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~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 .

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Ohio Lottery

Rio hack
in MOCrace·

-··

Piek4

4956

STI

•• •

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.,.,

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

•

•

•

.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.

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

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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
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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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I

Page 2-Tha Deily S8ntlnal.
· Pomeroy-M;ddlaport, Ohio
Wednasd~, J~

,

m~y

One drunken pilot is too

Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - The Atr · ltytng ts not just."any profession.
" II your plumber bas a drlnkll)g
Line Pilots Association didn't
like our recent report about the problem, It's unfortunate, but It
problems of drunken.pllots. A fe· won't keep you from.getting your
derat Investigation turned up 30 drain unstOPPed· Plumbers have
pilots working for major airlines
a right to be delighted If only 0. 75
who had at least one conviction
percent or their number Is con·
for drlv.lng while ln.toxlcated.
· vtcted drunken drivers.
Only 30 of the 40,000 airline piAt the risk of sounding rabid,
tots? That's a mere .075 percent. . we would feel more comfortable
" I tqlnk that any profession you
tl zero percent of our airline pl·
can name would be delighted to
lots had a drinking problem, And
. be able to say that It had such a
we are sure that Duffy agrees.
low rate of closet alcoholism,"
The admirable record of ALPA
responds ALPA President Henry
In helping to rehabilitate Its alco·
Duffy.
bolic pilots speaks for ,Itself.
Well, Isn't that comforting?
· The polnlls not that 30 airline
Duffy ts "dellghted" that only 30
pilots were caught wtth their
!If hts pilots were caught In a majudgment down. The point Is that
jor error In ..Judgment: driving
the Federal Aviation Admin·
wbtte drunk.
·
tstratlon ha·s done a lamentable
Next ttme you fly·, why not play
job o.f policing pilots with drink·
a llttle ·game and guess whether
lng problems - .not just airline
one of the 30 Is In the cockpit of
pilots, but anyone llcensed to tly
your plane?
a private or commercial plane.
That ts not our conclusion
Duffy should CcU•~;r~b!h~l~s;~J.~~
IOI)g enough to r&lt;

111 eo.r. S&amp;l'eM

•......,,OIIIo

DllVOTII:D TO TIIZ IN'I'ImJI'I'8 01' TO MBIGS-IIIASON AREA

-~~~·~=;~
ROBERT L. WINGE'ft'
hllllllller

BOB HOEFLICH
Geaeral Muapr

A MEMBER o! Tbe United Preos International, Inland Dally Preoa
AIIIOCiatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Auoclatlon.

...sa

. LE'M1i:RS OF OPINION ore wol&lt;11me. They ahould be Jeil tlrall 3110 ..
• 1011. Alllottenoruubject toedi11Dfllltl mut beolpt!ll wttb~e•.adclrel&amp;lllld
telopbone arrmber. No uDilped leiWI wOI be publllhed. Leiter&amp; ohoulrl be ID
oddrelllniiiiUOS, nol persmalltleo.

aoacrwte,

·Financial system refonn
)'roxmire's fmal job

NHL

atone. It ts also the conclusion of
a $ludy conducte4 by the Depart· .
ment of Transportation's lnspec·
tor General, reviewed llY our re.·
porter Frank Byrt. As we reported, the Inspectors looked at a
sampling ol10,300 pilots, private
and commercial, who lost their
drivers' · licenses for driving
while Intoxicated.
A chtlllng 7,850 of them lied
about the convictions when ihey
took the medical exams required
periodically by the FAA, and the
FAA never knew tt. Instead ofln· ·
dependently checking drunken
driving records, the FAA .think
It's good enough to take the pl·
lots' word for it . .
· Well, 'it Isn't good enough for us
sweaty-palmed fliers ;~nd It
shouldn't be good enough for
ALPA el~her .
The FAA has no uniform pro·

· WASHINGTON (UPI)- Sen. William Proxmlre, D·Wis., who will
:retire this year after 30 years In the Senate, has made a career of
:attacking the abuses or · big government, most · notably with his
·monthly "Golden Fleece" award to the most outrageous waste of
;t11xpayer:s money.
.
·
.:· • Bulin his last months In office. Proxmlre will be concentrating on a
·different arena -Wall Street.
··
: The 72·year·old senator heads the Senate Banking Committee, ·
.which In the next few months will be considering widespread reforms
.fn the nation's financial structure, Including changes In the way
;banks and securities companies do business.

Trimble hands -~eigs 74-62 league loss.

· Each Issue Is by Itself complex and controversial, and Congress,
based on Its history of tackling such matters ·only when the polltlcal
·lieat ts turned up high , could dodge any stgntftcant action, especially
·tn an'electlon year.
1
: Much depends on the po,lltical environment, especially how the
:sJock market behaves during the remainder of the year, Proxmlre
·said In an Interview.
: "There are .many people who want the status quo no matter what
.happens," he satd, admitting that poltttcal opposition could klll any
legislation this year.
_ Brtelly, these are the three Issues and Proxmtre's assessmeni of
the polttical situation:
· · -Repeal .of Gtass-Steagall. This 'law was passed In 1933 to protect
banks from the risks of the securities bustne&amp;s by placing a legal
barrier between commercial and·tnvestment banking. But tn recent
years, securities concerns have found ways · to move Into the
traditional domain of banks. Banks want Congress to give them the
right to return the favor by letting t~em compete tn securities
underwriting.
"
Already, federal bank regulators have used a loophole tn the act to
let some banks into the securities business, but outright repea,l of the
act 'ts opp&lt;ised strongly by the secu'rltles industry.

'

-Anti-takeover legislation. This legislation. which has been passed
.... by the the Banking Committee but not yet taken up by the full Senate,
would tighten disclosure requirements and generally change federal
taws to make tt mQre dlfflcull for people to execute a hostile takeover
attempt against a corporation.
..
Proxmlre. a sponsor of the legislation :·satd he ts waltlng to see what
the House does with Its version of anti-takeover legislation' before
taking hts blll to the Senate floor . As It stands now, the bill wtll
receteve strong opposition from the securities Industry and, most
likely, the adrnlntstratton.
-Stock market reform. The Brady Commission. recommended
sweeping changes tn tte way Wall Street operates, tncl)ldlng giving
one federal agency overriding jursidtctton over commodity a·nd
equity markets. establishing similar margin, or collateral,
requirements for all equtttes, options and futures, unifying the
clearing system lor trades tn all markets. and establishing so-called
·'circuit breakers .". a system of prtce-swtng ltmlts and trading halts
to reduce fluctation s, in all markets.
Proxmtre said congressional action depends largely on how Wall
·Street does in the remainder of the year. If the stock markets suffer
huge drops llke the 140 point dlp ,on Jan. 8. Congress may mov~ laster
to put In new regulations. Otherwise. Congress may not take any
stgntflcant action this year, he satd .
With Ihe exception of the "cltcult breakers," Proxmlre said the
Brady Commission recommendations should receive widespread
support on Wall Street . ·

·Today in history

WASHINGTON. ( NEA) - In·
the Agriculture Department ofll· Assistant Secretary For Special
fluenllal members of Congress
ctal who had been In chargeofthe ~rvtces Is supposed to do.
are Increasingly forcing federal
soli conserv~tion program.
,
Other legislators used the
agencies to bend to their will.
The direct object of Whitten s
Key legislators take ·revenge on
wrath has been Assistant Agrl·
uncooperative bureaucrats by
culture Secretary lor Natural
restricting appropriations.
Resources George Dunlop. His · Examples abound In the 698
Job was to oversee both the Soil
pages of the fiscal 1988 budget
Conservation Service and.the U.
recently approved by Congress.
S. Forest Service.
Whi.t ten convinced hts _House
For instance, the Small Bust·
ness Admlntstratlon was given
colleague~ to back. an approprta·
$175 million to lund owrattons tl(/ns btll that simply eliminated
until next Sep~. 30. But tin! 11ew Dunlop's Job.
But Dunlop, former staff dlrec·
budget law forbids It from using
any of these funds to lower the
tor of the Senate Agriculture
staffing levels of Its offices tn
Committee, had many Influential
Charleston or Clarksburg, W. Va. friends In the Senate who refused
The SBA wanted to close the to go along with Whitten's
Clarksburg ·offiee and cut back tn wishes. The Mts~lsslppl con·
gressman was adamant, and as
Charleston to save money. The
West · VIrginia congressional appropriations chairman he had
delegation said no, and now the power 10 hold up the entire
that's the taw .
bill.
Then thfre ts the tong-running ·
A compromise of sorts was
tued between Rep. Jamie Whit· reached. Dunlolp's assistant se· .
ten, D·Mlss., chairman o! the cretaryshtp,was aboltshed. Over·
approprlatlo'ns committee, and sight of both the Conservation
the Department of Agriculture. · Service and the Forest Service
Whitten has long been angered was transferred directly to Agrl·
by Agriculture's refusal to apend
culture Secretary Richard Lyng,
&amp;ll soil conservation funds that who was ordered to keep Dunlop
·1
Congress has appropriated. The away.
department has refused to do so
But a new assistant secretary·
onWhtte Houae orders.
·
!lhlp for '$peclal Services" was
Whitten, much as he would like established with the same salary
to cannot fire either the pres!· level arid budget, $e9,000, . as
d~ntprtheotflceofManagement Dunlop's . old job. Dunlop, of .
and .Budget. So he used the course, has been Jiven the new
,,
appropriations bill to do the next t··Job. The only problem lB that no
best thtne. He effectively fired one has any Idea what the

Robert

W:agman

.

.......
..._

.......

'

On. this date in history:
.
.
In 1265. Britain's House of Commons- a model for parliamentary
bodt~ - met lor the llrst time.
·
In i892. the first officially recognized basketball game was played
at the YMCA gym In Sprlngfteld, Mass. The game was lnvenied by
Dr. James Naismith.
In 19J1, Ronald Reagan was Inaugurated as the 40th president of the
United States and George Bush as vice president. That same day, 52
u.s. hostages were released by the Islamic government of Iran after
444 days 1!1 captivity.
·
··
In 1986. Martin Luther King Day was observed as a federal holiday
for the ltrst ttme. .
In 1987, accused bomber Silas Trtm Blsaell wasarrested In Eugene,
Ore. Bissell had been In lildlng for 17 years arid was the last wanted
member of the Weather Underground organization.

~llet·

I

.,

I

A thought .for the day: George Burns said, "Too bad all tin!. people
who know how to run the country are busy driving taxis and cutting
hair."
;
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CENf~AL Ala . CONDIHONfR at the., regura;Ttst pric.e, you'U·
.~ it .,INSTA~lED FR~£,!."* Plus, asi-an- added BONUSyou'Jl. ·
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appropriations blll to push pro·
grams·favored only by constttu·
ents or friends.
'

PLEASE, LADY,
CAN'T WE JUST
TAL$ ABOUT ...._,_ .·
THE lSSUES?

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Berry's World

·
·
By United Press International
· today ts WednesdiiY , Jan. 20. the 20th day of1988 with 346 to follow.
'The moori ts waxing. moving toward Its llrst quarter.
. The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
ThOse born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Include cartoonist Harold Gray i"Llttle Orphan Annie") In 1894;
comedian George Burns tn 1896 (age 921; Italian !tlm director
Federico Fellin! In 1920 tage 68) ; astronaut Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin, the.
second man to set foot on the moon , tn 1930 (age 58); actor DeForest
Ketley tn 1920 1age 681 . and actress Patricia Neat In 1926 (age 62) .

