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~

Wadnautay, February 17,

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

t9M!
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Ohio .LOttery

Olympic
re8ults

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Daily Number
. 131
Pick 4
1385

Page 3

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Super Lotto
1-7-12-14-2142

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Vol.38, Nb.t87

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enttne
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coryrl!hUd 1aa.a

Pomeroy-l\lliddleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 18, 1988
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Middleport, OH.•CC)rner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy . .&amp; Pearl St •.•992~3471

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CHICKEN·T~E SEA

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UGHT TUN~

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6% oz.
can

THOROFARE
LARGE EGGS

CLOROX
LIQUID BLEACH

doz.

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ctn.
limit 011 wittl co1pon &amp; $10.00 c-se: &amp;cllldi"'hlr. wiftl and ti·
r,rottos. Onoc;:oo por hroily.
It C.nlirlll ,.,....rtlll-ol
tlnlry 15, I .
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UmH Oftl with covpon &amp; 110.00
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Assorted or Prints

·BRAWNY
PAPER TOWELS

WAD'ING TO VIEW PROBLEM - BecurrlDC
floodlllg of Shady Cove Road, whlcb borden
Leadlllc Creek, Is now a bich priority In the Jlllnds
of some Joe!'~ officials, u well aa jn the mlnda ol ·
Wednesday momi111 to dltlcu118 the DoodlDI
realdeatl who live alone the road and endure the
floOdiDc problems. Memb!ln ol the Salslbury
Townlhlp Board of Tnlateea, gathered at left,

jumbo
·roll

gal.
ctn.
porhlrlty,

c-·

bel.... lotr, lriM ood ciotC.nllrooll•---of
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r.-·Orto.r,r.
...,15,1 .

·s' trong wm
· d.8
By United Preu latenallonal
Soulhi!rn Gallfcirnla, buffeted
by deadly Santa Ana gusts of up
to It JUil _.,. fl191d'IHLll zy
sta:tloli:"olt tile air and filpped ilf
least 21amall planee, brae~ for
more of the hot blasts Of air
today, although forecasters predieted ~he winds would weak~n .
for a while.
The National Weather Service
said the winds - driven by a
high-pressure system over Nev·
ada and Idaho- should weaken
today to 20 to 30 mph with some
gusts of 40 mph, but pick up In the
afternoon and likely return In
force Friday :

CRISPY SERVE
-BACON

PEPSI

THANK-YOU
PIE FILLING

39
8

1 lb.
pkg.

r.:~o::~r:r::'::.!~~-dlngmeaauree&amp;oralle
It ca~u

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annual cost of $1.600. the same as will be reviewing specifications
last year's Insurance contract which were requested when the
with the Pomeroy firm.
truck was ordered. The bill for
' Costs for both the office rental the truck has not ·yet been paid.
and the food stamp Insurance are
Roberts told the commissionrelmburslble to the county from ers that negotiations are now
the State Department of Human underway for a new union
Services.
contract at the highway garage.
County Engineer Phlllp Ro· The current contract expire s In
berts reported to the board on his April. ·
Wednesday morning meeting
Finally, the commissioners
regarding flooding problems on approved a recommenda lion
Shady Cove Road In Salisbury · from County Treasurer George
Township. The commissioners Collins to notify the four county
were pleased to hear .f rom banks, Central Trust, Farmers
Roberts that funding to raise Bank and Savings Co., Bank One
Shady Cove Road might be and Home National,. that applicaavailable thtough the Resource tions from the banks are needed
Conservation and Development for the deposit of active county
Program through the Buckeye funds over the next two years. In
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional a written report, Collins told the
Development District.
commissioners that approxiTed Warner, county highway mately $1,000,000 In active funds
superintendent, reported that he may be available for deposit at
Is not pleased with the new dump the banks over the two-year
truck which was recently dell- period.
vered to the garage, and that he

c

iOfficials meet with Shady ove
Raad residents Thursday; view ·road
;

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Residents of Shady· Cove Road were told by 'Mike Duhl, district
· In Salisbury Township are hope- cpnservatlonlst for the Soli Con.
.
. ful that local officials mlghi be · servatlon Service, that Shady
Elsewhere In the nation,. douse a grass fire star.t ed by the . able . to secure state funding to Cove Road might qualify as a
spring· like conditions prevailed live wlr~ blown down In a
~alse their road out of flood level.
project for funding from the
early today and htghl In the 40s neighlior s fron(yard..
, Ina Wedqesdaymornlngmeet- Resource Development aild Conl!nQ 50s were fol;'eeast .. across , '}.'No bl~k.l ~WII~ • ~~'N!'ed!lnes_: . J!li _arr~naed p'y , CouJlty ~ngl·
~-ervatlop Program ,th~ougb .t he
muc)l ·of t1ie country.
·.... '
and 70 mph 'w!Jidii ar;atlt'eih fire · I neer PbWp· Roberts, residents Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
The hot Santa Ana wind$ began causing $85,000 damage to a I
·
·
battering Southern California house.
.
early Wednesday and sireng- · Three men ~ Identified as
thened as the day wore on. Gusts Anacleto Hernandez, 26, Juan
of 90 mph were clocked In Martinez, 47, and Rudy calzada,
NewportBeacb,justsouthofLos 46, all of Sylmar- were killed
. Angeles.
shortly after 6 a.m. on a roadside
The winds were blamed In four accident blamed· on the Wind.
deaths Wednesday.
cat!fornla Highway Patrol OfNear Azusa, Julio Mendoza, 39, fleer Charlotte Foley said the
was electrocuted about 2:20a.m. men liad pulled onto the shoulder
when he stepped on a power line of the road and that a truck
while using a 11arden hose to · pushed off the road by high winds
slammed Into them.
.

Regional
· De\'elopment District.
Although Dub! made no promlses of funding, he did tell
residents that "If we can justify
the ·problem we have here, we
sholild be able to get some
funding."
continued on page 6

U. ·s. Marine officer· still missing

F1 Assorted Varieties
ValuaiJit· Coupon

Regular or Lite Cherrj

2 Sectiono. 1 2 Pages 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newopap•

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel StaH Writer
The Meigs County Commls1 sloners finalized several matters
, of business when they met
. Wednesday !n'regular. sesson .
Bids wereopened 'a ndaccepted
for office space for th.e DepartI ment of Human Services annex
in Middleport, and for foods tamp
Insurance, also for Human
Services.
1 The only bid for office space
j was from Maxine Gaskell for the
same office space where tl)e
annex Is currently located In
Middleport, and at the same
price as ·before. The bid was for
$700 per month rent on a two-year
lease, and gives the renter the
' right to cancel the lease with
.
1 60-days notice.
' The only bid for food stamp
' Insurance· was from DowningChllds·Musser·Mullen Agency,
l Pomeroy. The bid for coverage
re8ldeaualongtbenad,andBarbaraNieme.ura , was accepted for the same
of the Ohio Department of Natural Reeourcee, 1

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All Fabric

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:Meigs , commissioners
~pprove business .items

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Grade "A"

CIIKidy tonight. Rain likely.
Low In mid 38s. Occasional
rain Friday.

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! CARDINAL ·
! ICE CREAM

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in Lebanon; urge citizens to leave
TYRE', Lebanon (UPI) -U.N'.
trtibps and heavily armed Shiite
Amal militiamen searched
mountain strongholds of the
pro-Iranian Hezbollah group but
fal).l1d to find any trace of a U .S, :
Marine officer kidnapped In the
first abduction of an American
serviceman In Lebanon, officials
said today.
Lt. Col. William Richard Hlggins, 43, a decorated Vietnam
veteran who heads a U.N. truce
monitoring force, was snatched
Wednesday from one oftwo U.N.
v"hlcles driving south on a
coastal road from the port city of•
Tyre, 45 miles south of Beirut,
toward the town of Naquora,
near the Israeli frontier.
In the wake of the Higgins
kldnappln&amp; and the earUe~: abductlonoftwoScandlnavianU.N.
relief workers, Swiss Ambassador Dlno Sclolll today advised
Swiss citlzellli In I,ebanon to

I

%gal.
ct~:l

20 oz.
can

leave the country, "especially at
this very critical period."
At least 100 Swiss nationals live
In Lebanon, Including diplomats,
journalists and employees of
humanitarian . organizations.
Francoise Derron, a spokeswo·
man for the International Com·
mlttee of the Red Cross, said no
decision had been made to
reduce Its staff of 30 Swiss
delegates.
"Above all we are delegates of
a humanitarian organization and
we hope to be able to perform our
activities as usual," Derron said . .
No group Immediately claimed
responsibility for Higgins' abductlon, which raised to nine the
number of U.S. hoStages In
Lebanon and brought to 23 the
total number of foreigners held
captive. All the Americans previously abducted were civilians . .
Shiite Amal sources accused
Abbas AI Musawt, a powerful

Hezbollah clergyman, of orderIng the abduction. The proIranian Hezbollah Is linked to the
Islamic Jihad organization that 1
kidnapped three Americans and
four French nationals. ·
The Tyre region Is controlled
by the Hezbollah and the ShUte
Amal militia. .
Hezbollah has accused U.N. .1
NEW BOABD MEMBERS INDUCTED - Six
Lothar A. Vuholz, C!nciDnatl. Pictured at right
peacekeeping troops In the re-. I . new members were·recently Installed on the Rio
conferring
the honorary degree, Muter of Public
· glon of collaborating with Is~@el ! Grande Collece Board of Trustees. The new board
each new hoard member Ia coDe1e
Service,
upon
and of disrupting guerrilla ,a t- I IJlemben are James T. Grlpby, Cincinnati;
preaident
Paul
C. Bayes, Ph.D. In backll'ound Is
tacks across southern Lebanon.
Stanley E. Harrison, McLean, Va.; Richard E.
Miles
T.
Epllnc,
prealdent of tbe Rio Grande
In September 1986, four French
Nordlup, Cbarles&amp;on, W.Va.; T. Pat Sauber,
College
Board
of
Trustees.
U.N. troops were killed In'attacks · Athens; Dr. Richard F . Slager, Columbus; and
by p~·lranlan extremists within :
•
a few days.
Pollee sources said Amalgunmen driving Jeeps and armed/
with automatic rtnes and rocket·
propelled grenades . searched a/
string of villages In the moun·:
talns around Tyre late Wednes-:
day, but turned up no trace o~
Higgins.
Six new member~ were re- degree froni the Unlversl.ty of whlcll does business as McDocently Installed on the Rio Michigan In oceanographic eng!·
nald's Restaurants of Athens. He
Grande Cpllege Board of neerlng. He earned his MBA,
has restaurants In Athens, GalliTrustees .
with emphasis In finance and
polis and Henderson, W.Va.
The new bo.a rd members are management, from Stanford
Sauber Is a graduate of th~:
James T. Grigsby, Cincinnati;
University.
University of Akron.
David Wilhelm, an A.tllens Senator Paul Simon, Senator Joe
Stanley
E.
Harrison,
McLean,
A
graduate
electrical
engineer
· Slager Is a physician, specializCounty Democrat,unounced bls Blden. He wu director of public .
Va.; Richard E. Northup, Cha- of Ohio State University, Harri- Ing In orthopaedic surgery. He
candidacy forCqngresalnOhlo's policy for the AFJ..CIO's Public.
rleston, W.Va.; T. Pat Sauber,
son Is a native of Gallla County. maintains a private practice at
lOth Congressional District, de- Employee Department, where
Athens:
Dr.
Richard
F.
Slager,
He Is the executive vice president 1300 Dublin Road, Columbus.
clarlng that he could best repre~- he wrote and spoke extenslv~ty .
Columbus;
and
Lothar
A.
Va·
and
director of BDM Intern&amp;· Slager earned his M.D. and·
ent the worklna fam!Ues of · on e&lt;:onomlc development laauea.
sholz, Cincinnati.
tional
Inc. In addition, Harrison MMSc degrees from Ohio State
"I
am
-·ftft,ft8,"
W"'"-lm
laid,
So11theaatern 0 b I o I n
·~......,.
.....,
"Trusteeship
Is
a
unique
reIs
the
president
and chief operat- Unlverslty. He Is a former
Wuhln8ton.
,"because I want to live the
sponslbWty,"
Board
President
lng
officer
of
BDM Corp., a district governor of Rotary Inter: Wilhelm, who annOUJiced hla people of Southealtern Ohio a
Miles Epling said In welcoming subsidiary of BDM lnterna· national and . Is currently
candidacy with preaa conferen· choice - a choice of vlllon,
the new members to the board.
tiona!, J()(!ated In McLean, Va,
prealdent.elect of VARSITY -0.
ceslnLanwter,Newark,ZUiea· direction, and values." Wilhelm
"Jt II entrusted to us to provide
Northup Is also a · native of
Vasholz Is senior vice presiville, and Athena, 1ald be would 1ald hill campalp would foculon
IIOVernance
that
IISII11'es that
the
GaiUa
County.'
He
II
a
eradoate
dent
of Union Central Life
. "1tand up tor ·famlllel of thla· Jolla, children, and problem•
Rio
Grande
College
Ia
meetlqlta
of
Rio
Grande
Colleae,
With
a
Insurance
of Cincinnati. A native .
an!&amp; who Jive from paycheck to
lffect1q "CII'Idq families.
full
reaponatbWty
In
providing
major
In
chernlatry.
Currently
of
Denver,
Colo., he Ia a araduate '
''Thll rqto11 of the country
paycheck."
.
educational
pi'Oifams,
activities
Appatachthe
vice
president
of
or the University of Colorado. His
Wilhelm 11 the rormer execu· · Clll't atford anymore eltperlmen·
and MrVIcl!l directed to the best lan Power Co., Charleston, son, Eric, Is a sophomore at Rio
tlve director o1 QUienl for Tax litton In trlckJe.dowrl economlntereats of Its Intended W.Va., Northup baa pursued Grlllde CoJletle.
Juatlce, 8 tax reform lfCRIP that lea," ,Wilhelm ~ald. '1t'a Ume to
beneficiaries."
graduate studies In bullnell . Upon lnatallltlon, the honor·
ellpoled tax avoldiiiCe by 1arae elect a Coqreaamu wbo real·
Grtpby Ia pneral manqer of administration at Geor1e Wa- ary deiree. Master of Public
the Cabllltt CompoMDt Dlvlllon shiqton Unlverllty and the Service, wu conferred upon ,
corporattona: ·
or
the MIIOII1te Corp. &amp;11 CIQChl· Unlvenlty of Mlclllau.
He bill aetVed on the •tatta ol · Interests of t11e1e familles. "·
each new lllelllber.
Senatot Howard MeUenbaum,
nau.
hokll a_ bllchtlor'•
Sauber owns T.C.K.S. Inc..

.

Six new members
named to Rio
,,
Grande College Board of Trustees

Wilhelm' rdes for ·COng•·es8ional

Reg. or Bun Size.

KAHN
WIENERS

~

.U.S. NO. 1

FRESH

WHITE
POTATOES

BROCCOLI o,'
CAULIFLOWER

19
'

16 oz.
pkg.

.
10 lb.
bag

Per bunch
or head

RED FLAME .

SEEDLESS
GRAPES

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�The
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Comment
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Plge 2-The Dilly Sanllnll
. Pomeror Mldclaport. Ohio
. Thtndlly, Februrf 18. 1988

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Pomeroy, Oblo

1'!'E INTEBES'l'S OF THE MEIG8-~0N AREA
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IS:~ r"T"\._.1'-ro.....--o::::l;o==o

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaber

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PAT WHrrEHEAD
Aulataol Publlaber/Controller

or

BOB H()EFLICH
Qeneral Manager

P..,s

A MEMBER The United
International, Inland Dally Press
Ass&lt;&gt;~;llitlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
" than 300 words
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welrome. They should be less
loq. All letters are subject toedUinl and must be signed with name, address and
teolephone number. No unslgn,«&lt; letters wUl be published. Letters should be tn
IIJ(Iod taste, addressing issues, not persooallttes.

[Senators:

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~sorry

·1 was late but •••'

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WASHINGTON - Vice Presl· security adviser
Bush Is
dent George Bush Is between a elected president.
rock and a hard place on the
'Ibe Iran/contra scandal con· us that Gregg, a former CIA
were led to believe Rodri~ez "
Iran/contra scandal. He was tlnues to reverberate In the . agent, was constantly on the
had actually shot Guevara.
shoe-horned there by his national · public dialogue, but the question prowl to find a meaningful niche
security adviser and by a Centra- Is no longer, "What did the. In the National Security Council.
An authoritative account .'Y
IIntelllgence Agency operator '. president know?" It Is; "What In 1986, that meant eettlng close
ex-CIA otflclal VIctor Marchet 'I
who reputedly was on the team did the vice president know?"
to Lt. Col. Oliver North.
says that the CIA was on the
that killed Che Guevara 20 years
Gregg wanted In on the aontra
His protellatlons to the conscene when Guevara was caught .
ago.
·
trary, Bush still hasn't answered · 'issue and North was the· point
and that they tried to Interrogate
The Inside story Is that It that question In · a way that . man. Our sources say he "pes·
him, but that the Bolivians
wasn't George Bush who l cia· meshes with ottlclal memoa on , tered" North on tll~Jlssue, setting
executed him tile following day.
mored for a role In the Iran/ con· his Involvement. We have re· up appointments and making
Whatever Rodriguez's lnvoJe.
tra deal. If was his national ported the delaUs of those me· phone calls to get hlmselt and
ment, he was a charismatic.
security adviser, Donald P , moa, which show that, thanks to Bush In the Inside circle.
cowboy In tbe North mold. Gregg ·
Gregg, who wanted to make Gregr, Bush had plenty of
For help, Gregg turned to an
set up a meeting between Rodrl· ·
himselt and tbe vice president · opportunity to get his fill of old CIA buddy, Felix Rodriguez.
guez and Bush In the spring of
count on the subject. It Is a story details about the sale of arms to He putted up Rodrlgilez's reputa·
1986. As we first revealed . last
ot tremendously bad judgment · the I~anlans and the diversion of tlon,, spreading the word that . June, the briefing memo on the
on the part of Gregg and of Bush, the money to the Nicaraguan Rodriguez was part otthe s~lal
meeting said the purpose was for
who h!IS stuck by Gregg and , contras. Yet Bush maln!lllns be team that hunted down CU'ban
Rodriguez to brief Bush "on the
seems fully .prepared to have him didn't know.
revoluntlonary Che Guevara In
status of the war In i:J Salvador
become the country's natlonll..L
White House sources now tell the bills of Bolivia In 1967. Some
and resupply for the contras."
ROdriguez was working with
North on tbe clandestine supply
Une to the rebels.,
·
Bush claims that he never
talked about the contra resupply
at that meeting or at two more
meetings with Rodriguez . .
Only Bush, Greu and Rodrl·
~ know what went on In those
meetings. We don't. We do imow
that Bush, . the former CIA
dlrector,ls fa,sclnated by the CIA
and hired an ex-CIA agent to be
his national security advtser. It
would have been In keeping with··
Busb's·cbaracter to stay abreast
ot everything Gregg was up to.
In a depoaltlon, Gregg admit·
ted that he knew Rodriguez was
working with North on the
resupply operation, but that he
didn't .know the money came
from Iran and that he never told
Bush about lt.
. Gregg should have been quest!,
oned In public about wbat be
knew, and wbat Bush knew, but
Busb's friends on the Iran/contra
Investigating committee pre·
vented lt. He should have re·
signed to ta)l:e the heat ott his
boas.

