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In Our Town

It all started
here 30 years ago•..
GALLIPOLIS - Wha I is that
old saying ? ""You can't go

Charlie was jokingly called the
"Mayor of Arbuckle.-

lt's good to be home again and
- to work with Hobart Wilson. Jr.,
But, I did it. It
our editor. Junior's been around
all started here
and is .getting better all the time.
more th&lt;Jn 30
I remember filling In for him as a
years· ago . .The
$10-a-week
sports editor, In add!·
Tribune was
tlon
to
my
-circulation duties.
owned by Dear
he
was
off to the Far East
while
Radio and Pub- still have a picture of him and
lications; an East Coast outfit .
Robert L. Meyers was general actress Jane Russell in Korea.
. Robert L. Wingett is our
manager. ·'bless his dear de·
PROMOTED - Charlet! W.
parted soul." The late . Vic publisher. l remember a nigh!
(Chuck)
Sheet&amp; has been proSherow, who made up for what he Bob, Chet, and the late Pat
moted
to
Senior Delli per. A
lacked In skills with sharp Houck. our society editor, had
graduate
of
Nelaoaville W1h
the courage to ride to Athens and
tongue. was thl' editor.
School,
Sbeeta
has been with
There were others who are back over Rt. 33 to a newspaper ·
tbe
Company
since
198%. He 18
meeting at the Ohio University
gone now.
the "'!n of John and Vlrpae
Inn. For that. they deserve a
Charlie Butler, the staff photoSheets.
He Uves In Atheas with
medal.
grapher. who was as quickhis
wile,
Christine, aad dau~rh·
Newspapers
have
come
a
long
witted as any comedian; Dwight
ten
Heather
and Lacle. In his
C. Wetberholt. journalist and wa y from . the days of the old
new
position,
he wm be able to
historian and my seventh and flatbed press and handset type to
use
his
an
and
deslp expeeighth grade teacher at Washing· . computer s and word processors.
rience
to
help
lamWee
select
ton School. We went to Gallla There was a time when every
the
material
and
llttln1
design
Academy ~:Ugh School together character of type had to be
lor their loved one''s memor·
my freshman year - he as a hand-set. One of those setters
lal.
Logan Monwnent Is Sou·
teacher and I as a s tudent. We was the late Shirley Beck Brown,
theastern
Ohio's laraest mon·
who weathered the advance of
always kidded about that.
ument
company
with sales
time and later was a proof·
offices
In
Logan,
ClrclevUie,
Nobody will ever forget the late reader for the Tribune.
Pomeroy, Vlntoa, Wellstoa
Ruth Richards in . circulation,
~- It
's
great
to
be
back
home.
and
Piketon. The Company
every paperboy's seco nd mom.
Let
's
hope
r
don'
t
get
restless
dates
back to 1890.
And, the late Jim Danner, brains
again.
of the advertising department, a
man nobody could do without. ,-----,...,----~----------'----------.
Vernon Deweese was another
ad-man. He 's retired now.
In March 1955,1 came on tioard
as clrcula lion manager with the
Tribune at 423 Second Ave .. not
as a reporter . My insurance
agent at the time. the late Marvin
Cornwell, used to call me the
circulating editor.
In May 1957 , I became restless,
wanted to write, so I joined the
Athens Messenger as a Gallipolis
correspondent - my fir st jump
Into full-time reportiQg. Restless
\
.
again In 1965, I returned to the
Tribune as a reporter and columnist. During this'stint, we moved
Into our present location . Didn 't.,
stay too long. By March 1970. I •
rejoined the Messenger. shortly
1616 EASTERN AYE.
after the death of Mary Hyre. a
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
fine lady with whom I shared a
teletype circuit when l was the
Gallipolis correspondent
That didn 't l~ s t long eit her.
One day , out of the clear. blue
STATE ST.
sky, the late Paul Wagner . no
home. ''

OUR' NEW
TRUCK DEPARTMENT
TELEPHONE NUMBER IS

446-6400
'

JIM MINK Chev.-Oids. Inc•.
STUDIO 39

finer man .. ever lived, owner of

the local radio station , called and
offered me a job. So, for the nex t
17 years I was in the electronic
media. But , things neve r stay the
same · constantly changing.
And now. as l sit in the big,
quiet, deserted editorial room,
there' s a parade of memories .

Fashion Aeeessories ·

GAiLJPOLIS -The Galllpolts
branch of Southeastern Business
College recently expanded Its
facilities to Include office space
for another admissions represen·
tatlve. Mrs. Sharon Drain, Dlrec·
tor, has appolnied Mrs. Judy
Stewart, a Jackson·County resident, to fill the position.
Mrs. Stewart resides In Oak
Hill, with her husband Herman
Stewart and their two children
Charlene and Brian.
Mrs. Stewart brings to the job
several years of sales expe·
rlence, most recently as a beauty
consultant and sales director for

Mary Kay Cosmetics.
Stewart joins Ron Pitchford '
and Karen Pballn In the Admls·
slons Department, and they are
available Monday through Friday from 8: 30 to 6: 30. They are
now conducting enrollment Inter· views for the spring quarter
beginning on March 28. Anyone
havll)g questions pertaining to
the school or a course of study
may call 446-4367.
·

New businesses
•
.
ed
moorporat ·
_ COLUMBUS - Three Galllpo.
lis area companies recently filed
articles of Incorporation with the ·
OhiQ Secretary of State's office.
Consolidated Ice Service, Inc.,
Dalley Tire. Inc., and Gallla Auto
Sales, Inc. , were the companies
recognized as such by the state.

·expenses )hat can't be deducted
bacme of this provision can be
car.ried over and deducted in fu·
ture years apinst net home-oflice income lor those ytars. •

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.

j

NO NEED TO LEAVE TOWN
1

ALL MERCHANDISE GUARANTEED

•

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PRICED F-OM

-S9900

SUSAN SISSON,

.

1987 BUICK
PARK AVENUE

Styling and Tanning Center

.. .'J 93 SOUTH SECOND

992·2550
'

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·MIDDLEPORT

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House and Senate subcommit tel!ll were wrangling over the
disbursement formula, that
small counties' would be entitled
to $300,000 - each year, were
Incorrect. The money goes to the
region, not the county, and out of
the $300,000, the only guaranteed
return to the county Is 30 percent,
or $90,000 per year during a
five-year period . ·
Determination of which pro·
jects In the·region will be funded
will be decided by a regional
committee, comprised equally,
according to Long, ofrepresenta·
tlves from each o0unty In the
region.
It Is possible that If Meigs
County had a project which each
county In the region determined
a priority. then Meigs could get
more than the $90,000, Long
explained.
"But It also works the other

I

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•

EXPLAINS · DISTRIBU'ltON METHOD
Sta&amp;e Senator, Jan Michael Lon1. vlllt1n1 In
Chnter Satvday mornln1, wu called apoli lo

way," noted Commissioner
Jones.
Meigs could receive up to
$300,000 per year, but Is only
guaranteed $90,000 a year, some·
time during a five-ye~r period.
In fact, said Long, Meigs could
receive the whole regional pot In
one year, If everyone on the
-regional committee agrees that
Meigs' project Is priority.
There could also be years when
Meigs County gets no funding at
all,· but sometime during the
five -year guaranteed period, the
county must get - a total of
$450,000, or five times the $90,000.
When the $450,000 Is paid out,
that's the end of the guarantee,
Long· explained . .
And during the second five·
year period of the bond Issue, the
guaranteed return decreases to
25 percent. "At least I think
that's correct," Long said, "Af.

ter I saw 30 Iiercent for the first
five yea~s.I really didn't pay any
attention to the second ·five
years. I voted no."
Long said he voted against the
measure In Its flnalform because
he feltlt was a "slap In the face."
At one time, he said, there was a
guarantee on the floor of Ute
senate for 80 percent back to each
county. That passed. Then a
recess was called and when the
body reconvened , there was a
vote to reconsider lind the 80
percent was gone. Long said he
offered an amendment' of 50
perc~nt. but that was voted down
too.
· "1 1 m not defending the plan,"
he sald 1 but he did point out that
small communities will have a
shot at jl second pot of money
totaling $12 million. which has
been set aside just for townships
and villages with Jess than 5,000
In population.

State Rep . Boster 's aide, who
was. also present with Senator
Long, said that "Boster could
have lived with the 50 percent,
but when the guarantee went
down to 30percent, she also voted
no.''

Commissioner Jones called the
Una! outcome of State Issue II
another example of" ur ban area s
eating up the rural areas."
Long said the ray of light In the
dark tunnel is that senators and
representatives of other small
counties may find It difficult to
explain to their constituents why
they voted In favor of the
distribution method. " It wa s a n
extremely complex meas ure a nd
I just don' t t(llnk It was fully
understood by everyone. '·' If the
constituents in those areas voice
their displeasure loudly enough,
then the legislators will be forced
to go back toColumbusandmake
some changes , he added .

~

Auto Climate control,
pow• - rtllitg. a- from "3".
S15,900 Prkt
-1,000 Dtaltr R~tt Iii 3/3t

.

Amerlea't #1 Choleel

'

1988 PONTIAC
GUND Ul

•Brand New 6160 Wananty

•nh &amp; CruiH

*14" Aluminum Wheels &amp; Tirn
0 AM-FM·CasHif1l

JUST ARRI~EDI
THE 1988 MOTOR TREND
CAR OF THE YEAR I

REBATES END MARCH 31ST .
~

e5 750.00 on LeSabre, Bonneville,
.Century, &amp; 6000
*51,000 on Park Ave. &amp; Firebird
*5400.00 on Grand Am, Sunbird,
&amp; Skylark
*5600.00 on Fiero
•ssoo.oo on Lemans
•

MARCH 31

By Ualted Press International
Eventually, spring will come to
· Ohio, but for right now, this
second day of spring, It's still a
little like winter.
As much as six Inches of snow
was on the ground Sunday In
much of the northern part of the
state, with Solo'\. . a suburb
~outheast of CII!Veland, mea·
sured e,leht in~!tes.
•, •
·- N'orth '· central and northeast
Ohio got four to six Inches of snow
and northwestern Ohio got one to
three Inches . Sandusky had four
,
Inches.
The Cleveland suburb of War·
rensvllle Heights had a snow ban
In effect much of Sunday for Its
six Inches of snow, but that was
explain lbe distribution method of State ·
lifted late Sunday night after
· fundln1. ~n1 wu also In Raclne'and Middleport
much
of the snow melted.
on Saturday.
A few flurries and sQualls

. '
By BOB HOEFLICH

. 1988 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

$14,900 Net Scile Price
'

·spring enters second day, but
winter _temperatures still exist
lingered Into the afternoon in the
northeast. Other parts of Ohio
had a little bit of snow, and by
afternoon, the rest of the state
was dry.
Light snow and snow flurries
Sunday evening over Wisconsin
and Michigan were triggered by
a weak disturbance near that
area. This scattered snow flur rles.. wete ,!l..X~!!ld .t\),rnove Into
Ohio, but no-S!gn[ficant accumulations were expected.
Skies will be partly cloudy
today with temperatures still on
the cool side. with highs from the
upper 20s In the north to the upper
40s In the extreme south. Skies
will be clear tonight, allowing for
more cold temperatures.
Warmer weather Is expected
Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs
Tuesday should be in the mid 40s

to· mid 50s, and could reach into .
the upper 50s and 60s Wednesday :
Around The Nation
Spring arrived in na'me only in
the northern and eastern parts of
the c ountry , where wintry
weather ke pt hold with chilly
temperatures and snow today,
while Southern California and
tl)g &amp;ou~)lw.est jlaske4 1~ balmy
summer-111\e temperatures.
"The calendar says it's spring,
but the weather doesn't know
that yet," sa id Ben Scott. a
National Weather Ser vice fore·
caster in New York.
Early today, the first full da y of
spring. temperatures were below
zero in parts of northern Minnesota and upper Michigan and
below freezing from the Da kotas
to the East Coast .

Tuberculosis may be.returning in some parts of country

P~ICED FROM $1 519 00

an.

REBATES

'

''

by MARK Ill

MARSHALL

SHEAR ILLUSIONS

Gallipolis, Ohio
446-4471

"8" Brand ·New
J988 Astro
Conversion. Vans

more.

Walk In Welcome .or (all For Appointment

CEinFIEii PlllliC ACCOUidAIIJ,
126 First Ave.

JUST ARRI~EDI

AM-FM. tilt whHI, cruisa,
rear defroster, . and much

UI LUCAS, LOIS EBLIN, CHUYL WIWOID,

William 0. Smeltzfr

'

communities.
Bl!t It was the legislature's Job
to develop and enact the forrnula
for disbursing the State Issue II
funding.
.
,
For disbursement purposes ,
the state has been divided Into 19
different regions, with the seven
largest counties In the state as
single county regions. The re·
malnlng 81 counties are com·
blned Into regions with at least
one other county. Meigs Is In a
region with eight surrounding
counties.
• For coupttes over 30,000 In
population, disbursement ~·to the.
region" Is based upon $10 per
capita.
.
For counties like Meigs, with
tess than 30,000 population, dis·
bursement "to the region" Is
$300,000 per 10 years per small
county.
·
Media reports during the time

•9 to 12 000 low miles.

1987 BUICK
. CENTURYS 4 DOOR

NEW OWNEI

Sentinel Stalt Writer
The distribution mechanism
lor State Issue II funding was
passed Thursday by the Ohio
House and Senate, with State
Senator Jan Michael Long, P.
Circleville, and State Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-Galllpolls, voting
no on the · measure In Its final
·
form.
Long, who visited Chester· on
Saturday morning as part o(
Constituents' · Day, was called
upon by Meigs Coupty Commls-slo~r Richard Jones to answer
some tough .questions regarding
the distribution mechanism. ·
Voters passed State Issue II In
the November election, giving
approval for the state to sell
bonds which would raise $1.2
billion, or $120 million per year
lor 10 years, to be used for
Infrastructure needs of Ohio's

·

S9699

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f

By NANCY YOACIIAM

FROM....

SALE PIICE S10,399

TRUDY MARSHALL

i Section, 10 Pogeo 26 C; nu
A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

1987 OLDS
CUTLASS 2 DOOR

REGAL LIMITED

$19615 Ptr Mo.
With '499 llown, 10.25% for 66 mo.

Own~rshlp

enttne

•

OI!IY

Und·er New

•

. Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio. Monday, March 21. 1988

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·FACTORY -OFFICIAL
CARS lN .STOCK!

1987 BUICK

loaded

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.2.6
1

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Sen. LOng explains ·Issue .II fund distribution

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Clear tonlghl. Low In 20s.
Tuesday , sunny, milder.
In mid 50s.

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must be ulld: 1 . hclulivety
and regularly as the principal
place of buainesa. or 2. To
meet with patien1s, clients,
or customers in the normal
course of buainns. ,
Employaes can wri1e off home-office expenses only
whel! thay meet the two requirements above, plus an addl·
ti~nal one... the use of the _residence must be for the conve·
n1ence of their EMPLOYER. And, to be deductible an em·
ployee's home-office expenses, must excaed 2% 'of their
adjusted gross income.
.
TAX REFORM LIMITATION: Your deductions are
u.~ited to the net income generated by the home-officeac·
tiVIty ~hat year. (Exception: Real estate texas and mort· ~
gage mtare11 are always fully deductible.) Home-office · '

JEWELRY •••••••••••••• 2 5°/o

QUALITY MERCHANDISE
AT DISCOUNT PRICES

Vot.38, No.218 .
Copyri!ihted 198a
'

For Iliff-employed persons

~

Daily Number
424
Pick 4
8531
Su~ Lolto
6-9-5-13-7-11

Page4

10 lagitimataly take home-of·
fice write-offs, the office

JUDY STEWART

Ohio Lottery

•

i5~~R~QUIREM£NiS,
NEW AND OLD

GALLIPOLIS

oFF
HANDBAGS •••••••• .-. 2 5°/o OFF
BELTS
30°/o-OFF
SCARVES
2 5~/o oFF

NCAA's
'Sweet 16'

Dally Number
123.
Ticket sales tota le·d
$1,507,884.50. with a payoff due of
$3,437,640.50. .
PICK-4
5237..
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$254,910.50, with a payoff due of
$114.768. .
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$4,680. PICK·4 $1 box bet pays
$195.

e

BECAUSE WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS IN
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS!!
EFFECTIVE MONDAyI MARCH 21STI
STUDIO 39 WILL DISCOUNT
EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE • EVERYTHING •

You can almost feel the pres ence of the late J. Sher man
" Jim" Porter, former Ohio Senator, whom like myself, once
worked for the Ath ens newspaper and the local radio stat ion.
Jim was host of "Uncle Jim and
the Funnies " every Sund ay
morning on the radio. I'll a lways
remember the late Chet Tannehill, editor of the Pomeroy
Sentinel who came to Gallipolis
In 1959 when the editor ial and
production rooms were combined . Chet always re minde d me
of the late actor. Van Heflin.
especially in the fa ce . I learned a
lot from him . and could make'
him laugh at the drop of a haL
A couple of fellows in the
backroom !lave since reti red Eustus Wilson, who was an avi d
tennis player and big John
Morgan , genius of the old fl a tbed
press . used In the days before
off-set printing. And , there 's a
couple of individuals who sti ll are _
In the pressroom of th is newspaper- Otho Mattox and Charlie
Snodgrass. from Mason Cou nty.

Lottery numbers

Gallipolis branch expands

'

Jly DICK THOMAS

March 20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport-G.IIipdlis, Ohio-Paint Plaaaant. W.Va.

.... D-8 SuncUy Temes-Sentinel

well as their hopes for a better
Sentinel News Staff
life:
Victory over tuberculosis In
Some Individuals may have
the United States seemed close a
acquired Immuno-deficiency
few years ago.
syndrome-related -complex .
We expected the disease to
Their protective Immune system
become a medical curiosity. This
may be destroyed by the virus
has not happened. The decline · and other germs and cancers
seems·not only to have sll!blllzed,
that ordinarily would never get a
foothold cause "opportunistic
but appears to have Increased In
some parts of the country. _ disease"··uslng the opportunity
of lowered resistance to Infect
Transmission continues to occur
and destroy. Some of the most
as evidenced by the·reportlng of
' disease In children- under 15. common are Pneurnocystls carl·
nU pneumonia and tuberculosis.
years of age, most of which Is
An estimated 10·15 million
found In children under 5.
persons In this country are
Tuberculosis Is an Insidious
already Infected with tubercle
disease that can be asympto·
bacUlus and carry a lifelong risk
matte for years, so case finding
requires time, personnel and · of development disease unless
given preventative therapy. It Is
financing. This year, approximately 25,000 tuberculosis cases
estimated that about 90 percent
of new cases In tbe United States
will be reported In America. Yet
. even II every case now were
arise from this already Infected
diagnosed and cured and every
iJ'OUp. ,
The etiologic agent of tubercuInfected contact treated with
preventive chemotherapy, the
losis, Mycobacterium tuberculo·
sis, Is earned through the air In
tubercle bacUius colll!l still find
Its way to this land. Much of tl!e _Infectious droplet nuclei which
rest of the world still lives In
are produced when penons with
tuberculosis of the lung or larynx
poverty, and tuberculosis Is still
sneeze, cough, speak or sing.
one of the major killers. In a
world where nations are becom·
Symptoms of tuberculosis In·
elude fever, chills, .night sweats,
In# more and more lntercon·
easy fatigability, loss of appetitnected, no country Is an Island.
lte, weight loss, prolollgedcough,
Some of the new lmrnlifants who
over two weeks duration, Which
come to our sbores to flee social
ptog1~alvely worsens, and heand economic problems bring
along the tubercle bacillus as
moptysis. I coughing up blood)

Weather
8auill CaDinJ
Today, variable cloudiness.
IDih Ml to e. Winds northeut!l to
15 mpb.
TonJaht, mosll)' clear. Low In
tbe mld-201. Wlndl mosUy eaat
leu than 10 mph.
'I'IIesday, 1110111)' IUIIIIY. Milder
with tbe biP from 511 to 80.

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

Wet «v ......... ~
Fair Wednesday, wl tb a
c:baace ot ·rato Tbunday and
Friday. Rather mUd wttb blabs
In lbe 101 Wednesday and In 1be
IIIII 'l'bunday and Frilfay. LoW1
from lbe mid 301 to the lowr401.

The. Melp County Tuberculosis office ta1t:ea the . lead In
providing community leadership
for tubercuiOIIa preventton •and
control. We ellliU'e avallabWty
· and promotloa of standard poH·
cles aad objeetiVBI for tubereuloals IUI'Wlll•Me, control, trelt·
ment aad prewntloll.
We provide oatpatteat tre1t·
ment III'Vicel, laboratory and
x-ray lmllces, anU·tUberculosll
· m8dlcltloll for treatment and
jiiellentloll of dbe... and contact
eumlll8tlon.
IJt 118'1, llx cheat cHnlca were
conducted. Duritll tbaR cHnlca,
12 111tllnt1 were aee11, 588 x-rayll

WIII'IIDterpreted and recommen-

datlons offeted. There were 70
new patients. 3,478 skin tests
were admlnlst~red and 1,490 skin
tests were given for food service.
There were 4,096 office vlslts.The nurse made 381 home visits.
There were 7,835 other services
performed. There were 77 out·
side cHnlcs conducted. Fourteen
patients r!!CfiVed tuberculosis
medications. There were · four
cases of tuberculosis and 69
patten!&amp; were dismissed.
The county nurse made ~
·visits to the Southern, Eastern.
Metes Local and . Carleton
schools for the administration

and reading of tuberculin skin
tests. Joyce Thoren, R.N. , Mary
Price, R. N., and Sharon Birch,
R:N., assisted with their respec·
tlve· school. programs .
The tuberculosis office participated In the multl·phaslc health
fair and skin tests were offered
during the Meigs County Fair.
We are located In the Multi·
purpose Building on Mulberry
Heights In Pomeroy .
Personnel includes Joan Tewks·
b11ry, R. N., executive director;
Maida Mora, first deputy, and
Kathy Comings, clerk. Roy Don·
nerberg, M. D., Is the chest

clinician. The Meigs County
office Is governed by a board of
trustees appointed by the Meigs
County Commissioners . The
members and the areas they
represent are: Donna Nelson,
l.loyd Blackwood, Chester,
brange and Olive Townships;
Joan Wolfe and James Hill,
Sutton, Lebanon and Letart
Townships; Tim King and Ha·
rold Rice, Salisbury, Rutland
and Salem Townships; Cllarles
Riffle and Rev. Wllliain Middles·
warth, Pomeroy VIllage; Paul'
Patterson, RuUand VIllage; Dr.
Larry Kennedy , Middleport VII-

!age; Michael Struble. Syracuse
Village; Jeanette Lawrence, Ra ·
cine VIllage; Helen Swartz, Bed ·
ford, Scipio and Columbia Town·
ships . Orion Roush is the board
consultant and Faye Wallace a nd
Michael Struble are the Southeastern Ohio Lung Association
representatives.
The Meigs County tuberculosis
program is financed thrnugh the
passage of a .5 !Jlllllevy In June,
1986, for a flw year period, by a
large marjorlty of votes Mrs.
Tweksbary extendS' thanks to all
residents of Meigs County for
Continued on page 5

Wolle, lllultlil ....... .,..... - - ... Saa&amp;b-tera-Oltlo
lllltll AML NJI'II 11,...; INtall, l to r, '11m IUal. ud Rev.
WOllam IIM1hnrar&amp;ll, Cbarlaa IUflle, Harold Rice, .Dr. Larry
l;n t:b, UQd BlldtWDII ... Palll P ....rion. Boai'd memlier·

DO&amp; phAaeclll lu1ette 1.&amp;....-ee.

·

I

�•

Monday, March 21, 1988

Comment
Ill Couri Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~

IS!m 11:!
~v

'

-r.,..,......,.d...,.

~ .....

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PublisherI Controller

Southern baseballers open
season with I 0 lettern1en back

Page-2-The Daily Sentir:-e'
Pomeroy-Midd~rt. Oh10
Monday, March 21, 1988

Invasion .of booty ·snatchers Anderson and Van A tta

The Daily Sentinel

BOBHOEFUCH
General Mauager
"

WASHINGTON - The eco·
nom!&lt;: tragedy of tl1e 1980s cries
out for an Inquest. That a
catastrophe has occured.• spread·
lng economic devastation aild
Incalculable misery, Is hardly
subject to dispute. Nor Is· the
cause of our current hardship
and future danger dlf!lcult to
assess. To put It plainly the
United States Is losing World War
III.
For close to half a century, the
policy makers In Washington
have been . obsessed with the

wrong war. At a cost of trillions,
they have confronted Soviet
military ~lower, built up our own
armed might and resisted com·
munlst' political aggression
around the world. Yet all the
while, they have yielded to
economic aggression b y ·
Lilliputian's.
'After all the military. expend!·
lures and Ideological conten·
lions, the Soviet Union has been
brough Ito terms not by the size of
our arsenal, but by Its own
Internal failures. The Kremlin Is

now pulling bae k from Its foreign
adventures and seeking detente
with Washington.
The United States has also
suffered severe Internal damage
trif.llcted by the Lilliputians. Is It
overstatement to describe their
economic aggression as World
Wariii? Not at all. The Japanese
philosopher Honda Rimel In tQe
18th century (leflned lnterna·
tiona! trade as "war" In which
"each nation seeks to extract
wealth fro111 the other."
The Lilliputians have waged a

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcOme. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are s ubJ ect to editing an d must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. Ne&gt; unsig ned letters will be publls~ed. Letters should be in
gOOd taste, addresslng .issues, n'ot personalities.

.

