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!~~ag~a~1~0-~n.~~D~~~v~S.!~·~,w~~~------------------------_!P~mne~m~y~M~~~~~~·~O~h~io~·~----~_:--~~~--------JT~~~~~Y~·~J~an~u~~~2~6~.~1!9~8B~~ .
news_..;,_____ Hoffman ... _:C=:o~ntt~nu~e::_d.f~ro~m!..!p~ag~e_:l'_ _ _ _ _ _ _...__ _...__ _ _ __,...._ _ _ _ _ _•.' .

.....----Local

'

Will tq.ke bids on bridge Feb: 2
Bids will be taken Feb. 2 by the Ohio Depl\rtment of .
Transportatton.for the resurfacing of a section of State Rout!'
124 and construction of a bridge over Leading Creek, Joe Leach.
·'
· Deputy Director for OOOT District 10, announced:
The bridge ts located ~n State Route 124 In Langsville.
Rutland Township, near County Road 10. Construction will
consist of a composite steel beam structure with reenforced
concrete and thr~ 52 !oot span substructures . .
· ~~tlmated com;tetton dates for the project Is selfor Oct , 15,

I'

1

.

The Parents For Education support group, ;ecently formed In
the Meigs Local School, District. has scheduled an organizational meeting for Sunday, 2 p.in., at ihe. Meigs Junior High
building In Middleport. All c0 1)cerned parents In the district are
. urged to a.t tend this meeting . .
· The group will discuss the formation of a panel which will
consist of a representative from each of·the schools In the Meigs
. District. It. Is the .group's Intention that with this type of
leadership. no parent In the district will have to stand alone
. when facing a problel'fl or when unable to get an answer.
. - The group will also announce be announcing to the public the
. goals and purposes of the organiZation for the remaining school
year.
·
Organizers of Parents For Education are urging Meigs Loc&lt;!I ·
parents to ' 'get involved In your school system." ·

,

'

.•

Continued.on page 10

!rim-Contra affair,.; the network network blank while in Miami
said.
last year for seven minutes &lt;!fter
CBS &lt;~lso s&lt;!ld It had described being told the U.S. Open tennis
the program's content In promot- tourll&lt;!ment would run intd his
lng it .
scheduled news cast. · _
· "I don't have respect for \Vhat
. ·•Mr . Vice President," R&lt;~ther
yfJu're doing here tonight ," the said, "I think you'll agree that
vice president told Rather .
your qualifications for president
Then he got personal.
and what kind of leadership
·•J want to talk &lt;~bout )llhy I you'd bring the country, what
w&lt;~nt to b~ president," he .ex- · kind of government you'd have,
claimed. "And I don't ihlnk. lt's . is· much more important than
tatr to judge a whole career -It's · wh&lt;~t you just referred to."
not fair to judge my whole career · A few moments later he was
by a rehash on Iran. How would prompted to ask how Bush and
you like it if I judged your career President .· Reagan could be
by those sEWen minutes when you "party to sending missiles to thE)'
walked off the set In New York?" ... ayatollah of Iran."
../
The C&lt;!mer&lt;! caught -a visibly
"You made us hypocrites in the
surprised Rather, who left the
face of the world," said Rather,
who made . his reputation as an
aggressive White House reporter
questioning Richard Nixon during his final d&lt;!ys of the Water·
Dally stock prices
gate
White House.
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
The
Interview ended' on a curt
Bryce and Mark Smith
note when Rather quickiy asked
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Bush If he would go before a news
Am Electric Power ......... :... 28% conference before the low&lt;! caucuses to deal with the "unans-·
AT&amp;T ..... .'..................... ....... 29
Ashland Oil .. :: .................... 55\1, wered questions" about his role
in the scandal. ·
· Bob Evans ........................... 15
Bush, who beg&lt;~n thesentence,
Charming Shop pes ............... 12
"I've
been holding news conferCity Holding Co : ..... . ........... 34
ences
since March, ... " was
Federal Mogul.. ................... 35
abruptly
cut off by Rather.
Goodyear T&amp;R -~ ......... ....... .58%;
"I
gather
that the &lt;!nswer . is
Heck's Inc ..................... ...... 1Yo
no," the anchor said'. "Thank you
Key Centurion ..... ........ ....... 391,6
much for being with us."
very
Lands' End ................... ...... 201,6
Limited Inc ........................ 18\1,
Multimedia Inc ... .... :.... .. ...... 53
Rax Restaurants .............. : ... 3%
Open house
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. ... 71,6
Chester Fire· Department will
Shoney's Inc . ............. ......... 20%
have
an open house on Thursd&lt;!y,
Wendy's Intl ....... :................ 5%
at
7:30
p .·m ., for all lllfljll fire
Worthington lnd .................. 17%
departments to come ana view
Chester's new FMC, Spirit
tanker. Refreshments will be
served.
Continued from page 1
Meeting canceled
adeq.u&lt;~le, he said. Gilmore Is
The financial aid meeting
encouraging the public to "come which was scheduled for tonight
and get these maps because
!Tuesday) at Southern High
they 're worthless If they're not School h&lt;!s been cancelled. ·
used." Maps may be obtained at
. the Soil Conservation Service
office on the top floor of the
V eteran~,Hospl1al
Farmers Bank and Savings ComMonday
Admissions - Linda .
paiw. Gilmore also said that his
Rhodes, Long Bottom; Herbert
services as a soils expert are
Shields , Racine; Helen Waddell,
av&lt;!Uable to the public . free of
Middleport. :
charge.
Mond&lt;~y Dls,ch&lt;~rges - None.

ACTIVITIES FOR ALL
INTERESTS
Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing and
Rehabilitation
Center
(614) 992-6606

Stocks-

Announcements

Issue Two ...

Hospital news

I

Haning, Middleport; three brothers, Willis
Haning, Piqua;
Morris Haning, Nelsonville, and .
Ray M. Haning, 76, 35822 State
James (Max) H&lt;~nlng , CarpenRoute 143, Pomeroy, died Monter, 16 grandchildren and ' two
day at Veterans Memorial Hospigreat-grandchildren.
tal following a lengthy Illness ..
Besides his parents, Mr, HanA retired coal miner, Mr.
Haning was born lnMelgsCounty · Ing was preceded in death by two
sons, Gall Keith anq Randy Lee
on Sept 17, 1911, a son of the late
Haning; a grandson, Jerrry
Clyde and Hattie Graham
Haning.
·
Wayne Searls, Jr.. and two
brothers, Dana and Graham
He Is survived by . his wife,
Haning.
Myrtle Haning; five sons. Ray
Graveside rites will be held all
Nolan Haning, Albany; Ronnie
p.m. Wednesday at the Wells
and Jerry Haning, both of PomeCemetery with the Rev. Dear!
roy; Thurman · Haning, New
Porter officiating, The Ewing
Marshfield; Lester (Butch) HanIng, ·H arrlonsvllle; three daurhFuneral Home Is In cliarge ot
ters, Rhea Wlllis, Columb11s: . &lt;~rrangements. 'T)lere are no
Wanda Searls, Pomeroy; Donna · . callJng hours.
't

••

.Clear tonight. Low ne11r JO.
Sunny Thursday. Highs I~ mid
20s.
·

Pick 4
' 7869

'

Page4

'

•

a1y
· Vol.38,

No. ,.81
.Copyri!lhted 1988

•

enttne
1 Section, 1 4 Pages

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, 'January 27, 1988

.

':.

A C!lr-traln collision Tuesday at about 10 a.m. at the·rail-road
crossing In Gallipolis Ferry resulted In $2,500 tn damages to a
1983 Oldsmobile, according to a department spokesman.
The car, driven by Phyllls ~ckner, 54, Gallipolis Ferry,
apparently slid onto the tracks and w&lt;~s unable to to get off the
crossing. Beckner w&lt;~s no longer in the car when the CSX train
hit the ,car.
The engineer of the train, William McGaughlin. Vienna, said
. the train sustained no ·apparent damage. ·
There were no
. ._Injuries In the Incident.

Ray Himing

Daily Namher
350

26 Cents .

A Multil'!"edia Inc. Newspaper

.,.11

The dozen gets .
.dirty again

Presiaent ...

Tra~n hits .car early today

Area ,deaths

Dragons-

,-

.
.
. .
·Meigs County J'mergency Medical Services reports six c&lt;~ils
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 12:52 a.m. to Route 248 lor Linda ·
Rhodes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:14a.m.
to Lasley St. for Norma Goodwin to Veterans Memorial
. Hospital; Pomeroy at.10: 19 a.m. to Minersville Hill for Brenda
Watson to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 3: 30 pcm.
to Mill St. for l"ola Swisher to Holzer Medic&lt;~! Center;
Middleport at8: 40 p.m. toSo11th Fourth Ave. tor Helen Waddell
to Veter&lt;!ns Memorial )iospit!ll; Rutland. Fire Department at
11: 45 p.m. to an auto fire on New Lima Road ..

I

Ohio Lottery

.

i-;.,..10~·

EMS has six callS Monday

Bush...

of

. the good points In both of these This is probably where most
. lighting r.ecommenda lions for town's cemetery trustees for well ·~
since it would provide a .contlnu - the needs are a'nyway.
·
over 20 years . .
the miniature golf course. ·
ous. pot of money lor cbmmuni"Competititve grant' programs
Albert Roush, represimtlng ·, Council gave a second reading
lies who .have the money to are great butwe also need funds' to an ordin&lt;~nce which will · Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Amerl- :
' match . a.nd can afford ·loan which . aren't so hard to get. I provide P'~Y Increases :tor vlllage can Legion, met .brlefly wl(hthe :·
.
. _, . thoughtthis was what State Issue workers tn March.
repayments. .
mayor and council to complete a :
"I don 't feel this was the 2. was all about, b4t It apJiears 1
form necessacy to exempt the
Mayor Hoffman announced
intention of the voters. Most was wrong."
that the Middleport Board o! . new American Legion HaH ln. '
people thought there would. be
Council made plans to proceed Public Affairs h&lt;!S advertised for Mlddleix&gt;rt from t&lt;~xes In accor- :.•
very few .strings attached to this with the purchase of a miniature a used well driving "and well · dance with the village program •·
program . but we wen~ wrong golf course for the Hartinger pulling outfit with bids to be In by which permits exemption on new ~
again.
·
Park- with · the purchase to be the .next council meeting. There construction.
.
·
;
"If we had $50,000for matching
made from Mtnl Golf, Inc .•. Is only one local ftrl)'l now doing
Councilman··· Jack Satterfield ·';
funds and could afford to repay a Jessup, Pa.., &lt;!I a· cosi of $13,800, · the well work and It tsgoingout of satd · that. .ne will check . out; .
loan, we would go to our bank less th&lt;!n the $15,210 ' lowest business . Mayor Hoffman com- locations of several street lights•.;;·
~here w.e could obtain probably
discount pries -normally o(fered mented that th: board's owning which
are·
the.;
..
. not burning at
.
as goOd an Interest rate as by the firm. The ·town will send the equipment would be advan- · present time. . _
.
•...; . ·
· through about any st&lt;~te pro- $2,000 now on the contract w.tth tageous sh'lce the cost for pulling .
Attending the meeting 'were ::'
gram. At the wesent time our payment of .$4,900 to be made . a well by a firm coming In from Mayor Hoflm&lt;~n ; Clerk- ~;
bank's . Interest rate Is 6 % March 1 &lt;!pd. $6,000 to· be paid out of .the area can cost from · Treasurer Jon Buck, &lt;~nd Co,un-,;;
oercent.
wi)en the course Is completed. A . $1,00il to $5,000. M&lt;~yor Hoffman . cllmen Dewey Horton, Willlam-J
"All these guidelines are prdb- mlnl&lt;~ture golf fund wits estab- · &lt;~lso expressed high pra lse for the Walters, James Clatworthy, Sat-~~
ably goOd for larger communi- · lished last night so the financing !ale James (Boo) Simpson who terfield and Gilmore.
':,..
'
' ...J.'.
..,,,,
ties , but it would appear to me can be set up and Councllm&lt;~n , had se~ved · effijctively on the
that it is going to become another Bob Gilmore reported that com- ·
grant program ·such as the ones pletlon d.ate Is April 1. He sajd
oper&lt;!led by the Ohio Depart- . _that the local course will carry
ment of Development which are out a special river theme In going
socomplicated that it t&lt;!kes a full along with local atmosphere &lt;~nd
Sputh Central Ohio
The probability ·or precipita:
time si&lt;~ff to keep with it. Wh&lt;!t 's that the owner of the flrni is going
.
·
V&lt;~riable
cloudiness
today
,
·
tlon
·IS 61lpercent today and near·
wrong with the old way of doing into specl&lt;!l.redeslgn work lor the
,Yith
highs
In
the
mid
teens
.
·
zero
tonighi and Wednesday,
·
things, simply, ' such as 'the · toea( course. Council will diScuss
Partly
cloudy
tonight,
with
a
low
·
Winds
will be from the north at ~·
revenue sh;~rlng funds used to. the location of the course at the
between
zero
and.
five
above
10
to
20
mph
tod&lt;!y and light and ·
. be?
·
park with mel'flbers of the town's
zero.
Partly
cloudy
Wednesday,
northwesterly
tonight.
' '"And wh&lt;~t Is·· wrong with recreation commission. It W&lt;!s
with
highs
In
the
upper.
teens.
providing funds to are;),S which agreed to have Columbus and
Ohio Extended Forecast
cannot afford to match funds? Southern Power . Co. suggest
Thursday through Saturday . .
Fair Thursday· and Friday·,•
rcontinued from page 1&gt;
with a chance of rain or snow.::.
Saturday , Highs will be In the 20s;
'.
Thursday, climbing Into the 30s:
threatened &lt;~nd to require a · toward democracy.
HOLLYWOOD tUP])
Friday and ranging from 35 til~!&gt;&lt;
balanced federal budget.
Indeed, he .asserted a ' .'global
Ernest
Borghine
aild
.
Telly
Saturday . .Overnight lows wjll be:
-Increased military funding democratic revolution has put
Savalas
co-star
In
"The
Dirty
In
the single digits early Thurs,·
arid &lt;1 cutback in federal spend- totalit&lt;~'rianlsm on the defensive.''
Fatal
Mission,"
a
Dozen:
The
day,
In the teens Friday morning".
ing on programs such as welfare, :)nd "Amerlc&lt;~ 'is &lt;~gain a vigortwo-hour
TV
film
based
mi
the
·
and
In
the 20s e,a rly Saturday. •
allowing states to take the lead.
ous le&lt;!der of the free world."
,.
1967
hit
movie
in
Which
they
-A line-item veto &lt;~llowing a .
"Our record," he said of his
also appeared.
president to strike single items administration, "Is not just the
This c&lt;~sf also includes Erik
from (ederal spending longest pe&lt;~cetime reconomic)
1
Estrada,
J~ff Conway, Hunt
legislation.
exransion in history but an
Cor;d, Ernie HudBlock,
Alex
-Confirmation of Anthony economic and social r.evolution
son,
John
Matuszak, Ray
Kennedy, his third nominee to ... that at a critical moment in
1\'lan&lt;;lni
&lt;!nd
: Heather Tho- .
replace Lewis Powell as . a world history reclaimed and
mas, In a departure from the
Supreme Court justice: and of 27 restored the American dream."
all-male
cast of the original
other nominees .to the federal
The president discharged his
movie.
bench.
constitution&lt;~!
duty . before a
· In additioh. to Borgnlne and
As expected, ' the conflict In packed House chamber. Among
S&lt;!valas,
the original film
Nicar&lt;~gua and the battle for
the 1,400 In attendance for the
featured
Lee
Marvin, Charles
· Cdntr&lt;! &lt;lid were ·key points ceremonial affair were members
Bronson,
Robert
Ryan, Jim ·
among foreign policy issues in of Congress, the Supreme Court,
Brown,
Clint
Walker,
John ·
the·speech. Reagan said Nicarathe Ca blnet &lt;~nd the U.S. diploCassavetes,
·Dol)ald
Suthergua· s 1eftlst Sandlnista · regime matic corps.
·
·'land and George Kennedy.
"knows the tide Is turning"

Redmen
.
topple ·

.

. Parents to .meet Sunday

.

•

'32 OUNCE

BIG ROLL , ·

DAWN

. MISS OPAL'S
PAPER TOWELS

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

EVERYDAY LOW PRIC~!

2/99¢
1

4Q.$..

DISHWASHING
LIQUID
50~ OFF LABEL

14Ri.
1.111

8.48

BARBASOL
SHAVE CREAM
EVERYDAY LOW PRICEI

SOFTIQUE

ASPIRIN

FACIAL 11SSUES

2~U~EG.

BY KLEENEX

99¢

2.4t

COUNT~...........7

--aiii'C'Oi5iiTI

80UNCE
. VICK'S

FORMULA
44-D
·4·

99 OURREO.
Ul

80UNCE

CHLORASEPTIC'
TI1ROAT SPRA
CHERRY OR MENTHOL

.2~§R~.
a.u

24 OUNCE
TPI.LET .BOWL
CLEANER
EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE I

BIG 150UNCE

'HEAD&amp;
SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

EVE=AY299·

GNP4.2
percent

Real
"GNP
Gross National Product

_.....,

5.4

I

By DAVJD VESEY
UPI Business Writer.
WASHINGTON, !UPI) . - A
buildup of il)ventorles and ,acceleratlng exports pelped offset a
sharp decline In consumer spend- '
tog to push up economic growth .
4.2 percent tn the fourth quarter,
the Commerce Department said .
Wednesday.
Real Gross Na tiona! Product
expanded by $39.2 billion from
. October through December, or
- 4.2 percent {rom the t~lrd to the .
fourth gu~rter of-19!17, a~;cq~dtng
to~ t~'e· preUiii'!riary__ esuinate by
the dti118rtmerlt's ' Bureau of
Economic Analysis . .
· Real GNP rror:n 1986 to 1987
' grew 2.9 percent, or$106.3 billion.
The•economy grew by an equal
2.9 percent In 1986 and 3 percent
In 1985. ·
When computed · from the
fourth quarter of 1986 to the
four'th quarter of last year, GNP
was 3.8 percent higher ln. l987.
exceedllJg the Reagan admlnistratlon prediction of 3.2 percent.
· . T!ie fourth quarter growth
figure "was somewhat .of a ·
pleasant surprise," said Und.ersecretary of Commerce Robert
. Ortner. · "It was better than
everyone expected." · ·
Ortner said that the buildup of
lnventorles and cutbacks In consumer spending were matters of
some concern, but predicted
moderate growth hi 1988 based on
stronger .exports and capital
spending.
· From the second to third
quarter of 1987, real GNP In-

'

Seasonally adjusted annual rales
Percentages rellecl change
·
from previous period.
.r---.2-0A-o--,

4

4 All 1 2 3
'85 1986

4 All 1
'86

2

1987

Meigs County's development director will help
potential applications complete the required loan
application forms, applicant responsibility form,
source of Income sheets, agreements and
certifications and federal labor st&lt;!ndards forms .
AU of these forms, when completed and signed,
along with three year past financial statements,
three year projections and a brief business history
comprise the complete pack&lt;!ge.
Dollars are competitive and in short supply.
Early application Is strongly urged to ensure
adequate financing for a!J Meigs County ~usi~ss
and Industry.
.
.
.

·Meigs Regional planners pick:
.
officers for · .new fiscal year

3 4
y

UPI
FIGUREs RELEASED
A buildup of Jnventlirle~ a!ld
accelerating exports helped offset a sharp ~ecllne In consumer
spending to push up e;,onomlc growth 4.2 percent· In the fourth
quarter, according to the Commerce Deparlm~nt. (Ufl)

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
Charles E. Blakeslee w&lt;!s
again named executive director
of the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. when the
Commission held their first quar•
terly meeting . of the year on
Monday at the. Farmers E!ank
and Savings Co. building.
·
. Named as. officers for the
coming year were Thereon Johnson, president; Fred floffman,
first vice·presldent; .Orion ·
Roush, ' second vice-president;
Lee McComas. secretary; and
George Collins, treasurer.
The fourth Mondays of April,
July and October were established as regul&lt;~r meeting dates
lor the planning commission, If
needed. · ;
.
.
'A 1~87 financial report for the
commission was approved.
Among . itel)'ls reported as 1987
expenditures were $1,162.50 to
• the executive director; $790.90
_for office expenses and mileage;
$$1,600 for consultant's fees; .
$459.91 for expenses incurred by

'

the Meigs Couhty Business Ex- _ port housing project.
The commission called the
pansion and Retention Progr&lt;~m
state' s -attentlon to the fact that
through Ohio State University;
Meigs County is the only county
$1,600 for Sp&lt;!cial projects.
Total expenditures and the not represented on the Ohio Task .
encumbered balance for 1987 Force for the Ohio Riverfront
Redevelopment from Pittsburgh
amounted to $6,407.71..
Regul&lt;!r , appropriations for to Cincinnati. A present&lt;~ lion was
m&lt;~de at " hearing.\.!! Belpre In
1988 total 55,257 .25.
September.
The office for this
Following are many ol last
program
is
now
being set up. The
year's commission activities. as
director
is
from
Pike County and
listed by Blakeslee in his annual
Meigs
·
County
is
to have rep res· ·
report.
In 1987, through the commis- entation. The.-questlon Is when?
Preliminary site information
sion's consultant, Meigs ·tounty
was
submitted by (he commismalntalned .a presence and
sion
to a local utility company
·helped keep. the road
the
when
the company 1iias unable to .- .
bridge oil ·t he state agenda and
get
the
required information
the SoutheastPrn · Ohio Highway ·
lmmedia1ely.
Users Committee.
- ·
In conclusion, Blakeslee· reThrOugh Its county appropriaported
that Mejgs . County h&lt;~s
tion, the commission provided
become
known as having : a
: the required funding through
planning
commission,
which acOhio State UniversitY for the
county's · Business Expansion cording to Blakeslee, ',' has a
certain intangible value. A planand Retention Committee.
Letters of endorsement for ning comm.ission can only do
projects were routinely submit- what the county wants and will
. tep and a special letter of support," he noted. " Your input
endorsement sent on a Middle- is needed."

to

•.
creased 4.3 percent, · or $40.6 deflator· was 2. 7 percent In the
billion. GNP grew 2.5 percent In fourth quarter . &lt;~nd 3 percent for
the second quarter, and 4.4 the year, the government said ..
percent In ,the first three months
Bu~111ess inventories Increased
of 1987.
$58.3 btlllon In the fourth quarter,
· Personal spet\dlng declined 3.8 following increases of $24.6 bil. percent In the fourth quarter, the lion in the third quarter and $39
sharpest drop since the second billion in the second.
quarter of 1980, ~':hen spending
By MATT ROBERTSON ·
Down UndeJ' Restaurant con- lty is good, but it w.on't get Mason
Non-farm Inventory invest,
P.limged 7:9 percent In the midst ment Increased $41.6 btllion In
cerning the priority of highway · County a fe&lt;~sabillty study.
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.- An
of a recession;
·
extension of either Interstate 64
projects, the Improvement of
"We're not looking at one, two
the fourth quarter, in contrast to
Real personal consumption . a decrease of $10.6 billion in the . or Interstate 77 was the· main . U.S. Route35inp&lt;!rtlcular. llwtll or three years, it could be 10
expenditures In the fourth ' quar- third .
subject of discussion at Tuesday be the first of a series or ye&lt;~rs before the road is even
.
ter decreased $24.1 billion comafternoon's meetlngoftheMason meetings.)
started,'' Lewis ·said. ··we need
Real net export~ of goods and
pared with an Increase of $32.2 services increased $7.7 bllllon in
A study needs to be done first , to quit fooling around with people
County Chamber of Commerce.
billion In the third.
A committee consisting of
though, to decide which option is
who have other Interests," he
the · fourth quarter, compared ·
Economists watch personal with a decre&lt;!se of $5.7 btlliori in
members from each county · the best for Mason County: Lewls
added.
spending closely In GNP reports the third.
"(Congressman Bob) Wise,
along the·corridor between Cha- said.
'
for a good Indication of economic
The study will be to determine
ru.s. Sen. Jay) Rockefeller,
rleston and Columbus, Ohio, Is in
Imports increased. $8.9 billion
direction. Inflation as measured from bctober through Dethe planning stages, said Bernie ,which interstate to connect with, · Ritchie, and (Gov . Arch) Moore
by the GNP's Implicit price cember, compared with . $28.4
may be gone in 10 years, but the
R 1dille,. chamber · board either with an extension or with
president .
an access road, Lewis said,
residents of Mason County will
billion In the third quarter.
"The only function . of the &lt;!ddlng that Interstate 77 is
stilt be here," Lewis s&lt;~id.
Imports .of petroleum &lt;~nd petrocllmmlttee wlli be lhe advent of. closer.
.
The date for the chamber's
leum products, which accounted
four-lane access to Mason · . Money will be required to annual dinner was set for March
for about one half .or the third
county ;' ' Riddle said, adding _he finam;e the study, but the pleas 24 at 7 ·p.m. The main speaker
quarter Increase. fell $4 .2 billion
doesn't know What form . the for funds to finance the study are
be w.s. White. chief execuIn the fourth quarter.
commlttee
will
take.
falling
on
~eaf
ears
In
Charleslive
officer
of American Electric
. Approximately 400 parents, students and teachers met with
Real federal government pur"Don't go· after the improve- ton, Lewis said .
Power, .
Sen.' Jan Long and Rep. Jolynn BOstes at a , meeting of the
chase · of goods and services
ment of U.,S. Route 35, but rather
"Pleas in Charleston are fa!The chamber also discussed '
Unified Citizens for Education held Thursday evening at the
jumped $18.2 billion in the fourth
the extension of an Interstate," !ling on deal e&lt;~rs because of the poss~bility of having a VIP
·
Legion Hall 111 Rutland.
quarter, compared with an In·
Jim Lewis said, noting It may bE! /State Highways Commissioner reception before the dinner.
A two hour question and answer session was held with the two
cre&lt;~se of $3.7 billion In the third. ·
easier to get the extensltln of an William) Ritchie's : t11terest In
Ah outdoor drama at Fort
National defense purchases
officials who Indicated they Will take local concerns about
interstate than the: improvement . Ravenswood and the-lack of Randolph at . Krodel Park was
fell $0.5 bllllim in contrast to &lt;Ill
education back to Columbus. About 9:30 p.m ..word reached the
funds in Charleston,".Le)'.'ls said. · discussed, .with Steve Carpenter
meeting location as to a tentative agreement between the Meigs
Increase of , $4.8 billion In the · ·Of a u.s. highway.
. (A SQtitheastern Ohio Regional ·
Lewis also noted thai the help and Georgiana Tillis appointed to
third. Non-defense · pur&lt;;hases
Lbcal Board of Education and the Meigs Local Teachers Assn.
.
the
proJect Is receiving from the look Into an outdoor dr&lt;!ma.
Council
Highway
Committee
' and this was greeted with hearty . applause. A potluck dinner
IncreaSed $18.8 b.illion. In conmeeting
will
be
conductd
In'
Gallla
County business communwas planned for Monday eve~lng with an organlzatlo,nal
tmst to a decrease or $1.2.bllllmi.
meeting to follow. A vote of thahk.s was given to Sen. Long and
State and local government
Galllpo!ls on Feb. 3, at noon In the
Rep; Boster for the two clearing !hell' calendars so they could
purchases Increased' $5.1 billion
meet wtth the local group.
·
·
lrt the fourth quarter, corrtpared
'• with an Increase or $1.3 btlllon In
the third.
James See, 47, of Middleport, appeared Wednesday mo.r nlng
Real non -residential fixed InSouth Central Ohio .
II!
Melp County Common Pleas Court before Judge Charles H .
vestmeqt decreased $4.2 billion.
Partly cloudy today, with a
The two-story f~ame home or the William Hayes Family,
Knlcht
tol.enter a plea of guilty te·a single charge of receiving
.(n !he fo~rth quarter compared
chance of.snow flurries and highs
, Township Road. 624 off County Road 10, one mile west o!Dexter,
staten
property.
The charp atemmed from · an inCident In
near 20. Generally Clear tonight,
with' an Increase of $25.9 b!lllon In
was destroyed .by fire late Tuesday night. , ·
·
Middleport
on
Saturday
evealnj and was contained In a biD of
·the th'ird, while resldentlal fixed'
with a low near 10. Mostly sunny
The home was completely engulfed .When the Salem Center
lnfonnallon
from
the
Office
ol PrORCutlnK Attorney Fred W.
Investment grew by $2.8 btlllon In
Thursday, with highs ih the'mld
Fire Department ar~. lve'd on the scene. The department was
Crow
10.
·
·
the fourth quarte~ follmvlng a
20s.
called at 11:15 p.m. No one was home a! the time of theflte.
See was charred with ·dlspotliDI of a videocassette recorder
decrease of $3.3 billion In the , . The probability 'of preclpltaCause has not been determined. A car was lost In the blaze tn
· and a mlc~ave o-ven when he knew or llad reason te believe
tl)lrd.
.
·
tlon
Is
40
percent
today
and
near
addition to the home and Its contents. Losses were set at$35,000.
·they had .ooen o~ed as a result of a theft, accordlnl to Paul"
Personal Income Increased
zero .tonlghtand Thursday:
Gerard, ,laveaUptor for the pro~~~~eUtor. 'lbe ftems whlcli See
$90.5 .bUll on In the fourth quarter,
Winds will be from. the southw.
BOld at a local bar were atnODIMYeralltems which were stolen
up from an Increase of $52.4
est'at 10 to 15 mph today and light
Tbuniday
eveabtl from the Harley E. McDonald realdeace.
billion In the third.
and westerlY tonight. _
Approxlmate~J flftet!n guna were a1.1o ripirted mlllllln1 In the
Personal outlays Increased
Extended Forecut
break'ln, Gerard lAid. As of late TufJBchQo, none of tile Item1 bad
$5.7 billion In the fourth quarter,
Friday throulh Sunday
.The Pomeroy Elementary School was closed today after a
been
recovered, bat ciimlnal eomplalata have been llled aac1
sharply lower thah the third.
Mostly ·sunny Friday, wtth a
.
· •
bomb threat was reeelved pt the school.
feloa;r
warrant. olltaltted for the arreat of tltose penoita who
quarter Increase of $69.1 bllllon. . · cbanei: of rain or snow saturday
Other schools 'of.. Meigs County, with the ~xceptlon .of the
bi'Otlpl
the stolea piooperty to See'a Middleport home.
Personal savings Increased. an~ a ,cl!ance of rain oa Sunday.:
Carleton School In Syncuse, were all open f(lr classe&amp; today
Becelvbl1 lltolea pmperty, u charpd In . tile bll\ of
$71.6 billion, In contrast to a · Highs Will be ID ,the 30s Friday
after bavlng been closed Tuesday ~ue. to weather conditions.
lafo~on, Is a fourth jlqree felsa)'.
,
decrease
of
$4.4
b!Uion,
The
and
ID
the
40s•
Saturday
and
Scllooil of the Meigs l.ocal.School DIBtrlct underwent a wave
.Judp Knlpt accepted tlie plea of pllty and lll!ntenced S..e to
savings rate, savings as a per.· Surulay. Overnight lows wtll
of bomb threat &lt;!ails last fall and ~eral young people were
·
a
di!tennlila&amp;e aellleace of IIi moaths Ill prlloa. llaflld allo
centage
~&gt;f
d'spoaable
Income,
range
from
15
to'29early
Friday,
turned over the lo Ohio Youth Commission lis a result of the
ordered
the Mlddlepr$ to make ....tl$ttUOa and to ..y the
Increased
from
2.8
percent
In
the
cllmblna
Into
the
20s
.Saturday
calla.
·
coal'$
COIIIII.
third quarter to 4.91)erc,e ntln.the mornlna and to near 30 early
fourth.
·
·
Sunday. . .

