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~ -

'-8•

1·2-The Deitv SeuliMI

Pomeroy-Mid-' lllCJrt. Ohio

-----~~alnews--~Probe deaths
of Milton couple
.
.

"

EMS has fioo

weeke~ calls
'

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
over the weekend.
Saturday at 5:51 a .m., Rutland to Township ~oad· 234 for
Thelma Chase to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
1: 28 p.m. to C&amp;K Market for Don VanCooney to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 5:34 R.m. to Plum St. for
Thelma Grueser to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 3:49a.m., Middleport to the pollee department for
Dennis THUs to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 4:34
a.m. to East Main St . for Kenny Lunsford to Veterans Memorial
·
·
HospitaL

Announcements
.·

CJllllorilla except tor some snowshowers In the southern Sierra
Nevada but an advisory for
strong wind gusts remained In

effect for all of Southern Callfor·
nla. A flood warning remained In
effect along the coast.
Elsewhere; widespread dense

fO&amp; narrowed visibility across ..
much of the eastern part or tl\e
country. Officials at New ~r·
leaas lnternatl!mal Airport were
forced to cancel some flights
because of the tog.I&gt;elays of up to
40 minutes .were reported at
Chicago's O'Hare International
Airport.
Mild temperatures and rain
with some severe th1,mderstorms
were spread throughout the area.
. In ca:'lltornla, a plane crashed
Into a . fog-shrouded · mountain
SUnday, killing four members of
the Los Angeles County Sherltr s
Deparlrnenk Lightning strikes
knocked .out power to at least
20,000 homes and b~slne.,ses,
· mostly In the San Gabriel Valley
and In the South Bay near Los
Angeles.
The cornbiOlllion of strong
winds, pounding surf !ind high
tide along the Souther~: Callfor·
nla coast triggered floods

.fllJ

'. ~SNOw
•
AAJN ·
SHOWERS · ·
FRONTS:
Wann "Cold . ....1. Sialic .-Occluded

II

r

Hospital news

.,....

·

'

Veteraus Memorial
MlpshO\IIImiliiiiUm-:rw. AUe811150%olll'l)'shaded-IIJof-t
Saturday· Admissions
Items sought
Members of Eagles Auxiliary
toreceivepiec:ipitationi .
·
·
· :UPI
Thelma Chase, Albany; Crystal
No. 2171 are asked to bring Items
WEATHER MAP- Wet weatherwiUbefouadacrossmostofthe
Blake, Hartford. W.Va.; Martha
foranauctlontobeheldTuesday ,
couatry with aUilahlne preva!Uag only In Montana. Snow will
Everson, Racine; Dorothy Col·
7p.m.,aftertheregularmeetlng.
extend from the BOutbera and central Plateau region acrou the
llns, Pomeroy.
tickets. that had live of the six
Sorority
to
meet
southern
two-thirds
of
the
Rockies
Into
tbe
central~~~
Plallll.
Saturday Discharges winning numbers, worth $1.000.
XI
Gamma
Epsilon
Sorority
Rain
showers
aad
a
few
thuadentonns
wiD
extend
aci'088
the
Evelyn
Mall)s, Ora Sinclair,
There were also 9,295 tickets ·
meet
Tuesday,
7
p.m.
;
at
the
desert
Southwest,
Okl&amp;ltoma
and
north
Texas.
Some
of
the
Wilda
,Hudson,
Linda Stewart ,
will
with four of the six winning
Citizens
Center.
thanclentorms
ma;y
be
aevere
late
Ia
the
day
from
eastern
Texas
to
Jesslee
Kimes.
,
Pomeroy
Senior
numbers. Those tickets are each ·
League to meet
•
portions of the lower Mlsslulppl Valley. Rain wiD also fall over
Sunday Admissions -None.
worth $76; officials said.
The
Middleport
Child
Conser·
much
of
thee
eastern·
third
of
tbe
natlcin
with
snow
over
parts
of
Sunday Discharges - Tessie
Wednesday's Super Lotto jack·
will
meet
ThursMichigan
and
nortllera
New
~gland
and
scaltered
thundenhowEvans
&gt; Henry . Beaver, Walter
vatlon
League
pot . will be worth at least $3
day, 7:30p.m., at the Ohio Power ·
ers over the southeastern states.
Reltm!~e.
· mlll!on. ·
·
Ofilce. Bunny Kuhl will be 'the
.
guest speaker . and the district -----~---president will be In attendance to
Soutb Central ()hlo
' , an hour tonight.
discuss plans for the spring
Mostly cloudy today with a
conference. Devotions and the high near 50. Cloudy tonight with
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friends may call 'at Wilcoxen
traveling prize will be by Linda a chance of rain late tonght. The
Wednesday through Friday
0
Funeral !lome Mon,day from 2 to
Broderick. Hostesses will be lows w!U.be near 40.
Some rain likely Wednesday,
4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m•
Helen Blackston and Peggy
Rain Tuesday with a high near changing to snow In the northW·
Harris. All members are urged to 50.
·
est. Chance of flurries statewide
Mariori Hawk
attend.
The probability of preclplta- Thursday. Fair Friday. Highs ·
Cancelled
lion Is near zero today, 40 percent will be In the. 40s Wednesday,
N •
d
Marlon tHammer) Hawk, 59,
RACIN,E. - A meeting of the tonight and near 100 percent between 30 and 35 Th~rsday and
·
of 31890 Minersville Road, Ra· Soutnern Local School District Tuesday.
·
near 30 Friday. Lows w!ll ·be In
cine, died Sunday at 0!1!01Stilte announced ear.ller for 7. p.m. on
Winds will be from the north at the 40s Wednesday, between 20
University Hospitals In Colum· Tuesday at the high school flv~ 15 miles an hour today and , and 25 Thursday and· 15 and 20
bus
a lengthy
Illness.by . r~ca~f~e:te:r!~a~h:_:a:s~b~e:en~ca~n~ce~lle~d:·_·_~r:ro~m::_:th:e~e:a~s~t~a~t~fl:v~e~to~l5~m:il~es:·;_F~r~ld~a~y~,_ _ __:._ _ __:_J~==========~
A following
steelworker
employed
Midwest Steel, Pomeroy. Mr.
Hawk was born March 22, 1928 In
Pomeroy to the late Price P~rker
and Mary Wickham Hawk. He
was a veteran of the Korean War.
a member of the United Steel
Workers Local, and a member of
the 'South Be thel New Testament
Church.
Survivors Include one son,
Dennis Hawk, with the U.S. Navy
In Turkey; one daughter, Mary
Reltl'n!re, Racine; two grand·
children; three sisters, Mrs.
John (Frances) Smith of Sandy·
ville, W.Va., Mrs. Norbert (Kath·
erlne) Neutzllng of Middleport
REG. 1499.00 D.SHER
and Mrs. Dale (Florence)
Warner of . Syracuse; several
nieces and nephews.
SAil PIICI
)'!esldes 'his parents. he waspreceded In death by his ·w ue,
Ethel Hawk, two b~others, Ralph
ONLY
and Grover Hawk; one sister,
.Fal SIZI
DtuWt
.......
bookcaN
....
Dorothy Lawson; and one hall·
1929.00
Hnlllnard,
faotlloartl
IIIII 1111111
'"·
5
.....
dltll,
'""'"""
.
.
sister, Ada Wickham.
bH.
stood.
·
ORTHOlUX lEG. •m.so ruu so
Services will . be 10:30 a.m.
Ultra Plush
,
,DIIIIJint, ........ • I I of,
s·
Thursday at Ewing funeral
Top
lEG. 1554.00 GWIH so
.........lhuhh.
Home with Pastor Duane Syden·
SAVE &amp;0" ON tHIS ONE
Stricker officiating. Burial will
be In South Bethel Cemetery .
$pldal ....., II nllawty recllnln
lit·
(lllfry triple dm11r, noirror,
BERKLINE
Friends may call at the funeral
JREKA UPRIGHT
11799.00 pMistot liool, cNtl•........t,
home from 2 to 4 p.m . and 7 to 9·
night llllll. SAVE '400.00
Hurry in an this salt!
p . m . on Tuesday and
Wednesday .
lit·
Pi01 Illite lolludoo...., ....
IJOSOOO
Mr,trl-wlowmlrror,ful/OFF
Features Edge
0
A p•t accent chair,
•
• ... llool, night ltan4. '""'
....
1279
·
beatw bar, extrlllllly comfortable.
locker /llldintr ............... I 116
A11artld colors Cllld
Dial-a-nap,
fabrics.
....
1419
.
11339.00
Continued from page 1
Wallaway Rlclintr .......... 12JD

One person has ·winning lotto ticket
·CLEVELAND ( UPI) - One
ticket had all six winning
numbers In Saturday's $6 million
Ohio . Super Lotto game, lottery
officials said.
The winning numbers In the
game were: 3, 10. 30, 36. 40and44.
Oftlclal~ - said there were '195

I

·

Area deaths

Andrew Lofty

. . Andrew G. Lofty, 776, or Little
Hocking: died Sunday morning at
Parkv!ew Nursing Home In Par·
kersburg, W.Va.
Born Aug. 25, 1911 in Marietta,
Mr. Lofty was ~ son of the late
Charles and Rosa Todlo Lofty.
Survivors include a daughter
and son•in-law, Peggy S, and
James E .. Miller. P'arkersburg, ·
W.Va.; a soli and daughter-In·
law, Robert E .- and Carole Loft~.
Li tile Hocking; ·five grandchild·
ren; four brothers. Ph!llip and
Edwal-d Lofty of Parkersburg.
W.Va. , James Lofty of Vienna,
W.Va. and William Lofty of
Belpre ; . several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Isabelle, In 1987; three
brothers and one sister.
Services Will be 11 a .m. Wed·
nesday at the White-Ethridge
Funeral Home, 125 Lee St. ,
Belpre, with Rev. Roy Deeter
off!cla t!ng. Burial .will be In
Torch Baptist Cemetery ,
Friendscmay call at the funeral
home from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday
evening.

Daisy Douglass
Daisy A. Cle ndenen Douglass,
88. 2101 Mt. Vernon Avenue, died
Sunday morning In Holzer Medl·
cal Center , (:;all!polls. after a
short illness.
She was born Aug. 15. 1899 In
Mason County to the late Lorenzo
Dow Clendenen and Lyda Anne
·
McCulloch Clendenen.
A life-long resident of Mason
County, she had worked for
several years at the Bon Ton
clothing store and the Ben
Franklin clothing store. in Point
Pleasant. She was a member of
Height s United Methodfst
Church ..
Her husband , Captain John R.
Douglass, preceded her In death
In February. 1961. Also preced·
!ng her In death were two sisters,
Ora and Ida and one brother, J.F.
"Rags" Clendenen. ·
Surviving are four nephews,
Tim Cle ndenen, Point Pleasant,
with whom she made ·her home,
John Clendenen, Point Pleasant,
Kendall Clendenin, Culloden and
Jeff Clendenen, Letart.
Services will be Tuesday at 2
p.m . at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with 'the Rev . Michael
Chapman officiating.
' Burial will follow ln.Lone Oaks
Cemetery.

'

.

.'

;

!

Ohio Lottery

Michigan

Daily Number
996
.P ick 4
5331

Page3

•

Vol. 38, No.1 76
C:pyrtphttd , 988

BEDDING SALE

GENUINE
BRASS BEDS

BEDROOM SUITES

$6290°
$69600
s......__,.,..._,2 8870".,

....

$388°0

RECLINER SALE

EPER

5139900 .........,,odl.....

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

........
...

Meigs teachers ...

$5995 ::. . S171 ....
From Only

.

Ja•uarv Ho111e Sale
ACCENT ·
FURNITURE

5359.00
tilrri -d ar' s Oak Bookcase .• 5299
5349.00 '
48" Roll-top Desk ............. 5279
Reg. 5359.00
Oak Pie' Safe ...................... S299
Reg. 5895.00
Cherry Gtwtdfallw Clodc ..... 5588
Reg. S259.00
Oak Curio Cabinet ............. 521 I
5259.00.
~Minor Hall Tree .......... 5199
Reg. $359.00
. ·· ·
'
Oak Gun Cabinet
..........~.... s299
Reg. 5169.00
Split~back Rocker ..~......- .. S13S

.

33°/o

$839°

$1088°0

11359.00

LIVING .ROOM SUITE
SALE·
Wt
quality Norwalt &lt;IIIII
uphols·
ltrk~••

ftature

llflll furniture.

leg. 11323.00
•• TM Safa &amp; Swivel lock• ........S789.00
ieg. 11530.00
Flaral Print ~a &amp; Chair '"'"''''"'""''199.00

Reg. s1411.00 '
Flaral Sofa &amp;Chair .........................SI99.00
... 11426.00
llut Plaid Sofa &amp; Chair .................,$999.00
... 11011.00
'
llut Sofa &amp; Chair """""""""~'"""""''169.00

LAMP SALE

All tallll lamps and floor
lampslnclutled. Cryltallamps,
wood lamps, brass lamps. .

$57" 7•

.... 1459

Wallaway RtcUntr ....._: 1307

LAMP SHADE
SALE
Stylish dHip' lamp shacles in

1.,;...... slzn IIIII ,...
111g. 113,99 Shades.-111,19
115.99 Shadls ....S1U9
.

MERSMAN

'TABLE SALE
Qllllty ••• wllll11t.
CoffiiT..... a.npT-.
End T.W. IIIII Safa ,....._
~PIMIIIIIChltry

BABY FURNITURE
SALE

Play,•, • •.,, Ju~~~p~rs,
Str1l1rf, My lith,
Ia I 1tte1, 11th CINIIra,
C.rlln, C. Se11t1,

leelftr s..... ,.....
T1 I 1n . . •~rat

Windy tonight. Showers,
chance of tbunderstarms.
Temperaturee tlslng to .pear
60. Windy Wednesday. ·

••

at y

enttne
1 Section, 1 2 ,P•u••

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. Januarv 19. 1988

2.5 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NawlfNipBr

Polneroy Council adopts $1,023,311 budget
· By NANCY YOACHMI
Sentinel Stalf Writer ·
Pomeroy VIllage Council
adopted a 1988 budget totaling
SV123,3II for village government
and services during Monday
nlghrs regular session.
In a breakdown of some budget
Items was $157,500 for pollee law
.enforcement, Including $100,000
for salaries and $20,500 for
employee benefits; $17,000 for
recreation
and $4,300
for basic UIIUIY

Total costs for · the . general
governin!lnt services amounted
_to $101,097. Some tlg)lreS com·
prlslng that total were $78,097 for
. the mayor and administrative
offices, Including $29,600 for
salaries, $6,000 for employee
lleneflts and $40,497 for other ·
operatiOns and maintenance;
, and $13,400 for the clerk·
treasurer' Including $10,000 sa·
· lai-y ,,$2,400 for employee benefits
ailcl $1,000 for ·other. ope~atlons
. and ' maintenance.

permiSsive tax; making a total of
·Total generai fund app~oprla·
tlons amounted to $284,897.
$128;000 In special revenue fun!ls.
Under special revenue servl.. . Adopted for water and sewe~
ces council adopted $172,312 for · was a total of $338,563.75.
st~t construction and recon·
Total 'anticipated revenue
from Income tax In 1988 Is
structlon including $75,000 for
salaries ~nd $16,000 for employee ' $240,000. Of that total, $80,000was
benefits, $40,312 for other opera· . appropriated for · general fund
tlons·. • and maintenance and
purposes, and $160,000 for street
$41~000forcapltaloutlay; $10,000
construction, maintenance and
for snow and Ice . removal;
repair, ·~ .
$182,312 for transportation;
ThiS year's budget Is up over
$3,814 In the state highway lund;
$50,000 !rom 1987's budget figure
,J.J,uuu In
fund; SlO;ooo . of approximately $968,000.

In other business,. council· In-defining the job and estabi!shmembers agreed to . consider tng a base salary and merit
re&lt;julrlng • mandatory physicals ·raises for the position.
for employees of the pollee and
Mayor Richard Seyler re·
w;~ter departments. Council-took . ported that official forms have
action .In a previous meetlng' to - been signed to allow general
require phy~lcals for flrell)en.
wrm!sslon for the Ohio Depart·
Council also · discussed the ment of Natural Resource's
possibility ot officially creating Bureau of Mining Reclamation to
the posltio11 or supervisor withll! core drill. the hillside behind the
the street department. Council· Pomeroy Masonic Building. The
man Bruce Reed agreed to speak mayor was unsure when the
to a local attorney for assistance project would begin.

Mei~ · board

to _h old· ~xec:qtive
session at 4·:30 this afternoon
·
•

Central O!f!ce of the district In
The Meigs Local School Dis- met Sunday voting that the Issues
Middleport this morning. A spa·
trict Board of Education was be submitted to expedited bind·
!ng
arbitration.
Upon
accep(ance
kesperson· said a request for a
scheduled to move Into a special
of
binding
arbitration
.
by
the
blackout of statements on the
, executive session at 4:30 p.m.
board, teachers would return to
strike by both sides. requested
today.
·
Fr!d~y by Judge Charles Knight
·Announcement of the meeting · work Immediately.
Under binding arbitration, the , In t·he Meigs Common Pleas
was· made this morning after the
Court, was being honored by the
Meigs Local Teache'r s Assocla· unresolved -Issues would be sub·
board of education.
lion, on strike since Nov. 6, mltted to an Impartial third
reported Monday that members party who would rule on each of
Clas~s were again operating
voted unanimously to seek blnd- the final proposals submitted by
today In six of the Meigs Local
lng.arbltratlon as a means to end _ each side, the Meigs Local
Schools. Attendance on Monday
Teachers Association reports.
the strike In the district.
No statement was Issued In was reported at 65 percent by the
Members of the association regard . to the strike by the Central Office.

Americare-Pomeroy
UrStng an
Rehabilitation Cente·r
(614) 992-6606

Januarv Ho•• Sale

.

OSU tops

Com_munity.

A

~

'

9 Years ·
Service T The

to

., .

'

w'eath.er _____.....;.....,.... .--,..."'-.------'-------'....:.

I

Issues be submitted to expedited
binding arbitration. The general
membership voted unanimously
to accept the recommendation of
the negotiations committee . .
Upon acceptance . of binding
arbitration by the board, the
MLTA would return to work
Immediately.
"MLTA Presidnt Michael Wll·
tong said the MLTA would make
the formal proposal of binding
arbitration · to the board of
education today.
"Wilfong said that latest bar,
gaining session ·Saturday was
under the assistance of Federal
Mediator David Thorley . The
eleven hours of · negotiations
made no progress In settling the :·
strike , which Is now In Its 11th 1
·•'
week.
·
[
" 'The board of education re·
Dally stock prices
jected the MLTA's counter prop(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
osal and refused tp change It's
Bryce and Mark Smith
position on the untesolved
Issues,' Wilfong said.
of Blunt EIUs &amp; Loewl
.·"It has now become apparent
Am Electric Power ...... ....... 27~
that we can get nowhere In the
AT&amp;T ....... .. .... ... ... .. .... ... ... ..29~
collective barg$1nlng process ·
Ashland 011 ...... .. .............. .. 54')4
witt a board that refuses to make
Bob Evans ....... ............ ........ I6 . even t)le ·slightest movement
. Charming Shoppes ....... ...... .ll'Vs
toward settling this dispute,'
Cl ty Holding Co .... .. ............. 32
Wilfong uld.
Federal Mogul. ,.. ..... ........... 34%
"Under binding arbitration,
Goodyear T&amp;f!: .. ......... ... ......59')4
lhe unresolved Issues would be
Heck's Inc ... . :........... ........... 2\lo . subm!~ted to an Impartial third
Key Centurion .......... .......... 39'h
party who then would 'rule on
Lands' End .. c...... ............... .2111o
each of the final proposals
Limited Inc . ..... .. ....... ....... .. I8'l4
submitted by each side. "
Multimedia Inc .......... .. .... .... 51 · · Classes In six of the district's
Rax Restaurants ......, .. ... .. .... 3%
schools were open today with the
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... :....... .... 7",4
use of substitute teachers. Other
Slloney's Inc ........... .. .. ...... .. 20~
schools or the ceunly were closed
Wendy's InU ........... ......... .... 5",4
for observance of Martin Luther
Wortlllngton lnd ... . ,.... .......... . 18
_King Day.
.

Stocks

t

Southern California h.i~ hard _by sudden storm
By ALAN YONAN JR.
United Preas lateraatlonal
A winter rainstorm brought
landslides, floods and power
blackouts to'Southern California
and the pounding surf swept
away a res.ialll'ant, damaged
beachfront homes and forced the
helicopter rescue of 50 guests
from an endangered hotel.
The storm, which sprang to lite
In less than 24 hours, dumped up
to 3 Inches of rain .on Southern
California by Sunday night and
starte.d spreading heavy snow
from the Sierra 'Nevada to the
southern Rockies.
Up ' to 2 feet of snow burled
Monticello hi. southern Utah,
while 20.1nches fen ' In Durango,
Colo., and Flagstaff, Ariz. Drifts
4 feet high were reported In
Cortez , Colo.
The .storm . was spreading
across the soutiJern Rockies
today and was expected to Invade
the central Plains tonight. Most
of the snow had ended In

POINT PLEASANT - · An apparent murder-suicide' has
resulted In the death of a Milton couple, !oundtlead by a family
member at their residence on Dry Ridge Road In Mason County
early Sunday morning, according to a West Virginia State
Po.llce spokesman.
.
'
The victims, Woodrow Gary Hightower, 37. and his former
wife. Rebecca Sue Hightower, both sut!ered gunshot wounds to
the head from a .22 callbe~ revolver, according to pollee. They
were discovered ,by a family member, the spokesman said.
DetermiJlatlon of who used the. weapcin could not be made
until labratory tests , which. were not yet completed, are
finalized.
.
· ·
The Hightower residence Is In 'Mason County, pear the
Mas~n-Cabell County .line, according to Pollee.
.
. · Hightower was a construction worker.

Monday• .)enUII'Y 18. 1988

••.

• '· i

-

. Ortega says ·prisoners could
:be ~released. to United·States .

.....

, · tn

wu.eo.... ....,...,..

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI)
. - President Daniel Ortega ofCered direct talks with the
U.S.·backed Contra rebels next
week and the Immediate release
of Nicaragua's political prison·
ers If the United States agrees to
take them.
Ortega Monday also abolished
people's tribunals, which try
Contra supporters, and named
Cardinal Mlguel,Obandoy·Bravo,
t,he !Uitlon's Romari Catholic
poetry and a can'rrom Secretary leadj&gt;r," to mediate direct talks
or the State Julia Tashjlana for with the rebels.
Integration .o r the slatt&gt;'s urban
The moves fullfllled the Sa.ndi·
schools. And In ~oncord, N.H.,
rtlsta leader's pledges llist week
activists, religious leaders and . to rekindle the stalled Central
politicians held a Statehouse American peace plan. He made
ceremony amid the bustle of a
the promise at a summit of the
regular state work day. 1
five Central American pres!·
In Texas, state employees had dents, who signed the regional
the option of taking off Monday
for King's birthday or Tuesday
for Confederate Heroes Day. And
In VIrginia, King was honored
with Confederate war heroes
Rol!ert 1;:. Lee and Andrew
"Stonewall" Jackson.
aetore the Atlanta church
'
''
service, a wreath was laid at·
By JACK BEARY
King's crypt, a marble mon)l·
United Preaa lnteraatlonal
ment surrounded by a pool or
A winter storm that claimed
water remlnlscentoftheRetlect· eight lives arid caused more than
lng Pool In Washington, where $21 million damage In California
King delivered his 1963 "I Have a
barreled over the Rocky Moun·
Dream" speech.
talns and !lito the Plains with
At the church, Atlanta Maypr
heavy snow and high winds
Andrew Young, formerf'IJ/.S.
today, kllllng·at least three more
ambassador to the United Na·
people In Its path .
!Ions and a Cortner King as'so·
"It's snowing, all right. That's
elate, l)oted the crowd's racial. -putting It mildly. This Is winter's
and political mix and saki King worst for us so ftr," said
"would in~eed be proud of this
Ramona ver Maas, the pollee
congregation that has gathered
dispatcher In Sidney, Neb.
to commemorate his birth."
Attending were Christian and
Jewish religious leaders, repre- ·
sentatlves of other nations,
members of Congress, and Democratlc presidential · candl·
dates Sens. Paul Simon of DUnols
and Albert Gore of Tennessee
111111 Jesae Jackson, a lao a former •
VIctor Perry, 63, Albany Route
l&lt;lng assoelate.
3, entered a voluntary plea of
guilty to a slnele count of
marljuaan• cultivation when he
· appeared before Judie'tharles
H. KiiJiht In the Melp County
Commoa Pleas Court .
The chlrae aaalnlt Perry Is
the rault of a raid Wlltch
woUnds, acconllq to tile West OCCIII'redAq,lB,lastyear,atbls
Vttatala State Pollee spokeswo- property ·at which time more
man. Tile weapo11 !lied was than 100 plailta were taltea,
aPJII'I!IItly a
lhot 111111, .accordtna ta Metp Pr cutlnc
Attonaey Fred W. Crow 10.
accordlq to nptlltl.
Perry •
IDdleted 01 tile
. ~tly Qll!ar ~toa
cllarllv,
wlllcll
tJ
1 ter.y Ill tile
lllllt lltl ""- while ... ..1
foVdt
dejpae
,
aad
carrlel a
11111!'!4 Ill
penalty Ill abc, 12 or 18
Jato - ~ . . eliot .:lliliiMt
m.tlltlaprtJOIIIIIdl
mlalmum
lllalllif1 tcOoRIIq to the
*'I ; I II') -ofii,OIID.

Klar.
Jr.
ceremony waa pak of day-lone activities"
conducted In oiMetvauce of Martin Luther Klag ·
Day. (UPI)

·Jiell•lltrpamteace PI-

Ill
plda, Pa., a&amp; approsimahlytbe18111etlmeu ~Us

n.

