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Pll!:le--0· 6 -·Slllndilv

Times-Sentinel
72

Truck• for Sale

·

IAMI

tt78Fordlronoo381. 4 ........

elr. n_, tlr-.

ckrlah.
PI•IUN plat•, rebuilt Mgin&amp;

O words
R:ea'rrange. the 6 scrambled
below to make 6

73

wh...

I' I I~ l I I

1978 Joop CJ·8.

IIII I

T r 1·

76

=R~O~~~-s~To~l-ov~lt~lo-n~lo-r~vl-o:

WattiUIMI ' • Water H.ullng.
r-•MIII• rat•. lmm ..lllte

Hau• 01.. on RCA, O...-r.
GE . S-oling In Zonldo. Coli
304· 1?1·2181 or 114-441·

2818 .

•

87

tlr-.. Will ooftlldlr

c.n 114-

Upholatery

.'
Vol. 38. No.168
' . Capyrlghtod 1988

1 · 1~

Auto Parts

82

30ol-878-8110.

S1~1

81 .
S~NIS SA~M7~

,," S&gt;lNIS SA \/Ml'rl ~~e~ I auo a~ l ..
'P9!rdeJ uewJe~S!J 941 ..'IIBM .. ·uor
-uedwo~ 9~1 pa~se .. ~ f.~M .. ,;t.s1eou
~1 1serd 9111!1 9SO~I JO aJow f.ue 108..
· uo r ued\IJo ~ S!u pa~se uewJa~ S!J
a~r~ou 9~1 'Jold aur uo ourn·rs

NOSINn

.

AND H!ATING
Cor. Fourth. end Pine
Golllpollt, Ohio
Phone ,81'-«8·3818 or 614·

448-4477

•

84

Electricel

&amp; Refrigeration

viccs

Rtsklentl• or commtrei .. wli'·
lng. New -.rviCI a;r repe~r ..
UcenMd electrlden. Eltlmata .
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304178-1786.

Home
Improvements

•

;u:v'131:1

86

1snvn~

General Hauling

All,ON&gt;t
MNn~r

A~Mens
Sl37·W~I:IOS

ol · r

S•.B'-1 -~I:r11 :!J'3

01 mMSN'tt

Real Estate General ·

-·

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Real Estate General

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79 Point of
division
82 Goes In .
84 Apple juice
85 Support
86 Old French
coins
88 Indian weight
89 Filet of90 Precipitous
92 "The - Club"
94 Reliance

A&lt;;ROSS
1 Type of pie
(l Showy flower

11 Courtyard
16 Publish
21 Cooks In hot fat
22 Molars
23 Representative
24 "Ttl&amp;'- Limits"
25 Sn Is its
symbol

'

. ·26 Woodworker's

- toot
28 Lu~rlcated
30 Twist
32 Brother of Odin .
-:33 Printer's

446-3636~

measure

34 Arabian·garment
35 Legal matters
36 Choicest
37 Footllke part
38 Mr. Buttons
40 Lessen
42 Rosky hill
43 Ms. Winningham
44 Red plahel
45 Joan of 47 Soothing
ointment
49 Admirers
50 Prohibit
51 Roadside
restaurants

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HOUSE OF

54 Staffs
55 Punctilious
person
56 Football player
. 59 Native metal
60 Hearing organ
62 Snuggled
64 Horse's neck
hair
65 Apiece: abbr.
66 Pa's partner
67 Spinning toy
69 Eagle's nest
70 Submerged
71 Tattered cloth
72 Airline Info.
74 Foolish talk:
slang
76 Caspian77 Eacrltolre
78 Betty While
character

THE WEEK

LOCATED ON HILDA DRIVE- BEHIND SPRING VALLEY SHOPPING PLAZA- 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM WITH Fl REPLACE, FENCED BA.CK YARD. POOL; 2 CAR
GARAGE. $69,500.

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lt

TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE - THIS 1984 DOUBLE WIDE
WITH CATHEDRAL CEILING IN LIVING/ DINING AREA.
:
It EQUIPPED KITCHEN. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, ONE BATH
It HAS GARDEN TUB , CENTRAL AI RCO ND, FRDNT.AND REAR
11-. DECK S. CORNER LOT, CITY SCHOOLS; IS WORTH THE ASK·
It lNG PRICE OF $43,000. ADO THE 2 BEDROOM, FURNISHED
It REMODELED MOBILE HOME AND ADJAC ENT LOT AND IT IS
lt AN EXCEPTIONAL BUY'

:

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*

The' center was sold by the Celeste admlnlstra&lt;
tlon for $31 mllllon as part of a deal In which Honda
wlll use't for a research fac111ty and build another
high· tech auto manufacturing plant nearby .
The House Finance Committee, which heard
opening testimony on the sale last week, plans a
hearing for Tuesday afternoon. The Senate
committee will take up. a slmllar bl11 Monday
evenlng;-Tuesday morning and Wednesday.
The .House Finance Committee also wlll be
d!!aling with a priority bl11 correcting the terms of
a tax enacted In 1987.on long distance telephone
service. Sponsors say they need the bill passed by
·
the end of this month.
The General Assembly subjected long distance
Interstate · telephone service to the state's 5
percent sales tax, but exempted WATS lines.and
toll-free calls,
·
The new blll, worth an estimated $8 million a
year. taxes local telephone companies that
purchase WATS and 800 lines from major carriers
and sell them to local customers for long distance

:

BEAUTFIUL COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS MAKE A PERFECT

DININGROOM. DEN. IN-~ROUND POOL, 5 ACRES. $60,000.
lt NICE AND VERY AFFORDABLE -:- LE GRA~DE BLVD., 0
lt BEDROOMS, l'h B~THS. LEVEL LAWN, FAMI LY ROOM. JUST
:

:

LISTED' $44.000

lt SUPER, SUPER BUY! BR ICK AND FRAME RAN CH 3 IJ{D.
:
ROOMS, EAT -IN KITCHEN HAS RA NGE AND REFRIG. TH·
It ' ERMO PANE WINDOW S. NICE LEVEL LOT. $26,000.
.It 101 •cRES _ $2&amp;.SOO _ MOSTLY WOODED. PUBLICWA·
,._
"
lt TER AVAILABLE. OLDER HOME NEEDS REPAIRS. TOBACCO
It BASE.
lt $29.000 - SPACIOUS MODULAR, LOCATEO IN COU NTRY
lt AIR SUBDIVISION, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, GAS FURNACE,
lt. CEN. AIR, LARGE LOT GREAT PLACE FOR· AFAMILY. KYGER
~ CREEK SCHOOLS_.
..:
JUST LISTED! 3 BEDROOMS, 2 STORY 'fRAME HOME. 2
Jf,
LOTS GARDEN SPACE AND FRUIT TR EES BAR N NORTH
lt GALLiA SCHOOLS. $29,90D.
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NEED OFFICE SPACE! THI S COMMERCIAL BUILDING
ACROSS FROM . THE COURT HOUSE IS AVAILABlE NOW!
BRICK EXTERIOR, GAS HEAT. ~ BATH. GREAT LOCATION. EX . CELLENT BUY AT $25,000.
MOBILE HOME- 1978 12X60: 2 BEDROOMS, ! BATH,NIC'E
SPACiOUS ROOMS. EQUIPPED KITCHEN . fURNISHED,
ELECTRIC fURNACE GOOD BUY AT $8,000.
LEVEl lOT~ PUBLIC WATER AVAILABLE, JUST FEW Ml- NUTES FROM SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA. K!GER CREEK
SCHOOLS.

- 100-'l'ennlll Stroke '
102 Modlterranean
vessel
103 Game at marbles
104 Sin
105 Small amounts
106 Apportions
106 "Peggy - Got
Married"
109 Hebrew letter
110 Eq~ally
111 Partner
112 Debases
114 Irritate
• 116 Sun. talk
117 Rubbish
119 Hold on property
120 Intellect
122 Hindu guitars
. 124 Sudsy brew
125 Sow
126 Recompensed
'i2B Equals 2,000 lbs.
f29 Tardy
.131 Petty quarrel ·
132 Youngster
133 Separates
135 Tibetan gazelle ·
138 Ms. Arden
139 - on the cob
140 Canine
141 Cry of lamb
142 Mile: abbr.
143 Diphthong
144 Dele8t
145 Evaluates
14 7 Native Egyptians
149 Through
.150 Lifts with lever
152 Make happy
154 By onesetl
-156 PlatfOrm
.158 Accumulate
159 Locations

\ 1 Later

~

2 Choice
3 transfix
4·French article
5 "TheJ•til sense"
8 Ketti rum
·
7 Ted Keniledy, I.e.
8 Goll mound
9 Latl~ conjunction.
10 Or• llltter
'1'1 "IMJ!iflll;&amp;
· 12 Maturee ·
13 Mr.' Danson
14 Inches: abbr.
15 Aquatic mammals '
16 - au Prince
17 Hurry
18 That thing
19 "..,. On Sunday"
20 Loctc of hair
27 Experimental
29 Press clothes
31 Employ .
38 Loud noise
37 Mac11rthur's 39 Native of
. Denmark
40 "God's utile - •:
41 Short Jacket
42 Hurls
43 Servant
44 Heavy club
46 C!&gt;ncernlng
· 48 Mental Image
49 Liberate
50 Financial·
lnstllutlon
51 Cupolas
. 52 Angrr
·53 Petty ruler
55 Supple
56 Large cistern
57 Rent
58 Ardent
· 81 Origin
63 Woody plant
64 Church service
68 Corrupts
70 Mexican shawls
71 Rat
73 Come on the
scene
74 Lei fall
75 Plunders

rm:

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EIGHTY-SEVEN ACRES- $20,000. PUBLIC WATIR AVAl~·
BLE. CITY SCI-!OOLS. HURRY! HURRYI HURRY!

'

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155 Beholdl
.
157 Tantalum aymbol

CHECK BID, center,
· paramedic ·from the VInton County branch of
Soutleaat Ohio Emergency Medical Service.•
receives a check lor U50 from Roger Kimble,

At least
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$25,000 - THREE BEDROOM RANCH IN CITY. FENCED liBACK YAR D. LARGE EQUIPPED ~AT- IN KITCHEN , GARAGE. It
TUIKEY RUN RD. - -1 ~ STORY HOME, WITH APPROX. 2 • liACRES. 2 BEDROOMS, FUU BASEMENT, DINING ROOM, ·~
KYt:ER CREEK SCHOOLS. $33,900.
.,.

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********111i*******************l&lt;***************************#'
.
.

.

97 Pltcherl
99 "- the Bullet"
101 Shined
' Foundation
105
106 Reward
107 Cut lhOrt
111 ·stubborn 1111lmal
112 Food ~ogrem
113 Breek suddenly
115 OUtltta
116Warbled
118 llclon1
11~ Incline
121 flinger Nell 123 A:a far as
125 Dr"'!_ken
carouears
126 Rant ·
127 ArrangeS In
folds
t29 4umps
·
130 Tum aatde
13t Drunkard
132 carries
13-4 Make lace ·
136 "The ..:. Man"
137 Ventilated
139 Contaln..140 Tropical fruit
144 That woman
145 "Brother-"
146 Sink In middle
147 Cry like a dove
148 Fed. draft agcy.
149 Cr~y: colloq •.
151 A, E, -, -. U
153 Chi.- dlatance

.

\

dealing with politics. Highway Safety Director
William Denlhan told the subcommittee politics
would remain a par! of the system as long as the
·
deputies exist.
The Senate Highways, Transportation and
Small Business Committee will meet Tuesday
afternoon to consider legislation delaying untll
Sept. 1 the motor vehicle emissions tests .
scheduled for the greater Cleveland and Cincinnati areas.
The program was to have stat_:ted Jan.l but the
Ohio Envlromental Protection Agency. whlch did
·not have enough 'Inspection sites ready, was given
a reprieve "by Congress, which postpon&lt;"d
sanctions against er rant states. Celeste already
has ordered a delay until Feb. 1.
•
The House Ethics and Standards Committee
will conflnue hearings Tuesday · afternoon on
legislation nloulrlng the licensing of professional
sports agent~ by the state Commerce Department. One such bl11 already has passed the
·
·
Senate.

An unoccupied hOUSe In the
Chester area and ·a trailer on HUI
Road tn the Ru !land area were
struck by fire' over the weekend.
A Chester fireman reported
that hls department was called 11.t
4: 47p.m . Saturday to an older,
unOCC~jPied,
two-story frame
house on Rqute 248, owned by
l:lenry Beaver.
The fire department , spokesmail man said that althou!'h

'

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:
$12,900 BUYS A COZY COTTAGE IN CITY. 60Xl30 LOT,
.STORM WINDOWS, GAS FURNACE.

Eraseil: printing
78 Irritate
80 War god
81Hard·-

, DOWN

service.
A revised motor vehicle registration bJll,
approved by a subcommittee last wee~. gets Its
first airing Wednesday afternoon In the full House
Highways and Public Safety Committee.
The bill, passed by tbe Senate In different form,
provides for re-registration o!. motOr vehicles by mall ,rwlth adyance nlltlflcatloil of motorists , and
publicizes the hours and location of · deputy
registrars.
II also forbids the solicitation of political
donations from deputy registrars , with the
solicitor subject to a $10,000 fine.
The. Seriate had called for elimination of the
deputies altogether, with state employees offerIng motor vehicle services at " one-stop" shopping
centers. But House members complained st'a:ltlng
the offices with state workers would be too costly.
that .123 offices would have to be closed and
registration lees would go up. . .
The Celeste administration supports the House·
revision with the exception of the method of

..

Two fires cause . damage to
house, trailer over weekend-.

·n

160 Merchandise
161 Dinner pours&amp;

98 - and carrots
99 .-.ot crou -

..

THIS HOME IS ONEOFTHELARGEST IN GALLIPOLIS- EN·
OURMOUS FOYER WITH BRIDAL STAIRCASE, BALLROOM, 9
FIREPLACES. YOU COULD HAVE AS MANY AS TEN BEDROOMS, 3FLIGHT REAR STAIRCASE. WOULD CONVERTEASILY TO FABULOUS RESTAURANT. MINI MALL, OR IF YOU
WANT A MAGNIFICENT VICTORIAN ~OME . THIS IS THE ONE
YOU SHOULD MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE' $69.000.
.

1987 WAS AVERY GOOD YEAR AND WE EXPECT 1988 REAL ESTATE SALES WILL BE BET·
HR. WE URGENTLY N£ED YOUR PROPERTY TO SEll. WE HAVE POTENTIAL BUYERS FOR
All TYPES OF REAL ESTATE. HOMES, FARMS, LOTS, COMMERCIAL PROPERTY.IF YOU
WANT TO SEll, CALL US ANY HOUR.
•

lt SETTING FO.R THI S 3 BEDROOM CDLONI ALHO ME. FORMAL

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newep1per

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enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 11, .1 988

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse ·R eporter
COLUMBUS -This week ' s session of the Ohio
General Ass\!mbly will be highlighted by Gov .
Richard F . Celeste's ···state of the State" address,
along with work on a motor vehicle registration
bill and a property sale lor the development of a
huge auto factory In central Ohio.
The governor will deliver his annual message to
a joint session of the General Assembly, for the
sixth time, In the Hr:mse chamber ·at noon
W&lt;"dnesday. He Is expected to enumerate the
progress of 1987 In the · Statehouse, and his
expectations for 'the coming year.
Although there will be little floor action this
week, committees In both the House and Senate
will be busy.
.
The Seriate convenes Tuesday at 1:30 p.m., and
the House Wednesday at 11:30 a.m.
The House and Senate Finance · committees
have hearings on legislation conveying the Ohio
Transportation Research Center In Logan and
Union counties to Honda Motor Co.

CARtER'S PWMBINQ .

'79 Dodgt COtt trudt DISO for
pert1, new fran• end. mlk a off•,

r I' I' r r r· r 1

•

General Assembly to reconvene Wednesday

Plumbing

llo Heating

Flb•glus tOpp•; t195. Fit•SB
Ford ahortbed. Call 614-379· .
.2788.

!." "'(_~ .. ~ .. ~ •.;;, ,..

,.

'

uud • rebuilt tnmamiliaiona. All
intern•ltv lnap.C.ed • vu•rntetd. c.n 014-448-09ee. we
buy junk tt'lnamt..lo':l•·

.,.oLl deve lop fr om step No. "3 below.

at y

2484.

Runt

Clear tonight. Lows 20s.
~ loudy,
windy Tuesday .
Chance of rain. Highs In the
· ·
upper 40s. ·

35-21-33-43-16--29

a.ooo
•••etc......,.,.,.
- ·..
DOOit. Willi,
cell 304-l?e-

lit Accessories

~~

I

.Pages 3-4

1188.

Silting on the pier, the
novice fish~rman asked his
companion, "Got any more of
those little plastic floats?"
"Why?" asked the companion. " Well, " the · fisherman
replied,
_ , ."the one t have ---~--

780
Pit!k 4
6344
Super Lotto'

•

304-171-h70.

1879, 8 cyl, 4 tpood. CJII joop,

t--rl-'ilr.,..;;_o,.,IF.'-;-'.:,1-'-' j--t 0 ~~~~:~~~ ;~h~h~h~~~;~g q~~;d~

• ~;... I'

R WM• a.rvt• Home

....... Wtllt. poolt flltd ......
m.tv J1111• love WIIWt.Call

good tW• •nd running aond.
t2 ,200.00 firm . 304· 175-

I ...

..1. .._.1.

~4 .

vodo. 11000. 019.
742-2433.

16

' - - ' - ·....J.L-.J.L-..J.-

n~~~N

good,

TONKYT

SNUION

Ill •

Daily Number

games . ._

••In work(aiNft or uftltOPt. All

..,ork ..,.meed. III'Yfaa alii•
modo. con 114-441-1744.

1881 D•uun 4
.DrM
Truok. c.illlt 4·182-131( oftor.
1 :00 P.m.

TANUJY

I I' I' I I I

R~- Call 11

J • J Mobllo K...,. . . .,__

11"4·44&amp;.4313 doro. 441-0t 31
evtnl. a WHIIMdt.

12

ARL EET

·

~882
c;any~:Nion .

II I I I I I.

I I I I? 1- I

4 W.O.

Vane.

"l

mak~;;.up

Dodgo2111"11om. Cu- · Build on- ,..., Dllll Hth reomL
TnU• reldy. C.ll .,.u pump NPM·IIIPI•••n•ll.

ABWUSY

-G A U S T U

t:r-c.-

13,200.00. 304·811·2438 .

simple, word$. Pt int letters of
eoch il"' its l1ne· of S(1uores.

5

.SWEEPER •d HWirlg m-..ne
r...lr. pMto. .,d oullllll•· Plok
up on&lt;1 d-.,, Dovlt y.......,
Cle•ntr. one helf mile

wh..a..

Ohio Lottery

SVAC

.·Improvement•

WGID

.

10. 1988

Ohio-Point

right, mine· superintendent for So1tllem Ohio
Coal's Raccoon No. 3 mine. Carl Curry, ufety
supervisor for Raccoon No. 3, Is at left.

•
SIX ~ie · on

highways

By Untied Press International
Friday night
At least six people, including
None.
one Pe&lt;testrlan, were kllled In ,·
Saturday
!raffle accldenls In Ohio this past
Troy: James D. Fugate, 17,
weekend, the State Highway
Troy, killed ln a one-car accident
Patrol said today .
on a city street in Tro;v .
The courtt showed one death
Sunday
Salurday .and five Sunday . The
Findlay: Eddie . Daniels , 22.
Patrol said no fatal accidents · Norl}l BaltlrrJOre. killed In a
were report&lt;"d Friday night.
one-c ar accident on a Hancock
County road .
One of the victim s wa s a
Coshocton: Michael J . Kuhl·
pedestrian , klll&lt;"d In a hit -s kip
man, 33, Warsaw , killed In a
accident Sunday evening, the
one-car accident on a ·c ity street
Patrdt said.
.
In Coshocton.
VIctims lnclud&lt;"d:

to St. Joseph's hospital by
Tuppers Plains EMS. ·
The fire was c;on!ln&lt;"d .to the
Inside of the structure. A figure
on the monetary loss was not
available.
Orlglnoftheflr.e wasthoughtto
have l&gt;een In a wall between the
kitchen and living .room .
·
The lire department was nollfled by neighbors.
On Sunday, fire . reportedly
~.Jailllll;tHIId.!lQ}~!I-tl\ll .l:l,i&gt;J!~s;]JJ~J.I:I\,II!!{~ on . }!Ill JW!j_d "
he was In theliousewhenftremen
own\idby "John· Amos, but no
arrived, and had been trying to
spokesman "! rom Rutland Fire
extinguish · the blaze himself.
Department,·which was called to ·
Beaver had broken out a window · the scene at 7:41 p.m. Sunday,
In an attempt to excape the . was available with details.
house, and was pulled from the
window by firemen. Beaver,
Pomeroy Home Hit
suffering !rom smoke Inhalation
It was ,.also reported today
and minor scratches, was taken losses were esllmaled af $35,000

'

Board, MLTA to resume talks

New Philadelphia ; Wllllam R.
Kesling , 19. East Sparta, killed In ·
a one-car accident on a Tuscara - .
Negotiations were scheduled to
was County road.
take place at 1 p.m. today
Leb anon: Jacquelin e R.
between the negoti ating teams of
Roac.h. 38, Lebanon, killed when
the Meigs Local Teachprs Associ ·
she was hlt by a vehicle as she
a lion and the Meigs Local School
walked along a Warren County
Board as attempts continued to
road .'
seltle a reachers strike which
Cam6rldge: Patricia A . Van- began on Nov. 6.
Dyne, 40, Cambridge, killed
The Meigs Local Board of .
when the car. she was riding in
Education was meeting in specollided with a se qll· t~uck on
cial session this morning before
Ohio 285 ln Guernsey County .
the upcoming negotiations meeJ '
inglobe heldallhe courlhouseln
Pomeroy.
· Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Charles Knight sa id
that two federal mediators who
have been Involved In, earlier
attempts of settling the chose not
In Ashland , Ky. Ashland operates pledged
to
conduct
refineries In Catletsburg, Ky., Investigations.
Canton, Ohio, and St. Paul Park,
"We feel that Ashland Oil Is
Minn.. In addition to 23 oll really' doing their whole bit to be
terminal~, Including Jefferson.
as cooperative as possible," said
Tom Martinelli, a deputy dlrec·
McGinnis said the storage tank" tor of the maintenance depart·
that collapsed was constructed In ment In Ashland County, where
1986 from steel used In a Pittsburgh Is located . "The
40-year-old tank(, and then att· tcounty) commissioners are exached to a new foundation. The tremely pleased."
UNITED NATIONS iUPil
tank was connected to fuel lines ·
EPA spokesman Ray Ger- . The global economy will be
In 1987.
·
mann said Ashland' s cooperation
·:precariously unstable" In 19gg
Ashland neglect&lt;"d to get a · has saved taxpayers money by
and
faces the threat of a serious
· county permit to construct the . keepln_g the government from
rec·esston, ' a United Nations
tank, said a second spOkesman, having to step In and manage
world economic forecast said
Roger Schrum. But company those efforts.
today.
Chairman John Hall said the
"We had everything we• . The reporl , prepared by the
. firm received a verbal go-ahead needed. Why spend the govern·
. U.N. Division for Economic and
to build lt.
ment's money If It Isn't neces- Social Informallon and released
McGinnis said engineers de- .sary?" Germann said.
by Secretary-General Javier
parted from Industry standards
Gov. Robert Casey, among
Perez
de Cuellar. calls for a
by not pe~orml111 a "full-hydro" others, had urged EPA to require
· test on~!! tank, In which th~y fill the cleanup. Lt. Gov. Mark
the tan11 to capacity to check for Singe! said the state would seek
leaks. Instead, they apraye&lt;l fuel recovery of all dt.saster relief
Inside the vessel, then applied . costs.
·
preasure to the tank to see If the
"We Illtend to hold their feet to
fuel seeped through weldt, he the fire," Stnael said. "There Is
said.
going to be a recovery cost that's
Tile company also Uled ultra- Into the mliUoos of dollara. And
IIOnlc and X-ray lelia, he said.
we fully Intend for Ashland to
"Our chairman has seld ... that pick up that part or their tab."
Racine VIllage Council met In
If we had the decision to make
Aahland paid Alleaheny · ·special aeaston Frtdey to confirm
aplll, we .would do the hydro County 1210,000 to help pay for
the appointment of Keitb Harter
lelt," apokeswoman Margaret the cleanup, which coul4 run of near lAurelville, Olllo, to
Thomson aald. "Why the tank from 110 mUUon to 115 mWon,
serve u the vtllqe' • full
· falfed. we don't have that. We aakl Timothy Flelda, director of
pollee officer replacJna Joe
doa't Jmow yet." He said the .tha EPA emerpacy l'llpoDII
Kirby who rulpad effac:t.lve
Battelle InsUtute ot Co1umbua, 1)11~111 Wuhlqton, D.C.
today, Jan. 11. Harter'• -womt·
Ohio, would conduct addiUonaJ
mentllforaslamontllprabaUoa·
Five leWIUitl hive been fllld In
ery periOd as required by Ohio
lelia.
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Cpntlnued oa pep 5
State and county offlclala also..
Reviled Code.

to be present for this afternoon's
session. Nell her of the two, David
Thorley qnd Ward . Wilson, were
no.t present lor last week's
negotiating sessions between the
two groups held al the court ·
house. The mediators were last
Involved In the sessions held at
Athens. Judge Knight said that
mediators had asked both sides If
they expected movemenl In
settling the slrlke before the
stale evaiustion of th.e schools
la)&lt;es place a~d both sides had
said "no" . Therefore, the media·
tors will not be on hand today, the
judge reports.
. Meantime, classes were being
held In six of the nine Meigs Local

Ashland defends safety mark
PIITSBURGH tUPI) -Ashland 011 Co. defended Its environmental safety record but admltt&lt;"d to mtstakes·rilade In bulldlng
a storage tank that collapsed at a .
riverfront plant , fouling water
supplies downstream In three
· states.
''I think we have a very good
record ," company spokesman
Brent McGinnis said Sunday.
"It's certainly the company's
policy to be In compliance with .
all Jaws, whether they be federal,
state, or local."
Nevertheless, he acknowl edged that the · COII'Ipany departed trom normal procedures
In testing the tank th11t gaVe way 1
and had neglected to obtain a
county permit lor the storage
vessel.
The Jan. 2 collapse of a ~torage
tank a\ an Ashland terminal In
Jefferson, Pa., splll&lt;"d about 1
million gallons of diesel fuel Into
the Mononaahela River. From
there, the oil slick flowed Into
Ohio River at Plttsbu!llh, and
apread lnlo West VIrginia and
Ohio u It 1tretcbed more than 118
nillel down.stream.
Dozen• qf communities that
take Ulelr drlnlclDJ auppltea trom
the l\fo110111ahela Olllo ..-e
forced to.enduntweta lllortaiR
·while llltalce from the rtven wa't
cut all bloeuae of · the on
contamlnaUon.
McGJiuda uld'llle apiU we• the
Only blo! OD the fllvl~tal
•et.tY ~rd of Ule nation's '
llth-111'1ftt
com~y. bUed

on

as the result ·of a fire which
struck the residence of Leta Hall
on Osborn Sl .. Pomeroy. early
Monday morning. ·
The Pomeroy Flre Depart.
ment was called to the scene at
6: 18 a.m . and was on the scene
untll about 9:05 a.m. The two, .
story frame home was gutted by
the fire and all of the contents
were either destroyed or ruined
by smoke and water damage,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny
l(fl'' reports-:·
. .
Chief Zirkle said that lhe fire
apparently slarted from a wood
burner and that a smoke ala r m in
the house had sounded allerting
r esidents of the flre.
Both contents and l he hou se
were Insured , Chief Zirkle
concluded .

