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Paga 10-The Daily Seminal

,.

Tunclay, April4, 1989

· _____.. Local ~s briefs... -........, Nation's heartland hit. by tor:nadoes, (loods
Continued from page 1
water to the four elementarles will be temporarily shu ! off
Wednesday to enable the water company to make changes In Its
lines.

Squads have 7 Mond(ry- rolls
Melgs County E;mergency Medical Services reports seven
calls on Monday; Middleport at 1: 20 a .m. to Sycamore St. for . ·
Lisa Manley· to Veterans Memorial Hospital; later to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 9 a.m. to Broadway St. for Darrell
Dugan who was dead on arrival; Pomeroy at 11:31a.m . to Rock .
Springs Road for Mary Mereplth to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; later to St. Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at 11:46a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Lloyd Smith Jr. to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport ·a t 1~ :06 p.m. to . DyesvUle Road for Dennis
Woodgerd to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Middleport was
assisted by Columbia Township Rescue 1204; Rutland at 2' 19
p.m. · to Meigs Mjne No. 1 for Charles Chamber~ to Holzer
Medl~al Center; Pomeroy at 3:04p.m. to Rock Springs Road for
William John Kennedy to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MOOnWatCh p Ianned Thur8d·ay
On Thursday, the u.s. ·Naval
Observatory and NASA are condueling a · Moonwatch expertment. The object of the expertment Is to determine how soon.
after the moon Is new that It can
be seen:
Time to look for the moon Is
from sunset to 30 to -45 minutes '
after sunset. Thursday's sunset
In Meigs Countywllloccurat7:57
p.m., Eastern Daylight Time.
· A&lt;;cordlng to Meigs County
Engineer Philip M. Roberts, an
amatuer as tronomer,look for the
moon where the twilight glow Is
brightest. The sky must be clear
and the observer should have a
flat horizon. Binoculars will also
help. Look straight above the

place where the sun •sets tci· find
the moon. As the sky darkens,
youmlghtbeabletoseethemoon
with your eye alone, Roberts
says.
The U.S. Naval Obs~rvatory
wishes to hear from you even If
you do not see the moon. A short
report must Include your name,
observing location and whether
or not you saw themoon,headds.
Reports may be phoned to
Roberts on Friday morning between 9 and 11 a.m. at 992-2911,
who will forward the reports to
the U.S. Naval Observatory, or,
If you wish, you may sena reports
directly to: Moonwatch, Nautl·
cal Almanac Office, U.S. Naval
· Observatory, Washington , D.C ..
20392. ,

By United Pren laleraaiiDnal
Severe thunderstorms
marched across the nation's
heartland Tuesday after spread·
lng floods that swept a baby from
Its mother's grasp In Indiana and
hurling tornadoes In Arkilnsas,
Texas, Indiana and Dllnols.
The thunderstorms developed
ahead of a cold front In lhe
central part of the country and
were moving through the Ohio,
Tennessee and lower Mississippi
valleys. They extended from
western Kentucky to norlhweast·
ern Texas.
As much as . 4 Inches· of ,rain
soaked Indiana, Monday night
and streams were out o! their
banks early Tuesday across
soutllern and central Indiana, the
National Weather Service said.
A 16-month-old child was swept
from Its mother's arms Monday
night as she tried to the baby and
her tWo other cb,lldren away !rom
'her flooded car on Indiana 68 In
Gibson County In ~outhern Indlana , state pollee said.
Authorities looked for tile child

Ohio...

Continued

without success Monday night
and then had to postpone their
search untn early today becauae
Qf darkness. The family's name
and the sex of tile baby were not
disclosed by authorities.
Thunderstorms In Arkansas
spawned tornadoes near
Amagon, Mount Ida, JoQeSboro
and Ctystal Springs Monday
evening. In northeastern Texas,
a tornado touched dowwn
northwest of Grand Saline.
Hall measuring 3 % Inches
across pelted east of Quinlan,
Tel'as. Hall the size of golt balls
rained on the Texas communities
of Brashear, Beaver Dam, Sui·
phur Springs, New Boston and .
Maud. Winds gusted at 70 mph.
Funnel clouds and torrential .
rains blasted a large ·area of
Arkansas Monday, damaging
buildings, homes, vehicles and
power lines, authorities said.
' 'This was the most wides·
pread series of storms to hit the
state In one day since December
·t and 3, I982, when 64 of the
state's counties were under some

Bar'UP

o~···

League
roundup
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Page .4
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Hospital news

lim=-·

· FRONTS: "
Warm
Mlp • ._. mfrWI!Um

IOrec:.Ne'•edlllllllan~t=

At IIMI 50'11oolany
,

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UPI

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WEATHER ~AP- Dunn1 early Wednesday !nomllll', rain and
.. shower• are lo'ft!cast for parts of the PaciftJ Northweat, with
showers and thianderstonps In pans oltbe Ohl11 Valley, Ihe Gulf
Coast aad moat of the Allanite Coast sla&amp;ea. Rain and showers are
'po~~~~tble In pans of the northem lntermouataln re11on. Snow 18
poulble In the extreme northern Great Laketl• (UPI) ·

·'

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------Weather-----South Central Ohio
By United Pre~~&amp; lniernallonal
Tonight: Variable cloudiness,
with a .low In the mid 40s. ·
Northwest wind 10 to 20 mph.
Chance'of rain Is 20 percent.
Wednesday: . Mostly cloudy,

•

Plan dinner

A ham and turkey dfMer,
sponsored b;f_theSouthernJul)lor
High Boosters and the Career
Education Commltlee, will be
held on Sunday at Southern High
School. Serving will begin· at
11:30 a.m. Evfrytne we)come.

'

with a chance of showers. Highs
Will be near 60. Chance of rain Is
40 percent.
,
Extended Forecast
Thunday lhrou1b Saturday
A chance of, fhowers or snow
flurries Thursday and Friday,
with lair, conditions Saturday.
Highs will hi: between 40 and 50,
with early morning lows In the
30s.

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Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township TrUstees

will meet Thursday, 7 p .m., at the

township hall. The public Is .

welcome.

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continued from p.,e 1

· preclpltatlon had fallen ID Ohio,
just slightly below normal.
Rebecca Petty. a hydrologist
with the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, said storage
reservoirs throughout the state ,
are at near-normal levels, with
most or the rainy sprlq season
yet to come.
She also ~U~Id the groundwater
supplies were helped by the mild
winter - IInce the -lOU didn't
rre e, It allowed more rainfall
llld snowmelt thr911gb the
II'CJUIICl to the aq ulters.
'J1Ie rwervoln, lbe uld, would
reach IICJl'mal level• by the
1ummer. auiiDIIII&amp; normal rainfall between now IJICI tileD.
Tom Jama, a lpoileiiiiiUI for ·
tile Mulk~a~Jum wa~Cou·

I ----..............

•rvauey Dlltrtet Ill New
. Pblla·

t

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Stoi'JJlS

BEGINNING
ATAGE40

BEGINNING

$122,614
. •183,921 :
228

•49,816
•74,724

•17,801
•26,702

Increase your re~ment Income.

AT AGE 50

,

BOSTER NEW PUCO CHAIRMAN - Governor Richard F.
CeletJte (right) stands by as State Rep. Jolynn Boster
(D-Ga1Upoll8), the newly-appointed PUCO chairman, makes the
announcement In the statehouse In Columbus Wednesday ' ·
morning. She succeeded Thomas Chema. who stepped down
earlier this year. (lJPI~

Tuesday night, Boster said, "It
services."
Boster said she supports the Is truly an honor to be appointed
concept of "lifeline " telephone chairman of PUCO. I'm ver y ·
rates - minimum charges for very much looking forward to
elderly and low-Income residents working with Tom Chema and
- adding that such rates would ·my colleagues on the cornmis:
"absolutely" have an Impact on slon, as well as the representa·
lives of the co nsumers' and
southeastern Ohio.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel Wll· utilities'. Interes t du ring this
,a legislator
the liam Spratley said he was lm· transition period.
" At the same time, I regret
94th house District In rural, pressed by Boster's credentials
southeastern Ohio, Jolynn is and her attitude toward lifeline greatly .) avlng to leave the
keenly aware of the PUCO's role telephone rates and planning for leglstatui'e. Having served In the
House for foul' terms, I have
In aiding rural development," . lower utility rates.
formed
personal !reindshlps and
"I
h11ve
a
positive
reaction,
"
said the governor.
good
working
relationships with
said
Spratley
.
"
From
what
I
. ' 'She·ls committed to maintain·
my
fellow
members.
understand
o!
her
background,
lng an open and public dialogue
"Although I will continue to act
through regional hearings and she has a very open approach. I
other public forums. She wants look forward to the commission as a local advocate for Soutlleas t
the commIssion to devote more o! being accessible to the consu- . Ohio, I will sorely miss serving as
Its energies to ensuring that all mers, because I remember when State Representative for Athens,
GaiUa and Meigs counties. "
Ohioans have access to regulated It wasn't always that'way." ·

sa!~s

kill two
p
e
.
I
peo

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In addition. an I.RA. ofl'ers tax Incentives that :You can take advantage of right now. The Interest
you earn wt11 be tax·exempt unW-you uae the money. Many people are still eligible to deduct aJ1 or
part of their annual contribution from their current Income taxes.

Let us show you how to reach your reUrement goal with a Peoples.Bank I.RA. We make it easyl

-I

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A
~asu~a ollloe Ill

'P LES

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MASON

POINI' PLEASANI'.
675-1121

773-5514

P(lmeroy man injUred in wreck

NEW HAVEN..
882-2135

Tile , Gilllla·Metp · Poet of . -t he State ' HleJtway Patrol
lnvett!JIIted 1111DlU1!'8CCident at 2: 30a.m. Wl!jlnesday on SR.

MBMBBRP.D.LC. o·SUBSTANTIALPBNAL'IYIQRBARLYWITHDRAWAL
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7; o.4 mlil'tolltb elf Utile post 9.
Troopers

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Wednesday after hurling lorna·
does and high winds In Georgia
that killed two people, damaged
a school and a nursing home and
knocked out power to 50,000
customers . •
The National Weather Service _
reported · the thunderstorms
developed ahead of a slow
moving cold front , extending
from the central Gulf Coast to
Georgia and South Carollna .
The weather service said tornadoes struck at least eight
Georgia counties 'l'uesday and
es tlmated that winds gu~ted to up to 100mph In the northern part of
the state.
Jeffrey Lee Grigsby, 25, Cum·
mlng, Ga. , was killed when winds
blew down a tree and crushed
him, Forsy¢ County Sherllf
Wesley Walraven said. The
WhlteCountysherlff'sofflcesald
Sue Arrowood, 27, Cleveland,
Ga.,.was kllled by a tree that fell

ser~lng

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Newa Staff
"I 'll till be
lng the public
s
serv
st
Will
Ohio
II
0!
Ju be a broader
•
constituency,"
Jolynn Boster
said Wednesday morning from
her office In Columbus.
Boster, of Gallipolis, was
ed"" 1
f the PUblic
''&lt;a
rman
nam
Utilities
Commission
of Ohio
Tuesday by Gov. Richard
Celeste.
A four-term Democratic State
Representative of Athens, Gallla
and Meigs counties, Boster will
take over the PUCO chairmanship ~prU IO, from Thomas
Chema, who Is leaving to return
to private law practice.
Her vision .- for PUCO goes
beyond thenexttlveyears-well
Into the 1990's and leadllli Into .

°

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I -Deal news briefs-..... ::~!!r~ry~~~~~:):t~

Your Good_Neighbor
'•

old . life out of the
tile Ceun Ho- wu ~tulle au erdeal, bat ao .

wollder,l&amp; weiJhl ai!HI four &amp;oM aad Is approXtmatel)' tllnebes
wide and 10 1Del1111 l!tp. All door Jambe 111111 culap bad to be
removed aDd· a m~.U amoiUII ol the coaerete wall bad to be
chlleled awa; belore the lA~ would mlbrour,ll the de-ay •

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........-......_". _"·~· ..... ~~.. -:':"::•~-...;:..,...,..,....,..,,'-_
....._,_.,.
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Whal~er your ali. monthly contrtbuUOns to an Individual Rettre~nt Account will Slgnll'!Cintly

Euteru A~ iOolter• will
meet 7: 30 p.m. Vo'tdllerda)' In the

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pa~un~t~~:m:ou~:::.ue:ar:~ Constituency larger now' Boster says

EllS "'ib.letic
hiP ~ebool caf81erta.

.

Staff and UPI reports
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!~
Jolynn Boster, a four-term state
representative !rom Gallipolis,
was appointed Tuesday as chairman of the Public UtUitles
Commission of Ohio, for a
five -year term , starting AprlllO.
Boster, 37, a Democrat , will
. succeed Thomas Chema, the
chairman for the last five years,
who Is leaving to • return to
private law practice In Cleve·
land. Chema Is considering run·
nlng for state attorney general
next year.
·Boster, who was raised 1n
suburban Dayton and graduated
!rom Ohio State University, will
be the second woman to chair the
utility-regulating agency. Sally
· Bloomfield, a Columbus la wyer,
headed the commission In the
1970s.
"I am almost speechless, "
Bosler told a hastily-called news
conference In the governor's
ceremonial office at the Statehouse. " Lim ready to go."
Boster was chosen over James
Kennedy; Marsha Schermer,
director of the PUCO's legal
departmen t; and ·Robert
Tongren, an assis tant attorney
general assigned to the PUCO.
Thf lr names had . been recommended to Celeste two months
ago by a special· nominating
council.
.
Celeste said he took his time In
naming the chairman because he
wanted t.horough background
checks before he began Interviewing the prospects.
The governor skirted a question about whether he preferred
state Tax Commissioner Joanne
Limbach for the job .
Limbach, a popular figure In
the administration, applied for
the job but was not nominated
after news media reports specu·
Jated that she had a lock on the
appointment.
Celeste said he had "a sufflclent level of comfort" with
Boster. " I think the people of
Ohio will be extremely well
served by this appolnlment," he

By,United Press International

delphia, said all of the agency's
10 lakes and reservoll'IID central
and northeast Ohio weraeltber at
their summer levels or close to
·
them.

Boosen to meet

SPnng

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"

Amount In IRA At Aae 65
Assuming All Average Yield of 8.30%

.

"Becallll! of the drought, we
cut the nonnal drawdown (drain·
in&amp; to mike room for melting
snow alll\~ng rains~ In half on
all'but Q~ of the lakes this fall to
help with pplenllbment th~
year," Janlh said.

e

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BEGINNING
. AGE30

A Multimedia Inc, NewiiPaper

ter ·. named .
PUCO chai•..ttan'

••

-RAIN -"m2J SIIDWEHS
"Cald . . Static . . Oc:ctl'xlect

Thursday , mostly cloudy,
high near 50. Chance of rain 40
percent.

Sections. 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednasday, April 6, 1989

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· INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT
ACCOUNT

Water...

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IRAS

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M0111ly cloudy, low In upper

30s'. Chance of rain 50 percent.

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Vot.39.

!·.:;•JSNOW

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$50 .
$75
$100

Pick4
7519

•••

tuie of soap. It Is an alkaline

.MONTHLY
INVESTMENT

600

l

· non-toxic colbrless liquid, he
said.
Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby advised that he had been
contacted by PPG about secilrchairman
of
committeeman
and
lng the area around the capsized
DaJTell Dugan
UMWA Local 1957.
barge and several off-duty offlc·
Dally stock·prices
Funeral services will be held
ers were handling the security at
(As oliO: SO a.m.)
Darrell L. Dugan, 49, of Raat the Racine ,United . Bryce and Mark Smtih
Thursday
the site.
cine, died Monday at his resiA PPG barge capsized In the
dence following an extended Methodist Church. The Rev. ol Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewl
Roger Grace will officiate and
same location about two years
. lllness.
He was emplOyed at the burial will be In the Letart Falls Am Electric Power . .. .......... 26% ago, It was reported by local
Cemetery. Military graveside AT&amp;T ...... .. , ................. ...... .3I% officials.
·
Southern Ohio Coal Co., Mine 3.
rites
will
be
conducted
by
the
Ashland
Oil
..........
.....
,
..
.......
40111
Born on Sept. 29, I939, he was
the son of the late Joseph Dugan Racine American Legion Post Bob Evans . .... ..... .. ..... :......... IS
602.
Charming Shoppes .'.. ; .... ,, .... IS
and Grace Beckman Dugan.
Veterans Memorial
Friends may call at the Ewing City Holding Co .. .. ... .... ........ I8
He Is survived by his wife,
Monday
admissions - ~eryl
Home
from
2
to
4
and
7to
Funeral
Federal Mogul... .......... ..... .. 52~
Shirley Hill Dugan, a daughter
Ferguson,
Cheshire; WIIUam
9
today
and
Wednesday.
The
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ........... 48
and son-In-law , Kim arid Larry
John
Kennedy,
Pomeroy. ·
will
be
taken
to
the
church
body
Heck's .............. ... .. ........ ...... \!,
Rnyder; two sons, Richard and
Monday
discharges
- Marie
one
hour
preceding
the
services.
Key Centurion ... ............ .. ... 13~
Kevin, and a daughter, Erica, all
Hayman.
Linda
Thomas,
Elza
Lands' End ..... .................... 29 ~
of RadnP.
Persons,
Norma
Goodwjn,
Helen
Also survl vlng are his motherLimited Inc ......... ............... 28~
In-law, Inez Hill, Racine; five Chester ROlle
Multimedia Inc_ .......... ........ 92~ Kennedy.
brothers, Lowell Bobb, Jr., Chll·
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ....... .153/.i Second meeting set
Chesler Rose, 83, of Canton, a
llcothe; Harold Dugan, Hebron;
The second parent volunteer
Lloyd Dugan, Rutland; Larry formerresldentofChesterTown· Shoney's Inc ........ ..... ... ... ..... 8%
Joe Dugan, Pomeroy, a'nd Dick ship, died Monday at the Ault- Wendy's Inti ...... .. .. .. .. ........ .. 6\i, · meetlrig for the Everybody
Worthington lnd ....... .. ...... .. 2J3A Counts program will be held at
Dugan, Racine; and three sis· man Hospital In Canton . . ·
ters, Sue Little, Mlddeport; Do·
Son of the late John and Dora (Lands' End sees first-quarter Southern High Schpol on Aprll10
at 7 p.m.
rothy Ger!han, Newark; and Bookman Rose, he was ,bo(n on net below year ar;o $.29/lltare ~
Shirley Follrod, Rutland, along Jan . 29, 1906 In Chester
with several aunts and uncles, · Township.
,
.•
He Is survived by his wife,
nieces and nephews. ·
Besides his parents, he was Isabelle; two sister,, Mrs. Dopreceded In death by his father- rotlly Willard, Jacksonville, 111.
in-law, Julian Hill, a brother, and Mrs, Bertha Dye, Auburn,
Bob, and his grandparents.
Calif.; and two brothers, Arthur
For seven years Dugan ·was Rose, Little Hocking, and John
coach for the Southern •Local Rose, Long Bottom.
High School footqall team. He"'
Besides his patents, .he was
was a member of the Racine preceded In death by one sister
United Methodist Church a vete· and one brother.
·
ran' of the U.. S. Army, and a
Funeralservlceswlllbeheldat
member of the Racine American 11 a :m. Thursday at the Karla
Legion Post 602., and affiliated and Sons Funeral Home In North
with . the Fraternal Order of ·canton. Friends may call at the
Eagles, Meigs Aerie 2171. Pome- funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. on
roy. He . served as a mine Wednesday.

will not be eligible for the the costs Involved and the need
Insurance days even If they do . for workers on jobs here In the
not enroll In the health ·plan.
village rather than waiting for
Also discussed by council was lenghty periods of time to dump
the possible temporary ellmlna· trash at West Columbia.
lion of trash pickup in the village.
Finally, It was announced that
As explained, when Meigs Coun- a liquor license transfer has been
ty's landfill was still in operation, approved through the State
.village crews averaged three or . Board of Llqour Control for
four trips a day to the county Arlwona Sue Walker, doing busifacility .
ness as the Rainbow Inn, Pomeroy, to Marjorie Snider, •also
Since the local landfill has been doing business as the Rainbow
closed, village workers have Inn, Pomeroy.
been takillg trash to West ColurriThe mayor's report of $2,1331n
bla, W. V4. However, workers are fines and fees collected during
unable to take more than one load the month of Marcil was
a day because of the long walt approved. ·
behind large semi-trucks which
Absent from Monday's meetregularly dump at West Ing were CoUIICIImen Bruce Reed
Columbia .
and Franklin Rizer. Present, In
Council decided to leave the addition to Mayor Richard
trash pickup situation as Is, at Seyler and Clerk-Treasurer Jane
least until May. At that lime, Walton, we~ Councilmen Larry
council may determine to halt Wehrung, Bill YOUIIII, Bryan
the service temporarUy, due to Shank and Betty Baronlck.

Pick3

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Pomeroy_Council... continued fcqm page 1

Ohi~ Lottery

.Major

area near Oakdale, damaglne
kind of .dlsas ter declaration. "
houses, trailers and barns.
salcl Gary Talley of the Arkansas
The tornadoes descended from
Office of Emergency Service.
line of thunderclouds at about
a
At least two mObile homes and
IS
p.m. , said John Scheper,
3:
a "house were damaged at Pine
assistant
coordinator for the
Bluff, Ark., several businesses,
Emergency
Services . Disaster.
lpcludlng a Holiday Inn, were
Damage was reported In Oak·
damaged In Jonesboro. hill!
damage was report~!&lt;~ ..II! Hot d,le, Lively Grove and near
,
·
Spring County and powe!""and · Coulterville.
Clvll·Defense officials reported
com'fnunlcatlons lines were
15 to 20 homes were moderately
downed throughout tl!e. state by
damaged and about six trailer
the tornadoes and high winds.
homes were blown off their
In southern Illinois, storms
foundations . l"ower was knocked
spawned three tornadoes that
out throughout the area.
ripped through a I5-&amp;quare-mlle

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as a general service Industrial
chemlc'al with. a wide range of
end uses such as i.n the manufac-

--Area deaths--- .Stocks

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and was recently elected to the are both State Representative
Executive Committee of the Jolynn Boster and Senator Jan
De rri o or a t I c . N a tl on a I Michael Long.
•
Committee.
Dinner wlll ·be served at 6 p.m.
· Mary Hunter Is chairman of with the program to begin at 7
the dinner. Exepcted to be, _on_,....p.m. Tickets are $7 and may be
hand for the dinner meeting a'tMI' purchased from any committeeman or at the do,or.

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IBid Jo1111 Guinther, 23, Pomeroy, lost control on a

cui'Yl!.HIItlal'weft~Off111e roacUtrlklngtbe guafd
. rall. Damage
Cod1inued 011 page 5
_.!)