Highway extension concern voiced;
committee for~ning in the future

400 meet with .legislators .

BAYER

BIG 250 COUNT

SNO-BOL

Fourth
qua-r ter

.
..
will be mad&lt;.&gt; "' a five percent fixed rate of ·
interest. Terms will vary according. to the type of
IMn.
Applicants should pick up the ·necessary
pre,appl!catlon ·materials from the Meigs County
Development Office, week days, from 12:30 to
4:30p.m. or phone 992-6861.
All loans must be approved by the Meigs County
Revolving 'Loan Committee. Upon approval the
entire project package will tie ·reviewed by the
Regional Loan Committee. meeting at offices of
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley . Regional
Development Pi strict in Marlett&lt;~.

.....-. Local news briefs. .....,
50

EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE!

.provided by .small businesses·. the commissioners.
· aim to become adept In the use of the new
C&lt;!pitallzed revolving loan fund .
.At the present time, Meigs County has inv~sted
$12.000 in the Regional Revolving Loan Fund
which has been matched by the U.S. Department
of Commerce, Economic Development Admlnls·
tratlqn, to Increase the total to $60,000. Loans to
qualified borrowers will be on a two-to-one ratio.
That ·Is, a total loan of $15,000 would require the
business to contribute $10,000. and· !he Meigs
'Revolving Loan FUnd would provlde .$5,000. The
critical
. adv&lt;~ntage or the localfund is that all .loans
.

By BOB HOEFtiCH ·
Sentinel News Staff
'T he Meigs County Commissioners are announc- .
' lng a loo~tl $60,000 revolving loan fund for business
and industry,
The commissioners h&lt;~ve joined with other local
goverrurtents l.n Southeast Ohio In an attempt to
attract and retain businesses.for local communities. For small to medium sii~ businesses, l)ew
vel!lures and businesses operating In this area,
private flnariclng for fixed assets, equipment.and
working capital Is s&lt;~ld to be difficult to obt&lt;~ln.
Since the bulk of private sector jobs are usu&lt;~lly .

1.2 GALLON
VAPORI~ER

5.99
ou:.
INHALANT...
t.IGAI.I.ON

wm

:See ·appears in ·c ourt .

Weather

House destroyed by fire

.

·School closed after bomb threat

'

. '

'

-

�t

Comment

Page-2. The Daily Sentinel

. .'

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.•

.

~lb.
-·
r:s:m
lii.l ......._.._-r, .......... c::::~.....

qjv

ROBERT L. WINGEtT
Publl!lber
PAT WHITEHEAD
AMIBtanl Publlliher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mua,er

A MEMBER of The United Press Inte~national, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arE~ welcome. They should be less than 300 worda
' long. All letters are subject toedltlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number . No unsignEd letters wl11 be published. Letters should be 1.n
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Year end spoils
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON !UP!) - In the numerous weeks that pass for a
brief holidaY on the congressional calendar. a good number of the
scattered vacationers were caught with their fingers In the marzipan .
In the hectic days before adjournment of last year's session, only
the very major elements of the huge government-wide spending bill
made the head lines and the story.
It was only later. when the printers .flnally produced the finished
product, that the smaller boondoggles came.to light.
Although l)'lany in the Senate and House dipped Into the spel)dlng
pool on behalf at their states and districts, the two most glaring
examples of "pork" belong to Spaaker Jim Wright of Texas and Sen.
Daniel Inouye. D-Ha'!'aii.
·
.
If these t)VO - the speaker of the House and the highly regarded
chairman of the Iran-Contra investigation - feel free to plunder . ·
what better examples do others in the Senate.and House need.
Inouye's caper probably is a classic of Its genre.
The Hawaii senator slipped into the money bill. which totaled more
than $600 billion. a pauper-like $8 million for purposes that have little
to do with the United States and absolutely nothing to do with Hawaii.
This money. passed over the vigorous objeclion of the State
Department , which frown s on earmarking money. will be used help
build schools for Saharan Jews in France. Yes, that's correct.
Inouye has been less than voluble in explaining his actions but there
seems to ,be no argument that one of the persons ·aclively Involved In
helping t~ese Saharan Jews is also generous contributor to lnouye's·
political campall'ns.
Wright's assault on the federal treasury at least is In a more
traditional mode. The money went lor a Texas project and Involves
one of Texas's most influential people.
Wright got lnto 1the federal spend ing bill a provision that au thorizes
$25 million lor an airport backed by the son of Dallas busl&lt;~ess
magnate H. Ross Perot.
·
The "industrial airport" envisioned b:&gt;· H. Ross Perot Jr. would
accommodate large cargo jets as well as an executive jet fleet.
A regional official lor the Federa l Avia tion Administration
nirnarked that "without the legislation. we probably would have
St;lrted off a little smaller."
Although the FAA supports the concept of a general aviation
reliever aiT):iort , the ques tion is whether .the. Perots or the United
St!ltes.ls in better shape financially to build it.
'!"he lnou ye-Wright for ays. a long with numerous others In
Congress, have again tarnished Co ngress's less than shining image.
While the members of the Senate a11d House talk a lot In public about
cutting spending and eliminating waste. once behind closed doors
plilck off a million here .and a million there.
The practice is so lime- honored that members of Congress boast of
the goodies they bring to their states- and perhaps that is part of
their job.
.
For instance. Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La .. put out a seven-page
news release just 'to make sure no one at home could forget how
lnwortant his succPsses are to Louisiana.

Berry's World

Cll 19lai&gt;JIH!A,Inc.

By Jack Anderson )
and Dale Van A tta

~

"I'm a value-free yuppie. You're a value-free
yuppie. Let's do something that calls for
some MORAL ·RELA TIVISM!"

~--------~----------~,

Today in history

·
By United ~ress International
Today is Wednesday. Ja n. 27. the 27th day of1988 with ~39 to follow.
The moon Is waxing. moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stan are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter .
T~ose born on th'is date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart In 1756;. author Lewis Carroll
(Charles Dodgson) In 1832; labor organizer Samuel Gompers In 1850;
Broadway composer Jerome Kern In 1885; Adm. Hyman Rlckover,
"father of th.e nuclear navy.' 'In 1900; band leader Skltch Henderson hi
1918 (age 70); actress Donna Reed In 1921, and actor Troy Donahue In
1936 (age 52),
On this date In history:
In 1891, Thomas Edison was granted a patent for an electric
Incandescent lamp.
In 1915, U.S. Marines occupied Haiti after the Caribbean nation's
president was killed by a mob. The occupation ended In 1934.
In 1964, Sen. Margaret Chase· Smith of Maine announced her
candidacy lor the Republican presidential nomination, becoming the
first woman to seek !he nomination of a major American political
party'
· • .
.
.
In 1967, three American astronautsdhfd In a fire aboard theApollo-1
spacecraft durlng ·a launch .simulation at Florida's Kennedy Space
. Cent,!'r.
·

WASHINGTON - A
Watergate-en.• mystery that re·
mains unsolved to this day has
convinced some of those Involved
that the cover-ups of the Nixon
administration continue. And a
man who should be able to
provide some clues, Henry ·Kis·
singer. has . steadfastly denied
that he has anything to offer.
The 1f1Ystery surrounds Elias
Demetracopoulos, then a Greek·
exile leader In the United States.
Were. U.S. government officials
Involved In two plots to return
him forcibly to Athens where he
faced possible execution? If so,
who were they and why have they
escaped punishment tor their
role In the conspiracy?
The notion of a cover-up.arlses
from the fact that Demetraco·
poulos has obtained tantalizing
evidence that numerous govern·
ment flies about his case exist.
But everyone' Involved pleads
Ignorance.
The person who ..lllli'ht to be
able to help is Kissinger, nallonal
security adviser and secretary of
state under Richard Nixon and
Gerald Ford. But Kissinger has
chosen to send Demetracopoulos
trudging through the voluminous
archives of numerous federal
agencies in search of scattered

'
pieces of the puzzle, which might gencecommunlly began exam in· flies. " Except for those he ,holds,
already be neatly assembled In a
lng U.S. relations with the fallen Mr. Kissinger's papers were •
basement somewhere.
junta and the Demetracopoulos remanded to the National Ar· '
Demetracopoulos, a journal· affair. According to Investiga- chives at ·the termination of the •
1st. .es,aped from Greece In tive reporter Seymour Hersh, · Nixon and Ford pres~de11cles,"
September 1967, and set up shop Kissinger personally Intervened one NSC letter said.
There was a catch. The papers
In Washington, flye months after to kill the Investigation. In
the military junta seized power. Hersh's 1983 bestseller, "The thai . Kissinger had held thousands of pages of documents
Price of Power," he wrote:
He lobbied furiously and ably
against U.S. cooperation with the "Sources close to (the Senate he considered "personal pape111" •
colonels· and became. a thorn In Intelligence Committee) have - had been copied for his own use •
.the side of Nixon and his said that Its lnvest'lgatlon, was and the originals had been •
pro-junta supporters.
abruptly canceled at Kissinger's deeded to the Library of Con·
In Ff(bruary 1975, we disclosed direct request. He urged the gress with the proviso that they
that Attorney General John Mit· committee to drop the lnvestlga· not be made available to the •
•
chell had discussed a proposal to tion, one . official said, on the public for 25 years .
•
The
plot
thickened
In
March
deport Demetracopoulos to the ground 'that relations between
colonels who wanted him sl· the United States and Greece 1971, when the NSC released the •
only material it could dre,dge up 1I•
lenced. In the early '70s, Mitchell could be ;severely harmed.'"
In 1976,' an undaunted Deme· - computer Indices of files that •
was a member of the National
Security Council's "40 Commit· tracopoulos enlisted the help of · had existed on Demetracopoulos. II
tee," a secret group chaired by Washington attorney Wllljam ~ncludej) was a cryptic reference · !
Kissinger that reviewed convert Dobrovlr and began bombarding to ''Mr. Demetracopoulos' death · !
operations.
the bureaucracy With requests In an Athens prison." The date o! '
Two months later, we quoted for flies based on the Freedom of . the reference, Dec. 18, 1970, was '
about the same time that John t
top secret Greek junta docu- lliformatlori and Privacy acts.
was proposing that '
Mllchell
He received hundreds of documents that revealed a plot to
Demetracopoulos
be deported to r
kidnap Demetracopoulos from ments from lhe FBI , CIA and
!I
the streets of Washington. The departments of Defense, Justice Greece.
Since Kissinger had banned I
story was confirmed In 1979 by . and State. Many of the papers
I
lndlcatej) that copies had been Inspection of his papers at the •
the junta's last ambassador to
provided to Kissinger's National Library of Congress, attorney I
the United States who related the
Dobrovlr asked for them directly ~
Security Council, but all requests
details In his memoirs.
Based on our 1975 reports, two for NSC documents were re· from Kissinger. Despite the NSC I
congressional committees that jected on the grounds that the Index of files on Demetracopou- I
los, Kissinger refused for more. I
were Investigating the lntelll· documents were not In the NSC
than seven yea.rs to respond 'to
Dobrovlr's requests for copies of II
the flies. Finally, last Nov. 30, I
Kissinger's attorney notified Do· •
brovlr that "efforts were made to '
search the collection (of Klssln· •
ger's personal 'p apers) for copies ' '
of documents which meet the
description provided .... No such
copies could be found."
Klsslpger's attorney then suggested - In so many words ••
that Demetracopo111os spend the •
- next couple of decades assern· ,(•
bllng the bits and pieces of his
files from the numerous agencies
i
that might have kept them. The •
originals, the · attorney wrote, •
"should be In the complete • "
Institutional files of the agencies •
which created and received '

COLUMillS. 011 .. fUPIJ _ T11111. w.~la'a
V•~• Pre." .. etr•11o_. 0111o HIP
Scllool&amp;ftol r~~'llltlbMkdhll

"'*'•
wo•lett recol'll!l Ia pare.O.esea) :

- rat'-!rll IWllh tii"'C ·plate

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•

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them."

I. (lie-) AkNn lklchl:t&gt;l (II) II H)

a new responsibility. If you don't
believe It, just get a pet or white
wall-to-wall carpeting.
Personally, 1 think the trouble
lies not so much In overacquisition but In a basic lack of
mathematjcal skill. In short, we
&lt;lon't have the simple ability to
adduphowmuchtlmeltwllltake
us to do what we doc We simply
lry to do too much In the finite·
amount of time we have to do it.
Oh. sure. !here are ways to cut
down the amount of time It lakes
us to do tasks. As a young
reporter. I once sat through a
seminar where a beauty consultant told us how she go.l her
makeup applied, here hair fixed

I could hold down two jobs , rear
foster children and give money to
the Third World.
I think lime-guilt starts in
school with teachers who (llust
produce winning marching
bands and high s tud e nt
achievement-test .·score.s to keep
their jobs. They, send kids home .
with Instruments to practice.
dramatic roles to lear n and a
stack of books to study, after they
bring them to school early and
keep them late to rehearse. cA
disclaime r : Those teachers'
teachers did it to them. I did It
when I was a teacher. My

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Girls scores .
GlriM Ohio Hlll:h Sc.•hool ILIII.t~lwthllll
By Unll.ed f"te~•lnler~aa~tlo•l

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'
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seventh grade after I'd been
reading
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In True Confession 1
m·But
gazI'mes.not as bad as 1 used to :
be,andithlnklthasnothlngtodo ·•

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'Four Reds sign
CINCINNATI IUPI) - Four
players on the Cincinnati Reds
.major league roster slgned oneyear contracts Tuesday, club
officials said.
'Signing were Infielder Chris
Sabo, the MVP of Cincinnati's
Class AAA Nashville ·affiliate In
1987; Infielders Lenny Harris and
Marty Brown; and pitchers Gino
Mlnutelll and Mike ~oesler .
Terms of the deals were not
dl.sclosed.
Saba batted .292 with seven
home runs and 51 RBI at
Nashville, while teammate Har. rls batted .248, hit two homers
and d•ove In 31 runs. Brown ·
batted .264 with 15 home runs and
74 RBI for . Class AA Vermont. ·
Both Mlnulelll and Roesler split
· 'last season between Class A
Tampa an!l Vermont. Mlnutelll ·
was 7-6 with an ERA of 3.80 at
Tampa and 4·1, 3.18 at Vermont.
Roesler was 7-2 wlth ·n saves and
an ERA of2.23a1Tampa,4·2wlth
11 saves and a 3.29 ERA al
Vetmont.

THU

12
·
. PRICE
SAVE .ON

•

a

come, despite some Impressive
floor wor~ by starters . Renee
Halley, Holly Hastings and Lea
Ann Mu lllns and the. Redwomen
bench.
This effort helped Rio Grande
come to within 3 ( 30-27) with 1: 49
left In the half, but MVNC pulled
. ahead to lead at halftime, 35-27.
The second half proved to be a·
repeat of the first, with the
Redwomen coming as close as 2
(66'64) before a Dallas goal and
free throws by Robertson helped
give the visitors the final
advantage.
MVNC Coach Paul Swah~on,
acknowledging · his team's size
superiority over the Redwoinen,
said the hosts' tenacity was
Impressive.
·
"Our slie dominated at the
beginning, but Rtq rallied In the
second half," he said. "I was
impressed with their tenacity
and double-teaming and that
made It hard for us to contain
them. I was Impressed with.o~r
composure on free throw shoot·
lng at th~ end. I think you can see
why we're the top two teams In
the ·conference."
.
"Our strong point Iill defense, ·
but we didn't play defense
. tonight," Redwomen Coach
Cheryl Flelltz commented. ·'The
kids who came off the bench In
the first half played well and
should be commended."
Rio Grande's leading scorer
was Mullins, who scored another
high of 28 points. Co-captain
Renee Halley· posted 14. Mullfns
had 6 rebounds and 4 assists,
while Halley added 4 rebounds ·
and 1 assist to her . record.
Hastings, , the · team's top re·
bounder, had 10 points ahd 9
rebounds.
The Redwomeh were 24 of 47 on
field goals for 51 pe~ent and 9 of
19 on free throws for 47 percent.
MVNC placed 5 people In
double figures - Dallas with 15,
Robertson's 14, Sadowski's 12
and 10 each from Bosworth and
Jandt Ferrell. From the field,

Swanson 's club had 47 percent
(33 of 69) on field goals and sank 8
of 9 free throws for 88 percent.
The Redwomen are on the road
Thursday for another MOC en·
counter with Urbana ,'startlng ai
5:30p.m.
MOUNT VERNON NAZA ·
RENE . (74) - Mia Dallas,
7-J.l-15; Samantha Sadowski,
G-0·3·12; Erin Sharrock, 3·0·2·6;
Shari Robertson, 4-6·3·14; Jandi
Ferrell, 5-0·2·10; Nicole Bos·
worth. 5·0·4·10; Amy Feathe·
rlngham. 3-1·3·7. TOTALS 33-8·
17·74.
RIO GRANDE (66) - Holly '
Hastings, 4-2·2·10; L~a Ann Muillns, 713) ·5·0-28; Renee Halley,
7-0·3-14; Beth Coil, 5·1·0-ll; Billie
Jo Stephenson, &lt;0·1·4·1: · Leisa
Anderson, 1-0·5·2. TOTALS24(3)·
9-14·66.

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"=QAY;7

•

•

&amp;ckets 124, LA Clippers 104
Sacramento ll6-100 and Portland
At Houston, Akeem Olajuwon
beat Milwaukee 112·106.
·
scored
l!2 points and grabbed 10
Knlcks 1~~. Nets 101
rebounds
and Allen Leavell and ..
At New York, Mark Jackson
·, scored 22 points and set a Knicks Eric Floyd each added 18 points
rookie assist record as the Nets to guide the Rockets. The
lost their 25th straight on the Clippers, · who have lost 14
road. Jackson had 7 assists to straight on the road, were led by
give him 388, breaking the record 18 polilts from Quintin Dalley.
LA Lakers 111, Jazz iOO
of 386 set by Dick McGuire In the
At
Inglewood, C!lllf., Magic
1949-50 season. New Jersey Is the
Johnson
scored 22 points and
·only team without a vl~toryaway ·
Byron
Scott
added 21. Los · An·
from home this ·season, losing 17
geles
Improved
the best record l.n
In row .
theNBA
to31
-8.
Karl·Malone and
Pacers 97, Bulls 93
Dave
·
Stockton
paced the Jazz
At Indianapolis, Chuck Person
with
18
points
apiece.
scored 19 points and Vern FlemBlazers 112; Bucks 106
Ing 18 to guide the Pacers. NBA
At ?orland, Ore.. Clyde
scoring leader I'!flchael Jordan
Drexler and Jerome· Kersey
led the Bulls with 34 points, while
scored 25 poln·ts apiece to lea_d
rebounding leader Charles Oak·
Porlland. Sidney Moncrief led all
ley contributed 13 pol~ts and 13
scorers with 28 points for
rebounds. The Bulls dropped
Milwaukee.
their ninth straight on the road.
Mavericks 128, Spurs 111
The Daily Sentinel
At Dallas, Mark Aguirre .
· scored 24 points to surpass 12,000
(VSP!i lf&amp;·8t8)
points for his career and lead the
A
Div~lon of Multimedia. IDe.
Mavericks to their fifth straight
•
triumph. The seven-year · for·
Published ·every afternoon, Mo~day ~
.
throogb
Friday,
111
Court
St.,
Poward Is 85th' on the all-time NBA
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubscoring list. Alvin Robertson,
. Ushlng Company/ Multimedia. Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 15769, Ph. 992·2156. senamed to the AU-Star team
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Tuesday, led the Spurs with 21
Ohio.
points.

Redwomen lose 74-66 to Mt. Vernon
Mount Vernon Nazarene's
women posted a one point lead
early In the first half of Tues·
day's Mid-Ohio Conference game
with Rio Grande and never ·
looked back, posting a 74-66 win
over the Redwomen at Lyne
'
Center .
The victory, the Lady Cougars'
first at Rio Grande, places
MVNC In first place In lhe M.OC
at 5·0 and 12·1 overall. The
Redwomen go to second place at
4·1 andl4·6.
· MVNC got o·ff to a quick start
with goals by Shari Robertson
and Samantha Sadowski, while
Rio Grande stayed behlnj) until
15 minutes remained In the half.
MVNC's Mia Dallas and Nicole
Bosworth each pumped in a
basket to score a 5-polnt lead
over the Redwomen (12· 7\ 'I hat
the hosts were unable to over-

in East

5

SAVE FROM 6 TO 11 THURSDAY

•

m~k

MOONLIGHT

~

:•

said, "and when we do that, we
By IAN LOVE
can beat anyone."
VPI Sp.o rts Writer
011 Sunday , the Hawks over·
"We just shouldn't lose a game
took the Celtlcs for the best like this, " said Atlanta's Domi·
record In the Eastern Confer· 1ique Wilkins, who finished wllh
ence. Tuesday night, Boston . J8 points. "We gave It away.. I
made two critical turnovers
reclaimed the mark In Atlanta.
Boston beat Atlanta 100-97 to down the stretch. That's some·
Improve to 29·11 on the season,18 thing I normally don't do."
· percentage points better than the
Robert Parish, who finished
29·12 Hawks. The Celtlcs ha"e a with 20 points, started the Cel·
.725 winning percentage, but are .· tics' run In the final two minutes.
just 13-8 on the road. The team with a free throw and added a
wllh the best winning percentage . layup. Danny Alnge scored the
holds the homecourt advantage last 4 points.
for the post-season .
"They did all the things cham·
Because the Hawks had the plonshlp teams do." Fralello
best record In the East as of said of the Celtlcs. "They made
Sunday, Atlanta Coach Mike things happen when they had to."
Alnge's. record streak of 23
Fratello will guide the Eastern
Conference All-Star tea"l . ·Bas·
consec11tlve games with at least 1
ton's K.C: Jones had been the 3-polnter came to an .end as he
East coach the last four years, went 0 for 5 from 3-polnt range.
"There Is no way I was going to
but lost the job wheh the Celtlcs
were beaten by Cleveland Sat"r· force a 3-polnter In the last three ·
day and the Hawks' beat New minutes,'' he said. "It was fun.
but It wasn't a big deal. The main
Jersey Sunday.
Kevin McHale, scored ']0' of his thing Is we got the victory."
Elsewhere New York defeated
21 points In the fourth quarter to
· pace the Celtlcs, Who defeated New Jersey 122-101, Indianapolis
the Hawks In Boston last week. edged Chicago 97·93, Dallas
defeated San Antonio 128·111,
Basta~ outscored Atlanta 10·0 to
Houston topped the LA Clippers
end the game.
"We got out there and got after 124·104. the LA Lakers defeated
it and played hard," McHale . Utah 111-100, Seattle stopped

1

.

best NBA

Ottawa Glandorf II, Paukk H~l)l')' S2

twithd good
with'sense
dditland everything
b o
o
a
on,
or
may
subtraction. 1 have 87,600 fewere •'iii
hours to budge. t than I did 10 =
years ago, and.!. know lt.
~
So. 1988, be fc;trewarned: I hav~ purchased a hand' held calcula· . ~
tor, and fknow how to use it. To ;
celebrae, lthlnkl'lltakeanhour ~
_
and go gut on some,makeup.
:1;
•

'

r~claims

Reyaolll"'-ura: 15, Col Wllla.t Rld~e H ·

5, Sherwood t' alniew (2) ( IS.OJ
119
I, Ont1rl0 I 13-11
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s•Rawrua 1'1, Slow '19

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Fatrflelllll, llt1¥trtreek II

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Fort Fr)'P II. Slf\'W -II
Fraaklla II. VaU•J Vlt'W A
Fronalfto 11, s-..,.._.. 11

Poll. .. II, Mtn1UIM'!IJI
P:Y"*'•Iilll Val '21, Tt..n11Ledpmont

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tapestry Kissinger has woven of
his role. In history?