•

•U 11

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

cedure lor revoklnga pllot's 11·
cense to fly, even.when It does, by ·
chance, find out that the pllothas
a drinking problem.
.
The Department of Transporta·
lion Investigation only scratches
the surface. Inspectors didn't look
at cases or drug convic~. nor at
use of prescription drugs. ·
·
Remember the Delta Nrllnes
crash In Fort Worth In 1985 that
killed 137 people? Recent tesll·.·
mony In a ia\vsuit stemming from
the case all~es that the pilot )lad a
prescription 1or traDiquWzers.
There Is no evidence be took the
drug on the day of the ·crash, but
the FAA didn't even know he had
tbe prescription. Use of the drug
would have disqualified hlm fi;Om
flying.
We don't mean to plckonpllots
for major airlines. We are con·
cerned about anyone who makes
the skies more dangerous. Even
tl your own pilot Is cold sober, It
· Is no comfort to be sharing the
landing pattern with another
plane If the otherpllot ts drunk or
hung over.
·
In fact, 'it Is no comfort to be on
the ground, knowing that 10,300
1llcens•ed ptlots were found unflt-.
to drive a car.
.
FLYING A DESK -When the
Air Force "promotes" Its pllots
to a desk job, tt -may not be doing
or the pilots any favors. A
~~~~:! !Accounttng Office tnIV•
has ·concluded that
atr Force policy of training
pilots for administrative jobs
may be causing a shortage of
combat-ready pllots.
·The Pentagon considers a move
from the plane to the desk as a ne,
cessary step up the career ladder
for tt\e "total officer." But till! rna· ·
Jority of pUtos who leave the Air •
Force say they qutt because they
were being eased out of tbe skies·'
arid In the office.
- Meanwhile, tin! pllots who replace those promoted to the .d esk
are green. The GAO found that 51
percent of the F-15. and F-16 p'tlots · at strategic air bases are
Inexperienced. The Air Force 'ls
now constilertng an all-flying
career track for Its pilots.

bt~dget

' a H. I

W

to talk about when you can't see hereby accuse Michael Landon
given up his firstborn.
the cold canned food you're of lulllng us Into a false sense of
Women put on makeup by
eating or lind the rtashllghtln the security, so that we'd think we
flashlight, and left their houses
middle of the night so you can could survive something like
looking ·like Clarabelle. I wanted
answer the phone?): "It wasn't this. And did you ever see any of
to watch television so bad I'&lt;!
so bad .the first day. It was klnd,of the Ingalls plodding through an - have watched football or maybe
fun. But THEN .. ."
Ice storm to the outhouse)
even the PTL Club. I wanted to
We didn't play llttle tun games
Something llke this wtll make a . hear voices, see hatr that hacJ .
been washed more recently than
with our famutes and read by the person 'do Irrational things . One
glow of (\Ur kerosene lamps, like fellow, whose electricity was still
fo.ur days ago and pomped with
we always thought we'd do !fever out days later, tried to comfort
an ~lectrlc curling Iron. I wanted
confronted wtth the situation. We himself one day by going to a
to see Donna Reed walk through
whtmid. · We got depressed. We large shopping malt. "All I could
her all·electrlc home and turn ori
sat In our cold houses and sulked! think of was, 'tRow can those .every llght and appliance.
.
Oh, I tried to read one night, the people act so happy. when I can't
Despite my abject fatlure ai
flashlight tn my right hand aimed even flush my totlet" I wanted to
roughing It, I sttllllke to think I
hall from pioneer stock and can
at one.sentence at a ttme, giving go up to them and shake them
me a cramp tn my shoulder. I'd and yell, 'Don' t you tdtots know
adapt to what's necessary . I llke
saved that book for just such an the electricity's been off at my
to think I was bested by the
oceaslon, a span of ttmewhen I'd house for FIVE DAYS?"
sudden removal of life asl know
have nothing else to do. It was a
One of our county commission·
tt and not by any defect In
funny book, well-written and · ers bo•rowed a county-owned
character. I Imagine my grand·
action packed. The t.ast tirne I Ctvll Defense generator aild had
mother, thr.own out of her cabin
enjoyed reading as much was · a county employee bring It out to
and Into a ranch-style home with
back. tn my sophomore year of his house, while private citizens'
an electric an opener and a range
high school. "Silas Marner," I cows were moaning for the
to make cornbread on. C!&gt;uld she
believe It was.
mllkersj. It may cost htm hts .have adjusted. any better than I?
(What I want to know Is. how . pollttcal' career, but I suspect
Illketoth!Jlkshecould-after
did they get that cabin so bright when thAt first illcker of ltght lilt
a deep depression of about ftve
on Little House·on the Prairie? I
hts darRened house, he~d _have
days and a lot of whlnlmz.

How key lawmakers rig

_ _ _ .._"'"*' ..... .

...

WLT .... IIFOA .

tt•
Nw......,

N"rl'

.

ltotJglting it~~,-----------~----------S_ar_a_h_~_v_er_st_ro__
ei
, · Some of us around here are
calling It "Black Christmas":
three, four, five days - or more
- without electrtclty .
Wnen the biggest tee storm
many can remember lilt southw·
est Missouri Christmas Day, to
say tt caught us napping Is like
saying King Kong was a right blg
monkey. We were plundering the
Wal-Marts for w)cks, flashlight
batteries and kerosene, and ·
buying oil from opportunists ,on
convenience store parking lots
lor $4 a gallon.
.
None of us liked tt, but I 'lhtnk
maybe the hardest thing to take
was how much most of us hated
tt . And we're not talking about
the flatland comeheres, either;
we' re talking about ourselves,
who believed we were all . of
hardy pioneer stock, all of us
reared by parents who walked 10
mites to school In the snow with
carboard soles tied with twine to
their shoes. We expected better.
of ourselves, and we let us dow11.
Over and over I heard the same
commeni (and what else Is there

--.... ..
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n n • • Ill . .

5 ,,.

°

"rn

111

: At the top of the agenda are proposed repeal of the 54-year-old
: Glass·Steagall Act, ·a pillar of the nation's financial system
· separating Investment from commercial banking, and an anti·
· takeover bill designed to cut down on abuses by so-called corporate
·raiders.
· The committee also will hold an extensive Investigation of the Oct.
:19 stock market collapse and may write legislation based on
:recommendations by the presidentially appointed Brady Commmts·
'
;sion to tighten government regulation of Wall Street.

·-·c

'

. TRIMBLE - besplte a valiant
crlttcal turnCNers, hesitation lievabll! that no tn(ractlons were
Box »eore:
.
effortOIIIbepattofaptsyMetes "'Ort the part of the Marallller called ap.ln'at the opposltllon In
MEIOS - · Bartrum IJ.6·22: ,
-~
ltve, the Marauders were unable
. . ..se ta Jeltlaa th~ ball to, the the third stanza tn view of their Snyder 6·2-14: Bissell 5-3;13~
' . . . . .,. _•• kA ....... ..
· te · ~fiCOIIIe a ~th of tnactiv·
OJIII!II maa uaderneath, euysbots ' aaJresalve atyle of play.
Burdette 2-H; Smith 3-1·7.
•
·
lty
ud
cbopped
twlr
fifth
aame
thJit,,dld
aodalland
.what
.maay
The
Marauders
have
been
TRIMI;ILE
Holbert
5·8·18j
- - - -.......• r.-~
•
nrer A Mc.R111.8amMsu•• w
Ia TVC play 7442.
conildefed to be a uttl.e "holM- practicing tn an "open gym" Sayre 7·3·17.; R. McCiellall4
w..- •v•~Trt.ble.
now
atop
the
Trt
cookJaa", enabled the Trimble !YJ!e setttna under the direction 5-3-13; Kooas 5-1·11; R!pY0 ~
"1 1 rltt.......,.FII
·
,
Valley
Coatereneewtth
only.one
crewtowidentheleadduringthe )l'i •.OOrdon Fl.sher (AD and 4·0·8; Kovach 1·1·0·5; Me&lt;;OWJ1
NUN M. ...... 41 ( ... )
losa. Jwtlpecl out to a 4·0 lead In
third period.
· .•Mifslaat Principal) arid Meigs 0.2-2. ,
. ,
. .
Na * _. 11, 'hi (,_r •
OaW .......... 11. Yrr.._ a.t..- ·
the tll'$t stanza. Meigs, holwev'lr , .
In the ..fourth, the Marauders ···H lp Prtnclpal• Fenton Taylor,
. Score by quarters:
· ·
,...,........,,., . . . . . 1..
was not· Intimidated iiy . the
came back to pull to within three who accompanied the squad to Meigs ...................... 12 ·31 49 62
....... ua: .... U.A..WE•s a aiU .
.
Tomcall
record
~nd
l'lllln*ged
to
.
with stx all4 one-half mln~tteliefl. Trimble, Althougb It hu not been Trimble ... .......... .... ,. 13 38 54 1~
r-a-.-M .
. ...
.................... '111
·stay with Jhe lloa)s to trail by oaly , to play. But again. tn my oplnton, offtctally announced, the entire
In the reserve contest, AuiUck.
one at tile elj:l!l minute mark.
the.lack..of playing time against ..coa~hin&amp; staff . has ' alle&amp;edly
.,.._
took
scoring honors for the nllittt
!Wftl.n.· ' ...... .
. Metts opened I.he , secend
other· te4J1ia In ref1Ular competl· tendered their resignations to the
MMQ W'tta ..... \1 al H N
as the Cat'i guard bit lov 20 ; \
Ira- on a )lasket by Mike tlon .a&amp;aln showed In the erratic lloard of edllc.a tlon .
/
points,leadlnal!ta team tO a 41·30
..............( .......11 ..
Blirtrum, wllo .wls fouled In the
play of the Marauders. .
.
Mille Bl!rtrum ted· the Meigs
wtn
o:ver the Little Marallders: :.
.,act, of •.....,.m,, allll at tile 7:48 , Durtq the fourth frame, scorers .with 2'2 and Jeff Hp!bert
•n
For
Met11s.
Eddte' Crooks led b..
-~... n ...... n.r:n , ..
mark.beld a 15-13 tead .'?"er· thi!' ,,Melp !oat the services of both ., was: hllh point maa for Trimble. ·
teem
kwitll
13, followed bY Jay
Tomcat .. ORe mlaute later the . Mike But rum and· John canatn&amp;li. Trtmllle sllot a !lot 72
.....o~r 11. ...... tWVal•
Humphreys
who had 7, Hank
1~ exclla111ll\!·hands an&lt;! at the BUrdette via the foul route. ,, pereent from the floor to Meigs'
...ut• ,..........
,
Cleland
4,
Cary
Betzlng 3, Scott
Ttt._. 11. flllrtH He...._. n
. 6:05 point tile Marauders enjoyed Despite tile fact that the
52 percent. At the chartity stripe
Y.IW?
ra'hfWIIIWit
Barton,2
aftd
Brei
Little with
- . their last \MIS.of tlw contest as . were fairly even,wttb. ·Melp tbe•Marnders lilt lor ~2 percent
As
.
tn
the
varslcy
contest .
~ ...... n. GrHII¥fllloSI
Cllrts Smltll'dl!lcket put them on getttn&amp; za~ for l7alld tbeCats while tile Cats.posted a 60 perceat.
Uwnnl~ a •wr II
tunwvera aJid· a hesitant offense
. t&lt;ip il7-U.
,
with 14, ·u .s eemed almost un~ a:v.eta&amp;e.
. . . n.lrlMit Tl
· · contributed to tlw Marauder
. IJ"'
ua....
...."'"'
tt. ._...., . ~ ... )
defeat. Once aaatn-Melgs will~ .
on tile road. a• they travel lo
• ..... ~ ..........fFr '
Belpre to take on the Eagles,
"'*rtonl '7t. ,..,. 9 ?! ..... .
Wildcats were Roy Dalton and
start at 5: 4~ p.m.
J!lrtday ntaht.
WelllleaiZ,Vf.... f'. . . f.
, . , ltU'T aou:aiiON
.......... 11.~
..
Tony Young with 10 points each ..
0\'P .......
............. ,
1111
Also, atthere
will be
alumni r:;::=========~::;:
game
Hannan
on.all
Saturday
. Mike ".: lint'' 'fililan, ahootlng charlie Haaley had seven and
.,....,,.... 111 n. c.a.
• ·.;.,
Troy Woods had tour .
nleht, according to Joe Johnson.
· t 33 points, led tbe Hanaan Wtldw...... TrtwaJ•,N• a •
The Daily
Hannan
shot
only
35
percent
W'a oltiSMI•t1tr•IIMw 'tt ' ;11,..1 .
The
&amp;ame stated to lleglll at 7
1cats over the. Kyaer C~k ·
; Bobcllls, '14·57, Ill Ha11.nan Tues· · froin tile&gt; floor. 22·62, and shot 57 p.m. Any Hannan alumni Inter·
¥ . . . . . . . . . . " .......... .
y........... v . . . ._.•
percent Jrom tbe fQulllne, 20-35.
es.ted 'tri. playing should contact
day nlg~t.
'
i "It v.:as pretty,evea thrtllltrh the · , Wilson lead .tae team tn re· , Joe Jol1ns011 or Jt m Wttso11 at
boulid)ni wltb 12 and .Woods :tianun .Htgh SchooL The alumni
rtr-. half.," Hannan Coach Larry· toUowea
wtth sevea to contribute :w.tll practice Thursday at 7:30
.
Maylllll'd said.· . .
to
the
team.
total o.l '10 rebounds.
p.m,. Johnson said. .
''T)Iey wef1' .bl~iet than us but·.
"
.'
..
Kyger
Creeks
rei:ord
fel!
to
5-8.
we were qulrker," Maynard ·'
added.
The le~dlnl . scorer lor the ·rp;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;~
'1a. the seco111Lquarter.- tlu!y . Bobcats was Bill Loveday with 16 II
..
wanted to stt back )n ·tie zone, ·points, Chad Leach had'll, Alan
... ,
.
. .
, '•
.• illat'a · t~~e reaiion for the loW Den11y 'had 10, Ted Perry and
Mike Ri!ele had' six polats eac.l\
. _..," Marnard ~.ld.
arid Mike Brad~ ,alid Theron _
; TM game stayed even thr011gh
the tlllrd quartet, Maynard said. Hod&amp;e had lour points each. .
.The Bobcats:'· ma"llg\!CI .five.
· ·' ·
f'&gt;~'llln ilaiiUn broke tile gamf open
th.ree
point
gaols
'while
Hannan
111 tlw fourtll quart~r. took the
·
·
· ..
lead. alld the &lt; Bobcats were shol none.
The Bobcal' were 66 percent
forcftl to fou~ the Wildcats to get
from
the foulllne; 6-9.
·
tile ~ll back. .
·
The
Bobcats
junior
varsity,
U tills was allltnporta nt,win rot
........... ,....................
~
r'
Haana11, puttlnl t•lr. 'reeord ·· tl10ugh, defeated .the J'fann~n
IIDIOI.B'~
·
·I'IIICI!
...
junior varsity, 6S.6L
·
'f ,,_..,ty; .!100 ma~k at :0:4: It was
Daily'
........
,
..
:,
...
,..,
........
.
:
..•..
;,
25
Cents.
,
Thr leadtn&amp;'· sco~ers for. Han·,
eves~· more Important , pme ·
, •
I •· •
,'
•1
nan In the juniOr varllty contest
SUbiC:rlbe:r.s aot deslrtngtopay lheccor· , j
[ 11or WliloL
·
.
rl« m-.y remit I" adva•~ dlr-eet
were
To
y
Edmo~s
with
·18
0
• , WI~' a 33 politts ~ ,11101'e
The Dally SH1tnel on a3. 6or 12month
points, Don To,lltver has 12, Chris
baa II. Credit wut be rtVen carrter elcll·
" t1w1 "'!lll!h to !lilt htm alier. the
week. ·
·
·;,
Shull had nlf~e. Cbrls·.F~cemyer
· ·~~~=~~~~.points mark at 1,006, ·had eight, Mark Jenkins had stx,
I:
to Maynard. · ·
M11YJ18rd dPSCdbed Wllson·as a . Wayne A\len had .iour. and L)oyd
Holley and JasOI\ Ball · had two·
· quiet leadef and a :very lntelll·
points each.
lbiiS....rlolleader with lot~ of talent .
The junior varsity's · ~rd ·
--.~7
I"I&gt; "ND' part ·ol hia lame lit· poor,"
13 Weelts ......, ........................... :
drops to 2·5 on the seasoi\. :5 WH\&lt;1 ... ., ... ..·.. :, ......... .. ... , ... ..
.:,.,'flh.•~.~lnlsaid. . -·t '
.•
r -~
~2 w............" ....................,.... .
The next game fort~ Wildcats
''WileCa,. Is
' !lf tile '· top
will be Friday aa. tltey trawl 10
·· --.·~ .
13 Wei!ks .. .'.. .. .: : : . . . .
&lt;awftl 111 the
.West
Ohio Valley Christian, Galltpotts,
26
.......... .... .. ............ .... ..
MASDft, W. ¥&amp;•
Vtr&amp;laia,"
._let.
·
~2
Ohio, for a game aaalnst the
Tbe oflu!r
for the
Defenders. The il:ame ts slated to
' '

--~~E
.. . . . (i

By Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

By BUGB VICKERY

---

20. 1988

.

~ r.--. ~--------~--~------------~

· Aullw.t hblllher/Coa&amp;roUer ·

.

'

,.

PAT WBrrBIIEAD

'

Ohio

'

: Cottltnent
The

.. .

•

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,._

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•

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'

Eagles drop 72-65 non-league
battle
.
'

EAST MEIGS - Thl'l!t! :tastern Eagles 'reac~ double tlg- .
ur(!s, but the trio's effort fell shy
o{ a · solid Feder~! Hocking
Lancer outburs.t that burled' the
Easter.n er's 72-65 here Tuesday
In a non-league basketball
contest
.
.
Ron Eddy led all scorers with
22 poipts, Shane Burchwell added
19. Craig Jarvis 18. and Brent
Dishong 13 for the victorious
Lancers.
Eastern's Mlchae.l Martin led
the Eagle attack with 20 points,
Tony Hendrix a(lded 18, -and ·
Steve Horner 12.
Federal Hocking took an early
lead. and despite the .Eagles'
staying even In the last half,
Eastern could not get over the

Indians ·sign 2 free agents
CLEVELAND (UP[) -

Hank

P~ters ~~~pressed some Ironical

suffered offensive.Jy ·and In frusEastern, now 5-7. hosts South- · humor following the Oeveland
Indians' signing of the first two
tration' EHS strayed away from
ern Friday.
free
agent since he became the
Its gameplay.
Box score:
team's
president.
•
·
Eastern hit 20-46 and Federal
EASTERN (85) ,.., Steve
A torrid first period saw
"We're happy to have them,
26-56 from the ·field, while each Horner 5-2-12, Mark Murphy
Federal Hocking take a 25·19 · bit 13- ~6 and 12·20 respectively . 0·2·2, Tony Hendrix 2-3-5-18, -although ihe wags might' say .
advantage, then roll on toward a
from the line . .
Allen Tripp 0-0-0, Mike Ma~tln we're happy to have anybody,"
32·25 score at the half. ·
Eastern had 36 rebounds and 8+20,Scott Fitch 1·0·2,Shaun Sa- said Peter$ ip announcing tile
orie could say thar Federal bad
FH 31 as Mike Martin cleared the voy 1-1-0-5, Chris Lance3-0-6, Jeff addition of right-banded pitcher
that magic right from the start as
boards of 10 and Steve Horner 9. Johnson 3-0-6. TOTALS 2&amp;-4-13- Greg ]farris and swltcll-bltting
several players came through · Lemon had 8 and Eddy 9.
outfielder John Moses, who
65.
with stunning · firlit half plays. · . In the last half both clubs were
agreed. to one-year contracts.
FEDERAL HOCKING (72) High scorer Ron Eddy had
even up with 17ln the third frame Sequoia Lemon 1·2-4, Kevin
·'We belleve Greg can help our
averaged 8.4 markers through 12
and 13 in the finale.
Mace 0-0-0, Ron Eddy 9·4·22,
games, but hit ·double digits
pitching staf~
as he
.an
In the reserve contest Soutb·- Shane .Burcbwell 6-2-l -19;. Brent experienced
pitcher.
•(He)Is can
two:lold to emerge the visitor's
ern claimed a 59-48 win asa Dishong 5-3-15, ' Craig Jarvis help us In the bullpen although he
favorite, Shane Burchwell knotKEnny Caldwell tallied 17, while 3-2-18,- Brian McPherson 3-0-6. can be used as a. starter. He has
ted 18, uncharacteristic of his
.
JaSon Hager and Jeff Horner TOTALS !6-Z-12-'IZ.
an excellenl track record. And
\
runner-up 18 markers.
added 10, Mark Murphy 8, and
Score by quarters:
John Moses Is a bonafide cepter·
On the opposite side of the coin,
Matt Finlaw 5.
)':astern ............. 19 16 13 17-65 fielder, and gives us depth. "
several key Eastern ftgures
Brett Lewis had 12 for Federal. FHHS ......·.......... 25 17 13 17-72
Peters said the Indians are
pursuing "two or thJ:eeotberfree
· agents" and did not rule out the

hump, losi.ng on their owii hardwood lor the second str!light
time.

Redmen back in
'loop race after
104-65 triumph.

possibility of trades.
• The two players lirlng the
Indians' major-league roster to
the 40-man limit. Harris will
attempt to make the team as ·a
reliever while Moses primarily Is

COLUMBUS - Rio Grande "Rio Grande is the still the
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn district champion · . until It's
gambled on a new starting lineup beaten.
Tuesday and walked away with
"We knew we'd have to play
another Mid-Ohio Conference hard 'a nd smart, but we didn't
win by defeating host Ohio play smart sometimes," be
Dominican 104-65.
added.
By ·p lacing Ron Rlttinger back
Sartori . acknowledged that
on forward status after his debut OD's tenacity lnsld.e the court.
as center in Saturday's Walsh helped keep the game going. "W~
game, Lawhorn gave the post to don't have any true Inside people,
RAY
., SINGLETON
sophomore John Lambcke, ,In- . so we try to rotatl' and keep them
serted Marc Gothard as llrst fresh," he explained. "Rio's
man off the bench and received always had a strong _inside
top performances from all three game."
''I think we had a good rhythm,
in addition to senior RaY Sinparticularly in the second half
gleton. who led all scorers.
·
The win places Rio Grande at when we up 12 and then boosted
I
15-6 and 5-2 In the MOC and back that to . 25," Lawhorn . said.
CINCINNATI '(UPI) - When .
into contention for second place "Singleton had an outstanding
Dave
Parker was traded from
with .Malone after the Pioneers game, and bringing il\ John
. fell Tuesday to Urbana In over- Lambckewas a big boost to us, as Cincinnati to Oakland at baseball's. winter meetings In De·
, time, .90,8l. 'Malone falls to 5-2 In was Marc Gothard."
cei'nber,
he predicted !he Reds
the conference, while leagUe
•
would
finish
"fourth or fifth"
leader. Walsh lost to Cedarville
Singleton posted 27 points for without him this season.
70-67. leaving the Cavaliers with the Redmen, with Rtttinger and
"I laughed when I beard that, "
a 5·1 slate.
Kearns adding 23 each. Gothard says Reds manager Pete Rose.
Lou Sartori's Ohio Dominican had 12 and Lambcke 11 for Rio
squad got things started Tuesday Grande. The Redmen posted 64.7 "I mean, I just laughed because
wl'tb. an early basket by senior percent on field goals (29 _of 4'3 Dave knows more about baseball
guard Brian Harvey . For several attempts) and were 66.6 percent than to think this team's going to
minutes things remained neck· on free throws, sinking 4 o! 6 (inlsh fourth or fifth.
''I think he was mad and made
and-neck, primarily tllrough tries.
·
the
statement out ot anger,
OD's toughness on the inside.
For OD, Randy Tucker and
because
I'd be very disappointed
until a 3-point field. goal by Jim Dave Riddle each scored 13
if
any
expert
picks u~ to finish
Kearns with 13:58 left in the first ·points. The Panthers sank 19of 43
fourth
or
fifth."
half put tile Redmen allead 15-12 attempts from the field . lor 44.2
Parker said. his absence would
for a lead Rio Grande never percent and 0\!tted only 12 of 22
be
the reason !or the Reds
rellnquished.
tries on the charity stripe for 51 tumble. Rose disagreed with that
The Redmen moved from a percent.
1 ·
too. praising the two players he
47-32 halftime advantage to build
RIO GRANDE (104) - Ron plans to platoon In the r_ight field
a 30-point lead late In the second Rittlnger, 8-7-23; Ray Singleton,
spot vacated by Parker.
half. Despite this. the Panthers 9·9-27; John Lambcke, 4-3·11;
·'Paul O'Nelll and Tracy Jones
scrapped away at tile visitors, Anthony Raymore. 2-0-4; Jim