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By LEI!: U:ONABb
VPII!Iatebu.- lteporter
COLUMBUS- Soclal~ervlces
advocates paraded before a
Senate Finance subcommittee
Tuesday to urge realllratton of
funds to aul8t the elderly, the
poor and children.
At the same time, represenl.a·

J.,

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communication and transportalion In the state. It Is mos t famous ·
for decisions on utility rates and
has dev.eloped policy on the
transportation of hazardous
waste, which directly led to
legislation regulating its move·
rnent across the state.
As chairman, Bos ler will be
head of a commission with
approXImat ely 500 employees,
develop . Its budget and work
directly with the state admlnistratlon and legislature.
When her Representative pos ilion Is vacated, the House Democrats will vote on her replacement. While there Is no set
deadline. Boster Is hopeful the
choice will be made and her
replacemen t swor n In as she'
leaves for PUCO. •

SocUJ·l serv;~es· advocate·s·
plead J'or bu,~,..et
inc.reases
~
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damage In Habersham County,
lnchidtq an elementary school
and nursing home In Baldwin.
"It tore tbe topa off the
· bulldln&amp;S and messed up some
sheds next to them," Deputy
David toudermllk said. "There
were no Injuries. ~Ithe students
, were gone, and ust a f~
C6ntlnued on pa e 5

•

the next century.
•'There's a challenge In the
utilities arena leading toward the
next century," Boster said In a
telephone Interview Wednesday.
People may not think Issues like
nuclear energy and hazardous
.waste affect their dally lives, but
·"those (Issues) have an Impact
on utilities rates and avallabll!ties, " Boster said._. .
The chairmanship o! PUCO
was attractive to Boster because
It still deals with public policy
and development, she said. It will
- like being a state representalive - have an Impact on the
dlrecllon the state Is moving, she
added.
The mission of the Public
Utilities Commlaslon of ·Ohlo 1$
the regulation of energy, tele-

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lives of the American Cancer of Ohio United Way, told the
Society held a press contereDce · Human Servtces sobcommnteee
to push fbr au Increase In !be tax that ller group cOmmends the.
on tobacco product1, clltelly Houae for mtortn.: ttl mnUon ·.snuff and chewing tobacco, year to the Title XX pi'Qgram
which It claims are rulniD&amp; tbe -that drew~ federal matcblilg
lives of young people who use flllida. Slle uked. that anotlter
$8.7 mll'liOII a year be l'eltOI'ed tO:
them.
Judith Bird, associate director • lllltll'e ~I) I fllU federali'IIJIC~ :

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WednlldiY, April&amp;. 1989

Page 2-The .o .lly la•llt•..
Pon•ot-MkdiPCIIt. Ohio
._'VM•••d•v. ~ 1. 1111.

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The Daily

Se.te ~lll

Sen~inel

111 Court !Mreet
Pomeroy, Ohio

Tuel4ay eveniJII, the Senate
Education
Committee took adell·
Dl!:VclftD TO THE INTEUIITi OF THE MBIGS:IWION ADA
Ilona! tfttlmony on Senate Bill
~~ ...
'
. 140, alao known u the Omnlbua
~~
Education Reform and Accoun·
tablllty Initiative. W.Ullam Phil·
,..Ill,
ADIItant Superintendent for
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
CHARLENE HOEFIJCH
tbe
Oblo !Mate Board or Educa·
PubUiher
.General Maaapr . · lion tftUfled that aeveral con·
PAT WIDTEHEAD
• cepta of the bill parallel many
A•lltant Publllher/ControUer
Ieaia Ia tlve . recomm~ndatlona
preaented by the board; Senate
Prealclent
Stanley AronoH, R·
A MEMBER of The United Preu International, Inland
,
..
ClnclnnatL
S.B. 140'a primary
Dally Pres• Association and the American Newapaper Publish· ·
aponaor
teatlfled
a week ago that
eu Association.
the lqlllatlon Ia a aymbol that
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They; ollould be le11 thlll300
the Senate Ia aerloua about
words lone. All letters •re oubject to ed!tlna and mull be •llnad with
refOrm and accountability, Sev·
name. addrenand telephone number. No uftllped Jet•• will be puberal of my collea.pea In the
lished. Letters should ~e In 11ood tute, addreulllr II IIIIi; not per10nall·
Senate believe that S.B. 140 Is a
Ues.
.
·
IOOd beillllilili and fOr many
achool dlltrlcta acroas the atate,
the plan will be or.aome benefit;
however, for many acbooll In the
11th Senate District, S.B.140does
.
'
not even belln toaetatrectlfYinl
the exlaUna funding Inequities
that I atroqly believe muat be
the Important first step taken In
lmprovtna the overall quality of
Separate reports released last they jumped by 14% In 1988. achooll·tn So11theaatern Ohio.
week by th.e .Environmental Becauae of this the EPA eatl·
Some of the specific Items of
Protection Agency and by a mateathat88.6m1Uionpeopleare S.B.l40 Include:
- Derl!llllatlon of education· '
subcommittee of the House or living In county jurladlctlona
Representatives contained good wherj! ozone levels exceed fed·
ally excellent acbooldlatrtctsand ·
·news · and JJad news about our eral standards.
Implement a corrective aca·
environment.
Overall, an estimated 101.8 demlc plan for educationally
Tbe aood news Is that over the million Americana are now deficient districts. The baJic
last ten years, the u.s. has made thou;ht to be breathbllalrtbat 11 concept Ia fine, however, the bill
slgnJflcant proaress In cleaning considered unaafe accordllll to doea not clearly apell out the
up pollutanta In the air we standards eatablllhed by the criteria that would be · uaed to
determine what makes one disbreathe. The bad news Is that we EPA.
The House aubcommlttee retrlct outatandlnll and another
still have a lona way to 10· Taken
together, the reports Indicate the port releaaed laat week palata an deficient.
problem of air pollution II still even bleaker picture for thealr
-RequlrtnatheStateBoardof
very serious and that much stiJI we breathe than the EPA ~rt.
Education to prepare a plan or
action for accelerathll the meneeds to be done to correcit the This report rocuaed 011 the toxic
problem.
, chemicals which have been dernlzatlon or vocational currie·
First, let's look at the good ! linked to cancer, nervoua ayatem . ulum. The estimated coat for
news. According to the EPA, the, damaae and blz;tb defects that .prepartna a plan of action Is
overall quality of the air In the are released Into tile air at
$150,000.
U.S. has markedly, Improved Amerlca'slndustrtalaltea.
- Requlrlnachlldren to attend
over the last decade. In a study
The report found that u billion
kindergarten before belne admit·
that monitored six damaging pounds of these hazardou 4 pollu· · ted to flrat . arade· unleas the
substances In the air from 1978 to tants were releued Into our
requirement II waived by a pup!l
1987, the EPA found that there nation's air tn 1887. Thla fllllrt · peraonnel -aervlcel committee,
which each achool dlltrlct would
had been an overall reduction In far exceeda the 110 million pounds
the levels of all six. Of these, the that were eatlmated·on the bull
have to establllh.
level of pollonous le.gd In the air, or a smaller aample In lllll5.
- Requlrhll the State Board to
which was a major health con· Brlngtnaltcloaertohome,Ohlo'a
eatabllahaatatewtdeeducatlonal
cern-ten years ago because It has 122.4 million pounds of hazardous
manaaement ayatem. The cost Is
been linked to Irreparable brain chemlcala releued Into the air eatlmated at 1!1·20 mUllon for the
and nervous system damage, has ranked the . Buckeye alate fifth
biennium.
·been reduced by 88%.
outofal\ of thestateawlthreaard
-Require each city, local, or
William Reilly, tl,)e head of tile to thll problem. •·
exempted vtlla11e school dlatrtct
EPA, credits thiS success to
Moreover, the worst problem r..:tL::•d::o:!p:.:.t_a::n::...;ope::::,n_::en:::r~o:::ll:::m:;e:::n:t
federal clean air laws which he with the air . exists In heavily
feels have worked exceptionally COIIJested urban areu where,
welllnsomeareas. Forexample, frankly, most have beer»cOplz·
the federally mandated switched ant for year• that a aerliiua
to unleaded gasoline In automo- problem exits, and where con·
biles Is largely responsible for certed efforts are underway 1o
reducing the level of poisonous remedy such condlllona. Admit·
lead found In the air.
tedly, these emlaslona conatltute
Unfortunately, however, that's cause for concern buttheydonot
as far as the good news goes. constl!ute an· Immediate threat
According to this same EPA to the public's health.
ieport, while the levels or the six
Therefore, a rash of hutlly
pollutants are down overall from Implemented new federal re111la·
ten years ago, the levels orrour of lions are not neceaaarUy the
btem actually Increased from answer. Reports clearly show
1986 to 1987.
that we have a long way to eo
, or these four, ozone and carbon before we-can be assured thatthe
!nonoxlde emissiOns are of par· air we breathe Is clean and safe,
ttcular concern to the EPA and- but at the same time the jury Is
lhe Increase In both has been still out as to the cauae and effect
linked to automobile emissions. relationships surrounding theae'
In fact, ozone levels (as opposed problems. Thus, In the month•
lo the problem that exists with ahead, Congress muat work
·respect to the planet's ozone toward solutions that are both
layer) Increased nationally by proaresslve In scope and practl·
$% between 1986 and 1987, and cal In application.

.

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

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140· ---~--Se........;n_
. Ja....--n_M._Lo_ng
.

Alao. 11 the budaet biU llutna
to make Ita way tbroulll tilt Ohio
Senate, I wUI be reportiJII on Ita
PI'OIJ'8II, eapeclally In tarma or
dollan bel'nl allocated to tile
dlltrtct .
you have any queatlona
perta!nhll to 8.8.140, the buclpt
·bill, or any other tuue of
concern, do not hesitate to call
me at 61~81B6. or write:
Senator Jan Michael Loftl, Stateholllt, Columbua, Ohio 632111. .

policy within the dlatrlet, and provide us with an fttlmate of'
· either allow or prohibit open wllat would be thl flacallmpa.ct
enrollment with adjolnlnl on the schools of the 1'fib Senate
dlstrtcta.
.
Dlatrlct and the State of Ohio If
Tbere are other provlllona of S.B. 140 were to become law, The
S.B. UO which related to open Department has promlled to
enrollment, teacher certlflca· come up with an Impact analyall ·
tlon, teacher Incentives, and u aoon aa poaalble. It haa alwaya
conaolldatlon of achool dlatrtcta, been my feellnl that we ahould
many of which It II claimed will not lmpoae mandatea · without
not have major coati attached. I · provldlnl prop« fun4llll for our
have asked Mr. Phlllll and the -achoola or ldentlfYina IQIIrcea or
Deparlment of Education to fundtna.

u

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We ·have a long way
to go ___C_o.....;ng::;..._C_la_r_en_ce_M_i_lle_r

2

IHUISDAY, FIIDAY and SA
t \ ~ ~ ._~

. ALLW.....'S

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fLATS I CASUAU
•CONNIE
•FOOTWORK&amp;
•NATURALIZER

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Torolllo ,

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AVAILABLE 11'11
-Gr11n

-Bone

~Navy

CHA
N SHOES
lilT 10 ILII..IIDS
•-------------iaiiiiiiiiiiiii-.:.'
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ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

•'
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·
UPI Senior Editor
·
. wA:sHINGTON - Carl Bernstein, whose name has appeared more
-In gossip columns than at the top of big news stories In recent year•.
~ow has written a book about his family that also Is very serious
-~ournallllm Indeed.
• Bernstein. Bob Woodward's partner on the Washlnaton Post'a
;watergate reporting team and In the writing or "All The Prealdent's
•Men" and "The Final Days," has focused his ln.vestlgatlve talents on
:the Truman admtnlltratton's loyalty proaram In the late 1940s.
i His !'nterest, stated up front , Is· more than the searcll for a iood
,•story. Both ol Bernstein's parents were called before conareaslonal
·:committees to answer questions about their activities and loyaltlea,
(and his father defended more than 500 federal employes called before
::tlepartmental·loyalty boards.
; In a daunttng effort or writing, Garl Bernstein, the mlddle.aaed
·reportet;.undertakea to describe how all or this affected the child Carl
:ser111teln; the parenti, AI and Sylvia Bernstein; and to comment on
i;bow the process marked all or them.
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New Jl)llper Sal ea. 733 'lblrd Aveoue,
New York, New York 10017.

·-&lt;h....

POSniAS'I'ER; Sen4
to
'111e Dilly Sentinel. Ill COUrt 51.;

Pomeroy, ado 111'1611. -

'

-Ill$· ......

IIVBICIIII"'10N BATIIII
. , Cant.One We&lt;!lt ........ ... ....................... .SUO
One Monlh .................................IUO
ODe Year ............................ ..... l72.80

SINGLE COPY
I"'IICE

Dolly ..... ................. .........:... ~ Centa

Sublcrlbetl aotdmlrtn&amp;topay tbecarrter m~~y remit lD adVance dlred to
'111e Dally Soalinel on a3, 6or 12 mOIIlb
bas.ll. credit ww be atven curler eaeh

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week.
No subaertptlou by ftloiu pi!lmltlfll 11r
areas where home earner Nrvlce ll
avaUable.
...

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WE'LL HELP
A fire department am·
ployee In Georgia reports _
he lit a log In the fire·
place. He didn't realize
the fireplae w•• fake, . _nd
almost bumed the place
down. In Raleigh, a man
reported, I have always
ha1rd It was dangerous.
for a fly to be flying
~round in a moving car,
so in my a~empt to kill
the fly, I drove into-a tree.

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I

Colulilbla·wll Ckanale $1 for fNWY $2 you p
to the HeatShare for 'Citizens f'ni·

NY &amp;MJIN - a.eaDN ~.. er
MIU 81dlllr ,_. 0.:..,... •I Ute•

vtah M Pltoealk, lt. If p.m.

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lll&amp;er ...... •"'-' l.elfiPt.

W•lll•lf••atMhml..a~N
niP~

......

FormerMemphlsStatebasket·
ball coach Dalla l(lrk began his
one-year sentence for tax evasion j!nd obstruct ton or Justice at
a federal prlloll campo In -Ala· .
bama. Kirk reported l!flllllllt to·
the mln_!mum-aecurlty fedl!ral
pl"lson •t Maxwell Air Force
Base ln,!'4ontaomery, Ala., despite a fecleralJudge'a rullnl that
he could remain free JM!adlni an
appeal. L. Former Unlverflty of
Houston aa•Jataat "baaketball
coach Tetry KJrllpatrlek baa
bee!). placed 011, prdlltloa

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HOUIS: I U.-6 P.M.

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Milwau!Re 114, Gti-Statt 1111
Port..,. liN,
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Member: United Prelolllterutlollll.
lllland Dolly Proto Aaooclatlon ud lbe ·
Ohio Newopa_per AlloclatloD. Nat-

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. PH. 446·1699 ·

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Publl&gt;hed

lhrOUih Friday. 111 Court St., Pomeroy. Olllo, by the Oblo Vllley Pub- •,
ttshlnr ComJ1111y/Mulllmedla, IDe..
Pomeroy, Ohio 15'1119. Pb. 9t2-2156. Socon&lt;! class pOitqe pol4 .t Pomeroy.
Olllo.

ll~efo- MN'S

..,. . . . (••

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0

It's spring, and winter heating bills are
behind us. But others who may be living
on fixed or low incomes, br out ol work are
still paying winler's healing bills. Help us
help them.·
HeatShare for Citizens, administered by
The Salvtltion Army, is one 'flfl'/ all ol us here
In Ohio can help. Colum!Jia is donating
$50,000 stalawlde, IJIIdw/1/maiBh )lOUr COn·
trlbutlon with additional money: $1 for IIV81Y

( ••

'"'Ill ()I 1"' W•il
11 PC. SHIIMP:

eo1eae

Jl ' aruiiQIIII....,•,eompltttlniuslllkn

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 Jrd An., Gallpoln

(USPB liHII)

A llh1oloa oiMw-o, llle.

l:J!IIt... - M...-d ee rftftmnt

Welterweights Aaron _. Davis
and Luis -Santana, amt IIIII!·
welght.s T\lnde Foster and
Johnny DeLaR!&gt;sa. will fllhl for
WE!C Cqntlnental Americas titles
April 13 at Mad!Sj)n Sauare
·Garden In New York.

To-..='NN

GOOD USED
WASHERS, ·DRYERS,
IEFRIGERATOl;, TYs,
' . GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

llPf41itlcii. . O.uPaii,Kenl'.alen•

••11 •

· ,,.... lt...... , .•• , ..

cates and pins from their coaches
and advisors , and the sixth
graders received trophies and
pills from their coaches and
advisors.
All of the coaches and advisors
received gifts and plaques from
their teams and squads as well as
the Royals Committee.
Special presentations were
made to Carol Guinther, flag
football statistician, Megan Ma·
nuel and Mike lhle, fifth and sixth
grade basketball statistician,
and Tyson Mugrage. clock
keeper.
All members and friends of the
Racine Royals enjoyed a buffet
style meal with the traditional
red and white decorating theme.
Prior to the banquet, all took part
in a skating party.

an•

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......,...., .... ,,,:fill·'"· ...· '

·The Daily Sentinel

ee•

·..,

briefs-- ~
Boxtna

..

Is' C!nctnnatl Red~' Manager
Pete Rose, wager.ed up to $16,000
dally on bas.e ball games during
May, 1987.
The Oeveland Plain Dealer
said It had obtained an IRS
document that said the Illegal
bets were placed by RQnald
P~ters, a cafe owner previously
ldenti!led as Rose's prlnclp;li
bookmaker.

· QNCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) Unidentified government lnfor·
mants reportedly told the Inter·
nal Revenue Service a man
code-named G-1, who reportedly

Mel~., ...

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Unidentified informants say
Rose bet on baseball games

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Members of the flag football
squad were Luke Holman, Kevin
lhle, Travis Muarage. Riehle
Wamsley ; B.J. Ervin, Chris
Brown, Jamey Nelson, Scott
Grace, Jeremy Smith, Grant
Circle, Jeremy Guinther, Jason
Ervin, Jeremy H!ll, Jimmy Rancjolph, Ryan Martin, Jonathan
Smith, water boy, and Charlie
Mugrage and Kenny Gutnter,
coaches.
The fifth grade basketball
team Includes Jamey Nelson,
- B.J. Ervin, Luke Holman, Riehle
Thomsly, Janna Manuel, Char·

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ley McKinney, Ryan Martin, and
John Manuel, coach.
Players on the sixth grade
basketball team · are Jimmy
Randolph, Kevin Ihle, Jeremy
Guinther. Scott Grace, Travis
Mugrage, Jason Ervin, Grant
Circle, Jeremy Hill, and Nick
lhle, cQac~ .
Cheerleaders are Jyl Mathews, Amy Woods, Chanda
Mulford, Bridget Varney, Shanlion Morar!ty, and Kendra Nor·
rls : Their advisor was Joy
· Morarlty.
The Royals had a successful
year with taking second place In
both the Southern Grade School
tournament and Portland tournament In the sixth grade, and first
place In flag football.
Fifth graders received certlfl·

The Racine Royals flag football squad, fifth and sixth grade
basketball teams. and the cheerleading squad were honored
recently with a sports banquet.

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"L!li.J&lt;E saving .an groceries,
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and my~...

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coach Nick lhle, . Grant Circle, Jeremy Hill, and
Corey IDII. Second row, Scot&amp; Grace, Travll
Muvage, and Jason Ervin. Third row, Jimmy ..
Randolph, Kevin lhle, and Jeremy Gulpther.

Racine Royals honored at fete

Nfttl'erll•lllhrullle.•JIIIl

' Majors

-

'

Scoreboard ...

.DRESS. SHOES

'

-

&lt;RACINE ROYALS SIXm -GRADE BASKET·
BALL-Hoaored receniiJ' with· a sports banquet,
lhese boys look second place In ho&amp;h the Southern
Grade School· tournament and the Porlland
tournament. Pictured left to l'illhl' are, first row,

Wunsley, and Luke Holman.

r••

-:jd ifferent look at. HST·

.

Manaei, Charley McKinney, and Ryan Martin.
Seciond. row, Jamey Nelson, .B.J. Ervin, Riehle ·

RACINE IU)YALS FIFTH GRADE BASKET;·
BALL-Tbeae aludeala received eerdflca&amp;ea ucl ·
a&amp; their recent ljiOl1a buquet. They are, left
rl!lbt, fin&amp; row, ,eoaell Jobn Muuel, Jomia

ttns

~Carl Bernstein's

~aome justification at the atart of the project) that hlaaon wu mainly
:•Interested In whether the parents were Communlat Parly members.
! At the end ot the book, Ber111telnwrltes: "I have tried to learn what
;happened !~our family. and to set It down. ln dolqao, lmayormay
; not have committed an act of disloyalty. My father and mother never
:dtd."
· But the son Is broUihl around to the father's view, which wu that
·: party memberlhlp and subversion was not the lasue; that the object
~of the loyalty pi'OIJ'8m waa to hunt for polltlcalllberala, advocatea of
·ractal equality and pi'CJII'eaalve unlonllts and to earmark them for
:poaalble dNaUon.
• Tile ultlmlle vllltan bere Ia J. Edgar Hoover, Whk:h II no aurprlae,
·but the IHOadar)l heavy II Harry Truman, wblcb runa aomewbat
:COIIJIW to the trend of the laat i1ecadea to build up HS1"a nputatlon.
: ~In Millar blllllvea Truman abjectb' cav~ In t6 poUUcal
·pntiUI'III111141 to aava bla prealdenUal candidacy, and tbat 111111
;the dlpartmelltal loyalty boards, fed by Hoover'a UCIII)'IIIOUI
· ;lafoniiUtl, run rovcrblbod over the ConaUtuUon to railroad loyal,
•Americana oul of pwrlllltllt Joba.
: Wlllt 11 llli'lk'••t 111Dut Ibis II that It predltea the era of
••ubvii'IMI ~ llllllld after Republk:aa Joaepll R. McCarthy
~1
1a1t11 to Democrat Harry~- ·

The Daily Sentinai..:..Pag• 3

-- Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

*

.

'

'

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~ ADOLPH's iialiY vALLEY: ·
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ala rnc'dra.IIMIIIGI.,.Pi"'l
0, . . . . betanei fund,
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P.O. Box 1MB • ~OH4$111-4111

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r..-------.. ______________________
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'!1·2556

tant program. If you itemize 1 your donation is
tax deductible and it's simple to contributlt.
'ltlu can mall the Iorin from this ad with your
check, or uee the HaaiShare coupon
enclosed with your next Columbia Gas bill.
Every $2 VOl! give will provide S3 to
people who need it.

r---·-----------~---~-~
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wn. ·~~u~ ......$.199

$2 you give- as much as another
$100,000 to match contributions.
Please join us in supportilg this lmpor·

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The Daily

w.di ··~· April'· , .

Pomeov-Mi«M'JpOrt. Ohb

Pave 4 The Daily Sa 1li1el

I

.,

Oldest Opening Day battery·.

• •'!:"

.

.

UPISporta Writer
• Berra for ser:ond place all-time
the save. Fr'ank Viola, 0-1, aave
Openlnll Day In Anaheim, amona catcher.
.
.
up three runs on three hlta and
Calif., had ail Old Timers Day
Donn Pall went the !Ina! two
four walks In six lnnlnas.
fiavor as lhe duo of Jerry Reuss Innings for Chicago, allowing a ·
and Carlton Fisk made baseball solo homer by pinch· hitter Clau'
history. ·
dell Washington In the eighth.
Chicago White Sox pitcher Pall earned his first maJorJerry Reuss and catcher Carlton league save.
Fisk formed the oldest battery In
Witt yielded nine hits and three
Openlna Day history Tuesday earned runs In six and two-third
and also made key contributions Innings:
In Chicago's 9-2 victory over the
In the ninth, Angel reliever Bob
·
McCfure hit Ivan Calderon In the
California Angels:
i .
The Reuss-Fisk battery ec- . leg, and tbebenchesandbullpens
llpsed the 79 years, three months cleared when C&lt;&gt;lderon charged
and 14 days combined by Johnny the mound, angrlly throwing his
Nlggellnll and Rick Ferrell for helmet at McClure. McClure and
'
the 1944 Senators.
Calderon were ejected.
~OW
"The two principal guys were
Reuss yielded only twq hits
•
over seven Innings In gaining his getdng H out of their system and .
•Weed Eate....
212th career' win and Fisk belted the others were Involved lh the
his 3401h career home .run, obligatory wres tie," Rader said. ,.
•Lawn Mowers
helping White Sox Manager Jeff
ElseWhere In the American
League:
Torborg win his debut.
•Garden Tools
Yankees f, Twins 2
The defeat spoUed the managerial debut of Angels Manager
At Minneapolis, Roberto Kelly
PLUS MUCH MO.RE
Doug Rader, and extended Call- drove In two runs and had four
•
fornla's losing streak to 13garnes hits Including a horne run to back
over two seasons.
the pitching of Tommy John and
In his 18th major-league sea- Dale Mohorclc. John, 1-0, al'
son, Reuss, who will be 40 In lowed two runs Ol\ 10 hits and two
June, has.found a new apprecla- walks with three strikeouts In
Ryan MarUn.
row; Grant Circle, Jeremy
tlon for lhe game.
seven Innings · to successfully '
IIASON, W. YA.
"Arter belna released three start his 26th major-league sea·
Guinther, and ~~:.Ervin . Fourtb row, Jamey
Nelson, Scott u
Jeremy Smith, aad Chris .. times In 1987, I changed · my son. a modern record. Mohorclc
Brown. Fifth
B.J. Ervin, Kevin lhle, 'and.'i whole attitude toward the
_ , ._ _!'""""1'!'""11111!"'!!'
Travis MuKJ'age.
row, Luke Hobnan, and game," Reuss said. ''From then
Ritchie Wamsley .1
on, I carne In the locker room and
It I saw a uniform Iii my lbcker,
~ I'dputltonandthlnkhowhappyl
was to be In the big leagues for

IT'S..liME
TO TACKLE
THE LAWN.