Legislative session ··
produces battle scars
By LEE LEONARD
· UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -As always, the frantic rush to adjourn
the Legislature las t week produced some battle scars which may last
longer than the participants wish.
·
·
One of the most sensitive Issues provM to be the funding of the Ohio
National Guard college seholarsh lp program, wh,ch ran out of money
and had to be propped up with a supplemental appropriation.
Legislative leaders and the administration of Gov. Richard Celeste
agreed to spend $2 million, coupled with $4.5 million !tom the sale ol
National Guard armories and cuts In other areas of the adjutant
general's budget. to help fund the tuition assistance.
But that amount of money only allows the Guard to pay 60percent of
the scholarship amounts in fiscal1989.
This produced some sore spots, especially among minority
Democrats in the Senate and minority Republicans In the House, whc
did not feel they had any input on th e funding decision.
They made speeches about the fac t that the state had &lt;
commitment to the national guardsmen to fully fund their
scholarships when they enlisted.
Senate De mocr&lt;~ ts narrowly lost 17·16 on an amendment to plug $5.1
million iilto the supplementa l budget for the Guard scholarships.
Then the House Republicans, with a little help from some
lndependent·lhinklng Democrats, came within one vote of defeating
the supplemental budget on the National Guard issue Thursday
afternoon.
The bill had to come back before the House that evening In the form
of a conference committee report.
House Speaker Vernal Rifle Jr .. D-New Boston, decided he wasn't
going to have such a close call again. During the dinner hour, he
warned the recalcitrant Republicans that if they didn't see things his
way, they could forget about some Important capital Improvements
projects in their districts.
To underscore his point when the bill came up again, the Speaker,
from his vantage point pn the rostr um, brandished a typewritten list
of capital projects in the districts of the "no" voters and asked three
of them indlvlctually II they had changed their minds.
This time, miraculously , (he supplemental budget with Its 60
percent funding for the National Guard tuition program passed with
19 votes to spare.
"I couldn 't vote against it again ," one member was quoted as
saying. "I've got to protect my projects."
·
Whim It comes down to ~tudent soldiers and bricks and mortar, the
latter apparently wins every time.
Ironically, both the Senate Democrats a nd the House Republicans
believe the Celeste adm inistration has underestimated revenues , and
that more money than expected will be available for state programs.
As for Celeste, he said the legislative action was a testamentto "our
commitment to fiscal responsibility."
There were some fra yed tempers. too, over the distribution
fo rmula by which Issue 2 bond money will be sent to local
governments to replace antiquated roads, prisons and sewer and
water sys tems.
Rural legislators, particularly in the Senate, said their areas were
being shortchanged by the formula, which guarantees them only a 30
percent share by population, compared with urban areas.
'

RACINE - While returning also pitch.
eight seniors and 10 lettermen,
Shawn Cunningham, coming
Coach Mlck Winebrenner's · oft a fine 5·2 pitching season,anc!
Southern Tornado baseball team Mark Porter, a perfect 2·0,also
Is anxiously awaiting a success- will prove to be key factors In the
tul1988 campaign.
1988 season . The two local talents
Last year Southern finished at will compliment Amburgey on
14·6 and !!E!CODd In the SVAC·
the mound. 'I:urley was 1-l.
,while earning · a berth In the . Coach Mlck Winebrenner sta·
Sectional Finals against East·
ted.''We should be a good hitting
ern. Two years ago Southern team.We have 5 returning from
claimed the Meigs Sectional title last year's team with · a .300
with several players In the batting average. Our lettermen
llne-up,who are now seniors.
and expeclally our 8 seniors
Graduated from last year's should provide a lot of
club Is Mike Wolford,Erlc MIUI· leadership."
ron,arid Jeff Holtz.
Winebrenner continued
Outfielder Barry McCoy ,who saylng,''Pitchlng should be a
led the team In hitting last year strong point If we can find a
and shared an All·SVAC team · number two pitcher to go along
berth with teammate Dave Am· with Dave Amburgey .. Amburburgey,heads a long list ol gey was 6·3 last year with an
dependable lettermen. McCoy outstanding .98 ERA with all
batted .369 and played a strong three losses coming to Eastern.''
defensive center field.
Southern ; will be experienced
.351 hitter John Rlflle Will at all positions, but suffer a. lack
solidify SHS up the middle at of depth as only 13 will make !up
catcher, while third leading the varsity line up.Five players
hitter ( .345) Kenny Turley makes on last year's squad dldnotgoout
first base his home. Turley, a this year.
·
hard throwing southpaw, wlll
"Our players will have to learn
also spend much titne on the more than their position to give
mound.
Ius · some flexibility," said
Other returnees Include Shawn Winebrenner.
Arnott, Shawn Cunningham, Jun·
"We should be a contender If
Iars Todd Usle and Chris Stout.
we get off to a good start. Seven
Senior Dave Amburgey will J;&gt;oys played basketball and
undoubtedly get the nod to pitch missed three and half weeks of
In tough game situations as the practice. We'll need io just stay
senior flreballer hales as one ql · In the race uiltll they get their
Southeastern Ohio's premier arms In shape and their batting
strokes perfected."
·
·pitchers. Amburgey had a 6·3
"Four of these seven are
record last !year as well as a fine
pltchers,so our young pltcbers
legion season,
will
have to develop•early. Our
· Adding to an already tough
seniors
have finished second the
llne-up,Eastern transfer Jeff
last
two
years. They would like to
Caldwell, a three-year lettergo out with a league crown .
man,should add experience and
"As far as the league goes, Oak
depth. Caldwell, who batted .335
Hill, Symmes Valley,and East·
last year,wlll play Infield and

trade war against America that
has devastated our steel Industry, eroded our automobile Indus·
try and destroyed our machine·
tool Industry. Now our
electronics Industry Is under
Intense assault. No military
attacks have ever resulted In
such wreckage.
Who are these vexatious Lllllp·
utlans? The first assault on the
U.S. money vaults came from oil
merchants dressed In Arab bur·
nooses. At one time, the mE:r·
chants were fearful, weak and
helpless. They were powerless
before Israel and totally depend·
ant on the United St11-1es for
defense against the Soviets.
Just 20 years ago, a barrel of
crude cost around $3. The wily .
sheiks, their oil fields bubbling
with an overabundance, con·
trlved a "shortage." They tore
up existing oil agreements, lg·
nored International law and
jacked up oil prices above $40 per
barrel.
The reaction In Washington
was not. to assail the oil cartel,
but to support It by declining to
rock the boat. The sheiks were as
•first apprehensive, then aston·
!shed, to discover that the United
. States would not fight back, but
would tolerate $44 oil - would
beg for It, In (act.
The next Lilliputian offensive
came from Japan, a small island
nation with sparse natural re·
sources. Just 42 years agO, Japan
· was defeated, devastated and
Impoverished . Today the Japa·
nese are producing 10 percent of
the world's entire consumer
output.

.·.•

ern should have strong teams.
The league should be well·
balanced and I believe a team
with three or four •losses could
still win It all."
.
Marty · feel that Southern has
the horses to overcome a possible
slow start, and with the weather·
man on their side, the Tornadoes
may .· be right on target for a
banner year.
Following Is a roster:
SOU'I'IIERN BASEBALL
PLAYER-P08

YR

Barry McCOy OF ...................... ....... .... 12
John Rifne c ... .................................... 12
Mike Hill OF ..................................... ,.12

Shawn Arnott OF ... .............................. l2
Dave Ambergey P·JNF ..... .. ... .. ...... .... ..12

JeH Caldwell P·INF .............................12

.'

Kenny Turley P-IN~ ....... .... .... ;....... ..... l2
Shawo Cunningham P·INF ........... ........ l2
Todd Llsle INF ... .,: .............................. 11
Mark Poner P -INF ............................ .11
Chris Stout OF ....................... ............. 11
Mlke Amos C·OF .,., .................... " ........11
Shane Simpson OF ........ , ..................... 11
·
Bran~on KJDg OF .................... .. ....... ... 11
,
Brent Shuler INF .......... ;.. ,............. ,.... 10 (

. John McClintock OF ............................ 10

Jason Qulllen INF .... : .......................... 10
Doug Lavender C ............·............ ,....... 10 ·

Roy Johnson P-OF ................................ 9
Todd Grindstaff lNF .... ,................... ..... 9
Andy Baer P·INF ........... ...................... 9
Colln Maidens OF ........... ..... ........ ...... ... 9
Jamie Anderson INF ............................ 9

soumEKN VAR81TY
BASEBALL SCIIEDULE

·

April 7-Melgs ................................... A
April 11-Hannan Trace .................. .. .. A
April 13-Symmes Valley .................... H

Aprll !&amp;-Waterford ( DH~ ................. .. A
IS-Southwestern .. ........ ............. H
19-Ravenswood ........................ A
21-Federal Hocking .................. A
25-Eastern .. ................ ... ..... ..... A

AprU 27-Kyller Creek ...................... .. H
April 28-Wahama ............................ .. A.
May 2-North Gallla ........................ A
May 4-Hannan Trace ..................... H

May

FACTORY TRAINED SPECIALIST ON HAND: AUTO TECH HEARING INSTRUMENTS is providing factory trained experts for thi1 1pecial event.
The~e highly respected specialist• have gained out1tanding reputations in
helping those who have 1anaori-neural hearing inpairment (nerve deafness),
and have many years of experience in the proathetic aaailtance of

were to exceed .projections, the
extra amount would go to a new
account and carry over for the
schools In the next budget. This
would have resulted In schools
losing the bonus checks they are
used to getting at the end of the
biennial budget. Proponents of
this measure contended thar the
carry-over to the next budget
wo!lld be necessary If lottery
profits were to. be. lower than
expectations the next year. A
Se!late amendment provided
that . excess profits are to con·
ttnue to be distributed as In the
past. A compromise was reached
with the House so that five
percent of overall profits will roll
over to the next budget and the
rest will go to the schools In the
form of a bonus as provided for In
the current budget. ·

Indigent care pool by assessing
all 197 hospitals In the state 0.5
percent of their total costs. This
wlll raise $32 million, which can
be used to obtain $40 million In
federal funds to create the·
Hospital Care Assurance Pro·
gram Fund, an Indigent care
pool. Hospitals will receive pay.
ments from the $72 million fund
according to the amount of
service they provide to medicaid
recipients. Most of the hospitals
would get back more than Utey
put In and the few that would not
will not lose money. Those
hospitals will have. their losses
covered by a $2.5 million fund In
the Ohio Department of Human
Services. No one should be
denied medical care, but paying
patients should not have to bear
the costs of non -paying patients .
HB 738 Is a measure that will
provide money to hospitals that
treat those who cannot afford
care .so that these costs are not
passed on to other patients.
The legislature also passed a
measure to reorganize mental
health care In Ohio. Under the
current system, patients dis·
charged from one ol the state
psychiatric hospitals' fall under
the responsibility of commun.lty

HB 738, which also passed both
the House 1\Dd the Senate, deals
with health care !or Ohio' s
working poor. Approximately 1.5
million Ohioans do not have
Insurance or cannot afford healt))
care. More and more hospitals
are finding themselves faced
with unpaid bills, forcing them to
pass the cost on to paying
patients. The bill creates an

mental health boards. Many are
shuttled back and forth between
state hospitals and community
agencies and "fall through the
cracks" along the way: Under
the new plan, the responsibility
for the care and treatment of
mental patients will lie with the
local boards that will operate
community programs and have
the authority to determine when
hospltalizatlonls necessary.
Funds will alSo be llhlfted. Ohio
now spends over half of Its
men.tal health budget on state
hospitals, but community boards
treat nine times as many people:
The state will help pay for ,
services that local boards choose
to provide. Thegreaterempha~ls
on community care In this plan,
and the more cooperative rela·
tlonshlp established between the
state and local agencies, will help
Ohio to better care· tor the
mentally Ill.
If you have any comments or
questions on these or other issues
that interest. you, please feel free
to contact my office by writing
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
Ohio Senate, Statehouse, Colum·
bus, Ohio 43266, or call (614)
466-8156.

11-Melp .... .................. ............ H

.

,., "

SOUTHERN BELLES - •'J;bese Dve senior
Toraadoettes wiD reblrn to action agalD thl•
spring ali memben of ihe Soathera Softballsqalld

of Coach Kim Pbillips. Last aeaaon SUS f~lsbed ,
IHJ, Pictured are returnln&amp; senlon Leaune Clark,
. Bridget Bing, Ammle Franko, Tammy Holter and
Patrice Circle. ·

,

NERVE DEAFNESS. If you or a friend ere one of thoae who HEAR BUT DO
NOT UNDERSTAND , ... wordsrun together ... you !lave to aak people torepeat .•. you have trouble when more than one person Ia talking ,;, then thla ·
1pecial event Ia for you!

* * *Remember, t1t1t willie no htlrlng aid lf1llnnnlnlc.n ~P ._, ldncl of laaa, you owe It to VOUI'Hif
to find out If the 11.8.1. Aulomatlo _, be able to help 'JOU or eomaone you know to batw '*""" * * *
..

I· ,f

• • ,. i
·;• .":l'
t' . .«'

'I

.

or,a junior ·and sophomore, and Heather Roush OF .. ,........... .. ... ............. ~
RACINE -Not only Is Monday
WtUtams IF .... ............. .................. 9
three freshmen on the mound. . Jan
the first day of spring, but also
Brenda Zirkle OF .... : .. .. ,.................. ,... 10 ...
the first clay for the Southern We have a lot of depth here, but Mary Roberts OF ........... ..................... 10
Cindy Foley IF ........................... ......... 10
Tornadoettes softball team to hit not much speed."
Shelly Arnold IF .. ... ............................. 10
The Southern gals have been Tara Wolfe OF ........................... ......... 12
the field. The team has been
working hard to Improve their Laura Shamblin OF .. ........... ................ 12
working hard In preparation for
the upcoming 1988 season, which speed and have already made
SOUTHERN VAIISITV
SOFTBALL SCHEDULE
begins on Monday, March 21 at vast strides In that direction .
Southern has only one expe· DATE-OPP
Symmes Valley.
LOCATION '•
MarcJ121-Symmes Valley ................... A
The Tornadoettes of fifth year rlenced catcher, but others have
22-Federal Hocking ................. H
Coach Kim Phillips are looking . shown much · promise In that · March
March 23-Soutbwestern .. ....... ... .......... A
forward to 1988, as nine letter area.
March 30-Eastern .. ............................ H
March 31-Ravenswood -~ ............... ...... H
winners, Including 5 seniors,
Last season, Southern battled a
Aprtl 2-Trlmble .......... ...................... H
return to form a strong founda· lot of rain ,outs to finish with a
Aprll 4-~yger Creek ............. ' ........... A
lion for the club. .
good record of 9-6, which was April 5-Wahama .............................. H
Apiil 6-North Gal !Ia ........... .............. H
If strength comes In numbers,
good for fourth In the SVAC.
April 7-Melgs ................... ........... .... A
then Southern will be a force to be
Cdach Phillips concluded , April 11-Hanhan Trace ...................... A
l~Symmes Valley .................... H
reckonl!d with as 27 candidates . "Fieldlngwlse we are pretty well April
Aprll 16-Waterford CDH) ................... A
are vying for a starting job. The set. II we can control the ball April IS-Southwestern ............ ........... H
roster Includes seven seniors ; 3 . here(at the plate)then we have April 19-Ravenswood ............. .......... . A
21-Federal Hocking .......... ........ A
junlors,flve sophomores,and 12 the fielding to back It up. All ol April
Aprll 25-Eastern .................. ............. A
AprU 27-Kyger Creek ........................ H
freshmen.
our Infielders and outfielders
April 28-Wahama ................ .... ... ....... A
Graduated !rom last year's .have at least two years · expeMay
2-North Gall! a ......... .. ..... ........ A
club Is veteran pitcher and rlence at those posltiol)s, al·
May
3-Trlmble .......................... .... A
May
4-Hannan Trace .... ... ... ........... H
all-leaguer Rachel Reiber . though not all of It has come at
Ma y
5-Melgs ........................ .. ...... .. H
Reiber was also a key )litter and · the varsity lev.el."
spent some !line In the outfield. . · Returning are seniors Tammy
Also gone Is. Diana Simpson· Holter at third base,Leanne
The 1Daily Sentinel
who proved to be one of South·• Clark at ·second or pitcher ,and .
~rn's most timely hitters as well Patrice Circle, Bridget Bing, and
(USPS lfiHMO~
as a strong outfielder.
. Ammle Franko In the outfield.
A Dlvlskm of M.. tlmedla, Inc.
Coach Kim, Phillips said ..' 'I am ·
Junior Crystal Hill well anchor
Publlshe&lt;l every afternoon, Monday
looking forward to this season. ftrst base as well as pitch, Tracy
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·
we have really Improved our Beegle Is at shortstop,Carol
meroy, OhiO, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia. Inc.,
facUlties this year ,Including Fisher ,catcher; and Shelly Sawy' Pomeroy , Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Se. building new dugouts. We should ers at second · base. All are
cond class postage patd at Pomeroy ,
have a decent season. We're juniors except for Sawyers,who
Ohio.
experienced, and have a lot of Is a sophomore.
Member: United Press lnter.nattonal , . t
young girls pushing out older
At any rate Southern.desplte
Inland Dally Press Association and the
girls for jobs."
limited outdoor practice,has
Ohio Newsp.aper Association. National
Adverttslng Representative, Branham
been practicing hard and Is close
Southern should ..have much
Newspaper Sales , 733 Third Avenue,
pride In Its newly rebuilt facUlty
to winning form for, the 1988
New York, New York 10017.
with protective fencing and a
opene~ . With a -couple good
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
new coat of paint, which makes It
bounces, the Southern gals can
to The Dally Senllnel, 111 Court St. ,
orie ·of the best In the area.
look forward . to an Improved
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
Looking ahead Phillips stated,
1988.
St1118CRIPTION RATES
'•we have a large group of young
· soUTHERN soFTBAI.L
By Can1er or Motor Route
kids coming In to build on for next
One Week ................ ........... .. ...... $1.25
One Month ....... ............. ............. $5.45
te
thl
PLAYER-P08
YR
year. I'll lose five star rs
s Tammy Holler 3rd .... .. ......................... l2
One Year ................................. $65.00
5eason so any experience the Leanne Clark 2nd &amp; Pitcher ................. 12
SINGLE COPY
Patrice Circle OF .......... .... .................. 12
Young kids get will really. help."
PRICE
f
Bridget
Bing
OF
............
......................
l2
Dally .................,................. 25 C..nls
Phillips Jookstohersen Iors or AmmteFrankoOF ...................... ........ I2
ship antiC I
Hllllst &amp; Pitcher ......... .......... .. 11
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car- "
·on the fle ld leader
'
. Crystal
Tracy Beegle 55 .................................. 11
rier may remit In idvance dtreet to ..
patlg that their experience wilr carol Fisher c ..................... ................ n
The Dally Sentinel on a3, 6or 12 month
prove valuable In crucial games. Shelly Sawyers 2nd .............................. 10
basis. Credit will be given carrter each .... •
Hannon OF .... .... ..... .................... 9
PhilliPS looks to her seniors for Chris
week.
:&lt;
Shelly Winebrenner IF ............. , ............ 9
.'
'
on the field leadershlp.anticlpat· Junle l)eegte IF .................................... 9
· No sub5crlpttons by m a n permitted In • '.
................... ........... ...... 9
areas where home carrier service Is •.
log that their experience will Chery!PapeiF
Mayla Yoacham IF ................... ........... 9
avaUable.
:·&lt;
prove valuable In crucial games.
Angel Snider IF ............. ....................... 9
Phillips said, "Our keys to the Shannon Counts IF ............................... 9
Molt Subocrlpllooo
d Tonyalngei,S OF ........................... :....... 9
IDIIde Melp County
·!
season will be our pitching an
Andrea Theiss OF ............................ .. ...9
13 Weeks ................ ...•, ............. $17.29
catchlng.We will have one senl· Jenny.Llste1F .................................... .. 9
26 Weeks .................................. $34.06 i;'
52 Weeks .... ........... .... ............... $66.56 •.

F D'I'H GRADE TEAM and honorary ebeer·
leaden recoplaed at the all &amp;porta bauquet
Tneaday niJ)tt were fronl, l·r, Jennifer Friend,
honoray cheerleader, Jeremy F18her, manacer,
and : Stacey Hubbard, honorary cheerleader;
second row, Brian Ande run, Eddie Friend, Ryan

Hoban DivisiorJ, II champion

WWiama, Scott Hubbard, Randy Blq, Adam
Triplett; third row, Gordoa Fisher, Amy Weaver,
Andrea Moore, Mason f18her, Matt Morrow. 'lbe
team had au overall record of 18 aud e. They won
four toarnaments, .PorUaad, Eastern, Racine and
Southern Local.

COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UPI)
Tam!
McDermott
scored
14 -of
her 16 points In the second half to ·
rally Akron Hoban to a 46-42
overtime win over Byesville
Meadowbrook In the championship game of the girls Division II
state high school basketball
tournament Saturday night at St.
John Arena.
McDermqtt, a 5-foot-3 senior
guard, drove the length of the
floor to score on a layup with 8
seconds lett In the third quarter
to get the Knights evel! for the.
first time since the start of the
game, 28-28.
Hoban, which finished with a
22·6 reeord, threatened to put the
game away early In the final
quarter, P\llllng outto a 38-321ead
·over the faltering Colts with 3: 52

EISlER THAI EVER·

"

SUS
girls
open
softball
play
.
on 'Monday with. nine v~t~rans ·:
&lt;.

DATE-QPP
lAJCATION
March 21-SymmeSJ Valley ................. .. A
March 22-Federal Hocking ............... .. H
March 23-Southwestern .. .......... .. ,....... A
March 30-Eastern .......... ............. ....... H
April ·4-Kyger.Creek ......... .. .............. A
April 5-Wabama .............................. H .
April 6-North Gallla ...... ... , ............... H

April
April
April
April

No Volume Control To Ad)ustn·No Conventional Batter!,&amp; To Buy!
. . •Just Put It In Your Ear And Hear Automatically!
AN ERA WHICH OFFEH8 THE WORLD'S MOST
· AID HAS NO VOW1E ·CONTROL TO ADJUST. Tl.lta

JUSTS ITSELF AI' OWING THOSE WITH HIOH
STAND MORE Q Elfi..Y
A .NOISY
BCACMZifGIYSIW
MEANS

•
•
•
•
•
·•

non &amp;SIIOUfFII

HOLLY
114
·-

J

-~---

\

•

52 Weeks .......••......................... $67.60

INDIVIDUALS-FEDERAL-STATE
OUT OF STATE RETURNS
BUSINESS..- 'SMALL OR LARGE
PAnNERSHIPS
CORPORATIONS
OIL AND GAS

t40URS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.-8 P.M.
SATURDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

· na &amp; SAfiiY

,

Oulalde Metp Couoly
·•
13 Weeks ......... .............. ........... $18.20
26 Weeks .................................. $35.10

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

.SALES· SERVICE ·TESTING

J

overall record. Pictured are, front, l·r, Shawn
Arnott, Barry McCoy and Dave Amburgey. Back
- Jeff Caldwell, Kenny Tnrley, Mike HUI and
John Riffle. Absent was Shawn Cunningham.

SUS. DIAMONDMEN - These seven senlon
return to the Southern 11~-up to provide
leadel'llhlp for Coach Mlck Winebrenner's base·
ball &amp;quad tbal flDiabed last year with a 14-6

Jerod Moore OF .. ,............................... 10
Todd Wolte OF .. .................................. 10

Legislative Week in.reVieW _..:._B;...::...y_~e~n..:...:··J_an_._M_.L_ong~
· The past week was very busy In '
the Ohio General Assembly, as
many bills were pasSed before
the le!!fslature went on recess
until after the May primary. I
would like to draw attention to a
plan Implementing State Issue
One, an Indigent health care bill,
and the reorganization of Ohio
mental health care.
State Issue One, which was
overwhelmingly passed by Ohio
voters last November, earmarks
Ohio Lottery prol\ts for educa·
lion. These funds were going to
education before, b\11 the constltutlonal amendment guarantees
that all lottery profits go to
· education. HB 789, which has
been passed by both the House
and the Senate, sets up a special
lottery profits education fund.
This will notlncreaseordecrease
the amount of money that goes to
education.
Money would · have actually
been Joslin the original version of
the ,bill. In the past, lottery
profits In excess of expectations
went to school districts on a per
caplta-basls. The excess profits
were used for such· things as
computers, new textbooks, and
building repairs. Theorlglnalblll
provided that If lottery Income

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

171llwtlll11

uj ' " ·

'lllllllilllllrt, ... 417M
... 16141 ftt-7171

.., ....1,. "':"' ·"1-7446
Jl

"'

.
·''

..

'

.

'

~·

.

·-

�'.

'

~

'

.....

,'\

~y.

Pomeroy- Midclaport. Ohio

A.tS.M=~~~-

Scores

F1nl ...... Mard1 17
Jl-.nl• tt. FalrWIP Dlcld..,al!l
Mt'1n . .il: Sllale "Ill, . ,..r It
KaMU ltll&amp;r M. LL~W• 5S
D.! 1"•1 U, Wk-WU State t~
8ft.... RO..t. Matt'lll t
hnlw IW, M~...,...•Mtr 13
Ka~t~~a~~ Stair M. OreP... lllt
AI U••ta. Neb.
ftl"'t Rei_., M.m:h ••

OW.BIPScllool8uktUt&amp;ll
8e)'!l l&amp;l'p.MI To--nwllt lle!.!lllt s

1JJ U•ltd ~"rna .. WrUf.kl• l
Sal-.lo~.¥ ,

Mardi II

DI•W.all
, At ('uloa f'hk' Cr wr
W Gu111a 75, Glnrd If
AI Ualw-rslly of Telf•

MaMII~ MU.h•~ Dyrta(:ath7t (ol ~

AI Coi~M~ba s .Colblt'um
Ca...,w..- 'nL. !ll.e&amp;IM.ttroM. Ill

AI

Ua.ve r~ y

Ptuabu.qillll. Ea.Nen JlllchllliN 81
v.-.r~~~aM, utalt!Mai•Tf
M•na.' SCale 7R. Norlila Carollu Slalf'

of O..J~•

hl't!llnoll&amp;ll ~ na f'oresl Parll l\f (tal ) ·
·IM"tlikia III

"

At Canwn F1HdhoWMl
Waollltlr Trlway 11. Gilt,." Mill"
H11wken SS
·,
At Uah'crslty of TO'Ifodo
Sp&amp;flll H18hlaiMI 5I, Wy•fui'd -Ill:
At Ohio Ual,·ei'HI J
·
'l'u MCU'IIIW.Illt V alii%, Wfwoelfol'!lhura: 1$

Ai llalwr'Nty of Dlt.Jion
HamUtOIIBa.all , Sprtftll~d Qllll.fll

.

f'M~Ivlt"w

n""

a

At Can&amp;oll FldlllhiWW!
Zanl'1lril~ Ro!llf'(.'r. .!l .... . . dian

a. ....

Val S

At UalwrNiy of Dt.)'60a
Mllidh49WllfeiM'It•• $3

Jill..oram ~ U.

"

Boys
· COLIJM8US, Otit&amp; ~U PI) -

Palrh-.;!i

h&amp;!lkrlb•U toiM'AIUAr ... al st. JoMI Arf'M:
DivWon I
t.nln i\dmlral Kllll c !1-1) v11o ralwnliW~ u ..... n M('Jlhaley (ti ·S), Frid 111 ,
IO: Jta.m.
Clnt:l-.».tl Woedward ('!t-2) n P~tm~~t
\'alSey F•.-.• CU...J) , FrkiQ, :1 p.m.
F1•l11: SaiiWIIIay. 5:31 p.m .
Dl ""-ton II

West Gtllllltll 1"::2 1 n
l'll-51. Th••AY . s:a p.m.

Camhrkl~~:r

PoAsmoudt (t-f-11 v~~o MaMIIf'ld Mil·
lllhu (1!'! -4) , Tlhanda;r , t p.m .

' F1•1M:

S aturd~,

I : U p.m.

Di11i!don Ill
H~t mUion

llllcln

(SO) u Spitrta
ThUHday, II: at a.m.
M'ootl(er Trlway ( 2t·-H "~ Zo.rvU"·
1\Hie.a w~trauo Valle)' f!l-.tl . Thuntday t
HiJ~:hlllnd t~ H l .

p.m.
,
' t'lnad": S:Uunl"" , 10 a.m.
Dl"lijkln IV
Kalida t U--1) "" For1 LoNmk• (z.l ·~ l .
fl'kllly, 3: 30p.m.
( :olwntxno Wtrlllf' (tl·t) \'II Zanetirilk&gt;
Ro!ecrans ( IK- 4), Frtday , 8 p.m .
FI ... IM: SIIJ.urd llf.. 9: 15p.m .

Girls scores
OMo Kl~th Sc hool S..skr lhall
Ulrl!- ~alt&gt; ToW"namrnt RHull!l
B)' VoitPd Prf'!'ls ... lfornaulonal
Satwd~.