Americans honor Dr. King
•
with parades., ceremonles
'In Memphis, a. wreath was laid
B$ANNE8~R
at the Lorraine Motel, where ·
U.alted Preas lnleraatlonal
Americans marched, prayed, King was slain while supporting
rang bells and memorialized striking ' sanitation workers.
Martin Luther King Jr., whose There are plans to convert the
campaign of non-violent cw!l motel Into a civil rights museum.
· Rosa Parks, the Montgomery.
disobedience forced the natloch,
where King was pastor until his Ala., woman whodefl~segregaApril 4, 1968, assassination In tlon laws Dec. I, 1955, by refusing
MemphiS, Tenn .. his wife, Co· to give up a bus seat for a white
retta Scott King joined a host of man, sounded the first clarion In
dignitaries who heard past~r Philadelphia for a coast-to·c9ast
Joseph Roberts Jr., call the slain bell ·ringing.
In California, a "Freedom
clyll rights leader ''our general
. ..
Train" traveled !rom San J'ose to
,. of peace. "
"We know that the war Is not San Francisco with about 4,00()
people aboard and In Los Anover," Roberts said. "We know
geles, marchers paraded along
that we bave a long way to go.··
the boulevard named for King.
In coast-to-coast ceremontes,
Forty-three states mark the
Aml;'rlcans ·were urged to make
Monday's third national corh· 'national holiday that was de·memoratlon of King's birth the . clared by a divided Congress. In
addition to Arizona, Montana,
dawn of a renewed struggle
IdahO, Wyoming, South pakota,
against Intolerance.
Hawaii and New Hampshire do
Thousands marched In Phonot recognize the holiday.
enix to demand th1&gt; holiday be
1n King observances around
resto~ tn·Arlzona, where It was
the nation, Denver. groups prerepeal~ by. Gov .. Evan Mecham
pared dinner for the homeless;
. last year In the, first of many
New Jeney had a food and ·
actlons that have prompted a
clothing
drive lor Montclair and
campaii'JI to drive Mecham from
Newark homeless shelters; Colo· .
qfflce.
rado residents were asked to
drive ali day with their headlights on, and Bishop Hule
Rogers brought cheers from a
gatherlna of about 200 at a
Brooklyn, N.Y ., church when he .
COLUMBUS (UPI)- A man
noted tll8t "When one prophet
shot and I!Uled a woman In front
die$, the cause does not die."
of a ColQIIIbul residence Monday
In Hartford, CoM., Ktn11 was
and then baJTicaded himself
reme_!llbered with · songs and
Inside the house before appar.elltly taklnll bll own life, pollee
officials 111d.
J(IIJecr were Lora B. Fraysler,
. 26, and Duke Wayne Fleltz, 26,
both 0( Cohunblla. The lacldent
Involved an appa~nt tomestlc
dtlpute but tbe two were llot
POINT PLEASANT - . An
married and there was ao clear
apparent murcleroluklde hu remoUve, 11lcl poUCie.
lllllted Ia the deatll of a ·Leon
maa clallld tbe RJ~~U couple, fOIIIId •
by other
frorl{ 1111 . . . . "' . . . . tbe . flftlly 11161nt en: ·at 2 p.m.,
lfl'lllld lid lbat ............ ttamy, Ia t1111r lllldBDCe on
paUce lilt.
.
Leoa B·Sm Jtoatl.

Man shoots, kills

Colunihus woman

Plains receives more snow;
.nation's death, toll
increases
.

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olf U. . . ..0

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wu

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=:.:toaimr 'l'•lfttll1'11e
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e·
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The powerful storm draped a
southwest Nebraska and eastern
Colorado.
blanket of snow across a widen·
Butte, Mont., was down to 24
tng path from the southern
Rockies through the central ·below zero this morning, Alex ander said, "and I expect YellowPlains. Snow warnings were
posted from South Dakota to the stone to check 'In with somewhere
Texas Panhandle. ·
close to 30 below." While the
frigid ti&gt;mperatures were plaguHeavy snow was falling In
Ing the Northwest , the rest of the
Nebraska this morning, where
country was relatively mild .
forecaster Lyle Alexander said
North Platte had around a foot or
Heavy rain this morning
snow and drifts up to six feet In
the western part ol the state.
soaked the lower Mississippi
Winds up to 35 mph· produced · Valley and the central Gulf Coast
states .
near blizzard ~ond!tlons In

VictOr P~rry arraigned in Meigs
Court; entel'S voluntary guilty pie~

.Leon couple .f ound
· d~d in home Monday.

n.

the political prisoners they could
peace accord Aug. 7 to end the
be freed sooner.
region's guerr!lla wars.
"We think that the cardinal
Ortega said the direct talks
with the Contras could open as . eould negotiate with the United
States government for them to
early as next week, on Jan . 26 or
receive these prisoners so they
27~
be freed Immediately,"
could
He said he would grant a
Orteea
said. ,
·
general amnesty to political
Obando
y
Bravo
said
he
was
. prisoners, Including Contras and
satisfied by Ortega 's promise of
former members of ousted
a general amnesty and hoped the
leader Anastasio Somoza's Na·
States as "good samar!·
United
tiona! Guard, but he said a
tans"
would accept tho~e
negotiated cease-fire .would be
the 'flrsi step leading to an · released.
Ortega's agreed last Saturday
amnesty.
to
take the steps ' he announced
Ortega sal(! the Sandlp!sta
Monday
: His announcement of
government would be wHllng to
the
proposals
Saturday broke
free the ' prisoners without a
appeared
to
be an Impasse
what
cease-fire If a country outside
In
Implementing
the Central
Central America would agree to
peace
plan
.
American
let them Immigrate. He said If
the United States would accept

:....

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'ftllt IIMt
tided
-.I
IIMeiiii,OIIDUtlfarfelhlre
'II : c1a.s
.

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21

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The defendant, through his
attorney, agreed to the fine and
forfeiture of the property but
requested that . probation be
ordered Instead of Imprison·
men!, according to the Prosecu·
tor's Jnvestliator Paul Gerard.The forfeiture of Ihe propercy Ia.
but oae of lle\leral which were
undertaken aad completed by the
Prcl1ecutor's Office, Gerard reported. The JliOCeeda from IIICh
rortelhlrel are tbla directed
specifically to drill eafolllliileill
llft4 tl IJI tile COIIIIt)l •
1

Jlld&amp;e Kallbtaeceptecl !'my's

or

111uty but ordend ...
llaclll&amp; coadaued 1111t11 t: !I a.ai.
oil Tlninday, Feb. U. 8tHid wu
coau.uedas ~ .._.
PI 1outar ~Crow . alii J'fillllrta ·
IIIII Pltllllp Lauth I Jill, W, -.,
clllt, eaeered a plea oi . .
a·
plea

'

Utfto

1

single count . of breaking and.
· entering when he appeared be· .
fore Judge Knight In the court. '
The charge was ttled on a but of
Information prepared by the
Prosecutor's Of!tce on the fourth
'degree felony which carries a
possible determlna te sentence of
· six, 12 or 18 months In priSon and
a fine of up to $2.500, according to
. lnveatlptor Gerard.
A juvenile was charged In
connection with the same lncl·
dent alld thll caae has been
coaellllled Ia th1&gt; Melp County ;
JuWnlle Court.
Judge Knight accepted the
pllty plea of Lalldermllt and
ordered · aentenctna eoatlaUI!d
unUI9 a.m. lin Tllun:clay ,l'eb. 25. .
Laudlrmllt was releued on a ,
~tra""t boad uaUillla left· ·
lei~Ctnrdate. .
:,.

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�)

Dally Sentinei-PIIQ&amp;-'-3

Comment

Pomeroy....:..Midcleport, Ohio
Tu11chty,
·1988 .

Questions surrOund '85·. shooting

· The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.lllASON AREA
~£b

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,..,.._,.__...,...,....._=..=.
i

ROBERT L . WINGE'M'
PubltAher ·
PAT WHITEHEAD

,.

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mauarer

Aulltaal Publisher/ControUer

A MEMBER of.The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'n'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoula be less than 300 words
long: Allletlers are subject to edit,lng and must be sl&amp;tled with Ram e. address and

telephone nur:nber. No _unslgned letters wDI be published. Letters should be In
&amp;Ood taste, adQresslng Issues. not persmalltles.
'
.
,.

Resume' or record?
By ARNOW SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- In their spatting over who would make the better
president; Vice President George Bush and Senate Republican leader
Bob Dole,.have i:a!sed' an ·Interesting but not new question about job
training for the Oval Office.
!It declaring that he has "a record, not a Tesume' ," Dole was
rebutting Bush's frequent claim tl\at his exceptionally broad and
unu~ually varied experience in' government and politics makes him
uniquely qualified to be president.
Dole has served)n the House and Senate for 36 years, and his views,
in the form of hundreds of b!lls introduced and thousands of votes
cast, Is on the public record. He has repeatedly staked his job on that ·
record and his only election Joss was as Gerald Ford's 'vice
presldenlial running mate llt 1976.
Bush served four years in the House in the 1960s and then lost two
races for a Texas Senate seat. After that he served in several ·
important appointive jobs, including CIA director and ambassador to
the United Nations and to China. before he was elected vice president
with Ronald Reagan in 1980 and 1984. In all but his coqgressional
service, Bush has created or carried out policies for which other
officials have been ultimately responsible.
Intereslingly, Dole and Bush have had one job in common:
Repubi!can National Co!llmittee chairman. In that job both were
responsible to the 9omm!ttee and io the presidents then in office.
·
'
Richard Nixon and Ford.
Dole's comment actually was a double entendre: first, that Dole
has had W stand or fal! on his own decisions during his long public
career while Bush wa·s a hired hand during most of bis; and second,
thai Dole has proven his ability to win elections while Bush has at best
·
an only mediocre record as a campaigner.
Whether Dole' s zinger. will hit the mark Is a matter for the
RepubUcans who will select the GOP nominee to decide, but it has to
be noted that history does not always support the premise that. the
presidency requires a specific kind of prior experjence.
Dole's theory that a veter,an legislators make go 0d presidents c~n
be ·supported, · but )llany, . mclud!ng Thomas Jefferson. Woodrow
Wl!son, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower,
Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan
never drew a congressional paycheck.
Bush ' s . contention that high -level jobs in the executive branch
(leaving aside I he vice presidency and the ancient argument over its
potentcy) are the best presidential training might be appl!ed to some
of the ·men just mentioned, but It does leave out men who built their
careers c;m Capitol ~!11 , such as Harry Truman. John Kennedy
•
'
Lyndon Johnson. Richard NiJ&lt;on and .Gerald F6f'd.
The point here is that we have had presidents whose eareers have
followed tile paths traveled by both Bush and Dole and there is no
clear evidence that either exclusively leads t&lt;rsuccess in the White ..
House.

.Letters .to the editor .·
About the county board...
Dear E{lltor,
I ·can' t see what essential
function a county board of
education perform s in this day
and age.
There was a time when coun- •
ties were dotted with a myriad of
'little one room schools that a
county superintendent and his
office performed an important
educational function .
In this day and age when the
local districts are crying for
more and more money. can't this
costly. vesitgal and archaic
segment of the educational system be done away with? Talk to
anyone you please on this subject

who might be able to do some·
thing about it and you can't get·a
good answer or reason for a
county board of education and
the people that it employs. They
won't lauch it with a 10 foot pole.
1 am saying the reason Is
purely pol! tical lind in places that
claim to be Simon pure. One time
I wrote Governor Celeste a letter
on this matter when he was
asking publ!cly for suggestions
on how to save the slate money.
The reply conrained the usual
blarney . Here Is one for Senator
Long and Representative Boster.
We need a little modernization.
Signed t;:;ayle Price.

WASHINGTON- A U.SArmy later, mystery continues to surmajor lay dying in a pool of blood round the murder of Nicholson:
91\-East German soli, March 24,
but the outrage has died with
19~. shot by a Soviet sentry.
detente. The pursuit of friendly
America" spies lri Berlin knew relations with . Soviet Pren\!er
something was .wrong. They. Mikhail Gorbachev has kept
knew It, because they were . many of the· questions
monitoring highly ~ensitlve com· unanswered. '
mun!cat!ons by Soviets, !rant!· •, Pentagon sources have ap·
cally asking Moscow what to do proached Dale Van Alta 'wtth a
with the dying officer.
new story -that while Nicholson
Could tb~ major h.:l'ie been !ay bleeding lb death, u.s.
saved if American Intelligence officials knew it,' but held back
officials weren't so concerned from rushing to his ald. The
about ,Upping off the Soviets to sources claim there were argu··
our · ab!lity to . intercept their ments between American offi.
messages?
cials in East Germany. West
The major was Arthur D. Germany and Washington over
Nicholson, part of a 14-man what they should do;
·
military liaison, legally st'a uSometime dqrlng the eight
oned as observers in East Ger- hours that Nicholson Jay. on the
many. His deatl) at the hands of a ground, an American colonel
Soviet sentry in Ludwigslust, arrived on the scene, talked to
East Germany, sparked Amerl· the Soviets and then left, accord·
can outrage. Nearly three years lng to our Pentagon sources.

By Jack Anderson and Dale 'Van Aua

What apgered the sources, and and them to observe us in West
casued them to talk to us, was the Germany as . long as nobody
promotion of that . colonel to tramples on restricted territory.
general last year. (Neither our
Nicholson and Scbatz ,arrlved
sources nor the Pentagon would . at a Soviet training area about
Identify this colonel. 1
3: 20 p.m .. Tlie Ariny report lillY&amp;
For a year, we have made the area "was not a restricted
repeated attempts to get the area in accordance with the most
Army's version of the shooting, recent maps provided by Soviet
but received nothing until last Ciff!cials." The Soviets maintain
week. In response to a Freedom it was a restricted area and their
of Information Act requ~st, the sentry had a right to · shoot
Army Criminal Investigation Intruders. For all of Gorbachev's
Command declassified Its 1985 recent public relations program,
"final" Investigative report and the Soviets have !lever budged
gave it to us.
·
from that story. ·
. ··
It raises more questi'ons than It
In the c;l4ys af~r the shooting,
answers.
American officials revealed that
Maj. Nicholson and his driver, . Nicholson was taking pictures
.Sgt. Jessie Schatz, were assigned
to be legal spies. A 1947 agree· ~~~~ghB~~e t:'a~d·:'ta~ ~~tan~~
ment with the Soviets allows us to mentioned In the final report.
observe them In East Germany
The report says Nicholson and
Schatz had been In the area about
25 · minutes before three shots
rang out, without warning. The
second hit Nicholson tn. the
abdomen as he was heading back
to the vehicle where Schatz was
waiting.
Schatz was held at gUnpoint for
eight hours by an armed.Soviet
gUard,
believed to
.
. be the Slime
man who shot Nicholson. The
gUard wouldn't let Schatz give
Nicholson first aid.
"Nicholson was believed to
have expli'ed as a result of his
wound si!W!ral minutes following
the shot," the Army report says.
"However. the exact tlme of
death was not known because no
Soviet medical penonnel bad
·attended to Nicholson for atleast
one hour f?llowl_ng tile shooting."
No Arnertcan ·· dcictors were
arpund to verify when he died.
Did Nicholson bleed for hours
before he died? Could prompt
U.S. a~tlon have saved him? Did
an Amer)can colonel get there
within several hours 'of the
shooting willie Nicholson ·was
still lying on the ground? And If
,so, why didn't be bring a doctor
with him?
And did that coloneJ, ·as our
Pentagon sources· claim, tum
around a!ld walk away after the
Soviets "chewed him out"?
'

Dropouts drop

..

i~

It Is ho secret that the Amer!·

can education ·System has been
under attack in recent years. The
secretary Of education has just I
come out with a report de scr ib - ,
!ng the sort of tough high schools
we need. And education seems to
be the favorite bogyman issue of
just · about every presidential
candidate this year,· if only we
ha~ better education, we aret9ld,
we d be more "competitive" in
the world. In this.genera! context
of the trashing of American
education, it bas been noted that
the high school dropout rate has
been rising and is intolerably
high . Conditions for blacks have
been ·singled out for particular
crisis-mongering. The president
of the American Association of
Commun!ly and Junior Colleges
recently spoke of "the horrible
high school dropout rate." .
I do 'not propose, to announce
thai American education is with·
out problems. There are very
_real problems. However, looking
at just one part of the !ssue-·that
hlllh school dropout rate that is
supposedly high and going higher
- it Jlist is not so. In fact, there

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has been so lid progress. And.
taken lbelr education at least as
further , the re 1s reason 1o belleve
far as · a completed high school
'that the progress has caused
education. By_1975 the rate had
some·of the problems - yet one
cl!mbed to 83 ""rcent. And In 1985
~~ - the rate Is 86
more mam· feslation of the ever·
- the new data
present Law of Unintended Side
percent.
Effec ts.
The rate for blacks cl!mbed
A new cens us B ureau repor t on
much more sharp
· ty and Is
ed uca tiona 1 a tta 1nmen t has th e actually beginning to approach
latest data . It s hows
· th a t th e parity with whites. The biack
dropout rate is not high, and it is
high school completion rate was
n0t c 11 mb! ng; 1n fact . It has
only 56 percent fn 1970. It went up·
steadily declined for decades and
10 68 percent In 1975. In 1980 It was·
is now at a an all-t!me,low
up further to 77 percent. And in
pi a teau. Moreover. lh e d a t a f or
1985 it was 81 percent, closing tn
blacks are qu Ite encoura
·
g1 ng.
on the white-only rate of 87
The best statistical way to "percent.
,
t
t!
1
1
measure a rue, rea ve y cur·
(Data for Hispanics only go
r en1. dropou t ra t e 1s to 1oo k a t
back to 1974. In that year only 53
young ad u Its age 25· 29 an d see
percent graduated from high .
h ow many have f! n 1s hed hig h school. The 1985 data show a 61
school . Th! s P1c ks up th ose percent completion rate - very
·teenagers who may have left . low, tar behind both Whites and
s c hool for a w h!le bu t then blacks, bu't a solid gain
· re t urned 1o get a d egreee 1t her 1n nonetheless.) .
a regular li!gh school or via a
For comf!rmatlon, the Census
high school graduate equlval·
measurements of enrollment of
ency, the General . Education 18. and 19.year-olds, show the
Development degree.
same general trends.
The Census data show that
In a very Important way, these
back in 1970 just 75 percent of data are both encouraging and
yo ung Amer1cansof a 11 races had remarkable. Uniquely among

- :
the nations, America·Is attempt- ~
!ng to provide every youngster :
with a high school education. ,
That Is not the case In the more ?
el!te education systems In Eu- •
rope and Japan.
'
Like most human avances, •·
however, this one Is. not without
secon.d-order problems. When
you try to educate everyone, you
· bring Into schools many young ·-people who in earlier years would •
have dropped out. Some of them :
are emotionally stunted. Some :
are behavior cases who are. ,.•
d!sotderly or violent. This can •
make II harder to keep discipline ~
In a classroom; It can force
a :
lowering of the gen.eral level of ~.
Instruction, making school Jess ~•
interesting and less challenging ~•
to brighter students. Ironically, •
higher enrollment levels can s•
harm quality.
· ··
"•
So, the candidates and the •
secretary of education are right ~
to stress that we have an :
education problem. W~? do. But It ~
Is also in ort~er to note that a good ,,:
part of that problem stems from •
a remarkable success story.
;•

Bush fights ••to stay· on top._ _ _Ro_b_ert_~_al_ter___.s.1
pubi!ctzed back-to-hack losses .
fro.m which his Ci'mpaign never
recovers.
Busn strategists believe that
their best chance of avoiding that
fate ' lies In neutralizing Dole's

.

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popul!s~cla!m

to voters that they
.can logicallY. view him as "one of
us" - a Midwesterner "'who
came from a poor b~ckground
and made It the.hard way."

Berry's,World

I

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4

in · final
seven seconds
..