In over 75 runs last
knocked
succeeding In taking out of the Kearns, 214)-9-~3; Marc Go·
year,"
Rose
said. "If Dave'would
game Rio Grande guardAntbony · thard, 3-6-12; Mike Wheeler,
look
at
the
situation,
I don't think
Raymore through fouls.
1·2-4. TOTALS 28(4)-38-IM.
he
would
say
we'll
finish
fourth or
That fa lied to stop the Redmen
OHIO DOMINICAN (65) fifth.
.
.press as they held the "panthers'
Randy Tucker. 5-3-13; Dave
"And, he ought to know that
offense down to a total of 62 points Branscom, 1 (lJ ·1·6; Dave Rid·
just
from watching our other
for the last part of the half. Only
die, 4-5·13; Brett Brandt, 3-2-8;
players
like Eric Davis, Ka\
Dave Branscom's 3-polnter In the
Brian Harvey·, ·1jl) -1-5; . Chris
Daniels, Barry Larkin, Bo Dlaz
last seconds broke the tedium for
Hamilton, 0( 3) -0-9; Craig Den· and Buddy Bell. They've got too
the hosts.
ney, 1-0-2; Bob Walters, 1·1-3;
" We played hard, but we still Darrell Watson, 2-0-4; Chip Hol- much talent to finish fourth or
fifth! "
fe ll shor t go ing up against a solid combe, .1-0-2. TOTALS 19(5)-12·
R~se says It saddens him to·
ball club," Sartori commented. 6~.

Plan independellt
cage tournament

GOOD USD

WASHIIS, DIYIIS .
UFIIGIUTOIS, TY1
GAS I BEC. ••-n
._..,

,

COUNn.
APPLIAN·c·ES

lt27 3rtl Awe., G•If tM
PH. C4I·I6H
~-· I UL
. -6 P.M.

RACINE -The Southern High
School Athletic Department will
be holding a men's independent
basketball tournament at South·
ern Local lfigh School's Charles
w. Hayman Gy.mnasium hi Racine on February 13.14;20, and 21.
Each team !'nay have up to a
ten ()0) man roster andean enter
by 'contacting David Grindstaff
' a t 949-2025. Entry lee is$60.00per
team. The tourament Will be a
double-e)lmlnatlon format' and Is
slated to have,a-nd restricted to12
teams. Alllnteres\ed parties are
asked to· secure an opening on a
first-come, first serve basis, so
don 't delay.
First and second place trophies
will be awarded.

l

READY FOR REBOUND - Carlton Screen of Providence Is
read)' 1o catch a rebound a8 he jumps between Pookey Wlglngon
( 4) and Gerald Greene of Seton Hallin the first half of Tuesday
•lcht'llame In Byrne Arena, In East Rutherford, N.J. (UPI)

.

listen to Parker'rlp the Reds .
"I'm sorry lie feels that way
because we gave him a good
opportunity here and .,be took
advantage of It and did a good
job," the manager sal d. "I hope
he hits 40 home runs for Oakland.
.
I don 'I hope he lilts .220.
"I think it would .be nice If he
comes back here (for the Ali:Star
game in July) and bits third ~or
the American League All Stars.
And if he does, we'll have to take
(Continued on Page 5)

.Now Being Deliver~.~.
\

Game rescheduled
Kyger Creek Hlp School prln·
clpal Dan Brisker :announced
that the Bobcats' game qalnat
Oak Hill, rescheduled for Tueldllf • .baa bela -a ... Tuc 3'.
Pet.. 2, . _ . _ ot a carRitt fill .
scheduling with other athletic
events at Oak Hill.
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half, helping thE' Wildcats to a ·•
58-47 victory over the Shockers.
Richmond sealed the victory
with · 41 seconds left when he
made 3 of 4 free throws after·
Wichita State Coach E;ddle·
Fogler was given two technical
fouls for arguing with a ca II. ' '
. Kansas State Improved to 9-4 ·
While Wichita State fell to 10-6. ·

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LOGAN -According to a page
article In Tuelc!Ay•s edition
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alqleared oa Channel 6 televl·
8\0n. OOhambua, luued the fol~inlltatemtllt Monday:
"Tbere have been some vicious
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days.
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' GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) Tom ·Braatz, head of football
qperations for · the Green Bay
Ji'ackers. Is In Mobile, Ala., to
scout talent at the Senior Bowl
Saturday but is continuing to
Interview candidates for the
club's vacant bead coaching job.
; Forrest Gregg quit last week to
take the job at Southern Metho.dlst University, his alma mater.
~ Braatz has
already Inter·
vie-Wed several candidates Including George Perles, head
CoaCh at Michigan State. He
i)ttervtewed Perles Sunday night ·
at Pedes' E;ast Lansing, Mich.,
home but Perles reportedly Is not
Interested In the Job.
, The club has obtained permission to talk to Lindy Infante,
otfenslve coordinator of the
Cleveland Browns, and be h~s
said be Is Interested In talking to
the Packers.'

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DURACELI:

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far lnfo'rmation Call 992-6139
After 6:00 P.M. or 992-5196
IMtriiCton:
.· llidl How.., llack hit

can· make the
new· tax laws
work for you.
R§ .

1Continued from Pa~e ~ l
the beat for it. But we won t ta)&lt;e
the heat If we're In first place."
-And If the Reds just happen lo
In, say, fourth or fifth place?
"If we're fourth or fifth at the
••;;~t~~;~break, I can sit down and
It•
the reasons why and I'II
disagree that two of the
leasons would be Paul O'Ni!ill
Tracy Jones," Rose said. "If
fourth or fifth, it's going to
because of our pitching, not
offense."
Rose said there Is another way
Reds could ·sup this season. ·
"You can't say you'D never
fourth or fifth because
tia.et)811 Is a strange game,:'
said. ''It's always possible
team falls apart. I mean, If
Davis gets hurt opening dqy
and Kal Daniels gets hurt the
·
week of the season, we've
a good chance to be fou·r th or
Parker also compl!llned t~~t
E;E~:In him
the Reels' front office
for '' negative
" Rose also took Issue
that statement.
, "I've never Weard anyone In
the Reds organization say Dave
'gave less than 110 percent or was
a. negative leader," Rose said.
"At one · time, I said we needed
someone to stepfo.Ward and be a
l~er. to take charge in 1987.
~~ no one did, But that's not
spying someone was a negative
leader." .

.

ATLANTA !UP!) - Duane
Ferrell scored 27 points and Tom
HammondS added 22 to lead
Georgia Tech to an 84-72 triumph
' over North Carolina A&amp;T.
·

·

The Aggles juniped to a 23·9
Jona, 8-6, led by 29 points early
lead with 10:55 to go in the first
in the second half before the
half but scored only 1 basket over Warriors closed to 54-40 with
the next flv~ minutes. During 11: 14 to play .. But Loti and Glenn
that stretch, }Jammonds scored · Grant 's cored 2 baskets apleceas
10 points to help pull the Yellow lana built the lead back to 65·44
Jackets' within 25-23.
.
with 4: 22 remaining,
Dennis Scott tied the score
Tony Smith led the Warriors
27·-27 With a dunk at 4:41. No.rth with 11 points and Michael Sims
Carolina A&amp; T led 36·34 at the had 10, all In the sec~md half.
half.
FAI~FIELD, Conn. tUPJ)
Brian Oliver Scored on a layup
to put Tech ahead for the first Alex Roberts ·scored 17 points
time 11) the game with 17:50 to go, and grabbed a game-high 12
The Aggies scored only 1 field rfbounds, leading St. Peter's to a
goal ·tn the first four mlnut.e s of 54-44 victory over cold-shooting
the second. half as· Tech took a Fairfield. ·
The Peacocks. winners of eight
· 47-40 on a Craig Neal 3-pointer.
___
of their last nine games, 1mHARTFORD, Conn. !UP!) proved to 12-3 overall and 4-0 in
Doug McCrory hit a 14-foot :... the Metro Atlantic, Athletic Conjumper with 25 sec9lids left, ference. The Stags. who shot Just
llftin_g the University of Hartford tnpercent from th.e fl~r,
to a 50-48 victory over Maine:
ro peel to 4-10 and 1·3. Falrfteld
Hartford's Marvin Powell hit a
. s lost 9 of Its last 11 games.
free throw with 2: 45 remaining to
--tie the score 45-45. Alter Maine' s
HOUSTON !UP! ) - Kato
Je(l Holmes and Hartford's Armstrong scored 10 of his
Keith Jones exchanged 3· game-high 20 points in the final
pointers McCrory bit the game· five minutes to lead Southern
winning basket. Holmes missed a Methodist to a 69-65 Southwest
desperation 3-pointer with five Conference victory over
seconds to play.
Houston.
·
___
Terry Thomas added 13 points
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. as the Mu stangs Improved tol4-4
tUPI) - Alvin Lott scored a overall and 3-2 In the SWC.
game-high 21 points and Iona Houston, paced by Richard Hoiraced t.o a 27-polnt h\llftime lead, lis with 16 points, fell to 7-6 and
helping Uie Gaels rout ~arquette 2-2.
71-56.
.
MANHATTAN, Kan. !UP!), Marquette, 6-8 and lo'!"rs of
five of its last six games, hit only Mitch Richmond scored 24 points
6 of 27 shots from the fl'oor In the and Kansas State held Wichita
first half and trailed 43·16 at State to · one basket during a
nine-minute span of the second
Intermission.

Parker's ...

Beginning Classes Starting
Thursday, Jan. 21st at
7:00 P.M. At Carleton
School in Syracuse.

'

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
1UPJ) .-:.John Morton sank a pair
of free throws with three seconds
remaining to cap a rally from a
·20-polnt deficit that lifted Seton
Hall to an 82-60 Big East victory
over Providence.
·
Mark Bryant blocked a layup
by Providence's Chris Watts at
the. buzzer to help the Pirates
·improve to 13-6 overall and 2-3 in
the Big East. 1Providence
dropped to S-6 ~~2-2 ,

-

SHOTOKAN KARATE

. Do you have
·rent or royalty ·
incotne?
H&amp;RBlock

LOGAN . Utah !UPI) - Keith
James, stai'tlng'l n place of Jarvis
Basnight, scored 21 points on 7
for 8 shooting Tuesday night to
lead No. 7 Nevada-Las Vegas to
an 87-83 victory over Utalr Sta,te
in a Pacific Coast Athletic
Association game.
·James also hit all 6 o! his free
throws, had a tea!l'·h 1gb 7
rebounds ~nd added 4 assists in
place of Basnight, who was out .
with the flu.
Freshman Stacy Augmon con·
trlbuted 16 points, Karl James
and Anthony Todd had 13 apiece
arid Gerald Paddlo finished with
lllor UNLV, 15-1 overall an&lt;! 5·1
in the PCAA.
Reid Newey led Utah State,
•. I0-6 and a-2, with a game-high 30
points and Danny Conway had 21
before- fouling out with three
minutes to go. Kevin Nixon ·
· added 14 points.

r-;:;::::::=========rJ.

RON Rl'l'TINGER

The Daily Sentinei-,Page-5 .

·Nevada-Las Vegas, •Seton Hall triumph

i

Davis seeks more than $1 million
compromise.
Davis was among the National
League leaders In virtually every
statistical category In 1987, as he ·
batted .293 with 37 home runs and
100 RBI. He also stole 50 bases.
Pitcher John Franco, whose 32
saves last year were more than
any other lett-banded reliever In
baseball, Is r:equestlng $925,675$625,000 more than last year. The
Reds are offering him $675,000.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

viewed as a late-Inning defensive
replacement.
.
~
· H11rrls, 32, was 5-10 with a 4.86 ~
ERA In 42 games for Tl!xas last •
season. He made 19 starts and
struck out 106 In 140 2-3 Innings. ·,
"I am reallybappyaboutlhls.l ,
had 13 teams to ciiOose from, but ·
figured Cleveland would be the ~
best opportunity for 'm e," said ,
Harris from his Laguna Niguel, •
Calif., home.
"!spoke to (!ndtans president)'~
Hank Peters and to (ml!nager)
Doc Edwards.
·

Pa·rker's prediction
amuses Pe-te Rose
.

CINCINNATI 1-UPI) - Reds
outfielder Ertc·Davis is seeking a
contract worth $1.05 million
'through sa lary arbitration, a
raise of $750,000 over what he .
made this past season.
Davis was· one of seven Reds
players who submitted arbitra·
1ion figures Tuesday. The Reds
countered with their offer for
each player. which in Davis ' case
was $750,000.
.
Sometime nexi month, after a
hearing is held on eac h case. an
Independent arbitrator will decide whether the players get the
salaries I hey want or the money
the Reds are offeiing. There is no

·,

Wednesday, January20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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TELEPHONE:.992·3471

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.

Page- 7 -

;4

Beat of the Bend

Auxiliary
meeting held

: GOP chairmen meet in
·· .Colurilbus on .Saturday
By BOB HOEFLICH

•

.

•
Ohio's ss· Republican county
,• chairmen will meet In Columbus
on Saturday.
·
Jan. 23, for what
shapes up as a
major, pre·
1 presidential
' primary caucus
of,GOP l.e aders.
; . · ?Bob H11ghes.
• president of the Ohio Republican
; County Chairmen's Association
1
writes that county chairmen ··
have been Increasingly miffed /
1· over the years because so often
:- the overall leadership forgets
them on the takeoffs, but they're
:, certainly aboard for the crashes
•' so the state chairmen's assocla=~ lion was formed.
·
;:
So early In the process key
•, Republican officials, such as
• . Meigs County Chairman Rlchsrd
•• E. Jones, can make their voices ·
;~ heard on statewide political
·•- decisions which also can affect
: th~ national picture.
•' . Incidentally. each county In·
! volved)n the GOP cllalrmen's
•' organiZation has Just·one vote so ·
,.; each '· county •s voice will
' heard.
'
I

Dr. John Ridgway js well and
workh1g hard. 1
Rumors, as they will, have
been f)oetlng about that Dr.
Ridgway Is seriously fll, unable
to work and prayers have .been
offered by several churches on
his behalf.
Dr. Ridgway thanks you kindly
for the prayers, and hopes
they're stored up for future use.
Meantime, he's doing fine.

COOKIE SALE - Eight-year-old Stacey Price,
daughter of Steve and Cathy Price, Pomeroy, and
a member of Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271 Is all
set to begin laking orders for girl scout cookies.
Here she displays · the Black Diamond's Cookie

--.,._..

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years

appa~rances were· an

anblri'IISII-

~. ment. Our otKe"intense phyaicsl

!· ~ationshlp

moled considerably.
; His memory bepn to faU. His
· ;. health betlan to deteriorate. Colds
to btonc:hitis. Bronchitis
r~ · turned
~ tu rned
.
to p~nla. There were
:· pi'OIIIalt problems. The final blow

!·
attack at 39.
:r wasBillallean
.,.. ared. He thOIJiht he
•' was. ping to die and .sought coun·

;. sellna: ·Tite counselor told him that
;: he was in serious trouble.
•: Two daya later Bill checked into
; : ~n alcohol recovery center. ~YIIr
!~,,1ndoctrlnalllll ~~ the A.A. pniiCI·
•• j:lles. II saved ha Ilk.
·
;~ To "Jerry's Wife" I say~ as
:· m,uchd~ you can abouchat al ~~·
· •, 1t s a aease, not a
i'IICier ""'""~·
~: Go to AI·Anon. It can save your
'· 18011)'.

-

,•
And now for the 10011 news: Next
;; month BiU will eelebrate one full

(

1111&lt;.- ... ctpoo~

lim~ ont with coupon ond 1111.110 purcllut. bcltodiN
Ont Coupon por tomlly. Goorlst C.otlool ""'"""" -

of _ , II. • -

l· year of~· He Is a new - ·
·I; phpkally, iaentally and enlotlonal·
:. ly. Tbe tllllic Is blck in our

at Sho!• ney's In Point Pll!asant followed
~· a meeting of tbe Golden Rule
:j Class oi the Middleport First
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thiS. It's the l'unniesi darned thing
l'w llllen in yeais."
Ella became fllrious. She called
me inaensitiw and cruel. I say she
overreacted. Is this funny or not?S.G.H. (STARSANDSTRIPES)
DEAR S.G.H.: It's funny to me,
but I didn't work for two hours

tot~ether.

putting the quiche
Obviously Ella was humiliated
and didn't want her psrents to
know. I hope you were lll!ntleman
enough to keep your lip zipped.
0e1r Au lallillil: About thst
Jetter rrom "Carol" whQ thought
.she was pi'eJIIUUlt and el!Pfrienced
all the dassic symptoms - momi111
nausea. weight pin, food craving.
etc.: As 1 tegislered nurse, I ·have
llllen many such cases. This condi·
tion Is c:alled pseudocyeses - or
phantom prep!IIIC)'.
Q1-. Mary 1 of EnaJand was so
-eer 10 produc:e an heir that she
· suft'ered from this p,roblem for well
beyond nine months.
Hllllllnds, too, 111!1 inio the act.

ers' new!Y rt!Vixed booklet, "The Lowdown on Dope," will g(ve you the an·
swers. Send $2.50 plus a

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•••

The 77th birthday of Carrie
Kennedy was obser·vc d recently
with a family party .
Attending were Mr . a nd Mrs.
Jack Kennedy of f-!udson, Mass,
and their son. Tom. a student at
St. John 's Co llege. in New Mexleo, who were here for a holiday

.

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GEORGE·IHACKII

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OF

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ACCt:ltATE QL~RTZ .\10\'EME NT.

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ren. Jennifer a nd Greg. Winston
Salem. N. C, and the honoree's
hu sband, Bill Kennedy.
·
Other r&lt;'CC'nl visitors of Mr .
a nd Mrs, Bill Kenn.,dy have been
a nother son. Joe. a nd his friend.
Linda Craig. of near Memphis,
Te nn .

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Kennedy birthday is observed

THE' 'PRESIDENT OF LOCAL
.1890 AND MEMBERS DO
HEREBY STATE, WE .
SUPPORT THE MEIGS
LOCAL TEACHERS
ASSOCIATION UNION. WE
ALSO DISAGREE -WITH
THE 'LOCAL BOARD OF
EDUCATION PUTTING
SCAB TEA IS IN THE
LOCAL SCHOOLS•

Community.

·-..

:t

========:;1

GENEVE 14 KARAT GOLD .
AND DIAMOND TIMEPIECE
.,ATIRACfiVELY PRICED

mi ssion projects in the United
States while th ~ other h.alf will go
for projects In other cou nfries .
The group sa ng "Draw Me
Nearer" and "We Give Thee But
Thine Own." PrayN and another·
, hymn closed the program .
Mrs. Marilyn Spencerpre"ldcd
a t the bu siness meeting with 57
· sick and shut in ca lls being
re ported. Offic er s · reports were
giv"n and it was no te.d th a t the
World .Thank Offering was $48.
Special th a nk you not es were
read. All he sugges tion of Denise
Mora, the group will serve the
ca nteen at a visit of th e Red Cross
Bloodmobile sometim'e this year.

r;:::::::;:::::::::::::::=====~==~l

Dale and Marjorie Wa.lbum, Ray
and Helen Fields and daughter.
Melanie, Manning and June
Kloes, and Randall and Carolyn

ijaptlst ·Church
worship
lei'VIce.Su.nday.alter the r;D:av:l:•:·
Johp and Glenna Riebel were
ho8ta for the meedng and ulled
tnedltatlons entllled "Be Kind
One to Another" and "Step by
IJtep" wltll terlplllre from Epb. 4
aid Rollllllll. Ptaaa wen made
to ..ve. tfit fnlall Of reUjlloua
Chrltlillll ttl'lll to be 1e11t to St.
iJude'a RaiiCh for Cblldren. Rlebel eloletl llle meetllll with
~-··
.
Otllera attendlq tJJe brunch

The annual call to prayer and
self-denial service. wa' con·
ductcd by Mrs. Kathryn Windon
at the recent meeti ng of the
Ch.c ster Uni ted Methodi s t
Women held at the church.
.
Scripture was read from
Psalm 116 with -Mrs. Windon
extending th e ca ll to study, pray.
a nd reflect on issues of special
concern to women and children.
She said tha t si nce the ca ll Is a
special once-a-year observance
celebrated In different unit s at
different times. th e total a mount
of the offering will not be known
until la ter. Half of the total
arrio~nt will be a lloca ted to

visi t; Mr. a rid Mrs. Ed Kennedy.
Debbie a nd Mike ~ennedy.
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. John
Thomas. Adam a nd Brandl.
Middleport: Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
KennedyMand sons.
Oh' David
M and
d
.5
Ieven.
a so n.
10;
r. an
Mrs. David Kennedy a nd child·

self-addressed. •·tamped No. 10 envelope (39 cents postage) to Ann Land·
ch·
ers, PO
. . 8 ax 11 J, 62
• •
rcago, Ill.

~ Golden 'RJule class has meeting
A,• fellow~lp .brunch

..

Ann
Landers

I·

.;

cookie money .
.
The· cook le sa le is a real
learning experience for the girls
as It helps them improve their
communications skills. handle
money and build self-confidence.
Cookie profit received by the
Council Is returned to tro9ps
through maintenance ofcampmg
fac ilities. training of ad ult volunteers. purchase of tents , sports
equipment, books. film strips,
etc. and also through support
services of sta ff ..
Delivery dates for the cookies
ordered is March 7-11. Payment'
is made when the cookies are
delivered.

Mr. and Mrs . Alien Pape of
Racine, are announcing the birth
of a son. Joshua Allen, born on
Dec. 30 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infa nt weighed six
pounds, one ounce and was ·19
inches long .
.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brii&gt;n,
Racine, a nd paternal grandpar'
e~j t s are Mr, a nd Mrs. John Pa pe.
Racine. Mater nal great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams, Racine, and
Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Roush,
Racine.
·
Mr, and Mrs. Pape and son will
be returning to Wurzburg. Ger·
many, soon.
.
'

UMW conducts meeting

=: Delr Au I 1 L I ~I com- marrlqe. We csn lallgh and love .
: : pel1ed 10 hltipOIId . 10 Jerry's wile.
tlllin. I wish. the ssme for you. ; She llid her hlllblnd, at37, wu the
BABE IN KANSAS
.
•· picture ol helllh. but drank beer in
DEAR BABE: So do I. Thanks for
:• "lnmdlble~nts."
'
apalletterofencourqementlfl
::
My hlllltlnd, !OO.. is extremely
hearanythir!afromjerry's Wife, I'll Sympathetic males have been
~· handsome, .wd'•ttii)A!td and has
let~ know.·
known to suffer from morning
•' lln'l!l' misled 1 day ofwork due to
Delr ADa Landen: My dear sickness and odd food cravings.
:. alcohol. That ~one or the ways SJIOU8e worked two hours prepar· Even more common ·are husbands ·
: he denied his ~ism. He abo
ina 1 quiche for dinner. The recipe who experience "labor pains."
:' U1111 p!l~4ike, "I only drink c:alled for a ~inch pie plate. "Ella''
Somewhere there's· a fascinating ,
1
beer," "I pe'Yei' drink before noon," IUed a cake tin with a removable unwritten book about pregnancy ... ·
and "I can quit any time I want."
bottom. When she took it out of the LJ.B. (R.N.)
'
~ And.hedidquit-dozensollimes.
Omt, the quiche dribbled out all
DEAR R.N .: I'll bet you could
:
At3,7 ,Bill'slifebepnl0chan8e. · overthestove.·
writeit.Whynotgiveit a go?'
The fairy-talc: man:iale Of semt
The look or shock and disbelief
Drugs arc everywhere. They're easy
·t
started 10 fall apart. Aqu· on her " - was simply hilarioUs. to get, easy to use and even easier to