MaJ'I' It lit

Dhb!loal
I Ipper Arlin~ on 55, N Ca n Glt•nOak 5-t
Dhbikln II
1\kr Kohan -46. Mradcnl.tarook It tetl
· llhd!don Ill
Vlf'ftRa MalhPW!I 6.1, Ullca .tit
01,.-l!llon 1\'

Ka.lkla i%, ~ ( 'h :trlf'S IIm SE U

results

Grof'R'Ia Te4: h 91. Iowa Statt' 4M
Rl..tuno ....n . India na 69
T~&gt; mptl' ~1 . Lehh:h ':!
Gf'O.-,;liOWl' ... l..oublalllll Mall' 13
Se(·ond Ro ... d , .Man.•h '!II
Rl l'hmoncl 59, Geo ...la Tt• ch il5

!rmple&gt; 1-1. Gt'O.-,;Hown 53
AI Ea11t R.lht!rlord , N ..J.
R1•«1onal Se rnlflaals . Mart~ h :!-1
Rhod(' bland "' · Dukl'
Rl c hm o,nd vs. Te m~
R&lt;"r;lonal t~IJWol,. Ma~_· ll 'ttl
Rhod E' ls land -Duk r wlnlJt&gt;r "" ·
IU t" hmond·Tf'mplt' wl•ner
SOUTHEAST
,\t Allaalll
Fi rst Round, Man· h 17
,\uhum 90. BradiP)' *i
Oklahoma 9~ . Trnnr_..w,..OIIdla n~ a
Brir;ham \ ' nunr; m\. North C'a roll~&amp;a ·

C'h;u-lottt• tt COT!
Loul!i\'l llf' 'lO. Or i' Jon. ~a t t&gt; Ill
Sl&gt;t•ond RoUnd. Man •b l!t
Oklahoma IO'i, Auhurn ItO
Hrlj~~: ham

\ ' nun!{ 16

i\1 fl nd nmdl
Fli-sl Rn1ind. M&amp;:rt'h IK,

\ ' llla no,•a K·!, Arklt.n~~a!; 11
llllnol ~ ltl . TPxas ·San t\ral onlo TI
l\l ur )-1and !l\! 1 ( "a I-S alibi Rarh ara ll2
K••niUl' k.l' !19, So uthern 11-1
Set·omt Ro ...d . Man:•h '!tl
\ ' lllario ' a 66. 01\nols Q3
Kc nllll'k)' !10, Mar)1and Ill

.-

Ne \'ada· Lu VeKJU! 541, SW MIIIIIIIIUrl St.

II

S~oMI Rlltr~d, Marcil 20

'

Artz.oM M-I,_W.n Hall $5
Iowa IM. tJNLV 8t

....

"'

~
Re(PogJ S.mlllnal~~o Miardo U
Ml c ~can 'o'!l. Nardll carollu.
Iowa n . Arbo•
~~1111 Fl•l. M~mll Z'l'
Ml c lllll{a~~t·North Cai'GIInl ~¥ 1nM r ,._
lowa· Arbo• wi~URr
AtKa _ _.. City, Me.
NaUenal S.mlfi•l•, April 2
E.at.111 c llampkln 'o'll. MlchwAI t:Mmplon
So ulh e tjlil c ham,lon u. We" t
c Mmplon
NaUoMI ChMPplonllhlp, Aprll.t
F.aiii·MidweKt winner om. S.ldhl'lifll·
W r-t~t winner .

Cage scores
NIT Plllrtqs aad Rfrndts
By United Prl!llsln~rnat ~JIIll

F1rM

RoW~d

Marc-h II
Ohio Stat.- foe, IHd Domllllion '73
Man:h 17
Connrdlc.t ft, Wt'tll Vl,.llllia $1 COT)
~u...-la
Gtaorila Soalhena .til
Bolllon CoUe,;.- 73, Slf'na I~
Lo•ia• Tecllll, Ark.·Uidt' Rock H
Ho.aon II. Fenlham II
EVannillt&gt; II. Ulah S5
New Mrllllco 86. PepperdiiW' i5
Ore!fOn Kl , Saata Clan~
Man!h HI
Arka1U11U Stat.- 10. Nf: LGul!llana 51
an-eland Stat,. fit, Dllnelll Stale ~

».

tOT&gt;
Middle Tenn. stat~ 115, Tf'rJM511t'f! Ill
Suudlern Ml~!dsslppl7.t , OtmiiOR &amp;9

Louisiana Teeh ( 2'l·IIJ 'o'!'l. Conllf'ctk!lll t

At Harlford. fO liA.
flf"lll Ro..nd, Man:h lit

,\1

.

( IS.I-1 ) a i Ha rtford , Conn., Mp.m.

Nf"A,\ BASKETBALL
EAST
,\t O•aprl Hill, N.C.
flrst Round, Man:h 11
Khodf' Island 117, MINOO•I 118
Syral'U!!it' t!l, North fsrolfnlli A.IJT S$
So..U,_r rn Ml' tho41:o~t ~. No t"' DaiTM' 75
Pukf'·85, Bo!loton Unl,.-e ri'iM)" H .
'
Sf't'Oad KoWtd, Man.~ h It
Rbndj• h;(ll.nd 91, SyraCIIIII' !-1
DukP !l.t, Southt'rn MethodiM '79

l ..t• uls\illl• 91,

nonu 85

Va. Commonweallh It I, Marshall Hit
Colorado state t3, New Orleu!l ~
Stanford 1\D, Lo~ Buell State 77
Msrth 'll

NCAA

..

Mh: hl~t•• 1111.

AI Loa An Jek's
lltl'!lt U..-d, M.arelll~
AtiiOM H. Cornell 5t
!Wton HaU Ill, tt"xas· tl Puo N
Iowa It!, FlorWa Slide t8

Pairings
lor llw 11th bo)'K· !l.... e 111111 !K'Mol

n

K11N11a!l Stah·· hnl.e wln!M'r ""·
Vdli('&gt;rtiii·IUIIIU" wlaM r
WEST
At Salt LaW Clly
a.IIIMI. Makh H
Nvrtll CaroU•fQ. Nortll Trus Suate 15
Loyola Mu)tiiO•I li t, WJI!fniiiC Ill
Mlf hllu
Slat• sa
florida t l, &amp; . lctlla's II
Sfl.'0-.1 Ro•d, Mal'('h It·
Nardi ( 'a roll• IU, Lo,.la Mar)'mOWII

Dlvlsloa IV "
AI Ualwrdy of Toll!*'
Kalkla U. Hvlalllr 5l
,U Bowtl~ t:rt'f'l'l

raw...... ,_.

RrJI:Hnal Fl•l, llllln!h

'"'

( 'ol . ......... AI, Conwy

k~t. ...... IS, Xa"lt&gt;r COli .. I 'n
Sl.'c.' OIIIIa. ..... M~tol't't.!t

· Yllnll._.. lt •~
iOTI
KaiUIIUI tl , M•un)' Sble Sll
..tl ~ntlac, Mlcb.
Rtopolllll S.mll•l~~o Nlut•ll U
k aMU Stair \'&amp;, l"vrdlll'
V!UIIIerWI u . Ka -

Blrmlnji~:ham ,

,\Ia .

R{' l{lonal Se mlllnal !l, Man: h ~-1
IA ub\'il k&gt; n . Oklahoma
VlllanD\'a \ ' !'\, Kto ntut:k y
ftj •,;innal Final , Man: II ~
Lou\!1\'lllt&gt;-Oklahoma wlnno•r v....
Vlllll now-Ke lllctt·h wlnrK'r

Ma~h

:n

.

,

Gf'OF'I(la ( illl-15) Ill Mlddlf' Te nn. St .
U'l·IIJ , 1: U p.m.
Cl&lt;'wlaMI Stall' c:n.-7) al Ollalo Slatf'

C17·12) , 1: H p.m.
·
Southern MI Mslsslppl flt-101 al Va.
Commonweal lll (e2-1 1) , 4:30p.m .
O.Non CoUep ( 1&amp;-131 al Eva11s'o'iiiP
ctHJ . M: S5 p.m .
RoW!Iton ( 18-12) al C. lonado SkiP
! l e:l:lJ,!t:.1t p.m.
Orepn ( 1&amp;-13 ) a l Nt•.,.,· Medco (21·13),
t.3t p.m . .
.
ArkanlVIA Slatr (1»-13) •I S.anlord
Cti -IIJ. lt.30p.m.
Quarlf'rfhw.IM
Mll~h 'l$-tl- SlWI t.ao 1te dettlrml•d
•Se mlnn~~ls
Man.•h :&amp;11 at New York: 7 p.m .
Cha.nlplonshlp
Man:h 30 at Nt&gt;w Yortt. 1 p.m.

Calendar
ElllhlhiUon Bll~~t•hall
Hou...lon 'o'!l. Bo!iiton at " :IMer Han n,
t' la ., I :., p.m.
Kattsa..'i flty 'liS. St . IAailll at Sl .
Pdrr!lflu~ . fla ., 1: 85 p.m .
Tt":out~&gt; ,K, PhWIUf'R'h al Brad4-nlon,
fla .. 1:15 .m .
Los An•dl!s ,.~&gt;. Phlladf'lpllla Ill Clesr-

wa ter, f11l., 1: 1 5 p.m .
Nl'w la' ork !NLI ... ~. Muntl'l'il at W ~t
Palm Be~U:h , Fla .. 1:05 p.m.

• Toront• ""· Chk:a~~:o ( o\L) Ill Sllta!looltt,
p.m.

F1 a., 1: :10

Clnc hwtll "'· Mhme!loota IIJ. Or-.ndo,
F'lll .. 1: 30

San

p.m.

Fra~~el~~eo

'o'i'l . Mllw11ukrr (111'11 Ml

f handlf'r, Ariz•• 3 ·p.m .
MllwaukN&gt; (!l.'l ) ""· Sratlll• Ill Trmpt•.
,\riZ .. 3 p.m.
SeaUit- ... ~. Arlz.oftll Slate&gt; al T e mPI"
(,\S lJ),3 p.m.
Oaklanl \'ii. ( 'allfornlll al Palm
SpriDI'"· Calli., .t p.m .
Chk•a,;o (AL) \ '.'1. Detroit at Lakehuld,
Fla.• 7: 3S p.m.
New l'oril (ALl "s. RaMimol"f' Ill
Miami, 7:&amp;'1 p.m.
Chk:~t.•• (NL) "~'~ · S~t.n Di e~ al Yuma ,

Arl:z .. S p.m.

.

neds, Browning edge Phillies

By FRED LIEF
UPI Sporlts Writer
The NCAA Tournament like a
party starting to thin In the late
hours. reduced its guests to 16
Sunday.
Gone was the lone remaining
team from last year's Final Four
-Nevada-Las Vegas . Gone was
a traditional NCAA power Georgetown. Practically gone
was a whole Influential clique the Big East. Only one of the six
Big East entrieS Is left In the
. tournament.
.
But stlllaround,waltlngforthe
partytomovelaterintothenlght,
· are unlikely crashers In Rhode
lsland, Vanderbilt and Rich·
mond. And at the edge of the
room Is VIllanova, the 1985
champion who borrowed a bit of
old magic in advancing to the
round of 16.
" I can't believe It "said Rollle
Masslmlno, cOach' of the Big
East's VIllanova .
East Regional (Hartford, (Jonn.)
Temple·74, Georgetown ~3
Mike Vreeswyk and freshman
Mark Macon scored 21 points as
Temple, 31-1, won its 17th
straight. The Owls made 23 of 24
second-hall free throws. Georgetown, 20-10, shot 30 percent from
the floor In its worst defeat this
season.
" Now Is the lucky time of
year," Temple Coach John Cha·
ney said. "As long as we stay
blessed, we'll continue."
Temple plays ' Richmond
Thursday In a regional semllinl!l
at East Rutherford, N.J. Duke
plays Rhode Island in the other
game.
·
Richmond 59, Georgia Tech M
Peter Woolfolk struck lor 27
points to help Richmond. 26-6,
post Its ninth straight 'victory.
Georgia Tech ·drew to 57-55 on
Dennis Scott's 3-polnter with 34
seconds left, but Richmond's
Benjy Taylor sealed it with a pair
of foul shots live seconds ia'ter .
Georgia Tech shot just 33 percent
and was beaten on the boards by
the smaller Spiders. The Yellow
Jackets, 22-10, scored their lewest points this season.
"It may not have been the most ·

. PLANT CITY , Fla. IUPI) Lefthander Tom Browning be·
c~ me the firs t Ci ncinnati Reds
pitcher to go six innings and
showed his hilling abilities Sunday in a 3-1 exhlbilion win over
the Philadelphia P hillies.
· Browning gave up his first run
oi the spring, but e merged with a
0;7:\ ea rned run average alter
giving up that one run on three
hi ts. two wa lks a nd one strikeout
in the !lrst six Innings.
.. He's just pitching with more
co nfide nce after losing it last
~ar," sa id manager Pete Rose.
·: Rose said Browning just
picked up where he le ft oil
lJ!lea use he wa pitching as well as
anybody in the National League
in the last live weeks of the 1987
season
"Things are jus t working out, "
'ill id Browning . "Confidence Is a
IJ\g part of it . I'm confident ot
t.bere now and I came to spring
tta ining confid ent: I'm just work·
ing on things -r need to work on. :
•

· ·hank Williams , who had not
pitched since March 7 because of
arm stillness , threw one Inning,
and righthander Bill Landrum
had his second consec utive im·
ptesslve outing over two Innings.
Landrum , who had three con·
secutive bad outings, went back
to a windup delivery In ·a game
las t week and continued Sunday
by striking out the side in the
ninth Inning and lour batters In
his two innings.
' 'In sprln!l' training you can't
worry about what: a guy did two
times ago or three times ago
J

.,

Indians lose, 15.0 ·
PALM SPRINGS, Calli. (UP!)
- Bob Boone and Devon White
each had three hits Sunday,
leading an 18-hlt California at·
tac k that powered the Angels to a
15·0 exhibition victory over the
Cleveland Indians.
White's hlts .lncluded a polr of
run-scoring triples. Boone also
tripled and had an RBI single In
the !lith.
California starter Mike Witt
pitched two-hit ball for live
Innings to earn hl1; fourth spring
victory without a loss. Joe
Johnson, Stewart Oiburn and
Bryan Harvey finished ' up the
four -hit shutout.
Tom Candlottl, the . lndla~s·
starter, was rocked for nine runs
and 11 hits in 4 1·3 Innings.
The Angels' attack also In·
eluded two ~Its ·each by Gus
Polidor, Wally Joyner and Chlll
Davis, who hit a two-run homer ·
In the third, his second.
, The Angels. are 9·7 In Cactus
League play . aeveland fell to
8-10.
.

Kansas F.rlday .In a regional
semifinal at Pontiac, Mich. The
other game matches Purdue
against Kansas State.
K11118&amp;11 81, Murray stale 58
Danny Manning scored 25
points and preserved the victory
with a rebound to allow Kansas,
23-11, to escape. Murray State's
Don Mann missed his shot and
after several tips Manning se· .
cured the baiL The All-America
was fouled and sank two free
throws. Jeff Martin llad 22 points
lor the Racers, 22·9. Murray
State shot 37 percent from the
floor.
West Regional (Los Angeles)
Arlzou 84, Seton HaU M
Anthony Cook's 20 points and
Sean Elliott's 19 carried Arizona
In another runaway. The Wild·
cats, 33-2, led 45-25 at halftime en
route to their 13th straight
victory. Arizona has won Its last
eight by an average of 27 points,
For Seton Hall, 22-13, Mark

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Mark Baker, Dayton ·Dunbar's
explosive senior guard, heads the
1988 United Press International
Division I boys all-Ohio basket· .
ball team.
Baker, who teamed with se·
cond team selection Mike Haley
Jr. to give the Wolverines per·
haps the top 1·2 scoring punch in
the nation, was voted the Dlv·
!sian I player of the year In
ball.oting by coaches from
around the state.
The 6-loot-1 Baker was the
coaches' choice in a two-man
race with 6-loot-6 junior Jimmy
Jackson of Toledo Macomber,
probably the state' s most public·
!zed player. B;lker received 18 of
the 48 votes cast, while Jackson
had 12.
Joining those two on the
all-Ohio first team were Mark
Alberts Jr. of . Wooster ; Bill
Robinson of Canton McKinley
and Harold Walton of Lorain
Admiral King.
Baker , already signed to at.
tend Ohio State, ran a Dunbar
offense that averaged 104.5
points per game and was over the
100-polnt mark In 12 oilS regular
season contests.

Division I UPI

AU~Ohio

The 1188 UnMd

Pre~ ll

lnternatloMI DlviAion I hop aU-Ohio
h&amp;!lkethall tum , lncl ... lnr; helaht, •rade ani

••ortnc ave rare:
Mark AThem, WoDRer. 1-1, !14!tllor. n . 7.
Mark Baker, Da)'lttn Dllatlar, l-1, ~ nlor , 21.tl.
Jlrnm,..lacbo., TGiedo Macomtn•r1t-l,j ... lor,
Zl.l .
Bill Rolllmon,_Canlon MciUnlf'J, I-ll, ~~elllor ,
LGral• Admiral kla«, 1-!.

Mnior, 11.1.
.' H:I J\H H-~ · 1\1
Mtkl! IJaJey , Da;ytoa Dwanbar, t-8,1•1or, S·U.

Kerin Humble. C.yaM~a Fallll, 1-l, jMior,

n .o.

DaPnels OwenA. M..,leld SeNior, t-1, aerllor,

11.1.
Eric RHeJ , Cleveland Sl . .loHI'fl, 1-11.

IU.

~~erafor,

'nm SmUll, We&amp;lervlllfo Nordl, 1-!, ~;e nlor , IU,
THI/4() 11-.".-1.\1
BMI F.Aiwanl1, Maullkln re-.,.r,f.'J,q......,ll.&amp;.
Lewbt Geier, Col..nbusUndeR, l-t,leiiiH,IB .8 ~
Chip Jones, Onclnnatl ''iHdward; .... ~~tnlor ,
11.0.
Chrlll Mack. Oactn...u Sl. Xa\'Wr, 11-S, Atnlc..-,
!U.

Ron Ple~e. Frankllft.f-1, se.aor. l4.'7.

Basketball Team

.•WJ-.'1.' 1·11. "1-:''l"lfJ\
Charlie Back. Bea~k; D.J, Ienton,
ctncl_.l WIHillward; Mille Clark, Prrr')'llbu~J ;
·Boh ('otre)', Niwark; TMd
Falrfletil;

•w.ela.

i\ndy Moon!, Ho ... Ver8oa: Olllft PetaWI ,

f: IH :-!1" "1"f,'.J\f

IU.
I
H.rold Walton,

Baker averaged 27.6 points per
game game and his 11 assists
helped the 6-foot-8 Haley to
average 34.2 points per contest, a
combined 61.8 for the talented
..
pair.
''Mark is the type of player who
can hurt you In so many ways,"
said Dunbar Coach Mike Haley
Sr. "He has the ability to drive
both ways. He can penetrate, hit
the open man and he also can pull
up. He can score Inside as well as
outside. "
Baker was a 33 percent shooter
from 3-polnt range the. past
season, 60 percent on 2-polnters
and 50.7 percent overalL
"Physically, he's the Ideal Big
Ten guard," added Haley. "He's
hard nosed. He can go In tlfere
and bang the boards. In fact ,
every now and then, we even
moved him to forward so they
wouldn't sag on MichaeL
"Mark is what I call the
complete player," said Haley.
"Where some players are gifted
shooters or just being a good
point guard, he does both.
"He also was our team
leader," added Haley, "and he
led by example. He wasn't one of
those guys who'd say 'common

Kt&gt;Ue rilll" FalrmMt: Derek w..... Eftlkt.
lit' \t 1H ·IHI.I·: .\If-,' \ TlfJ \
A.llle •~11. Wawrea Westel'll llfterw; Fred

lal'llf)',

Alr.nn

Joe Barr,.

C.•nt·•Mtr:

••a.

O.ford T*••_.a; Doc
Martet•; Dan
Cro~Ma. a-..- lmall LaSalle; R.D. DeLoadt,
WoOMer: nm Dtbewc, BariiHMII: Derdt
Fo•r, Dayto.Palle.-...; RobRa••.ancl...ll
Oa1l Blllr. .Iller Wewe-, z-svlllie; Tem Rsll,
(.1tvelaad HeJc~;

"-•••1 ••lnloll, Oll.n...

Racldm, C.,.bop Falk;
Scotlolll-., Gro~port-Madlsoe; Berro a IUaller,
Ml......_a; P ..l. M~~,J~ea , Cl•l-'1 Pllrull
Marla•; Crall MlcMellll, Tek-*t Wllltmer; Clu~•
Owe., c.l.niHis Mlml"n:
Pore, Wif!lltr·
. l'llle Nord!: Steve Petee. Ashland; Keith Pertd•.
· Ca MGN JlcK,oley; Maurke Rlgt-. Hamil ...;
Rick RlaWnowar, Tole*l Wldtrner; Otrt. 8p. .
lrNbnn;

La~

Do•

KeG•· MIINIIIon ~1'11 ;

nail Prhlceto.;

C~)'

CMI~

Sellmllll, (]~Ia.
WaWnJnlak, Pmna

Nonn.liMIJ),

1'1•.••"-••ftlu ~.w n~

O.ohar

-

- r:,,...,.,.,,.t/,-.o,.lli- -

Muil

Ballf!r,

Mlklt GIBam,

Larry A. Lee has been' added to the stall of Rio Grande
College/ Community College as an Instructor 'of nursing.
Lee received his bachelor's degree In nursing from Ohio
University, where he graduated cum laude. He received an
associate degree hi applied science in nursing from
Parkersburg Community College.
Some of the honors Lee has achieved Include being listed In
"Who's Who In American Nursing 1986-87" and receipt of
certification In nursing administration through the American
Nur5es Association In 1986.
Lee currently resides In Chillicothe.

....-----.~.-A-~-e-a--d-e_a_t_h_s_____. . .
1

~ ...

'

f

which ended tied at 1l·ll afier
Mathews led at one time 9·2.
Santiago scored the first two
baskets of the second period to
put Mathews In front to stay.
The Mustangs, ranked No. 2 In
the final United Press International Board of Coaches Division
III ratings, quickly put the game
out of reach In the third quarter,
building Its margin to 50-32 at the
end of the period.

Lelah Weatherby
Lelah~

Veda Weatherby Winebrenner, 89, long-time Middle·
port resident, died Sunday at
Pleasant Valley Hospital In Parkersburg, w, Va.
Mrs. Winebrenner was born at
Pratts Fork on Aug. 5, 1898, a
daughter of the tate Peter and
Eva Gok!sberry Mohler. She was
a retired licensed practice nurse
having been employed at the
former. Meigs General Hospital
for a number of years. She was an
active volunteer with the Amerl·
can Red Cross, a member of the
Ladles Auxiliary of Feeney·
Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, and a member of Heath
United Melhodlst Church In
'Middleport.
Surviving are a: nephew, Ches·
ter 0. Rogers of Pomeroy and
three nieces.
.
Besides ber parents, she was
preceded In death by her first
husband, John William Wea-

Gillam top coach
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Mitch Gillam of Lorain Admiral
King, whose Admirals were the
only unbeaten Division I team In
the state. the past season, has
been voted the United Press
International Division I coach of
the year .

,,'
'

u .a.a.L •nrm~

Ia

KEllER BUSINESS
SERVICES
611 WT MAIN STREET
HU llCI(J( OFFIC(
lOCAnON
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
(614) 992-7270

If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
about what they can
do for your-company
- call us. We would
be
to vlllt with
to you.
•
I

fte

hliUG

'IIUUU.

O.•••••lea of OJaM llu
1ft lu ·paliU.

~

............ ful.,_
a... ••.

UoOI·U..IDC,

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

- C p R -. . . U4
poll•• of Oel-llu

. . .- . :

'paa~,

......

Three winners

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions- Bessie
Turley, . Middleport; Domingo
Alvarado, Racine; Wilbur Rowley Sr., Pomeroy; Pernle
Brewer; Pomeroy .
Saturday Discharges - Cha·
rles Neece, James Large, Harold .
Fetty, Ruth Morris.
Sunday Admissions - Clara
Phillips, Rli tla nd; Barbara Ba I·
ley, Tuppers Plains; Rita Hendrickson, Mason, W.Va.
Sunday · Discharges .,... Sher·
man Williams, Katherine Evans,
Kenneth Cundiff, Dorothy Sayre.

CLEVELAND (UPI) -There
were three winning tickets from
Saturday night 's $6 million Super
Lotto drawing.
The winning numbers were 5,
6, 7, 9, 11 and 13. The holder of
each winning ticket will receive
20 annual pre-tax Installments of
$100,000. There were 576 tickets
with five of the six numbers. each
worth $1 ,000, while there were
14;761 tickets with four of the six
numbers, each worth $44 .
Wednesday's jackpot Is worth
an estimated S3 million.

Am Electric Power ........... ..28'4
· AT&amp;T .................................28%
. Ashland 011 ...... ......._........... 64!4
Bob Evans ..... .....................l6%
Charming Shoppes .............. 12%
City Holding Co ................... 30
Federal Mogu1.. .................. 40%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... ........ 64%
Heck's Inc .......... ............. .... 1% .~
Key Centurion ....... ............ .40%
Lands' End .. .................. :..... 21
Limited Inc .... .... ................ 20%
Multimedia Inc .................... 67

therby; 'her second husband,
William Homer Winebrenner; a
son, Herbert M. Weatherby, and
two sisters, Cora 0. Mohler and
Clara V. Rogers.
.
Services will be held at 3: 30
p .m . Wednesday at the
RawlilliS·Coats-Biower Funeral
Home with the Rev. C. S. Zuniga .
officiating. Bttrlal will be In :
Riverview Cemtery. Friends '
may can · at the funeral home ·
anytime after 2 ,p.m, Tuesday.
Family members will be present '
'
tram 7 ~o 9 p.m. - ·

. RGC!CC hires office director

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Saturday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
424 .
Ticket sales totaled $1,683,913,
with a payoff due of $697.970.50.
PICK-4
853~ .

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$279,267, with a payoff due of
·$126,169.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$3,792. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$158.
Super Lotto 6, 9, 5, 13, 7, 11 .
Super Lotto ticket sales
totaled $5,720,575.

:~~b~e:~~~~~~ :::::::::::::::::~~

Shoney's Inc ...... ... ., .... :.......2~%
Wendy's Inti . ................. ...... 6% .
Worthington Ind ...... ............ 20'f'a

Read the Best Seller
Read the

Kingsley N. Meyer Jr. has been appointed to the position of
part-time director of continuing education at Rio Grande
College/ Community College.
Meyer received his bachelor's degree from Wilmington
College, where he received an Ohio teaching certificate In
biology and outdoor education .
He was most recently employed with Bob Evans Farms as
recreation operations coordinator. Meyer has also worked with
youth programs. the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
and is very active In outdoor education. recreation and public
speaking.
, Meyer has been an executive board member of the Ohio
' Valley VIsitors Center and an advisory board member of lh!l
0.0. Mcint yre Park District. He Is also a member of the Sierra
Club, Nature Conservancy, and the National Audubon Society.
Meyer Is from Rio Grande a nd resides there with his wife and .
daughter .

The
HOLZER CLINIC

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH
HAS ADDED THE
FOLLOWING

PHONE LINE
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

992-2188
This number has bean ,added to make it easier
for you to contact us. We apologize for any
inconvanien~a you may have axpirlancad In
the past.
·
·

CLRSSIFIED RDS

•.

June Cremeans

June (J. C.) Cremeans, 83,
Depot St., Rutland, died Sunday
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
following an extended Illness.
Mr. Cremeans was born July
12. 1904 In Lincoln County, w.
Va., a son of the late J~tmes and
Bertha McCrosky Cremeans . He
was a retired construction •
worker and was a member of the
U~lted
Faith , Church' In
Middleport.
Sutvtvlng are his wife, Iva
. Stewart Cremeans, whom he
married on June 20, 1923; live
sons. Jim Cremeans, Scotsdale,
.Ariz.; VIctor and Roy Cremeans
of Bucyrus; Gary Cremeans,
Rutland, and Dave Spangler,
Rutland; seven daughters,
Glenna Fetty, Langsville; Allee
Kennedy, Rutland; Zelma KaylOr, New Haven, W. Va.; Joann
Smith, Syracuse; Phyllis
Spangler, Rutland; Leoma Wou·
lett, Chicago, DI.; 'Karen Gilkey,
Middleport; three brothers,
Basil of Rutland; Theodore of
Middleport, and Charles Estel
Cremeans of Trenton, Ohio; a
sister, Maude Sml th of Rutland;
32 grandchildren, 38 great·
grandchildren and several nle·
ces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by a son, J. ~.
Cremeans of Middleport In 1985;
four brothel'S and three sisters.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. ·
Wednesday
at the Rawlings· ·
.
Coats-Blower Funeral Home
with the Rev. Robert E . Smith,
Sr .. officiating. Burial will be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today
and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on
Tuesday.