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Schools again this morning mak Ing the lOth day of classes
conducted by s ub s lltute
teachers. A state eva luation to
determine If meaningful education Is taking pl ace in those
schools Is expected to be held this
week, It IS reported .
Frid ay evening, reachers
voteq 123 to 11 against accepting
the latest proposal offered by the
Meigs Local Board of Education .
That proposa l was reported to '
be the " last and best offer " that
the board had made towards the -·
teachers negotiating team .
Officials this m orning Issued
no reports of any vandalism
taking palce In the district.

Global economic .forecast for
1988 not too good,
U.N.
says
-unified lnlernatlonal strategy lo
manage the global economy .
" There Is a risk of serious
recession In the world economy
with the adverse consequences
which this entails," SII}'S the
re11ort. which predicts generally
lower and sluggish growth rates
In both output and trade.
"The International financial
system will remain precariously
unstable and tbe risks to both

that sys tem and the global
economy will b&lt;' high."
It caUI!ons lhat " lhe dangerthat a new shock would ca u s~ a
widespread recession In · rh e
lpdustrlal world will be ever
present In the months ahead... .
The report says the Oct . 19Wall
Street crash "was superimposed
on- and, Indeed. prompted bysome long-standing and unreConllnued on page 5

Racine .· councll name8 Harter··
,...
.new·fuU.;time police officer
ume

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Harter will be worklna en_;;. Cleland reported that Harter
averap of .0 bollra per week, but wiD berin work In Racine as100n
wlllbeoncallllel'lltoftheUnw. u the neceuary performance

Herter aDd 1111

felntb' will lie

movtq to 1M vlllqe wltllla tile
moatll.
• Slace Hel'tltr wu Ia etlmlduc:e
at Frldly's
Mayor
Fruk ClelaDd edmlalltarld tlte
oath of oHice to the ~ village

meettna. ·

IIW'Ihal.

~

II obtatlled.

Ortl llal'tltr, Wife o1. tbe aew
111111'11181, wu alae appointed by
CJ•talld to serve as pollee

bond

clerk.
Clelalld npol-tad-the teMphoae

company bed lnqulre4 11 the
Continued on pap 5
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Coniment

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The Daily Sentinel
I '

-11i Court Sll·eet
Pomeroy, Oblo

OEVOTED TO THE INTERI!:STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA .

111b

cs:mi!ll
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""T",,.......=·=-

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ROBERT L. WINGE'i'T .
Publisher

P,\T WHlTEHEAD
.\Bslstaut Publlllher/Controller

. BOB HOEFLICH
General Muacer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association. .
LETI'ERS OF OPII:liON arf' welcome-QThe)' should be less than 300 words ·
long. All lettersaresubject toedltlng and must be signed wtthname, address and

t~lephone num!&gt;Pr. No· unsigned letters wUI be pub)lshed. Let ters .should be In

good ta~te , addressing issues. not persooallties.

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pon1810y-Midcleport, Ohio
Monday, January 11, 1988

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Bush, Dole forces
slug it out in
Ohio
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WASHINGTON- The political on how much to pinch pennies.)
leaders take In . the name of
Junket. It's · a dirty job, but
Our reporters Stewart Harris
foreign relations, and their
somebody had to do 11.
and Jennifer Smith pored over
comic attempls to Justify those
Fourteen representatives did It dOzens of documents from the
trips by exchanging pleasantries
In 1986; they endured a grueling, trip. To the lawmakers' credit,
with heads of state. But thfs·
.14-day tour of South America we found thai they did manage to Junket set new records of excess.
made more bearable. by the squeeze In meetings with the .· The congressional delegation,
comforting presence ' of 14 highest officials In every country • led by former House Speaker Tip
spouses and 16 staffers. The State they visited.
O'Neill, visited Brazil, ,Argen·
Department has Just coughed up
"Squeeze" Is the operative
tina, Venez11ela and tbe Domin!•
tile government cables detailing · ':"9rd. The lawmakers held offl- . can'Republlc .
the rigors of this trip -16 months clal meetings on only five days of
Congress . members routinely
after we asked for them.
the two-week trip, and some ot
tie up valuable military aircraft
No wonder It took so long. If those meetings lasted only ii few for questionable trips. The jet
. Congress Is looking for ways to mlnutes.·The rest of the tbne was that flew the tun·loving lawmak·
deal with the deficit, It need look spent, shoppfng, sightseeing and ers from Andrews Air Force
no further than the bills for this lazing around on the taxpayers' Base to various South American
trip. (By the way; fearless fiscal
dollar. To be exact, $216,843.m
spots was a VC-137, the military·
expert Dan Rostenkowskl, the for room and board and $148,824 .version of a Boeing 707. In 1986, It
Dllnols Democrat who Is chair- for .the Air Force jet that cost.the military $7,615 an hour to
man of the tax-writing Ways and
transported them. .
fly the plane,
Means committee, was ;~long on
Foryears,wehavereportedon
When they are .aboard, our
the, Junket possibly taking. notes
the·costly trips our congressional elected freeloaders rely on
..,
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By L.E E LEONARD
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio ({)PI) ~ There's a story circulating at the
Statehouse that Cuyahoga County Republlcan Chairman Robert
Hughes c.J.I~pbs up on a hill, rubs two sticks together, blows on the
tinder and starts a fire.
·
On an adjacent hill Is former Gov. James Rhodes, holding up a huge
mirror. "Pretty soon," chortles one Republlcan, "people think there
are 20,000 Aztecs out there."
·
What Hughes and Rhodes hav~ done lately, to the chagrlno( those
who would !Ike things quiet and peaceful In ihe Republican camp, ~s to
press for a quick kill for Vice President ~orge Bush. in the GOP
presldentlal'sweepstakes.
,
·
. What they are also doing Is attempting to give Ohio a voice In the
selection process at a time when the Buckeye State otherwise will
have nothing to say about whether Bush'orhlschlefrlval, Sen. Robert
Dole, R-Kansas, Is the nominee.
·
.
· · Rhodes has called for an early endorsement ot Bush by the
Republican State Committee, and Hughes has scheduled a Jan. 23 •
meellng of all GOP county chairmen In Columbus, with the hope of
gettfng. a Bush endorsement.
· ·
.
· DOle supporters are not amused by the antics of Hughes and
Rhodes. They belleve the GOP leadership should keep hands .off the
nomination fight and allow rank-and· file Republicans to decide ft.
Keith McNamara, chairman of Bush's Ohio campaign, said such an ,
endorsement would be discouraged. "We don't want to do anything
that would be divisive,'' he said.
·
At the same time, McNamara did a pre(ty good job last week of
creating the impression that there are 20,000 Indians out there for
Bush.
He held a press conference with several respected party leaders
pointing out Bush's "unprecedented" organ~ation ·In Ohio, and
endorsements from a majority ot elected Republican officials. ·
The Dole forces respond that this Is a facade for weakness; that the
Kansas senator Is virtually even with the vice president when
rank -and·flle Republicans are polled.
Part of the s niping results from the loss of an early Ohio primary
and the missed opportunity to have an effect on the.GOP nomination.
The Ohio presidential primary was at Ol:le time set for March by an
act of the .Legislature, But It was returned to May, ostepslbly'because
of the ·prohlbitive $5 million cost of a secon&lt;! primary election.
However, neither the.Republicans nor the Democrats a !that time
wanted an early primary. Gov. Richard Celeste was thinking about
running for president. And with Bu&amp;h fighting fallout from the
lran·contra scandal, it looked like a wide-open Republlcan battle with
'
a late decision date.
Now, the GOP c9ntest looks like a two-inan race, and Bush
supporters are trying to ·close· Dole out.
Dole founci irony In this two weeks ago when he made an Impromptu
visit to Columbus. He was told most party leaders believe Bush has
the nomination sewed ·up. ,
·
''That's not going to happen," said the senator. "Jim Rhodes said
he was going to be the next governo,r In 1986, too ..Whim he couldn't get
anybody else to come, Bob Dole was out here working for Gov.
Rhodes." Ouch.
·
Meanwhile, Hughes Is promoting his Jan. 23 county chairmen's
meeting In Columbus as the first big caucus In any state on the GOP
candidates, bigger than Iowa. It will draw national TV and blg·tlme .
political repOrters , he says.
·

A . CI~AR~TT@. ·

By United Press lnlernallonal
Today Is Monday, Jan. 11, the lith day of 1988 with 355 to follow
The moon is waning, approaching Us last quarteL
·
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Include statesman Alexander Hamilton, first secretary of the
Treasury, In 1757; Ezra Cornell, founder of Western ·Union Telegraph
Co. and CGrnell University, In 1807; Sir John MacDonald, first PrimeMinister of Canada, In 1815; psychologist and philosopher William
James In 1842; feminist lawyer Allee Paulin 1885, and South African
novellstAian Paton ("Cry the Beloved Country") In J9oo.
.
'

On this date In history:
h1 1785, The Continental Congress convened In New York City.
In 186J., Alabama seceded from the Union.
In 1935, American aviator Amelia Earhart J;'utnam became the
first woman to fly across the ~aclflc from Hawaii to California.
In 1984, Surgeon General Luther Terry released a repcirt saying
·
smoking cigarettes Is a definite "health hazard."
In 1984, the Supreme Court reinstated a ,10 million award to the
family of Qklahoma nuclear worker Karen Silkwood, who died In
": :' . 1974.
.

A thought for the day: I'sychologlst-phllosopher William James
said, "Is life worth living? It depends on the liver: •

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Wildcats slip past
NG Pirates 60-56
in ·makeup battle

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Toledo go in opposite directions

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The year of not~.ing moe~· -.-----.--w_
.uL__iam_Rus--=he~r -r Three ,major college

'
We are stlll much tao close to tlon. When the year began, Bush the lead merely underscores t~e .
1
1987 to see It In perspective, as It was far ahead
of his challengers point, since It Is widely agreed
wlll be viewed by historians. But In the polls. But that was that neither of them can possibly
IUs nott.oo early to note cerlliln of dismissed as mere name recogni- win the nomination.
the year's notable events ...: or tion, or as a byproduct of the fact
_The non·end of the longest
rather non-events.
that Bush was vice president. economic boom In postwar U .S. .
Among these, surely the most ·Almost every, knowledgeable ob- history may also turn out to be ,
spectacular . was the. non- server I spoke to was contldenl • one of tl)e signal non-eve11ts of ,
resignation of Ro nald Reagan as that ;~t some point Bush would 1987, but the stock market crash
president. As 1987 opened, Con- "stumble": i.e., make some at Oct. 19 leaves this matter In
gress was preparing to launch Its blunder that would cause his lead doubt.
·
own . Investigation of the Iran- to vanish and his campaign to
We are so accustomed to
/ contra affair, and no one .collapse.
thinking of the crash of 1929 as
doubted the Democrats' objec·
It hasn't happened; Bush made
ushering In the Great Depression
tlve: to prove that Reagan knew his way across the whole danger- that we Instinctively began lookof the arguably 'lllegal dlverslo,l ous year Without putting a foot Ing around for bread lines on the
of arms sales proceeds, and on seriously wrong, As 1988 opens,
morning of Oct. 20. But what If
that basis to either fotce his the polls Show him stU! comforta- there was In fact no necessary
resignation or Impeach him and . bly ahead of his five Republican connection. between them? What .
remove him !rom office.
rivals - and now well ahead of If the presumed link was just a
As the winter, and spring wor.e the Democratic hopefuls too.
spectacular example of that old
on and not a scrap of evidence
. logical fallacy, post hoc ergo
turned up Indicating that the . Among the Democrats, lnctd: propter hoc?
'.
president knew of the diversion, en tally, the non-d ~h of oneofthe
After all, the leading Indicators
that hope went glimmering. The candidate$ to the tore, pulling of economic health and activity
, hearings continued, but noboby ahead of his rivals and establish- are still pointing upward. Even
was watching.
Ing a solid claim to be the the stock market Is trading In the
Another notable non-event of front-runner, , surely · rates· as
range that, just .a year ago,
1987 was the non-collapse of another notable non-event. The represented Its all-time high. All
George Bush as candidate for the fact that polls show Gary Hart
the,' 'crash'' did was puncture the
Republican presidential nomina- and Jesse Jackson narrowly In

G~If pol~tics

The best lreatment J:ve seen ol
and France, and joined Saudi
U.S lnvolvem!O'nt In the Persian Arabia in giving billions of
Gulf Is a recently completed dollars to Iraq 's war effort.
study by the U.S. SenatPCommlt·
Iraq has escalated its attacks
teE' on Foreign Relations, which
on tankers moving lnlo or out of
concludes that " there is mountIran since 1984. In retaliation the
lng evldpnce that shlpl)lng In the Iranians went aft!O'r tankers and
gulf is less safe now th~n before cargo ships carrying war mate'the U.S. naval buildup beg!ln."
rials to Kuwaiti ports.
In September )9&amp;6, the KuwalThe'most Interesting asj&gt;ect of
Ihe Senate study Is Its analysis of tis appealed to both Moscow and
hoy; the Reagan administration Washington for help In the form
becamE' lnvolvt&gt;d In the gulf.
of flagging ships In the gulf. The
Admlnlstralion spo.kesmen Reagan :Administration r'estress that the United States has spondl·d In a limited way, conbeen militarily Involved ln. the. tending that . the American flag
Gulf ever since World War II, woul!l be made available only If
Implying that the current buildup Kuwait could meet U . S. reguhi·
Is a cont1nua11ce of American tlons .for this procedure.
·
/ policy. In fact , the role assumed
Moscow, however. offered full
over lhe p~st ~ear Is a new une.
cooper at Ion, lnc l ~dlng reflag.
The current policy Is based on glng of 11 Kuwaiti ships with
· the ''Carter Doctrine" enun, Soviet escort protection. Once
elated by former Preslderlt Car· the Soviet offer became known to
ter In 1980 following the Soviet Washington. the Reagan admlnmove Into Afghanistan. In what I lstratlon matched It, offering to
regard as a l)'llstake, Carter reflag the 11 Kuwaiti ships with
made a unilateral pledge that the U.S. escort protection. The KuUnltt&gt;d States would go fll war If waltis accepted the American
necessary to prevent "any out- offer · and lliTilted the Russians
side force" from seeking to role to the charter of three small
co.ntrol the· area .
Soviet tankers.
Kuwait has sided · with Iraq
The Reagan administration
fro.m lhe early period of · the seemed to act from two motives:
Iran· Iraq war because of Its tear to offset the Soviet offer and to
of the extremist religious force retrieve some of the credibility 11
that controls tran. Iraq has long lost In the Arab world as a result
claimed much of Kuwait's terri- of U.S. arms sales to Iran.
tory, but the conservative ruling
The administration's de~lslon
Sunnl group In Kuwait feared .... to move Into the gulf was poorly
even more the threat of Iran's conceived. ·There was little conAyatollah Khomenl.
sultatlon with' Congress, !he gulf
Thus the Kuwaitis opened th!!lr . states or our allies. .
·
air space to Iraq l planes for
Administration officials did
strikes agalnstlran, opened their not anticipate that the Iranians ·
ports and territory for the would lay mines that threatened
shipment of weapons from Syria both the tankers and their naval

~scorts. · W)len this threat mate·
rlallzed. It bt&gt;came ci!O'ar that the
U.S. navy had no adequatt&gt;
mlnE'-S"::_eeplng capablllty.
There .are several lessons that
should alr&lt;'ady . bt&gt; clt&gt;ar In the
U.S. gulf operations:
. ll Such decisions should not be
made hastily before mllfiacy
factors are fully evaluated.
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I svAC standinJJ'Ii

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Rates of Taxation for 1987

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Berry's World ·
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teams stay unbeaten

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a~pta

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I ahti

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Halley nets 32, In Redwomen vietory