Kinder t'ten ·registration Friday
registration for students entering Southen
rten will be on Friday, April 14 at the
klndergar building In Racine. Hours are 8:15 to 11- a.m and ·
12: 30 to 2: 4 p.m.
Parenis e asked to lake a copy of the child's birth certificate
and -lmmu lzatlon record when they go to register. Immunlza. tlops req ed to register Include tl!ree polio and booster, three
·OPT an booster, MMR, and a recent tuberculosis skin test
within t past year.
..
Child n must be five on or before Sept. 30 In order to register
for kl ergarten. There will be no rel!\llar kindergarten classes
tllat y. Further Information may be obtained by calling
~
..

IN STOCK

RACINE ROYALS FLAG FOOTBALL SQUAD·
-Honored at their recent sports banquet for
"receiving first place In tournament action are,left
·to right, first row, coach Charlie Mugrage,
Jonathan Smith, and co!Wh Kenny Guinther.
· Second row, Jeremy IDII, Jimmy Randloph, and

•

te 11D0f11 tbe top two runnfn&amp;'

~~~~ MJeeted,

, "We bew always believed It
bolb rcttulonal and
foolbal ttiat the NFL
ralle tlrJt work to

.....::::rlwl~
~

.

one more day."

•

Montreal answered with thr,ee In Inning that powered San Franthe second. Brooks singled, Wall- cisco. Kelly Downs, 1-0, pitched
ach was sale on a throwing error seven shutout Innings, allowing
and Tom Foley homered down six hits and th1'ee W!llks while
striking out six. Loser Bruce
the llne. ln right field.
Pittsburgh tied the score 3·3 Hurst yielded eight runs on 10
with two runs In the seventh off hits in five Innings In his National
Dennis Martinez. Consecutive League debut.
•
singles by Bonilla, Sid Bream
and Glenn Wilson narrowed the
Montreal lead to 3·2. Mike
Lavalliere then hltlntoa fielder's
choice, scoring Bream.
Barry Bond~ collected four·hlls
In as many at bats for the
Pirates, Including a tie-breaking
horner In the eighth to give
Pittsburgh a 4-3lead. Bonds said
"It's personqlly a great way lor
me to start the season but I am
PROM SPECIAL
disappointed that we lost."
After Bonds homered, Lind
walked and Andy ' Van Slyke
singled. Van Slyketook second on
the throw to third and Bonilla
received an Intentional walk.
Bream· also walked, maklna It
5-3.
Get Ready For The
Montreal pulled within 5-4 In
the eighth on a triple by Spike
Alumni Banquet
Owen and -a ~Ingle by Garcia.
HUSBAND &amp;WIFE
In other NL action:
,
1 MONTH SPECIAl
Cubs 5, Phlllles 4
UNliMITED
At Chicago, Andre Dawson
·homered and Rick Sutcliffe be- .
came the first Cub pitcher since
Grover Cleveland Alexander In
1925 and 1926 to win consecutive
home openers. Floyd Youmans
was the loser, though Mike
Schmidt stroked his fifth opening
led Hll load
day homer and the 543rd of his
career for the Phlllles.
Astros 10, Braves 3
At Houston, Art Howe won his
managerial debut as Mike Scott
wimt seven Innings to notch his
third straight Opening Day ylctory. In the second, Glenn Davis
added a solo homer, a 400-foot
blast off loser Zane Smith, who
worked two and one· third In&amp;
nlngs, allowing six runs on six
hits.
Ghints 8, Padres 3
.At San Diego, Will Clar k and 1
Kevin Mitchell slammed backto·back homers In a six-run thlr\ ;

Reuss retired 17 batters In a
row after ·Devon White homered
with two out In the first. White
then snapped the string with a
hustllnll double with one out In
the seventh. Reuss struck out
three and did not walk a batter.
"I was able to pitch the way I
wante~ to pitch," Reuss said. "I
was getting them Inside and the
pitches were called strikes."
Fisk's homer, a soloshotln the
slxlh oft loser Mike Witt., moved

l

4 Wheal drive. running board•. radio, _
sport' wheel•. tltripe ·
. package.

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1 MONTH
UNLIMITED

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1986

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PBSC.PTION
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Ju.t bring In eny

new pt'lllll'iptlon Of prM«!jltlon bottle

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. ANY NEW 011UIISFEIIID

Meigs jobless rate at '10.2%
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services have announced
the Oklo county unemployment rates for February, · 1989.
Among the state's 88 counties, the unemployment rat111 ranged
from .a low of 4. percent In Hamilton County to a high of 15.6
percent In Monroe County,
•
.
The report showed Melp County's unemploy.ment rate tor
February at 10.2, one tuU percentage po~t below the February.
1988 rate. The February 1989 rate was 1.1 percentage points
lower than the January 1989 rate of 11.3 .
The report listed Meigs County With a labor force at 8,100with
7,300 .In employment and 800 unemployed. ..

DIUTell Dugan

Dana Hoffman
Dana E . Hoffman, 88, of
Tuppers Plains, died Tuesday at
the home of his daughter, Hazel
Gare)l, Clearwate~. Fla., where
he ltad resided for the pasl two
and one-half years.
A son of the ' late Mont and
VIvian Hoffman, Mr. HoHman
was an active member of the St.
Paul United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains. He' was a
farmer, and ownl!d and opera ted
a service station In Tuppers
Plalq.s.
SuMvors Include his wife of 67
years, Gertrude, of Clearwater,
Fla.; a son and daughter.-ln-law,
Dana and Bern~e Hoffman Jr. ,
Rutland; a daughter and son-In·
.law, Helen and l&lt;enneth Davidson, Columbus; a daughter,
.Hazel Garey, Clearwater, Fla.;
· one brother, L.Z. Hoffman, Cambridge; two sisters, Jo Albers
and Betty Jane Adams, both of
;wheeling, W.Va.; six grandsons
and 12 great grandchildren.
: Plans for a memorial service
•are Incomplete at this time.

:Hukel Toppin88

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992..2174

ACCEPTS INI'l'IAL EM·
PLOYMENT - Dreama Sue
Bentz has accepted employ·
ment at the Fashion Beauty
Shop, Emit Second St., Pomeroy, worldnJI partUme every
, day except Thursday, ~he Is a ·
!1988 graduate of Melp ID gh
~chool, cosmetology class.
~ ~.

Twelve charges of speeding In
the village of Pomeroy were
settled In the court of Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night,
with nine forfeiting bonds a nd the
other lhree appear ing. ,.
Forfeiting bonds on the charge
were Adam Blake, Tlpp City,
$45; Timothy Ball, Long' Bottom,
speeding; Charlotte Stewart,
Pomeroy, $47; Vicky Nor thup,
Racine, $47; Regina Wright ,$~;
·· Richard Ellis, Porneory; Gre·
gory Clbor·, Detroit, Mich.,
speeding; Donald ~ha n , Oak·
wooc! Village, $48; and Tony
Nealge, Gallipolis, $46.
Fined · on the charge were
Brian Spencer, Pomeroy, $44 and ·

Weather

By United Press International
Sou Ill Central Ohio
.
Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a
chance of showers. bOws will be
In the upper 30s. Northwest winds
5 to 15 mph. Challte or precipitation Is 50 percent.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy, with
a chance.of showers . Highs will
be near 50. Chance of rain l,s 40
percent.
. Extended Forecast
Friday.through Sunday
· A chance of showers,-or s now
flurries Friday, fair Saturday ,
and a chance of rain Sunday.
Highs will be In the 40s Friday
and Saturday and between 50 and
60 Sunday,

..

Diamond Savings and Loan
Compa'!y has been granted judg·
ment of$39,007.23 from RobertT.
Stewart, et al, In a foreclosure
action In Meigs County Common
·
Pleas Court.
'The probation of Jerry Stone
has been revoked by the court
and Stone sentenced to 15 davs In
jail.
In an action by Edna G.
Par sons against Mar k A. Parsons to quiet title to property, the
property Is to go to the plaintiff.
Finally, Judge Fred Crow Ill
has stepped down as presiding

Dally stock prices
(l\s of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ..... ,....... 26%
AT&amp;T ....... .. .... .. ... .. ... ..... .. ... Jl%
Ashlanil 011 .. ...... ... .. ...... ... . .41 %
Bob Evans ...... ..... .. ......... .... 14%
Charming Shoppes .... .... ...... 14%
City J;klkllng Co ..... ... .. ....... .. 18
Federal Mogul... ..... .. ....... .. .53%
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .. .... .. ...... .46%

•

•

••

· • Haske! Toppings, 83, of Hun,tlngton, W.Va., a formerrealdent
·, 'of Logan. W.Va., died Tuesllay at
·the Hurnana Hospital In Rich·lands, Va.
· Son of the late LinZY and Annie
Scltes Topplftp, he was born on
; Jan. 24, 1906'1n Sheridan, W.Va.
•• He Is survived by his w1 te,
· Blanche Booth Toppings; one
: son, Dol)lld, Loaan, W.Va.;
' · dauab~s, Helen Boytek, Milton,
: ·w.va., Delqres Adams, .South~ aate, Mich., Elmore Reyno~s.
• Rlchl&amp;nlls, Va., Sharline Doczl,
; Middleport, . and Judith Lee
. Rogero, Margate, Fla.; a slater,
; Lula La !IIbert, Hamlin, W. V11.; a
brother, Audry Topplbp, Hun, 'tlngion, W.Va.; 20 ifandchlld-

five

'' r. e n ,

a n d

Spring...

' !AJIIII'Ica:.

~ Fullerallei'V\cet wlll'ltMld at
' !I p.m. Tbundlf at ~ Maker
' Funeral Home')! Lopn, W.Va.
with t11a ReY~mea Bledaoe

· otftclltlna. Bu
Me

·will.lit at the

Garlelll lll

~(lotley, W.Va. Frlelldl ~ c;ell

:.t tile funeral 11ome tram 6 to 9·

; Jl.m. tqnJihl.

Oscar Scholl

,.

Contin~ed from page 1
teacbers remained.' '
He said the nursing horne was
occupied by elderly people still
able to take care of themselves ..
Several homes wer e damaged
by a tornado In Cave Springs,
Ga., and another twls ter struck a
Lake Alatoona , Ga ., · mobile
home park.

Common pleas court
•INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
.•INDIVIDUAL
•CORPORATli
. •PARTNERSHIP

An entry confirming the sale of
property and ordering delivery
of a deed and dis trlbu tlon of
funds has been flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court In
the mortgage foreclosure action
of the Bartlett Farmers Bank of
Bartlett against Bobby G. Johnson, et aL

'

HOURS
9:00 A.M.-4:30 p.M.
EVENINGS &amp; SATURDAY

vou know c~tt#wt:r~
prob;bly firs!Jiom~stical~d
during the New Slone Age.
BOOO to 9000 y~rs 2~0?

Did

.IY APPOINT-NT

SMITH and .
ASSOCIATES

A representative for the Buck·
eye Program. will be at ihe
Racine Department Store on
Friday, from 10:30 a .m.· to 2:30
p.m. Anyone Interested In a
Buckeye Card may also.sign up
at lhe Pomeroy Library or Senior
Citizens ·center . .

ClYIIY . . . . . . .

(POadlkOSi) ·

992-5995
196 W•t S.COIKI St.

•-•Y• Ohio

Grrat Straks. Guarantrrd. ·
© I\JK9. ~ond c: ru ~a . Int.· .

.

Key Centurion .. .. .. ..............13%
Lands' End .. ..... ... ... ........... .29%
Limited Inc .. :: .... ... ......... .... 27')(,
Multimedia Inc . ..... .. .... , .. .... . 93
Rax Restaurants .. .. ... .. .. ....... 2'\1
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ :, .. .. .. 15%
Shoney 's Inc .... ..... ... ......... ... 8%
Wendy's Jhtl ........... .. .. .. ........ .6
Worthington Ind ... .... .... ... .. .221-4

·~

.

.

SALE

There will be a P. E . R.I.
meeting Thursday , at 1 p.m .. at
the · senior citizens center on
Mulberry Heights In Pomeroy.

ution
. Net/Oil wide's 10 Year

Renewilil• TemJ
Ia an aiiOidlbie way

Annuil

Oscar Scholl, 84, of Pomeroy ,
died Tuesday at the home of his
son-In-law .and daughter, Dale
and Marlene Harrison, Porne·
roy, after an extended Illness.
Born on 'June 5, 1904 at
Pomeroy, he was thesonofJacob
Scholl and Barbara Ann Ebersb·
ach Scholl.
Mr. Scholl Is survived by four
daughters and sons-In-law ,
Norma and William Harrah,
Vandalia; Rita and Ron·Calvert,
Nipomo, Calif.; Marlene and
Dale Harrison, Pomeroy; and
Margaret Bachman, Columbus.
Also surviving are six grandchildren, Brenda ZUia, Rebecca
Harrah, Angela Calvert, Amy
Calvert, Seott Harrison, and Jodi
' Harrison, and one greatgranddaughter, Jennifer Zula.
Besides hi's pareats, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Fannie Lippi Scholl In 1967, five
brothers, and four sisters.
Funeral services will be IJeld
Friday at 10 a.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Horne. The Rev. RIchard Freeman wilt officiate and
burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeralllome from 2 tot and 7
to9 p.m. on;t'hursday.

Plen

General ·Manager Mike Fox Can't Believe Jim Cobb
·
Allowed $2,000.00
For This Trade·In!!!
. .
.

to get the Ute Insurance
protection you need tor
your buslneaa or 1111111y.
Cell today tor all the
details.

$2,000°0 *
..

•

;

'

WE-WILL 'TRADE NO AlTER
•
WHAT CONDITION!!!
JEFFREY J. WARNER
·

NO ·REASONABLE .OFFER REFUSED!

Ropr•onutlvo

302 W. 2nd 81 .. Pomoroy, Oh. 4&amp;789
I'll. 814/ 992-1'79 Rog. 81419112-2477
Clolmt: 1-800-421· 3&amp;35

NO DEALERS PLEASE

-llt--

I ..... C*I:~ . CW..

.

•

t&gt;'ALL REBATES AND PROMOTIONAL CONSIOERATION TO DEALER .

"1·1114

2 1...CI -

!1111

.....
--- =-·-............
--- ....... .... .
PDSI'S .

PI IllS

Will A PAll PIIU ,

112.95

,_

., , ...
~~.

r. ~ (

,,

;

I
I,

•••• ,.,. lilt.
Wtat . . St.

nn

'o

.MINIMUM TRADE

· *OFFER GOOD ON ALL NEW FULL SIZED 1
CARS OR TRUCKS AND SELECTED USED
CARS. (PRIOR SALE PRICES EXCLUDED.)

BQIVII

I

JIM COBB'S
P~SH, .. PULL or TOW

Heck's .......... .. ... ... .. ,..... ....... 1h

2 5

:;areat-ariDdchllclren.
; Topplnp wu a retiJecl coal
'omlner and a met)'lber ' ot the
: pnlted MJne Worken of

. t Hllhiand

Funeral services for Darrell L.
Duaan, 49, who dlect Monday at
his Racine residence will be held
at 1 p.m. Thursday at tile Racine
United Methodist Church. The
Rev. Roger Grace will officiate
and burial will be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home from 2
to4 and 7 to9p.m. Wednesday,or
at the church where the body will ·
be taken one hour prior to
services .

'

au{horlty In the case of 13onnl.e
Fre e man agai n s t Gary
Freeman.

Buckeye card official
to be in area Friday .

Stocks

.

--Meigs Court news---

---Area deaths-- PERI meeting

SHEILA'S TANNING
Danwllt, Ohio

jty," the NFL statement said.
''But when an underclassman
whose program Is under NCAA
sanctions decides to turn pro with
the full support of his college
coach apd athletic director, and
when he has lost any remaining
college football eligibility In the
process, we have no realistic
choice but to accept him."
Smith, from his Denver office,
said he and S!~nders were grateful for the favorable r1111na.
Sanders' attorney, David Ware,
had threatened to sue the NF~ It
Rozelle turned down his request.

I

lp County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
cal Tuesday; Syracuse at 12:56 a.m. to Pine Grove Roa&lt;! for
le Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
2: 8 a.m . to Race St. for Emily Boags to Veterans Memorial
pltal; Pomeroy at 6:27 a.m. to Kingsbury Road for Oscar
!jCholl who was dead on arrival; Syracuse at 9:29 a.m. to
I Trouble Creek Road for Mary Kearns who was treated but not
. lransported; Pomeroy at 2:13 p.m. to Spring Ave. for Audrla
,, Arnold to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:31p.m. to
1 Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing .Center for Susie Edwards to
· Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy Fire Department at
5: 5!! p.m. to a minor !llect~lcal fire at the Wa:Yne Roseberry
reslde~U;e on Willow Creek Road; Tuppers Plains at 11:09 p.m.
to Cher'ry Ridge Road Jor Travis Roseberry to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Compl;lfJ!ts on the operation of open dumps at different
locations throughout the county are being received by the Meigs
County Health ' Department acr:oidlng to Keith Utile,
sanitarian.
Little advised that It Is a violation of the Ohio Revised Code to
create or operate an operl dump. Any person who Is convicted of
open dumping may face the possibility of a tine of up to $250 a
day until the dump has been properly cleaned up.
·
LltVe pointed out that there are 01\lo Environmental
Pr~llon A&amp;ency approved solid waste landfills In GalUa,
· , At . anct.Yfnton counties In which solid waste·may be taken.
•
alo With one located ai West Columbia, W. Va. ·

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

ssooo

I

.·

Open dump violations increase·

SHEILA'S TANNING

Sanders declared
eligible for pro ·draft
By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!i- Helsman
Trophy winner Barry Sanders
'!Ill be eligible for the AprU 23
NFL draft although the running
~ck played Just t~ree years at
Oklahoma State, NFL Cornrnlsiloner Pete Rozelle said
Tuesday . '
Sanders last week petitioned
llle league to enter the draJt,
elalminll financial hardship. He
"Usted agent C. Lamont Srnllh,
lnd los~ his final year or NCAA
•llglblllty as a result. •
A statement released by the
la'L- ctted !landers' loss of
ellalblllty and tile fact that
Oklahoma State's program will
ao on probation aext year as
reuoaa for allowing Sanders In ·
lbe draft. Sanden Is expected to

E , S has eight calls Tuesday

PICKENS .
HARDWARE

Raines' 'exciting wa~k' gives
Expos 6-5 win over Pirates
By ERIK LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
. Tim Raines exper~nced "the
mostexcltingwalk''ofhlscareer
and Damaso Garcia collected
two RBI singles Tuesday as the
Montreal Expos posted a 6·5
Opening Day viCtory over the
·Pittsburgh Pirates.
Tim Raines forced In the
winningrunwhenhedrewawalk
with the bases loaded In the
bottom or the nln th Inning, giving
Andy McGafflgan the win. Mo· ments earUer Garcia, who was
released by the Dodgers last
year, delivered ,Rex Hudler !rom
third with a two-out single to tie
the score. In addition, Garcia
singled home a run to bring
Montreal within 5-4.
"When I came to the plate I
thought he would throw me a
fastball," Raines recalled. ''.Blil'
Robinson just used that forkball.
I noticed he was keeplr.g his
pitches down . I waited for the
ball to come up and noticed the
. last one was low.
"Thafs themostexcltlngwalk
In my career. I enjoy a situation
like that."
With Pittsburgh leading 5·4
and loser Jeff Robinson on the
mound , Huble Brooks singled
and pinch-runner Otis Nixon
stole second. Tim · Wallach
walked and Hudler ran for him.
Pinch-hitter Wallace Johnson
sacrificed and Nelson Santovenla received an intentional walk.
After pinch-hitter Mike AIdrete forced Nixon at the plate,
Garcia provided the clutch hit
when he singled . between third
and short. Raines lhE:Q walked on
a full count, sealing the victory
for the Expos.
•
Upon his return to th!&gt; dugout,
the Expos affectionately greeted
Garcia by smacking him repeat edly on the head .•"I enjoyed It
when the players pounded me on
the head," Garcia said afterwards. "I haven't had that since
we won In Toronto In '85."
The Pirates took a 1-0 lead In
the first on a triple by Barr}Bonds and a single by Jose Lind.

.

Veterans Memorial
costs; Mary Sheet&amp;,: ytayne, W.
Tuesday admissions =- Goldie
Va., $48 and costs; Dona Ma nley , Roberts , Racine; Mary Huff
Middleport, $48 and costs.
Pomeroy; Alma Riggs, Middle·
'John Greg Hayes, Middleport,
port; Audrla Arnold, P omeroy;
was lined $213 and costs on a
Sharon Durham, Pomeroy.
·
charge of pet ty theft , a nd Keith
Tuesday discharges - Russell
Musser, Por tland was fined $88 Cuilurns, Sarah Mr:Carty.
a n.d costs on an 'open nask
charge.
Others lorfelting bo nds In the '
cour t were Ricky Shaefer, PomeDivorces granted roy, $63, operij. tlng under suspen·
s)on; Diana Ne ace, Pqmeroy, • A divorce has been gra9ted In
$43. slop sign violation; ·Da le Meigs County ·Common Pleas
Kinney ;']vlldland , Pa., $63, drlv· Cour t to J anet Faye Mowery
lng under suspension; Roger from Charles Mowery Jr. Janet
Dowell, Middleport, failure fo' Mowery was res tored by the
·yield; Wllllam Norton, P omeroy,
court to her malden name, Janet
$63, trafflc light violation.
Buchanan.
...
Shirley A. Collins was granted
a divorce from William o.
Collins.
~

was heavy. The
Gulather was
Hospital where
today.
an accident at 2: 30p.m. Tuesday
The
of
County on CR. 18. 25-feet north ot
In Scipio
SR.
said the steerlna broke on a Cl!r driven by
, 23, Rutlaad, aa she was turning off. SR. 143
CarnUia S.
vehicle went Into a ditch. Damage was
onto CR.
moderate.
.
·
Morris sullferE!d a minor visible Injury and was taken to
Veterans
Hospital by a passing motorist. There was
no c!tatlon,' ·

.

Hospital news

Pomeroy
mayor's
court
.
.

trun paee 1
Is still under lnvesdgatlon.
and taken to Veterans Memorial
reported In stsbli! conditiOn at 11 a.m .

gi~~~i~ ..~~~....?.:2.~~~2-~

'

briefs,..• - -

r---Local

II

�-

,•

l

Von.-. lndea•endently Ow1ie~ ·
Luw-l,~lced Suatennarkel

By The Bend
-- -·

Every child hu th' right to feel Includes such tragic consequen·
fore the threatening situation
occurs...
safe, strong, and fr~ .
ces as Injury. alcohol and drug
Ohio's communlt\e5 join com~ abuse, chronic truancy, run·
:Parents should locu s on telling