Contact one·of our

You'll want tp
advertise in our
guide for timely
tips and information
on gardening.

,

sales represen4Ltwes
·Oisted below)' today
I

to reseroe your ad space.
AD DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY APRIL 1st.

r

Goa·

u.. o,vau.a.,

11 your problem - end you teal that
hurlng aide er. prlotd TOO HIGH for your
BUDGET - than plaa18 conttlct ue It DILES
HEARING CENTER. We have many refanll
IOUnltl for •••l•tt~noa end you may quellfy

If

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...u. VUU.t:... Gee••··
asea, .110 . _ . _

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AU la-MI14 puttae
WiD .... , . _ . . . . . ..

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whell• you . . regula~ employed or not. h Ia
our hope thlt NO ONE whocen be helped lhould
be tliprlvld of benet heesh1g. L.a Ul be your ICI·
voam,
·
CALL TOLL-FREE 1·800.237·7711

•

·-·~ ............. l'u~ ....

DIUS HEAliNG CENTER

IH W.... St., M 11 1i QIIIa 4~701
(614t SM-1571
1 _2,7.-7716
.
Wefelbn
'·

.

''
'

Hospital news

l _

Vienna Mathews tops
Utica for III crown

"liCARL A. ICEitiR Ill. CPA

.Wmlnl Kl111

The Women's Association of
Middleport First Presbyterian
Church will meet 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. Group I will have the
program. Group II will hostess.
Installation of officers will take
place.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt EIBs &amp; Loewl

Nursing instructor joins staff

at the •University of . Akron,
averaged· 27.7 pOints per game. ·
Walton, a 6-foot-2 guard, led King
to a 20-0 regul~tr season mark and the No. 2 rating behind Dunbar In
the UPI' Board of Coaches ~
ratings. Slj!nE'd at Kent State;
Walton averaged 19.7 points per
game. ,
Haley, one of an outstanding
crop of juniors In the state,
headed up the second team,
which also Included 6-foot-9 Da· ·
PrelsOwensofMansfleldSenlor,
6-loot-11 Eric Riley of Cleveland
St. Joseph, 6-foot-2 Tim Smith of
Westerville North and Cuyahoga
Falls' 6-loot-7 Kevin Humble,

O.yiOa

Emergency meeting
An emergency meeting of
Racine American Legion Post
602 In regard to by-laws has beep
called for 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the po$t home.

Stocks

•

Oyde Scragg, 87, Rutliind,dled
Saturday night at Camden-Oark
Hospital In Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr. Scragg was born May 6,
1900 In West VIrginia, a son of the
late John and )'dary Stephenson
Scragg. He was a retired machine operator at Owen-Illinois In
Charleston,W. Va.
. Surviving are bls wife, Bla~he
Ste\Vart !jcr.au; ~ ~~lllightf!rs, ,
Barbara Comer, Corning, N.Y.;
Helen Brown, Columbia, s. C.;
Carole · Norman, orange City,
·Fla., and Lynn Swackhamer,
Johnsville; three sons, John of
Radcliff: Joseph W. of l&gt;.llrkersbui'g, w. Va., and i&gt;avld of
Belpre; two sisters, Esther Taylor, North Ridgeville, and Opal
Alderman, Falnnont, W.Va., 20
grandchildren, 5everal greatgrandchildren and several nle·
ces and nephews .
Besides his parents, he was ·
preceded In death by · three
brothers and four sisters. ·
Graveside rites will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday at Miles ~em·
tery In Rutland with the Rev.
Jean O'Brien officiating. Friends
may call at the Rawlings-Coals·
Blower Funeral Home from 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

continued rrom page 1

""'••• - - - - . , - - -

-----Announcements---- -

Dennis L. Franks has been named coordinator -of computer
services at Rio Grande College/Community College.
Franks attended Marshall University and received an
associate degree In computer science from Rio Grande In 1983.
He was· previously employed as a coordinator/Instructor In
the BEIIP program lor the Gallla-Jackson-V)nton Joint
Vocational School District. He also develo~d training
programs for local business, Industry and the general public, as
well as belng·a n Independent consultant .
Born and raised In the suburbs of Detroit. Mich. , Franks
moved to Gallla County at age 17, where he now resides with his
wife and two children.

Clyde SCragg

1'

their cooperation and assistance
Any resident needing any
with the local tuberculocls pro- further Information Is asked to
gram
· · co11tact the clinic at 992-3722.

College employs new c~ordinator

TO!&lt;YO (UP() - Mike Tyson
mllllon. "He had his hands up
retained his world heavyw~ight
high and that surprised me. I
title Monday, scoring a second·
went to the body and the middle. I
was looking to go to the eyes . He
round knockout of Tony Tubbs In
a scheduled 12-round bout at the
took a great shot and went
down.''
Tokyo Dome.
Tyson, 34·0 with his 30th
The Japanese Boxing Commls·
knockout, unleashed a devastal· slon doctor and Tubbs's handlers
lng left hook that staggered announced the challenger had
Tubbs'. The challenger crumpled suffered a l-Inch cut over his
in the corner as his trainer right eye.
rushed in to siop the light at 2:54 · Th~&gt; fight, opened with Tubbs
of the second.
·
landing first. Tyson scored with a
"My mission Is ·to go out there right to Tubbs's head then a jab
and destroy," said Tyson; 21. "I . to the head. Tubbs rebounded
can't lose. I refuse to lose."
with a jab to Tyson's face.
After an even first rourfd, the
The muscular champion then
New York-born champion at· went on the offensive, attacking
tacked. He landed rights and Tubbs with a left to the stomach
lefts to the flabby challenger, after the bell.
who was unable to respond.
Tubbs, 238 Y. pounds, appeared
Tyson punished Tubbs with a out of shape- a trait throughout
right to thl' body before deliver- what was once considered a
Ing the powerful left hook that promising career. Tyson, 216 Y.,
ended the second heavyweight 11; sc!Jeduled to light Michael
tltl~ light ever In Japan.
Spinks In Atlantic City, N,J.,
,;I.was looking loran opening," ·. June 27 In what Is expected to be
said Tysiln, who was guaranteed the richest fight In boxing
$5 million lor the defenSe, but history.
could earn as much as $10

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Senior guard Dianne Rappach
scored 20 points and handed out
10 assists Saturday night In
leading unbeaten VIenna Ma·
thews to a 63-48 win over Utica In
the championship game of the
Division III girls state high
school basketball tournl!ment at
St. John Arena.
The 5-foot-5 Rappach, who also
had 6 steals, hit on 3 of 6 3-polnt
field goal attempts and defensively disrupted the Utica offense, simply controlled the
game from start to finish.
Rappach and 6-foot-3 Judy
SantlagQ. who wound up with 16
points and 14 rebounds, each
scored 12 In the first half as the
Mustangs , who finished the season 27-0, took a 32-25 lead at'the
Intermission,
Utica, which wound up Its
season at 23-3, stayed ,with the
for the first quarter,

I

Meigs Courtly Emergency Medical ~rvlces reports nine calls
over the weekend.
Saturday at 11:05 a.m., Middleport to Bailey Run Road for
Wilbur Rowley to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2: 51
p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 1 for Gerald Jolly to Holzer Medical
Center; Middleport at 5:28 p.m . to Fourth Ave. for Lela
Winebrenner to Yeterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:38
. p.m. to the Amerlcare-Pomerroy Nursing Center for Pernle
Brewer to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:04 p.m.
to Route 7 for Jeff Reitmlre who was treated but not
transported; Rutland at 11:·21 p.m. to Swick Road for Edna
Swick to Veterans Memorlall{ospltal.
.
Sunday at 3: 47a.m .• Mld_dleport to Russell St. !or Carla Davis
to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 8:41p.m. to 106 State St .
for Joseph Zwilling to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport
at 8: 58 p.m. to Route 554 for Muriel Spires to Holzer Medical
Center.
.
1
·

Tyson ·:ret.ams
• ' c·ro
· _wn·

'
you guys, '!hen he'd be hiding out
there somewhere loafing."
Jackson, the lone junior on the
first team and a player coveted
by major colleges all oyer the
country\ averaged 26.1 points per
game this ~eason 19r Macomber .
Healsowasa firstteamplckasa
sophomore.
The 6-loot·ll Robinson, led
McKinley to a 19·1 'regular
season. Also bound lt&gt;r Ohio
Slate. Robinson averaged 17
points per game and was an
Intimidating shot blocker lor the
Bulldogs .
Alberts also led Wooster to a
19·1 regular season. The 6-foot-1
senior point guard, who will play

,.,ube.,.culos;
~
1

EMS has nine weekend calls

Bryant was limited to 11 points.
"lthlnkthey'reagreatbasket·
ball team," Seton Hall Coach
P.J. Carleslmo said. "That's the
best anyone has played against
us this year, . and the ,worst
anyone has made us look.
Arizona plays Iowa Friday In
the regional semifinals at Seat·
tie. Michigan also takes on North
Carolina.
Iowa 1M, Nevada.-Lu Vesu 116
JeH Moe and Ed Horton had 24
points each as Iowa lorced
Incessant turnovers In ellmlnat·
lng Nevada-Las Vegas, The
Hawkeyes. 24-9, were '?&lt;'aten by
the Rebels In last years tourn~men!. Iowa scored the games
first 10 points and led 51·39 at
halftime. For the Rf!bels, 28·6, ,
Gerald Paddle had 34 points. '
"We turned the ball over too
much to win, over and over
again," UNLV Coach Jerry Tarkanlan said. "The p~ss just took
us out of the game.

Dunbar's Baker top Division I player

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) -

because that.'s what spring train·
lng is lor." said Rose.
Brewing had a single In the
second inning and led oil the fifth
with a bunt single that paved the
way to a ll three runs. Also in the
fifth were singles by Chris Saba
and Dave Concepcion and a
two-run double by Kal Da niels .
Philadelphia scored In the
fourth on a walk by Phil Bradley,
a double by Von Hayes and a
sacrifice !ly by Lance Parrish.

handsome game IIi theeyesofthe
basketball junkies," Richmond
Coach Dick Tarrant said. "But It
was pretty In our eyes."
Southeas&amp; Re~ (Cincinnati)
Keatucky 11, MaryJIIJicl 81
Rex Chapman who hit 1 of 6
!rom the field and the foul line In
the first hall, and Ed Davender
each finished with 23 points to
power Kentucky. Maryland tied
the score 76·76 with 3:05 left
before turning cold. Brian Willi·
ams Jed the Terps, 18-13, with 20
points.
·
· "Davender told me at half·
, time, · that's history,"' Chapman
said. "He saki just play hard and
that's what I did."
Kentucky, 27-5,. meets Vlllan·
ova Thursday In a regional
semifinal at Birmingham, Ala.
Oklahoma meets Louisville In
the other semi.
Villanova 66 Illinois 63
Mark Plansky 'drew a foul In
the corner and made two foul
shots with lour seconds left to
carry Villanova. Rodney Taylor
then stole an lnbounds pass and
made two more free throws,
completing the Wildcats' star·
tling comeback from a 10-polnt
deficit with three minutes left.
Plan sky and Tom Greis scored 16
points each lor VIllanova, 23-12.
Kenny Battle had 15 lor Illinois,
23·10.
Midwest Regional (Lincoln,
Neb,)
Vanderbilt 80, Pittsburgh 74 (ot)
Vapderbllt's Barry Goheen
delivered. a pair of 3-polnters In
the llnal12 seconds of regulation,
Including one at the buzzer.
Goheen, who sank his leaning
buzzer-beater with two defend·
ers on him, finished with 22
points.
" With lour seconds left there's
not enough time to pass the ball
or get a screen," he said. " I was
fortunate togetasgood a shot as!
did and fortunate It went ln."
Vanderbilt, with star. center
Will Perdue having fouled out,
scored the first 6 points of
overtime. For Pitt, 24-7, Jerome
Lane had 20 rebounds and
Charles Smith 21 points.
The Commodores, 20-10, .play

The Dely Sentinel- Page 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

l..ooal news briefs

NCAA toumey field down to 'Sweet 16'
·

•

Mondey, M.ch 21, 1988

M.ch 21, 1988

,

l

&gt;·

·. SPECIAL SECTION APRIL 5, 1988
~oint

Pleasant Register
675-1333
· Vicky or Steve

Gallipolis Daily Tribune446-2342
or Chip

The Daily ·sentinel
. 992-2156

•

�, __ - ·....

.,
Plgl 8 The Deily Sentinel

J. ,;:. "" ~·,.

'.l."•-•' f.'. ,./J .... ~'!!

-

·

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Monday, March 21, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.No-win situations can be·won·
Au J• I

I am writilll
about tbe YOIIIII WOIIIIII who is
"Sttuillina in California." Shci was .
mud! lllllii!Jed by her mother-in.·
llw, and her hl&amp;tblnd l'dllsed to
inle~ "Don't' put me in tbe
middle," he said. ·
'
As a piiSIOr, I haW! beard a.11reat .
many complaints about mothers- .
in:law. If Ollly this wife could
undersland that her mother-in·law'
is desperately unhappy and that tbe
an,er she directs toward her daUIIh·
ter-in·law is nothi111 personal. This
motber wouldn't like her son's wife
· no matter who she was. All she
knows i$ that somebody else comes
now, and that is very paiilful
for her, .
·
·,
When your motber·in·law telephones, reac! your mail or grab a
llllpZine. Every few minutes, say,
"Oh really?" or "Of course" or
''You don't say," Let her talk as
10111 as she wan~ ll's her nic~.
It's a no-win situation for you, so
don'ttry to defend yourself. Jim let
her talk, t,alk, talk. - VERMONT
DEAR VERMONT: "Strusgliug"
certainly hit a hot button. I was
inundate~! with letters and they
copiained a lot of gOod advice. ·
Read on.
From Columbus, Ga.: I lived with
my mother·in·law when we were
first married, and then she lived
with us for 34 years;·until she died.
She had red hair and the disposi·
tion lhat usually goes with it. But I
got
... alo111 . with this old battle-ax
J)ellr

1:

lint

beautifully. My secret: I never ' ,..._ _ _ __
mpoJidlld to anythina she said, no
11!8tter how ~- Shci'd try her
damdest to Jlel a rise out of me, but :
uo way would I Jet her win by
Jettin1 into a fisht. Finally, she'd
blow llerself out like a summer
storm, then go out and buy me a . ANN~. . . "
~"'=\I
'
present. "Strualina" shoulc! try
this with her mother-in•law. I'll bet , .' a..rna, 5 $ ' '
it works. ·
:~~---.....--...;.-~
From Louisville: About that
·"
WOD!8D whose mother-in·llw wa&amp; a .
don't make 'em like her anymore.
mi&lt;Jerable witch: I had one of those,
From Orlando: My mother·in·
too, and I was glad you didn't tell law is a dream. It's my mother who
the wife to insist that her husband bas the sharp tougue and a knock
tell "Mom" off. He would if he ·· for everybody. The · woman has
cliuld, but he can't. The poor fellow alienated every one of her cliildreri.
is "mother-hung." I know because I I am the only one who is speak,iug
arn married to the same kind. These · to her. But she is my mother. She
Olen would ·ueed years of therapy · gave me life and she raised me.' I
and darned few would set it. .
know that she has had a diflicult
· From Tacoma, Wash.: My moth· time. My father drank and gam·
er·in,law has the meanest mouth in bled, and .he was a chaser: He never
the Western world. Thank God she took her anywhere. Ever sin~ ·t can
lives in another state. (We moved.) remember, Mom has been hQStile
When I sent her pictures of our and bitter. Her children were easy
children she ealled me up .and said, . . targets because they couldn't fisht
''The younaest isn't very gOod-look· back. But as you once said, Ann
ing. She looks just like you." ·1 did Landers, "To understand every·
not res!iond. There was a long thil!l is to forgive everything."
silence. She then asked, "What did Thank you for that bit of wisdom. ·
you say?" ll'ejllied, "Nothing." She
Planning a wedding? What's .
got the message.
right? What 's wrong? ''The Ann
From Sheboypn: That letter Landers Guide for Brides" wiU relieve
from "Stf1181l)iug" made me f!llllize your Qnxietjl. To receive a copy, send
what a terrific wife I have. She has $2.50 plus a No. 10, self-addressed,
man&amp;lfd to get , aloJII with the stamped envelope (39 cents postage)
world's most difficult woman, my to Ann Landers, P.O. Box /1562, Chi·
mother. God bless that angel. They cogo, IlL 60611-0S62.

TO ~~ iN lD &lt;&amp;U ttf.J1f6
MONDA' n.11 ' - ' I AA te S P.M.
I &amp;.!1. U.til NOON SATUIDU.
· CLOSE~ SIM.U

Ann
Landers

-

...

--

t11 114'!1

,......,

WINNERS- Jon Jacobs, admlnlslralor of the
Meigs County Health Department, Friday afternoon presented students creating winning posters
In lbe annual dental poster contesl of the
department with prizes of money and personal·
lzed plaques. Winners from the left .are Jennifer
Lawrence, Syracuse Elementary School, second
J 0 bn Card Racine' Elementary School
Ia
P ce;
'
'

.t hird place, ·and · Brian Hoffman, Chester
Elementary School, fourth' place: First place&lt;;. J.
Harris was unable to be present for the photo.
Providing the month lor prizes of $15,$10 and two
S5 pri2es were Sheriff Howard Frank, Attorney
Steve story, Judge Charles Knight and treasurer
GeorgeCollins.Theplaqueswereprovldedbythe
health department.

· EAGL~ RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949.2969

· story book charaetel'll as a part of the
·.
of the Rlglillo.Read program at the.HarrlsonviDe
Elementary School.

STORY,BOOJ!:- Mindy Young, right at
costumed as Mary with her Jamb, and Iter
grade ~tudents, pictured~ dressed as their.favorite

Dllller fer

YAIDIIIAI &amp; ECHO

located Helfway be·
tween Rt, 7 lo _Balhan.

Students -dress for right-to-read week

8,7 Financing on
Yardman
'
Seivica on All Maket' ·
We H_, MC/Disc/Visa
l/7/'lltll 110.

Rutland-Harrisonville commun- also held on Saturday. The
tty. Other activities . Included classroom teacher had , set a ,
t -shlrt day , hat day and read a
reading goal for the partlclular
button day as well as a colorful class and the class reaching that
balloon launch. There was also a
goal had the teacher kiss a pig.
day set aside for . studen~s and The pig, belonging to Matte
school sta·ff to attend classes Titus, a fourth grader at the
dressed as their favQrite story Rutland Elementary School, was
book . chartacters. Tbe week kissed by the kindergarten and
ended on Saturday with a movie · the fourth grade teachers , A
and popcorn, a special treat for . total of . 469 books were read
the students, The long waited leisurely by the students at the
event, the kiSsing of a pig, was HarrisonVIlle School.

HARRISONVILLE- "Pig Out
on Books" was the theme carried
out in observing National R!ghtto;Read Week ·at the Harrisonville Elementary School.
Various activities took place
beginning on Monday with stu·
dents and teachers decorating
their classroom doors with a .
reading theme. The doors were
· judged on March 11 by Mr. ancj
Mrs, Louie Christian and Mr. and
·Mrs, T. K
Workman, both ·
couples being residents of .the ·

•

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS ,

RffR~fll ·
· · We can repair and re·
core radtators and .
heater cores. Wa .c~n
.also -acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

••

PAT992-2198
HILL FORD

PORTLAND - Portland Ele·
mentary celebrated Right to
Read Week, March 7·ll,: wllh the
theme s.T.A.R. (Start Today
And Read). and students partie!pated in a variety of "star"
related activ!iies throughout the
week.
·
Constellations. peek boxes
showing constellations, bulletin
, boards and other learning sta·
!Ions decorated the school.
Each. day, Monday through
Friday, students performed for
. each other-reading, s!ngl!Jg and
reciting-during ''Star Search."
On Tlwrsday, Southern Kin·
dergarten students visited the
school and were read to by
Portland students. The kinder·
garteners alSo enjoyed a slide
show, a ,play by the fourth and
·fifth graders, and star coloring
books which were made tor.them
by the Portland students . .Before
leaving the school, each kinder- ·
garten student received a balloon
which was decorated 'with stars.
. on Friday morning, the movie
"Star Wars" was shown for the
school.

Individual room projects, . a
as group leaders to guide the
booR auction, character dress- children to each session and help
ups, sustained silent reading and
them find the appropriate con·
other activities were also carried stellations while star gazing.
out during the week, ·
·
Many teachers, parents and staff
Hut the h!ghllgllt of Portland's .members .' contributed to the
Right to Read celebration. was
highly successful event.
Star-Gazing Night Over 70 child'
ren and 25 parents attended the
·wednesday · night event which
Youth league
.
was made possible through Ohio
RACINE
Reg!stratlbn
for
University.
.
the
1988
Racine
Youth
League
Children, in groups of 10,
attended seven 'different star' . summer ball season will be held
at ·the Southern Kindergarten
gazing sessions where they were
building on Saturday, March 26,
presented with !nformaiton
,from
9 a.m. to 12 noon l!oth days,
about stars and planets.
Fee is $10 per child and a copy of
David DeSilva, of O.U.,
birth certificate I~ needed.
-brought a powerful telescope to
the school which he .focused on
Venus and Jupiter. James Smith ~~--~-_....,..__ _....,_
conducted a ···session using a .
theodolite. Deborah Harris presen led a slide show about planets· ·
·
' and constellallons. And a star
machine was used by Southern
High School science teacher Kim
Phillips to accentuate the constellatlons which are apparent at
this time of year. Prlinary and
intermediate packets filled with
'
informative and fun activities

I

RandS
AUTO REPAIR
41926 ST. RT. 7
. TUI'PERS PlAINS, OHIO
17 Yra. EKperience

CERTIFIED MECHANIC

BUS. 667-6102
HOME 374·5599
HOURS: 9:30 a.m.·6 p.m. •
Manday·Frldqy
..Sat. bJ ...oinlmonl ·
·

.. '

.

...-.~

~;~fer.d!strfbuted

by wanda
Parents and teachers served

· (614)

.

lHMY

. . F,.. Eatlnurte1"

PH. 949-2101
or.. NO
ln.
949·2160
SUNDAY

PH.

JOHN A WA DE M
. D 1nc· '
I .

e

e ·.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

e

EAR1 NOSE . &amp; THROAT.
GENERAL ALLER G
. IST .
"WE HA"E
HEARINI A
. IDS"
W
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

'------"""'~;,;;~.;o·;;.:~;;;;:;~~~----'

do reach a product with rtw symbol o.n II, they will

"NO",

·
WHAT IS IPECAC SYRUP? .

~ni:ze

'

"

I.

sr. .:... . . . .

In Memoriam

IR lovi"L1111mory of

~·

.

4-16-1&amp;-tln

GUN S,.OOT
EVE.Y
SUNDAY''
1: oo· p M
e

e

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

RACINE
GUN CLUB

. 915;4141

.

0-C-tlOIS

11·~,ttn.

Ref....CM

-az:

RIILII . .
DIILD.1
'

The original Buy, 84ill,

~

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

OPEN .DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Lot of New Items:
Flahlng Supp!leo, Gulla,
' An:hery, and Much

992-3410

More.

LIMESY.ONE
GRAVEL • SA.ND
TOP SOIL
FILt DIRT .

Call T. 0. Stew.a rt .
!lir 'IIIStewart

742·2U1 :

OrSteply'llle S~
0. New Utita lead ellf
ef llutlasttl
•
2-28-'87-1 mo.

.

-

FOR QUICK RESULTS ...
Adverlito today In
Wheeler Duler. or you
jual Rilly mi11 • Aiel

Ph.l-992-3117" 1-16.. 4133

YOUNG'S

CARr' ENTER
SERVICE
-Addona arid remOdeling .
-Roofing and gun.r work

- Concretl work
-Piu.mblng and electrical

h.

USID CAl$

II. SO W..tlf (I

Clltit
All Of Our Cora ,..,.
Wtlrtll "rho Money

•

21. YO!I ~ mill"
llld'fCMd lliora
.todly 1hln tilt first

Fuctge sundlli. Wh-'i the . Oov•nment Job1. t11,040· "
'U8.230 yoor, N- hlftno, Y_ _ "
..tcoop?" end why now? Suean

,aroo. 1·808 ..87-1000 Et!t. R· .

Reward for Ft"et ttolen trom

IS IQI fpr cu""ftf Feclerlllilt.

c1-. call 304· n3-8122.

4

Job huntlfta? Null • 1111111 We '·.
"""' - " ' for }obf N Auto ·,

Giveaway ·

Mochanlco, ~. Etootd- ..
ol.na. F..,d

&amp;a.--.. ·

Electrorlk:e Ttchntdant, Indue-

Audiologis~ ,

Coli 114·441·2168 .

ContO....Tri-County Vocatlonol .,
School wiU trlin .you for' joblln .

call 814·448·4998 and I will

-lcanta, Ca11 .7S3-31111 oxt. .

offered.

nlng AprR 4th.

LOST - male Beagle dQU. brown
111d black. blue call•. vlclnty Rt.
82 Deed Men's Hilt Reward!

Donnie Rouah. 304-678-4o.t8.

Day or Enning

(61~)

, 2-25-'17·1 mo.

8

It. I, Cllohllle
Servln1 Meigs &amp;
Athens CounUea
Raotyllng. • Routlllo!oterln8
· .Ruldlntlll•
Commlll'dal Furniture
Automodve • Marine
Dn,.t• II Carnic.

- · -lnga. C.l 1·311· 733" 8083 Ext. F2788,
, .,
· WedemeYer's Aucticm S•.M ceIYaleble at your conv•lenee

Full time compenlon 1nd c•• for .,.,
eiHrly man.ltay full time. room
end boM"d. Beauttful home.

1nd IOCiltiOna. Merlin Wade·
meyer

Auctioneer .:

c.:• .

614-241-

814-949-2938 or 814-982-•
.:.&amp;.:.13;.::2:.:.•...,.....;·_ _ _ _ _· - :

8112.·
Lie.

Cllc~ .

Lady to bYe In end ·care for an
..._.., women · In Syr8cuu,

No. 1M·

Ohio. Juat Maht -hcMiool&lt;-'ng.

Must have good ,.,• .,~. ulery Is negotiable. Cell coiiKt

e......
tlon

·t-388-B740.

ooteo. 3o.t-878·6786.

AVON • Atl 1r... C.l Mlrllyn
Weaver 304-812-2145.
Money for Cologot Po"·~mo

joba, JOin the Army Na11..,11
Gum!, 3o.f·l7&amp;·3980. or 1·
800· ..2-3119,
AVON ell IfNI; Shirley Spa••·

304·171-1429,

. TOP CASH plid "f or '83 model
1nd new11r Ulld · Cars. Smtth
Buick-Pontiac, 1111 E11tem

Hardiman, Jettenon County,

W.Ve to .mHk 200 "cow• onct~ a

day and fMd. Mu1t have exp•
rlenae and good retrenCH. excellent housing and pay. C•ll

Ava., o.ttlpollo. Coli 814-448·

2282.

304-728·B308 ......... 8:00·
9:00PM.

Complete houMholdl .o f furni-

ture 6 errtlq~~e~. Alto wood •
co.ll heeters. Swain's Furniture
• Auction, Thir4 . 6 Oliva,

GET PAID for rNdlng bOokal

•100.00 per title. Write: PASE-

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
eRangea •Freezers

Junk Can with or without
motors. Call Larry Uvely-114·

, •Refri~litQre

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

A LAROE SELECTION OF
FABRICS

985-3561
We Service All . Makaa
1/22181/tln

388·9303 . .

Standing Timber. Cait 814-379·

278B.

.

Went lo buy tobacco poundega.

Coli 114·441·1437.

Wanted S1endlng timber. Llrg•
or small .crNga. Calll14-182·

7346 or 682-7216.