Renee

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Persian

T Qday in history

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11y SCO'IT WOLFE
team well against the more
three-pointers and handled
Maynard led the charge with a
8eat1Del stall Writer
powerful Tornadoes.
Southern defensive pressure whopping 22 polnta and 14 reThe Southern Tornadoes of
It was evident that Deel's club well.
_ bounds, while Kevin Bureesa and
Coach Howle Caldwell steam- was well-trained In the situation
AI; the tiring Scotsmen faded
Chris Murphy added 9, . Todd
rolledtoaconvi!lcing9344SVAG, game,but the ,H ighlanders SHS whooshed Its way to a 24-fi Grindstaff 5;and Doug Lavender
basketball victory over the lacked the execution and consls· escape In the final round, win- 6:
.
.
Southwestern Highlanders Sat- tency necessary to pull off a win.
nlng 93-44.
Fallon had 11 for the visitors '
American embauy pesoMel as' __
urday
In
a
makti-up
date
from
Wl.th
5:02
left
In
tbe
second
,
Besides
Mershon's
13,
Hively
behind
Halslop's 16 and'
It they were tour. guide&amp;. Qur ":!!
Friday
evening
In
tlier
SHS
flYm.
canto
Sol!thern
led
·
39-23,
but
had
8,Tony
White
6,Shawn
Metzger's 10.
embassy In Venezuela had to ask ;;:
Five TOrnadoes hit double scored just one more tleld goal McNeil 4, and John Darnell 4. .
Southern Is now 9-2 and the
Washington tor more money to • figures as Coach Howle Caldwell before the half for a 42·27 lead.
Southern ; hit 33 of 62 for 53
reserves 10.0.
pay for rental cars, Interpreters ~
. shuffled his line-up and play
Southern exhibited se~eral dlf- percent from the field and
Box score:
and ·o vertime for the embassy •
selection
throughoutiheevenlngferent
offenses, -but was very canned 6-10 3-polnters with a 9-14 ·
SOUTHERN (93) ..._ Chris
staff because of the. trip. ·
.Leading the way was .senior successful going back door to night at the Une.SWHS netted ' Stout 2-1-5, Dave Amburgey
guard· Jeff .Caldwell with 21 Turley, Caldwell, Riffle and 12-42 for 37.5, hit 3-15
4-2-2-6, Shannon Riffle 6-0-l2,Jeft
Among the mlnutlate arranged
points, Kenny Turley with 19, , Amburgey. It's lightening quick . from the perimeter, and was 9-16
by our diplomats (whom we hopeCaldwell 6-2-3-21,Scott McPhail
Dave Amburgey 16, Shannon fast break left the Highlanders In from the line.
l-0-2,Mike Amos 0-0-0,Dave
have better things to do) were ~
Riffle 12, and Shawn Cun- their tracks numerous tbnes as
KeMy ·Turley continued his
McMillin 0-0.0, Shawn ' Cunaccommodations, meals and reKEN'nJRLEY
JEFF CALDWELL
nlngham 10. .
SHS cashed In both unscathed dominance on the boards for
ningham 2-2-0-.10, Kenny Turley
creation for the delegation. On
· Early In the, contest It was and with the 3-on.two break.
Southern as he hauled In 14, while . 8-1-19, Shane Simpson 1-0-2,
the rare occasions whim the ...,..
~ thought that pivot man David
Shawn Diddle hac:! 5. With SHS Shawn Diddle 2-1-5, Brent Sh11Jer
· lawmakers actually held a meet- · .McMiWn.
went
down
with
a
A
glant'thlrd
frame
boosted
the
claiming
a 36-26 edge Shawn
1-1-3. TOTALS 33-e-9-93.
lng, It was up to the embassy to ; .~
broken
ankle,
however.
an
unofflscore
to
69-38
as
Shawn
·
CunMcNeil
talllec!
11 to lead his club.
SOUTHWESTERN (4f) entertain the spouses.
•
clal report at press time ·lndl- nlngham swished one of two
'the overwhelmlni stat and Mike Walker 1-0-2, Dave. MerOn the first full dJIY ·In Soup! "'
cated that the junior suffered a three pointers at the buzzer.
maln·dlfterence In the game was
shon 2-3-2-13, Shawn · McNeil
America, · while the lawmakers .., •
bad
sprain
and
could
be
back
The
entire
Southern
bench
that Southern forced 37 High1-2-4, John Darnell 2·0-4, Bryant
were tied up talking to Brazilian ' '..
within ten days.
played well and received scoring land!)r turnovers, with the vis - 1-3·5, Hively 2-4-8, ToiJY White
officials In Brasilia, the spouses
Southern turned up the wick In stints from Chris Stout,Scott ltors earning one steal and 16
a:o-6, Cemlnl 0-0-0, McDaplel
· were treated to a ·slide show ·t
the first round with an aggres- McPhail, Mike Amos,Shawn Did- fouls . Southern had 14 turnovers ,
1-0-2, Hammond 0-0-0. TOTALS
about the country and a private · • .,
slve assault to post a 21-14 die, and Brent Shuler.
'19 steals, and 12 fouls.
13-1-9-44.
shopping bazaa'l' arranged at the ! ~
advantage,
however,
SouthwestMeanwhile,
Junior
guard
Dave
In
the
reserve
contest
Coach
· Score by quarters · ·
embassy club so they could paw
ern
Coach
Gre~:
Deef
handled
his
Mershon
was
having
a
good
night
Jay
Rees'
·
Tornadoes
remained
Scott
Rankin
seori!d
i9
points
Southern
... ......... 21 21 27 24-93
wiHin Petro would lie ab(e to ptay.
over gems, embr&lt;;lldered linens '::•
for
SWHS
as
he
netted
several
unbeaten
with
a
61-47
win.
Brad
to
pace
Hannan
Trace
to
a
,G0-56
· Southwestern ..... 14 13 11 6-44
The Wlldcata, now 6-1 In the
and stuffed piranha. The spouses ·: a•
win over North Gallla Sjlturday
later lunched at Eron Hotel, ... w
conference, will host SVAC co·
~Jight. .
leader Oak Hill Tuesday nfght.
chosen for Its scenic view, and :;1,1
The· game, moved ahead on the
then toured the city, according to .·-:· '
The Pirates, now 3-4 In league
calendar one day because of
play, will travel to Racine
the cables. Most of the spouses &lt;!~:!
Friday's snowstorm, was a
Tuesday night to\tlke on conferwere women, so(heStateDepart- ,.,"J
tightly contested affair, as the
ence co-leader Southern.
ment figured shopplilg was the 1;~i i
By GENE CADDES
with 22 points. And .It was a season, scored 14 of his 21 points rone HOI had 18, Mike Davenport ·
Wildcats led 14-12 at the end of .
- best way to occupy them. Whe- .;;r.'
UPI Sports Writer
basket by Adams with one second In the second half Saturday night 17 and Mike Ramey 15.
•
the
first
quarter
and
33-32
at
never the boys were meeting ':'~~
Only two · games Into the
(!!ft In the half that put Kent and also had .6 of his 7 assists.
At Dayton, LaFes ter Rhodes
HANNAN 'J'RACE . (80)
halftime . .
with officials, the spou~s were . ,;~ ,;
ahead to stay, 32·31. ·
' 'Tommle·Johnsoncandomore scored 30 points and Jeff Grayer
Rankin S.H-3-19; Brumfield S.J, Mid-American Conference seaHapnan Trace, which went 9 0-1-13; R. Swain 2-1-3-1-10;. Jen- lion, Kent State and Toledo are
escorted .to the shops. ·
·'i
"That was a very.blg basket;" than just shoot the 3-polnter, l. · 20 to lead 19th· ranked Iowa State
for-.15 from the foul line, did not . klns 3-0-2-1·8; G. Johnson 3-Q-O.J, teams going In opposite
•lt,l
said McDonald. "Reggie did said Coles, "and 1 had to remind to an 84-80 wln over the Flyers .
shoot from the stripe In the first
great Job comlngbackandglvlng .. him of that."
6; Stitt 2-0-0-1-4; J . Swain . directions.
After only one day In Brazll's · ,·.~G
half.
North
Gallts,
which.
was
3
'
of
Kent,
which
struggled
through
·
us that one-point h~lftlme lead.' •
In Saturday night's other two
0-0-0-1-0.
TOTALS2i-3-IJ..HO
capital, the delegation jetted to 1'·):!
6
from
the
line,
did
all
Its
foul
a
4-6
pre-conference
schedule,
Central
Michigan,
whlchlostat
MAC
games, Eastern Michigan
1
.
NORTH
GALLIA
(18)
Rio de Janeiro for what a ·, ~
The Daily Sentinel
shoottnrln
the
first
16
minutes.
has
a
share
of
the
MAC
lead
wl.th
home
to
Eastern
Michigan
on
won
Its
second In a row with an
Burnette t-4-0-4-20; Denney 9-0-0declassified cable dryly des: ,, ,i,
Wednesday, had too many guns 81-66 decision over Bowling
The Wildcats were 24 of 53 from
3-18; Glassburn 2-1-1-5-8; Mays a2-0recordaftera7S.70wlnover
· crlbed as a "well-deserved rest · :
(USFS lfii-HII)
Western
Ml&lt;;hlgan
Saturday
'
for
Toledo, although the Rockets Green and Miami took Ball State
the field, while the Pirates went 3-0-2-1-8; George 1-0-0-3-2. TOafter a heavy congressional ; ,;;
A Dll'illoa of M•ltlmedla. l•c.
night.
·
kept It close for a half.
66-55. Grant Long scored 23
24 of 57 from the floor. Center TALS - 1H-S-il-58
schedule and packed visit to ! :
Published every afternoon, Monday
Toledo,
which
lost
only
one
of
·
Tommie
Johnson
scored
21
points and Brad Soucie 15 In
·
~lck
Swain
and
auard
Tim
Score
by
quar&amp;era
BrasUia." We're exhausted just '"''!
thrwgh Frldsy, 111 Court St ., Po·
points, Dan Majerle 18 and Ed leading Eastern to Its win over
Brumfield each had nine of the HaMan Trace .. ,--14 i9 17 10-60 Its nine non-league games,
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio· valley Pub·
thinking about it.
· .r ·"
Wilcox 17 to pace the Chlpjlew.as, BG.
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
· WlldcaiS' .19 rebounds.
North Gallla ...... 12 20 12 12-56 dropped a 73·60 decision at home
In Rio, the delegation spent cine ·''·' ·:11
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S..
. A 22-44 run by the Hurons
to defending champ Central
whose 10-2 run at the end of the
Pirate fo;~tward Keith Burnette
Retlervepme
hour with a local politician. The ·~
cond class po.'ltage paid at Pomeroy,
half gave them a 33:311ead they helped them to a 52-30 halftime
led all scorers with 20 points.
Hannan Trace 45, North Gallla Mlcbigan and, at 0·2, already
Ohio.
rest of th three-day stay was for t~~
flnds.ltself
facing
an
uphill
battle
never relinquished and extended lead.· The Falcons got to within
Wildcat
'senior
forward
Chris
41
fun. Not to worry, .though. The "
Meffiber: United Press International,
to 44-33' at the start of the second 62-52 with 7:53 left on Billy
Petro wa~ out with. a cracked
Top scorers - Bailey (Hannan to stay In the title chase.
taxpayers didn't pay for the-gill a · "'~ '
Inland Dally Press Association a·nd the
"As evidenced by their road
half.
Johnson's driving layup but no
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nat tonal
bone In his hand and did not play. · Trace), 14 polnta. Stout (North
1 h 111
dinners 1" Rio.
1•
Advertlslng ~presentative, Branham
win
at
Miami
(on
Wednesday)
,
"We
dug
a
big
hole
for
·
closer.
Lamon
'Pippin
had
15
Jenkins said It · was unknown Gallla), 12 points.
' ~·
Newspaper Sales. 7~ Third Avenue,
. I
'
this team can do some things
ou~selves at beginning of second points and Steve Martenet added ·
New York, New York 10017.
·well," Western Michigan Coach
half," said first year Toledo 12 for Bowling Green, which fell
POSI'M.ASTER: Send ·address changes ·
Vel'llon Payne said of Kent State · Coach Jay Eck. "We made too to 4·8 overall and 0-21n the MAC.
to The Dally sentinel. ll1 Co•rt St., '
after his team's loss.
·
many mistakes. We had 20
At Muncie, Ind., Miami's La·
PomE&lt;oy, Oh!o 457119.
"(Kent Coach) Jim McDonald . turnovers and ..you can't do that mont Hanna scored 17 points and
SUII8CRIPTION RATES
·
hassomeverytalentedplayers,"
against a good team and expect Tim Stewart 15Jn theRedsklns'
Dow'sabsurdrun-upfrom200Cito - •
ly Carrier or MIKw Roule
added Payne. ''They have been
to win."
.
.
wfn ·over Ball State.
One Week .............. ... ..... ...... ,......$1.25
2700 during 1987.
'~
One Month ........ ..... .................... $5.45
recruiled
top)aywlthlna
system
Central's
Charlie
Coles
Miami
took
the
lead
ior
good
Still, as~ London Spectator
One Year .. .. ............... .. ..... , .. ,... $65.00
By COLIJNS YEARWOOD '
No. 2 Pittsburgh, lll-1, was and tbat makes them very
thought Toledo might have been 6-5 with 13:48 remaining In the
dryly observed, "Whatever a ::1
SINGLE COPY
UPJ Sporta Writer ·
,defeated early last week, making talented." One of them, &amp;,loot,
overanxious because of the more first half on a Carlton Clayborne
stock marls:et crash portends, Ills
PRICE
Dally ................................... 25 &lt;:ents
Weekend results offered the
Its chance&amp; of rlalq less likely. · 152-pound junior guard Reggie
than 8,000 who nearly fJIIed free throw, then built It to 23-11 .
rarely a boom." For the ·tlme J,
'
~lblllty of yet BIII!Jhl!r l'j'o .. 1,
Nci. 3 North CaJ'ollna, 10;1, and A~ams, leji the way tor the
Centennial Hall.
with 4: 211eft In the half.
being It Is probably ~afest to·' •&gt;.;,/, '
Subscribers not destrlngt opay the car·
may'
.~it
In
advaace
dir;_~t to _
rler
and Je(t Olll)'tllreemajor-c6Jiqe .1 No.4 AriZona:, 14·1, both won two :' .Gc!lden Flashes Sa\urday .,night . .. "Sometimes when you have a ·. Ball S~te .. gpt to within 36-33
score the' crash· :at -Oct".rtis- as 11 ·I btw
Sentinel
on
a
3,
6or
12 ~onth
Thf'
Dally
teams undefeated.
· . games last Week, And one could
big· crowd," said Coles, ''you early In the second half, but a11
major .eve.n t In Its own limited · ·:ri:J:
basis. Credit wUI be given carrier each
Oklahoma, 14-0, Temple, 10-0,
regain the top ranking.
r-~~o:-'="'--~:""'"--.,, . want to do so well. you try too
11-3 Miami run put the Redsklns
. week.
sphere, and reserve Judgement ' ''
and Brigham :Youna. 11-0,
Saturday, Plttaburgh decked
hard.'~ '
. .
back on top 51-47.
on Its Implications for the '"' ~
No subscrlptlon.s by maH ·permttted Jn
emerged with unblemished reco-No. 19 St. -'obn's 81-70, North
eColes said he team took It on
. Ball State got It back to 51-47
areas where home carrier service is
broader e~onomy .
:it u!,
available.
cords as most teams continued
Carolina downed La Salle 96-82 ·
themselves to spread the offense with 4.: 55 left, but Miami put
That leaves the Washington •c";t ::·
conference play.
and Arizona trounced Stanford
ALL G~ES
out In the second half and It together a 9-1 spurt to put the
MalfSubocrlpllons
summit and Its attendant INF ·~ ·
Auburn's
53-52
upset
Saturday
~.
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
worked
out
pretty
well.
game
out
of
reach.
Inolde
Melp Co•nty
treaty as just about the only 1"9 2 857 689
13 Weeks . .................... .......... ... $17·29
night
of
previously
l!nbeaten
and
Elsewhere,
It
was:
New
MexHannan
Trace
···
"lt
was
nothing
that
I
Xavier
set
·
a
school
single
really world-class "event" of ., ,..,,
top-ranked Kentucky probably
leo 85, No. 5 Wyoming 72; No. 6 ~ukthHelrlnl · .. ... :.. .. : 8 2 84 2 592 pla.med,'' he said. "I wish I game .scoring record with a
~~ ~::::: : ::: :: ::::.:::::::::: ::: ::J~:~
1987, and It maybe wondered just c;J;
7 2 621 545 had.'' ·
wiJI
change
the
No.1
team
for
the
Temple.
79,
Geol'll'e
Washlng!on
a
·
······
··
·
·
·
125-84
win
over
Florida
lnternaOutside Melp Co•noy
how cosmic even that actually · !:i-1:
sixth tiiPe In eight Wfl!ks when
66; No.7 Syracuse 84, ~ton Hall
~~~~r~allla ··· ··· : · ~ ~~ ~
Johnson, who had games of 53 tiona!. Byron Larkin led the. ' ~~ ~::l:! ::::: :· :::::: ::::::: :::: ::~:::::: ~:~
was, The ratio of hype to ;H .o.
results of United Press Interns- 82; No. 8 Oklahoma 108, OklaK
C..... k.. .......
and 45 points earlier In the Musketeers with 25 points, Ty52Weeks ........... :..... .. ............... S67.60
substance Is always notorlol!sly · ; .,~.•
60 597
4
6
high In these affairs, and In that -... "u
lng
Is revealed
Monday.
59; Np,
Valley·
tlonal's
Board of
Coaches ballot- · VIrginia
homa State
80; 10Purdue80,No.
No. 9 Duke 77, . Symmes
yger ree
······ 3 · 7 636l 805
respect this one ran true to form:
;;j:J!
JohnCaylorsanka3-polntf!eld
16
Iowa
79;
No.ll
Michigan
103,
Southwestern
..... ! . 10 607 823
The class of weapons elipllnated . ' •·
goal with 10 seconds to play at MIM1!110IIi71; No.l2Nevada-Las
SVAC ONLY
accounted · for only about 4 ,.,, ,.
Lexington,
Ky.,
Saturday
to
lift
Vegas
103,
Cal-Irvine
68;
No.
15
TEAM
(Vu:tyi
p OP
percent ot the nuclear armory of ;AG.}
the
Tigers
over
the
Wildcats
In
Florida
84,
Georgia
70;
No.
17
the two sides.
:1.!;·
the Southeastern Conference ·Kansas 78, Missouri 74; No. 18 Southern ···· ·· ···· ·· ·6 I 626 395
So perhaps 1987 may be known ~~ ·
game. Caylor, a 6-foot-7 sophoDllnols '17, Michigan State 62;
Hannan Trace .....6 1 548 444
to history as The Year Nothing '"""
more,
was
starting
because
of
and
co-No.
19
Iowa
.State
84,
Oak
Hill ............. 5 I 449 375
Much Happened. There are " ul•
theabsenceoftrontliJiestarsJeff
Dayton
80.
Eastern
............... 4 3 475 522
worse years.
· • Jllr
In pu1111111ct of ~ow. I, Gto'VI M. Colllnt, Trt•ner of Meigs County, Ohio in complilftto with milld Code No. 323.08
· Moore and Mike Jones.
At Pittsburgh, Charles Smith North Gallla ····· ... 3 4 453 499
of Statt ol Ohio, do fi111by givl notico of tht Rita of Tuttion for the Tu Voor of 1987. RottS ••Pitlled in dollars
Rex Chapman, whose 2 free scpred . '20 polnta and Jerome Symmes Valley ... 2 6 485 600
and cents on MCh'Ont dtout~nd doRtrs tlx Vlluttion.
.I
. !brows pushed Kentucky ahead Lane added 19 points and 15 Kyger C,::reek .. ,... :.1 5 344 395
:;- ..
7
52-50 with 28 seconds left, missed rebounds to help Pltts.burirh snap SQuthwesterri........ O
399 549
27 27 3'7711 3'779
an off-b~lance shot with two a . seven-game Joel"' streak TOTALS
seconds to- go.
against St. Johil's.
SVAC
~~
2) 'The Unlled States urgently ,:.,
TOWNSjiiPS
Syracuse was UPI~s precseaslnaon
At Chapel Hill, N.C . , J .R. Reid TEAM
(Rese~e~ p OP
1
nO?eds to beef up Its mine'
.~~~
No.1 team, but North aro
hltbisfirstllfleldgoalattempts .SOuthern ........... ... ? 0 412 · 298
M
5
••
•
sweeping equipment nad
gained the top ranking during the and finished with 30 points to lift
c
SCHOOL DISTRICTS\
;
!
•'
;
f.
••
"•
oi
c
,, ,.
procedures.
~
.first week of ratings. Kentucky North Carolina over La Salle for
Hannan Trace ..... 6 I 390 265
i
b
••
i
··~ ~ .
.;
;
••
i
I
4
=
I(
I
3) 'Efforts of this kind should .., ,
surged to the front the following Its seventh straight viCtorY.
· Oak Hill ...... :... .... 2 233 246
i
·
.:
H
~
••• .;I
c
AND CORPORATIONS
r• I
•o
Involve the cooperation ·a nd r·•dw
week and held the posltlon,tor
At Tucson, Ariz.; Sean Elllott Southwestern ....... 3 3 310 342
! - "~ ••• •! &gt;I
••
. "
•
participation of other couqtrles.
three weeks. Arizona ended 1987 collected 19 points and Arizona
Symmes Valley ... 3 4 312 321
;-tJ:I
.
BEQFORO
4) Congress should be fully
at No. 1, but Kentucky recovered committed only 6 turnovers to
Ncirth Gallla ....... 2 5 327 341
.10
2.00 t.50 1.00 .051687 .026112 36.1 0
1.00
consulted before such actions are
the top spot' last week to open the rqut Stanford.
,
Eastern···· ··· ······· .2 5 291 367
. 4.30 1.70 24.0.0 .50
Mt~
taken.
new year.
At Albuquerque, N.M., Charlie Kyger Creek ........ O 6 215 310
2.00 1.50 1.00 .057236 .028915 32.60
4.3D 1.70 20.50 ·.50 .10 1.00
E1111m
.
The Wildcats, 10-1, stumbled Thomas struck for 27 points and · TOTALS
·.
27 27' M80 11490
.
CHESTER .
2.00 1.50 1.00 .072383 .D42123 33.90
due In great part to 21 of 61 13 rebound&amp; to help New Mexico Hannan ~':ed;r.·;=~allla 56
4.30 3.00 20.50 .50 .to 1.00
Ell!IIA
shooting (34.4 percent). Auburn beat . Wyoming for Its lOth Southern 93, Southwestern 44
2.00 1.50 1.00 .065610 .038181 37.40
.10
1.00
.50
24.00
4.30
3.00
Me~
was not much better at 36.8.
straight victory.
2.00 t .SD t.OO .2623t6 .235087 43.30
4.30 2.70 28.80 .50 .10 t.OO 3.30
COLUMBIA
Eastern 89, Symmes Valley 85
l
At Landover' Md., senior Tim Oak HIJI at Kyger Creek, resche·LEBANON
"The fact that neither team
Perry matched his career-hlg!J duled for Jan. 26
2.00 1.50 1.110 .067932 .030817 34.40
4.30 3.50 20.50 .SD .to i.OD
E11t1m
was · shooting well helped us,
with 24 -points and freshman
TuesdQ'B gamea
- - - - 2.00 1.50- -1.00 .142897 .051116 37.4oSou thorn~
4.30 3.50 23.&amp;0 -.50 .10 t.DOI
because It sl~ the P!!ce of tile Mark Macon scored 16of hls221n Oak Hill at Hannan Trace
.to
1.00
2.110 1.50 1.00 .1473t6 .058201 3B.t o
4.20
23.&amp;0
.50
.
4.30
game do\YII and It made them
LETART
the second 'balf to pace Temple North Gallla at Sol!ljtern
2.00 1.50 t.OO .08t141 .1144418 34.60
take time to look tor a shot.''
4'.30 3.70 ' 20.&amp;0 .50 .10 1.00
OLIVE
past aeorae Washington. .
Eastel'll at Kyger Creek
:::t ,, I ,
&lt;\uburn
Coach
Sonny
Smith
IBid.
2.00 1.50 1.00 .073478 .0411522 34.40 .
t.l10
20.50
.50
.
tO
4.30
3.50
ORANGE
'·' ~c ~
At $yracuse.- N.Y., Derrick Symmes Valley at Southwestern
"We copldn't throw It In the Coleman totaled 1'1 polnta antll6
"!' J'• t
2.00 1.50 1.00 .06235t .03t&amp;SO 37.7o·
4.30 3.30 24.00 .50 .tO 1.00
RUTLAND
ocean and they couldn't throw It rebounds to enable Syracuse to
tt u'~
7.00 2,00 1.&amp;0 1.00 .101020 .053474 43.40
RUTLAND V.ILLAGE ' 4.30 2.00 24~ .50 .10 1.00
in the'ocean, and we just noa ted bold oft Seton Hall.
2.00 1.50 1.00 .051&amp;87 .026112 38.t 0
4.30 1.70 24.00 .50 .10 ·l.oo
SALEM
". '",.
to shore first.''
2..00 1.&amp;0 1.110 .051687 .026112 36.10
4.30 1.70 24.00 .50 .10 1.00
SALISIURV
2.00 1.50 1.00 .D95445 .059423 43.30
1.00
1.70
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE.4.30 .20 24.00 .50 .10
7.80 . 2.00 t.50 1.00 .D95320 .961106 42. 50
POMEROY VILLAGE 4.30 .20 24.00 .50 .10 1.00
--~
,,
4.30
2.00 1.50 t.l10 .1156198 .03tD82 37.80
t.OO
3.20 24:00 .50 .10
SCIPIO
r
CLEVELANDHalley
on '1 of 11
on field aoall
:J
SUTTON
scored
32
.
points
for
the
Rio
and
5
o1
6
on
tree
thron
for
83
-=~~
2.DO- 1.50 1.00 .141289 .,061191 37.00
4.30 3.10 23.50 .50 .1D 1.00
SouthiiR
Grande Redwomen Satlll;'day to · . pen:ent.
.
q:~ o1 r,
l .to 2.08 1.&amp;0 1.110 .210232 .t08233 44.20
uo 1.20 23.50 .5I .to 1.00
RACINE
han4 Dyke an 81-82 lou Ud
One al the RMww-·a top
•fl N.it
1.00
uo
2.00 1.50 1.110 .1351!3 .D54828 40.30
4.30'
23.50
.tO
1.80
.5I
SYRACUSE
Improve the RedWOmea'aoverall ~this • • - · Hutbip
.... r.J;.
reconteUI IPIDat'l&gt;ru.
'
SUTTON
' 1f!!C I standiq to tll-5. ·
_.. I ~
'
1'he victory 11vea Rio Grande a
Lea AM Mlilllll W :13 polata.
2.110 1.50 1.00 .058405 .D21441 37
4.30 J :t~ 24.00 .50 .to 1.110
illtill
•trona eatranee Into Ita first ' Sbe auk Ill U tritl aa field
,J,-du
. '
¥J4!..())110 COnference pme pa1a for
but
;j ,:.,;
and flrlt bome eomplltltlon of tile
bettet
Real Estate taxea which h8W not ~ peid •t the cl018 of 8ICh colloction carrv a penalty of ten per
~.~U u
year
on
·
TbUJ'Iday
ap!Ut
cent. Tax• tillY be peid 11 the offici of the county t , _.. or by mail. Plt1J118 bring your lest tax re·
!£. ~~
•,l ... f .
Urbana.
~lpt, and If you pey by mall be aul't to IOCitl your property by taxing district and enclose stamped

Ken~

\

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

·Southern bombs SW five for eighth .win

The long vacation -:----B_r_t_ac_k_A_nde__rso_n_a_nd_Da"""le_Vt_a-n_-1-_tt......a

'

'·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ wu M pereentfrvm the
field. nett~~~ 15 ol Wattempta

qa!ut Dyiie. Ill ddltlon, .....
·. .- 2 o1' ll'lelat tile fl'll dlnllr
" 11M. THmlliate HoiiJ llutliP
•Mw" 11 poblta, blllll .. DI ,oeat .

Nll-add..-di!MIOPII.

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AIWIYitltltnlntt your tax rapt to • tt.t iiCOYWJ Ill your prOillfty. Office Hours 8 :30A.M. to
4:30P.M., Monday thru Friday, CIOHd !!" S.turdiV.
GEORGE M. COLLINS, MeiVt County y_,..
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Moudtf, ~ 11, 1188

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Pon•10y Mldtlaport. Ohio

Rio._·Grande holds on to edge Cougars
One of the best Mount Vernon
Nazarene teams of recent years
· stormed LyneCenterSatufday to
live .R io Grande another physical Mid-Ohio Conference game,
but the Redmen 011tlasted the
· Cougars·S0-78:
Tbe Redrnen were able to hold
a slim margin after MVNC's
TOdd Morrison sank a basket In
the last few seconda. The game
was viewed by a near-caJM~Clty
crowd attending Foodland Night .
The win puts the Redmen at 3-1
In the· MOC and 1J:5 overall,
While Bernie Ballktan's club goes
to 7-7 and 1-2 in the conference.
"I was very pleased with bur
effort," Ballklan commented. "I
think we broke down a lot. It
doesn't take too ll)any mistakes
to win a 2-point game..
"We have a lot of ri!Spect for
Rio's program, so any time we
• come as close as we did here, we
feel proud, ' ' he added.
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
felt guard pl•y and competence
on the boards helped Rio Grande
wrest the game away from the
Cougars.
"II was an · excellent . ball

,.

.. MADISON BLOCKS SHOT - Mount Vernon forward Tim
Madison ( 31) goi!S over the head of Rio Grande guard Jim Kearns
" ' (No. 30, only 0 Is vi~lble) to block his shot In Saturday night's
'·· ma&amp;chup In Lyae Center, as fellow Cougar Sam Barber (23) ·looks
on.
·

.,Eagles
outlast
:··vikings
The Eastern Ea.gles won their
third straight c~nference game
with an 89-85 .victory over
Symmes Valley In a ·make-up
game Saturday night.
The Eagles shot 33 of 60 from
the floor and had a 23-for-38
performance from the charity
stripe. They committed 14 turnovers. The Vikings went 32 of 56
from the field and sank 18 free .
throws In 24 tries at the line.
~entor center. Steve Horner
pulled down seven o~ the Eagles'
· 30 rebounds . Teammate Mark
. Gtiffiri had eight of theEagles' l7
. assists. Senior pivot Joe White
grabbed eight of the Vikings' 35
rebounds .
Eastern, now 4-3 In the league,
will host Kyger Creek Tuesday
night. Symmes Valley, now 2-5 in
· conference competition. will
travel to. Patriot to take on
Southwestern Tuesday night.
Horner
EASTERN (89) 10-0-9-29; Griffin 6-0-6-18: Martin
7-0-1-15; Hendrix 4-0-2-10; Tripp
4-0-0-8: Savoy 1-0-5-7; Lance
1-0-0-2. TOTALS - 33-0-23-89 .
_; SYMMES VALLEY (85) White 9-0-3-21; Miller .6-0-5-17;
· Tibbs 5-1-1-14; McCarty 3-1·1·10;
. Cade 2-1-0-7: Schneider 1-9-3-5:
. , Mootz 1-0-2-4; Nelson 0-0-3-3;
• Kipp 1-0-0-2; Pernesti 1-0-0-2.
TO'l'ALS - 29-:J-18-85
Score by quarters
SVHS ... ... ..... .. ... 16 18 25 26-85
Eastern ............. 24 20 19 26-89
Reserve game
Symmes Valley 43, Easter n 37
. Shawn Mootz (Symmes Valley) , 14 points. Kenny Caldwell
I Eastern). 18 points.

•'

:: Ohio Outdoors
By JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers
Association of America
Distributed by UPI
The temperatu re fina lly fe ll
. low enough to produce Ice s ulta ble ' for ice fishing. More accu. rately, it produced "some" Ice
·· that is.
Be very skeptical of " ta bles"
that show increasing thicknes ses