By MARY ~ETH FRANKI..IN
.
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senatorshavesometlmesbeenaccusedof
-railroading a plan through Congress, but now there's a new twist:
·some want a plan to railroad themselves through Congress.
Like a tardy officer worker who explained to his boss that the train
was delayed, eight senators complained earlier this month that they
missed a vote on the Senate floor because the subway car from their
office building arrived late.
. A mini-subway exists In the bowels of the Capitol tr;&gt;nsportlng
:senators, staff an&lt;\ visitorS back and forth to the three Senate office
·buildings.
·
Several senators suggested ways to Improve the situation and
Rules Committee Chairman Wendell Ford, D-Ky ., revealed that his
panel Is considering a $10 million plan to refurbish the current rail
system.
, On Feb. 2, Sen. Howard Hefiln, D·Ala., said he would have voted
·. "yea" on a bill to Increase the number of fede~allnspectors charged
·with ferreting out government waste, fraud and abuse, but he missed
: ihe 15-mlnute vote deadline because of a subway car delay.
: "I am not alone In missing this vote," Hefiln said. "We must have
·had on this car seven or eight senators who arrived late."
· He traced the problem to the fact that only one of the system's four
, subway cats connects with the Hart Building, the farthest of the three
Senate buildings and the one where half of all the senators have
offices.
:; "I do feel there Is .an Inherent problem that exists In getting to the
:. floor from the Hart Building," Heflin said.
-: "I left my ottlce with eight minutes to go," he said. "I must have
&gt;Just missed It because I waited a long time."
·
There were extenuating circumstances as well, he added. .
"There were blind people on the subway car and It took-some time
: · to get them off. "
:: Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd expressed his sympathy to
Transfixed by C.Za and the area" tor both tribes.
·· those senators who were unavoidably delayed but said the vote could
••,•not be reopened once It had been announced.
West Bank,_ most Americans
Fln~lly, a century's encroachIgnore a land dispute In their own ment by the more numerous .
;: Byrd, In his effort to lpcrease the efficiency of the Seriate,
back yard. It Is not a conflict with Navajos ended In 1974 with
, convinced members at the beginning of the new session to agree to
International tmpllcations. It af· leglslatio\1 !ilvidlng the joint-use
: adhere to a 15-mlnute rule, forsaking the more flexible practices of
feels !ewer people. But Its arefl · between the tribes . and
: the past of stopping the clock and holding the vote open while
outconie
wUI determine whether proyldlng for reloc!IIIOn of any
!' stragglers made their way to the floor.
.
the
United
States betrays yet · Indian living In the other trl~'s
The Democratic leader also made reference to the old days when
another
Indian
tribe.
territory.
. senators were expected to walk to the floor to cast their vote. But that
From
the
time
Spanish explor·
· remark was not Included in the Congressional Recor&lt;l, the official
Or at least the encroachment
ers stumbled upon the Hopls In was supposed to end. The Hopls
: transcript of Senate and House proceedings. The omission probably
what eventually became Ariz· (and most Navajos) abided by
was a result of every member's Inherent right to" advise and extend"
ana, . that ancient tribe has the law, but a few thousand
~ and sometimes expunge his remarks.
·
watched Its territory be steadily Navajos refused, Ignoring relo·Ford Interjected his own apologies, and as head of the Rules
chipped away. · Unlortunately, cation's legal deadline In 1986
Committee charged with the administrative operations of the Senate,
the retreat may not be over.
: promised to look Into the problem.
and mounting a campaign to
Some background Is required persuade Congress to overturn
; "We are In the process now of looking at the cost of putting In a new 1
: subway on that side which will be a continuous car route," Ford · · to understand why. Betw~n U!82 the 1974 law. Now a . group of
and1934,thefederalgovernntent NavajO'S has tiled suit against the
.· added. ''Maybe that will eliminate the problems ... that we are facing
expanded
the nearby Navajo federal government to again
now.
reservation
several times until it block ·relocation.
Elliott Carroll of the Ar~hltect of the Capitol' s office said the
surrounded
the Hopls. Then, In
proposed revamping of the subway system would Involve using
1962, a U.S. District' Court re·
. " smaller cars, but more of them" · to create almost continuous
The lawsuit Is revealing for the
duced Hopi territory to one· way It plays upon Americans'
; service. He described the new style cars as similar to the ones used In
fourth Its former size, deslgnat· sentimental attitudes and lgnor·
. Disneyland and said the project woul~ cost$10 million.
.;
lng the remalnd,er a "joint-use ance concerning Indians. The
: Meanwhile, Ford announced a plan to res trlct the subways to
· senators only during a roll call and sent a detailed letter to the
· sergeant-at-arms, the Senate's otnce manager, asking his help In
lmplemen tlng It .
·
In Includes a strict timetable that would make a railroad conductor .
• proud· but probably will test the limits of lawmakers who are
: accustomed to more flexibility, .
.
WASHINGTON - The U.S. era! Manuel Noriega. Noriega
• The letter stated that "a car arriving at the platform with more
and · Panama have historically holds no political office, and
: than three minutes but less than six minutes remaining on a roll call
enjoyed a close relationship. Our Panama Is nominally a demovote will stay at the platform and depart at the three-minute
countries' economic and national cracy. However, this arrangeremaining point. "
.
security Interests are Interests. . ment Is merely a charade. It Is
In explaining the experiment to his colleagues, Ford asked them for
Unfortunately, this relationship Panama's armed forces which
· their support and cooperation.
has . been strained · by deve1op. hold the real power In the
: "We hope that members will not ask drivers and pollee officers to
ments , In that country over the country, and Noriega Is thus the
: make exceptions ," he said . .
last few years, giving us cause to defacto dictator of Panama. As a
be greatly concerned about what result of this arrangement, there
.Is now transpiring In Panama.
Is growing public dlcontent with
Geographically, Panama Is Noriega In accusations about
strategically located between Noriega rigging Panama's 1984
Central and South America. elections, killing political rivals
By DICK WEST
Because of this location, It Is well and profiting from corruption,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Is It safe to drink the water? How many
situated lor Its role as host(or the· brought Panamanians Into the
times has that question been asked hy Americans? Usually on foreign
U.S. .Southern Command. This streets to protest his ~le. In the
'soli.
In this country, apparently, the answer may depend on which coast
Command Is responsible for all face of this protest, Panama
U.S. military activities south of declared a state of emergency,
.
.
you are on.
Mexlco,-,j, and to carry out this suspended· basic freedoms, and
According to Omnl magazine, more than 81,000 Illnesses have been
mission · there are more than thereby consolidated Noriega's
caused In America since 1971 by bad &lt;,lrlnklng water.
10,000 U.S. troops stationed In dictatorship.
It Identified the "water-borne"\erms as ranging all the way from
Panama. Overall, there are
: those bringing on nervous ailments, . birth defects , Insomnia,
It must be noted that Noriega
about 50,000 American nationals has appeared to be a friend of the
:constipation, anemia, liver and kld~ey disorders and hearing loss, all
living In Panama. Panama Is U.S. In the past. He has hac! "'f .
· the way up, or down, to cancer.
also
.a major international finan· close relationship with our Intel·
· Constipation? I have heard American trave.l ers complain of having
cia!
center and Its banks hold llgence Agencies and served as
a touch of "tourlsta" attributed to foreign water supplies, but the
millions of dollars In private U.S. an Important link between the
·
opposite? Must be strange water Indeed.
·Anyway, the magazine. reports that " nearly one In flve 'Amerlcans · deposits. Finally, of course, ft Is u.s. aild other key rovernments
the home of the strategic Pa• In the area. He hu allo assisted
· drink excessively lead-rich tap water." .
nama Canal which ·links the the Nicaraguan contraa and
: Maybe so, and here Is where location rears Its ugly head. Omnlsays
Atlanilc and Pacific Oceans. The helped ua hold the line aaalnst
· :New York City's borough of Manhattan tops the list of the best places
Canal Is vital tor our national Communism In Central Amer·
· tn the nation "to drink water."
defense since It Is the yeblcle .lea. However, at the aame time
: Gee, I have been In Manhattan a number of times- at least they
l,lsed to move our naval fieet Nol'le•a bu used hi&amp; poaltlon to
·told me that'a where. I was - and li never occurred to me to drink
between the oceans. The Canalis make a fortune from abady
water there. Except possibly as a chaser, which always tasted as It It
also
of vital lmportancl!. enco- commercial ventures In shiP"'
came directly from the East River.
nomlcally
In that It carries the Pinl, airllnee and Import/export
Not that I knew wh11t East River water tasted like. EspeCially after
goods
of
the
U.S. and a over 80 . buaJneases. Furthermore, • ac:seeing a "Dead End" movie. But I could dream, couldn't I?
other countries to foreign ~lni to a u.s, eovernment
; Thl$ may ,be one study Manhattan otflclals and bartenders wish
markets. ln Bhort, the U.S. baa a Indictment banded down two
·
:hadn't been made.
lot at atake In Panama, and we wel!b qo, be bu alllo been
· After that borough, the nation's four best- read the safest- water
have a strong Interest In Its senq hll aallltance to drui
' supplies, based on a 1987 sampling, were found In !Jerkeley, Callt.,
stabUity.
·
trafflcllen. 1'llua, It Is ~leied .
Hood River, Ore., Manchester, N.H., and Birmingham, Ala.
The tact that America's presidential candida tel were concentrted
Over the last year, thla atabU- that ,moe Norleia claimed to be
Ity hal been threatened. The sup~q tile U.S.'a eftorta to
In New Hampshire until this week or that "Super Tuesday" In the
Southland ptovldes the next big telt may be only coincidental.
reuons for the Instability can be atop tlie International drq lraf·
: Don't ,et the Idea you can avoid stomach cramps and other germs
tra~ principally ·tO the pres- tic, lie ID fact wu buly t1U'Dlna
·carried by lead· rich American water by moving to New York City or
ence ot one man, the leader of Panama Into a drui 11111unl!nr
Panama '1 armed forces, Gen· and moaey latillderVJI center.
New EnrJand or down South.

•

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~lb

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Bush aide wanted 'in'·Bywith
contras
Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta.

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO

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American ~ockey te~ loses 7-5 decision
CALGARY, Alberta (UP!) There 11 more to Olympic pride
than winning.
Neither Swiss skier Plrmln
Zurbi'IU'en ·nor the American
hockey team emerged victorious
· Wednesday at the Winter Olym·
plct yet · .their fierce pride
stamped them champions In
defeat.
"
Dan Jansen, an American
speedlkater whose loss this week
waa far more painful than' any
defeat suffered In a race, i:l.l'ries
Olympic pride a step further
tonight.
Jaillen, 23, will race In the
. 1,®1'1\eter speedskatlng event
fo\lr days .after . e!ldurlng the
worst day of his life. Jansen, a
medal hopeful, for the Ul)lted
States In till! sprints, learned last
Sunday that his sister, Jane
Beres, · had died of leukemia.
Seven hol!l'Slater he competed In

the 500 meters only to fall on the
first turn and be eliminated trQm
the race. Now Jansen resumes
the worJt be came to do.
"I want to go out there and
skate a good thousand," he said
after falling In the 500. "I think I
can go out there and medal In
that race 11 I come around hy
then. It ~ very Important. · My
family doesn' t want me to jllSt go
home now and I know Jane
.wouldn't want that. I'm just
going to go out there and put thl$
behind me."
His hometown of West Allis,
Wis., will be behind him tonight.
Thousands of Milwaukee-area
residents sent him a 96-foot
banner .w ith messages of
support. .
''When he skates Thursday ...
there will lle some extra spirit
said Thomas
with him,"
Baylerlan, promotion director

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Hopis vs. Navajos vs.

NHL results

'

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years ago,-represents the belrht
at this propaganda. It brims with
claims that Navajos live tli
balance with the universe (Wha·
tever that meana) that they have
a · special environmental ethnic
allen to Western culture (why
then do they so overiJi'aze their
land'!') and that tile Hopi·Navajo
dispute would melt· away It the
white bureaucrats and greedy
energy companies would leave
the irlbes alone (tell that to the
. Hopi tribal government).
Like .e very .Indian tribe, the
Navajoa once suffered terribly at
the hands of whites. ijow Ironic,
however, It guilt over this squalid
history prompted Congress or .
the courts Into betraying a rival
tribe - one smaller, poorer and
less polished at the sort of public
rela tlons and legal maneuvering
that seem necessary to prevail in
so mimy disputes these.days.

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NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE
NOW ON DISPLAY

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plaintiffs charge, for example, . an Academy Award a. co1,1ple a!
that relocation violates the Navajo right to religious freedom
because of their deep spiritual
ties to tbe land.
Never mlnd . ;tha~. Hopl ties to
the land go back even further,
that they actually descend from
the Anasazl, whose abandoned
settlements dot the Four Corners
region of the Southwest. Never
mlnd, either, that the "ancient'.'
Navajo lifestyle of sheepherding
could not have existed before
sheep theO'lselves were lntro·
duced to the area by the Spanish.
Such Inconvenient facts don't
square with the media campaign .
ot the past few years, abetted by
rock stars and actors, that
portrays Navajos as mere victims s~kl!d again Into tragedy
by the scheming white man.
The "documentary" film
"Broken Rainbow," which won

-.......... .....
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.............................
·.--,.... -.. ·NATION~

.

IIOU.ANQ, Olllllo (UPI) -'filii week't

.....

I

NBA ftlllults .

Wresaling
.

u. s. ___V:~ince_n_t_Ca_rro~ll

pre-Olympic competition), an,!!
for WTMJ·AM radiQ, which or·
ganlzed the effort. "We're hoping· tliis group, they never roll over."
Even the Soviets were
that It will cheer him up."
Prlnfed In red letters on the
Impressed.
"When we were successful In
banner are the words: "Dan, be
the
first period (leading 2·0), by
strong! Keep the faith! Wiscon· the third period we thought we
sin Is wl.th you all the way!"
t,11other person wrote: "You bad accomplished what we !Hit
a•" a champion In every sense of out .to accomplish," Soviet A.t·
slstant Coach Igor Dmltrlev said.
the word. We are all proud of you
and I'm sure your sister Is, too." · ·"But we forgot that In· North
America - and especially U.S.
Zurbrlggen proved himself a
teams - th!!Y light hard to the
champion to his colleagues even
very end!'
.
though he failed to win a second
To gain the medal round, !¥
gold medal.
The world's most versatile &amp;merlcans must win their final
skier enjoyed a comfortable lead
Continued on page 4
at the start ot the seeon&lt;! slalom
heat In the alpine ·combined and
needed only a gOO&lt;j run to win the
The Daily Sentinel
•
event.
. .
Instead, he crashed near the
(USPS 1f»&gt;l)
end of the run. He could bave held
A DlvWoa ol MJdHmedl• be.
back on the run but chose not to .
Pub11ahed every afternoon, Monday:
The decision cost him a victory.
throuilh Friday, 111 Court St.. Po··
"(Zurbrlggen) skied strongly
meray, Ohio, by the Obio Valley Pub-lishing Companyn.fultlmedla, Inc.;
In the second·run because he Is a
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,.Pb. 992-n56. Sebig champion and that's the way
cond class postage pald at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
he always skis," said Austria's
Hilbert Strolz, . who won . the
~ember: · Un'ted Press International,.
combined gold medal.
Inland Dally Press Aasoclatloil and the
Ohio Newspa5: Association, Natlonaf
Zurbrlggen won the downhill!
Advertising
resentative, Branham
Monday with a daredevil run
Newspaper Sa es, 733 Third Aven...e1
over Icy slopes and captured the
New York, New York 10017.
downhill portion of the combined
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
event Tuesday with his speedy,
to The !leUy Sentlloel, ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohlo 45789.
slashing style. It Is not his nature
to ski conservatively, even In the
SUBSCRIPTION RATER
one event he has not fully
B7 Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .......... .. ............ ..... , ..... $1.25
mastered.
One Month ., .. ,,. ... , ..... ., . .,,.,,... $5.65
"I knew I had two seconds
One Year ..... .,.... ...... , .. , .. , .. .. , $65.00
(lead) over Strolz and normally
SINGLE COPY
It's not a problem," Zurbrlggen
•
PRICE
Dally .................. .... .. .......... . 25 Cents
said. " But you never know. I had
Subscribers not desiring to pay lhecar,
bad luck.... That's the sport."
, rter may remit In advance direct to
The U.S. hockey team also
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
displayed the mark of a chambull. Credit wlll be gtven carrter each
'¥eek.
pion In defeat. Trailing -the
powerful and experienced Soviet
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service iS
Union by four goals In the third
available.
period,' the Americans pulled
within 6-5 before succumbing 7-5.
M.U SubocrtDIIIMide Metp CoWII)'
"You get the feeling this team
1J Weeks ..........................:........ $17.2!1
doesn't know the meaning of a
26 Weelcs .............., ................... $34.06
52 Weelcs .................................. $66.56:
certain word that starts With the
O.&amp;llde Melp Co•nc:y
letter 'Q,"' said U.S. Assistant
13 Weelcs ................................. . $18.20
Coach Ben Smith. "This Is our
26 Weelcs ................... .... ..... ...... $35.10
52 Weeks ............... .... ..... ..... ..... $67.60:
64th or 65th game (Including

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IOT8 'niB ICE - USA'a Tony Granato (21) puliA tbe Soviet
Unlaa'a Al-l .Q.-rov (I) to the lee durlnc flnt·perlod action
Wetl•m•ar ....., 1M tile XV WIDter O)Jmplca: (lieuter/UPI)

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We mUSt .protect ()Ur interests Cong. Clarence Miller

Water,-water, everywhere

Therefore, wblle he has helped us
In the past, N\)rlega has shown
himself to be an opportunist who
is most Interested In advanclne
his own Interests.
Ultimately, It will be the
Panamanians themselves who
' the fate of
will have to determine
Noriega. As shown by the Philip·
pines and South K\)rea the
hunger for democracy and tree·
dom runs deep thro'!ghout the
world. True stability In Panama
can come only when Panama Is
democratic and free. However,lt
.

Is not likely that Noriega wlll_go
peacefully, and It Is Impossible to
predict what - he might do to
protect his position. He bas
already lashed out at the U.S. tor
his Indictment and for urging
him to step down, andlnsodolng,
has called for the removal of U.S.
troops from Panama. We must
not be bullied hy this strongman.
We must and will support our
rights to our presence In Panama, a presence that Is pro·
tected by the Panama Canal
Treaty. ,
~

Berry's World
.

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BANKE()NE.M '

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FYRNtt l~fi«/Pk 1111/o am-.

"Say, Ed, I c.n't ,.,.,.,_ ..._ . . . )'011 IN 01'
OUT of "" loop on "" oonlflct of ln,_t
bu.t-?"
.

BANK ONE, ATHENS. NA
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�T111..dey, Februery 18, 1988

Pomeroy-Midclepcxt. Ohio

Pag1 4 The Delr S••lil..a

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SVAC
~ teams wind up regular season play Fri~a!,"".,...._.....
;jT
g~IMaft~BNE
987 88
Th~ f~na~c'::tter In the!tu .he
B)'

;~~n;rld~ynlgS:.~:~elght

teams honor their seniors and
prepare for their respective

lo~r;:::~! 1~=~=~~::ST.-aee

The Pirates and the Wildcats,
coming up short In title-chase
contests last Friday night, will
tangle In Mercerville. The PI·
rates {10-9 overall; 6-7 league)
will, among other things, he
· looking to Improve on their foul
In their last few games and cost
them a shot at knocking Oak HilL

outofthetltlechaselastFrlday
night. Though this wiU he the last
regular-season contest for senlors Keith Burnette and Blaine
Gllmore,theVIntonsquadwill

115-74 nightmare In Racine and
sharpen their fast-break offense
In preparation for tournament
play against Patriot Southwest·
ern In Chesapeake on
Valley
seniors Mark Griffin, Tony
Hendrlx,SteveHomerandA!lenTrlppwlllleadtheEagles(&amp;-10•
5-S) south 10 play the VIkings
2-17 1-12) • whose Willow Wood
~althful dseehome
the last regular·
game for
::f:~~nug
. Cade DannyKipp,
MCC ty
d Nelson
. ~~~Yn~erne:f. Dall~~ ftbbs and .
oe
e. ·

~~s~':!R:::~Je ~as~~~- Wedn~:~·Symmes
game Ia the Meigs tournament,
atMelgsHighSchoollnPomeroy
onTllursday February25
•
·
The Wildcats (15-4, 10·3) • who
will witness seniors Mark Jen·
klns,GradyJohnson,ToddJohn·
son,. Cilris Petro, SeQ It Rankin,
Rlchird Stilt and. Rick Swain
and home game, will shake the
memory of last Friday night's

will

R

( ~i
oo-cha'::r•~~·

)
Brian Howell.
stwin
The Oaks 1 3 11' 2 :':eague
1 th
to have a 8 0 :Ut
lao
mirac.:&gt;"to;uu

TlleEagleswilltakeonCrookl·
ville In the Meigs tournament on
Tuesday. The VIkings will face
Ironton St. Joe In the Chesapeake

tourn;:~~:~:'iou

T~f":"':;~

regular-se~on
Cunnt~gham,

Thla Is the last
match for seniors
Dave Amburgey Jeff C.ldwell,
Shawn
Scott
McPhaU, Shannon Rltfle and
take on South Weblter Tuesday Kenny
ders having won
In tile Rock Hill tourn:_::t. , f~~ =~ nlo fr:r thla· seaaon
of major (2·17, 1·12) than last year {8·13,
6-2121) 410) willhelooklngtolmprove
proportions, Southern 11 • ~ '
ir• . Ia In preparation for ·
sbould breeze past Southwea th~
:rna~~~ action Wednesday
Qn t~elr way to winnln~
. to I t Hannan Trace In Chesa·
. years SVAC crown. The oma
ail n.s . . th last regulardoes, finishing . third lnlretclyhe peake. Tabnlds ~~om~ contest for
conference last year •hasa a
season
II B d
Improved Its stock on Its wahy to seHinl~rs ~o~~.;y~~:. • ra

r.e:~wl~orlO:,theoakawill

The Bobcats (8-11, f ·9), who
will face Racine Southern· Tues·
day In the Meigs
haveachancetoequa as ye
conference finish (5-9) If seniors
Mike Bradbury, Theron Hodge
and Bill Lov~y ~an bow out by
exactlngrevengeagalnstanOak
HlllsquadthatwiU,withltsf·ana,
say good-bye to seniors John
BrQWD, Rtc.h ard Clagg, Todd