'

NEW -REPAIR
oJunk
Buoln""
WANT TO tUT WIICIID 01
IIIII CAII .OR 11UCI5

ESTIM~TES

·

949-2263
or 949·2 68

-FIH ESTIMAtES- ·
For any of lhtoo tonkn·rail

614-742-2617
lotw-' a.m,·6
or ~·a

High pric.. pl)ld for pr•1960
qulh•. Api:JIIque. pieced. 1ny
condition. Call &amp;1•·992-2101

Hatp wanted: Part tim,a rKep- • ••
tionl1t In dental office. ApproKI· .
mtitaly 111 hourt a waall:. To ··
apply aand rllumeto PO Box 29,

Point P'-ant. WV. 21880.

bany, Ohio , 814·818·1284,

fienoed peraan n.-.cl far a, ,
euperiritand«&lt;t In grading and.or , •
paving for the Pl.dmont 1rN ot
North Carolina. &amp;hoW up•· . , ·
rlanca of the 1111 five .,..,. q1 ~
kmll•· Employment IYIIIIble.
EEO. Write Jamee L. Propst, PO
Box 1~1. Concord, .NC 2802~: ~ '

Elllployllll'lll

Part tlmec:tantal.alliatllnt. W-~ --;
end wortc. Approxlmltllly 9 to 18 .
hOun a WHk. Experience pr• .
terrld. To 1ppty Send AMUme'to~ · 1
P.O. Buz 21. Potnt Pt....nt... :

S1:rv t:t:s
1

wv. 288110.

Help Wanted

I

Gat a fr• cologne · Sell Avon"". ' l

Make big bucks. C.ll 114-441, ·~
GOVERNMENT JOBS . 3388,
.
'
111.040 . *59;230/yr. Now
hiring. Your 1rn. 801-8878000 Ext. R·IOIBB for cunent 12
Situations
Fad•alllst.
Wanted ·

Factory Choice
12 Gauge SholfJUM

.PLUMBINc;
&amp; HEATING

BELL ·
CONSTRUDION
.IACI.., OHIO

NEW HOMES
REMODELING .Io
- ADDITIONS
CONCRETE lit
BLOCK WORK
SIDING

992-6282
.319 So. 2nd Ave.

7&amp;71.

Application• are Hlng accepted
ulttll April 1 for the potftlont of
London Pool man•o•r and

dHnk1g.

JO'S GIR SHOP
lr

•a.oo .

SYUCISI.OIIO
N1W STOII-NEW' STOCI

LOW PIKES

hgistw for FlEE
.dlolh- No

l'llrdlo• Neceu•ry .
In - ,Loll of

New

GOLF
" LESSONS

Cltillt

6 for •45
$5.00

New ..... SUI

.......E••••....

Relklant of Melgt "•·,

Counry onr ZO ,..,., Eltpe- . .,

rlancecl. C.lll14·812·7308 ..

.L iw,.eon, derk·truau,.,, VIU...

13

. of lyracuM. Ttllrd St.. lyriCuH.

O~lo 4177~. ..

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

OET PAID' for -~ bookal
1100 pei tklo. Write' PASE·

Call ua for your mobile home '~

'"

insurance: Miller

33K, 111 I . llnooinway, N.
Aui'CH'.. II 10542.

oal- wiN hovo oxoO!tont

lldva._.,,_..,nltlaawlth

aompony. Worldng
" - 1-5. "ltl;h oduca·

• • or equivalent. For confidential .......... cd 114·441-

11373-Mon.. T-. a Wild .. I
AM'I PM only, Nk for M•.

Hlab,

homo, lifo. hutlh,

Schoola

16

Instruction
' •,

.....-&lt;·

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

Top loi&gt;O roqitO. " " tlldlio: Act ' •
Nowl lauthiBIIWn Buatn- •
C-4441·4387 I'IC Accri- '
-)log. 18-11,10811
~·

.,
18

Wa11ted to Do

~..... $1.10

.101111 I'IAFOII

a... ft-...

We.. +",..,.

INTMiiT R.ATI8 NOWAY~-

=.......

,,.,. •., •.•• tltlrlllille.....
'

llcien-terywiOthor-·
'

....

' ·· •

I -,-::---:::==;:--.-..:

,.... ...... $10.00

'

lnsur1nce~

30•-182·2U.&amp;. AlsO: auto,

·-our,.......,._.. __ _
Due to eJtpentk)n il')to thl1 • •

i

Rttlden.tual or commercilll

gutnla for this tummM", Ae·
aum11 . . to be m1Med tO: J1nlce

wa hove full ~- poaitlona
...u-. Applloanta muot bo
nNt in appeerarioe ·lftd have 1

kOUNTRY CLUI

Will dO betty 1lt1ing In my home.

Have ,.._encas. Cllll14-31'7- ~

1-B00-248·3882.

.NOTICE · H~LP WANTED

Middleport,

IJ:on~oe

- - - - - - ··

lntoml.tion nHded concerning
of 3 or 4·wh..t
All· Terrain ' Ythlcl" · (ATV Of"
ATC). C.. l The ReHirchltl

artY flip-over

·CARTER'S

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

,,

Sup.-lnlaftd•nt needed, e•p• ,\-~

Tllr• head T.ylor aoft urvelct~
er11m mechine. Call 8U.·797·
429&amp; or 814-184-4711.
·

11

-

28026 .. EEO.

Dalton Logging Inc. Buyer of
Jtanding timber and logs. Al-

RACINE
FIRE DEP.T.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

·w.-.tect: Welding machine 1150
to 2150 amf machin"e Wllh T.to.
torch6 M.. G.wlrefNder. N,ed
about: &amp; hp 1ir comprnaor.
304-175·&amp;242 ask lor D1ve or

.:..:..:.:.:...:....-._ _ _ _._:.
_. \ •t

or 814-992-&amp;867.

GUN .SHOOT

.

t.rm aara. up.-

rlence Is prett.n-.1. II you wouW.
IIUmoNttaloln--.. ...... OIIA
theJ&gt;enOnnalolft.. ot304·!175,
4340. Ptea~~ntValley Hoaph:alla
an equal opportunhuy and ef.frlm~ actio!" e~ployar.

tha . Pilldmon,l aru of Nortf\
Caralin•. Show uperlence of
tha lut ·&amp; . YNrs or longer.
EmPioymant av•l!abla lmme- .
dl1tety. Write Jem11 L. Propel. · 1
PO Bolt 888, Concord, NC. •, •

Scrip INd. Plying . 12 per
•pound. CAII8t4-742-2928. .

Basham Building

La~

qulr...

Help Wanted: Construction ;

QUILTS

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cle•ni.ng
·
Painting

PINNI)t Valley H~sph:•t II IC·
a.ptlng eppllcatlona lor a full
·time Social Worker. Bachlor·
dlfii'M In Social Work II ,.._

equipment .mach1nlc nelded for .

2nd, Ave. Mlddl-rt. Oh. 814·
992-3476.

ROOFING

Aurora, II 10142.
.
'
.

Vat

Buying dllily gold, silver coin1,
ring•. jawlllry, 1terllng ware, old
coins. 1.-ga cufrency. Top pri·
·ell. Ed Burtclth S.rber Shop,

Howard L Writasal

FREE

&amp;173, 111 S. Uncotnway, N.

Want to byY; UHd fuMitura 1nd
. anttqu-.. Will buy entire hous•
hold furnishing. Martin Wade·
mayer, 114-245-5112.
·

"Mull h Repa!rablt"

'

Feder... State and Civil Stii'Yice '
Joba. Now hiring. Your arM . .,
··13.110 to tll.480. lmm... .

Public Sale
8t Auction

814-448-3189.

. UPIIOLSTEIY '

•·

24B·3882.

Additions,

985·3365

.

lnfommlon needed concerning ;
eny flip-over Of 3 or 4 wheel An ·
Terrain Vehlcl• CATV or ATC) . .
Call The Ro-dtoro. 1·BOO·

Custom Home
., · Building. Room
Remodeling &amp;
Repairs. Roofs,
. Baths, Kitcl'tena

~

_..,..ng

6

3o.t-Bi6-3430.
B8.

.4- 15-'86-lc

8·3

V-lonal Adu~ c.- ot 713·
3&amp;11 axt. 14, A ..n0ty of •,
fuindlng iOUrcM to PlY for •
tralnlq ·are avllllble for thaw ·,

dog • • pupp!tt·2 maltt. 2
femeiH. Eacellentwlthchlldi'en,

c•STR, OHIO .

Pay Your Phone
Cable Bills l:'•re
. IUSINESS PHONI
(614) 992-6550
IESIDINU PHON!

992-6215 or 992-7314
Polltll'oy, Ohio ,

882·22&amp;9 .
9~8 Mon.·Fri.

UM.. Mac:hi~Nftt, and . WlkMrtl• ·•

Rog- now for o l - begin· •
nlng AprM 4th, Call Tri'Coul'!l' "

.Ptn Germeri Sheptt.rd femele

AuctionMr Col. Osc. E.

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

· W• CarTy Filhlng lupptln ·

.r

trial 'Malntanana• ·.W orker-.. ..
Nurolng Autltanta oncl Onlor·

14 to regilt• for a1.... Mgln~

·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

..

identify the •mount. · Rewer~

Licensed Clinical

Now Lecatian:
161 Harth S.cond
Midthtlort, Ohie 45760

V. C. YOUNG Ul

. Over 100 Properties
For Sale- Call Today

....... tilted ......

I

P-.

Hot

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·

PlUMBING &amp; HEA'riNG

(FtH Eotirn.totl

Clelan
·.,: lealt

··

roqulrlld. Call 8t4-414'2080
._._,.... or w~• box 111
OH 43342.
. .• ,.

'Rick Pearton Auction..-, ticenHCI Ohio .... Weet Vlrglnle.
antique. f•m. Uquidl·

work ·

·· BROWN'S .
TRAILER PARK
Camper$, RVs,

I

3 Announcement•

t1to oorvtolng ond m-an· · ..
c.he servlc of llec:trOnlc equil). -~ ·
rMnt. We hiVI monl• n.II.W.
to .PlY fOf trlinlna for, eltalble

::t: (614) 446,7619 or (614) 992-2104.
Second Avenue, Box 1213 .
z 411
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Trade M.gu:lne for can,
trucb, bolltt. cycln, RVa

.

liN FOUGHT

f_,..,
. . .• ,_,_
........E_.,_

Whoev• fourid the O.V .B. •nve·
tope with l•a• tum of money et
Johnson'• fNirldn_g lot. PleUe

orltawe

STEWAH'S
GUliS &amp; SUPPLIES

A11111111111:1'II II~ Ill s

Lost and Fciund

Finn E•illt.Mtlt
Parts &amp; Se!'f1~

•

·"

· Control Ohio, dollY a -~~ :
Top ulory, - . _ ·c·

Go the way of thtl ~tech future . . ·•
The E.-..ronics
.JM'C&gt;: •
grMt at The Adutt Eduaniori

· . .Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Se~1ic•
0 Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Prtmitring

C.H 114-,Mt-2181,

GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
614-662 ·3121
Dealer

992-,..., ......

PHOTO ADS SELU

lUICUM I
COIITUCTING .I

CHESTER. OHIO I
•HOME BUit.OING
I
•ROOM ADDITIONS ·
OKITC"ENS · BATHS
oliOOFtNG
·. REMODELING &amp;
RE~AIRS
.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

qulrod.
.

ollglblo,

6-17-tfc

parsqo on

JIOiat!n....

-

·

·· ~t¥lfll~
wiiO
iift tllll 11

properly, Additionally, Ipecac Syrup may he pur&lt;ho•d 11 tht p-rlpllmc..,..

'

7118.J

.

~

trr. lislng thewsttc~~raand kef!Pin~ lfPti('OIIblft!l may heiPR~\'f'nt BPrlousla·
jury ro ~· chlld'!_n from a~ttol

'

. .(

T'&amp;"',.::. .... :, ... ,, .... z:aa1

pharma:clsts will ttl' on duty to answer any qutsdCI\• on how to uw thew slle~n

.,

NO SUNDAY CALlS

..-+:-::..:.

' )~:,;,~:.e.~

·

'•·

· Day or N~t

C.........., arw. R...-~~nc.t , ..

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
Authorized John D•re,
Ntw, Holland, luth Hog
· · farm Equipmtnl ·

arid Notary ·
·. Service •.
Margaret Pa1rke:rl

Alto TraltMittlu
PH. 992-5682
or 992•7121

'

'SALES &amp; SEIVICE

book~eeptng,

lnd '
NOTICE DF
' APPOINTMENT
..........118
OF PIDIICIARY
......... 3.471
. On Mtrch 4, t . . .~ Ill,_
Molp Co~ · Probete
......42o
Court. eo.. No. 21111.
... 1,828
C""rlo11e E. Merrj-. R 1. lo• 213. Crown City. DJt.
Public Notice
:.::,eijltl ......... 44.8~0
41823, wae eppolnted E•t·
Dvor/
·
cutrl• of the ottate of H-1 '
(Undet'l
.. :... (25.440)
E x -.•. : ........... 4, 185 '
M., Wooten. decHtid.
'
''
Opore11111i TronoferoAdvertltlng ond
·
of 43281 Stote Route , .
In ..... :................. 26,110
Printing ......................88
, .
flacino. Dhia 411771.
POIIEIOY, OliO
PubliC Emplo- · .
Robert E. Buck, T011tl Other Flnonalng
2-!9:'18-!110.
Sou,.,.. (U-1 .... 211.1110
Retiromonc ....... .... 3.471
Probote Judge
Worklro'·Com· · ,
Lena K. 111-erlroed" Clorlt ·Totel of Rec. ond Othor
· SO..rcee Ovor/(Undor)
pilnutlon .............. ,:.420
(3) 14. 21, 28, 3tc
Produtitt/Mate'riolo ·
Dltb. and Other
Public Notice
u- ...................... (21101 ' far -.1......... , ......... 8118
'
. P .. blic Notice
,Fund ¢•h Bolon~•
OtlterAIM6 MFR ....t3,000
Jon. 1. '87 ............... 8,224 TOt.! Dltbur..·
ment dotalilng th~ re110ns
Fund C10h Bolonce,
menta .... ;............80.272 on or·betore Apri112. 1188.
MEiGS COUNTY SOIL
Dec. 31. '87 ............ 11,134 TatallleoiiPu Over/
· Unlet• the Commlulon re·
AND WATER
Rloerw tor Encumb, .
(Undor) Dltb ........ (8.41111 ceiv11 a wrlttM1 etatement
·cONSERVATION
Dec, 3t. '87 ............... 21111 Operotlng T r a - to that tffect ind on IC·
. DISTRICT
MULTIFLORA
1
28 150 ·componylng requett fof oral·
' STATEMENT OF
ROSE FUND
. n
"'"~~~~i~it '
hearing on IIUCh laltl•, thia
. RECEIPTS; .
RECEIPTS:
~~=~~u~~~~;~~ ., ..28,160 metter will bo decided on the
DISBURSEMENTS. AND
GRANTS: Stete·
Rec.
Othor
boslt of thelnfarmotion con·
Go-nment ,........ ,3.000 Soun:oa Ovor/tUndlr) Ditb. tained In the oppllcotlon ond
CHANGES IN BALANCES
~~1,!~; .E~~
~:= ~~: ~FR ... 10.400 ;:~~~u.:.~:;;;;~ (&amp;.82111 tho otflclovlto tubmltted by.
the applicant. Furlh•.r: lnfar,
, DISTRICT FUND
menta ................. 10,400 Join. 1. '87 ....... : ..... 18.892 metlon mily bo obtained by
RECEIPTS:
Totel lltcolpto Overo . '
Fund C11h Bolonc:e
co-cting ,the · PubiiQ, UtHI·
Glf1t. Contrlbutlona
(Unilerl Pltb ....... : .. (7.4001 Dec. 31. '87 .......... 13.388 tltt Commlulon . of Dhlo,
and Boquosu.......... ,1,561 Oporotlng Trontfero.
ReHI'VO for Encumbronces . 180 Ettt Broed Strilet, Col·
&amp;olo ol Products/ .
In ................ ;........ 3.000 Dec. 31, "87 ............ 3.888 ·umbut. Ohio 432&amp;el0.6 73.
Moterlttlt .................. 802 Totiol Other Finenclng
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED . (3) 21. tiC
Sauraea (U-) ........ 3.000
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
Rentolt ................... ,1,480
All Other
.
'T01111 of Rec. ond Other
t31 21, ttc
Rllllonue ................ 2.794 Sources Qnr/(Undorl Dlab. - - - : : - - - - ; - - - , . Totall!tcolpta ..........8.407 · end Other Uoeo ....!7.4p01
Pub.llc .Notice
DISBURSEMENTS:
Fund Cllth Balenco
Suppllu ...................... 414 Jan. 1. '87 ............. 11.000
Equipment ............... 1,167 · , Fund Cllth Bolonco
LEGAL NOTICE
lntormotlon' Education
Dec. 31. 'S7 ....... , .... 3.800
Notloolt giVen thot Unltel,
(Scholorthlptl ........... l11 ReMrvoforEncumbro- ·
Dec, 31, '87 ............ 3,100 lric. hu.fllod ari oppllcollon
·Trovol end,
with the Public Utliltleo
E•'*'Mt ............... 1,61 8
TOTALS
c..,.ml.,lon of Dhlo (Co•
Producta/Materials
' IM~um Only) ,,
No, 88·177-TP-ACE) reFor Reule ................ 868 RECEIPTS:
.
, qutttlng outhorlty to furnlth
Other AIM 6 MFR ...... 712 GRANTS: State
Government .....·... 22,080 oporotar-allil1ed. lntrottata
Total Dltbtw...
monte ...................11,342 GHtt. Contrillullono
'
tana.ditta- tolepltone - ·
Total Ricolptt 0 - /
ani! SoquHta ......... t,lllt vt- tta-ldo In Ohio. Any
inteNIIed poraon, tlrrn, corUn&lt;ler Ditb ....... :.... I,OIIII Salo of Producto
M.,.,...t ... :.............. 802 poratlop, ar entity who con
Totel of RIIC. ond Othor .
ceu.. why thlo
· Saurcoo 'Over/(Undor)
Rental• ... :.: .............. 1.480 tlhow
ejlp!ICI11on thauld not· bo .
Dltb. ond Other
All Other
,
llovenue .............. 28.114 gnrnted thauld fllo with tho
UMt ..................... 1,0111 ·
Fund Coth Bolanco ·
T01111 Reaolpto ........ a3.BI7 Commlulon • ,.,_n atateJIUi. 1. '87 ............... 2.7118 · DISBURSEMENTS:
Fund Coth Bolonco
Solerloe ........... :...... al, 112
Dec. 31 ; 1187 ,'
'8uppllu ................... 1,321
. , !'eal Estate General
SPECIAL
EqUI_.., ...... ,...,..... 9.217
RECIIP'fll:
8orvl..., _ . ............ t,210
Grtlnta: ltato
lnfanniltlon Eiluaotion ·
GwerntMnt :....... 1
(Sahollrrohlpo) ........ t,3111
1
TriVIII and
Saflr!lol.............
:of&lt;=ii's::i..
~-''
71 Auto I or · I .
Eq
t ........... ..
8
.................

Mr. YUk as saying

.

PIL 949·2101
' .
.
" .... 949•2160

·--'BOGGS

I

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
'REPAIR

P'ricts"· ·

Public Notice

t'!L10AMN'ts':'

West VIrginia I'OIIon Cenler wlllob,.rve Ma"'h 20-:Mu N•IIOIIII I'OIIOa Prewn· ·
lion Week. "Mr. Yuk" ollckero wllllte·aYIIIable to porenlsii'Pt' al&lt;bo110.,..

.,

"At·-~·

Rt. 124, Pemoroj Ohio

aaoa

If you 1Uipe&lt;l tbol oorneone hal -IIOII!\IIfd 111!1 help Immediately. Call
your local M~et'lft'CY room or nea ..!lt pot11011 center. Try to remain calm and an~er aJ.l.que!ldOIII they may ask. These pr(lfeulonal~:can tell Y'O*Whl)t action, If
1
,
any, should be taken.
. .·
·Fruth PharmBey.ln cooperallon with lheCt&gt;ntraiOhloPDisonCenttraddtM •

. ,·

CUSTOM I ..T
H.OMES &amp; GARAGES

niy llome-Raqpoon Rd, Call
'
Non· lmoldna Chrlltlan to ba.,;
yah four 'fMI okl In my home.

Four ftt frilky ~pp,IH . Oeytime

Will do .Federal
and State
Income Tax,
. · typing, ·

'

naadod, Prolwably In

814-,U,-3431 .
.

814-441-0808: oftor 8:00 pM
614·441·2821- .·.

. Roger Hysell .
.··· Garage

..

l_pel!ac Syrup 1.11 a product used 10 cau~e vomlti,J'I.g'wheri people are polaoned,
Ipecac can be purchaae-4 without a presrrlptlon at any pharmacy and Ills recommended that one bottle be kept for each child In the family ( But renwmber.
NEVER give the syrup unless told to do 10 by a physician or polaon eent.r.

WHAT DO I' DO IF SOMEONE IS POISONED?

BISSELL
BUILDERS

614·~~~~~;~e

Help Wanted

lla~

.

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
.... ._lhlt

We Provldi Cori For the
ElcMrly In Tholr Home.
NUII8Ea AIDES,
ORDERI,,E8. LPN'o
HourlY Dr Uve·ln
Anengementa
BONDED • INSURED
Covorad
Wortunon'a

992-5623

992·6606

SAVE STEPS!
Shop the
Want AdS'

•VINYL SIDING ·
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•SLOWNIN .
INSULATION

H~...!~f!1~1c~.;~,.,

or Mobile
Home lot
· Rentals

Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center

1

' H·'II-In

Public Notice

OPTOMORY .
SERVICES
PREMISESON

'

.}

••

Middleport; Ohio
IAOII; OHIO
~~
...
·-..,.._.:.1·,..1.:3..;·
t;:;;fc:.J
10-9,tfn
L
' L-_.,......,...,:.::;~

.

.

••·•

usiness Services

The third six weeks grading
bury, Bryan Colwell, Jake Gan- · ston, Lori Kelly, Chris Knight ,
, Melinda
Dailey, Pickson,
Heather . fp:::.::.:::~::.:..l~:::;::;::::::~
period hOnor roll at the Rutland
naway, Michael Jarvis .
Kevin Lambert, Adam 'Little, Cowan
Davenport,
Kimberly
Elementary School has been
Fifth Grade: Kim Janey, Crys- Courtney Midkiff, Lorena Oiler, Jason Dowell. Stacey Fry. Tara
announced. Making a grade of B
tal Vaughan, Susan Page, Josh James Pullins, Beth . Roush, Gerlach, Kim Hanning, John
S!gmait. ·
or above in all their subjects to be
Sherry Seddon. ·Tara Shepherd. Harrison, Jeremy Heck, :Amy
natned to the roll were:
Sixth Grade: · Matt Clark, An· Jessica Silvers, Tina Smith, Herald, James Howerton, April .
786 N. SECOND ST.
First Grade: Kristen Brown,
drea McDonald, Denise Shene- Sheryl Thoma, Rusty Triplett, Hudson, Darin Logan, Susan
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Robby Diddle, Ben Fowler, Stacy
field, Tonya Thornton.
Katrina Turner, Tom Wilson. Love. Joe McElroy •.Nikki Meier.
Gilmore. WaylonMcK!imey,AlyTodd Workman. Michelle Young, Tammy M!ller; .. Kev!n Musser, ·
The third' six weeks grading
son Patterson. ·Heidi Stewart.
Melissa Neutzling, Miranda Niperiod honor roll at the Salisbury . Yvette Young,
By Carol N. Carson, R. Ph.
Clayton ·Tromm, Clark Van Ma·
Eighth Grade: Barbie Ander- cholson , .Becky Ockerman, MeElementary School has been
NATIONAL POISON PREVENTION WEEK ...
· tre, Kasey Williams, Jason
son, Tr!c!a Baer, Love Batey, lanie Qualls. Jason Reynolds.
announced. Making a grade of B
MARCH 20..26, 1988
.
'
Young.
Frank Blake, Julie Buck, Misty Connie Sauters, , Michelle Scott,
or above in all their subjects to be
could
You
Poison
Youf
Child?
...
:.MaYbe!
'is
this
year's
theme
for National
Second Grade: David Banks, . named to the roll were:
Butcher, Steve Caruthers. Beth Tony Six, · Marjor!ta Tromm,
Polson
PreventiOn
Week.
This
them~
poln'ts
·
t
o
the
statlstlcs
which
sh9w
that ap·
Kindell Brown, Carly Chasteen,
First Grade: Lacy j'lanks, . Clark, Dodie Cleland, Mary Hobby Vance, Chrissy Weaver,
proximately 90% of all poisonings occur tn children, with 75% in children u~_ the
Emjly Fowler, Brandee Gil·
Compston, Sharla Cooper, Ryan Valerie Wilson, Robby Wyatt . .
age of ttve. Children of this age gro}lp are curious abput their sunoundings and
Jeremiah Bentley, Cory Colley,
eager to explore things that glitter, pretty colored pills and bottles and containers
more, Br!anna Gilmore, Nathan
Tricla Davis, Joseph Diles. Taof all kinds. nfortunately, the natural tendency for ,
Halfhill. Billie Jo Hysell, Jill
nya, D!Il, Edson Hart, Clinton
young children Is to put everything Into the mouth,
Lemley, Dante lie Peckham, TathUs leading to this high Incidence of poisoning.
·
Horn, J.T. Humphreys, Rebecca
bitha Powell, Charla Roach,
·rhe pur~ of National Polson Prr-ventlon Wt&gt;E'~
Johnson, Carrie Lambert, Bryon
Is to make pare nts and others awart' ol step!~&gt; they c~n
Diana Sigler. Lisa Snodgrass,
Moss, Tamra O'Dell, Clayton
ta~l' to prevent Polsonln~ In children . Below al"P
Jon Stewart, Missy Titus, Mean-swers to frequently asked question~ which h~ ·
Ohlinger, Amanda Ralph, Jenlissa Williams, Sandra Young.
fullv
will help protect your children from poisoning.
nifer Ramey, Ryan Ramsburg,
HOW DO I "POISON-PROOF" MY HOME'•
Third Grade: Chad Bartrum,
Bella Stegall, Joshua Wilson,
The first steop In "potSon- proofln~· · yotrr home ts .
Jessica ·counts, Elizabeth Ellis,
. to remove all poisons within the N&gt;ach of ~hildn?n. ~·
Bobbl Stewart.
Sh~un Fife, Frank Herald, Mi·
Since plants are the number one rau~ of"poisonlngs.
Second Grade: B!Ili Bentley,
find out the names of your plants a·nd If the~· arc pOi" ;_.
chelle Miller, Amanda Musser, .VIncent Broderick, Jesse Easts·onous remove them from the home or out Of the
Ashley Roach. Beverly Stewart.
• reach of young children.
man, Chad Folmer, Jason.
· Most poisonings occu.r In the k11ch t:-n. folloon'ed by
Jamie Williamson.
Frecker, Michael Frymyer, .
the bathroom, the bedroom. then all otMr sites to·
Fourth Grade:' Phyllis Clark,
James Geiger, Myca Haynes,
get her. ·ThE'~,ore. begin tn th~se an&gt;a~ by using this checklis t from the Ce-ntral
Jeremy Coleman, Lori Russell,
Ohio Polson Center:
Michael Le!flie!t, Heidi Legar,
'
KITCHEN:
Clndl Stewart, Roxane Williams.
Tara Michael, Holly Milhoan,
•No' hOusehold cleane-r!'~ under slok
Fifth Grade: Rebecca Ell!ott.
Melissa Ramsburg, • Sabrina
•No medlcinE!s on coun1e r Or windowsill .
Sherr! Ramsburg,
•No household products stored wiTh food ,
Smith, Shera Patterson.
BATHROOM:
.
Sixth Grade: Lorr! Burnem.
Third Grade: Jared King,
•Medicine cablftt't cleaned out . Flush unused t outdat ~d dru!Zs down toilet
Rachel' Hysell, Missy Jeffers, Timmy Pe.avley, Chris · Roush,
•No drain or bowl cleanH:·s under the sink
.
Billy Jones, Jason M!iler,
, ~Cosm£'1tcs , col~nes. drugS an~ mouthwas~ out of n~ ach.
Melissa Whaley; Adam White,
BEDROOM:
.
QH Class: VIcky Dolby. Penny Brian Withrow.
.
•No
drugs
on
Q.lghtstand
.
Napper.
•perfumes,"e~metlcs and powd.:ors out of reach
·
Fourth Grade: Nicole Bentley,
LD Class: Mark Norris.
GARAGE ' BASEMENTi LA.CNDRY:
Autumn Conde, Dorothy Lelf·
•oeter&amp;en1. bleach and fabric sottener out of reach
helt, Mindy Patterson, Paul
•BUll: sprays and weed killers In larked cabtnet
The third six weeks grading Pullins, Daniel Russell, Natasha
•Gasoline. turpt&gt;ntlnE&gt; and .patiirs In locked cabinet
period honor roll at the Salem · Slater, Petrova Stegall.
• Automotive products out of ~ach
'
GEf:I.ERAL HOt;SEHOLD'.
Center Elemenl&lt;\ry School has
Fifth Grade: Jarrod Folmer,
STAR
.&gt;.!Silva, of Oblo Untvel'lllty, provides
• Alcoholk beverages out of reach
been announced. Making a grade · Heidi illuftrnan, Joseph Lips• Ashtryiy!ll emptied
Eugene Long, a l~lh 1rader al Portland Elemeatary, wllh a lew
ofB·or above In all their subjects comb, Shilo Moore.
· •rurte$ out of reach, 'il)('ludlng vl~itor~ and sister's purses
pointers on star gaZing. star-Gazing Night was held Jut
. ·~.nee or rat poJson In areas where ~hlldren don't play
to ·be named to the roll were:
Sixth Grade: . Ryan Conde,
Wednesday at the Portland school, In conjunction with Righi to ·
WHAT,ARE
''MR. YUK" STICKERS?
'
First Grade: Jamie Barrett,
' 'Mr. Yuk" ·ls a pot~ warning symbol de5lgned to ·tell little children NO-DO
Jertod
Douglas,
Heather
Hud,
,_.:.Re::::ad::_
,
.:W:;~;:e::k:..
__
.
_
..._
_
_
·---.,...---~--~--..,...
Brian Bias, Tara Butcher, Jona- son, Eric Jacks, Brad Knotts, '
NOT TOUCH ! Parents can place these sUck«!i on JJ:OIIOIHI and teach the-Ir chll·
dn!'n that the tref'R. frownbla race means danaer aDd NO. HoJX&gt;fully, if children
than Dellavalle, Clinton Hen- Jason Witherell.
e

••

-th

'

.

