
garage
heavily damagevening on Route 33 near the
ing
it,
and
then
a 1917 Pontiac
Intersection of Route 7.
which
was
parked
beside the
Cox reportedly had compound
garage,
demolishing
lt. The
fractures of an arm, multiple
truck
then
proceeded
several
abrasions and possible other
hundred
feet
before
overturning.
injuries.
Both the garage and the car
At 10 this morning he was
reported by the hospital to be in were owned by Walter Bearing:
Pomeroy.
fair condition.
. .

Traffic was tied up for aboul
two hours following the accident
which ' 'occu'Ffed at ·8:'117 p-.m:
Lumber was strewn over the
highway and pollee reported that
It took until about midnight to
clear the accident scene.
Also Investigated by Pomeroy
police was an accident on West
Main St. near the bridge at 4:07
p.m. Thursday.
Police reported that Roger
Dowell, Middleport, traveling
north, turned 'lelt Into the path of

a car driven by Gerl Miller,
Pomeroy, who was traveling
south. ', ·' . ... ' '·· '.
·,
There was moderate damage
to the left front fenders of both
vehicles. pollee report. Dowel!
was cited for failure to yield.
Pollee were also on the scene or
a car fire atlO: 49Thursday at the
intersection of Route 7 and Union
Ave. Esther Nellun wa .. treated
but not transported, it was
reported.

Bill indroduced mandating gun waiting period

You'll be pleased to know that
Earl Snyder Is now out of
Intensive care at University
Hospital where he was confined
for sometime following heart
surgery.
Earl Is doing better and Is now
able to enjoy cards. He would
appreciate hearing from you and
his address Is University Hospl·
tal, Room 919; 9 East Doan Hall;
lOth St., Columbus, Ohio.

handicapped Is having a ball
creating those puzzles made up
of letters of the alphabet which
spell out a word when a certain
combination Is encircled. He
even created one lncludlng·famtly names which, of course, Is
popular with family members.

See P-1 special

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n. c.utffG ru•

Low In upper 20s. Chance of
snow 80 percent. Saturday,
partly cloudy. High in mid ~Os.

8970

Eastern hoard
gives·Moore
2-year pact

And spring will bring out the
Royal Oak Ballroom Dance Club
members again as they enjoy
their first dance of the year at the
Royal Oak Resort from 8 to 11
p.m. on April 8. Providing the
music for dancing will be
Skyview.

-------Ronald Coats who Is somewhat

Pick3
267
Pick4

•

So it's spring and time for those
golf tournaments to get underway -everyone's Itching to get
back Into the !lame.
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will be staging Its
third annual tournament on April
29 at the Riverside Golf Course.
Breaking and team drawing wllt
be at 8:30a.m.; tee-off time at 10.
The tournament will be a
!our-person mixed scramble and
the registration fee Is $40 which
will Include breakfast, green
fees, cart, beverages, gUts and
other food. One-half or the
proceeds will go to the MelgsGalllaMason Boy and Girl Scout
Camp fund and Turnpike Ford
wlll provide the new vehicle If
you make a hole-In-one on Hole 9.
To get registered, call the
course at 304·773-9527 or contact
Becky Triplett, 298 Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.

What a pleasant surprise for
Dorothy Young Saturday
evening.
She was tricked Into going out
to eat and when she returned
home her house was decorated
and family members were on
hand for a surprise birthday
party - she marked her 75th on
Friday.
Sure there were refreshments
and presents. Taking part In the
surprise gesture were Russ,
Sandy and Michael Moore, Point
Pleasant; Kathy and Steve Lane,
Middleport; Toby and Tory
Swartz and Charles and Pat
Kuhn, Gallpolls; Jolonda Root
and Kathryn Brown of Middleport, and Bob Yates of GaiUpolls.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio t UPI) -On
the eighth anniversary of the
attempted assassination of Pres·
!dent Reagan, state Sen. Lee
Fisher introduced legislation
Thursday requiring a 14·day
walling period for pistol
purchases.
Flanked by Ohio Highway
Patrol troopers and police from
Bowling Green and Columbus,
Fisher announced the bill at a
Statehouse news conference held
at the foot of a bust of President
Abraham Lincoln, killed by an
assassin using a revolver.
The measure would permit,
but not require, local law en·
forcement officers to conduct
background checks to determine
i! purchasers have criminal
records or are in violation of
federal, state or local firearms
laws.
"This proven crime-fighting
measure, perhaps better des·
crlbed as 'crime control' than
·gun control,' enjoys the strong
support or police officers and the
law enforcement community