l: menu. became more freqilent and When I stopped laughing I said, "I get hooked on. If you hove que!ilions
1 Bill became wrbally abuslw. Public csn't wsit to tell your parents about about drugs and drug use, Ann Land·

f

BONELESS ENGLISH
.CHARCOAL STEAK

Sl. 99

'

r~ ~ife should learn .

USDA Choice Beef Chuck

P!RLB.

'

cookies. they not on ly get a good
cookie, but they help make it
possible for l~al girls to reac h
special goals and participate In
many worthwhile activities.
For more than 50 years, the
sale of cookies has been a major
source of funding for Girl Scouts.
Troops use the profits to finance
girl planned projects. such as
troop cam pin g, a weekend a t the
Center of Science and Industry in
Columbu s. or Discovery Place in
Chariott.e. N.C. A longey trip to
somep lace suc h as ·the Girl Scout
Nationa l Center West in Wyom·
ing or Our Caba na In Mexico may
be a t least partially funded by

It 's Girl Scout cookie lime
again!.
Cookie Festival'88 is the theme
for the Girl Scout cookie sale in
the Black Diamond Council be·
ginning Friday and con tinuing
through Feb. 7.
Sale price will \le$2 a box again
this year and all of the favorite
varieties are avai lable - Echo,
chocolate sa ndwich cookies: Sa·
moas , a combination of ccarmel.
chocolate an coconut ; chocolate
chunks. m ade with pure chaco·
late drops; thin mirts, a c hbco·
late wafer with mint peppermint
covered in cocoa coating: Do-sl·
dos, crunchy oatmeal cookies
with peanut butter filling : trefoils, old f~shioned shorihread;
a nd tag!llongs, cookies topped
with P!'ai\.Ut butter a nd ·covered
with chocolate coati ng.
When reside nts buy a box of

1

'

Festival '88 poster and boxes of cookies. A portion
of the profit from lhe cookie sales remains In the
troop lrea.~ury · while the remainder goes Into
Council programs and projects.

Girl Scout Cookies are on sale

l.) e

S1.2fiLa.

Members of the Women's Aux·
lllary of Veterans ·Memorial
Hospital were joined by their
families and hospital S\aff for .a
holiday party recently. '·
· A turkey dinner wa s- served,-.·
the group· had a gift exchange.
and there was a si ng-a- long
during the' evening. Tables car·
ried out a burgundy and beige
color scheme with placemal s.
napkins. and candles .

waste precious time Instead of
getting Immediate medical
attention.
Super~merlca and the Amerl· •
can Heart Association Issue a
renllnder that heart disease kills
nearly one of every two Ohioans.
SuperAmerlca hearts may be
·purchased In Meigs County at
stores located at 279W. Main St.,
Pomeroy and at 497 Geperal
Hartinger Parkway in
Middleport.

Mildred Heins of 1233 Second
Street North, Fargo, N.D .. 58102,
writes thaI she has six letters
that w11re written by Philander
and Ruth Andrews of Center
Point-Washington Township'·•
'
Paris, Linn County, Iowa . The
--~
I
1
Super America and' the Amerl- letters were written during the
! can Heart Assn., are teaming up · Civil War and are addressed to a
' during the month of February to sister, Mrs. Mary Bush. Racine.
1· fight Ohio's number one killerRelatives wishing copies may
1: heart disease.
contact Mrs. Heins.
i: Local SuperAmerlca stores
t will offer paper hearts to their Allen Ball, for ¥ears a rural
t customers for Sl each during the mall carrier out of the Pomeroy
, f!rst two weeks of the month. Post Office, Is a patient at Holzer
1 · (::ustomers will write their names
Medical Center and cards may
, or attacl!lhelr business. cards.to be sent to room H3-A. By the
J the hearts and stores will use 'the way , did you know that Allen,
• h.e arts as Valentine's Day who lived for 52 years on Route 7
' decorations . ·
·
near Pomeroy, In recent months
Customers
also
will
receive a moved to Hysell St: in
1
copy of ihe American Heart Middleport?
Association pamphlet, "How 11
Feels to Have a Heart Altack".
I know that rain seems so cold
Vlcllms often confuse a heart - but It beats the heck out of ice
t attack with Indigestion and and·snow - so do keep smiling.

HAM

Wednesday,, January 20, 1988

. ··-

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CHIPPED CHOPPED

The Daily Sentinel

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~·""'*'---------.....,r·""'·

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1

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�P'gs 8 The Deity Sentinel
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday. at 2 p.m at the hOme
ol Mrs. James Clatworthy. Mrs.
Richard Owen will review
" Hammer-A Witness to His·
tory." For roll call members are
to give a hopeful sign lor world
peace,

Community

•

calendar

Pometoy-Midd' 1port, Ohio

'

SYRACUSE- The Wednesday
Homemakers dub wlll meet all
.p.m Wednesday . Members are to
take unfinished articles from

December's meeting.

-

wlll·be there to dls~uss plans for
spring conference. Members are
.urged to attend.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle•
SATURDAY
port Child Conservation League ·
SliADE - The annual Inspecwill meet Thursday at 7: 30p.m.
at the Ohio Power Office In tion ol Shade River Lodge 453 will
Pomeroy . Devotions will be be this Saturday , Jan. 23. Dinner
given by l,.lnda Broderick who · will be served at 6 p.m. and lodge
will also provldt&gt; the traveling will open at 7: 30 p.m. Work will
prize. Bunny Kuhl will 111' the be In the Entered · Apprentice
guest speaker. Hoatesaes will be degree. All Shac!e Rlver ·
Helen Blackston and. Peggy members are asked eo attend
Harris. The district . prt!ildent and bring· two homemade pies
with them. The lodge will meet In

Wednesday. January 20. 1988
special session Thursday, Jan.
21, 7:30p.m., with work In the
F t'llowcraft degree. Past .
members will be In charge o!Jhe
\
work. \
Dance FridaY.
POMEROY - A dance will be
held Friday , 8 to 11 pi.m., at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens &lt;:;enter.
Music by Larry Hubbard , and
True Country Band. Admission
$1.50. Public Invited.· Bring
snacks,

Usi111 tlrr.Classifitds .
Js as £as~ os .. .

Wedl

'

.

99.2-21.56
'

BuyO e
Get One

I.

BUY ONE

·BUY ONE

'

24-0Z. BOX

10-0Z. FROZEN

..

Kroger
.Broccoli Cuts

'

GET ONE

BUY ONE ·

'

BUY ONE

, 12-0Z. FROZEN HOT N' BUliERY,
BLUEBERRY OR HOMESTYLE

iwt. J~ 20, 1988

'

.

'

-~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

•

Gaildhi in Peshawar to honor Khan
......&lt;
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CRUNCHY MRS. PAUL'S

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Complete

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AUNT JEMIMA REGULAR SYRUP

l4·9Z . .. $2.09

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JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••~··~·····$1.69
FRANKS ••••••••••••••••••••!~........" s1.99
MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••• ;~····~ ~ 89&lt; -

.

"'"

.

lh London, the British pound Europe and Tokyo, halting a
Strengthened to open at $1.7855, comeback that the currency
up from Tuesday's closing staged following last Friday's
$1.7760.
news of a loWer-tha n-expected
In the earlier To~yo market, U.S. trade deficit for November.
the doilar closed at 128.78 Japa·
The · dollar was quoted at
nese yen, down from Tuesday 's . $1.2873 Canadian in New York
Tuesday , up fractionally from
final rate of 128.90.
Dealers in Tokyo said the $1.2872 Monday.
In the bullion markets, gold
dollar's weakening reflected an
overni!(ht trend 9verseas and opened in Zurich at $477.50 per
was also In reaction to the ounce- up from Tuesday's final
Finance Ministry's announce- $477 - a nd In London at ~77.75
ment that Japa'n's trade surplus against $477.25. ·
with the ·United States had
Silver also rose, opening In
Increased marginally In 1987.
Zurich at $6.75 per ounce from
It was the second straight day Tuesday's closing of $6.70 and In
that the dollar had fallen In London at $6.74 from $6.72 per
ounce.

(;Y

:YAC. PACK BACON ••••lt!·....: s1.·09

::&gt;

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LONDON (UPI) - The · U.S. \
dollar fell for the second s traight
,day at the opening of the
European foreign exchange
markets today. Gold rose.
The American currency began
the day In Frankfurt at 1.6740
West German marks, down from
Tuesday's closing 1.6830, In Zurl9" at 1.3635 Swiss francs
against 1.3695 and In Parts at
5.6522 from 5.6740.
It opened in Brussels at 34.97 ·
Belgian francs, down from Tues·
day's closing 35.2750, In Milan at
1,230.50 lire against 1,234.70 and
iii Amsterdam at 1.8800 Dutch
guliders !rom 1.8895.

...

'

~I

'

whkh left shops closed In Arab East Jerusalem. A
·locked shop Is seen at right. (UPI Reuters) .

Dollar falls . in·Europe, Tokyo

o:arrylng

&lt;(

0
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:::&gt;

•

GENERAL STRIKE CONTINUES - Armed
Israeli soldiers block an Intersection In Jerusalem's Old City Wednesday durlng'a general strike

flAn

,.·

BUY ONE

BUY ONE,
Chocolate
.

12-0Z. FROZEN

w

%-GALLON POLAR PAK

FRU111 BRAND

NIGHT .nME
COLD
MEDICINE
oz.

.

. Ice Cream,

GETON·E

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

PALMOLIVE
COM
PLEXION
SOAP
..

'GRAPE JUICE ••••••••••••• il~:•..•.... 99&lt;

BUY· ONE .

BROCCOLI SPEARS ••••• ltih••••••• 89c

11-0Z.

5-0Z. FROZEN .

WA

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Shave Cream

GETONE ,

Assorted
· CREME WAFERS

•• 69&lt;

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CAMPBELL'S SOUP~ ••w:.o.z.... 2/99c
SHELLIE BEANS ••••••••~'.~!•••:. 2I 89c
SPAGHEni/MEAT.- BALLS u.o.\ •• 93&lt;

$159

$349

...

BUY ONE

9C

PORCEWN
"I LOVE YOU"

WHITE CLOUD
BATHROOM TISSUE

FRIED APPLES ••••••••••••1u~e••••••• 93&lt;

... ..
...
.
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U.S. GRADE A

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Breast Quarters

..
'

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Pound

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ILVER PLATTER" FRESH .

Assorted'
Pork.Chops
Pound

IEEF •• ~•••••••••lUh••~ S1.99

$3.59

•••~·••••na..... S4.39

69

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PESHAWAR, P.aklstan I UP!)
linen!. Whlle Nehru's successors toppled Bhut.to, paid an brief
- Prime Minister Rajlv Gandhi were reluciant to pay official official visit to New Delhi In
became the tlrstlndtan leader to trips to Islamabad, several Pa- December 1985 and made uno!flv(slt Paklsfan In 28 year~&gt; today, · klstanl government leaders tra- · clal stops In 1983, 1984 and last
fl,Ying to ,Peshawar to pay last veil!d to India. ·
year.
,
Ijspectstoa .l eader:l)l theflghtto
In 1972, Pakistan prime' minis·
There was speculation last
end British ·~nlal rull' ol the ter Zulflkar All Bhutio visited year that Gandhi would go to
Iadlaniubcontlal.'lltfourdecades India to sign the Simla Agree- Islamabad as ch.t.trman of the
a~o. ,'
men!, under which Pakistan and seven-nation So11t Asian Assocl' Indian military aircraft India exchanged prisoners cap- atlon for Regional Cooperation.
Gandhi, his ' Italian- tured In their 1971 war and Instead, Gan!lhl dismissed the ' r·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiii
liorn wife, · Sonia, and severai · pledged not to attack the other. , Foreign Ministry official. who 1,
Cabinet niiDISters,-touched down
Zla. who seized power as army suggested the p6sslblllty of such
In the capita\ Of the North West '_.!c;!!h~le;!f!!!_;~~ln~l!!!9~77!_;1!_!!n~a~:!!!!.!!th!!!a:!_t_:a!_!!:!!!,;___.:__..;._~-~
Frontier ~ovlnce, , 100 miles .
OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
west of l'!lamabad, atl2:49 p.m.,
WITH FILLING YOUR
airport authorities said.
Gandhi spent about twQ hours
PRESCRIPTIONS.
. Ia Peshawar, paylllf hla !ast
respec1a to Kl!an Abd~ Ghatrar
ALL STORES
Ktlan' and li,_f'01DieiiCift
tilE' dead tribal leader's family.
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!
qiandh.l then returned to New
Delhi to tly to Sweden for a•
Wt: ~~ Tf'll A+gnt :ro ltm•t o.~• ~•~ ~
six-nation nuc~ar d~rmarnent
HOI Aift,potl$tble For Prtnt""i' f uor~
CQnference.
Sources In the Awaml National
•1
Party, the lefflst political ontanl. SWIFT ECKIICH
·
. .
.
.
zatlon hl'aded by Kh'a ..i son,
Abdul Wall Khaa1:1d Gandhi
also had tea .with
c~,a·Js of thl'
·KAHN'S J-0 PACKAGE
.
.
. .
provlllctal ·gover
nt before
his departure. , N'o official talks
, werl.' held. "
·'
. HOMEMADE
Softens and
~
,!"
'
fades
new blue
' The Press Ttust of India news
1
jeans
with just
•••••
agency· said during the return
one washing.
Olfht, Gandhi IssUed a message
t)lanklng President Mohammad
6 oz.
Zla ul-Haq for permtttlnll his
10
SUNICJ)i
.
visit and saying, "We are ne~h­
LEMONS ........!M.U,.. l/49&lt;
boril, bound to(lethl'r b)' many
CHEESE
•••••••
·
•••••
~:.!~... t1.
99
'
.
ttes of history, geography and
'
tra!Sitlon. May -peace, good wm.·
CAUFORNIA
.... Of ,,._,
;'vEnA
and good· fellowship prevail
30 CT. kh ": 79&lt;
CELERY
among OlJr people."
CHEESE .................1.;\!: 12.39
f,fJIIMl. TO NYQUl
• Khan, who died early WednesI . HEAD
day at the agl.' of 98 after a
lengthy Illness, was dubbed the
LmucE .•••,".~.u.~t· s1.39
"Frontier Gandhi" for his leadership among the Pathan tribes
11Jong the northwestern
Paklstan·Afghan border In thl'
oonvloil'nt movement for Independence from British colonial
4 BAR BATH
·•
rule.
. SIZE
. J(han was widely admired II!
Iri'dla because of his leadership In
REG. $1.99
the Independence struggle and
1110
FlYING
his opposition to the partition of
VANILLA-CHOCOLATE-STRAWIIRRRY
tHe subcontinent Into Islamic
Pakistan ·and Prt'domlnantly
Hindu India by the departing
RAM &amp;lACON
British colonial rulers. ·
·'Khan was awarded the l'!harat
.00
R41tna. India's highest honor.
lUsH'S
1
.
. ./ ,
,ljefore ·Jeavlng New Delhi,
GAndhi declared a five-day period of mouralng In India during
which flap wiD be kept ~~
Oliff iOY·AI·DIE
half-staff, and ordl.'red governIJ!I'nt offices closed on Frlc!ay. '
·aandhl said In . a statement,
LUCK'S
.
.
. ~
"The Ialii of the towering rtanll'
of our freedom stnaggle !uta
gone.''
.....
4 Roll
tl.alt year, Gandhi dllpatched
Pack
att Indian air foree plane to
~ir and badKhallflowa to
·New.Oelhl tor medical treatment
S'AVE 40c
afler the lrlllalleadef Hffeftd 1
....•.;' ., ..
"
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The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

~-

11

JERUSALEM fl)PI) - A
wounded. .
D.avld accords . .
··
In Tel Aviv, Defense ·Minister
border policeman trying to dis. ·
peraerock-throwlngA,rabprotesM111tary officials satd ' Israell Yltzhak Rabin accused ihe PLO
soldiers shot and killed three of spreading rumors that soine ol
ll'rs today lost controrof his jeep
and ran over 'a demonstrator,
Arab guerrillas early today min· the 1.4 million Arabs tn the
seriously wounding the Arab,
utes after they slipped across · territories were . starving. (Jf
~oun after Isr¥.11 troops killed lsrael's northern border on loot .those Palestinians. about 350,000
' three Arab gilerrlllas WhO
on their w~y to _a ttack ' setile· . live t11 re111g11e camps.
•slipped acroal ·the border from
ments In \he area.
Tile PLO has urged Arab
·
1
- ~Lebanon. l
.
One l$raell soldle was se- countries to send emergency aid
Many Palestinian-owned shops
rlously wounded In thf''clashnear tel the teri1'torles, ·and protest
~re shu~red again In mainly the town of 1\{ena~a. about 100 lead~rshaveappealedtolnternaArab e~st Jerusalem as part of a
miles north ,or Jerusalem on the tlonal relief groups and Arabs
genl.'ral "strike against the Israeli border with Lebanon.
living outside the refugee c~mps
occupa(lon of the West Bank and
In Sidon, ~banon, a spokes·- · to provide food and clothing.
. , G!ll~· !ltrlp seized ln 'the.,l967 Six
man of the, main PLO group, AI . U.N. relief officials have said
· l:la:;.· t'War from Jordan and Fatah, cla'lmed responsibility lor the army ts preventing workers
' Egypt. .
··
the ln!lltratlon, saying It was
from 'distributing food In camps
Scattered unrest was reported
carried out "In respOnse to on the Gaza Strip by keeping
In and around Jerusal~m. Five
ordersmadepersonally"byPLO rl.'fugees In their homes under
Chairman Vasser Ararat.
curfews.
. Arabs were arrested, four for
hurllngroeksandoneforwavlng ,· The clash came almo~t a
Rabin .has vowed to block aid
U~eoutlawed llagplthePalesttne , · i)-lonth after an Isral'll army shipments from Palestinian suppairol captured three Arab guer- . porters while Arab shops stay
Liberation Organization, author1tl~s said.
.
rlllas who wa'ded into Israel closed In support of anti-Israeli
In the Incident lnvolvllitl' tbe ·across the Jordan River. Mil· protests. But the military, which
border policeman, a rock
ttary officials said the guerrillas administers the territories, has
whO made the Dec. 25 lnflltra· stressed that the. government
smashed Into his Jeep's wllld·
Shield, causing bini to lose, tlon,' the first from Jordan In 10 would not Interfere with U.N .
control of the vehtc,ll!, run down years, were emboldened by the relief shipments.
the demonstratoqind slam Into a ' bloody disturbances In the
"Whatls being done, by outside
elements under the PLO's tnfluutility pole at a protest near territories.
There were signs · that the ence and by local elements, is to
Mount Scopus In nortbeast Jerusalem, pollee spokesman · Raty continuing unrest has prompted create the tlluslon tliatthere ts an
Levy said. :rwo p()ltceltl('n were ,right-wing leaders Into reconsld· Intentional policy on the part of
thrown fr9J1I • Ih~ Jeep, and both erlnglsrael's20-year-oldoccupa- ' Israel to starve camps resident$
suffered1 moderate Injuries, he lion of the territories.
by .Interfering with the supply of
said.' :
·
In recent remarks, Prime food to the camps," Rabin said.
He said those spreading the
A hospital spokesman refused Ml·nlster Yltzhak Shamtr has
to give Information on the condl· suggested reopening talks with rumors were trying to use food
!Ions' of the three, but 'state-run Egypt on autonomy for . the "as a political Issue, and thus to
Israel Radio reported the Arab occupied territories, using the damage Israel's Image. "
protester was seriously framework of the 1978 Camp

1-LB. VALLEYDALE

-..:

'

Three Arab guernllas. ~e killed,
dernons~ator wounded in Israel

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Yoal' ladepeadeatly 01JPaed
Low-Priced Supe...uket
· MANUFACTIIEIS
-.

-CO.UPONS -

.

,

The Grand Jury session scheduled for Thursday morning,
Ja11. 21, at. the Meigs County Courthouse, has been canceled
according to Prosecullng A'ttorney Fred w. Crow III. Juror~
need not appear. A new dale fQr a Gra~d Jury session will be
annoullced later and j4rors will be notified by the sheriff's
department.
·
.

I

.!

SEE STORE FOR FURTHER DETAILS

Sutton Twp. officials organize

'
.,J'

est

Delbert Smith was elected chairman lor the new year when
Sullen Township Trustees held their organlllillonal meeting.
Forrest VanMeler was elected vice chairman. Tlilrd member of
the board Is Otis Knopp. Regular meetings of the group will be
on the flrsl Monday of each month al the Syracuse Municipal
Building.
·

•

• WIRESIRVR THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QIJANTITIEI. • PRICEI EFFECTIVE 8UNDAYLJAN.17 THROUGH SATUROAY, JAN, 23,11188.
• USbA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED. • NOT RESPONSIIILE .FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

Patrol reports 2 accidents

..

The GaiUa-Melgs Post of the Slate Highway Patrol repor~ed
responding to two accidents since Tuesday morning. One of the
accldenl&amp; re5\llted In a citation for a Syracuse youth
Rachelle E. Davls,l6, was cited for driving without a license
after her 1985 Chrysler LeBarl)n hit a storage building on S.R. ·
124 In .Ml!lersvllle. She was driving west when her car
encountered a large puddle of water and she lost control. She
· went off the letl side of the road and hit the building.
·
The other accident was a deer accident No one was Injured.

I

'

.

. . I
I

'

I

'

.;

Announce $13,860 dental gtant

'

.

I

Bonele$5
Chuck Roast .

Fresh -Lean
Ground ·. ~hue I&lt;

IBeSsie

-5 9
~

LB.
BONELESS
ENGLISH SHOULDER

Tomato.
....

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•REGULAR •LIGHT

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SKINNER SPAGHml
or SHORT (UT

32 oz.

LOAVES

.11

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U. S. NO. 1
WISCONSIN

Ussus

Bath ·
Tissue

AGRI-GEN.
GRADE 'A'

......

,

·Russett
Potatoes

,_

_ . . ....---__

oz.

., 5BAG

· •SPRITE •CAFFEINE FREE
•CLASSIC COKE •DIET

Coca- ., . ..
Cola ;·

49

LB.

18 CT.
CTN.

·1 ' .

.
.

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1 12 Dozen
Large Eggs

.8.16 oz:
BTL.

\

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE lo ~ g!Qn
thot on e.turdoy; J..,..ry
23, " " · et 1D:DO •.m. •
publlo 111!1 will be h-"1 11

101 Unla!t Avenue. Pam·
- · OhiO, to Mil for oolh

tllo following colltteral:
18840odtle 2 dr.IOO. SSI

.. , ..

=n. .

POIEIOY - Fn~me house
wiltl upper &amp; ~ one bedroom apartmenls. Qlod rent investment! $300/mo. income
polenlial. ~tNG $14,!110.00.
IIDDLEPOIT - Great neigh·
borhood! 2 story home w/3
bedrooms, I car garage, W.B.
fireplace, ful basement Much
More! Cal for £ur appoint·
ment $!!4.900. . ·
·.
LETART- 3bedroom frame
home with alumin'um siding,
large rooms, workshop. car·
port. Nice lot. ASKING
$23,000.00.

-=· ~~-·=
COIICNie marlier 011

the

NOf!h Uno of F,.clian 32,

Aid concmo ....- Mint
on ihe rla-t of woy line ·
of Ohio ltotelio~ 143 and
I01eofEulcilthe - l n e
of Ohio ltiUo Route 143;
~~~- Iouth 10 ... 33'
Eolt 278 - t o tile conter