MAC leaders lose, but ·race

Ba~=::Ut

fire;; round

th

~~~~~~~~~~~~~·J~~~It~;;,;;;;;;~Q~~~s,~E~r~k~F~a~y~e~,~W~~ke~H~a~l~e~a~~~~th~e;~Me~ig~s~to~~~a~m~e~n~t~,~w~eire~i~ve~y;a~~i·~~~~·;~
.CHILDREN'S SUMMER

MUTUAL FUNDS?

STONE WEAR

IRA's

wEPa, .9.25°/ooN

·Just·Arriving

SUlCI 11/3/16

,&lt;

U.

By IAN LOVE
UPI Sporlll Writer
A freshman who looked up
when his ' teammate fell down
converted his only basket o1the
second half Wednesday night to
give Tennessee a 72-70 victory
over No. 9 Kentucky.
With the score tied 70-70,
Ten11essee forced a Kentucky
turnover with 10 seconds left.
Freshman Greg Bell took a pass
from Clarence Swearengen, who

, 011 Til ,;,. Ill MIIDLIPOIT

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~~l:~:~~~~undsatt~rlettinggo

Bell drove Into the lane and
made an off-balance shot to give
the Volunteers the Southeastern
Conference victory before a
crowd of 24,378 - the largest
ever to watch ·an SEC game,
Tennessee officials said.
"On the winning basket, Clarence Swearengen came to the
side looking up for (Dyron) Nix,"
Tennessee Coach Don DeV~
said. "He got even with (Ken·
lucky's Rex) Chapman but fell
doWn. Greg Bell got the pass arid
he had the poise to find the
(seam) and put the ball In the
basket.''
Nix led the Vols, 13·9 overall
and 6-7ln the SEC, wlt1120 points.
Bell had 15, 131n the first half. Ed
Davender led the Wildcats, 18-4
and 10-4, with 27 points.
Tennessee converted 7 of 14
3-polnt shots. The· the Wildcats
missed 'qn their only attempt
from .3-polnt range. Mark Griffin
s'cored 15 points for Tennes,see,
au com~ng p~~&gt;sbots from 3-polnt
range;." · ": '-- ·
''Tile biggest thing was getting
behind and allowing the crowd to
stay In the game and allowing
them to bUild confidence as the ,
game went along thinking they
can play with us," Kentucky
Coach Eddie Sution said.
In other games Involving
• ranked teams, No. 4 Oklahoma
edged Oklahoma State 79· 75, No.
5 North Carolina defeated Wake

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A=merican...
Continued from ~ge 3
two games. They must also heat
west Germany by at least two
goals Sunday In the tlnale of the .
round-robin portion of the tourna·
meot. The united States faces
11th-seeded Norway Friday .
In other gold medal events
Wednesday , Tomas Gustafson of
Sweden won the men's 5,000·
meter speedskatlng event and
Finland's Marjo Mat!kalnen, a
twO:time World Cup champion,
edged a pair of Soviets to capture
the women's 5-kllometer cross
country ski race In Olympic
record time.
·
The two medals gave the Soviet
Union a total of nine, Including
three gold, while no other .country has more than three total
medals.
The United States, with one
medal to show for five days of
.competition. Is expected to earn
one In men's figure skating,
which began Wednesday with the
compulsorles. At the end of tills
round, A!exand~r Fadeev of the
Soviet Union led U.S. champion
Brian Bol\ano and Canadian,
Brian Orser, the world
champion.
.
In addition to the me11's l,OOO·
meter speedskatlng, other gold
medals will he contested today In
the women's downhill, the
women's luge and tbe 90-meter
team ski jumping. The women's
luge and 90-meter team ski
jumping were postponed because ·
·
of high winds Wednesday.

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the Big Eight. Freshman Rl·
cbard Dumas had 21 points for
Oklahoma Stale, 12·11 and 3-6.
At Chapel Hill, N.C., Steve
Bucknall and Kevin Madden
scored 15 points each to pace
North Carollna,1S.3 and8-21n the
Atlantic Coast Conference North
Carollnl! had lost 83-80 los~ to the ·
Deacons three weeks ago. Wake
Forest 8·14and 2·8 lostltsfourth
straight. .
· '
:
.

from Chad Keller and 12 from
Fisher. Eric Mudd wltl121 points
and Ken M.cFadden with 15 paced
the VIkings, who fell to 18-6.
Akren heat Wright State 89-82
lnoverttme,theZipsscorlngthe
final 12 points after trailing at
one time In the extra period,
82-77.
Eric McLaughlin paced the
Zips wi'th 28 points. Joe Jackson
led the Raiders with a game-high
33 points.
'11he stage Is set for a title
showdown In the Ohio Athletic
Conference Saturday night at
New Qncord between Muskln·
gum and Ohio Northern. Both the
Muskles and Polar Bears won
Wednesday night, pushing their
OAC records to 12·3.
Musklngum beat Mount Union
79-51 and Ohio Northern took a
73-60 decision over Otterbein,
handing the Cardinals their 24th
consecutive loss this season.
In other OAC games, It was
WlttenbergoverHeldelberg68:67
over BatdwtnIn the North Coast Athletic
Conference, Ohio Wesleyan

clinched at least a tie lor the
regular season title with a 116·77 .
romp over Case Reserve. The .
Bishops finished 11·1 In the . ·
league.
·
Allegheny,whlchhostsOberlln·
Saturday night, can tie Wesleyan
for the championship with a win . •
The Gators heat Wooster 52-49
Wednesday night, while Denis-on ·
downed Oberlin 81-76 for Its first
league win.
In other games, It was Illinois
over Ohio State 118·86, Kenyon
over Marietta 89·74 and Findlay

~~o:ve:r:D:e:f:la:n:c:e:82:·:63:.====;

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In the championship game on
February 27th. Tonight's contest
will get underway at 7:OOPM.
Against Wellston, Missy Woods
was the top point getter with 15.
Stilbart and JOdy Taylor finished .
In double digits for the Marauderettes with 14 and 13 respectively. Debbie Dixon led the
Rockets wj th 12.
Woods and Stobart were the
leading rebounders for Meigs as.
they grabbed 10 and 9, In that
order. Woods was credited with 5
steals and an assist and Stobart
with 2 and 2. Tammy Wright
came through with 4 thefts, 4
assists and 1 rebound, Beth
Ewing had 4 caroms,l steal and 4
asslstss and Wendy Fry snagged .
5 rebounds. :
Box score:
. MEIGS Stobart ·6-2•14;
Woods 7-1-15; Fry 3-0-6; Jolly
Taylor 5-3-13; Wrlght2·0-4; Beth
Ewing 3-0-6; Smllb 2-0-4; Nelson
1-0-2; Rouse 0-ll-0.
WELLSTON - Heather Fyffe
1·1·2-7; Dixon 3-2-0-12; Specht
2-0-ll-4; Young 4·0·9·8; Kirby
2-0·1-5; Sims 3-0-2-8; Ervin 0·1·0·
3.
Score by quarters:
Meigs ..................... 15 25 47 64
WHS ................... .. ... 9· 16 34 47

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AA

ALBANY - Defeating the
Wellston Golden Rockets for the
third time Ibis season, Meigs'
Marauderettes advanced to the
second round of sectional play at
Alexander High School.
Co11ch Roger Foster , commended the effort of his team
saying they played one of their
best games, CO!ftmltt!ng only
four turnovers In their 64-47
victory.
"Shelly Stobart was outstand·
lng In her perforrpance often
getting second and third shots on
rebounds for the score", said
Foster. "Give a lot of credit to
Missy Woods, In the paint and
Jody Taylor with 13 points had
one of her best nights' \
'
"Their press did not rattle us
and our def~nse forced them to
take the outside shot as they put
up "20 from ·, beyorld the semi·
circle, hitting only four of them.
All of our , kids had a gre~ t
game", Foster concluded.
Meigs will definitely have their
work cut out for themselves and
must he at their best tonight as
they meet theGAHSBlueAngels,
now ranked 15th In the state .In
division two. The winner of that
contest will meet Jackson, a one
point victor over VInton County,

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one-and-one.
Hanna scored 21 points and
Jim Paul added 19 tor Miami.
Dave Jamerson led all scorers
with 24 points and Paul"Snoopy"
Graham added 17 for OU. At
Kalamazoo, Mich., Lamon Pippin, Steve Martenet, and An·
thony Robinson each scored 14
points to lead BG to Its win over
Western Michigan.
·
Bart Brown, who led all scor·
ers with 29 points, scored to give
Western a 43-30 bulge with 16: 30
left In the game.
The Falcons then outscored
Western37-14totakea67·57lead.
Mar tenet scored 12 points durln!l
the spree.
·
Toledo ran Its record In non·
conference games to 10-1 with an
85-76 win over Cleveland State.
The Rockets are 3·81n the MAC. .
Freshman Keith Wade's 17
points led five Toledo players In
double figures.
The Rockets took the lead for
good 27-26 on a basket by Andy
half
Toledo also got 15 points each
from Jeff Haar and Fred King,13

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Forest 80-62, No. 6 Duke routed
VIrginia 73-54, No. 10 Michigan .
topped Minnesota 82-78, No. 12
Syracuse ripped St. John's 82-68,
Alabama downed No. 16 Vander-·
bllt88-77, IowaStatehetteredNo.
17 Missouri 102-89 and No. 20
Loyola-Marymount topped Pep- ·
perdlne 107·95.
At Stillwater, Okla., Stacey
King scored 22 points to lead
Oklahoma, 23-2 overall and 9·11n

•.''

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remams

By GENE CADDES
21 points and Jim Mangapora long as we get better," he said.
UPI8port1 Writer
added 17 points andacareer-hlgh "Quite frankly, It doesn't matter
The bottom half of the Mid· 14 rebounds to lead the Golden to me where we finish."
American Conference gained FlashestothelrwlnoverEastern
Eastern'sBenBrauncalledthe
some respect Wednesday night, Michigan .
loss "fruStrating"
but not much ground on the
Kentled45-40atteraclosetirst , TbeHuronsgotonly24mlnutes
leaders.
half and stayed ahead until of play from 6-foot-8 Grant Long,
Both league-leading Eastern Eastern's Deren Goheen put the who entered the game averaging
Wchigan and second pla.ce Cen- Hurons ahead 60-58 with a 22.5 points and 10.5 rebounds per
tral Michigan found the road a 3-polnter. l&lt;ent reclaimed fhe game. Long, !lllddled with foul
little rough going, the Hurons lead a short time later on a pair of trouble, scored just 8 points.
dropping an 83-76 decision at free throws by Erl.c Glenn and
"We haven't had to to play
Kent State and Central absorbing built the margin to 75-65 wlth3: 27 wUout Grant Long much thiS
remaining.
season,'' said Braun, "but to·
a 54-5lloss at Ball State.
In addition, last place Miami
. "We played well and beat a night we did. I thought our guys
edged thli'd place Ohio Unlver- ·'very fine team," said Kent State played very well without him. "
slty, 72-TI, and Bowling Green coach Jim McDonald. "Eastern
Long fouled out with 4:29 to
came from' 10 points down at the Wchlgan has a lot of people with play and Eastern trailing 68·65.
Miami's Lamont Hanna scored
half to beat fourth place Western a lotof weapons. They can hurt
Wchigan, 75-66.
you a lot of ways."
with three seconds to play to
After the dust had cleared,
McDonald, who finds his team provide Miami Its narrow win
however, Eastern (9·2) still held still three games behind the over Ohio University.
,
a one-game lead over Central •league-leading l{urons, said he
Jlm .Paul had put OU up 71-70
(8-3) and the Chippewas we~ only worries about his team's with 22 seconds left when he bit Is
two up on OU (6-5) ·
'
Improvement.
.
nth consecutive free throw. But
At Kent, ~eggle Adams scored . · :•r don't car,e what happens as he missed the second . of the

Tur~:·

The DaAy Sentinei-Page-5

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~P~•!a-::I::~The::~D=..:v~S~I~n~~~-~~----~------------------_2P~~~m~~~~~~M~~~~~~~~eP~~~~.JO~No~--------------------------~Th~w~MM~Y~·!F~-~r~•:;lf~1!8,~1~9:88:::
r----

Local news

...
briefs~
. ...... Officials
Continued from page 1

Brown to visit Pomer'!Y Friday
COLUMBUS - Sherrod Brown, Ohio Secretary of State, will
bring his "traveling office" Friday, at 2 p.m., to the Meigs
County Board of Elections office, at 10! Mechanic St., Pomeroy.
Brown wUI l!dmlnister the oatb of office to newly·appolnted '
elections board ·members and conduct training sessions for
election officials from Athens, Fairfield, Gallla, Hocking,
Monroe, Organ, Noble. Perry, Vinton and Washington Counties,
as well as those from Meigs County.
The Pomeroy session will Include discussion of the
presldentiaJ.year primary and general eleCtions In Ohio, the
'.relationship between the Secretary .of State's office and the
local elections.boards, and the 1988 voter registration program.

EMS has seven Monday calls

(

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Wednesday ; Rutland •t 3:02a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 1 tor
Steve G.llllpsle to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland at 3:43
a.m. to Depot St. for Gary Cremeans to Veterans Memorial
Hospltaf;· Racine at 4:08 a.m. to Route 124 for Gene Wolfe to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 8:43a.m. to Pomeroy Pike
for Leslle Storm to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at
9:23a.m. to Depot St. for June Cremeans to Veterans Memorial
_ Hospital; Pomeroy at 11: 06 a.m. to Second St. for Dennis
- Musser to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:14p.m.
to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Ted VanCooney to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:57p.m. to the Flood Road for
Walter Bentz to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Area deaths _
Earl Kibble
Earl Anderson Kibble, 81,
Reedsville, - known for years as
"Mr. Whiskers" by county fair
goers throughout the area - died
Wednesday night at the Arcadia
Nursing .Home In · Coolville. Arrangements will be announced
by the White Funeral Home.

Honorary pallbearers were
officials and directors of Com·
munlty Bank, members of Court
No. 156, Royal Order of Jesters,
Drs. S. William GoH, Paul L.
McCuskey, Lyle H. Vincent and
Nlkunjm Shah.

Eloise Siders

George PoweU
PARKERSJ;IURG - Funeral
services for George Raymond
Powell, 72, 2310 Vaughan Ave.,
P arkersburg, were held at 11
a.m. Wednesday at the First
United Methodist Church In
Parkersburg with the Rev. Arthur Backus offlcla.tlng.
Mr. Powell died Sunday mornIng at· Camden-Clark Memorial'
Hospital following an extended
Illness. He had numerous friends
and relatives ln. Meigs County.
He was a son of the late Wllllam
0. and Ammy Whitlatch Powell.
He was chairman of the board of
directors of Community Bank of
Parkersburg and haq been a
certified public accountant until
his retlrment In 1980. He hagan
practicing with George M. Nicholson In 1933.
Mr. Powell was a graduate of
Parkersburg High School and
was a llfelorig resident of Parkersburg. He was a U.S. Army
chief warrant officer and chief
accountant for the New York
Ordnance District During World
War II.
He was a member of the First
United Methodist Church;
served for
many years as
treasurer for Nemesis Temple,
A.A.O.N.M.S., and belonged to
Parkersburg Lodge 159, F&amp;AM,
Scottish Rite, York Rite and
Royal Orde'r of Jesters 156. He
was a member of the Elks Lodge
l.98, the .Parkersburg Lions Club
and I._Sons of the American
Revolution..
Mr. Powell served the community auditor of the Mid-Ohio
Valley · United Fund and was
treasurer of the Kootaga Area
Council Boy Scouts of America.
He was the recipient of the Stiver
.Beaver Award for his work with
the Boy Scouts.
Surviving are his wife, Irene
Ebersbach Powell; a son, William G. Powell of Parkersburg; a
daughter, Mrs. John (Barbara )
Ayers of Beckley, W. Va., and a
grandson, _ John Powell Ayers,
also of Beckley. A s ister, Zeta
Mae Powell, preceded 'him In
dea th.
The Ogdin Funeral Home was
in charge of funeral services and
burial was In Mt. Olivet Cemetery . Masonic r ites were con. ducted by Parkersburg Lodge
169.
Memorials may be sent to the
First United Methodist Church,
the Shrl ners' Crippled Children's
Hospital and Burn Institutes or
the American Cancer Society.

I

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Ashland Oil ........................ 58Y,i
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City Holding Co ................... 33
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Goodyear T&amp;R ...................58¥.
Heck's Inc . .................. ..........2
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saldEn~~rRoberts.
· ~t~he;;roa~d~we~r~e~fi~ood~ed~~,t~he~ca~b~le~s~~d~a~y~·s~m~ee~ti~ng~.--~------~
Salisbury Township Trustees . r~a~nd~~~~~~a;;m;a;t;te;r;:of;:ho;v:;•;
Richard Batley, Nathan Biggs
and Harold (Butch) Brlnker,also
A Great
Dinner Special

present for the meeting, said
they are hoping tile funding from
RC&amp;D pans out, because raising
Shady Cove Road "Is too big a job
for the township'' to afford.
Officials seem to agree that ·•
past strip mining along Leading
Creek is likely to be the cause of
the flooding problems, with wa·
ter runoff filling the creek with
sediment ftom the old mines .
Since the fioodlng Is suspected
to be mine related, Roberts had
originally thought raising Shady
Cove Road might qualify as a
project through the Ohio Department of Natural Resouces, Division of Mining Reclamation.
However, Barbara Nlemczura, of ODNR' s Division of
Mining, told Roberts and albers
at yesterday's meeting that she·
didn 't think the road could
qualify .. for funding through her
deparlment, at least not right .
now. At this time, N!emczura
said, the Division of Mining Is
focusing on reclamation of strip
mined lands. Once the lands are
reclaimed, reclamation of water·
ways will begin taking place.
. Although Nlemczva .did noi
think Shady Cove Road could
qualify for ODNR funding at the
present time, she did leave
ques tionalres for residents to
complete and told them she
would be referring the problem
to ODNR's Columbus · office
where funding decisions are
made.

The Daily Sentinel

would prevent ep~ergency per·
sonnelfrom bringing boats up the '
creek to reach the residents
along the road. Roberts wasn' t ,.
sure If · hlgbway department
workers could remove a tree which Is down across the creek. •.
Residents said they were ap-· ·
preclatlve that Roberts · ha~-·
taken an Interest in their dl·
lemma and had·arranged yester·

s· Iom
. T.tps·

'

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'U ,

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baked potlllO and .U·vcu·can·eat
Soup and Salad Buffet. ·

BOB HOEFLICH
time. Can anyone out, there
Dr. Dan of Radio Station pinpoint the date? u so, give me
a ring.
WKEE, Huntington, W.
whose name
was Pan Robin·
The Mothers of Twins Club will
son, was sup·
be sta~ng Ita fund raiser for the '
posed to be the
year on Saturday, March 5.
'd.J. for a teen
The fund raiser will be a
dance to be held
rummage sale and a bake sal~
from 9 to mid·
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Trinity
Church in Pomeroy. , Club
night Saturday
at the Pomeroy VIllage Hall melnbers hope you wll)look them
auditorium.
on sale day.
However, tragedy struck. Dr.
Dan was killed In a one vehicle , Ohio Secretary of State Sher·
. h.ighway acclden t as he was rod Brown, who is popular in
• trav~llng from doing a dance in Meigs County, will bring his
Ashland, Ky., Saturday night, "travelling office'·' to Pomeroy
back to Huntington. His co· Friday setting up shOp at 2 p.m.
workers at the station are really . at the Meigs County Board of
diSturbed about the misfortune Elections , 10! Mechanic St.
Secretary of State Brown will
and particularly since Dr. Dan
had looked forward so much to administer the oath of office to
his visit In Pomer(ly Saturday newly-appointed election board
t:nembers and conduct training
night.
The dance, however, will go as sessions for election officials
scheduled with Dan Whittington from 11 Southeastern Qhlo coun·
of 105 to be'the d.j. A represents· ties, including Athens, Fairfield,
live from WKEE will be at a local Gall1a, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry, Vinton
dance at a later date.
Saturday's dance will be a and .washington.
The Pomeroy session, Brown
beneflt'for Michael Bartrum and
Brent Bissell to help with their . reports, wllllncludedlscusslonof
expenses on an · athletic trip to tl)e presidential year primary
and general elections in Ohio, the.
Europe.
·
relationship between the SecreSo how about a little help from tary of State's office and the local
elections board, and the 1988
someone out there.
The Incident Is believed to have voter reglstratrlon program.
happened In the mid-1940's and It
The more I see of the presidenInvolved an e~capee from the
tial
caucuses and primaries, the
Q.H.E. A Mr. Wilson was shot In
more
meaningful rny "Morris for
the leg at the Hobson railroad
shop by the Inmate wl!o was President" badge becomes--and
subdued by the late -rohn Kin- then there's Pat Paulsen. Do
caid. It was quite a story at the keep smtung.

.

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1988 Pouderou. Inc.

163 Upper RiYir Rd.
. lt. 7
IAcm1 from the Airport)

Gallipolis, Ohio

Rock Spring Grange meets

Tbere'l a'family feellag at Poudii'OIL ;•.

i'

,.

'1988 FORD MUSTANG LX
HATCHBACK

2 DOOR HATCHBACK

. • EQUIPPED WITH •

Dail Worthem
Tuppers Plains native Dall R.
Worthem, 65, of Smyrna, Ga.,
died Jan. 31 at St. Joseph's
Hospital in Georgia.
Mr. Worthem was a retired
dlsas ter preparedness officer tor
the 14th Air Force, and was
stationed at Dobbins Air Force
Base In Georgia.
He Is survived by his wife,
Mary Martindale Worthem of
Smyrna, Ga.; two st~psons,
Mark J . Rogers of Austin, Texas
and Steven T. Rogers of Tampa,
Fla.; three brothers, Duane and
Bob Worthem, !loth of Masstlon,
and Jim Worthem of Norfolk,
Va.; and two grandchildren.
· Among famtly· members who
preceded him In death was his
father, Garrett Worthem.
A memorial service for Mr.
Worthem, who was cremated,
was held at Dobbins Air Force
Base. Burial was In Marietta
National Cemetery, Marietta,
Georgia .

news

Veterana Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Gary Cremeans, Rutland; Bonnie Inscoe, Pomeroy; June Cre·
means, Middleport; Earl Reed,
Pomeroy; Grace Whaley, Pomeroy; Dennis Mu'5Ser, Pomeroy;
Theodore VapCooney, Pomeroy;
Walter Bentz, Pomeroy.
· Wednesday Discharges Daisy Haggy, Zona Shrerldan,
Ronald Hart, Helen Jeffers,