across Ohio, and IL is long
overdue," said Fisher.
"In the 22 states that have
handgun waiting periods, liter·
ally thousands of convicted fel·
ons, minors, mentally unstable
persons and other Individuals
prohibited from buying a hand·
gun have been Intercepted with
this provision," the Cleveland
Democrat said.
The bill accommodates fire·
arms hobbyists who make perle·
die purchases and object to
repetitious waiting periods by
providing for Issuance of lde,ntlfl·
cation cards, good for two years,
that would authorize holders to
buy guns without the walt .
"The bill is not designed to
keep hunters, sportspeople and
collectors from exercising their
lawful right to purchase and own
handguns," Fisher said.
The senator read a telegram In
s upport of the bill from Sarah
Brady, whose husband Jim.
Reagan's press secretary, was
critically . wounded In John
Hinckley's attack on Reagan.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Charles Moore, Eastern High
School principal, was given a
new two year contract, school
years, 1989·90 and 1990·91, and.
the board approved a plan for
external ,funding for athlet lcs.
marc~ing band and other extra·
curricular activities for the 1989·
90 school year at Wednesday
night's meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
The board 's approval for the
external funding of the three
programs came following a request from Wes Arbuaugh, At·
hletlc Booster president, and Ken
Fasnaugh, Band Booster
president.
The external funding Is neces·
sary due to the school's shortage
of general fund monies following
defeat of recent operating levies .
The funding by the two groups for
the extracurricu Jar activities,
sports and band programs was
successfully carried out last
year.
The board adopted a schedule
of deposits with the treasurer.
For fall sports the monies are to
be deposited with the treasurer
no later .than July 6; !or the other
exti-a·curricu~ar activities It
must be de posted by no later than
Aug. 29 , for winter sports by no
later than Sept. 30, a:nd for spring
sports no later than Feb. 1, 1990.
A school calendar for the
1989-90 school year was adopted.
Teachers will report on Monday ,
Aug. 28, and students will begin
classes on Aug. 29. The last day of
school for teachers and stucjents
will be June 1, 1990.
The board employed a subs tl·
tute teacher, Lori Ritchie, as a
volunteer girls softball coach lor
this year.
Also employed were Masrsha
Egleston. Paula Horton. John

. ·"I hope the day will come when osal had been In effect In Dallas
no American family will have to eight years ago, Hinckley would
go through what my family has not have been able to purchase
the gun he used to shoot Reagan
gone through," she said.
Fisher was joined at the news and Brady.
Furney called the measure
conference by Gov. Richard
Celeste and Democratic Senate " insurance for those communi·
co·sponsors Linda Furney of ties that want to require back·
Toledo and Michael White of ground checks," and White said
Cleveland.
It represents "the first major
Four indictments from last
"I am deeply concerned about attempt to take our streets back" week's session of the Meigs
the rise In crime," said the from criminals.
County Grand Jury have been
governor. "! am committed to
In a statement, Attorney Gen· filed In Meigs County Common
working with the Legislature and era! Anthony Celebrezze said the Pleas Court.
the attorney general's office In two·week waiting period Is "a ·
Indicted by the grand jury
any way possible to bring this proper exercise of the state's were William K. Moore, Dexter,
responsibility to protect Its on one count of sexual battery, a
alarming trend to a halt."
third degree felony, and one
In letters to House Speaker citizens."
"Law enforcement officials count of gross sexual imposition,
Vernal Riffe, D·Wheelersburg,
and Senate President Stanley · now fear that the guns on the a fourth degree felony .' The
Aronoff, R-CinclnQatl, Celese streets far outnumber, and are sexual battery charge stems
said he wholeheartedly supports more deadly, than their own from allegations that Moore
weapons," said Celebrezze .
participated In sexual "conduct"
the bill's quick enactment.
Fisher said Rep. Judy Sheerer, with a minor child. not his
"Any purchaser of a handgun
who cannot live with such a D·Shaker Heights. plans to Intra· spouse. The gross sexual lmposcommon-sense waiting period duce a companion bill In the tion charge stems from allega·
must understand that many will House. The senator said he also lions of sexual "contact" with a
minor, not his wife, according to
not live without It," wrote the will be offering another bill,
within the next 10 days, to outlaw Meigs County Prosecu ling Attorgovernor.
ney Steven Story.
Celeste noted that If the prop· assault weapons.

Teaford. and Sandra Walker as
substitute teachers for the bal·
ance of the 1988·89 school year, to
be used on an as·needed only
basts.
A new policy on commu nit y use
of school buildings was given
first reading. The pt·oposed new
policy will be considered for final
approval at the April 26 meet ing.
The board approved substitute
teachers being included In the
employer "pick-up" plan (a
payroll reduction method) for
put·poses of the State. Teachers
Retirement System. ·
A number of appropriation
modifications and revisions were
approved and bills were ap.
proved for payment. The board
accepted a donation from two
Individuals tota ling $2.800, and
advanced money to the uniform
supply account for purchase of
classroom materials such as
workbooks.
Three elementary teachers
along with the elementary prinle·
pal, Dr. Donald Shue, were given
approval to attend an all·day
workshop to be conducted by the
Ohio Department of Education
on " new directions in the teach·
lng of elementary mathematics"
for kindergarten through second
grades
Amounts and rates as determined by the budget cotnmlsson
for fiscal year 1990 were
reviewed.
Following the meeting the
board moved Into executive
sessio n to discuss personnel
matters.
Next meeting will be at 7:30 on
April 26 In the high school
cafeteria. Attending the meting
were Jim Smith, president,
Kathy Manlcke, vice president,
and members. Susie Heines, Ray
Karr, and I. 0. McCoy.