proved it this week ."
to No. (ranked Arizona back In
BJ GENE CADDES
Grady Mateen's dunk with
November,
led
OhloSt1lle33-32at
. UN Sports Writer
;
·'
seven
seconds remaining lifted
halftime
and
the
Buckeyes'
64-58
COLUMBUS - Ohio State's
the
host
Buckeyes. His basket
leo.
1 with 3:51 to play was the
Crady Mateen may .be one .of
came
just
eight seconds after
gest
of
the
game
for
e!lher
bi
6
those who lilves his best for last.
Glen
Rice
had
tied the score with
. For the ~nd time in four team.
jumper.
Rice's 3-po!nt
a
12-foot
"They
played
us
very
well
and
. 'n!ihts, the ; · foot-11 Mateen., a •
attempt
at
the
buzzer
missed.
of
prevented
us
from
doing
some
·~ tra
er from . GeOrge·
On
thew!nn!ngplay,Oh!oState
the clincher as the things we do well." said
tRria, prov
!nbounded the ball to Curtis
the auckeyes knocked off a top 20 Michigan 90ach B!U Frieder. "It
Wilson
, whO dribbled through the
was a typical B! g Ten basketball
· team.
Michigan
. press ·and . hit the
Lat Thursday, Mateen's two game. "
&amp;-foot-11 Maleen cutting t oward
"''ve told a lot of people . this
free !llrows with four secoads to
the basket .
.
(Ohio
State)
Is
a
good
basketball
play assured Ohio State an 87-83
"Grady saw that they were up
team
.
If
they
dldn'.t
prove
it
last
Big Ten· win over than 18111·
attacking
the ball pre tty early
year
against
"Kentucky
(in
the
ranked Iowa. On Monday night,
and
he
slipped
behind them. "
NCAA
Tournament
)
.
then
his two-handed .stuff with ·seven
Ohio
State
Coach
Gary W!lllams
maybe
they
proved
it
this
week.
'
·
seconds .remaining gave the
"I
think
Curtis
made a
said.
As for Grant's subpar game,
. Buckeyes a 70-68v!ctoryoverNo .
great
pass
in
that
situation."
Frieder said: "Gary just didn't
8 Michigan.
Jay Burson led the Buckeyes
• The lOss was only the seeond In play well. · It 's the . worst he's
IS points and Wilson and
with'
· 16 games' for the talented Wolve' played here In four years .
,,
Jerry
Francis finished with 12
r!nes, now 3-1 hi tbe confe~ence, .Whether he's hearing toomuch.of
and snapped their 13-game win· · that nonsense abou.t ·all - . apiece. Rumeal Robinson had 19
American. I can't tell. We'll see If points to pace the Wolverines .
n!ng streak.
The winning stuff came after he bounces back. "
Michigan won the battle of the
In other games
Michigan's Glen Rice had tied
. the game 68·68 with 15 seconds boards 34·32, but the Wolverines ranked teams, No. 5 Temple
remilinlng and was set up by had a 23·14 edge at halftime. Ohio ripped Penn State 59-44 and No .
guard Curtis Wilson, who broke Slate had 9 offensive rebounds 13 Syracuse thrashed . Boston
the Wolverine press and hit the final 20 minutes.
College 90·60.
"We're ·the type of team this
Mateen wlth la nifty_pass.
At University Park. Pa., fresh·
"I s~w an qpenlng ani! said to year that we 're never going to man Mark Macon scored 19
my sell, 'Grady. you should get in put people away," said W!lll;rins, points and grab'bed 9 reb9unds to
there,'" Mateen said. "I re· "Hopefully, this proves to peQple lead· Temple to its 13th straight
member Curtis and I had eye we can play with the big people in victory, a raul Cif Atlant!c-10 foe
Penn State. Tim Perry added 13
contact for an instant. He got me · the Big Ten.
."We have to understand too, points and blocked 6.shots for the
the billl and I went up with It
when we go up ·to Minnesota Owls . Temple and Brigham
' strong a!ld got It through." '
'.
. While Wilson and Mateen Saturday, that they're a good
Young are the only Division I
share the glory of the winning basketball team. ll's going to be
teams without a Joss. The Lions
were led by Tony Ward with 13
shot, Ob!o State's heroes were a struggle just like tonight )Y~s a
struggle.
many Monday ntclt.
points. '
"If we think we can get away
At Syracuse, N.Y. , Stephen
Jay Burson led lhe Buckeyes
Thompson scored a game-high 21
with 18 points. hitting some key with not playing like we did
points and Syracuse turned a
free throws ,and a 3-point field tonight. th'en our chances ol
close game into a rout with a 23-4
goal in the second half that winning up at Minnesota aren't
run' in the second half to pound
brought Ohio State from behind. very good."
Sophomore
guard
Rumeal
RoBoston
College. The Orangemen,.
Tony White scored ll points. 8
binson
led
Michigan
In
scoring
who
broke
a two-game losing
of those came in succession
with
19
po!nt.s.
.
skid,
turned
a 59-50 advantage
during another stret&lt;ltl of the
into an 82-54 lead with three
seconcl hall thai kept the Buck·
'
National Roundup ,
. minutes remaining. Dana Barros
eyes out front.
Ho hum. Another major upset . scored 16 points and .Jamie ·
Then, there was seldom-used
eolleg~ basketball.
in
Benton added 15 to lead Boston
senior' guard Scott Anderson,
After
a week in which Okla:
College . .
who entered the game when
Wilson picked up his fourth homa, Duke, Syracuse, George·
Elsewhere it was: Holy Cross
personal foul with still 9:20 to town and Indiana all lost to
unranked
teams,
a
new
week
130, New Hampshire 92; Rhode
play and continued the good
Island 92, George Washington 61;
defensive pressure on Michl· began with another stunner as
gan's Gary Grant.
· Ohio State beat No. 8 Michigan
American 75, East Carolina 69;
Grant, who entered the game 70-68 Monday night.
Louisville 84. Western Kentucky
Wolverines Coach Bill Freider,
.averaalng 23.9 points a game. got
71; Murray Slate 85. Morehead
only 15 points and hit only 5 of 13 whose team had won 13 straight
State 74; N.C. -W!lmington 69,
field goal attempts. He also games, was not suprised by . the
Navy 60; Old Dominion 82,
loss. (lhio State had beaten
.comm!lted 9 turnovers.
Alabama-Birmingham 80 in
The Buckeyes also held in · then-No. 18 -Jowa on Thursday.
overtime; Southern Miss. 61.
"I've toJd.a lot qf people Ibis is
check forward Rice. who began
South Alabama 55: South Carol· '
..........,•• o....
the night averaging 22 points a ·a good ··basketball team," · ina. 84, Memphis State 58; Virgi·
a.
~c
......
,
.......
,...
.,.
ralin@ll
, game and settled for 12, with Freider said of the Buckeyes. ''If
n!a Commonwealth 97. Virginia,
Ml...llliiH' ai ·B• .-......I: at p.m.
Jerry Francis doing the defen· they didn't prove It last year· Tech 84; West Virginia 71 , St .! ·
NEWVO&amp;Il(UPIJ-TMV•biiiiPnM
....,.... .. _. ....,. of
,.., D
llt.uaatsacn-•,lt:Jt.,m.
against Kentucky (In the NCAA
sive work.
I
Bonaventure 54 and Xavier
Dllllua PDI"ttull.lt:a 111....
"..... .......hflll ........ ..... flral·
Tournament).
I think they
WPdaeiiiiQ'II
o
....
Ohio
Valley
Bank
will
sponsor
pilef' ~~ IUllill ~ceftl ID ~·~~~~.
Michi,gan, which had lost only
!ObiO) 105. DetroU 84.
....,. JOI•b 1bue4 on ~ I:I pei.U.' for flnlt
r._.......uoa. ••PI
the
next
Booster
Night
with
the
Ge..,.astakal~~rwr,alpt
......... J.elortwt'VIII, dc,JudlutWI'ek'~
.Rio Grande Redmen Saturday
:
when the Redmen host Cedar'
Dftn.tt at Vlala. alril
lf4 I
1. "rile• t!IJ ( lf.IJ
lndlau.ll: LA. l11,.rra.ail..
~- Nortii·C•r ..lna~ (II I IS. I)
'IU l
ville's Yellow 'Jackets !ri Lyne .
N~ 1'M a1 &amp;e.ettle, alalllt
LlkM•kyttl n•u
tRI 5
Center.
J. Pardur ( IJ.I) ~
U! II
Game \I me is 7:30p.m. Tickets
.t. Trmpll.' (-I) ( 1:!-1)
e. Plt&amp;llburxh 11,.0
NHL
results
for the game are ava liable, free
t NewdM·LI&amp;II v .. ~ 11.a.1 1
mu
·
of charge, at OVB's main' office
· ·NATIONA.L H0cK!:V LEAGUE
ll. Mlvhla-.. (l.J.I)
. 2'73 10
· Walt-M Cunfeft•e
at 420 Third Ave., Gallipolis. and
, l.(llcd)BVU(IHI2·1)
Palrick Dhlblkln
!itl4
I. (iied) Dulw (1.2)
at its·· Jackson· Pike and Rio
WLTPt•. GFGA
· first-place votes while Purdue among rated teams . advancing
II. Okll.llomil 114-2)
f!·~dt'lpttla
2S I~ I I! "lll't 112
... 3
,By IAN LoVE
' Grande branches . .
I!. Iowa ~e (15-2)
1-Q 17
NV J•la.tt·n. u n 1, "
117 1111
jumped from eighth to fourth. six sluts. Illinois, wb!ch dropped
UPI Sports Writer
1J. S)'l'loCIUII! (It-t)
!'l.'t!W Jpi'M')o
21 a 1 .n 1111 tl7
A.s a longtime supporter of Rio
14. IUnel11 ( 15-3)
Kentucky earned 481 points and out of the ratings last week,
W..a.i.._tH
~I !I 5 .n 1.. HI
NEW ·ypRK - Arizona and
Grande's sports program, OVB's
IL GeOI'IJftown (11-:IJ
PIUitiUPilll
17 .ZI t.. -13 17t lilt
returned at No. 14 after posting
Purdue 412.
Temple e1ch won twice last week
Nil
N\' R.....-n
17 Z-1 I •
liM) 118·
donation to the \ Rio Grande
lt.JIIfodl tJTEr 111-21
AIIMI• DlvlMIH
. Rounding Out the Top Ten were ill)press!ve victories Saturday
but lost grpund In the United
Boosters qub ~~&amp;' ensured the
II. {lied) WyomiiiJ ( I'WJ
Mo.. !'!"..
U It II •
111 HI
No. 6 Pittsburgh, No. 7 Nevada· and Sunday against Wisconsin
Press Intef'itat!onai college bas4112 •
..._
11111111UIU
.contlnuat111n of ~thlet!cs on the
and Tennessee. I
II. Ka-·11!-4 l
.........
• II 7 417 Ill 111
.UII
campus as a major community : ketball rath(gs released Monday. Las Vegas, Nq . 8 Michigan and
II. Iowa {II·$)
ftantenl
n a , u tft ltf
Arizona retained its No. 1 co·Nos. 9 Brigham Young and • Texas-El Paso and NC State
II.(Urdl fljfSWf' (lt-!J
Qlelw1'
II tl t II IU Ill
activity. said Red men Coach
U. (Ued) Fl .....• (IW)
famflbtU c...,.._..
Duke. BYU, th£! other undefeated we•e not listed last we'ek while
rating, bul No. 2 North Carolina
Jobn Lawhorn.
·
, Nell'll Dlvt.lon •
a-u•ra•kctl.
pie ked up li points to inch closer · major college team, collected the Indiana and New Mexico
«MMMI ~~~ •etr!l: ..\rk_.,
, Dtll'lll
·
• 11 I II Hit Iii
Donations to the booster club
' dropped from the el!te group.
Arla-.s·UtUr Roell.· ..Wttu.... • ..
ll. a.•
II tl I ' U
1-11 Ill
remaining first -place·vote.
to the top spot. Arizona routed
allow for the promotion of Rio
!late, . . . . ., • DeP.. I, oftrp. 1'1.:11.
Okaao
II II 3 411 Ill 1111
Oklahoma lost twice last week Texas-El Paso entered the UP!
lalllllaaa. I.G:IIAwlllt, Ma..,.._. ~ M:l__.l,
Paclf!c-10 rivals .Oregon and
llliRIOia
Jot II t1 H IIH. 1111
Grande's sports IJrograms In·
SOIIhHn MhlklilfPI. TeMtllllltf', Utah,
Ttrot110
14 t1 7 Sl IB tiD
and fell to No. n : The Sooners ra.t!ngs for the ,firs t time this
OregiH! State last week.
Uhih stalt!, \' a.dt-rbll.
cludi'ng the establishment of
Sm,thto IH\'tlllo•
were followed in the rank!ngs by season. Indiana and New Mexico
Ell~
,. ~~ · • .. 21t 111
:remple. one of two undefeated
athlell~ , scholarships, Lawhorn · ·
both lost .twice last week .
falprf
t1 IS 5 H ftt 1'4
NBA
resuhs
Division I te.am!ll, .beat La Salle . No. 12 Iowa State. No. 13
said.
·
· ~
Wl•lprjt
II It I 4Z Ita 111
The Big Ten has four ranked
··.
Syracuse, No. 14 Illinois, No. 15
v-....,.r
11 z.a , 11 111 l'fl
and St. Bonavenltl'!-e yet dropped
NATJONAL'BM&amp;E'I'BALL ASIM&gt;&lt;',
teams
while the Western At ·
Le1t\llp~
H~IPI''ntta
Georgetown, co-Nos.I6Texas-El
, MondaJ 's Rftlllb
from the fourth to fifth position.
MolldAJ'I
Result•
·
.,... 1!1, Golde• Slatt" ttl
Paso and Wyoming, No. 18 hletll::, Big Eight, Big East and
Malllllnal .. Ed...-....
J"he drop occurred even lhoug)l
Nll'W York lit. AI. . . II!
Df'lrolt •• ToNMe.
'q
Kansas, No. 19 Ipwa and co-Nos. Atlantic Coast have three apiece.
l)rtrolt ID. Oeawer 111
the Owls picked up one first·
,.._.,-'I G.,....
LA Lallerw I!I,Bo ....... Ill
New .ae.., .. Wllltl.-, 1: • p.m.
20 North Carolina State and Voting Is based on 15 points for
place vote.
..
first place, 14 for second. etc.
N"'
8c.o
.. .knr)' 111, Pllillf"illx liS
Florida.
.
With 39 of the 42 members of
Ed...-..~ q.ellee. 'I:Sip..h.
(:hlcap 111..............
Oklahoma took the biggest , - - - - - - - - - - Pltw..rwb at NV ••h « rs,.•:• ,.~~~.
the UP! Board of Coaches voting,
Dal~ •· lA Cll"*nl1
Federal Hocking at Eastern
tumble
among rated teams.
the Wildcats received 26 firsl·
Kyger Creek at Hannan, W.Va.
The- Daily Sentinel
dropping
eight places to 11th
place mentions and 564 points.
alter
losing
to
LOuisiana
State
OVCS at New B!Oston
The Tar Heels received six '
(USPS 145-91111)
Wahama at Ravenswood
first-place voles and collected and Kansas State. UNLV de- ·
A Dlvlllon of Mukbnedla, Inc.
Trimble at Meigs
feated
Fullerton
State
and
Provl·
521 points. Last ·week North
South Point at Coal Qrove
Published every afternoon, MOnday
Carolina trailed Arizona by 59 dence to make the biggest leap
throua:h Friday, 111 Court St ., Po·
.
'
I
Chesapeake at Buffalo
points. meroy; Ohlo. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
pol~ and work it by hand over tile · Co!umb\IS ~1. Chari~ at Logan
By JERRY PICKRELL
ltshlng Company / Multimedia , lnc.,
· hole ·in the Ice. These short rods
Keittufk)' advanced two spots
Outdoor Writers
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·.
, to move Into. third with two
cond class postaee paid at Pomeroy,
All•oelatlen of ,Amertca
'' usually have only a rudtmentary
Ohio.
reel (simple line storqe ,devl·
Dlllrlba&amp;etl by UPI
It's a proven fact that ' Ice oet) and thus no drq. Tbere 11
Me-rn~: Unlted Press International.
Inland Daily Press Association and th e
normaJJy u~
for a lirar
fishing ·ts the moat productive
Ohio Newspaprr Association . National
way to catch ftsh: Hour for hour •IDee the fllb 4on't haw tile
Advertlstll&amp;: Representative, B ranham
versus pound for pound notlllng energy tt0 malre a Rrloua attempt
New&amp;PaPt'f Sales. 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
at letiiJii looiR.
beats lt.
.
The baits that are used for tbll
Wilen you consider the long
POS"''MASTER: Send (i ddress changes
lo 'lbeo Dally ~nt lnel., 111 Court St.,
perlnds ot time that anglers are kind of fllblq are allo aomewllat
Pomeroy, Ohio 157119,
wiUtng to put In when trying to dltfel'entfronl tlletllei:\IW'Ullllll
catch fish tn the summertime In a sumrnertiJM tackle box.
stJBIICalPTION RATES
.... JOI .... US, we'll be
Br torrter or_,. Boule
ccimpared .to the relatively shor· . Moat are very much~ and
t111n ... with promjlt. conOne Week ..... ........... :.................. $1 .2$
· ter duration of Ice fishing out· are 11ot. equipped w1t11 t1Wbla
-Qne Month ..... ..... ..... .. .......... .,.... $5.415 .
etmllllnsnnct
strYict.
We
One Year ..:.... .,.....,, ;..... .. ,....... $611.110
!np, It's a good thing that tile hoolia and big flully bladctl. Ice
....,. try to Itt friends you ·
'
ballnmtlll)o,
allllly
Jllllthateu
'
catehlng ·Ia· better tlleft. But
SIN'GI.&amp; OOPY
Clll iltpeld on. Call tiS today.
.
PIUCJ:
be\fl!r or worte', Ice flailing Ia flllled by lirnplyiiJIOIII•U.. ap
DOlly ..... ....... l .. ...... .......... .. . .. 25 Cents
and
clown
aver
a
place
Ia
the
greatly different from the flahlng
SUblcrtbers not dftlrlng to pay the caryou'll do at any other Ume or the . water. Tbe movement littraetl
rier m9 remit lll advance direct to
the fllb which IWilloWIIt 81111 II
Tbe-Dauy SNtlnel on a 3, &amp;or 12 month
~··
.
boolled.
'l'llere -are barely detectable
bull. Crecltt will be liven can111" ••oh
slrlllel troll! ftlh tbat are movlll&amp;
.
•
• No _,, tplloM by IIUIU pormitled tn
fNflt 110 tiloWI,y. 1'llla II overeome
ll'ftl wMre bome urrler ll!r\'1ce ta

!nv~ving

!:

• .

1

OVB ..will
spori~r

Rio tilt

C'a~U!IIn'

.......
......

......

~.

................................

Arizona retains · top rat~g;
North Carolina five moves ·up

.

....., ,

•• •

'".

.

.
'"'.
,....
"

tii'IIL··-··

Tonight's games

Ohio Outcroors .

Ice fishing most productive
neecs

..... -· .....

.

Today .in histori ·

I

:
::

•

Plans organizational meet

•

"::

·B~n . Wattenberg ~

I

president, Bush must meet. high
DES MOINES, Iowa (NEM In three consecutive major face· expectations of his political per·
to-face confronta,t!ons, Vice formimce. Anything less than a
.
.
.
President Bush has convincinglY first-place finish In each of the
rebuffed assaults !tom his rivals early major contests wtiuld be
Dear Editor.
Reagannomi9s to Reagan.
On Thursday, Jan. 21, at 7p.m .;
On · national security Issues, . for .this year's Republican pres!· viewed as a severe..setbac k and
two or more such "losses" would
I invited all people interested in
Jack Kemp supports a policy of dential nomination.
be devasting.
But_Sush's
surpr!sjngly
powerthe Jack Kemp for President
peace through strength antl . a
Iowa obviously is crucial be·
ful
oratolcal
technique
may
not
campaign to come to an organi·
bel!ef that American !ng!mu!ty
cause
the process of selecting
be
sufficient
to
rescue
him
from
a
zat!onal meeting of the Ohio
and know-how can construct a
delegates
to next summer's
In
Iowa
lfhose
ripple
defeat
University Students for Jack
defense against enemy missiles.
hill!
victory
In
Republican
National Convention
effect
could
deny
Kemp Committee in Baker CanAnd as .National Review says,
begins
in
earnest
here (notwlth·
other
states
and
eventually
de·
ter 203.
_
"The Republican field now as·
prive
him
of
the
nomination.
standing
Michigan's
clumsy atFor the last 17 years from a
sembled is a good one. The best&lt;'
to
schedule
an earlier
tempt
In recent months, Bush has
blue-collar congressional district
man in it is Jack Kemp" .
In upstate New York, Ja ·'&lt;Kemp
I hope to see you Th\lrsday effectively neutralized repeated vote) with the Feb. 8 precinct
attacks during debates with the caucuses.
has set the national an.: the
night.
Even more Important Is the
five
other Republican presiden·
political agenda. Jack Kemp h• '
Sincerely
fact
th•t the first primary
t!al hopefuls In Houston, Wa·
been a long believer in the notion
Signed: Scott Pull!ns, 0. U.
·
election,
In New HampShire,
that tax cuts can produce ecoCamp\ls Coordinator, ., Jack sh!ngton and Des Moines.
follows
the
Iowa balloting by only
'Even those "victories"· have
nomic growth ~nd prosperity. It
·
Kemp for I'resident.
hot been sufflcien(, however, to eight days. Thus, the result here
•
js often said that Kemp sold
allow Bush to recapture the lead could have unprecedented lllfluIn public opinion polls of Republ!· ence upon New Hampshire
cans likely to participate in voters.
As recently as 1980, the two
Iowa's precinct caucuses.
events
were aeparated by five
The Iowa Poll sponsored by the
By UnUed Press lnterna&amp;lonal
weeu,
gtvtng
each Independent
Des Moines Register indicated
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 19, the 19th day of 1988 with 347 lo follow .
status.
Eight
years qo, Buab
that Kansas Sen. Robert DOle's
The moon is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
1
defeated
rival
Ronald
Reagan In
lead over Bush was 36-30 In early
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
·Iowa,
but
the
Reagan
forces
had
November and rema!Qed euen·
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus 11nd Jupiter.
time
to
repoup
and
sufficient
tlally unchanged at 37-33 In
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
mid-December, A New York stage a comeback In New HampInclude Scottish engineer James Watt, Inventor of the steam engine,
Times-CBS News poU 11one In shire - a pattern not likely to be
'n 1736; Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in 180'1; American
·\
early Jjlnuary showed Dole lead· repeated this year.
autllor-poet Edgar Allan Poe ,Jn 1809; English metallurgist Henry
Thus, the very real danger for
!ng Bush bY an even wider 41·29
BesremerJn 1813: French post•lmpress!on!st painter Pllul Cezanne In
Bush
Is that be could be beaten~
margtn and other surveys have
1839: Ebofly magailne founder John H. Johnson in 1918 (age 70);
Dole
.in both Iowa and New
produced similar results.
actor Guy Madison In 1922 (age 66).
Hampshire,
sustaining highly
Partly· because h,e Is vice

I

70~68

Jar:u!:x.-''·

·'·

~s:m~

~ucks upset No. 8 Michigan

Page 2-111e Dally Sentinel

by~ Jolded _trtaen

011

'

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214 .EAST MAIN

POilROY
tt2..UI7

. flaber·

lD

•
' •

•

c ..........

==~·=

·'QI'~~~......,.....~"""'..-

,.,

. "U'f me. to think that Jtm ..., .,. to #MY off
~ with , . . of the lfiQfley ... ..,,, "

..

~~-~----------~~--------------~
;

r

avallabl•.

........

-

.......... c..ttr
1S Wetlcl ........•.~·· ··-· • "··-·._,. ..... lllt.a

•...........................................
w-..............-...... SM.•

................

h_ .....

1.1 ........:..................... ...,.......
. . . . . . ...... . ........ .. .. .... . .... , ... !
.10
UWHIII ...................................18

•

I'

.. -

•

�•

Ohio

~oneymoon . over,·

..."'

according to ·Pete

"",,

· CINCINNATI IUPI) -Tired
of finishing second for three
straight years, anciimaU Reds
manager Pete Rose says· the
"honeymoon atmosphere" Is
over in the clubhouse this season.
"I'm ~ing to be a firm guy,"
Rose declared Monday. "We're
going to take a little bit of the
honeymoon atmosphere away.
"1 told the players when I first
came her~ We're going to try It
their way.. We tried it their way
· three years and we came in
second. Now we' re going to try it
some other way."
The " other way" will start with
a clubhouse ban against business
people and players' friends even team owner Marge Schott's
friends.
"You better have apass to be in
th~ clubhouse this year or you
won't be in the clubhouse," said
Rose. ''Nobody. Not my friends,
Marge's friends. • anybody's
friends.
"It got to be too much last year .
We had more businessme n in
there than people peddling bats·,
gloves and shoes. There's a time
and place for everything. You
don't need friends and agents and
people who want you to endorse
this and endorse that In · the
clubhouse all the time.
"We keep reporters out a

19, 1988

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Ali o~ - the· items.-in tentative agreement must b~ signed· off by
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commence the ·expedited arbitration process on· the ·unr~solved
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ACCEPTED BY:
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3. School calendar.
4. .Non-renew-al.
5. : Eval~ation .of bargaini.ng unit members.
·6. Le1y· propsal.
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REEVES' liTH TITLE
GAME - Denver Broncos
coa~h Dan Reeves discusses
having been involved in his
lith conference . title game · '
Monday during his regular
Monday afternoon press con·
ference In Denver, "The fact
that you play in a champion·
s hip game can never be taken
away I rom you," he said. The
AFC c hampion Broncos will
take on the Washington Reds·
kins in the Super Bowl on
January 31. ( UI'I) '

•

Proposal to the Bo~rd of Education
January 18, 1988

..'

Stallworth, Shell call .
it qllit~ in Pittsburgh .
PITTSBURGH (UPI) -Wide
Stallworth's and Shell's deparreceiver John Stallworth and tures !eave center Mike Webster,
strong safety Donnie Shell- two also 35 and a 14-year-old veteran,
of three active veterans of the the only holdover from the teams
Steeiers' four Super Bowl cha.m- that won the NFL championships ·
pion~hip teams - are retiring
in 1974; '75, '78 and '79.
after H sea~ons each, all of them
"It has been wonderful. But it's
in Pittsburgh.
time. It's lime to move on,"
The de~ ision of the 35-year-old Stallworth said.
best friends , which had been . "Football was good to me. "
anticipated, was· reported Mon - Sheil said. "All I ever wanted to
day in The Pittsburgh Press but
be was a teacherand a coach, but
will be af\nounced formally at a
football turned out to be my
hews conference in ·the Steelers'
calling in life. I'm glad, rea!
Three River Stadium headqua rglad."
ters at noon EST Friday ,
Steelers' President Dan · Rooney said he preferred to save his ·
tributes for the news conference.
"What they've done for us over
the years is obvious. " Rooney
said. "And it's obvious we'te
going to miss them."
Stallworth. the · Steelers'
fourth-round draft pick out of
Alabama A&amp;M In , 1974, retires
ranked 15th on the NFL'S career
catches list with 537. and 11th in
receiving yardage with 8, 723.
Though he caught 41 passes for
521 yards and two touchdowns
this season, Stallworth is best
remembered for his play in the
Ia te 1970s, when he combined
with Lynn Swann to g!vequ,a rterback Terry Bradshaw one of the
· \nost sure-handed and acrobatic
receiving tandems in the game.

.

igs. Local Teclchers ·Association

."..

half-hour before the game, so
we'll kee.p everybody out. If lean
keep my friends out, I can keep
the players' friends out. I think
the players will understand. 1
think some of the players agr&amp;
with lt."
Rose blamed himself for let·
tlng clubhouse visitors get out of
·
hand.
'
.
, ·'I felt the players needed their
friends In there, so they would be
more comfortable and play more
relaxed," he · said. "But now
we're going t.o have a more
business-like a~osphere In the
clubhouse."
Rose also is go to be stricter
with AWOL play rs.
"1 had a guy (·pitcher Frank
Williams) whodldn'tshowupfor
a game last year) I fined him
$1,700 and learned',somethlng,"
said Rose. '.'We're going to back
off from letting guys •go on
off-days and stuff like that."
Altho)lgh Rose said• hi''s going
to be "firm," he inslsled he won :t
turn Into a "dictator."
"It's not my nature to be a bad
guy and I'm not going to turn Into
a bad guy," he said: "II ll's going
to take me being a bad g~~y for us
to win, we're never going to win.
I'm not a dictator, I'm a manager
trying to communicate with
players and trying to handle
players:"

The Daily

Ohio

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fakers hit 18 straight shots in triumph:_
•

BLOCKS SHOT!... Ia hlsllm &amp;arne for the New Jeraey NetBBinqe
movln&amp; on from the CavaUers, Roy H111110n.bloeklthe shot of the
Phoenix Suns' James Edwards In the flrt1l quarter of Monday
night's game In Byrne Arena, In East Rutherford, N.J. (UPI)

Rio to host OD
Panthers,tonight

By COD.INS YEA&amp;WOOD
UPI Spena Writer
The Los An1eles Lakers played .
10 Well In the first quarter
Monday they may bave llnlmowlfilly-set a record In the process.
"The first quarter was ·really
good," Magic Johnson said after
the Lakers hit 18 consecutive
shots In the opening quarter en
rQute to a l-21-110 victory ove~e
Houston Rockets. "II '!"as·almost
like we couldn't do anything
wrong."
It Is unknown if the 18 straight
shots l!lllde approached a record
- the NBA does not keep such a
mark . .
The Lakers, whohavewon 17 of
their last 18 games, went ahead
16-4 after four minutes and the
Rockets never recovered.
Johnson scored 26 of his
season-high 39 points in the first
halt and had 17 assists. James
Worthy and Byron Sc_ott added 22
polnts each · for the Lakers.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the ·
NBA's all-time leading scorer,
had 20 to Increase his total to
37,002.
Abdui-Jabbar would not speculate on remaining around Iring
enough to score 40,000.
"I . mlght've already put the
record out of reacli," said AbduiJabbar, 40, the oldest player the
league.
Akeem Olajuwon had 24 and
Joe Barry Carroll 21 for , the
· Rockets. .
"It took us.a while to get Into a
.competitive rhythm," Carroll
said. "By the time we did, we had
dug too deep a hole."
- Johnson!li free throws and
spinning b?lsket began and ended
a 10-2 Los Angeles spree .that
opened the game. After . Allen

filled by Brian Watkins, while
Anthony Raymore will retain his
guard spot. · '
·
,,
Junior Marc Gothard, who has
been seeing more playing time
this season, .will probably come
off the bench as a forward.
Sartori Is expected to .start
Brian Harvey, a 6-2 senior, and
6-5 ·sophomore Bob Walters· as
forwards and retain Darrell
Watson ,' a 6-5 senior, as center ..
Randy Tucker, a 5-10 junior, and
6-1 sophomore Da vld Branscom
are expected to start as juniors.
In other basketball action
tonight, the Rio Grande Redwo-·
men. 12-5 and 2-0 in the MOC. face
Walsh . on the Lady Cavaliers'
court at 7 tonight.
Powered by Lea Ann Mullins'
25-polnt performance and by 21
points - pumped in by Renee
Halley, th'e Redwomen pushed
The Panthers will be 3-13
back a strong Ohio Dominican
overall and winless in four
attack Saturday to win 84-65. The
conference starts, Including an
Redwomen did an Impressive job ·
· 85-66 loss to Rio Grande on Nov . in holditjg down Angel Franken,
28 in the consolation game of the
the Lady Panthers' top scorer,
Musktngum Tournament. OD
althougb Franken still walked
lost to Malone 99-69 Saturday .
' away with 23 points to her credit.
Playing without center Rob
Mulllns, Rio Grande's small
Jackson, who suffered an arik le
forward, and Halley, the team's
injury in las t Tuesday's Urbana
shooting guard, will probably
game, Redmen Coach John La- start tonight -in the same posiwhorn is expected to start . tions. Beth Coli will be point
Rlttlnger at the-post and continue
guard and Holly Hastings will '
with Ray Singleton and Jim
repeat at power forward. Leisa
Kearns as forwards . Kearns'
Anderson is expected to take
starting guard position wlll be
center position again.

Xavier posts seventh
straigh't win, 105-84

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Re&lt;!s signed veteran
free agent pitchers Lary So-r ensen and Mike Jones to minor
league contracts Monday.
Both were assigned to Nashville and Sorensen was Invited to
the Reds' major league spring
training as a non-roster player.
Sorensen, a righthander who
has pitched for Milwaukee, St.

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The Daily Sentinei""":'Page 7 .

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

·Court fmds homeless, ill · woman , R~leased teen celebrates holidays
hospi~ized, . drugged against wlll
may ·be released if found a home
By RHEA MANDULO
NEW YORK (UPI) . - A
h9meless woman involuntarily
hospitalized under a new city _
Ptogram could be released this
week by doctors who have
~.decided they cannot successfully
treat her mental Illness, a city
· spokeswoman said.
' Doctors a I Bellevue Hospital
reached their deeislon after a
state court found last week that
·Joyce Brown could not be forced
tQ . take anti-psychotic drugs
against her will, said Suzanne
Halpin, a spokeswoman for the
city's Health and Hospitals
,
Corporation.
BJ'OW11, 40, who was admitted
. to the .hospital Oct. 28, w.a s the
fir-t •picked up under Mayor
·Edward Koch's controversial
plan to involuntarily hospitalize
the homeless mentally ill.
Brown will be released if
arrangements are made for her
liouslng and psychiatric care,
Halpin said. J;lrown was expected
to move Into the Travelers Hotel.
a single-room· occupancy hotel in
Manhattan, she said.
"If an appropriate residence Is
not found, she won't be relea~." Halpin said.
l
"We have been barred by th~
court from Involuntarily medl- eating her," Halpin said. ''For
that reason, the doctors felt that
since tbey could not oUer her the
kind of treatment we want to
provide ber, they decided that
discharge was Indicated."
Brown, who first gave her
name as Billie Boggs and has
been diagnosed as a paranoid
schizophrenic, "can't be treated
with the medication the doctors
feel she would benefit from," she
said.