- · OhloP.E. No. E·32187
oo - " of OUIWY doted Oc-

tober 14 tnd 11. 1911.

EXCEPTING 871100tho
of on lll!fl. lf)Ora ,or looo, ••
duo lbed In VoiU- .,411,
Ptge 87. Molgo c-ty
Ooed Recordo, con""Yod to

Roneld E. Alfflo ond Undo L.
Rlfflo.
...... .. , piing .80 -

of Thomtl Filrtt CNIIl and
bel!,llll the So~~t-ot oomer
Tho Fonnora lenll ond· of. trtct tOld 10 Henle Cope.. more or looi. 10 - - I n
Sevlogo . CinPIIny, Po""
Oeod Volu- 214, Volumo 211, Plige 128.
flltfJY, Ohio. r111rwe ·the
Melga County Ooocl Roconto
right 10 bid II thlo oole, ond
carro.,ed
to MII'CUI' A.
towlthd..-the......,.......,.
of~.....
J..,,_, and M- John·
tere1 prior to llle. Further.
The Fo...,.,. Bonll ••d lov·
PARCEL NO: 2: Tho fol·
·
c-peny
,_,_
tho
lowing _, being . In
rlaht • Njeot lllrY or ol bldo
l'l..llon
No. 32, 1'2N,
oubm-.
R13W, lollobury T-.lllp,
Furthor, tho tbave oOIIo·
County, Ohio, de-will be- In the-·
dltlon If It In wllll no ••·
pi II II d ,. ...., .... W811'1ft•

M:::..c:o.:=

........ 22..'"'

(1) 20, 21.

Public Notice
' '

I

-·

Public Notice
Pqe 387; ond VOl. 219,
Pogo 829. Mllga County
Dood-.do. •
Thoobow ciMcrlptlon wu '
fuml- by Hom• Hyllll,

Roglotooed

lu~

I
Btrl.ol

No. 2274, por ourwy of Fol&gt;· ·
ruory, 1871.
.

.A......IMCIVoluo

t30;ooo.oo

Torm!l of

a•: Cooh.

Tho ..... - · CIIMot be
tOld fDr leoa thon two-thlldo

of tho·oppnoloocl volue.

H-ald E. Fronk,

.
Shorltf
M. . County, Ohio

.

11 I 20, 27; 1213. 3tc

.

Public Notice
IIIOTICEOF

1

·Busine.s s

•HOME BUILDING .
•ROOM AOOITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEliNG •
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS •
BACK HOE WORK

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

IIODLEPOIT - Unique 4
bedroom Clllonial ·home! level
lot and 2 carplllge, has~
bim, attic studio w/slcylillhl
WI« insulated. MUST SfW
REDI«:ED TO $62.1XXlOO.
IIIEISYILLE - Cute 2
story home with a view of
· lhe BeiUtiful Ohio River. 3
bedrooms, front porth, stor·
age area. Much More!
$19,900.00.
HYSELL RUN- Really nice
ranch with a giirgeous kit·
chen, huge family room, big
living room · w/fireplacaJ
plus a trailer hook-up. 2u '
acres. MANY MORE EXTRAS!
MAKE OFFER. $49,900.00.

RUTlAIID - 2 bedroom
home
on 1 level lot. Renlal
On JMIIIlry I, 1181, In . investment as it is now
tho Melp County Probete
retrted or a nice cozy home.
Court. C... Na. 21721, Joo
Wlikinl
distance to sllop·
N.loyre, R-1. lo11Z21, '
llutltnd, Ollie 41178 WIO
pinJ $13,900.00.
FIDUCIARY

.

,lfPDinted 1-Uior of the
-~~ of Marthol T. loy,.,
ct..Mooct..... of R - ·1,

lox 1211. Rut!Md, Ollie .

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

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111 zo. 17: Ill·a, aa.

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DON'T lET YO. 81(.
TII(Al PIOIWlS 11.COII A SIIOCI TO YOII
W1

~
D&amp;C ELECTIIC
Ron Dll• or
G•ry Cummine

992-6226
Mlclcl..,.rt

lh
he

GUN SHOOT

EVERY
SUNDAY·
1:00 P.M.
UCINE
GUN CLUB
lAClNE,

Roger Hysell
·Garage ·
Rt. 124, Po1110t0y Oflio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tr••••lttlo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES
"At ..MG!I.. It Prien"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
.NO SUNDAY (AUS .
' 4·16-16-tfn

BINGO

BOGGS

SALIS &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. IT. SO EAST
GUYSVUE, ·OHIO
614-662-3121

Aotheri ud Jolin Dltrt,
• Now H..... ltUih Hag
Firm IIJUifl-t

Doaltr

Fen~

E••l..etl

,.,. &amp; ··"~~

IS ·

n ..

JERRY'S
CUSTOM

SU"GHTER
WlltTE 1111 ID.
.IUTLAND, OHIO

,,
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742-2035
1 2-:ff-i'lt
mo~ pd.
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YOUNG:s

cia
the

.

R!•

CARPENTER • ·

"

SERVICE

~et

m-

- Addont and remodtlllng

os- .
1re

-Roofing •nd gutter work
-Conctet~ worlt
-Plumbing illnd e~Rtrioal

1£)':.'

won.

(F,.. Eotlmat-.1

V. C. YOUNG HI

.~ ··~·

992·6215 .. 992-7314

. PanNroy, Ohio

•.

..~====4=·1:5·':86-:lc~ -..:"!

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 lOCUST Sf.

PCMIOY -915~3561

lEW$ lPPUAIKE
SERVICE
915·3561

All Molt

•Wa1her1 •Dia.....,_.,
•Aangee •AelolgiNtora

•Drv•••F,...,.

WE SEU USED 1AI'PLIANC:ES
.

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS .

GUN SHOOT
UCINE '
FilE DEPT.

•

'

.-la•hzalllllllng

. EVElY

SAT.IIIGH1
6:10P.M.
flldory Chtkt
12 Gauge She,._

4-S.IIe

APPOINTMENT OF

41771.

TH£ fAD YOU IIAVliEEI
LOOKIII8 FOI .:.. 60 atres
W/2 llury AHIKJdalad lltm
hOUII. 3 bedrooms, I\!
bllhs, equipped llllchln, F.
A.W.B. heal, Oulbuldln&amp;l, aU
minerals. CAll FOR MORE
IIIFORMATION. $52,000.00.

. '4iotiiiiXI.nLY 136Krll
of _ . lind. Secluded
lftd
Eatallllllllllllll

t':·

I.

MAICUM
COITUC11NG
I
CHESTER, OHIO
I

12·7-'17 '"'

POMEROY, OH.
992·2259

CREW ROAD - POIEIOY
- Realty nice split foyer
home. 3-4 bedrooms in a
great ' neighborhood. fin ·
ished basement on a large
I\! acre tot. PRICE TO SELL
AT $49,500.00.
Public Notice

....
~

E)llalo. . . .

==. ·==.::

Pu.,lic Notice

H08pital news

t

I ,

.......u~

Imit-

....

111311VI1CHG148418.

Plus tu &amp;
Deposit

..... !

He was former managing Southeastern Ohio Sportswriters ·
editor of . the Galllpolis Dally and Sportscasters Association.
Tr'lbune and editor of the Gallla
1n 1975, Porter was treasurer of
Times. He was also a news the Gallla County Council for lhe
director at WJEH radio and Aging, and the 10-county Area on
sports editor of lhe Tribune.
the Aging Dlslrlcl 7•
Porter worked at the LexlngOlher memberships Included
lon Leader In 1923 and 1924, and the Gallla County and Ohio
was ·s tate editor from 1925101927. Hlstorh;afSocletles: the Board of
He was on the Paducah (Ky.) Trustees of Holzer Hospital
Sun-Democrat In 1932 and the Foundation; board of dlreclorsof
Associated Press In New York In lhe Gallipolis Clinic Medical
Center Hospital; Naomi Lodge
1933.
From 1936-38, he wrote for lhe 55, Knights of pythlas, . Us
Maysville (Ky.) Independent chancellor -commander and
and the weekly Oldham Era In · former dlstrlcl deputy grand.
LaGrange, Ky., In 1939 .
chancellor of K of P; former · .He was city editor of the president of the Kiwanis ~nd 1952
Douglas (Ariz.) Dlspatch1946-47, stale winner of ·a Kiwanis letter·
and otherwise was with the writing contest; former presl·
Gallipolis Daliy Tribune · and dent of the Gallla County Tuber·
Galli a Times from 1942-1953, and culosls and Health Association;
again briefly In 1960. He finished the Gallipolis Area Chamber of
his jo~rnallsm career In 1986 as a · Commerce board of directors;
part-time writer for Ohio Valley and the Fraternal' Order ofPublishing Co.
·
Eagles.
.
·
His
Is
survived
,
by
his
wife,
Parler was SEOAL . sports
writer for the Columbus Dis· Margaret Lloyd Porter; lwo sons
paten from 1947-1953 and Galllpo· ahd their wives, Ll. Col. ,David
lis general reporter for the . Lloyd and Karen .Sue Porter of ·
Huntington (W.Va.) Herald· Fairfax, Va., and James Sher·
Dispatch, and was a newscaster man and Lynn Porter of Colum- ~
bus; and five grandchildren, ~
for WJEH from 1956-1962.
At Rio Grande College, Porter Jamie, •Matthew, Nicky, Joshua,
was publicity director from 1940 and Amy Porter.
until 1942, and again In 1962, Bailey senlenced
retiring from the college In 1974
Charles W. Bailey , Jr ., Reeds·
as jlssoclate professor of Politi· · ville, charged wllh domeslic
cal Science. In 1974,75, he was violence in the Meigs Counly
college historian·, and had served Courl of Judge Patrick O'Brien,
as director of admlsslo.ns . and was given a six month jail
records untll1965.
sentence, suspended to five days,
He was commissioned to write wa.s placed on one year's proba·
a history of the college In 1976 lo lion and was ordered to pay court
commemorale Ihe 100th anniver- cosls.
sary of Rio Grande College,
-. r.
"Lamp of the Hills." In 1980
Porter also wrote the 50-year
Veterans Memorial
history for the National ExecuTuesday Admissions - Julie ;; .·
tive Housekeeping Association.
Biron, Middleport: Sheila HarHe continued writing news part ris, Middleport; Alexander May,
time, and his column, "Peeps, A Pomeroy; Thomas Tobin, Mid·
Gallipolis Diary" appeared until dleport; Pearly Jewell, Rutland;
1986 In the Sunday Times· David Talbott, Racine.
Sentinel.
Tuesday ·Discharges - Elmer .
He was president of
Hysell, Penny Smith, Larry
polls Downtown
Curtis, Alexander May. . ·

- COII1UCfGIIS
R·
llf.....-.cll
1 1-)-ttn

Clald/,ed
eov.r 1M
jollo.,;O,,.,.ploo,.. ..o\capo.. .

Public Notice

LIMIT 4 WITH $10 PURCHASE.

1

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

~

Services

··--~ ---

.CANS

ELBOW MACARONI ,

Continued from page_
1 _ _ _ _ •...
·Port.er... _:....__:....___:_:

Real Eltate General

·..

IOI'IMI • • 011 Hf.Jift

'

WiOUih

In rile Closslfieds.

-

Tomato
Soup

Kraft
Mayonnais

200Z.

BI-RITE

h Will Be Music To lbur £on
When You TIMltln To rile Best&amp;,.

. . ....
.

=---~

3

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................................. 2874
Ashland 011 ..................... ...55~
BOb Evans ......................... .l5%
Charming Shoppes ..............12%
Cily Holding Co ................... 29
Federal Mogul.. ................ ,.34~
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ........... 5874
Heck's Inc.............................2
Key Centurion .................... 39%
Lands' End ......................... 21 ~
Limited Inc............. : ......... .18%
Multimedia Inc ...... ... ........... 52
Rax Restauranls ................. 3'!8
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... .......... 774
Shoney's Inc........: ..... :: ...... .l9'h
Wendy's Inti.......... : ............. 574
Worlhlngton Ind ............ ..... .l7~

· .Area deaths·

··--==~'==-~
,......,., _..._

12 oz.
CAN

Exlends lhanks

~

:CAMPBELL'S

Foodland
.White Bread

Orange
Juice

Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt EIDs &amp; Loewl

·- ~

KING SIZE
MINUTE MAID FROZEN

Dally BtOck prices
(As of 11:'30 a.m.)

·--

-

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.......__ .I

~

Stocks

..

·

'---~'...
,.,... .

:

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11 •.

1987-88 winter ·. heating season. ·
Income guidelines are the same
as the regular HEJ\P. Appllcatlon deadline for emergency
assistance Is April 15, 1988.
Emergency HEAP assistance
Is available only through the
Gallla-Melgs Community Acllon.
A&amp;ency. Applications must be
completed with a face to face
Interview by agency HEAP staff.
No appointment Is neeessary.
Appllcallons are accepted at the
three following locations, the
Gallla ' County .Outreach Office,
220 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis; the
.Meigs Counly Outreach Office,
39350 Union Avenue, Pomeroy
and the Agencies Central Office
In Cheshire.
For further Information about
the reguiar or emergency HEAP
programs, call Gallla·Metgs
CAA at ~7·7341 or 446-0611,
Gallla Counly or 992-6629 or
992-5605 Meigs County.

Announcements

-

T-Bone
Steaks

.,

The deadline for the regular
HEAP program applications Is
January 31, 1988.
HEAP Is a federally funded
program designed to help ellglble Ohioans meet tbe high costs
of home heating during the
winter months. To be,eligible for
the program the total household
Income must be equal to or less ·
than 150 percent of the federal
poverty guidelines.
Applications are available at
all Gallla·Melgs Community Actlon Agency Offices, as well as
the senior citizen centers, utility
companies, post office, and
many olher publ_l\! places
throughout Gallla and .Meigs
counlles. Application lnforma·
tlon Is also available by· calling
the HEAP hotllne at 1-8{)().2820880, .
.
.
The Emergency component of
the HEAP program was created
to provltl.e. financial assistance to
low-Income households. that are
threa.tened wllh a disconnection
notice, have already had service
disconnected or hav~ a ten day or
less fuel supply. Emergency
assistancE' Is a vallable only one
lim!' per household during 'lhe

RACINE -The Racine Volunteer Fire Department would like
to' thank th.e public for ll)e
donations received In IMir pic·
· ~ iure taking campaign. Some
scheduling problems did occur,
however, so anyone .who has not
Lynette Decker .of Lyndhursl, yet had their pictures taken as
M_..-kley
Und,a Diane McDonald of Lll· scheduled and would like to have
Bessie Viola Foreman Mark· burn, Ga. and Leila Ann Bldmar lhem taken,or anyone who may
ley, 114, of Coolville, died Monday of Clevland; and 11 great have experienced an lnconven·
lence In scheduling should ' subnight at Arcadia Nursing Home. · grandchildren.
mit a wrllten request to The
Besides
her
parents,
she
was
Mrs. Markley was born May 5,
1903 In Arcandum, Oblo, ' a preceded In ' dealh by lhree RacinE' VolUnteer Fire Deparldaughter of lhe late 1mmanuel slslers. Frances Baker, Fanny ment; In care of Doug Rees,
lreasurer; P.O. box 246, Racine,
and Susanna Nelswonger Fore- Dickie and Onda Foreman.
Services wlllll a:m. Thursday Ohio 45771.
man. She was a graduate of
\Vhlte Funeral Home In
at
Manchester College, Manches.
ler, In~ .• and worked as a school Coolville. Pastor George Horner
teacher for many years . . Sh~ will offlclale. Burial will be In Almual meethlg
The women'.s department of
lived for some time In ' lhe Coolville Cemetery. Friends
weslern United States while her may call at the . funeral home the Reorganized Chu·rch of Jesus
husband paatored with Home from 2 lo 4 and 7 lo 9 on Chrlsl of Latter Day Salnls,
Racine, will hold their annual
Mission Churches'. · Most re- Wednesday.
business meeting on Thursday at
cently. Mrs.'. Markley lived In Ellen Couch
7:30 p.m., ' at the church on
Marietta where her husband was•
Officiating al services Mrs. Portland·Rachle Road.
paslor of the Chapel On The Hill
Ellen W. , Couch, 89. · Pomeroy, Meet1n1 Thanda,
Church. She was currently a
who died Monday, will be lhe
Unified Citizens for Education
·member of Grace .Brethren
Rev. Liston Halley. ~rvlces will In Meigs Local School District
Church, Coolville.
be at 10:30 a.m. Friday allhe wlllmeet7p.m.,Thursdayatlhe
Survivors Include her hus!&gt;and,
Ewing
Funeral Home and burial American Legion Hall In
Rev. Lloyd R,. Markley, Coolwill
be
In-Beech Grove Cemtery. Ru !land.
ville; one son !lnd dau111ter-ln·
'
.
law, ' Rev .RQI;Iert \Vm. and ,
WIC pickup dates are annCNJnced
. .
Idabelle MArkley, CoolVIlle: six
The Meigs Counly Heallh De- 29; Feb. 2, 4 and 5 with makup
grandchildren, Robert W. Mark· ·
ley of Worthington, Rlch~rd Lee partmenlls announcing the Feb- . · days being Feb. 8, 16 and 22. Shol
Markley of Cleveland, Lloyd W, r~ary pickup. da\1! for the WlC dales for lht: monlh of Fejlruary
·Markley of, Pataskala, ·Ruth program. Dates are Jan. 28 and are the ~lh and 16th.