HOUSTON (NEAl - Thel vallves. Conservatives can pre· servatlve" Gore.
effect lri Texas. Most 111slders
Texas primary, which Is set for ventthls by delivering a majority'
In recent years the conserya· believe Texas will be a contest
Super Tuesday ;".. March 8, has of presidential delegates to their 'tlves have not proven they can between Gore and Dukakls with
turned Into a major battleground
man and. by controlling the 1990 elect candidates. But they can Simon and Jesse Jackson getting
of Campaign '88.
gubernatorial nomination. To a raise money. Gore has been some support. Bruce Babbitt has
\VIth 183 Democratic and 111
grea.t extent the ·latter may given a substantial war chest not caught on, and Missouri's
Republican delegates up for
depend on the former.
with which to finance his cam· Richard Gephardt all but ended
grabs; Texas has the largest
The withdrawal of Gary Hart palgn here. The. question Is any chance In Texas when he
block of delegates at stake In any
from the race In Texas changed whether he can translate dollars mov~ most of his workers from
of the stat!! primaries that day.
the dynamic of this Democratic Into votes and delegates.
here to Iowa .
As so often happens In Texas,
primary. A conservative-liberal
With Hart out of the Texas
The Republican primary here
presidential politics have be·
alliance had formed behind Hart, contest, many liberal Democrats Is considerably more bitter•than
come entwined with slate Demo·
and be probably would . have , s~ng their support to Sen. Paul the Democratic contest.
cratlc politics.
swept the state. But his wllhdra· Slmo11.
T·hls Is Ge~Jrge Bush's "home"
Many experts here .see this
wal shattered the alliance and
However, the real. story here Is state, and he has the complete
presidential primary campaign
left the !actions scrambling te the emergence of Massachusetts \lacking of the Republican estab·'
- and the gubernatorial race In
find a candidate.
Gov. Michael Dukakls. As a New .. 1ishment. But It Is also a slate
1990 - as a kind of last·dltch
The. conservative Democrats' England ethnic; .especially one where the far .right and funda·
effort by conservative Demochoice for president Is Sen. who Is ,considered "anti· mentalist /Christians have a
crats to retain control ofthestate
Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee. He domestic oil" ·because he does substantlql Impact on Republl·
party. They have dominated for
was not their first choice. fact, not support an oil Import .fee, can politics.
more than 40 years.
he waa P!'llbably not their fifth Dukakls'sgrowingappealhearls
Tbe fundamentalists hate
But conservative Democrats In ' choice. Clearly the conservatives hard to understand. But the George Bush. In fact, they get
Texas have suffered' numerous
would have been happy to back Spanish-speaking Dukakls ·bas fighting mad If you call Bush a
blows In recent years. The latest · Mario Cuomo or Georgia's Sen. wide support In the very sizable Texan. "He's a New Enelander
was the 1986 defeat of Incumbent · Sam Nunn or Virginia's Chuck Texas Hispanic community and from Maine or someplace," they
governor Mark White by hla ol!l
Robb or New Jersey's Bill alll(lng Jewish 'Democrats In tell you disdainfully. Tbe probRepublican adversary Bill
Bradley. Blit the only available Houston and Dallas. He has · !em Is they will prqballly ..,put
Clements.
candidate who fit the co111erva· started 'tocutlntoSimon'sllberai · their vote between Pat ltoHrt·
Now a host of young, liberal·
tlves' Image of a man who could support.
· sonand Jack Kemp, anclthld will
populist politicians stand ready
· be elected In Texas and the South
Hart's re-entry Into the ria· not be a m~jor. threat to Bush.
to emerge and banish the conse:·
was !he newly born·agaln "con· tlonal campaign has had llltle
1
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31

FJyrta (IS.%)

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Top prize on Super Tuesday~~R_ob_er_t-:--.~-ag_ma-'-n ~

In

4i '