munltle~ across the nation to
away children and even teen
children acllons and words which
c.e lebrate April as NatiOnal Child suicide. Calllng attention to the
give them .~ sense of llfl:Sonal
Abuse Prevention Month, and to consequences of abulll! abould
strenll\h and . safety; talk to
focus on waya to prevent .child help communities·focus on ways
.children about possible dan·g er·
abuse.
io prevent It, be said.·
ous sftuallons before they occur;
One way to prevent abuse,
Nationally, theHouseofRepre·
listen car efully to what children
according to the GAP Project of sentatlves and Senate sent a joint
say, and don' t assume they are
Melp COunty, Is to Instill In resolution to President Bush,
"')laking up stories"; teach
every child a arise of personal asking him to proclaim April as
children bow to move about with
safety, strength, and freedom. Child Abuse PreventiOn Month.
friends rather than alone; and
Prevention efforts must begin
That mellllll ~bing children
help children understand bow to
how to recognize threatening at home, according to Carol
report Incidents to adults wh.o
situations, how to remove lbem· Edwards·, Director, of Commun·
will help them. Parents·can help
selves frol)'l danger, and how to .lty Assault Prevention Services,
their children by teaching them
dl,!velop the confidence to move that Implements tbe CAP Project
that they have the right to be
a1!out home, SChOOl, and corri· and other personal safety pro- . sale, strong, and lree.
muntty with penonal and group grams, In Gallla, Jackson and
For'lnformatl&lt;;m contact: Com· .
security.
Mel~ Counties. "Tell your child
munlty assault Prevention Servl·
· In proclaiming April as Child what he or she can do to prevent
ces of Gallla, Jackson and Meigs
Abuse Prevention Month In Ohio, abuse," Edwards · says, " help . Counties, at 286-6611 or write
Governor Rlcllard F. Celeste your children feel powerful beP.O. Box 207, Jackson, Ohio . .
noted that the cycle or abuse

•

,liOISI
.

20/o
· MILK

REG.• ADS

..

HERITAGE
HOUSE

LOW
FAT

?

2°/o
.MILK

FOODLAND'·,,
'

I

FlESH

GROUND
CHUCK

,.

FlESH WIITE

BREAD

'

.'

Family Medicine:
By John C. WoU, D.O• .
late Prol-r of FamUy
Medicine '
University Colle1e of Osteopal:blc Medicine.

Mal lito White Flour

PLASTIC

::!"

GAllON

99C

3 liS.

Unit One w~h lto.oit

........

or Moro Alliltlonot

OR MORE

lSSORTD
unu DEBBIE·

1oc::~

LUNCH CAKES

. .-

61f10Liat ·

ASSOftED

99C

FRITO LAY '

POT ATO CHIPS

•
""

...•
•

"

'

..•

FRESH

FOODLAND

Head

Margarine
Quarters

Lettuce
£ACH

BOX

••

~

$1 ~~~.

SHORTENING

(
99

42 Oz.

I-lliTE

SCALLOPED 5.5
POTATOES oz.
lll"ll5 20 CT. ·

$199

30GAL

TRASH BAGS

RUFFlES .J3 GAl. 30 CT.

TAU KITCHEN

.

$ 199

TRASH BAG~

;;ER ;Ll;ES 99&lt;
1

TU. lOSE
SllF IISING

SJ 09

6'· 9(

II-RITE 22 OZ.

WINDOW
CLEANER

75(
~o7:E~~~~;ER 49(

I-IlTE 100 CT.

$119

TEA BAGS
II·IITE 4 IOU

79&lt;
MEAL
u.
NATURE'S
. ~~~~~~AKE~· 99&lt;
~:~~~E~z. $)79 HOMEIEST 10 Ll. Sl 79
CHARCOAL ·
.
COVD 25 Ll.
=:~KS12~ CAT
99c
un1
•at14JOZ. 4 C
5
lfst '

5

· BI·RITE

BATH TISSUE

11-111'1 Sl OZ.

DOG FOOD

$299
,

20 lB.

79~

,

•

..•••

I·RITE 300 CT.

$J19

NAPKINS
rillE SWEET

SUGAR

4.4

HO-EST UQUID

.FABRIC
$OFTENER

SJ ·53
. Sl 09'

u.

'

GAL.

.

:~r-.·

Patrick and Jlll .(Nease) John·
son, St. Clairsville, are announc·
,lng the birth of a son, Patrick .
•Dwight Andrew, on March 14 at
Wheeling Hospital, W!leellng,
':H.Va. The Infant weighed 10
pounds, five and a half ounces, .
)nd was 23 Inches long.
• Mat~rnal grandparents are
Donna and Bill Nease. Racine.
~aternal great-grandparents
e_re Vera and Harry Hayman,
romeroy, and Art and Ada
r'lease, Pomeroy . Maternal
r:eat· great-grandparents are
1\miJer Warner, , Pomerey, and
J{elen and ·Vernon Nease, ·
Racine.
. · ·
.:· Paternal grandparents are Art
' lnd Margaret Johnson, Racine.
l&gt;aternal great-grandfather Ia
Ji;dlson Johnsonr Racine. Pate.r·
pal great· great-grandmother Is
tunle Brinker, Racine.

-

FLAKES

II·IITE lG. IOU

49C
HOSPII'AUTY 1S OZ.
INSTANT
99 C
POTATOES

PAPER
TOWELS

II·ITE 32 OZ.

99(

II·ITI WHOlE

r

35(

''c

:r-:~~~63&lt;

:;~•ozslM
-HIAYE 10 OZ.

;.:.;u.;•.79&lt;· =~
I

3/Sl

9

1-IITI-4 0%.

..IIJE...:.16

BLACK.
PEPPER . .

APPLE

SAua

oz.

'

~

'

PATRICK D.A. IOHNSOI\1

ville In M~cy must bring their $5
registration tee and $2.50 cbarm.
TOPS members honored at the
meeting wer~ ·VIrglnta Dean and
Maida Long. TOPS queen Is
Mary Martin. She wlll be recog.
nlzed at the meeting In
Zane~vllle.
·
Best losers were Dreama
Plckells and Juanita Humph·
reya. The fruit basket was won by
Mra. Dean.
lns'-llallonofofflcerawllltake.
place at the next meeting.

,

Mr. and Mrs. Don Anderson of
uth Carolina visited Bessie
rabam over Eaater weekend.
Mrs. Nellie Lowa allll tamlly
nt Eater at tht borne of Ray'

.
=

· we, ColudiiiUa.

Mr. and Mra. Leiter Haning
anllOUIICIIII the blrth of
, a 1011, Andrew, al)d a
htet, Amber.
. Hazel StanleY joined tbe Senior
CIUzens of Atbens County for a
rlp to view tbe Chinese exhibit

l•'8oa
oC J(eavfll" 111 Collunbus.
&gt;.Mra. HelD Bible and sons.
I•

t~

'

Slinderetla rneets

,

It was decided that there will

I

•

Saturday guests ol Mrs . Do·
rothy Roller were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Roller, Belpre. their
daughter, Tara Roller, !~om
Marshall College In Huntington.
W.Va., and son, Cadet Brad
Roller. olthe Air Force ~cademy
In Denver; Colo. Cadet Roller
returned to Denver on Sunday
alter a weeks leave with his
.
parents In Belpre.
Other guests ·of Mrs. Roller
were Mrs. Wilbur Hanning,
· Bradbury, and Mrs. Nancy Cale
and Jessica, Middleport.'

Mr. and Mrs. Leonar d Russ ,
Cleveland, spent Wednesday and
Thursday In Pomeroy visiting
friends. Mr. and Mrs. Russ came
to visit their aunt, Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart, wbo is In Over,
brook Manor.

!lfarrisonville happenings .

,lip. .,

Area woman notes
visitors from family

Vickie AbbQtt.•lost the most
.. weight and Texanna Well was the
runner-up at the recent SUnder·
ella class at Five Points.
Janice Reltmere lost the most
and Joan Vaughan was run·
ner-up at the recent class at
Mason, W.Va. JoAnn Newsome
Is lecturer.
.

.
.
0
S
recent
meettng
h
ld
TOPS
group
.
.
.
;J:: 30 p.m. at the Coonhunters
building on tbe fairgrounds. at
the recent meeting of Ohio TOPS
~70. Tbe public Is Invited to
attl!nd.
. Due to the time change,
welgb-ln will begin at. 6 p.m.
Wttb the business meeting at 7
p.m. Anyone Interested In walk·
lng ·lbQuld meet at 5:30 p.m.
betore the meetln&amp;&amp;. ·
; Memberl planning to attnd
iU'ea Recognition Day at Zanes-

·$)39

40% BRAN

Question: What causes short·
ness ol breath?
Answer: Shortness of breath Is
not a disease In Itself; It Is a
symptom of underlying health
problems. Let's look at aSthma
as an example. In people who·
have asthma the air passages In
the lungs suddenly become tern·
porarlly narrowed and this
causes shortness of breath.
Emphysema, a serious condition
In which tbe . tissue of the lung
begins to deteriorate, alsocauses
shortness of breath, as does
pneumonia, heart disease, pul·
.mo!lBry embolism and many
other heart and lung diseases.
When you go to see your doctor
about your breathing problem,
be or ~he will need to know how
often you experlenCQ.shortness of
breath and abQut any other
health problems that you've been
experiencing. When shorlness of
breath Is combined with other
symptoms such as chest pain,
wheezing, coughing, blood spit·
tlng, or a sudden change In
weight, It may Indicate poten·
!Ially serious health problems.
One more note: smoking can
cause shortness of breath as well
as a host of other painful and
fatal conditions. I, therefore,
again urge those of yQu who still
smoke to take meaRres to Quit.

Visiting area

'

pe a,n open house i)n April 18 at

~:. 69(

the e\'ent, and standing up with
the child, were hlsgrandll!other,
DOrothy Jenkbisl' Middleport,
and his sister, Misty Clendenen.
Following the ceremony was a
family dinner at the Jj!nklns_,
home. Attending with thll!e men· \
tloned above, were Frank
,Vaughan and bls family, Candice
and Derek Miller.

Johnson 'birth being announced

I

~

59( DIU. PICKLE M. 99 (
' COVEl CAT 10 ll ·
49C
PYGMY Cllml
una
CAKE aix':t 69&lt;

ELIOW ·
\.MACARONI

IIOSIIIfUY J. OZ.

7.501.101

4 Sl $1 t! 3/Sl

OL ltL

GRAPE JEUY

HOSPITAUTY 16 OZ.

POll/lEANS

6 •

'

David Earl Jenkins II, son of
David . and Johnetta Jenkins,
• New lfa'ven; W.Va.• was baptized
recently at the Methodist Cburcb
In New Haven, W.Va. by his
grandmother, the Rev. Mitzi
Oldaker, Hartford." W.Va.
The Infant was christened In
the same suit his father . wore
when be was dedicated to . the
church 40 years ago. Witnessing

·. II·IITl

99&lt;

lOX SUGAR

MARCAl

MACARONI/ FROSTED FLAKES/
FACIAL
TISSUES
CHEESE
RAISIN BRAN
100 Count loa•

HOSPITALITY 20 OZ.

II·RITE-2 ll.

. HOSPIT AUTY

'

3 s(
99( ~~~::~~
BROWN SUGAR
Bl·llTE IS OZ.
PO~K/BEA"S
BI·IITE UGHT 2 ll

HAN0¥8 15 OZ.

CHAICOAl

TOMATO
CATSUP

HOSPITALITY
'

1

....• ·.

'

CHAMP CHUNK

participating In sports after a
long winter, or the first !!rile that
you're up and around after an
Illness.
In these situations, you should
begin breathing normally atter a
few minutes of re~t. if shortness
of breath pei'Jiats after resting,
that could be the sign of a
problem . Moreover. If you expe·
rltnce shortnela of breath when
you are resting and not engaging
In any physical activity, regard·
less of your age, state of health or
lifestyle, there Is certainly a
problem with your heart, lungs
or emotions.
Significant shortness of breath
may come on so gradually the
vlc\lm doesn't realize at first that
be or she Is breathing differently .
The condition, therefore, may
have been present lor some time ·
before It's noticed. That's why I
consider It Important lor pi!jlple
to see their doctors Immediately
when they first become aware
they are having unexplained
breathing problems.

i Jenkins family announces baptism

•

r

SWIFTNING

Diffirult breathing?

'

•'
••
••

1 lB.

SPAGHETTI
SAUCE

/ Qaatlon: Recelltly rve had
occasional trouble ~atchlng my
breath. Doei tltla sound like a
serious health problem?
.
Anlnrer: l'our condition could
be very serious, or It might not be
serious at all. You don't supply
enough Information for me to
respond specifically to your
situation, so I'll give you some
general Information about breathing problems.
In certain cases, shortness of
br.eatb Is 110rinal. For Instance,·
we all know that we breathe more
heavily after exercise or physl·
cal exertion. This Is especially
true In people who are out of
shape. lt'5 also normal to expe.
rlence some shortness of breath
II you engage In strenuous
activities- after a long layoff, such
as the first tl~e you begin

The Daily Sentinel
.

'

V'lednesday, April 5, 1989

Page-7

•

tAP project notes special ·mdnth

•We ReMI'IIo Tho Right To Umlt ' Qu~~ntiiiiH •Prlceo Good Thru
8 , 1881
•USDA Food Stamp• Qlodly Acceplld •Not Rooponalblo For i.';)~~h.;

ASSORTED RAGU

.

;

Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

BIG BEND

~

Sam and Brad, spent a couple of
days visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Don CotterUI.
Belale GraJIMI bad as .......
ber l'l'and~lllfbter, trom ~
gla, Janie Addal and b.- llulband and two children.
Members of the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens enjoyed a quar·
terly birthday d!Mer at Shoneys
In Point Pleaaan t.
Unda and Mlcbelle Finley.
Columbus, recently spent a week.
with !Jiell' granclparenta, Mr. and
)lfrs. Don Cotlerlll

'·

Community Calendar

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Tb·e Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet 7:30
p.m. Wednesday evening In the
high school cafeteria.

P,PMEROY -The regular
meeting of Pomeroy Lodge 164
will be held Wednesday , 7:30
p.m., at the Middleport Temple.
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting.
EAST MEIGS - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet In
regular session, Wednesday, 7:30
p.fl . at the Reedsville fire
s tation.
HARRISIONVILLE - Tile
Harrisonville.Holiness Chapel on
State Route 684 will have a
specla) missionary meeting at
7:30 p. m . on Wednesday.
Speaker will be Don DeLong. The
Rev. David Ferrell Invites the
public.

Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star will meet Thursday at 7: 30
p.m. Past matrons and past
patrons will be honored. Past
matrons are to wear past rna·
trons dress. Initiatory work will
be exemplified. Of!lcers are to
wear chapter dresses .

Gues 1 speaker will be WilHam
VUlers. Everyone welcome.

raising p~;.oject. the Fr aternal
Order of Pollee, Meigs Lodge 95,
--~
will sponsor a dance on Friday.
FRIDAV .
Apr il 14,,at the American Legion
MIDDLEPORT 1- A square
Annex on Mill Street In Middledance will be held'Frlday. 8 to 11 . port. 8 p.m to midnight .
p.m., at !he Middleport Amer.l·
Tickets lor a $10 donation lor
can Legion Annex. Ever yone Is
two are ava ua ble from any '
welcome.
member ol the Fraternal Order
of Pomeroy or at the door. Music
· . MIDDLEPORT - The Evan·
will be provided by Country
gellne 0rder ol the Eastern Star
Blend Band.
will be having a spaget 11 dinner
on April 7 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. · Potluck
BURLINGHAM Modern
. at the Masonic Temple In Middleport. Cost w!U be $3.50 lor adults
Woodmen of America Camp7230
and $1.75 tor-children under 12.
Is having a potluck on Saturday.
at 7 p1m:. at Modern Woodmen
' REEDSVILLE- A dance lor
Hall at Burlingham. Members.
.. fourth, flft.h and ~lxth graders
their families and trlends are
will be held at the Riverview
Invited. The camp wlll furnish
Elementary School PTO Friday
the meat , tossed salad, rolls and
evening, 7 to 9 p.m. Chester
coffee: Members are· asked to
Elementary and Tuppers Plains
bring their own table service.
Elementary students are Invited
There Is no charge for the
to attend . Admission Is $1.
a ctivity and drawings will be
Refreshments will be sold
held for famil y door prizes.

· THURSDAY
POMEROY ' - XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma PI\ I
Sorority, wlll bold a spring tea at
the borne of VIcki Ault, 7 p.m. ·
Thursday. Members are to meet
on the upper Pomeroy parking
lot at 6:45 to go to the Ault home.
MIDDLEPORT ~ Evangeline

•

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold their first
dance of the year on Saturday
!rom Stoll p.m. at the Royal Oak
Park. Come and enjoy an even·
lng of run and lellowshlp.

SALISBURY - The Salisbury
P .T.O. will have an aluminum
can recycling day on Apr il 8 !rom
10 a .m. to 2 p.m. al the Salisbury
Elementary School. Money
raised will be used to purchase
new playground equipment.

·Revival
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Christian Union Church will be In
revival Monday, April 10 through
April 16. Ser vices will begin ai
7:30p.m. with different speakers
and singers nightly.
Revival
FROST - . Faith Chapel
Church at Fr ost will be having
revival services starting Monday , April 10. and continuing
through AprU 15 with Evangelist
George Riffle, of Akron. Everyone welcome.

.;::-- RACINE ..;. A round and
Banquet
square dance will be held at the
SALISBURY - The Meigs
Racine American Legion hall. 9
County Pomona Grange Banquet
RUTLAND - The Rutland p.m. to midnight. Music will be
will be held Friday. Aprll14. a the
Township Trustees will meet by the True Country Ramblers.
Saltsbury Elementary School at
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at tbe.;r' The public Is Invited to attend.
7:15 p.m. A baked steak dinner
.II'·
Rutland fire station..
' will be served by the Salisbury
SUNDAY
PTO .
RACINE - A ham a nil turkey
DARWIN - Salisbury Town·
Speaker for the evening will be :
sblp Truslees will meet Tburs· dinner will be served Sunday.
State Youth Princess Samantha ;
day. 7 p.m. , at the township hall . beginning at 11:30 a .m., at
Mercer .
Southern High School in Ratlne.
Everyone welcome .
Music will be furnished by
The dinner is sponsored by the
Kendra Ward· Bunce and Bob.
SALISBURY -The April pack Southern Junior Hlgb Boosters
Tickets - $6 for adults and $3
meeting of Salisbury Cub Scout and the Career Education
for children- may be purchased
Pack 246 will be helq Thursday, Committee.
!rom George Masters, Eldon
7:30 p.m. , at the Rock Springs
Barrows. William Radford. Earl
United Methodist Church. Unl· Auction
Cross, Patty Dyer , Zlba Midkiff
EAST MEIGS - An auction
form Inspection will be held. The
lind Norman Will. Deadline for ·
program will be a handyman will be held by the sen lor class of, purchasing tickets Is April 8.
Eastern High School Saturday at
co~lest.
10 a.rn. at the school. Proceeds
' '
CHESTER - Big Bend East trom the auction will go toward
Sll JACKSON PIKE
- E 35 WEST.
Girl Scout Service Unit will hold expenses of the senior class trip.
l'llono
Items
are
being
solicited
by
the
Its regular monthly meeting on
"'4524
students
and
anyone
with
things
Thursday, at 7 p.m., at the
to contribute are asked to contact
Chester Fire Stallon.
Jim Hufl. class advisor, or
STIVERSVILLE - Revival Charles Moore, principal.
services will be held Thursday,
April 6, through Thursday, April Rutland banquet
RUTLAND - The annual
16, 7 p.m. nightly, at the Stlversbanquet
and dance olthe Rutland
vllle Word of Faith Church.
High School Alumni Association
has been seheduled lor Saturday,
May 27, at the Rutland Civic
Center. Plans were made for the
annual event at a recent meeting
of the Association ol!lcers.
Mrs. Eileen Buck revlewE)d the
OOok "The Other Florida" by
Dance sel
Gloria Jahoda. at the recent
.. MIDDLEPORT - As a lund
meeting of the Middleport Liter·
ary Club held at the home of Mrs. ·
Wendell Hoover.
''The Other Florida" Is about
the part of the stat&amp; that tourist
normplly do not visit. The au·
thor's explorations took her
mainly on unpaved back roads
where the pines are tapped for
.
turpentine by Isolated workers,
the reviewer reported. She des·
crlbed her as a naturalist, who ·
knows the birds. wild animals,
vegetation. and explores the
pln~oods and swamps.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter pre·
sided over the business meeting
Is which roll call was answered
with members telling of and.
oil-the-beaten path vacation.

---

Middleport Literary
Club holds meeting

NOTICE

DR.. RANKIN I. PICKENS, D.O.
IS RETIRING
EFFECTIVE APRIL 30, 1989

BUSINESS OFFICE WILL REMAIN OPEN

992-2756

Kids be Kahn's Corn ~-tasty
Kahn's wieras (all meat, oo fillers!)
wrapped in a delicious gokien
batter and placed on a safety stick.

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

l-

The Daily Sautinei-Paga 9

Poma-oy-Middlaport, Ohio

.

Boy Scouts recruitment program wraps up

FOOD STORES

WITH WEST VIRGINIA'S ENACTMENT OF THE 6% FOOD SALES TAX
YOU STILL SAVE 25-30% ON YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL AT SAVE·A·LOTI

.'

5 LB. BAG

OVEN BES'

HEAD

•
•

L£'11'UCE

RAGU
SPAGHEftiSAUCEh
•PLAIN
•MEAT
•MUSHROOM

;age
!

,I

POTATOES

'1.81':"

'

s 31.

320Z.

•••••••••

••••••••••••·••••• ID 'LB•••••••••••••• ~ •••

'

YELLOW .

· o 10 S.~.~. . . . .

'

•

~

Price!

BON TON -

HARVEST FARE

CHEESE

SWEO
PEAS

c
12 oz.
PKG.

~Low

LowPrice!
•

~.

a LB. aao ..........

.YELLOW

c
oz.

FARMERS SELECT FRIED • 5 LBS.

MERICO ·12 OZ.PKG.

10-12 oz.

BANQUET
TV DINNERS :!:"i:"

•SAUSBURYSTEAK
•FRIED CHICKEN

70Z.
,

•TURKEY

•VEGETABLE BEEf
·CHICKEN

.s

$1 '19
'

¢
..

PRIED CHICKEN

71-

280Z.

Prine .-lldsadlhnuth lpdl I, • •

'.

•PERSO!'IIAL CHECKS
•!IIAI"rlJFAcnJRER'S

•

COlJPOI'fS
-

Rt 6i NORTH-. - -, '

,•'

•

. (304) 878-1155

I

'

PHIU:S tFFECTIVE THRU SAL APil. H i!H\~
SUPIIIICn WNCH MEAT

..

·BREAKFAST HAM ••••••uJ-. S2.29·sw•n·s ECIIRICH

· JUMBO .BOLOGNA ••••~a. •• S1.97
SHREDDED"...Ib. S2.19

SMnHFIRD

COOKED HAM •••• SLICED

$1.97

lb.

HOMEMADE

FRESH HERBS:
Sage••• Parsley,.•. Garlic •.• Chives
Greek Oregano
Great Alternati~e to. Salt and Other
seasonings.
SPICES UP YOUR CObKING!

Spaelal April S thru 8
DOMINO .CONFECTIONER'S SUGAR

$1l O

...,, 1

AMEI. PIOC.
CHEESE .......llJIJ... 51.83
.110PIUNA

ORANGE
JUICE ..........t~..'!f,.. 52.89
•avo vw.u
GlADE A

HEAD
LEnUCE .......1!.~ ...... 59'
NEW GREEN
CABBAGE .......... M .... 27&lt;
IDAHO BAKING
POTATOES 1.t.lt.Atf. 52.59

BANQUn SUPPER

SALISBURY STEAK~:.~~••• S2.79

Wo Accept Food Stamps

FOODS ·
Pomeroy
Ohio

514 East Main
992•6910

LADIES JEA.N SALE

20°/o · OFF·
THURSDAY -FRI.DAY -SATURDAY
-LEE, LEVI, CHIC, SUNSEl BLUE