Caryl Cook, Fred Stewart, Joyce
Jewell.

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Total Vehicle Price ...........58660.00
Option Package Savings ..... 694.00
Pat Hill's Discount .............. 341.00
Manufacturer's Rebate ... ;... 400.00.
TCiit,al Savings .................. S1;435.00
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More than 50 children gathered
at the Pomeroy Library Tuesday
night to hear Dave P!lkey of Avon
Lake, a winner in the 1986
National Written and lllustrated
by .... Awards Co11test, talk about
· his book, "World War Woil."
Pllkey was one of three
winners in the conllis t which had
1,600 original book entrles. The
winning books were selected by a
national panel of distinguished
~ucators , editors, art directors
and 22 authors and lllustraJors of
juvenile books .
Each winner receive a publish·
ing con tract and .an all-expensepaid trtp to the office of Land·
mark Editions In Kansas City,
Missouri, where the staff as·
slsted them in the final editing of
·manuscripts and In preparing
th e ir Illustrations for
publication.
__ In addition to presenting his
book, via video, Pllkey did some
Illustrating for the children, and
signed books. He was brought t.o
Pomeroy through the library.

to bear the .19-year-old publlahed author and
Illustrator tell about hla book, "World WIU' Won."

Layette shower conducted for Ellis child
AbabyshowerhonorlngJaEes
Ryan Ell1s, son of Gary( and
Debbie Ell!s, was held· rec':J::IIY
at the Heath United Meth;...Ist
Church In Middleport.
\
Hosting the shower were S:usle
Byer, Twlla Chtlds; Debbi~ · Davis, Becky Johnston, and Pat
Mayer. A rocking horse theme
was carried out with the t~\!me
cakl! being made by PE!ggy
Houdashelt. ·
Games were played with prizes
going to Marcia Houdashelt and
.
·

Allee Globokar. Mary Kitchen
Miss Kim Ohlinger, Mrs. Tammy Sandell, Mr. and Mrs.
won the door prize.
Donna Ohlinger, . Mrs. Cecilia John Nash , Erica McClintock,
Presenting gifts were Mr. and Mitch, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs. Mrs. Shirley Quickel, Mrs. MaMrs. Louis Ellls, Mr. and Mrs. Ruth Powers, Mrs. Emma Clat· rllyn Williams and Holly, Mrs.
Kevin Honsher and Tabitha, Mr . worthy, Mrs. Cinda Harris, Mr. Judy Crooks, Mr . and Mrs. Roger ·
and Mrs. Jack Honsher and and Mrs. Tom Harris, Mrs . Helen Abbott, Mrs. Jane Walton, Mrs.
Kerry, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Byer, Miss Mary Byer, Mrs. Rose Sisson , Mrs. Allee ·
Byer, Mr. and Mrs. Mlck Childs, Donna Byer, Mrs. Nora Rice, Globokar.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Davis, Mr. Mrs. Jeanie · R.ldgeway, Mrs.
Mrs. Sally Erwin and family ,
and Mrs. CecilJohriston, Mr. and Marcla1 Houdashelt, Mr. and Mr. and' Mrs. Steve Bachner,
Mrs. :John Mayer, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Gene Houdashelt, Mrs. , Mrs. Caroline Bachner, Mr.
Todd Kitchen, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Pauline Reuter, Mrs. Dorothy Joanne Mescher, Mrs. Janet
Darst, Mrs. Janet Harris, Mrs. ·Jeffers.
Duffy and Patricia, Mr. and Mrs
Margie Blake.
Mrs. Linda Guinther, Mrs. Dave Neigler, Mrs. Nonga Roberts, Mr. and Mrs . Don

Evangeline chapter holds meeting ~~~;~ion announced

Shade River Lodge has ·meeting

sent on the death In a member's There will be displays of family
family.
·
pictures and afghans.
Get-well cards were sent to
Mission study was by Chari·
Gertrude · Andrews, Gertrude dine Alkire and the closing
Bass, Eileen Bowers, Helen prayer by Betty Spencer. ReMiller , Thelma Sines, and freshments were served by Mary
Joanna Lo.ckhart. Plans were Lash to those named and Brenda
made to purchase salt and Venoy and Pauline Kennedy·
pepper shakers for the chlirc)t
dining room, Members were
asked to take pantry items for
distribution to the needy.
The annual mother-daughter
banquet will be held on May 5 at ·
6:30p.m. at the church with "A
Mother's Heart" as the theme.

~on tact Fonda Thomas,

667·6863;
Janet Eblin, 992·6296; or Gall
Patrick, 446-3161.
Attending Were Barbara Lo,
gan, Albany ; Fonda Thomas,
Reedsville; Gall Patrick, GaUlpolls; Debl Gilmore, Rutland;
Linda Faulk, Janet Eblin, and
Eloise Drenner, all of Pomeroy.

MiJdkp;;;cPT(; meeting held

1987
Mercury Cougar ·

I'

Pllkey did a series of
tbali 110 chUdren
Tuesday night

A contribution was made to the attend. Also announced were
National Society for the Blind by tentative dates In April for the
Rock Springs Grange at a meet- annual banquet.
lng held Thursday night at the
Opal Grueser had the leglslahall.
tlve report, noting facets on food
Barbara Fry, chairman of instruction !lnd the agriculture
The Evangeline M::1:ry
women's activities, reminded census to take place this year.
Group of the Pomeroy Churci·h of
· members that the national dress
Instruction in sign language Christ met at the parsonage \vith·
-conteyt will be held on March 4 at · was gtven by Bunny Kuhl. Roy Pat Thoma presldlngr
•
the Pomona Grange meeting. It . and Opal Grueser ·presented a
Sherr! Might had the opea.lng
• was allo noted that details of the video tape .lln sports activities Jlrayer .and for rollcall mem~•ars
"quilt ill a day•: proJect to Ta!se held at Royal Oak Park. Linda
named Bible sweethearts.
,
...money.for hall renovation wiU be Broderick and Nancy. Morris
Betty
Spencer
had
an
artlcn&lt;ion
announced by Bunny Kuhl.
served refreshments. Members
· Members were reminded of the reported Ill were Frank Broder- · "Women", Janet Venoy hatJ a
poem on "Love", and LaDoitna
department head visit at the lck, Agnes Dixon, Pat Holter, and
Cl!ll'k.
had ~. meditation. 01\\10·
Athens grange hall on Feb. 23 Mrs. Kuhl.
tions
were
given Mrs. Thoma 81nd
with officers being urged to
officers' reports were present&lt;~ .
Mrs. Thoma distributed new
program books for the year! It
was noted that flowers had be~n
A family nlg}1t observance wlll vlded by the Sue Matheny Sin·
be held Saturday_by the Shade gers . There will be special
River Lodge .453 at 6:30 p.m. at entertainment for the children .
tbe Masonic building In Chester. All members of Shade River
Plans for a rummage and bl\.ke
The ·meat, bread and beverage Lodge and thetr guests, along sale to bi! held on March Slat
will be furnished and members with members of the Pomeroy Trinity Church In Pomeroy wth·e
·and guests are asked to take a Chapter, Order of the Eastern made when the Mothers'of Twtns
covered dish.
Star, are Invited to attend.
met Monday night at Shoney's· t.n
Entertainment will be pro·
Point Pleasant.
,
l
Next regular meeting will ~:.e
held on March 20 at the Pomerpy
United Methodist chvch. Tho;;e
Margaret Amberger and Gol· Inzy Newell and Thelma White.
die Frederick were hostesses for There were readings by Erma
the recent meeting of ,the Past Cleland and Marcia Keller.
Councilors Club of Chester Coun· Games were conducted by Ethel
"
cti 323, Daughters of America, Orr and Inzy Newell. Martha
A donation of $200 to the Chlld
Tuttle
won
the
door
prize,
and
• held at the hall.
Assault Prevention Prograln
Laura Mae Nice presided at others attending were f Lora
was made by the Ml!ldleport PTO
the meeting reading from Psalm · Damewood, Mary K. Holter,
meeting Monday evening at th:e
1. The Lord's Prayer and the Opal Hollon, Sadie Trussell, . school.
1
pledge were given in unison, and Betty Roush, and guests Bonnie
A large group of parents and
officers' reports were given by · Landers and Sandra White.
friends were on hand as the ftrl:t
graders of the school presented~&lt;!
program of song and rhyme.
: A medley of love songs sung by
A smorgasbord .of_ favorite Emma Ashley , Mary Braue!',
Suzy Carpenter and Jane Wise desserts was served. Games . and Roxanne Jenkins worked'
wl.th the students to produce t~•e
,highlighted the Sweetheart Night · were played. ·

Pa.rt Councilors meeting held

Total Vehicle Price ....... S1 0,632.00
Option Package Savings ..... 793.00
Pat Hill's Discount .............. 444.00
Manufacturer's Re!Nite ·....... 400.00 ·
Total Savings ..................S1,637.00
-TAX AND nTU E11U-

ILLUSTRATING lllustratlona for the
gathered at the Pomeroy

Mothers of Ttt'ins hold meeting

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'·

1988 FORD ESCORT GL

Page 7

:•

Dance will go -Saturday

l

@

·.

Beat of the Bend

••
•

-

Thli'Sday, February 18, 1988

·-.. ···- --- -· · ~

Dtlldoul Charbroiled Sirloin Tips """"hmd in
onions and mushroomo and ...v&lt;d with

Announcements

I H~pital

Stocks

Since RC&amp;D funds for this year
are already committed·, Duhl
said he would In May. propose
Shady Cove Road to RC&amp;D as a
consideration for funding In 198$.
Although at this point, the
· RC&amp;D funding Is not certain, "at
least this starts the ball rolling,"

wlh

Roberta also 18ld he woUld be with no rain. the creek
be.
coatacUnc the U.S. Corpe of htah. Roberts 11111d he will talk to
Engineer~ to dlscuu the likell· someone from the Corps to see
hood that the depth of Leading why the water can't be released
Creek Is ereatly affected when at the dam sooner.
the river Is held back at the
Finally, Roberts assured res!·
Eureka Dam at Gallipolis, above dents that someone from the
normal pool stap. Loretta Tie- counly highway department
meyer, a l'l!llldent, and others at would cut out two cables that
the meeting, said It 18 not unusual . remain strung acr9~s the creek
for the creek to be running low from an old swinging bridge. If

'

Church of Christ program given

program carrying out the holl·
day theme.
The third graders led In the
pledge to the flag. The $15 prize
for room count was won by Mrs.
Brauer's first grade. II was
announced that the fall carnival
which had ben postponed In the
fall, wlll be reschedulep as a
spr(J1g fling. Refreshments were
served by the-second grade room
mothers.

IT'S OFFICIAL ...
SwleherLohee Pharmacy
le Your
Suing•
Headquarterll

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Ellis,
Middleport, are announcing the
adoption of a son, James Ryan,
who was born on June 21.
He was welcomed Into his new
home on Feb. 1 by his parents,
Gary and Debbie Ellis, and
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Ellis, Mldd

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Rutland Church
of Christ.at the
held part
recently
·program
Also taking
In the pro·
gram were Beverly Stewart and
·Mellsllll Williams with plano
solos, and Arnie Elliott with a
fiute solo. 'The congte'gl\tiOn sang
hymns selected by the church's '
youth.
· Joan May had devotions using
a story from a bookTeft to her by
the late Victor Braley who was
very active ln. the church. Isadora Williams closed the pro·
gram with prayer.
• Following the . program. the
group moved to the social room
where they enJoyed a game
modeled after the game show,
"Win, Lose or Draw." Those
11ltendlng were divided Into
teaml'lnd given Bible stOries to
Illustrate for the other team to
.ldenUfy. Valendne candy was
given to the winning team.
'

Retreat attended

LADIES' LONG
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BLOUSES
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Seve,PI••If By

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s~.,.,., Wit~

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FREEl

Plan Sunday meet
A missionary .service will be
held Sunday, 7: 30 p.m., at
Harrisonville Hollnesa Church,
State Route 6114. Speakers will be
Rev. Lawrence Gray and famUy,
who are serving a million In New
Guinea. Everyone welcome.

oma ,._AIYII,1tU
0001 •••••• . .u.

o·

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D

'·

·-

1'1&gt;-1111 1

'

�-----

~Pon,t
..

wait to enjoy life - live in

t~e

SMALL
WANT ADS

present Ann

AU

; : : · Deu Au laden: I've learned, · south. They had been puttin&amp; it off newborn. He recently raid that if
the rather isn't invol~ in the
...-.iJI a very beautiful way, the power but now they ·~ aoina. ..
· You have broiJiht a great deal of ·lflediq of the infant, bondini
::a scope o1 Ann Widen.
pleasure to my life, dear lady. I will won't t8kr plalle.
: • Qn Del:. 2, 1 lener I wrote to you
I've always believed that brast is
- J'l'blishcd. I told you how your always cherish the memorim of my
last
trip
with
Ruth.
And
I
have
best,
but I certainly don't want to
column
on
"1'be
·
Station"-about
.,
deny
my husband the opportunity
some
wonderful
pictures
of
the
two
livlnl ~ in the preaent rather than
she still looks great.
waitinl for I!Jiioyment from some of us to look at as I relive those to bond with our. baby. What do
Drup are everywheir. They'l't.' easy
beautiful days. It's a thrill to know you ami/or the experts think about
futu~ event you a~ looltina.•for·
' 1~ get, l!tiSY 10 use and even ttiSifr 10
ward to- had alkcted the lives of that many others headed for their this? - R.S. IN 0:1 ICAOO
DEAR R.S.: It's wonderful that
get hoo/W on. 1/you have questions
my wife, Ruth, and me. It made it "Station" on Dec, 2 because of my
FLORIST
about drup and drug ust, Ann Land·
your
husband
is
so
e~q~er
to
be
part
pollllible for us to ef\ioy the time we letter. Thank you from aU of us. ~· newly ,.,..;sed boolcln, "The Lawhad after slle was ·diagnosed with IRV GAIPTMAN, PLAINVIEW, of the baby's early life. But a
Melga County's Oldat Flor'-t.
breast·fed cbild has a decided ad·
down on Dope," will~ you the an·
tmaina1 cancer.
N.Y.
352 E. Main St. l'omll iy, Oh.
swers. Send $2.50 plus a
When my letter appeared in' the
DEAR IRV: I am.deeply gratel'ul , vantqe, and I would urge you to
PH. 992-2644
· ·
.self-alldras«l, stampM No. /0 enl'l"
column the phone calls I received to you for letting me know how my do it if you can.
lope (39 ctrllS postage) to Ann Land·
Your husband can bold the cbild
from IICrtliS the country, and the column affected your life. Believe
"Often lmilaled - Never
ers; P. 0. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
Duplicaled"
letters expre511in8 kind thoiJihts and me, when I receive a letter like after be feeds. He can burp, cradle,
6061
1{)562.
coo
and
establish
bondiq
in
this
memories of similar situations, re- · yours it fuels the fire that makes
sulled in some emotional moments.
this old engine JIO. No hi8h can ...--------------l~----------------------~-------"----:-­
Neiihbors and friends who had match the thrill of knowina that I
disappeared from our .lives more have connected .and made a differthan 30 ymrs ago called to say
!!ltce. BII!Qi you for writing.
"Hello! We read your letter in Ann
Dear Ana J,a'den: My husband
Landers' column!''
Probllbly one of the most moving and I are starting 11 liunily. I hear
calls came from a doctor who left a many women complain that their
m r sayina he was indebted to husbands don't pay much attention
me. When I called him back be said, to their newborns, so maybe I'm
''ibis mornina a patient who is lueky. Yet, I'm concerned.
Stock I 11112, V-8, air cond., auta•l
My ptoblem is that Larry doesn't
" · tmninal came to my office. I gave
trana., PS, PB, AM1FM radio, ~
her the column with your letter to want me to breast·feed our child
pickup, long wide
gaugea,
lng ,.., gl..e, topper.
Ann Landers. Tomorrow she and because he wants to play a sisnifi·
her husband are leavjng on a trip cant part in the care of our

Landers

ABGPIKHI ,

~{4..

•

~ Star

-ftt

. •Adl outaidl Meig1. ~•Ill• or MMOn counti~ mutt be

10AYI
IDAYI
I ::IAYI
18DAYI
" 1 MONTII

p,.;.

:C..
Odo
In.....,.,.,
.
,_ode-1 .10G - y.ond Found
odl undof11-rdowiU
for

RATES

be

· _ _ ,.,..,~

run J d-r• 8t no ch.._,..
'
,
'Prico of ldiOf ol oo;ttolleno" Ia -bio priC&lt;I of oct ooot

. , ......" " ' - onty ......
.
•
•hntinella ftOt rti-D"ilble for wrotl 1f111r fin.t d~~,y . !Check
for lrntrl flrwt Hy H ruftlln paper) . C1ll before 2:00p.m.

A•

• diiY .ttlr publlclltlon to mtllce correct'-.
thlt muet be l*d in lld¥anw ••:

t:ard of Th.,..

HoPP'/ Ado

In Memori8m

Yard hiM

·--4tl

The Stevens Family Singers of
· St. Albans, W.Va. w111 be fea·
• tured at Sunday morning servl·
ces at the Langsv11le Christian
Church. Everyone welcome.

FOODLAND'S WEDNESDAY AD
SHOULD HAVE READ

MAXWELL HOUSE

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z ·417 Second AVWJue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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Parta
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doni
and ~-.-datal ot
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Final IIC1Ionto noey be eppaibd, lttwoltlue, wj1111n30
deye af the d8te af title RO·
lice,
Envlronlllll)llll
Boardtoaf the
Review,
Rm.' 300,
231 E, Town lt.. Columbul.
Oh .. 43211. Notlall af ....,
. . . . """ be . . . wllh....
d1Nc1or within 3 dlye. Propoeoid 11111on1 w111 bloafinal un.._ • wiltlllla Mllucl&amp;.

9.92-'2 156

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Call for Birthday.
Church, Private ·
Partie• !Ilion.,'Tues.
Thurt .. Sat. &amp; Sun .

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or 915·9996

... ,.., ............. Anv
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1986 FORD ·
ESCORT

•• ,I

Stock I 115051, 4 wllael drive,
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wlndowe, po- -•tt,~~=-~~=
locke, tllt wlllll, a
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white waHa, " 1on pickup, long
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1984 FORI)
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1980 FORD F-100

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Ohio. Elflllllve Dell:.Feb. 8,

8ullara 8lld llldrtlto mix ltDCI maid! aa yau

eon llmlnllll lOok. All - qulai!IO
lllllllollldwty..YID. ,
5000: Crocttal I lli:y Vic:lorilin blou8e using aport
~yam, Dlll8a up auila or skirts In al UIICtiS.
EaiY diiiiCtiOilS for
lo14lncl.
.
1007: Croohtlt an eaay shell stitch pulicMir of iwo
cOlora liPOII yam. Note eollly draped oowl ocillar.

1888.
Thw final IGIIon - .....,.
lded byo-llldllllllon and
Ia IIIPIIIIbll to EBR. l'w·
llinl to 401 certlflcetlon,
grant. l'lrlllne to Htintlnt·

wllh fOr a

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"' the~don••.
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......,. "All•
doea
not lnalude I'ICIIItlt af o verifled oompl81nt. If ·~rit
.....lc lnl-' . . . I pubIto -'~"1 mey be held. ~
to any lOtion. lnalildlng ,..
ce111t af VIlified oompletnte.
lilY .,.._ mey oll!toln no·
lloo af further IMIIIone, end

lddltlonel Information. Un·
'"' otltlowlle p-dld In
notlcel af Plrdauler aotlo111,
ell -munlaetlona lhell be
1111t to: H..rtng Cliork,
OEPA. P. O. loll 1041, Col·
umbua, Oh .. 432118·01 48.
'Ph. (114) 481·2111. Con·
Milt ORC CHep. 3741 and
OAC ChiPI. 3741·47 end
3741-1 tor requl-nll.
Flnell-anoo of cenlflc•·
lion.
J•yrner C~N~I Co.. Chaahl,.,

••
•

1986 FORD
F-350 DUALLY
Stock 1 88011, e oyl., 4 epeed n:,~ Stock I 85321, v.e "'I· 480, 4
AMIFM redl9, ~ ton pickup, 1
Irene., PS, PB, AIIIFM rldio,
wheel be.., ehort wide bed, ,..r
u-. 1 ton pickup, io"tt wide

Stock 1 85471, 4 doono, front
drive, 4 oyl., air oond., euto. If~~~~ auto. Irena., PS, PB, poww
PS, PB, AMIFM redlo, .rldwl t
wheel,. cruiM oontrol, AMIFII reat~, 1
white wall•, buokot ' Mate, r•r
radial tlree, bucket Male, roer
bumper.
claw defog.
dow dafog,g•"'l•· ·

, . _ $1zaa 10-12, 14·181ft!:(uclecl.

·

411e: Mi11es eizaa S (28-28), M(30-32), l (34·38);
XL (31-40)•irtcluded. Alltne ttldrl811a119 an elastic
walat. Agreet value. '
.....,...., AUG. 31,
'
PLUS $1.110 PilL

t•

ton Dll1rlol Corps. af Enel·.

'

Publlo Nolloe· No. (H)
•87·137.
12111. 11c

. _ $3.2Sior each patterit Add $1.00 I8Ch pattern lor
poalageendhancllna.Sendto:P. . .,..

'

Public Notice

....

Read the Best
SdeJ
.
,V
D........ the
I~
D~SffEI'\R.

.11 Help Wanted

•

',
,

•
Stock I 78222, 2 daON, ooupe, 4
elr oond., 4 epeld ebond. trane.,
PB, Ull .whaal, AIIIFII radio,
tapa, rlllwl u..., bucket _ , ..

•'

1985 FORD
RANGER4X4
Stock I e4801, 4 wllf8l drive, 8
apeed irene., PS, PB, AMIFM
IIINO llpe, ia.... liNe. ~
pickup, lllort ...... 11-, """'

bed, ..., etap bumper, 1111111•.
T-tope, oonvwllon ldL

Cheyenne

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT, OF ,
FIOU~IA.RY

On Jeii!IIFY 21, 1888, In

• 1he Molp County Probe•
• . Court. c.. Na, 21710.....
: nlco Cerpenter. 21:1 Mul·
,

.•

berry"-. Pomeroy, OH.
41711, appointed E. .
IIUII'III af the .... ..... af

.. Ruth A. lunitl. deli1111d,
1111 af 401 Welt Meln. Porn·
· eroy, Ohio 41718.
•

,

'

RobOrl E. Buell.

'

. ,.,..... Judlll
1..-uo K. ,._...,_d, Clerk
(214. 11, 11. l1c
.

CA.I DIAIIISHIP
S11lw W. Ptaple (llllllt • ftttnlla).
'
No,[xpll'ilncl Nu1 t• WI fnin.
lpply .. '*Ill Wltl! •• I er c.l
hr A,palr!l a:et . ,
IUs c. I
MIL ... St. 614o99J-6614 P111..,, 0.

• co•a.AII

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

' F~9
"'
Itt ..-, If
lllllllahlllaflllrtl

••

J&amp;L ILOWN
, II.SUIAIION

FilE DEn.

·VINYL&amp;
· ALUMINUM SIDING

.UCIIIE .

lalhan1 luDIIfng

.EVElY

SAT. NIGJIT
6:30P.M.

Fectory Chake
12 Gauge Shtot..., Only
·

0·7-tfn

•VINYL SIOING
•ALUMINUM ,!II~ING
•BLOWN IN
1
INSULATION '

IISSELI:
SIDING (0.
... . _ ...It
" Free Ettimatea"

PH. 9•9-2160
or 9•9·2101
NO SUNDAY

FilL- POSIIION FOIIIGIS1WI
• • M. . . . . . JICIIIICUJI ON

.
lOYA11111diS
.
'
...... l•••••llant .,..., with
c~p••Bitltlln all er• of clllllcal
'

•lnaulatlon
•Storm Ooora
tStorm Windows
•Replloomlll1 Window•
•N- Rooflne

flEE ESTIUTES.

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

E········
&amp;,,,.,,,

·l-16 tie

'FIIEWOOD·
locust, Oak, Cherry

~. 3500
Per Pickup Load
Delivered
Bill SlACK
614-992-2269 .

Ennings

1/25/'87/f mo. d.

EXCAVAftNG
Bo'*"- Work
tWIH Do Heulne With

•Oour •

Dump Truolt

•WNCklr Service

•Junk Yerd Bullneu

WANT TO lilT wcao 01
.JUIIII WS 0111UciS