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Davtr 11. carrtllha M
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Srt'OIId lea: il. St. ~Ill')' :t'l; ''' Fort
J..onmk&gt; It; 11 Franklin F\l,...,.e
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F11irba1111Po (I) .11. . mllfllon (1),14

~~~~~~~e~~~~~e~po~~~s t:;~~l

with employers.dependent,on the
"bottom line" to keep their own
jobs. "How many woodchu~ks
could chuck wood If we Increased
th·e wood pile and hi' red fe· wer
woodchucks•"
And while I may talk big, I am
sometimes stili easy prey for
,
others expectations of my time.
"Can you, will you, oh. I'll be so
dlsappolnled If you don't..." still
affects me like an allar call In

I. EueUd (11!.1)

C.l ••• ,.. tel r ..aldla ... .,
C. ..... a V .. 1l. ..... V .. N 11
CertluNI Lallnlnr M. E P.a.tt.e.U

1'1-t

I.CUf)Cinct-.USetonl'l) ( lS.I)
,S. To~ Cedlral CDih Cll (IH)
4. laltterMa (IJ.I)
5. Clevelaadl Glen\llla,. (I+ I)

' · lllu·keye Wl"'t OS.t)

Adding up the . time crunch.__
and her clothes on i" 15 minutes .
''
max. The next morning. I had
managed to gel my makeup case
out. Ihe coffee on and was
rraching inside the closet when
the 15-minute beil 'sound ed. I felt
like a failure .
These days, 1 realize that
climpletc facfal reconstruction
lakes more than seven minutes.
But old habits are hard to break.l
still believe that If I could only
manage better, shave a few
minutes off here and put it there.

Polal~
I'M

M. S C'hlli'INIIOn !!lolllheMW.m I! ) ( 11-0)

'
S_ar_ah_O_v_er_str_ee_t j

really don't have a lack of Ihe
commodity, but an aver ·
abundance of material "things"
to attend to.
I'll buy thai, up to a point. In
some cases, new possessions
help us SJIVe tlm,e - a new
vacuum cleaner that sucks faster
and harder. a car that doesn't
require a·n oil-check and a
tire-kick every morning. But In
many cases, a new possession Is

aod

..

What happened to the NSC files
on Demetracopoulo$? Did Kls·
singer take them? fr so, why IS
Kissinger trying to hide the
official record of an outrageous
scheme to eliminate a persistent
and effective critic or the Nixon
administration? Would p,ulllng

"I think it's worse than the caucus of '84- but most of them will melt as
soon as they hit the ground.·"
.
I

1M vl•lloa 1

T eam

'

••

B " .h 0
Y ..,ara verslreet
I've always been fascinated
with the subject of time. As a kid,
my absorption was with the
dimension itself. Later. I read
scientific conjecture about lime
d
· t 1 db h h
an ~as 10 r gue Y t e t eory
that It might exist in layers. those
eras we re ferre d Io as past an d
future peacefully coexisting with
the present.
More recently , I've become
absorbed with the measurement
of t he force and how we perceive
it . But I'm not so sure my
new-found interest has much to
do with science. It's like becoml·ng poor. Money doesn't become
muc h a f an ·tssue unt II you don't
ha\'e any.l'm interested In tim€'
because I p€'rcelve a serious
Shortage. .
As a wou ld· be sc1enust.
· · r can
take cornfott in the knowledge
that lots of us are looking for a
cure to this deficiency. Time
management Is a mainsta y In the
self-help era, a necessary by·
product of the : 'be all that you
can be'" generation. Columnist
Ellen Goodma. n took on the
subject recently , deciding we

C.I ......UQr .. C.IIIanutb41

I

Clues to an old mystery·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

·.

Boston

l
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday,
Januarv 27; 1988
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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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llUOI\ wv.

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Paga 4 The Daily Sentinel

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Wednesday, January 27. 1988

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

:•

Meigs' captures 81-69 TVC ~~ctory over Alexander . five
By JIM SOULSBY
" It was a team effort, both
o!ensively a nd defensively. Although we were not as high
emotionally as we were against
Belpre and Trimble, everyone
played very hard to get the win ".
Those were some of the post
game comments or Maraude r
Coach Mlck Chl!ds after Meigs
had racked up an 81-69 vic tory
over the vlsltinl;l Alexander Spartans . It was the Marauder's !lrsi
game of the season before a home
crowd. Meigs ha d lost an earlier
overHme contes t at Alexander. '
The Marauders cam e out of the
c hute quickiy as they notched
live potn ts In the first 60 seconds
of play b1&gt;t the visitors came back
to knot the score at the midway
mark of quarter one. With just
over two minutes left , Meigs
aga in built a six point lead and
once aga in Al,e x clawed back to

Cards
humble
Flyers.

knott he score at 22 a t the .end of
shooting kept the Spartans as
e ight minutes.
close as they were as they hit on
During the second period or
1~ of 17 frolll the charity stripe
play , t.lle Marauders handled the during the last sil(teen minutes.
ball we ll , t'ommltting only three
Fatiague ~eemed to overtake
turnovers. to eight lor the Spar- the. )oeal five during the early
tans. whlle compiling a twelve
stages of the fourth period and
point' half-time bulge.
Coach Ch!!ds Used the bench very
Starling the seeond half, Alex
ettectively , shuttling players In
made adjustments to their defen- and out.
Alexander Coach Mike Meeks
sive set and put strong pr~ssure
had
high praise for the Meigs
on the ba)l picking up iii hal('
court and trapping In an effort to
team stating that 11\ey are a very
get back In the game. Meigs, , domineering unit and spee!flcally pointing out the , strength
however. managed to maintain
a n eleven lead going onto the
and aggressiveness of Mike
Bartrum and Brent Bissell. He
final eight minutes of the game.
. Alexander , It seemed In despera said that these two traits make
tion, s tarted shooting !rom the
them very hard to control. ·'I felt
that we , as a team, played as
three point range hoping to cut
the Marauder lead. The accuhard as possible. It's very hard to
racy of their shooting .l eft much
get the breaks on the roads", he
to be desi red as they did not
concluded.
connect on any of the nine tries.
Meigs put three players In
Only high pereentage lou!
double Ogures as Bartrum had a

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) :_ When Ohio Stale and Indiana
meet tonight in the Big Ten's TV game of the week, 11.will match
two teams heading In opposite directions In the conference race.
Ohio Stale, 10-5 overall and 3·21n the Big Ten, has won three In
a row since hack-to-back losses at Purdue and Wisconsin to
start Its confer,ence schedule. Included .was a solid 8:1-76 win by
the ~uckeyes at Minnesota last Saturday, which followed
victories over top 20 teams Iowa and Michigan In their last two
games In St. John Arena.
Meanwhile, the defending natloQal cbampion Hoosiers have
·struggled, . losing four of their first five Big Ten games and
dropping to 9-6 overall. In their last outing Sunday afternoon,
they lost t.o Michigan, 72-60, snapping a 29-game home winning
streak.
"We're coming of! a very good road win, which was very
. Important IQ us," said Ohio state Coach Gary Wlllhims. "We're
playing with a lot of L'Onfidencc right now, which we weren't
0
do!n~ three weeks ago. Our players are In a good frame of
mind."
·
•1
I
Indiana Coach Bob Knlght"has three starters back from lasiyear's national championhip squad - 6-foot-10 center Dean
Garrett, 6-foot-1 guard Keith Smart and 6-foot-6 forward Ricky
Calloway. Those three are expected to start against Ohio State,
along with 6-foot-9 Todd Jadlow at a forward and 6-foot-1
.
•
Lyndon Jones at the other g11ard.
"It's a tough time to be playing Indiana," said W!IIIams.
"They need a win very badly. ·

_C incinnati' Reds
want division title
Oakland !arm tea m in 1987 and a
By MATT ROBERTSON
.
career
average ERA of 4.7o.
OVP Stall Writer
Rlrtsas
had
an ERA.o! 3J2 inl987
BARBOURSVILLE- The Cin with a n Oakland farm tea m and a
ci nnat i Re&lt;Js organization recareer ave rage ERA of 4.2H.
centl y revealed for the m edi a the
A vete ran RPds pitcher that Is
new . and hopefully Improved.
returning is Tom Browning.
Big Reds Machine fo r 19Rl\.
Browning boasts an ERA of
The mission for the 19Rl\ Big
.
15H.
but had to be se nt down to
RPd Machine . and it ha s no
the
Nas
hvi lle farm tea m on June
choi ce bu t to a ccept .it . is to wi n
111.
19H7
becausp his ERA had
their divis ion.
slipped
to
7. 71i.
The Reds have fini shed second
Whe
n
he
move d back up from
in th&lt;' di vision three years in a
the minor leagues , he a llowed
row .
three runs or less in ll or h'ls 18
To w in their divi ~ ion . Vice
starts. The Reds won a ll 11
President a nd General Manage r
Murra;' Coo k has j1Cquir£'d sev - games that he allowed three runs
or I Ps~ in .
eral new players a nd · kept
On the other e nd of the ga me,
several ve tera n Reds.
1
the Reds have Paul O' Ne ill. who
One or the acq ui si tions wa s
ranked ninth in the National
Drnni ~ Ra~mussen .
Leagup
as a pinc h hitt e r In the
Ra s mussen came to the Red s
1
~87
season.
in ~ n Aug. 26 trade from the Nrw
O'Ne ill hit .297 as a pinch hitter
York Yankees . Overall, In 19H7,
and he fini shed the 1987 season
Rasrnussen a llowed no , morP
wilh a ,.256 average, seve n home
than three runs in 2:1 of his :12
runs, 14 doubles , 28 run s batted In
start s .
and 1!10 trips to the pl a te in lHO
Also acq uired as pitchers for
gam('s ,
the Reds were Danny .J ackson.
Je If Tre adway will a !so be
Tim Birtsas a nd Jose Rijo . ·"
returning to the Reds lin e- up.
Jac kson was acquired in a
Trea dway hit .333 after he was
tra de wi tti KKan sas City.
.called
up from Nashville on Sept.
Last season with the Hoya ls.
l.
.Jackson had a 4,02 ea rned run
He a lso collect!'d two or more
avera ge a nd ha s a career aver ·
,hits
In a game nih ~ ti mes and put
age ERA of :!.69 with the Royo ls.
to gel her a nine game hitting
Whili' wit h the Royals .. J a~ k so n
strea k. Treadway has hit over
·racked up a 37-49 re~ord . but
.:100 in every step of his profesoffens ive production from the
rest of t-he Roya ls may have b('('n sion al car'eer .
Trea dwa y , though, is more
a prob lem.
than jus t a hitt er . He had a :980
1n nine of Jackson' s 12 19B6
fielding percentage as a second
losses. the Roya ls scored fewer
baseman with the Nas hville
·tha n two runs, ea rning Jackson
team
and will be playing second
the dubious d is tinction of havi ng
base
with
the Reds some.
the worSI run -s uppor t of any

on the crowd. giving Loulsvllle
two shots.
Negele Knight scored 18 points
and Ray Springer had 11 for
Dayton, 9-9.
Elsewhere Tuesday night, St .
Bonaventure thumped Kent
State, 84-61; Wittenberg defeated
Muskingum 68-54; Ke nyon
downed Mount Union, 67-59·
De !lance beat · Bluffton, 85-76:
Malone nipped Cedarville 80-78;
Mount Vernon edged Walsh.
55-53; Urbana whipped Ohio
Dominican. 95-85; and Rio
Grande tripped T'l!!ln, 80-76.
At Olean. N.Y .. Rich McCormick scored 7 o! his 13 points in a
13-0 run to open the seeond half
that carried St. Bonaventure to
li s win over Kent State.

Kosar named MVP

pitcher in the maj or leagues. l;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
Kansas Ci ty averaged only 2.93 11
runs in his sta r ts .
RljoandBirtsaswereacqulred
.
.
In a trade with the Oakland A' s
.for Dave Parker .
Birtsas was described by Cook
as , '.'A Slrong le!t -hander in the
moldof ourDen ni sRas mussen."
Rljo . In a published Interview ,
said he is excited about playing
A $)2.00 YAWl
for the Reds and In the National
•Emergency Road Service
•Personalized Auto
League . " l roomed with Joaquin
Anduja r the last two yea rs and he
•Accident Service
TraYII Service
was always talking about the
•Ball lond
National Leagu~." Rljo said.
"Ken Crilley and Dusty Baker
AND MUCH MOlE
said the same thing. Joaquin
spoke so highly .of 11 : 'Bigger
360 SECOND AYL
, · ·· · ball-pa t ks. better cities, no desigGAWPOUS, OliO
nated hitte r,' I gotta try this ,".
Rljo said.
·
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PH. 446·0699
Rtjo had an ERA ofo.90wlthan
1'1

. In
, .Jan.uary· f or $29
.

Get an associate membership FREE!

'

Continued from page 1 ,

· An entry of judgme nt and foreelosure has been flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court In the case of Citizens Federal
Savings and Loan Assoelat!on of Miami , Fla ., against Charles
Ellis. et aL Plaintiff Is to recover $26.568.93, with Interest, on a
note by the defendant.
A notice of appeal has been flied In the case of William B.
Deem, Long Bottom, against Micha el J . McCulllon, registrar of
. · ,the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Columbus. An order of
suspension against the plaintiff has been suspended du ring the
pend~ncy of the appeaL
·

EMS has four calls Monday
Meigs Coupty Emergency MedlcalServ!ces reports !our calls
Monday; Middleport at 1:59 a.m. to 329 Third St. lor Dean
WhiHington to Veterans Me morial Hospital; Pomeroy at 4:39
a.m. to Route 143 for Joanlta Norman who was treated but not
tran~ported; Rutl~nd at 1:08 p.m . to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Manon Grety to 0 Bleness Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
5: 10 p.m. to Brownell Ave. for Paul Steinmetz to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
·

!
'

t

fii".;~G~;;de nips Tiffin, 8~7 ~
Neither side ap'peared too tlnger, who scored a game total
Impressed with the outcome of or 22 points, assisted by Anthony
Tuesday 's 80-76 win by Rio Raymore and Ray Singleton,
Grande's Redmen over Tiffin, pushed the Redme!'l ahead by 11
but as Redmen Coach John 173-62) In the closing minutes of
Lawhorn said. "A W Is a W."
the game. Tiffin mounted a
Both teams played each about strong counterattack in the closevenly throughout both halves or lng. seconds and were within 6
the game, which marked Bob t80-74) when Steve Doss brought
E~ans Farms Night at Lyne · . the ball in for a Tiffin goal with 3
Center.
.
seconds left .
The Redmen ·I mproved their
"lt's a mark of a good basket -record to 17-6 on the season and ball team that It san play poorly
6-2 In the Mid-Ohio Conference. and win, " Lawhorn·commented.
while the Dragons go to 4-16 and "We didn't mal&lt;e good decisions
1-8 within the conference.
and we didn't get the ball Into
Tlttln tied early with the hosts Rlttlnger 's hands enough. But
until a 3-polnt tleld goal by Jim you have to give Tiffin credit .
Kearns put the Redmen abead Their story all season Is . that
for most of the half, although the they've lost by 4, 6 or 8 points.
Dragons regained the lead at 8:21 They 're a pretty good bas ke tball
and created a 5-polnt lead until a team ."
free throw by Ron Rittinger tied
Dra gons 'mentor Jim Ham It at 28-28 with 5:17 remaining on
mond~ commending thee!forts of
the cloek. John Lambcke then Trbovich. a juniorwhoscored:n
rebounded for the Redmen and points, 'said the tea m "Is coming
took the ball in to put the score at
a long . . Defensiv ely, we' re all
30-28 In the Redmen's favor.
right. ·
The Dragons . boosted by scor- · "Rio Grande has a nice team ."
ing !rom veteran Tyrone Trbo- he continued. " Th ey' re at the
vich,agalnwrestedcontro!o!the point where they' r&lt;' over the
lead until Singleton tied It again
hump and have achieved stabilat 14 seconds (39-39) . Watkins
ity. We don' t have our stabilit y
broke through to score 2 and put
yet."
the halftime score at 41 &lt;19 for Rio
Singleton scored 17 poin ts lor
Grande.
the Redmen and posted 10
Tiffin wore away at the Redrebounds. while Raymore a dded
me-n and ca me within 2 points
16 points and Bassists and Kea rns
with 11 minutes remaining. Rlt rec orded 10 points. From thl'

May pinpoints roles
of baseball coaches

field, the Redmen were 48 •
percent 129 of 61 attempts) and ~
' netted 13 of 2() tries at the free 1
throw line for 65 percent.
Also scoring In double !!gureli
for Tiffin were.Mike Francis with
12 and Dorsey Birdsall ,w ith 10.
Birdsall also led In rebounds with ;
ll. Tlfflnposted 39percent (30o! 1
77 attempts) from the field and •
were 13 of 14 on free throws for 93 1
perce nt.
l
Rio Grande ltosts · a non- : . ·
conference opponent, Wllmtng- :
ton 's Quakers. at 7:30 p .m.Thursday for Jackson New Car
Dealers Night.
TIFFIN (76) ~Tyrone Trbovlch. 13-5-1 -31; Mike Francis,
4-4-2-12; Scott Morrissey, 1-2-4 -4;"·.
Bryan Brown, 3-0-4-6; Dorsey
Birdsall, 5-0-1-10; Steve Doss, ·
2tl )-0-5-7; Steve Magill, 0-2-0-2; '
Brad Reamon. 2-0-1-4. TOTALS
30(1)-13-19-76.
RIO,GRANDE (80)- Anthony ' .
Raymore, 5-6-4-16; Ron Rlttin- '
ger. J0-2-2-22; Jlril Kearns, 212)- ' '
0-3-10; Ray Singleton, 6-5-2-17; ·
John Lambcke, 4-0-3-8; Brian '
WatklnR , 2(11 -0-0-7. TOTALS ,
29(3)-13-14-80 .

'

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd Awe., Galllpcllls
PH. 446·1699
HOUIS: IAJI.·6 P.M.

INVENTO.R
CLEARANCE

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CARS

akfast Bar At8f01~
"

· · ' (For 1\vo)

~lght cases were processed In the court of Mlddle~ort Mayo r
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night .
For!elling bonds were Timothy R. Ebersbach, Middle port ,
$50, !allure to yield; Wilma J . Mooney, Gallipolis, $41, speeding;
Sharon Fields, Mason. W. Va, $40, speeding; Cha r les R.
Wright , Pomeroy, $450, driving while Intoxicated; James
Priddy, Rutland, $450, driving wttile Intoxicated.
. Fined were Katrina Stanbaugh, Tlpp City, $10 and costs.
expired tagS ; Tony Henry, Middleport. $10 and costs. squea ling
· tires; John A. Casto, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
ma~ner , and $25 and costs, destruc tion of property .

I

CINCINNATI iUP li - New
Cincinna1i's lone coaching
Clncinnail Reds coach Lee May
vacancy .
says everybody kf'eps asking
him the sa me question: "Just
what exactly Is your role?"
May 's answer is a primer on
the basics_of big league coaching.
" My role is to make things
eas ier lor my manager t PE'te
Rose 1 and easier lor our young
players·." says May . "That
should be the role of all coaches.
"A manager ha s so much to do
that he shouldn 't have. to deal
with eve r y littll' thing that
happens on a ballclub. And one of
the key areas where coaches can
do a lot is to help young players."
Often, a sensE' of humor and a
light approach Is needed to help
playPrs battle the phys ical a nd
mental fatigue that se ts iil when
162 games are played In 180days.
"Taking the press ure off," is
what . May calls it and h£' uses
banter to do it.
"When I played. I got the young
ballplayers to take the pressure '
off me, " he says with a grin .
" When a young player had a bad
night. l'd get on him and
everybody would forget about
the bad night I'd had."
Not that May had many bad
FREE BRAKE INSPECTION WITH THIS AD
nights.
The "Big Bopper." as the
6-!oot-3. 220 pounder wa s called,
blasted 3fi4 homers and drove In
1,244 runs in his 16 years for
Ci ncinnati, Houston, Baltimore
and Kansas City. ·
May, 44. retired in 1982 and was
'
Kansas. Clty's hitting Instructor
MOST'
514.50
ALIGNMENTS
for three years before Reds'
generat ·manager Murray Cook
POMEROY, OH.
600 E. MAIN ST.
hired him three months ago to !Ill

.

Eight cases processed in court

i

GOOD USED
WlSHEIS, DIYEIS
REFRIGEIATOIS, 'rVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. IANGES '

America's DinnerThble.,

With The Installation Of Each Windshield At Point-Mason Au
Glass You Can Have Breakfast On Us At Shoney's,
"Where You Buy Your Glass Does Make A Difference"
- Offer Good At Shoney's of
Pleasa'Qt &amp; Rip&gt;ley

ATHENS - T .S. T r im Indu stries Inc. ITT! ), a Japanese
manufacturer of Int erior auto-.
mobile parts, a nnounced plans
Qn Wednesday lor a $1 2 million
plant In Athens pending approval
of economic development dppli catlons to be made to local and
state agencies.
TTl President Mitsuhlro l shlgai (Mitt -sue-hee-row Ih-sheeguyl of the company's headquar ters in Canal Winchester, made
the announcement at the meeting
sponsored by Ath ens Area
Chamber or Commerce at the
Ohio Universit y Inn.
· In At hens, TTl would m anufacture seats. door trim panels and
headliners for Honda Civic automobiles manufactured In Marys:
vl!le , Ohio.
Lt . Gov , Pa ul Leonard and
Department ,of Development Dl- ·
rector David Baker joined with
State Rep. Jo lynn Boster, DGalllpolls, State Sen. Jan MIchael Long, D-Ctrclevllle, Athens
Mayor Sara Hendricker', and TTl
officials In making_the announc- ·

Sum sought through coltrt

1

Januar.y spee 18. I

JOln
• '•

'•

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The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

-Local news briefs----. Japanese industry moves to Athens

I
held the young Spartans .to just 'Cochran added 6 apteee.
game high 27 points, followed by
The
little
Marauders
pulled
1
Bissell with 22 and Joey Snyder two points · (via the free throw
down
26
rebounds
to
Alex's
30,
1
route) In the third quarter of
who came hi with 11. Bartrumn
their contest .as they picked up a committed 13 personal fouls to \
and Bissell were effective In the
well earned 40 to 30 victory over the visitors 17 and had 12 •
rebounding department with 10
turnovers to the Spartan's 18.
'
the 'visitors.
arid 12 respeetively . .
olunlor High Residtl
1
Alexander' scoring was well . "Better d.e fense than In past
Tl)e Meigs junior high maroon l
two games and aggressive ness In
balanced as Denny Jarvis hit for
23, Doug Ketter 15 and Jim the rebounding department squad continued tbelr winning j
Martin and Bill Whitlatch each made the · difference", said ways as they posted their ninth •
Coach Kennedy . He pointed out win of the year against no losses, ;
garnered 10.
that In the last two games the downing Federal Hocillng 40 to l
Box score:
opposition
· had averaged 62 · 19. It was another great team :.
MEIGS - . Barti'um 10·3-4-27;
·
points
per
contest.
He praised the effort ·as It became halves of •
. Bissell 10-2-22; Snyder 4-3-11 ;
"sweet sixteen s". In the first
l
play of the entire team:
Burdette 2-0-4; Smith 4-1-9;
Eddie Crooks led the Meigs ha!f. Trlcia Baer and Chrissy
Durst 2-0-1; Baker 1-0·0-2; Sisson
scoring with 12. Cary BeP:Ing Weaver combined for 16 for the
0-1-1.
ALEXANDER Chapman was c lose behind with 11, Scott Mar'a uderettes and after the ,
3-0-4-10; Kelter 1-3-4-15; Whi- · Barton came In with 7, Jay intermission, Kim Ham·ttng and •
Humphreys and Doug Stewart Reva Mullen teamed up for 16 :
tlatch 1-1-3-8; Jarvis 7-9-23;
added 4 each and Hank Cleland more.
&gt;
,
Skinner 1-0-2; Martin 3-4-11.
Pierson and Bentley led· the •
contributed 2.
Score by quarters:
For the visitors, Benjl Dixon Lady Lancers with 8 and 6 ~
Melgs ....... ...... ........ . 22 43 63 81
,
had
9 while Chris Warren and C. respectively.
Alexander ....... ~ ........ 22 34 52 69

OSU, Indiana on TV

By United Press International
Louisville coach Denny Crum
and his Dayton counterpart Don
Donoher agree that Crum's Ca r dinals are a line passing team.
" We played really well passing
the ball to the open man. That 's
the key to getting good shots,"
Crum said Tuesday night after
the Cardinals routed the hos t
Flyers, 90-59.
"We played as well as we have
all year. especially on the_road." .
added Crum. "It was one of those
days when everyth ing went
welL "
Donoher also praised the
Cardinals .
"Louisville. is a . tre m endous
passing team. They are a joy to
watch.
Herbe rt Crook scored 20
off 14 straight points.
point s, Pervis Ellison added 18,
Th e Ca rdinals led 38-16 at the
Kenny Payne had l4 and LaBradhalf and· e nlarged the lead In the
!ord Smith and Mike Abram 10
second half.
apiece to pace the Cardinals.
A large student delega tion
10-6.
among ·the 13,261 fans ar UD
Day ton jumped to a 9-2lead but
Arena became upset with the
two quick baskets by Crook
officia ting and began throwing
started the Cardinal comeback
paper cups and toilet onto the
and Louisville we nt a head 14-11 .
floo r. The officials gave Donoher
Dayton scored to cut the margin
a warning but a second barrage
to )4 -13 before the Ca rdinal s ran
of debris brought a technical lout

Wednesday, January 27. 1988

ment. Also Instrumental In the
buildings planned lor the plant .
teilm effort involved, were WilThe fir st TTl building 'would
liam Lhota . of Columbus Southcontain approximat ely 80,00(l0
ern Power. and Co lumbia Gas
square fee t of floor space, a nd
President E ugene Gralla a nd
operations in the building could
their respective eco nomic develbegin by September 1988. A
opment departme nts. The effort
second building, approximately
involved was truely tea mwork
40,000square feet, could be In use
between state, local and corpoone year' later.
·
rate people .
An expected 200 workers from
The TTl pla nt In Canal Win the local labor pool would be
chester manufa ct ures similar
hired for manufacturing operaparts for Honda Accord.
tions In the first building, and
. A plant In Athens would crate
another 100 for additional pro·300 new jobs. making It th e
duciion in the second building.
second largest indust ria l em A team of'· 6 to 10 Japanese·
ployer In Athens County.
. · managers would move to Athens
TTl has al ready located a 24
to direct operations a t the plant.
acre plant site in the Kerr
Locai \YOrkers would be hired In
Industrial Park on RT. 56 and
groups of 20 to 30 and go through a
will complete negotiations for it s
training period be fore another
purchase if applications to loca l group Is employed.
and state agencies are approved .
. TTl is a s ubsidiary of Tokyo
A Japanese compny will apply
Seat Company Limited, and both
this week to the Ohio De partment
compan ies have their hea dquarof Deve lopme nt for state a nd ters in Saitama (Si-ee-tah-mah)
federal dev&lt;;'lopment grants. · " . and In Japan
II grantsare awarded, TTl will
President Yasuo Shimizu
move immediately to start con- !Yah -sue-oh SMe-ma-zoo1 and
struction on the first of two vice preside nt Shozo Tsuchlda
iSbow-zo Tsoo -chee- dah) of Tokyo Sea t and other top corporate
officers flew to United Sia tes to
join TTl m a na gem ent lor the
lion o! surface mined land since
announceme nt in AthPns.
the mid-1940's, whe n it first
Don Blosser . presldent.o! the
bega n mining in the area sou - Athens Area Chamber of Comtheast of Zanesville. The popula r
merce , said the chamber , depart ReCreali on Land properly, a
ment o! development. sta le legisresu lt of th at com mitment , is
lators. city and county of!lclals
ava ilabl e to th e public, free of
and Athens businessm en. and
charge ., The area offers oppor- utility company representatives
tuniti es for camping, hiking.
have been Involved In developing
fishing and hunting.
1
a proposal to bring TTl to the
· U.S. Secretary of the Interior . city .
Donald P. Hode l, in citing thP
A TTl piant would genpra te an
Initial "T a ke Pr ide In America"
expected $3 mill io n In pe rson al
campaign as a " phenomenal
inco me in At h&lt;&gt;ns Coun ty eac h
success," said th at 525 nominaypar. according to Chamber o!
tions wer e conside red for na- Com merce C'Xec uti vr director
tional recognition . Of those. 38 Robert Huff.
were se lecte d as national
Tax mon Pys from lh£' new
winners.
industry would cduca t&lt;' 237 child " We are extremely pleased . renIn AthPns public school s. Huff
that Ohio Power Company was said . He esti ma ted that th e
one of those 38," He ller said . "lt dolla rs c ircula ting in the area
is still another indica tio n that we from th e new ly created jobs
were doing the right thing with would a dd a n estim a ted 204 jobs
that mined land long before laws i n I i e I d s o 1 h c I' t h a n
were passed maki ng reclama - manufactu ring.
tion a ma nd a t~ry process. ,;
For further in fo rmat ion or
questions. ca ll thP At hens Area of
Chamber of Commerc e at
16l4i 594 -22ol .

Certificate on display
On display a t the Ohio Power
Company office, 110 Mulberry
Ave .. Pomeroy, on Wednesday
through Frida y, will be the
"Take Pride In America" certifi ca te the company received last

summer in ceremonies in Washington D.C.
R.K . Ash. area manager, sa id
;he certificate bea rs the signa tures o! Charles Bronson. Clint
Eastwood and Lo.uis Gossett Jr ..
honorary spokesma n for the
nationa l "Take Pide In America" campaign in its inaugural
year.
··

Area deaths
and Mrs . David !Joyce ) Bussart.
Elsie Boring
Columbus; live brothers. Walter
Elsie May Boring, 72, 2370 Will ia m Gray. Mansfield; Ar thu r Gray, Radcliff. Ky; Ivan
Mercedes Lane, Columbus. for- Glen Gray. Nora, Ill.; John
merly or Meigs County, ' died
Herbert Gray, Stockport: NorTuesday at the St . Anthony
man Richard Gray, Monroe.
Hospital in Columbus following a
Wise. ; two sisters, Mrs. Ca rroll
lengthy illness.
!Dorothy LeP ) Weber . Highla nd
· A holl)emaker, Mrs. Boring
Heights, Ky .. and Mrs. Roger
was born at Sprigg, W. Va .. a
!Frances) Zerbes , Aurora, Ill. .
daughter of the late Robert and . 20 grandchildren and e ight gr eatNellie•, HensleY Gray. She was a
grandchildren .
retired ~ mployee of Ohio UniverBesides her parent s, she was
sity and a member of Christ's
preceded In dea th by two brothUnited Methodist Church.
ers. Clarence Gray a nd .Jesse
• Surviving are her . hu sband ,
Gray; a sister. MrS&gt; Harold
Lloyd Boring; children, Mrs .
iGladolal Helle r , and a grand Charles t Erma 1 Norris, Racine;
daughter , Cindy Denise. "
Mrs . Gordon 1Garnett 1 Horton ,
Services will be helci at 2 p.m .
f ort Lauderdale, Fla; Howard
Friday. at the Ewing Funeral
~dwln Boring, Newfoundland,
Ho.me With the Rev . Charles
Canada; Vatchel · L. 1Sonny 1 Nor ri s officiating. Burial will bt&gt;
lloring, · Carroll; Mrs. Micha e l
in Wells Cemetery. Friends ma y
/Barbara) Dickens, Columbus;
call at the funeral home from 2 to
· Mrs. William (Virginia 1 Gillen4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday .
, r ate r, } ort .. LauderdaiP. Fla "

··we are most proud of the fact
that our ReCreation Land
project was se iec led for this
national honor. a nd I was pri vileged to accept the award on
behalf of the compa ny and our·
customers." sa id . C.A. Hele1·,
president of Ohio Power .. "We
can all share in this recognitinn."
he added.
The company has been committed to responsible rec la m a-

Pomeroy Court news

.;Harsha files forjudgeship
' Wiii /all) H. Harsha. prosecut Ing attorney o! Pickaway
County. ,h as announced his candidacy lor the newly created
;)udgeshlp 9n Ohio' ~ Fourth Dis;rtct ' Court of Appeals, which
~ontalns fourteen counties in
li;outhern Ohio.
Harsha , 40, lives with his wile
lr.arpara and two daughters
1~utside of Circievllle, where ·he
~ractlces law and serves as
.~ou!'IY pro~ecutor.
J:' ~e Is a pative of Portsmouth,
C"nd is the son of former Con~ressman , William H. Harsha.
ho represented Ohio's Sixth
dngrcss!onal District for
wenty years .
·
Harsha !holds an undergradu:ate and 'graduate degrees from
.iamf University and earnPd a
w degree fr om Cooley - Law
WILLIAM H. HARSHA
chool. Lansing. Mich .. where he
, as a ' member of the Law ,
. eview and graduated with
Assoc iation and the Ohio Proseonors .
.
cuting Attorneys Association. HP
.also serves as a member of the
. ; In addition to being a member
,of the A!perlcan and Ohio Bar
Ohio Jail Advisory Board for the
ll).ssociations, Harsha belongs to
Ohio Department o! Rehabllita :t,he National District Attorneys · lions and Corrections and is a
'"
past delegate to the Ohio Council
,.
of County Officials .

l

f

'·

jlivorce8
sought
..

Nineteen cases were processed
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Rich a rd Seyler Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds w ere Barry
McCoy. ll. Syracuse. $42, speed-'
ing; RhoQda Wood , (..et(lrt, W.
Va., $43. stop sign violation;
Clara . Whittington, Pomeroy,
$63, t&gt;xpired plates ; Phillp, M.
Ohlinger. Letart, W. Va. , $43,
speeding; Jamie Davis. Pomeroy, $4&gt;. speeding; Diane K.
Jones. Re.edsvllle. $43. stop s ig n
violation; Robert Calhoun, Ru- .
tland, $47, speeding; Laura Far·ley , Long Bottom. $48, speeding;
James Hensler. Racine, $88,
open flask; Brian Reeves, Paineroy. $46, speeding; Randy
Snider, Pomeroy, ·$63, ex pired
plates; Pamela · Shaw. Rio
Grande, $47. speeding; Maria
,Juchasz, Mt ., Pleasant, Mich ..
$43, stop sign violation; Loretta
Ro se, Middleport . Pxpire d
plates.
Fined were Gary Hi ckel. Coolville. $63 and costs. no opera tor' s
license. and $43 and costs ,
speeqing; Willlam Pi um!ey, Rus -

Daily stock prices ,
(As of 10: 30 a .m.)
Bryce and Marl! Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 28*
AT&amp;T ... .............. ........ :..... ._29%
Ashland Oil ...... .... .. .. .: ...... ._55'"
Bob Evans .............. .. ........... 15
Charm ing Shoppes .............. 12Y,
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul... ... ............. .35*
Goodyear T&amp;R : .................. 58%
Heck's Inc ..... ........... : .......... 1 ¥~
Key Centurion .... ...... .......... . 40
Land s' End .... ,........... ......... 20%
L.1m1't ed Inc ............... .... .. .. .l8Y,
. a .
Multimedia Inc ......... : .. ........ 53 .
Rax Rest au rant s .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 7*
Shoney's Inc ........ .... .... : ...... 21%
Wendy's Inti .................. : ..... 5'"
Worthington Ind .... ....... ....... 171,1

Lottery numbers .
CLEVELAND IUP!) - Tuesday 's - winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
·
Daily Number
350.
Ticket
sa l es total e d
$1 ,139,768.50, with a payoff due of
$543,857.50.
PICK-4
7869.
PICK-4 tic ket sa les totaled
$190.103.50, with a payoff due of
$85,811. '
.
P ICK-.4 $1 straight bet pays
$_2,952. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$123.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges January' 26: Hollie
Boggs, Nicholas !lrumfield, Mrs.
Rick Cossin a nd daughter , Dixie
Golden . Mrs. Anthony Grey and
son , Richard Ha ll, Maria Huddleston, Nancy Hughes, Davi d
John son, Dolores Kruskamp, Robert Kuhn: Jason Mayes, Thomas Roach. Tina Si mpson, Mrs. •
Don Smith and son, Larry
Stephens aM Sheila Stidham .
Births Janyai'y 26: Mr . and
Mr s. William Ra msey , da ughter,
Oak Hiil. Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert·
Slone. so n , Hamden. Mr. · and .
Mr s. Howa rd Writesel. daught er.
Racine.

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

sell, Ky., $43 and costs, defective
muffler; Albert Curtis, Pomeroy, $63 and costs. ope rating
while under suspension; Todd
Goode, Pomeroy, $:175 and costs , ,
driving while intoxicated, and
$63 arid costs. operating unde r
suspensio n; Denver Bush. Pomeroy, $54 and costs, speeding.

Fur Your Valt'ntine,

A HEART OF GOLD

• • •

•
BARGAIN MAT INEES SAT • SUN
ALL SEATS $2.50
~2 . 50

BARGAIN NIGHT :TUESDAY

LJANUARY 22 thru 2!J

WITH A SPARKLE OF LOVE

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY !

A ~' I ;n: ·•nt diamond sel in lOK yellow gold
:1 C l1 7 t )I LOVE IS NEVER FORGOTTEN
OIWER M UST BE MADE BY JAN . 29t h

~&amp;~

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
. Tuesday Admissions - Ka thryn Evans. Portland; Pauline
Derenberger. Pomeroy; Daisy
Sisson, Midd!epor;: Mary Carr-,
Coolville.
'l;uesday Di scharges -Ro nald
Diles. Tami Hof!ma~ . J eremy
Watson. Dorothy Proffitt. Helen
Miller.

Stocks

'QfJetlelers
212 E.
Pomeroy
Mo\n,

1( ' 11' &gt; ,1 10 I " \1HI~·\ ( I- ( &lt;) II! (T1 0N

·Moonlight
.

THURSDAY, JAN. 28 -

ad ness
'

6:00-11:00 ONLY

'

: •. Michael Lee Conley. Portland,
illas filed for a divorce In Meigs
tounty . Common Pleas Court
~om . Sandra Lynn Conley ,
r ortland.
A divorce was granted to both
rtles In the case of Teresa
olllns against Larry Collins.
A dissolution of marriage has
een granted Betty L. Woije and
erry ~- Wolfe. Betty Wolfe has
,1\een r!!stored by the court to her
j;llalden name Gilmore.
• • A d'tvorce has been grante;&lt;l
llarbar,a Jeanette Cullen frorh
erry Lynn Cullen and the
a ·tnli1,1·1las been restored to her
alden name Lanier. · .
~ Nll\s~l Davies has been
ranteo;l a. dlvorcefromJamesW.
avles Jr. and restored by the
ourt ' to her malden name
uvall.

~

i

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SUPER SALE
SAVE UP TO .

S0°/o

LARGE GROUP OF 45" &amp; 60'~ FABRICS
0/0 STRIPES, PLAID
/4 0
AND SOLIDS

.,f

40

CORDUROY
'

6()" WOOL &amp; BlENDS
60" WOOl CHALUS

40°/o oFF
.

20°/o TO 50°/o OFF
40°/o OFF

45" GROUP OF FABRICS

(
99
ONLY

~SED MACHINES $3995 &amp; UP
• Marriage licenses have been
sued In Meigs CoiiDIY Probate
urt "' Terry Lee Rowley, 26,
d P~Jo~ephlne Jarvis, 18,
th
ddJeport; EIIIJ Earl
Mil , 30, . and , Dorothy
uiM .toiiC!S. 30, both of Racine.

'•H
t; · ,I;
~~

/

FABRIC SHOP

110 WISf MAIN

•
GROUP

WOMEN'S

CHILDREN'S
WINTEfi:OTS

heritage house

DRESS SHOE-S &amp;
DR.ESS ,,OOTS
1f2PIICE

sso

30°/o
OFF
STOREWIDE

.

.

ONE lACK

CHILDRE'N 'S

RED GOOSE SHOES
&amp;

KANGAROO BOOTS

lf2 PRICE

20°/o
OFF
STOREWIDE

.

Si~~ES
$ 00
LAIGE GIOUP

TENNIS ~HOES

'Sl 0 00

.

ONE lACK

ONE GIOUP MIN'S

LEATHER HI TOPS

SlOOO

Locker 219

.

APPAREL

ssoo

'

lEAD THIS AD CAREFULLY, THEN STOP IN FIOM 6 TO 11 FOI·GIEAT IUYSI
·-

~ htri~ hous~ ­

SHOE PLACE
MIDDUPOIT

992-5627

�•

The

:::::::;t:;:::::s::::=_

. . . ._

Wednesday, Janus

27, 1988•

'

•

' limit Quantities

l~ Land value and time...

.ST-()RE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

•'
;·

8 AM-10 PM

By BOB HOEFLICH

:

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 30, 1988

1··

SeatlneiStaff
I! you think the business
: makeup of the
·: Big Bend area
;· hasn't 'changed,
;· then you should
'. see a rural dl:- rectory of Meills
; ' CountY ,
•' llshed for
; : years of 1933, 1934 and 1935.
: : The bOOklet, owned by Frank
· . Epple or Middleport. lists resl·
· ;: dents of all townships of the
;~ county, the number of acres they
•· owned and the valual'lon· of the
; land and buildings at tnat time.