P. E.

-

.,., •

Compenlltion

Honor Roll-------------------------------

dricks, Jessica Priddy, Step~en
. Thornton, Bridget Vaughan, Ail·
The third . six weeks ,grading
drea . Dunfee, Lori Kinnison. period honor roll at .the Meigs
Second Grade: Leigh Ann Junior mgh Schoot has been
Canterbury, Rachel Edmiston, announced. Making a gradeofB ··
Latlcia Metheney, Matthew orabovelnallthelrsubjectstobe •
, Metheney, Amanda . Napper, . . named to the roll were:
·
Larry Ogdln, A.J . . Vaughan.
Seventh Grade: · Debbie Alkire, .
· Third Grade: Mellasa Barrett, Abby ma~. Tessie Bradshaw, .
Mlitt Barrett, Amy Clelaml, Linda Chapman, Jennifer ChasAndy Myers, carrie Harmon, teen, Jay Cremeans. Kelly .
Jenny Ervin, Jo Sandy, Stacy Doidge, Elizabeth Downie, Alll- .
. · Silvers.
son Gannaway, Trevor Harrison.
FC?urth G!a~e: _q~ry ~anter· Jason Huffman, Randall John· ..

eu.-

,

~.

'Star' acttlvtttes kick off right-.to-read

"e
~
' ·
~-- .

n:a•

. Cldliflerl p~ cot1er 1M
·
folloM"r 1elepltd~ ucr~ae..,., ..;

• •

·-•
.'ij

IIAtu

11

••• -0. .... -111 .... """'

f

"·'

..•

Business
Services

...... . .. ....
.... .."•.....
.......
.......
--··--...... ..........
....

7

The

Ohio

...

~

',.

.

�..

..

;

s- The Dally s&amp;utiilel

Pagil

Pomeroy-M

LAFF·A·DAY
21

61 Hou1ehold Good1
. · SWAIN
AUCTION • FU~NITURE 12

Buaine1s
Opportunity

OUw lt., OaMip aNt .

NEW· I 110- -

..,...,. t:llt .

Uvine ....mouhoo- 1111-tSit.
Bunk belli with t ddlne· ttll.
Full t1a mettre~~ • fCMMietfon

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH•'

atartlng• t89 . lhcllntu
tlarting- til ..
USED- ledl, drMtert, bedroom
aultet. f181-t211 . Detkt.
wring., wuher, a COftlt)let:a Nne
of uNd furnttu,..
NEW- Wnt.-n ltoott· UO .
Workboott 118 • ~o~p . (StMI.
ooh toe) . Coll114·441-31tt.

ING CO. recommMtdl that yau
do bualnHI with people you
know, Mel NOT to Mnd mon.,
through the m.H until 'fO',I havt
inv..rig.ted th offering.
lnternativnal M•tal Building Ma·
nufecturer S•l•ctlng builder-

/ dealer in some op~ •• •· H'ah
potential profit in our orowttl
industry. (303 1 711-3200 Ext.

County Appllanc., Inc. Good
uMd appliancu and TV Ntt .

Open lAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot. 114-441· 1181, 127 3rd.

2403.

Ave. GtHipolia, OH.

Toning tebl .. (6•· •12.500. 0111

direct with m1nuf1cturer. 1800-334-0411 el.1. 1203.

23

Professional
Services

Waltpaper &amp;. Painting'
16 y&lt;a. of ,.perioneo-oll work
gu1r1nteed. Fr" 11timat11. Ca ll
614·446-8621 .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Big 3 BR . f11m homes built on
your lot, S 15,99ti and up. C1ll
1·61 4· 886· 731 1.
3 BR . tloute-Main St.. Crown
City. $26.000. Call 614-446·
151 1 . .

erate all my

Mu1t nll-3 SR ., 2 8 ., 2 vr
modular. attached g1r1ge. Ex·
trasl City utilities &amp; schools. C•li
614-446·6221 after 4 PM .
2 bedroom, 2

baths, 2 car
garage, level lot on Rt . 33.
Swimming pool, satallte, clo1e
to Meigs High. Call 814-992 3254.
b

morrung
· , WhY d On.'t YOU save

th.em Up for the weekend?"

33

Farms for Sale

1 h 1tory. 3 bedroom, family
room , large kitchen wilh difllng
area. Naw gas puiH fumece
with central air, slorm window•.
new eJttet"ior p1int, all dr~peries,
curtains. 1 bkM:k tram Pon.
Office in Middlaport. C•ll814992-61 13 evenings altar 7 ;00
or FridaYs and weekends.

Ne•r Rio Grend•- 'Pond. blms,
good home. Call 614-245·9~7&amp;
or 245-9182 .
52 acrit firm . 6 room• &amp; blth.
Good blrn. t25.000. C.ll814-

251·1774.

.

35 Lots 8o Acreage
100 acr ... ·Muon County At.
87, rolling• hill• of woodland
and mNdows, excellent for
hunting, many goad building
1itea, fenc•d for c1t1le ,
136,000.00. Ctll Ron Thomton
304·195·3$1 3.

PROPERTY SOUGHT: To leue
or buy warehou1e-type building
appro111imatoly 6000 aqusre leeJ
in area between Pl. Plaa11~ 1nd .
Gallipolit Farry. Call: 304-343·
8801 .

41

Homes for Rent

Four bedroom•. 2 battl1, Ned
Sam Addition. centrll 1ir cond. Nicllv, furnithed •m•ll house.
biSement, g1rage. fireplectl, . AdUhl only. Ref. required. No
80'1, 304-675-8999.
. pets. Call 114·446: 0338.
3 bedroom. 2 baths. fullfini1hed 2 BR . unfurnished. 1 mil•218
basement, new furn1ce &amp; cen· oH Rt. 7 . t200 rent. t150dep.
tral air, gartge, ftnctHiylrd . Low Ref. Married couPles. One child.
so·,, 2414 M.t. Vernon Ave., Pt. Call 814-448·9188.
Pit. 304-675-1774. .
233 Second A~Je .: w / w ctrplt, 2
BR ., 1 'h batt!, kitchen furni11hed .
32 Mobile Homes
$350 e mo. plus dep . &amp; ret. No
peto. Coli 814 - 446 ~ 492&amp; .
for Sale
1986 Nashua 14x60, 2 Bedrooms , underpirtne&lt;l. centr•l ti,,
porch, unfu rni1hed. Park Lana.
Call614-446-93 15 Mornings.

1 or 2 bedroom houH in
Pomeroy. Recentty remodeled.
Furnished or unfurnished. He1
washer &amp; dryei'. 814'.892-8723
aher 6 :00.

1986 Crestrldge , 14x70. Total
olactric. 2 bedroom. 2 b1ths· 1
ga r~en tub, laundry room. large
porch &amp; underpinni ng . Call
614·446-9653'.

Nice country kame, c1rport,
l1wn, garden. Adult• only. No
pats. Oepo~it. &amp;60. One mile
north of Chestet", Ohio. P1ul
K1rr, 614·!:186· 3638.

1979 Fairmont 1 4x70, total
elec., 3 BR ., ga rden tub with
deck. Very nice. Call avening a
61 4-446 -1512 .

For sale or rent. Middleport, 7
room1 , gar~ge. 3 bedroOm. loti
of extr1'1, nfce neighbol'hoqd.
614-992· 2353 or 814-9927621.

Sale - Rent -1987 1 4x60 Skyline
mobile home. 2 Bedroom, all
electric . Call 614-446-9863 after 6:30PM .

14 •crM, b1m, pOnd, mile out. 2
bedroom•. centrel air, I"'• or
sell, 8460.00. 3044-676-1999.

Double wide, 2 vears old 3 DR .,
2 beths, AC. fi replace wittl
blower, Cathedra l calling• .
White vinyl siding with blue
thuttors. Built-in TV Ill VCR .
Ceiling h.n. New refrig . &amp; sto\fe.
Concrete block tor 1e1 up &amp;
underpinning. Atking $19,600.
Call614 -387-0669 .
14~~:65

Mobile Home. &amp;12,000
addilion , 16x29 ft .. living rrJOm.
2 bath. 3 large bedrooms. new
ca rpet through out. In Rutland
on 11!1 1cre. Gerage, out building,.
side w1lk1, large front lawn.
&amp;26 .000. 614· 742-2067.
1975 1211180. A-1 a h1pe ~ furnithed except livingroom. Air In
kitchen, wa1her and dry•. C1ll
814-949-26&amp;3 aftltl' 6:00.
Windaortraller3 bedroom•. with
ldditiOn, 3 acres lanet, out
buildings, Ga llipolis Ferry. 304875·8930,
Mobile home ori 1 acre lol, will
sell uperatal~ a~ Glenwood,
phone 304-678· 201 8 .
1984 1 4x70 total electric all2x6
cortatruction 'I• osk paneling and
aheat rock. full bathroom with
garden tub, 3 bei:lroom1, vinvl
underpennlng. • 1 3 ,500 .00 .
Pttone 304'- 875-8367 ..

Modern 3 bedroom country
home, large garden, loceted
Athton. 8176.00 plus deposit.
Call304 -876-1113.

42 Mobile Homes

· for Rent
2 BR ., w1ter, 1awege fumlshltd .
Beautiful river view. No ch:y
taxat. Foster'• Mobile Hom•
Park. C11t 614· 446-1802.
In Euraka-2 nice a. clun 2 IR.
mobilli homet. t200 • ·*221 P•
mo. Dep · requirtd. No ,eta.
Adul11 only . Call 614-245·
5813.
2 BR . unfurnlehed mobile home.
Rt, 36 ,at Spring V1lley . Oap . •
ref. required. C1ll 814-448·
4389 or 304~175 - 9710 .
2 bedroom, furnithed . Wathlt'
and dryer. 1ir. t210. per month
plua d.po1it and utllh:iM. C.ll
614· 99~·7479.

2 bedrOom. 70x14 Mobllt
Home. 614·992-1722.
2 bedroom mobUe home hllf
mile aut Jericho Ro8d, cell after
6:00 pm, 304-171-1483.

Mobile hom• fumithed. 2 bed1983 Liberty 14~e54 mobile rooms, t200.00 plua g11 and
tl'ome. all electric, 2 bedroom•. elactrlc, cell •fter 7:00 pm
one blth, tat upon rented lot, · 304·178·1&amp;12 or dop 175good cond, phone 304-671- 7882 11k for Ethel.
78~3 alter 15;00 pm,
3 bedroom, 2 beth mobile home.
1986 Commodor•. 14x70, 2 Children. No Pete. 304-488bedroom, 2 beth•. elatrlc, 1887.
clttladeral ceillng1, gard1n tub,
304-87&amp;-2921 1fter 5 :00 pm.
22 ft. ••lf·oontllntd t2,1SOO.
304·578·2328 or &amp;71-21101 .
MUlliOn• Ad. 'h acre I-'d.
moblte home with ldd on, new
porch. car port a outbulkllng.
WHI Nil wtth or without fumit ura. Nice propiH'ty. C•ll Som•
rvill• R..lty 304-1715·3030 or

171 - ~431 .

1172 Da &amp;rook mobllo homo,
14x:70, five ml• out Jeny'•
Run Rood. P - UIOO.OO.
Contect Semmte Jefter1.

Apartment
for Rent

30 ecre flrrA: Mostly tillable.

Wanted

1

44

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . epta, I clo..ta. kltchenappl. fumithld. Waahet-Oryer
hook· up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck. ·Regency, Inc:.
Apll. Call 304-871-7738 or
875·5104.
' .
Naw completely furnithtd
apartment • mobile; home in
city. Adults only. P1rkint. Call
114·441·0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 1531 Jack.an
Pike from *183 1 mo. Walk to
shoP and mavin. 614·446·
2518. E.D.H.

74

76

SWIMMING 1'001.8 • tt88
ORDE~ NOW · ,AY .U.TI~

..0MS.

ctn"&lt;~U.

114·441·1111.
Big Da- 1 - homo. 3 lA .• 2
H . t11, 111.up.Model•~ 1

hP. ••trill.

•

Gal-

Sp-o - l o loto lor
rent. Femlly Prldl Molll.. Home
Po.._
Fony, w. Vo.
304·17&amp;.3073.
Treller lote. Rt. 1 locUat Road,
boc* lJI K • K M - Homoo,
304·178·1071.
01rdln epot In Now H1ven
t21.00. 3114;882·2714.

k

81 Farm Equipment

!lot-•

--0-ion

_ . . , , _ _ , - - · ue7 c -. 4 eyl .. 4 apd ..
Buill
4 0 - - .. - • oomploto llno ol . _ • UH!I
-lpmont. ~
In
S.E. ONo.
.

nddlpcNitt.

304-U2· 21H.

•AC. 12.-mlloo. *431&amp;. Coli
114·441-1117.

----------

13.-

1181 Olda. Dolto Aoplo 88.
mlloo. 010,000 Firm.
Top
lJI tho Uno. Coli 114-211·
JIM'S F~M EQUIPMENT • 4217.Jo-.
.
441·1777
3 Pt. ........ fortiW.. FOfi.... 21978Subonll....,4
opr- wltll PTO ahofl. *111 wheel
drive, C•ll 11•·•48·
WhHo t11oy loot.
0748.
Utility llda. lpl; :!O'a40'd~ . 1187 Covoll• RS

..

10 100

-.u·&gt;ii·--·~·
- · *418'1 ERECTI!D: mho. outo., Pfl. PI, AC,
~H.... I.....
AM·F. M-(:oll-. ~
...... 114 •332 • 114-311-1240,

*'1-

ln1trument1

· C.,ll

Kenworth.ndO.KalbMedoorn.
-FonnG--•-WL
AHIIII. --178·1101.

."""*"'

w...,

luol'*

1879 ''""· 0500. Coli 114'
·
·

448·7481 111• Spm.

; I d i I 'J IIJ

I

11 lll

Oovommoint H.,.. from 01. IU

--

Dlllntto*rt,.. .....- .
. _ Ext. GH·I801 for c""ont
ropolr).

... t100. Call ... todoy. 211·121-tiOI. oat

2~.

1tN--A---..
~

01111.

m'1111

Cell l14-44t·

.. .,.......,__

'

, 171 Cllmllr Col filii .......

Rod HOt borwl•l Dtug dul.... ........ ._·d.lur·
plue. Your .,.., luyws aukfe.

eos.

1·-·187·.-. Ext. •·

1814 VW Roblllt. low mlloogo,
AC, AM· FM 8 - topo. n tlroo, Okcollont -.lhton. 114·
742-2880.

"'""'"Ill

~

. [jl

'

Volorw Promio&lt;.
.. olr. - •· High
...... runt aood. ciMn car.
t710. Col lf4-MI·2877 bo1;00 om ond 2;00 pm.

111eoces~~en

7:00 (J) Remington

· W1nt , to buy body parta. 1978
UnOOin, r...- bump«, tlflllghtl,
trunl Net wiH buy complete ar lf
prlco Ia right, 30,. 773-1822.

1

1'

•'
'

vi..

truck topper for
oton~ord bod Chevy 110, 304c
171-7831 ~r 175· 1311.

e ill M'A'S'H

7:30BCJl ro HollrWOOd

Home
Improvement•

•••
1

IWEEPEf' end aewlng r'MIIhlne ,

DELl•

l

j

•
I

•

Cle1ner, on• half mile up
441-0214.

..
r• ;,
modollna. Wu 114·441· 1377 ,

,

·'..,J

NEW INFORMATION; .-;..
C.rt, 4a:4's te1zec1 In drug rlld1.
. . . '""" 11 oo.oo. Col ... ,....., 1213)125·1-.

lewna, ......._ mu1a1t. 10Pt011. '"''

m._.

1172 Dido Cutl- Sup,_
low
304·171-4512 Olio
for Rey.
.
1182 Chevy Ch..otto. groot
body. run• well, ucellent work

cor. 304·171-1723 pm.

S:OO

73 Ford M-o. 2 0210. 304·171-2417.

HT.

1179 Multont 4 cyl. "'· olf;
1981 024 OodtO • cyt. ~ apd .;
1812 Hondo Cl-100. 304· 17111314.
1171 lulc*LeSabre, one oWner.
.1 .100.00. 304-171·1217 •••

T..... llump

NIIIGU ...

.......I .

114-317-0121 .

,."

Row, or Clb6e tool driiHng.
Matt.-scompletedumtdly,
Pump IIIII and 1ervic:e. 304·
11&amp;·3802 ·

1172 Nov1, rune good,
*378.00. 304-1'71·2223.

Starb T"ree 1nd lAwn Service,
lawn csre, lend.c.plng, ttump
ramaval. 304-1578-21•2 or
&amp;71·2103.
.

82

· Plumbing
8o Heating

. 4 apd. Lodt OU1""""· eon
- 7 PM 114-317-o413.
Muo10oi~1HI110.

LDnebod,
full.-.
-..
olr,
doluxo. Coli e14·448·U21 of·

-----07-.
-n.
,_4PM . •

1111 8·10, 4 apd , · - with

,

,

84

........
Wl1h
· - · hlah - · ·
torp.
'Excll...,

1171 Chw. au-. INn.
1 1 - - - · -- 114·112·
1141.

Van1&amp; 4 W.O .

Nar AS t=i»RAS'IO.J'RE
CONCE RfoJED.

SHe ei.JRE DOSSN'r
· 6EA.TAIG:&gt;UND

THE BUSH.

e

:;.:;s~~Uvel

Electrical.

.

Relidentlll Of' commerciel wlr·

'.

WHY DON'T YOU
COME OVER TO MY
HOUSE AN' SMOKE
YORE PIPE,
SNUFFY?

· t:01 (I) Portrelt of the Soviet
Union: Qolclen Road View
raca 10 race the decenclenls
of t1te graal Mongol warriors
who invaded and l8llled the
Central Allan region of the
USSR.(NR)
1:30 1111 • liZ EIIIIIIIO- I Lutz
TOQI!her, Meg1n and K.!Y hit
on llu&lt;l and hfs qulrka. Q
10:00 (J) l1riJght Talk
111' ·eo WIH~~Ur Vlnne

THEN I WON'T
NEED TO TENT
·FER TERMITES

lng. Nnw ..vice or ,......... · .

Generel Hauling

441-HII -

1:00 1'!11·

.

'':

-- --.
'

point.

......

tl.200.00. 304-171-7171.

74

MotorcyoiM

__

Is

__

II 121 ICX t11r1 ...._

.,........ 11.000
Colll14471-m•.

tl74 """" ..... ...1••

- ~owou~ LTD-1-.

from
13 Fiery
crime
14lnhibit
115 Do better
18 "Gotcha!"
18TV emcee

+QI876

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

w..1

Nor,. Eul
II
Pass

z•

Pass
Pass
Pass

4+
4+

Pass

Db!. .

Pass

,.

Soatb

3+

Pass
Pass

Pass
•
Opening lead: Q
The lost opportunity came at trick
two. East should know that West failed
.
to lead a club only. because he had
none. So, after taking the king of
hearts, be should return a low club.
' West will_ ruff, and e:ventu~lly East
will get hiS two club tr1cki! wtth his AJ-10, enough to set the contract.

FOR'' SloiOW AND TaL' TODAV•

I I-lAVE BROUQIT MV HEW
DOLL"

(I)

I PO HOT 8EUEVE

AHI·

I'

.34Swedish
island

35 Fencing
. move
36 Viper
39"TheSeed" .

40Yale man
41 Half a
sawbuck
42 Lardner's
"Alibi-"
.U"Diamond

88Shem's

son

II Suit
48Afrlcan
antelope
46Shareand

48Trace
47Hash
house
48 "The Sons
of Katie

•

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOIEi-Here'a bow to wort It: 3111
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW .
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the ~ L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single lettets,
apaatropta, the len8th and fonnatl~ of the words are all
. hlnta. Each day the Code letten are diffmnt.
WJ H V U C.

G K Q ,M

IVUP

........... P.I.

ID IIIII If I Look at many
yllfllllll olln!Mor llld
IJC. . Ioi .., ..... appleltlolil.

PJ. Konll Windt
~

'

J

c u

V KM

JRRODKPB
VKM

1111011111 . . IIlli~ Ill (ft)

',.

33 39.37
Inches

enous·

.ILr;r.Q
11.="

Yesterday's Alllwer
22 Stone

84 Palm leaf
87Behuman?

Of
(Ll

!ii:.r::.a 111'11

r
.t

type
7 Bristol
brew
8 Shanty ·
9 Chemical
suffix
10 Ending
for rub

chess
821ndlg-

J

·i~-r.u.

t ,;

&amp;Auto

jet or

11:30.!a::....
c.nan
II;Cio..

PEANUTS

4Yoko5 Cure-all

23 Rubber
duck, e.g.
24 Old title
26 Old-time
Ron
comic
19ldea
Olsen
24 • ...a
or fib
27 Deadly
dagger
17 A long
one?
)-berow
28
Thomas
fore me?"
tb
Lincoln's
215 Hodgenickname
podge
20Paint
29Conceal
28Ancient
layer
31 Walter
. Roman
21
Building
Scott's
' polt
29Uke brine
30 Plnocchlo,
at times
- 81 Word with

11:01~::= Qrlulylleara
of A"*'~ DO

.....

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

•

•u
• "9

shue-

e==~(!) Loft eo.......
-IIOtonn

-· .
. 87 Upholetery
Af'V
" - '- · 104-171- . - - - - - - - 1111... •
..,....,
liP lfltloy lito II

ill !lenny HIP

eCJl ro ew 1111 eo

--7011.- · 031. Coli 114· 441· I•

· - . ........ 304·171· 2111,

e

......

LIMESTONE.'-07.00 -1* oon.
Ho..... oil kJndo. , _ ....... '"

..

Evening NIWI

e

Paul Rupe, Jr. Wiler lervloe. •
P'oolo, - · · - · C o M 114448· 3171 •

gollon -...,, -

•

SOUTH
.QJ 9 4

DOWN

12Keep away

wt,_

J a J Wiler 8erviee. Swllnmlng
poola, cletame,· welll. Ph. i14-,
241·1281.
~~
.:.;_..:..::.::.:._
~---···
R. a A Watlf S.~. Ho~~te
Wille. DOOle fll... For-

Watt•rton' l .W 1ter Hauling,
rMIOneble r8tM, inunediMa

0

1Q:IIIIIJ Portlelt of the Soviet
Union: llaltlo.Slyle Dlecover
Ulhuanla, Eatonla and Latvle,
the USSR's
on the
Will, Whirl the Ideal
thi!Ping the counlry's Mura
are being bOrn. (NRI
10:30 (J) Children of the
llr0k11oll urled
ill ......... lflrola
11:00 it&gt;RIInlnglon .,_..
Stealing lhl Show

Oill•rd Wlter Service: Poott. ~
Ct.tama, w.. l,, Delivery Any.
limo. Call 114·441·7404-Na
s....... Cillo.

30;4·171·1370.

.,_ Joop CJI, V-1, -

-

••••

1 Roofing
material
shop need ·
2Alpine
8lndlan
region
title
(var.)
11 Tropical
3 Scratchy
vine

Ill .....

*••·
morty J•- ..... w..... c..

.,

'IAK63
• J 10 2
+AJI02

1 Barber-

CIA operation 10 overthrow
lale Pavot.

'
1111 Eoglo 4WD, . 4 dr ..
. . . . -.. Coli 114-

.

ACROSS

confronls LOcocco about a

UoenHCI ..ICtrlaiM. . Etdmate •
frM, Ridenour O.rillll, ~04·
17S-1781.
.

86

Alabama, OWighl YoakUm.
The Judds, Tanya TUCker,
Marla Haggard and BUCk
Owens are among those
scheduled to perform. (Same
day talecast)
(!I Col. B'bel
(I) 8 (I) MOYIE: 'Qocl
Bleil the Child' ABC

1'IIMIIr 1;1

'

a. Refrigeration

.

MEEKLE .AND WINTHROP

([) aJ)IIIierman'o Man:ll
11J 0 !Mwhart A new
world opens up for Michael
when he'S liked to produce

Coli It 4-448-88H.

1111 R...,. Flot. 10 h. 2

In
Buena Pari&lt;, CA. The gro~~p

liom Knott's Barry Farm

'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
c;or. F-ond Plno
',
GolllpoUo, Ohio
Phont 814·441·3188 or 114·"",
441·4477

EAST
., 2

t.y THOMAS JOSEPH

e

RON'S Te!tYIIIan S,ervlce .
HauH gallt on RCA, Oueur.
GE. looolollno In Zonltll. Col
304·5'11· 2318 or 114·441· ~.
2414.

1878 Bulcl&lt; !logo!, Pfl. PI,
•800.00. 1178 Oldo Toronodo.
.... - . lilt. 3114·175,4317
or 17&amp;·4413.

1 .1

•

w •

--lrY-

tor 5:00.

1171 Chevy C·20, 4 -

1

1

e

,~

Fetty TrM Trtn1ming. atump
remov•l. c.n 304-171-1331 .