Four indictments are
returned by grand jury
Mark A. Searles, of the Harrl·
son ville area, was Indicted on one
cqunt of aggravated felonious
assault and one count or carryi ng
a concealed deadly weapon. The
Indictments against Searles
stem from an Incident on March
20 in which Searles allegedly
assaulted Bill Cremea ns y•Jth a
deadly weapon - a 22 caliber
Mississippi derringer. Charges
against Searles also carry a
firearm specification which
mean If Searles Is convicted of
the charges, he would serve a
mandatory additional three ye.
ars In prison fo r the firearm.
Ronnie E. Taylor, Middleport,
was indicted for grand theft
stemming from the March 7
(Continued on page 12)

-Local briefs---...., National Guard to assist police in drug fight
Estep fights extradition

Harrisonville resident Debra Lynn Estep Is contesting the
right of North Carolina to extradite her from Meigs County to
Yadkln County, North Carolina on a warrant charging her with
breaking and entering and grand theft.
Estep was arrested Wednesday by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Deparlrnent on the warrant from North Carolina. Charges
against her stem from an Incident on or about Jan. 19 In North
Carolina In which she was allegedly Involved in the theft of dogs
valued at $4,000.
Estep appeared Thursday before Meigs Common Pleas
Judge Fred Crow III where she contested the extradition. She
was represented by Attorney John Lentes.
Estep was permitted by the court to post at $10,000 property
bond.
Another hearing In the matter has been set for April 28.

Trailer home leveled by fire

MwrtbM FDIC

The trailer home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur L. Ward, Jacks
Road, near Rutland, was destroyed Thursday by fire. Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby received a report of the fire at
&amp;~~~

•

"

According to the sheriffs report, Mr. Ward had discovered
(Continued on page 12)

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Defense Secretary Dick Cheney has
given final approval to 12 states
to increase the use of the
National Guard In helping pollee
crack down on Ulegal drugs - the
first phase of a $40 million
program .
All are border or coastal
states, ranging from Florida to
Hawaii and Arizona to Washing·
ton, and their National Guard
plans were "accorded the high·
est priority !or review and
Implementation," a Pentagon
statement said Thursday.
"Plans from other states have
been reviewed and approved by
the Department of Defense and
have been sent to the Depart·
ment of Justice for further
review. We expect approval of
these plans In the near future,' '
the Pentagon said.
Tbe 12 state plana · that won
final approval vary, but none
Involves direct participation of
National Guardsmen In pollee

activities such as search and
seizure.
The plans include detection
and monitoring via flight surveil·
lance, aerial photography and
other Imagery , radar surveil·
lance, Jong·range reconnals·
sance, assistance In searching
containers, transportation, ex·
panded training of law enforcement personnel and Increased
loans of mUltary equipment.
Dan Donohue, a spokesman !or
the Natlonai Guard, said the
Guard assisted law enforcement
agencies in 32 states last year
and had a role In the seizure of
$1.3 bllllon worth of illegal drugs.
The new plans Increase the role
of the Guard, he said, so that It
can engage In aerial surveil·
lance, searching containers at
ports of entry and In long· range
foot patrols In the desert Southw·
est aDd el.ewhere.
Cheney approved a total of
$11.7 million for the 12 states. The
state plans and the amount of

federal funding approved were:
Alabama, $930,745; Arizona,
$176,359; California, $990,407;
Florida, $3,413,052; Georgia,
$281,904; Hawaii, $247,627; Loutslana, $1,190,820; Mississippi,
$468,046; New Mexico, $330,399;
Oregon, $474,384; Texas,
$2,904,210 and Washington,
$369',880.
"I just signed of! this morning
on packages for 12 states in

letters to the governors announcIng ... that their plans for using
some of that $40 million that
Congress appropriated for the
Guard have been approved,··
Cheney told reporters during an
Interview.
Congress allocated $4U million
for the increased use of the
National Guard In support of
Illicit drug control and drug
Interdiction efforts by the states.

Spring forward,' fall back
WASHINGTON (UPI) -It's almost time to fiddle with your
clock again. Daylight Saving Time starts Sunday.
The time change mandated by law requires clocks and
watches to be set forward an hour at 2 a.m. local time the first
Sunday In April, moving hack an hour to Standard Time at 2
a.m. local time the last Sunday In October. Just remember the
adage "spring forward, fall back" when you reset your
tlmeple~e.

Bftldenta of Hawaii, Arlzoaa, lhe Eaitern Time Zone part of
llldlana, Puerto Rico, the VIrgin Islands and American Samoa
do nQt make the change.

.,

\

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