I'm sure you are aware that
·values were much. much lower
at that -time. For example. a
, Sutton Township property owner
had 48 acres with the value of the
; land at that time being $1,820
while buildings were valued at .
$700. This is typical throughout
the booklet.
.. Few businesses which adver·
•' tised in the booklet are still in
. : extsta nce today , although slm·
. : . liar. business operations may be
· ~ · taking place in the same
~ · locations .

i:, · Auto
Looking back. the Blaettnar
Co. in Pomeroy was adver~:

'

CE BONELESS

Chuck Roast ... ~~~u~

$

Q)J

79
I
I
I
I

ill i' I' 'i
t....:fLt
I
"'l"i 1 11 1

LB.

BALLARDS 1-LB. ROLL or' 10 OZ. LINK

Sausage ..........

uu e

LONGACRE

Ground Turke

tlsing the Rockne, Hudson and
;: Essex Terraplane, and you could
, . not only buy a musical lnstru:: ment at the H. M. Cross Music
• · Store In Middleport but you could
:- pick up gold fish, fish food, bowls.
: : wall paper. _paints . vacuum
,.•' cleaners. radios and refrigera, • tors. TheRA. Miller Lumber Co.
;: In Middleport offered lumber a,nd
, · builders supplies .for the barn ,
: milk house, chicken house. tool
.0: house or corn crib. The Curtis
~ Funeral Home in Racine boasted
;: 35 .years of dep~ndable service in
.: : the same location and the Miles
•' Monument Co .. also in Racine.
··· said It was one of the oldest
established business firms In
Meigs County . The Robert
Warner Insurance Agency ad' ver tlsed, "lt ;s a bad policy not to
have a good one" . The New York
: . Clothing House In Pomeroy was
; "Meigs County's Old Reliable
1. Store" and the Prlode Lumber
: Co. in Middleport offered a wide
•, range of building materials.
1· Pomeroy's Phillips Sisters Style

.

FRESH .PORK BUTT

Steak/Roast

LB.

$ 39

1_..1
.....,_.________
.

'

.

-

PI

'

.79(

.

"''

t

•

(

"'*t)8(J)(j

)-Health department begins
.·~ . dental sealant pro.gram

--------------GAY 90's 20 Oz.
WHITE BREAD
Reg. Price 79c

BUY ONE GET ONE Fill
·coupon
Expiros 1·30..1
.
.

(

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

MIKE-SELLS ASST. FlAVORS

POTATO CHIPS
Reg. Price SU9

. l24 07..
~

llil&lt;li ill

Coupon bpi111 1·30·aa

..

CRUNCHY or CREAMY ELF

(

W GAL.

Peanut Butter

YELLOW ONIONS
Reg. Price S1, 19 •
BUY ONE GET ONE FlEE

59 --------------

·Mac./ Clleese ••••••
.•
.•• •
•

•• AJAX DETERGENT

•

•

•••

oz.
lOX

12$

$309

limit I Per Custo•or
Good Only At Powell's Superrnartet
Off or Gootl Thru Sat., Jan. 30, 1_911

•

1-LB. PKG. CRISPY SERVE

•

•

•

•

DOMINO.SUGAR
S LB.·
BG

$ . 29

limit 1 p.,, Custcmor
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
• Offer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 30, 1988 ·

•
•
•

Reg. Price $1.39
BUY ONE GET ONE FlEE
co.;... lxplros I·SO.II

,

. ' o..

--.--------~----

. 0'1.

12 OZ. PKG. SUPEIIOI

•••

limit 1 Per (usto.,,r
~
G~od Onlv At Powell's Supermor~tl
,
~'::' Offer Good Thri. Sat, Jan.' 30, I'll • •

······ ~··· ··· ········
'

1

•

'
'

·'.::::::=::::::::;::::::::~::::::=~
•

•'•1

•••
•

Reg. Prlct $1.49

..... ,

\_

'

The third six weeks hono r roll
for ttie Letart Falls Elementary
School has bee n a nnounced.
Making a grade of B or above in ·
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
,
Second Grade: Kristen Hill,
Julie Hunnel, Jennife r Roush.
Billy Tackett. Stacy Warden,
Ranetta Wheeler.
. .
Third Grade: Amy Aikins,
Adam Roush, . Jessica Say ri'.
Lora Sayre. Vanessa Shuler.
Fourth Grade: Jason Barnett.
Jason Shuler.
Fifth Grade : Sabrina Congo.
Tracy PlckC'tt, Brandy Roush.
· Sixth Grade: Michael Jarrell,
Stepha~ie Sayre, Sam Shain .

Revival
BURLINGHAM- The Word ol
Life Church at Burlingham will
begin revival services Monday , 7
p.m. each evening. Johnnie Rid·
die will he the evangelist.
Speaker
LONG BOTTOM -Mrs. Mary
Folmer of Long Bottom will be
thespeaker at the Feb. 2 meeting
of the Long Bottom Chapter of
Flame Fellowship to be held at
7:30 p.m. at the Mt. Olive
Community Churc h. Long Bot lorn. Suzanne Bush is president
and In vites the public.

nagging cough or hoarsenC'ss.
As for ways to r~d u c~ the
incidence of ca ncer. !he

nur~e

that thP ovPrwcight reduce. that
fiber bC' increased and fa t d~·
creased in lh!' diet. thai \'itamin
A and C bC' increased. and that
co nsum ption of alcohol. and salt
cured and n i lrit ~ lunc heon meats
bt&gt; ''edu ced.
Five million Americans are
a!l1·e today who hav!' a history of
ca ncer .. but 900.fl00 npw cancers
arc found C'ach year. and there
ca n be no letup on early detec·
lion. she concluded.

SWIFT

SHREDDED $2,19 lb.

COOKED HAM •••••••• ~!•.. SLICED $1.99

HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD ••••••••••~ ••••• ~!·.•••.•.• 89&lt;
KRISP &amp; SERVE SLICED

VAC. PACK BACON •••••• ~!-- ... S1.19
IDAHO BAKING .

POTATOES ...... !.~.\!, •• , S1.79
CELLO PACK

CARROTS ......t.~.?.L~~-~~ ... 3Sc
I SO CT.

TANGERINES....;....... 6/ 79c
ORE-IDA

GOLPEN FRIES •••••••• M!.~.A.~ •• S1.59
BIRDS-EYE

PEAS ............................. ~~-~~••••• 99&lt;
BANQUET 10 PIECE D_,NNER
'·
. . 2 LBS. $4 39 ·
FRIED CHICKEN
·····'········

.

KRAFT DElUXE DINNER

MAC/ CHEESE •••••••••••••~ ~.~P.~·. S1.39
STOKElY

APPLE SAUCE ••••••••••• ~!.~!~ ... 2/99c .
ARMOUR
2.5 oz. $1 19'
'DRIED BEEF ••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
CARNAnON Reg, &amp; W/Marshmallows

.

HOT CHOCOLATE .........1•2.~!;. S1.79 :

You'll Save On Items Throughout The
Store Like Never Before ••••

JUMIO

BOUNTY TOWELS ......~!.~H; ..... 99c·

FOLGER'S

SAVE - SAVE - SAVE

..

INSTANT COFFEE ••••••~.~:~.z~ SS.29

CHED "90c OFF"

DETERGENT ••••••••• ~ ••••••~~!.P.~·. S2 .59
LUCK'S

992.·7521

CHICKEN/DUMPLINGS ~.~tz.~!; ••• 99&lt;

-DLEPOIT, OHIO
;'

•

c hange in wart or moiC". and

A shower Was held recently at
the Racine First Baptist Church
honor ing. Joshua Allen Pape, son
of Allen and Carol Pape. Racine.
Linda Teaford and Lisa Pape
hosted the shower.
. Winning games and the door
prize were Dixie · Wolfe, Lillian
Hayman, and Judy Pape. Cak~.
mint s. nuts and pun&lt;:h · were
served.
Attending were Phyllis
O'Brien, Patty Pape. Florence
Adams. Mary O'Brien. Eilee,n
Roush. Virginia Salser. June
E ichinger. Lois Mugrage, .Judy
Pape, Kristen Pape. Dixie Wolfe.
Clara Powell, Lillian Hayman.
Reva Norris. Tammy and Kevin
Hill. Cla udia Roush. Carol Jean
Adams, Martha Beegle, Dorothy
Badgley, Pearl Adams. Libby
Fisher. Mindv Pat.terson. Lillian
Weese, Caroly n Adams. Julia
Norris. Cookie Salser. Tonja
Hunter. Kay and Monica Hill ..
and Jennifer Arnold .
Others "sending gifts were
Bonnie White. Barbara Dugan,
Clara Adams. Mary Ball. . Sally
Hill, Peach Mugrge, Doris
Adams. Ellen Deave r . Marie
Roy, Pat Smit h. Donna Johnson.
Gretta Simpson. Kathryn Hill.
Tina Rees. Lorna Hill . Marilyn
Powel l. Aldena Taylor. Sherry
and Delores Sayre. Shirley
Sayre. Franc&lt;'s Cady, Kathy
Grady, Patty Michael, Becky
Teaford. l\1a.rsha Arnold. June
and Kathy Baker.
Margaret Yost. Nancy Rawlings . Lucille No!Tls . DorothY.
Sayre. Margaret Gloeckner ,
M~ry Lou Proffitt ..Joyce Quillin,
Mindy Mill. Missy Rees . Tammy
Nibert. Paula Eichinger. and
KC'nda and Kelly Rizer .

PORK &amp; BEANS .......... !.J.P.~·••••• 99&lt;
ORTEGO TACO SHELLS.~~.H:.•••• 99( .
ORTEGO TACO SAUCE ~.~.z~...... 99&lt; :

•

Jl

unusual bleeding or discharge.
thickness or lump in breast or
clsew herC'. indigestion or diffi.
culty in swa llowing. obvious

recipient Of
layette sh0We~

VAN UMP

..

..
.,

v -

YOU USE OUR HELP?"

Do you need e vacation from 24 hour care of
'
••
•
. a loved one?
.,••' ;
Let Amerlcare Pom~ Nuralng end
Rehebllbtlon Centera' undfratandlng, .
:-;
steff tem,brarlly relieve you of ·
profeulonal
•'I·~•
your hHvy reeponllblllty.
•• Accepting reside~ for short term reeplte care.
Call Sonya Wolfe at 814•912-8808
·'
Far ConiUitlria and lnformadon
~

I;

BU~

ONE GET ONE FlU
c..,. ...... ,.....

"CAN

•,

FRANKIE WIENDS •

•

Tammy Leachman. Chris
Spencer. Trisha Spence r. Diana
.. .
White..
Tenth Grade: Sherr! Bissell.
Shawn . ·aush. Amy Murphy.
Mary Parker . .Jill Reynolds.
Greta Riffle.
Ninth Grade: Andrea Cleland.
Suzanne Clay. B illy Johnson .
Mar'y Ann Kibble. Mark Murphy .
Eighth Grade: Steve Barnett.
Tiffany Gardner.' Sheila Lalli·
mer. Toney Maxey. LotTe Os borne. Julie Riffle. Amy Well.
Sherrie Wolf.
Seventh Grade: Jeremy-suck ley, Nicole Kanawalski. Michelle
Met zger. Carrie Morrisey. Li sa
Hoffman. Elise Manlcke, Matt
Michaeel. Karen Morris. Tracey
Murphy, Stephanie Otto. Mike
Roush. Sherrie Smith.

.

••

.-

____...•

eartv. three out of four cases ca n
be c'ured.
·
The American Ca ncer Society.
according to Ms . Tor res . reports
that one out of every 11 women
will get br~ast cancer in her
lifetime and that most of those
will be 35 years of age or over. A,s
for mammograms, a base-line
one should be taken between ages
35 and 40 and after age 50 the
society recommends there
should be a yearly mammogram
taken.
she urged attenlion to the ·
seven war.ning s ign s of cancer-·a
cha nge in bowel or b!addrr
haBi ts. a sore that does not heal,

POST INVENTORY
CLEARANCE SALE

•'

BACON

•••••
• • • • (XH}~o••
• • • •• •••
••

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Roller skating
will . be offered Friday. 6,: 30 .to
8:30 p.m .. and every Friday
thereafter. at Rutland Civic

· MADNESS SA·LE

•

Coupon Expiros I·SO·II

oz.

CHESTER - Chester Fire
Department Is holding an open
house ·on Thurday at 7:30 p.m ..
for · all local fire departments to
view Chester's new tanker. Refreshments will be served .

THURSDAYf JANUARY 28th
6 PM· H PM

3 LB; lAG

\lj(,'!I'IID&gt;~&lt;J(li

PRICE SAVER

• •••• •
·····(XJU~·······
·.• • • •.

---~---------·--

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Precptor Beta
Beta Chapter wm meet at Lambs
·Restaurant for diimer at 6 p.m.
before attending a performanc~
of "Carousel" at Ohio Unlverslty. For additional information
members may call 992-2732 .

~ MOONLI~HT

&gt;

BUY ONE GET ONE. FREE

SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - A bene lit
si ng for David Pratt. of Baker
Road. Pomeroy. wlll be held
Saturday, 7 p.m ., at the Word of
Life Church. Burlingham . Severa! singing groups will b&lt;'
featured . Everyone welcm:ne. · ·

County schools
announce honor rolls

''

L1 • BAG

(':e nter. $1 students. $2 adults.
Spectators free. Special time wlll
be allotted for skateboarders.

-~eigs

Youth group has party

,.

GardenCiub;lllmeetThursday,
7:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead. Co- hostesses
will be Mrs. Herman Grossnickle
and Mr·s. Ronald Cowdery. Pro·
. gram on houseplants will be
presented by Mrs. Harlls Frank.

Cancer clinics planned by department

The media seems to be bom- The third six weeks honor roll for ·
barding us with "facts" about the the Southern Junior High School
filing of our 1987 income tax . has been announced. Making a
reports. Don't they know we're grade of B or above In all their
not going to get up tlghl about . subjects to be named to the roll
that until about Aprli 14? Do keep were:
Seventh Grade: Nick Adams.
smiling.
Beihany Bass, Nicole Beegle.
Michael Evans, Todd Grace.
•
Nikki Ihle. Heather McPhail . .
Ang~la Mills , Kenny Rizer. Dar·
rell Sayre, RuslySmlth, Ml.chelle
.
.
•
Stobart
, Kvle Wickline. Shawn
I
The group extended appreciaTwenty-two youth of the Enter·
Wolfe.
Vaierie Connolly. Julie
:, pr)se United Methodist Church tion to Helen and Joyce Davis for
Hill.
Raherta
Caldwell. Heather
:. held a party recently at the Davis the use of their home and
Hill.
Rachel
Rose.
: home on Rose Hill following their assistance with the party. At·
Eighth Grade: Jeff Allen.
tending were those naned and
·:, regular meeting at the c hurch .
Jason
Arnott, Joshua Codner.,
'
During the evening, the · Erica and Randy Robie. Cynthia
Sarah
Duhl.
Kellie Ervin, Jqdy
: . younger members went sledding • Cotterill. Anni~ .Jesse. Kelly and
Hayes. Andy Hili . Ve!£&gt;Ssa flun·
; under the supervision of Darrin Ta ra Grueser, Jason Hall. Paul.
nell. bavid lhle. Trevor Petrel.
; Warth, Danny Hall . and Chris · Sarah and Jim Pullins. Leonard
Jenny
Varney. Carrie
,; Davis assisted by Charles Smith. Hill. Josh. Frank and Shelly
Gloeckner.
Terri Hayman.
Pizza, hot chocolate. and pop Dickens and Pat Young.
Brenda
Hunt.
Scolt
Lisle. Renee
Firelight sledding was enjoyed
' were prepared and S!'I'Ved by
Russell.
Stacey
Theiss.
by the senior members folloWing
~· Joanle Simpson. Amy Warth and
the
party.
Mary Butcher.
The third six weeks honor roll
for the Eastern High School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above in all their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
Twelfth Grade: Trlna Barker.
Maralyn
Barton , · Lori ·Burk.e .
•
Renee Kaylor. ·Larissa Long.
' : ' The first Installment on fund·
he adv ised in advance and will,be
Amy Bissell, Amy Connolly.
:; ~ lng to intiate a dental sealant
asked to provide written permis - Bonnie Koenig, Ruth Nutter. Will
:. program in Meigs Count)· ha s sion for a dental evaluation and
Poole. April Rl tchle. Jodi
. •; arrived according to Jon .Jacobs . sealant. There will be no charge
Schaekel.
:·: · Meigs County Hea llh Depart- to I he students who will be taken
Eleventh Grade: David Rice.
' : ment admtnstrator.
from the classroom one or two at
.Jayne Ann Ritchie. Lisa Bissell.
;: ' Jacobs reported that $10,500,
a timE' so as not to disrupt school
Mary Edwards. Amy Hager ,
:• ' half of the $21,000 grant tci schedules .
Krls Heines. Tammy Kennedy,
operate thE' program through
Income does not enter Into the
~ June 1989, arrived this week
dental' sealant program which.
permitting · personnel to move according to Dr. Lawson will he
forward with plans for going Into carried out in the first or second
schools to began evaluations and
grades and then again in the sixth
applications of the sealants.
or '"venth grade. While a dental
•
Jacobs did note. however. that
hygienist will actually apply the
' Dr. Margie Lawson who is sealtant. It will not be done until
~. headln~t the program and a
after a dentist has checked the' couple of her assistants will he student.
going to Columbus or Cincinnati
The procedure which takes
~ sometime in I he near future to
about 15 minultes entails clean·
; view the projects going on there. ing the teeth with a special
, Mei~s County is the third location
toothpaste. applying a special
: tn the state to receive grant cleansing · liquid using a tiny
•' money for a school based sealant
pleee of cotton which Is gently
·: program.
rubbed or\ the·teeth. washing that
~·
Plans call for tpe program to off after .a minute. and then
~: begin at the Carlton school,
painting the sealant on the tooth
. • probably In mld ·Febr~ary. Jac·
with a small brush .
; obs said. Parents will. of course.

·~~~~iii:
- ,. !r

'
~-

WEDNESDAY . '
MIDDLEPORT - American·
Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128
Shoppe offered ready·to-wear
and its Auxiliary will meet
millinery a nd hOsiery and Bar' Wednesdayeveningatthehaii.A
ton's Phamacy In Pomeroy. joint dinner will he served at ii: 30
assured you that prescriptions followed by meetings of the two
were accurately compounded.
groups at 7:30p .m.
sanitary Grocery and Meat
--Market, owned by the late Floyd
LONG BOTIOM. - Th~ Long
F. Mees, advertised that it was .. Bottom Community' Association .
"Quality Grocers and Provision- wUI meet Wednesday at 7; 30p.m.
ers". The Red Anchor Depart- at the community bu lldlng.
ment Store said It was "reliable,
--friendly and different ." The
MIDDLEPORT - The Ohio
Goessler Jewelry Store advised· Valley Commandry 24 , Knights
· "we can save you money on Templar, Middleport. will meet
everything tn our line. We at -the Middleport Masonic Ternabsolutely guarantee ·every·
pie, Wednesday night. There will
thing" , and ·the: Pomeroy Bar.- be full form opening practice.
gain House was "Where You Can
THURSDAY
Always Do Better."
RUTLAND - The ladles Fe!·
A few of the advertisers are
stll1 going strong today :_ these lowshlp of Meigs County
include The Farmers Bank and Churches of Christ wlll meet
Savings Co .. toe Ewing Funeral . Thursday at the Rutland Church
Home, Watd Cross SOns. G&amp;J .of Christ.
'
·
\
-Auto Parts Co., and the White
POMEROY
Riverview
F uneral Hotne at Coolville.
Incidentally, this booklet was ..
published In the days when we
ordered up our number from a
local telephone operator and
local numbers were three digits
A cancer screening clinic has
and' a letter-'like 182-L. 445·L and
been scheduled at the Meigs
206·J.
·
_ County Health Department for
lf you're wondering about
Wednesday. Feb. 10 from 9:30
clea nup of the November rock a. m to noon.
Mark Brown. M. D. wlil be the
fall on W. Main St., in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Mayor Richard ~yler volunteer physician doing the
says that this won't be taking · exami ning, .Norma A. Torres. R.
N.. nursing s upervi sor . reports.
place uritil spring and of course,
will he up to the property owner. Sixteen appointments will be
taken by phone, 992-6626.
However, Mayor Seyler reThe importance of having
ports that the village will help if
regu
lar examinations was
the re is anything that It can do ,
By the way, if you've been stressed . by Mrs. Torres who
curious about those thin poles to reports that 100.000 Americans
which ribbons are ·attached.
get colo-rectal cancer every year
along E. Main St. in Pomeroy.:... and that it remains the biggest
those mark the rlf1hi-Of·way of cancer kille r in the over 50 age
group. If detected and treated
the telephone company .
And to update you about Main
St., Mayor Seyler says that the
telephone company will IJi. seeing that 'Main St .. from Butternut
Ave .. to Sycamore, is resurfaced
come spring.

~

7

Wednesday, January 27, 1988
Page.7

~:~Be_a_t-;of~.th:-e-:-be-n_d_. ..:..__....,.._ ___;_ _ _ _ _ _~_C_o_m_m_u_n-ity_c,_al_e_nda.:.:.
·. _r_______P_a_pe_c_h-il_d_ _

We Reserve The Right To

U.S.D.A.

By The Bend

-- ..

•' •

The Daily Sentinel

�"-•·

..

~

-- ··~·

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

...

~

..

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.

Page 8-lhe Deily Sentinel

.·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. January 27. 1988

•

rPeopler
.

As for Bush, he was declaring
lntervlewarguement with VIce
victory Immediately alter the
President George Bush.
But on Tuesday Donaldson was . Interview. "The bastard didn't
~
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
lay a glove on me," he reportedly
· saying, " I don't want to beat up
~ .U nited Press International
told aides and CBS technicians as
on Dan Rather. I've been In that
• GLASS BO\JSE RESIDENT:
soon as the Interview with Rather
sltuatlon, In a live Interview
. ~am Donaldson backed off on his
was finished.
trying to get answers. r have a
l;orlgtnal criticism of Dan Rather.
MAGIC MARTIN: steve Margreat deal of sympathy for him. I
Donaldson, the ABC White House
tin Is developing an alter ego
understand the problem. I have
,s:orresponde11t with the reputaknown as The Great Flydlnl.
myivtew of how It all came out but
:~ton
for confrontation, was
Martin made a surprise appearI don't want to throw rocks at
·~uoted by USA Today as saying
ance at a Los Angeles benefit for
Dan Rather or lead the charge
;Rather " went too far" In his
the Big Sisters, showlnll, up as
against him."

•

a.

"lt;s made it somewhat dlffl·
silent, off-beat i')lagictan who
cult
for me to promote the show ."
pull~ strange things out of his
said
Sarah Purcell, the chatrwo·
pants.
man
of the Big Sisters benefit and
The flydlnl routine started
former
hostess of "Real People."
with a couple of· unannounced
"It's
a
Jot easier If you can say
performances at the Magic Cas·
the
name
(Steve Martin) ."
tie In Hollywood . last fall and
YES HAS TO SAY NO: The
Martin Is trying to keep an air of
British
rock band Yes had to
mystery about the character. He ·
Interrupt
Its tour this week
Is Introduced only as "the famous
Italian magician, the Great Fly- because of lllness. Trevor Rabin,
dint'' and won't even allow the guitarist-songwriter ·
producer who masterminded the
pictures to be taken.

band's comeback. has been suf·
rerlng from t.he flu during the
early part of the tour. It got so
llad that he collapsed offstage
. Saturday at a .Tampa, Fla.,.show ·
and was unable to play the
encore.
After a Miami show on Sunday,
doctors confined Rabin to bed,
forcing the cancellatl~f Tues·
day's show ln Jacksonville and
Thursday's In Knoxville, Tenn.
The tour Is scheduled to resume
Friday night In Columbus. Ohio.

•

•

I

,.

We Work Fuli-:-Time At H.aif-Time.
Our ·Experts Will l3e On Hand This Super Bowl
Sunday. To Offer You ~ Cooking Tips, Storage
AdviCe &amp; Recipe Suggestions.
Just Give ()sA Call 1-800-632-6900
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For

CHILLED GRAPEFRUIT OR KROGER
APPLE JUICE 64-0Z ..• 99¢

H
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DIET SPRITE, SPRITE . ·

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,

Hypothermia, particularly In blankets or heating pads may be warm, windproot ciothing and
elderly residents , Is a real used, small' quantl.t les of warm shoes. Frostbite varies In sever-'
danger oCwlnter, according to food or drink may be given .
· tty from "frostnlp to deep frost ·
Norma Torres, R. N. nursing
To prevent hypothermia heat ' bite" depending upon the dura· ,
supervisor at the Meigs County should be kept at a reasonable lion of exposure, temperature to
Health Department.
.level and people should dress which the skin Is exposed and the
Ms. Torres described the con· warmly. In cold weather, she wind speed .
Frostnip, she explained. Is
dltln as one of ilbnormally low said. Heating the living and
Internal .body temperature sl~plng areas to at least 65 when the skin turns white and.
may be slightly numb, and with
where rather . than the 98.6 degrees appears to be adequate,
'" deld'ees considered normal. the . and proper diet an exercise help this there Is usually no pain.
,. deep body temperature falls to95 . maintain the proper · body Superficial frostbite Involves the
. degrees or lower,
temperature.
, ·
· skin and tissue just ·beneath It.
~ The elderly. those living alone,
The health department nurse The skin appears while. waxy
~ those already suffering from
cautioned that hypothe rmia may and firm although the !Issue
~· si&gt;me Illness or anyone taking
start during periods of low body beneath It remains soft. Deep
:,. drugs which interfere with the activity such ·a s sleeping, and frostbite Involves not only skin
,. body's temperature regularly that special care should be taken and tissue underneath, but a lot
~ are particularly suspectlble to to. keep warm by dre_sstng prop·
of musde and bone.
• hypothermia.
erly and using blankets. ·
Firm steady ptessure from a
~- Although checking the body ·
As with other Illnesses, .she warrri hand. blowing hot breath
, temperature with a thermome· said .that early detecti&lt;in lni· or holding ' frostntpped f(ngers
~ ter Is the moist accurate way to · proved chances for a safe speedy . against the bcldy will help re·
~ detect hypothermia, it may be
recovery. If the body tempera· warm them. The area shpuld not
· suspected when other conditions ture does not drop below 90 be rubbed she said. nor plunged
• eXIst.
.
degrees, chatlges are good for a
Into very hot or cold water.
•
Ms. Torres said that hypother· normal recovery. Anything
Persons suffering from super·
mla can be suspected If someone below that could result In some flclal frostbite should be brought ·
; feels colds to the touch but Is not permanent damage, and any· in from the cold and the affected
shivering, Is showing a change In thlng below. 80 degrees usually
areas rewarmed. Stinging, burn·
appearance or behavior, has leads to death, she said.
lng pain and superficial blisters
Ms. Torres advised that frost · may occur. The area may
uncontrolable shivering, stiff
muscles, a slow Irregular heart· bite also poses a danger in
become permanently red and be
beat, slurred speech. shallow. winter. It usually Involves the extrernely sensitive If again ·
slow breathing, confusion, dis· e extremlti~s since' they are often exposed to the cold.
orientation, drowsiness, lack · of the least Insulated part of the.
Vicilms of .d eep .frostbite must
coordination or sluggishness.
. ·body and they are furthest away
receive .prompt· medical atten·
II someone Is suffering from from the heart tn ali area, where lion and s))ould be take'n to a
medical fac.lllty immediately . If
hypothermia, she suggested be· circulation Is poorest. The ear
ginning first aid lrnmedlately tips, nose. cheeks. chin, fingers
treatment must be delayed for
and seeking emergency help. and toes are likely candidates for
more than an hour.' then Ms.
Torres suggests Immersing the
The victim should be kept warm frostbite, she said.
by wrapping the person In
Prevention is the best "cure".
Injured extremities In water
blankets to prevent further heat advised the .nurse, who suggested
between 100 and 105 degrees.
·
··
loss. Hot water bottles, electric·

DNr Ann !.alden: Today 1 read and compassion for the emotional·
the letter from "A Man in Search of ly unstable who have run afoul of
Answers." The prisoner he wrote the law, but ,I am more concerned
about was guilty as chaf'led and · with the victims and their families.
serving a life !lelltente for a crime
Those borderline folks must be
conunltted wheri he was "dearly aware that their psyclies are someout of his mind."
whaf fragile. When they go over the .
A
hours later on .the ABC edge and 8558ult or kill in'nooont
eveni1111 news I saw a young man in · people they must pay the price for
the Bridgewater, Mass., pn.on who their antisocial behavior. Too many
had kUied liis Infant SOl). He noW people are judged "temporarily"
stares at the sun hoping to destroy insane when they knew very well
his vision so "I will not be able to what they were doing.
hurt anyoneewr apin.".
'Dear ADD Landen: My youngest
I am a physician with 20 years of brother works. but not too hard.
experienre in w:neral practite an'd He dlailJI!S jobs frequently and has
have worked in jails and psychiat· always lived beyond .his means.
ric hospicats. My heart bleeds for
Every time the creditors lower
the thousands, yea, tens of thou· ' the boom I lim expected to rescue
sands of men and women in our him because I am in the best
penal and pSychiatric institutions ~ position to do so.
and on the streeiS who did someMy brother is 34, and married
thing ierrible in a moment whe~~, with two children. His wife IS. an
they lost control.
expert when it comes to buying; She
Actually, many people live on the cannot pass up a bargain and has a
edge of "losing it" and then, under small depa~t store in · her
the influenre of alcohol, a mind·al· home.
terilll! drug or a stressful situation,
The bottom line is this: My
they suddenly slip over the edge. I husband and I are preparing for
know whit I'm talking about retirement and while the money
.because for most' of my life I have will allow for some travel. I have
lived on the edge myself. Shouldn't not made any effort to retire my
we have mercy and compassion for brother's debts.
these folks, Ann? What do you say? · The situation has become tense
-j.E.G.,GLADESPRING, VA.
.~ my mother and me. She
DEAR j.E.G.: I am all for mercy !lays if I refuse to help him she will

"r.w

U.S. GRADe A'"'

Holly Farms
Boneless Breast

HERRUO ROYAL CROWN
WHOLE 14-17-LB. AVG .

'•

,.

'\

)

',.
'

·- --

U.S. GRADE A

.."
•..

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TRIM

LIMIT TWO PLEASE

•

Hypothermia winter killer; watch
for signs, _especially in.elderly

. Temporary. insanity?
Have compassion on
convicted and victim

Boneless Bottom
Round Roast

.
...
'

I!
'C/

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

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

HOOVER SALE EVER!!!

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conventtonn.
"I have taken a firm pledge not
· to endorse any candidate prior to
the convention," he said, adding
that all the Republicans tn the
field are qualified and capable, ,
However, he wasn't as compll·
mentary:to the Democratic field,
saying· the most formidable candldates were not In the race.
-Those he lde~tlflfd as Sen. Sam ·
Nunn of Georgia, Sen. Bill
Bradley of New Jersey and· New

CLEVELAND CUP!) - The
· Ohio Valley Jazz Festival, for:
merly the Kool Jazz Festival, Is
being relocated In Cleveland this
summer from Its longtime home
In Cincinnati.
.
Officials of the two-day leveat
said the festival wl)l be held at
the Cle\leland Stadium July
2:1-23. Lut year~ a Jaz2 festtvaltri·
CIIIC!IIIIIatl attracted mort than

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in with her little bit of Social
Security and small pension. The
question: To what extent should the
most financially successful sibling
··be expected to contribute ·to the
least financially sui:Ce!Sful sibling'IUNEASY AND NEEDING ADVICE IN OIL COUNTRY, OKLA. ·
DEAR OIL COUNTRY: If your
brother is in danger of losing hi&lt;;
home, or the butcher or She milk·
man has threatened to cut him off,
you should come to the rescue. But
if he wants ·money to improve hi&lt;;
standard of living because he sees
you living so well, explain that your
success didn't come easy and you
don't want to cheat him of the
satisfaction that comes with hard
'work.
Wish him luck'. .

How mUch do you know abOut pOt,
rocairu:, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
downers? · Think you can handle
them? For u~urthe mlnure information on drugs, write for Ann Landers'
newly revised boolc/et, "The Lowdown
on Dope." Send $2.50 plus a self-ad·
dressed, stamped, Nfi. 10e;IVelfipe (39
cents postage) tfi Ann Landers, P.O. ·
Box 11'562. Chictlg(), Ill. 6061 UJ562.

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York Gov. Mario Cuomo.
Addressing himself to the
co'n troverslal Interview Monday
n(ght between VIce President
George . Bush and CBS news
anch9r Dan RathPr, Ford gave
his v,ote to Bush.
''George Bush once and for all
eliminated the wimp factor," he
said. "In a political sense (he)
enh11nced his reputation."
Ford termed thP Interview "an
unfortunate situation.

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11

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1988

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Too long, costly, Ford says of election
ELYRIA, Ohio tUPI)
Former President Gerald Ford
said the current process of
electing a president Is too long
~nd expensive. ·
"It takes too long to nominate
and elect a president, .It's too
expensive and It forces a caridl·
date to make too many irrespon·
slble promises," he ·s aid at a
news conference after a speech
at Lorain County Community
College Tuesday night.
He said he would not endorse a.
can'd,ldate before the

'

'

101•W. Mlin St.
OHIO

142 2ndlvt.
GAUIPOU$. :()H.
446-1405

�.I.

I
'

Paa•

.;.,

'

1D-The Deily SentiNII

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'Phantom' op_ens to. Broa·dway cheers
NEW YORK (UPI ) - "Phan-··
tom of tbe Opera,'' Broadway 's
aU-t~ musical hit before 1t
eveb opened, lived UP. to the
acclaim that preceded It from Its
ortam.l London prodiiCtloh In Its
debut at the Majestic Theater.
Baaed on a 77-year-old French
novel that Inspired three Hollywood movies, Andrew Lloyd
Webbefs quasi-opera was balled
Tuesday by Its opening night
audience with a standing, shout·
lag ovation headed by Mayor Ed
.Koch and hundreds ot formally
:clad notables.
•. In the first night audience were
many show busineSs ' greats,
'lAcludlng Gwen Verdon, Adolph
.Green, and Betty Camden, real
:!'$tale tycoon Donald Trump,
!'fashion designers Pauline Trland Donald Brooks, and
iopera Impresario Beverly Sills .
" Phantom" sold more than $17
million worth of tickets before
, the C!!rlaln went-up at the formal
, openlag after neai"ly four weeks
; of previews, setting a Broadway
• and world theatrical record for
', advance sales. The price of
.
1 tickets , the first Broadway pro' ductlon to command $50 tops for
' all performances, has recently
' risen sharply on the black
market !rom $100 to $250.
''I'm nervous, numb, fright - ,
' ened and happy," Lloyd Webber
· told United Press International
. during ·the show's Intermission,

.
.•
Lloyd Webber's brilliantly orMemora blearetheagra ndlose
ches trated score Including such VIctorian p!'()duc tlon . of a !lcsongs as "Angel ofMuslc,'"'The Ilona! opera, " HaMlbal;" comMusic of the Night," ""All I Ask of plete with an animated elepha nt ,
You ," " Masquerade," and "The _ the glamorous masquerade ball
Point of No Return" tha t dem on- with costumes from myth and
s trate hls own way with melody history, the satirica l put-on of a ·
while drawing unabashed ly from " The Mar r iage of Figaro" and
musica l styles of the past , the s tage premiere of the Phannotably Gllbert.and Sullivan a nd tom's own operatic composition ,
Puccini.
"Don Jua n Tr iumphant/ ' The

can actor making hls Broadway
de but In the role ot Christine's
lover, Raoul, a nd Judy Kaye as
the man nered, s tentoria n pr ima
donna , Carlotta, are outstanding
In an altogether excelleni cast.
Leila Martin m akes much of the
minor but pivotal role of the
ballet m istress, Mme. Glry.
The boO!&lt; by Richard Stllgoe,
who a lso.. provided apdltlonal
lyrics , c aptures the essence of
the Ga ston Leroux novel but It
remains f or Crawford to human-

lze the ti tle role, a Grand Guignol
character sta ined with blood,
;
With surpassing gFace, Crawford Is a ble to e ndow the
P ha ntom with notilllty In the
exile lmpose.:t on him by physical :
m onstrosity a nd with tender ness ,
In his love for Christine.
'·
Crawford, ·1n his white • half- •
mask, Is the P ha ntom for our ,
generation , just a s Lon Chaney :
was for our grandparents, and
Claude Ra ins was for our
par ents.

"Star light Express, " but also of
the leading lady quality of
BrlghtJllan , wh.o or iginated the
role of Christine In London In

ODLAND...
SUPER
•

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•

•

•

•

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•

•••

SAVIrtGs·
l

BOWL

I

•PRJ~ EFFECTIVE THRU SAT~RDAY, JAN. 30, 1818•

.,

•"DDDA FOOD STAMPS AND

W.~. STAMPS ACCEPTED. • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERROR~.

' ..

.~=====:::::;1
.· ACTIVITIES FOR ALL
INTERESTS
Americare-Pomeroy
...--.and

:

.I

'
:

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

Mixed rryer Parts
or

IIRACLE WHIP

...... urunNIA BROCCOLI
SNOW WHITE

Salad
Dressing

Whole Fryers Cauliflower

•
32

~ltation .
t...
(614) 992-6606

c..

..

Public Notice

lhomes Fork Creek. · Aid

tnon Pleaa Court of Meigs
County. Ohio , in the c11e of

0.57•acr• canvevod to (:arl

The Central Trutt Company
of Southeattarn OhlooN. A..
PleintiH. a.g ainet Vertin M .
Butcher. et al., Defendants,
upon e judgmltl'lt therein

oz.

,.nde..,d, being Can No.
87-CV-173 in Aid Court. I

County, Ohio. on th~ 26th
deY of ~ruuy, 1188, "'
10:00 O'clock A.M. the tott-Ing r.nd1 and tonomenh!. IO~wlt.; , .... , ,., ~ flf ~ ~
PARCEL NQ . 1: Being in
Fraction 32, T-n 2, Range,
13 of the Ohio Componv's
Pu'rchaH in Sellsbury Town·

'

1hlp, Melgo County, State of
Ohio and being doiCribad as
fallowo:
.
Beginning eta point on th8

tall right of wov llna of Ohio
&amp;tete Route 143 South 8
deg. 32'Wnt 100111etlrom
a conctete marker on the

North

U~ -

of Fraction 32,

uld concrete marker being
l on the e"'st ·right of way line

Pork
Shoulder

"~

• PLAIN •SELF-RISING

Hudson
ream Flo..-r

$$ 99
LB.

Limit
One

3 LB.
CAN

5 LB.
BAG

T SALE
$1. 89
Eckrich Franks •••••.;.J.l!-.r!f.
SMOKED SAUSAGE
$199
tf••
.oREG. •THICK
' ·
· $189
MEAT •BEEF •CHEESE

Kitl····. . . . . . . . . . . .

Bologna ..................... l.t.-..
120'$249
S•orgas. pac ..................
.
.
. .
. $199
Cooked Ha111 ..............t.~1.
SWIFT

•

. ,

Turkey Franks .......... JI.P.Z..

69~

I

FRESH LEAN

Ground Beef .
3 LBS.
OR
MORE .

19

PEAK

Pinto Beans

Popcorn

I

,,__.

Clauified pages cover the
fol~owing telephone exchanges ... .

I

I i ,I,

ArooCodo30•

ArooCOM 114

··-ue

1171-Pt.,_

Qrl'ralll

2411-lllo .....do

··~
ns-tiiOoon

141-AIMio Dlot.

111-l.e-

H7-C-o

P-.

n-v-•4WO"t
74-Mo...aycleo .
71-la.t. a Motort tor lele

___

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ACCMIOrioo
n-AutoRopol&lt;

14-1-- Trotntno

78--Co,..,. E""tonwnt
11-c.,.,.. a Motor Home•

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M,. • t.ll.tlllil~.l
11 - Hou _ _ _

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a2-Nt~WHev•

II t. ' .t I

12-CI, TV·~~- Eqolp-

11-A..Iqu•
&amp;4-MIIa. Merclt•dlle
luppll•

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17----.
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831-BuHola

nt-w*"'•

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n - Tna-. tor lelii

11-lltlpW12- IIwa.... W.,.III

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11-1-lo • 'l"""'!lllon
11-f!lldlo. TV • Cl llopll&lt;
17- MIICIIa.neDUe
11!-Wimtd To Do

M.-on Co•• WV

,...., County

..

• _, .... •voo-too

poini b8ing the Northe11t

comer; of

1

Public Notice
tar of the Cre"k; thence N.

32 dogra1s 46', W. "148.6

tract contlilning ' feet along aaid ·creek to a

Edward Oel"ong and Genevieve Sue DeLong. huSband
and wife, by David W. Baum·

gardner and Shirley Joan
S.umgerdner by deed dated
October 21, 1981, and recorded In Volume 210, Page
269 of the Moigo County
Daod Rocordo; thence North
70 dog. 00' Well 230 feet
along the North fino of uld
Delong tract to a point on
the East right of way liM of
Ohio Sttte Route
I 43:

thence North 16 deil- 18'
Eaot 237 feet along u._ Eaot
right of wav Uno of Ohio
State Route 1 43; thence