-

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

TENDERBEST QUALITY

'

State Sen. Jan Mlcha~l Long and State Rep. Jolynn Boster ·
announce the award of $13,860 1o the Meigs County Heallh
Departmen I to .fund a dental ~ealth project designed .to promote
good orar heallh.
.
..
.
Funding Is provided by the Ohio Department of Health
· thtopgh the Dlvlsln of Dental He.alth using federal maternal and
child health block grant funds, the two 9fflclals report.

TENDERBEST QUALITY COUNTRY STYLE

Cubed Beef
Bucket Steaks

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- - -·Local news--.. HEAP application
Grand jury s~ssion canceled
deadline_Janu~ 31 :

ALL THIS WEEK

Limit 4' Per . Visit Per Family · W_lth $10.00 or More
Additional Purchase:

JenUary 20. 1988

,

· WIMAN'S

..._

.

...... 1Q-lhe Daily _Sentinel

__

.

.:.

_

.

~

- . .....-·-··-· ...... ..--......

r ..~::b
145,000.00.

.

.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL , SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL Dl

We can...,..,
re•
core . rldilton · and
linter cores. Wt can
also acid boU and rod
out radlltors. We also
Jtplir Gu Tanks.

PAT HILL

992-21

•

�3

,--~·- ,' ­

Announcements .

· - . .. 17,200. 104-ltl·

----··

1141. .

y - - ....

1171-

..........
-

. SWAtN
AUCIJ10III • PUIININIII II

=--•••·-·
OIMit..o·•····

---8-AS
~~-- · Ic-

Ut ' "'• 12 ., ,...... c......ct
doyo 114-111·2031.......z.
2311 . AllOr 8 114-112·11147.

Anytime.

· 2 M .•

'

4

Givtlllway

5Y. moo. oldmalekittontoglvo
10·. ..-"""" home. Whlto.
Utt
t•o:ned. Coli 814·448· .
48

ow••
;:J.

·2

Kitten~

to give ..M-,.

614·44&amp;·7076 .

.

c

n

1

~·
t-~---~-"'!"--,-------_:,-~
·

HELPWANTED

ao...,;tul vouilil cot 10 ~ivo Locol co"""'ny- hlrinO 101
;2~~~ Nou,.rod. Coli 114·8 2- :;:..~,crn,:;.=::=:

Puppiet. htlf He-'tr. 304-182-

2648.

.

Free puppies, amtll, good hou11

polo, 304·176·7418.

8

·

·

Wedem8Yer's Auvtion Servic.
•v•ilable at vour convenienct~
and locations. Mar..,. Wid•
meyer Auctio""'· 814 ~ 241 -

5152.

9

31 · Home1 for

48R., ftroploco.t.lbllo-1.3
mi. oo. of G o -. 132,100.
Colt 0...0·814-&lt;141·1111 1 :00. &lt;141·1244.
•
e,.nd-3BR; -Gollip0Uo

Llohtllftlnoln- lf200o
mo. Proftl IMring • . other

LoabbnRt. 7 .2a.p.... nlr:e

We PlY' cuh-tor late modtt ciHn
used cart.
Jim Mink Chev .~Oidalnc .
Bill Gene Johnson
614 · 446·367~

I Mon. lftor 9:30AM .

t:emo. -orty,

'83

OowommOftt Jobo. o11,040·
119,230 Yi18r. Now Hiring. Your
Areo. 801·117·1000 'E•t. R·
9805fo•cu:rontfodorolllot. .

1orgo1n

priood. Col81.._:441-io31.

3 BR. houee. Land contrllct

131,000. •2100 - . ,, 2 :nttoi
frok m
Rt. 141 . won:lo I E-ogo oltor I PM·
8,4-441-8210.

,_.on

j:trraon to do houieclunlng.
Some cooking. muot bo OKi&gt;O' ,
rirncld with your own trmlty or . ~ented: ttou• with property Of'
ot.._.. Contre1: A.R. Knight
rlonr. Crown City'·
614·912-2433. Coli ot 118 Mo..-o oroo. Colll14,211·
Uncoln Rd" Pom....
·
1247.
,
If you''" ombltlout ond lookilltl
c....., opportunity, Jo'n the
NrttonWidr hwurancr f.mity.
Wohovoioaolpooplolillo .....
A1 en agent you c• •m

Go.....,mont Ho- for 11. IU
~irJ. DINnquent tax p1 o,.rty

for~

Aepo IJ 'ona. Cll 106-181~
1000En.DH·U05forc..,... 1
repo Htt.

*20.000ot"moretheflntye~rin

2 Mdroofn. 2 blthl, 2 OM
0...... aev.t lot on Rt. 331.

Send tMUme or can tor ..
•ppointment. NatkHtwklelnSur1nce. P.O. lox 1071. Marietta,

S~ng pool. tltellte, cioN
to MMgr High. Cell 814-112-

Oh. 45750. 614·374·8241. An
equol opportunlty-"&gt;yor.

3214.

I roorna end bllth, 0. , . .
ovtaide buildlr~~. niW •dtng 11ft11
roof, nerw carpet, wtlllntuleted.

W1nted: 10meone to w.tCh 2
chiklren In my home. I' m eirigle

.

Want to buv: Uted fumltura and
antiques. WiU buy entire houH·
hold tumhhlng. Marlin Wed•
meyer'. 6_1 4-241· 51&amp;2.
Buvlng silnding timber. Call

614·378·2719.

~~..:'~-~~"l:~

992·3478.
Raw tur, beef and deer hiclel,

Gvn Sing and YttkM root. we
!have whe.t and nile lhft.
Trapping supplies tor Mle. (Buy·
ing used ttapt). Lart day to buy
fur. Fa b. I. 1988. G8orge
Buckley. Hours12-9. 814-H4·
4781 .
.
'

Elllployment
Serv1~e:;

11

Help Wanted

WANTED: BHCC seeking Adults
tor training. Basic Education,
ABE / GED. Job Sicilia, EmPloy·
ment Asalstance, and Financial
Aid availabla. Contact Adult
Se rvices a t 614'·245 · 5338 .
Don' t delay do it todayl
EXCELLENT WAGES for tpara
tim e lltembly worll: elactranlcs, c rates. Other~ . Info 1 -604·
641 -0091 Ext. 2987 . Open 7
d ays . C ALL NOW!
TE X AS . REFINERY

CORP .
needs mature. pe..aon now in
Ga llipolis area. Regardl••• of
tra ining, write H.J . Hopkins, Bo 11
711 . Ft. Wo rth , r •. 78101 .

912-3150.
1979, 1•b70 ·,,...., with 7x24

~~..... nlco.614·742·2840

••Pinda. 3 Hdroom, Stow ond

13

lnsurencl!

assume loan. ptymentt

Call us for your mobile hama

Insurance: Miller Insurance
304 -882 w21411i . Alto: auto:
home, IHe, hetlth.

0187.51, 304·675·7209 or
171-7114.

' 34

Profusional Retumq. Send in·
formation tnd *10 to: 577 Sun
Valle-., Dr. G1lllpoli 1 Ohio

Butlness
Buildings

t300 · UOO · S600 · Per Week.
Yellow Pa ge "Still po:&gt;ple
needed. Only
·.· ,~-, ., ..
experience
resume to
· Gallipolis
Third Ave .•
45631 .

,.

Naeded: A director 9f nurling lor
a SNF· ICF Facility." locatlld in
South..atern Ohio. Previous
experiJflc::• detired. Qullities:
Should ~tv• good management.
leadenhip, &amp; . nursing skJHt.
Excelent ulary • benfths. lend
rnume to : Boll Cll.-125, c/ o
Gallipolis Oaitv Tribune. 821
Third Ave .. «isllipolls; Ohio

45831 ,

' .

SMALl
WA~ADS
A8IJ Plfllff

2188.E.O.H. .

Luaury T. . Ap.rtrMnta. a.
gent. Z Sr. 2 floor, · fully
cerpetect, CA and Met. PtMte

z-.omtumloedoPt.mond
w, y 1
304·992-3287 or 304· 773:
.
5024.

depotit, Naw Keven,

Nice 1

992·6403.

614·992·2214.

loll of TLC , 304·171-1730. .

GAOVERNMENT HOMES,
from t1 ,000 IU re.,.ir) dallnquent ta• propertiM and NPO'I.
For current 1111 call 1 - 100 ~3SS·
468~ ext. 3670 al.a open

even•ngs.

41 . Homea for

Rent

3 •R. hou• •v•nge. A -1 Aaal
Emte. Carol ..VlfiUar·Broker.

Adu~s -

tinan

houll
· Rol. :oqulrod. N~

P\licely furnlehed

pott. CoNC14·441-0331 .
Large 2·3 BR .

hou•. Plenty ot

naraea HHdenon .,... C.l
114·-·7025.

114·-

Busine11
Opponunity

3

·0008.

•

Bod....;.:,. 2 bOtho In Choot:iro

on Rlvertrant. Avtlllble March

I NOtiCE I . (..
THE OHIO VAUEY PUBLISH·

CoN
o"1'4.i'&amp;7:7its'rol7.orIOIJulrod.
1·703·318·

lNG CO. reco:nmende that you
do bwlnea whh people you
know, and NOT to Hnd money
~hrou"" the maw until you htvt
•nvelttglted the Dfflring.

Small grocery ltON wtth oc::et·
mNt • deli dept .• lnwntory
equipment . Help on financing
eq~t avaU.bM. u ... on
bulldlot - · In Golllpolls.

Sortous lnquhlot only Coli 114·441· 1843.

l'u...,ilhed Room•

I ,i.AY"'E'II!URNITURI
,.,.;. o..t ....... .,.._ -

t!¥1 10 · -· Toltloti- H:f
upt1&gt;1121,Ht-ool•-·to
1211 to
l371.
· Ill .. 1111.
D - 11 ..,., .. ':1'a:'::o.*W.,r.
H - "!JO "''I ... -

:":#

=

Mill wrnp.l11 . ..._.

·
·
Merchandlie

114 .Mile:.

J-

,..,.......,_021,1a"-·
11~11M.

U- . _ - 3 - .. •Col

t:,~·

~==

:,,•:,::."::'""G,:.":t4'::
1417.

40·
aoon¢11 IMDfriiWa·...-

-..o

=•

100 food p1owo •
- · 12111. AC D-12

n·,

traDior wtlh ...... oultlwtut,
O&lt; , filM. Ownwwlll

.Coii14-211...Z2,

month. ,

81 .........

room "" o-on

Up.ln. PrM:te antnnca. •1zi
monthly. 114; 892·7204.

Space for Rant

Office S,.ce b rent. Excel.
daw~own OaiUpoUt locMion.
lnquir~tt caR 11 4-441·4222.
Corr:tMn:lal bulld"'tJ for 1.....
DowniOwn Pl. Pleeaanl. ltorH.
offtcet. A· 1 Real Eltatl. C.rol

Yoog•, Brolio:'. Col 304· 111·
15104.
I
COUNTRY MOBILE Honio Pork.
Routo 33, North of p 0 _,y
Rtnlll lflilets. Cell 114-HZ~
7471.

·

•••

101
1114Cfwrolotl......... - .
-rive
Ill 111'1 Itro-lioft
oot'
Root Dnl . ot 14,100.00:

llool:.
·~·21tlori71·17U.
·
·. .

JM.
' • .

,

, •·

-.IMiil·

TNckt for . . .e , \

Chow. - ·
~
point. niw'wl&gt;-. tiro~, ., '
englna. can 114.414.1"" ..
0114.
'-

c.....

1172

---:::-=":":a~tlt=':m~ll~we;w::lll::_:f«):::T SEE."

pld:up. PI, PB,

olum . . , good Colll14·117·otl0,

·

11J8Food4--.F·1110. :
V·l. lb. - · 14111. Col
., ..378·2741.,
' •. 1
1171FoodF·100. e .....

plak.., 11100. 1177 Panl F210 •
drift. UjOO CoR
11 ..1141·2801 .
'
.

LOANS

__

Fl-

(formelly PM'IOn'l Pumllure)

1411

e - Avo.

...n ..., on comp1e1e
.-... M~. Jan. 11th thru
10 tK

·

• lot.. Jon. Zlnl.

~--1171.
up.
' mp~•utep. ouhoo
1411.11 I
up_..,eo&lt;,
mlcacuuawen.nda

1 - 11 •

Canw In and
OWMn.

mee\ .._

MW'

I

..

~~-:,0..~#."~'·

doll ....... . .........
Coulllloo. Doll-

.,.... _ _ _" ' _

An.......,.., lied. Ful

atla

rKrt

or iol. R ~~ 1124 Eolt Moln lt..
011tii'Of. Haurt: MH TUM
-Wo:l. 10:00o.:n.-I:Oop.m"
8 ""· 1:00 p.m.-1:00 p.m. aY.
a._. or appal •••••· RUII
Moora. 11 ..912·2128.
Anllquoo.

'----------.J

''

'7,8 · Auto P8111
•

\

Acce.aorlet

I

Dlk · tl:aaDiilll. c.l 304-87S·
2717 4:10 'p.m. ""
WaadntaiL

100--. . .

84

Hay

~

Grefn

.I

Apple-~-.
- Milii.oo. Col bot

Mlxod hoy or olfollo • l!oJoo.Mixo:l .... ·lortoround
boloo. , Coli If 4·211·33134
J o - . fltllo.
'

.,
1:00.1:00 pm. 104-171·-·

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

="'

t::o.,.o....

". .

·-·
-.
. - .... c.......;plpoo m_f,~1oroo!fo. o . Col ., ..

yen1 or

'( .

'
,

!
Ctil ...... i

Free 1111, ....

0

( · R£·(~LIOO)

'

for billa
11 JleiiMinl
11 Menu item
14 Ebb
11 Do~
18 "Meeee . double" ·
. . ·. Jl Bllclcblrd
J2 ·Fate ,
U Peck 11KJ\iie

...,,, d

,,'

.

SWEEPER ond-"" - " ' '
Npiolr', ond iuPJI(foo. ""*l ;
up """ ~. Drill Yio--1-" . ,
Cle•n•; one llelf ,..ie'iii.,. . .:.
Goo 1101 Crooll lid. Colt If..~ ' .
448-0214.
. ' ·:~•.,

. .•

RON'S Tetevleton Service . ·~
H- ,.,. RCA o-r
GE. lptcllllno in
c.i .
-·171·2181 or . "4·441· •
2414.
'
\
•

z.n...

(with
: MY ~RENTe
6LJ~ F-IG-HT

A LOI..

'"l'hej

C::0 'fOl.J THINK
THEY!..L ePL.II
UP?

OH,IHEY'LI.NEVER SPLII

UP. ..

71

Auto'1

For S1le

1-:::::-::-:---....:..1111 D-. Omnl 4 *

Sele

Rotory

or . - -

'THEYRE: 60TH AFPAID
THEY'D ~TSO!..e
CUSTODY' CF ME. .

II Place for

111-3102

"'
''•"' ~
•••

c-- ..... •.

· - T- ond Lawn - . ·~
'ltwn
lendiiiiPI• Slump ~
removal, 304·171·2142 or t

-

~;::;:;;:;==- 'l1

tS,OOO miMI. ou..: .. 1811
..
"--0 a.....__ 4
:.~ ...-. .
~r. , 11.000
1••• DocJ.
.. "'· 40,01fo
h..... 2.2. • CoU ., ...78·2721.

c•

. , .. 2103.

82 •

.

.'

Plumbing
HNtlng

·

a

COr.--- '.
QaN~OII..

. g -IM-171·1410.
- · l'lobr:ollood
Furniture,

......._ .,..
-4477

'

-

'

or

"

n l · ~'

84

Electrk:ltl
•

Refrlgernlon

/""

..
.

11'1"

or Jane
17 fllppenlng Z7 Show up
88DockliExempllr ' II Hit lip
II In a pet 81 Belna (Sp.)
workers•
-·

~

'

. .. Selleck

tor one

' 18 Exile

..-

HWork
. ~ on copy
40Get even
-tl Aria, e.g.

01.: BULLET'S
GOT TH! ITCH

REAL BAD,

ooc ..

. THAT PORE
OL'DOG

I WARNED YOO

-~!River

ABOUT TAGGIN' ALONG

ve,ael
-t8Cowboya01'

WITH SNUFFY

aan,er..
e.J!.

DOWN

.

I Turf
2 Harem.room~J.,....L-1-.L...

DAILYCRYP'IOQUOI'BS-Here'lllowtewortlt:

-

1110

AXYDLBAAXR

IILONGFELLOW

.........

Mualcel
lnetrumenta

grp.

81 Secaet

more tlwl

- - -IIZ·ZOU.

17

:::=

.·. 12 Domingo,

____ ...,.. __

.....

0

· pllfe word
11 Usher
111 Half 1
. 21 ltalla'1
confedion
capital
18 PythiU'
23 Pasebook U.Aplece
I? John
· .buddy
entry

SO Not

·=·.:r. o-.
.........
. - ~••,..
Loop 12"

IUftlx ..

t Society·

18Cond1Uon
18 Jl'onillcary
denilen

,.

Me;c ....ndiH

Wlllta Geu11en lhepherd ·
· 1M PDIII Pulllllaadad. Cd 114441·1148.
.'
.

'

8 Taxonomic

18-Carlo

I •

CARTER'S I'LUMIING ~ ;
,AND HIA11NO
'
·

7 Equalif¥

II "VIall d'

.., eg

~"li.
·~.

M01twaltaoc: plllld..,.
Pump ......... ·

v

11 Place

1·114-217·-· ..., or"""" ,
Roeeral•aement "t .

w-.........

.¢"

aF:a""'

10 Redolence

y

I

I Jl'oolblll

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

RE:ALLY?

D , ....._. .,.._...,.. ~

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

'

===-~--~~~~~~-~~

•~••

Pet• for

..