of lee ' being able to support
s imila rly increas ing loads. Wellmea ning people have a t times
. issued such tables and not a lways
, with an accompan ying nota ilon
• tha t they a re only a guide even
th oug h they m ig ht l ook
"scientific."
The problem is not with the
•• ·tables themselves. The real
~ problem is ma ny fold.

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::; • It is a phys_lcal fact that clea n.
: pure ice of a g'lve'n thickness a nd
~ lying atop the water will support
~ a give n load. The difficulty
, comes whe11 other factors are
• add ed to · the equa tion. For
• exa mple, it Is said that 21nches of
~ ice will s upport a man wa lkl.ng
• alone. What Is not sa id is that If
: the water level of the lake has
; dropped s ince the Ice formed a nd
: the part you're walking on Is now
~ s uspended · some 6 or 8 Inches
~ over the water, 1\ won' t hold you
• for more than a few seconds.
:
It Is also a pote ntial da nge r
: that the Ice thickness over a lake
~ or pond is rarely uniform across
•• the entire surface. What might
~ have .been 3-inch Ice where you
• checked could be little more than
.: a s kim where a spring enters the
•••. lake.
Ice that is really notl!ing but
:; refrozen slush Isn 't nearly as
: strong as Ice fprmed dl{ectly
• from the freezing of the water
: beneath it. If there has been
Drlght sun orl an area of Ice, or If
,; the weather warmed briefly.
~ before turning cold again, check
,. the Ice carefully before ventur~, Jngout.
.
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game," Law born aald, "and
Mount Vernon played very well.
Ron Ritttnaer played 40 minutes
for us and he played great for 40
minutes. We should have given
him a break, but we didn 't know
when we could give him a break.
Jimmy Kearns shot well and.that
was a key for us."
·
Rltt!nger, who scored 22
points, was tn all the way due to
the Cougar blitz. The first ball
saw MVNC grab the lead early on
a nm Justice basket and from
there on leadership changed
hands constantly.
Rio Grande lost and then
regained the lead until1: 03 when
"Steve. Gregory, MVNC 's' stan.dout freshman, tied It up at34-34.
A foul called on Rio Grande's
Marc Gothard allowed the Cougars to pick up pointa at the free
throw line, but a Rittinger basket
In the final seconds of the half lett
the score at 36-36.
The Cougars held the advantage over the Redmen until ' an
Anthony Raymore basket, whtcli
followed a 3-polnter from Brian
Watkins, gave the Redmen a

1-polilt lead (57-56) with 10:49.
rem1lnlng. Tbe Redmell stayed
about. oDe step allead ot MVNC
for nearly the rest of the period.
Rio Grande waa 58 percent
from the field, ,slnklllg 33 of 57
- atte~pts and bad one of Its better
nlghts frDm tbe tree throw line,
posting 92percenton9otl0 tries.
The boats tared only 14 percent
on :J-polnt field goals (1 of 7) .
MVNC netted 16 of 38 field goals
for 42 percent and connected on
19·ol 25 tree throws to~76 percent.
The Cougars did better with Its
3-polnters, landing 7'of,17 for 41
percent.
. ·
In addition to Rittinger, Raymore added 18 points for tlie
Redmen, while Ray Singleton
and Brian Walkins each supplied
13. Kearns served up 10. Gregory
was MVNC's high man with 19,
followed by 14 apiece from
Morrison p.nd Jeff Case. White,
who began his collegiate basketball career at ·Rio Grande last
seasQD, had 12.
Madison Fouls Out
Former Gallla 1\Cademy standout Tim Madison, co-caplaln of
this year's Cougar team, fouled

Cold front stings- eastem,half 0~ nation

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out late In the second half, but

~h~~hllappr~

ctatlon to Robert Eutman;
owner of Foodlalld atorea 111
GaWpolll, Pomeroy, Polllt Pleai
sant and Ripley, W.Va., tor
SJIOIIIOrllli Saturday'• game. :

The Rldmen IWllli blcll IJlld .

action at home Tul!lday at 7: aq
p.m. agaillat Urbana, which fell
sN!6 to Wallb Saturday.
evening will be Gallla COUIII}i · ·
New Car De!~lerl AssoclatiOI\ .Night.
.
•
RIO GRANDE &lt;•1 -Anthony
Raymore, 9-0-2-18; Jim Kearns,
4-2-3-10; Ray Singleton, 6-1-3-13;:
Ron Rlttlnger, 9-4-2-22; Rob
Jackson, 1-0.2-2; Brian Walkins,
3(1)+1-13; Marc Gothard, 1-04-.

The

2. TOTALIIII(l)-11·11-81.
,
MOUNT VERNON NAZA·;
RENE (78) - Tim · Justice;
1(1).0-1-5; Sam Barber, 2-0.H; :
Tim Madison, 1-6-5-8; Todd More·
rison, 6-2-2-U; Stev!! Gregory"
3(3)i-1-19;· Rick Burke, 0.2-1-2;: ·
JertCase, 0(4)-2·2-14; Joe Whlte1
3(1) -3-0.12. TOTALII 18(8)·19-14o:

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Pomeroy- Middaport, .Ohio

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By United Preu lnteruatloaal
longer than a week In the
A cold front stung the eastern
Northeast.
half of the nation today, chilling
"It has been a little b it below
the South with below-freezing
normal every \!BY since Jan. 3
te mpera tures that made It colder except for the 9th, when It was 1
In Tennessee than In Alaska.
degree above the average," said
" A high pressure r idge from
forecaster Michael Nobel.
The National Weather Service
Ne w England to Arkansas Is
maktng· It about 15 to 20 degrees reported record lows of 14 below
colder that usual lor this time of at Bradley Field In Windsor
year,'! National Weather Service Locks, Conn., and 5below atT.F .
meteorologist · Lyle Alexander Gr~n AltpoM In Warwick, R.I.
said.
·The temperature dipped to 91n
Other low temperatures In the
Knoxville, Tenn. , a 4a.m. today, East and South Included 11 belpw
while It was 22 In Anchorage, zero at Concord, N.H., 1 degree at
Alaska.
Hartford. Conn., 9 in Pittsburgh,
The lowest readings In New 14 In Memphis, Tenn., 16 In New
England were 29 below In the York City, 20 in Washtngton, 24in
small southwestern New Hamp- Blnnlngham, . Ala., ·and · 28 in
slilre community of Marlow and Atlanta. Rain fell over parts of
24 below In the western Maine Florida and the Pacific Northw·mountaln townofLovell,continu- ··est, both areas .soaked by heavy
· lng a pattern that has lasted rains S~nday . Snowfell·at higher

e levati ons In t he Pacific and the m ountains of Nevada and ·
Utah.
Nor thwest.
Sout herly w inds ):lrought
Nearly 3 % Inches of ra in
wa
rmer temperatures· to the
soaked Key West , F la., In six
•"
central
Rockies and the Plains,
hours Sunday, leaving some
Alexander sa id.
streets flooded .
In Lander, Wyo., It reached 54
Euge ne, Ore., was hit with 2.93
InChes of rain, while 1.12 Inches: Sunday, the first time the
temperat ure rose a bove freezing
fell at Newport , Ore.
Winter storm warnings for since Dec. 22.
Bismarck, N.D., war med to 35
heavy snow. wer e posted for
central Idaho, the_ Washl_nK!_on ·sunday. It_wa s below zero there
much ol last week.
~· -··--··"-+-'-:!
and Oregon Cascade mountains
In Gray. Mountain. Ariz.. a
and .t he Slsklyous of sout hern
2-year-old girl who wandered
Oregon and northern California .
from
her home on the Navajo
South Da kota wa s under a
Reservation
and spent the night
winter storm watch tonight.
In
freezing
temperatures was
Snow combined with expected
strong winds could create near- found dead Sunday, police saki .
Nava jo pollee officials Identiblizzard conditions across the
entire state, forecasters warned. fied the child as Theresa Curley .
A rapidly deepening low pres- who_~ently died ot,exposure
to ~ r atu res that dropped
sure sys tem over Montana reInto the 20s early Sunday .
sulted In s now advisories fo r
The girl disappeared Saturday
western and ce11tra l portions of
night while playing outside her
the state, with up to 4 Inches of
ne\11 snpw expecte d today In the home near· the reservation comContinued frOm 'page 1
. •••__,..-~
_;_
----,-.~ valleys and up·to 10 Inches In the
munity of Gray Mountain, about
village wanted JQrby's telephOne of many older residents.
mountains . .
50 miles north of Flagstaff. Her
number of 949-3089 as tbe pollee
Cleland also said he would be
.A winter storm watch also was body was . found about a mile
number. Cleland recommended working closely with CouncU to · rn effect to r parts or Wyoming
from the hOme.
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and Council approved . using the ed\ICate residents In regard to
same number. Cleland will make enforcement of various village
~TIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·12-88
the necessary arrangements ordinances. "We have Inherited with the telephone company.
a number of problems that have
Suspending the rules, Council developed over the years beamended an ordinance to reflect cause of the lack of adequately
the Increase In pay for the full Informing the ~sldents. We hope .
The annual pickup of Christma s trees Is taking place In
time village marshal. Council at to quit talking about the probPomeroy this week. Residents are to put thelr·dlscarde d trees • ·
thetr last regular meeting ap- lems and start' taking action to
the curbing to be hauled away by village workers.
propria ted_enough f\lnds to cover solve them ," Cleland cncluded.'
the salllry Increase.
·.
It was noted that Kirby was
Clelaild as Jllayor, and Dick
offered the full time position but
Continued .from page 1. .
Wamsley, Larry Wolfe and Duke
refused It because he did not
Bentz as councllmembers, and
solved global economic on the world econom v a nd
want to give up his job with the Bob Roy and Ivan Powell as
problems."
resume a subs tantial nei inflow
Pomeroy Pollee Department.
members of the Board of Public
of
resources
to
the
developing
In a regular session of Council Affairs, were administered their
These problems Include the
countries ."
·
on Monday , the budget lor 1988 oaths of office by VIUage Soliciwidening ·trade Imbalances beThe
report
predlct
l'd
only
a
2
was approved and Mayor Cletor Frank Porter. Wamsley was
tween Japan, West Germany and
percent
growth
rate
for
the
land
. gave a report of the
named to fill tbe Council seat of
tlie United States , "together with
rapidly changing interest and economies of the Industrialized condition ot.tl)e village, com- Cleland who resigned to assume
nations In 1988 and 3 perce nt fo r mentlng that it Is In good fiscal
the mayor's post. ·
foreign exchange rates."
the developing world. The only condition and that finances are
In other business, Council
· It says the Wall Street "shock"
exception
would
be
China,
where
·
available
to
attend
to
"needs"
appr()ved
th.e mayor's request tg
quickly assumed global proporthe
robust
lO·percent
rate
of
.
but
not
ne
cessarily
"wants."
purchase
a· .code bool&lt; from
tions and "that crisis also high·
."·JsNOW .
AAIN ·
~ SHOWERS .
growth
In
1987
is
expected
to
slow
Council
approved
1988
approPublishing
Co. , dealAnderson
lighted the obstacles to the
prlatlons In the amount of
· FROt{fS: "
Warm "
Cold
. . Static . . Occluded
Ing with municipalities.'
I!TIPiementatlon_of concerted pol· to 8 percent this yea r .
International
trade
wlll
grow
$191,0\8.13,
just
a
few
hundred
Map
shows
minimum
temperatures.
At
least
50%
or any shaded area is forecast
The highest of five bids, Ivan
lcles for the managemPnt of th~
to
receive
precipitation
indicated
'liPI
at
a
"sluggis
h"
3
pe
rce
nt
In
1988,
dollars
less
than
1987.
Powell's bid of $1,510, was
world I"COnomy .
the
report
said
.
Abreakdownofthe1988budget
accepted for a surplus van
"In a world of sovereign but
~THER MAP - Ugllt snow will extend from northern
Includes $58,974 In 'general fund;
formerly
used as a backup
: Interdependent nation states, goMichigan
across the upper Mississippi Valley Into tbe Dakotas.
$22,715 in street fund; $45,3.99
emergency squad.
' vernments must act In ordPr to
Snow
will
be
heavy at tlme8 from the northern and central Rockies
.... fire: $4,000 state highway; $3,800
r
,
. ensure great t'r financial and
Into
the
Great
Basin. Rain ' showers will occur along the Pacific
• cemetery; . $55,381.13, water demonetary stability. but progress
Holzer Medical Center
Coast from Washlllgtoa to cejllral California. Winds will be strong
Council also declared a 1973
partment; $500 water deposits:
In that direction is slow, " It says:
DI!!Charges January 8: De bble
and
gusty along the eastern slopes of ihe central Rockies.
Chevrolet
dump
truck
as
excess
Ont' of the dilemmas govern- .Bias, John Canode, Lawrence $300 transfer to cemetery.
property
and
the
elerk
Is
to
Clerk Jane Beegle reported the
merits face In 1988 Is that " they Cheatwood, Angela Eblin, village. ended 1987 with a cash · ·prepare a legal notice that the
must tackle the lmb;ilances of Dyanna Eggleton·,· 'Nathan balance of $136,525.95.
truck will be sold by sealed bids
hour tonight.
the world economy but without
Faught, Donald Hayes, David
South Central Ohio
at the FebrUary m~ting.
Extended Forecast .
' deflationary steps that nilght 'Holter, Hazel Isaacs, ·Delores
Mostly
sunny
(Oday
with
a
high
In his report on the village's
• Finally, It was ·r eported that
.w
edaesday
throut!h Friday
bring on a wor]d recession and . Massie, Jessica Mci:.aughlln; present condition, Cleland said
In
the
mid
30s
.
Mostly
clear
Christmas trees will not be
Chance
of
rain
or snow Wedwithout excessive demand ex- · Bonnie Mitchell, Homer Noble, the -first priority of the vtuage
picked up during regular trash tonight with a loW In the mid 20s.
. ' panslon that could rekindle lnfla- Catherine Wandling, Christina must be to provide full tUne
chance
of
flurries In the
!lesday,
Partly cloudy and windy Tuespickup, but wUl be taken by
northeas
t
Thursday
, fair e lseClara
Waugh
-and
Mrs.
Waugh,
·
' tfon, " .the report say~.
police protection, rather than
village work crews iat.e r this day with a chance of rain. Highs
While "sound management ·of Brad Yoho and daughter.
where.
Fair
statewide
Friday .
will be in the upper 40s.
part-time, In order to dlspelfears
month.
economies everywhere Is more
Birth January 8: Mr. and Mrs.
The probability of precipita- Highs will be In the 30s Wednes day, Jn the 20s Thursday and
critical than ever," It urges Stephen Colegrove, son, Willow
tion Is near ·zero today and
International cooperation In Wood.
tonight and 30 percent Tu esday . between 30 and 35 Friday . Lows
order to "restore a. climate of
Discharges January 9: Mrs.
Winds will be from the southw- will range between 25 a nd 35
greater predictability of ex- Brian Baker and son, · Mrs.
est at 10 to 20 miles an hour today Wednesday and In the teens
• change rates and lnteresJ rates." Steven Buck and daughter, Riand Increasing to 15 to 25 miles an Thursday and Fr.lday,
It calls lor joint action to chard Cook, Uilda Gillenwater,
"decompress and grapple reso- Varina MpCiure; Betty Nelson,
lutely · wit!! the debt problem . Mrs. Brian Richardson and son, .
~ews
CLEVELAND !UP!) -Out of
selling at a rate. of more. than
which exerts a deflationary drag ·Jeremiah Simpson, Mrs. Randall
more that 24 million tickets sold ' 20,000 a minute Saturday '
Storms and son, Robert Theiss,
Veterans Memorial ,
Lottery spokeswoman Ann Dally stock prices
In Saturday 's recoid $32 million
Marta Whittington and Delano
Saturday Admissions- Steve n
Bloomberg
said
about
12
million
(As
of
10:
30
a.m.)
Super Lotto game, only two htid
Flniaw,
Long Bottom; Henry
Workman.
wagers
were
made
Saturday
.
and
Mark
Smith
Bryce
all six winning numbers, Ohio
Continued·from page 1
Discharges January 10: Trlsha
Beaver,
'Long
Bottom: Betty
of
Blunt
Ellis
&amp;
Loewl
Sales -agents reported lines form '
Lottery Commission officials
Stover
,
Dexter
.
state or federal court against Adams, Deborah Conkle. WIIlng outside their businesses besaid.
Saturday DI Scharges - Keith
Ashland, including a class action llam Ferguson, Andrew Hale,
fore dawn and many bettors Am Electric Power .......... .. . 26%
The numbers were16, 21,29,33,
Hayman,
Billy Goble.
suit on behalf of fo\lr people Vermont Higginbotham, Mar- · 35, and 43. The holders of the two
waited more than an hour to AT&amp;T ................................. 27'1.
Sunday
Admissions - Elle n
denied water as a result of the oil garet Ingalls, Tina Lambert,
Ashland Oil ......................... 54
tickets will split the jackpot; purchase tick.e.ts.
Wells,
Long
Bottom: Ruby Fredspill and seeking $10,000 dam- · Beverly Matney, Tyler Mintz,
"People have been outside theJ Bob Evans .. .... :.. ... .. .. .......... 15%
meaning each wUl receive 20
e rick, Pomeroy; Nancy Smi th,
LesUe Moon, Charles OhUnger
· ages per person.
building since 6 a .m .," said Jean\ Charming Shoppes .. ............ ll %
annual payments of $800,000
·
and Mary Waugh.
Pomeroy: Shannon McComas,
Ann Heally, an employee ot the City Holding Co .. ................. 32
before taxes.
Rutland.
1-70 Ttuck Plaza at New Paris Federal Mogul .. ........ ... ,... ... 33%
Identities of the winners won't
Sunday Discha rges - Jane
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 56%
be known until the lottery com- near the Indiana border.
Ratcliff.
Lee , Pope; manager of the Heck's Inc .. .. .. .. ...... .. .. .. , .. .. .. 2\1.
mission yalfdates the tickets.
Lottery olflc)als said 651 /Jil'ala; ·. said one customer pur- Key Centurion .................. .. . 39
Lands ' End .............. : .......... 19Jia
tickets had five of the numbers, 1rhased $1 ,500 worth of tickets .
Hawthorne Murphy
·Robert Epple
Jim Crossen, manager of Chur- Limited Inc ......... .. ............. 18 %
each worth $1 ,000. Another33,409
Lodge to Meet
chill's Supermarket In Sylvania Multimedia Inc . .... .. ....... .. ... 49 '1.
Hawthorne !Hawk) Murphy,
tickets had four of the numbers.
Robert J. Epple. o8. Glen Eden
Shade River Lodge 453 will
In Northwest Ohio, said he Rax Restaurants ... , ....... .. .. ... 3%
each worth $84.
Road. Evans, Pa. , formerly of 48, of Route l. Ewlngton. died
In regular session Thursmeet
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
..
............
..
...
8
to
100
$1
limited
customers
Sunday
at
Holzer
Mt'dlcal
Wednesday
's
Super
Lotto
jackMeigs County, died Sunday at
day,
7:30p.m.,
at the lodgehallln
Shoney's
Inc
...
....
................
21%
tickets
because
crowds
had
Center.
pot
will
be
at
least
$3
million.
, Butler Memorial Hospital followChester
.
Plans
for
annual Inspecup
to
90
Wendy's
Inti
.
..
.....................
5%
forced
people
to
walt
A
coaimlner
and
member
of
Lottery players doled .'out a
Ing an t-Ight month Illness.
tion
will
be
discussed.
minutes
to
buy
tickets.
Worthington
Ind
......
:
........
..
.
17%
record $24 .3 mllUon for SaturMr. Epple was born at Bunker the Rutland Church of God , Mr.
day 's game that had the fourth
Hillin Meigs County on Aug. 11, Murphy wa s born Dec. 3, 19391n
bettors, where
he said,
r;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j.
Many
of the
were
from
Michigan,
·a 1
largest jackpot In North Amerl·
1929. a son of the late Mlchat-1 and Logan. W.Va ., a son of the late
number of Ohioans are expected
Elmer a nd Myrtle Copley
can history. The national record
Florence Clark Epple.
to go this week beCause WednesMurphy.
.
Is $46 million offered by the
day's Super Lotto jackpot In that
Survl.vors Include his wife,
·Pennsylvania · Lottery last
He was the owner of tile Epple
will be' at least $12 million.
state
l"lora
Jea'n
Pen'ntngton
Murphy,
October.
Equipment Co. In Cran.berry
three
~aught~;&gt;rs,
Con·
Tickets
tor
the
game
were
Ewlngton:
Towonsblp, Pa. , and was a
member of Jhe Qutllk United nle Bowen of R,ay, Ohio, Betty
Methodist Church. He bad,served Copley of Vero Be~jch , Fla. , and
Rose Murphy of Ewlngton; one
In the U. S. Navy.
son.
Hawthorne Murphy Jr. of ·
Surviving are his witt', Lois
Columbus;
three brothers, Jack
·
Kagey Epple, whom he married
Murphy
of
Albany,
Carl Murphy
' '
on Dec. 30, 1950; two daughters.
ot
Logaq,
W.Va
..
and
Charlie
Mrs. Richard Pearce, Cranberry
' .
TOWIU!hlp,: Robin Epple, Stat· Murphy of Ohapmanvtlle,
W.Va.;
two
sisters,
Mary
Lamford, Va., a son, Michael Epple,
Cranberry; thr~ sisters, Mrs. . bert and Sarah Jarrell, both of
Jean Brown, Ray; Mrs, Mary. Rutland; and two gi-andchlldren,
Leedy. CIQIIls. N. Mex.: Mrs _. Crystai UDawn. Bowen of Ray,
-· Janice WaiCieck, Carroll: .three ' Ohio ami :Paul Richard Copley of
'
brothers, Ca)vln Epple of Smith· Vero Beach, Fla.
AB
Services
will
be
Wednesday,
1
burg; Md.; Richard Epple of
!I
GIC!II Burnie, Md., and Fr1nk p.m., at the Rutland Church of .
God with Rev. John Evans
Ep~. Mlddlepon; and three
officiating. Burial will be In Mllea
gralldlons.
~melery. P'rlendl may call at
. Services will be lleld atlla.m.
the church from 2 to 9 p.m. on
Wedllltlday at the Glenn-KIIdoo Tunday: Arrangements \vere by
HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.-8 P.M.
' Funeral Home, Wlaeonsln Ave.,
Ewllli Fuaeral Home.
.
SAtuRDAYS A.M.-&amp; P.M.
Cranberry Town~hlp, Pa., with Coua:dolt
•
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
tbe Rev. · Douilas Palter'
offlclatlq. Burial will be Ia
1'1141 surviving daughter of
AlleiliiiiY CotiDJy Memorial PreltollAlbert Par10na, Racllle,
: Park. Frltndl may call at thlr wlio41td l'liday, waa llleorreetly
' l'lll*'al hoJIItl tram 7 to 9 tlila . ~llrlunday'aUW~p~per
evGJQandfrom2tohndTto9 u Wlndl Juatll of lelpn. The
p.m. Tuesday.
' ;.
eerreauame I.e Juanita Juatll.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Serttce8 repor ts 20 calls
over the weekend, 10 Saturday and 10 Sunday.
Satu.rday at12: 40 a.m., Syracuse to Route 33 tor Robin Jeffers
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 8:48a.m . to Route
681 for Juanita Hoschar to Holzer Medical Center· Middleport
at 9: 57 a.m. to Front St. for Lorena Ault to Hoizer Medical
· Center; Syracuse aHO: 05 a.m. to College Road tor Ava Sisson to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at10: 21 a .m . to Beech Grove
Road lor William E . Cremeans to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Chester Fire Departll)ent at 4: 1.7 p.m. to a fire at the Henry
Beaver reskle!lce on Route 248; Tuppers Plains. at 4:54 p.m.
transported Henry Beaver !rom the scene of the fire to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; · Middlepon Fire Department at 5: 33 p.m.
was called to assist at the Beaver residence: Middleport at 7: 31
· p.m. transported Mike Conkle. and Deborah Conkle lrbm a ·
sleigh riding accident on Route 554 to Holzer Medical Center·
Po!lleroy at 9: 16 p.m . to Wolf Pen Road for Terry Payne who
was treated but not -transported.
·
Sunday at 1:02 a .m., Rutland to Carpenter Road tor Beth
Robson to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 5: 43
a.m. to Long Bottom for Ellen .Wells to Veterans Memorial
• Hospital; Pomeroy at 8: 14 a.m. to Mulberry Ave. tor Ruby
Frederick to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland a t8: 25 a .m,
to .Union Ave. for Carl Kennedy to Holzer Medical Center:
Pomeroy at 9 l!.m. to .Route 7 for Nancy Smith to Veterans
Me~orlal Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 12:13 p.m . to . the
Aroough Addition for Isaac Jackson to St. Joseph's Hospital; ·
Rutland Fire Department at 7: 41 p.m. to a traUer fire at the
John. Amos residence on Hm Road; , Middleport Fire
Department at 7: 57 p.m. was called to assist at the Amos
residence: Racine at 8: 21 p.m. to Yellowbush Road for Mona
Haynes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy atll: 12 p.m .
to Eagle Ridge Road for Troy Boggs to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
.

.
'
·
R acme
.

_ __

.

4D

.

.

Tree pickup continues th.is week

Notice of Application of _GTE NORTH INCORPORATED
for Increases _and A~justments in Rates ·and Charges

"

'

Global...

f'urSuani to the requirements of Se?ti.on 4909.t9 of the Ohio Revised Code, GTE NORTI:f INCORPORATED hereby gives notice that on September 30, 1987, it filed with the Public
Ut!iltles Comm1ss1on of Oh1o an application (PUCO Docket No. 87-1307-TP-AIRJ for ~lllhority to increase and adjust its rates and charges for telecommunications service and to change
1ts regulations and practices affect1ng the same.
·

.

This notice contains the substance and prayer of the
application. However. any interested party desiring complete detailed information with respect to all affected rates,
charges. regulatiOns and practices should inspect a copy
of the.application and all attached schedules at the office
or the CommissiOn, tao East BrOad Street, Coi!Jmbus. Ohio.
Acopy of the application may be inspecte&lt;! by any interested party at the oftice of GTE NORTH INCORPORATED
located at 100 Executive Drive, Marion, Ohio. A copy of
the application and the proposed tariff Sheets are also available
for.inspection during normal business hours at any Phone
Mart or Customers Service Point of GTE NORTH INCORPORATED. In addition, the proposed rates were mailed to
the mayors and legislative authorities of all municipalities
served by the Company on August 28. 1987, as part of the
Company's notification of· its intent to file.
The application affects rates and charges for telecommunications services to all customers ~~ GTE NORTH
INCORPORATED provided pursuant to itf Exchange Rate
Tarijf P.U.C.O. No. 6. General Exchange tarift, P.U.C.O.
No. 7, and Facilities for Intrastate Access Tariff,. P.U.C.O.
No. 2.

''1 ·

~!.

•

•

, Any person, firm, corporation or association may file,
pursuant to Sectron 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised Code,
objections to the prpposed increases and adjustments in
rates and charges, and to the proposed changes in regulations and practices affecting the' same. The objections
may allege that such application contains proposals that
are unjust and discrimrnatory or unreasonable. Recoinmendalions which differ from the application may be made
br lhe sraff of the Pu_
blic Utilities Commission of Ohio or
by intervening parties and may be adopted by the
Commission. •
·

LOCAL EXCHANGE SERVICE
The application proposes to cohsolidate the tO existing
rate groups into 5 new rate groups.
.

. R·1
Malvern Exchange
Current Flat Rate
Proposed Rat Rate