North 10 deg. 60' Eaot 192
'"I along tho East right of
way line of Ohio State Route

point in the c,enter of aaid
the i9uthea1t corner
of Ernest and hra Powell ;

c~

thence N. 80 degre.. 33' W.
273 feet along Powell' •
south Uno to the place of beginning. · containing .80
acre. more or leas.

Except Ill legal right of

way or easement.
Reterence · 1 Deeds : · Vol.

2•3.
P119o
Page
Daed

The ~tbove deacription was

lurnlahed by Momar Hvsett.

son, Ohio P.E. No . E-32181

aa result of IUNey dated Oc·

Record•; thence following
the meandering of centerline

Meigs County Deed Records
conveyed
to Marcus R.

of Thomao Forie C - along Johnoon and Mollie John·
the following boerings and son.
PARCEL NO . 2: The faldlotancas: South 84 clog. 30'
Eaot 108 feet: South 6 dog. lowing real · estate being in
No. 32, T2N ,
00' Weot 11,6 feel: South 18 Fraction
clog. 2&amp;' w.t 1&amp;8 fool: South • Rt 3W, Sallobury Town1hip,
8 dog. 150. Eaot 117 fool: Moigo County. Ohio, doSouth 32 dog. 00' Well 64 . scribed aa follows :
Beginning on a concrete
fiiii: '' Well 107 loot.; North
49 i:leg. 00' .w... oW feot: marker on the ealt right of
South 89.deg. 00' Well 30 way line of State Route No.
111e! to o point In the center of 1.3. 30 '"t from the centar
Card of Thanks

1

The family of
MARION R .
("Hatnmer"l HAWK
Wlahea to e•prthanka to tho many
·trlencta who· helped uo
during and after the ..,.
..nt Uln- and death of
our
father. Special
thanka go out to membera of the Meigs and
GaUlt EMS. doctors
and · staff at Vetllrana
, Memorial Hoepltal, the
Em.,.ancy Room and
lntanoiva Co"' Iliff and
doctors at HolzM Modical Center, doctors and
ataff of Rhod• Hall 7th
floor and M.l.C.U. at
Ohio Slate Unlvoraity
Hoapltal. our frlttnda
and neighbor&amp; In Min·
oi'SYH... memlleNofthe
Boutlllethal NawTaat·
....ent Church, Pastor
111111 Mra. o.._ lYden·
atrlclter, Ewing ,unaral
" - PlllllleaNr• and
to Anna S1alay. her hue·
blind.
Chllrlu. and
for
t!\lflt time, Mlf'Y,
patience,
lfl/6 8Uiatance. Thl
...... _ . .. 1houflhta,
etlll •done of lhatl
• IIIII ·IM"Y othlrl pro.

tiel'•'""'·

line, where the nonh line of
Fraction No. 32 interMCtl
the said Right of_Wev line.

belt1ll the north- of
Ernest end tve ~ell, ,..
corded In Daed Book No.
238. Page No. 307, Daod
Rocont1 of Moig1 County,
Ohio: lhance S. 8 dogroeo
32" w. 100 feet alo!'lf said
Rlght of .Way, to ErtiNt and
tva · Powalt'o oouth-t
comer, tho placa of beginning for thlo detc~ptian;
thence S. 8 degree1 27' W.
11 0 feet ,rang said right of
wav: thence S. 80 degroe1
33' E. 372 .8 feel to the can-

rua,Y, 1975.
APt&gt;raiotd Value

'*

~IIIIR.Hawlt

....."""...,

.
lli'Jb;oiN IIIII fllltlly

Section 1!il3.37 of the
Ohio Revieed Code wishes
to reclaim the hillside insta·
bility problem in order to
protect the public health, safety. and general welfare
from the adverse .effects of
past c oal mJ~ing practices;

and
·
WHEREAS. the owners of
the 1.90-Bcre tract of land
identified above cannot be
located ; and

NOW THEREFORE, having

Revil8d Code, provides for r"'

· ·' Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen1icd
C!J Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

::1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- GaHipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy• Ohio

Meigs County, Ohio

Robart E. Buck.
Lena

(1) 20. 27; (21 3, 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF .
FIDUCIARY
On J111uory 13, 1988. in
the Malgo County Probeta
Court, Caoo No. 26722.
Dougr.1 W. Little, 211 -213
Eaot Second Straet, Pomeroy. Ohlo•&amp;789 wuoppoilitad Executor of the es-

Bus1·n~ss· s·erv1ces

z

101
E. Motnliro....

POMEROY. OH.

992-2269

BIIADBURY - Ciose in, but
out of town. Garden area, 3
bedrooms, outbuildin&amp; some
new carpel, equipped kitchen, One-lhird down on land
Contract. $21,000.00.
RACINE AREA - Approximately 26 acres of vacant
land. Really nice buildin g
sites. $1 3,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - This older
home is close to slores and
.c hools. Two to three bedrooms, level lot, carpeting
and olher ni.ce features..
Nice· (ron! ·.sitltn g porch
MAKE OFFER, $19,000.00.

tate of Mo~orit M. Ball, docealed, t~ta of P. 0. Bo• .
135. 541 Svcoma Stroot.
Middleport, Ohio 457&amp;0.
Robert E. Buck,
. Probetlr Judge , RACINE - Approximately
Lane K. NHtllroad. Clerk
3'h acres of land wrth 3-4
(11 20 •.27; (21 3. 3tc • ·
bedroom · home. Also in·
eludes a smal! mobile home
for rental income. ASKING
Public Notice

PuBLIC NOTICE

FAtRLANE DRIVE
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
To Whom It May

C011cern:
1ha -of Ohio, acting by.
and IMluah the Oqo bn•n
of Nltuntl ~ Dlvltlon
af AI ' aLIIIIuao. ...._ to un--~ Itt pntjootwHoln•ltlooitlttlm In - of hlllldo inttl'
!lilly by ..... "'"""'
odotwd ~
..... Oaa of . . Jn....... Ia a 1.10 triCt
-

t

a1Lwl8d~b-ln
flallllpofllll
....
don 1, 1'oMwhlp •
13.

t.~J:."r;'!'\

-r=..........."!:,.

Jr. andn• L a.a •
tlllldldili'Voltlmaltl......
.... tnthaMI!ttCounlyR.-

. .....

.._
....., and ge-

'IMIIIIIIldJin-

•puWio
-'WIIfnlantl

=·.

WHitiW. •

~ of

::::e~J:.~

R~.- ~to

. MIDD!lPORT - 'Here is a

two slary colonial in town, thai .
·ltas many great features .
Gru11Mn1 room, Great woodburiilr fireplace, Great WDik-

shop, plus·a Great apartmlllt
mr llfllll Income. WANTS

$34.900.00.

Jl .

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Oryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrige rators
" Will Buy or Haul ,Away "

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985 ~3561
We Service All Makes
1/22/ 88/ tfn

aro
II TNE

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bt ·us convert thosi old
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CALL AMY t ARTER

or BOB'S !IECTRONICS
446-6939 or 446- 7390 :
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'

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL.FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
WHITE llll 10.
IUTLAND, OHIO
742-2035
12-31"-87 1 'mo: pd. ·

RACINE .
FIRE DEPT.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

GUN SHOOT
Basham Building

SKATE-A-WAY
CHESTER, OH. ·
OPEN

.;

WED .- FR I. -SAT. ,
7 :30-10:0 0
C a ll for Birth day. "
Church, Priv.a te ;
Part ies Mo n ., Tues ..
Thurs .. Sat . &amp; Sun,'

.

'

12 Gauge Shotguns Only

RACINE, OHIO

985-3929
or 985-9996·..

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG
·
CHESTER, OHIO

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
1NSULATION

Roger HyseiJ
Garage ·

BISSELL
·SIDING CO.

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Factory Choke

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS

, •ROOFING
REMODELING l!o
·,
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK •HOE WORK

.......915-4141
.., ... .....
~

~COttTUmiS

RefiH'enceJi

1 1·3-tfn

New ·Homes l•llt

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-11-tfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

PlUMBING &amp; HEAliNG
Now locotlon:
161 NOrlh Sotantl

- Addons and rem odeling
- Rooting snd outter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing an d electrical

Mldtlapart, Ohio 45760

SALES. &amp; SERVI(E

Wo C.rry

Flohlnt Buppll•
Pay Your Phone
and Cable 81.. Hare
...USPIIONI
16141 H2,6SSI

work

(Free Eoti,.tHl

V. C.

YOUNG) II

992-6215 or 992·7314

IISIOINCE

Pomeroy, Ohio

(6141 H!-Jr:lt

4-15-'86-lc

... BOGGS

SAliS &amp; SIIVICE
U, S. IT. SO EAST
. GUYSVI1E, OIRO .
614·662-3121

Allllterlllll ,.._ Dtort,
Now H..... luJI; Hog

,_ r, t

111

D.lir .
•• ,. ...l....t
'•"' &amp;

1-27-'88 -1 mo .

10-9-lfn

10-7-lfn

$24,000.00.

SYRACUSE·- II )'Oil like spacious room and want nealness
and tastelul decor, make an
appointment to see this IOYely
4-5 bedroo]Tt home wrth 2
baths, kitchen with cozy
breakfast 'nook, formal dining
room, uti~ly room. lull basement large neat acre lot, 2
car garage. Many other tea·
tures. $62,900.00.

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

__...;,_..;,:
·'.,;·_ _...;.,....,........._ _.;.....;..__ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1

Sheriff

· Probate Judge
K. Nusalroad. Clerk

Columbus. Ohio 43224; _t&gt;,TTENTION: Michael S mith. Telephone Number: (6141 265 1081 .
,.
!1) 27. 1tc

t

of the appralaed value.
Howard E. Frank.

llox 228, Rutland. Ohio
45776.

.For
further informatiqn.
contact the Department of Natural Resources, Division ·of
Reclamation. 18 55 Founfitin Square Court, Building H-2,

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..__ _ _~_ _;...._...I._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.1

_

oold for,_ then two-thirdo

appointed Executor of the
estate of Martha T. Sayre.
deceaMd, late of Routa 1 ,

;.~.

entry by the Slota of Ohio,
its
agents. emptily......d
contractors to do the neces-

PRICE REDUCED on this Handicapped accessible home.
Ramp ways. speciallloor covering, special bath hxtures,
etc.' All designed wrrh the handicapped in mind . Really nice
3 bedroom home with lireplace, basement &amp; porch.
area. large modern ki!chen.
NOW $34,900.00.

Public Notice

made reasonable efforts to b-

. WHEREAS.
1613.37
(Ei (11 ofSection
tho Ohio t..__ _,_...,._ _ _ _

sary ~ork to abe'le the _dan-

. Public Notice

"cate and obtain voluntary Con- described reclamation work.
thOroby protecting the public
sent frOm the owners prior to
health, safety, and general
entry upon tho property. the
Stato of Ohio, acting by and . welfare from the adverse ef·
through the Deportment of feels of past coal mining practices. Such entry &amp;hall begin on
Nat~al Resources. OMsion of
or about April 30, 1988 and
Reclamation, its agents, emshal continue until the necesployees, and contraC'IOrs, shall
sary work to abate the danger
·enter the property identified
is completed.
above to undertake the above·

ge r to the p~blic health. sa·
fety. and general welfare
when the owners cannot be
located by posting.notice on
the premises and advertising
once in a newspaper of ge·
neral circulation in ttie.muni~ipality in Which the prop·
ertv lies.

Terms of Sale! Cash.
The real estate cannot be

11120, 27; (2)3,10. 17, 6tc

Public N'Otice

Public Notice

Real Estate General

uo;ooo.oo

~ IIIUIIh Dlldld .....

...,...lllittf'ltflltp art fi1!,
clurltlg thla time or

Public Notice

Aegietered Surveyor Serial
No. 2274, per survey of Feb-

143 to tho point of begin-

ning, containing 4.08 acres.
more or leu. excepting allle·
gal rights of way and eaMmentl of record.·
The foregoing description
p"'pared by Robert H. Eo-

t&gt;.ge 267: Vol. 238,
387: and Vol. 269,
821, Moiga County
Rocardo.

tober 14 and 16, 1968 ,
Public Notice
EXCEPTING 87/ 100thl
' Of Ohio State Routo143 and
30 foot Eaotoftlte centerline of an acre, mora or le11, 11
of Ohio · State Route 1 43; daocrlbed In Volume 24~ .
NOTICE OF
thence South 80 dag. 33' P•ge 87, Meigo County
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
Eut 276 feet to the center Deed Records. conveyed to
On January 6, 1988, in
of Thomoo Fork Creft and Ronald E. Riffle and Lindo L.
· the Meiga County Probate
being the Southe11t comer Riffle .
Fu.- excepting .80 acre, Court, Ctto No. 26729, Joe
of a tract sold to Hettie Capehllrt. see Deed Volume 214, mo"' or loll, as deiCribed In
N. Savrl', Route1, Bo• 228.
Page 93, Melgo County_Doed Volume ~69, Page 829, Rutland. Ohio 45775 was

.

Crisco
Shortening

lr 111".11

I! •111 •I ,
,ll [ .; 1l 1

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SAL€

BY virtue of' an Order of
Sale iaaued out ofthe Com·

HouH in Pomeroy, Meiga

Te-n derbest
Baco.n

31 - R.. I--.. W~nt.d

t

front door of th8 · Court

20c OFF LABEL
•RE;GULAR •BUTTER F~AVOR

,,

1-lngo

"

A•••retDr oonMCUttvl runt, broHn up•yswll be d'llrgltd
for tech dly 11 14Pnteecll.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 1t :OO A .M . SATURDAY
-. 2100 P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P. M. TUESDAY
- 2:00P .M. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P.M . THURSDAY
- 2:00P.M . FRIDAY

will offer for ..... 1t the

TENDERBEST. QUALITY WHOLE
BOSTON STYLE

a•
M
-..
21-lott·A-

11-for • • or TIWI•

JAR

SLICED •REG. •THICK •THIN

!.lit'

32-Mobile HOINI tar lale
33- Pifftll tar

...oo

• A clallifled advertlument placed in The Daily Sentinel (,._.
cept - olat~lfied display, Businna C•rd and legal noticesI
will 1110 appear In-the Pt. Plet unt Register and the Galli·
polie Deity Tribune. reaching over 18.000 homes.
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESPAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PA~ER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

I

31 - -fo&lt;Solo

0·11 WOIIDI 11-21 .WOAD8 2B-21 WOftPII
. 17.00
11.110
M .OO
1PAYI
110.00
• • .110
11.00
3DAYI
111.00
113.110
IOAYI
UI.OO
.121 .110
11:1.00
10DAYI
110.00
151 .110
133.00 .
1 MONTH

*Ada outl~t Meigs; Galli• or Meson countln must be pre·
paid.
·
.•·
.r
•Receive t .60 ditcount for tdl paid in tdvtnce.
•F,.. edt - Glvteway end Found M11 u n dtr16 wordl will be
run 3 d-vs tt no ct..rge.
'
•Price of td for ell captt.llmerals double price of ad cost.
• 7 ,point line type onty u11d.
• Sentinel it not r11ponsible for errors efter first day . (Check
'for error1 firtt day ad runa in p,aper). Call befori·2:00 p .m.
day after publication tO make correction.
• Adt' that must H Pllid in advance -a
' re:
Card of Thanks
Happy Ada
Vard Sales
In Memoria~

,..

1

RATES

POUCIES

I

•WE RESERve THE RIGHT TO UMri' OUANI~ITIES

ilr•

. TO PLACE AN AD CALL .992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY ·
CLOSED SUNDAY

'

't
t

UMW meets
Faye Wiggins wa s progra m
leader for a quiet d ay service of
the United Methodis t Women of
the F orest Run Churc h hOs ted by
Kat hleen Scott.
Them e of the serv ice wa s · 'The
Older Wom a n: A R esource fo r
Mission" with the focus on
moving forward In time, supjJor tlng one a nother, a nd renewing
appreciation for the special gift s
that ate ours to give a nd receive
from one another .
There were unison readings
a nd mome nts of slle nce between
unison prayer ,and songs. Scripture was taken from Psalm 116.
· Mary Nease pres id ed a t the
business meeting with Edith
Sisson reading " Hugs. " Offi cr s
gave repor ts a nd 16 sick and
s hutin calls were r e ported. Other s atte nding the m eeting we re
Evelyn Hollon, Edith Sisson. Ada
Nease, Carolyn Salser . a nd
Noami Wyatt .

"We

programs to g~t · th~ right mix ;
f or t h &lt;:'SP reclamatio n
pi"O j&lt;:'Ct S."
Bryan , an e lectrical eng ineer
who grew up on a ·farm nea r ·
To ledo, said he took some of th~
sludge-ash mlx a nd pu t It In th€
brick furnan~e just to see what
would happen .
•··
He's now found his brick and is
looking fo r a contraclor to
produce oO,OOO to 100,000 of th€.
waste produc ts for a test.
•

..

•

Actors E q ulty. the Amer ican
theatrical union, had tried to
keep Brightman from oomlng to
Broadway on the grouilds that
she did not have the same star
status as some American actresses who could do the role.
This was resolved by a compromtse, but no onne needed to
have worried about Brightman's
sta r quality. She Is a beautiful
young woman with affecting
ac ting ability and a crysta111ne
voice that has a sharply etched
edge and ample volume. She will
continue In the show here tor six
months. according to an agreement between producer Ca meron Ma ckintosh and Equity.
This Is one of the most beautiful
stage ptoductlons of all time ,
created by Britis h opera designer Marla Bjornson, and one
of the mos t sk111fully dh'ected,
thanks to the legendary talents of
Br oadway 's Harold Prince, who
also directed the London production : · The movement of stage
elements a nd the" cast Is seamle ssly Integrated.
The Majestic Theater has been
transformed at a cos t of several
millions Into the stage of the
Pa ris Opera , Its roof, Its gr and
staircase, Its subterranean lake
and the Pha ntom's lair. Explosions of gilded sculptural groups
frame the proscenium, the central one forming a c har iot for the
Phantom , and the crystal
chandeller Is cleverly wired to
' 'crash" ove r the audience at the
end of Ac t 1.
There a re many memora ble
scenes musically supported by

from the tra sh ash and the
ous materials ar~ burned (J\\'aY in
sludge from sewage plants
· th&lt;:' 2.000 dPg rcP
hea t of th &lt;'
which conta·tn heavy metals
furn ace.
and other potentially·haza rdous
Bryan said he ca me on the idea
materials.
of the bricks while working on
Bryan said he conferred with reclaiming strip mined lands In
professors at Ohio State and P'e rry and Vinton counli&lt;'s in
Purdue University when he wa s southeast Ohio.
developing his brick-making
" We first started pu t by us ing
process.
f' 1 urlge mixed with lim e as a
, " The toxic materials are e n· r, &lt;fi 1'zer for strip mine
capsuled In the bricks," he said . n;clamation and this wa s very
" There Is no danger a t a ll. "
s ucce~sfu \, " said Brya n.
Bryan sa id the other danger· . even developed computer

Low-Priced Supermarket

:~~n ho~ ~~e a~~~~

hits ·as " E vtta," " Cats/' and

The Daily Seritinei-Piige- 1 } :

PomeFQy- Middleport, Ohio

a clty!s waste disposa l problems .
COLUMBUS, Oh io (UPII
The mixture Is then fired at
Edward Bryan says he can build
everyth ing from brick houses to 2.000 degrees. resulting In a block
brick streets by using sludge t)1a t looks like a standard clay
brick, said Brya n.
from sewage plants.
''We are pursuing thlsnow wilh
·· Bryan, owner of Bto,F uels of
municipa
lities as a way for them
Ohio. Columbus, says he has ,
to
get
rid
of their sludge, ash and
developed a process to ma ke
trash,"
said
Bryan.
bric ks by mixing s ludge from
" Whaf I want to do Is achieve a
sewage treatment plants with
totally recycled product," he
ash from t rash burnjng power
said.
plants.
Bryan sa id the bricks are
This 'Process provides a lowcost brick while helping alleviate .safe even though they are made

Engineer
uses sludge
for bricks

1

: would appeal to American critics
but also to the casting controv' ersy over his wife, Sarah Bright·
man, who stars as Christine
opposite Michael Crawford as
the Pha ntom whose face Is
partially hidden In a white
half-mask.
It was not just a test of Lloyd
Webber's continuing record of
suecess on Broadway after such

1986.

gondola scene on uie misty lake
beneath the opera house Is
encha n ting,
There are flaws but none that
endanger the show's general
high level. There could havebelm
some editing, per haps even of the
entire graveya r d scene, which Is
muddled, . atid the lyrics of
Char lf!S Hart could . have had
mnre polish.
In addition to Crawford and
Brightman, Steve J;Jarton, a
ha nds ome, !ulsom-volcedAmerl-

~adnesday. January 27. 1988

EASTMAN'S... Your Independently Oned ·

' :;ere

i . ~~~~::

Wednesday. January 27. 1988

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR :,
Also Trlltllllttlttt
PH. 992-5682.
or 992-7121"'
6-17-\ic

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL . ·
JUST CALL! ·•

992-3410 "

LIMESTONE ·:
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL . : •
FILL DIRT -~'
.

10-1-

~

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM Mr .._
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtaionablo Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or '949-2160
. Day or
NO SUNDAY

.,

.

_,

�..

13

Pomarov- Middl&amp;port; OllfO . .

Anr·rrunrr·rrt:nh
3 Announcements

.T
. i~
~ 1
\\ 'Je
If- ('8 ;.....__
. ,,
.._____,_,r- ;i-Jt

.-~-~-:e=.~df::.!!..---:...,._'·Z'A~
-=-

O.Voull.

"A crack in the wall doesn't

clothing •• giveowoy.
4
c ... ., . 388•8449.
·
..... of

2home.
Cats Uner
to give
•wty1 ta
good
trained.
male.
1

!:".:';M~" 114·441·2323 •'·

Wirehaired Terrier , female.
epeyect and h.d
1 lba.
eitver gray.• 1 3 mDIItha okl. ta a
good home. 304·89&amp;·3073.

•u. o

One year old mele Collie dog.

304·171·2347.

6

mean yoti . come . from a
broken home, dear!"
~1

WANTED: BHCC ..-:lng Adults
fur training. laaic Educatlo'n,
ABE / QED, Job Skills. Employ·
ment Aui... nce. •nd finandal
Aid avei..bla. Contact Adult
S•rvlce• 1t 614-24-5 -5331 .
Don't del.y do it tadayl
" Frienda Retail Corp'' of Galli·

Lost and Found

LOlli It 848 LOQIIn St .. MidcU•
port. A 35 Mllimeter Konic:t

Camera. Reward. Cau·e1•· 992-

3872.

Found in Rutland Sunday Jan.

polia. Ohio, sHU a · competent
uJes penon to wark In child·
.-.n'a clothing store. MIMI be

hkJhty motivated and LOVE
woritine with chlidren. ·s end
f'esumt to: 'frienda Retail Corp ..
P.O. 8o1. 981 , Oatlpolla, Ohio

45131 .

Bu1inass
Opportunity

ti.BI one price ahoe store or
t1Q-t20 falhion atorel Open e
non~ tranchlll etore with the
liHflll f11hlona advantage.
Over 1,300 brand names. On•
~~ fM. Inventory, . fixtures.
buying . trip, au~Piiea, inltore
training and more. Call any Ume.
Dan Kotteckv 501·327-1031 .
" Piau Shack" good 1nd going
buainna -OIIIIipolia Ferry. new
building, and lot · 100111200 h , ·
cloee to new dam ahe, call
Somfiville Realty. 304-175 3030 or 67&amp;-3431 .

.LOST Benjie type dog. cNppiMI,
antwera Muffin, New Fl.. rOc:k

Fire Dept., REWARD, 304-67!-

5797 orl71·6179.

LOST 't atlgata. white tap fold

down. one aectlon. REWARD
phone 304 -876 -1807.

8

'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WMemeyer's Auction Serviceavailable at vour convenience
and loc·ati()f1s. Marlin WeeNmeyer Aucttoneer-

5152.·

9

814-245-

Wanted To Buy

We p8Y cash for late modal cleln

used cera.

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidalnc.

Bill Gene J Ohnaon

e14-44&amp;-3&amp;72

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newltf uaed cara. Smith
. Buick-Pontlee, 191 1 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Cell 614-446·

If you're ambitious' and looking
for a cer11r Ol)portLJnity, join the
N•tionwlcle ln.urance femily .
We have lots of people Uke you.
At en agent you can ,.,..
•20.000 or more th1fir8tyearin
•lary plut eddltional bonuatl.
Send resume or call for an
appointment. Nationwide lnturance. P.0 . Bo11. 1079, Mariett1,

Oh. 45750. 014-374·8241. An
equal opportunrty emplOyer.

AN needed for nuning rehtbili·
tatiun unit. Raqulret clring
individu1l who't nuning prK·
ti&lt;:e are g"red toward rntoring
rnidence to the home environ·
ment •• much •• pouiblt.
Contact Nancy VanMtttr
D .O .N. Americara Pomeroy
Nursing tnd Rehebilitltion Cen·
tet'. 114-992-&amp;808. E.O.E.
AVON · All areat . Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2&amp;41.
·

pi••••

R.N., physician• office.
send resume to Bo• C-16 care of
Point Ple8sant Register, 200
Main St ., Point Pleaaent, W. V1.

25660.

Get paid for retding booka!
$100.00 per t itte. Write: ACE·
2282.
•
&amp;17g, 161 S. Uncolnway, N.
..
Complete householda of furni· Aurora. Ill 80642.
ture • antiqun, Also wood &amp;
l.P.N .-P.H.
coal heatitrs. Swain'a Furniture
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Olive, Plea ..nt Valley Nursing C.re
Center seeking energetic li·
614·44&amp;·3159.
cenaed Pr~ctical Nursn. lmm•
' Want to buy: Used furniture and diet• ptrt time employment .
antiquea. Will buy entir1 house- Experlencld in long terni i::art
hold furnilhing . Martin Wede· preferred. Exeellent fringe b•
nefit and 11lary package: Call
meyer. 614-245-5152.
personnel ofice. Ple11ant Valley
U1ed mobile homn. Call 814- Hospital. 304 - 67&amp; - 4340 .

E.O.E.·A.A.

446·0115.

Standing timber. Cell614-3792758.

12

·

Real

Esldle

31

Homes for Sale

4 BR .• fireplace. full baeemtnt. 3
mi. ao. of Gallipolis. S29,900.
Call Oaya-814-448 · 1811, after

5:00· 445-1244.

1.-.nd new 3 BR . neer Gallipolis
Loct.son Rt. 7 . 2carg.-._ nice
lOt. lmmedi ..e J)MHNiOn.·Will
consktlf' trade in of mobile
homa, proparty, etc. Bargtin
priced. Call 814-446-8038.

8 rooms &amp; · btth. Newly rem~
d .. ed. In AthaUa. Wall to will
carpet. 126.000. Call814-2511270 or 251-1970.
3 BR ., 2 baths, 3011.40 garage.
Crown City· St . Rt. 663. 8 ICJ'es.
•eo.ooo. Call614-2&amp;8-1270 or

251·1970.

Availtbl' February 1st. 2 Bid·
room houae in town in good
location. No pets. S326. Secur·
h:y deposit .• referenc" r•
quired. Wiseman Raal Estate,

614·441·3644.

2 bedroom. 2 baths, 2 car
g1rag.. level lot on Rt. 33.
Swimmirtg pool, ..telhe. clase
to Meigs High. Call 614-nZ-

3264.

.

Houte for .. ,. In Pomeroy . ·

814-837·1321.

Insurance

Standing timber. Call 614-742-

2328.

Employmenl
Serv1ce~

Cell ua lor your mobil• home
insurance: Miller lnaurance,
30• ·882 -2146. Also : auto,
hGme. life, health.

PM .

446·0115.

1917 Holley Park- 12xl0. 2 BA .•
1 bath. 2111110· built on room.
CA. fuel oil furnace. 1 OKlO front ·
awning. carport awning. Good
cond. Mu1t move. Call 114448-2858 after 6 PM .
14x70 Wlndeor with 1411130
addition. 3 bed rooms. black top
roMI, approx :J acres. Gallipolis
Ferry, 304-676-8930 .
Completefy furnished 1211115&amp;, 2
bedroome. on rented lot, c1ll

1 8 Wanted to Do

304·115·4853.

11

Help Wanted

Professional Resumes. Send In·
lormation •nd t10 1o: 577 Sun
Valley Or . Gallipolis. Ohio

- - - - - - - - -- -

Sewing &amp; elterationt in my
home. Call814-245-9228.

30 ecre farm : Mottly 6ll1ble.
N.. r Rio Grande. Pond. btml,
vood home. Call 114-Z4K--

46831 .

Sell Avon. Get your own Avon 111
a discount. Call814-448-33&amp;8.
Adult-Desk A11i1t1nt. 15 hours
per walk. Some 8'4'ening• &amp;
welkends. 85 .13 a hr. Dr.
Samu.. L Bos.. rd Mamorial
Ub rery. 141 Second Ave .. Galli·
polis. Call for appoWitment-61 4·

446·7323.

Will do Federal and Statelncomti

r .... ~

typing, booking. tnd
Notary service. Mi rgaret Ptrker

61 4·992·2254.

Private' guitar l•aons. Umited
pumber of s1udent1. Prefer
beginnera . 814-949-2187.

GET PAID for reeding booksl
S100.00 per title. YJrile: ACE· .
33g. 1&amp;1 S . Lincolnway, N. Give pi1no, CalliG Keyboard artd
Aurora. II 60542 .
organ lnaona in my home to
beginners, advanced students.
Udiul Telephone Survey, 6 :00- . Al1o teach chording 1nd trana9:00 evenings, 15 days, Monday· PM~ng . If inttt'eS:ted call 014Frld..,. t3 .&amp;0 pflf hour plus 992·5403.
bonua. Call 614 -446-3816, 9 12 AM onty, for appointment.
EXC-ElLENT WAGES for spare
time auembly worili; electron·
ics. crafts. Ottt~~n . Info. call
1-104-&amp;41 -0091 , E1tt. 2987 .
Open 7 days. CALL NOW!

Lilllt thi•1• .
.., Worth Alot
in

tht Gl••S;fittl ~dion !

33

Farms for Sale

9102 . .

T

39.4 ICrtl: Two older hOUitl &amp;
outbulldlnga; pond. Approx. 20
1cres tlllabfa. county wit•. FCird
tractor. Kner Creelc achoola.

n&amp;.ooo. Neg . Coli eu.a81·
9704.

H1:ntols
41

0

'Commwrclal buldlng for 1...1 .
Downtown pt, Pl. . .nt. StorM,
oHices. A-1 Rtal Eetlte. Carol
YIIQII'. Broker. Celt 304·07&amp;·

PM.

5104.

3 bedroom houae for rtnl in

7478 .

.

Unfurniehedhou1efor rent. Fully
cerpetecl. n ioe, .ct clean, 8ft8I'9Y
efficient Wil I IIICtpl 1 Or 2
clllldr"". 11 4·192·3090 .

1

675·3763.
~;;::;:~:;:;::~=====
42 Mobile Homes
- for Rant

·--....-

P..... Qolll- Forry. 304·175·
3073.

2 SA., ~eter , sewage furnished.
Btautlful river view . No cth'
tllll. Fotter't Mobile Home
Ptrk. Call114-441-1102.

156

47 Wanted to Rant

Pets for Sale

Nlee rental house in Ge)llpolia
eree. 3 BR . R1terences tvellable. Ctll 814-448 -9740 attar 5

PM .

14~t70 Mobile Home. 2 8A .. 1Yll
bathi.· Near Eureka. Ctll 014·
448-1211 or 2&amp;1-1420.

••bl•.·· 1Part/ 11thwhite-

8:00. 304·118· 1450.
63

Peddler,

Antiques

514· 448·751 ~.

puot&gt;l... . 150

-h. Celll14·2se:u33.

Full blooded whhe German
Shepherd pu.,.,._ for ule. Ce"

2 boclroom, fumlohocl. Utilities

61 Household Goods

p•ld. 1 child ecc;:epted. No pBia, · -~--------­
drunks. or dope. Call614·367-

· ·

3 bedroom trtiler, Portland area.
$200 month, t200 deposit.

814·742·2254.

2 Mdroom mobile home in
Middl1port, Ohio. Reference
end Security deposit required.
304 -882-3217 or 304-773 -

6024.

44

SWAII\I
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62·

Olive St .. Gallipolis.
1\!EW- 6 pc. wood group- tlll.
Uving room sultts· t199 -t699 .
Bunk beds with bedding· •111.
Full •ize mamea &amp; foundation
starting · $99 . Recllnen
starting· f99 .
USED· 8eda, ~r"""· bedroom
suites, t199 · f299 . 01111;1,
wringer washer, a compl1te line
of used furniture.
NEW· Weatem boots- t30 .
Workboots t 18 &amp; up. (StHt-A
1oft toe) . Ctll &amp;14-446-31&amp;9 .

County Appliance. Inc. · Good
uaed appliances and TV HIS.
PPtn BAM to IPM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-446·1189. 627 3rd. ·
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

Apartment
for flant

GOOD USEO APPliANCES

2 BR . apt1 . I closau . kitchen.appl. furnlehed. W11hef· Dryer
hook-up, Ww carp1t, newly
paint~. deck .
Regency; Inc.
Apta. Call 304-876-7738 or

Wuhers, dryers, refrigerators,
range1 . Skaggs Appliances
Upp1r River Rd. beside Ston~
Crest Motel. 614·44-8-7398:

9112. .

_,.

6:30 D Cll 1111 Nl!(: Nlghlly N -

'77 Orand Prix. 301 enoiM. 2

J

Evon·

Callahan'• Ulld Tire Shop. Over

1.000ti.... ..... 12. 13, 14, 15
11. 11.5. a mlloo out AI . 211:
Colll14·2611-1251 .
Keyatone Cluaic Map· Doctoe
or Ford. EurciM mach ine. Barr
gen1rator, toolt, knlvu. crlftt,
tarps. C.HI14 -367·0141 .
Firewood for .. t.. AII h•d wood
DaUvered- t3&amp; . Cail 114-446:

1437.

72

, ,

IOn.· '

.

I,

.,

....... 304·882-3238.

•

n 0 .00 lb.
.
.

''•·:
,.

,.
'·

,

11:11 Stllltlllt",
i\ l '. ,o 1I'll

74

1 t1

FIGURE SHAPING TAILEII

.

T1fl!

:•"

~-~.

81 Farm Equipment

,.•'

'·
I·

INHOL..e WO~P.

!

ALLEY OOP

1914 Kaw.aaki KX 80inot0rcy- f'·''
cia. E•c.Uent condition. tiOO. , . , ,.
Call 814-892·1085 .,_. 8 :00 . ••
p.m.
f.

1-Peertna gts hMter, vented,
CROSS• SONS
. .
complete with stove pipe. Wll
875·5104.
· hHt tt a..t tWo rooma. Cal U.S. 35 West. Jackson, Ohio. 1989 H•rley Oevklson Sports- "&lt; '·
Sof11 and chairs priced 1 ffom
114-44-1-31528 or - a t 124 814·28&amp;·1481 .
tlf'. Recently ,.built. Many new ' ~·
Furnished apt. next to library. S396 to S995. Tabl .. tBO and
M..aey Ferguton. New Holland, pan.. New paint job. •800. ..,.:
Rivtr St .• Kanauga.
up
to
t126
.
Hide-a-bade
t390
One pr'o tntionel adult only .
BuohHaoa.o..•-..
o814-881-4420.
' ,.
to t696. Recliners t225 to
Parking. Call 614-446-0338.
20 cu.ft. Hotpolnt ch11tfrMHr. 40 used tractors to ·choOH from
' j'
t375 . Lamps t28 to 1125.
S.
c;ompiMI
line
of
new
a
uud
~~ ~·
•1s0. 2· 8 h . tool bo•ea-•kle
Dinette•
t108
and
up
to
t49&amp;
.
2 BR. apt. Stove &amp; rafrig.
mount for pick· ur.· •400. 1 inch tqul,.,.....t. l.arttst Mlectlaft In
"-••'
furnished. Ne1r Go Mart. Call Wood ttble W·B chairs t211 to
.
·
...:,.
chhnnay blower Of' woocl.stove, 8.E. O~la.
$796
.
o.,k
1100
up
to
t37&amp;.
01 4·441-7025.
1100.
C•ll814-261-1191.
~~·
Hutctte~ t400 end up. Bunk
1'030 c... trKtor: c...m Putt.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS ,AT bada complete w-mattreaes
Must be ~ to a,..-.clate. I
Pink
•
white
fu!l
length
prom
8298 and u'pto t38&amp;. Baby bed•
bottom plow.. trenaport disc. '8"'1,..-----H:-:-o-m_e_ _ _ _:; }:
' BUDO~T - PRICES AT JACK·
gown.
size
3.
•eo.
can
304•
SON ESTATES, 538 Jack1on t110. Mattreases or box sprinva
•47110. Coli 114·2H·I522.
875·5491
.
.
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to full or twin $68, firm t78, and
Improvement•
t88 . Queen uu 8226. King
shop and movies . 614-446Mi1.ed h.-d wood al1b1. 112 per 2010J.D. Vactorw/ J :D. equipt3&amp;0. 4 drawer chest t89. Gun
2588. E.o .H,
mHt, 2 row planter. plows. ---~------- ··~
bundle.
Containing-•ppro11..
1
V..
' ,.
c:abineta 8 gun. Gal or electric
ton. FOB. Ohio Palltt CG. rottry r.o., polt driver. 13810.
Coli
814-288·1522.
Lu111ury Tare Apartment•. Ele- . range $376 . Baby m•ltreaHs
IAIEM&amp;NT
Pomeroy. Ohio. 814-192·1411 .
t 36 &amp; 846 . Bed tram•• 120.
gant, 2 Br. 2 floor, fully
WATERPROOFING
130 &amp; King frame S60. Good
c~rpeced , CA end heat . Private
· UnconditiOnal lifetime guaranflrawood
for
ule.
Hardwood
entrance, encloaed patio, pool• selection of bedroom suites · slabl. t10 par bundle. Sewed 62 Wanted to Buy
tee. LOcal rei•• ew fumlthed.
'·
plavvround. Sttrt-$299 per metal cabinets, heldboards 130
Free ettlrnatea. C•ll collect:
wood, t15n..-eg•pickupload.
and
up
to
sa&amp;:
month. Utilities not included . .
1·&amp;14·237·048S, cloy .. night. ,,
lumber 1 Inch, ~x4. 21111. 211.8 at
Ctll 614-387-7860.
R o a • r a 8 a • • m ·t n t
SewmiU Co. Rd. 19. Paachtorlr.
90 Days aeme 11 cuh with
Now buying shell corn or ,.,. Waterproofing.
'•
Ad
.
Coli
.14-992·6922
ot
approved credit. 3 Miln DUt
co..-n. Call forllt..tquotea. River
Upat1ir1 3 room &amp; belh, fur12,30
pm.
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to Spm
'I,
City Farm Supply, 114· 448- SWEEPER and sewing maohint
nlahed. Clean. Utilitlnpsid. Ref.
Mon. thr,u Sat. Ph. 814-4411'-, · S1ven good, used tirll. Four 2986 .
a deposit requii-ed. /(dults only. 0322.
rtptlir. parta, arid suppll•. Pick
I;
No pets. Call614-441-11!i19.
up and deiNety, Qjvll V8CUum
;.
mounted with Pinto huba and
Claaner. one half mile · up ~~ ,•
btiUty rlnga. A-78·13. One
Valley Furniture
83
Livestock
Furnished 2 8R . apartment.
Go.._
c - Ad. Coli 114· ' ·
spare
mounted.
Two
recapped
Adults only . No pets. Inquire at New. and uaecl furniture end
448· 0214 .
'
' ,.
anow tlrH, not mounted. All tor
epplicences
.
Call
61
4
-446·
~-----.:._
_ _ _ _ ' II
Firl1 a. Olive St. , ask tor RoN
.,00, 010 . Alao len Franklin
7672.
Hours
9-IS.
Stllner.
AON·s Ttlevltlon Service . • ,
Stove. likt new with allacce~so ­
HouM catla on RCA, Quenr, . ...
riH,
t260.
080
.
Alioflrewood
- Molloh1n Furniture
Furnished apartment· 7 Neil.
OE . SPtCiallna in Zenith. Cell • ~.I·
. for aele. t7&amp;. One p1lr Acme
Gallipolis. 1 BR . *225 . Utilitiae Upper River Ad., Gtllipolis, Oh.
304-5'11-23111 Of .1 4·441· . Q
ltdiH boota; nev• worn, 1i11 8
Olnettes-S226
&amp;
up,
Uving
ptid. Ctll448-4416 aher7 PM.
2414-.
.
. '..,.,..
medium, 140. Call 304-773room suitu -•300 &amp; up
9127.
Aecl!ner•-t156
&amp;
up,
Cerpe!
84
Hay
&amp;
Grain
New , delu111e 2 SR ., equipped
Fett¥ TrM Trimming. ttump
~:
kitchen. tow ,utilities. hcellent . etartmg It S4 1 yd . Financinv U H1ul trucks and trsil.,. for
rem.,..,•l.
Cl1130:4-87&amp;-1331 . ·;, ;.
loeatkln . No pets. O.p. &amp; ref. available to quilitied buyers. Cell
rent, 304--1715-7421 .
••
814·446·744 • .
required. Call 614-446-1260.
Ml..d hay or aHaHa · square
••
Firewood d•llvered, uacktd,
baln. Mixed hay - large round
••
,,
J &amp; S FURNITURE
Gracious living . .1 end 2 bed· •
t35.00. Meun Countl11, Galllbales . Cell 114-281-3334,
,.
I
Formally
P1raon'a
Furniture)
room apartments at Villege
polil, othtt' treas within ranon
Jtcbon. Ohio.
1415 Etstern Ave.
Mtnor end Rivenide Apartat
our
d
iacreation.
304-895·
-k:ments in Middleport . From 10 per cent . ofl on complete
3448.
Mlxad hay or alfafa In aquara Sttrka TrH and Llwn SeMel,
11
•215. inclUding ulilitiea. Ctll atock. Mondty, J1n. 18th thru
-balea. Ml1111td hay In l•rga round l1wn c.e, landacaplng. stump \1
Sat., Jan. 23rd .
814·992·n87 . EOH.
.
SURPLUS DENIM , Cerh1rt, ' b1l11 . Cell 814-288 -3334, removal. 304-171-2142 or
11
Uving room auitea from t179 a
576-2903.
... ,,,1 .
R•ntal Ck)thlng. New hewy
Jackson. Ohio.
up.
Bedroom
suites
t488
.96
&amp;
Cotttge efficiency. total electcoveralla 122.00, heavy new 'C"'-c-c-------ric, refrigerator. atove. nice. up. Complete microw•ve stands wo"' clothing, boots till winter 1t
ltay for sale. Large round •nd TrM trimming 1nd rtmDftl, odd
S39
,96
6
up.
Hl!O approved . 2215 Mt. VerreaionabJe
prlc
...
Sam
Some-aquare balu . C•H 614-167- jobl, free. 1ttimet:11, 304-871 non Ave ., Pt.· Ple11ant. 614- Corne in end meet th* new rvllle's, Old Rt. 21 ·Junction
1114.
3312 .
Ownari. ·
'
992·5858.
tndepend•nce Ra.ct. Ea11 A•·
Hay for ..1• . Large round bal...
venswood. Fri. Sat. Sun; naon... --.I•
Kenmore wastier-white, 175. 8:00
2 bedroom apt. for rent. Stove
&amp;14·992-7302.
Plumbing
pm. 304·273·1&amp;8&amp;.
82
Kenmore
washer-coppertone.
and rtfrlgetator ere lurnished.
&amp; Heating
Carpeted. Nice seiling. Call S76 . G.E. Wllh~r-AvacadO.
,.
Mlud hoy, 11 .00 bole, 304.
for ..... t30. 1 pickup
S91S . 4 lide·by·lkl•refrigeratore firewqod
814·992-3711 E.O.H.
171·1211.
laocl,
304·418·
1838
or
458from •111 . Frigidaire refrigera- 1728.
APARTMENTS. mobile home1, tor, S96. 2 door refrigerltorCARTER'S PLUMIINO
,, ::
houles. Pt. PIHaant and Glllipb- ava cedo, t96 . 30 in . elec. 011t firewood . c.n 304-171 ANDHEAnNO
·
lr
dll~ porl.rlillll
range-h1rveat
gold,
t'J&amp;
.
31
in.
llo. 614·446·8221 . ·
Cor. Fourth and Pine
~27157
etter
4:30p.m
.
Ask
tor
alec. r'ange-whlte, •715 . 01s Woodman.
.Oollloollo. OhiO
,.
2 bedroom furniHCI tpt, ref :and range·1vecado, 176. Skagga
.,.......,,-,,..,..,,.....,;:--,;:-;,..--'
·
Phone
114-441·3AB
or
114·
•·
ApplilrtCet
d1poslt, New Haven, W. Va .•
MtjorCredh: Cerda! Reg1rdl. . 71 Auto'• For Sale
441-44n
•
'·
:
579
Upper
River
Ad
..
614--441304:182-3211 or 304-n3of credit history. Al10, naw
7398
6024.
credit card. No one NfYHdl For
lnformltion c111 ... 1·311-733- 1883 Chovy. Cltotlon. Am redia.'
isi'A41"E:;:Ie::ct~r='"ic:-a:-:l--'- :
Beech StrMt, Middltpan, Ohio, !5 pc. Early Arn1rlcan living
auto. trena., PS. ftB, 89,00o
1012
o•t.
M2831.
room suit- couch, chair, rock•,
2 bedroom· furnithed apt. utHi·
mil•. t1700. CenbetMn•tthe
&amp; Refrigeration
.
tin paid, ref~encestnd daposit, ottoman. footatoo\. E•cel.
GaiHpolla Dally Tribune or fOf
Green
velvet
Lary
loy
ch~r.
Si•
cond.
t360.
Call814-448304·882·2616.
moralnformlllon celll14· 446etorm
windows
wtth
sc.....,.
for
2796.
2342.
ctHment wlndowa. 304-171· Relidential or commercial wn-. .•
45&amp;3.
N•w ~ or fepeirs.
i
un c...... Crocll. 81,000 lng.
Ucenllld eleclricien. Ell..... 1
mllee. euto .• Y· l . 11100. Cell
frll. Rid.mour Electricel, 304- I·

,,

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

. ,.
..

dog.(A)C

llll • d2l Magnum, P.l.

••

..

______

'

"'i·',.

66 Building Suppllea

114-44S-1111·Doy, 44S·1244
ohoriPM.