-Fill ESliiMTESFor 1111f If tt.u ....lctoo tal

614-742-2617
i e l - 9 a.m.-6
or loan

Kupid'• Nelt 1nd Connection•
O.ting Service of Huntington
join~ togfthlf' lhlrlng profllu.
For infonnltk)n write: Kupid '1
Nell. P.O. lox 1519, Ironton.

Ohlo414131.

Chllltef Bowhuntel'l h01ting 30

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING •
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS •
BACK HOE WORK

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

915·4141

· · - (-[1015
R.terenC•
11 · 3-tfn

YOUNG'.S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
woric

(F'" El1imata•l

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
PoRMWoy, Oh)~ .•..•.

l
L....----~4~

I,.SUUnGN
HIAftiiiO &amp;
COOUH
•FURNACII .
•AIR CONDinONERI
oHIAT PUMPI

.

,.. ••2~~1-zr~.
FREE ElnMATEI

DENNY CONGO
. WilL HAUL
.JUST CALL!
992-3410 .
GRAV£L • SAND
TOP SOil
FILL DIRT

WANTED .
DEAD OR AUVE
•W11her1 •Dryars
•Rangel, •Freezers
•Refrigerators ·
"Wm luy ., Heul Away"

.

MARINES: W1're looking tor 1
few good I'MI'I. For more lntor·
metion~ caH .Sera• .,.t MIQ Abetf

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE ·
915-3561

We Service All Mekes

1122/11/tfn

KAY'S
BEAUTY WON

SALES &amp; SERVICE

··1·1725

WAII·M WW:OII

...... I ...

New Lemllrto
lire llertft S..otttl
•~•••art, Ohie 45760
IUfllllloo
Pey Your Pllene
Ceble IIH1 H-

WI t:any Flohlng

. SUSIIIISS , _

2 tmell puppi• to utwaw1y to
good home. Cell 814-992-

7147.

6 loll and Found

grey.

FOUND: Doric
block cot.
It Foodlend. Rt. 315, fri .-2'· 12·
&amp;8. con 814·448· 1428.
LOST: Brown m1r,e wtth bl1clt
miH • trail. Henn11n Trace area.

R-od. t:alll14·218·8811 or
211-1812.

Lolt dog•: i m1le IIHgl• •nd 1
male mixed breed, on Shon
Fourth St. 11'111 In Mlddiepon.

owr 20 peid deya off 1 at fiar;
Ad\la-c•re inlu,.nce paid . :rid·
tlon reimbursement and m.J,y
Qther benefltl. a. pllrt of tl'lt
hlghty tkilled team •t Pinecr111
Car1 Cem.r. Call 814-446-

7112. EOE.

Secretary Needed

..

Mlitt INa . Mu1t b1 reliabl1.
Awll1be for immldllte employ.
ment. Send raume to: Iolii: Cl1

131 c/ o Golllpollo DOiiyTribuno.
821 Third Aw. , O•lllpolll. Ohio
4&amp;131 .

Feb. 12. Both hunting dogs.
A-nt. Call 814-882·8391 or

GET PAID for Nocllng boolil
1100.00 por Iiiio. Writo: PAlE·
331, 161 S. Uncolnw•v. N.
Au,..,.,lLI0842.
,

Found on Court St. In Pomeroy,

Metura women for 2 bev1.
CMitenlry .... Our home. Alll

Public Sale ·
&amp; Auction

8

ohlflo. t:alll14-441,1418 oltoo
2 PM, Gllllpoll1 ..... Calli only,
Need 1 11r1 to ... Y

whh

bod._ woman· 5 d.y1 •
Light - ·

441-1023.

eble
nighta.

lolortl Coli l f4-

Qovernm.m J!)bl. t18,040-

U8,Z30 yooo. Now hid. .. Your
oroo. 1 ·IOI·IB7·1000 Eat .. R·
9808 for c1r..- Fedorol llat
AYON, • All oo:No; CoH:IIIiority'n
·' · . . '
Avon al ·.,..•• lhirfiY SPH(a.
304-171-14211.
• .

w.- a04-ila2:214&amp;.

dul
et,
not

IIUIII_,,

'

Roger Hysell
REPAIR

Alai frt••ll81at
Pl.9fJ,.J612
., ftl-7121
1-1'7-ttc

r:;•••d.

mnlmum

~

oro- . 34ton~.-..,.

9

Wanted To Buy

----J-

Wtpoy-loilotomotlll-

Cfotv ••Ofdo Inc.

Jlni -

114-44t·H72

end - 1111
· EMtern
lmlth
.................
A• GJ'IJI?IJ Cell 11~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

s...•••

leo, c..flo. OthtrO·. Info. 1·15041 .
141-0091 EKI. 2987 . Open. 7
dayo. CALL NOWI
•
AN'S : Elm t21 .000 plu1, Whh

TOP CAIH pold for '83 mot111

... 114, ,1.1111 . .

992-6212

Help Wan·t ed •

EXCELLENT WAGES for ·•P'•rt
time atMf11bly work; ~eelnin·

1614) HI·6UO

Gai'Cigt

&amp;

.

'

I blool&lt; Gul- Pig with 101-upo.
Coli 304·171-2218.
·

. IISIIIIII(I , _
16141 m~,~1!!4

\

· CARTEl'S

F11111111 v1111: 11!
S1:rv11:1'o

Locol phyolcon . - -th&gt;n·
lot to , _ bllllne. ftll,g,
appolnt"'entl, patl•t •c!t•·
uperienoe
•ut

D-.

169 N. IIIli AwL
. . . . .rt. Ohio

.

Coli 114-448-7804.

1-13-tfc

PLI-NG &amp; HEATilt&lt;IG

Groce;
Angela
and lay at

Clll 814·

11

h.qcquall!t yourself

with tha stylids ,...
Mory, Naomi, Ja11t,

b1nlrie~ .

742·2415.

B11utif\tl black mele houn cal. 8
moe. okl. lo good home only.

11pair GIS Tan~s.

Mjddlaport. Ohio

Buying junk

F... - ' " · Coli 814-4417841.
•

LOST- b l - eo.-lne
e400.00 caeh on Meln St. PcMnt
P I - Feb. lllh. REWARD
phono 814-448-8141.

992-2198

2328 .

Qivaaway

4

LOST whitt 1 - holr· cot · with
Mlf 1 ••• In Muon. W.V1.
REWARD . 304. n3-17t8 01
n:J-&amp;808.

PAT HILL FORD

Middleport, Oh. 11•-

at 304· tt2o-eofe coDect.

core
and
heater cores. We can

also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wealso

A~ .

Standing timber. C•ll614·742·

For detlilll oft rulel, CIUMI,

Sentinel Ofllce.

r•n••ir

2nd.

~--. lnd PlY blclt. Clll Brown'1

1 g.-.y feotoner Glow . Claim It

We can

Buying d•lly gold, 1IIV1r cqins,
ring~, jewelry, lterlng weN, old
c:oin1, l•rv• c:unen~:y. Top priCII. Ed ~urktn Blrber Shop.

992·3478.

- Addon• 1nd remodeling

- Roofing a.MI gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

W111t to buy ltlndlno timber.
Colt 814·379·2718.

targot l·D ohoot Febouory 27th.

Taxldemw end Archery ·,, 114918-3384 from B:OOo.m.-1:00

. IIAICUM
CONTIACnNG
CHESTER. OHIO

Wanted To Buy:

3·4 8~ . houot wllh gorttlf ot
lult 1800 tq.ft. Ga1llpoli1 1r11.
Colt 304·876·8806.

3 Announcements

114-et2-1277.

1&amp;1
'.
.

9

Alllllllii iCC llll'll!S

2· 'U I mo.

·

LIMESTOIE

.._LAIOUIOIY
Mon.-Fri. 9a.m.-7 p.m.
Saturday 9a.m.~!' o.m.

GUN SIOQT

···

or at
Velerans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats; Pomeroy,

pm.

,

c•
os
··: ~==Dap=·:t.tl3=1115:,::;11ax:x:44:000000Tillla
__M_t,;_4_11_20-40o0-:;:;:·::;;;:;~,_:U~u:::~ LV ·

1984 PONTIAC
.FIERO

'

~ LISA M. KOCH, M ~S. .
·~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist ..·.

. U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSYILE, OHIO
614.662-3121

Thefollowlllf_......,_
lcl/preparad 1rt The Ohio
Envlren-1 Protactlon

Stock I 77811, 2 doON, 4 wflael drf1M,I
8 cyt. elr oond., euto. trane.,
tilt wheel, AMIFII redio, • radwl u..., buokll _ ,..

$3700

I

· · .Television
Devices
Dependable Haaring Aid Sales &amp; ~n,i••
C) Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All Al's

·aoGGS

PUIUC NOnCE

The Daily Sentinel

Ranch House Dressing.

:(

-~

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Public Notice

.

•,
•

992·5627

·~
····~·-:---

!l-M-010
On • ....,
....- an-r•L...

Business Services

.ClAltiRfD·AH ·

•

•DILIPOIT !i

··-loa·--·
..--........,. -. .
.17----.

U -CI, TY • I I - l!""lpont
~~---a-•

:&amp;11 ..... . .....~

THE.

~$

.

,.~.M-rHo-

Authorized John Deere,

Stock I 83241, 2 d90ra, cmope,
wheel drlv., e cyl., .elr
trona., PS, PB, p po- door locka, un whlll,
Control, AIIIFM radio, etno
whllll watw, bucket
gaug•, ,.., roof.

c:w........_

~

' 171
77J __,,

UU AMY CAITO
ar IOI'S ri~~;r:.~~~~
446•693,;

FoooLAND

heritage house
SHOE PLACE

77--R•olr

. II -For lifo er TNIIt

UM1T ONE WITH $10.00 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

The Santa Fe Collection from Dexter Made from ruggedly
. soft aged and burnished leathers. These st0es are elegant yet
1own to earth. lis footwear for the new frontier.

---

.

",...

.

11-.

u -,c... wv

Ml«C*I...I

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

~--·--lorloto

'"*•WW-

VHS.

INSTANT

..

..

11-''ala•

71--o
tor • •
71-TN... tor lolo
71-Y-·-·o
.,. ,..

11_...,_
12
1s-e,....
14---Troill"t .
11-l .. lall • .lftltlu·ot~ott
11
TY. C1 R•llr
17-MIIIdln... a
11-W-Tolle

H - Moviot ovtr It 11C11f

The parent meeting of the
Everybody Counts Program will
be held at Southern High School
in Racine on Wednesday, Feb. 24, ·
at 7 p.m. Anyone wishing to
attend Is welcome.

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

0

-

........ ~uy

.

.,__.,.

COPY DEADLINEDAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
MONDAY PAPER
- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
WEDNEIDAV PAPER - 2:00 P.M. TUEIQAY
TIIURIOAY PAPER
·- 2:00 P,M. WEDNIIOAV
FRIDAY PAPER ·
-' 2:00P.M . TIIURSDAY
SUNDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M . FRipAV

.._,_,.,.,_
...._.~·­
..... ,...

tlvoNM,boofllluit&gt;•rowllbodlooilod

·- c -

will- 1ft tile Pt. P I - Roglotor Md lho GoHI·
polla Dally T-oo. Niching- 11.000 """*· .

..

•-IIootE-ow.....
-~·A­

· - MO¥tiS 1t VIIS 'TAPE
Lot' • •....., tt.u .w

Meeting planned

Set to sing

Jl-fiMMo"" loto

u
••~u· Ho.- tDr • •
U Puuwtwl•

Cltwified papa c011er rhe
following telephone e%changea.. ;

•.- ci1Uif6ed •dvertl•m..n pieced In The O.tty.Sentlnel C.X.·
- Gluoiftod dlaplly, &amp;ualn- t:aod ond lejoolnotl...l

.

·M----..

0.11 WOIIDI 11:• .- 0 1 11-• - 0 1
M .CID
18.110
17.CID
18.CID
...110
e10.CID
18.CID
11J.IIO
e11.110
11J.CID
111 .110
111.110
IU.CID
111 .110
110.10

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

peld

Garderi Club meets

. A pledge of $10 a year for five . some which are easy to grow
· years to support the Amerltloral Including tarragon, chives, ore·
'92, the International floral and gano1 sage, thymne,. and Ia·
: garden exposition being hosted vender. She said that blueberries
.: by ~he City of Columbus, · was are a dellght In bush, flower and
: made when the Star Garden Club ·fruit, and add to the beauty as
· met recently at the home of Neva well as · practicability of herb .
gardening.
: Nicholson.
She also talked about roses and
Mrs. Nicholson opened the
noted
that heading the llst of
meeting with devotions from
Psalms and members answered hybrid tea roses Is the " Ameri, roll call by naming a dlstructlve can Spirit" with long potnted.red
· otrd. Ruby Diehl reported on the buds and wide blooms having 40 .
best new flowers and vegetables to 50 petals.
Binda Diehl, Neva Nicholson,
for 1988. She noted that a
vegetable that has gained popu· and Wanetta Radekln exhibited
la'rlty Is broccoli which Is rich In artistic flower arrangements us·.calclulm, potash, niacin, thtam· Ing a bird accessory . Mrs. Diehl
lne, vitamins A aild C and fiber. also displayed forced branches of
· She . discussed Its effect on crabapple and pussywlllow. Refreshments were served by the
disease, especlally,cancer.
Miss Diehl also talked about host~ss.
herb gardening and mentioned

:;

•

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru lfRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY .
'POUCIEI

'*'·

j

----·--

Uil

P·2 ..,. of Point PI-nt
Roglotor, 200 Moln lt.. Point
,_,, w. Yo. 21180.

car

d-Ipv.

.tlto ~- ­

plo lmolt or ftmolol, No ......_ n
wm tram.
Apply In - , _..... or

aill fvr . , . . t -. Jim COI&gt;b
C h - Oldomollllo Codllloc,
308 E. Moln lt., Pomoroy, O~lo.
l14·tiZ·II14.
GET PAID for _..,. ..... ol
1100.00 JIOI'-. - : PAIE11711. 111 I. Uo ool ION¥ . N.
-.11-.tl.
::

a lien• AIM wood a MONEY POll COWGil ......
jolio. Join tho Anny No·
• • .. ,...... lweln'oPumlltn
TNtd • Olive. ' 0 - . :104·171-1180 ..
114-441-1118.
.
1·1Q0.141·3111.
'
tuN

.....
.,
---•n
_
.....
......
......Uir=
:':'-~~lli.
...... ""

............ .... Pllftv ,.,..... , ............

w• • -

as 3 0 -...Mid ihs•ss; I
Cell 114-171-11. • 171.

-~
-.
r--:;;; ..., ...

12

..'
••

�1~11w

18.1888
Couo!ty ............ Ina. ....,._ _, TV - ·
0,..114-441-1111.
lAM .. - -127 """
....
3rd.

.,.,__~ora

__ __
-c-..__ _
----'¥

tolloloo=-1011... l l o - - - 1100111 - .. Cal .......... 114IU-1111. •

Aww. Getlp:alll, OH;

..__~ora-.

. . .

lilt

Calll14-44t-3074.

h'l

~-

... ""'
Call 114-

b'l

I

t82-U73.

Will do hDuel wor11 in r...... o~
erei. H.w ,..... ~ CaH 114·

-·loll.-·..._..-

_.._......... Col .,....,._

1 - ...... II. . Y-1. AC,

•

112-3381.

WMh to

from 1:00pm . .. 12:110pm. Col

-

114-742-2211 aft• 1:00 pm.
Refw•:a.. ewHMala.

13

-Jr
11'11

0ok IIICW II d, -~-· 304- 171•

Wanted to Do

1111 1Zdl ·-No. liomo In
Pomorov. 1 bodooom. 11-.
••f•lwuwtor 1nd
t2100.

w_,_.

Want to do WMilty ciMNng kl

your horne. h!Mrie~W*I. C.n
aupply good Nf--.cw. CIM

114-211-1713.
MothOI' of 4 • - old • Iooby will
babylit In my llomo. WooOdoyo •
eft« school. c~ to Addwil..

olom. 114-317-77al-lpm.
HouMCIMning &amp;.,.tee- Don't

fUN· Coli Uo. 114-37a-2110 Of
379· 21552, anytime.

:do - -· .

Will
114-141-1122
alto! 1"1M . Col

Will do Fedenlend S.. telncome

TaxH; typing, booldftg, end
Notary eervk:e. Merg-.t Ptrk«

114-992-2214.

of 3 YMr old wiit beby 1ft
in my home, Rt. 2. Leon .,..,

304-895-3424.

2821.

. ---

clition. A- 5:00
---~ 114-H2710Z. 114-t82-807Z
o~.

1173 roronoldo 12xl0, nkle 2

Farms to~ Sil!e

33

ING .CO. recommendl th.t you
do ltuein"' With people you
know. tnd NOT to send money
through the tn11il until you heve
invetttgeted the offeri!'IJ·

39.4 ecr•: oktW hou111 •
-lldlnp, pond. Appoox. 20
acresllllabla, county
Ford
tt.ctor. KytW' CrMk

opt)l. tumlohod. w..ro •. o.,.r
hook-yp, ww c....... n.wfy
poolntod, d_oclo. Rot•cv. Inc.
Apll. Coli 304-871·7738 oi'
17a-1104.

3 BR. houN. • yrs. old. Tobacco

b-. Coli 814-258-1394.

34

35

Lots

&amp;. Acreage

7991 .
Commercial property and hOUH
loii-Goltpollo Forry. Coli 304'

E:sLJ!I'

876-1908.

Homes tor Sale

4 SA .• fireplace, full buement. 3
mi. so. of Galllpolil. ue.eoo.
Ctll O.yot-814-.WII-1815. th.,

5:00- 448-1244.

3 SA . houtaln Crown City-Mtln

2 lou for 111• V:~ mile north ot
Eurake on Rt. 7. Rurlill watW'
evsileble. 80 ft. wide, 238 ft.

long-etch. C.l 814-251-1&amp;10
ahar 8 PM .
1 acre lend. 3 mil• from 1own.
Hard ro.d ready lor mobile home
Of good building site. Call

814-441-1468.

1 511 or 441-1522.

Rt:ttl~lo

8313.
OR RENT : 3 BR.

houll wh:h attached a•-u•
central air-NO PETS· Depolft •
refWence required. 39 Chilli·
cothe Rd . Cell 8U··'"I-21ii83

41

Homes for Rent

Nicety furnished tmell house.
Adults only. Rat. required. No

..... Coli 814-446-0338.

Fumllhed : 3 room cott.lgt In

9· 5 daily&lt;.

O.illpollo. Adulto. Cloon. No

3 BA .. 11h btth, formtl DR , brick
fireplace. Bilevel dedc. Brick and
frame ranch located at and of
quiet drive. One plu1 acre.
Garden space.. Ctty •choolt.
Heat pump-central air. Outdoor
ttorage area. Call 814-.WI·

pltl. W111r furnlatled. Aef. •
dep. Call &amp;1•-..-e-2&amp;•3.

9667.
2 bedroom, 2 bath•. 2 car
gerage, level lot on At. 33:
Swimming pool. utaUte, cloaa
to Metgs High. C.ll &amp;1•· 992·

3264
- - - - - : - - - : - : - - lc-

Rultlc cedar home with ollk
floors. two -way..fi(!Piact, Pelle

Colonial "-'indowl , cuttom
woodwork. Jtudy, 3000 ptus sq.
ft . approx. 8 wooded acrH In
Sutton Twp. Countryside. AppraiMCI at t112.000. Sell for

t17c000 . C.lll14-949-2130.
4 bedroom. fireplace, full fin·
ished buernant, 2 car o•ao•.
hot water heal and wood bumar.
On 6 wooded acres at Tuppart
Pl1 ins, Ohi.o. Cell 114-8878201 after 8:00 pm.

7 room hou.a. 1 1h Nth; 4 lA .,
geJ'IQe. an Qrptl Hill, no A1h

St .. Middleport. C.lll14-882·,
5714.
In SyriC:UH. Southern Local
Schoot Dilltrict. New oak c•
bineu. dllh waaher. firapleca,
quality c•rpM, gerega. I ec:re~~.
No ,.,_lrl naaclad. nice home.

vi-.

or couple. o-k • m. No
..... Cllll14-441-4821.

Pflcedto•llfllt, ownermovlng
fa .._,....

Cliff.

Dlshw11her, ~·ltOr, nOYe,
- -· d..- lnotudod. Coli

&amp;14-112-8310 oftlr 8:110 pm.

2 Btdroom brick In ·town. No

pat1 . A•f•anc.. a. MCUrity
depoalt rtM~uirld . noo month.
Willman .Real Eltate. 448·
38 ....
3 BA. hou11 for rent or rentwhh

option to buy- on 141 . *350 a
mo . Oap. • ref. required. Call

304-171-1801-doyo. 114-44192.,0 even.

a. w.akday•.

2 or 3 8R. home in city. No pets.
Rat. ..-qul.-.d. Call 81•-448·

1118.
3 BA., living room. kh:ch~ •
bath. t225 rent, •110 dep. Call

814-448-1364.

2 bedroom hou ... Nice. Fully
carpeted. good localktn. can

814-892-186B.

Verv nice. reoemly

r~•ed .

304-878-14&amp;0.

T-'"' 1 • 0ft11 •35 00
-•
,.
· up; ~~
complete
150.00 up; 'bdd chai,.
ta.oo up; refriger~tort, ato...••
•ao.OO.up. Picken• Usld FUrni·
tura, half· mile out Jerrico Rd.,

• r-

814-4tW-1132.
Nice 2 IR 1pt. Wetar. gerb-u•

poold. sto,. • •otrig. tumlohod.
Coll114-448,7021.

304-17&amp;-14&amp;0.

lii===iiiii~~==:-:
~­

Nice 3 rooma &amp; bath·lurnilhed.

Utlfltflt poold. *230
114-441-7111.

mo . Cllf

1

Antiques, buy or sell. Rlva'rine
Antiqull, 112• btt Main St.,
Pomaroy. Hourt: Mon .• ·Tues .•
endWed. 10:00a.m.-t :OOp.m .•
Sun. 1:00 p . m. ~I : OO p.m. By
chance or 1ppointmant. Ruaa

Grecloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
room 1panmenta It VHiaoa
Menor 1nd Rtvereida Apartment• In Middltport. From

*211, Including lllll!ttM. Coli
814-992-77B7. EOH.

Moore. 814-992·2121.

Hill, Pomeroy. Cell 814-992-

54

8139 or 614-992-34B9.

Callehen'• Uud Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tirn.llzee12:. 13, 14, 16,

Nice 2 bedroom epl. In Middl•
port. 11815 per month . Deposit
and reference required. Day
61.· 992-2381 , WHkeni:tt614-

New left over 1987 Model
Pools. Hugh 11x24 ft. twlm
aree. • ft . deep. lncludll deck,
lance. filter • warrenty.lnltallallon • flnencinQ evellable. Call
24 hra.: 1 -800· 3•&amp;·0941.

~:i, ~~:.-2:~~A'~rt Rt. 21B.
SWIMMING POOLS · 0999

992·2609.

1 · bedroom 1partmant1. Fur·
niahltd and unfurnilhed. t200.·
t228. per month. Utlllt'-s furnished. Call et•-992-1572,..

quirod. Coli 814-892-1053.

houH, Jetf•aon Ave.
reference an~ depotlt; phone

Smelt

304-171-1 128.

42

~ulldlng,

out-

304-178-1111 or
17a·H,8.
'

32

Mobile Homea
fo~ Sale

Ntw 1111 Country VIlli,
14a:72, ell Molrlo. Mt uji4a
rtvwhaot krt. 114-112-

oiwflto.m.

Concrete blockleH ·Iizes yard or

doltwory. M11un und. O.lllpotlo
Block Co.. 1 23._. Plno II ..
O.IHpollo, Ohio Col 114-44127B3.
BUILDING SUPPUES
SAVE 10% to 71%
1-WIIor bolrd 7 / 18x4'xB'·
U .ll. ~x4'x8' -te.88.
2-T-111 yellow plno oidlng

~x4'xl'·113.95

eech.
3·1Ax4'a:8' Lau1n plywood·

16.95Hch .

·~•12"x72" - 2

for f8.00.

&amp;-No.2-8" apruca blm lid·
lng \(•groved-38¢ lin. ft.
8-Colonltl beed.cl muontla
fop otdlnt- t23 oq., 20 oq, "'II
liftt-118aq.
'
7-7/ 18x4xl praflnithld
tlata grey or almond skiing·
113.95 ••ch.
11-Masonfte rode or brick
unfinished paneling 1t.a:4x8·

U .91uch.
8-.AIItibe flaf1l1 1nd

· l~e~~

penallno 1!ex4x8-e7.91 and

•B.91oooch.

10- Y.x4a:8 All wood p•ntUna
.oak and pine tnd birch· 115.11
to $18.8 aach. ·
11 -' Beth room peneUng.
glalld tiS. end tmooth pattem-

Aulllilollon lhotthonl ~

Col1114-448-7137altor8PM.

.....
old.
C.ll14-au--.
2 v- old, rod ..... ....,.... __
Cllll14-441-4727.
·
AKC·-Ihettllonl,,_o.
10-- ....... "' ....... 1 Col 814-381·
·I.

1114-...,blnl. 2- - .

=:.•n...w:::S.a':h"l.:: ~

=· - -

Pu...,.... _ _

APARTMENTS, mobile hom11,
houHI. Pt. Pleu1nt 1ncl Gllllpo-

6PM .

llo. 814-441-8221 ,

'

Gun ceblneu for ..1.. 2 hand
mede, newly flnithed c•bineta

2 bedroom ru;niHd ept. ref and
depotH, Naw Heven. W. Va .•

for aa1 .. 1 wllnut. 1 cherry. loth

304-773-

hive 11 gun capecity. A.lking
lliiliO each. Calli 1 4·448-4046.

Beech Straat, Mlddltpdrt, Ohio,
2 bedroom fumlthtd ept, utili·
tin pekl. refarencnandMposit,

Etvlt collection for ule. 11600.
Saa at 2•1 rear J1ckton Pllr.a.

304-892-2188.

MEMBERSHIPforS .... to ROval
Oak Retort Club on AI. 7 ne1r

Two and one bedroom furnl1htd
apta, c1ll 304-ts7G-3900.

PomOI'Oy: Socurity privi!ogoo.

indoor pool, c•mplng. fishing,
aoclll ectlviti11, othlt' adv•n-

. llgoo! BIG SAVINGS botore

Furnished Rooms

March 1at. Cell Collact-614·

281·1B37.
Room• for rent, diiY· w.ek.
month. GaHia HoteL Cell i14••e-H80. Rant
as 1120
month.

Crtb. mettrau ·A bump• pad &amp;

••low

crib lftHtt· l75 . Car •eat-•30.

Ploypon-t28 . Coli 304-876"
1433. '

Copier: 3-M d•ktop, t75. aofa
• metchinl cheir, 1100. Call
814-445-4 18.

town locetlon. Sanlou wel-

come. Perk Cllrilrlll Hotel. ·C. II

.

~lxltd h•d wood

lltbt. 11 2 per
bundle. ConUIInlng IPPfO.K. 11h
ton. FOB. Ohio Pellet Co.

PomOI'Oy. Ohio. 814-B92·1411 .
Firewood for Hie. $35. lerga
pickup toad. All herdwood.

57

cu- otono. Good conc1. eon
&amp;14-318--- 1:ao PM.

-iohool uflrilht

Antiquo

1H7 C.mOI'O. T-tap, ouiO,
AM-FM • - · 11u_..ty color. Cltll14-t82-11313 crl14812-2214.

pt.

ono. *ZOO. C.le14-:SU:I76a.

I

! 11 1

~' I i II \

II11

1-

Toyoto

cyt.. Pl.

19-Brlght •net antique braN
and 'c hrome Vlnlty and tub •
ahower tauc... Seve 150%.

20-2 gol. buckot • off wh!to
'

rool cootlng-120 .81.

22-K-Lua: white brick 15 sq. h .
ctn.-11 .150.
.
23 - Eprolly coated steal
cloaet: 1nd door shatvlng. SIYtlto

75'JI.

24-Wood. eluminum and
vinyl cl-d windows. (Bows),
lhyos), CCuement), COouble·
hung) , S ..... It WhOIHIII lnd
below.

25-t,i Tempered th1rmel
pene. Gllu panels. ~32x71·

029 . 951, 134x71 ·
136:001,(47x78••41.001. Full
lots-15.00 pr.pc. ltu.
21-21" Ocolgon therm•t

ct . .

!Ndod g!- w!ndowo-•11.81,
2 tor 1121.00.
27-72" We'lnut start1r
kltch . . - including (2-1 8" wall),

11 -72"bou) , (1-72" pc. topl0199.96.
2B-2 gol. ~ K-Lux whltl!

t129.81.

31 -lnterior p r = · doore,
finlohool ond unttn
. Choloo
llz••-*29.85 aach.

32-Extorior ooloot lnoulotool
....,..ng doon-•n.n

..nol

lnd

eaa.ea eech.

of door ond

33-AII -

window trim. Flnlehad aM un.
finished . Pl11tlc and wood01
10
pr.pc.

.oo

n .oo

PENN'S WAREHOUSE
Wllfoton, Ohio
114-314-3148

1188 llodgo Doytonl Turbo Z·l
. - . M.OOO mu... llue830 CoN diOMI tnctor. · Wldo ·eltwr. Tranlfelllbla cullOm Wlrfront with 3 bonum ot-o. renty. Loaded. Muet . . to
tronopon dloc, • I 11.
hog. IIPP ICI.... EJUHIIIenl COiddon.
13710. C.lll14-281-1822.
eon 114-742-2871 or 114742-2143, D.

buoh

w-.

3100 Ford tract~ with NH baler,

._ .....

nko.loto.-NHmochlno. ..7!50. OwMr wli
finonce. Col 114-281-1122.

1 HP Troy-bllt
new.

8118.

-

au•. - •

1700. C•ll 114· 311·

0-

bl...
................ f4710. Clll

1180
A -. U!50. Col
114-812-7341.
.

114-2BI-HZ2.

1400 .rounct

'

1111 lui&amp; C.ntury. 4 doOf.
~~~.:Z~:':i3~~4-112-1213 ..