Difference

R-2

$13.53

B-1

$13.02
$11 .90
17 .21 . 15.60
4.19
3 .70

$29.30
.39.22
' 9.92

$11 .96

$11 .56

1694

)6 .29

$24.98
36.29

4.98

4.73

18.06

453

Marblehead ~cnange
Current .Flat Rate ..
'Proposed Flat Rate

R-4

Difference

$10.44
14.63
4.19

Mechanicstown E)(Ct1ange
Cullent Flat Rate
Proposed Flat Rate "
Difference

$11 .56
15.74
4.18

$11 .11

Paris Exchange
Current Flat Rate
Proposed Flat Rate
Difference

$13.53
18.06
4 53

$13.02

$11.90

17.21

15.60

4.19

3.70

seaman Exchange
Current Flat Rate

$11 .56

$1t .1l
16.29
5. 18

15.08
3.97

making premise visits and completing various functions
while on the customer's premises, upon a customer's
request. The Company is also propOSing to replace the
current Central OHice Line Connection Charge, Initial and
Subsequent, with a Central Office Charge and an Outside
Plant Charge to mora appropriately reflect the work tunc. lions performed.
·

1L31

$ 9.99 $23.80
13.57 . 32 .92
3.58
9.12

service Ordering Charge lnfttaf, per occasion
· Business

Aosldence

Present '
Rate

$35.25
35.25

16.94
5.38

waverty EXChange
Current Ftat Rate

$1, .96

E11change
Access L1nes
11o 3 ,000

3.001 to 6.000

Schedule Il l
Schedule IV
Scheduie V
Schedure 111

6.001 to 12.000

12.00 1 to 24,000
24.00 1 10 48 000
48,00 1to 96:000

&gt;
&gt;
&gt;

Proposed
Structure

$12.52

$11 .96

1694

16.29

4.42

4.33

$10.89
14.63
3.74

Oilterence

~

4.98

Winona E11change
· Current Flat Rate
Proposed Aat Rate
Oitrerence

Business

14.63
. 4.19

$24.98
36.29
11.31

Residence

Schedule I

1 to

.

6.000

Schedule II

. 6,001 ·tO 24.000

Schedule Ill

24.001 to 96.000

96.00 1 to 192,000 ~......,

Schedule VII
Schedu le 11111

192,00t 10 384.000 ,...r Schedule IV

· Business
Residence

Schedule IX
Scehdule X

384.00 1 to 7613 000
768.001 and ~ ...er

.

. -nee
.
'

.

&gt; Schedule V

384 ,001 and over

Specific local s_ervice rates depend on the rate group
class1flcahon applicable to a specific location. The average
1ncreases 1n monthly rates for difterent classes of service
are as follows: residence one-party· $4.80 or 37%: twoparty $4.22 or 35%; lour-party $3.94 or 37%; business
one-party $t0.89 or 40%; key !runks $13.65 or 40% and
PBX_trunks $t2.81 or 23%. The changes in monthly local
serv1ce rates for res1dence one-party, two-party and fourparty e xchange service and for one-party business
exchange service in representative communities, should
the requested increase be granted in full, are shown below.
Proposed rates for services in the Company's 232 other
exchanges are contained !n the proposed tarift sheets which
can be inspected as stated previously. .
·
A-1

R·2

A-4

$13.08

$12.46

$11 .34

18 .06
4 .98

17.21
4.75

15.60

BrOOkville Exchange
Current Flat Rate
Proposed Flat Ame
Difference

$ 14.65
20.06

$1 4.14
19 .26
5.12

$1 2.80

. 17.31

B.runswick E~o;change
Currenl Flat Rate ·
Proposed Flat Rate
Oill.erence

$15.73
., 21.31
5. ~

$15.32
20.73
5.41

$1 3.7 5
18.37
4 .62

$11 .18

$ 10.66

15.74

15.08

s 9.65

4 .56

4.42

13.57
3,92

$ 15.11

$14.82

$13.:36

21.31

20.73

18.37

6.21)

5.91

5.01

Amanda Exchange
Current Flat Ra te
Proposed Flat Rate
Ditlerence

5.41

4.26

4.51

Carey Ewchange
Current Flal Rate
Proposed Flat Rate
Difference
Chestli r9 CentEn Exchange ·
CUI'renl Flat Rate
Proposed FJat Rate
Dilrerence

The Company is proposing an introductiOn of optional
Usage Sensitive Service (USS) to its one-party customers
1n forty-one additiOnal exchanges. Also, the Company proposes an increase in the existing USS access and uss
usage rates. The usage rates are proposed to be increased
between 35.0% and 40,0%. Proposed USS access rate
· increases in representative exchanges are:

I

~- I

&amp;llevue E ~~:change
Current Access Rate
Proposed Access Rate
Difference

$15.95
22 .06

6.11

9o!Nar EKchange
Currenl Access Rate
Proposed Acc8ss Rate
Difference

R-1

$

Businets

per ilem

Montrose EKchange
Current Access Aale
Proposed Access Rate

OiUerence
Sugarcreek E~~:Change
Current Access Rate 1
1
Proposed Access' Rate
Difference .

10.05
10.05

9.20

9.21)

10.55
2.80

$ 9 .44

$18.65
26.28
7.63

$ 8.76

~0 . 05

9.21) '
9.21) ,'

'

&gt;

13.65

14.70

5.70
5.70

6.50

25.30 '
25.30

35.75
35.75

..

'

'

t

ot ~nt ,

Residence
Maintenance of Service Charge.
firsl quarlef hour
Business

Residence
Maintenance of Servtce Charge.
each additiOnal quarter hol.lr
Business
'

6.50

Two players win record
Ohio Super.Lotto jackpot

Stocks

7.35

Residence

7 .~

Central Office Line Connection
Charge Initial, each line
Business

'

·:

~ Central Office Una

Oonnectk&gt;n
C.harge Subsequent. each line
Bus;ness

Aesideoce

J

10.40
10.40

Central Otfic8 Charge. each line

-nee
Business

Outside Plant Charge, each line~
Business
Residence

13.10

13.10
39.05
39.05

Area ' deaths

MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES
Increases in rates and charges are proposed for some
miscellaneous services, namely:
·
.

13.44
4.00

• Foreign Central Office Service ·
• Directory Listings
• Directory Assistance Service
• Private Line Services
• Off Premises EK!ension Line Services

12.10
. 3.34
$ 9.82
13.44
3.62

.

.

· Because the Commission has authorized the deregulation of certain billing and coHectlon services, the Company also jllopc ISS 10 incr! BSe its proposed basic exchange
rates by approximately 1.5%.

$ 8.39'

'

•

'

.,

Fabricators, t~.

•CHORE BOY ,
.•MUELLER

•PAIZ

~ AF'

•WESIFALIA

ePOUIIILIIIGS

•TUaOI PAllS

Associated F*icators, n.·

The_lorm of this Notice has been approved by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
~.

Announcements

As~iated

i

. ' ..·

I

1

neia

'

Hospital

.Ashland...

15.80
15.80

. The prayer of the application r~uests the ·Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to do the lollqwing:
24.31
11 .35
6.67
2.96
(a) Find that the Company's pr~t rates and charges
8-1
and the regulatiOnS and practices affecting the same are.
. untust, unreasonable and insufficient to yield reasonable
$27.84
comP8"88IIon for the services rendered;
39.22
RESIDENCE LIFELINE SERVICE
11.38
(b) Find that the rates and chaiges and regulations and
The Company is proposing to establish a Residence
p~actices proposed ara just and reasoneble and .will proLifeline Sarvice for one-party customers eligible .for the
$32.39
vide no more than a fair and reaaonable rate of retum on
Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) or the Ohio
45.05
the value of the Company's property actually u$8(1 and
12.66 - ' Energy Credits Plan (OECP). The proposad Residence
useful for the convanlence.ofthe public;
Lifeline rates ara 57.4% of the proposad flat local sarvice •
(c) Approyp tt)a filing of the proposed schedule sheets
rate and usage sensitive service. aocess rate (42.8% dlscontained
iQ,Schedule E·t of the application, modHied to
cxiunQ. Upon approval of the fle81dence 'Uellrie proposal,
$35.95
·
raftect
lOCh
revllllona thereof u may ,become eflactlve,
the Company will file for the matching Federal Lifeline
49.27
pu..-nt
to
orders
of the Commlaslon, dUring the lntalim
13.32
Assistance p!ograrn which waives up to $2.80 Of the monthly
bel\ol11n
the
li!lng
of the appltcatlon and the date upon
subscriber line charge. Upon FCC approval. the effective
schedule
lhee!l beoome etfactive;
which
the
, discount lor residence lifeline customers will be approx~
$22.45'
(d) Order thai the ptopoeed schedule sheeis become
· mately SOO/o. .
32.92
elfacthe
lorthwtth; .
10.47
--:·(e)Approle the wtthdt£.11f of the l)ri,...C ~
SERVICING CHARGES
,
I
$34.1S
contallled In Schedule E-2 of !he appilcatiQII;
49.27
'The Company is proposing to increasa its servicing
(f) Grant llich other Mel further rt11e1 as !he Company
15.09
charges as follows for handling customer sarvice orders,
Is ~ably ~ll!ld to In tile preml!lfll,
$17.64

------Weather------

7.75

$20.61
30.18
9.57

$21 .70
30.18
8.48

15.90

10.05

Bus;ness

t·furon Exchange
Current Access Rate
Proposed Aocess Rate
Difference

18.05

8.00
,8 .00

Slaliol) Handling Charge,

9.96

Th!l Company is proposing that customers with more
than 30 Key trunks or 30 PBX trunks receive a discount of ·
tO% per trunk for each trunk over the initial 30 trunks if
the total trunks serve the same customer premise and ~re
billed to the same account. The disCount woold apply only'
for Flat Rate Local Service and not Usage Sensitive Service.

•

32.05

Pren'liSes Wiring Charge, each terminaUon

36.29

KEY AND PBX TRUNK DISCOUNT

96,001 10 384.000

•
Hospttal news

$39.05

Repair Visi! Charge, per occasion

$26.33

USAGE SENSITIVE SERVICE

Exchange
Access L1nes

Rate

Premises Visit Charge, per occas1on

$23.80
14.63
36 .29
4 .84 . ' 12 .49

$,10.44

Hi.~

Aesideoce

s 9.99

$11 .56
16.29
4.73

Pro,,sec Flat Aale

BusinesS

$29.30
39 .22
9.92

Residence
Ex1st1ng
Structure
Schedule 1
Schedule II

Proposed

Service Ordering Charge Subsequent, per occasion

Proposed Aat Rate
Difference

EXCHANGE RATE GROUPS

!·.:•

..•

614-ftJ-5101

"

•·

!
J

•
•
•
•

INDIVIDUALS-FEDERAL-STATE
OUT OF STAn RmRNS
BUSINESS - SMALL OR LARGE
PARTNERSHIPS
(ORPOUTIONS
• OIL AND GAS

�•
•

•
I .

Monday, January 11, 1988

Ohio

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SliOw Waleh II,,Nordol• SS
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Dr~&amp;a· •
Swant.H '71, N Cellini • ·
8yeiU1iore Mel!-.._ 1!, Fremeat,olee 4t

s..........u.

a.

New Yerk 1M, IIHM• t8

........La IM. DeveluMilll

w.-..pata L.\Cilppen11

"**
De•wr ••
lA L&amp;.n ••· IIdia• lA
111,

' ·•

N H. O..y PattentOa 5I

Tecumaell-. SOrt~t~ NW II

11110ra M, l!'.do11 II
~
Tel 8coU 11. B Cle SUw ,..
T•l O.r 'n, Da-*•ry
M
Tol Drn11blu •· Adrtu (MI) n
TCIJEmmBa,. f:t, lacU.a CMI) lapt•
Tree 1M Ule 11, Xelllla Wllloa I!
·'hhtskl'l' Sl, Q-at.._. II
'I'Wia Va1871, V~fVIew II
U•lolliowa
51, New Plllla 11
Upper SUII•IQ 'It, Bher VlllrJ 71

'

La-.'*

Oil leap Ill. U&amp;all tl
............
r.._....

._.. .... s.. A.tMMotJI
DdM Ill. Gelllea !&amp;Me"

s...., .. lleMita

......eel&amp;N...-Ie,.rl'2

La..,

8 . . . . . . . . . . . I!IH&amp;Ie ••

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

IAO..,_.ai ....... 1:11p.m.
Dener .a I"WIIlx, t: • p.m.
'heellar'• Gamet
NewYerfl atQneluii.•IPI

Urb... H.U.._N

V• Wert n. Una CC 51
V..talla Butler • . npp Clt:r tt
W Carrolliall 18. Mlam ... •l'l 411

....... a.lc:..........
.,......,• .a Mlhrulee. •IPl

wsaaem Nw 11, KJdre• ee.- oar ts
Wanu IFK 11, strllllllers U
Waraenllle u; CarDale 18
WtPeTraee IN, W~~pesvleldGosben

Geldu !bte M LA. Lallen. •l1ht

48

Wllllehalllt, Ucan Elm 81
Wooaier 81, t:.Dton 91!

NFL playoffs

Yo•p UnuJin II; Akron 811 ~II
\'oanaCaiChrlt, Bet~ver Valiey01r82
Zane Trace 4&amp;. Oreellhead U

NFL'J.1Qolf SellNule

..... s Bel!ll&amp;a

Zues~lle

NFC 11'1111 Card

13, W..-nn Ueal a

MJ....a 44, New Orlt. . 11
. · .urc .,... card
Ho-.. U. &amp;e•tle. {OT)

SM..., •• Bnlllt11
A.rc DlvWtl-.1 "a,off
ClevelllMI u, ...... poHa !I
NFt IMvt.le-.1 PIQofl

Glrla o•to HIP Sellool Buketball
B)' United Prea lalenaUoaal

s .......,,,....

•~•S•I"rucl.cott

II, Col H•mllloa 1Wp H
Arcadia IS.'Nortlllalllmore ft
Anu.... a

• ..., .. RH.Ita
NF( IM~- PIQoff
W_..IIIClo• tl, llrrolrap 11
AF&lt;: IMvt.io-.1 Pl.,-on ·
DeiiW:r It, . . . . . 11

111 Walnul 41, .leb•&amp;o- N' rlclp n .
•oom C.rreU N, Law:M&amp;er Flllher $l
Buckeye W Jl, w..-fteld Jl

.,... .,.

Clnal Wlncheel4!r II, Libert}' Unlon41
Cardl111lon 45, &lt;:elllerburc t1
Cenlt:n111e 1!, Sprtsc N S'l
ctn 8etOII 85, Col Wlllt:r'Mn II

NFC CllamJiiOMhlp
Ml~a&amp;WMhlll(ba,lt:•p.m.

Arc Champfoa.hlp

Col Hardey 14, CoiS 11
. Dalllbul')' Lakellkle II, MonroevUie J1
Fshilekl Union M, Llcldlll: BI.S1
F!d Ho«lldniJ et, Olo.-ter Trbnble Sl
Fort Fr)l'l! 11, MarieUa U

Clew!laad a1 Dener, ~p.m .
, ••. JJ

, . S.per lhtl!l
A.FfJ o.am.-n u. NJI'C Champklon at
~- Dlep. I p.m.

Gr•avllle 14, "•lllnsiOwa ss
Greenfield 54, N .... T~~,yler tl '
'•-*hall Alder a. MecMlllabltrr n
UddiiC v .. •. •eath tl
Loaaa Elm 11. IMikraport 48
Marin Hanll• M. Ne...n U
Marl I.._ N. R•ven• SouUieut Jt
M. . Pert')' n, M... ,l•cboll II
Mqavtlle 11. Phlo II
Meadowbrook 11. a.clle)'e Tnll M
Me11u .... New Ledartoa •
N C~ato• Gle.Oak &amp;1, A.IU&amp;IIC! Sl

College scores
011. C.Uep Buketb.tl Result•
lly Ullld Press lllterMUDMI

.laa. I

.

~·-··
M, Ollie
St • .. Green ..
E.•
lee.......
aowu

..... .,71.•n••.U.aaellllp.a 71
ILea&amp; Ill

Wea~r•

~ ..... MieiiiiU

Tt~do •

All,.. .. fo•ploWe State II

Prepsco~

..,. oe;lt RIP Sehool a..ketball
• . , Ualled Pret• lllter.aUoMI

' s......,.,....

.Wa a, Cel')'·Rh' ... n

P•rk:k Beary 11, McComb JJ
FtcMrh111111011 ft, Dlllllware ff

Tear• VllleJ H. •~ V•••ts
Ot:r 'npPe M, ..... Un'-11
Trl
Cl'tollawllle ..
'4 Upper 8Udallll:r H, s...,- M
uuea u, Bebroa
M
.. W Jhtlltlapm, n, ShM'IIIu a.
W-• Rlwen1ew41, NewCoaeo'I"'U
· WdiiMw 11, BeiJft 11
w.. ~to~ellall11. Col Bt:bool Fer Girts a

v..,. ...

,pp

La....._.

z-.tn. a. z...e.vtltr .._er.u ca

Fill THE

'

,

"CAN

YOU USE

OUR

POMEROY - South Central ual challenge.
Area Aglow Women will hold
.three days of special meetings,
· The schedule for the "Three
Mon,day, Tuesday and Wednes- Days Aglow" Is as follows:
day, with Susan Boucard of
Mollday, Jackson, 10 a .ni. to
Cheboygan, Mich . as the noon with Boucard, 2 .to 4 p.m.,
speaker.
perSQnal ministry, and 7 to 9 p.m
The meetings are open to all Boucard at the New life !;hrls Uan
women of an denominations. Center, 1981 Stan4:!pjpe Road,
Boucard serves the Aglow Inter· Route 35. 3.5 miles from Route
national Board as. a U.S. field 35·551ntersectlon; Tuesday, Lan·
reptesntatlve 'traveling exten- · caster, 7 to 9:30 p.m. Susan
slvel&gt;' sharlngwlth women scrip· Boucard, Red Carpet Inn, Stringtural encouragement and spirit- town Road, Exit 100 oft:l71 South.

.

CHICAGO (UPI) -In the past
five seasons, the Wasbblgton
Red.sklnl bave gone to tbe Super
Bowl twice and to tbe NFC
cbamplonshlp game three times.
'nleir coach bas tbe belt winning
percentage among. active ·
coacbes, and they have tbe most
postsea&amp;QD victories of any team
since 1982,
So why Is everybody $0 sur·
prtsed tiM!y're going to the NFe.
IItle game 8$'aln?
The Redsklns could not figure
that out Sunday, after a 21-17
playotf victory over the Chicago
Bears. Tl)ey overlooked tbelr
OW!I Inconsistent play during the
re!Nlar season and their losing
two of the final three games.
Instead, they pointed to an 11-4
record, NFC East title and a
second straight playotf victory
over the Bears.
•'Nobody gave us any attention
· or . respect," l'tedsklns tackle
.Mark May said. •"!'he Bears
·overlooked us this year,Just like
last year."
''We're the Rodney Danger·
fields of the NFL; nobody respects us," quarterback Doug
WIUiams added.
Washington will play at home
against MiJiilesota In the title
game Sunday. They defee ted the
VIkings 27·24 In overtime at
Minneapolis to · end the regular
season, but Mlnnesolll has since
upset ., New Orleans and San
Francisco In the playoffs.

.

HELP?''

Do you need a vacation from 24 hour care of
:
· a loved ona1
. ·
Let Amerlcare Pomeroy Nuraing and
Rahabilhation Centen' undemanding..
profeuional ltatf temporarily relieve you of
your heavy reaponalbility.
~cceptint retldenta for short term respi!a care.
Call Sonya Wolfe at 814-992-8608 ·
For Con~«,~ltlng and Information

Curlup with
.

Wednesday, Lancaster&gt;all day
mlnl·re!reat, $10 registration lee
for the enUre day to Include
brunch and luncheon, with $4 for
evening session only.
Sessions will be held from 9: 30

· TO PlAU &amp;~~· u cau nJ,ft u
..,_..,tin
,_AT I oUl N.S r.a
I AJl. ._.. IIIOGI s.&amp;nMDIY
UOSIIs.AT

_......... .-........
n•
1---!---.-·-·-·
. .. -·. . .
!"-. . --·--·

, 1o.-n
104'11
104'11

,. oa.,.

a.m to 11:30a.m .., a ••one on one"
sharing with Boucard and area
officers with a light brunch being.
served; 11:30 a .m . to 1:30 p.m.
Bouca'rd speaking, 2 to 4 p.m .
luncheon, 4 to 6 p.m. personal
.ministry and Intercession, and 7 ·
to 9 p.m. with Boucard.

....

,

....

••

...
- ••
ttiM

...
.....
M1.•

·--:··=.. -

·-----

tit.•
t i l .•
- ·•

- ~--

:•'
I

abook,

I
~
I
!•

B-u siness ·Services

'

As we start the new year let's t--~--------T,;;;.;;;;.,;;;;;::,;;;:,.;:;..::;..:;:.._-r::..:::;.::;_.:,..=,.;::.:;;;,;:::..___.:.,__.;;..~
brary story . hour has been
changed to Tuesday evenings at go .over some of the materials
•
The holidays are over and 6:30 p.m. There are stories, /and services that your library
Listening Devices
HOUSE FOR RENT
everyone has settled down to a crafts, fla 0nelboard stories and
brings to you : Books, (flcllon and
· 107 LOCUST )T.
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;Service!
normal pace. The new year has · many oilier things to entertain
non·flcllon); magazines, (most
POIIIIIOY-915-3561
Evaluations For.AII Ages
CJ
arrived cold and snowy. A good your little ones . on Tuesday
We can repair lfld r~·
popular titles); !Urns, videos,
combination for curling liP with a ··evenings. · Getting a child ac·
core radiators anlfl •
a11dlos. j:!hlldren' s bOok and book. lEN'S APPUANCE
~ . SAM.KOCH,M.S • .
good babk, which Incidently your qualnted with the library at an , tapes; camt&gt;ras; 111)11 projec·
SEIYICE'
heater cores. We caii
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
local library can proylde readily.
early age often leads to a love lor
tors;· lnCQme. tax torms; talking · ·' 985·3561
·. also acid boil and rocf
Also with the new year, brings . books and reading, which can
: (614) 446-7619 Ill (614) 992-2104
book equipment; large · print '
A.II M k
out radiators. We also- ·
thoughts of Income tax. The only be an asset to the child as . ·books; copier service; Home417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
• 81
repair Gas Tanks. :;;
library has most of the more they grow up.
I
boUnd service; Interlibrary
•W01horo •Dtihwaohoro
- Gallipolis, Oltio 45631 ...
popular forms and can m11ke you
A reminder ....the library has loan; Literacy Tutors; Book-by•Ranges •Refrigerators
PAT HILL FORO~
or at
•Dryers •Freezers
any form they do not have In · 16mm films which can be bor· -M ail; Bookmobile service; Story
992-2196
.,
Veterans Memorial Hos1pital
bulk.
rowed by the patron lor use as a Hours ; Reference materials . A
Middleport. Ohio :!
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,
WE !Rl .US£D AIPUAIICES
1 -.13-tlo.
Rernembt&gt;r, , the Pomeroy li·
program or personal use.
lot of reasons to come in and
,
check us out!
./

By Ruth Powers .

Rfi~OTil .~ •J
:

z

,.,.

Alfred community happenings
&gt;

' .••

'

.

Ruth Campbell .

Wolfe Pen- happening!

Saturday's scores

Local bowling

IJ-11-87

HaHtime shootout scheduled at Rio

TEAM

Mlddl~ort

WON LOST

Trophies . .. .......... .... ... 78
Dairy uPtn , .. .. ... .. . ..... ...... .... .. .... 77
Shelly o ..... ........... ............ .. ... .... 72
Ohio PallE'4 C .. ................... .'.... ,. ... 67 .
Chateau Bl&gt;iluty Salon .... ....... ... .... 60

50
51

JAN.4,1Q8
. .
HIJch St&gt;ri£'S T('am - WoOOys RollE'f'S·

I.

1734; Pat Hill Ford-1698: Carpenlers
Vldeo·l640,
HIRh Game Tt'am - Woodys Rollers·
671: Pat Hill Ford-600; Carpenters Vldeo577.
HIRh Series - Ron Smlth·528: Larry
Tucker·498; Rod Walker·446; Ellen
Hatfteld·420; ~Orrlta Atkins, Terri
Whitman-417: Ann Splres-405.
Hlah Gamt- - Ron Smlth-192; Tim
CundtU, Larry Tucker-184; Everetl
$chuler-l80: Terri Whltman-168; Loretta

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Ell, NOSE &amp; THROAT
·GENERAL ALLERGIST
·"WE HA~E HEARlNO AIDS"

ClEARANCE
SALE
4 RACKS

.Holiday visitors
Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Ebersbach and Chris
were Edna Roush, Coonle.
Marla, Stephanie .a nd Brld~t
Rousli, New Haven, Y{. Va.;
Joyce Carson, , Eddie and Carol
Carson, West Columbia; George,
Bev. and Cody Knapp, Lelgha
and John Gregory, Letart, W.
Va.; Kim "smith and David
Ebersbach, West VIrginia Wes. leyan College, Buckhannon, W.
Va.

Public Notice

$5 99

A~o . $799

MON., TUES. I WED. ONLY

•

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
AID .
~ TOP OF THE STAIRS
_
l11 • 2ND .
.
.
POMEIOY
.

Public Notice ·

992 6720

70 Hurrl Co•r!

~ '·fl I"'' q11rnr

. NEW AND USED .

1.\\,'H' ''0 ~fOP('
5··~ I'~' qwn•

WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

•• '' f. I·

? ·•n rJ (r;rd• fl/1!
w !h ti' &lt; nrl orod PI'" ··1••
' 11

••Titl

"1' '"'-'-""

IHH&gt; •.kJI'

I !W '··'ll&lt;Jmr• p~r
BrnQ&lt;l !~HI!!II

• Lio:. ltOJ·Dl hp. 1fit1i1

CALL 742·2315

-- ~

PUILIC

Husband
Children and
Grandchildren
Nieces and Nephews
Sister-in-law
In Memoriam

In lovina memory of
Charles F. Stewart
who God called home
on Jan. ll. 1979.
The angels are guarding
a silent grave.
For in it lies a precious
one.
Your dllys of pain are ·
past
You have swnt rest at

last

For God has called you
home.
loved and Silly missed
'by W'tft. Children,
Grlltdchildren lltd

FIREWOOD'•

PARTS ·

Gnt&gt;"~l

12-4·'87-1 mo. d.

NeW loc:ation:

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio ·457.60

SALES &amp; SERVICE..
We Carry Fishiftg Supplies

108
E. Moln

P'ay Your Phone

. iol.l..l

and Cable Bills Here

POMEROY, OH.

992-2269 '
RUTLAND- H? story home
in Rutland. 3 bedrooms,
,bath and storage building.
Front sitting porch, all on a
nice lot. · ONLY $19,900.

IUSINESS PHON!
16141 992-USO
IESIDINCE PHONE
16141 992·77S4

..

"

.MIDDLEPORT,- Unique 3
bedroom home [n goo:!
condition. Equipped kit(hen, washer and dryer
included. Fireplace, front
sitting porch, I 'h baths.
$18,500.

.

NEW LISnNG- POMEROY
- 3 bedr09f11 trailer just out
of town. W.oodburner, I car
gl(age, equipped krtchen,
AC, fenced yard. Also has
workshop wrth hookup lor a
woodburner ·in the garage.
Fruit trees. MAKE OFFER
.
. $15,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Two ~nrt
apartment building ·Ready
to be moved into. 3 bedroom
units should ·rent for
$200MO. PLUS EACH. PRICE
REDUCED. MAKE OFFER
$1G,900,
SYRACUSE - Brick and
fr1111e r111ch type home with
basement. I car garage, 3
bedrooms, large level lot.
Fenced area. Good condi·
lion. Call forappt. $39,500.

'

)

••
•

'

l
!,

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

- Ad doni and remodeling •

- Roofing and gutt_,. work :·
- Concrete wOrk '

,

- Plumbing arid electrical
work

(free Eetimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill'
992-6215 or 992-73t4·

Pomeroy, Ohio

..

4·15-' 85 I~

RACINE
FIRE DEPT•

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL'!

Fn&lt;ilorv

Choke' .

I,.i

. 992-3410

I

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOit
FILL Dl RT

'

10·8·tfc

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

SLAUGHTER

Alto JrutMiuloti

WHIT£ HILL ID.
RUTLAND; OHIO
742·2035 . ..
12-31-87 1 mo. pd.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
Day or Nighl .
NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16·86·tfn

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
•U. S. Rf. 50 EAST

GUYSVIllE, OHIO
614-662-3821

Authorized Jahn Dooro,
Now Holhlnd, lush Hog
Ferm EqllipmSIII .

Doalor

Ft,. E••IPiillt
Ptrft &amp;

POMEROY ~ Beauliiul
modern kitchen compli·
millis this 3 ~- home
w~h 1 decll Full biSIItllett~
lots of closet space. Nice
woodwork. PRICE REDUCED.

Roger Hyseil
Garage

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
JERRY'S
CUSTOM

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

REPAIR

PH. 992-5.6 82
or 992-7121
6-17·tfc

GUN SHOOT
EVERY .
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB :
10·9·tfn

DON'T I£T YOUI EUC
TIICAL PROII.IMS IE:".t-~
COME A SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL

:. "ii: 't' D&amp;C ELECTRIC
Ron Diles or
Gary Cummins

992·6226
Mlddl~ort
12·7•'171fn

THE DAilll SHOP
Middleport, Ohio

IS FOR SAlE
If inttrlltld ~tot~ by.

I.

IEPTIC SYSTEMS a

...... ..,.h.

BACK HOE WORK

9P.o4ttt
'ta...ma
"•ha••• ',.a.tfR
1

••

RACINE, OHIO

IMui'td/Uc....

Jl

.

,

IV14/87 I mo.

· DEN.N.V.CO.N.GO

$42 .~.

'r' · ~·.

Per Pickup Load :
· Delivered ·
BILL SLACK '•·
614-992-2269
Evenings

GUN SHOOT

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

LETART AREA - Appx. 2
acre mini·larm with small
barn, shed, plus a 1978
modular unil..;ith·3 bedrms,
satelltte dish. Drilled water
well.
· $24,000.

'

$3500 . )

I J?!l / lln

Basham Building

RACINE - Main Street Close to everything. Cute 3
bedroom home on a level lot
Carport, •slorage building.
Close to shopping, church,
schools.
$19,900.

MIDDLEPORT - Two to
three bedroom home located in town. L~vel lot.
carpeting and other nice
features . MAKE OFFER.
$19,000.

Locust, Oak, Cherry:',

YOUNG'S ,

Reai .Estate General

oPOIIEROY - Just out of
town! Over 13 acres of land.
great .building s~es . older
hou!e on property needs
repair. Agood buy at
$9,200.

'Dave Campbell,

•:

v.w.

MIDDLEPORT - Here is a
cute one ftoor plan 3
bedroom home, nice kitchen
~nd bath: Shed, equipped
krtchen.
$16,500.

Brotr.r.

FOR JUST

S3.25

Christmas DaY visitors of Mr.
Christmas Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. J: R. Murphy and
and Mrs. Charley Smith were
Peggy weri' ~bert Murphy, · Mrs. Iva Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Robbie, Jlnny and Chad, Racine;
Doyle Knapp, Langsville, Mr .
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs,
and Mrs: Charles · Knapp, local;
Adam. Eric, and Dickie, Trim·
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp, ·
MARY ANN RANKIN
. ble; Mr. and Mrs. John E , Michelle and Amy, Racine. Kall
Mjp'phy, Chris, Mr. and Mrs.
Knapp &amp;nd Barbara Ifatfleld
Joseph . Evan~. TYson and Joria· were,evening, visitors.
than; Racine; Mrs. Greg Davis,
Mr . and Mrs'. Howard Thoma,
Ashll, Joshua, and Mlrtnda; Mrs.
1•5·
Sr.
were Christmas dinner guests
1.:
Debbie Bashan and Cassandra of
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Lasrry Barr,