BASIC, FASHION &amp; STRETCH

ORE-IDA IIRINIILE KUT

FRENCH. FRIES •••••••• ~~.~~. S1.79
BIIIDS-EYE
•
HI 01,101
98(
AULIF
••••••••••••••••••
'

DEL MONTE FRENCH SHLE

GREEN BEANS ....!~~!•~ 2/S·1.29
OSAGE PEACHES::.~~,;. 2/S1.95 .
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

PEPPERONI PIZZA ~t~:.~~. S2 ~99
ROYAL CREST

SANDWICH COOKIES.::.~~ •• 99&lt;

UUOGG'S CEREAL

CORN FLAKES .... ~ ••••!~::. S1.69

JUNI.ORS, MISSES, WOMEN'S

20°/o OFF

LAUIIDRY DETERGENT

ALL LADIES HANDBAGS
•

·2-0°/o OFF All SCARVES

PUREX....................~:~~!• S.1.99

111An

MIRACLE WHIP ........!~::. S2.59
GATORADE •••••••.'•••• ~.~!.~~- S1.19
IN HOT SAUCE - HOMES .

.FISH STEAKS •••••••'::.:!• 2/S1.09
CANNED WNCHEON MEAT

HORMEL SPAM ......~~.~~,;•• S2.19

- - Quirks in the news--"We have some skins In our
Inventory and will run lhese 011t
In the next 90 days," Honig aald.
Environmentalists are angry
because hunters are kllllng el~
pbants lor their tusks and leaving
their bodies to rot.
.
•'This Is the kind ol uncontrolled klll that has ca11,sed many
of us to take a public smndon the
Issue," Honig said.
.
Elephant-skin bOots are I~
than 1 percent of Acme's prOduction.

-

No Purch8H NtoniMY
Entry DHctUne May 31 , 1811

.

Ma111o SllceiNmlundo

Sweepstakes
P.O. Boll. 2291
ltbtrly.til ... ll60198

,.... ............ -.r

::~--

. OFF

\

100 IICOfiD
FIIUZEII
._ ..... -.r
,.,..--=

I

lOGE SELECTION Of .
ltO.. &amp;PENIIOOIE

'· c

,.

' .

MEAT SALAD ............\le~ ••••• 89e

••••

2 lb. lag

PtlCJNE 742 2100

\Jpperp.m.
Pomeroy
parking
at · :-===========:::::::;:;;~~
6:45
to travel
to thelotAult
residence In a group.

' 20~/o

•

.

Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Walburn,
Middleport. Maternal gre~t·
grandparents ·are Mr. an.d Mrs .
Jtaymond Walburn. Middleport.
Patermll grandparents are Mr. ·
· and Mrs. R.A. Carpenter, Lin·
colnton, N.C. Paternal great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
R .A. Carpenter and Allie
Whitner, Lincolnton, N.C.

SWIMSUITS
j·
. .
.

MONIY-BACI
GUARAN1£E

1

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

Afii""M~Go.nec.Mir

100%.

•

I

The Middle East generally refers to
the area of southwest Asia west of Pa·
kistan to the Mediterranean Sea, In·
eluding Egypt, Sudan and the island of .
Cyprus.

50 FIRIT PRIZUI
,...... c.ar.e ...-

.,

WBWELCQME
•WV W.LC.
· ··
•1'000: STAMPS

'

Mr. and Mrs. -Qiehe Yost, Syra·
cilse, and : the greatgranddaughter' of Mrs. Edward
Foster.

10GIWID PRIZES

STORE HOURS: Monday· Saturday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sunday,11 a.l'(l.-8 p.m. -llllke llanlhout, OWner

Wt,...,... the tiQhl. to limit 111 qutnlltl.
Som.lltfnl MIIY not._ av1111ble In llloedont.

and Coletta Madden, Navarre;
Elton, Joyce, Kenny and Jayne
Ann Ritchie, Coolville; Earl and
Wayne Ritchie, Long Bottom;
Arlene Ritchie, Columbus: April
Ritchie and Gary Curtis, Pomeroy; Joe and Bill Ritchie, Columbus; Bryon and Ruby Steele,
Columbus; Richard and Helen
Hall, Hllllard; Paul, Juanita, and
Shawn Paxton, Columbus; Jeff
Paxton and Lisa Muncy, Columbus; Jim and Mary Hall, Galena;
Carolyn and Rltcbie Jones, Ket·
terlng; Joesphlne Ritchie, Long
Bottom; Marigold Ritchie, Circleville; Mike, Kanda, Billie Jo,
and Mike Ritchie, Amanda;
Fhiyd and Joclaire Millhone,
Belpre; Alan and VIctoria Mil·
!bone, Belpre; Darrell and Nola
Cbevallar, Pataskala; Winona
Duncan, Columbus; and Ray and
Marilyn ·.- Miller and children,
Kidron.

Mr. and Mrs. Todd Carpenter
(Jill Walburn), Lincolnton, N.C..
are announcing the birth 9f a
daughter, ValerleKay,imMarch
:~a. The infant weighed eight
pounds. eight ounces and was 22 ·
Inches long. The Carpenter's
· have another daughter, Brittany
Jlll, age eight.
,
Maternal grandparents are

,
I
Tbe program for the Ohio
panel will present "What His tori·
ans Do." The pane lis made up of
Association of lllstorlcal Socleties and Museums, Region 8 area historians wbo wlll discuss
meeting/ to be held Saturday,
the various ways they use hisApril 15, 111 the Meigs County tory, Dr. Frank Porter III, an
.Museum, Butternut Ave., Pome- ethnohlstorlan, will speak on
rby, promises to be Informative publlahlng history. John Lester.
for Interested historians.
a teacher at Gallla Academy,
Richard Franca,·Jglla, of the •• ..wlll tell about his students'
Local History Office of the Ohio participation . In the National
His tOflcal Society, wlll pay trlbHI's tory Day competition; and
ute ip Henry Howe's historical ·· Mike Gerlach, Meigs High
collections about Ohio from his teacher, wUI speak on teaching
visit In 1847 and his second trip In history.
Susan Ollver will present a
tbe 11\te 1880's. Or. Francavlglla
has entitled his presentation; program on. "Yesteryear."
"Do~ History Since Henry
Reservations for the meeting
Howe."
.
are· $8 and must be received at
·Following a noon JuncheQ.D, a ·- the museum by Friday, Aprll 7.

Company lo llop makillg eleplwlt boota '
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
- Acme Boot Co., the world's
largest boot manufacturer, announced Tuesday II will slop
manlifactw-lna boots made with
elephant skin because of tbe
of animal lovers.
director of purchasAcme, said the company
buying elephant
though the ones It bas
have been from antm·
killed In Atrlca.

BAIQUE'I'

SLICED - 16 OZ. PKG.

. BRIDGET N. HUMPHREY

vorsFounder's
were discussed.
The
for
Day w111
be meriU
final·
'
··.·

people to provide the
leadership and financial support • Judy Bart rug, daughter of Sam
necessary to keep scoutlftg . and Martha Bartrug, Warren,
Va., will be participating In a
strong.
Financial sources which help choral concert entitled "Amerpay ror scouting activities tn- lea Sings" In Washington, D.C.
elude miscellaneous sources,
such as the annual popcorn sale on April 22.
Bartrug, previously of Ravensand other special events; United
Way; and the Sustaining Mern· Wood, W.Va., w111 be performing
wtth other high school students
dr ive. Th ese · · from
I
bership Enrolment
all across the United States.
monies help provide year-round
She Is the e:randdaughter of
camping, Klondike Derby. Pinewood Derby. camporees, cub
olymples, cub day .camp, Webe·
losdad overnight, bike-a-thons,
recruiting programs, visual aids.
program planning and ·equipment, aduit leader training, ·
insurance, meeting facilities,
literature and supplies and more.

'

XI Gamma EpsUon Chapter of !zed at the next meeting. Election
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met of officers will also take place at
Thursday, March 23, at the the next ineetln&amp;.
Senior Citizens Center In
Necklace orders were given
Pomeroy.
with the necklaces to be turned In
It was reported that Items
at the next meeting, which will be
wblch were provided tor a needy
the pledges' tea. This meeting
famUy for Easter were de!lvered _ will be held Thursday evening, 7
by Judy Glbb and Vicki Ault. ·
p.m.. at the horne of VIcki Ault.
Founder'.s Day plans and r.
Members are to meet In the

19' EACH

INSTANT
POTATOES

Mary Rltcble recently cele·
brated her 80th birthday with a
surpriSe celebration at the MInerva Park community building
In Columbus. Hostess for the
celebration .was her daughter.
EIIElen Kuhn.
·A c'ake was1baked. and served
.by Mrs. Ritchie's niece, Jyanlta
Paxton of Columbus, to Carl.
Eileen, and Dick Kuhn, Louis·
ville; Mark, Pat, Mart, Brian,
and 'MUdd Stier, Wheaton. Ill.;
Randy, Jean, Derek, and Dustin
Fox, Canton; Kenny, Sue, Nathan, and Jacob Kuhn, Pataskala; Jack and Donna Ritchie.
Pataskala; Gene and Mlchella
Ritchie, Pataskala; Andy, Dl·
ana, Tim, and Stephanie Anderson, Westerville; Buck and
Emma RhOdes, Navarre; San·
dra Bennington, Masslllon;
John, Nancy, Eric, and Duane
Bucher, Navarre; Lee RhQ!!es

'n ta!&lt;es

Carpenter birth being announced
.

·;1

'

..

Tbe Tri-State Area Council,
Boy Scouts of America, touches
Ihe Jives ol more than 3,400 youth
in a 10-county, three-state area
which 1ncludes Meigs. Gallla and
Mason Counties. In scoqtlng,
fun-filled educational activities
are aimed at mak~ a positive
Influence on the character of
boys participating In the program. Scouts are trained in
citizenship, personal fitness development, leadership and ser·
vice to others .

SOrority meeting held

/

'

HUNGRY JACK - 27 OZ. BOX

12 OZ:
PKG.

41
¢

ENGLISH
MUFFINS

BANQUET
POT PIES'

' '

L

was Scott Hinsch, executive vice
president of Star Bank. In Mason
County, the SME chairman was
Jon Parrack, of the Nationwide
Insurance Agency In Polnl
Pleasant.

Regional meeting planned

,,

~ RICE8.5~
---=---=--- _A-_RO_N_I-~

asc ~~ . aac FRIES

CHEESE

BEEF or CHICkEN. 8 OZ. BOX

a·ac _U
BEEF .·
___
VI----=-OL---1

MAPLE RIDGE - 24 OZ. BTL

IMITATION

c.~·,.

18.5
BOX

FREICB

'OMA'I'O

J

CH~ BOYARDEE .- 15 OZ. CAN

GINGER EVANS- 32 OZ. BOX

FLAKES
NATURES PICK • 46 OZ. CAN

CAKE MIX -.

PINEAP E

•

..

Price!

CRUSHE-D

. 20 oz.
CAN

99~ PANCAKE
MIX .

CORN

~Low

GINGER .EVANS

oz.

BREAKFAST BOWL- 18 OZ . BOX

Price!

LIBBY - SLICED, CHUNK or

. 15
· CAN

.

Gene and Darla Humphrey,
Pomeroy,; are announcing the
birth ol their first chUd, a ·
daughter, Bridget Nicole. Born
at O:Bieness Hospital In Athens
on Jan. 14, the lnfantwelghedslx
pounds, 10 ounces, and was 19
Inches long.
·
Maternal grandparents are
.Janet Lassiter, Goldsboro, N.C. ,
and Charles Hatfield, Rtitland.
Paternal grandparents are Gene
aild Pat Humphrey, Pomeroy.
Paternal great-grandmother is
Myrtle Grover, and mat.rlll!)
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Hatfield, all of
Pomeroy.
·

Ritchie birthday observed
•

~Low

lea, Meigs County Improved
substantially tl)ls,year In Its fund
raising efforts.
Heading up the SME drive In
Meigs County was Bill Nease,
manager of Bank One, Pomeroy. ·
Gallla County's SME captain

.

'

FLOUR

''

The suatalnlna membership
enrollment period for MeigS·
GaiUa-Mason Boys Scouts bas
been wrapped up and according
to John A. Pinkerman, district
executive for the Tri-State Area
Council of Boy Scouts of Amer-

Battrug to participat,e in fnusic
_program from Washingtpn, D.C.

COLLE

POINT PLEASANT, WV
'
'

.

•

''.
l

•

i

I

�•

.......

Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel
4

Meigs County
land transfers
•

CompUed By:
Emmogene Holateln Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Roberta C. O'Brien and James
B. O'Brien, 100 A, to Patrick H.
O'Brien and Mary E. O'Brien,
Syracuse VIllage. ·
Thomas K. Woods , eta!, .sherift' s deed, to Central Trust Co. of
S.E . Ohio N.A., Middleport

VIllage.
Eurana J . Thomas, dec'd, l)y
executrix, parcels, to Donald L.
il'rllchard, VIrginia Pritchard,
Middleport VIllage.
John N. Bradford and Diana
Bradford, tracts, to Gary Noel
and Laura Noel, Scipio. .
Eldon McCOy, Loretta McCoy
andMarkMcCoy,parcel, toCarl
R. Pulver, Jr . .- Olive.
Liberty 011 and Gas Corp. and
Intrastate Pipe Line Co., Inc.,
affidavits ot tracts relating to

Ro.,_.. L. Dye and Wenona D.
Dye, pjlrcell, to Larry R. Carr

Title, Meigs.
Deeter, aareement, to Columbia
Clyde A. Adams dec'd, cert., to Gas of Ohio Inc., Columbus Gas
Lela D. Hawk, Olive.
Transmission Corp., Lebanon.
Joseph w. Dummitt and
Farmers Bank and Savings
Tammy D. Dummitt, pt. lot, to Company, Lota 15~lll5%, to Leo
JosephW. Dummitt and Tammy Yourig, Pomeory VIllage.
D. Dummitt, Middleport VIllage.
Robert E. Ferrell, Elizabeth
Newaza Smith, lot 434, to Ferrell, William 0 . Ferrell,
·James R. Mills and Linda L. VIolet Fer.rell, VIrginia E .
Mills, Pomeroy VIllage.
Challn." WillleCbatln,MiltlldaM.
Gregory P . Garretson, agree- Cassity, )obn Cassity, Fem J .
ment, to Columbia Gas of Ohio Winkle, Myron Winkle, Robert H.
Inc. and Columbia Gas Trans· Winkle· and Sharon Winkle,
mission Corp., Rutland
. tracts, to Ralph E. Ferrell,
Argyle Deeter and Florence Bedford.

and Susan K. Carr, Columbia.
GeorgeW. CundtlfandVadaL.
CundiU, right of way, "to Columbus Southern Power Company,
Chester.
Billy J . Dalley and Carole M.
Dalley, rlghtofwa&gt;', to Columbus
Southe.rn Power Company,
Chester.
Patty Ann Pickens and Ray
Pickens, right or way, to Columbus Southern Power Company,
Chester.

.

. '•• ...

Clair F. Shenefleld,dec1d, cert;,
to Clair Eugene Shenefield and
Betty Metcalf, Salem.
Diamond Savings and Loan
Co., parcels, to Dal~ E . Tllylor,
Middleport VIllage.
·
~
William Nelson ,Hoselton , :
dec'd, affidavit, to VIrginia F. 1
Hoselton, Olive.
\
'
"Middleport Housing, Corp., lot :
5, toFamtlyHomes,Inc. , Mlddle- :
port VIllage.
:
1
Wilbert McClain, 1 acre, to ~
John H. Cline and Geneva M. •
Cline, Sutton.
1

Pomeroy-

PUBUC
AUCnON
EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT--6:00 P.M.

ES

HOWE'S GlOVE PARK

ISO HP llercrulstr inllolrd·outbolrd, 6 cyl. Plus
extra outdriw-aood 95 HP. Volvo 111rine 4 cyl. (No
outdrive). 55 lfp Homtlite outboard.

•
•
••
••

Count on Kroger for

........ Ohio
tOIISIIIIIIINTS WB.COIIE

PATIICI H. •ossER

POWU TOOLS
36"1athe. 6x8 bench grinder, drill press, 1\1 HP air compres·
sor, 616 eiet. mlllll saw, gas powered concrele saw, 250
amp welder, lathe ~hisel .
MUSIC INSTRUMENTS
Gu~ar. Iiddie, bango.

•.

. I

lUCYKINIII

Complete Smell
Engine Service
TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS·
OV~RHAUU! on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS.
ETC.

DAVE'S ENGINE
IEPAII ·

PH. 304-421-7245

mo.

4·1·*'·1 ....

BINGO

•

•

POIIIIOY.UGLES
CLH

''•
'

I

••

R

224 E. MAIN ST.
892·8876

ID.

ltiUIS. LL 6:45 P.M.
SUfi. 1.1. 1145 P.&amp;
IOOIPIIII

2 H.O. FREE w~h COU]IOII Mid

• • ol min. H.c. Pact·

11e. Um~ ~ coupon por cus• - per binJ) IISSIOR.
IWt l'ov ISO.OI ,_ Goono
.OYtr 110
hr'"""
Gomt 161.01

2-1·1!11

Uo 1001-32

Lor••· Lor•f
ICeltlt I• 401

COPYRIGHT 1989 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY. APRIL 2. THROUGH SATURDAY. APRIL 8. 1989, IN
,

WE RESERVE TljE RIGHT TO· LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SQLD TO
DEALERS .
.
.

'

,ADVERTIRD IT!M POLICY
Each of lhese advertised itpms is required to be reltdily available fJ)r sale ln each
Store, BlCcept as .specifically noted in thia ad. If we do run out of an advertised item we
will_offer vou V_~ur choice of a, compa,.ble"item, when available, reflecting the ~m&amp;
sa".ngs or a ra•ncheck which will entitle you lo purchase th8 advertised Item at the

~d~ertised price witl'lin 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item

purchased.

.

·

•

' l

Gov't Graded
Choice Grain Fed Beef
"Untrimmed Wholesale Cut"
.Cap·On 10-12-lb. Avg.

Whole Boneless $
.
• ·1o1n
• T·
S1r
. 1p........·... .Ib.
BUY ONE
Oscar Mayer
Bun Length Wieners
GET ONE

I

.,

•

Fn• •••r Frl••••

r:i

(

992-2156

'

69'
Sliced \

The VHiege of Midll•
port wll hold 1 public
h-ing on Mondoy. Aprl

Free .

10. 1881. beglnnln~t
7:30 p.m. In tho vi
council ch.,...,o et 2 7

Roce St., MlddllfiOrt.
Oltlo• .
• T1te ...,._ of tho
. hl•lng II to dlocuoo the

, Compr.,.ensive

Hou•

• lna/NIIghbo&lt;hood Rev!. lllllotlon p r - end
• tho opeciol hauling pro' ' • - • .......,"' bling of·
" to lligiblo juriodic·
tlono within tho Stoll of
, Ohio.
•
· AI inlw•tod cltil.,o
.,. encoUraged to ntend

· tM h•••• Mdlor aub•- mit will;..., comm1n1a to

· tho Oflloe oltho MIYOf.
~- Fnd Hoffmen, ·

Moyar

"'

VHI'P"" of Mldclopon

' t31 3t

2 ·In' Memortatn

Parts

· '

REGULAR, LOW SALT.OR
UN SAL TED TOP

0

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
CURTIS"JONES
WHO PASSED
' AWAY
, APRIL 4. 1984
He ia Hdly miaatid
·bY en. He.left on hia
bike; . aeld he'd be
beck later. I eeld
bye, not knowing
I'd nev• aee him
elive epin. It stin
huns IQ much, but
he wHI never be for·
,gotten.
With Love.
,
/"AOm lo D1d,
Sona end Doughter.
8I'CIItherl, Siatero.
Nl
•end Ne h-•

Zasta

L/ )

l - - - -,

Saltines
11-oz.

r

KEEBLER

Soft Batch
Cookies

located on Eallt Ridp R01d (lltiiS Co. Raid 32,
epprox. 3\'lllilts from Route 7.) Turn north! lltiiS
lle110rial or llei1s Co. Roed 32.10 approx. 3Y. miles
to tile COlts residence. lr. and llrs. Coats are mov1111 to Florida.

'

12-oz.

·
TRUCK
19.78 4x4, 351 mi., 14"' snow tires, Fl50. Some rust bul runs
good.
POWER TOOLS ·
Weed Eater, 2 riding lawn mowers, Troy-Built 8 h.p. lawn
mower. air compressor, Super XL Homeltte, router and table,
table saw. band saw, scroll saw, dnll press. sander. battery
charger.
HAND TOOLS
II sockel set, creeper, m~er saw. air lank, tool box and chest,
seed sower, log chains, wheelbarrow. aluminum extension
laddefs.
HOUSEHOLD
Selfo5 lrost-lree relri~erator, 3·piece living room surte, Cold
Spot 23.1 automalicjlelroster, Singer sewing machine. port·
able television, washers and dryers, chest or drawers, dress·
ers; dehumidifier, kitchen cabinet, quilt lrames, single bed,
rockers, gas heater, bicycles, twin beds, roll-away bed,
flower sland, lamps, Bear Cat 8-scannl!f, elechlc knife. brass
hall tree, lloilr lamp, canners. pressure cookers.
HOME INTtRIOR, COLLECTIBLES, ANTIQUES
Roll-top des~ walnut dining table with 4 chairs and 2 captain
chairs, clawloot piano stool, walnut stand. hand mirror from
Ben Fraklin service lor 8 Crooksville china, pmkdep., Caslor
set 1851 pfWter. large glass top hal small cider press. 2-20
gallon stone jars, etc.
EQUIPMENT AND MISCEllANEOUS
2-way plow for Super C. drag disc, culoff saw. electric lence
posts, J.lot cemenl blocks, 3-pot pi&amp; pole.
TERMS: CASH or CHECKS with Proper I. D.

•

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
COCA COLA CLASSIC,

Diet Coke

..

1Wt

Z-Ltr.

1.--.....

ll1n

1

Cart

and.,,..._
nd

Contlllll

I

•Mobile Home
Pert•
•Mobile Home
Rentela
•Lot Rentele

992-7479

lt. 33 Net th of

I

lallhom luldlng

Oomlltlc Vlhid•
A/C S•v'ce
All Mttor • Minor
AIIUiin

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
• 6:30P.M.

NIASE Cert:Mied M1ch~nlc

CAll 992-6756

Factory Chollo
12 Ga'9 S..it'"" Only
Stric"y Enlorcod

"DOC" VAUGH!\
Certified Ucented Shop
5-25- ' BI·tfn

NO SUNDAY

2048.

3

Annuun ce 111enls

................892·5858.

Announcement~

70 or 80 cc kidllrail bll&amp;
304-675-4681 .

We hwe tha towed p~ on
chllirl uwa .,d 11ring 1rim,_.

OAK. LOCUST,

.nv""'•e. Siden Equtpment.
304-1711-7421.

S3 s

PER LOAD

DEUVEIED

ReduaeyaurWelght T1ke"New
ShiPe Diet Plan" lnd E-VIP
Wet• PMI1. A.,.IIJble 11 Fruth
Ph....c,.

UGHT HAUUIIIG DOMIEI 4

. ·BISSELL
BUILDERS
Leeaa Murphey
&amp; Aoooeiale&amp;

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

Givaewey

101 Hlsh s.....
Phon•(614l 992-2922

Coble BRie Here
.IUSINDII'IiONI
16141 "2-6550
IISIDINQ P-1
.16141

R1. 31 Shake Shoppe vidnity.

Rewerd. C.ll 814-448-8974.
114-4411-0485 or 814-44113808.

"At Reasonable Prices"

c,..., color.t Min..ure Poodle.

1 ve• old m ..&amp; prefer older

couple to give him •aood home.
304-8711-1108.

8 Lost and Found

Found: Blonde wolfe type dog011e"Whi1e fife. Vlcinfty d Nibert
Rd. Ne• Mtteo.kC!a.rch. CaH
114-387·7132.
&lt;UITOM KITCHINI. IATHI
tE)fiiNINE REMODEliNG
•VINYL IIDING. "QOFING
•MDAl M.IIUMNGI

HOUIINO. AJI'T. IIROJICTf
SINCE: 1969

P•••ey

•sn n. sr•m•
1

992-2284

Sole!:.~-~~~

RADIATOR .
SERVICE

We con r~r and rt·
can radiators end
heater corts. We con
also acid bail and rod
out radiators. Wt also
ri!PIIir Gas Tanlcs.
.

PAT HILL FOlD
992-2198

Middlepcirt.

FOUND: Bracelet. G.llipolia
Munldptl ..-king lot. C.H 8144411-2342.

LOST on KtppR~•••fernele
Bel(lle. red. white. copper ......
304-41111-1618 oft• 8:00PM.
LOST REWARD vicinity Or_.Roed. white tong Mlr Shepherd
.nd bi8Ck l..alll'edor. med ailed

c• J-.•

SAlES &amp; HIYICI'
I. S. II. SO IAS1'
GUYSYI&amp;I, OliO
614-662·3121
~uthoripd John
D-o. N- Holl.,d.

Eern •1111 mon-r lor your tprlng
werd-obe. A von. C•H Bet 814446-4182 or Carlll 448-4397.

Sumrri• emPloye. for o...
Hertins-- "-k In Mlddapon.
AppiiCIIIions ara .,aillbtelt the
~or' 1 Offt ~ for 1he potitiom .
of awimming pool *edor.
IIW'immfng lnrrructor and lfe
gultdl.
Need 1omeone to mow lewn
twice monthly . C.ll 814-4486747.
Re•iden1 Man -uer/ Melntnt.,,. r.~non for e 42 unh: ept.
cornp .-: in Rio Grande. Krtowlodgo of tlodrictl. r*mblng.
heMing. &amp; cootlnrthetp.,l. ~tl
, ·814-&amp;eJ-41114.

Part·time b.-ttndlr w.nt.:l in
, .. pect:llble downtown .-ee.
w...en6-Nighta ontv. Aeplv to:
Boa cle 188c/o Oelflpolll o.lfy
Tribuna. 825 Tlllrd .t..... o.llipollo. Ohio 411131 .

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

GOVERNMENT JOSS
•te.040.-•ss.230 y ... Now
lOring. Call 11 FILE ER ROll
allllng lpeci..llt with knawladg.
in Medl-=-• MadiCIId ..d lnlur.,ce bilin!P needed. The IUC·
cenful •PPI•C8nt muat be dlt•l

oriented, organR:ed and hwe