I

4ROLL

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Louis, Cleveland, Oakland, the
Chicago CUbs and Montreal, had
a 3-4 record and a 4.72 earned run ·
average In 23 games with the
Exlios last year.
• Jones, a lefthander formerly
with Kansas City, pitched In 't he
Expos' farm system last year, ·
going 3-4 with · a 1.52 ERA with
Burlington and 3-1 with a 4.73
ERA for Indianapolis.

JUST REDUCED!'
11 OUNCE

Babic also .grabbed 14 rebounds for the Eagles, '7-7 overall
and 1-1 In the Ohio Valley
Contereilce. The Penguins, who
shot only 3.2 percent from the
field, were paced by Tilman
Bevely with 17 points. Tim '
Jackson and Jim Gilmore added '
12 apl~ for Youngstown State, I.
6-7 and 1-2.

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By United Press International · whipped Howard, 88-69; and Ohio
Xavier coach Pete Gillen not State upset 8th-ranked Michigan,
only got a victory Monday night,
70-68.
he also had the opportunity to
At Cleveland, Ken McFadden
give his substitutes plenty of scored 26 of his 29 points In the
playing time.
· second half to rally the Vikings
a yron Larkin scored 28 points from a one-point halftime deficit
and three teammates also to Its AMCIJ-8 victory over
reached double figures to pace c Eastern Iiiinois.
Xavier to its seventh straight
Eric Mudd s~ored 26 points and
victory , a 105-84 Midwestern Hersey Strong 15 In helping the ,
Collegiate Conference decision Vikings improve to 11-3 overaii
·
and 2-0 in the conference. The
over winless Detroit.
•'Tonight we had a _c hance to Panthers dropped to 8-6 and 0-2,
play a lot of people (15) and that's
Important ," said Gillen. " We
At. Akron, Shawn ~oberts
want to press and play uptempo scored 22 points and Eric
so we need to play nine or 10 McLaughlin added 17 of his 211n
players."
the second half to pace Akron
Tyrone Hili added 20 points, over Middle Tennessee. Scott
Derek Strong had 16 and Stan Paterson contributed 13 points
Kimbrough 10 to help the host for the Zips, 8-5.
Musketeers raise their record' to
Middle Tennessee, ll-5, which
ll-2 overall and 2-0 in the defeated Akron 82-'llllast week on .
conference. Detroit slipped to its home court, received 28 points
· 0-14 and 0-2 in the MCC.
from Chris Rainey,
Xavier unleashed a 27-0 scor- " At Youngstown, Milos Babic
ing run early ln the first half to and Earl Wise scoied 21 points
grali a 30-4 'lead with 11: 56 left apiece and Tennessee ·Tech was
and controlled the game the rest 16 of 16 from the foul line In the
of the way, leading 60-35 at final five minutes as the Golden
halftime.' Larkin scored 12 points Eagles downed Youngstown
·during that run .
State.

.

When Vout C11 Neld1 A Bl~t,g
A•' U1 Fot The ,

Reds sign two. free agent pitchers

Rio Grande's Redmen will be
looking to improve their standing
within the Mld,Ohio Conference
tonight when they take on Lou
Sartori's Ohio Dominican Panth- .
ers in Columbus.
The Redmen enter the contest
14-6 and 4-2 In the MOC following
Saturday's 73-66 loss to conference leader Walsh, a game that
saw senior Ron Rtttinger, Rio
Grande's highest scoring player
this season, held to 13 points.
Anthony Raymore scored 17
points and Ray Singleton added
16 to lead the Redmen · push
against the Cavaliers, which
·started well as Rio Grande
posted statistical superiority
over the hosts and led by 9 (36-27)
at the half. They were ahead by
15 in the second half when a cold
streak slowed down the offense.

Detroit got 36 poln~ from
Archie Tullos, while Marvin
Owens added · 14 and Dar! an
McKinney had 12.
Elsewhere Monday night .
Cleveland State defeated East·
ern Illinois, 95-84; Akron edged
Middle Tennessee. 76-72; Tennessee Tech topped 'yciungstown
State, 79-59; Wright State

Leavell nailed a jumper, Worthy added 20 for tbe Pistons, who
Bulla 11'7, Bullels 113
scored from the low post and trailed by 8 points midway
At Chicago, Michael JordaJ!
Scott hit a corner jump~llot and tllroueb the final period. Alex scored 33 pOints and reserw
Jam to make It 16-4. Jom-o had Eagl~ paced Denver with 32 Sedate Threatt added a season:
15 first-quarter polnta as Los points and Jay Vincent contrlbhigh 26 to lead the .Bulls to their
Anplea led 41-22.
uted 25.
•
third straight triumph. . After ·
'Too much to handle," HousSolllca 111, Pacers 1111
trailing for nearly the entire first ·
ton Coach Bill Fitch said. •They
At Seattle, Dale EIUs scored 29
halt, the· Bulls ran off the last 8.
· really put a clinic on In the first ' points and aecond-year guard
points - lneluding Threattla
quarter. They're a very good Nate Mc:MIUaa registered the 18-footer .at the bu~r, to take a
bllsketball lellin- Wfve got half a first tliple-doullle of hts·.career., lead they never lost.
season to catch up to them. We'll · leading tbe SuperSonics .to their · ·
Mavertcb 81, Clippers 87
need all the.tlme W!! can get' '
15th ·straight .home victory.
At l-os Angel~. Mark Aguirre
Elaewhere, New York am- McMillan scored a career-high 16 scored 13 of his 26 points In til~ .
bushed Atlanta 110-102, Boston . points and added 15 assists and 11
third quarter. and Roy Tarpley
goUied GOlden State 121·101,
rebounds.
.
·
came off the bench to add 20',
Detroit dumped Denver 123-116,
Neta li1, Sau 11.3
helping the Mavericks overcome ·
Seattle sank lndlana 115-100,
At East Rutherford, N.J . , a sluiglsh start. The Maverlcki
New Jersey felled Phoenix 117- Orlando Woolridge scored 27
turned a~-41 halttimeleadlntoa
113, Chicago shellacked Wa- points, Pearl WashingtOn added 73-63 advantage after three
shington 117-103 and DaUas 23· and Roy Hh1son had 22 in his
quarters.
topped the LA Clippers 99-87.
first game with New :Jersey to
KDicklllO, Bawb m
lead the Nets. Hinson, acquired
At Nh York, Gerald ~IIkins over tile weekend from the 76ers,
scored 28 PointS and rookie Mark .scored 10 of his poirits In .the
JackSon collected his first triplefourth quarter as New Jersey
double to spark the Knlcks. ·· rallied from an 88-84 deficit at the
.
Jackson scored ll points, st~t of the period.
grabbed 10 rebOunds and had 13 ·
':::
assists. The Hawks' Dominique r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~''
Wilkins led all scorers with 45 l1
points.
Celdcs 1%1, Warriors 101
At Boston, Larry Bird scored'
26 points and the Celtlcs built a
25-polnt.flrst-half lead In coasting
past the Warriors, who remain
winless in 17 road games this
season, With his first shot,
•72 month
Celtics guard -Danny Alnge exwarrenty •616
tended to 20 games !lis NBA
record for consecutive .-g ames
cce'a In groiips 24,
with at least one 3-polnter.
24F. 74
Platou I28, Nuaeta 116
•P~dea extra
At Denver; Adrl!ln Dantley
poWer for cold
scored 15 of his 32 points In the
weather atena
fourth quarter to rally the
Pistons. ISiah Thomas finished
Our Service TechniciaM
with 21 points and Joe Dumars

. Tunt.lay. January 19, 1988

Mourner visits
Poe's grave
for 39th year
By REBECCA KOLBERG
BALTIMORE (UPI) -For the
39th year, a mysterious atranger
visited thl (llavt! of Edpr Allan
" ll!l!e · f4l!tU' to . ,-y the poet a
!J., 'Jft.dS~• ttMiartl'lbO~. pl1c•
lnJ · ihree red roses and a
half-empty bottle of cognac nel!r
his modest headstone. ·
Jetf Jerome, curator ofthe Poe
House, said the stranger wearing
a long gray coat, black hat and
white scarf arrived about 2: 30
a.m. to continue an eer)e tradition started in 1949. Each year,
the stranger makes a toast to Poe
alid then leaves the cognac and
roses at the grave pf the American literary giant.
Jerome said no one knows the
Identity of the stranger, ,though
r:· he has several suspects. ·
"But we make ab$olutely no
attempt to identify him," he said.
"We want to respect his privacy.
He hope Just to be witnesses to an
annual event. We don't want to
ruin It by exposing the stranger."
Jerome said he and five other
peopie watcblng from a window '
of Westminster Church did not
see· the stranger's face but It ·
appeared to be a dliferent ~ and
younger -;: person than In past
years.
~.
. "Maybe·t,he father died and the
son Is cQnt11111lng the tradition,"
Jerome sald.'•1'It does sound a
Uttle corny or-romantic but with
Poe you never kndw."
Jerome said the previous
"stran1er" had been walking
with Increasing difficulty In
recent years.
Jerome said if the stranger
ever stopped making the• birthday toast, city museum officials ·
would probably take over the
tradition and make. a ·public
cermony of it.
' .
But until th·a t time, Jerome
says: "I don't think people have
to- be cynical and BUlge&amp; I it's a ·
joke or a hoax. I __bellelle the
stranger Is making a very
special, but dramatic. tribute to
Poe."
.
Poe died In 1849 after collapsIng on a Baltimore street and wa's
~rled at the Westminster
~ui'Ch, a f~ blocks from his
~ ."holne.
'
· Tbere Were onb' five 1110umers
at Pof• funeral bt,il Jerome said
hlllidredl of times that number of
people villi bta grave each year,
' lncludll!l, ot course, tbe mysterious •ll'IIIP".

•
State Supreme Court Justice
Irving Kirschenbaum ruled Friday that Brown could refuse
. ;mil-psychotic drugs because she ·
had .not exhibited "dangerous or
potentially destructive
conduct.''
Doctors wanted ttl use the
anti-psychotic drug Haidol for '
. treatment of arown's hostile
behavior and a seCond drug to
curb Haldol's side effects, Halpin
said.
Brown's lawyer, Robert Levy,
said the side effects Include
long-term damage to the nervous
'sy_stem, restlessness, an lgablllty
to think clearly and .a Toss of
·muscle control.
·Levy, an attorney with the New ,
· York Civil Liberties Union, has
. fought to have her released on
grounds that her civil rights were
violated by the involuntary confinement because he said she is

competent to care toi herself.
. Levy said he hopes his client
will move. Into a community
shelter that could offer her
supportive services .
Brown, a former secretary
from New Jersey, lived over a
hot-air vent outside Swensen's, a
restaurant.
·
·
An appeal by Brow ills pending
before the Court of Appeals, the
state's highest court. to determine the legality of her forcible
removal from the stre_et5 by the
city.
,
As of Friday, the program's
team of doctors had picked up 70
people who were admltled to
Bellevue, Halpin said,
·
Some were seat to Creedmoor
State Hospital In Queens and at
!east six were plaCed In other
. medical settings, Halpin said. At
least two people were reunited
with their families, she said.

By HENKV G. LOOEMAN
any of them."
live with her brother , James
RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (UPI) Pierson Jr. , 22, at an undisclosed
An 18-year-old former cheer- .
During pre-sentencing hear--~ location and will try to get work
leader who admitted paying a lngs last fall , . the .18-year-old as a hairdresser. ·
classmate $400 to kill her father forrner cheerleader recounted .
James Jr. testified at a prebecause he forced her to have sex how 'her father began sexually · sentencing hearing that his fawith him planned· to celebrate abusing her when she was 11. She ther had physically abused him ,
Christmas today at the end of her told a Long Island judge she paid but said .Cheryl never told him
jail term.
Sean Plea, 19, a classmate, $400 - •their father forced her to have
c, . Cheryl Pierson was to be
to kill Pierson. Pica also pleaded sex with him.
released today after serving guiltY to manslaughter and Is
Cheryl has renounced any
more· than three months of a six serving a prison term of 8 to 24 claim to her father's · $250,000
month sentence.
years. ·
. ,
·estate and 'the beneficiaries are·
Pierson pleaded guilty · l~t
Cheryl served 3 ~ months of a James Jr. and another sister,
March to a .reduced charge of' 6-month sentence; She Was given JoAnn, 10. Their mother died of
first-degree manslaughte~ In the credit for two weeks served cancer a year before the slaying.
· slaying of ·her , father, James before her sentencing and two
Cheryl said one reason she had
Pierson Sr., 42, who was shot In . months for good behavior and is her father kiiied was she feared ·
the driveway of his home Feb. 5, to remain on probation for five he would sexually molest JoAnn.
years.
She said she began seriously
· 1986.
The mother of Robert Cuccio, · Cuccio, who delivered the $400 thinking abOut it when she came
20, Cheryl's boyfriend, said she to Plea after the murder, pleaded home one day and found him
hopes Cheryl will be taken guilty tocrimlnalsollcltatlonand "wrestling" with JoAnn on the
directly from )all to the Cu~lo was placed on five years living room floor.
home in Selden for a belated probation.
JoAnn lives with her paternal
Christmas celebration "If weare
Mrs. Cuccio said her son has aunl, Marilyn Ad*"s. Adams
given !&gt;Qme privacy.':
.
been visltlngCheryialmostdaily and Cheryl's
ghndmother,
"The lighted Christmas tree Is and hopes, to marry her.
Virginia, have been estranged
. still up, and we have all the gifts · . "But, right now, they are not from Cheryl since the killing.
for Cheryl and for our family stili formally engaged;"' she said.
They bitterly rejected her asser- •
wrapped under the tree," Tina
Last week, Cheryl's attorney, lion that her father sexually
Cuccio sa I'd. "We haven't ope~ed · Paul Gianelli, said Cheryl would molested her .

Notice Qf 1Appli:cation of .GTE NORTH INCORPORATED
. ··for Increases and Adjustm_ents ·i·n Rates .· and Charges
.

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1

· Pursuant to the requirements of Section 4909.t9 of the Ohio Revis8d Code, GTE NORTH INCORPORATED hereby gives notk:e thai on September 30. t987, it filed with the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio ari application (PUCO Docket No.' 87-1307-TP-AtR) lor authority to increase and adjust its rates and charges for telecommunications service and to change
its regulations and practices affecting the same.

This notice contains the substence and prayer of the
application. However, any interested pai1y desiring complete detailed information wi_th respec_.o all affecte,d rates,
· charges, regulations arid pr)ICtices should inspect a copy·
Of the .application and all attached ~hedUies. at the office
ol the ~. ti!O East Broad Street, Columbus, Ollio.
A copy of the 8PI)Iication may be inspected by any interested party at_the offlcifbf GTE NORTH INCORPORATED
located at 100 Executive Drive, Marion, Ohio. A copy of
the application aild the pcposed 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, ihe proposed rates were mailed to
the mayors and legiSlative authorities ol all municipalities·
.. seMd by the Company on August 28, t 987, as part oft he
.,'Company's 'notHication of its intent to file.
1
.. •
The appllcat~ a~ rates and charges tor tetecom-,
··• muntoatiOna 88I'ViCes to an customers Of GTE ~RTH
INCORI'()f!ATED provided pursuant to hs JFxchange Rate
.~.
Tadff P.U.C.O:·No~ 6, Gener,ai 'Exchange fariff, P.U.C.O. •
No. 7, 8nd Facllties for Intrastate Access Tariff, P.U.C.O.
No.2.
Any person, firm, corporation or association may file,
pursuant to Section 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised Code,
objections to the proposed increases and adjustments in
rates anp charges, and to the proposed changes in regulations and practices affecting the same. The objections
may allege thet such application contains proposals that
are unjust and discriminatory or unreascinable. Recommetldalions which dillfJf from the application
.
may be made
by the staff of the Public Utilities Commission .of Ohio or
by intervening parties and may be adopted by the
Commission.

LOCAL EXCHANGE SERVICE
The application proposes to consolidate the'10 existing

rate groups into 5 new rate groups.

A-1
Malvern

A-2

R-4

making premise visits and completing various !unctions
while on the customer's premises, upon a customer's
request. The Company is also proposing to reP.Iace the
current Central Office Line Connection C:harge, Initial and
Subsequent, with a Central Office Charge and an Outside
·Plant Charge to more appropriately reflect the work_functions performed.

B·1

E~~;Change

Current Flat Rate
Proposed Flat Rate

Difference

$13.53
18.06
4.53

$13.02
$11 .90
15.60
17.21
3.70
4.19 .·

$29.30
39.22
9.92

$11 .96

$11 .56
$10.44
14.63
1629
4.73 . 4 ;19

$24.98
36.29

MatbleiMiad~e

Curren1 Flal Aa1e .
P~AIIAa1e

16.94
4.98

Oirterence
·Mechanic91ownExchange
Current Flal Rate
Prgposed Flal Ra1e

$11 .56
15.74

4.18

Oilference
Paris Exthlwlge
c~ Flat'Aa1e
. Prgposed Flal Aile
Oifftif'80Ctl

$13.53
18.06
4.53

$11 .11
15.08
3.97

$ 9.39
13.57

$13.02
17 .21

$11 .90

4.19

1 1.31

3.58

15.6o
370

$23.80
32.92
9.12

Service Ordering Charge Initial, per occasiOn
Business
Rerfdeuce

$29.30
39.22

Service Ordering Charge Subsequent, per occasion
. Busi~
Aesidence

9.92

Business

P1oposed Ftat Rate

Oilf"""""'
Wavorty Exchange

'

Current Fiar Rate
Prgposed AII'Aale

. Oifl8rence .

Winona Exchange
Current Flat Rale
Prgposed Flat Aa1e
Difference

$11 .56
$1 1.11
16.94 .
16.29
. ~.38

$11 ,96
16 .94
4.98

$ 9.39

$11 .56
16.29
4.73

4.64

36.29
'

$24.98

4.19

11 .31

$12.52

$11 .96

16.94

16.29
4.33

4.42

$10.89
' 14.63
. 3.74

·,

10.05

10.05

9.20
9 20

13 .65

14.70

I

Stallflfl Handling Charge.
per item of equipment

$26.33
36.29

Bysiness
Residence

9.98

KEY AND PBX TRUNK DlSCOUNT
The Company is proposing ttlat customers with more
than 30 Key trunks or 30 PBX,trunlcs receive a discount of
t!Wo per trunk for each trunk over the initial 30 trunks, if
the iotaltrunks serve the same 'customer premisa and a(e
billed to the same aCClQunt. The disoount would apply only
for Flat Rate Local Service and not Usage SensitM! Service.

Structure

Schedule I
Scho&lt;lule 11

1 1o 3,000
3.001 10 6.000

Schodule 111

6,00; 10 12,000
12.0011o 24.000
24,001 lo 4e,Q~
48,00110 96,000

Schedule IV
SchoduiO V
Schedule VI

&gt;

USAGE SENSITIVE SERVICE

Exchange
Access Lines

Structure

Schedule I

110

6.000 .

&gt;
&gt; SchoOOie

Scl1odule1l , 6.001 lo 24,000
·
IU
24,001 10 98,000

The Company is proposing an introduction of optional
Usage Sensitive Service (USS) to its one-party customers
in forty-one additional exchanges. AlsO, the Company prof)dses an increase in tha existing USS access and USS
usage rates. The usage rates are proposed to be increased
between 35.0% and 40.0%. Pro~d USS access rate
increases in representative exchanges ·are:

Schedule VII . 98,00t 1o 192,000 &gt; Schedule 111 96
384
.
· •001 IO
,000

Schedulo VIII 192,00110 384.000
SchecloH IX
Scohdule X

384.00110 768,000
768.001 and OYer

&gt;

Schedule V

Current Access Rate
Proposed Access Rate
.Difference
'

Bolivar.Exchaf98
Current Access Rate
P1lljiClilild Aocess Aate
DiffenniCe
Huron Exch'tnge
Current Aooess Rate
Proposed Access Rate

llillerence

A-1

$13.08

Curren! Fla1 p,,._
FlaiRate

18.06
14.98

Diriel-.a

· Fla1
E.cn.ng.
. Curren!
Rate

-$14.65
20.06

PrQPOMd FlaiDIIIen" ICO

5.41

A-4

' B-1

$12.48
17.21

$11 .34

$27.114

• 15.60

4.75

4.26

38.22
11 .98

$14.14

$12,80

18.26
5.12

17.31

'

4.5t

$32.39
45.06
12.111.

5.151

CheiNM Cenlilr F

"'·

$15.32 $13.76 . $35.16
20.13
18.37
4U'I
5.41 . 4.82 • 13.32 .

$11.18

$1D.I!&amp;

s 9.86

122.45

1tl74
4.51

16.08

1U'I

32.11!

4.42

3.12

10.47

115.11

114.12
20.'13
&amp;.81

1.8

....•

aur..FIIIRIII .

21.31
n--

Dr".WWIICI

CUO

A-1

$15.95
22.06

$ 7.75

6.11
S2C.61
30.1a '

10.55
2.80

s 9.44

9.57

13.44
4.00

$18.65

s 8.76

26.2e

12.10

7 .63

. 3.34

Curle01AcceUAa1t
P~ Acoell Rale

$21 .70

$ 9.82
13:44
3,82

llillerence
'SUgeraMic Exchange
•Currwnc Access Rate
P!opooadAocela Rile
OOiervnce

30.18
&amp;.48

$1'1.114
24.31
6.67

$ 8.39
11 .35
2.96

RESIDENCE LIFELINE SERVICE
The Cbrnpaoy Is proposing to establish a Residence
Ufelinll Service for one-party CIIIIOtTMin ~ for the
liorn8 Energy A8e1atance P1ogr1m (HEAP) or the Ohio
Energy Ctldltl Plan (OECP). Thl propelled flesidence
UfellneiBielens 57.-4% of the PfOIICIId tiel local service

rata lll1d yaege..,...ive eervtce 'CCII'• rate (42.11% dis·

•
$15.13
21 .31

B-1

Monlrooo Exchange

shown

Aniarlda exc'lionae ..

count). '-'Pot~ .,.,..ollll of the Raaldenoa Ulellne IJIOPC.'S81.
the ~ . . file lor the lllllchiilg Fedei'll LlfeHne
.... iiiWICilJIOIIIIIII wNch-- up I0$2.10of the monthly
••• tiM 11n8 clllrga. Upon FCC IIPIIOIIII. the tllective
d!D"ntor r~alt.a 111a11na CUIIDm8rl wt11 be approxl·

mahlly50%.

I

StU&amp; •

114.18

18.3'1
5.01

41.1!'1
. tllot

5.70

6.50

5.70

6.50

25.30

3;.75

25.30

35.75

8usinft$S

7 35

Residence

7.35

9.15
9.15

BUsiness
Residence
M;aintenance of Service Ctlarge.

each addiiMmal quarter hour

Central Office Une Connection
Charge Initial, each line

15.80
15.80

Central Offtce Line COnnection

-

Chalge Subsequent, each line

Business

10.4C
10.40

Central Office Charge. each
BUsiness

~ne

13.1 0
13.10 .

OJtside Plant Charge, each line
Business
Residence

39.05
~ . OS

Belklvue Exchange

384 _001 and oYOr

Specific local service rates depend on the rate group
classificalion applicable to a speCHic location. The average
inCreases in monthly rates for different classes Of service
- are as follows: residence one-party $4.80 or 37%; twoparty $4.22 or 35%; four-party $3.94 or 37%; business
one-party St0.89 or 40%; key trunks $13.65 or 40% and
1 PBX trunks St 2.81 or 23%. The changes in monthly local
service rates for residence one-perty, two-party and four·
party exchange serviCe and lor one-party 'business
.· eXchange seMc:e in representative communities, should
'the requested tncrea.e be granted in full, are
below.
P~ rates for services In the Company's 232 other
exclwlges . . Clintalned in the proposed tariff sheets which
can be inspected as stated previously.
·.
. "'1, :,"

15.90

Residonce

Buslfless

Proposed

16.05

Maintenance ot Servk:e Charge,
first quarler hour

EXCHANGE RATE GROUPS .
Exchange
Access Lines

8.00 .
8.00

BusiOHS

Residence
Exesting

$39.05
32.05

9.20
920

,

Premises Wiring Charge. each termination
Business
Residence

36.29
'

$35.25
35.25

Repair Visil Cha'rge. per occasion

12.49

$10.44
.14 .63

flate

10 .05
10.05

Res~nce

$23.80

14.63

5.18

Proposed

Rate

Premises Visit Charge, per occasion

Seamon &amp;charige
Curren! Aat Aa1e

Present

SERVICING CHARGES
The ComPinY 'is propOaing to increale ill servicing
clwgaua laloWa for hlncllng CUI!Ofner-IMifYic:l onle!J,

MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES

.,.

· Increases in rates and charges are proposed for some
mi,scellaneous services, namely: ·
·
• Foreign Central OffiCe Service
• Directory Listings
,
• Directory Assistance Service,
• Private Une $ervices
• Off Premises Extension Line Services
Because the 1Commission has authorized the deregulation of certain billing and collection services, the ComPII"'' also propchs to lnCI'ease iiS proposed basiC e~
rates by approximately 1.5%.

The prayer ot the application requests the Public I.Jtiiities CommissiOn ol Ohio to do the following :
(a) Find that the Company's present rates and charges
and the regulations and practices affecting the same are
unjust, urveasonable and insufficient to yield reasonable
compensation lor the seMces rendered;
(b) And that the rates and charges and regulations and
· ' practices proposed,ens just and reasonable an~~ wiD provide no more ttwl a fair and reasonable Tate of return on
the value of the Company's property actually used and ·
useful tor 't he convenience ot tile public;
(c) Approve the filing of the proposed. schedule sheets
contalfied In Schedule E·t of the application, modified to
r.nect such reriaicna thetepf aa _may become effeCtive,
.pursuant to ordn of the Commission, during the interim
betwlen the filing of the apptlcetlon lnd the date upon
whiCh the 8CII8CUe ..... become effective;
.
(d) Order that the p!Of1aaed ~le sheets bobec:ol"""m""ll
llffactMt lui tliWith,
(e)AjlpotHI • . . . , 11 ofthe 11 11"4 ~sheets
001 trl i8d in SChadute E-2 of the IIPfl(lcetton;
(f) Orii'IIIUCII on. llld further t1111e1 aa'the Company
18 ~ •1111111!d to In the premises.

I

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--------------~.........--"---.

-----

Th.torm of lhii'NoiiW
, h.. bMn •pp"OJIId ~ thl Public Utllltli. conwntulan of Ohio:

,.