410 Int. tnlctor w/plowe, cutdvatore. grader
mowing

HeiROn

.... 114-848-24110.

Mo .... Fo111_, 110 Dl-1.
-rubboronnor.AII-cob with
Pl 1 tit - ·
........ hydNulc llnll.
front wolghto. N - - 273
Ho!ylln•. Hoy · lol• with oupw
pickup. Coli 114-141·
2237.

h-.

'71 T-llrd. ... cond, 304-8711221 olllr 5:110 pm.

'74 D - Volort, 311 two
borretl. 1300.00. 104·1712417.
l

llitaae wqone. 1172 Ford four
plok ...

104·171-

141170. 2 111 .. ucel. e-.
... 111. 1. 2

.. n111. ..

Me• ow ulla. mint cond. C.l
114-441-1211 Of 211-1420.

__
.
----,._.,
...
..........
of-wtumttu...
NIW- w- - . •ao.

.a up. 111101 •
loft'""'· c.ttttl114---3181.

Folly t,.. Trimming. otump
- 1 . C.ll-304-178-1331.

Rotary or clble IOol drllng.

OPENII-6 'lUIR -SrAI-JD

H•y •

72

:rruckl for

1 ,

•

-- ~~-

,

. . . . ..

L-SJ\IIONADE.

(0:30~

dlacussaa the Importance ol
the Harlem Renaissance. r:;l
D (!) Hogan'•
10:35 ()) MOVIE: Electrs Glide In
llul (II) (1 :46)
11:00 ()) llamlngton lltHie Steele
Spawning

-0

&amp;.

YO'RE FUST,
RUSTY

..••
I

•(I)

!I

' .11:30 • ())

THE GRIZZWELLS®
6()(fJ HEWS NR. Plm'I"JJ~•.)t)IJ

........,
__
- · Coil 114-44t-7404-No
•••
,..,.,.

-241-1211.
.. - . . . -

Symphony.
!1J 8portt Tontghl
DID 'Night Hear CIS Lata
· Night ~ IICCitlentally
'Nilntnn lhe killing of a
gUII'd at 1 warehOull.
g Magnum, P.i. Lest we

I

~NOT' A~ ...

~

'i.,

J • J W.,. a.vtoe. lwlnwntng

- I'll. ,, ..

~Tnxt
t2:00 ()) luml 8t1tl Alln
(I) 1117 NI'L l'llme AII·Pro

T~i~•Q

1. . DlflltiiO"- C&lt;l' I
II 1 I III&amp;L 'hllllr ..... Cll
11 .............. ~.
.......

PEANUTS

....... . =--

IID1. , 11000.

-

WHEN 'r'OV !liKE IN

Col

......
,.............
..!.!!!!~·F.:·iii
~

not juat

_____

.__ _
'•

''
........

-

-

...

•

lHE~HAVE
'10
FOR ,

11 Oiili•'••,

D&lt;Zlllallldda
. 12:30(1) ...........
• CJ) • Lata Night '"""
' 111111/11&gt; I OJ .

A~CIAL

CALL WE USE IF WE

HElP H!LI'..

'

l-

.
''

ro4.ili'!."r.9;,t-,,
••
1 II I .

I

.

,I

I

I

IB!~
If-=:.~:~

t.-o(J)Isll~ll .

PM

® ....... Ifill("'

SOUTH
.KQI073
• -62
tQJ 10

.J96

.. •••

-

~~ •

'i

••

•,

· --

·.

. . . ... -·

··-·"--·---.- ----··-· ----- ·-·- --·.. ··- ··--·····- --····· .... ... .. _
~

,.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
North

2t

- ..

Eut

2.

s•

Paso

Opening lead: • 7

·-

L - . - - - ---:-----' .. '
feet. When North now bid thr~ : :::
·spades, that sounded like simple com- •
· petition, so South did not seriously .
consider bidding more. Since the ca~
sit well for North-South (diamonds are
2-2), 10 tricks are easy in spades. The .
game might be bid if West passes over , .
· two spades, since now a free raise to ·
. three spades from North would invite
· game, and South would probably
accept.

•,

-.
..

..

Yeaterday's Ans~er
23 Nay, e.g.
24 Babble ·
211 George
Eliot
novel
26 Premiere
27 Ancestry
29 Vaude·
ville's
Eddie -

31 Harass
32 Gennan
river
36 Hebrew
measure
37 Cute
39 Gobbled
41 ~ight
(Lat.)

..

,,
•, ...

.

",

. ... .

•

..

2118

--·

r

~

day the code letters are different.

.

2-18

··.~

, ,E Y V K H E A

S M R T'F

S T E

V ,KME

UQV·

M WH R T

I

?V HE A

.·..
.
... .
'

CRYPTOQUOTE

iS Y L T

... "

.~

apostrophes the length and fonnation of the words are all

1

"

. -"

"

. One letter stands for another. In this sample A is IISed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
· hints: Each

y

-'

PLTFF

FQHVF

, y........,.. c

- ..

.. .

YE

... .,..,.it'
..
. .....·~

',V K T S .· -

B H W W
L Y A T L F
.-.aote:
SATIRE
lJES· ABOUT
17
lll'ERARY MEN WHILE '111EY LIVE, AND EULOGY IJES
ABOUT THEM WHEN THEY DIE. - VOLTAIRE

.I
I

. ..
-'

· ~ QIOSU

AXYDLRAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

'

NI•INighl

lt •• '

-·- -1171..- _ V-1.
1171CIIaoYMo-

l
It

(I) XV Olympic Wlntar

International opera star
Wilhelmenta Fernandez,
featured In lhe acclaimed
French film Diva, performs
with the Miami Chamber

.

Dlttonl Wot• . . . _, PDoto.

w.... Oeltwory

llll Tonight Show

11m M8Qt1Utn, P.l•
QD Diva In Concert

...~

Ciltoml,

Lovll C~n

Cl8mM

....,·~'

Genar•I "Haullng

(I) 91 • Cl2l

(I)~(L~

(I) •

tA9

· IU
.K73

star

Cl2l MoMyllna
1B1 ilollp

, . I

Electrical
Refri~Jer•tlon

-~

.QlO 3

.KJt74

28 Lariat
29- to
be tied
30Catch for
It diable
31 Faux pas
3~ Won-'soup
34 Needle part
311 Short
flight
· 38 Inventor
- Howe
40 Resin
• 4Z Stake
43"Hopeless
·case
-44 TV's
"-Smart"
45 Bear down
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES-Here's how to work It :

(!11113 NCAA Fltllll Four
lllgiJ llghta North Carolina
Stille, Houston, Georgia, &amp;
Loulavllle (II)
(!)Sign Oil

•

EAST

•u

Womeh~

H-•

• ()) (I) •

WEST

•us

1 S.' Amer.
1 Phone
Indian
2 Toward
shelter
6 Evil spirit
9 - and
3 Fasten,
kicking
in a way
10 Dramatist
4 "-Got
ConneUy
a Secret"
12 Embankment II Direct
13 Warn
route
15 Actor
6 Semblance
Christopher 7 - de
16 Fall behind
tete
18 Notice
8 Laundry
19 Jiffy
worker
11 Originate
21 Japanese
title
14 Mortise
22 - for the
partner
money...
17 King
23 Nix
topper
24 Demonstrate 20 Meander
27 "TwO\

I!Jl Volcn • Vlllona Hughes

-~
.

liNe. can It •-•H-UM,
1

ICE'ON'IOPCF'Il-IE

c.IUSTCAMS:OWT.. ,

toft"*"'· -·

..... .......... 111_
"You're IUI)poaed to BIY my Plt'furne II

TO BREAK L-JP THE'

73 VPI' 4 W.D.

'

....

rM NOrOPEN R:R

BU6/NE$SYET. I

!Ill Nnia

S.la

........
,, _ _Col,,.....
......

Grein

---~~~

OH,

A LITTLE eARLY 'THIS
YISt\R.AREiN'T 'rOLl'+

CAATEII'I PLUMIINO
HIA'I'INCI
.
c..AND
........
__

84

~

e

304-171-2311 .. 114·141'
2414.

-"'f'

UYeatock

... ., .......... __. _ .
\

RON'I Ttlevlelon lervlct.
Hou11 on IICA. ao-r.
GE. lpnllf *I In Zentltt. Cal

. .'
l' •

Now · bu\'ing lhlll oom or . .

.

mysterious, palllonete, bigulllng,
'amelia Dkey'l"

PAIBEI, J - . Ohio. e.1 4211-8110.

I
\

~~--oflloo-ollto.
Colt •14·171·
1171.

,

ohotl·
EIIANJI
ENTIII·
- ·liON
foctory
-

Wanted to Buy

'

U810. ltdl, ....... ll1d oom
oultoo. t111-t2... Dutoo.
.,..........,,aoouplmllne

r''

•

100
...... of _... 11111
Colli.._
_ .... hey.

etartlng- •••· leaiiRa"

Coft- 8optlo TMkl- 1000
gol .. 1100gol: ondJot...,ollooo

8&amp;

84

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

.....

....... Col 114-311-1783.

•s

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

boat fn Mexico, he and A.J.
head south.
i1J1 Lany King Llvel
9:30 D (2) 01 Nlghl Court The
court staff must try 207
cases by midnight to save an
orphanage.
10:00 ()) Straight Talk
· D (2) 01 LA. Law Becker
goes too far: a tumlng
McKenzie may ask for his
resliJnation.
•
(!) 1'he lrsln Examine the
role of Instincts and Internal
rhythms In humans. (1 :00) r:;l
1!11
Cl2l KnOll Landing
Abby Ia pressured by .
Charles to elOpe; Mack
oonfronts Frank Williams. r:;l
QD 1111 Newt
i1J1 EVIIIIng NIWII
D (!) Benny HID .
10:30 ()) Oraat "--ean Ouldoore

F • F C.._try. c.._...,-

tor. 304·271-421 I.

&amp;2

e Cl2l Simon and Simon
When Rich Inherits a fishing

plumlillng worll. R•uoneble

t-11-a1

t!£Mo"vVJW

W ® MYoteiYI

lid. Coli e14-

~- F-::n tbt bw h8y nke.
N- Hot
707...._.._,_

IIIII
Ter.11nHontetor
. . . W....,._
- · ·Cal
·
114-44t-4711.

wood.....,_

441-0214 .

m!Ur. N - - 4 1 7 h o t

Mr'rt:ltd!iil l\ 1'

IWAIN
AUcnON • PUIINITUAE 12
OIMo It;, O.lltpotlo.
NEW- I pc.
•311.
l.fvlolg- ........ tlll-•111.

o..,... c....

. ,.

. ..

1!11

CleeMr, one, hllf mile up

lntarnatlonall 1010 grinder

83

&amp; 1 Houaehold Good•

-.

O.liltlotlo.Ohlo
114-441-- Of 114448-4477
'

whool d2111,

EEK &amp; MEEK

t.

AC Dloto Ho!roow. Modol 2311.
. 11 ft. wldo. Cllll14-ll2-3378.

1177 Cbovy Mo

..... •

' .

' &lt;'

-v. . . .

. .

~

lalketbllll
• (!) MOVIE: Thl llllecltlinle
(PGI (1 :40~
8:05 CJl'MOVIE: Claah of IIHt
Tliana (POl (1 :58)
1:30 a C2l 01 A Dlfl...m. w~
8:00 ()) 700 Club
D ()) 01 C~Nfl A snooping
RebecCa Ia torceclto tilde In
Drake's bedroom Clos81.
II) College lalkelball

''

, _ . ade..,_ ' Cel .....
1·114-U7·-· ..... ...,.._
R o 1 • r • I a 1 • m ·e n t
Wat•peooftnt.

---ooomplotod-doy.
1911 ch.. c..n .... 2 - · · 811·3102
· 30437.000 mlln. ph- 304-171- Pump lOIN 2741.
ltoofiiT,.._..__ .......,
lewn ctn. lendtDIIII
mtmp
107011
v.•-v. Ford Tompo, 41,000 r1mov1l, 30•· 171- 142 or
· mltn, dntool -dowoo. I .,....._ 171-2803.
rodllil• • 2.100.110, 304171-7431.
82
Plumbing
·eo c~~ryo~or cu-. ohoop.
&amp;.
Heating
ti,BOO .IIO. 304-171·2113.

lieltr,

®

•I

. .. Looel ........ furnleMd.

For • • or 18ka over toan on

•1.281. 1181 18ft. hN~rJduty
IIvek ·trolltr, *2411. Coli 814288-1822.

&amp;Pri~WI

'

WA;:~~NO

_.... _

1881EUOfiLa.._w_.l
.,....._ M,OOO m!loo, PI, PI,

2 BR .. utQ-P"ki•OJOcopt!liocl·
rtc. "'mlohool/ untumlohod. e.c.

w .v .. Col! 304-773-1181.

' I

U"COIIMIIIIDAII ~ IUifM·

117a_ ... _
_v .... condltioll. Hlah - -- f1800.
114-111-:niltl.

com. C.iltori--lltwor
Fonn 8Ufltoly; 114--2UI.

Spece for amaH tr~len: AN
hook-ups. Ceble. Alto lffldency
roome. eir end clbla. •Muon,

..-,'

Horne
lmprovementa

u p - -.....

morter· $4.95.
29-Pine Lou•.-.d Interior
thul18ra . Balow Wholetele
prices.

30· 1 pc. pele llli'ROn color
commodft. reo -· •299.91, now

and Charles Russell. ·
81 D Cl2l Tour of Duty
Percell, Taylor and Rulz
undergo cuttura shock while
In Hawaii on R&amp;R. C
I!Jl Talevlalon Examine effect
of·TV news on such atarlea
as Kennedy's assassination.

o

8WEEPEII- MWiot mochlne
-lr, portO, ond IUppilll. 1'1'*

1171 Dodtle 080. 70,000
· No ..... Col 114-441HIIor441-'N71.

=-~'oli"C.~

· 81 .

nte' ~aot of IIHt

lmaalnatlon Look at lhe
work of Frederic Remington

1

'

Colloo. Auto .. 4
PI, - ' · olr,
AM-FM rodlo.
condl·
don. Colt 114-181-3111 Of
114-112-7al1 .

18e1

' • I "' 1111 k

stHI beth tub.-

each. whltaor

(!)

''

Rapalr

Sr•t v11' .,

1110 Oodgo Horizon . Auto. AC.
- - d -. GIMtlhopo.
tiOO. Coll .e14..12-8141.

tll.tl ••ah. 2 tor •too- color

~1159 . 115

Auto

Nom·..