'

.' Ill\ w.baL wer
· ' M0t11 · -

.ACIOIB
1 London

Fetty Tne Trlmfwlnl.
NmCMil. Call 104-171--tU1 . • · -.

Co.. 1211&gt;1: , P1no It

Ill

~ un

IAIEMINT
WATEIII'IIOOI'IIIG

( Bl·'i'Q.IJJG

~~:

all.,..,...
........,.............

-.. _.., ... _. ol
OOUCfl. tuDDiaa. Cll U1 V.....
a.eo-t onCI I!!PPII
304-771·1214·.
~ 0 ...

•'

-lc-

Mixod hotlor'"tlolo ......ro
Mlo:o:l .... lo kilO round
Coli . , 4 ·111·1334.

11. 11•• 20ft. .............
1120 ft. 304-111-

R~ _,_

Home
lm..-menu

81

Old l&gt;uffot. oond. T- old
minow dNI&amp;II'I. llnier trMdltt

&amp;4 Mite.

ea••

'

'l'lnnill'l prtoee..
,_.,, OW Rt. 2 1 · ln IIJDIIMIM• Roed, 1!1111 R•
111•• uaad, Frl, IM. 111ft· noon,
8:00 ..... - .· 271-Hii.

, _ Aco

,.••I"

.....

Wy - damm(i aee o1 ap1t1ea ·
llld lm!Mollot.ely cellwd 1111 A·K of
lrearta. Sa "" abotlt tAl plaJ a third
lrelrt wileD lie_..... 111111 tat_..
4NT
'·
problam lllltblr...,_.. bad
Nrted Willi ,_ ............. So be
DIIJed aee of diiDWMiollld I di•"'I''d
Opening lead: • J
to file klllc· WlllJ'• •Nn~r~ns "" 111a1
lie Cllllld brrJI!Ile a bad diamond apUt u
IIIII loti&amp; fiPPOIIDII trump wu In tbe
11D11 liiDd- Willi- tbe leattb In ~ amondnlld !hell •
·
DWM1o Of ClOanl 11 dlo!!M!!Mh split
a ,o., belrt to dumaleel)', be wwld draw tbe llllrd trump my's 10. If trumps were dlvldltrg 1-Z :
Willi IIIII jiCk Ia tlumiay llld raa tbe dl· Cbrrrlle would theo play dummy'i .
.•mceclaalt. Tao
Ellt nfled spade klllc. tlrrowia&amp; a diamond, llld
tire tet:oad diamond llld led 1 club tAl De:tt ruff a low diiiiiO!Id 1n bll band
let tbe eotllrllct two trlcb.
wlllr tbe .kiD&amp; of bearll. Even llloap .
caretal Cbrrrlle UOwl tbe uner tAl dliunoada are ._1, CbrrrUe would
taday'a problam. Bewwld Will tbe ace back tAl dumm)' wllb tbe jadl of belrll ;
of lplldel, pll)' ace of beartl, ace ol dl· :.r:':'ae~ dlamoads aDtl just make 1111

TO HAVE SPIJN
OU'r Of C.ONj(?OL.I•
.

.

Pt .

-Otou••·-..a=t..:.,
... aom.

Oolll at'o. Ohio Col 114•.,..:
278i.
.

Corl&gt;ln I 8nydor F...-,. · IBi
S-Aw. 114·- ·1171.

tiD
t15U

_..1fnc:e

•••...., •z2.oo.

-

AntlqiHtt

••u

...........

·~·-

IUIII'WI DENIM, Comort
I I - Ckd&gt;ir4-- .,_y

CorMCllli bi9CU

&amp;3

C~GE

.)