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By The Bend·
·-· · ..,... ,.. .-. .. . --··
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.The· Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, January 19, 1988
Page 8

•

Shower given for woman ·
A wedding shower was held . Shirley Sinclair, Frona Riffle,
recently at the home of the Rev. Barbara · Hoffml!n, . and Karla
and Mrs. Herbert Grate 1 to Chevalier.
Sending f{lfts were Candy Til·
honor Rebecca Bauer and Her·
bert Grate II.
Us, Paul and Mildred Hauber, .
Games were played with prizes Melody Roberts, Ronnie and
being won by Carolyn Bissell, .Gayann Clay, Opal Hollon, David
Wilda Blaney, and Carolyn Bar· G~ate. Betty Roush, J!lnet Koton. Cake baked by JoAnn Baum blentz, Mazie Holsinger, Ka·
was ~I'Ved with chips, mints,
thryn Windon, Betty Gaul, Boots
and punch.
Hunt, Cathy Spencer, Wanda
· Others attending were Susan Wllllams, Mrs. Roy Christie, Roy ,
and Mickey Bauer, Debbie Wat·
and Mary Gillilan, George and .
na Williams, Larry and Marilyn
son, VIcki and Tara Woods,
Sheila and Donna Curtis, Cathy
Deein, Edna Wood, Irene
and Holly Masters, Amy Broth·
Kennedy, Betsy Hawthorne,
ers, Nancy and Sarah Pullins,
George and VIola Grate, Erica
Caryl Pooler, Jeanette Moss,
Priddy, Charles and Margaret
Barbara Masters, Mary Hunter,
Bissell, Margaret · Amberger, .
Doug and Chl!ryl Bartrun\, and ·
Aima Lindeman, .Janie Armes,
Terry and Elaine Congo.' ·
Opal Wickham, Mace! Bairton.

:
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Montomery honored by hospital
Judy Montgomeroy, R. N.,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
HOffman, New Haven, recently
was selected 1987 Nurse of the
Year at Humana St. Luke's
Hospital In Richmond, Va.
She has been employed by
Humana for six years and Is
presently assistant head nurse on
the orthopedic unit which has

been selected by Humana Corporation as the Center . of Excel·
lence In orthopedics. .
Ms . Montgomeroy graduated
from Fredrlcksburg Area School
of Practical Nur~lng In 1981 and.
Germanna College , In 1986 with
an associate degree In applied
science with a major In nursing. ·
'I

'

'

Star Garden Club meets ··

CHAMPIONS..:. The Styleties Twirling Corp11 have won the title
of W. Va. State High Point Grand Champions. Maldng up tbe group
are left to right, front, Kandt Hysell, Rachel Arthur, Ruth Ann
Flllher, Joy Black, Angle Clarke; second row, RTiffany Williams,
Jennifer Errett, Brandl Hysell, Kimberly Woodall, Jessica Carr,
Dawan Rousll, Jaml Shobe, Kristina McCoy; third row, . Jaml

Nibert, Jessica William, Kirstin Black, TIHany McCoy, Jeny
McCoy, Maggie Norvell, Mandy Patterson, Am811da Clay; fourth
row, Lori Gibbs, Michelle Gibbs, Amy Barker, Carla Glllsple,
Peggy Gillespie, Instructor, Heather Patterson, Chante Ashworth,
Crystal Donohue, Kristen Slawter. Not picture Ia Melissa Sayre.

Twirlers tqke titles· in W.Va., Ohio .events
The Stylettes Twirling Corps,
&lt;:omposed of glrl.s from both
Mason and Meigs Counties. cap-,
tured thl' title of West VIrginia
High Point Grand Champions at
the recent state group baton
twirling championships of the
National BatonTwlrlingAssocia·
lion he ld at Ravenswood.
·The membe rs won271987-88W.
Va. State Championship titles
and 35 tl'()phies to become the

most outstanding group, accumulating the most points in a field
of 22 corps.
In addition to thetttl!'ofW. Va.
State High Point Grand Champions , the Stylett!'s·won thl' titles
of W. Va. State Tiny Tot Dance
Twirl Champions in the small
and extra large dlvisons , w. Va.
State Juvenile Dance Twirl
Champions In the small ~nd large
dlvlsons, W. Va. State Tiny Tot

Child's problem more
.than simply medical

PomPon Champions, W. .Va.
State Juvenile Pompon cham·
pions, W. V.a. State Primary
Halftime Show Champions, W.
Va. State Junior Half· Time Show
Champions; W. Va. State Juve·
nile Majorette Line Champions,
W. Ya. State Juvenile Trio
Champions; W. Va. State Junior
Trio Champions, W. Va. State
Senior Trio Champions, anil W.
Va. State Junior Flag Twirling

Ann
·Landers

A program on 'hpuseplants was
fetured at th~ recent meeting of
the Star Garden Club held at the
home of Binda Diehl.
For roll call members gave
botanical and common names of
houseplants. Anna Turner a
report on "Flowering House·
plants That Keep On Blooming'',
noting that some plants that
bloom continuously are African
.violets, · begonias, and
geraniums.
On the subject of propagation
ot houseplants, Steila Atkins
talked about the fascination of
propagatl!lg plants through tip

and leaf cuttings, root dlvjslon,
stem offsets, air layering and
planting seeds.
Mildred Jeffers presided at the
business meeting noting that now
is the time to plan for gardens .
which provide continuous bloom·
lng throughout the summer. She
also talked on the Importance of
feeding the birds as winter .
continues.
. Allegra Will read a letter from
Lulu Levis, &amp;.lllfmberwholsnow .
living in Akron.
Refres)lments were served by
the hostess.

Champions in the large and extra
large dlvlsons
They also .won the titles of W.
Va. State Tiny Tot T w i r l i n g , . . : . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , , - - - - - - Team Champions, w: Va. State
Juvenile Twirling Team Cham·
pions; · W. Va. State .Junior
Twirling Team Champions, and
w. Va. State Juvenile Flag
Twirling Team champions in the
small, large and ·~xtra large
division.
.
The past five years of baton
•
twirling competitions have been
very successful for the Stylettes.
According to Peggy Gillespie,
director, they have accumulated
103 first place trophies, h'lcludlng
55 W. Va. State championship
titles , five regional champion·
ship titles, and two national
titles.

COMING SOON YOUR NEW HOMEI

Promoted
Steven P. Patterson, son ,of
Paul and Rose Patterson, ~u­
tland, has been promot!'~ to the
some sizzling rebuttals. I'll print the non-commissioned officers corps
· as E-4 . sergeant. He recently
best one.
re-enlisted and Is presently serv·
Planning a wedding? What 's lng the third year bf a three year
right? What's wrong? "The Ann assignment to u!pper Heyford
Lilnders Guide [or Brides" will relieve RAFB England. He lsa 1983
your anxieiy. To receive a copy, send graduate of Meigs High School.
$2.50 plus a No. 10, self-addressed,
stamped envelope {39 cents postage)

to Ann Lilnders, P.O, Box 11562, Chi· ·

cago, Ill. 60611-0562.

.

ANN LANDERS o
• t 988, los Anoeles Times Syndicate end

Craators Syn~cate

8.5°/o

CONSTRUCTION LOANS
NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE WV HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
FUND AND PEOPLES BANK
YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE
A FIRST TIME HOME OWNER'
TO QUALIFY!

LIMITED· OFFER-APPLY TODAY!

9.44°/o A.P.R.

P OPLES BANK
'•"

Second Streit
Mason

.

Tuelday, January 19. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the,Bend

Community calendar

'Lady, in ·Columbus
tor formal training
By BOB HOEFLICH
"Lady" who has been
Bpbbl Pauley and her fAnollv
Meigs Couniy
tor the past yea.r
learning fin
steps 1
.
.
~.
becol'lllng a · ..
·.
.
fng eye clog, I . .

•
,.

been ·~.,,,,,.;,,,;.,

'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-:..9

TUESDAY
POMEROY - . XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, ~ia Sigma l?hl
Sorority, wlll meet Tuesday at 7
for aU Interests and for all level&amp; p.m. at the Senior Citizens
of participation. She Is also the · Center.
coordinator of a large group of
active volunteer.s.
The public Is lnvtied to visit
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehablllttlon Center or to
call for any Information they
inlght like.
·

·---

Columbus and
At a meeting of "some ·of the
, ~-~
'
MIDDLEPORT - Group II;
now In themoredeinandlngs)eps
old residents" of Meigs County at'
of her formal training.
the courthouse on Sept. 7, 1876 MlddlepQrt Presbyterian
Bobbl writes: ·
·'
measures were taken for tile Church, will meet Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Paul HaptOnstall.
"We took her back Sunday,
formation of a Pioneer Assocla·
'1'0 fUCI M M (.Ml tti·IISl
ftATfl
'
IUUT ..,_ r.Af I Ul t1 S P.M.
Mrs.
Dwight Wallace will have
Jan. ~0. It was very hard to leave
tlon and this. was the first
I AJI. aa.tl . . . . Y.MDi.r
·
·
·
,
...
-01
~··-~~~
,_,..
"··
the first chapter of the study
her as we fiad her with us for
meeting of what is now the Meigs
aoso-.,
........
~·
.
almost a year and she was a very
County Pioneer and Historical book, "Concerns:" Mrs. Thomas . ........
- _ ......
,__ .. _ ,, ......... . , _ . . ... ..... . WI . W - -· .....
·~--------..c:... ....
.,
Rue will be devotional leader.
intelligent animal. We met three
Society.
.....
-.. ..
... _.,_~-·"""·
Stillman Larkins was chosen
blind recipients that were al·
't".'::..lo,:::=:.=.:::..""JC::::'
.
MIDLEPORT - A special
ready learning to handle their
chairman ; and Aaron Stivers,
..........
ClMtif•ed pap• cour rille
meeting of Middleport Loclge 363,
dogs. On!' was a man .from Israel
secretary, of that first . group.
e-....:.=- =n=
follcuinhw
1elep'-9JW e•clutn•••··· ·
._.::r--.
"""!"!;:-":
c:~.r::-:::=i\
who wllHake (tis dog back there . Those present deslflng to be F&amp;AM; has ' been set for 7 p.m. ·
.
with .him . as soon as they
members gave· their names and Tuesday at the temple. Practice
.
graduate. The other two were a. Included Samuel S. Paine, John · tor the master masons I degree
little closer to home. I believe
Irvin, James · Ralsto11. Oren wlll_il!!~held and all officers are
Missouri and kansas were their
Branch, Silas Jones, Larkins, asked to attend.
home states.
Samuel Bradbury, Thomas
' The school will contact us
White, Laurin Robln:wn, Joseph
about ''Lady" when she finishes
V. Smith, Stivers, Aaron Thomp·
Public Notice
Public .Notice
Public Notice
her training which will take three
son, H. G. Smith, G. W. Cooper,
.
'
to five months. I! she doesn't
Darius .Reed, John Ruble,
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
MATE FDR THIR PROJECT VISED THAT IN ACCOR·
make It as a seeing eye dog, they
Bdnjamln Smith and Mrs. S. C.
Sealed PJ'OI&gt;Gula will be AS DETERMINED BY THE DANCE WITH THE PROVIask the breeder II he wants the
Miles.
recetred Ill the:
DIVISION OF RECLAMA· StONS OF THE JANUARY
DIVISION OF
TION IS i27 .1134.00,
27, 1972
EXECUTIVE
And, again, let rne remind you ,' A re!iort on Christmas projects
dog J;&gt;ack. ·If he doesn't then' we
was
given
at
a
rec,ent
meeting
of
IIECLAMATION
A
pre·bld
meeting
wit
be
ORDER
BY
THE
ClOVER·
·
1
have im option of taking her. . .
. that there are some extra copies
NOR OF OHIO. AND
the
Reedsllle
United
Jl;lethodlst
'
DEPARTMENT
DF
held
on
Thurodey,
January
"It's a battle to know whether
of .t he·new Volume II'of the 1987
AMENDED . EXECUTIVE
0
at 11 :00 a.m. ot OADEtl 84-9, F.EBRUARY
1:::~~t:J:1~ ¥~8:=E :h~
· you really wa.n t h~r to succeed or , HiStory of Meigs County still for · WQmen hosted by Pat M~trtln.
SECOND FLOOR
Coplu of the plena. aplcl· 16, 19S4, EQUAL EM,
come back. But deep lns.lde each
sale' You can gt&lt;t a copy by . It was noted that a thank you
PLOYMENT OPPORTUN·
note
had
been
received
'from
a
CpWMBUS,
0Ht043224
llpatlonoon~propoalforma
of us In this family which has
seandlng $49 plus $311 YOIJ wan !It
·dM
M I
IHIIU · Frldoly, February I, wlf be forw8rdod fro111 the tTY CONDITIONS ARE APII
f
eed
rs. ar ene
1988 111 10:00 e.m. and Dlvlolon of Rectamotlon, PLICAfiiLE TO THIS ~D.
' raised her; Is the realizatlon'lthat . malted to you, to the Meigs n y, am Y an
, we truly want her to be the best. County Museum, P.O. Bcx 145, Put,man reported On gifts given o-ed thMMhet for fur· Depe- of· Nlllural\,fte- WAGE . RATES ESTAB·
to needy children .
nithlng the m 11$illla enca aourn1.~ upon receipt of a LIIHED IN ACCORDANCE
· seeing eyl', dog, Pllof Dogs, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Mrs
Putman
,had
devotions
lllt'lorllllngthat•fforthe check In tha amount of WITH 8£CTION .1&amp;13,18
· has ever trained
with
members
giving
th~ Lord's
exe-n
and co-.,ctlon i10.00 madepayabletothio AND 1&amp;13.37 OF THE RE·
Compliments were heaped
"Lady" was Meigs County's
of:
0 . . , . - of Nlllural R• VISED CODE ARE ALSO
MEIGS •
ooun:M.
may atoo be APPLICABLE.
upon Jim Sheets, Meigs High Prayer in unison, There was a
,
first Pilot Puppy project. ·
readlrig
froiD
Guideposts
"Bless·
UNDERGROUND
#1
purohalld
with
oah in the
llidl ore ...... and lid·
School teacher, !or his cooking of
lngs , In Disguise" along with
RECLAMATION PROJECT a•oct Mnount. PIMo ond - - 19: DEPARTMENT
the steaks Saturday nlght 'for the
· Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
" ·• 1 s of Gold "
MEICJI COUNTY, OHIO
apecifiellliono become the OF NATURAL RESOURCES.
f
dl
dinner-dance of the Pomeroy rea ngs rom »PP e
·
RECLA1¥1ATION PROJECT pr~ of the proopeetlve DIVISION OF RECLAMA·
and Rehabilitation Center - Is
..·.
Scripture was given by Mrs.
NUMSER MG·Xx·01
blddera ond no refundo ·wMI TtON, 1SII&amp; FOUNTAIN
proud to recognize Jan Buskirk Area Chamlier of .Commerce.
Martin.
,
In
eccorilonce
with
the
plono
be mede. Addltlonot lnfor· SQUARE. BUILOING H, SEC·
"Best
steak
I
ever
ate",
was
. as · a Certl(led Activity Director
Eighty-to
shutln
calls
were
and
ipeclfiootlono
p,........
motion
mey be obtained OND FLOOR. CDWMBUS,
the'
expression
:
of
so
many
as a part of the observance of
reported and cards were signed . · bv tho DEPARTMENT OF from the Dlviolon of Recta· OHIO 43224. No blddor tn11Y
National ·Activity Professionals attending the affair as they·
hla bid wttNn ""v
~:lu'l:~ts:,~so~~c~:: ::~,:j 11'!:.,"?.::nt 18 :~ (110) dove -the
.'
1CtU111 dlle
compl~ented ' Jim, who was · for several friends. Dues were
' Day this Friday .
collected,
games
pla,Yed
and
CLAMATION.
COLUM8US,
Fountain
SqUIIre,
BuUclng
of
the
...,-g
-eof.
Activities In a · nursing . home assisted with the cooking by Bill
The Director of Noturol
prizes awarded. Refreshments OHIO.
BIDS WILL 8£ H. Second Floor, Columbuo.
are mandated by federal law. Nease,lmmedlate past president
Rnourrnorves the right
OPENED
IN
THE
SEC·
Ohio
43224.
(Phone:
111141
were served to 'M ary Allce Blse, OND FLOOR CONFER· 21111·10111).
Activity professionals work with of the chamber.
to roj&lt;lct ony or oil bida, or to
Erika Boring, Kathy Master, Sue • ENCE ROOM OF 18115
Eoch bid muat be occom· accept ttte bid which om·
It seems that Jim created his
health care professionals. regu·
Douglas,
Barbara
Masters,
VI·
IBUILOINCI
H)
OF
THE
ponied
by 1 BID GUA· ttrac• auch combinattort al"cooker" !rom a large oil drum
' Ia tory agencies and care provld·
vian
Humphrey,
Sandy
We.
s
t
and
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE
OF·
RANTY.
meeting the requi· ternllle propoaoia u may
: ers to coordinate the delivery of -1t has a lift . up lid In case It
Denise,
Mrs.
Putman
and
Lillian
FICES
OF
THE
OHIO
DE·
ramento
of
Section 1113.&amp;4 promote the boot lntornt of
• activities and services to persons starts raining. He uses 'wood
PARTMENT OF NATURAL ol the Ohio Rwiaed Code. the Stllte.
I
Pickens. Mrs. RcblnPutmanand RESOURCES . . THE EST!- , CONTRACTORS ARE ADAI provided In Section
charcoal !or cooking and can
. • served by long term care faclll·
cook .up about 65 big steaks at a
ties.
Mrs. Judy Elkins, co-hostesses,
were unable to attend.
.
' Activity professionals, such as time.
Mamie
Buckley
will
host
the
Evecyone, but everyone, was
' Jan, strive to assure that --iii!
next meeting. Kathy: Masters
• elderly and handicapped per:wns , more than pleased with Jim's
won the door prize.
: : lead full and challenging lives, work Saturday evening. ·
• , rea;ard.le:as'Of financial status or
· 1 know losing the game Sunday
1- • aj!e. Acttvttles In a nurslrlg home
• are said to enhance sell esteem, was toligh, but on the other hand
Intelligence and social f!Jnctlons auto thefts In Cleveland were
MARCUM 1
down considerably in 198'7. Now,
and general life enjoyment.
CONTRACTING
1
At the Pomeroy facility, Mrs. iloes that helper what? Do keep
CHESTER. OHIO
I
We
can
repair
and
re·
Buskirk has developed activities · smiling.
oHOME BUILDING
core radiators and
The families of Mr. and Mrs.
oROOM ADDITIONS
otUTCHENS • BATHS
heetw cores. We can
Hanford Stanley, Willow Creek
oROOFING
Road, Pomeroy, held their analso acid boilaAd rod
REMODELING •
REPAIRS
nual Christmas dinner and gift
out radiators. We also
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
exchange at the home of Jack
By WIUJAM C. TRO'JT
rtPiir Ills Tanks.
BACK HOE WORK
· and Karen ·stanley, Crew Road,
,.~w
United Preas International
Pomeroy. Following the dinner,
915-41.1
ROYAL 'l'HEATER: Britain's Prlnee Edward, who quit the
G-C-UOII
992-2196
a birthday party was held for
Royal Marines a year ago, will btlcome the firSt member of the
R1t.eno•
1 1 -l · tfn,
Middleport.
Ohio
·Hanford Stanley : ·,
,
royal family ln. the· history of the monarchy to jol.n the
1-13-ttc
Attending . were Bernard·,
. .
.
:prof.e sslonal theater.
· Donna and Jennifer Grueser,
Edward, the youngest son of Queen Elizabeth II and fifth In
Scott Myers, .Cathy Fezzell · and
line !or her throne, Is joining Andrew Lloyd Web~r's Really
DON'T liT YOUR B.IC·
HOUSE FOR RENT
Brian,
'I;'rentqn; .Dan and Janet
. Useful Theatre Co. In February as · a production assistant, ,·
111CAl PIOilfMS If.
107 .LOCUst ST.
King, Shade, Pat and Joy Quinn
according to· a statement from But;klngham Palace:
COME A SHOCK TO YOUI
and sons, Pat, Mit, and Derek,
Edward has the "full support" of the queen In his career
. POEIOY~-91$-3$61
CAll
FilE DEPT.
Guysville; Jack and Mary Ta·
move, a palace spokeswoman said. Edward's penchant !or the
B'S
pley, St. Louts, Mo. ; Carolyn
dramallc arts is well known and It was widely assumed when he
.., li(
.~
Basham Building
Bcwen, Lancaster; Bob and
left the Royal Marines that he would eventually seek a career In
EVElY
the theater.
·
Joyce Bowen, Jack, Karen,
915~3561
D&amp;c ELECTRIC
Kristen and J . P, Stanley, and
1
BAD AtTOR: Former ''Diff'rent Strokes'' star Todd Bridges
Ron Dll• ·or
lkll ·
Hanford and Evelyn Stanley, all
Gsry Cummlna
Is In trouble with the law again. Bridges, now 22, was booked on
4lllheri•Oishwoohera
6:30P.M.
of Pomeroy,
suspicion of reckless driving late Sunday alter allegedly racing
•RIIntt•• •Refrlgeroton
992-6226
through a Los Angeles residential neighborhood at 80 mph.
.Oryer1 .,:reerer1
Mldcl-11
Bridges, who played Gary Coleman's , bil brother on ·
·
IMund/Uc....ct
WE SW USED APPIIIANI:U
, 2-7-'87 tin
·'Oil!' rent ·Strokes," was released on $250 ball 'two, hours later.
In 198.') Bridges was fined and put on probation for a year after
UsinR lhr Cl•ssi{ird&lt;
being convicted of carrying a loaded pistol p.nd lnJ986 he was
Jus U.s~ as . .. ·
arrested for making bomb threats lli&amp;lnst a man he hired to
customize •his car.
JohnS. Codner and Beverly L;
CARPENTER
Bridges pleaded no contest to that charge and was ordered to
Codner, tracts, to City Ice&amp; Fuel
Co., su tton.
· ·
SERVICE
Pay $6,000 restitutiOn, fined $2,500 and' sentenced to one year In
- Addona ond .....,.,.....
jail, pending psychiatric evaluation.
·. Nela Faye Blake, tract, to
- Roofing and guner work
ONt.OCATION IN BALTIMORE: Anne Tyler I~ thrilled that ·
Mary L. Blake •Clark, Arlen E.
- Concrete wortc ·
the movie version of her prlze.winnlng novel "The Accidental
Blake and Raymond c. Blake,
- Plumbing and elecrtric.l
Tourist" will remain true to the book. The inovle, which sta~s
Jr., Olive.
(Free EatimotHI
William Hurt, Kathleen Turner and Geena Davis, Is being
Herbert Olin Hoover, ~ A, to
filmed In her hometown of .Baltimore, \Vhlcllls where the novel
Herbert Olin Hoover and Ricky
V. C. YOUNG IU
Is set. .
.
. • ··
Eugene Hoovef, Sr., Sal ..bury. •
992-6215 ... 992-7314
"llovetheldeathatlt'sbelngshothere,"TylertoldTheSunof
. Alva 'Sowards and Hazel
UCI., 01110 .
Pomeroy,' Ohio ,
Baltimore. ''I'm proud of Baltimore and I like to ·thlnk that
Huehes, 4 A, to Kenneth T. Doty,
111-t-tfn
4-15-'86-tc
they're using thl' places that I had In mine! wbeu I was writing.:·
Bedford. ·
1)iler even drove director Lawrence Kasdan around tbe tOWjl
Shirley Willis and Ro~M:rt WI!,
/
last fall to scout for shootlq locations.
tis, Lots 85 &amp; 86, to Robert L.
She's not Involved In the movte-ma.kiDg process but baa
Wln,ett, Syracuie VIllage.
watched some of the !liming and greatly enjoyed It "becallle
Julie A. Hyaell Slezak and
they're so sensitive to wh,at .the book ta abou,,"
J ames R . SJ"'-·
.. 1990
A., 1o
,_...,
.
CUSYOM•r
11. 124, Puoarar Ollio
DEPP WAS A BAD BOY: .ro...., Depp playa an undercover
James R. Slezak and Julie A.
H-S
I GARAGES
cop lllho lnflllrates 11 btgh school on Fox Broadcaattng Co. 'a "21
Slezak, .Sutton.
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
"At .... +I• Prien"
Jump Street," butln hla teenaaedaysln 1\flramar, Fla., he was
Mary H. Hagerty, tract, to
not exactly pollee academy material.
.
David R. Ha~rcertY: Saltabury ..
'Ill" .
Druga and crime became puttmes. "We uaed to break and
David R. Hanerty a11d Terry
enter places,': be told TV Guide. "We'd break Into tbe IChool
Hauerty, tract, to Lucl)lef M,
PH. Hl-1612·
and destroy a room or ,s omethtq. lllaed to steal thlnp from
~a11erty, salllllliJ'I.
,
., 992-7111
stores. Pretty much any drug you ~an name, l'w done tt."
Edltb Aurllla Hayman, dec'd,
Depp, 24, says he loat bla VIJ'IInlly at age 13, dropped out ol
by adm., tract, to Thorllef v.
h'-h acbool at ~8 and eventuallY moVed to Loa A,..lea to try to
~tz and Donn Jean Bentz.
makt It with a rock bud. He atralibtened up aad · hla
sutton.
relallonshlp with hta Jlllrenta II atroq &amp;JIOIIfrh that he lllvltecl
Walter Dallelley Reibel, dec'd,
them to move In with blm In Vancouwr, wllere "JumpStrwt" Ia
. ..,.,vtbe Eltzabetll Reibel, affld,
filmed.
'
. '
i'l!tbuary .
•
WW.IIEADII BOUo1': .loa a.n, tbe aet·teUP llllll·J Tl
, 1
m a, ~ u4
principal In Pa~. N.J., Jut It aptn Clri wlliillitllltl!t
...._. Hq t ~ ......,
dlscipUne and outapoken ·waya llave ldllllllla)' , _ Ad
to Wllllam 1\. Hipttaatall, 11111t'llaDY e11t111lea, aald two memberl of hla acboollllllnl dl u w
IIIII')'.
•
tbe IJIIIIotlne for not IIIPJIOI'tlnl blm.
Marla S. Foatllr, Pt. tract, to
Clll'k. wbo Ia black, said In a atory publlalled Ill Tilt J111 rt err ·
J1n1i11t J Reid lilld Rita J ......
HaclltDIBek that two lllack trul.... are "I at.ale l 2 I
II~ It
:
~-..artlle-·
2awiDiilrt
- -~~:- 1:
• • ....,...
•-~
•
,..,. ....,
.__.... ..._ • to~. "'1'111
_,__
loepaw:e
me l'llillt were the two lllacQ 011 tlae llou1L Tbt
pii'Jaa .._
1 a1 a. trMt, to DaYtd Jt.lllll!n
.._._•tuc..,..k•b:V•'·m•e•w•u•a•rnere--Pu-er.,.to_RicU_
. _._
.. _.
·'udLIIwreaetC.Ielltr.,lulton.