Common sense dictates that the
more you bid, tbe more you need to
have. Pre-emptive bids are an esception to thiS rule, 11 are sacrifice bids,
wbich are made to prevent the oppo- ·
·
from &amp;!:~g a contract likely to
Fur
ore, most competent
have the understanding
are battling the oppoa part-score, bidding one
tm10rE of the agreed trump suit Is not a
serious game invitation. Instead, It Is
.simply trying to either buy the contract or get those nasty opponents
bigher.
•
'today West's bidding follows this
stratei!Y. After opener East raised
West's hearts over North's two-diamond overcall, South bid two spades.
We!it had little defense against two
spades, and certainly no interest in
bidding game. However, he still bid
three hearts. If he had more strength
and wlabed to invite a game, he would
do so by manufacturing a forcing bid,
which would aive East the option of
bidding a game with a little extra.
West's three-heart bid had a good ef·

\F.:,&lt;ll.XV Olympic Wlnl~r

I

'

77

·• ·

•.us

By Jamea Jacoby

!J

- - CooU 114-

ZII-1243.

912•1~.

p""', C.lil14-448-1802.

311-1121.

Elton 181 -

ANSWERS.

.Competitive·
· dding

1:00 ()) ..etl Town The Ratm8n
Cometh
(2) 01 The Coaby Show

!

1

tK87652

7:35 ()) Sanford and Son

I PASS-fAIL.\

.

Coif 1,14-44t-3834.

front-

Mu•lc•l
lnstrurnenta

...... Foe1ar'• Mobile Home

-

-

Jlm'o Import A- ....,...
11...... Will VI ........ II 1ol•·
lng In Hondo pollll - .117a. 13041 37a·
1110 C'-Y c -. 2 - · · 1817. Nino to ttwo.
outo,
drtwo. 43,000
orltllnll ....... fiOO: Col 114-

1117 Pordll-1. I oopd ..
AM fM Cox 1.000 · Col
11..__a~za 41'M.

2 8R -

Ulld rebuilt np1IJJld trlnamle·

H- ....-- ,._ _.........

City

dop. Coli 514-448-2390.

304-171-4130.

'

•u&amp;

~ fln~/Ztdyl Q
D (!) WKIIP In ClnclnnaH

AKC
UGO•=:·-~~. . roooly to Ill, 304- ...... Yout ArM. lluyon Outdo.
17a-8100.
' 11IMI·U7-- Eoot. 8·8101.

11-Color pediltal levatoria•- ·

2 lA .• water, lftlagefumlthltd.
Baeut:lful rivW' ....-w. No ctty

Hom town. •200 e mo. e100

" ' -· Col 114-378-2220 cr

'

- ..

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GU ANSWER
.

BR

7:05 ()) Andy Ortftllh
7:30 D (2) (l) Hollywood
Squars1 .
D(l) Judge
1!11 WhHI of Fortune Q
i1J1 CIOIIIIN

o--

GM - .

•..
'

.

At a slumber party, several teenage girls were silting around
goesrping. One girf did not join in because she thoughl the
best way lo keep a secret was WITHC'' IT help.

,

®c~~ee..
D (!) M'A'S'H

i-ff'(! .I DIDN'T f?EALI'Z.e
IT WN GO!Nti 1b BE

-·

yo u develop from step No. 3 below.

lit

"

··-·--buNt
- ....--.Caoha....,
~oc~o-,.

139.91.

thowers

,....,

DUWdllw10110Turlto. 2 ......

color-*19.91.

color.

Parte
• Acceeaorle•

-~

'"
SCRAM-1.~5

NIWIHOur (1 :00)
1!11 Newt
Cl2l Moneyllne
Cl2l (!SWheel of Fortuna

Auto

-~-ldtolooQM

13-Chlna tnd marble round
end OVIII venHy bowie- whlte1nd

1885, ..... ., 386.
1B-1 pc. tlfsorvl..• tub •

''

'

Physic - Unwed - Notch - Stigma - WITHOUT

II) College BulcetbiiU
(I) Entettelnment Tonight
D (I) Peopll'l Court
(!) I!Jl MlcNIII/ Lehrsr

RooiHotborgllnol D I U I - '

room vantti11 with mwble top

179.95 each. ·
17-Whlrlpool tUbt ·
flbergleu. complete plumbing-

D (2) PM M...zlne

• audeet TreMm lui~ la
UHCI- ltaids4 . . . . . . u chenge. 11180-Nbullt llai. . . .

117a Mu-. -Moko-.Coi-41'M-114241-tl17.

IBI.f1r-·t111.11.'

18-Wh~

'·,
' '

44t-QI81 .

n-

v.,..

8:31 ()) Carol Burnett ·
7:00 ()) llemlnglOn StHie A
Sleete at Any PrCce

W•tren••

1117 c ...... 4 dr ......... ......,, Noruot. Tllillo-. Noldl
upbot"*'f - Colll14-44t,...,
'
1HI Fonl M........ _, ..,.._
lito. I cyl.. 3 opd.. m...,... U400. C.U 114-441·
4412.

o.......

.

D (!) TO!&gt; Clo" for Comtort

.... ...., 31100 .. 30 .....
warranty. (whichftw oooun
flml.
hltp .hlnl.to
find
IIIIOi"'- Cell ·114-

:!;·!::d~it~C::.=

I

PDIIIIca 'II

1111 WKRP In Cl-nati

•

I

'---'--.L..--1.__._..,.,__.

'Nawallilpot1
!;I

G) lnakle

UHCI • rtbult tr.,....llane.

C.lll14-211-1171.

8hoptoonl. 3 ..... old.
-tlo. UO. Coil 814-1412012.
8 AKC _ . _ " " ' :
,.,..
·
.,
10.110
- 304· 784830 .. 178-2471.

tl.88 tot12.11
12 -Whltl 48 .. x22" beth

21-6 gal. eluminum fiber.cl

Doll,.rod. C.oll 814-742-2411.

1,----:-:-:-:::-::-::::--:-:-:
Fumlohod 12x80. 2 BR .. motstlo
Hou•· on Moln • - · ~ bod· h"""'- 0ooo1 locotion. 2 !'11110
~room.

.

••

Uud . . ll•rnely II J 11'1M

old--D.-.moto.1
year old.· Call! 11•••
.

toro, Rio Or.-. O.. CII! 114241-1121 .

*9.95.

18 ft. Aluminum truck bed boll
band. Call 114·446-3243 efter

Mobile Homes
for Rent

ue.100.00. 304-t71-lle4.

ltvlngroom,

llocli;, brick, IIWW pipet, win·
dowe, lkttels, etc. Claude Wln-

your lot, 816,995 end \IP· Call

Co11114-441-1437.

48 Space for Rant

441-8111.

1.,..
khch.,, ono

8ul!dlng MIIOololo

78

I

'

CANCET
.t---"TI
'--,I-rs
-'-rl-'rl"-l:
.l'r-1
e Complete
lhe chuckle quoted
.
•
.
.
.
.
by filling in the missing words

Ill
CCUNawa
l!ll iiOclr Electric

..

ott• . Col 114-

1 I" I I .--

=AIIC1uu-

(I) N
(!)

.

It's great fun to find mixed up
and mangled metaphors. My
favorite Is: " Run,it up the flagpole,
r--::--:-7.-::--:--=---,anc:f see if i t -."

Super Bolitl of 8portt TrMII

~-

WANTED: 11 or 14 II...,_
boot With t - . phono 304178-1221. ·
.

Oqe PMIIarr • ......_ 3 vn . . 1111 ~ v~ - l 1
ven. fu y lo1d1 • running
241
38
......... 21.0110-- f12000.

Building Supplies

iextured wall peint- $4.95, reg.

Flrewaod·Larga, pick-up load.
131ii delivered. All hardwood.

114-t82-3711 E.O.H.

814-441-0766.

King otH wotor bod. 304-1711225.
.

55

f2100 .. 211-1141.

~-

®ilolltdwlllk ...........

c -.

30 ft. 0wor1o Cobin

m- ........

18B7 P-ldon poOl, goound, oound 24'114' doop,
lnotud11 · pump, filter,1
.... 4 ,-~.
...... U
_ _, O ·
-oooo1y dlouomblod. n.ooo.oo.
304-ee2-3887.

Big 3 BR . firm homM buill on

1-614·888-7311 '

2 bedroom 1pt~ for rent. Stove
end refrigerMor art furnished.
Carpeted. Nice 11ttlng. Call

01

•
4 17
rudy, n.o.oo. 30 - · 3118.

• 69.96, 21oo 0100.

Weekly, monthly rattl, utltitiel
dlaeount. Security depwit: re- · plid. Cooking fec:llltl• . Down-

lwdrooma.

rooma, bath.

Misc. Merchandise

Conege ettlciancy, total elect·
ric. refr~.,.tor. Ito"•· nice.
HUD approved. 2215 Mt. Vernon Ave., Pt. Plu11nt. 61 4·

304-892-3287
8024.

TOtH VOI.J'RI
FlllltWP9,

,
1
I I' I . t

r-rS_Un:-R-rY1Tr-11.

• tD Happy Dara
1:05 ()) Allee
1:30. ()) 01 NBC Nighlly Newt

1

'

. 14-Color aommodtl·
••9.915 , White commode•·

2 bedroom apartment On Lincoln

new ca.,.., 2 bedroom on
Uncoln Heights. t228. with

dip. requltad. como.ilent loce-lion. Cofl 814·448-4781 Of

c• ......

PICKENS USEO FURNITURE

d--r hookup. AM eiiCtrtc. C. II

oontroi, ooblo

-

· ··Rough SIW ced1r boerdl

Beds. deeke. lampt, · t1bl ...
couch•. chairs. dlnnettt. mlae.
Helf mila out Jericho Road.

1nd laundry h»Qm with weth•·

45

HomotorNIO. O.lltpotloforry, 4
four

814-t82-7431 .

814-441-47112.

Toonoforrod. 114-192-8801.

out of ...... 3 bedt'oom houN

chllre, coff. . tabla, 2tnd tebtee.
Brown In color whh florel
dNign. 1 y..r old. 1260. OBO . '

992-IB69.

StrHt. •27,000 . Col! 814·448·

Brick hom• In town-2 BR ., nice
b11ament, central air. $49.000.
Price negotilbte . Calll14· 441-

condhlon. t300. Colll14-99201rpet, $321 a mo. plue utilities. 7487.
Nopolo,d_.tt•rot.
238 Flnt A,.,. 1 lodooom, Living room tulta. Couch, 2

•partm•ll with lerga kitchen

Furniture refinishing and r.pair.
rates, ,,.. IHtimatas, 304-87&amp;·

Quean eiH hld..a-bed. Exc.tlem

fumlohool, w/ w

814-448·0390.
B-•·ldo Apoonmentt: 1 BR . New electric Hotpolnt dryer for
·~
..,., 304-871-2130.

Business
· Buildings

Bldg. !50x100. 1,000 oq f! on
.lllcrH. elltteele building 15ft

quality work and raoonablt

k~ch.,

Modern One lA. apanment. Cell

high. For 1.... or 11le. 304-876·

with 7 oc:rn

Phllco 26" coiorTV·t410. I pc.

'

·eB ocrw, I mil• lOUth on 21B-

Loefled 4 miiM north of O.llipo111 k»cklend dam on w.ve. lklt.

Professional
Services

SAL~

2 pc. livinti room sultu-etaning
et *300. 5 pc. dining room
tuitet-ltlrtlng 11 •221. 7 pc.
dining room sultt-13150 .
Recllnarl·ltlrting 1t 1151: New

._zaee.

Nice 1 IR. ept. neer HMC.
Stove. refria, • dr1pn. Cell

ue.ooo.
9704.

6332.

FOR

up. CompiM• mlci'OWive stands
139.11&amp; up.
Coma ·in end mMt the new
Ownen.

living ·room sultu ~ l•oo .
C.rpat·atlrtlng It 14 a yd.
• b1throom vinyl
ohop ond movl01. 114-448· ·Kitchen
u
noe.umltlrtlna el 14.99.1 yd.
E.O,H.
lnstellltlon It flnlnclng
eV.Iebla.
Nice 2 lA. 4 lA mil• from
Mollohan Fumhurt
O.llpollo. Stovo. rtfrig. • _..,.
403 4th. A110.-KMII
fumilhad. No pets. $211e mo. Golllpollo, Ohlo-114-441-7444.

khch., "'mlohod. rtvor
1171• mo. ptua utilltiel. Single

V!nt6n. Ohio 41118.

31.

up. lodooom oulloo *488.81 •

ptka from *183 e mo. Welk to

wet•.
•chool•.
Neg. Col 114-31B-

Credtt- No credH check.

no int_..t chllrge. Everyone
tllgablt. Appllcttlon: Aulh a
llirge. tddrNied, lUmped en..,..
loped to : Olltr, At. 2 BoX 228

Re~l

1•11 Ee11am AVe.
Uvlng room eultetfrom *179 •

2 BR. apu. I cloMtl, kltch• -

bllho,

! NOTICE!
THE ;oHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

23

J • S FURNITURE
IForrn•lly P-.on'1 Fumh:ure)

11 Court St.· 2 ladroom, 2

Business
Opportunity

lniUI~

7172. Houro 1-8.

boot room mobllollomo. portlolly
"'•nlohool. U.IOO.oo. 304- !':::-- --.--:-:--;;-:-.---:
411-1101 .._1:00.
Ntw completely furniehad
oportmont • mobllo homo In
1 HI two bodooom mollllo city. Adullo only. Porldng. Coli
homo, 14a70. coli 304-BBI- 114-441-0338.
3M2 ~ 1:110. ·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
1817 C'-Yton mobllo llomo, BUDGET PRICES AT JACK14x80. complololy "'mlohod SON ESTATES. 831 Joolllon

,..,...-. 304-578-2108.

-

Q

®P'-ofLHe

VOU ILI't'e
WIIIT THROU6H WH511
1 WAI AWAV, CT'tl NIC!

.'

Boata •nd
Motora for S.l•

..

Am-·

Cuotto Mothlo 21 lnoh TV. IIOitd
wood.

7&amp;

" "111. Col ,. Volloy I'Jfi"ii:itjj;;a'Fcjirjhjjji"'lrook cem.nt .... 1· ppN11i, ' - - - - - - - - : - - 304-773-1214.
-&lt;'
,1111 Chwy. Clio-.
o.... "-·· PI, PI, 11.000
58
Pet1 for Sale
mllll.t1110.C.nbo-otihe
O.lilpollo Dotty T - • cr for
~
~~oo. coll14-4482M2.
.
a,_, ono1 1upp1y Shop-Pot
Grooming. All broodo ... AII 1111 c.-rod with MIN
onytoo. lome Pot , _ · lllltt po&amp;- v-1 1uo1 .....,...._
Julio Wobb I'll. 114-141-0231. A.oru-,-~C
~ ptu~ ,
- - . , . . . ,. . . .100.
Droaonwynot ClttOI'Y - . .. c.u 114.317·08.11.
CFA Hlllll....n, l'o!wl• ono1
· 11..,_ k-. AIIC C ·
pupploo. Coli 114•44t-3844
1177 Fonl M-111 11. N 01101' 7PM.
- - .700. Col 114-4417741.

rino_Nowllony, 304_ 112·2111 .

New Md Ullld furniture and
1ppllcencta. Cell 11•· 441-

Apartment
for .Rent

C.ll814-441-8038 .

21

CAPTAIN EASY

-:;

,

lluo~y mlli ....... -

vooc1 u new. Gill cattt•

t,_.

Volloy Fumlturt

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

withw..ttennddr-,.r. •bowr

M~

....... our dlooiNtion, 3048tl-3441,
E'-lc hoopltol bod with met·

Collli13-213-8522.

1914 10d0 HTrol• with""""""· NOw fur.
nACe. new hot water IMk. fulty

Androzanl
I!J)IIeadlng Rainbow
I!Jihowllz Today

4:30p.m. Aot for

2 BR. total alec:. •1co ph.,ts dap.,
On Dry llldgo Ad. Coil 114·379-

44

'

I~

(I) Sporttloolt
(!) Dr. Wllo Caves of

..

114-~-

• - - Col
2418 I I'M.

t--~p...;·ors;;....r,-c,Erl-,

!IIINawa

'

WHATIV~

1M2 Hortor· lui .... Mit

-

Building Suppllu

18

-·'

~*
I~~·;-~·~-~-~~~:;;~::r.::::::::::~ ~= =e',:!"J:'Jnl=
~
.
.
.
_...
...........
r
-~;....=·::;:;~;:==
''"· ohiO~-~o...'::r.,; &amp;&amp;

"Dammit, McGregor! I don't care if.minis ARE
back in!"

ln1urance

'.''

74 Motorcyclu

won ,, ...,.,..

II I

1:00 ()) Crsrr Uka 8 Fox Murder
II a Two Stroke Penalty
• ()) (I) • &lt;a) 91 • Cl2l

lf.OOO l'ftllll. All..fiM 'Ill ae.
tc.C. wll IIIIo. 104·111·
- · 1 :110 till 4:00.

cPool
... wortl ......... htMiewtth
• .,..... ••, ··~ caring fOf
tldtrty and •edlcallw' dlaabled
peop~e

KNISNY
-

,.,. .... CJ7 .......... -

0

oocto•. •eo. vety ...... ·- - - Col Horry lurl- 114-

'

~

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

0

0

..

•

1 - - . -Mo""'- - ·
-117.1'11...,..._
plotM. 8MMVC11a-.
Col
304-178-H74.

'

Moplo - - t e o. -

112-nn.

...

1.1Mo-oll-7. t1100.

FOf8olo:.......,_T_,Ift.
luoh Hog; fl71 "-do. 714
Motorcvale. Cell 11•-7•2·
2411.

tor ..... lolly . ...... _
home. ....

,..,. DeiiiO
- · - .,4-.
...
.......
b$11'1
.
11 LT II Itt ,...._
GOCMI I '11' In. 0. Ceunlw M ,

Dlil. · r o l t a p - . -. ...

......... 170 Wli4T I ..1 • 10

... - . . . . . . - - - f27a
- Coii14-MI-H01.
Newly ...,u,tgalltl t4 _,....._
....., oulltlalll. ~ - ·
-..•aoo.u~~MrwGed...,..
Tv'* oltor. •100 . 114-H:l·

__ ..._.
7

73 V•ne i 4 w.b.

&amp;1 Housahold GOOda

............ , . . . . . . . 1 . , .

houle ....

~~,-------~ .--..,.--------·-

Dlltv S1 11iuel

LAFF-A·DAY

__

•

I

"

I"

_

�-

...

.

,.

.

'TlMnday, F*'-Y 1s, 1988 1

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Adult ,class.has meeting
I

I

Plana were made to purchase a
new plano for the church sanctuary when the Adult Claas met at
the Rutland Church of Christ
recently.
.
It was decided that the plano
currently beiDa used In the
sanctuary will be moved to the
basement for use durin&amp;' Bible
studies ad family nights.
'rentatlve plans were made for
vacation Bible.school and sample
VBS kits have been ordered for
review. Tentative date for the
Bible school Is July 25-29.
A progress report was given by
the cookbook committee. It was
reported that the ·recipe drive Is
off to an excellent start and tbat
the deadline for submitting reclpes has been extended to

Community Calendar

-8ociety

to

...

.

Coleen Van Meter and Ella
· Mae Daugherty were named to
the nominating committee when
the Phllathea Women of the
Middleport Church of Christ met
recently.
·
Phylls Gilkey, president,
opened the meeting wl th the
Phlla thea Song and Mildred
Riley had prayer. For roll call
members answered with something pertaining to "Love." Offleer reports were given by
Dorothy Roach, Farle Cole, and
Mildred Riley. Devollons Ineluded reading of the love chapter !rom I Cor. 13 by Martha
Childs and a poem, "Life's
Road." Nora Rice read poems,
"The Magic of Love" by Helen
Steiner Rice, and "Febraury" by

r----------------------------------------------L---------------------------------------------2
---------.----~
)

Martha Childs, Nora Rice, and
Lula Mae Qulvey were hostesses
for the meeting with Francis
Roush contributing.
Others attending were Dorothy .
Baker, Delcle Forth, and Regina
Swift. At the March 10 meeting a
candy making program will be
presented with the officer§ to be
hosts.

·- People in the
By WILUAM C. TRoTT
United Press lateraa&amp;louJ
BUSH·RATHER REMATCH A
DRAW: The George Bush-Dan
Rather rematch didn't produce
any fireworks. The vice presl·
dent and the CBS anchorman
were on their best behavior
Tuesday night In their first
encounter since their vitriolic
video shootout on Jan. 25. Neither
Bush' nor Rather mentioned the
earlier exchange and Rather was
somewhat deferential while
Bush kept his answers short.
Rather asked Bush If expected
his " slugfest" to continue with
Bob Dole,-Bush said, "No, and I
don't plan to make.it that at all."
A DANCER'S DEATH: A
toxicology report on dancer
Patrick Bissell shows the Amert:·
can Ballet Theatre star died of a
staggering combination of cocaine, Valium, alcohol, methadone, codeine, acetaminophen,
the .active Ingredient In aspirin
substitutes, and sallcyate, a form
of the active Ingredient In aspirin. "You could have shot him.
He wouldn't have felt It," said
Hudson County, N.J., Prosecutor
Paul M. DePascale. Bissell, 30, a
principal dancer with the American Ballet Theatre since 1979 and
a member oi the ·company since ·
• 1977, was found dead by · his
fiancee, ABT dancer Amy Rose,
in their Hoboken, N.J., apartment on Dec. 29. Hew as known to
have had a history of cocaine
abuse.
GRAHAM BACK ON THE
JOB: Choreographer Martha
Graham returned to her dance
studio this week to oversee
rehearsals after recuperating
from a brief bout with fatigue.
Graham, 93, entered a New York
hospital last month complaining
of dizzy spells. After a short
hospital stay, she recuperated at
home, then resumed her active
rehearsing schedule at her Center for Contemporary Dance.

news~-

Graham and her dance company .
will leave April18for a tour of the
Netherlands, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Austria.
RUNNING UP: When Is a
runner-up a winner? When the
race Is the Empire State Building
Run-up. Craig ·Logan, 26, a
newlywed pastry chef from Melbourne, Australia, led the 124·
person field by dashing up the
building's 1,575 steps In 11
minutes, 29 seconds to win the
annual race while Janlne AleDo,
28, of San Francisco won the
women's competition lor the
third time. •'I knew that I had to
take it easy In the beginning and
let people go out and kill each
other for the !Jrst 10 or 20 floors,"
said Aiello, a marathon runner
and Olympic hopeful. "It feels
· easier' every year. Youjustbattle
gravity the whole way." The
steps are only a quarter-mile in
actual distance but Its comparable to running 2 lh miles uphill.
GLIMPSES: Belty White w111
rule over the animal kingdom for
''Entertainment Tonight.'' Start·
lng Thursday, she will occasionally appear as a guest correspondent on "Celebrity Pets."
This week she meets Tlppl
Bedrea's elephant, lions and
tigers, Doc Severlnson's dog and
goes to Bo Derek's Santa Bar·
bara, Calif., ranch to ride horseback

ELBERFELDS
INTER

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ONE CASE OF NECilACIS,
IIACEliJS.IWS
and EAIIINGS
75°/o OFF

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•

SWEATERS

Size• 8 to 20. sonde and pattern•.
~:rew neck ltyl4!1 and veeta.