Mary Ann Rankin celebrated Florida. VIsiting In the afternoon
David
and
Michelle of Rutland ..
her .fourth birthday on Wednes· was Mrs. Iva Johnson.
day at the home of her parents,
John and Connie Rankin,
Tuppers Plains.
The Boss Is Away So
A Strawberry Short Cake
•
theme was carried out. AttendWe Are At Play
Ing were her brothers. Jeff and
David Rankin, and Mr. and Mrs.
I
Leroy Fryar and Brian, Mr. and
Mrs. Tony Jones. Mr: and Mrs.
David Stover, Mr. ~nd Mrs. 'Bill
Pullins, Melva Eblin and Kll)l,
Lee Shutts, Maude Gray. and
Julia McCoppln.
to
Sending gifts were Mr. ·and
Mrs. Jack Richardson, Esther
. Off Everything
S1lllth. Judy Jones, and Florence
2
In the Deslg11ar Boutique
Ruth:

300fo 5 0°/o

"·
A free ticket from any Gallla 3·polnt shot a~(i a hlllf·couri shot
:;&amp;;
61
·ln'25
seconds
to
win
the
car.
County New Car Dealers AssociM
In addition to the boop shoot
ation member will qualify every .
Stewart's Gun Shop ... .. .. .. , .. ..... . .... 6
26
Rio Grande basketball fan for the contest, the (lealers are provld·
High GBiml': Reba Board-205; Dottl e
opportunity to win a new car lng popcorn during the game at
Will·l92; Jackie Walblm·l87.
no charge to the fans.
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
. High Series: Reba -Board-523; Dottle
WIII-!U6; Jacklf'Waltum-447.
As a proud sponsor of Rio
A donation made by the local
Team HJJ(h Game; Shelly· Co. - 5~.
Atklns~164; Judy Musser-162.
Grande College athletics, Jim dealers to the Rio Grande Boos·
Team High SE-ttes: Shelly ~o .- 1486 .
Mink CheV)'olet-Oldsmoblle. ters Club has made possible the
Norris Northup Chrysler-Dodge- distribution of ' tree tickets and
Plymouth, Smith Blllck·Pontlac the cuntlnuatlon .of athletics at
. MONDAY TKIPIJCATES
and Turnpike of Gallipolis are Rio Grande as a major, source of
1J.IIII-81 ·
.
unity
and
entertalnllll!n
t
for
the
offering as a major prtze a new
TEAM
WON LOST
car valued at approximately community. Rio Grande Head Chateau Beauty Salon ~ ..... .. ~, .. .. ...., .. &amp; 2
$12,000 at the Rio Grande-Urbana Coach John Lawhorn com- DalryQu&lt;oen .............. ,., .. ............... . f 4
Co ................... .. ...... ...... ...... . f
4
mended the· Gallla County new Sllelly
game.
,
OhloPalleiC .... .... .. .... ......... ........ ... f
4
/
.
car dealers on this outstanding Middleport Trophies ......... .. ,........... 4 4
Tickets are free and are effort. "Th.ls support by Gallla Slewart'sGjnShop .... ............ ........ 2 6
available now at all four car County new car dealerships Is
High Game: Reba Board·178; Dottle
dealers. Only a limited supply of appreciated by Rio Grande Col· Wlll-184; O.bblePhelp•l81. .
High Series: Reba BoariHIO; Dotlle
tickets will be given away, as lege and·Community College and
Dobbie Phelps-49'1.
Lyne Center.s eats only2,000fans. Its athletic programs," Lawhorn Wll~493;
Team HIRh Gamr. Ohio Pallet Co.·S:M.
Team Hitch Ser 1..: Ohio Pallet Co. ·139.
A hoop shoot contest during the said.
baHtlme, using the 25 second
clock, will determine the win~r
For further details and tree ~;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;~~
' =!;;;!~~~~~~~-----.
tickets, stop by any one of the
of the car. lt partlclpan t must , four
local dealerships between ·
-:
make a lay-up, a foul shot, a now and Tuesday.
·

,JOHN A. WADE, .M.D. Inc.

Her loving face I hope to
see again,
the days have
passed away;
Sleep on, dear wife. and
take your rest.
They.miss you most who
. loved you best.

Ranki.n blrthday·
celebrat-ed .

...._,.,..,'"••

I

HILLSIDE
MUZZLlLOADING
•s~~o, SHOP

Sunday School attendance DeMr. . and M~s. C!1~ck Sargent
Mr. Wilber Parker, Mr. and
cember 27 was 27; church,attend· · and new soil returned home from Mrs. Joe Poole and Will enter·
•AI\'IMO
ance, 18. 0~ January 3 Sunday
Florida. ·
.
·talned with two ·lamlly dinners
•GUNS
School attendance was 24;
Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs . . during the christmas holidays.
•MUZZLELOADING
church atJendance, 14.
Lester Keaton were Mr. and Mfs. The house was decorated In a
SUPPLIES
'
Robert Keaton, Bobby. ,Matthew, · Christmas motif with a creche,
Alfred carolers made 13 visits
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
Rt. 124 Acron from ·
In the community on December
and Kevin, Oak Hill; Mr. and lighted tree and Santa Claus
Happy Hollow Rd.
21. Carolers were Lloyd Dillin·
Mrs. Don ~eaton, Cleveland. The wall painting by M~s. Poole. · On
RUTLAND
ger, Ruth and Debbie Brooks,
Don Keatons also visited her December 20 guests were Mr.
Nina .Robinson, and Marilyn
sister and husband, Geneva and and Mrs. Samuel Michael, Sti614-742-2355
12/14/1 mo.
Roblnson. .
Howard Nolan, Syracuse.
versvllle; · Lenora Leifheit, DoTim Spencer and Nina Robin·
Mrs. Wilber Parker visited rothy and Michael, Rock
son received pl~s lor perfect
Lucille Smith and guests Opal Springs; Louise Michael, Mr.
Sunday School attendance In
Hollon and family on Christmas a!ld Mrs. Gary Michael, Mat·
•VINYl SIDING
1987.
. ,
, . Day., Miss 'Smith's niece and thew, Kimberly, and Todd, near
The .community and ,church , nephewweregueslslnherho!J\e; Chester.
•ALUMINUM SIDING
wert&gt; saddened by the death of
Kathy Frletag, Mary Elizabeth
On December 27 guests were · ' •BLOW~ IN
Don Robinson on December 27.
and Susan, North Canton; WHits Parker, Parkersburg,
INSULAnON
Many relatives and friends .at·
George Reuter, Akron. .
West VIrginia; Homer Parker
·BISSELL
tended funeral home visitation ·
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Poole and and Suzy Carpenter, Rutland;
and funeral services. Mr. Robin-, Will visited Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tom Hysell, Middleport; April
SIDING CO.
son had been a member of the Avis and Bob Christmas morn• ' and Todd Lewis, Sacramento,
New Ho..eo Bvllt ·
community for 60
lng. Other guests were Mr. and
California; . Aaron Parker, Co·
"Free Estimates"
Mrs. Larry Spencer and Mike, Iambus; Mr. and Mrs. ·Howard
PH. 949-2860
·
Parker. VIolet and Dennis
· Racine.
or 949-2801
James Kelly, Amerlcare Nurs- Parker, all of Long Bottom; Mr.
No Sunday Callo
lng Home, spent the Sunday · and Mrs . Robert Parker.
. Hl·tfn
before Christmas at his home Marietta.
here. · ,
.
Mrs. Wilber Parker received ·
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Stearns telephone calls from her sons at 2 · In Memoriam
spent Chrl$t~as with the!r ,, ·Chrlstrnas·tlr!le; Edward, Eve·
daughter, April Neeley and farn, ret!, W.ashlngton, and. Eric,
In loving memory of
lly, F,alrborn.
·
'
Stockton, California.

.i'

Washington defeated Chicago ·
" '· ~
23·17last year, but llilst 17-0 to the
...,.,' • '•"£.
.Ai' .,..
.... ...
New York Giants In the NFC
Championship Game.
l
On their way to the title game,
the Redsklns ended Jim McMahon's Invincibility and Walter
Payton's career.
Field. 'i'eammage DenniS Woodherr:r (46) cele·
WINNING TOUCHDOWN - The WaablnP,n
The Bears were left to wonder
bratea tbe acore. The Kedaklns will face the
Redaklns'
Darrell
Green,
right,
races
Into
tbe
end
what happened-to the team that
Vti&lt;IIIP
next Sunday In the NFC cbaiiJpionshlp
to
ecore
the
winning
touchdown
on
a
5~:rard
zone
won the Su!)er Bowl two ~s
punt
return
for
a
21·17
upaet
victor:r
over
tbe
game.
(UPI)
ago.
,.
·
Bears In Sunday's NFC pla:rolf game at Soldier \
"Two In a row to the same team.
.In the . playoffs Is tough to
swallow," Bears center Jay
Broncos 34, Oilers 10
assisted with a series of turnov, ments later, Moon killed an
Hilgenberg sald..,"We could have
DENVER - The defending ers •. penalties and poOrly exe- Oilers . drive by throwing an
·
Interception to · Mecklenburg,
played at home again next week. champion New York Giants cuted plays.
Broncos quarterback John El- and the Houston defense could
I wish I could explain what never were a factor. and now the
•
San Francisco 49ers and Chicago way completed 14 ol25 passes for not slow down the typically hot
happened, bUt I can't."
,
Here's what happened: Dar· Bears also have been removed 259 yards and two touchdowns, Elway.
"Now we have got to the one
rell Green returned a punt 52 from Super Bowl contention.
both TDs coming In the first half
Isn't It about time, Denver to tight end Clarence Kay for 27 we've been looking forward to,"
yards for a tie-breaking touchElway said, referring to next
down , and the Redsklns bar. coach Dan Reeves suggests, and 1 yards.
Elway ended the sprlngllke week's meeting against Cleverassed McMahon Into three Inter· somebody start thinking about
afternoon by runnqtg·3 yards for land. "It's going .·t o be a barn·
ceptlons and five sacks.
the Broncos?
Payton gained 85 yards on 18
"We're .not doing this with another score and Rich Karlls burner. Sure, we're going to be
carries, but It wasn't enough to 11Jirrors, you know," Reeves said added field goals of 43 and 23 home, but we still have to play
perfect ball, just like we were on
extend the NFL's rushing cham· , following yet another Denver . yards.
pion's career. Payton announced victory In tronr or' some of the
Denver's' first. touchdown the road.''
before the season he would retire most fariatlcal fans In pro foot- . came on a .1-yard run by Ge1)e
Denver's victory ,foilowed the
after this, his 13th NFL year.
ball. :'We have a lot of good Lang two plays after Houston lost Broncos' norm~! ' pattern. 'They '
the ball only a 's tep away from Its . led the league In· takeaways this
He finishes with an NFL record . players, t,oo."
season with 47, and got tnree
16,726 yards.
Reeves' Broncos clobbered goal line.
Having been .backed up to Its more Sunday. Elway bit his
"We had opportunities to put Houston In the AFC divisional
the game away and we didn't," playoff round Sunday, taking own 4 on Its opening possession, share of big plays, lnclud~ a
Payton said. "In the last 13 advantage of early Oilers mlsc.u e Houston tried to create a big play 55-yard throw to Vance Johnson,
years, I've had a lot of good In rolling to a 34-10 decision that by having quar.terback Warren a 25-yarder to Lang, a 25-yarder
moments and a lot of bad put the Broncos In the AFC Moon throw a laterai pass to to Steve Sewell and the 29-yarder
·to Kay for the second Denver
moments. Overall, It's been a lot championship game lor the se- running back Mike Rozier.
of fun," ·
Rozier, who had lined up to the touchdown.
cond straight year.
McMahon Was a winner In 28 ot
Denver made It to the Super far left of the forma lion, hoped to
· his last 29 starts and had not lost a Bowl last season by downing the take advantage of fqur Houston
sU~rt fn postseason. Williams,
Browns In ClevelaiJd Stadium, . blockers who quickly assembled
lotn~ S&amp;ale 84, 1Jay1611 Ill
who began the season as lilsu· and next Sunday's rematch will In ·rront of .him. Those' expecta~
f1o~d• lnMraat ..oal lll. Xavier 81
•
a.www.w~ 11. Ottflrbdalt
ranee for 1986 Pro Bowler Jay be played before ~nothe~ sellout · tlons went down the dra'ln when
t
Helllelbei'J II, .......am • '
Schroeder, outpassed McMahon throng In Mile High Stadium, tbe ball bounced off Rozler.!s
Mo•l Ua.011II, MUietla Ill (ol)
Wllfllaberr U. 011• Nerillei'D • .
Sunday as the Bears' leader where the Broncos have won28 of :chest and'Ilenver's Steve Wilson
hhlaDll M. Keii~~~:Q wes~e,.. a
•
failed to come through when his their last 33 games.
recovered .
Allepeayl-. 01111 W.teraa II (tvll
'
Kuyoa 11, Cue llfterve ft
teammates needed him most.
"I think we've got to be the
"What more can 1 do,." Moon
Obcrll• n, Hiram 81
"I guess Patton didn't show up favorite," said Denver line- said. "It was a big turning point
W...r II, De ....• M
C. .arriUe 111, O..kl Damta&amp;can 1'1:
today," Williams said of backer ,Karl Mecklenberg, who In the game, built wasn't the type
McMahon.
provided' a key Interception Sun- of play that we couldn't recover
Rio Ora .. e 81, MD•I Venoa 78
Wabti 11, Urbuall
. Williams, named the starter day. •'We beat Cleveland In their from."
,
II... _ II, Wlknlqtcm 7t
over Schroeder last week by back yard last year, and I think
As It turned 1lUt, however,
~e 11. O, ..e It
Central st az, Palrntoai k 7t ,,
coach Joe Gibbs, completed 14 of we'll beat them worse this year. HoustOI! could not recover. Mo29 lor 207 yards and an 18-yard If we play as .well as we can, I
TD to Clint Didier. McMahon .don't think anybody can beat
completed 15 of 29 for 197 yards us."
Denver made It look easy
.and a 14·yard TD to Ron Morris to·
'
Sunday, although the Oilers
·
glve Chicago a 14-0 lead.
MONDAY TKIPIJCATES '
MONDAY NITE MIXED

(All (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244 .

.

library line.r

.

CLA~~IFIED AD~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Aglow meetings planned ·for three days

lledskins, Bron~«M ·poSt playoff Wins

I

Mec......,.rtll. ...... Pial• •

u ..... ....
........... "...._..... &lt;.,..&gt;

1M Allplel at Ml.-.ota,

w.-1..-,ae-..48

..

NA.'I'ION.U.IIOCKD LEAGUE

..

.

.... CanoJJ .. Dor · - - ·
wate''M

-~·..':."' II
~::r-·

"CJIIIeC

71. ..... .

...........................
........... ,., u.. ...

2

• Gill.....
•

....

DI&gt;QoriZ,-51
DQ1t811.c:.Mwatw7&amp;,
DI&gt;Do-IIE,TeiU-IIiJ··

.'¥loll*-" aoot-1
; •v•......,,,_II
co.-. ~.-.

II

,..Dist •

ftlnlllf, , ......

:

aa

,

Colli a. ........ .
Ct1W... 'M, ......... . . . . U

w

)W

I

~

• ....... v....
,.uu
, ...
··~

. . . . . . . . . . .,

Cllll
.................. . .

Monday, January 11, 1988

1/2 PRKEsAt.l

GOING ON

�•

•
Monday, JanU.rv 11. 1988
BORN LOSER

I

Nicoiot -lu"""hod
- d.
- ··
Adub
· lief, •
-e
No
poto, Colt 114-441-0UII.

lArge 2·3 1~ . ..0.• . " - of
atcnae. Hendtraon .... Cell
114-448-7021. .
.

P~tldng.

814-441-0001.

........ h...

Col

MON.. JAN. 11

......

./I

'

I:GO (I) Cluy Uke • I'Oll

'.!

ew. Cll eCil a

woolt-.

...... ........ Coli 814-4414031., 441·1111.

1:$0.

i I

,. '

rl"'"'

t

care to trade the

to 22.
valuel

for

great pattern

Patlem includes
cap and long I 18 018li0p,
slim and full e'rstk waist
I

s~irts.

11

a fork, 'sir?~
18

Help Wanted

DenTu hi now acc.ptlnllpPu..
cationt for expwllncH r.
PND••a. Must be
with
Individual to rlltUMI. fot' ~for·
mation tnd ~~ppointment, phone
DtnTu- 114-441-8178. Hr•:

f.,.•

IN Y&amp;Ill resodenlsaddsailslall .)
s.ndlo:

10 AM·I PM, M·F.

AI ' d 1 Mail

Bol 40GO, Nlln 1111.1 '4ti20:
4GIID.Prtnt .......,'-ddreaa.
Zlp1 Sil8, Plllllin Nu-.

Deyclt'e C.nt., h• poe•kJn
open for 2 mOrt children. Htvt

.........,... Coli 114·448·8147.

Plumbing. con-=rete, c•penter,

wehll~. ' FrM tttim~~tu. C.ll

114·211·1210.

GET PAID for reading bookll
noo per titla Wrkll: ACE - 33f.
181 S . Linoolmvay. N. A.orw. ll

, FAEEOFFER
3 O!aft Books (value $8.85) '
whln you order 0111 ollhe
S2.e5 bookllilled below.
111--Haltpi1 Clochat .•

bo,_.....,

lncome. plu1 c•h .
benefits to m ..ure person in
Gallipolis ......
of
.. ,_ience. writ• M.D. Reid,
Am•ic.M Lubf'IC8nls Co.. lox
426, Deyton, Ohio 41401.

Rev••••

11Hay Ripple Ctoc:hel

.

Addtt .051ati

· grNndlng.

Ann uu nr. e111 enls

·

EXCELLEfiT WAGES. fcir - ·
Hlln'lbly work electron-

lea. crefls. Oth••· Info 1 ;104841 -0091 Ext. 2987. OpM 7
diY•· CALL NOW!

SEARCH

,Announcements

I

~EOPEN

The VMIII(Ie of Rio Gtllndl h•
i'eOp•ed the Merch for Clerk of
Couna. Appllc.t6on1 • r..um•
M Mnt to: P.O. lox 343,
ATT: Angi ~ Seagrav... Rto

c•

'

IN F, ORMATION WANTED ·

About Sift• Lew;., wlf• Polly
Gardnlf retidenh of ·Oallia
Co4nty, 18ot0 ··o 1,860. P•Wits
pf f!l.th.n Lllwll born in Otaego
Co., N.V.: Vernon L..wil lot64

.

Gr1nda Ohio 415174. D11dllne:
Noon, Jan. 14. Applicant must
be bondabl•

Business
Opportunity

. I NOTICE I
T"E QHIO VALLEY PUBLISH.
recommend~:

th .. you
do bUain•• wflh peopte you
know, end NOT to Mnd moMr'
through the mill uml you h.,.
inv•tia•ect the oK•Ing.

lNG CO.

R•taur~~nt

for 181• 1390 East·
ern Aw. C ..l,l14-44t-3077 or

446-e712.

23

Profeuionel
.Services

31

Y:! Doberman, 1f2 German Sh•

Young Llicty to livl·in •n'd hlllp
care for little boy. Call 8 t 4-446891.8 .
Someone to wetch 3 ye• old girl
In my home. Call Evenings.

4 BR .. fir apiece. fuiiHIMI'Ient. 3
mi. so. of O.llipoWs. t32,500.
Call Drta-&amp;1-4·448-111&amp;, efl•

68502.

lincoln. NE.

'

Reduce ufe and f•t with
GoS.u tablets end E-Vap "water pills" •.Fruth Pharm'!:CV. '

,,

4'
•••

pherd. 3 mos. md. Call814-446-

3049.

6 puppi• to gNe .way to.good
home. 'h Cocker Sp.,..iel. C.ll
614-742-2369 .
.
Fi11e cute pi.ppi• pan.Pelcing•e
6 wks. old. 138 Uyne St. N.w

Haven or cll,l 3041o-882-3392.
Half German . Shepherd pup,
epprox 8 months old, 304-8713648 eft• 6:00 pm• or 896 ·

34eO.

6

Lost and Found

LOST: Female Boxer in vicinity

of At. 68el: 35. Call614.448-

4206.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

W8demiP(er' s Auction SerViceavi'iltble at your convenience
and locations. Marlin Wedemeyer AuctiDn&amp;M· 814-24f)-

6162.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pav cash fOf late model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink ChiN.·Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

•

614-446-3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
an&lt;t newer used
Smith
Buic:M ·Pontiac, 19, 1 Ee1tern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614-446·
2282 .

c••·

WANTED TO BUY: U18d wood
&amp; coal hea1:ers. Swain's Furniture, lrd. &amp; Oli\18 St. Gallipolis.
C'a11814 -446· 3159.
Wanted to buy- Used furniture
and antiques. Will buy entire
household furnishing. Marlin

Wedem.,yer- 614-245-5152.

3 acres o r IMs ~.Vith water, on
lend contract. 8500 down .
S200 a mo. In CIBV sehool
district. Call 614-2156-8&amp;87, 8
PM· 11 PM .

WANTED TO BUY · Centennial

Book Gal!ipolil, Ohio print8d in
1980. Vernon Lewi1, 3454
Grimlby lane Lincoln, NE .

ee502 .
Buving Standing
~ 14 - 379- 2758 .

'fih..ber.

Call

Buying deity gold; silver coins.
rings. jewelry, rterlin. Wire, old

coin1. l•ge currency. Tap prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614-

992·3476

Raw fur, beef and dew hid•.
· Qyn Sing and Yellow root. We
hwe wheet end nite lite•.
Trapping IUppliM for ule.(8uying uted trtpl) . L••t d._- to buy
fur. Feb. 6, 1988. Otorge
Bucklev. Hour~12 · 9 . 814-8644711 .
S tanding timber. Calll14-742·

2328.

•

Wanted to buy; Electrk: trudmHI. 304·871· 4123.

! 1l'DLI ·/ nrr nr

7991 .

R1:.JI Fsl~le

AVON · All are•· Call MarHvn
WeiNer 304·812·2845.
MONEY FOR .COLL~GE iuYiil·
abte to individuals who become
tnemb•• of the Army National
Guard. Cell 304-676-3950 or

1987 14x70 Fairmont, Allel.c.,
furntiMd. heM pump. S.atellite
dish. A-1 cond. In Quail Creek.

Colll14·245·6284.

Trail• for ule, 1984 14x70
•cellent ah..,a, CUIIoth made,

oil oloc. 08700, Coli 114-lee.
4429.

VETERANS: Let us hlllp pey your
Chriat~N~s billt. Anny National
Guard-- Pirt·dme Jobs·full time
bemrfh:s. 304-875-3960'"'"or 1·

1 979. 14xll. 2 be•oom. Also
1975 Dodge Daytone SE . Cell
114-992·2122 for det••·

Gal P•id tor , . .ding bookll
·•100.00 pw title. Write: ACE ·
51 7f. t 11 s. Llnc:olnwav. N.
Auror•. Ill 10642.

12

Situations
Wanted

CertHi«&lt; nurte a1111tent wifl
c•e for sicll or eldirtr In your
home. Exp. • dapendllbl• Fu•
or pan-lims or relief for • ftw
hourt. Call814·3•7·0321.

1 2x10. In Middleport. Call 814·

le2-3180.

13 ·

ln1urance

.

33

for Rant
·Luxury T•• Apanmentl. El•
gent. 2: Br. 2 floOr. fully
c..-peted, CA and hul. Priv•te
entrance. en~ .. dpltio, pool&amp;
plavgrou,-.d. Start· U99 .Per
month. .Utilki• not lnduded.
Celt614·367-71&amp;0.
Nice~1 BA . ept. Aange.ndr.trig.
furnilhtd. Water • garbege ·

poid. oopooit ,..ukotl.
114-441·434&amp; oftor a PM.

eon

238 First • River vi.w· 1 BR .. 1
bllh, ·no children, t176 plus
utilh.l•. All apartmenti·Oep. &amp;
No pet1. Call 814-44&amp;·

r.,.
4926 .

.

Upatliira 3 room • bMh, furnished. Cl.... Utiliti• ,.ld. Ret
• dlt)OIII riQYiredl Aduhs only.
No
Call 814-448-1&amp;19 .

p••·
.

4

Nice 2 BR

•Pt.. 11tov8, refrlg., &amp;

water furnilhed. 4 11.1 mil• from
Qalllpolil. •216 mo. No pets.

Coli 1 14-448-8038.

month.

Tlwanted to Do

Out of W~rll7 ~o. Job in sighi:1We
c• hlllpl Btslc Educ•ton and
lkut Tralnlng avalltlbl• Contact
Adutl &amp;ervicee, IHCC m 814-

241-1331.

Will tlo -

p-Ing lor drftto·
wayt Df' ,.rWng lot1, •c . ICR
gener•l a~ntractlng (former
Moollo ..,d ltlatlntl• painting).

Milo o.lna. 114-211-1247.

Cortt
otlort. - · "' .......
homo.lor
Collll4-311·te07.

ooHing AVON - · Jon. 12,
.... ..._•. Col114441-2111 .

Will,_olt in myhomo7·1p.m.

·r

fiM,_ AN&amp; 304-111-3138.

'

.

.

114-441-0444.

Gracious IN in g. 1 and 2 bedroom IPiftments at VHiage
Manor and Riverside Ap.-tments In Mldclepon. From
$211. lnduding utilitl•. ,C.II

614-992·7787. EOH.

New. 1 bedroom apartment.
Furni1hed Of unfurnl1hed. In
Pomeroy. Cell614-446·8898or

614·992·1304.

1 bedroom. All utilh:l• p.~ld .
•210. month. ~100. deposit.
Also 1 bedroom, pert of utliti•
~· 1176. momh, t100 . d~

oolt. Coli 114-992-1713.

,In Pomerov, 2 bedroom apartment. Plftly furnished, rtmodelld, in Naylars Run. Call

814-e82·1811 oftor I :OO·pm.

hom •.

APARTMENTS, mobile
hou111. Pt. PI . .I"UndGatlipl&gt;
lia. 11•·«8-8221.
2 ttedroom furniMd apt, ref end
dePosit. New Hl'll'en, W. Va .•

304-882-3217 or 304-7738024 .

S.ech Street, Middleport, Ohio,

2 bedroom furnished 1p1, utllt.
ti• Plid. ref•enc••nd dapoatt.

304-882·2188.

..

- -' Middaport - 2 room turnlahed
apt. Private bath. Utllitl• ~id.

Nice 1 . and 2 bedroom apart·
m . .tt for r.ent il Point pte-nt,
814·44~·2200

COUNTAV MOBILE HomoPwlt.
Route 33, NOrth of PomtrOy.
Ren.. l trall•s. C.l 614-H2-

747ll.

Space for amarll trail... AI
hook· up•. Cable. Alsoefflcienav
rooms. air and Cllbla M•on.
w.v•. Cell 304·773-1516(
~or rerrt ! office spa.~ 112 N.
Second, Middlaport, Oh. 1. 2, or
3 rooms. Witt remodel to suit
tenf1ant. Phone 614-992·1471
or "· 8~4 - 992-~413 8fler 7:00
pm. .

or 441·3131 .

- · 4 - · Ml; twin
mMt,_.., Ills«; mi~e
...,. --;:·woRKING

MAN'S FRIEND •
.
M-on Furniture •
Upp• Rivtr Rd .. Oolllpolio, Oh .

49'

Fot Lease
'

a

mort aptilfon- Coll304-1712700.

s.,.

erng~o

w-: ot&gt;Od

Olive St.. Gellipolis.
NEW· 8 pc. wood group- t399.
Living room suhes· 1119-11591.
Bunk beds with bedding- 8199.
Full size m.n.Wst &amp; foundMion
ltarting l $99. Recliners
st.rting- *99.
USED· Beds, dreuen, bedroom
suit••· tt99-t299 . Desks,
wrlnglr wast... a compiMellne
of ulild furniture .
NEW- w..tern boots- UO.

a.

up. (Stelll •

soft toe}. Call 814-41o41-3119.
County ~ppiianca. Inc. Good
·uMd •PPIIences end TV sets.
Open 8AM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot. 614·441·16e9, 127 3rd.
Aw. Gallipolis, OH.

GOOD . U.SED APPLIANCES
Wash••· drvers, relrlg. .tora,
· rangea .' Skaggs Appllencea,
Upp_. Rivlf Rd . b•lde &amp;ton•
Cr.11t Motel. 614-441·739.8.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas end chain priced from
t396 to 1996. Tabl• t50 1nd
up to •121. Hlde:.a-b.tdl t390
to t'i95. Redin.,. *221 to
i376. lamps 128 to f121.
Dinette• 1109 1nd up to t411.
. Wood table w -8 ch*• •ze&amp; to
t79t. Desk f100 up to U7J.
Hutch• 140Q and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mattr•t295 •nd up to t395. Babrbeda
t110. MaHr• ... or box springs
ful or twin tl8. flrm f71, and
t88. Queen Mts 1221. King
f310. • drewer chiM t89. Gun
cabin•• 8 gun. G11 or elactric
renge t376. Blbv mattru . .
ne &amp; t41o&amp;. Bed trem• tzo.
tlO &amp; King frlme 1&amp;0. Good
Hlectton of bedroom tuh•.
meblll cabinets. headboards UO
and up to 1&amp;6.
·
90 D•y• ~~~--~-~- c•h with
appr'oved credh. 3 Mil• out
Bui.W~Ie Rd. Open 9em tct lpm
Mort thru Sat. Ph. 114-448-

0322.

t
'/•ller Furniture
New 'and "u•d furniture and
appllcanc11 . Cell It 4,- 4487172. Houu9-l.

Hdroom

houN,

•a-•.

.eonar.·btodts an-.-.. yard or

uc. cond. 304-871-1239 or

.....;

:::!

"fiiW

304-171-, ....

245-1121.

· dollvory. Maoon loncl. Goliipol~
' llodt Co., 123¥. Pint ....
. ~ Ohio Coli 114~-

72

"•Ill¥

58 '

7:05 (J) Andy Orifllth
7:30 D W HOllywood 8querot

ro ,eon.g. lelketblln
(I) Newlywed o-

ew Judge

1871 Ford F1&amp;0. 311 M. 4

Antiqun, buy or 1111. Riftrine
Antlqu-. 1124 Eest Mlin 81.,
Pomero,. Moun: Mon., Tuea.,
and Wid. 10:00a.m. -1:00p.m.,
Sun. 1:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m. By

chonoo . or oppoint,_,.,
M...... 114,912-2121.

Miec. MerchtndiBa

Cellah ..·s·used Tlrt.hop. Over

8o 4

--•.

W.O .

conwrlllan. T..-llw rNdr. Call

altw7PM.

evens.· • weekends.

114·448·4383 d., .. 448·013e

Coli 814-4411-3144

2 loxii" pupa. 7
114·211-1309.

wki. old. C.U

Ald. whlto leoaloOoa. Milo.

A"-C Sh..IMtd Sh1ep da p (Mintlllure
•ble an¢~ whiM, 1

76 Auto Parts
eo.-a
8o Accessories
;ot3~:.=::· UIO.OO. Coli

•und¥ 1tto Nx. Ueed very lttte.
lUte n-.v, 304-773-15307 cw

A;CA· 215 " coniOfe cotor TV.

remOUI. Exc•. cond. t300. Call
114·441-1111.

eaume...,..l monthly PIIYf"lf'lta

150 ertid• of girls clo.t hlng8x·1"4. 1 pr. rOH• eket11. 1 pr . .
snow boots- Llctilt- 7 . Call

anytime.

on plono. Soo locolfy. Cali
Maneger at 118·234-1301

&amp;14-44e-oon.

lti

llol-448-7811.

.

Ptntarx K·1000 cam. . wtth
fiMh a CMI, 10·300 1oom
lenM. cloubl• lenM. u~ nJW.

81

Home
Improvement•

' BASEMENT
WATEIIPIIOOFINO . .
Unoontltlon• Hftlime guer•n-

U.S. 31 W•t. Jack10n, OhiO.

814-211·1481 .
M•ll'f FlffiUOOO. NIIW Hollond.

ll•d Batt.fl•. luyin9 juntl
b•terl•. Morrts Equipment.

814·742-~411 .

.

Air CDmpl'ltiOI, 1 215 Jeeg • .

'Collll4·317-7133.

a

tNdlng accnsor._, grindW
milllr1. waeons. trall•s. rotary
til•, nrUry cutters, bled•.
cultiwetors. diac. plow1. Med•a.

w_......,,.

*""'"

ougoro g• ....
- hoed11otOO.
'
P0\..,...ah.._ .....eahoot1,

llwettockwltef . ., platlctankl.
mJnnt fllden. tniek or nil•
,.ft\pl. tfllek Ncb. . .,.....,.,,,
Wheel Hone IIIWII • u.-tten
traclort• Hueqnrn•ch•n uws

•',,,.

JIVIbEN'8 • 114·441·1171

Coil 114·141·2120.

304-l7f. 7421 .

Cltlar IIHir' AIIC Mondllr