inltilt~e. Eceflent .-ge •d
benefit peck~g&amp; Send ,_,me to
Dolly SentineL P.O. Boo 729A
Pbnwov. Ohio.

····· ·G"iilliiiofis··········
&amp; Vicinity
-ch 31

11o AP'I 1-3-4-11-1·7·
8. R.m or thine. Large g•ao•
Mle. Manv ant5quea. tova. at•
rUng • 1urquoin i.walry. Home
W,tlrior. ov• 100 piece~ a..-.
wood well dloor·naw. Oldtoola.

•nfurntture.. 701 Cherry St.

Ae.-. VInton. Ohla.

I family y.rdtll•10 1 Mebetene
Dr. Mon.• Tu•.• &amp; Wed. AprN
3rd. 4th. • 8th.

Thn•dov. -

AVON • AI • - · C.H M.itrn

w. ... 304-882·21411.

AVON ... • - I I ....,., lpen.

304-1711-1429.

clot._,

I .,..,

9~

m: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

4:00, IR 141. one mle past
Cent.n.,-, Prom • • • hou.hold Jt..n-. clot,._g.

Z .17 Second Avnle, Bell 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans llemorial Hospital
lulbeny HJts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Fri. Apr. 7, 9·8, ruga, pic:tur-.
plcttn tram• • mlac. Oroh•d

~ '(614) 446·7&amp;19 or (614) 992-2104 .

COOk needld M Hi·Wfl¥ Inn.
Apply 1'1 penon. Ken a~ga. Ohto.

Yard Sale

7

tiq~.

Dependable·H•rinc Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ictl
Hearin1 Evaluations For All Ages

Hll Rei . oH 218.

Ju.t want to·•.-n

• little •tre

mouv7 Or woukl you •• to
hwe • c••? Either WilY Avon
Cln '*P'YOUblthtbllt:yauc..
belli C.l Mlrlfyn
30.._

882-2645.

We••·

.,. 4. '·, .,. .

Blbtallt• r-.ded for 2 c:t.ldr•
""'homt.

Otyshllt. ...,.Jv•:ao.c.u.Pt

Plaaent, WV 21110 In c.a of
tho floolot•. CocnpConlor ••·

P.n-timt r.,tte c•e ..,_ tor
tho , _ . . , . . ._
""'•
.... lnd .......... ~Ired.
Sendretumeh C11S In certof
Pt PI-- Revllt•- 200 Mllln
St. Pt.
WV 28810.

P--.

······pt·Pr&amp;iiunr·····
&amp; Vicinity

Pwt time relllbte 1., te lllilt
locJv In her I'D-.

w~h t l -

,..,• .,_ required. Sand lnqulr• to 10111. C-1. cere Polflt
Plooo_,. 11011111•. 211DMoln St ..
Ft&gt;lnt P l - . W. Vo. 28110.

Sltulltions
Wanted

Schools

Instruction

Center
R.N., IIDoldng for ..,

Holzer MIIIDII Cant•
o-,;11, OH. 41131
14/t4t 1111

iN

s-leet

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1919
.IMjtct to 0..,.

Wlllsut Ntlict I
Ill COPPII--

*'' "-

6S • ~

If COPPII

AlP

..

---.52• ..

AW Ill,_

LIMESTONE
HAULED
DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.

Call AI 742•2328

•

Help Wanted

Fiaher. 304-

doga,
1711-8101 .

gl.......,e. b•b¥"
Li~tenin1

BOGGS

11

7428 .. e14-258-t307.

FABRIC SHOP

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•HOWARO
ROTAVATORS
•MANNIS nLLERS
•INTERSTATE
BATTERIES
LAWN lo GARDEN
SUPPLIES

dog.

lnt : T.., pUf'M at downtown
Mu,phys. Sund-v aft•noon 42-89. Reward. Clll 814-44•

MASTERS TUXEDO RENTAL
DIY ClEANING SEIYKE
SCISSORS SHARPENED
USED SEWING MACHINES
AITEIA110NS
SING£1 AND WlftTE
SEWING MACIINES
SING£1 INITTING
MAC liNES

EQUIPMENT

be~~gle

Puppiel. 8 wka. old. % Germen
Shep•d 'll CoiUe. 2 f.-n-'e., d 1
m-'e. To good home. 114-9122091.

Day or Night
NO SUNOAY CAlLS

Pomr:roy, Ohla 45769

MORRIS

I" -'1ii!i;

Se1 v1ceo

AeRBooks for Pay! t 100atitle.
Write: Pla•330. 161 S. Unool,_y, N , Awor11, IL 10~2 .

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

. PH. 949-2801
or Its. 9C9-2160

~ne

Home type l.t\t. Aae 46-&amp;5 to
live ln. Free room &amp; bo •d. Cll ·
114-44&amp;-3419.

BILL SLACK
. 992-2269

992-5275
.' L! H-"HH· I

. Call 114.

flllpluylllent

fiDJce your Welght·TIIke " NIMII
Shipe Dlel Pl~n" end E·VIIP
Wet• Pilla. Availlble Fruth

FIREWOOD
CHERRY

Limeetone

110 Weot ._.~~,

Used furniture 111 d houeehold
epp,Uenee•. Phone 114-742·

Ph•mecy.

ALLEN'S
HAULING

3· 13-"89-1

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

ANle W. Daniell, R.N .. Dlreotol of Nuralng

WIIBN
Y011

Moat For-'ln •nd

PH. 9C9-2101
or les. 9119·2160

C. Ito
Pte 1940 qultta. Any ODnditlon.
Coth pold. Call 114-892· 8157
Dr 111 ..... 592·2'11 .

4-4·81·1 mo•

appartunlty to aclvMoe ollnlaally.and ptctftaalonaly...

'

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.

S~RVIC~
5YRACUSI, OHIO

thl pleoa or
lllo aelllng.

992-6855

Sick ChHd Day Care
gred!lla or • Qlrlll

If you"' a -

DI~SEl

.. Free Eltimetn"

, . . .110M ·OWIB

ear..Leddar
1

.... ...

GUN

OPDIIOST SATURDAYS
10:00 "TIL 5:00

.
·
lncllviduellnd Orientation Pragrem
You oen ..-Jve one of the bell aeAary end belwlit package•
l ·
·
avelleble In the .,..
·
Oeneroul tuhtoft Mlm~
Hu.pltel IPOIIIOfed continuing education oreclltt

Sprinadala
2% Lowfat

VAUGHN'S

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.,

""""*'al

Wll buy .. .,.,.....
A,n:lqun, furnhure. app~~,n..,
......... IUtO&amp;. co~e homa
turnkhlnp. Mlrllna,..,...
114-2411-&amp;152.

Weevlng Supplloo
Siari up now for B••ket •
w...lngCI8o-

'
..A veriety
•s.nw..
of Httlnga: •· 10 and 12 hour ihlfta avalleble

KROGER BUTTERMILK OR

' 949-2969

2·15·'11-1 mo. d.

C.III14-4C&amp;-

3t81.

Lorge Supply of Beokort

art now oHtring

• 8 Ctlllcal

614·985·4180

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

. . . . opportunities ..._
•Mtllcai-~Swglcal Arl

HOURS : Mon. 9· 7
Tueo.·Sit. 9·6: Cloood Su

THE
BASKET WEAVE

I

•·

MOIILJ
HOME PAll

....... lp-1

I

•

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985·)!61

..... ,

Holzer
Medical
·Center

or Coke

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

VISA · MASTERCHARGE

DEAD 01 -AUVE

Buth Hog Farm

THE BEST.'
UICE TO WO-K HERE
because
THE BEST
ARE ALREADY HERE

prlc..Hing~d.

Parts I Service On
· AI llakts

WANTED

Equpm.,t Deal•.

I

Fwnlture...,lnd wM~n.a brr the

pleoa Of""entire hou....,..d. FU

LDII : Sm-'1 &amp;mille

•Weahllfi•Drv••
•Rengel •Freez••
•Relrlgeretore
"Must ........,. .. '

Buy

~IS

OIIGOII IllS, CIWJIS
lYAII SilVIa Cltml

l llfl.

REGISTERED NURSES

•

- ~

·31 I

Help Wanted

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMplDYER

~

SAT• I a01-l2 N-

To

TMDUIIIIOWDS

KIO SAWS I

YDY lllSDNULE
IAYIIInUIKI

Cone, Ol11o, "'""·
Copper end More
MON.·FII.: 9 am·+. pm

AUCTIONEER: Jim Carnahan-614-949-2708
Not
lor Accldtnts or Loss ol "'"''ortv

Immediate opening for Jllfl time registered
. nunet~ to work In Specie! Cere Unit. Acute
Cere and Emergency Room. Selery commen'
au rate with experience. Excellent fringe hen•
fltt.
SEND RESUME TO:
Rhonde Delley, R. N.
Director of Nuraing
Veteran• Memorial Hospital
11 &amp; E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 46789
(8141992·2104, extenolon 213

' FREE ESTIMATES
Ia.. the pain out of
painting. lat ,.. tie
It llir yM.

Dirt, Sand &amp;
Coal Delivered
1,000 Gel. Wa1er
Service

LUNCH

11

111'11101-IITIIIOI

AUTO -

Wanted

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL 'ENGINE

LINDA'S
PAINTING

We Haul and
Spread

SAT., APRIL 8, 1989 at 10:00

PUBLIC HEARIMO

F·R EE!
Mixed ·

PUBLIC SALE

Public Notice ·

Each

'1

.

Ohio

NOW OPIJI FOI
IUSIIHSS .

14tll &amp; .... St.
'"""
"•o•... W. Yo.
We Buy Aluminum

'

California
Oranges ·

U.S. INSPECTED
HOLLY FARMS

PUIUC
RECYCUNG .

Htppf Blrtlt.tfl

•

113 SIZE

1-LB. PKG. BEEF OR

·'

-~~-

Services Offe ed

.•

.

•
ow ··r tces .•
Cl.......o&amp;ll AND IIOMIIIIOY aTOfiU,

.-

·.,.

Wednlllclay. April 6. 1989

----------------------------------------~~------~--------~--------------------------------------------~------~~---------------------- :
'

-··------· ------ -- - .

- ~--···-

8
18 Wented to Do

�~~~· 12-n.e
f111 1111

21

Sentinel

!.II

LAFF·A·DAY

51

BlllinHI

OpportUnity

SWliN
AUCTION • FURNITUI'IE 82
Olivo St.. a.lllpollo.
Nl\¥. I Po. IJOUI&gt; 1381.
Uvlng room ....,.,. ,,,.. 1119.
....~ bodo ....
'249.
.Filii loundallon
ltlrllng· tal . Recllnera

h-..
m-•

•••

,

I
CEI
THE 0110 V LEV PUBLISHING lluslnCO. - wllh
-·
Y'"'
.do
, _. . yror
know, •dNOTto .-dMOnew'
through thl m.. untl yOu h••

IIOrllnll' . . ..

UsED·- • - - o o m

oult•. Doou. -

of!•'"• '

. -lgalod ihlt
rUm Ut ap atlun. Downtown
e.. •d lounge wkh 22
din•. 2 two beG-oom ul)ltllrl
ap.-tmentl. OWn• "h• ott.
l n t - e11.ooo.
CAl llont1114-912· 111172.

-lobi•

Inch· *71. Autonwdc KMmore
· •71. - ...... fr...
free, •v•c•do - •75 .
Atlrlgorol... fr- lroo. wlrll•

••· Smll Konmort wooh« ·
*110. - - .......... ~.
Sk- Appllon-. 178 Ul&gt;o&gt;w
Alv• Rood. Coli 114-441·
7311.

.Qwn yaur own IPP... or De
1tore. choo•• from : J••n·
•por11WIIIf. lediM. men' •·
Ghlc.tr.,;mlfernlty. ••oe aMI.
P••e. .dlnOIW_.· ...oblc. bricloil. llngorloor _ . , . _
Add aolor •M\'sil. lr~nd
nom•: Llo Clolborno. Hool1-.
Ch-. Le' It Michel a Forenz1.
lh""o loy, LtvL Comp lovortv
Hllli. ()rvonl!!ollv G,_._ Lucio.
2000 at. . .. Retll prl011
unW.abhl for top queltty
• ..,. •aawlv Driced from t19
1o 110. 0vtr 2SO lw.,dl 2100
ltyloo. e11.900 to I 29, 900:
Loti &amp; Acreage
l_.ory, nlnlniJ flrltu- ok·
_g rMd optnJng. wtc. Can
OHI" 11 d•a. Mr. Schneid• ·Building Itt" end Iota on RIIY·
_40_'__
l' l' 31_1__
- __'-______, ___ burn Aotd. 304-1711-1213.

Rr:iil rsldle
~1

"Be patient! · There are no
shortcuts to success. You've
been with us only 22 years." ,

-.,..-...,.....,..,===----44 Apartment
~
.
for Rent

One bedroomfUr,.l;led.-t very
nice end ct_.. IMiultt Onty, no
P••· phone 3114-8711-13ae.

100 ocr• Joining Cornt101k
Hunting Grounds. e37.000.00.
Plrono 3114-11711-2&amp;97 or 5712197.
.

Hcmn for Sale

2 bedroom Apto. IQr ront.'
Corpotod. Nlco ,.,In~ Laundry
focA_I_ ovolloblo. COli 114992-3711. EOH.

Rer1tals

Very -lvolwldl 4bodroom.
2 both, fwnllr """" with ftr•

rDDm

Homes for Rent ·

.... llnloh
frl•tl
om
Hoopllol off AI. 311lu-lllo"
COli
.14-441-4111.
·

-•brook

Deluxe 3 lA. houH for 1118.
~
Co" -~.,co
• ~4- 17II04.
.

t,:

GOVERNMENT HOMEII From
'1 .00 Ill flopolr). F o r - II.,Poo..TaDolnquointPrtl01. NOW SELLING THIS
AIIEAI Col (Rolu-111·3111733-10&amp;1. hi. 2732·A. FOR
I=UI'IIIENT USTINOII

3BA.hou... dlkiJII.AC. t380•

mo. Coli 304-8711-&amp;104. or
, ~711-5381

---=----·----------2 111 ·Middleport. l.olgo.yord.
Exc. neighborhood. full .,...
mont, dw, dlopoool, AC. Coli
S14-44fl.9205•ft•5:30PM.

7ye•olcL 3bedrGomtlrick·vlnvl

totat ll.ctric. ..,ch •tylll home,
c.pllted throughout. 1 •ere
f.-,otd In back yard with d.ak.
Locetld 7 rnl• from Hot1er
Hos~ol on Rt. 1110. A.oiloblo
Mlirch 1. *350 P« month. If
lnl•tolod, CAII114-281-1316
(Jickaon) lift• 7p.ln.
HGUit for

ftau.. 4 acri. inore
lar.. mn.;rlte block

l•t.
g ..ag ..
~ 10. FurnitUre. f•m ..,..,..
01

- · e41.ooo. co11 114-2&amp;111114
tl78 WndlorMolalloHome, ol

-~ 2 Ill. l•go living lo

•lnv • • - . on lrl-op
· road. to mlnut. from Hotz•
- • lol·up on lorgortnlod
IQt wJth •••••• building.
e,12.100. Col work 114-24111301 'or •••• 246-111&amp;.

'

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Fully furn51hed g•-ae 1pt. AN
utllti• ptlid Mctlpt eiiKitrlcily.

- t y rode- • - o d.
Oop. Alto 3-oom lrollor. Coli
114-441-S5118. 4el·ll150. . '
2 Br mobile home. ApPro.. 2
mil• from Gelllpol51 on lt. At.
ua. eon 114-441-1303. ·

'

7·'foom hou• tn ground pooL

F.A.

42

,_.t, 30'4 -875-8720.

lurn~e&amp;

wood bur'*·

.....oroom-hMd. . . . . . .
Coll14-992-383a ., .. 4 .. d
..do.
HouM 1I ...... 2 be*oonw.

w.... ,...

blthroo!!to_ city
phon&amp; . JV coblo. buo • mol
rout&amp; ·blodl top rood 1·4 milo

from town. 31141711- 41 II.

80 ft. """""' ... ...... 3 bocf.
· room. ZINI ... Z bll•ttl.tlltone
.... _
2 ... .. .1.&amp;
• • • Mlnv at,... •ee.ooo.
304-411-1838.
.
lroomtrouoo.2--.lnlfl'lllnd

PGOI. mmv •tl'll. low eo· ..

for

- t y romodolod. &lt;t225 p«r
month. *100 depotlt: In Rio
Orondo. Coli 1114-2415,5181.

New Lteto. 2 811 , Rtf. lo Dop.
Req'ed. t1ZIImo. Gtrden
. _•. eo11 """""'" nH .,
843-2144.

3 -oorn ronoh. prlaorl IO'o,
utro rilra Mt-llnlok Addl·
tlon. Clll .,.. 1:00 .nd w ...

VERY NICE, 4 or I -aom
ho"" ellunn •lctna e•1111e.

1•.. •1n1 .nd clnlng· roam.

..... ~.... ........

ftr.piM:&amp;

ee:z. 000. oo. Loon ooournptlon
ovololllo. Pl-o •• 304-17113473 for moro ~ ....

32

Mobile Hcmn
for Sale

Vlll~ge

114-192·1331 or 114-91113811.

3 Acre prMite mobile ho,..e lot

2 bedroom. n&amp;&amp;. P• mon1h.

for rwtt,11mln. fromGIIIipolte.

• 100. dopoolt. Coli 814-992·
3122.

Coiii14-142-223Z.

43

Route 33, North of Pom•ov·
Lot1. Mntell, .,.-ta, 111 • . Clll

=c:hlir•new
or ulld. 3
·
ed eleclrtc 1ooot... Cell
Molality colloel, 1·814II!""*
o?0-9111.
·

I 14- 992· 7479.

P-.turl for r.,t, Rio' Grtnde
oroo. 81tckllurn Rool1y. COli
&amp;I4-441-0008.
·

49

44

111r

A partm'!Klt
for Rant

For

Lease

lA11e: AP.II1ment newtv-

decorMed. 2nd_ floor, CCM''*'
Seoond a Pin• o•lpoll. OnebNroom. ltove a r*lg.-MDf'.
w.ter pt'ovided. Deposit M d

rtfw.,OII. ,.qulrld. *22&amp;. per
month. Coli 114-441-4248.
441-4e2&amp;, or 441-232&amp;.

BE~TIFUL

APARTMENTS AT
BUOOE)' PII1CES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 131 Jtckson
Pike from *183 • mo. Wllk to
ahop end ' meN'._, 814-4462&amp;11. E.O.H.

Mer r:ilan !11 se

T•• Townhou• apertmentl· 2
BRt., 1~ b.tt.. CA.~ dlt·
hwather. di1p0111. prMte en-

51

cloHd pOlio. poot plo¥1Jcund.
WMer, IIW8r, &amp; tn~sh Included.
Slorllng 01 o 289 P• mo. Coli
814-317· 78110.

Household Goods

County Altilll•ce. Inc. Goad
Udd IIPPIIIin~»~ .-.d TV •••·
Open lAM to ePM. Mon thru

redecorated. Clrp8L complete

kitchen, AC. P•kinet. No pate.

SOl. 114-441-1199. 127 3rd.
A..,. GolllpoAo, OH.

Deposit. Colll14-4el-0139 .

SHAOY LAWN APT&amp;- 729
Second Aw. FurUhecl.tflden-

Sloollruck tool bo•. Wide bod. ·
Colll14-441-7717.

ptuth carpet.

1171 Flornlngo , 211.1. 3 bod-

Apert,...t evaleble. HUD ac·

v•a •1000. Mey .... on lot.
• 14-742-3033.

1111 121&lt;10 ....... On rlvor· - lot .... .., bo rtnlod.
14100. Coli 814-992-33111.

requlrMf. c.ll814-441-1119.

Qui,. lolo: 1173 14K'JU Ff.,..
11'. llolhl. 2 or 3
bo*-. 11.000. Aloo lot lor

honw .betow

Coli' 114-441-0331.

1111 molallt """" 1 4•'JU. 2
bo*-. prlcod to ... 304

Furnlohod offici•&lt;¥· 107 lo·
cond. 011-. ,, eo. Sh••
b.h. COI441-4411oii•7PM.

..... 304-712·23311.

1711··41.

31,5 loti a. Acreage

... . .,•.. -A-. 2-·
0.1. - o Rd.· 2 -dtd

..... Col 114-14.. _1 .,..

c..v·-··7ml1oo.. ....._.. AI urlllor-nd

.........

...... l'lootrlolod. Coli 814-

'

I

I

I

'

bot~

77

~;:;~::;;::";::::::;::l":;;;;:::;~;:;:;.;::;;;~=-179
81 Farm Equipment
71 Auto'a For Sale

•eed•

-

Ford 3a10 42 hp cl•ol
tractOI'I tl70. 00 down PI¥mont ond *211.00 p«r month
far 10 mont.. or a •-•
purch•e for quolftod lluyon.
Alto N- Holond .ld 'IIW •
lold••· ' ,.. bll... .. blln.

tlddert. A cornpe.te ht~t tool
In• New Holland bll• twtn•
10.000 ft, •21.00 7.20Qft,IIJI'
balling straw 100ft. moret.,.l
tlr-h U1.00. 10 bolllo or
more. Kool... ·lorvloo Cont•.
81. At. 87 Loon. WY. 304-99113874.
Ford 132 bol,;. 12,710. 00. Ford
101 ft mower *110.oo. 3
eilc ton wagane 18 ft ollk tilts

UOO.OO uch. OrMiy bod
UOO.OO. PTO pt. oudor
•135.00. 2 rOtW ... cull:t&amp;tator
*225.00. ...... - . . . . .ont
cond. Ford PY? lift rfte
0310.00. J.D. 3110. 42 It
~~- .. ,...,...,.,,,ooo.oo.
24ft bolo""""''"' *2211.00. 22
It vroln o1..01or e1oo. oo. AH 1n
good cand. L.E . ll•on. 304
171-2833.

1913 Pomloc t-1000 fur solo.
Colll14-992-2111

Liveatock

Umouoin llullo- Ono 2'1. yo•
lulolrlood. Ono 1 y - p -blood. Coli 114-311-1441.
Oood.d..,,Aog-odOuortl!
horooo. Col I 14-311-9991 or
311-1123.
AOHA 1174 ...1ogol ... ~ Nloo
m•ldngo. No 1&gt;oc1 - · EICol·
1ont ... 1100. Coll1424!1-1474.

ond hok _ . , IQr dogo .,d
Cltt. Contalnt NO tynthlllc

· For Soi•R~ Ouortor horoo.
m•• Col 114-211-1822.

Flld lane

lndlvldull gubr •••on~. be·
glnnoro. -..s.,Morlot. Bru&gt;
corclo Muolc. 114-4-el-0187.
Joff -..lor lnllniOior, 114- ·
441-8077. Llmlloil op.,lng1.

65

Seed

a.

ml•.

1980Lincoln Contlnonlol . good
cond. 78.000 mil•. Phon.•
304-,17"'7147.
•

TNckl

192·7217.

e.

1873 Yocillonw o l - oolf
corrJalnod. 2311. coli oft• 1:00,
'PM. 304-1711-51, a.

TlfAT TAIL. WAGGING, •• {~

for Sale

1971 Dodge plc:kup;

•.4 ton.

Serv1cr: :;

4

• ...... fltCtory ........, ••ruck.

Good oorll•ion. Call 114-4482~Aift•lpm.

1811 S·10 pldl·up, 4 cvl.. 4 ·
'

' '"'81,..--.,..,H-ome
_ _ ___,.__,
Improvements

--------~--------:'

Hewy duty Holm• wreck•.

-Ttndlm
- .,.
· ••
18c.ft.hall•.
"""""•soo.
clu1y
Colll14-441-7141. ,
1114 f ..dP:110 E""'or•. Coli
114-211-1111
19n Ford "F-100. eeoo: Col
114-4-el-1414.

1818 Cholry 1·10 818or. Fu11¥
loodod. pluo cuOiomlzod. 1
- · ••1o
kiPI. e1o.ooo.
Nogotlolrlo.
14-992·1320.

74

Motorcycln

l rIPS Pill Lillllll

71

Auto'• For Sale

But there wu IIIII need lor careful
p1ay.
Declarer won dummy's ace of
hurll and p1ayeCI a club back to hit
kk1J. Welt wually pla)"d low. Declarer returned to dummy's dlall!ond
kine llld played another club. When
Eut lllo'lfed out, Welt won the Jack
1nd continued he1r11. Declarer ruffed,
but I!Duld not alford to lead another
trump at thll point, since West would
win and Ioree declarer to ruff once
apin. So there was nothing to do ex·
cept take tbe tpade · r~neae. When
dammy'• queen of spades won the
trick, declarer cubed the spade ace
and !ben bspn nmnlnc bil diamonds.
lleeaUH the 10 of clubs remalaed In
c!Dmmy, Wilt had no way of ruffin&amp; In
with a low club to beat the contract.

tAQJH .
.KQti7

.'

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

"""
Pall

Nordl

Eao1

z•

P•• ,
PUI
PUI

I+

Pill
Rill

1•

P111

Opening lead: • Q

..

•

It's worth noting that a Cllreiwl
play of the club 10 from c!Dmmy on ta·
II!COIIII round of clubs would bave c:aet
South tbe contract, placinl West In tH
position of beinc able ..,.ntually to
ruff in with the live of clubs.
1•-locollf~ booU •J-T'"' ........ 11/14
caodGa-·tomttoo _ ..,.-.

•J_,..,

lbr "'"' Onlrllll~) ... · - II
,
.
.
pubiJMod
_.
""""
........
~
II) 1..1. ND'V'APSR &amp;NTEIIPJUII: AIIN.

pon1, a•ag• •d cMckl. Fre· ~
e•lm•oo. coll3114-llll-3e21J. ,
PalnllngC.... ony

.BARNEY

7237. lit. 1 los 10 A, Point"
....... W. Yo. 21110

------------------- :' .

I Actresa

4 Comp11111

... ..

. . ..

-·...

.....

......
.

TWO DOWR5

:

WHO TOLD
YOU?

A t.ITrtf

"""''-

THAT'S WHO!!

. YOU AN' YORE

Ill MOUTH II

'a. RefrigeratiOn

-

17Bao
IIOnr

••

II Shriek
11 Upwlll'd

..

(prefix)

II Reaching
(abbr.)

31Cieen up

•

;;;84.--"E::;:Iec~trica""·
:-::ol-'---- !

.. ... ..
•.

Dalmatlu?

· CARTER'S PWMIIING
I
AND HEATING
(
Cor. Fou"h Md Pine
~
Oolll&gt;cll. Ohio
I
Phone I 144411-3181 Of 114- I
441-4e77
,)

ovwlooldna

DOWN
I Prone
Z Rrotulcast
3 Inherit

IINIIM
for a .

· 1

IAt Ul color your wOitd. lnt•lo-J
r-attrlor. CoH lon 304-1711- •

&amp;

ACI088
1 Take It
st -value

IC"Ifl- .
a H&amp;n~mer"

'I

Megl c Touch

;, •.

i= ·

1818. Honda lhodOw ?OQ.CC,
I 1.1100 llrm. Coli 114-4411-

Sale

hearll on only a three-card
boldine 11 1 normal procedure, de·
liped to elicit a no-trump bid .when
South holds Q-:r of hearll. But when
South completed the d-.lptlon of hia
diMrlbullon, North bid pme In clubl.

......

:rN 'THr CARD
GAME!!.

for

two

Deborah
point
.......
9 "The - In 1 "The -·,·•
Winter"
Kid"
10 8e of Ulle
(1984 film)
11 Weapon
1 Oet away
.,
Ut (P'r.lled
from
AMwer
8po
7 Operated
11 Btrle
8 Uke .
It IJoot)'
17 H..-anaue
II ~l:f.)
Donald
II Cebbqe- It More
If '1'111&amp;·
'l'lump
like
dllcemlng
.
11 Feudal
veaetable . 80 Mickey,
••
11
lord
14 Mllter
for one
10 Grow old lC One.of the
(Gr.)
IC Equal
11 c,reno
Birr)'·
IIJ Con pme 11 Ma. Glll'dner
featuN
moree · II Dlaculllon 1.7 Actor
II Wu aware 11 Verb tenH
Scheider
QSinall one

Heating

Moton

.6

leld, 10 the declalon by North to bid
live clubs wu 1 10011 one. North's bid
of

••

SOUTH
+94

lty IHOMAS JOSEPH

· YOU LOST

B011t1 and

tlO 7 2

• AJS3

.CROSSWORD

'

'Corponuy "" ... lob ...
hour, pan-.g, d!fti w.l. plu,._j
In g. ....,,. . ramodq;IJII oorn- .
plilo. Coi114441-78B.
'
::8op-.llc-T=on-.k=Purn-rn-.oln•o...-:1l',=ao=.-=o:-:-,,,:
Ue Co. AON EVANS ENTER· ~
PAISEI. Jocklori. Olllo 1·1100- 1
137·9128
•

;;:::;;:;;;::::::::
t
82
Plumbing
•

75

.K97S2

.QJ105
t!U

'**"eel to quick defeat with a heart

·"

-~

1114 Hondo Y·ll Mogno, good
oond. n.IIOO. 1815 Hondo
100. low ..... e1 .2oo. Col ·
114-:Jal-8901.

1180 Hondo -or C¥01• 900
CC. Filii • - olr rldor .,d
- · ,11"-742·3101.

+JIUS

. ..

1871 Chovv tnrdl. ' 310 Old.
Long wfdo 1100. Col
1.14- 2411-. . .2 oft• IPM.

0102.

I

IIH01111ehold
(Fr.)

...

17Rake
II Bulwark
*tEn&amp;lllh

.••
'.

n.•

·-.

riYer
40 Scotland 41Be~

river

86

to

lundort - ·
J•JWIIt•llirvlao.

Llbr_.,

clt1•no.
2411-11211.

-

Ph
. . 114-·•

-·-leo.
.................. ...
........\
phono 104-171-2311 or 114441-4088.

=

I!Wn ...U h1IIIIIIOIMICI .... ooukl

Wotl...,.'s Watw Houllne.

;:-~.ms:

W,

1-1711.

g,or,t
.

........ li.0001o4, _ _ ')•