.. ... ........... .···-....-.
·-...
..
___ __ __ _ .""'... ..... ···-· ........____
--·............ _ __ _. __

__

·--__
Mt----·--

____ --

·--·--

·-·-·5:::.·.'=-.
n - -tooeiolo

~=='1':::!:

:==:---",....,..,_

":":i·-·-.· -. _. . __
_""",----···

.UMW
. holds

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

meet1ng

,':.,':'

Til••

w-

iF8:!f=--

Public Notice
123.151 of the Ohio Re·
viaed Code ond Adminiatra:
tlve Aulo 123:2-1&amp;-02 Of
the Dtportmont of Admin·
iatrativl Setvil:n, the CON·
TAAc:TOR shell moko ovory
effot1 to onaure thet cot11·
lied minority b!lolne,o oub·
controctoro ond moterlot·
men partlciptlte In tho cont..ct: Tho totol V111uo of aub·
controctl oworded to and
moterlola and aerviCII pur·
ch-d from minority buai·
neo-llhelbe••tforthin
the apoalficatlona.
CONtRACTORS REQUIR·
lNG ASSISTANCE IN SE·
CURING BIOS FROM CERTI·
FlED MBE SUBCONTRACTORS AND SUPPLIERS
. MAY CONTACT THE STATE
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT. CO·
ORDINATION BY CALUNG
1114)4611-11380 OR THE Mt NORITY BUSINESS DEYEL·
OPMENT DIVISION BY CAI.UNG (614) 486·&amp;700 OR
TOU FREE ON 1-(8001 282·
'10811.
APPROVED:
Jouph J . Sommer,
Director. Deportment
of Natural Reaources

RECOMMENDED:
Tim L. Dloringor, Cliief

Division of ReclamatiOn

1---------"---------J----------'--------Business Services

.· -.- -

Sta~ley family

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
UIIESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FUL 'DIRT

has gtlthering

.----People in the news----.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD

...........

......

) 12. 19, 2tc

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
'
INSULATION .

BISSELL ·

SJ.~I!!!. f..~·
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949·2801
. NO SUNDAY CAllS ·

·GUN SHOOT
UCINE

't

SE ICE ,

' All .•

.Meigs land
transfers

.SAT. NIGHT

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

Now Locolion:
161 North Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing SuppliH

. Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Here

IU$1N£S! PHONE
16141 992-6550

llltOENCI PHONE
li14l 992-

1

YOUNG'S

_...

1:00 P.M.
lAONE

GUN CWI

Roger Hysell

N

Garage ·

REPAIR
Altt Tn••

SALE .ON AU
JACK~TS. Reg.

D~ON

MERCHANDISE

PETITE .AND CLASSIC

I

949·1100
IACIIII, OHIO
MASTERCARD : VISA • GOLDEN 'BUCKEYE

•••

New c:Utdit C8fd. ~o O!M ...tuaedl
M8iof' oredlt cwd1 lnd mo,., Oet
your coni todllyl Coli t -&amp;18418·3734 E&gt;t. C· U22 24

._
.......
_.

_____

·I&lt;:-

v.

..

. RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

'

·3 Announcements

7

$29.98 ...,. ................... NOW '22.98
SKIRTS. Reg. 816.98 ........ .............. .... NOW '11.98
SLACKS. Reg. t13.98 ......................... NOW '10.98
_ALL LADIES DRESSES ................ 1 /3 Off Reg. Price
STORE HOURS: Mon. lllru Fri. 9 1.m.·S p.M.; Sit. 91.m.·l p.m.

30 SYdiY

·. BISSELL
IUILDEIS

7

ITH ITIIIET
111141H7·:1110
COOLVILLI, OHIO

......._ .. _._..

,•

I

I

•lt!nll

-·--.-..,..-.-....1

.,
I

L.J

&lt;i J

•·

7

{j l

,....

l'bippiiL

.....,,
half ....,, 104·. .2·

I

\(

.-

,j .

�,.

.

10-The Ollity Sentinel

Page
4

Giveew•y

W•tch~

Dee.

•

'

..

'

Ohio

LAFF-A·DAY

44

P.art Oermen

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

61 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

Television
Viewing

S.h IJII t d pM Colle. ~rftele .

S1&gt;0wN. Hod .. ohou. CaD
61 . . . .....3.

2 IR. apta. 8 eloMu. ldtchen·
oppl. fumiohod. Woollw·O._
hook-up, ww
newty
palrttecl. deck. A....,cy, tnc.
119to. c•N 304-171-n31 "'
171·5104.

c•,.,.._

2C.u10...,.o-voooooe~
8 1 Fomolo. CaM

- . .. 1 -

614 ....·2323.

u.:

l'h mot. olcl mate kittM to give
to OOOd homo. Whito.
treintcf, C.ll 114-4414113.

FumiaMd apt: ,..t to llb,.ry.
Ont prof•lkmll adult only.
Port!,... Coll1•·441·0338.

2 ~ ~ to live awtly, ~·
114·44&amp;-7071.

2 IR.
St... 8 fumiahod . Nt• Oo M1rt.
61 4-448· 7025.

..t.

::-------·lc3 old Lalt, ful.
-puppioo,· 2 block
molo
Lab
onq CoiNo:
frM 10 DOOd hom•.
114·

I

c.•

9"·2Mllevenlnp. ·
:K:::
it1o
:-ns
- t-o--:glvo-o..-,.-y.--:3-..,.-~,

J

•

Jr

fomolo. Colli14-H2-2073. '

F,.. to fOOd home in country,
Molo 0....... Shopi\Ofd, 19
montho old, 304·171-1810.

6

lost and Found

er---v··~'.,

"Your Honor, my feet · are

LOST: REWAAoi For ,.wum of
vokf Sign.. ring . loat Frid.y at
Po-.11'1 Sui* V.. we. C.lll14-

killing me and that's the
truth, the whole truth and

8·

nothing else but the truth. So
me." ·

992-~156 .

Public Sale
&amp; _Auction

31
If you•,. tmbitiaut tnd looking for 1 CII'Hf oppoJ1unity, join the
Nationwide lnsurence ftmll\'.
We htve lots of people like you.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pey ~for l•t• model clnn
uMd cart.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc.
811 Gene Johnton
614-046-3672
TOP CASH plid for '83 model
1nd newer uted cera. Smith
8uicli. ..."'ontllc, 1911 Ee11eri't
Ave., G•lliPolia. Call 8'1 4-o\41S22a2.
WANTED TO BUY: Used wood
• coal hNten. Swain's r:umi·
ture, 3rd. 6 Olive St. Gallipolit.
c.u 61o\-.U6-3159 .
Complete hou•holda af fuml turt a •ntiquea. Al1o wood •
coal heattn. Swain's Furniture
• Au~::tion. Third • Olive,
614-o\48-3159.

At en tgent \'OU cen etrn
*20.000 or more the firat yeat In

•larf plut additional bonUNI.

Sind · ,....... or call for an

appointment. Nationwide lnturance, P.O. 101111079, Mtriltta,
Oh . 41710. 614-374-8246. lin
equ.l opportur:'itv. employer.
._.,....t..:.:;__.;..;:__;__;__lc_
Warited: tomeone to watch 2
children in my home. I'm aingle,
21 and work twing shift. Could
work out , living 1r~nta.
RaferanCM. C.ll &amp;14· 7•'2·2790
or 614-742-241&amp;.
.
. -lcU.ct C.rpenter, 7 .,.,,. e•perienca minimum. 'Framina. interior 1nd tJitefior trim, roofing
and gener~l conetruction ellperience required. Mutt hiYI tools
1nd tr11napo1111tlon. (Truck p,.ferred). Qood PlY for right
peraon. Send reaumt end work
hl1tory to: The Oaity Sentinel,
Bo• 729C. Pomeroy. Ohio,
.6769.

Went to buy: Uaed fumiture end,.
1ntiquea. Will buy entire house·
hold fumithing . Merlin Wede- Get paid for reeding bookal
t 100. per tjtJe. Write: ACE-31 e,
meyer, 614-245-515'2 .
161 5 . Linc::olnway. N. Aurora . IL
Buying st1ndin$1 tiniber. ten 60542.
614-379-2758.
AVON - All areas. Call· Marilyn
Weaver 304-BB2·2645.
Buying dail¥ gold, tilver coins. :-:----:---::-:----:~ ··
rings, jewelry, aterling ware. old Lady to babysit in my home.
coins. large currari'ty. Top pri- 614-446-6966 .
ces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd . Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614- MONEY FOR COlLEGE ilavailable to individual• who became
992·3•76 .
membeu of tha Army National
Raw fur, beef and i:le~ hidu Guard. t;all 304-675-39150 or
Gyn Sing and Yellow root. We 1-800-642-3619 .
have wheat end nite litea.
Trapping tupplies for sale. (Buy. VETERANS: Let us h~ppeyyour
ing used trapa). Laat day to buy Chrlatrnea bills. Army N1Uonll
fur, Feb. ~ - 1988. Geof{le Guard-· plrt-time jobs-full time
Buckley. Hours 12-9 . 614-664- benefita. 304-676-3960 or 1 800-602-3619.
4761 .

Standing timber. Call614-74·2:
2328.

W. V'e. auto- license platea
wanted before 1915. Clarence
Titus. Clark, Pa. 16113

Employment
Serv1r.es
11

R.N .. physicians office, ple•se
send resume to Box C-16 care of
Point Pleuent Ragiattr," 200
Meln St .. Point Plea.. nt, W: Va.
25650.

13

Insurance

Call us for yOur mobile home
insurence;- Miller ln1urance,
304 -882 · 2145 . Also : IUtO,
home, life. h"lth .

Aelp Wanted

18 Wanted to Do

WANTEQ: BHCC seeking Adulti
for training. Buic Educ1tion.
ABE / GED. Job Skills. Employment Allistance; and Financial
Aid available. Contact Adult
·servlcea at 614 -245 -6336 .
Don' t delay do ,it tOdavl

Want to do babyaitting In my
home. Call614-388 · 8267.

Unlimited In come. Anyone may
quelify. Call 614-448 -8273 after 7 PM.

46631 .
Government Jobt. Sl8.040 ·
t59.230 year. Nqw J1iring. Your
Area. ts05 ·6B7-6000 Ext. R9806 for current Federel lilt.
Ohio Licensed Nurting Home
Adminiatrator "'needed for 100
bed ICF •nd skilled nursing
home. Apply at AmaricarePomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, 36769 Rockapringl Road. PonNtfoy, Ohio.
Tolophone (11•1992·6606.
Mtdictt A11in.nt
Young and developlftCI Medical
Practice ;. tetking a penon with
1 atrong background for 1 long
term poti1ion. Wt are looking for
tOrntone to aulst the Doctor
with petlenta. end handle backup ,.,pontlbllities -Mth bHiingi,
tht tM.tifle.. office and general
dutift. Tht proper lndivid..,.l will ·
hiYI • g,.t1 opportunity to grow
with the prectiee. Plu• Mnd
your rnume ln atrie1 confidence
to the following Ndreu: Tht
Dolly Sontinol P.O . lo• 7211.
Pomeroy. Ohio 457tl, Quail·.
fled appfiantl wflf be contacted
in ' rht n.., ' future lor an
lnttnlltw. Thla poaition ia imme- ,
dletety op~n .
&lt;

1

Pereon to do ttouaeciMning.
coc~rJng. bo ..,..
rienced wtdt your own famNy or

s-

others. c ....ot II. R. Knight
114·192· 2433. Col .. 118
Uncoln II d.,PomlfO¥.

32 Mobile Homes
-for Sele
Tr~llerl,,for' Nle, 1984 14x70
excellent 1hepe, Cu~tom made,
all ·""'· t8700. Call 814-696.
0429.
Fim ule of '881 No paym8nts till
fbvonel new '87',a. Freacredh
check . Free delivery &amp; llt·up.
We finance what we Mil. Ute
your IlK ,.fundi Hurry for bftt
ooloctlcn. ELSEA HOME CEN·
TEA, Circleville &amp; Chillicothe,
Ohio WATS- 800-826-0762. .
1978 Wiftdtor 14K70 whh ell·
panc(o. 3 BR., all alec., CA.
wether A d~r. awninga, porch,
undtrpinning. Ellllcet cond. Must
see. Call 814·6B2-7437 after &amp;
PM.

Nice 1. bedroom apt. water 1nd
gargage paid, air cond 1nd
ceiling fana , grounds care for, no
children or pall. phone 304773·6362 or 304-882-2827 .

Bu~iness

Buildings

Commercial building for leaae.
Downtown Pt. Plea11nt . Store•.
For Rent: Commercial Building offices. A-1 Real Ettate. Carol
in O~ntown · Gellipolis with YeaQer, Broker. Call 304-676 off-nreeet pllrlling. Alsofi· room - 510• .
unfurnished apertment In Gallipolis. 304·876-4630.
COUNTRY.MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailera. Call 614·992 7479.
36 Lots &amp; Acreage

20 ecrea in Hemlock G;ove area
Co. Ad. 39. Excellent hunting.
Some timber. 814-992.'7297
after ~ : 00 p.m.

Re nta ls

3 8R . house&amp; garega. A-1 Real
Estate, Carol Yftgar-Broker.
304·875· 6104 .

Space for small trallera. All
hook-ups. C1ble. Also efficiency
rooms, "'ir and cable. M11on,
W.Va. Call304-n3-6661 .

Will do Federal and State Income
Taxe1; typing, booking, and
Notary tervice. Margaret Parker
814-992-2264.
Will do baby sitting in my home,
Iota of TlC, 304-676 ·8730.
GAOVERNMENT HOMES ,
from 11 ,000 (U repair) delin quent till properties and repo'a.
For currant liat1 ca111 - 80Q ~8 4687 tilt. 3870 alao Open
evenings.

Fin ancial
21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. r'ecommenda that you
do butinen with people you
know. 1nd NOT to aend monev
through the mail until you ha~e
investigated the offering.

Rea l Estale
31

Homes for Sale

4 BR ., firapilce·. fuH baHmtnt. 3
mi. to . of Gallipolit . 132.100.
Call Oaya-114-441 -1111. after
5,00· ;441-124• .
Hrend naw 3 BR . nNr Gelllpollt
Loc:kt on Rt. 7. 2 car g.,.... nice
lot. Immediate poeenMn. WIH
contlder trede in of J rftObUe
home. propeny. ftc , llfglln
pri&lt;od. Cofl61•·441· 1031.
3 BR . house. Land conuect.
UI.OOO. UIOO d_,, 2 mlln
from town on Rt . 141 . w..
kendl II Eveninga ett.r IS PM·
114-441-9210.

Rent -lease -Land Contract :
Homes in Eureka . Rodney Village II. Evant Hgta. Oep. &amp;: Ref.
required . Blackburn Realtv-.
614-441 -0008.
3 Bedroom · 2 baths in Cheattire
on Riverfront. Available March
ht . Oep. &amp; ,rtf. required. Call
614-.387-7667 or 1 -703-3881109. '
Nice 2 BA . ·house in Middleport.
OW, garbage ditpOsal. AC, full
batement. Excel . location. Call
81• - ••1 ~ 9203 after 5 :30PM .
Fumithed houM. 3 BR . 29 Neil,
Gallipolis. I 226. Call 446-441 6
after 1 PM .
3 bedroom houte for rent. $200
month. Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy.
814-992 -51587 or 814-992 7460.
6 room duplu. baaemant, garage. private, nice location, 304675-3763.
2 bedroom houM, Henderaon,
W.VI.. t200.00 month,' refer·
ence required, up to 6:00 cell
304·675· 1972.

42 Mobille Homes
for Rent
Crown City, 121l853 BA. Newly
carpeted. AC, heet with pro·
pane. 1220 a mo . ptus 110.0
d..,.. dep. • utllhlft. Older
couple preftned. Limit 2 children. Ref. required. Call 814266-113e.

County Appli1nce, Inc. Good
uaed appliances and TV Jtts.
Opan · BAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-448· 1699 , 127 3rd.
Ava . Gallipolis, OH .

GOOD USED APPUANC ES
W11hera, dryers, rtfrigeratora,
rengea .. Skaggs Appliances.
Upper A1ver Ad. betide Stone
Cre•t Motel. 614-441-7398.
Bedt. deakt , lamps, tables.
eoueha, chaira. dinrMtts, misc.
H1tf mile Out Jericho Road.
8 :00 -8 :00 Sundays 12:006,00. 304-675-1460.

/E tnlllde lhe PGA T~·

Hlgll. Cal 110-112·

"

H•-

F l - 1vr - ·
wood, nlovongoplokup~.
Lumber 1 ·lllch, Z..4. 2alt 2d et
SowmiH Co. Rd. 18. PoODhlarl!
Rd . Coli 114·192· 1122 ot
12:30 pm.
'

oiob~• •10 per bundle. • -

Uatd refrta .• 10f1 &amp; chair. Corbin
6 Snyder P:umtture, 18&amp; Sieoftd
Avo., 114·441·1171 .

Antique Brett bed. Full tize.
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture, 956
Second Ave. 614-441-1171.
Antiques, buv or Mil . Riverine
. Antiques. 1124 East Mein St.,
Pomeroy. Hours: Mon .. Tutt.,
andWtd. 10:001.m.·6:00p.m ..
Sun . 1:00 p.m.- 6:00 p .m. By
~hance or appointment. Run.
Moore. 614-992-2621 .

Callahan's Used Tire Shop ~ Over
1 ,000 tiret, aizea12. 13. 14,1 5.
16, 16.6. 8 mil11 out Rt. 218.
Call6t4-258-8261 .
KeYstone Claaaic•Mtga- Dodga
or Ford. Exerclte mechine. S.rr
gene;retor, tools, knives, cr1ft1,
tarp s. Ca11614-387-0841.
Antique dreater w / mirror, antique wardrobe· Both g(llod con d.
1978 Plymouth Arrow- 4 new
tires , 1250. Peevey Heritage
Amp. (extra 2 spaakarcebinett),
like new. $1150. Call 614-«6 ·
3969 .
JVC VHS -VCR· 4 heed. remote
controL beet Cond. 8200. Cell
614'-446-11 55 .
.RCA 25 " console color TV,

remote . beet cond. 1200. Call
614 -446-1156.
HAlF PRICE! Flashing errow
signs S2991 lighted. non-arrow
$2891 Unlighted $2491 Frn
letters! See locally. Call tocleyl
Factory: 1 18001 423·0113,
anvtime.

Stitt I chain saw 028, 1 8" bltdt.
Used tell ttlart 3 . houn. Call ·
614-446-6188 .

U Haul trucka 1nd , traitert for
rent. 304-171-7421 .

doll-.

flotockod.
UI.OO. Mooon Counlloo. Clolll·
polit, other ,,... within f'MIOft
• our· dltereetlon, 304-111·
3448.

Inch·-

I ft. "'1Julotion coin _...,.
pooltoblo. 14
top, ... .
Nt balfl, • 115 pool lliclul, UD.
thepe, •sso.oo. C.H evening•
304-882-2400.

POLITICIIL 1\DVERTISIMENT
Imprinted -iohlol, rna-.
Union m1de, H. 0. ..&amp;am"
lorntrviUe. Clinoe 1811 •. Junction Independence AM&amp;. OW At.
21 . Erlot·R-DOd oi 18
lurdaU. Addn. Point Pl....nt,
304-273-1611.
SURPLUS DENIM, Corhort,
Rontol Clothfng. Now hot¥v
cowraflt tZ2.00: he.vy new
work clothing, bootull wlntt-rat
NIIOftlblt prioH. Sam Somerville's, Old At. 21 -Junction
Independence Road. i!11t A•
wniWOOd, F.ri, Sat, Sun; noon8 :00 ""'· 304-273-1611.
Oak fi,.wood. ·Call 304-8712767 after 4:30 p.m . Aak for
Woodman.
"Homes" LPN g11 ·fum•c• far
mobltt home eomplete whh all
the fittings, 304-678 -20t1 .
Dinette ub._ and
8106.00. RCA fiDD&lt;
t126 .00 . Houae
•100 .00 deposit
month plua utilttias,
4622.

I chein
modll TV
for rent
8200 .00
304-571·

Frenklin Ace 500 computer.
Apple compatible. disk drive
monitor t450.00. Call behwean
&amp;,oo.8,oo pm. 304-676-4184 .
Bridg• •teet - matct.d I beamt
16, 18, &amp; 20 ft. long . Bridge
decking, 8ll20 ft. 304-6712026,

Fl~aod -

••o.

dellvtret;l.
HEAP; 1117 Meroury
Cougw; 1962 GMC, 210ntruok.
•ch •~- 304-578-2781 .
Ketpt

Flexattele rediner. Broyhln aofa.
trim line rowing machine, eall
after 5:00, 304-876-6295.

Building Materisla
Block, brick. uwer pipet. win·
dowa, lintela, etc. Cleude Win tara, Rto Grinde. 0 . cal 814245-6121 .
Concrete block• all aizea vard or
deU\IIIry. Maaon And. OaUipolit
Bloak Co., 123Y2 Pine St .,
O•llipolia. Ohio C•ll 61• -4482783 .
Ready mix concrete end 11
concrete auppliea. C.ll u1 Valley
Brook Cement ind SuPPlies.
304-773-6234 .

Model12· 12 ga .• BroWning 11
ga., 137 Winchester; UnlvtrMI
12 .ge .. 31 Remington 12 g1.
Call614·446 -3346.
Tree &amp; atum_premoval. Firewood
8110· Dump lruck load. Heap
vouchert accepted . Don ' t
landscape~ . Call 614-441 ·
98.6 .
Ateri 2600, Ghostbuster &amp; 18
other gamea. 160. Call &amp;14441·8743.
Mixed herd wood aleba. t 12 par
bundle. Containing appro11 • 1'1h
ton . FOB . Ohio_ Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 814-.9 92 -8411 .
InteNtate Banerietlor sate. Aleo
Blend Batteries. Buvtng · junk
b1tteri11. Morrlt Equlpmjtnt.
614-742-2455 .
King size water bed mett,.ll,
liner and hNti"9 unit. t?l . Call
814-986 -4362.

TANNING
SALON

JIVIDEN'S FIIRM EQU-ENT
Spodol •lo prlcoo "" Lang •
Klotl trecton a V•meer ...,,,
All 'VI'• of y...._ •mowing,
roklng 8 Torldl"" oqulprftent. A
complete Nne
handling a
feeding aCctltoriM, grinder
mlurs. wagona, ti'IIWt, rotary

of._.

. . . rotary

cutter~.

~.

,_,.,., dloc. plowo, - . , ..
~Dd
8 post drlvoro.

o...,. ___ a_.
.,.-._

56

Pets for Sale

USED EQUIPMENT
A variety of ueed treotora. round
IMI... r~~k•. mowen. grind•
mixer. gravky wtgon, bli4a,
plows. eom picktr, h'eyblnee. ~q.
bMe. chelnuw, tob. aetter.

...c. herrow.

JIVIDEN'S · 614-·41-1871
100 Ford tractor wtth piOWJ •
cultlvetar. t2895. AC 0·12
traetor wittl plows, cultlvetor.
belly mower, 11196.' Owner wiD
finance. Cel 014·-28_
1 ·8622.

0394.
1972 Ch"". -up. PS, Pe ,
-.m.
.tot whHla, good tires.
Coli 11 4-317·01180 .

Now buying shell com or ear
com. C.lllorletettquotes. Riwr
Ctly Ferm Supply, 614· 4482986.

livastock

R,e gis•ed Quarter Hone, May
1•83, Gelding, 115 ,3 hands.
Ou~. The Own Son of Choco·
leta Convoy tWorld Halter
Chempion» . Call 814-218·
8122 .

PIANO FOR SALE
Wonted: R-oiblo -

to

. IUUmiJINII monthly pe¥1Milb

on p&amp;.no. IN loclltv. C.N
M•n•ver a1 118-234-uoe
•nvtlme.

&amp;8

.

Fruit
&amp; Veg.Ubles

12•80, 2 SR ., unfumittfed. w/ d
hookup wtth exPW~C~o . Half mi..
patt Holdr Mtdiul Center. C.U
114-446-4369 ... 304-671·
9760.

64

Lerge round biles. milled hey fot
Nte. C•lll14· 2•5-6084.

.He WAS INTO
·r..-

Motorcycles

........ wheete, rebulh Clrbu ....
tor.IJIU. aet Ford Ralty'1. t375.

1 9815 Harley Pan held. Runs
good. t2800. now or 13800. In

BECAME f'OpuLA[?.

thollpring. c;.n·I14-H2-2680.

1111 Dodge Omni, 4 dr.,
1&amp;.000 miles. tuto .. 1882
Dodge AM•. 4 dr., 13.000
mila. euto .• air. 118&amp; Dodge
2.2. 1uto•• air, 40.000
mMoo. Coli 114· 371·2721 .

i r!J•
r~~ at hOw
pilots and planes adapt ·to
e

Ol'rtlneNawo

· .

iRI MOVIE: The.Goodbye Gilt

14. ft SHft flbergll" boat,
V-bow. okl&amp; hpJohnton enginl,
oare. troHing motor, •400 .00 .·
304·815-3031.

lPG) (1 :50)

eClJ Mt111Jn llatla: bCOOid

Time Around
L-oti (l) NIA llulletbll
11:30 &lt;D lranded
&lt;1J (J) Growing PalM

e

=~·a=:.~~.
but
n·a rlggtel. (II) Q

U1td • rebuilt t,.nami..tons. All
intarnelty inspected • gutm·
teed. Cell 114-448 -0916 . We
buy tun,k tnnami. .ont.

t:tiO &lt;D 700 Club
C2l G H - Hunter and

Home
Improvements

EEK&amp; MEEK

HtY; LISTW

· lOlHIS ...

BASEMENT
WA,_T£RPROOFING
Unconditionel lfetlme guerentee. Local reference• fumlahed.
Free eatimatee. Call eollect
1-614-237-0488, day or night.
RogertBitement
Weterprooflng.

•
THt~JUST
~iHEM£23ER
Gf AL£ADIOO ~ltJ&lt;IUfR
~

,_n
TV newswoman's
ca'"' jtopardlzad when

A 0\11NG ~KE....

mobater 16 killed In her
home.

1D1 Larry Kina Uvet

e Cll ~r:
Ecldlll
Run (A) (1:35)
~·a

10:00 e C2l 01 cmoe Stoty
Ghlne88 agent trlea to

smuggle stolen Jll~tonium out

-,.,,

AON ' S Televi•ion Ser\llce .