~~~;;::=~~~=== ;~!

1814 Ford Eooon. 12181.
JoM'oAoto-

86

.

General Hauling ·~

""

below · Hqllday Inn.

.....

~~o

Businail
Opportunity

&amp;75·1785.

~111-

Magnum 's business venture
1akas,a.bact&lt; seat when T.C.
has a problem.
11J !.any King Llvel
9:30 8 ()) 1111 Bevel1y Hilla Bunu
Buntz a1ratches 1he truth to
protact a widow's settlement:
I]) 8 (I) Slip MIXSiory Slap linda adventure
on highway; Jucly and Charfia
launch relaCionahip. Q
10:00 (]) Stnolght Talk
D (J) 1111 St. I!IMWestphaH's resolve to get
AIDS petlenc program may
gat him Clrad. (R) Q

l1l D Cll Dyrtl41y Alo•is
gives up the ei8C1ion

,.,,
.

.....'

Homes.for Rant

SHE: .JUST KE:E'F'S SNIFFLJNE:i
AND ,MARK I~ OF!= TH5 Oo\'18
CN 'THE CAI..END&lt;IR.

.,

"""

JOGHAID1$

BEEN

FIGHTIN' WITH
~MANTAV

A6'1N, PAW

WHAT HE

NEEDS 15
A GOOD

WHUPPIN' !!

~MANTHY

BEAT Me TO iT,
MAW

campaign; Dax warns Alexis
about Sean. Q '
llll DID 1M EqueUzer A
journalist wort&lt;lng un&lt;larcovar
becomes obsessed wi1h ceM
girls.
.,
11J Evening N 10:30(]) A-IIMplholl
• (!) The Mcwtl 1'11'-• This
tribute to the movie pelace o1
the 19208 end 1930s, hosted
by Gene Kelly. porlniY' the
ha~dly , decline, and roblrtll
of grond old movie lheatros.
liD® N -