Truck!~ for Sale

:

Painting, roofing, rem cJ I 'I-'
tNI trim.,.mg, bulldlnga torn
d-n. ...... houllng. · CoM

A • B REMODELING
Cen't lfford high pricet1 Don't
let the wllther IIGP you. Dry·
woll, bollc wlrint. ropolrine.• potch dtluouoy, plumbing,
Coli 441·8170.

Ante Bob,

Union: End ol AI the Earll
Examine the meaning aild
Importance ol national,,aa
well u lndlvldulll, lden1lly
wllh a rare look allhe .
warrior mountain people. (NRI
1:30 (JJ 91 Valelle's Femlly
Wl1h Michael and Davld
gone, the lwina eneak In an
X•ra!ICI video. Q
1111 • C Dloltjnlng women
Mary Jo faces peraonal crisis
wllln her ex-huaband
re-enters her life.
t:OO (J) 700 Club
(J) 9123rd Annual
Acldo.,Y of Counlry Mualc
Awlllll Hank Wiliams Jr.
and Reba McEntiro host, .

'~

.

former mobetar.JRI 1:;1
([) DIKDYI!Iel ndeiwLook at ethics of treasure
hunting and dlfferoncas from ,

I:OIIJ) Porlr81t ol the Sovlei

.1

-

e (I) M~yver MacOyver
llghts.to save the life of a

Ut743
+K543

BQ 86 5

After North bad suppor~ spades,
Soutb bad values to make a game try,
so be bid his second suit. From North's
,point of view, game was oo, but just in
case South was cue-blddiDg with the
tbougbt of slam, be showed his club
kiDg. East came to life with an ill-ad.viled double. South passed, content to
·play four clubs doubled If North had
support, but North was a little nervous
about the mellllin&amp; of South's pass, so
be returned to four spades.
Against four spades, West led the
,queen of hearts. East overtook with
the klllg and returned the jack of diaIIIOIIda. Declarer won the ace, played
three I'OWidl of spades ending In his
... dum
band• and led a Iow c1ub towa."
my's kiDg. West showed out as Eastwon the ace. East played a diamond to
clammy's kiDg and de(:larer led a club
from dummy' setting up the clubs
wbea East. spllt his honors. And that
was It for the defense - a heart and
two clubs llld deelarer took the rest.

(NRI (2:151

New .l'

thedl ' trea. lhnibs. AuHu.
Don't Llndlclpet. Cell 814~

By Jameo Jaeeby

e ill MOYIE: 11le Hueller

o'

Now Cell i14-441·3011· Fred • -r
Cox.

ALF. Q

ro FOC~!a on the F1111lly

3-2~··

lUI MOYIE: KOICII (PGI (1 :531

.

1174
· -·
llody
In poor~
to fllr 0.11
OCMMitkMt.
Interior
good. noo. 114-112·11121.

e

aunt. ,1;;'
01 P;lnANewa

rlollly.
"'·
Carpenter wCNtl·bv hour or job.· . f
PeneMng. painting, drywall,

- - 114·3e7-0275.

7:311J) Sanford and Son
1 :00 l]j Fother Murplly Eighty
Elgh1 Keys to Happiness
(J) 01 ALF ALF's dummr
leaves the Tenner household
s~ss; he takes over

naiuro unites a Hnlillve
younllJII~ and her recluaiva .

1,

117• C.,.._L Motor runs DOGCI.

ll..,~y':.«:S:rrdyll;l

attlck, proposes to Allie. C
aD WonderwOika A love of

:
.

IIJ) Cto11flre

lrlend'a heart

...

NORTH

.AK106

'17

read.

B(I)Judge
1!11 WIIHI 'ol Fortune !;I

:"m9a
lhaken by a

:

1877 Monte Corio. P8. PB. itr.
0410. Colll14·812-2171.

73

~

iltAT WE CAN
AfFORP A .
&amp;OTTLE op WINE!

WINE • BEER o
o

~

!

For home replir, remc d1llng,
flnlah worlt • woHpoportng. C.U ·
114-441-1422. Moy God 1o1oN:

72

o

''

, BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltkmll lifetime guarentee. LOOIII ,.,.,.,ce, fumWied.
FrM liltlmlltes. C•ll coUect
1·114·237·0488. doy 0&lt; night.
RogertBitement
Wat.-ptoofing,

•

e ill WKRP In Clnclnneti ·
"'

•

BRIDGE

In bridge, opportunities can be I.ost
. when problems remain 111110lved. In WEST
today's deal, the North-South bidding •au
gave East a road inap that he failed to 'IQJIOBH

7:05 (I) Andr Oi1ltllll

'-'.)PE(;IAI. OCCA,S'ION"?

•.

Hunger - Vaunt - EmOed- TlraCJe - BEHIND
We live In a very automated society. I've noticed that the
~ the tralflc light tum• green, " aulomatically activaleS
the hom of the _c_ar BEHIND ,;:m:.:•:...·- - - - - - ' - - - - - - ,

ale......

WHAT'S THE

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

N.ewaHour (1 :00)

FRANK AND ERNEST
we NI!!D A &amp;o'TTL£ ·OF \NINE FCI!t A Jpit:l~ O(:t:;tt.SION.

the chuckle quoled

by filling in the missing words

L._J....J_.J.._J....J_.J you develop from step No. 3 below.

s-...

1111 New•
IIJ) MoMrtlne
• liZ 91 WIIHI of Fortune

8quaNI

.

!

A

ew
([) aJIPeople'•
_ _,Court
LAh....

~
--

.

I
V

PuzzledS_..
e (J) PM Magazine
(!) Col. l'biiH
ro 1!-l'"l•t! Tonight

,

.

"We're going 10 have a quiz on
I he moon nexl week, " lhe
10.year-old Informed her parents.
The younger brolher asked,
"Mom, are you going to - her

8 PRINT
. NUMBERED LETTER S IN ·
THESE SQUARES
· ·

'Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
ei!J Too Clooe lor Comlort
1:3111J Leave It To ..._

!;f

- . _ .C..... Rd. Coli 114·

""""'1...... t110 or
trodo !Of lll'n. 114·112·7312 or

~Rilpoot

II) lllllde Pollllca ...

=N·••

•

=

·

aJIIIIoclr Elocb lc

&lt;.

.

._

R E L A· F.T
. -?"
· ~-...~.:.:...:;1;....:::,.:1~~;_,~.;.$.:..,1r-..i Q Com plete

· 11) But of IIIII Dance~~

,..,air. perU. 1nd tuppU... Pick ~ ~. l
up lnd delivery, DIVIt Vecuum-r, s

1178
I cyl., -

1171 Hoofoir.Dorll
._
tor. Colll14-741--.

-;OWN.............. - .......... Col
11 4-Mt-4071.

...;,

!,

81

.

t:O&amp;IIJAIIce
1:30. (J) Ill) NBC Nlghllr Hen

Boatr1 """'-

;.

t.w.------....,. ........._. -·"""· 1.Colll14oat7-0171.
.

·1117 ~ DoVII8. 21~
Ill I - 1-1.
· Call- ,,.· I........

.

BUDGET TRANSMISSIONS· •'
Used • rebuilt, Ill types QUiflft• .
tMd 30 days minimum. PriCII·
ttl • up. Rebuilt
i .
low 11 t31 . 310 conv
n kite t •
to flt ·S-10'a, C-10'•· f'Mtrlc a
overdrive. H~rd perta tor trant- • '
million a trlntmlHion ldta. C.ll •'
1-304·4230 or 1 -11•·379· ~·
2220.

~~" 1111 a1\1. C.l 1 ·106-117-

......4o_.,..,. _ _
NIW INPOIIMAnONI Joopo,

..

e ill HaPPf Dar•

Good
- · •171. -Coli
114-448-H25.

, 71 Auto'• For Sele-1113 Cflwt. ~- ""'-·
- ·1
- --.·
· oPfl,
88.000
C
r o,.,
--o
t ...
Cle*S II DeNy TrllauM or for
more ...., ..loft OliN 114·4412342.

lUI Factt of Ule

~.

Olda.. Buick, Pontiac, Chevy, t·
Chevy truck. Forcl. Chrysler· '~
trensmislions luNd} are internalty lnapected • carrv 3000 mi. ,
Of' 30 dey Wl"lnty ~whk:hBYift ~~
occur• firetl , We buy junk
trensmiUi.o na. C111 814-.U.I0818.
' • •.

Fiber

1

,... .H E V 0 L

IIJ) Bhowlllz.:rodllr

.....

4&amp;~

---r.;._:;...:...,.:-:r-~1 ~.~·'.
. . 13 I ·I I

aJI COiolwoundtl

" I

- !
..! - I ' "
""
.fUOO.OD.
-~
aa"
'

'•

([) Dr. Wbo Two Doctors,

lloclr 71 ~- Hlah mlloo.

Coiii14·MI-2418.

-

61 Houuhold GoQdl

11M ChfytMr llollont IW. AC.
PI , PI, AM-FM-Stereo. Excel.
cond. eon 114·379· 2588.

1 Ill C.mll'o. Red wlth all the
CROSS a IONS .
extru. e.Ott: cond. t8300 or
U.S. 31 - . ,..._, Ohio. o~ Coli 114·317·0169 .
114-2H·8481. ·
'
_::~:..."•::;;_
· :.::.:...;__:_;__;__

AC, 88,000- 1111...,.

Pt.- - Ool"""'

fum._
tlet .......,. . . . . .

Ml•ld herd wood &amp;lobo: •12 ""
bundle. Contllntng appro-. 1"h
ton. FOB. Ohio P811et Co.
Po.....,, Ohla. • 14-H2-141t .

Ill'*Office bulkllng • 21. Locust St. ~I~=========:.L:::=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::..I
Colll14·441·8221

APARTMENTI, mobllo hou-.
111. 114-441-1221 .

Beech Stroot. Mldcl'-" Ohio.
2 bodrGOm
lilt utll~

••eel.

I

--.-:;.L

(!) lporlai.DOk

Ford motor. akiequipment. good ~ ....
. cond. phone 304-676 · 7.6 53 If·.,,""
:'t ,..,.
ter 15:00 pm.

'

,•

r_ I I ·1 I .

"'
_;I;. . E:;. ,.;2.D. . .;Y,. - ~1 ~j

eCJl ro elll 1111 eo

o

f

1j.·========~~;:======e:·•:;:.,:-=~~- ~~ 76 '. Auto Parts
8o Accessories ·
71 Auto's .FQr Sale
f II II '),]II Ill\
,\

. I I I 1· r

· OINen

lo&gt;-'f"

t~e

·11----r-G_,
.U~M..:.,..:..T_,E,....N......-r-1

1:00 (J) Cruy Like 1 Foa TIH ' ....._
Dulh Do Us Part

,.,•.

WOlD
UMI

below to form four simple words.

EVENING

''' ''

hours,

18'n ft. Berkey je1 drive.

, .,u

._.....

Speoe fOf emeH tr111ert. AN
hook•UPI. Cable. Alto lfflctenoy
room1, air 1nd cable. M110n,
W.Vo. Coli 304-773-1111 .

64

19n Ch.Ckmate Jet

In-·

, COUN~Y MOBILE Homo Pork.
Routt 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trlllert. C.l 61•·992·
7478 .

uted

'

Rearrange letters of
0 four
S(rambled words

Part 4

304-578-2314.

=;:..::.:...:....:..:.:.:.:::....____

.
RIVER LOTS
For Boating • Clmping-ForS1I1
or R'ent. A-One Re1l Eatate
Brokor. 304&lt;17S-1104.

etc. 350 V-8 eng .,

1 987 boat, take over paym.nta
nothing down, V-1 , 19 11: 175

.........,_u

w-.

'
''

PM-114·441 ·1419.

Coli 114·188·7311.

MOVING SALE. Morch 21. 22.
23, Mon, TUII, Wed. Moving out
Individual Gultor ..._.1 IN·
of ~tate al new fumtture. mun
ooll, AW TV, oolor TV, 21" -~~ Muolc 814· 441·0117
color· RCA conaol• TV. VCR, or Joll Womoloy I n - 44&amp;·
aot1, chairs. ottomt. gl... top l(t77 . Limited openings
IVIilabll.
coffee • end Ulblt. lampa,
bed, 3 piiiCI bedroom tutle. a
,.,_ wood dlnn.rta whh a..t,
Fruit·
GE
dryer. 3 bor atoola, ' 68
rocker. bobv bod. high choir.'
8o Vegetable•
knock-· lown mower,
1178 Meroury anct mite~ kama.
Pfentllub. DtvlslonoffluJI"'IIIe cr... gr...s, ti .OO·plckld,
Rood, Oolllpollo.Ohlo 114· 441· . o4.00·eon 114·448·
2144.
' M42.

''

18 ft. }1ydr..por1 8111 bo.t, 80
t
HP. Mer~.• Mere. TM, 55-prop,
trail., . b.Con. Ctll tfter 5 -~

-om

46 Spece for Rent

.•'·

....,. 1 . Very low houri.
t27,500. Coli 304· 727·1890.

FlriiWood-mixld h.rdwood. Aver-a• p6olt-up load-t21. yau
houl. US dollwtrod locol, CoN ·

'UZZLII S@~4UlA-&lt;Z£!r~&amp;
_ _ _ _ _.:__ Edited b, CLAY I . ,OLLAN
TIAT DAILY

'' .
"'

801t1and
Motors for Sale

21 ft . S.yliner eruiter. 1988
widt btlm, 1H •ectronk:,g .....,.

-co.

·Furnilhed room -919 Second
.Av•·· 01lllpollt. t1 215 I mo.
Utilttill paki. Single mele. Sh1,.
both. Coli 441·4411 oftor7 PM.

'

•
'.
•.

Huge 31' CWII ~ wittl dtck,

fence &amp; .._, llt8tel.-n •
ftntnctng n ........ -1·100-341-

.The Daily

Television
Viewing

'

I

8748.

Furnished Rooms

-

Motorcycle•

mil-.

J • S FURNITURE
'Go thew•v oflhe hi-tech future. ·
1415 ~altern Ava:
' The Electronics a.Mcfng pro3800 Food • • tloo.
Uvlng room 1uit• 117$ &amp; up.
gi'lm It The Adult EduCit~ aultlvttor. Dyna Bounce mower.
11 Court St .· 2 s..:tfoom. 2 Bedroom suit11 t319 a .up.
Cent•--Tri-COuirty ·Voc;adonll Hoooton round bolor. t7,3110.
blttl1, l!,h:c:hen fumllhed, w/ w
School wiN lfoln you lor' lobo In We'll - · 1:111 114, 288·
carpet, t3211 a ma. plut utilitift. 30" rang•whitt, *16 . 30"
the Hrvictnt and n'lllinttntn- 8122.
No p..s. d..,olit • ref. Call rlngi·MrOcado, •111. 30" glt
coho MfVIc of-........ oqulj&gt;614·441· 4921.
range-white. til. 31" r•~oe­
mant. W• h.,. monl.. nellble 1070 c... Cobln · low
whlte. *75. Kenmore w•aherto pey for trMnlng for eligible hOuro, 4 bottom 11 h. J .D.
Brookside AplrtmenU: LocetiHI whlte. *95. Kenmore wllher- n t o. Coil 713·3111 .... - · 14 ft. J.D. """"' hoo.
oH Bulavllle Ad . ~ 1 lA. apeckM11 coppertone , t915 . O . E .
1• to regleter tor cia.... begin· Wo'll
*1.880. CoN
a.-tmtnta with modem kltchttn wether-white, Ill. M1yt1g
nlng April •m.
,
114·211·1112.
aftd wuher-drylr hookupe, ca- Wllhlr·whit•, t1150. Kenmara
ble tiiWilion avdlble. Cell dryer-white, tH. O.E. dryer37 ln-otlonol boloo. lido 8N Fortl-wlthoulllvlton.
114-441-1932.
wtlh:•, t96. Whirlpool dryer·
delivery wheel rlke. Hey WIQOn Good oontltion. *1800. Coli
white. t81S. Weujnghou••
All in good condition. 101 ecre 114·311·1280.
.
Upltalrt untUmiahed apt. Clr· dryer-white. tll5. 22 cu:ft.
hill f•m I room houu need•
plftld, ut1Uti11 paid. No children. upright ftoat·fr• freezer-like
.ame riiJIIir. 3 walerwetls.lotaf Mixodhoy,12001•. .......tboloo.
No pets. Cell 614-448· 1837.
ni'N, *196. Coldepot rilfrts~o­
timber. Producing au well DUt •11 .• delivery poi1lbl1. J.D. 4
wtliht, froat-free, *178.
building&amp;. 2 - l c
w1t11 - - . 1 1 &amp; 0. 114·111·
Fumlahed efflclenay-920 4th. Skloa• ~ppllanca 5158 Upper
.
mobile home flaotl-up.814·1138· 1254.
Ave. t185. Uliliti11 paid. C1ll R'- Rd.· 614·448·7398.
9814.
614· 446-4.115 aft« 7 PM .
1'40 Faflllllll tr.or b6aaer than
Whirlpool electric stove. Need•
For sele: Seaoned hltnfwood.
tho
Cull.
2 BR .• 2 bath 1pt. All utilities minor rep1lr. •25. Call 614·
Help No. 70.4 7 regllttred. dr....,
end CuttfvetarWlito
.._ -ha
included. t3110 a mo . Oep. 441·04114.
pickup or d - I d. Coli 114dloc onc1 - · n.-.oo.
required. C1ll 814-446· 4222
742· 2421 .
304-171·1703.
between 9·5 .
Hide-1-way ·sot1 bid • twivel
rocker. ~ood cond . Call 814Now toldnt
!Of
Nice 2 8R .· t216 1 mo. Stove, 441-tS37 alter 5 PM,
farm equ!Dment 1uctktna leturrefrlg. • wlter furnie,hed. 4YJ
doy Mordl 21111, Sldoro Equip·mile• from town. No pets. C1ll Kh:c:hlll cabinett. countartops66 Building Supplies
mont Co., 304-175-7421 .
814·446·8038.
ocel. cond., ca1t Iron double
aink w/ t.uceu, electric cOunt•
Jolwl 0oon 7 ft. hoy blntl, Now
2 BA . •PS· Adultl only . First Ave. . top range w / hood. built-In elct·
Building Materiel•
Call 81 4-448·8221 .
ric oven. bulh-ln dlthwesh•.
HoUond .oonclltton,.
, - - 3CM·273· Block. brick, MW« pipea, wjn- ucehnt
C1ll 614-446·1712 after &amp; PM.
dowa. .nnteea...c. Cl•ucl• Wln- 421S.
Downtown, ground floor ·apart·
tera. RIO Grlf'lde. 0. Cilll 814·
ment. 4 rooms, blth &amp;. biS• Good 2 pc. living room suite.
2411-&amp;121.
83
Uveltock
meht. Newly decarated. Off Call 814-441-0593.
ltreet puking. For more in~or .
Concrete blocks· 111 siaM· yard
ce\181 4-4415·0855, 8 AM - 4:30 For sale. Wa1t1rn Auto electric
or deflvefy. Meson und. QMik:to.
PMw.kdaya,
H,_ to. Ml• l _ _
....brod
..,.,. t71. 814-949-2528.
i Ht Blodl Co., 1231,-\ Pine $t,,
end T.,-.nMIM WeiUrt. C1H
Golllpolll.
Ohio.
Call
114·441·
Nice, 2 BR·. apt. for rent. Bedding Sale 10 Pet. OFF: Used
114-448-47SI.
~783.
t225/ mo plu1 deposrt. Clo .. to bedding top brendl, over 30 11tt1
Rio Grand Coll'9'. Cell 114- twin, fuU. queen, king, at.Fting '
245-9376.
t215.· t90. 1et. Ha1dboards,
56
Pets for Sale
frlmea, rail• t16. up; Warm
Efficiency 1pt.-1 room fur- Momlng WOOd 1tove w·blower
nlttled, kitchenette, It ba- 18&amp;.; M•ny speciels. Y:a mill or.,~t
Groom ond S..ppty Shop·.... 0uii1•Typo Boy Mo,.. 58" toll.
throom .· Private entrance. prl· Jtnicho Rd. Pickens Uled FurniGrooming . All br1!ed1 ... AII
vate perking. UtiHti" paid. Call ture. 304·676-14&amp;0.
814-446-7816.
ltyl ... lama Pet Food Detter. 7 yro. old. Ru!IY - · UOO. Coli
Julio Wobb Ph. 114-041-0231 . 114-388-M71.
For Mle. 3 -pc 14 poster) bedNawfumlahed 1 bedroamapen- room tuit, 1tereo, dinette aet,
Drtgonwvnd Catl.-y Kennel. loor -loll !Of brNIIIne. Coli
ment in MiddiiiPQrt. Call 814· Home Interior • other item,.
114-441:3021.
CF~ Him .. eyen, Pertlln and
992·5304 or 814-446·8898 412' St1tfhouae Rd. · ,
aft• 5pm.
Si•m•• klttana. AKC Chow au.n. hDrle gelding. very
pupploo. Coli 114·441-3144
after 7PM .
GriCIOul living. 1 1nd 2 bad·
' " · bcollont
... ""'"'
ch!ldron.
Call 114·441·7821.
room IPirtmlntl at Vlll-aMenor 1nd Aiv.,.ldll Apart64 Misc. Merchandise 2 Cock.ti.l• • cage. Cell Sto!Uoo Sorvlco AOHA. In-·
814·266·9305.
manti In Middleport . From
tlvo Fund Polomlno Bio!Hon.
t21 &amp;. Including utlllliea. Call
Olflprlng
OVIHiblo !Of
AKC
D•shahund
pup;
mlnlture
Lllrgt 1lr compre.. or with 80
614· 992-7787. EOH.
tion. NOQIIA ollg-. 1100.
m•le, I month•. t135. Alto,
gal. tank. 1500. C1H 814-992·
114-848-2485.
.
W1nted, AKC M1l• Pamar. .n.
1 bedroom 1partment1. Fur- 7401 .
Coli 814·441·1827.
nistled 1nd untumlehed. t200.Senriae lfl 'Yari; a., for Ml•.
t226. per month ." Utilltlu fur- Oi.mOnds and gold. Brand new
7'h
montho old, 300 llo. Still
2
Mlnltture
Dachshund
puppj
...
men
and
women't
diamond
nithed. Cllll14-912-&amp;724.
h
...
hoy. 114-742·2711.
10
.'!fkl.
old.
fil'lt
ahota.
t200
rlnga, gold ch1tn1 1nd watch••·
2 bedroom 1pt. in Svracuee for All m.-chandlta 60 percent uch. Call 114·241·9131.
I woOk old pip, moll ond
rent. Eld•ly'preferred. Ra•sona- below jlwtlry store co•. For
female. wormed end cutrateCI,
informetian, c.tl Jim at 814- AKC reglewed Coclcer 8pantels.
bl• rent. 114-112-2748 .
.31.00. 304-175·4111.
luff and btande. The p.tect
992-2962 tvenlnga.
E11ttr
sui-prite.
Depoah
r•
2 Mclroom Apt. for rent. C.r·
qulrocl. 114·982-3005 ., 114·
petld. Nice ntting. Llundry U Haul trucka and trailers for
64 Hey • Grein
992-1187 evenlng1.
f1cUhlu ev.U.ble. Call 814- rent, 304-876· 7421.
992·3711 . EOH .
Firewood dlllverect. silck.t, Sla~... kitten•. Hll or IIIIC
Good .ni.od hoy to. oolo-lq...,
potnt. long or short heir. C.~
3 room fumishld 1pt. No pets. U&amp;.OO. M..on County, Glllipoboloo. Coiii14·241-MIO.
·lls. Ohio end other lrNa whhln 814-992·7201 and. leeva
114-M9-2253.
rNaOn It our dltcreltion. 304Good mlxict hoy. Coli 114-24111 bedroom furnished. Vary nice. 895-3441 .
MS7.
Bob}&lt; ,.bblto. 304·115· 3430.
Ba1utiful vieW. Ulllltla1 fur·
'
n'l thld.' •300 month or •a5 1i71 J - CJI. 211. 18 cyl, 3
800 boloo of hoy. Colll1 4·378wok. Camper and hou• kHp- opood, 01,110.00. 1184 Me&lt;- Cocker Spenitl pupplet,
2848.
ing room lor rent. Ohio Alv• cury Cougor t4,SOO.OO. Ajoy *100.00oooh, d-'t-lrocl,
C•mp Grounds. 614·949· 2321. Oc.. gym !rower Ulf'CIHr) cell before 12;00 noon or 1ft•
t1150.00, lnnnlon uerciter 8:00 pm, 304·1'78·4101.
Hoy ......, boloo. -doyo
1100.00. 304-89&amp;·3104.
only. Adrltn Co.- 31382 Titus
Ad., M....n;l!nt, Ohio. Phone
. Mayteg w..h, and drver. 304· 67 · . Mu•!cal
114-742·2 2.
882·2428.
•

46

-

.

Pomeioy-Midclaport. Ohio

Hondl ANO 10 Soootll!•· 2 lor
11000. LtncludM
__.. •kUtionel ac:cttun...
1,1 4-M1·2Ht .
•

Col-'o UMII Tlre8hol&gt;. 0 1...... -11.11. 14, 11,
11, 11.1• • .... ~·· 211.
Col 114· 1M-8211 .

"cld•

-

•

,i i MIIC. MtrohllnciM

Cukt.nt, UWir d,.ln a Wlter
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ''lin• pipll found 1t ., .. lktw-'1
W11hen, dry'", refriQeretore.
Caah feed ltore. c.n for latall
r•no•• · Skaggs Appli1nca1,
prleo. Col 114·388·9181 .
Uppw Riv• Rd . batkle Stone
Cr.. t Motel. 614·448-7311.
Big Hom uddle. Eac.i. cond.
New hHii at•ll • hM:karnoN.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Hahet • tMd rDpe, blanket, NCI
b11olloclr pod. N- hood 01111•
Sofoo ond cholro pricod !Yom
*395 to tillS. T1bl• tiO and , 0450. Caiii14·317·0H9.
rein•nM* Ulld. Bridle. AI
up to '125. Hide·l·btdt t310
10 t586. AocU.n .,. '225 10
HALF PAICEI fllthing ltTOW
f375. Lomps f28 to t125. •on• t2911 l.Jghted. non-lf'l'ow
Dlnot1nt108ondupto0491 .
t2811 UnUahtad t2491 Fr•
WOOd tlblt w -1 chair1 t281 to
lottonl Seo l.ocolty. Con todoyl
0715. Deok 1100 up to 0371.
F1ctory : 1 1800)423· 01 83.
Hutchea t400 and up. Bunk
•nvtlme.
bed• com,._• 'fw-mlttr....,
0295 ondupto f381 . 1obfbod• · Gara9e door tor •Ia. Call
I 1 10. M1ttr..... or box 1pring1
814·441·0373.
full or twin 181, .firm t _7 8, and
181. 4),ueen am 1225. KinO
10 HP varl1b11 drive Crt~fttrnll'l
t310. 4 draww ch•t tl9. Gun
moww.
cond .• e7oo. 4ft.
Clblneta 15 gun. Baby m..tre.HI
ber """'• far Bolen
trector, • 150. 2 HP Powlt'
035 • 041 . llod " " - - uo.
't30 &amp; Kl"g frame •&amp;o. Good
Wisher-new, •1&amp;0. CeU 814·
Hlection of bedroom aultat,
379-2745.
metel Clbinltt. hladboerda t30
tnd up to t85..
1 1H'. IOH 901 tpllkert · .....
4 , aolid w•lnut cabinetw/ IQUII·
10 O.y1 aame as cuh wtth
lzw on chram1 ltllnd , Cll
approved credit. 3 Mi'- out
114~441·7711 oh•7 PM.
Bulavide Rd. Open 9am to lipm
Mon. thru s... Ph. 114-44155 HP rototlller. t 121. C.l
0322.
114-379-2730"' 379-2430.
Velley furniture
New 1nd uMd fumJture and
applicance1. Clill 814--417572. Hours 8-S.