•77 " "

'

75°/o
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to 17 neck sizes. Long aleeves.

BIILLO
/- PADS

60°/o

119.00 5111rts......MNow $7.60
' 122,00 5111rts......MNow 11.10
123.00 Shirts.,...... Now ".20
~'\'ll•-'1111 Shlrtt.....M.Now ... 60

10 COUNT

KNIT

.REDUCED

60°/o

For Example: .
'19.96 Knit Shirt
SALE 17.915
.

~:::;.JNow $3 00

VILLAGE PHARMACY
992·6669

••n•on, 0110
-·

'\

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County Republicans will
decide upon three races at the
May 3 primary elections In
pomlnatlng candidates to run for
county level posts In November.
This was disclosed at 4 p.m.
Thursday, the filing deadline for
, primary election candidates.
The county level races are for
the posts of Judge of the Court of
Common Pleas, Meigs County
Sheriff and Meigs County
Engineer.
Charles H. Knight, Incumbent,
filed his petition for nomination
to run for reelectlon)ls common
pleas court Judge, and will be
opposed In the primaries by Fred
W. Crow, III, now serving as
prosecuting attorney, who Is also
seeking the nomination to run for
Judge.
Frank Flies
. Incumbent Howard Frank
flied for the party's nomination
to run lor reelection as sheriff
and will be opposed In the
primary by Robert E. Beegle, a
former deputy sheriff. The

•

3 Sectiona, ·22 Pogoa 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New11Japor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 19, 1988

banon, James W. Hayman; Lewinner of the race will be t.:oroner. A newcomer to the
tart, Harry C. Hill; LongBottom,
opposed In the November elec- , county level political ·scene,
Dorset Larkins; Ollve-Dale,'wu.
tlon by James M. Soulsby, a Steven L.· Story, filed lor the
Democrat, who is seeking the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorllam Francis, Reedsville, 'Ethel
Mundry; Orange, Roger Gaul; ·
sherl!f's post. Soulsby is the only ney's post. He Is assured ot
Rutland ViUage, Elizabeth HobDemocrat to file for any county election since he Is unopposed
level post.
both In the primary and the fall
stetter; East Rutland, Florence
Barrett; West
Incumbent Meigs County Eng!· elections.
,
Rutland, Ann Barrett; Middleneer Philip M. Roberts will be
Central Committee Races
port First Ward, Ruth Powers;
opposed In the May primary by
Both RepUblicans and Demo·
Mlddlepori Second Ward, Fred
Robert H. Eason, a newcomer to crats of the county will elect
the county political scene. Eason central committeemen at the. Hoffman; Middleport Third
Ward, Betty J . Fultz; Middleport
Is a son-In-law of the late Percy May primary elections.
Riggs, who was active in RepubThe Republicans have races In
Fourth W~rd. Dorothy McGuflican circles In the county lor three precincts and these In- Jin; Pomeroy First . Ward,
George .Hicks; Pomeroy Second
many years.
elude: Columbia Precinct, Gay
Ward, John Manley; Pomeroy
Other Republicans filing for F. Johnson. opposing Ronald
nomination and eventual reelec- Whittington; East Letart Pre- Third Ward, Evelyn Clark;
lion -and they will be unopposed cine!, Clarence I. Norris oppos- Pomeroy Fourth Ward, George
also In the fall -Include: David lng Joyce White, and Laurel Cliff Harris; Bradbury, Larry ThoJ. Koblentz and Richard E. Preclnct,NathanBiggsopposlng mas; Rock Springs, George
Jones, incumbent county com· Charles J. Knapp. There Is no Nesselroad, Jr.; Harrisonville,
Lola Clark; Pagevllle, John E.
missioners, with two to · be candidate In Racine Precinct.
elected; Larry Spencer, incumOther Republican
central Williams; Racine VIllage, Cora
bent, lor Meigs ·C&lt;?unty Clerk of committee candidates, all unop- B. Beegle; Syracuse Village,
Emmogene Holstein Coqo; MiCourts; Emmogene -Holstein posed, Include: East Bedford,
Congo, Incumbent Meigs County James H. Qulvey, West Bedford, nersville, Fred E. Smith; Salem,
Recorder; George M. Collins, Brenda A. Roush, North Chester, John F. Colwell.
Dems Rave Two CC Races
Incumbent, lor Meigs County Rodney Chevalier; South ChesDemocrats have two races lor
Treasurer, and James P. Conde, ter, David J. Koblentz; West .
Incumbent, for Meigs County Chester, Virgil Windon; Le- central committee posts In the

.

Gillmor, Cleveland Browns'
"When wwe're cjlallenged on unco,mmltted since Babbitt has
By LEE LEONARD
something like this, we're going withdrawn .
owner Art ~odell, Rep. John
UPI Statehouse Reporter
respiJnd,.
"
he
said.
Brown
said
he
hopes
Babbitt
.
Kaslch, Pub!la Utilities Commisto
COLUMBUS - VIce President
Young Bush said . the Dole will be appointed secretary ofthe
stoner Gloria' Gaylord and CoGeorge· BUll)) aqd Sen. Robert
commercials
were
"equallY
negInterior
or
special
envoy
to
tum bus d'e veloper Richard
• Dole, vowing to Win Ohio's May 3
alive"
and
addlld
the
Democrats
Central
America
by
the
next
Sotove.
~ ,Qresldenttsl prim"iBercym~the .lde.a that
lin'.~- l!«cltm!ter tiii'GUIIV "''lovelt , andthat•swllywe'vegot •-P~Idept - ~- ,,,.._.-,. '
to
atop.:.
.
.
·
:
we·
hilve
1he
k!a~nntil
1fl
--Dole's
·moii'l'i!litunl·was ·stopped
slll'l'ogates Thuraday.
Alsoflllngwlththesecretaryof Ohlosuppor'llngus,"saldMarvln . by Bush in New Hampshire.
"We're. 110111&amp;' \O 110 toe-to-toe
state's office for posltlolll! on the Bush.
.
..
"Momentum Is up, momentum Is
wjth George Bush," said Brian
ballot
were
Pat
RobertSon,
Rep.
"The
leadership
Is
very
split,
down,"
he said. "It goes with a
Berry, Midwest director for
Jack
Kemp
and
former
DelacounteredRep.JoAnnDavldson,
victory,
It goes with a loss."
Dole's campaign, as he helped
ware
Gov.
Pete
duPont
even
R-Reynoldsburg,
co-chair
of
Berry
said
Itis largely a function
file petitions to get Dole's name
though
he
dropped
out
Qf
the
race
Dole's
Ohio
effort.
"II
!~
not
all
of
perception
as generated by the
on the Ohio ballot. "We're not
earlier
In
the
day.
wJth
the
vice
president.
media.
going to concede any area. Our
Eligible lor delegates on the
Among those filing as dele"We had our win In Iowa, they
campaign Is going to be pointed
Democratic
side
are
Massachugates
lor
Bush
were
former(;ov,
.
h
ad
their win In New Hampbut not personal."
setts
Gov.
MlchaelDukakls,
Rep.
·
James
Rhodes,
Cleveland
Mayor
·
shire,"
said Berry .
"My father does not like ugly
Geqrge
.Volnovlch,
Columbus
"We're
heading Into friendly
Richard
"Gephardt
of
Missouri,
politics," said Marvin Bush as he
Sen.
Paul
Simon
of
Illinois,
Rev.
Mayor
Dana
Rinehart,
Toledo
territory,"
said Marvin Bush.
helped file the petitions for the
"We h'Ope to win on the first
vice president. "But he's not Jesse Jackson, Gary Hart and Mayor Donna Owens, Reps.
Tennessee
Sen.
Albert
Gore.
Delbert:Latta
and
Ralph
Regula.
ballot.
New Hampshire proved
afraid of a little skirmish."
Secretary
of
State
Sherrod
and
Donna
Pope,
director
of
the
my
dad
Is resilient. I'm proud of
Berry said Dole told · Vice
Brown,
who
had
s~arheaded
U.S.
Mint.
the
way
Dad took one on the chin
President Bush to ''quit lying
former
Arlzgqa
Gov.
Bruce
BabFlUng
as
delegates
for
Dole.
lp
Iowa
and
came rlg!)t back and
about my record" 'b ecause Bush
bitt's
campaign,
said
he
will
be
were
Ohio
Senate
President
Paul
was
out
working
the next ~ay."
TV ads had distorted the Kansas
senator's record on oil Import
lees and Social Security. '

Boster files for House re-election

JACKETS

BoodS~on

Sl- 8, M, L. XL

60°/o
Slate Rep. JOLYNN BOSTER

UTTLE' IOYS

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enttne
•

:GOP has 3 races contests in May prmtary

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at

•

.

MEN'S
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Entire selection
lnd.-s.
long """ styles.

•

Vot.38, No.198
Ceeyrr,htod 1988

MEN'S

REDUCED

Rain l!kely tonight. Low In
mid 30s. Cloudy Saturday .
IUghs between 3~ and 40.

8789

e

.

SAVE

Daily Nqmber
766
Pick 4

Page7

CHILDREN'S

DRESS
SHIRTS
Solid colora and patterns .. 14Y2

REG. $4.90

60°/o

COATS and
SNOWSUITS

Ohio Lottery

Church
•
notices

Reg. 8115.96 Jeana ......... '8.38
'17.915 Jeane .......... •7,18
818.96 Jeene ......... '7.68

(6141 992-6606

12 oz.

Sweatera .. Now '9.

SAVE

Rehabilitation Center

Kaopectate

60°/o

· •1 1 .911 Sweater~ .......... Now •4. 78
•14.911 Sweater~~.: .... Now '11.98
'17.911 Sw11tera ...... Now 17.111
•19.911 Sweatera .. Now •7.98

SAVE

'.

BOYS'

. REDUCED

•

May primaries, but have a
number of precincts In which
there are no candidates. Pre·
cincts In which no candidates
flied for election are West Chester, Lebanon, East Letart, Letart, Reedsville, Middleport
First Ward, Bradbury, Page,
ville, and Racine VIUage.
The two precincts having Democratic races for central committee posts are Long Bottom
with Melody L. Roberts opposing
Chester Wells, and Middleport
Second Ward with Peggy A.
'Stevens opposing Kenneth lm· .
boden.
Democratic candidates In

other precincts, all unopposed
for central committee, are East .
Bedford, Thoma's Hart; West
Bedford, Edith Leach; North
Chester, Henry L. Hunter; South
Chester, Ray.mond H. Boatright;
Columbia, Charles Crabtree;
Olive-Dale, Robert A. Maison ,
Jr.; Orange, Norman 0 . Weber;
Rutland Village, Samuel B. May;
East Rutland, Janet L. Howard;
West Ruiland, Norman C. Will;
Salem, Edward D. Anderson;
Middleport Third Ward, Connie
Dodson; Middleport Four,th
Ward, Barbara A. Hud&amp;on;
Pomeroy First Ward, Mary
Continued on page 10

.. .

•••

...

....

' .

fw"
.~

..~ .

...•

.....,

.Ohio presidential _ballot ful·l at deadline

Cl

· Nursing and

NO GLARE UNS - ALSO AlliER
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'

..

~cari-Pafneroy

,SUNGLASSES By Classic

211 NOIII Slco•

1

Plaee roar lo•••
one •llh tho••
•ho eare.

EVERYONE
SAVES AT
VILLAGE
PHARMACYI

KIIJPJCIIII.i

---------1

•

Free clothing d4y

meet

March 8. Recipes are to be
GalUa-Melp Community AcThe Melp County GenealogiTIIUB8DAY
and Interested ·persons are In·
mailed to the church Box 139
cal Society will meet· Sunda:(, 2 tion Agency's free clothlq ~ay :
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- vlted to attend.
Rutland. A portion oi the pro: pori
p.m., at the museum on Butter· will be held Friday, !rom 9 to 12 .~
-___,.
Child Conservation Lea111e
ceeds from thecookbooksalewlll will meet this Thursday at 7 p.m.
nut
Ave. In Pomeroy. Everyone p.m., at the old high school •
RtrrLAND - A special miS·
110 to the plano fund.
bulldiDa In Cheshire.
•
welcome.
·
at the Mason Bowling Lanes.
service will be held
A dlacussio!l was held on ways Devotions will be e~ven and the slonary
•
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m., at the
to Improve the church b&amp;aement. traveling prize will be provided Hysell Run HoliDess Church, :
'.&lt;
A portion of the cookbooks can be
Ann Colburn. Members are to located off Route 12• on Hysell r------"-----------------~;
UJeCI for basementlmprovement. by
take layette items lor the special Run Road, near ·Rutland. Mark
Bill Carter announced that • project.
and Crystal Becker will apeak
Wednesday evening Bible stuabout their work on a South
dies will begin this month. The
POMEROY
Pomeroy Dakota Indian Reservation . .
group discussed the possib!Uty of
a bowling party In early spring. Church of Christ will be holdiq a
SATURDAY
Future activities will be dis- C.A.R.E . seminar on Thursday
RUTLANDAn old-fashioned
cussed at the next meeting. and Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. each
bean
dinner
will
be served at the
Carter used Romans 4 1~8 for night. The seminar will be
Rutland
American
Legion Hllll
devotions and closed the meeting conducted by Hoyt Allen. Eveon
Saturday,
Feb.
20,
from 11:30
with prayer. Games ·wereplayed ryone welcome. Call the church .
a.m.
to
6:
30
p.m.
Cost
will be $2
and refreshments served by at 992-2926 for IJiformatlon.
for
all-you-can-eat.
Sandwiches
Jeannette Carter.
an'd pie will be extra.
SATURDAY
,. ·,
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange '
SUNDAY
.
l. '"
will meet on Saturday for a
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Mary Hurley.
potluck supper followed by a fun
Eddi~ Wayne, of Canton, Will be
Named on tl)e prayer list were . night at the Salem Center Fire featured singers at the Flat:
Rose Reynolds, · Clyda Aliens- Statton, 6: 30 p.m. All members · woods Onlted Methodist Church
worth. Thelina Boyer, and
on Sunday, Feb. 21, at 2 p.m.
ThereuKeonedy.
It · was announced that the
Middleport Church w!U be hosting the Meigs County Women's.
-- ---~~ ~----------____.__..._ I ,
Fellowship meeting at the
church on Feb~ 25th at 7: 30 p.m.

Philathea Women meet

..

State Representative Jotynn
Boster (D-Galllpolls) filed her
petitions !&lt;ir candidacy with the
Athens County Board Qf Elec·
lions. Boster has served as State
Representative for the 94th
House District for three terms.
As state representative, Boster
has sponsored and successfully
guided several Important bills
through the legislature, Including a substantial revision of the
Ohio ethics law, and the creation
of the Governor's Office of
Appalachia to locus attention on
Ohio Appalachia's unique needs.
Currently, she Is working with
other rural representatiVes to
ensure ihat rural counties receive their fair share of State
Issue 2 funds.

for Meigs j~dge post
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow III, 43, of
Syracuse, Thu~aday aflernoon
!lled petitions to-seek the Republican nomination In the May 3prlmary elections to run for
Judge of the Common Pleas

Coun.

·eont!Jtued on pare 10

'.

I.
'

, ATTY. I'UD W. CROW

(

'

~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - ·
More than six months after being
Introduced, and now In dramatlcally different form than when
first offered, legiSlation revlslq
the state's solid waste law finally
Is nearing a vote In the Ohio
House Energy and Environment
·'Committee.
"I've aged 50 years" . In th~
courae of working on the bill,
panel Chairman Joe Secrest said
Thurlday In promlalng a vote
next Tuelday.
The Senecavll~ Democrat said
the propoaal hu llllderiODe 15 to
20 committee aDd eubcommlttee
revtewa atnce laat AupaL
When lllltlally Introduced by
Rep. l"rederrek H, Deerlni.
D-¥onroevllle, the meuure re~ exempUon of non·
toxlc ~ Slllld, llq, demoli·
tlon deliria and IIOII·toxlc fly aab
froM repladoll u lOUd wute.
Now In nbltltute form, tile
le&amp;lalatlo11 reatorea their ·
..mpdon.

pea•

'

\.,. '.'

through state and local officials
working 'with the business community to attract new
Industries ."
T.S. Trim, Inc. recently an·
nounced plans to open a factory
In Athens which will employ
300-400 people.
"We have mad¢ a great deal of
,progress in the past five years.''
Boster sajd. · "Admittedly, we
face some serious challenges, In
· financing quality education for
our .children and continuing
progress on highway and economic development. These are·
tough iss11es, with no e11sy
answers, but together, we can
work out a solution which benefIts our community."

Name Dr~ Lentz
chie} of staff at
Veterans Memorial
Malcolm W. Lentz, M.D . Is the . Cincinnati Hospital In thorac ic
new chief of staff at Veterans and orthopedic surgery .
He Is a fellow of he American
Memorial Hospital.
College
of Surgeons, and certiDr. Lentz was elected to the
position by thehosp!tal'smedlcal fied with the American Board of
slaff and succeeds Dr. James Surgery, American Board of
Witherell who has served in that Thoracic Surgery, and the Ame rposition for the past several ·lcan Board or Orthopedic
Surgery. Dr. Lentz belongs to th e
years.
The surgeon who resides In Gallia and Mason County Medi- ··
Gallipolis with his wife, Kathryn cal Societies, the American MedAnn, and three children, has been Ical Assocaiton, and the Amerl·
on the staff at Veterans Memor- can Thoracic Society. and has
full staff privileges at both
ial for the past seven years .
Dr. Lentz Is a graduate of the Holzer and Pleasant Valley
·
University of Pennsylvania Med- Hospitals .
Dr. Lentz main tains an office
ical School and Interned at the
hospital there and took his in the medical complex across
residency at the University of from the hospital.

Solid waste blll nearly ·ready for.·committee vote

.Atty. Fred Crow files

Crow Is a 1!!70 graduate of'the
Ohio State University School of
Law, and Is a parlner In the law
firm of Crow 1: Crow In Pomeroy,
with hla father, Fred W. Crow,
Jr., and hill brother, L ·Carson
Crow. He was admitted to
practice before the. Qlllo State
S!lpreme Court In 1970 and theli.
· S. Supeme Court In 19'78. ·
Crow waa the ttrat lqal advisor to any pollca cieplrtnltDt In
the State of Ohio, the Dlyton
PoUee Deplrtmenlln 11'11).'12. He

Despite having less tenure
than other committee chairmen
in the House of Representatives, .
Boster was appointed In · her
second term to chair the standing
committee on Ethics and Standards and the Legislative Ethics
Committee. She Is serving her
second term as chair of these two
committees.
Boster said she has served as
an advocate lor the district and
plays an active role in acquiring
state grants and aid for the 94th
district.
·
"I actively support economic
development projects for our ·
region," Boster said. "The T.S.
Trim plant Is a perfect example
of what we can accomplish

DR. MALCOLM ' W. LENTZ, M.D.

I

A provision limiting the setyice area o! a solid waste facility
to a radius of not more than 100
miles around It, assessed by
committee members as possibly
unconstitutional, also Is gone
from the original bill.
Retained, despite warnings of
possible unconstitutionality, Is a
stipulation setting fees lor treat·
ment or disposal of out-of-state
hazardous waste at the rate in the
state where It was generated, or.
the Ohio rate, whiChever Is
higher.
A representative of Citizens
Watch Committee of Hatrtson
County Inc.
applauded that
provlllon at a Thunday hearing.
Richard Moore of Freeport,
wbo described hla organization
aa "a New Jer&amp;eY:a-n-keepU..tr~earbare lfOIIp,'' ~aid 2
mmton tons of out.of-etate waste
811181'1 Ohio "eh year.
''Garbqe Ia MCODtl 0111y to
lllepl clrup u a IIIIIHY·

-If It has population of less
maker," h.e claimed.
than 120,000, form a joint district
~Usc kept In the substitute
proposal is an Increase in permit with one or more other counties.
-If it can demonstrate a
and license fees applicable to
to accept garbage for at
capacity
solid waste disposal facilities.
The bill alsc creates a state . least the next 10 years, obtain an
solid waste management advi· exemption and establish a single·
sory council and requires that the county district with a -population
·
Ohio Environmental Protectioh of less than 120,000.
Agency develop a management • Each district would have to
prepare and submit a solid waste
plan.
.
The plan must establish waste- management plan to the EPA (or
mlnlmallzatlon obJectives, such review and approval. The agenas recycling and reuse,· and cy's director would prepare
restriCtiOns on landfllllng Of plans for districts unable to
waste for wHich alternate man- obtain approval for their own,
Plans would be prepared by
allflment methods are available.
"Recycling 'Is the direction dlatrlct committees composed
entirely . of local government
we'd like to 110." said Secrest.
The substitute leglalatlon also offletala, except for one public
calls lor creation of local plan- member each.
· Several witnesses Thursday
ning dlatrlcts. Each county
WO!Ild have to do 'one of the called for more pubUc represel)tat!Dn, and the Ohio Public
following:
-If It has a population or Interelt campaign uraed com·
120,000 or more, form a county mlttee membership tor represengarbqe and refuse dlapoaal tatlyee of lnclu.stry.
'
'
dtatrtct.

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