Houee calla on RCA, Queur.
GE . Specilling' In Zenith . Call
304-171- 2398 or 81•-4•6·
2454 .

of lhe country. Q
&lt;IJ • (J) .....,..,.,1111
MlchHt Iindt himself
growing lncrtulngty more
jeaiOue of Elliot. Q

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HAVE 'IOU~

Fetty Tree Tr!mming, stump
removal. Cell 304-871-1 331 .

WIN~RCP,

TEDDY-?

Roury or cable tool drilling.
Most weNt completed lime day .
Pump utw 1nd service.· 304896·3102

HE!sa::MING-AL.OG
RIGHT BEHIND

ME.

'rQ..i'RE NOT
WINTHROP.·

AND OONT THINK IM
!'jOT ETERNAL.LY
Ef!"AT5FIJL ~ IT.

liD iiJl News

(PGI (1 :35)

~

w..,_

10:30 (J) Countdown lo Calgary

lawt'l cere. landtc1plng. etump
rtmovel, 304·671· 2842 or
578-2903.

•

trap 1 crool&lt;ad construction
IKacutiYe.Q

@I!..,..Nawa
10:20 ~~1!: Kenoaa City

St~rks Tree 1nd Lawn SIII"Yice..

.

Ill • a21 Cagner 1 ucey
Harvey lnalsll on helping

Wr111ng The
structure of a story must
erne~ from the material.

(!)

(0:30) 1;1
.
liD TCI!'Y ~!!!*''• Journal

Plumbing
&amp; .H eating

11:110(2) Remlll!llolr ltaele
. • (2) (J) • (I) 1111 • a2l
TODAY
I'M PAYIN

CASH
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

181140 Chovy. Y· B.....o .. now
tirel, pHd:, IAheult. CliO 814·
441·44U.

B6 · General Hauling

1113 Chevy. Ciutlon. Am n~dio,
- · lront .. . PI, PI, lt,poo
mllel. •1700. C.n1M1Hn1tthe
Golllpollo Dolly T~burlo "' for
_.Information colll14-446·
2342.

.DMIIrd Wner SlfVlce: PooJa• .
Ci'*"'· Wtlla. Delivery Any·
time. C.U 114-441-7404-No
lund.., calls.

1112 lorrllt.oou C.m~ro (Rod!.
ba... concl. N. PI, . -; alr1
----...Unlng
-.fowmlloogo. 0 - . CoN
114'448-2811- lrPM.

GDOdvo•

lrMd, 8R 10·13.
- · c.11 114-

o..

1117
r c ..... lupfMie.
.Col 304-77J.H11 at 771.1 111 .

J6 J

liD -

Paul Rupe, Jr. W•r lervlce.
· .._,.,,
· CoN 114·
441-3171
,

China and dlaoo... ·family
rooll. (0:301 Q
0 lporll Totilglit
·
• . . 'Nigld ..... Cll Lata

N1t11it &lt;lilmbone mue1 appe~r
belora tha Grand Jury after a ·
llhoollllg. (RI
iRI ~; P.t. Mao'S Back
emfa~

,.•'

- - CIGod ...... llllw.
14-tta.am.

f

by THOMAS .JOSEPH
45Stephen
ACilOSS
or Hart
1 Reduce,
47Trading
in away
place
5 One or lO,
DOWN
in bowling
1 Cougar
10 Give a
peroration
11 Cabinet

12

J!:.o•s

"pal"

7 Arab
gannent
8 lion 9 Prior to

marble
14 Little

::=:.

'

'

'

Yeeterd&amp;y'a Allswer

ZO Undress 36 EuroJ)ean
21 - or lamb
river
ZZ Holm
37 Saucy

23 Get top
billing
coach
10
Lugubrious
Z5
Withered
II Over
27 Abundant
170ne of the II Row
t 7 'The 30 Filer's
Mutlns
Hunter"
aid
18Ascot
18
Use
a
.,
34
Billiard
fabric
Jitney·
shot
21 Fall
19
Advantage
31
Equal
preceder
Mlnhablt
HShowy
League

38 Tyke
39 Circle
part

40 Celtic
deity
41 Yellow
bugle
plant

43 Eggs

ftower
28Mu~l
Z90en~

phile's

choice
31 Rod's ·
32=r
for plunk
33Tempo
Sl"...ere
I l!laW - ·

88 Elect

.

81Vtvid
41-Drlve,
Beverly
Hills
44Emblnkmentflclng

45Mdest~~~;;;.

1111

AXYDLBAAXR
liLONGFELLOW

(J)

liD ~:'OffGu;

·'

~

6 Storm

.13 Playing

.

_....lit PGA.T' - (R)
iltlllttllntl;l

2With

3 Persian
4Poem type
~ N!lpped
· fllbric

11:00 &lt;D lutne IIIII Alln

One letter stands for IIDOtber. In this sample A is used
for tbe three L's, i for tbe two O's, etc. Single letters,
IPCJIIIapbel, tbe Jenatb and formaUon of the words sreall
blniL Eaehclay tbe code IIUen are different.
·t

CRYPTOQUOTI

W•tter~a,n't Water Hauling "
reaaonable r•ttl, immecH•ti
2,000 goflon dllhooiy, olo18mo,
PDOio, -"· otc. oon 104-171·
2111.

87

KAU
'

.

R p QJ

NRIKAJ

RY

DR X T ·U K C K C, R P

0

NC MU

XOP

Upholstery

.... '

M.._.,·o Uliholltor ... ",
111
117t ... - · Air, • 1n-lu-;.:~:o·,.
-._401·41onoL
"'""'"
rfnt, Col .
104-171-4 14 for ftoo

E

ec- Yaung

Mlclw ullrl women travels to

dlternt. . . .. Ph. 114241-8285.

J'"'"

iRI Soap

e Cll Love Con~
11:30et2l 0111a11 ot ca-

•t::•l;l
IIIII
, P.t.

w.., &amp;orviao. lwfmmlng

304-671-1370.

IIJIIIaneyl~oa

~=•-&lt;LJ

pooll,

A • A Water lervtoe-. Home
alatart, w.tlt, poole fAted . FormMty
Boy~ w...,..C.II

(J) LJghlar 8ldl of Sparta
(!) Slgn.Oif
.
liD IIOuM lor All S..tonl

.K .

(!$okW\fW

prfllnenl tingle woman
B1

...

'

-·t

MoCelllnvea11gale an •
UIIUIUII JOhn 0ot murder.
(J) eiJJ MMI D/111111 A •

aharaa Davld'l conlutlon
about pnnthoOd. Q
(!) liD Aniarlcan Pliyl1oUH
Woman. upset over lo88 of
her fiance, mafTies a men
aha doesn't love. C
111 eaJ.~ak. .ncl 111a

+K

WEST
EAST
claims to fame, illcludiJia a year on +QJJO
2
+K
tour In the United states when be
.10763
Cll!le In seCond In tbe McKeuney tro+532
phy race, losiq only to fr!!quent p_art· 4AJ10963
487542
ner Peter Pender. Last October he
SOUTH
was apln rwmer-up, this time to the
+AU f
United States in the Bermuda Bowl
.AQJ982
open world team cbsmj)ioasblp. To• 10 9
day's deal
compensate bim lor
+Q
losing that contest, hut at least be can
. Vulnerable: Botb.
say that be - .tx more tricks than
Dealer: East
his U.S. opponent at tbe other table.
After the queen of spades lead, Flint
Norda Eut
reasoned tbat tbe play of tbe king
Pass
· from East illdlcated that the opening
2t
4+
leader bad Q-.1·10·2 as well as a six·
Pass
Pass
card club suit for his overcall. He also ,
Opening lead: +Q
believed that tbe' heart kine would be
. with West for bis vulnerable overcall
So, not upecting ·anytbinc dr~8tic - ~....._;.__ _ _ _ _
~"'_ ___J
to occur, Jeremy won bis spade ace
and played the beart BC!e. Wben West's
klDtl came dow!!. be got to dummy
witli a dtamoad, finessed against the mond came baclc, and declarer won
trump 10 in tbe East band and made and played another heart. Eventually
be lost two heart tricks, three spade
all 13 tricks.
.
Meanwhile, at tbe other table, de- tricks and the ace of clubs for down
clarer South received a different lead three,
I can't say that the U.S. declarer
apinst bis four-belrt contract - the
ace of clubl. lollowed by a diamond misplayed the band, but Flint must be
sbift. SinCe declllrer did not- a rea- congratulated on his rillht decision at
SOli to refuse tbe heart flnesae, be lost tbe table to forsake the trump finesse
to West's singleton king. Another ella· against tbe king.

.e

1-===-------- ·'

C..,_

Rl, IIIIo now.
21,000 ouir&gt;., olr. 1'1. PI,
AM.PM.C.oa. lilt. Coli 11-.
388· U40.

•will ' llnonoo. Coli 114·
211,M21.

she and her new

Ill

Allidential Dr commercial wir1~ .• New tervlct or repairs.
Ucenaed electridan . Eatimate
free . Ridenour Electrical, 304671·1716.
.

,_ c...a.

hlloh.... _ . 22
..... 118. Owner

r

Samantha announcea lhlt

high techonology: Q
a2l 41 HOilra Newa
fnturaa program • Premiere

Boats a nil
Motors for Sale

CoH 614·446· 7867.

noo or 17t·2732.

lwtlllllw

JuST !A'( ''No''
LONti BEFo~f IT

-lc-

71 Auto's For Sale

- · OOOd

81 Farm Eqlilpment

----

7:35(1) l8nlord and Son
· 1:110 (2) Crottbaw .
e (J) 1111 Mallocll
Hendaome dance lnstruc1or
Is accull8d ol murderinG hie
benefactor.
&lt;IJ • (J) Who'l lila loa?

'i-GIIewa

f - Rolv -

=··pt.

~=~=:~

Pick
Mixed ttay or aH1Ifa - squer..,
bal... Mixed hay • large round
balea. Call IU -288-3334
Jecltaon, Ohio.
'

•s
English star Jeremy Flint hal many

()) NHL Hocltay
• (I) Judge .
. .
Ill Whaat of Fortune Q
OCNHIIN

Hay &amp; Grain

ZM·1121 .

1-10 . . . , ••

Glllftl!o -·
7:30e(J) &lt;IJ Hall)w-

1977 Bronco. bottory a.
tlret. Runa good. •1600 . C.M
814-2415-9394 .

6 nk:t 12 WMk old pip for 11la. ,
Coif 11•·949-2237.

Pigt Ufi .OO each, Rice 't Pig
Farm. Ten Milt Road. 2 miln
f..., Rt. 62, 304·468·1683.