..

-

~

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

Monday. March 21 . 1988

1-----------.-----------1

loti, one acre. level wooded,
city wat1r, Jerricho Roell, owner
'!:! acre, 5 room• and bath. · fin1ncing, good terms, 304Outbuilding and g•raga. For 372·8405 or 372-2678.
more infornlll ion t:lll614· 949·
261 8 or 614-949 -2321 .
Loll - Commercial lot 6 tlou1e
lots. G•Uipolil Ferry. 304-8757 . room 3 bedroom t1ou1a on
6908.
laurel CIIH with 7 acres . Wattier
and dryer, tefrigerttor, 1tove,
dishwuher. Asking 146,000. 36
Real Estate
614-992·6310 after. 6 PM.
Government sie:Eed homel .
$1 .00 (u repair) Tax ••l•s.
toreclosures, morel For onfo.
repo list 1 -3Qf; . 744-3000 ext.
G-1307. 24 hrs.

th1' s

•

Wanted ferm land to rtnl·
suitable for r1iling com-Crown
2 story , 3 BR ., 1 b.th. In town. City are•. Call 614-266-15689
Near School. Will ••II on l1nd . after 6 PM .
contract . Cl ll614-446-1622.
118 ecre t1rm, 24x50 bern.
2 BR . houte aurrounded by pin• outbulldlng1, pond. good rold
tr•s. 1 3 1cr•. full b•••.. 2 frontage, will spltt pro,..ry '"'a
b1th1, hardwood floors, new 40 a 78 IICnl ~riCtl. 0w1111'
fence, pond &amp; QUtbuildingl. financing. Somerville Realty.
Priced in t40'J. Cell 614-446- 304-876-3030 or 876-3431 .
21 07-days. 245-5800-avens.
5 room house with b1th on big
lot in cou nlry. C1ll 304-676·
6349.

~aults

J.,

...

·'

Ohio

."There- isn't time to enUD\• ·
Piano &amp; Organ IHton1. C11t
M"Y Lucos-614-446-9787 o'
446·4426.

-

.,

K H

MNP

G P N I M·

BCNIKPB

Q J ,S .B V H U ·C

V K M
S R

MHJCHM

OKRMHKAG
MHJCHM

\.

JPQ

IKRKPB

N W W . - X' N U 0
J Q J Z M
; r'aCii;u~iili .HEntATBOASTSOFIDS

; ···Jiul
.. ~ 00Nn88BSIIB HAS Nq VIRTUB OF IDS
.OWN. -ENGUSH PIOYEBB
.
~-- --

_, . . . . .,. r.-·--4·- ___ _j.:__ _ _ _...:..--------"-----:--...;.,___:......_

�Paga 10-nie Daily Sa21tiM .

Community
calendar
¥0NDA\'
MI QDLEPORT Meigs
County Churches or Christ Men's
Fellowship meeting at 7:30 p.m .
Monday at Bradford Cl!urch of
Christ.

•

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Local Band Boosters Monday at 7
p.m. in band room of Meigs High
School.
·
· PORTLAND - Revival at
Morse Chapel Church, RacinePortland Road, county road, '35,
Monday through March 26,7 p.m .
nightly with · the Rev. . Rick
Weaver, New Haven, W. Va., as
speaker.

•

ELBERFELDS

••• YOU'LL
. FIND
SAVINGS ON

M·ARCH HOME ..•..

FURNITURE~

TV'S, RUGS,
FLOOR.
COVERING,
PLUS 'MORE••• ·

SPRING IS NOW HERE AND NOW
IS THE TIME TO SAVE BIG, TO
GIVE YOUR HOME THAT NEW
LOOK!

MIDDLEPORT - A Miss
J unior Civitan Pageant for Meigs
students will be held on Monday
at 7 p.m . at the ju~ior high in
Middleport. Admission will be $1
for adults and 50 cents for
students. Special guests will be
the Mejgs Choraliers and Madri·
gals. All Junior and Senior
Civitans are urged to attend.
•. .
DARWIN- Bedford Township
Trustees will meet in special
session Monday, 7 p.m ., at the
town hall.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Booste rs will meet
7 p.m . .Monday a t the school.
Nomination of officers will be
held.
RACINE - Racine Vi!J'age
Council will meet in· recessed
session Monday. 7 p.m ., at the
Shrine Park building. ·

Insert

25"
COLOR
CONSOfi
TV

YOUR CHOICE OF
THESE 3 GREAT SETS

539900

TV
-XL-100
'

;....Auto ·
·Programming
-Cable Ready

LOW, LOW SPRING TIME PRICES

QUALITY
FURNITURE
SALE
ALL BEIIUNE IECLINIS ....;, 25-t.» OFF All SWIVEL IOCICIIS "'""" 25"1o OFF
ALL DINING lOOM TABLES ... 25% OFF ALL SUIPII/SOFAS."""""' 25"1o OFF
ALL GUN CAIINETS ............. 25"1o OFF All OCCASIONAL TABLES •••• 25"1o OFF
All BEDROOM SUITS •••••- .... 25"1o OFF All SOFAS
25"1o OFF

RCA Video Cassette
Recorder

. Our entire stock of curtains

and draperies is included in this
sale. Huge auortment of.atyles
and colors for every room in
your house.

$

. .

SPECIAL

2 7 790

•Digital Control unified 111!"0te
•Total ra!'l'lote operation with I:SP"'
•MTS stereo sound system with Ill watts
per channelt
•3-jaek audio/ video monitor panel
•Hi-Con"' ·square-corner 1oo•
COTV picture tube
•147-chaimel cable-compatible tuning*
•Auto-Program'm ing

·Automatic
Dryer

Automatic
-Washer
•Large Load Capacity ...

$389

RCA 26" diagonal
ColorTrak 2000
Stereo Monitor-Reeeiver

but only! 24" wide •4
Automatic Wash Cycles
•3 Water Temp Combinations •2 Water Level
Selections •Easy . Clean
Agitator - Mounted lint
Filter •Super SURGILATOR " Agitator •1 Wash
&amp; 1 Spin Speed •Automatic Cool-Down Care.

•Large Load Capacity
•Timed Dry Sy~tem •6
Drying Cycle' •TUMBLE
PRESS •Control•3 Tam.·
perature Settings •Automatic ".No-Iron" CootDown Care •1 80 deg. Side-Swing Door •EKtraLarge Lint Screen, •Bac- '
Pak* Laundry lnfor..,a: ·

S299

NEW SHIPMENT
METAl CABINETS

tion.

Grecit for kitchens,

ba111111nts, bldrooms

...d extra storage.
Whitt and Almand
_.finish.
lASE CAIINns, CHINA
CABINETS, UTilRY
CABIMns and
'WARDROBES

SERTA SALE

'.

Premier Comfort....

$99 ... pc.

All Sizes.- Twin, Full, OuHn, ling

ORTHO LUX

20°/o OFF

10 YR. WARRANTY

Full Size Set .......... $299
Queen Size Set ....... 5399

PERFECT SLEEPER
15 YR. WARRANTY

Full Size Set ........... 5399
Queen Size Set ....... S449

WALLPAPER
SALE

SOLID OAK

Now's a groat limo to
hang paper. Wo havo a
hut' assortment of prints,
strops and ltclllru ~ lit
ovory docat. luy now and

.,ak.

REG. 5359.00

GOSSIP'
.BENCH

MATINEES SAT I SUN
All SEATS $2.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDA' $2.SO
BARGA!~

...__,._.., ......, '

IJ.~,il~ Sulint:l = ·=.-;.

06()9 '

1·

I

•

at y

.
enttne
'

3 Sectlono, 32 Pogoo 26 Cenll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday. March 22, 1988

. A Multimodlo

Inc. Newopopor

200/o

With padded

From
·the KHpsakt Colltcton

O.FF

seat.

of Pula*i Fumifure.

SALE

SAlE

$299
VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING

'

'

in the eighth year.
Miami, Preble and Unlor
· Here are the districts II) which counties.
the counties will compete lor a
District 12 -Lucas County.
portion of the bond money. Single
District 13 - Allen, Auglalze,
counties receive a per capita H~!-ncock, Logan, Mercer, Put·
share:
· nam. Shelby and Van Wert
District 1 - Cuyahoga County. counties.
District 2 - Hamilton County.
District 14- Carroll, Columbl·
District 3 - Franklln County.
ana, Coshocton, Guernsey, HarMon~omery
District 4 . rison, Holmes, Jefferson and
Counll(.
,
Tuscarawas counties.
District 5 - Defiance, Erie,
District 15 .,.. !\.dams, Brown,
Fulton, Henry, Ottawa, Pauld- Fayette, Ga!Ua, Highland, Jackllli, Sandullky, Williams and son, Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Sci:
Wood counfles.
oto and Vinton counties.
District 6 ~ Mahoning and
District 16 ~ Ashland, CrawTI:umbull c!Ounties.
.
·
ford, Hardlri, Marlon, Richland, .
Dlstrjct 7 ~ Ashtabula, · Seneca, . Wayne and Wyandot
Geauga, Lake and Portage counties .
counties.
. District 17 - Delaware, FairDistrict 8- Summit Co,unty .
field, Knox, Licking, Morrow and
. District 9,- Lorain, Huron and Plckaway counties.
·
Medina counties.
District 18- Athens, Belmont,
District 10- Butler, Clermont, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Mar·
Clinton and Warren counties.
gan, Musklngum, Noble, Perry
District 11 - Champaign, and Washington counties.
Clark, Darke, Greene, Madison,
District 19 - Stark County.

all ,

•
•

'

Fi
j
d
•
~~~r.:;~n:~~~~~~~~~ . uture inancing boa.r tonrc
.1:' .

'

COMPEirnON - Theae two Melp IDgll School vocational
students receillly competed Ia the annual VICA skUI contests al
Plckaway-Ross Vocational Cenler In Chllllcolhe. The are John
Carl, left, son of Sandra Carl, Pomeroy, and Dwight Carl, New
Castle, DeJa., who competed In welding, and John Sisson, son ol.
Roberl and Iva S111110n, Rutland, who competed In the hand
calculator competlllon. Bolb students won lhe conlesls In lhelr
areas and wiD compete at the State VICA skUI contests Ia
Columbus next monlh. Carl · IS enrolled In welding under the
instruction of Kenneth EbUa and Richard Fetty and Sisson Is
enroUed In electronics Instructed by Gary Walker and Dale
Harrison.

allQWed.
A special Ohio Public Works
A Cllscusslon of future financ: the school district's participation being installed at Sy,racuse Ele·
Commission will determine the lng In Southern Local School in the COG·SEOVEC Health and
mentary. Great Bend Eleetrlc
\ grarits, interest-free or low· District took place at Monday Welfar.e Bene!!t Program for
Company wllllnstalllhe system.
interest loans and other forms of night's regular meeting or the medical, hospital and major
The school calendar for 1988-89
credit assistance based on the Southern Board of Education.
medical insurance benefits, ef· was approv~d. with the first day
recommendations of each local
According to Dennie Hill, fective July 1, 1988 through June of school for students on Aug. 29,
district. A local match of at least treasurer, the board Is consider· 30, 1989. This group, Hlll ex· and the last day for students on
10 perce.n t is necessary for lng a reduction in staff,. a plained, is a consortium of 45 May26.
.
receiving a grant.
reduction in programs, or possl- scl\ool districts for which bids for
A special meeting of the board
By Untied Press lalematlonal
All of the bond proceeds will go bly both, in order to avoid Insurance coverage are taken, In
has been scheduled for April 11,
Here is a county-by-county breakdown in Southeastern Ohio
for grants in the first two years, financial problems that are an - an effort to secure the lowest 7:30 p.m., at which time the
of the number of AIDS cases reported to the Ohio J;)epartment of
according to the leglslatlon ticlpated by the end of the 1988·89 possible premiums for the cover- district's principals will present
Health and the number of deaths of AIDS carriers through
passed last week. Then, 10 school year unless some action is age. Hill reports that this year's
evaluations of their·sta(fs.
percent may go for loans In the taken In the near future to reduce cost to the district for providing
March 7:
The board also completed the
County
Cases Deaths
. employee Insurance benefits Will following matters.
third yea~, lnc~easllli each year the~dlstrtct's budget.
..
.....................
:
.......
..
.................
......................
3
2
Athens
until 22 percent of the bond
Currently, SoutherQ District have Increased by $130,000.
Approved Cindy Allen and
Galila
.................
..........
....
........................................
..
1
0
money is used for loans in the has a total of 107 employees, Hill
It was announced that a girl's
Gregory Spees as substitute
Hocking .............................................. ........ .. ...... ........ 0
0
seventh through lOth years.
reported; Including 66 teachers softball coach Is still needed,
teachers.
.'
...........
................................
..
......
....
.
3
1
Jackson
.............
TownshiPil and villages with and 41 non-certified employees.
since no teacher In the district
Approved Douglas Hunter,
0
Lawrence ......... . ,........ ...... .... ................................... .. .1
In another matter related to has applied fort)lejob. The board M.D., as school physician.
tess than 5,000 people will divide
Meigs
..................
..
..
........
..
......
.....
..............................
0
0
up a $12 million "small govern- tlnancllli, the board approved will now accept applications
Approved the use of the junior
,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ _ _ _ _ _,. from certified teachers outside
Pike .................. ... ..................... ........................... ...... .2
2
and senior high ball diamonds by
4
Rlchland .... ................ .......................... ....................... 6
the district. Anyone interested in the Racine Ball Association.
Ross
......
...............
.......
..
.....
.......
............
..
........
........
...
4
4
the ppsltion should contact Su·
Approved a service contract ·
Scioto .............. ..... ......... ........ ...................... .......... .... .1
1
perlntendent Bob Ord at the high between the district and the ·
Vinton ........ :......................................... ... ..... .... .. .... .... 0
0
school.
Meigs County Board of Mental
Washlngton
....
.......
..
...........................................
....
.....
5
2
To meet state requirements, a
Retardation-Developmental Dis·
Ohio
·
725
424
new electric fire alarm system is
Continued on page 12 ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ Tbe Issue before lhe Poltal Board of
Govemon, meiltlftlloday lo consider the flnt rale hike Ill lhree
yean, was whether lo raise the cost. or mallblf a ftnt-illaaa
letter to a quarter. · .
·
·
.
Polllal official. laid before lhe prlvale llellloa II was aD but
By Untied Press lnleraatloaaf
Snow was falling in some or the morning.
night Binghamton, N.Y., set a
cel1ala the lkeal slamp and alher increuea would be
Cold Canadian air grazed the
Southbound 1-95 south of Alex-. record low with a 'readllli of 7 higher elevations of the Pacific
approved, especlall1lteeaule I~ boar.d already had ~el April S
northeastern United Stales, degrees above zero, breaking the Northwest. Advisories for snow andrla, Va. , was blocked for
as a tarrel diMe for new rae..
· ,
sending temperatures plunging old mark for the date of 8 above,
were in effect for the Cascade about an hour when at least 10
Tbe preeldntlally appolaled panel was expected to move
mountains of Washington state vehicles were !Qvolved in an
from the Great Lakes states, to set in 1965.
qulcldy oa the IIJW, nnrtlll from 13.6 pereellt for flnl-illaal
New England today, white balmy
It was 9. degrees in Erie, Pa. , 8 and Oregon where 6 to 10 inches accident. Arlington County
mall to t1 pereellt for adverllalnr bulk mall, and thea to
weather covered the Southwest in Caribou, Maine, and 4 in were possible today and tonight, blocked Icy, car pool lane ramps
aiUIOIIIICe 1.. tlecllloalal an ~n aewJl conference.
Crowther said .
and central and southern Plains
to the Pentagon parking lot;
Lebanon, N.H.
A flnklaalltamp ba co.t ftcea.. lllaee February 1881, aad
and heavy snow was forecast In
On
Monday,
the
first
full
day
of
snarling
traffic and backing up
In the southern and central
lbe Ptltalle.-vlce pia. to .leU alraultloul "E-Stamp" Willi a
tbe F!aclflc Northwest.
of vehicles .
hundreds
sprllli,
snow
and
freezing
Plains and the valleys and
pkAre ol BartllllafoN II relealcit I lleW !keal vel'lloa.
The coldest readings In the deserts of the Southwest read·
temperatures hit northern and
''It was a disastrous morning,"
Uaderetiltr prq u 1d rille8, lhlrd:claal hulk adverllalar mall
Pastor said.
'
nation this mornlntr. with reports
IRiS were in the 50s and 60s; eastern sections of the nation.
wouhllacrl-ll:r t1 pareeal, lleCOad:C:Iau mall for map!llaea
M'a ryland State Pollee de·
in tbe teens and single digits, following afternoon highs In the
A dusting or snow Iced roads jn
Uld -JfiDIJ'IS·wUid·adY-IIy li~N!ftnt and rain for
stulli much tlf the lower Great 80s Monday.·Crowther predicted ·the natiQn's capital and . its cl!lred a snow emergency for the
polloi • wtiJid bJ I peSIIIJ to 11 aenll.
Laltes region - lncludllli Ohio,
toclay's highs would aratn climb 1 VIrginia and Maryland suburbs, southern halt' of Prince George's
A Plftltl .... pacll11p weiPIBallp lolpo- would IIICN- . . Pennaylvanla and New York Into
sending dozens or cars sliding out· County, requiring vehicles to
the 80s in the region.
froai ll.lt .. U.8 ud a ........ Expr1111 Mall pachp weald
state- and the northern Atlantic
of control but causing no lnjurtes, have chal,ns or snow tires.
It was 70 In Palm Springs,
HP ~= lit.'lltalll.
·
"It's Iced over," said Sgt.
Coast states, the Nation111 · Calif., at 2 a .m. The high ror the
pollee said.
'1'1111
.... CtamlllloiS' . . . the .............."' lo
Weather Servlce_Jajd.
"As soon as we trot the warnllli Robert Devers of the Slate Police
nation Monday was 93 111 Borlbe rate tMs'tMSI 81SIIi IIIII 6IMdl, ~ ID a,_ap
'1t'a Just. very cold air coming rego, Calif.
to expect trouble, we were barracks in Colletre Park;
hllle·of 17.1 ,.............. pr9Jeeted .... llllllollllallolt ..
d!IWD from Cauda," rorecuter
Wet weather was confined to already in trouble," said Marl· "There's a ton of accidents out·
JtM. TIIII11NrdW .................... ra1u IBIIaJ 111'1,11•1
,
Hqb
Crowther
aald.
"It'•
movscattered rainshowers In anne Pastor, a Vtttrtnla Depart· there."
.
widely
~
llrll.
tna IOUtheast acroaa the Great . the northwestern part of the ment of Transportation
Marquette, Mich. , was the·
Till Paltallel'dae,
I......... 0.. If I pdva&amp;e
natlon'a coldest spot Monday
Lak• area. It's tlnd oiiP'Utna i nation today. Heavier rainfall spokeswoman.
•T lA Ia lll'r after J "II I
CllfPINMGI II lMI, Jell
the IIOS'Iheaat corner ot · the
In southeast Washlncton, up to momtna With a record 15 below
totals for a alx·bour period
rate ......... tile
United States."
18
cars were Involved In a pileup zero.
ending earl)' today Included
..nte~llllltl llwellld , _ ... N.llllllaailefkll&amp;, larplrbeGa••e
At 8un. on the I4!COnd full day
Sprllllfofflclallyarrlvedat4:39 ·
in
the northbound lanes of
nearly tw~Htatha ·ot an Inch at
of rlllqlalltr ... ftS'Us' '""1*11 et1r1 llOite.
of lprllli It waa 1 below zerd at · Quilll)'ute. Waah., and .17 or an :Interstate 295, which ciOied the .a .m. EST Sunday.
·
\
Bradford, Pa. Juat after ll'lkl-'
highway
for
·
mucb
or
the
,.'
Inch at Bozeman, Mont.

AIDS breakdown ·in Southern Ohio

Cold weather lingers in Great Lakes region

..

Reg. 56.99 Rugs ......... Sale 55.59
Reg. sa. 99 Rugs ......... Sale S7.19
Reg. 512.99 Rugs ..... Sale 510.39
Reg. 519.99 Rugs ••••• Sale 515,99

ment" · fund each year, and
another $1 mlllion a Year goes
into a water and sewer rotary
fund for the first ·four years.
"We should encourage most of
the use of this for water and
sewer systems," said Senate
Minortty Leader Harry Meshel,
D·Youngstown, one of the 'sponsors. "Those are the most serlous
problems. You're talking about
clean drinking wat!!r and the
elimination of waste."
Eil~h county 15 guaranteed at
le~.t ~.OOCI a year. The small
counties also are .guaranteed a·
· years Is for · l)tinlinum amtiWit &gt;baed .on a
e~•K~a!:~~etl)llda~
facl,ltles .percentage of their populations.
. Although the bond IJ!Oney is
rn'! :zJng : Ohio's
intended .to tlx up antiquated
Infrastructure.
Basically, the state .will be facllltles, 5 percent of a district's
divided Into 19 districts for the money each year may go ror new
purpose of sharing the bond construction, such as replacing a
money. Each district will select two-lane road with. a four-lane
its· list of top prlortty projects highway, or replacing septic
based on replacement need be· tanks with sewer lines. That will
cause of age, pu!Jllc health and gradually increase to 20 percent
.safety, or value to the area in

Postal board.meets to
increase mail costs

Assorted sizes, colors and styles ·
- machine washable.

---4524

Till

' 'f•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Local governments later this
year will share $120 million worth
or slate bond money ror replacing
and repairing deteriorating )ocal
bridges, roads and sewer and
water systems,
.
Before adjourning for the
primary election, slate legislators put together a formula for
· dlstrlbutilli the so-called Issue 2
money approved by the voters
last November. The blll is
Gov. Richard Celeste's

~ SWIVEL """""~

•Infrared remote tontrol
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RUGS

JACKSON PI(! · R't3a WI:ST

-·~

Cloudy tonight. Low In mid
40s. Cloudy Wednesday. Highs
near 'lCl. Chance or rain %0
percent Wednesday.

Issue 2 bond money to. be distributed

THROW
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IN, ....

Pick4

dissolving the Board of Public
By NANCY l'OACHAM
"In closing," they added, "we.. must be arranged to work out a Naylor's Run' hili. The mayor town section of Pomeroy is in the
Affairs.
Setitlael Slaff Wrller
would like to say that \Hider the · compliance schedule. If the vll- said he h.as already been In engineering phase, a&lt;;,cordlng to
The hiring or someone to . · In a letter to Mayor Richard circumstances, we have tried to lage does not follow the com· contact with Ted Warner, county information to Young from Co·
oversee Pomeroy's utilities lias Seyler and vlliage council, Tom serve" the people or Pomeroy to
pliance schedule, the usual highWay superintendent, about · · lumbus Southern Power.
.
been put 011 hold by Pomeroy Reed and David Goodwin, cur- the best of our abllity, and that
procedure at that point is for guardrail, and that Warner said
Also. Young reported that a
Vlllage Council until a job reo t members of the Board of both of us will always be ready to
EPA to tlle a law suit, the mayor the county is in the process of village resident complimented
Public Affairs, recommended help the village In any way we
description can be prepared.
said.
purchasing some guardrail and the pollee department for the
Council met Monday night in the hiring of a service director to can.''
·
Pomeroy faces great expense that some would be made avalla- progress that has been made in ·
regular session.
replace their board.
Council will not be dissolving in trying to upgrade the sewage ble for Naylor's Run. .
slowing down speeding drivers.
In preparing the job descrip·
"This action would allow for the Board of Public Affairs untll system to comply with EPA
It was reported that the Young said the woman appre·
tion, council will follow the Ohio ·someone with the proper back· a final decision is made on the regulations, with no financing LEEDS computer, for running 'e lated the efforts by the pollee
Revised Code which lists the · ground to take charge of the day service director's position.
options In sight. The village still license plate checks through the department because in the past,
dulles or ' a Vlllage Service to day operation of the.wilter and
Meanwhile, Mayor Seyler and owes $279,000 on the village's old State, has been received by the she has feared for the safety of
Director.
street departments. By any con- members of council have been system.
village and will be Installed by her grandchildren who also live
Council has received a · few servative estimate, this person,
summoned to EPA's district
Seyler and at least two the State Highway Patrol as.soon in the v!Uage.
~pplications for the new' posltion,
thro!,lgh effective management, . office in Logan to 91scuss the · members. of Council, will attend · as possible. The computer must
Finally, Meigs County E.nglWhich is being created to deal in would save (the vlllage) enough village's failure to comply with the meeting In Logan on Aprll5. be segregated from other areas neer PhiliP Roberts was at the
particular with mounting prob- money to justify · their sal.a ry.
sewage mandates.
"All we can do, " said the mayor, of the pollee department, ror meeting to present council with a .
lems In the village's sewage arid Having a position such as this
Seyler reported thai he re- "is go up and see what they have access by authorized personnel laminated county map. Council
water systems. Council wm would also allow for the inuch ceived a call from the State to say and then come back and ony.
commended Roberts for the new
I
.
continue accepting applications rieeded long term planning that Attorney General's office last report."
and updated map, which was a
Councilman Blll Young re·
for the new position until such our village so desperately Thursday, Informing him that
Several minor street related ported that the project to Install project of Roberts and the Meigs
time that final actio!' is taken on needs," Reed and Goodwin when a community Is not in problems were discussed, lnctud· new street lightllli In the down.· County Commissioners.
!tiring a service director and stated in the ll&gt;tter.
compliance, a meeting with EPA ing the need for guardrail on

REMOTE

FREE DELIVERY
Revival
MERCERVILLE - Mercer·
vlile Missionary Baptist Church
wlil hold ·a revival March 21
through 26, 7:30 p.m. with the
Rev. Curtis Shee ts as evangelist.

... -

·e

DRAPERY .&amp;
.CURTAIN SALE.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Litter Board will meet at j
7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the litter '.
control office, located :. at the
co rne r of Union Ave., and Route 7
in Po meroy.

MIDDLEPORT - · Feeney.
Bennett Post 128 American Le·
gion and Auxiliary will meet
Wednesda y, 6:30 p.m. at th e
annex fo r a dinner a nd obser·
va nce of the 69 birthday of th e
American Legion. Post ever last·
ing services will be held. There
will also be separate meetings of
each grou p.

lr

h· ·~ - ··~

OHHOOOOHOOOOOOHOOOOOOO

20°/o

WEDNESDAY

..

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- ~~

I-

RCA :19"
Diag.

•1 00% Solid State
Chassis
•2 S" Diagonal Picture
•Oak, Pine, P•can

EAST MEIGS - OAPSE Chap·
ter 448 will hold an important
meeting at 7:30 .p.m. Tuesday in
th e high school cafeteria.

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will hold its annua l
inspectio n on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Work in E.A. degree.
Re freshments will be served. Ali
masons urged to attend.

.........""'. . .. .

398

Council still accepting applications for post

SAVE

POMEROY - Pomeroy Chap·
ter 186, Order of Eas tern Star,
will have practice for officers on
Tuesday evening at 6: 30 p.m. at
th e mason ic hall in Ches ter .

Daily Number

'
Vol.38,
No.220
Copyrlphted 1988

TUJ'.SDAY

HARRISONVILLE - Meigs
Christian Women Fellowship
meeting. 7:30 p.m. Tuesda y at
th e Zion Chu rc h of Chris t. Eac h
woma n is to ma ke a nd model a
hat fo r the meeting.

Ohio Lottery

Fashion
supplement

'

MIDDLEPORT - Organlza·
tiona! meeting for community
1heater group. will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday In the Middleport
American Legion Annex; all
persons Interested in any phase
of community theater Invited .
EAST MEIGS - Public meet·
ing at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Eastern High School to explain
the need tor passage or the
upcoming school levy. The ad·
ministration and board of education will be present to answer
questions and provide Information; all residents of Eastern
District invited.

•

Monday. MM'Ch 21,

Ohio

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12 ft. width. Large anort·
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