~~~·=·
87

..... ....111 ... lllltooll. hr
~

. .-t ,..,.=

171t.I.O.H.

=~=-·=· ::;.;m;.-..,. "'

=.......""' .. ...::u:.:m-·""
""' tloor. AI

,..

~

UJitahk •••
104-171 · 4114 ••• f,o.

•

""•

AXYDLB.UXR
IILONOJ'BLLOW
· One letter ltlndl for another. In Uda llllJPie A lllllld
for tile three L'l, X for tile two O'a, etc. Stn&amp;le !etten,
bGPI*1 U.lqth and fCII1nltklncl tile wordlare au
. Each dly tile c:odlll&amp;ttn are different.
.
CatFIOQUOII
M

=

~AM

CPS

BCNAMVFTI

WATIMYATJ
~PNFTFBVAB
.

NFWAHIAr '

OCPS

...

MYHM

OCPS ., I H 8
'

"

.•.

....
I

•o .

"I. '
••

""*'

HH &gt;

LCOHKP.

••
•

•

...-ov·o
_,.._.. •..,.."111e..,Inti
....
In t&amp;tr. . .
Call
..~~1~::·~·~·..:...._____::..._~.

. DAILY CRYP'I'OqtJO'I'D- Here'allow to Wert It

BMSATIMVATB

;

Uphohrtery

upon your-·
ICORI'IO (o.J, 14 1111. 8) A;run·
11tc1 co-worlter with probllnl8
1 lry
10 lnVOIWI you ladly. wlriOII ecru ul111111t11y - • • .probltone for you. 11'•
bill to ill 11111 ~ reeoiW Mil•
. .,.. unllleled.
UGITTAIIIUI (lltlr, 8 he 11) 'I'"'

neo::•

... golo. dilloool•.
1.000 orw
2.000

.

TAUIIUI (o\11111 ......, •1 Do wll•l
you Cl8il 12. !II helpful to Olherl 10111y.
bu1 cton'1 ill Oll'tlln ~idt,.illllll whO
lhciulclbt "'idlillllor
11t8P
111 of t1111t bUrdine on )111111' l*k.

able oonCMIIOI'II. 1*111'- wllh Wllom
yOII'II .h... dNIIngalaclay.,. likely 10
do lhe - · IIIII !hey 1111y IC1 only

Nflfll (Mir11..... . , Oon'll_,.
...,thlno ...., loday without llnl think- m1y gel invoiiiM In IOIMIIIing ICidl1
lng OUI 811 of 11• rllinlflael1onl In eel• U.l CGUicl-'&lt; OUI 10 I fllrly good dell,
- · Opnllng In lillie OOIIId IMCIIO
In U. way 11 IIIII Ill
IWIY lfllllllkll,
·
Pl'l n
Acl)ul1 11 men II
OAJiiOft loMM 11.,.., II) YCMI'rt IJII•
1y to IIMi men IIIICIM today nyou .,.
eblllo op111111 lndeplndlnlly of olh-

l'llrldco

., .., ...... "'!.~ - · -

Grep/1 predl~ lor lhe yur llhead by
m•Hing •1 10 Altro.Qrtoph, c/o IIIII
ne aplflll', P.O. lloll142,, Clovelend,
OH 4e101-3428: Be tur• 10 11111 your
zqdllc -'Gft.
.
.

"""*"'•

~Imming

II lo II - · lorvlct. Pools,
1.ooo .. 2.oooao1ono-orv.
Coi1304-171-U?O.

WQI111

:w,..............

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

cl•t•m•. wllll, lmrnedlet•

·-·=-.....
----.-.............
,.... .
_.................. .........
-

Ganer.el Hauling

DMI•d Wit• 8orvlao: Po ...
Clol- Wol~. Doflvory Any:
limo. Coli 814-441- 7404-No

film.. 114P""A... laD/1100dlp. .-drol., - • f o r
' Colli 114-441-1111.
Al41-124$

'

/CNO\V you~f HArftY ·
AJOUi ~EceiVII'•Ui .JEC~f;'
INfO/tM~TION '~ SAIP THt
5pY J0$$ 1 1'JCJT WATCtf

1814FordLTO, 304-1711-4113.

O.cllb 1Md oorn and llfllfe
1974 Hondll 710 with ntr11.
- · 304-1711-1101.
'400 010. Coli 114-2411120. •

R••• ,.
q -. Col lf&lt;&amp;-441--7.

I lit_.: -

..

. , •• l

"11 Chevetu. 4 speed.
. . 110.00. Phone 304871·
4140.

72

•u

EAST

WRST

Three no-trump would have been

II

hot .,......... t1800. 11 ...-

.

tK5

By J1meo Jeeoby

01'

""" '

.1042

a bad split

1971 28ft. Fronldln. 2 .,... .
ond both. Sol~corttoln od. olo«·
rlcrefrla••or. storvewllhovBn,

.

.AQIU
. .AH

Overcoming

Remodi!Hng. ntw edcltiol'll. c•·

Fertilizer

•too -. -.

.

NORTH

tnd• for eonv...lani
Yon. 114-742·3101.

eom ...

. ..

,.,.

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

'

Sleep• 8. Air contltion. t.rnlca •

'14
Y·8, low rnlioogo.
IOio of options. 3114-1711-&amp;2911&lt;

~··

Sign l.n window of smalllown booted: ..If you neld it,
we heYI it." Acro11 the strlll a shop advertleed. "If we
don't havl H, you OON'T NEED Ill"

. '
1973 Qodge Mo......-1tome.t

For.,.

II

UNSCRI\MIILE 1\BOVE . LETTERS
, TO GET 1\NSWER

iCIIAM-LITS ANSWIRS
"'~
Daggtd- Eduea - ll'lfi(Jt - Zflfllth - OON'T NEED-

comolnod. oloops olo. Clll1114-1
2411-1183.
.

1172 Oldl Cull- 3&amp;0: 1982
Coeah"*' Pop- up camper.
304-171-1817 oft• 1:00 p.m.

...

NUMBERED LETTUS IN
THEsE SQUARES

I

11142~ 11. Prow'- .;..,.p... ooitl

..d emopa. •m. skJh. n.v
11r.,_ 302. Nftl good. e1. 100.
Off•. 304-171' ~M

Tovato Slice. lllto, eir.
70.000
~d c•; 30._
171J.81Ji
I
,

•

..

P~INT

a.

e2.200. C.ll144ee.0208.

•

Comploll · thl chuCkle quored
by filli11g In t~• missing wordli
you dov,lop Irom Olop No. 3 bolow.

~.

Motora Homes
Campera

'71 M,...,., II, wtwlt._ lou..,,..

.....

0

.l
22' CoechmM Clmplr', ..., I '
tlr11, ~· h. . • end more.

p.m.

·eo

•

'--'--'--'--'--'--J

a.

''"' ,.,~ 2 - - unllrrnlohod
gorogo Stow
· · -• ·rf/1.
· No
1200
month.
pile.•

I

I

,

....

I

F

~---r~...:;,lir=-'lil~~·TI...;..TI-·-1

·
1871ChovyCI020ft.bod.- · ~~~~-.-.-.~
RON'S Tel..,l•lon B•rvlce. ;
-lOOft. Oood m8k•. Shade. Ohio ~l.:t"· .I. 1100. 30 4-171·
Hou~ cafl1 on RCA. Q.-ur. ,
114-811-1234.
.GE. Spoollllng In Z..kh. Col '
304171-2399 or 114-441- •
24&amp;1.
.•
" - IQr lolo. Col 1'14-14.. 'IS Chov ~ton. 310, 4 speed. 8
20'17.
ft bed. 31141711-1722.
----=-----~
··~·~--.
Folly Troo )'rlrnrrirr9 llump•
Yo•llna llullo. McCoy · Polled 18n,ford Short bod. v.a.,o.
romovo~ CoD 3041711-1331. ·,
1871 - .... , . _... 1887
·
·
Ol_
...
d.
w.vo.
304171-2441.
" - - 1 10. Phono 304171Rot.-y or: clble tool «filing.
7918.
- - ................d.....
~~Jmp 101• •d ..,.let. 30481mment1l tulia. 1 Ya yq 'old. clll -;;;;::::;,:;:::::;;;:::;;::;;;;~:
bol- ,7:00 ond 11 :00 PM. ::;
8811-3a02 .
'.
73
304882-3291
Vena &amp; 4 W.O.
'
'
RON'S APPUANCE II!IIVICE. :
house a.tl ltrvking OE, Hat f
187J Dodg• Yin, Utrl to,.. 4
64 Hay Grain
Point, WMhtrl, dryMI Md!
coploln aholn, o&gt;lt bed.IO.OOO
1
octvol ml•. U311. Col 114- · ltov.._ 30+57.238&amp;
----::-:-----:-- 1
241-&amp;232.
M- l-op ond PwlniJ •
Conditioned or•• h.,. ~·
Hlndlrwon. WV1. W.p.;ec:trlv• !
- · Coll814-441-4344.
1814 P1vrnauth lolryogor Von.
woyo. portdnglolo. - , , , .,
Front wheail • ..,.. ado, AC,
otllmiloo. 3041711-241 .
1
Slrow lor •lo. 304-1711-1081. oruloo. 83.000 m101. tiiOOO.
Sondv'o. 114-992· 7403.
•
1

A.C. Rtf. roq'od.
- . - . lor , Col
114-441-0331.
'

2 II

BRAWLERS,
CHUCK!

Cow for Gentle. 'Mitlhv. Due to fr•hen

Mocltrn101- 1111. trrnolhod
opl. lo 2 eA. 101 unlur·
nlohod opl. Aof. • ,dop. Coli
114-441-1078. .
porldng l

I I I

&amp;ETWEEN ~AVE AN'( ·

••

•

to.
ator1. "Thera's
~ 1 ; nothing but snow on .the
.
screen," I complained. "Don't
r---·~~~-., worry," smiled !ha clerk, "Ws
I LES T
the-."
·

......... Milk

•FIH'nllhod · opl. · 1 lA . 243
J ....on Plk• •221 • mo.
Ulllllel pold. Coli 441-4411
ott•7 PM.

MKt

A.uto Repair

D 1 S MT

2&amp; ft. trovol trol... 1 98g
Nomod. 118150. lolf oonloln od. •

.............. -....,,,.,.,

Aplt.

~AWL

OURTWOTEA/1\5!

Coli 114- 2&amp;1-1311.

1811 Mudo I 2000. Loodod.
4 mo. old Point ltlv·IIOod .Coli' 114-992-2122 cir 114b-n~ Coli' 114-4-el-3189.
••z - 314~ •venlng• efter
~:OI)p.m.
.

Effld1ney- ept.- 1 ·fMn. Mobile

Fum.

~OU 1RE lUCK'f' IT '!'OUR WIMP'f'
PIDN'T CAUSE A TEAM I)OESN'T

.

1118 Pontloc Fl•o · IQrnuio II
4.000inll•.
1Dodtd. 30_.1711'&amp;114 oltor II

1410.

Nloetv furnilhed 1m.l hou•.
fllllllltn

114-- '

-·

1971 TorTy · 21' OIOops oi&lt;.
ooncltlon with IKtrae.
*2.000. Coll14-4el-0014.

cyl. E.-:. cond. -

blllh. CI-.. Nop... R•f.• dep.

r~vor;

C&lt; -

'h.

E IIDtlltm

1178 MerCury Monugo,
31 , 000 mllel: exc. cond .
• 1.100- 3041711-11178.

opd.. 14000. Coli 114-Z&amp;I-

63

EKAYEN

-.

llrod oflodiYo hlah prtca. Coli
~171-2808. Allo. mechMIC }

-trl· .

Farm Equipment

I

!• .,

Now Bod&lt; lhop Opon

Bull... g
Block. 11ricll. pip-. wfn.
- s . lnloll. •c. Cloudo Wfn.
ten, ~lo Orondo. 0. CoR 1142411-1121.

61

..,GUn.

3331.

rongod. Phono 3114-1711-4418.

&amp; liVI:SIIIi.k

low to fo"" four llmplo wordt.

'

w.v•.

410 lo :JaOJ_D_o· .......
lood•, - - HD11, HD21,
HOI, AC do1..,_ 040 Co1 .. TD
20 Int. Huntfnvton. WY. 304
7311-7191; &amp;lkld- -·~
liD-: ford. Cooo • - ...
lrlllon I' ..,.. ~-d . . .
doubl•'**• ......
wllh Hyd 1r-pao1-mont.
'3.100- Doutz·AIIt 385
4 r - ....... . ,. .... pl•o umo
dry ferl., rowmaulwa. lntac:t
att•a:h monitor •e.aoo. 00.
Kooot.o lvc. Contor, lt. Rt.l?,
- n WV. 3114-1111-3874.

lflo
bo-

-od. ~1

POOII BOYS nRE8

Dan•. runt

I .11 ill S.JIJIIIIr:s

M

IVININO

Hlndlrson.
Now doing '
·froM • d lllgn....U *18. 11.
Nlw end und t~- ·304-17&amp;- '

Ilk. MWV With lltaehmenta.
t1•.oo cesh or ,..,.,. .,.

-lilt pupu--.

lotltri of
0 •OQrraftll
four· 10ramblod wordo

.

_ . . ........... olclo ,,
door. WlndDw II
Clr
ruN but r.-dl put in tim&amp; Vtllll ,•

Prloo Ollott. Point Pluo, 241&amp;
Jockoon Avo. (30411711'4014.

ond

lodv rlllllitl\0

Cll...-

tlko UIIO.
742-2117

copltd. Coli 304-1711-1104.

F.urnllhed 2 ,3, or 4 rooms &amp;

•.
I

m.lnten.noe.. Contact us tor

end fMt wtth

n...,

pr..... ,..... • . . _ """

Point Plus Pll1...,rgh Points IQr

py,..lrroldol R•G Supply 319 w: Moln St.

M WlPu APRIL I

bowing. WirrlftiV· 12 CVC•
lo'"'-'lill tyPa Col I 14-37.. ;
2220 or 304171-,.11. '
,

oil
your pof!ltlng
· -or· plant
Ho·
meownlt',
contn:ctor

••oo. -•bon.

Oolloot C-uloo ond E·Yop
"Wol• Plio .. 01 F""hPh•"*Y·

114-441-1102.

n., Herrll;on-

Uso Appllon_. 314 Th~d 11.
Kon.,go. 114-4-elo 7473. 311Dio-obon, prl- """ 01
el50. 11·Auto.
prlotat1ot

Including _,_. • .-lroaa Col
814-441-4107 or 441-2102.
n-r.""· Ulfl~lol ,...,~~y pold.
f17 tmo.Coll304-1711-5104.
87&amp;-&amp;:Jal. 117&amp;-n31.

rooml· l.ooltM

Dolbort lwloHor

()

Unl- 1000 e..1• lolollllo
Dloh. 10ft. *1150. Coll114-992·
1414.

ftlt•. •

RecliCI 1 Mfe

ciet IUirtlilg at t171 • mo.