~~~~
AmiiiCI
Examine 1he most

'

1

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

m-. Coli 114·445·8744.

Tel•vlsion Service.
Hou• calls on RCA. Qu.ur,

'•I ,

•'

,.

'
,.•'

D6'&gt;.RSIR'

ALREADY Wa.&lt; TEN Ml LLICN
[XJLLAR5 .. .

'

·

HE'S

- ,.

,.,·

' ..,.

SOMEWHAR

,.,

3

.I~-

Woool-.-n41lllllood
ooff• 18111&amp; MN'I'IIMI mWrered

-.·,.

five~

· · - · 304-17l-41114.
Bu1ine11
Building•

,.

(I) lportiCinter (Ll

·=.~·Ei
®

IIIII

MIKid ..... lor lll'o. NfWif wet.
t1.00,..
1_ _ ......
, .....Col 114--

-,
..a-_......,'""
--........ --•.,.
·- ........ -·"·

171-1104.

lomo tlmW. 114-912-7297

after 5:00 p.m.

f131.W-·~ ... , _

Watteraon'a Wet• Hauling.
, . ........ . rM•. llnmedl••

110 ielt """ .... .....
r.ao.. MO. . . . . ..._
...... , . ...... ~1410.

10 . . . w aa 's' toceted on

OIWa on ..... Hil Road. 1 oily

"Relax. This Ia Ma¥1111... nothlng hare

~.-

-

1

71 Aulo a For . .

1-...-..

=r"J:r1~.

but vegatarlal')s. "

(

I

::=

•

••
.,

I'!

,

.._

i7 ·

'

food

.. -

you eat when you're cheating ON

a

. 'I

'·'

r

' .. •1

1·11·11

~-

.

'

8Q3

Poor Willy Nilly. Today's deal
lbows wbat happened to his New
Year's resolution to play more
carefully.
With no elear-cut lead available,
West led trumps. Declarer Willy woa
his spade ace, got to dummy with the
elub kinl and led the queen of dia·
moada. West ~ the king and played
a lleCOIId spade: WIUy won, cashed the
A-J of dlamoads,. sbeddif11 a elub In
dununy, and played ace and ruffed e
club. U East overruffed, there would
be no story, but Eut could see that his
muter trump should be llled to draw
a trump from both dummy and declarer. So be disCarded. Willy now played a
low heart ff(!m dummy. East won,
cubed his spade queen and . got out
with the king of hearts. Eventually declarer loat a elub and was down one.
Willy lbould have realized that the
lead marked Weal with probably .only
two trumps. That meant it would be
safe lor West to gain the lead later on,
but II migbt be important to prevent
Eat from wlnnlni a later trick to play
the third trump. At trick two, WIUy
lbould have ducked a heart in both
hindi. Ellat would win and play another spade. Now WIUy would go to dum·

+K32
WEST

EAST

+ss
¥865

+QJB
.KQ109

.H

U8.72

+KSH
.Q 10 84

&gt;

SOUTH
+AKH

I

'

''

.7 2
+AJ 10
+A 765

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer:' South
Well

Pass
Pass

Pass

..

Opening lead! • 9

my and take the diamond finesse. Al-~. ~;
though West would win bilr king, he ..
would not have a third trump til lead, ·
and dedarer could. now go safely ;.
about his business: East mlgbt over- __
ruff the ·dub or not, but be would not
be able to stop declarer from taking' · ·
care of both club losers by rufflng. . . :~
• • ,. '!f

lty THOMAS JOSEPH .
.
ACROSS
1 - -o'- ·

"

.. ""·

4Z Actress
S~~~~n

llhanter

•• • !"'

43.Potato

' Kind of

... . ..

part
DOWN

sister
or story
7 Skirt for
Paylova

1 Italian
city ·
2 Supped

8 Gary -·

8 Ordinary

10 'Two
Women•
woman
11 Winged

4 Protect,

" ·''

·in a way

•.

I Rower

6 Engllsh

horse

city

18 Spoonbender
Geller
14 • ...that.
married
dear old
•
11 Delhi Mr.
17 Collage

.

as wine

7 Corrida
loser,

usually

9 Victor

over
7 !;&gt;own
10 Abner's

radio
partner

18 Vietnamese 12 Saltpeter

New Year
20"A Chorus

11 Improve, 25Trace

. ...

27 Alley

high

r-'II"'""''I"-

.

.

18 Sundered
standee
21 Dray
29 Loiter
22 Like
SO Speak
Georgia
pompously
Brown
31 Ceremony
23 Stick ·
320ne of 10
alter376 Down
native
brew
24 Gave the 39, Singer

~

'~

. '

.' "'
..

· ~:

~-wJ~ohnnle

Line•

number

..

21 Nucleus
ZZSay "boo"
215 Bravery

·~ ··

l

'·

., :0.

26.Ridge; welt

, ~ ._ , ,.,

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.....

'·

~

'·

- aspera•

28Sooner
28Twlst out
of shape
83Make a
faux pas .
34 Opp. of syn.
SS-Grande

.. ''"'·"
"'
. ,,
,,_., .
.;

86 Wreck

~.·

38Seeingred

40 Swiss hero'

. .... .......•·.

41Arena
. . receipts
DAILYCR1PfOQU(hES-He,e'a bow ~work IC:

~

..
.

!I ' , . ' .

,...,..,

;. ~:
~'":..

"

AXYDLBAAXR

...

II LONGFELLOW

.,.,,.. tt

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is llled

fiX' the three L'a, X fiX' the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of.the words are au
hines. Eldl day.the code leUen are dlffe'l'ent.

. , ,. '"'l

I

• •· '

t .. • ..

,.. .... ;.

.

..,

., ...." '

~.

~RYPTOQUO'I'£8

1-11
FJV
D

OAGOGY

L W V M L ·z M 0

HPYYOAC
y J L

YJL

VA '
N0 AC

UPRMY

JLRMGL.-

FfrGL DPY
PABAVFA GVPMXL
. Y_....,'l CIIJIIII'liitl 8B NOI' 'ftiE fl 1ft BY
WHOM Till NIW m 1*'01, NOR YET THE LAST 1Q
LAY THE OLD ASIDE.- ALB1ANDER POPE

1

,. .....

;

OIET.'

NORTH
+10832
.AJU

_ James Jacoby

J&gt;LWVML

Upholstery

...

......

I I I I I I I 1·· I

BRIDGE

RML

.. - . ....... :1104-171-

Comp lete rhe chuckl e', quoted
· by filling in the miss ing words
you de¥elop from $lep No. 3 beiQw.

Triune,,- ·Judge - Union - Detect - ON a DIET
Ovarh&amp;liu'd in cafeteria line: "No food tastes as IJOOd as the

~OABOAC

'

•

G)

SC!!AM-LETS ANSWERS

HLVHTL

...~

........ ='=••'=~.""'·
::.rr,::

* I 1111.
---~

dlatutra. e110.

,.,.

.,..11?1 .

40,- .,.., 1110.; • • • •
t20. 1114-171-104.

In Hemlocli

·i:C&amp;:;'
'IDIIIIftOif

'I I'

Wh8n mailing a package con·
1alnlng breakable ob)ilc1s, always
label clearly: " Fragile. f'leaa8

9

UNSCR~MBLE FO
. Rl
•

P.L Jororo Kill

12:00 ()) llumlllld Allen
(I) Cat lldaMI lo CllgllfY

, ,.,'

•-c-.......
..................
""' ..

3441.

*•
Grew . .e
Co. Rd. 31. Eacolllltl ..,_g,

...
...

lervlce. Ho'"e

m""' J..,.., loro WII... Cal
.... lftd • • ...,.., lor .... 304-171-1370.
I I - . .,. Co!
.. I 114-741· P.ul Rupo, Jr; W- ........
2111.
floolo ......n.. -~. Cal e14-

Plueusaad. d......_ _ . .
t31.00.

A.O..e ' Real ENte.
Carol Ye . .er, Broker. Cell 304ofRCM.

,. a -.: wae.

P.l,
Man'aWey

rMaamtnt.
emfalll

I.

...:,.. .,

ANSWER

::=:...-,.:.Lilt

~l
~·

'

.

(I) Cheer~

_, ____ ... .:i
.....
..
_
.. ..
J • J w........... lwlnvnlntl
PGDII. dlterne. Wills. Ph. 114·

all lolp

e

,sill '

241·1211.

Commercl .. buldlnliJI ..,, l. .t .
Downtown Pt. Pl...m. Stor-.

80MIIIVILLE REALTY
Phono J04-171-3030 oflioo
171·3431 -171-4232.

84 Ha~ i Gillin

IIIINewl

• (D Love ConfliCtion
11:30 (2) il)l Tonlght811ow

...
..,,.·

· - ltttdV to ..._ . 1114111-3141.
'

Hogtn'a HarM1

il)l Monly11n1

.'

H"
old Bay More. llo•ly
Nloo. Coli 114-3118-1471.

i CD

t 1:00 CD Remington Steele
D CD Cll 8 &lt;ll Ill ec
~

.

General H1uling

I BEEN
OOIN' A LOT
OF IT

(J)IIgnOII

I'
,,'

85

GOOD
SCRUBBIN',
SHERIFF

:·
'

Llvaatock

THAT'S

'

Now buying thell corn or ••

ec Da1lgnlng w-

• (D llemy Hill
tO:OI (J) MOVIE: G1111blt (1 :49)
10:30 ® T1le Making of a
Continent Look at 1he Great
Blain and Lava Plains and
Ylilowatone National Patk .

•

~.

I

- n. Coli farl_qu_. Rivtr
CMy Form Supply, 114·441·
2911.

OFF

POLITICK IN'

r

· 8o

IIIII

llll ® New•
iiJI Ev111lng Ntwl

....." :•

Electrical
Rafrigaretion

9:311 (1) ColllglleokltbiiH.

OOLLAR5 ftR THE #,AGAZ.INE.'

",.

Oallipalio, Ohio
Phono 114·441· 3UI .. 114.
441-4477

84

1F 'OJ 'M:N 1HE 1):N #.II..I..IIJN
DOLL..A1&lt;5, PL~eE SEND 1\10

ilndangerld, yet ~cheat pane
of America's landscape. I;J .
11JJ .IIJ Ntwhlrl Dick's
formtlr co-hoat, Bully .
.
Denver. becomla last lrianda
w~h Steph . 1;1
01 Larry King Uvel
aJ1 Lillie Houaa on t111
Prllrie. WOlves
Charlane Ia aclvieed to plly
the tleld, but aha won't listen .
10:00 (J) Lilli Rlg~te
11J eaJ -.guy Vinnie,
bodyguard for 1he Profltts,
must rescue Susan lrom
. kl&lt;lnapplrl.

I,

82 Wtnted to Buy

EXCITING NEWMAGAZ.INE.

11

,.

171-2103.

Cor. fourth end Ptne

OR A FREE COPY' OF OL.lR.

'

Starki.Tree end Lawn Service,
l.wn c•-. l*'dRIPII'!g. ltump
r•movsl, 304·1'71·28•2 or

CAATEII'S PWMIING
AND HEATING

II

'
'·

2

Plumbing
• Het~.tlng

'101.1MAYHAVE

'I

Rotary or otlble tool drlfing.
Moat wells c:om,e•ed•emed;'t
:u.~a-:' • and llrYice. . 30 .

82

II

' '•'

Felty Tree Trimming, ltump
ren'IOvel. Call 304·171..1331.

U Heul truclls end tred•• tor
ron~

e

I

M"'ld firewOOd, 180.00 dump

tnck - · dolr..r.d,
304-17&amp;·
2103.
.

e ())

,.'

"""
,..

•wlldeMerl.

USED EQUIPMENT
Kenrnctn. a• dryer, .. .,.rfc
rllfrlg., ga cook tton, 27 cu. h. , A wrlecy of uad t ..aon, round
Ul... tllkt. moner1. grinder
freenr. bMh room fecllitl•.
amque shistroiM _wtth mirror. mil•. Slfh'ttv weoon. bfadt..
Coil 814-387-7133.
111ow1.. corn Cttc:ller. harblft• aq.
bal... aluiln•w. tob. Mttlr,
dleo. h•row.
·
Seven houa wlndowe tor ....

1RAV£.L
A LOr'?

..:~.,·

J &amp; J MotMie Home S•viOM-- ·
'
Bultd 'on- ,.model bath rooms, ,4&gt; I' I
I'
Mil pump napalr-"placem•
drllin work·(dean or unatopl. AU ..,.
work gUirant:Md. Service cell• ..., fj

GE. epoclollng In ~onMh . .Coli
304-578·2398 or 814-44•·
2414.

lnttr~tMe .lantri• for ul• Also

~.Jo

'·'·

JIIIIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT
8poi:lol .... ... Long •

Kkwi tnCior. V•meer bel••·
All typal of Vermlfll' mowfng,
rolting• Todding -ipm.,., A
pompl• line of bale t.ndlfng •

ro &lt;y{)()

""'; 'iI

.

'R ON ' I

Mixed h•d wood el . .. t12 p•
bundle. Containing approx. 1 Y,
ton. POl. Ohlo , ..,. Co.
Pom•ov. Ohio. 11•-192-1411.

......

Cleaner. one half mile up
q.ora-; Creek Ad, Call 114-

S.E;•Qhlo.

equlpmenl. .._o•t .. actiOn In

Slndy IRillt Dlvl&lt;l dining
wllt1 a new data, his
Chemistry teacher. C
Ill eiiJ F-k'l p(a.,.
Wacky woman caUHa
1ananl8 to leave becriuae ot
her I/09dOO pract1ee1.
9:00 CD 700 Club
.il)l MOVIE: •rre1dom
FighW NBC Mondll~ Night
etllti-C
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'Evllln

I

,.

441·0284. . .

CIIOSS. SONS

&lt;P&lt;it (2:021
8:05 (J) MOVIE; T1le Bag'*d (A)
(1:491
'
11:311 G (2) il)l Valtlrie'a F•Uy

A ogerela1emen' t

Firiwood·Urge ph:kup lo..:l. AU

Keyltone CIMic M•11· Doctoe

Won-lkl itough
NYC boy takes en orphan
train lp Nebraska to start a
new 111:~001 1;1

e

t'

1115. Colll14-318-e70V

or Ford. E.rd11 machine. a.rr
genwnor. 10011, kntv". craft&amp;
t.rpa. Call 814-387-0641 . .

Kllte • Allll Jennie
audlllona
a band Binger In
order get closer to 1 guy.

WI
@ T1le Infinite VOYIICII
Research in IIHia-known
raglona Of tile earth Ia
examined. C
.
!D MOVIe: Croll Creek

. tee. Local r.rlf8ftaae ~hed.
fr• Mthn..... Cell . GO. .ct

lulh Hog Ill• • Slt'Yice. Over
40 uMd tnc:ton to ohoOM from
• cornpl... line of ri.w &amp; ua8d

hwdwood U!·Dolivtfld, CoH
114-441-1437.

i •1121 as
to
.8
GJ) 'P~

.
...

-

SWEEPER 811d MWinsfNm.ne
r..,-,,
pert1. end auppll•. P.i dt
up and dtNvery. Davia Vacuum

61 F1rm Equipment

8 driWer bl8ck metal office ._k
with wOOdclnrin top. t75'. Call

i

.~·

Wat-ftnt~-

.k

O.E. euto. wuh•. Rt..
2370 after I PM.

,••

I

1·814-231·04111. dill or nlgltt.

~:l,qll•t'.'

.\ IIVt::

l

-.
.~ ·;:'J'

44e-aon.

PIANO FOR BALE
Went•: Aelpo~~slble .,....y to

I II

deHrted oil tanker and 1h1
legendary Suquatch.(R) 1;1
(J) T1le Melting of e
Contln1111 L.ook 11 1he Great
Basin and Lava Plains and
Yellowstonl! Netlonal Par1&lt;.

...

.

D &lt;ll U.COyvar

MlcGyver discovers

LOOKS LIKE MY BEST SET IS T'WORK
MY W~ AC!t:l&amp;s WHILE THEY'VE GOT
THiilR 8ACI(S TU~NEDI

1 1

e

(J)

Dlo· tor · ~'
pl!rtl,newfrontenct.mtlle~•· ~ .
304-17&amp;-1110.
'
.

~f

Wems1w IMtruatOt,

cond. $100. Coli

,

•)

~~. E~.oond, t200.C.H

r.od
814· 41·

~

D.-•.c.,. ·-·

· '7ll

Pool tllbl• Oood cond. 8300.
Cell 114-448-7572, 11k tor
Jeff.-·

·

Ford ohortbool. Coli 814-379· ...,
2~11.
•

Gu._ Lneoftell lndtvkluel •lft.
.. ruction. Brunicanre Muila.

114-441•1111.

$pAcE Fo~. ~wo~tc;
. EXPE~ENCI:" ANI&gt;
NoT ENouGtt fOR
. tt l.EISU~f. ACTIVliii::S''!

-

ALLEY OOP

Ua.t • rebuilt trlnsmlallions. An
lntarnally Inspected 6 guam-

773-1118.

JVC VHS· VCR· 4 hold,-·

Mucti

flblrgiMt topp•. 1191. FitaSI . ...;.

Mu1ical
lnatrumants

114·44I·Oie7 "' coli

.THei?E'S .roo

•'

opoclol f"'Pt'i•· UIO. lnotollm ... &amp; Coli 304-124-71111 or taed. Coli 114·448-0ell, Wo
304-342· 2417 col ....
' bliy junk tre~smtsliona.
'

57 ·

Arrlications

~:to
/1~/'e .

•'•·
•,·
. 'I

117ll, I cvl. 4 optld. CJijoop,
IIOOCI tlr• and rurinlng cond:
U.200.00 firm. 304· 675·
118&amp;.
•.' .'

I moo. old. Calll4·2H·1311.

AKC lour pups. 7 mille. very

Emplo~mel\t
-:fl~·n....;_'~--

•
•'

18.1 2 Dodgo 210 Rom. Cullom

• (D WKRP In Clnclnnaa
7:35 (J) S.niOid and Son
, 8:00 CD Fellllr Murplly
CD il)l ALF The Tanners
put ALF on trial when ~e·s
accused of.breaking a
wlndow.C

ERNEST

. •

Draganwynd Cttt_.y Kennel.
CFA Himel_,..., P . .l... Md
Siom- kM-. AKC Chow

pu.....

Antlquea

Van1

il)l Jeopo~rdyii;J

· 1111 hmey Miller

ep•d. fiber gl1n topper.

73

63

Ill Wheel ot Fonune 1;1
iiJI Cro11flre
.

ec

.

.,.

e (D IIII'A'8'H

Trucks for Sale

· - Ph.....
Food Doll•.
JulioW114-4411·0231.

ueo. 114·tt2·7711 .

~~i:a~a::·
· ® .
Ce!iter (LI

aJI Cheer~

Pete for Sale

1•-...;·:·::._ _ _....;...._~

•.

• C il)l Wh•l of Fortune

171-2745.

I

f9 lfTTfRS
PRINT NUMBfREO I'
•

NIWIHour (l:pol
. Ill,._
iiJI M-yllna

11n Pontloc T·1000, 5 optld.

.•
.,.
.,
.,•

-

L -.L.-..1.-...J.L--L.-..1.-.J.

(I) l!*r181111Mnt Tonight
• (I) People'• c-t
(J) ® MaCNeil/ Leh,.,

1184 Oldl Cut1111 Supreme

Etrtre niCII 8 piece d•k pine
room IUitl. Exc .. ent
upholat.ry and very eturdy.

IMntl

•n and 3

.. fl¥0 .. 114·112·1313

-·

V-8, 1111 power ~qulpment, wire
wh. . •
tlra e7,400.

7

--'S ' 1

~·

ot na.ooo. Colll14-el2-2143

20

lullclng MMerf.- , ·
81odt, b&lt;i.._ pipa. win·
dow&amp;. Nnllle. etc. Cleude Wlt~o
""" lila Grondr. p . eon 114-

83

oth• buHdlng~ . 1351.90 month
plu1 12100. dawn or c•h prk»

34

1171 Ford Elitt. gpod cond,
304-1111-342&amp;,.

ueoo. Coll.14·992-5141 .

M err.ll~1HI 1 sr

SWAIN ·

Building Supplle1

Groom and Supply · Shop-Pet
Qraornlng. All breeds ... AII

448-232&amp;.

AUCTION , &amp; FURNITURE '12

116

I

. '~·

~

. .:. Z

Ih~·,. . . ,I;:.~. .;A;.I. :L. .;I;.:~-R;.;I. .:Y:. .,. I~j

·

1:35 (J) Leave II To . . ._

· -~

. ·

Coll14·4~·1311.

oond.

1400 sq. ft. commrtrdal tpace . 18. 11.1 . I mil• out Rt. 218.
suitable for qffic., retailing. or
C~llll4·211·1211 .
llfvica. Prime location-corner
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in Oelllpotia.
Ample perkir~g in re•. USO per
month. cau r 614-44-8-&amp;249 or

61 H ousehold Good1

,.,., Coli 114-tt2·8722.

.,..

*""'·

•I,OOOtlra, 1110112.13,14,15,

-=....,;-..!.'.....,-,,...,;..,.,..-.,-

.-n-tm. lody aood. runs u.ctt·

I

.

·''

,.~----------. ThroW ......__, ..

1111 WICRP In Clnclnlllll
e (D Too Cloll for Com!olt

Dln.n.-1211 a up, I.Wing
mbt conar.. "'d ell ), ---~-.:;__ _ _ __
room suit11·1300
up.
conortrte auppli•. Call u1 v.ul¥' 1978 Ch•v Blldr. 71.000
R•dln... e111 • up. Carpet lrook Cement ·enci Supplla mil•. Coli 114-441-4BI9.
ottrtintl at •4 o V~· Fin•- ' 304-nS-1234.
IVoflolilotoquliflodbuyorL CoO ----=--,-~---- 1178 Dodg• 4 , whHI drhle,
814-.....7444,
•
IBn Ford 4 wltool
1e11
Chevy ~ton ,tdt·up. 11100 ·
KilohM cabin•• with aold Kenooch. 114-949' 2801 .

64

-~~--C-Aood.4

Chrlltmes Mls to Prl.'f7 ltart

Co!!

I

36 Lott • Acns1ge
Help Wanted

114-

441·8180. R~r~too lowoo U~O

Workhoou •ta

Furnllh.:lapllriment. 4 rooma6
beth. 1 or 2 edults. No pets. R 1f.
&amp; MC. dep. requlr'l d. CIJII

Good•

Houtehold

Farms lor Sale

Lind Contr8CI.. 1 .18

-

CaH

I

. 304·882·2516.

14x70 Windlor wtth 14x30
addh:lon, 3 bed room1, black top
FOld, epprox 3 ec:r•. G.UipoUs
Ferrv. 304"-1711-«1930.

after
Work w..-ted: Wll do hou•
clawting Of oftloe d-"ngln fit.
Pl. . .nt arta. 304·171-1114
• ,. ... 3 :30.

2 bedroom. t100. deposit,
t271. per momh lnctu($ing
utlit"i8e. No drUnks or dope. Call

44 ", Apartment

1·800-842-3519.

800·642·3811.

7473.

304-171·408e.

e,oo. 446·1244.

month. Gillie Hotel.

PM.

2 b8droom mobile home. full oH
heM, good for couple end one
child. no pet. t110.00 month,

Hon'le1 for Sale

Rooms tor reP.t. d.. Wlllk.

Crown City. 12N813 'BR. Newlv
c•pMed. AC, hiM wtth· propan• •220 a mo. plu1 1100 · 48- Space for Rent
dem8Qe diP. • utilltw. Old•
Cl!)uple P"fend. Limtt 2 clllld'
ren. Ref. requnct, C~l 81•·
Office Space /for rent. E11c.t.
211-1131. .
.
downtown . &lt;UIIIp"OIIs loctltlon.·
lnqulrl• call 8' 4-440-·2~2.
3 II!A .• yew rOund comfort withheM pump. Furnished. 2 IIA .• Mobile Home'
80ft. or Ills.
utilitl• ,_ld. Ref. a dep. r•
920 4th .. Goll!polio. •71. Wotor
quired. Call aft• I PM, 814·
paid. Call tt•·"6·4418tfter7

614-992-3122.

Job hunting? Need • ski117 We
Bren·d new 3 BR. ne• Galllpollt
trein people tor' iobs as auto
locks on At. 7.2c•g•aga. niDI
mechanics, tarpentars. elec1r~ -lot. lmmedi .. e PDI... ston. Will
cilfts, food sarvice wOrkers.
contlder trade in of mobile
electronics technicl.ns. lndu•
home, prapertv .• etc. Bargain
trill maintenance workers, nurepriced. c.,,I14-446-B038;
lng •11ilunts end orderli ...
machinms. and welders: Regis2 Bedroom h_,.• on Ch••
tar "now tGr clelln betilnnl1ta
Road in P.•"'arov. taooo. Cell
814-367-7287.
'
Jtnuerv 4th. Call Tri-County
VocMionat Adutt Center at 7533511 ext. 14. A vari.tv ot
OoY~rnment Hom• for tf. (U
funding sources to pey for
rpalr). Delinquent •x property.
training 1re wail·l ble for thoM
Aapo..euionl. Ctll 801·187·
eUgibla.
8000 Ext. GH-9805 for current
repo list.
Government Jobs . t1 1.040159,230 ye•. Now Hiring. Vour' 2 bedroom. 2 b.th1, 2 c•
Area. 806-8117·6000 Ext. A·
1•-ue. lwei lot on At. 33.
9801 tor current Federel tilt.
Swimming pool, lllelita, clo1e
to Mei.. High. C.ll 114-992Get peid tor raiding . boob!
3264.
1100. perth:'•· Write: ACE-31d,
161 S . Lincolnway, N. Aurora,IL
Glenwood. Wv - 13.5 ecr•. 8
rooms. 2 bmhs. r.neh style
60542. '
home. 304·782-2141 afler &amp;
p.m.
Ohio Licensed Nursing Home
Administrator needed for 100
bad ICF and sldll_. nursing
2 or 3 bedroorrit, full ~•ement.
home. Apply et Americ••- garege MPt~rate with b•dl enPomllfoy NUrsing and Rehllbilt·
lrln'ce. call aftlt 3:30 pm.
tation Cemer, 38769 Rocksp- 304-17:5-2599.
rings Road, Pomeroy, Ot,io.
Tel~hone(814) 992-8808.
3 bedroomt, 2 baths, full finshld
b•ement. new furnace &amp; cenYouAQ and dweloping Medii:el tral ~r. g•age. fenced yard, toW
Practice ia.llelting a p•son with
60'•. 2•14 Mt Vernon Ave,
e strong badlground for e long 304-175-1774.
term poaitton. W• walooldng for
1omeone to assist the Doctor
3 bedroom houte with 32 acr ..
whh patients, and hancle blltk- in ·Eul'tlk., Ohio ac:ro11 from me
Yp responsiblliti• with billing,
dam. Basement &amp; ltorage buildthe busin•• office 1nd genwal ing. 031.600. 814-448-2206.
duti•. The proper indtvldull wll
hl\le e great opportumty to grow 3 bedr~om house' In Gallipolis.
whh the prtC1ica.. Pl. . . aend' Ohio. Nice conditiOn. 2029
your resume in strict confidence Chathem Straet. t31 ,500. 114to the followtng lddr"1: The 448-2206.
Oalty Sentinel P.O. Box 7298 .
Pomeroy, Ohio 41789 . Ou11t.
fled applicants will be contacted
32 Mobile Homes
in the n,,ll' future for 1n
for Sale
Interview. This position ill imm•
di~tetv open.