'BOlts end · ·
. MotOI'I for Sale

· _
,._,.,.,..,
: 178.
Goo . Fla wood - e40. dill•••
.. _
...... ' f78,
Uooto
·HEAP: 11177 .........
~
~~~· ia
~11820MC,21oo- .
;:.u"!'"' ""'Rd.. 114-141·
· - · Jo4..171·2J81.
ao ....
round · - of hlud
....,..~=­ .....
3 piece b • droom tUtlt tor Nla
120.00 por CoN
trlmloo_.,._ ... 114·141·2112
. .\
.
- 1:00, -171·1218.
: : . : = · . :._ . . -. Coli
M421ud2 hotl IGr . . .. Coli 81 .. '
.
7 . 711.
·
dool:o
•.
lo:nj;o,
....Cht. c11o1ro. dhwlto, n:1oo.
:.;:" ..... ., .oo bolo. 104·
Holf milo out lioN.
1211.
'
1:00·1:00 luodoyo 12 :00· lluHdlng .. _
1:00. -··71·1410.

.....- ..... ......_ ......

Rfvot.vrN(i

.
76 ·

EAST
tQUU

wm,,

'

1183
'
r.:. "'""-·
......, 1____
.._..._n_ock
___
131.00.

MY

.....

Wanted to Buy

tl4

.. twli · ~
.
Ill plaJIDI tbe
Iliad. 'l:'bllll ~DOt true. UafOrtu.
aaw, for
too ottea be tete~~ tbe
pneeatltD. Here'• bow be

ACCdUNT )~i!MS'

82

.JilT
tKQtf.IJ

. Perllli...... of JOII wbo follow tbe

four -

- ....... - . • ~. Col
,...,_Rd., Gllllpalll, 011. 114-811-1112.
- · 1 2 1 1 a up IJwlog
rooM ooltoo·UOD ' • up\ Fila bad felt ..... tt.daood
Rnii.,.,...*1H ·• ._u,.~·
110 por ..._ . _ , . . at •• • yd. F
' · wood•• , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
llvdlblc to qultfled buyere C.
...__ 1 - · 2x4, 2xl, 211 ot
114·-·7444.
·
1 - Co. Rd. 111. ....~
lid~.,._Coli 114·182·1122 Ol
U::od ........ oOfo I ollolr. Cor11ift 12:0JU ~·
.
lo lnyderFumlturo,lllloo:io:l
Aw.,l1 .. 441·1171.
,
U Houl _ . . ond ... for
..m. 304-178-7421 .
J loS FUIINITU(IE
MolloMRFumhuN

James Jacoby

J.ll.u

tAK

ea~ al WlllJ NWJ t1r1Dt lbat be ileV·

10ft

·
'
.
VolloyF....,_
----.112,_
New Mid Ulllld ~ 8ftd • ...._ Contalulnt IIPPfOL 1~
IPDiiceneee. Call 114-441· tall. .01. OWO Plllt Co.
71'72t ftourt. t..a.
Pueuup, Ohio. 114-112-. . .1.

u,.,

NORTH

.,,._J...,

- 1 1 . -........ -.Vory • ,
~ OOftd. On Nll~~atftaad ' ·
~ • ..._... Aol:l"'! 11111.' ,I

_.. 741.

........

BRIDGE
right way
to be careful

a.,..•.,

·

.

Th~

............ wttl: - · llodlol • '

·1tlt

SCllM LITS ANSWEU

Q~ -:_l,.ully - Enot ·- '1'llllw ~ NOT SEE
1
we - - 111 pl!lloaoplly: "Children .,. the living mauegee

,. ;·-;;7;.;;;;;,;-.;·-I
:;Col~.;;1~11~4-.441
c........ lllwndd'lt -·

~

Rooms for renL d..,. wwek.
eon 11 4·

441·8180.,R- oolow oo 11 20

In

110

=..~Mr.' - ;•aeo.oo.

72
I liZ
' N"'
"
new.

.CROII.tiONI '
U.l. 31 WiOt.
Ohio
11 ..211-1411 .
·
'
·
-H-..t.

, .1

"',

12.000.00 -

11 Ferm Equ!pment

m:."::··~.:£= ::.-":.!~·=·-==--~ ~~PG::~ ...._ IOIIOtioll
1

month. ~llo Hotol.

I

Rent -lellt -Ltnd Conuaot :
H -. In luroko,. Ro:IMy VII·
l.lge II , Evena H(ltt. Dep• • Ret. ·
required. Btaokburn Reahy

~III&lt;I IIWI

ceiling flnt,.groundlcare,for, no
children or ~ phane l&lt;M~

48

304·875·5104.

Will do blbv sitting in my home

1pt, water and
. DlrQIO:e l peid, ; air cond and

45

Loving grandmOther want 1 10· 20 acrn In Hemlock Grow arM
blbystt in her home. Lives in Co. Rd. 31. E.. - . hunting.
Same timber. 114-812-728'7
Thurmon . Coli 114·245·949&amp;,
1fter 15:00 p.m.
Give !Mano. Cillo Keyboard snd
Grgln leuone in my home
beginners. advan'cld 8tudentl
Also teach chording and ll'ln,:
posing. If Interet IN call e14·

Will do Federaltnd State Income
Taxet; t'fPing, booking. end
Notary Mrvlce. M1rgeret Parker

Md~m

773·53&amp;.2 or :lo4·182·2827.

home. Coll614·388·8287.

,.,.

- o.
.,J.~

i ............

'" Downtown GlllllpaHa wh..
off........, parting. Alto I· room
unfumlthed ap11111nen1 In 01116pollo. 304·171·4110.

Acreage

c-.~· l1

cond7'Cd .,.:. ...:

304·812·2561.

Lots •

. •

0000' UIID ,V,UANCU

&amp;'::'

~Of Rent: Comm.:C1a1 Building

35

HU.
1t71 Cloovy M....,, 4 -

w--.
..,...,~ ~~=====:::::===;:=~======:J
u"~' 1•1-n~o.

Mlf* and Rivert6dt Apart· Con.wnnlonwood.OMittow
m.nts .In Middleport. From lome free 00111 wllh aove'
1211, lnol:o:llot ,: :tiMtl•; Col . 1210: Coll14·-·-3.
·
81 ...n2-7787. ~QH.
Gold IOfo. Ill ln. ·1ona: 1100. 2
~ roomt. unfumiltted. C.llt4alub aMira. 110 MOh.
9121434- •"'_.. 112 2118" ·
• .· ......_._ 110
·.
- -·
.
·
A
11111_ _
Cot11g1 .niclency.· totll elect·
I.
ric. rtfrigelator, ltove, me.. K o - --·wf:lto. 171.
HUD approv.d. 22115 Mt. Vtr- Kenmore we"*'-cop,ertone
non Aw., Pl. Pl....nt. 114- t71: G.E . ••att•:A.vaoado'
912·5118.
.9• . 4 .... br·lidltwflp;t178 ,,
• APARTMENTS. moW-~ -tor ·til
:whlfwa·
• t ·
. . iChiVW&amp;IOt
. Pt.-niondGom,.:
•
•. . . . . ln. - no. 114·441·8221 .
_"'"'-!1 ........ 31 ••.

. . Hooch Strtiot, Mlddloj,ort, Ohio,
2 bedroom, fumlthld -,.t, utNi·

.

Want to do b_,.alttlng in my

21

Pice ffOfll 1113... tno.
to
ahop rnd mD¥111. 114-441-

tiel peiid, reJnncn tnd depoett.

Wanted to Do

41831 .

Jw•

G,.._ IMng. 1 and 2 bedroom ' lptll'tmentl et VHllge

1987 c._,. 14x7o mobi•
homo. 10% down poymont,

Unlimited Income. Anyone may
quality . Call 814-446-8273 af·
ter 7 PM .
.

Sell Avon . Gat voor own 4von.t
a ditcount. CaH 814 - ~6 - 33158 .

1177
~-~-·
·· - .- :
..
- .good-.1-.lllw
- ~
_,.ttuga MOO.OO. _...,...... ~

c
.
r

8

14x7_0 WindiOf with 14d0
Mklition. 3 bed root'M, black top
road. appro• 3 ecret. O.IMpotia
Ferry. 304·171·,1 110.

'W.

Titus. Clark. Pa. 11113

I

OM.

,,

DE~IR

Fumlthi:f 2 IR. - t
Adu~o
-·
oi
F1tlrotlnor•.only.
Olive!llo
St ..- uk
tiMRoM

sendretumeto8oxC-1eCireof
Point PtHunt Regilller. 200
M•n St .. Point Pl....nt. w. v 1.
25550.

18

Va. auto licenae plates
wanted before 1916. Clarence

m:\

R - . Inc. lui o r - 111,'t
1111f 11t-441·1MO.
Aorte. Col 304-171·7738 or lit, 1211, '"""
1111·1104.
1110. 4 - c - l l l . e . . , 12;..!2p..••••*•"
117
1
- - - - -.....- -. . 6 . .. Gat tM' . . . . . .
h.SWW
U.......
Fuml-. opt ..... to llllrory, , . _ 1178. lolly
t .... 11 lloeMc;obi 12 to
Ono p&lt;Ot.oolonol- only. 131. 141.1od- t20
114....._334t: \
.
P_,.'ilil· Col 114·441·0331.
110 • Kina g..,j·
•lrltfon ol ' '.¥
·~ ,,.. • ....,.NnsDWI. Pie ad
2 BR, opt. • - • ..trig. - • . - . . . . h-:io::W tao •no. Du,. byol: - · Hoop
fvmlltlld. Near Go Man. C.H and Up to • •·
VOtlohrn rooepted. Do•'•
114-441-7021.
'
··········-·
.,
Un'ldueprr. C•ll 114-44110 Dor• •rile 01 ' aooll -·
IEAunFULptiiCE&amp;l
APA"ll:IENTI
AT BuOPIIIOIIOdRd.
...-.
M._
aut · IA;;i;ito~Qi;;;;;j;;;;i.,:ij
IUDo.,AT JACK·
o.,.n 31om
.. 1Dm
Atoll 2100, 0 - • • • • 11
-0 122·. tl:ru lot. Ph. 814..... ~.tr."'
ION EITATE8, 131
. , 110. Coli 114·
poimod. - ·

1

.......... "..
R.N ., physicians office. p1M11

-=-=

2 BR. IPtl. ecloHb ••ltcMn·

2 BR, portioly lumllho:l. In
town. U7&amp;. All U1llitiw paid
Calll14-446-8723 8ftet 7 PM:

1978 WI ndeor
. 14x70 with •·
pondo. 3 BR., oil otoc., CA.
M,ONEY FOR COLLEGE Ia naii· "'f''ther&amp;dryer,lwnlngt porc11
able to individUIIt who becam 1 _yndllfPinn~. EKcM. eond. Mud
m.mbwt of the Army N1tional .... Call 814·882- 7437 efter·8
Glillrd, call 304·175·3950 or PM.
1-800-142-3819.
1-,.,---~-----12xl0. In Mldd-. Colll14·

Standing timber. Call 814-742-

2 328.

A-rtment
..for Rent

Fumllhi:foportmont, 4roomo•
both. 1or2odultro. Nopote. Rof.
• - · :lop. ,..ulrod. Col
114-441·0444.
.

;n my homo.

800,142-3619.

Buying daily gold, silver. coin•
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins. lilrt• curnncy, Top pri~
en . Ed Burkett Barber Shop
2nd . Ave. Midd1epart. Oh. &amp;14: .

44

Aw. • "

IA~II-

d~

••eellent lhepe, custom made
oil ellc. 08700, Coli 114·111:
4429.

VETERAP&lt;(S: L:.t ut help pay your
Chrletmat bUio. A'""' N 0u•rd·rl)er1·tlme ]obt·full tifnt,
RNnlflts. 304-676·3960 or 1-

1:1

Upllllrs 3 room • beth, fur·
nilhed. Cle.n. Utiltt... ,...._ Ref.
•
roq.-. Adultt .....
'fo Pt'tl. C.l 114-441-1111.

Tr•Uer for .•••· 1984 14x70

AVON · All INtt. Call Mtrityn
Wnver 304-882·2141 .

614·446·3169 .

mobllo or

pl•ytrou.nd. lt.rt-•211 per
month. Uti- ln-o:l.
Coii14·317·JSIO.

-;--------·lc-

-le-

ture, 3rd. &amp; Olive St. GaHipolit.
Complete houNhokls of tumi·
ture &amp; •ntlquu. Alto wood &amp;
coal hRtert. Swtin't Furniture
&amp; Auction, Third • OINe

~r~O~=hla=·~:R~o:lo:~o~-~·1

;·l

lD-4i·ll

entrMN.en:' rrdpetlo.IIOOI6

'Bill del

Coli 114-445-3119.

Co~

of

otc

26, ond wo&lt;l: owing lhlft. Could Mooon W.Vo. Coli 814·992·
work out living •r,.ngrnentr. 2813.
'
a.,d newer · uied can. Smith ' Roloroncoo. Coll814· 742·2790 .
B,tJiclt-Pontlac, 1911 Eettern or 114·742·2416.
32 Mobile Homes
Ave .. GallipoUt. 'Ctll 814·441·
2282.
Got pold for &lt;Oo:llng bool:tl
for Sala
1100. P"'tHie. Wrilo: ACE·311
WANTED TO BUY• Usod wao:1 111 S . Uncolnwty,N. AutoN 11:.
'
S. coel hNten. Swain's Fumi· 10142.

, ~OP, c•;H P'id b'

2 kod:-n nolloi' lor ..... In
lloclno. t119.00:=:IiMw. ·Rof.
-2112. - ·
111.,.141·

=:':::.:a~:~.:::j: :::,;,1:"'!!::."': ion..;.:: ::'.;...';,""::"

Alary pfua MldltioMI bonUIIa.

~ntedTo Buy

••·
DIIOil.,..._.,_,
....... -117 ....
lnl.

Sele

=:--~==---pr~~perty

Public Sale
l!o Auction

111C Ch•uaue. 4 ' owL , .,... •

':·~~-=

....
_,.,,
- nliO
·· · -' 1210
..,...
lioo.l14·112·7 71. "

1178.00. "

aand.MW_OW _ _ ...,, •:
10 MMwll. _.....,... ~·
10• l00 ......
. 100
'
•
,....
' "'•

e-ra :

.-...

~-

"Marth I W
. . a.
/e got any
mtermedi'ate-range nuclear
•
l es?"
'
ffi1SS
·

-.

F,.. ta goad home In country
M1le German Shepherd. 1i
ni ontht old, 304·875·1.8 10 . ·

~,... • ....,, Jooon
. · 111·1111. Dnko.
...._, •oom•tau 11M
. , . .; .A. .......... . .
•w

Wedol11t1 I I . • 1 - .
- • · Colll1 ..- . l , l t.
1

11 H_e_l.:_p_W_•_n_tltd.:.:,_
FOUND' T- cooo, topoo. Coli ___
· toldentHy.e1•-3&amp;7-77
. 4&amp;ottor 1
1
6PM.

-..:i:,J':.-·

ou

a b1doom unfuri.l.hed. aww

~--7171·.
~··-

. . .- - - . 110

--110000
·-•
. .
'77

.,

...........

:mr•ta•i wl.d ..,..'t..

'

Winter C._ence . up io 71
pen::ent off. The A.nJc. 203
Bridge St . Quyendotte. Rt. 2,
Hu'!,1ington.
1

71 ...._ ...-. 4 I'll.,...

-

-••ta'tan ·
~...
lloollooro

.......

N._ 2 81 drDOnl ......... L.1rM
- · . . . . . . Coll14-441.
'7411.
~

authori:Nd f110t0ry ut. and
.. rvtce reprqen.,thftl. for

phone 304·137-2272

··

~-.

_...,I 'I I fill.

ATTENTION ELECTRDLUX
CUBTOMEIIS
· · ·
Frtnk Futb It "now yoUr
·-

"

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

- · 1114'

• IJB-14N.

One letter lltandl for another. In thll umple A Ia ·illed
"- for; the tine L'1, X for tbe two 0'1, etc Sln&amp;Je JeUen
IPCIII•
lqtbandformaUan ol the wordl are
linll. Eac~dq tbe c:ode leUen are diffeiMt.

.-.the

j

•'

''

.

,,

1•10

·

Own your own .,...,.. ar ·shoe
•tore. c::hooH hom : Jean·
sparuw . . r. tadlll. mens,

X

large -.._
petite. danctwe•·•lfObic brf.

ad

ca1Pl'OQUai'B

0

cu

c

UP Jt GJJI'p .

chikl,....mat~~mtty,

dal,...lln(l«&lt;e 0t ICC
Ad~

1Crtee

colar tnalysls.

OCXPJB '

dor..

lr~nd

nomoo: ua Clolbcmo. H•ol-. ·

c-. ..... lt. 11-. Fo..
na.

lutlo

PQJ

loy, t..vt, Comp
Baverly Hills, O(G,nlaally
Grown, Lucia: owr2
OIINra.

. . ..

Or 113.81 ~"',tee dulg
m:.:ld tilr pftclne 'I l EM

p Q J

*·

U P.N G :1 Jl' p

v z··o j

u~ p

OCXPJG
'

_ _"1 __ .,
to 110. Over 10 1100
. . .. 017.- .. fii.IDO:
l_
n. 0
,
.......
. . . .. Coo

trol?;-·*·

r. IWnoy '
'

' I · Z V V J .-W J

......

ZF

OC'~PJBU-

LZBR

Of

~~--. Run-.blo lor top - " " '

· 11 d:oyo..
112·HI·I31t.

OQZ

.. V· X L J

.T .. B. .
. I I
, J y Z II ,.
~~ Ots;l t 1111 Till ONLY

ZL

.-

. . W~: : : : - IIAMB WllW.iii".i-

�Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Kentucky
limit Quantities

.Daily Number

loses,.58-56

The Ri&amp;ht To

. STORE HOURS
Monday 'thru ·Sundoy
8 AM-10 PM

434
Pick 4
4621
Super Lotto
I 0-16-27-28-33-35

.Page 3

.ALL.
WEEK

•

. JANUARY 17

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 23, 1988

n

I

,u.s.D.A. cH~ICE

.

La _

Chuck Roast .••••••.

$ . 29

1.

Limit20
Coupons:·.

·. . ·

'

LB · .

Fryer .Parts ••.•••• ~••. 3·9&lt;

·Pork Cube Steak.~.
'

2-39

8-14LB. AVG.

LB.

CRISPY SERVE

Bacon ••••••••••••••• ~~ ••• 89&lt;
. .

i

HOMEMADE

1

A

Sandwich ·Spread.~·•• 99 &lt;

2 Sections. 16 Pages

25 Cents

were not open. Students In these
programs were assigned to a
series of study halls or permitted
to leave the building.
"2. The Occupational Work
Education class at the hlgll
. school was without a teacher. ,
· "3. Several Individuals were
not appropriately certificated for
their teaching assignments a~
required by Section 3319.30 of thli'
Revised Code ana Section 3301;
35-03 (A) of the 'Admlnlstrallve
Code.
·
"4. Lesson plans were availa·
ble to give direction for lnstruc.
lion. For the most part, course$
of study were availa ble in tht:l:
elementary schools. In the junlol"
high school, some teachers haa
courses of study. some did not. In
all but a few Instances. courses Q!
study were 'not available in the,
· high school. Several teacher.s
had no guide to basic texts:
;
Continued on page 16 ·

New county maps available

.VI

•

·

offered Include guidance, health, Meigs Local School District on
psychological, remedial reading Wednesday, Jan. 12, 1988. The
and speech therapy .
evaluation was tonducted In
·'"What Is really shocking,' response to a number of com·
Wilfong said, 'Is that this superln· plaints alleging that the district
tendent and board of education · was operating contrary to law
~till refuse toacceptanyreasona·
and standards of the State Board
ble solution to the strike. They of Education. The aaminlstrahave resisted many proposals,
tlon. has established a manageIncluding .binding arbitration,
ment plan and given attention to
and they have Ignored advice · the Instructional program. pupil·
from a federal mediator and
teacher ratio, and pupil safety.
. even their own attorney. •
Results of the evaluation di·
'"Apparently, out of a sense of reeled to Dan E. Morris, superln· ·
revenge, the school board would tendent of the Meigs Local School
rather the State Department of District, are as follows:
Educatidn would close the
"1. Certificated vocational
schools than to settle with the teachers were not available to
teachers, .. Wilfong concluded.
provide· the required vocational
Following Is the statement on program. Some vocational pro·
the evaluation Issued by Frank- grams were not operational In
lin B. Walter, Superintendent of · that students had ava!lable to
Public Instruction In Ohio:
them only the related and 'aca·
"Staff members · of the Ohio dem!c classes. Automotive, elec·
'Department of education con· Ironies, .vocational agriculture,
dueled an onslte evaluation of the and welding shops-laboratories

FLAVORITE
•

-

·

Pomeroy-.-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday. January 21 • 198B:.,_______...;.._;___..,:A.::M:u:lt::.:im:,:•:::di:,•:.::•n::;.&lt;-~N::•::w:lap::::•=:P•::,•~

·

Turkeys ••••••••••••••••• 69(

.

.

Negotiating teams of the Meigs Classes are being conducted ·1n deflclences have been corrected.
Local SChool Board and the six of the nine schools of the In the event the ·deflclences are
Meigs Local Teachers Assocla· district through the use of subs II· · not corrected, the State Depart·
tlon were back at the bargaining lute teachers.
·
ment would stop state funding to ·
table today - this time · In . - The teachers ' association Meigs Local. ·
Marietta - In an attempt to statement reads:
"The report from the State
settle a teachers strike which
· "The · Meigs Local Teachers Department oi Education pol!'lls
began on Nov. 6.
Association today hailed a Sta.t e out some shocking descrepancles
An official otthe Ohio Educa· Department of Education eva· In Meigs Local Schools since they
lion Association said this morn· luatlon report on Meigs Local reopened on Dec. 21, • Wilfong
lng that negotiations were to be SChool District as a possible said.
underway today.
.
means to eventually end the
"'For Instance, 21 percent of
The Meigs Local Board had strike that Is now nearing the end the subs ·h ave tempor&lt;\ry certlfl·
requested David. Thorley, fed· of Its 11th week.
cates. and two have no certfl·
era! mediator, to bring both
"MLTA President Michael cates at all. There are instances
parties back to the negotiating · Wilfong said the report found where a sub with a temporary
table after the board of education that at least 32 of the substitute certificate In psychology Is
rejected a binding arbltratlon .lechers hired by the board of steachlng In Industrial arts and
· propOsal II had received from the education to replace striking another where a sub with a
teachers assocla lion on Mooday. teachers were not appropriately certificate in home economics Is
Meantime. today. the assocla· certificated In the areas In which teaching math.' Wilfong stated.
lion Issued a statement In regard they are teaching.
"The report showed many
·to an evaluation report Issued by
"The report ordered Meigs courses or' study were not avalla·
the State Department of Educa· schools to file a report with the ble to the students who have been
lion which had Inspected the six State Department of Education attending classes since schools
schools ot the district last week. by ~an. 29 to show how the were reopened. Services not

MIXED .

s·

)lol.38, No.1
Copyrlphted , 988

enttne

:Board, MLTA resume talks today in ·Marietta

$. 89
T~Bone Steak....... 3 .
BUCKET BEEF
·
.$
219
.Cube Steak ....... ~•.
U.S.D.A •.CHOICE

•

at

THRU

JANUARY 23

.

'

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·

FRESH

Scattered snow llurrlea
early tonight. Low between'ZO
and 25. Partly cloudy Friday.

New Meigs County--maps are
now on sale at the courthouse.
Purchased by the County High·
way Department at a cost of
approximately $8,000, the maps
will be sold for $2 each at the
commissioners' and ,. plat map
offices. county Engineer Philip
Roberts reported at Wednes·
day 's commissioners' meeting.
Printed bY the Spectrum Co..
ClnclnnaJtl, .! he . new .!llaps are ,
· one-irlch scale wltli. easy to read
coloring Road names are listed
alphpbeiically and the grtd sys·
tern ,used for the. county house
numbering system Is also In·
o!uded on the new map.
Roberts said each county off!·
ces and governmental agencies,
each township, each fire depart·

men I and EMS unit, will receive the Rout~ 33 corridor a top ·
a laminated version of the map. priority. '
.
The ·· last county ll)ap was
Other business conducted Wed·~
printed In 1979.
•
nesday by the commissioners
· Roberts also reported briefly Included the following :
on a recent. meeting In Athens of
Approved a request from the
the Southeastern Ohio Regional Meigs County Litter Control
Council highways committee. Office for a $3.000 advance which
Roberts said the preliminary,. will be repayed to the general
planning report on the Route 33 fund when grant money for litter••
corridor from Rock Springs to control Is received In February .••
, Great ~nd Is. due by the el)d of __ ~.P~~ove?".. a !~qu~;;t from the: .
the year.Jhe preliminary plart ' countY recordet to establish a
nlng rEtPDrl Is part of the petty cash fund.
environmental study which was
Met in executive _session with
ordered some time ago. Because Michael Swisher. director of the
the project "Is gelling to the Department of Human Servtces.
stage when we must start press· and Ken Edsel. of Clemens·.
lng to get the road Into the design Nelson Assocjates, In e., a Co ium ..
stage," Roberts explained. the bus labor consulttng firm .
highway committee has made
•

.KoJ&gt;Ientz ·seeking third term

..
~

&lt;'
~· &gt;
'

illll

99&lt;
•
Potatoes ··············~.
0
$ 39
0
.2°/o ·Milk •••••••••:!L•·· . 1
U.S. NO •.1 WHITE

. .

LB

.

·VALLEY BELL

FLAVORITE IND. SLICES

Amer. Cheese ••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

BANQUET

Saltines •••••••••·•• ~~ ••••

TV Dtnners •• .-••• !~~~·•• 89&lt;.

AR~OUR-~ OZ. CANS .

V1enna Sausage •••.. 5
SURF· OETERGENl
'47

oz.

s

$ 59

Li"'it 1 Per CUI!. Good Only At Powell' I Supor"'arkot
Offer Good Thru s.t. J.t. 23, 1911

\e

f$

2

Jeno' s Pizza ••••••••• 89(

U"'it 1 Por (uot• Good Onlr At Powell's Supor"'arktt
•- Offer Good Thru Sat. -.. 23, 1911

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fez. ·

•

TREET

COFFEE

$629

.

10.1-10.1

MAXWEll HOUSE

3 lB.
CAN

.

FROZEN

LUNCH MEAT
12

oz.

99(

Umit 1 Por Cuot-

Gtod 0n1, At ,,• .,.., Supor....ut
Offer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 23, 1911

, CRISCO
SHORTE"IffG.
· !LB. .

$199

Utnlt 1 Ptr CustGood Only At ,.,....., Supm!IIIOtit
Offer Good 'lhrv Sat. Jan. 23, 1911 •

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NEW MAPS AVAILABLE - Area residents
will be anxlou to purchase copies of the new
,Melp County JDap which ju81 arrived Wednesday
imd are now on sale at the comm!Mioner!'' and
· plat map offices Ia the courthouse. The maps were

...

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1·.

•Any manufacturer'• cou·
,pon greater thai) 61¢ will ba
•redeemed at . face value
only.
•Only one, manufacturer'•
coupo~ per item.
•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon
cannot excaed the purche•
price of the jtem. ~oney .will not be refundad.
•

•This offer excludes clgirettet, or any ot!Jer hena
. pJQhlbited by law.
·
•Offer is only good for pro·
duct - on hand. No Rain- ·
checka . . ·

I

By PETER ROWE
Ualled Presa International
A hilhlll storm thai hurled
tornac10es and snow as It $lashed
across the United States rolled
through ·C;'anada today and In its
!cy wake snowbound Mldwes·
terners struggled to reopen
schools, airports and highways.
. The storm, Its leadillg edge
. brushing New England, crossed
Into eastern Ontario late Wednesday 'fter whipping up blizzard
conditions over northern Michl·
gall, where almost 2 feet of snow
fell In some areas and 45 mph
winds reduced visibility to a 'half
mlle. In Marquette, Mich., 21
tnclles had fallen as of early
Wednesday evening. ·
"It appears l!l&gt;W the only area
affected Is upper1Michigan. (It's)
moving Into eastern Ontario and
heading quite nicely toward
Quebec," National Weather Ser·
vice forecaster Harry Gordon
said Wednelday.
By late Wedf\elday, the lead·
tng eclp of the four-ilay stotm
was apreadlng freezlna rain over
New England and .upstate New
York.
The number Of deaths ill whicb
atcirm may have .played a part
fOR lo 27, lacllldlna eight In
· , Callfonlla, flvebJTenae~eee, qvo
In Nebratlca .: and cme Mel\ In
AriiOaa, W~lnl aad towa.

people In the Deep South cleaned
. ·up from a batch of deadly
twisters. .
Tornadoes Tuesday sliced
through Mississippi, Arkansas,
Tennessee and Alabama Tuesday kUling five people In Tennessee, injured dozens of others and
damaging at least 100 homes ,
stores and churches. Flooding
also forced 125 people from their
homes In BrownsviUe, Tenn.; and
eastern Arkansas .
The storm blew ashore on the
llaclflc Coast during' the wee·
kend, battering a 250-mlle
stretch of · Southern California
aftd ·parts of Mexico Sunday and
Monday. It killed eight people,
leaving eight others missing and
causing at least $72 million
damage before heading for the
Rockies and then Michigan .
A Coast Guard helicopter Wed· '
nesllay rescued a couple -who
spent three days clinging to an
OVerturned yacbt that capsized
Sunday In strollll' winds 11nd
choppy aeas 180 mlles southwest
of San Diego, Calif.
Searchers looked. for the four·
per10n crew of tbe Appacbe
Brave, a flshlna ·boat. wbole bow
was found Wedllesday afternoon
80mlleiwestofEIIIellada,caut..
but flO trace of tbem was found.
Tltey were p~umed dlwtlid.
· Elaewbere, searohen tOIIIId a
Rllldelltl 111 t11e Roeldll and drlfUq net beUewd from oae of
. PlaiDI Wtdlt
dvf Olt from I two Sill Diego fllblq boall tllat
-drtftsupto.lUIIIIIIIP,ud dllappeiNd durlng the storm.
~

I·-

\

the constructlon of the Melg~
County He!lport.
He js a member of .Chester
Lodge 483, F&amp;AM.
Both Koblentz's children. Rl·
chard Koblentz and Patricia
Koblentz Wolfe. reside In the
Chester area.
Koblentz and his wife, Ma~
who rece ntly retired from em:
pioyment with St. Joseph's H&lt;is~
pita!, Parkersburg; W.Va .. ·are
members of the Chester MetM ~
dlst Church.

Local news ..·___;,_,......,.·

Bedford Twp. trustees organize
David Brlekles was reeiectedpresldent and Robert Hawk was
named vice president at the annual organizational session of the ·
Bedford' Township Trustees held at town halL
Elmer Bailey was named fire prevention officer. It was ,
agreed to use The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. a!! depository ·
for the township. Trustees agreed that wages will remain I he ·
same as established. Regular monthly meetings will be held on
the second Monday of.each month.

Both boats carried two-person

crews, all still missing

eluding Chester Grange, 4H, Soli
Conservation, Farm Bureau and
the Meigs County Falrboard.
He has been a Republican
Party central committeeman
and was a Ches.ter Township
Trustee for 12 years before
becoming a commissioner.
Since 1982, Koblentz has been
chairman of the County Litter
Control B!lard. He Is also a
county representative to lhe
Private Industry Councli and
was instrumental in obtaining

farm-related organizations.- In- . - - - -

'

2!

•Thla offer does not apply to
Powell's Super Velu Cou- ·
pona, free coupons. or any
competitor'• COI!pona.

purcha~~ed by the Meigs County Wghway
Department. Reviewing one of the maps are,
slandlng, I to r, Coun.ty Englnee~ Philip Roberts
and Commissioner Richard Jones, sealed, I to r,
Commissioners Manning Roush and David
Koblenlz.

Winter storm ·leaves path
•
of destruction across natwn

a•

.•The total value .o f the dbu·
ble COI!P\1" may not exceed .
$1 .00

\

ZEST A

r~
&gt;
r-

Meigs County' Commissioner
David Koblentz has officially
announced his plans to seek the
Republlcn nomination for
another terrp of office. Koblentz
has been a ·commissioner for
eight years. serving this year as
President of the Board.
A lifelong resident of Chester.
Koblentz has always been en·
gaged In some aspect of farming
and. has operated a Holstein
dairy since 1952. Over the years,
he has been Involved in several

~arly

today.
·
The storm tore through Mlnne·
· sola Tuesday and officials closed
Minneapolis-St.. Pau~ lnterna·
tiona! Airport for the first time
slnee 1985. By Wednesday, the '
biggest snowfall in three winters ·
covered the Twin Cities - 8 !-2
Inches, with up to 11 foot In the
.suburbs. Schools were shuttered
across the state. ' , .
.
Several highways across
north -ce ntral Nebraska re·
malned 'closed Wednesday because of blowing .and drifting
snow . Authorities said up to 30
Inches of snow In north-central
parts of the sljlte were whipped
IIIIo drifts 14 feet high.
In southwest Colorado Invest!·
gators were t~illg to determine
the cause of Tuesday night's
crash of a Continental Express
commuter plane near Durango.
Nine people were killed, but eight
others survived, inctudtng seven
wbo hiked through deep snowdrifts for more than a mile to
summon help.
Snow waa foreeast today from
·northern MaiDe aci'Ois west
central NeW Enalalld and parts
of New York, Oblo, Pennaylvanla
8lld West Vlrrtnta. Gordon said.
Stroq and IIIII)' winds were
expected adroll Montana, and
mUd COIIIII«oDa were In •tore for
ma ot tile rest or nation.

'

Nibert en.ters guilty plea

SEEKS THJRD TERM Meigs County Commlsdoner
David Koblentz 11 ~eeldag the
Repuliean 110mlnatlon for a
third lerm In office.

Weather
South Ceatral Ohio
.
Occasional snow flurries to·
day, with highs In tile mid 30s.
Scattered snow flurries early
tonight and clearing later to·
night, with a low between 20 and
25. Becoming partly cloudy Frl·
day, with highs between 25 and
30.
The probabWI)' of preciplta·
Uon Is 80 percent today. 40
percent tonight and near zero
Friday.
.
'
Wlllds will be from the northw·
eat at 15 to li mp!l and IUity
today, beeomlllf IIOI'tllerly at
. five to 15 , . . tonitllt. ~
•' ',

Keith Allen Nibert. 26. Gallipolis. entered a plea of guilt y to a
grand theft charge !motor vehicle) Wednesday when he
appeared before Judge Charles H. Knight In the Meigs Co~nty _
Common Pleas Court.
The charge was brought against Nibert as thl' result of an
incident In Middleport last June. Meigs Prosecuting Attorney
Frederick W. Crow III reports.
c Nibert .was accused of stealing a pickup truek from Cooper
Chrysler-Plymouth In Middleport, by deception . Paul Gerard.
Investigator for the prosecutor's office. reports that Nibert had
pretended to be Interested In buying the truck. giving a f~sle •
name and asking to take II for a test drive. TM vehicle was
taken to Gallla County where It was abandoned, Gerard sald::
Further lnvest1gat1o9 revealed that Nibert had prior the!t :
convictions, Including a vehicle theft similar to the Middleport ·
Incident. (;erard said.
Judge Knight ac~pted Nibert's plea of guilty and sentenced
hi'IJ) 19 a determinate sentence of one year In .prison. Nibert •
received a similar one year sentence In Ga lila County on •
additional theft charges.
• .
Proaecutor Crqw c;redlted the successful prosecution to the cooperetlve efforts of his offiCe, the Middleport V!llage and, • ·
Gallipolis City Pollee Departments and commended all of the.
officers Involved.
·
.

Report
. more nails in area
'

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