D

11:00 (]) Aomlnglon BIMII
DIll l1l D w llll e~D

-

~~~~-

!]) Schale•llc Sports

(1)81an011

Own your own et4.11 on. price
ladl• apperel. chikh'en• 1*20 .
v.....l or thM etore.
Aqul1r. stor" chOOit from
Jean-lporl..,...., IMIM.

••o..

11111 -leo SOOO. IHARPI
111!00. caM S14-44t·ll71.

"*''·
large ...... petite, ...........

1114 1-ZI. -

. ..-obic, bridef, 11...... Of H ·
ceec. brideori• ttore. llnlnds:
1.,11' C'
C.mp
a.v.rtv Hils. lt. Mlahall, For.
na, Bugle loy, ..__l.zlaltlv
pown.
Lucio. .... 2 __
- .._·
Or
f13.ttone_or
II

, . ., ,

, _ dlocount or timllr ,._

Jtorll. R.-~1 untnllhlble

--·
Mr
.
--·______

"" ...
normolly
· e2100
. oaiiO.Owr
~10 llranll•
atyl•• ·

,..... · -· Col ., ........

8871.

Dean Ruak, William Rogers,
Edmuild Muakle, Cyrus
Vance atiO Henry Killinger
anawer probing questions
abOU1 cul'l'lllt U.S. loralgn
•pol.lcy:J;..'nltll

,_..;;,

""""
,

~-

- .......

..... . '

•

..

=........ ,. . ,............ . . ....
•

WltllriOII'I Water Heul!af.

-.

•
"!:
II

- · 010. .... J04-1'7j; 1I
b11.

17
,.. ~!'.::.Lillo
10.000
•• AC,-...-

- • d....... ,_lrocl. C.H
114-"'-4111.

1'1. AM·

''""*- wwe no ._. wtth wtndehllld1 to
• • 10

114-IIIIIR

01 liNt ot &lt;:.,on
I]) lparteCt- (L)

•

a

Coli

C1tetn

==~i=
Cll Lito
flillt o·
end Glambone
lnYMtlglli

~-

'

I

'

•

IIM·S71-3110. """ - - ' ::

one ,_.roam houN nNr
donntown • lftooole. Rtf.-•-

e Cll

D'-=IIQ
ill
P.l. .

CooiMMit.trn.

Nice

117.to0 .. 12••f00.1-tary, Cem...ldv fum- - " "
rent. 3 Iff .. bnll, f.,.,Hr room.
II ..._.noea. lwlmrnlna pGIII,
.... ""'- - · can ,. lnlllke dlltf. for more inlO. aal
.. . .. Col
114-446-4101 or 371·2740.

...........

.. olr. - ·

· -· Coll14·44t·ll71.
1114 1'111111 Alii. llillti.. olr,

.........

.

· 0 1'11i1o Annuel Report o1
U.lacilleMiotat.te

(I)

1177 c:-. 40.000 .
-.Coi-71'M.I14·371.

Upholltery

'

.

•

I

II

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
. FOR ANSWER
•

.

'

' '

- 'I

· SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS.

Jo¥ful - Dtoop - Allaa - Mantel - TOO FAST
They noW tell us we can microwave minute rica. 1Chink thac's
making Chlnga move 1 bit TOO FAS.;:.:.;T·: .__ _ _ __ __ _

BRIDGE
to

NORTH

...
1

-· ''·

..

.1·!~11

8AQ1096 2
.KQ9 8

••

- ,,

an urldeiOOYtl'
IQIIIt'l murlllr. (R)

8 Mlgnum. P,l. No NNCI to
1&lt;.-

.

D~Tul

.t*~i;T

lf.wez
1'a:aolr....

• l.ali ...... wllh

LCISIII\III
. CllNI... wiiiiiiiM;

Loull waited lor~

I Find

key
DOWN
ambition
I Emulate
1 Wldqw's
wJ . Bryan lllwe
10 C.!l'le!an I Muellm
. Wlpge
decree
11 VadD•te I Item
11 Gladll
for
piMade

\

•

ajudge

11 Dutch .

.4 Colorado
township
Indian

11 Ema bed I "'lbe
18 )'ellow
Seven

bulle .

111'rulted,

wldl"on"

11 wiudld

.,_rur

•
.,
e

7St.

IJSmallbill
II Heroic
tale
J4 Gregorian

·,

Yeaterdq'e Allewer
14 Waterway 3ZAway
17 Plndarlc
frOm
JO Hebrides
starboard
laland

Solution"
6Yore

,,

" ..

8 Dutter's

•

83 Slight

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degree
City
MUkea
Z4 Weather
beaver
word
36 Welcome
211 Shout
word for
28 Claimed
alders
27 Mailer's 39 Hoosier
need
wit
29 Unclerstand41 After

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role

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AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

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One leiter ltands for another. In this sample A is used. ... :•
for lbe tt.. L'l, X for lbe two O's, etc. Single ~tters,
tile leniab and formation ollbe words are all
Ellcb day the code letters are cUff4!rent.
C&amp;tPTOQUOTB .
1·11
.......
I
LRFBF'N

VBFTL

T

U 8 W 'L

s

Q

H S 1. F B
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xw
RXLZR

L R F A

PSNR

LSS

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MAD YOUR llUSIQ8S ·

TA'D AS SHORT AS YOOR PRAlL 8, AND YOU WILL ,

ALWAYS II A WINNER.- BD HOWB
'

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44Molslwe
415 Computer

ACitOSS

Exon:ilt"

Walelllng (1 :32)

IIJMD . ,. .
D (!I LIM CotwteCIIon

-·

lNG CO. recommends that you
do bustn.. with peopl• yau
know. end NOT 10 aend money
through the men until you have
lnHattglttd lhe offering.

(!I Hogan'l Herooa

10:35 (IJ MOVIE: A Sldligtt' II

11:30
t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY ·PUBliSH·

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

·by filling in t he missing words
yo u d evelop from step N o. '3 b elow.

The jump four diamonds by North
was s~ial in their partnership. It
said, Partner, I have a strong hand, ·
.A6
with four-&lt;:ard heart support, plus a
EAST
slngletoa diamond." .Kno-:Mg that, WEST
aK
aJ
a
s
3
• (!I M'A'~'H
South felt be bad to show his diamond
•• 2 .
•ss
7:05 (IJ Andf Briflflh
ace, and the side got to a shaky six- a K )08
8J9H3 2
heart contract.
•to 8. 2
7:30DCll l1l HoCt,.KQJ'9
' -'
U you bioi out the East-West cards,
lqulSOUTH
it looks as if the slam depends upon eiCJ·CIJ.Judgl
'"'"
,.
+H
llll Wheel of Fortune Q
ther a diamood or a spade finesse af.
.,,U107 3
11J Cro4111N
ter the openlnl lead has forced out
+AQ7
DID 1111 Jeo~H~rdyl Q
dummy's club ace. The prillciple here
.743
® ..""' Millet
'
iA to postpone a fineae If you can try ·
D (!I WKAP In CCnclnneti
Vulnerable: Both
some other play without risking an im.
1::is ciJ sMtanlanc~ Bon
Dealer: North
mediate set. Put another way, if you
"',.
. 1:00 (]) Baco;ld
take the spade finesae and it loses, the
Norlb E01t
D Cll till Hlghwey 1o •
defenders will cub a club; if you take Weal
'1+
Pass
HHven Young cquple finds
!lie diamond finesse and It loses, the Pass
4 +• Pass
unconditiOnal love end
·defenden.alao cash a club. So what un- · Pass
6+
Pass
responslbiiiCy H brings. Q
•uaual play can you make that is free, . Pass
Pass Pass
l1l CJ Cll Ptftoct Sino.....
after which you will still have the op• Strong hand, four bearts
ljousegueslls ax-jailbird
tion of finessinl to make your conand singleton diamond ·
Balkl and Larry tes1111W
tract? I think you have it. Why not just
against Q
• (!) IIlJ LIVe from the Mil
draw trumps and then play the ace of
Opening lead: • K
Franco Zoffirolli's prOOUcllon
spades? Once in a blue moon, the king
..
of Puccini's opera Is .
W:ll drOp ~fully on the table.
• •.
... , conducted by James Lavine . '
Wben 111at happens, you can make the spade king does not fall, you will take · ~
llll .ID 1M Law and Heny
slam
without risking the diamond the diamond finesse and the defenders .
Mc~w Despite smaslolng
finesse.
will set you one more. But any player
legal victQI'Y, forthcoming ,
This
play
lives
you
a
little
extra
,
worth his salt should not mind so long :
blrtllday brings bl~s. lA)
but
there
Is
a
price
to
pay.
On
as he is not doubled, since he is giving '
chance,
IIJ PrtmoNowl
' bands In which both the diamond king himself a better chance to bring home "'
and the spade kinK are with West, you' the proverbial bacon.
' ;
•®~···Cll MOVIE: llHtllintP (PG)
wut be set an enra trick. When the·
·
11 :56)
1:05 (IJ MOVIE: Family Plot (PGI
12:00)
·8:30 (]) Anlmail o1 Afrlcll .
I]) • Cll ot !H Claee
lay IHOMAS JOSEPH
Janice competes for first
ceHo spot in school orchestra
and loeaa. D
® Coi!IQI flaak.,.,.ll
9:00 (]) 700 Club
DIll 1111 Chlerl Eodia
· final!~ asks .Carla , pregnant
with his twins, to marry hirit _
lA) ·
I]) College ..tklltiiH
I]) D (I) Hoopemtttn Harry,
taken to court, trios to pass
Bijoux off as a. narcollcs

,...

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lhe chuckle quolod

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~teiHT- MINPEP GUY$ IN!

.'

Open your own flture &amp;lion whh

the original Stlluff.- Concept
Figure Shaping Tebln. luy

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TWo OF THE MOti

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RooT of AL.L. t:vtl-,
WE GOTTA

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One ol the cutest "oalfyn~ions"
I've run across defined a routine
as a 'ritual which had become

. Is I .I' I .r_ ,;l;. . :l;.,.I :. :.A,.:.:IN~D;. . I e C~mplele

...
.

·I,

&amp; weekends.

I ~,·

iChHre

814-441-4383 doya, 448.0139 ••• ~
~Yen~ -

L

11J Moneyllne
•ID till WhHI of Fonuno

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·r iedy. Cett

.1. ' L u Q.I

NewaHour 11 :00)
llll Newa

M.

Tran..-

I I 1 I 1· .~j
3

.. Cll People'• Court
(!) IIlJ MocN411/ Lehrer

~---------------·~
1982 Podge 2&amp;0 Ram. Cuetom , ·~

lltck walnut kernels

304·882-3120.

-1•

pickup, •1300.1977FardF2&amp;0 • .•
four whHl drive, 11300. CeH
814--849-2101 .
'
":.:1 •

conversion.

c- for Comlotl

7:00 (]) Remington
D Cll PM lhpzlne
(!) CoUego 8811tetbllll
I]) Enlerta1111Mnl Tonight

1:

1871 Chevrolet Sllvetado Y.t ton 1

(!I Too

I

THACH

8:35 !IJ Carol Burnett

,,•

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

2

1111 1

•

1887 Ford Rano- 8. IS tpd..
I'
AM-FM-Cest. 8 .000 mllu. _Cell •. ::
114-2323 eft..- 4 PM .
.
. ,,

73

Fruit
&amp; Vagetal!les

PRUBAL

1

11J lnelde Polltlca 'II , .
® WKRP In Clncln1111ij

13250. Colll1 4·288·8522.

68

I

·r·

1982 Ford plek·UP truck .

firm,. 304·882·2136.

low to form four sim ple words .

l~..J.L-..J..-..J.L--..J.__..J,L--1

(I) 8 (I) ABC New4 Q

•o cea

aia

.

O four
Rearrange ieHers of the
scrambled words be-

&amp;

1980 1~. Trans·1Ur 11.
ca,.-cummingli. Recently overheuiH. New lnjectDrt. N1w
pump. AC, Am-FM·Cau.
1 1245 tirw. Truc:k fint ah~pe.

UIIO.OO,

~NBAToUy

liD 8ocly Elocll1c

John 's Auto"11l11
~ ·:;
below Holldty Inn- ; .,_
KeHUgl
•
Open til dtrk

1178 Dadlo truck,
304-175·2 31.

Electriagultlrwtthc.... t71 .00

~f

'·

1981 OodG' Riorm 0·1 00. J•
•4799.
·~

1878Flborltl..,
Ford F·150.
4 · -· 351
topper. n1oo.
514-992·5&amp;41 .

GAM I
T=~~:~' s~~~lA-l&amp;t-trs*
14\IM
CLAY I . POUAN _;;__ _ __

(!) Nlghlly lluiiMII Ropcirt
llll
Newa

•. '•,

Truck• for Sale

j

Carvin DC126 Le•d Guiter
137&amp;.00. Carvin 4x12· Inch
cabinet 12115.00. Bottw lltC

1978 City triule aiurNnum
dump trail.-. 32 foot box. v...,
good cond. Call 114-448-1378.

loc:IO&lt;y diroct. 31 2·234·1547.

.

•

~

·

114·318·1521.

Musical
Antiqu", buy or Mil . AMwine 67
Antiques, 1 124- 'Eatt Mtin St.,
lnstrumants
Pomeroy. Houra: Mon .. Tuet.,
andWed. 10:00a .m. -8:00p.rri ..
Sun . 1:00 p.m .-6:00 p.m. By · Guitar L.aasonell lndlvtdual in·
chtnce
. or •ppointinant. Ruaa struction. Bru"icardl's Muelc,
Moore. 814·812·252&amp;.
114-448-0687 or ctll Jeff
· Wam.tey inttructor, 814-44864 Misc. Merchandise

24157.

Colll14·143·2813 otter a

inga • weekenda.
roy. Cion to high achool. Call
114-742-2160 betwaen 8 :00
end 4 :30.
·

• Cll Happy Day•
1:06 !IJ Allee

Bunny Rabbits! For Valentine's PM.
or 4--H proJec:U. 11om- Dec.
17.1987... tts .OO each . Ctll 1 1977 Ford piekup. F - ~80. AUtGrnatlc. V-1 . with toppet. Cell
114·441-1382.

fll . 7

21

Chow • Chow •

114-446-114&amp; . .

Buy II Sell AntiCauea. Buckeye

2 bedroom on Crew Ad., Pom•

®~-o!Uie

Rt . 7

PICKENS 'US£0 FUANITUAE

Bedt, l!leskt, lampa.
couaha, chairs, dinnett1, misc.
Hatf mile out Jericho Road.
8 :00· 8 :00 ll.fndeyt 12 :00·

·

•

borroll, •450.00. 30(-.,751

Sptck»ua nloblt. home lots for
rent. family Prida Mobile Home

House pr.tersbly with ac reage
for husband &amp; wlfa only. ·Excel.
reference. Ctlll14-446-7846.

,. 1

won

DID

(!) Dr. Who
IIlJ Dogreul Junior High
Themes: Disabilities,
sh~nass , jealousy and peer
relationships. Q
·
iiJ ShowBiz TOday

'72 V.W. • 710.00. 'II WI- '::
· J ..p 11 ,000 .00. 114·Ua. ' ,

W.Vo. Coli 304· n3·5151 .

•

@ SportoLook

..... 1100.00. 304-171·73711. '.;

.

EVENING
IIIINewe

'

'73 Pinto wagon. 4 ayl• .,to--

Sptce tor tmall trdars. AN
~ -ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooma, tlr and cable. Maeon,

Cell &amp;14·2.,·4845.

,•

•'

rnotlc. 14.000 - 1 mlleo, no

Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Alrttal ttailtrt. Cell .14·1t2-

living room.. dlr*tg room 1rld
kitchen. Also laundry room. 2
ctr garag.. centrlll atr, E11tern
SehGal Dietrict. References r•

(

0

s,....... Coli 114·892·7189 COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork,
- 5:00.

Financial

AUTOMOBilE ClUB OF SOU·
THEASTEAN OHIO-AAA

If you art inter.. ted in 1 aelllng
career in Galli a County are!lfll, why
not consider AAA1 Send u1
someinformet~ about yaui'Hif
and your wark hlttory. We will
contact you for 1n int.,• .
Send to; Automobile Club of
louthenttfn Ohlo·AAA, An:
CaNY JonM, P.O.Box 371 .
PortJmOUth, Ohio 415812 .

Hou .. for Nit or rent ( 1.00 sq.
ft .. 3 BR .• 2 full batt,s. utility
room, famity- room. ' Z4~t21 gar~
ttgt. ~vel lot. At. 3&amp;-Aodney
.,... Call614· ...0-28&amp;8 ....... 5

WED., JAN. 27

8:00 ()) Crazy Lflle a-Fox
D ()) (l) D Cll 1111

'

1970 C.mbridga 12~~;70 , g11
ht~t. 3 BR. 11h beth. htr1 nice
throUghout. t8900. Call 614-

13

Ofl&amp;c. IPKt for rent . beet.
downtown· GsMipoHs loclttion.
lnqulrlM caU 114-446·4222.

'

~

'·

Raw fur, beef •nd d...- hides. 1::-c--c-c------Gyn ·sing 1nd Yellow root . We Sentor citi1en. Aoom·and board
heve . wheat and nlte Illes. for one lldy. Specill cera in my
Trapping supplies for ..-sle. (Buy- home. Reuoneblt. Call 614·

! ;9~9;2=·6=8=7;3:.=======

9·&amp;.

&amp;1•·•41·2101 .
.
1879 Flot llrd Fo.-.' Air,
-lniOriar.
· 403·4
........
blocl&lt;
Good
COfldl..,..
UIOO . Co1111 4-812·2772.

•

HouH for ~le. Will sell on land
contract with t6000 down.
Aaking 124,000. Call 114-9922852 or 614-198-6817. Will
consider mobile home on trade.

1978 Wind1or 14x70 wlth expanda. 3 BR .. all eltte., CA.
wllhlf' • dryer, awnings, porch,
underpfnnlng. heel. cond. Mult
eM. Ctll814-682-74-37 efter 6

. L.. t day to buy
ing. uaed
fur
Feb.trlpsJ
6 . . 1988. George
=~~~~~- Hours 12 -9 . 614-88'·

condition. t2200. 1171 Chevy , I"
pick-up haft-ton. 11800. C.N • ')

46 Space for Rent ·

304·882·2466.

Buying daily gold, ailwr coins,
rings, jewelry, .,.,ling Wife , old
coins. large curr...ey. Top pri- Lonely pre-schooler needs comces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop, pany. Wil b1by sit tr.. another
2nd . Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614- pre-schooler couple houn dey
time In Middleport. Grandma.
982·3476.
.

614·992·721 5.

4 rooms • twrlh. Eu y t.o heat.
MHA approved . Sea at 21
Ctntraf or call 114-446-1'473,

qulrocl.

•

•~

1981 OldoCudo .. LS . h e - .

3 bedroom, furnished . Good
cletn condition. 1 child, no pat&amp;.
S176 per- month. New Haven. .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Situations
Wanted

440-1010. Rtnt It tow • f.120
month .

2 ... .. w ith firepl~ . "'Il acre.
t 2&amp;0 a mo. Ctll 814·4•1-7811.

oe11 .

24th, mille Brittany Spaniel with

Government Jobs. •11.040·
beU on collar. Call 114· 742- . •s9.230 y.. r. Now Hiring. Your
2766 . .
Ar. ., 801-187-1000 Ext. A·
9805 for cu"ent F1d1NI list .

1871 T-llrd, good condttlon. ,,.
CW Lalont•. Write to loa l 71. • .
Pomeroy, Ohio. 41781 .
::

Hotel. Col 114·

.8 room duplex, basement. garage. private; nice loution. 304-

t-----------~----------~
1 1 Help Wanted

month. Qollo

.

3 bedroo~. 2 full bethl, large

r

the:fuleatentofthelaw, lonnie

Giveaway

J

.'

Aooms for l'lnt, dey. WINk.

911 4th. Aw . Call 114-448-.

8030. .

}J. .

To wMt .,.., J*tY of the
O.Veutti femily that pul'-d up
1he • •· which mlfked whtre .
my MOU"*Jta It to be, the n~t
time I Mn toiftl'tO pro.cute to

4

., .

I

I .&amp;:-~

TeleviSav••
Viewing-

, I

"

�j

· Wednesday, January 27,' 198~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Corner of General Hartinger Parkway and Pearl Street

· · TELEPHONE: 992·3471

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8 A.M.·10 P.M.

We accept food stamps and W.I.C. coupons.

Honor
veteran
-Mason

l
I

•

l·l

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
764
Pick 4
1394

Page7

.I

Super Lotto

•

-.II

.••'

at y

e
Vol.38. No.182
· Copyrighted 1988

jlicloNI....n.

.

Cloudy tonight Low btl"
tween U and 20. Sunny Frl· ·
day. Wghs between 40 and 45.

2-7-14-25-42-43

I

IALI DATU: lr 11ry 24 . .
h11 rry 31, 1MI. ~l'ig!anoorwd
Nai'-POftllblllor ~or

•

•

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. January 28, 1988

2 Section a. 12 Peg"

25 Canto .

A Multimedia Inc\ NewfPaper

-

Senate passes motor vehicle· registration hill
found excessive levels of ozone.
Cincinnati areas.
,
.
By LEE LEONARD
adjourning
for
the
weeIf Celeste, backing the Ohio
Before
VPi Statehouse Reporter .
Environmental
Protection
COLUMBUS , State senators . kend . We&lt;!nesday. t)le House
· will ron · Into an unplanned ratified the delay, 89'8, and also , Agency, vetoes the measure as
session today to put the finishing passed its own version of state promised, House Speaker Vernal
.. touches on a bill delaying for six motor vehicle regis tration Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said it is
conceivable the House could
·months a controversial manda- reform.
By approving the delay in the return before Monday to. over·
·tory auto emissions Inspection
auto emissions program, the . ride the veto if the Senate
program . .
Tbesess!on Is to begin at4 p. m~ Senate will be courting a veto by -llVi!rr!des. flrst .
Tbe motor vehicle registration
·The Senate had not scheduled · Gov. Richard Celeste.
bill,
passed last 'year by the
The
emissions
inspectiop
proany floor sessions this week, but
gram
·
is
scheduled
to
start
Senate
In drastically different
leadership wants to concur In
form,
cleared
the House on a ·
Monday
in
Hamilton
,
Butler,
minor House changes to the bill
postponing until Aug. 1 the Cuyahoga, Lake and Lorain 72-25vote. The Senate is expected
. mandatory aspect of emissions counties, where the U.S. Envir- to disapprove the . extensive
changes and send the measure to
onm~ntal Protection Agency has
:checkups In the Cleveland' and

a joint conference committee for
reworking.
The registration bill occupied
50 minutes otdebate, with some
members cotnplaining it does not
go far enough' to take politics out
of the system &amp;nd one - Rep.
Michael Shoemake r, D Bourneville - protesting the
sys tem doesn't need ,to be
changed at ali.
The Senate calle&lt;!' f9r 272
deputy registrars to be replaced
by state employees at 150 field
· offices around the state to
provide "one-stop shopping" for
.vehicle services such as titling,

Also, anyo ne contributing ,$1,000
inspections and licensing.
The House rewrit e keeps the to a political candidate over two
deputy registrars , appointed by years could not be appoi nted as a
the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. deputy registrar.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Newark,
but tequires them to advertise
their · location and hours of architect of the-revised version,
operations. and provides for said It shortstops political donadate-of-birth registration to cut tions for practical purposes.
Guthrie said 12 cents of every
own on long lines .
·
Like the Senate bill. the House $1.50 transaction fee received by
version provides for registration registrars will be sent to thest10te
by mail with 45 days' advance . to defray the cost of registration
by mail. He also said the deputies
notice ·sent out by the BMV.
will
have to shell out $2.2 million
The House bill a lso forbids
for
Social
Security benefits for
soliciti ng deputies for political
donations and provides for a their workers .
.Continued on page 5
$10,000 line for each violation.

'-Iranians upset over abduction
Good p,loel
DELl

LUNCH MEAT
' AND

.

CHEESE TRAY

~12.99

Pkg,

..

OKED PICNICS

c

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) no decision at Hezboliah'sieaderIran and Syria are trying to ship·level to seize the German. It
pressure the kidnappers of a was an individual move by the
West German into freeing their Hamad! clan," he said.
hostage, who was snatched in an
A Lebanese official and other
abduction believed orchestrated sources said 'schray was· abby the brother of two men ducted Wednesday in. a kidnap. accused pi terrorisll) In Bonn, ping orchestrated by Abdul Hadi
Le.banese and Syrian sources Hamad!. the brother of two
said today.
Palestinians held in West GerAn Iranian delegation arrived many on terrorist charges.
late Wednesday as Syrian forces
The sources sa id the Iranian
In west Beirut warned · the kid- team, Including members of the
nappers that they "will use Revolutionary Guards, met with
forc e" if Ra lph Schray is not Hezbollail 'leaders.
freed within 48 hours, Lebanese
"The mission of the Iranian
secur!.ty'sources said. The warn- delegation is aimed at seeking
ing was conveyed to the kid; the release of Schray," said a
· nappers at midnigh t.
senior Lebanese securit y official
A Syrian source, who asked not who requested anonymity·.
to be named. said the Iranians
Lebanese Shiite sources close
"were very upset by the latest to Hezbollah said Hamad! , a
abduction and are negotiating Shliie Lebanese who is in charge
with the kidnappers" to have of the Moslem fundamentalist ·
Schray released as soon as organization's "security org;1n,"
possible.
.
.
personally carried out Schray's
"There is an uncompromising .. abduction, along with other HezTAIIUIOARD MEMBERS -J;IYf: t\WARD .. ·. Olllo Oepartment of Arrlclllture, at the Ohio Fa.lr
Syrlan deCision to take declsive - bolla!) members. · · · ·
'- WUUam Radfonl, rlpt, accept&amp; a ,certlflcate of
.Managers Convenl!on In Columbus. On the left is
action to secure the re ieaseofthe
The abduction occurred outaec-pllillmeataward for the MelpCouoty.Falr
Jay Hill, a new member of the Meigs County Fair
German, and the Iranians are side a hotel In west Beirut, where
Beard from Steven D. Maurer, dlreetor of the
Board. Rlldfoftl Is board president.
helping In this direction," the 7,000 Syri an troops are deployed
source told United Press to keep peace. The kidnapping
Interna tional.
was seen as .a challenge of Syrian
The source said the Iranian- authority.
The Meigs County Agricultural
luncheon held this month In bring entertaining events to backed Hezbollah, or Party of
The Shiite sources said HaSociety Board of Directors, Columbus.
fruition, he commE'nted.
God, had nothing to do with mad! recently arrived from Iran
which Is known as the Meigs
"Members of local fair boards
Attending either a part or all of Schray.'s a bduction . "There was after defying instructions from
County Fair Board and annually
take just pride In and . derive · the annual Ohio Fair Managers
stages, the .)leigs county Fair,
pleasure from their community Convention in Columbus from
was presented a certificate of activities," sailj Maurer in mak- MWe t gasmCoRunatdy~ wredr,~ MMrr . aanndd MM·rrss . •
f,
f,
accomplishment by Steven D.
lng tile presentation. "A fair
1
Maurer, director of the Ohio really Is a cooperative commun- . Dan Smith, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
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senger ca rs and vans from Ohio
Turnplke tolls would present a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) d!strtcr delegaies slots for the Ohio.
Ohio may' have ap eight-way Democratic National Convention
The ch.a irman said more than potentlalfor abuse·and fraud and
contest-for the Democratic nom!- in Atlanta July 18-21 were former 2,200 Democrats · s ubmitted cost the Ohio Turnpike Commisnation through\)ut the state when Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt, forms expressing a desire to be . sion about $14 million annually in
the presidential primary rolls Massachusetts Gov . Michael Du-- delegates for various preslden· lost revenue, the commission's
kakls, Rep. Richard Gephardt of tiai candidates. He said some of executive director says.
around May 3.
Allan Johnson testified Wed- ·
· Democratic State Chairman · ·Missouri, Sen. Albert Gore of the delegate candidates may not
. James Ruvolo said Tuesday that' Tennessee, Gary Hart, Jesse . · meet state requirements later in nesday before the Ohio House
Transportation and Urban Af,
·
ail seven major. Democratic Ja~kson, and Sen. Paul Simon of · 'the process.
presidential · candidates have Illinois.
"f'm tremendously pleased · fairs Committee in opposition to
taken the inltlal steps to field full
Iy addlti&lt;)n, said Ruvolo , Rep. with their enthusiasm," said a bill by state Rep. Robert W.
slates of -delegates in .In all 21 James Traficant of Youngstown Ruvolo. "This indicates that Jaskulskl, D-Brecksville.
Jaskulski 's bill retains the
congressional districts.
has filed incomplete slates of people don't think it (the race for
commlss!on's
· authority to fix,
FIUmz to compete for the 104 delegates in every district In the Democratic nomination) Is
revise,
charge
and c91lect tolls
going to be over by the time we
but
exempts
collecting
tolls from
get to Ohio. Most active Ohio
automobiles
and
vans
registered
Democrats · f~l there is going to
lri Ohio.
be a contest."
CINCINNATI (UPI) - ,A federal appeals court baa n1led that
Johnson said he was aware of
Rep. Dou~~:la.s Applegate, D·
U.S. Steel Corp. and American Culvert &amp;: Fabricating Co. are
neither
any such exemption In .
Continued on page 5
· partly liable for the collapse of a Paulding Couaty bridge In 19113
that ldUed five people ·and InJured four others.
" U.S. District judtre In Toledo had granted summary
jud11111ent to the firms In June 1888, thereby dlsmiBSing all
DETROIT (UPI) - A new percent gain In sales. gaye up
c~ms against them.
round ot attractive buyer Incen- considerable market share from
But the 11&amp;11 U.S. Orcutt Court of Appeals ruled this week that
tives and less severe weather last year and the previous selling
the companies are not covered by uri Ohio Jaw under which any
accross the nation helped salE&gt;s of period.
penon funlllhlng the deslp, planning, supervision . or
·
,
U.S.-made
cars
and
light
trucks
coutnctloli of a structure may not be aued for InJuries
"It looks like the snow did not
• during mid-January Increase melt as fas t at GM dealers," he
re8111tlllg from defeCtive conditions more than len years after
32.7 percent from year-ago levels said:
providing aiiCh aervlcea.
when measured by the dally
"We coaclade that U.S.S. aad American Culvert, aa suppliers
,The eight companies - GM,
selling
rate.
of a sluclartl product wllolly unconnected with lin)' speclallaed
Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Corp,,
. ''There Is silll no sign of the Honda Motor Corp., Volkswagen
d•lp or service~ Ia - u o n with llle ...-ucture, are not
stock market crash or a reces- -of America, NlssanMotorManu'penou' wllllln the tnc!lllllniJ of (the Ohio ~te)," tbe
sion," David Healy, cit New York factl\rlng U.S.A., Toyota Motor
unanbnoua court llaltl.
Investment firm Dtexel Burn~ Sales U.S. A. and Mazda Motor
Tile case wu returlled to the dlslilct court for further
ham Lambert Inc., said Wednes· Manufacturing (USA) Corp. pnceedlnp wl&amp;ll awpect to lhe..clalma of ne.-,eace ..
day,
"Americans are back buy- reported combined .sales of
The appel._ nurt tlld uplleld the II'IDI or 1wnmary
Ing
cars
again.'.'
186,385 cars, or 20,709 per day, In
Jaclpmnt u tlf the ,nnct llallllty elllbnllaplnlt u.s. Steel
Healy called the Industry's the United states during the
aad American
latest performance goocJ, Indlcat· latest Jan. 11-20 period.
''The evldeMe GJ SPI• .,• ....,.rt a fl"lli tiiM tile arch
1111
a salea rebound from recent
This compares with 125,77•
(proYided II)'
lteel ... Amer&amp;caa Flollrllr"ll) eoatalllalll ·
weeks
when frllld weather froze units, or 15,722 cars 10ld per day,
111J muaflldllnlr life Ill .. n:t.te•ce at tlltf.... lt ~~(their)
traffic at showrooms across the In the year-aeo period, when
.............. Gtilft .....
nation.
P..W.., Ctllb' lltl;eidlllillonlhe tl'tp Ill ..., Zeller
Mazda was not yet building cars
Car sales alone rose 31.7 domesUcally.
Cree1l Ill IJ'II, file DH' 4J ......, U tile U.., Cllarlel
.
percent,
wltll
all
automalcera
but
Tl)ere
were
nine
aelllng
day.s
J:lmea"", ••• • •• nat .... 111ape ... p.p ..,.. wu
Nlllan showiDa year-to-year
·aeabl]ll)' rofel'tiM • ......
catalop llelllld receiMd
this year, compared with eight
gabta. However, Healy noted that
flem.a d8111er, ev•t•w'IJ Nlr Dlf!lc one Jllllllllfllclllred by u,s.
last year. Because ot this, all
industry leader Gueral Motors
.
pe~tages are calculated on a ·
Corp., alti!Qugh It posted a 19.2
daily rate to account for the

Court rules on bridge collapse

Iranian officials to remain in
Tehran. They said he kidnapped
Schray to pressure Bonn into
freeing his imprisoned brothers,
Ali Abbas Hamadi and Mohammed Ali Hamadi.
"According to our information,
the German was abducted by
Abdul Hadi Hamad!, and he Is
be ing held in the souther n suburbs of Beirut." said Karim
Pakradounl. second in command
of the Christian Lebanese Forces
militia :
Pakradouni ma'Cie the statementafter a closed-door meeting
with German Ambassador Wolfgang Goettelmann at the militia
headquarters in eas t Beirut.
Mohammed AU Hamad! refused to testify Wednesday in the
trial of his brot her in Duesseldrof. West Germany. The session
-coincided with Schray's abduction In Beirut.
..
·Ail Abbas Hamad! is charged
~lth complicity ih the kidnapping in Beirut las t January of
Rudolf Cordes , of Hoechst chemical firm , a nd Alfred Schmidt, of
Siemens Electronics. Schmidt
was released Sept. 7 amid
reports th e Germa ns pai d a huge
ransom , but Cordes was still
being held.
Mohammed Ali Hamadi is
Continued on page 5

"There's also the potential for
abuse and fraud," he told the
committee in its second hearing
on the bilL
·
·
Johnson estimated that about
40 percent of the autos that use
the toll road are registered in
states other than Ohio but that
they account for approxlmaiely
50 percent of passenger car tolls
because out-of-state drivers usli ally travel greater distances on
the turnpike than do Ohioans.
Automobile tolls amounted to
$27.5 million last year, somv 50
percent of which would be lost if
Ohio-registered cars and vans
were exempt, he said.
Carol Pierce of the Ohio
Department of Transportation,
which will assume control of the

highway must bein good condilion when It changes hands .
"We want a reasonably safe
highway when we takeover," she
said. "We wa nt it"up to interstate
standards."
Johnson said the commission
currently Is in the · midst of "a
massive program of rebuilding
the turnpike."
He als.o said Ohio's neighbor
states of Indiana and Pennsylvanla plan to retain their turnpike
tolls lndef!nlteiy.
"Connecticut's is the only
turnpike In the nation that's gone
toll-free in recent years," he
said. " That wasn't a very good
road when thetoilswereon . Now,
the situation Is even worse."

Mid-January car, truck ·sales up 32.7 percent

hlldsn...,.,.

u.s.

.....
!I

,....ct

•

differing number of selling days
By share, GM's slice among
in the comparable periods .
the domes tic carmakers deSales of domestically made .clined to 48.6 percent!n the latest
light trucks totaled 104,243, or · period from 53.7 percent a year
11 ,583 units per day , up 34.5 ago. Ford's share rose to 32.6
percentf~om 68,885, or8,611 units
percent from 26.9 percent.
per day , In the year-ago period.
9 hrysler's share dipped to 13.2
The annual rate for the Indus- percent from 13.6 percent In the
try during the,. period was 8.2 year-ago period .
million cars, compared with 6.2
Among the smaller companies.
million last year. So tar· in 1988, sales of Honda' s U.S.-built cars&gt;c ·
the flrins have sold 296,738 cal"s, rose 42 .8 percent, while Volkswaup 27.1 percentfrom 233,509 cars \ gen's domestic-made . models
sold In the comparable 1987 &lt;showed a 17 percent gain. VW
period when- the Industry was said Monday it would formally
still suffering trom a sharp drop end prodiJction at Its only U.S.
In sales following a rush to buy plant In New Stanton, Pa. , by
before Dec. 31, 1986 because of July 21.
changes In the tax law .
Nlssan, which announced a 1.9
For the period, GM's car salea percent price Increase Monday,
rose 19.2 percent, while Ford · osted a 24.'9 percenr decline In
posted a 59.9 percent gain on a sales.
daily rate basta. Chrysler, which
Toyota's sales of its U.S.-made
formally acquired American Mo• , cara totaled 678 units for the
tors Corp. last year. reported a period. Mazda said It iOid 362 ot
27.9 percent gain In sales when Its
MX6 coupes produced at .
·compared with the cqmblned Ita Flat Rock, ·Mich .. assembly
total a year ago . ...
P!a!lt. •• • .
, . ..

new

•.

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