NORTH
l·ll-11
+8"154
4
+AKQJ76

e Cll lrA'I"H
7:05 (l) Andy

1171 Ford Maverick. New dual

Wunlh:ar org.in. Th,.. k..,..
bolrd dighll mutlc ayttlm.
Lolllo "'""'""· Coli 114·0413882.

~~~-·

Uaed fumhure, piece or by ;the
houllhold. h1N mile out Jericho
Road, Pickens U~ed Fumiture.
30.·676·1450 .

83

~

0 Moneyllne
e aJ 1111- of Fortune
iiJl CIIMn

lclulrH

74

.

".
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS.
Ctuttch - Fleck - Power - Wallop - WHOLE
I Ullld the term 'half brother' to 0118 ~ng lad. Ht'1'88110nded
by aeidng, "H the btolher gets older. wll he bBcome.wHOLE?'"

NIWtltaur (1 :00)

1171 Ford f . 100, I cyl.. 3 oprt ..
ohort bod. with 10ppor, Rldlol
- · 67,000orglnillmlln. Vwy
good cond. On Neighborhood
Rd .. Gollpollo. ll"'lnt •1995.
Coll614-441-9407.

82 Wanted to Buy

f r~nsporta!IOII

Mu•icel
lnstri.Jmenta·

1 LAM wu... I.Ovt
· 'RHli~D... !M... 01&lt;,
N •. M,JYS!
.
.

1978 Ford4whMidriw. F-150.
V·l . E111. ~ond . •411&amp;. Call
114-379-2706.

82

57

e Cll Too CloH lor Comfort
1:35 (l) Clf'llllk!rMu
·7:110 &lt;D Aemlngtan Staele
. . e (2) PM Magazine
(J) lpotiiCe- (L)
&lt;1J l!lilli.t I went Tonight
' • (I) ........ Court
(!) 11J1 lla Cllll/ Lal'lrar

1182 Chev.. pickup, short bed.
New peint, ·new wheeta 6 tlret,
new engine. Call "114-448-

75

Hay lor •II. Larga round and
Dragonwynd Canary ICennel. sq~re balat. Call 614 -167.
.
CFA Hlmlllyen. P.nl1n and 611•.
Siarnttt kittent. AKC Chow
puppl11. CoM 614·44&amp;·3844 Mlud h1y for ul,.. Cell 81.4•fter 7PM.
742 ·2718.

AKC "'thltofod Old Englloh
Sheep Dog IIVIKabae for Jtud
•Moe. female mult h1ve reglltrltion paperw, 304-112-2034.

iRI WKIIP In Ctnclnn811

Trucks for Sale

w•-.rera.

1183 c - . 1.- mMoo.
Geaol - - uaoo. c.u 114·

"Which expensive Caribbean resort did
you tell your co-workers you're
going to thi~ year?"

72

PGWtrwelhen, aqUina lhoota. 73
Vans &amp; 4·w.o.
flwttook
plaatk: •nkl,
ntl-.1 - .... tru&lt;:k .. lrslior 1~:-:-::-:----------,
rampe, truck reeks, aprayera, 1882 Dodge 260. Ram. Cultom
Whetl 1 .Horn l1wn a · gerdtn conve,..a,. Trailer rHdy. Call
triCIOn a Husqvam. chain uws 114·44... 4383 days. 441-0139.
• wetdMtet'a.
twins. a weekenda.

20 large round b1let of hay for
Nla. t18. per bile. Call 814949·2916.
- : ' : - - - - - - - -lcMiud hly or alfefa in squere
balM. Mixad hay in llrge round
balet. Call 614 -281-3334,
Jackson. Ohio.

Firewood for sale-All h8rd wood.
Delivered · $35. Call 614-4481437 . .
Knight Tampler uniform tize 44,
also Faz . Good condition. Call
614-446·1340.

CR0818SONS
U.S. 31 Weot, J1drlon, Ohio.
6.1 4-211-1411 .
Mtttty Fttra~:~eon. Nnt Hoi._.
Buoh Hot 8 - 1 I""""•· o4 0 - ... clOntochooM·fnom
• complooo 11110 ot now • uiOd
........,_,, '--11• oroltoction In
S.E. Ohfo.

35 roottera for sal". 9 weeka old.
35 centa ••ch. C•ll 114-1492602 .

.,

..

·

0 IMide Po1111ct '81

81 Farm Equipmant

w-..,.
aon.

..

-~

Ill e C CIS Newt
liD llocly ~

2 laodroom. 2 Hille, 2 ur
- 1 lot ... ftt. 33.

9214.

I

eiJJAIC-~
.
(!)_Nlghlr lullneM Report

Gowmment HOITIM for f1 · IU · 1-:--:---:-----:--:-:---:--:-,_lrl. Delinquent tllll property. 3 bedroom unfumiMed. It"'
R~llfont . C.tl 101-881and refrlg., curteln•. t210
1000 Ext. QH-1101 for current month. •1 00 dtDOIH: lnd utllf.
llot.
tl01. 11 4-H2-,7479.

,_.....,.pool,
-· ·•• lilofao

TULSY

&lt;1J

Gutter USionell lndiWIUII lnMruction. Bruntcardl'e Mualc,
614-448-0887 or cell Jeft
lnotNCtor, 614-441-

Futnlthed 2 BR. mobile home.
Located at K &amp; K Mobile Home
Park, Eaatem Ave. Dep. &amp; ref.
roqund. Coll14·216-1187.

1:30. (2) 01 NIC Nightly Nawe
. Seaeon Premiere

Mercl1andi se

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliva St .. Galllpolie.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- 8399 .
li\ling room suites- 8199· 8699 .
Bunk bedt with bedding· 8199
Full sire mattre11 &amp; loundatio~
starting · 899 . Recliners
starting- 899 .
USED· Dada, dre11era. bedroom
su!tat. $199-t299 . OeJtka.
wnnger washer, 1 complete line
r
of used furniture.
NEW- Western boots· 130.
Workbootl *18 &amp; UP.· [Steel &amp;
Jolt toe) . Cell614-446-3169 .

I

f

e:as mAllee

lllltllot.L TROUIIL!,
1'ROU&amp;LE1

For rent: office sp1ce 172 N,
Second, Middleport. Oh . 1, 2, or
Kerosene heater- S&amp;O. Reddy
3 rooms. Will remodel to 1u it Space hNter· t60. EI~M:trotux
tennant. Phone 614-992 -6471
carpet cleaner· t1 60. Stemmler
or 614· 992 -241.3 after 7:00 _ Jaguar wood long bow , 40 lb.pm .
$76 . DSE compound bow,
quiver &amp; · errowa, 80 lb.· t76.
Sp1cious mobile home loti for
Renegade ~4 caliber muule
rent. Familv Pride Mobile Home
loader 6 ICCetiOr11J· 8150.
Pfirk. Gallipolis Ferry. 304 -676- Sansui rJil to rail 4 track 2
3073.
•
ch1nnel- *75. Blonde Ibanez
acoustic with cate- t200. Dixon
Strat Dernazio humbucker 6
tremelo with case· t1 25. Serte
Guard ma1tre11 Sa boK springa,
frame . &amp; headboard, aingl•
$60 . Call 614-44&amp;-Jon .

61 Household Goods

LEEFNI

e Cll Happy Daya

'IOU'Ite liONNII Ill

54 Misc. Merchandise ·

Office Space for rent. E11.cel.
downtown GaUipolit location .
Inquiries call 814-441 -4222.

r'I

@llloowlll Todtly
iRI F- of uta

C-"PTAIN EASY

J 8 S FURNITURE
[Formally, Paraon·a· Fumlture)
1411 EallemAw.
Graciout livi"g. 1 and 2 bed·
room •Pirtmenta 1t Village 10 par Clf'lt off on com !)tete
Manor and Riwnide. Apert- atock. Mo,llay, Ja(1 . 18th thru
Set .. Jan. 23rd.
ments In Middleport. From
t215. Including utllitin Call living room au11e1 from t171'
up. Bedroom tult. . •489.95 &amp;
614·992·7787. EOH .
up. Compl,tJ mlcroweve tUinda
839.96"
""· .
!5 rooma, unfumithed. Clll 614Come In 1nd mHt the new
~92 -6434 •• 304-882-2566 .
Ownef'l.
APARTMENTS, ·mobile homet,
houMt! Pt . Plaa11ntand Gallipo· Combinltion wood a eoalstove.
SO!"'e free COli With stove.:
fis. 114·441 -8221 .
•260. Call 814-388·9963.
2 bedroom furniaed apt, rtf and
deposit, New Haven. W. Va., 63 . Antiques
304-882-3267 or 304-7736024.
2 bedroom furniahed apt. utili·
till ptjid, raferenelt and depoait,
304-882-2566 .

I

----~EV~EN~I~NG~
. ------

f

liD Owl TV I;!

Updain 3 room &amp;: bath, furnlthtd. Cl•n. Utilitietpeid. Ref:
&amp; dtpoait required. Adutts only.
No peta. Call81• · 441- 1~19 .

Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,

lo,. .Ia form four sl~ple wOJds.

M

TUES., JAN. 19

QSNewa
(I) 8porltLooll (T)
(!)Dr. Who

Nlc~ 1 BR . apt: RengeandrflriQ.
tumlahid . Water • gerbqe
poid. Oopooit -INd. Call
114·446·4345 · - 5 PM.

2 BR . par1111ty furnished: In
town·. 1275. All utllitl.. paid.
Co11614·4•8·1723 1ftor 7 PM.

l~ilo~ ~,

• (2) &lt;IJ • (I) Ill • a2l

Uuwry T. . APirlmenta. Ele......
·z 8r. 2 - · fully
• cwpeted. CA and hut. Priwlte
entnnoe. encloaed patio. pool•
playground. Stert-•2&amp;1 per
month. UtllitiH not Included.
C•lll14-387-7810.

Furnithtd .;per1ment. 4 rooma •
bath. t ·or 2 aduitt. No pets, Rtf.
&amp;: sec. dep. required. C.ll
61 4·441-0444.

WOlD

e:ao &lt;D c..., Lila a l'o•

Cell·

121l60. In Middlepon. Call614- . , Roomi · for rent. day . week.
month . Gallia Hotel. Call 614992·31 60.
446-9680: Rent aalow as $120
1979, 14x70 trailer with 7x24 month.
ea:p1ndo . 3 bedroom, Stove 1nd
refrig. Very nice. 614~742 - 2840 Sl&amp;eP.i.ng room for gentLemen.
Upttlfrs. Privata entrance. t125
evenings.
•
monthly. 614-992-7204.
14x70 Windsor with 14.JO
addition. 3 bed rooma. black top
road, approx 3 acres. Gallipolis 46 Space for Rent
Ferry, 304-675-6930.

34

'

BEIIUTIFUL IIPIIRTMENTI AT
BUOGET ·PRICES liT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 136 J • Pih:t ·f.rom t 183 • · mo. Walk to
shop and movleli. 814·441·
2668. E.O.H .

large 2 -3 BR. house. Plenty of
ltorage. Handerton area. Call
614-448· 7025.

Sell Avon . Get your own Avon at
I diaeount. Calle 14-446-3358.
UOO - t400 · t600- Per Week.
Yellow Page Salu people
needed . Only those with sales
eaperience need apply. Send
reaume to Boll Cia 1'4!4. c/ o
Gallipolis Dilly Tribune. 825
Third Ave.. Gallipolis. Ohio

' 3 .bedroom houae In Gelllpofi1,
Ohio. Nlee condition. 202t
Chath1m Street. 831,500. 814•oa-22011.

Nicely furnished small house.
Adults .only. Ret. required . No
pets. Call 814-448 -0338.

Young l1dy to live-in and help
care for litde boy. Ca ll614-446&amp;966 ."

Wantad: Payroll Clerk. Must
know shorthand . Computer Ill ·
perienee helpful. Salary negotiebta with experience. Send re sume to; Box Cia 123, c/ o
Gallipolis Oail¥ Tribune. 825
Third Ava., · Gallipolis, Ohio
46631 .

3 btdrOO'f' hou1e with 32 tern
In EureU. Ohio aero11 from the
d1m. Ba•mtnt • atonge buildIng. 031 ,600. 614-446·2205.

Profeaaion•l Resumes. Send information and t10 to : 677 Sun
Valley Dr . Gallipolis, Ohio
46631 .

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
time 11aemblv- wort.;; elee1ronics. crafts. Othera. Info 1-504641 -0091 E.r. 2987. Open 7
deyt. CALL NOW!

TEXAS REFINERY CORP .
needs matute person now in
Gallipolis area. Regardleaa of
training, write H.J . Hopkint, Box
711 , Ft. Worth, Tx . 76101 .

Homes for Sale

•

t.trss

'::~:~.~' S~\t(llA
-·~
Uflll
CLIIT R. POllAN _.;;.._ _ _ __
O Reorronge
letters of lht
four xrambltd ytords be-

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

'

.\

C M

•

NCKA
•

ACXMUQY

�w7"

~r Midii•DOrt.

Peg• 12-The o.ily 81 IIi..

0111o

...---Local briefs......._-----.. ----------~~~r---------Nails scattered around arrea ·
Quantities of large roofing nails were distributed In front of
various locations overnight, the Pomeroy Poll~ Department
reports.
·
·
.·
.
·
.
The.·first calls was received at 9 p.m. when a number of the
large nails were found near the Pomeroy Elementary SchOOl.
From then on, numerous calls were recorded on nails being
found in various other locations Including 12 midnight at the
home of 'Melgs Local Supt. Dan f; . Morris; 1:40 a.m. , at the
Harrisonville Elementary School; 2:50 a.m ., the district bus
garage; 4: 08a.m., the Meigs Junior High In Middleport; 5:43
a.m., the home of Tom and April Smith, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy; 7:08 In ·wilkesville, the exact location not named;
7:40a.m., again at the Smith home In Pomeroy;. 8:20a.m., the
Rutland Elementary Scl!ool.

.,, .

EMS has nine calls. Monday
.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
Monday; Pomeroy at 12: 03 a.m. to Lincoln Heights for Nicki
McCarty to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10: 07 a.m.
to Vine St. for Ben Philson to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 12:48 p.m. to Atllaugh St. !or John Arbaugh to St.
Joseph's Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 2:02p.m . to Locust Grove
for Bernice Stout to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
5:20 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Lucy Gaul to ·
· Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:-33 p.m. to
Butternut Ave. for Ellen Couch to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7:49 p.m. to Chester for F.red Gilland to Veterans
. Memorial Hospital; Racine at 8: 04 p.m. to Hill Road for Chelsa
Dllcher who was treated but not transported; Racine at 10:19
p.m. to Apple Grove for Julie Biron to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

DWI eases are down in ·
Meiaa Court during 1987

Soutb Cealral Oblo
·with showers and a chance of
·
Rain this anernoon. with blahs· thulldentonna and temperabetween 45 and :10. WindY tonight, lures rising to near 60. Windy "e~
.
l-~
·
Wedneaday,withsbowerschangMelgsCountyhadmoremlsde- there were 86 clviJ . cues comd
A!j
big to snow flurries and tempera·
meanor and felony cases brought · pared to 56 In 1986, 30 more, an lures falUn&amp; Into the mid 30s. . Into Me!p County Court in 1987 there were 227 small cla)ms
Dally atock prices
(A• ofll!30 a.m.)
. The proba~lllty of preclpltathan in 1986 but regular trafllc actions In 1987 compared to2161n
Bryce lllld Mark Smith
lion Is 100 percent today and cues and drlvlq while intoxi- 1986T • 11 more. I
for 1987
of Blual EIU." Loewl
tonight and 60 percent cated cases were down.
ota 1 rece P1s
.
Ain ElectriC Power ...........·... 27
Wednesday.,
· Accol'dlng to the annual report amounted to tl49,931.30 com: ·
AT&amp;T .................................281h · WI~ wl~be ~m the east at or' Meigs County Court Judge ~ed to receipts 1/f$174,191.10 In
Ashland Oll ........................55'h 20 to
m
Y·
Patrick O'Brien, there were 664 1 · 1987 th
rt paid
Bob Evans .......... .. ., ...... , ..... l5~
misdemeanor cases In 1987 com- $4~n924 88 · th est ~out chiding
08pl
DewS
pared to 448 In 1986 and there
• · ~~~~If e $2 0~3 ::S State
Charming Shojlpes .............. , 12
City Holding Co ............... .. .. 32
were 70 felony cases In court $3,42S, w P ,e; 1 $2&amp;
;R&amp;R·
Federal Mogul .................. .-.34%
V'eleraiUI Memorial
comparo!d to 311n 1987.
:rbway, a J~ 1 ii
j 1 ~11 fee{
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... :............. 58% ·
ll!onday Admissions - .Ethel · ·
· .
. • state sba vio,~atlc
$ • ·
11 t ~: ons, ty740~ ::
Heck's Inc. ... ......... ........... .....2
Hatfield, Middleport; Frank
There were 1,874 regular ·trar,._ .$69; ~~eat
1
Key Centurion ....... ... ........ ... 40
Wolford, "VInton; Lots Sayre, rtc · cases In 1986 compared to ' Money pad 1n
e codun ts to •.
11
1
1
98
Muon• w•va.; J ames Meadows • 1,7551nl987,a totalofll91essand 1 .7 nc ur es:d nes
an cos 1 ~
•. Lands' End......................... 21 "7t
$28 01014
Limited Inc ........................ 18%
Portland; . Versla !1tou!, .Long there were 216 driving whlle · general $l~n7i
:;
2 04od •~~1•0 {tee~~~
· nre ;'
Multimedia Inc ..... :.............52%
Bottom; LarrY' Curtis, Raclile;
Intoxicated cases heard In 1986 library,
Rax Restaurants. :.... ............ a%
James Pellegl\ino, Tupper . compared With 119 In 1~. or 97 and eas. •f41 $2 54 ~r~ ~be
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 8%
Pl,alns; .. Michael Brown, . less .
payments ~
• 9 ~0
d
Shoney's Inc . ... .... ;............:.19'A Pomeroy.
- · CtvU and small claims actions
;h;r~~~s
eparJmrn . . ~ 1111
Wendy 's lntl ........ ................ S%
Monday Discharges -Eliza· filed lncounty.courtln 1987wer.e
1 ,
. 98 pa
n. c v
rW::or~t:hln~~:~::ln:d:--~--;--:--·:--;--:--·:--~-1=8~-be~th~V:aua:=ha:n~,~El=:le:n~W~I=k5~------bo~th-u~p_co_m~pa_r_ed__w_1_986-=.I:n:1:987:=,,:=ju:d:gm~e~n:ts:.:::::::::::::;··

Stoc

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.,

Daily Number

,.

528

Page 4 .

1

t

Ohio Lottery

Rio hack
in MOCrace·

-··

Piek4

4956

STI

•• •

i/ °

.,.,

Vartable cloudlaeu ~l.
Low aear 21. Tblll'lldq, :
clulllce of ilaow Dorries. BfP..

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•

•

.enttne

~

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2

Section~.

lion locations will be Tuppers
Plains ·Fl.re Station, Racine
American Legion Hall, Pagevllle
Township Hall and the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. · ·

Area deaths

and Evelyn Imboden Landers.
Surviving are two. sisters,
Florence Ethel McPherson, 84, Delores Summers, Charleston,
of Little Hocking, died Monday at . W. Va., and Penny Smith, MidSt. Joseph's Hospital in Parkers- dlei;&gt;ort; a nephew, Jack Justis,
Minersville; a special friend, ,
burg. W.Va.
· A homemaker, Mrs. McPher- Major (Ret.) Glenna Rummel,
son was born Nov. 10, 1903 In Salvation Army; several nieces
Little Hocking, a daughter of the . and nephews and an aunt and
·
late Andrew and Ethel Palmer uncle.
Besides
her
parents,
she was
Colflns. She was a lifelong
Universalist and a member of the preceded In death by four broth-,
Li t tle Hocking Fellowship ers, Robert, William, Jack and
Orville Landers aild two sisters, ·
Chapel.
Survivors Include one son and Wanda Adams and an Infant
daughter-In-law. David and Ber- sister. Jayne Landers.. .
Officiating at Thursday's. sernice McPherson, Little Hocking;
vices
will be Major Rummel and
one daughter and son-in-law,
011 Riter
Lt.
Duane
Harris. Burial will be
Emily and John · Smith, Little
Hocking; eight gr;mdchlldren In Gilmore Cemtery. Friends
may call at the funeral home ·
and five great grandchildren .
from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Besides her parents, she was
preced,ed In death by her hus- Wednesday.
band, E.T. McPherson, In 1958; Ellen Coucli
1
and two sisters, Marga ret
Ellen W. Couch, 89, of .ButterBrigham and Lucy Kingsley .
nut Ave., Pomeroy, died Monday
· Services will be 11 a.m. Thurs- at Veterans Memorial Hospital
day at While-Ethridge Funeral following a sudden Illness.
Home. 125 Lee St., Belpre, with
Born Dec. 29,1898 in Antiquity.
both Rev. Brady Stephens and Mrs. Couch was a daughter of the
Regular replacement For most aot'nestiC cars
Rev. Donald Wilcoxen officiat- late David and Ella Weaver
filter
helps engines run and IQitt trUCks. Spin·
Ing. Burial will be In Rockla nd Watson. She was a member of the
better. For most do- 011 ty filter
Cemetery. Belpre. Friends may Pomeroy Baptist Church and the
mestlc cars a"""'
call at the funeral home after 2 American Legion Auxiliary. She
.... linht
.,.. imumpeenQine for
.protec·
tr
p.m. qn Wednesday .
Cks
had worked at the Ben Franklin
...u_•.•Regu-lallri.i2iiii.9•9•,
2.39
' Store and Stark's Drugstore In
Cecil E. Donahue
Pomeroy.
· ·
Survivors lnclud.e one son,
Cecil E. Donahue, 60, of 1014 Robert . Couch. Pomeroy; 'one
Cho~ce
Crescent Ave. , Ellwood City, daughter, Belly Thomas,ColumPenn .. died Dec. 9, 1987, In bus; one brpther, Bill Watson,
Ellwood City Hospltalfollowlng a Pomeroy; two sisters, Burton
. Smith of Pomeroy and. Wilma·
brief illness.
Born Nov . 30,1927 in Pomeroy, Martin of Sidney; 11 grandchildhe was a son of the late Frederick ren and 10 great grandchildren.
and Nellie Donahue. He was
Besides her parents, she was
formerly mar ried to Caroline preceded in death by her busRegular 24.99
'
Donahue of Carnegie, Penn.
band, Robert, five brothers and
He was a mechanic fo r a four sisters.
Services will be 10:30 a.m.
number of years. and was a
member of the local Polish Friday at Ewing Funeral Home.
National Alliance Group 1212 and Friends may call at the funeral
the Eagles.
home from 7 to 9 on Thursday
Tone/pulse switchable phone
·
Surviving are three sons, Cecil evening.
'
be
on any pnone sys· Tasty selectiOn includes Cheez
E. Donahue Jr .. Philadelphia,
Penn .. Charles E. Donahue of Ve~ia Stout
rounds of high velocity .22 tem. LaSt number re-dial and Balls, cneez curls, corn Chips,
Carnegie and Michael P. Do· Vercia Nlada Torrence Stout.
rimflre ammunition. For small wall/desk mountable. Large .keys Potato Crunchles, and sour
nahue of Ellwood City, Penn.; .a 80, lifelong resident of Long
Cream and Onion Puffs. ·In a
perfect fOr Children well
game or target practice. Stock
daughter ; Mrs. Frederick (Sa n- Bottom, died ear ly Tuesday
DeODie with sight
dexterity handy cannister- package.
up now.
dra) Reed of Ellwood City , morning at Veterans Memorial
bmltatlons.
Penn.; two sis ters, Nellie De- Hospital.
Mrs. Stout was born May 2,
Vault of Ga llipolis and Lettie
Rorer of Bridgeville, Penn.; a nd 1907 in the Keno area, a daughter
'
four grand children.
of the late James A. and Adda
He was preceded in death by · Weber Torrence. She was a
three brothers. Frederick. John member of the Rose GardJ!n
and Clarence Donahue.
Club, 'tuppers Plains; St. Paul's
Services were conducted Dec. United Methodist Church ln.
12, 1987 at Harold J . Marshall Tuppers Plains and · of the ·
Funeral Home In Ellwood City, women's association of that
Penn. Burial Iollowed In Wur- church.
leglll8rUI
,.
Iemburg Cemetery.
Survll'lng are two sons and
~egular 8.99
'
.
Regular
69.97
'
""
daughters-In-law, Charles Glen '
Frank Rice
and Grace Stout. Long Bottom;
James Robert arid Dorothy
. '
Frank Rice, Toledo, formerly Stout , Tuppers Plains; four .
• I
or Meigs County, died Thursday , grandchildren Keith Stout, Long
In Toledo.
· Bottom; Joe Stout, Richmond,
Mr. Rice was married to the Va.; Terri Stout, Tuppers Plains,
former Sarah Jenkins, a siste r to and Connie Soulsby , Pomeroy; a
The rowing exerciser Is a Assorted Colors
the late David · 0. . Jenkins. great-granddaughter. Shannon
114
314
portable
unit that' turns'
"
"
Frances Bearhs ;md Hannah Kay Soulsby, Pomeroy; an aunt,
Greenlee, all of Whom · were Mrs. Pearl Baum, Worthington;
ordinary Slt·ups · Into swnacn 4'X6' Carpet Remnants ........ $8.97
Meigs County reslde!liS. Mrs. three sisters-In-law, Mrs. Ellen
tightening power stretcnes. ·
Stout. San Antonio, Tex.; Mrs. ,
Rtce survi ves.. ·
I
.· · Graveside· rites ·and burial Lulu Belle Dugan, DLeon
Springs, Fla., Mrs. Alba (perle)
· ... w~re . held Sat~rday In Toledo . .
1... '
.-·.·· -··· .·:
..
-···
' Shrives, Cincinnati, and several
.··. Shirley Landers
"nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
Open Dally I:GO • 1:00, $Undlly
NOOn • 8:00 - NOun lilY VIIY At Dlffnnt
preceded
In death by her husFuneral services for Shirley
Jean· (Sally) Landers, 47, who band of 60 years, Cjlarles Floyd
sorry. 110 a.ayaw1y1
blncttl~lrl
TheH ltans. Allltenll IUbJ*t
died in a fire at the Rummel Stout, on July 21, 1987.
Prior Sill.
.
··
Services will be held at 2 p.m .
residence in Minersville early
'
' Monday morning, will be held at Thursday at the White Funeral
2 p.m. Thursday at the Ewing ,Home In Coolvllie with the Rev . .
1
Arthur Duhl offlclatlna. Burial
Funeral Home.
A . youth · worker with The will be In Sand Hill Cemetery,
Salvation Army, Miss Lander$ Long Bottom. Friends may call
was born In Pomeroy on' Sept. 3, at the funeral home from 2 to 4 .
1940, a daughter of the late Henry and 7 to 9 p.m. Wed~esday .

Florence McPherson

IDUI\IDflllil\l··

.

FIRST.

so

Racine Council handles ~suranc~
m
. alters during MQ.. nda~ n· iuht
-e· .

Planters snacks

,
,
.
Racine VIllage Council, meet- newspaper regarding sealed bids
Ing Monday night In ·recessed to be received ulitil 6 p.m.
session, a·uthorlzed Mayor Frank Monday. Feb.l, for the village's
Cleland ,to &amp;ubmlt an insurance 1973 Chevrolet dump truck.
claim lor Jay Proffitt; who
Cleland reported thattheradar
reported his car was damaged has been returned after undergowhen a water main turnoff cover log the annual calibration for
on County Road 35 flipped as his . accuracy and noted t'hat the
vehiCle traveled over it.
telephone number for the Racine
In other business, Lee Floyd, · Pollee Is 949-3089.
emergency squad chief, was
. Cleland also reported that Kim
present for the meeting to Inquire Shields, county director of develabout InsUrance coverage on the opment, has requested addlcontents of the squad building. tiona I survey on the village's
Floyd submitte4 a property list Community' Development Block
.• · and will obtain valuation. on the Grant Application.
Items so the mayor can then : Reassigned by the mayor to
check with the Insurance com- serve on the street committee
pa,ny as to coverage.
was ·councilman Duke Bentz.
Cleland also appointed Carroll
Clerk Jane Beegle reported she
has r~elved certlfica lion from Teaford, Duke Bentz and Larry
the county auditor authorizing Wolfe to serve on a building
the 1988 appropriations. and that construction , maintenance and
legal notice has been In the repair committee. This commit-

used

or

as

1

as

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•

•

VCR/Utility Cart
.Plymouth Oak Finish
29 X 15 X 30H

...::..

.· .

Rowing
Exerciser

•

3' X 5'
Carpet Remnan'ts

Byer issues war:'ning

settle any dispute · over the clarified on several Issues .
amount or 'new money', and 4. work was done through · the
Asaoclatlon made to the Mella the MLTA needed a no reprisal, · mediator.
• ,.
Local Scbool District Board of clause.
·
~ ·In · the early evening, ·I~
Educationlni'egardtoateachers
"At the neaollatlons Session Board was told· that another
strike which beaan on Nov. 6 was .held on Saturday, Jan. 16, 1988, ·proposal was forthcoming f~
declared unacceptable when the the Baord . presented at the the MLTA. When the medlatllt..
dlstrlct'i board of education met beilnnlg of the session the asked the Board for some lnfoi· ·
In special session Tuesday nltht. prop1081 thai It would: 1. ap-ee to matlon which the Board did not
A larp crowd wu on hand for a four year contract; 2. that the have available at the meettJui,:.
the meetlq'. H~. the meet- Board would 11ve 63 ,percent or tile MLTA said that it would·IIQJ· ·
big had been lnnounced earlier 'new money' for salaries and be making a proposal and the:
as an ~live session cif the frlnie benefits In the thll'd and mediator called the session Qtr.:.
board and -the board did move fourthyearoftllecontract; 3. the
''The MLTA's (ut propsal t-ot ·
Into that session ll'nmedlately Board would ap-ee to expedited salarycallstormoremoneythan'
with neeotlatlona and the blndlna arbitration should there . a proposal made earlier by the
teachers' auoclatlon blnd!ni ar- be a dispute over the amounf of MLTA. The . Board has made·
bltrallon propoeal dllcuue~.
•new money', and 4. the Board movement toward settling the
Supt. Dan E. Morrta reJ!Orted presented a no reprisal clause · Issues sllll on the table and .tbe·
today that the board had directed stating that 11Q reprisals would be MLTA negotiating team Is mciv-:
Its negollatlnateam to communi- taken with the exception of lilg away from a point It once
cate to the Meigs Local Teacher• . anyone c:Onvicted of a crime held .
•
•'Parents are being told things
.AIIsoctallon that the asaocla- related to the strike.
lion's binding arbitration prop- .
''The Board addressed the four which are not true through
oaalls unacceptable. This mes- lssueswhlcbltwastoldltneeded MLTA news releases and radio ·
saee was alven to the MLTA, 1!1 addi-eas. The BOard presented announcements. · The MLTA Is
Supt. Morris stated, and that propoaals which were entirely using ta tactics for which It fl~
board's negotlatlne· team Is- re- new In concept and had not been an unfair labor practice charge
quesllni federal mediator, presented to the MLTA for It against the Board In which It
David ·Thorley, to bring both consideration. The Board was ai1CIIsed 'he Board of negotlalfng
parties back to the table to able to make these proposals In the public Instead of at the
continue mediation In an attempt because or .tbe savlnas In a new - table. The MLTA refused to obey
to resolve tbe disagreement and 1111urance plan, and the pro- the request of a judge to refrain
settle the strllle.
jected future savlnas In this plan from public comment so thai )h~
·Meantime, the board of educa- · over what II now In effect.
Issues might be settled at tbe
tlon today llsued a public alate- . '1'he MLTA CO\IIItered the table and the dlstrlcl 'not be torn
meat outl_l!llni act,!OIII ,that bad ., llollrd's pro~ liY adding to It further apart. The Board wants a
takea pla~'~n
to'tiqotla- that: 1. the Boat!~ -~ ..,. the setttementto ihe,trlke ana made
-~ •~e 1¥t Frldq , w)len lna~for811J)Ioyftswhll!!on . llollest l1Rd 1alnc:ere attempts to
.. · ·:,Cbatlei·' Klll&amp;ht, ··~ strike; 2. That makeup days settle It on Saturday."
County . Common · Pleas Court,' would Include all days schools
Classes In six of the district's'
bad requested a media blackout.
have been closed ·during the nine schools were being held ·
The statement says:
strike /The Board would pay the again today with the use or:
"At a meeting held In Judae teachers for the days they have substitute teachers.
;
Knight's office on Friday, Jan. struck); 3. that the Board should . Meantime, this morning the;
15, 1988, the ~LTA said thalli pay for all fringe benefits and Pomeroy Pollee Departtnent reneeded to have the Board adshould ·give 55 percent of 'new ported tbat three glass station ·
drest four Issues In oroer for a
money' for salaries only. Their windows and two garage area ,
settlement _to be reached. These definition of 'new money' did not windows had been broken over- :
four Issues were: 1. a contract of take Into accountlhe factthatthe nlglfi at the Ashland Service •
four years In lengtli. ·2. the Board dlltrict could lose money In Station on Mulberry Ave. In ,
needed to look at giving .a certain areas.
.Pomeroy. The station is ow,ned:
per-eentage of 'new money' In''The Board and the MLTA by Robert Barton. a member;&amp; •
stead or total I'I!Venue; 3. the spent IIE!Veral hours In golqover the Meigs Local Board of Edua, :·
Board would have to look to each proposal and questions tlon. Limestone rocks wece: :
expedited blndlng ·arbltratlon to were asked aftd points were thrown through the windows:-·
pollee said.
·. " '

on

Locaaons.

a

to ·

NOS II'ISIV. . . . . . . . ., .. Y. . IAYIJ•SJIINAL.
Ill Y. ."RI JIOT IUUIPY, WI'IIIIIOT ......y~

--l

..

.... tevet."

,'• r·

'·

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-

.

.111

norte-,
.a , 79, ve.t eran newsman, . . ·
fortner state senator, educator dies :

JIDl.

C

1

A newspaperman, colleiepro- corporation franchise tax In the
feasor and alate legislator, 1959 session.
James ·sherman Porter of 921.
· In a ceremony before the
1
tee Is to make a recommendation Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, died 5:30 senate on hll 51st blrlhday, he
on office space in the annex
p.m.. Tuesday In Holzer Medical was made a Kentucky Colonel.
bulldlngforthemayorandclerk.
Center. He was 79.
Porterwasauthororco-a~thor
Fireman David Nelgler pres· BeSt known around the Galllpo- of 30 legislative enactments, and
en ted the annual lire department
Us area u Peeps or Jaspey, served two sesslonsas a member
report . The report was prlntedln
Porter kept alive a style of of the education-health committhe . newspaper prior to the
writing from bygone days· until tee and the ·a griculturemeeting.
·
'·
leavlnatheTrlbuaelnNovember con~~ervalloncommlttee,andone
Council authorized purchase·of
}987. In a home-style faahlon, on the taxation committee.
a flashlight for the village's
Peeps told In areal detail the
He waa a araduate of Lexlngpolice officer and several Items
day-to-day Uvea of Galllpolltans. ton (Ky.) Senior Hl&amp;h School,
, for the street department, ·as ·
Serving In llie Ohio State receiVed an AB degree from the
requested by Glenn Rizer, street
senate from 1959 to 1963, he was University of Kentucky ·In 1931
commissioner.
. the only Democrat ·elected from and his master's degree from
Attending the recessed meetthe old 7th--8th district. He was there ,In 1941.
·
.lilg In addition to Mayor Frank
also a secretary of the Gallla ·
Porter Is remembered for his
Cleland were; Councll.melnbei"s
County Democritlc party execu- pen names II\ the Calllpolls area
Robert Beegll!, Duke Bentz,
live cotnmlttee and ~aa a - Cousin Tenyell, a play on tbe
Carroll Teaford, Richard :Wains·
member · of the central word sesquicentennial, for a ,
ley, LarryWolteaftl! ScOtt Wolfe; committee.
column, "Sez Cousin TenyeU;"
Marshal Keith Harter, Street
Aa a state senator, Porter J. Samuel Peeps, A GaUpolls
Commissioner Glenn Rizer,
differed from .his part)~ and the ·Diary; Jaapey for a dally sports
Cieri! Jane Beetle and Fire Chief governor, Michael J . DISalle, column, Touchlni All Bases; and
Robert.Johnmn. ·
helping defeat the dlrecl·ue tax Uncle Jim, for his readlq of the
In the Senate taxatloa commit- Sunday comic.. at noon on Suntee. He proposed a state · ~ days on WJEH . .
tax aa an11_lternatlve and fblally
Porter · was researcher and
compromised oa lnl:nlllq thi! author of .thi! laraetl slnile
South Cenlral Ollie
Variable cloudtneaa today,
whh a chance of. abowerl aDd
temperatures falllile to aear .0.
Variable cloudlaesl toa!Jbt, with.
a low IM!ar 25. Variable cloud!· ·
nesa Thlll'lday, with a ebuce of
snow flurrll!lllld 1111111 near 10.
The problbWty ol prtdp!tatlon Ia 30 PII'Ctllt ~, 20
percent tonliJ'~ and ao percent
Thtll'lday.
,
OhiO
Bxttdat
1\1
Dill
'
1

Weather

Any person or persons found pllly of an:r ad hampering the
movemeiJII of an emergency vehicle wl_ll be pro~~ecuted to the
fullest extent oflhe law.
·
.
Tb._ It the warning luued today b:r Robert E. Byer,
..mlaltRrater·· ol the Melp · Coualy Emerrency Meclleal
Service~, and M!U'cl~ Elliott, s&amp;atlon chief of lhe Rulland
Emerpnc;r SqiUid after nall8 were found apriDlded Ia llle
driveways a&amp; the Rutland Civic Center Tuesdq mOI'IIIDI. Tbe
atatemllll&amp; b)' aile two emer1enc:r service offlelals read8: ·
•"l''lte pei'IOI or JIM'IOII8 wllo In lhoUIIIIIMa act apre8d Dalla
In tile drtHIWiaJI olllle Rutland Civic Cealer are remladecl tllal
- .......... tile lives eflile cllluaa eflllelp (leaaQ.
"Oar lqll8d alation f 18 located rbeblnd tile Bull... Civic
Center wltll two squad&amp; to cover tile foar to-hlfl ol Ballud,
lal1m, Coltunbla and Scipio 110t to mentloa Melp M111e1 Oae
... 'I'We.
'
· ••A., ,...... or p e - f011nd pllly of aacllan ad Ill\ U;r lei
111M_.. h .••, lbe ni-DI of 8SJ _,,~ vftlcle
wlllllt.,lll c111 die the fldle.t exlelld ol the Jaw a&amp; tile leoaland

~·

or

tim~

CIIABLENE HOEFLIOH
or course there Is a tee for reiund check.which means that
call It
Refund."
using the ~~ervlce whlcb brings there Ia no ''Upfrqnt money",
a
.service &lt; Illfu!Mis In the .fl'[!i1 1Q ~~n day .•. IS8bler ,el'PWIII: ·. .o:-. '11 ,~ ,
~,ulose . ~lod ,rather than ·.waiting tor :.. Elecll:olllc rw~ IIU ,l:leen I
who will bali~ an three or: fo!lr mpq&amp;bs- w~h 11. aval~. -'!l . ~e _a~a· (or the
•
tax refund ol $300 or usuallytakesforretunds.tocome pas! tlil;e'e years . .It' liutblnates
·more.
.
... . through from the Internal Re- most manual steps needelt to ·
process paper returns and as a
This Is the first year that the venue Service.
service has been available In
The local fee is $18 If 'H&amp;R . result Is faster. less expensive,
MeAigssexCpo.unntyed. by Ka'rl(\ebler of Block prepares the tax Iorms .and · more nearly error-free,
18 1
fn' a!M!!!on to the regular tax according to Information from
the Pomeroy H&amp;R Block office, preparatloncharge-or$281fan tlie IRS. ·
~pld Refu~d Is one way of
Individual prepares his own form . The IRS acknowledges to the
getting your Income tax relund
and brings It In for electronic preparer when the. Service acmoney fast.
·
transmission. ·
cepts the electronic return for
· In fact , he says, if you have a
There Is an additional charge processing so that the preparer
refund coming you can- have It
of tl5 which goes to Beneficial can then notify the taxpayer. As
within live to sevendays by using
National Bank of New Jersey with a paper return, the taxpayer
the service.
which acts somewhat like a Is responsible for making sure
Most forms even with several
middleman between the tax- that the return Is filed accurately
schedules qualify for the elecpayer and the Internal Revenue and on time. El~tronl~ filing
Ironic filing, Kehler says, and
Service, providing the money on does not make It more or less
personnel at the local office will
a loan basis.
likely that the IRS will audit a
be glad to review returns free to
Both the local fee and the bank return.
determine eligibility.
loan fee are withheld from the
.\

max·

are

Mel&amp;•

New tax service available first

Your

can

-

.

HICKS Air Filter HE~KS 011 Filter

Lones:tar®
PMC .22
Sidewinder Ammo "Mega" Phone

RAPID

Couly's first taxpayers participating In H.t.R
Block's Rapid Refund program, electronic filing ·

•

~.;tl;;on~·_;;Re9ufar

Cent~

Tlils

A blndlni arbitration proposal

Food commodities to be distributed

I.

26

Meigs . bOard rejects
·latest MLT A proposal!,
by the Melp Local Teachers

The Meigs COoperative 'P arish
will be holding fOOd commodities
distributions on Tuesday, Jan.
26. from10 a.~ .. to 2 p.m., or until
supplies are exhausted. Dlstrlbu-

14

A

edition of the Gallipolis Dally :
Tribune, a 110-page sesqulceritennlal edlton In 1940. His work
took one full year, and the record
edition stands to this day.
Continued on page 11

..•

1 •.SHERMAN PORTER ' •. •

Meigs COunty voters .must ·norninat~
·Candidaies for 10 county
position~_·.
.

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

Molltly 1U111if l'rtdq, w111a a

ol ralll at ..,.. ~
ntpl 1114lllttlldav, _ . lair oa
c~

Svz Mr. 11J11M w~t~• Ia 111•
Friday, ~ , . . .• to •
ud .. to 10 , _

:.a.:'

county ent~lneer, Philip Rober\s.~
Incumbent; court ol COIIIRIDJ!
pitas c:oun Jlld&amp;e. Charles
Kallht, Incumbent. All pcllltlo111:
a foar year terms wltll the
exceptlobll of the Judlet,blp.
'ftleh ... llx year terlll.
• •
· In the MIY prbnutes, bpt1i
J11rtM1 will elect ill t11e1t
live preetactl, . . . . to aerye~
011 the •&amp;ral OOTFPiell , Qf•
eech put;r.

•Ill*':

IJ'r

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