Call us for your mobile .hom•
lnsurtncze: • MNier lnturance.
30~·112 · 2141 .. Also: euto,
.home. Ute. h... h.

~~~~I•Jior'\

11

114-441-7'98.

Furniture refinishing and rep~ir,
work,. free eltlmMII 1nd
reasonable rattl. 30•·171Q~o~elfty

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

919 Sooond. Galllpoiio.
448-4411 oltot7pm.
.

For r.ni:: 2 Bedroom mobile
home. Eastern A..... In ch.y.
Adutts only. Oeposh • r.,.
requir«t Wltlf • NWer fur·
nMhtd. •221 p• month. Call

151

tutt.n. Ull.ll: ah•t of

Furnliahed room. •9&amp;. Ullillel
paid. lh•e bMh. Single male.

446-1200.

~-~::::==:=====;:~======:=~

PARI!ON'8 FURNITURE
·'
~iiiiiJ New woad I pc. Uvlnt ,room

iCl

Nice 2 Bedroom tr~~ilw. Large
prd. Kan_,g,. Call 61•···41o8·

Giveaway

Grhnsbv lane,

w.. to

.,.

.,i

5

1 .

® llocly Elactrlc
il)llnllde Potlllca '88

1971 FOrd Elite, autO, p-. pb•.. W'lt
"" · •

,.I

~ . ; j:. .:.A:. . :Il~:. . .;r: -v:.,_l-1 i
t
HOCLH , •

I.

iiJI NBC Nightly Newt

111ecCiiNewe

Int. 1100 loall•r and.m with _,..:
boom. 17300. Cell 114-317· -~~
0117.
Will

• ---.. .....

ohop and .....tti. 114·4«·
3897. E.O.H. '

871-37&amp;3.

114·441·3871.

Sell Xerox c~pi•s • typewriters
on a fuHorperttlmeb•il. OHice
teeching or ul• beckground
preferred .. Good Income oppor·
tunity. Esublished Ct,Jstom•
Hie. Car nens•ry. Send IMter
or r"ume t6; lox Cia 120. c/ o
G1llipolil Daily Tribune. 825
Third Ave. Gellipoli1. Ohio
411531 .

Pike from 1183! a mo.

aga private. niCBiocl'tlon. 304.

3 Mdr~ hou• Hartford, ne•
ochool. 304-812-2011.

-~

514·
7021.
i
aEAUTIPUL
APARTMENTS
AT ~
IUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
ION UTATESI 831 Jocltt., ·

a•·

Hou• In the country Letart. W.

f llldiiCI&lt;II
21 ·

I r~m . dupl •• bMtrrient,

Vo., 304-812·2018.
42 · M®lle Homes
for Rent

AN OHIO OIL CO. oHoro high

11t-M o1 NeeCiatloilt

'

2 - - hou•ln Midcl_..
Furnllhed. t110 p•month. C.ll
814· 982·11178.

Wanted to Do

60542.

. 3

814-112·1117 .. '114-eaz.
7410.

Choo!M! nsyon.

Eal:h pallern $3.25 plus ·
75C postage/handling.

.

3 bedroom hou11 for rtnt. 1200
month. Mulberry Aw. Pom.,oy.

(2)

(J) Nlgl!lly ·~ Repatt

With
11200. ...
1tn F·210 ••4 • 1soo. 1973 ,. ,.

12·

.

1fi leal o!IIU o.noa lRI
(I) e (I) ABC New1l !;J

! ·:

1174 f .700 .Ford, Fl. •x2T.

2 8R. opt. 1 - • rot.ta.
tum,.':', .Ne• Go Mart. C.ll

'

,

•=

1111 , _ 01 Life .
.• (D One lily at • Tlmtl
8:01 (J) Allee

!!
~~

P-' boll hitch. U300. 3 ....

eq, trd•

'

.

all Calal'eaunda

·•
,.

1117 Eeoort OL. 3100 W•.
11100. lped ... Call 11 • •3889111.

.2 lfll . houle. 1110amo. A... I.

•

ii)I~Todey

2· 1"7 Ch-""•· 4 opel, Coli
814·441·8174.

•

.

'' '

low to form four simp le words.

(I) I~ I riiLoolr
(J) Dr. Who

114-441-2111 oftor I PM .

4313·dll't. 448-eu....... .

WDID
IAMI

~,

EVENING

;'I

1182 lurlinaltl C.m.-o IRidl.
&amp;col. oond. Pl. Pl. etuloo, olr,
,
....-.o_ , . . defrost. rtdiftinl ~ •
llltt. tow mN1111a. Original. Cali ~

*·
., ........

'::~~:~' S©tl~lA-~t-trs·
. 141tt4
CLioT I . POllAN
Rearrange letters of the
0 four
ocramblod wards be-

t, ·

tiiOVWO..h•. dl•eltorllla.

Call14-iM8-0JR.

•

1,

01300. Coli 114-311·1033 ...
&amp;PM.

fur'*HII .,.. niiiLt to lli!NrYOno .,._ _ liT . . M - ·

Atnt•Lent-Land Contracl : . DoWnt:...,.._ 'Med•n t M ..
compl•e ldtahtftt e.,..

Hom• In EUftlk.. Rodn., VIII-ll, ·E_, Hg1o. Dop, • Ref.
requlrM. lltDkburn Realty,

o.. ctn-. supreme. . :·

PS, P8, AT. tit. Oood ........
13471. Coli 304-171-2700.

The Daily Sentinel- Peg a 9 ·••

Television
Viewing

I

1112

'

.pOmeioy..:..Middleport, OhiO

).

---

... ..r
,. ....

~

. li.lort

"""' ~

�.-

•

,.

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

"

Sooners
upset

Ohio Lottery
Daily Numbe-:

•

··560

Raill111
Oaata

••

..

tHE ·

':'&lt;.

. ''

CENtRAL

Vol.38, No.170

ALL GAMES SUSPENDED
UNtiL FUITHEI NOTICE .
DUE TO THE LABOR .
P~OBLEliS IN THE
DISRICT.

..

COMPANY
"YOUR FINANCIAL".
CENTER"
'_, ··.
.

.

97 N. 2ND STIEiT
MIDDLEPORT

·Negotiations between the teams of the Meigs
lion is to determine if meaningful educat.ion. is
Teachers Association and the Meigs Local
taking place within the district's schools at this
Board of Education for over four hours at the
time. Supt. Morris said that attendance on
courthouse Monday afternoon failed to produce a
Monday ran 62 percent overall with some
settlement in the teachers strike which began on
elementary schools having as high as 80 percent
Nov. 6.
· · attendance. ,
Before adjourning at 5:30 p.m .. the team s m.~ t
In regard to Monday :s negoUatlng ·session, the
with Judge Charles Knight, common pleas court.
Meigs Local Teachers Association this morning
who said the teachers gronp presented an oral
issued the following statement: ·
proposal. He directed them to put that proposal in "
" During negotiations yesterday under the
writing and have it to him by noon today. Judge
direction of Judge Charles Knight; the MLTA
Knight said he had not received the proposal at ,
gave the Board of Education a· new proposal that
10:30 this morning . ·
should have brought the current s trike to an end at
Meantime, Meigs Local Superintendent Dan E.
that time.
·
Morris reported that a state inspection of the six
"The .association has agreed to move. to the
schools of the district operating with substitutes
board's method of calculating salary and fringes
has been scheduled for Wednesday. The lnspec·

IOU IASICETBALL
JAN. 12-KYGER CREEK -HOME
JAN. 15-0AII HIU - AWAY
JAN. 19-FED.- HOCKING - HoM£

GilLS BASKETBALL
JAN. 11-KYGER CREEK - HOM£
JAN. 14_;_0AK Hill - HQME
JAN. 21-SOUTHERN - AWAY

GilLS BASKETBALL
JAN. 11-NORTH GAlLIA - HOME
JAN. 14-SYMMES VAllEY- AWAY
JAN. 20. GAlLIPOLIS - AWAY

BOYS SCHEDULE

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN ·HIGH SCHOOL
1987-B8 BOYS BASKETBALL

8-SoUthern ........................... ;Away
11-Hannan Tract •••••••••••••••••• Away
Dec. IS-Parkersburg Cath. (6:151.•• Away
Dec. 22-North Golia (11:00) ..... ;...... tt.M
Jon. &amp;:....Sym1!11S Valley ••••:............. Home
Jan. 12-lyger Creek .............~ ........ Homt

Dec. 1-Eostern.......................::.....,.Ho•

'

*•Roast Beef on a

-

I

Croissant'* Stuffed Baked
Potatoes * Taco Salads
* Salad Bat
* Real Ice Cream *

D..:. 8-Trimble ........... ~.................... Away
Dec. ·11 -Belpre ............................... Home
Dec. 15 -Alexander.......:................. Away

.

Dining • C.a rry Out •
Drive- Th'ru
.

-•
'

.

'

:s un.-Thurs. 6 A.M.-10 P.M.
Fri. 8t Sat. 6 A.M.-12 P.M.
'698 W. Main Street , Pomeroy .

992-2057

•
I .

Jan. s-Federal Hocking ................ Away ·
. Jan. &amp;'"""'!"'Miller ..........................~ ........Home
Jan. 12-Nelsonville-York .............. Away
jan. 1 5-Vinton County .................. Home

•

~·
(rJcaiM!RSir
&gt;-;BBIJ/166.
AKM

rod:;J;y.

Feb. 2-Warren ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Wellston .......................
Home .

Feb. 2-Miller ...............................'... Away
Feb. S-Hannon Trce ........................Home
Feb. 12-Southwlstern ...................Home
Feb. Ill-Parkersburg Cath ••••••.;.... Away
Feb.19-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Federal HO(king ••••••_. ........ Away

. MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL .
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIG~ SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Dec. 7- Vinton County ...................,Home
Dec. II,)-Trimble ............................. Home .

Dec. 10-Hannan Trace ................... Home

Dec. 7-Southern ............................. Home

COMPLETE AlHLETIC
·FOOTWEAR. STORE!

Jan. 7-Federal Hocking .................. Home

Dec. 23-Mtigs ................................Home

Oood Lucflet11111

Jan. 9-Miller .................~ ................. Home

Jqn. 7-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away

MIDDlEPORT

Dec. 22 -Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Dec. 29 lntita• Valley
Cent•

so.... c-o.

· Jan. 2'7"""'Sauthtastern ......;............... Away
Jan. 8'-:-Southwestefn .....................Hoene
Jan. 12 -North Gallia .....................llotM
Jan; 1 5-Symmes Volley .....,...........Home

Jon. 22 -Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-Kyger Creek ......................Home

Jan. ·30-Miller ............... :................ Home
FE,b. S-Oak Hill .............................. Away
Feb. 6-Fetleral Hocking .............. ;.. Away
Feb. 12-Hannon Trace ................... Home
Feb 19-Southwestern .........,.......,.Away

Jan. 14-Nelsonville. York ............... Home
Jan. 18-Vinton Count ................... Away

Jan. 21-Trimblt .......................-... •.• ~way
Jan. 25-Belpre ............................... Home
Jan. 28-·Aiexander ...;.................... Away
·Feb. 4-Wellston ................. :........... Away
Feb 1-Fecleral ·HO(king .................. Away
Feb. 13 -Southern ••••......••••, •••••••••••• Home

Dec. 17-Southwestern .: ................. Home
De'c. 19-Federal .Hocking .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallia ........ ,........... Away

Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Jan. 21-Southtrn ................·.......... Away'
Jan. 28-Narth Gallia ......... ;•••••••;••• Home
Feb. !-Symmes Vlaley .................. Home
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .................... Awa,
Feb. 11-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hocking ...............Home·

"CQM£ .GlOW
.US"

Middleport VIllage Council ap- · erage ot SlU,utJU for employees r!'gular meeting of council.
proved a $1,161 ,880 appropria· under 55 and $5,000 fo r those from ·
Steven Story was appointed .
tions resolution for 1988 and gave the ages of 55 through 64.
law director of the town for 1988
town employees a pay· increase
Council approved the report of . ai the same salary of$2400 for the ·
at a regular meeting held Mon- Mayor Hoffman showing re· year and council approved a f.ire
day night.
· ceipts of $6.081.30 in fines and contract lor the Middlepor t Fire
hi introducing the appropriafees for the month of December. Department to provide protectioris resolution, Mayor Fred
Mayor Hoffman read a Jetter tion for on!'·half of Salisbury
Hoffman pointed out that the from Pomeroy Mayor Richard Township with the township to
total figure provides only for the Seyler,feporting that Pomeroy pay $l100 a year for th e coverage.
very basic operations of the town Village Council does . give its
Dewey Horton wa~ reelected
during the next year .
consent for several homes on president of council for 1988 after .
Making up 'the tota l appropria· Rutland St. to be annexed to the having received the commenda·
lions are: general fund , incluil- village of Middleport. It was lion of Mayor Hoffman and other
ing safety fund. $337.295; street reported thattwo of the residents . councll members for his work in
maintenance. $68.8.15; fire equip· involved will pass the requ1red 1987'.
m~nt ; Sl9 , 015; !Ire truck, $36,200;
petition for annexation to
Horton ahd Councilmen James
sanitary sewer escrow, $30,300;
Middleport .
Clatworthy commended theMid·
pu,bllc ' transportation, $19~.32~; · . The rj)ayor .. apriounced ·that dleporl J:&gt;ollce Department lor It's
water· tarlk. · $85,000: water. bids for a dimen~ion manhole to· "flhe performance" during inci$156,.100; sewer, $115,015; swim· 'be installed ·at Race and Front
deq ts in the Meigs Local teachers
ming pool, $20,755; cemetery ,' Sts.. in order to lake sewage to st rike. Councilmen Bob Gilmore
$21.840: meter deposit, $6.000. the sewage lagoon rat her than to commended all employees and
Estimated income for 1988 is the river were openPd . There thE' fire d!'partment for th.e ir
$1 ,229,522 .
were four firms bidding. the work In 1987 and asked th at a
Upon the recommendation o.f lowest being $10,86.1 by Young's d&lt;? terminatlon be mad e if Middle·
Mayor Hoffman who commented Excavating of Millfield . Mayor port VIllagE' as a property owner
th a t the village has a good group Hoffman was authorized to ac· in the Hobsori area ca n pass the
was pulled
her yard to ·hegln work In · ofworkersdedicatedtocommun· cept the Young bid if that is the necessary pE'tltlon s fo r annexinr:
' WORK UNDERWAY- Lulu Shaffer, of Dark
lty service. council passed an rE&gt;commendation of Floyd G. Hobson area properties· to the
a
fire
that has heen smoldering
extinguishing
llollow Road, just outside Pomeroy, was relieved ·
ordinance
providing for pay Brown Associates. which serves villai(e.
.
underground
near
lrer
house
since
August.
Monday morning· when excavation equipment
increases · to ' those employees. as the town 's advisory firm on
Councilman Jack Sa tterfield
e ffec tive· March 1. According to engineering matters.
read a .letter from Rep . .Jolyn
· Mayor Hoffman reported that Boster in regard to the funds tha t
the provis ions of the ordinance,
a ll full and part time hourly he also'recelved a Je tter from the may be ava ilable to Middleport
workers will receive a 30 cent an U. S. Corps of Engineers which for numerous improvement prohour Increase while salaried indicates for the first time that jects as a res~ lt of the passage of
·By NANCY YOACHAM
been removed. th e ' excavated Resources and because public workers wil l receive a flat $12 a erosion to the town's sewage Iss ue 2 in ·Ohio. She will provide
Sentinel New,s Staff
area wlil be backfilled. covered health and safety was Involved. week raise. Total cos t to the · lagoon below Middleport might guidelines as soon as they arc
Work began ~onday on . the
with top soil-and reseeded .
the project was classified as an viliage for the year will be · be caused by the Ohio River. available so th'at Middlepo rt ca n
Luia Shaffer property , , Dark
The refuse burning on the emergency according to OSM $16,000.
Council approved a study of the . file applications for project s.
HolloW Road. just out stile Pome· . Shaffer properly is from the old guidelines.
Counc il also agreed to pur· problem by the corps. Mayor Also present for the mee ting
roy, to extinguish an old slate 'coal mines which once operat~ d
Although origin of the slate fire cha se Dimension 100 Insurance Hoffma,n said tha t c urre~'tly a were Councllman William Wai·
dump which has been smoldering
in the Dark Hollow area. The is not known forcerlain,Jocal fire through Agent Jo hn Musser of village must pay 25 percent oft he ters and Cl&lt;'rk-Treasurer ,Jon
underl(round since August. Cost
problem ":'as referred to OSM by officials suspect th~ slate began th e Downing -Child s-M ulle.n cost of actual corrective work Buck.
of the reclamation project, ap·
the Ohio Department of Natural burning by spontaneous Agency for employees giving up Involved but that 20 percent of
In conclusion. Mayor !'loff!1'1ari
proximatel Y. $28,000. is being
combustion.
Blue Cross coverage. Mayor that can be -in " in kind" services. rPported hat he has received
paid by the Feder11l· Office of
Last night 's mrE'ting served as · several te lephone ca lls from
Hoffman sa id that th&lt;? increased
Surface Mining. a part of the U.S.
· cost of Blue Cross this year would a public hea ring on a economic townspeople asking that MiddleDepartment of Interior .
be about $7.000 more with the development grant for the devel· po rt Village withdraw from the
Bob Fleming. a s upervisor at
premium being $40.56;}. Cost of opment of the downtown area. Meigs Loca l School District and
the Plltsburgh. Pa. office of
the Insurance pu rcha sed through Mayor Hoffman reported that form its own sc hool system.
OSM . reported this morning that
Musser will be'$29.249. The new aspects of the grant application Mayor Hoffman said th'at even
the contractor. Jones Excaval ·
policy wilt provide better ben!'f- are coming together and he was thoui(h he approvPs of such a
lng, .of Charleston. W.Va .• has
its for workers at a Jesser cost. authorized to proceed with filing plan. steps towards that end
three wceRsTiiwhteh to complete
CLEVELAND !UPIJ - A r·o r which a record 24.3 million . the mayor said. The new polic y· the application if all of the needed would not be a function of the
tl!e project. weathrr permitting. Columbus man plans to use part
tickets had been sold.
also includes life insurance cov- data Is ava ilable pr.ior to the next vi lta i(e· government .
The Barnes appeared Monday
·Fleming said that in cases such of his winnings from Saturday
.
.
as the Shaffer project. OSM night's record $~2 mililon Super for a mid-afternoon news confet··
Invites potential contractors to • Lotto jackpot to buy his wife a . ence at a regionallotteryofllce in
Columbus while the Walkers
· ,visit the sife and then submit bid bowling ball.
Zelma
Barnes
said
his
wife
were,
at a late . afternoon news
pro~a.Js . Actual project plans
COl .UMBUS.. Ohio !UP! ) . In Cleveland .
conference
Sharon wanted a bowling ball for
miJiion to Strauss lo set . up the
are desiJlned by OSM'.
.
The board a Iso:
'The
state Controiling Board Phar-Mor headquarters , which
Zelma
Barnes
·
said
his
first
-Approved th 0 r&lt;'IP&lt;Jsc of
Altho~gh Fleming says the · Christmas. but didn't get 11 .
Monday reieased $2 million In employs 200 people.
He and his wife wili receive purchase will be a bowling ball
$5!9,000 fpr th0 Ohio Department
·
burning slate.plle on the Shaffer
emergency loan fund s to three
property Is not large. It Is serious ' $640,000 a year for the next 20 for his wife because she wanted
"If there ever were an oppor· of Insurance to hire 10 peopl&lt;'.
because It is in close proximit y to years. their half of the jackpot for one for Christmas and he never school districts which . ex pe- tunity to expand upon a success including four inVes ti ga tors. two
rienced sudden reductions in story, this is one," said Meshel.
•
having the numbers 16, 2!, 29, 33, got it for her.
legal inter n• and an att orn0y. to
Shaffer's home.
T)le conlractor will excav;~te 35 .and 43 on their Super Lotto ·
property tax collections beca use
The Barnes have four children,
Another loan granted a year a!)minister the insurar.ce portion
the burning malerial which will ticket. Getting a similar check two at home and two in college. . of vanishing industry.
ago. tri Llftle Tikes . a Hudson toy of the civil justlr&lt;' and reform law
then be mixed with water to bring will be Orv(lle and Anna Walker · He· works .for the Ohio Pepart·
Cleveland Scho'ol District was manufacturer. •was modifle ~. enacted in 19~7 . The moncv wi 11 ·
.down · Ute temperature to an · of Utica, the other couple who
ment of Youth Services and she awarded the largest amount placing the state second In line come irom age nt licensing. f('(!s.
acceptable level, Fleming said. had the second of the two winning works lor the ·Small Business $1.3 miliion. Other recipients· for recovery to Amei'ltrust of
-Released $1 million for elt'c·
On&lt;;e the burning material has tickets from S~turday's drawing
were Martins Ferry City Scho61 Cleveland In the event of a trlcal renova tions a t Cambridge
Continued on page 6
District In Belmont County. bankruptcy.
Mental Health Center.
$333,901. and Grov.eport ·Madlson
In Franklin County. $385,815. The
·loans have to be ;repald In !990.
The board also released $241
.The $1.3· million pers:onal In- .
Defendants presented evi· million as the state's regular
The Meigs County Common
Pleas Cqurt jury trial of Parts jury lawsuit by Hess stemmed dence that James King was not monthly school subsidy payment
Hess anll Robin Hess against from an accident on Dec. 15,1981 on the scene at the time the for January, and released $1
CLEVE(.ANO (UPI) ,- The Ohio Student Loan CommiK~lon
accident occurred a{KI the jury mJUion in ·instructional subsidies
Jaqlf's King and Jeffets Coal and at an oil and gas drllll'lg site.
engaJec:l
In maltlmllllon-doDar, no-bid contrarts and questlona·
Hess, · a J.D. Drilling Co. found that neither King nor at public colleges and
Excaval!ng, ended Monday af.
hie
deale
wtlli loagllme campalg" contributors to Gov. Richard
ternoon with nine jurors retum- employee, fell off an on rig while Robert Jeffers. of Jeffers Coal universities.
Celeste a pablllbed report says.
lng a verdict In favor o! the · ·lowering a drUUna-mast, sustain• anti Excavallng, were at fault In
The board granted a $2 million
The Clevelaad Plain Of;&gt;aler reported Sunday that directors of
tng
a
brolten
anlcle.
Since
'the
defendants.
·
the accident.
loan to 35th Strouss Associates.
lhe liludeJit lou cemmiAioa milled stale officials last year lo
accident, Hess hu undergone ·
The defendants· were repres- Ausdntown Township, Mahoning
pia appro•&lt;~~ for mlftlo.. oi dollars In office 11pace and· '
still ented by Pomeroy Attorneys · County. for constructing a $19
The trial which began last seven operations and
fumllure
dealt wllli tile Celeale eaatrlllutors.
WednesdaY was expected to have walldq with a severe limp and Carson Crow and Fred Crow 111. million state-of-the-art dlstribu·
·
A
11-;rear
1-. IDr the udetil loa• comm......,'s
Hess was reprelentecl l;ly Attor: lion CMter for Phar-Mor Co., a
concluded on Friday. However, cane at trial.
headquarten
wu
awarded to a pu1Denthlp fonned b' llie
the caae did not go to the Jury . Plalntltfa alleJed tltat the · ney Cliarlea Hess, Columbua. •
dlscounl drligstore headquar:
Celelile
eoahibtdon'
abo&amp;' a ..-IIi before the c0111rlliutors
The case haa been dismissed terec:I In downtown Youngstown.
until ab()ut 2 p.m. yesterday. It accident aild the reeultlng perpure~
tile
bulllllag,
a vacaal dllapldaled llntcture In
too)! !ell than two hours for the sonal Injuries to Hess were by Judie Chiri!!S Knl&amp;bt with
!!@nat~? Minority Lead,e r Harry
·
dOWIItoColambtla,
reoortla
..,_.
·
•
jury to return the verdict In favor caused by the negllgMce ~ .!l'e aourt c:oata to be' paid by the Meshel, D·Youngstown, noted
defendant!.
plaintiffs.
of tbe 4tdendant.
1
·the state already ' loaned $2

Work underway on project

GUlLS SCHEDULE

Dec, 14-Miller ................................ Home

992~5627

Dec. 11-0ak Hiii ....................~.......Hotnt
Dec. 1 8-l;lannan Trace ................. Away .

Feb. 12 -Federal Hocking ;.............. H0me

Dec. 14-Belpre .............................. Away
Dec. 17-Aiexander ......................... Home
Dec. 23-Eastern ............... ,'.. ~......... Away
Jan. 4-Well.ton .............................. Home

THE AREA'S MOST

,,'

Jan. 19-Fecleral Hocking.~ ............ Home
Jan. 22 -Southern ..................~........Home
Jan. 29-North Gallia ................... Away

Jan. 26-'Aiexonder :,....................... Home ,....
Jan. 30-Point Pleasant ....,............ Away

!

-

Jan. 1S-Oak Hill ..... ~......... ~........... Away

Jan. 19-.Trimmble .......................... Hon~~
Jan. 22 ~Belpre .............................. Away

Feb. 9.:_Athens ....................................... Home

•

Dec.
Dec.

Dec. 19-logan •••••••n•••••..•••••••uouooooHOme
Dt:t: . 1 22~WellstO!n .. ~ ........ ~ .............. Away

u .....

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL .
1917-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

·Dec. 7-EGstern............................... Away
Dec.1 0-0ok Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-Ncirth Gallia .................... Away
Dec:: 17 ~Hannan Trace ...................Home

Dec. 19-Aieonder .........:................ AWay'
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ........................Home
Jan. 7 -Southwestern .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia .....................Home
Jan. 14-Symmes Valley ................ Away
~n~

20-Gallipolis ..... ,....."·............. Away
·Jan. 21 -Eastern .............................Home
Jan: 21-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Feb. 1-Southwest•n .~...................Home

Feb. 4-0ak Hill ..............................Home
Feb. 1 1-Hannan Trace .................. Away

.Feb. 13 -Meigs ........................~ ...... ~ A'fDY

Central Ohio couples
capture Super Lotto

Schools ·receive loan money

Trial. en,ds in j(lvor of defendant

·I

oCOM!'LETE RADIATOR 8lllvicl.
•MAJOR AEPAIII&amp;
•COMPLETE WHE!L ALIGNMENT .
&amp; BALANCE
•MOlT MAJOII'CIIEDIT CAROl
/lCCEI'TED,

inspection of schools to see if they meet minimum
standards. The association does not believe that
this atti tude will serve to bring this labor crisis to
an end.
"Meigs Local taxpayers and parents have a
r ight to know that their teachers have bee n willing
to paSR up wage increases for two school years and
to maintain labor sta bility for a n additional two
years by tying increases in salaries or fr!nge
benefits to a set percent Of the district 's money
actually available.
"Although the MLTA was willing to negotiate
today and the Judge was available, the next
session was set for Wednesday in order to
. accomdate the board lawyer who was not
ava ilable for today."

·

'\

- Featuring
Great Hamburgers

OSLC makes questionable deals ·
acconling to published report

w••

(

•

•n

4

26 Cents ·

Middleport · employees get
pay hike; approve '88 budget

BOYS BASKETBALL

A GREAT PLACE .
FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Section. 12 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

· on a percentage ol the total opera tin!! fund s. The
proposal was reasonable in that it provides only a
. four percent increase ht the a mount to be spent on
salaries in the last two years of a four year
contract. The association is still willing to accept
no pay raise in the first two years of the contra ct.
If the two parties cannot agree on what constitutes
the amount of money available then it would be
submitted to arbitration. This idea, along with a
four yea r contract. would guarantee labor peace
for at least four years.
"The assoc iation · would also agree with the
board:s last proposal on school calendar.
non-renewal , and teac her e\&lt;a luation articles.
"Board members con1acted by parents have
indicated that they are not . willing to seriou~Jy
negotiate until the State Department has done an

Lo~al

JAN. 14-NORTH GAlLIA - HOME
JAN. 1 5-SYMMES VAlLEY - HOME
JAN. 22-EASTERN- AWAY

Tli'a£e~)

enttne

Teachers, ·board .fail to reach agreement

SOQTHERN

992-6661
INSTALLMENT LOANS
992-3007

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, Januar.V 12, 1988

,Copyrighted 1988

EASTERN

· t"IUST

I

•

MEIGS

'

'

)lick4
. 4925

Page3

.,•••,,
Flitenf'
"•••

.
Cloudy. Chance ot showers,
changing to snow flurries
tonight. Low in 20s.

.

.'

~

t

'~

.

'•

••

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