.... FonrsMobUeHomePwk.

l

puppl•. Walk• puP111oo, MounFor Slle - Con or•• end Pllltlc - Curr
ond-...,n
I'Ptic tenka. All lint. . RON .Aedbon•. Wllkft end MQunEVANS ENTERPRISES. Jodi· ' loln Curro. 114·742·2412.
oon. Ohio. 1--.137·9128.
· 8nowdon'o KonnoL At. 1, Autl.nd.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
AonAIU1on. 1210S.oondAw .• Fioh Tonk. 2413 Jo..oon .Ave,
Golllpolls, Ohio. 114·441· Point P1o-l. 304-1711-2013.
433a.
10 1101•• up .,4.81 ond 10'IIol
complete *43.21.
SWIMMING POOLS· *1188
Eorlv bird opoclol on 89 pools. One yHf' Old squirrel dag mel•
Hugh 19•31 ft. pooL Hugh docl&lt;. Fielt. One y._ aid W..• Coon
fenoe.
Wlrr.nty. lnltel- •••. 304-1711-1132.
latlon • tin an'*'• w8llllbl&amp; Clll
AK C rogltt•od Molo Wool High24 hn. ,1·--MI-0141.
lend Terri•. hod ol s Swimming poolo- ,,, ... Elrly UOO.OO. Phone 304-182·
2210.
bird t~ll on 89 1)0011. Huge
1h31' pool. Hugo ....._ Ienos.
flit• • w..,..ny, lnl'lllll•lon &amp;
Musical
fln.,Ding av•llbla c.ll 24 hrl: 57
1·II00-3ei·OI41.
·
Instruments
Shop ~hout VOing """"plnll'
tho
Amwrtr - · A - prcducta dellv.-.cl to ygur home.
Coiii14-441-M79.

..

4 Prom gowna for- .... vf!IY:
ood canlltlon. 'Narn once.
1.4-992·3041 '

Raln,bow V•cuurri

Viewing

o;

irrttllted •ldn. llrOmat• hlllflng

Country Mobile Home P•k.

Farma for Rent

2 BA:. ••··

Mavtoa woohtr. _ . . , typo.
Ulco now . .,10. 1114-111·
3313.

Cheoko--~~--­

814-441-4e21. 114-4411-4241
or 114-441-232&amp;.

a. Acceeaorles

tlG:'·

..

2 BR mobile hom~. BldwiH ••·
Coli 114-318-1292 doys. . .
I 14-2&amp;1-1410 0Vonlng1.

Auto Peru

IUDGET TIIANIMISIION•\
Usod • rollullt all
-only· 311dt!o. Prt- llo
up. Uood • ~· . . .
OOIWII't.._ --d dutah-. i

•II ,..,. id

Second •d Pina O.llillolls. Call

71

- - - - - -.

r•

DO't\fntown 1 lA, apt. niiW'Iy-

12170. 3111 .. 2 trn lrott., now
_,._ -oo typo win-o,
underpinning. Prlcod for quick

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

MarChilnctiH

STOP ANO CHECK OUR PRI·
2 bedroom opl. In Mlclcl_,. ' CES
Concr..e biOdcl:
t171 p• month. dlllotll
or deltv.ry. Muonilnd. o.ll oFlirnfture anci C.rpet
qulrod. No pet~ Goy e14-992· VInyl e4.97 yd. oommwclol lio Blool&lt; Co.. 123'/o Pine ..
2311, ..onlng 114-912-21109.
c.rptlt *3.19 yd. loti. room •lie , Otllll&gt;ollo. Ohio. Coli 114'441rtmn.,... •d rail, Clirpttt. half 27U.
2 bea'oom. .. ,,.hid. Aemo- lncllpod 11 .78vd.wMhi:orptl.
dolod. now plll'qround. l•go
Molloh8n F11ntture
polfto. Se.., rlty dopoolt. CAl
56
Petl ' for Sale .
2 loa.tlont
114-192·1818 oll•lp.m. . ·
122 Vlond 811001
1 bedroom. wry be•tlliL fur·
Groom ond llrPI'IV lhop-Pat
nlahed. Ohio River Cemp
""'%~=4:ivo
Grooming. All brHdi ... AII
Orounda. Allo hou11 kMPin&amp;
otvlol. lomo Pat Food Dool•.
room. l"y ce.,. VIIIINII. month.
Upp• Rhr« Rolld
Julio Webb Ph. 114-441-0231.
I 14-141-2121.
Gollpollt. Ohio
114-441-7444.
o•-vnd eott.v Konno!.
1 bedroom opl. faro ..... e221
Penl., •nd ll~rr~. . and Hhn..
mGnth, dtPoah ~:equWed. 814Hlnpaint d...,.r. aheap. Phone .
lirvin ldtt.,o. Chow . otud ser992·1119.
•
31141711-1211 . '
.
vice. Colt 11+441-3a4eall• 7
PM.
ErMertlln"*'lt mahoganr ceo45 Furnished Rooma lOr, porfoel cond. 8 ft 1rw 7 ft. HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM:
304178-1414 tfjor 1:00 PM.
Checb ...8tahlng. IDDtta ,...,
Roomt for renl·~ or month.
lnttMifd akin. Prairnat• heillng
St.-tlng at t120 1 mo. CUIII•
ond holr .,.,..,..,., ...........
Hotol-114-4-tl-91180.
52 Sporting
G~ds
C-lno
NO rtrnthollc py,.
.
throldol IIOWELL CASH FEED
Fwn'ed. RoOm. ell utiUt• ...W.
JO NORTH ,PIIOOUCE.
1h1re bath. 919 Second Ave .. Remington modal H2. 22 rtfte.
• 12&amp;/mo. Coll114-441-3841. Colllf4-441-3118.
3 Oormon lhopHordpupo: lied&lt;
6tM,2mll&amp;1fllll.. &amp;4
IIMIPina room1 with cooking.
montbo old. 1110 oooh. Col
. Alto Trlllir apiCa. AI hDoft. • · 53
114-2411-1133 oft• 4pm.
Antiques
CAll oftor 2p.m. 304-n:J.
&amp;8&amp;1. Mooonwv.
AKC Aog'od. Otr~ lhoph«d
puppl•.• ,10 ...... Coll14Buy or Soil. Riv-t /'&lt;ntiQUOS,
441-8017.
1 124 E. Moln Sir.,., Pom•ov:
46 Space for Rent
HouN: M,T.W 10..m. to &amp;p.m .•
21noh01. 2 . . . .s far oolo.
llrndoy 1 lo llp.m. 114-992· Coll14-211-lllo.
2&amp;21.
•
For Rent: Large on•c• g.-ege._
HAPPY ' J 'ACK S~IN !IALM:
,.., of buRclng on oor'*' of

k•dl 31141711-743a.
ly_owner 3201 Jacklon Ave.•

et

*182. Colll14-992·7717. ·

lnforrirollon . . 304-411-1517.
3-oombrldlhomowhhl•ao
lot. MldW" D.otvo. NoW -on.
Oood otnd. 3114 nl-1811 .

epartrnent.

Minor end Rlv . .l • A~­
m•t• . in Mld~eport. From

~ .... ~ .. -

lbeldl~2lol.c•
4e•aee.
., cop..,
ml01

... ...,.,., Nftl...-atort. mlcroMVe ovens. Ken' 1 Aldl ..ce;
217 E. 2nd St., flam•oy.

G-'ous lvlng. 1 .,d .2 bo&lt;f.

=;:rr;:"':,:~,:a::,": 41

54 Mile.

· Usod ·king •o bo• opr1ngo a. , Norway 8pruo1, Mite Pine.
mm-. e110. Coli 114'l41- Thom11 Nur~•ry . 30•·171S009.
·
.
4041 .
lrlr¥hll lwown a: bolgo llrlpo Home made qulltl' tor llle.
oofo, • 1110. e - n ohol&lt;. •10. phono 304-182-2174.
11.... con- e10. Col &amp;14441-4173. '
. Uvlng .room • · oop-o•
ronvo.
_,_...... 3110 1 ~ '"'
GE W•hlna -no. uoo ·1 ,
_ bale. pho• 304-17..
ve-. ua:. aond. •110. OE elr 1:1111.
condition•. 11.1100 BTU. 111
told. Oood condl11on. 13110. ELI!CI'AOLUX April cioN out
Syiv.,locoloroonooloJV,mlnor opooloL 304-1711-1417 •.
........... , . . -. *100. Mlc3~~~7.""· 021. Colt ., ...
GUILTS WANTEO
8uvtrla old quill. bo 25
-yoaro Of older. -dqultodonly.
• piece girll bedroOm lutt•
Frondl ProYinciol. 1110. Col "
" '. Coli
--·
Paying304-472·
top doll•
oahl
collect
304-1711-3383 ott• I PM.
11..2. Wll come to you.
Goad uNCi cokw t.v.'afot llle.
Colll14-441-1141.
56 BuDding Supplies
Uood oppNon-. Woo-. ary.

lS

35

f•..

.•

Electric r•n .. - ·30 Inch.
..........71. ·...... 30

..... busln- IQr Mlddl~
P!lf1. Ohio. Johrioon'o Vttlotv
liore lion F,..ldlnl. 1-3114173-130&amp;oll• I:OI)p.m.

ov•

......-

ODmPIII:t _In• of uMd A.trnllure.
NEW· JIWwti!iil boot• t3B.
-ldloolo I 18 • up. (llool lo
10ft loti. Coiii14-441-31SI.

s•

•oro.

Household Good1

~~~~!J!!~------~~------------·!~~.m~~~o~v-~M~~~~~·~~~~~~~e~v~i~s~i~o-n---r~~====~;;~~~~~;;~~~:

Wedu11day, April&amp;, 1989

Pomerov-Mk:ldllpOtt. Ohio

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�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

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-~v;:~1 ~dn~•~•;d"f~.~~~&amp;~.~1~9~89'::.

Ponwoy-Midclaport. Ohio

· t S~h Anniversary·Speelalal

YELLO-W
II

ONIONS'

!I

1sc·IAG

I

W~

'Tom' ends
Orel's streak
at 59 rungs

Reserve The Riehl To
limit Qu~s _1

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

Pick3

378

- . 8 AM-10 PM

6374
Super Wtlo
15-17;;.18-27-28-35

-Page 5

Kicker

552

Jurdtate

-------------.CAROUNA PRIZE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

BACON

Vot.38, No.232
Copyrighted 1189

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PARKAY

MARGARINE

$ 09
Steak/ Roast ••••••••
_

.

LB. _

1

.•

LEG QUARTERS

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1se-ll.
Limit 1 P• fanily •
and $5.00 Pwchtne

L·---- . , ,
With

Coupoo~

1
· - ---------I
.--------·

•

Chicken .••••.••••:.•••••~9 c lwHi;~ ;~EAD I
CHICKEN
! 1 5( 2ooz. r
79e
Drumsticks •••••!·······
I
FRESH
--------------:.&amp;
_Chicken Liver·•.•••• ~·••
I

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LOAF

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
New, sUck-style, professionally done brochures to advertise
Meigs County, will be available_
this Friday.
The Meigs County Commissioners had a few copies of the
brochure at Wednesday's regular meeting.
·' The brochures were developed
through funds from the Meigs
County Planning Commission. 01
the 10,000 printed copies. about
6,000 wltl be distributed throughout Ohio. The remainder will be
disbursed to locations throughout the county Including,
chambers of commerce offices
and locations In each of the local
villages.
,
The commissioners were

pleased with the quality of the
new brochures. Cofllmlssloner
. Richard Jones said he believes
the brochures were developed
and printed at a. cost of $3,000 to
$3,500from the planning commission budget.
A discussion of new building
permit procedures (now that
Meigs County goes to Washington County for building permits)
took place In · Wednesday's
meeting.
According . to Meigs County
Engineer · Philip Roberts, all
Meigs· County building permits
must no\V be approved through
Washington County, not Columbus. Roberts reported he has
been told by slate building
permit authorities that permits
will not be "walked through In a

•
••

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KAH~'S

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Substitute teachers hired by
Meigs Local Dist~ct Board

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W•eners
.
....
~ •.•• !·.~:..
,

CAKE MIXES

-'

$) 49

2 UTER IOnLE

._

LOTSA POP

TWO GTB BMPLOl'EES RETIRE -

l 5·&lt;.

--------VAN CAMP

PORK &amp;

! ~A~z·l .5.(
1

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·_ 21
· $1
l ttuce· •••••••••••••••
HEAD

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.

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Umlt { P1r family
.
I With (CNpon 111111 S5.00 Purchalt

•

$1
4
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
Cottage Chees8•::~S -1°9
$ 2
Snack Cakes ••••••••• 69&lt; Ice Cream ••••• ~~~A;... 1·
$
P.otato Chips·•••••••• 79&lt; Frozen Pizza.!·:::.2/ ~ 1
FLAVORITE

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FLAVORITE

'tinLE DEBBIE

•'"r
•

GAL

ZESTA
CRACKERS

,

·

BORDEN

. .

~

. _ .,

ASSORTED

LB.
BOX

15&lt;

BfE:~aritrber&amp;
Neel were beaored
oa tbelr
reUrem
l fron Geaeral'l'elepbone
a&amp; a luncheon
held.
eeday a&amp; Main St. Pizza. Both were
p
led plaq- alouc wltb diamond rlap from
GTE. Jtey, wbe reslda wltb hill wife, Hazel, at
Racine, retired as faciUty loop maintainer after 35

WASHINGTON !UPU - MI- the cruel Irony that this populagrant farmworkers, although tion derives little benefit from
laboring amid an abundance of the agriCultural bounty that
food, commonly suffer malnutri- surrounds them," said Ellen
tion and hunger accentuated by Haas, executive director of Pub-parasitic Infections, a comumer 'uc Voice.
"Living on .Inadequate diets,
group said Thursday; calling for
often
running out offood entirely,
better . government food
these workers .lace unnecessary
programs.
Public VoiCe for Food and barriers preventing them froJ1;1
Health Polley released the find- taking advantage of government
Ings of a year-long study on the programs that could signifinutritional and health slatus ol cantly Improve their diets," she
the 1 million .lo 3.5 miiUon said.
The report. c.alled "Full Field,
migrants and tbelr tamllles. and
Empty
CupbOards," said the
made several recommendations.
median
annual household In"While we have known for
came
of
migrant
farrnworkers Is _
some time that migrant farm$5,291.
About
60
percent of
workers endure extremely dlffl·
migrants
·.reported
annual .Incult living and worklni conditions, this report brings to light comes between $2,500 and $9,000,

Local news briefs____;.-

Limit 1
WithC-.on

I

Blqodmobile visit slated April 12

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The·need lor blood donors at next week's visit ofthe Red Cross
Bloodmobile to Meigs County hils, been emphasized by Marlon
Ebersbach, chairman.
The bloodmobile will be at the Pomeroy !'!enlor Citizens
Center on AprU 12, 1 to 5:30p.m.
"
Advances In surgery, tberapy for ·cancer patients, accidents
and speclllc dileue treatment have created continuous need
for blood and blood products, Ms. Ebersbach pointed out,
emphasizing that In ·spite ol lqtenslve research, !here ·Is no
substitute for human blood. ,.
·
The pbllosophy,of the Red Crou blood service, she said, Is that
blood lhould be available to all who IIHCl it. This requires
re1111ar blood donations by healthy c:al.'lq people In all
commuDitlet lnchidlq Melp County,~ lllfd, In appealing for
a hllb tuz;na~n at·new week's Visit.

6.5 oz.

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lAG

SUGAR

~!.14!
.... ...,,, .....

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TOILET TISSUE

.

41011
PIG.

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Unolt i "' c..,..
.... Olllr
At ...... Suplr , .

' .... S... •· I tin i.t."'if;. I. 1tl9

.... s.a, .... I

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s.t..... I. 1_919

ye.._ Noel ntlled
more thu Sl years • a
faellllyloopmalntaiDer. He audhlswlfe,Pa&amp;, wbe
worb a&amp; GTE's Pbonemart Store In Pomeroy,
live on Route J:U Just off Route 71D Pomeroy. Left
to rl&amp;bt for the presenta&amp;lon are Phil Ramey,
dlslrlct aenlce muager, Roy, Noel, and Glll'Y
Bates, local faciUty mauager.
.

Consumer group says· migrani
•
farmworkers health £Spoor

fOX DELUXE

RUfFLE'S REG. S1.49

Jane Fry , and board members ,
Richard Vaughan, Robert

•

Absentee ballots. being accepted
The Metas County Board of Elections Is now accepting
applications for alii atft bllllotl, Jane Frymyer, director,
&amp;DDOWICed today.
.
Voters may reqlll!8t an application for au ablentee ballot by
, pbOIIf or Ia penon. Tiley mq al10 vote In tile bOard office.
There will be_a Republled Primary In botb Pon)eroy and
•
ICCI!Iblld 011 pqe-16)

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I

and less than 10 percent of the
sample households reported
earnings above $11,000.
Migrants generally are not
covered by standard employee
beneflls, such as paid health
care, paid vacation, overtime
pay, unemployment or workers
compensation, said the study,
conducted during the fall of 1987
and winter of 1987-88 In the
VIrginia portion of the Deln_tarva
Peninsula, as well as In sou tb and
south-central Florida.
Project director Jeff Shotland
said migrant workers are not
only Isolated geographically, hut
socially as well with little knowl·
edge of government programs
designed to help them.
The key findings of the study.
were:
-Nearly one-thin! of the
workers reported running out of
food or not having enough to eat
during the past year.
-More than 50 percent had
diets that failed to meet minImum nutritional standards. The
diets were e~~peclally deficient In
vitamin A, Iron, calciUm, and to a
lesser extent, vitamin C. Diets of
American black farmworkers
Wt!l'e found to be the least
adequate, while diets of Haitian
farmworkers were the most
adequate and varied.
-About 24 percent were partlclpatlna In the food slatnp prolf8m. Altbcnllh .moat of the
laborera 'Probably qualified,
111011 felt tilly were not eiJatble.
Of t ' - wilD bad received food
atam.. dlll'IDI tbe prevloua year,
. aear)J llalf ~ they bad received t11em · fcir oae or two
111011tlll1111ly.
-Parultic lntec:Uon, wlllclt
IUs a aerloul IOU on nutrlt1ollal
statUI, was rampaat, atrec:Unall

pere•t to 58

p,n!ellt

ot

tbe

DIIIP'Ut populatiQD. Tilt bll....l
rate -d. lafectlon was amona
cblldreD•

Hysell as
custodian
the Rutland Elementary School. .Robert Ramsburg was hired as a substitute
bus dflver . .
In addition the board entered
Into purchased services contracts with Shirley McDonald to
tutor a handicapped student and
with the Blue Streak Cab Co, for
transportation of a handicapped
student.
A field trip for 't he high school
choir to attend the Kings Island
Music festival on May 5anl!6 was
approved by the board.
To comply with state stand·
ards, the board adopted a change
In a board policy concerning
graduation and a job description
for the position of teacher.
In execu live session personnel
was discussed and a suspensloq
hearing. was held. The suspen·
slon was upheld by the board.
Attending were Superintend·
en I James Carpenter, Treas_u rer

•

Snowden, Bob Barton, Larry..
Rupe. Jeff Werry.

Board releases funds
to complete package
..

limit I P• flllllily
With CCNpon and $5.00 Purchast

.•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Rick Edwards was employed
as assistant junior high track
coach and Paula Horton and
Sanclra Walker as substitute
teachers for the remainder of the
schopl year at a special meeting
· of tl!e Meigs Local School ,D'IsBoard of Education Wednesn'lght.

IEnY CROCKER

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2&amp; Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NewJPaper

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day" at Washington County. You · Ohio Historical Society, inform- reported that he wiU be meeting
Bids fur a -new tractor lor the
can however, Roberts said, make
Ing them that the Historical Thursday mor'!lng with a rep're- . Meigs County Hi,ghway Depart- ,
appointments to review permit Society has no objections to the sentatlve of the Great Beild
ment were tabled by the commls- \
applications and "you'll probaconstruction of an elevator In the Electric Company about addistoners fo r' review by the county Vi
bly know before you leave the Meigs County Courthouse.
tional smoke and heat detectors
engineer. Bids were · received
Washington County office If the
The commissioners are to . for the sheriffs department.·,
from Dell's ford, Albany ; All
permit Is likely to be approved.' ' meet 1 p.m. AprU 14 with the
A request from Meigs County Good Equipment and · Supply,
Although Meigs County's vil- architects on the elevator Recorder Emmogene Congo and Wadsworth; Keefer Service Cen·
lages have applied to the state io . project.
·
members of her staff to attend a
ter, Leon, W.Va. ; Falrplaln.
also be Included In the WashingHarold Brewer and Rick Hy· district recorder's meeting In Tractor Sales, Ripley .
·
ton County building permit area, sell have been hired, respec- Athens on Saturday was apFinally, the commissioners
the state has not yet approved the tively: as collection supervisor proved by the commlss;oners.
approved a request from -a
village applications, Roberts and enforcement officer on the
It was also reported t~t a representative of H. C. Copeland
said. Any buUdlng permits for Meigs County Litter Control Personnel-Labor Relations an- and Associates, Inc .. Dublin, to
the villages must still go through Program, reported Commis- agement Seminar, sponso ed by return to the courthouse next
Columbus.
'
sioner David Koblentz. Brewer Clemens-Nelson, will be hel1 Thursday to discuss with em- :
All plumbing permits for the replaces Bernard Gilkey, who May 9·10 at the Ohio Center In ployees the Public Employees :
whole' county must still go retired, and Hysell replace,'! Dan &lt;:;jjumbus.
Deferred Compensation Pro- :
through Columbus, Roberts Levingston, who left the position.
The low bid from the Koch Co., gram. The Copeland representa- ·
added.
Kenny Wiggins Is sttll Litter Heath, was accepted for bitumi- live will also be talking with
The commiSsioners received a Program manager.
nous products for the month of employees_at the other county
letter from W. Ray Luce, of the
· Commissioner Manning Roush April.
agencies located outside the
courthouse.

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Cubed Steak .••..•••l:.•• S2
U.S.D.A.-CHOICE
Round S·t ea k••••••••••• Sl 99.
BALLARD'S 1-LB. RO~L - OR .
$
Sausage· L1nks ••~:::.. 129

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 6, 1989

lillit 1 P., FamHy
I
1 With Coupon an4 $5.00 Purlhatel

49

•

Low tonight In mid 308.
Chance of rain SO percent.
Friday, high In mid 40a.
Chance of rain 80 percent .

•Meigs brochUres · will be_ available Friday ·

. . Limit 1 p., FaMily With Coupon and $5.00 Purchase

FRESH PORK BUTT _ .

e,

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I

15 ell.

PRICES EFFECDVE SUN., APR. 2 THRU SAT., APR. 8

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Pick4.

Limit 1 , . f ...
1lrtth Coupllll and $5.00

..

Lottery

---"";-!~"'

....... ••

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On Monday, April3, the State slonerRichardJoneson beilalfof
Controlling Board released -Comthe hoard, "to publicly thank the
munlty Development Block
bank and particularly Ted Red
Grant funds In the amount of and Paul Kioes, for their untiring
$240,000 to the Meigs County efforts on behalf of this project.
Without their help, II would not
Commissioners. These funds will
In turn be loaned to Meigs· have been possible. All Melp
Manufactured Housing, Inc. The County citizens shot~ld be grate-:
transfer of these funds completes
ful for their assistance. This Is .. ·
the financial package which will classic example of what can
allowforthestaqupoftheMelgs ·· happen when county governManufactured Housing Industry ment, state government and the
In Meigs County, report the private sector join together In a
Meigs County Commissioners.
common cause. The jobs created
Although these funds are a
by this Industry will · benefit
vital part of the project, the real Meigs County for years to
credit, according to the commls· come," Jones concluded.
It Is expected that work will get
stoners, goes to Roger Davis.
Meigs County resident, whose · underway Immediately to predesire to bring an Industry to his pare the ,site In Bedford Townhome county lnltated the pro- ship for a 40,000 square foot •
ject; the Farmers Bank and building to manufacture lioth :
Savin~ Company, for local flsIngle and double-wide mobile
nanclal participation; and Kim homes.
Shields, Meigs County's director
Plans for grqundbre.aklng ceo! development.
memonles are expected to be.
···we would like to take this made by Mr. DaviS Iii the near·
opportunity," said Commls- • future, the commissioners said.

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