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                  <text>PEa• D-8-SlRilly Tmu Sentinel

Take a look at your tractor tires - · ·

OVMA dicus~ ·Appalachian Ohio needs
Several needs of Appalachian _
ObJo need to be addressed as part
of tbe overall strategy for economic develapment, the Ohio
Valley Management Association
teamed at Its March 1 meeting at
Rio Grande College/ Community
College.
Michael Harford, executive
vice president of .the Gallla
County Community Improvement Corporation, urged open
II$Cusslon In the region to change
" how we do things" In terms of
economic al\d social well-being,
Defining development as the
creation of jobs and the lmproveI'IK!IIt of the quality of life In
soutbeastem Ohio, tlarford said
the area must- determine "what
Items to address to prepare us for

GALLIPOLIS - The Agricul- pollution problems on their land.
ture Conservation Program pro- . According to Dave McKenzie,
vides both technical and finan - County Executive Director,
cial assistance · to help farmers "Cost-share · funds are u~ed to'
solve severe soli, water and correct conservation problems
on a farm beyond which would be
accomplished with the farmers
own resources.''
McKenzie said cost-share re2120 Fyffe Rd., Columbus, Ohio questa are considered after each
43210.
sign-up period. "We establish
After all voting Is completed priorities and approve cost-share
May 10 during regular business funds on practices that will
hours In county Extension offl· obtain the most conservation for
ces, ballot boxes will go to county the dollar spent." Requests are
Agricultural Stabilization and evaluated as to loss of soli and or
Conservation Service offices to water, and the amount that can
be saved by performing the
~e counted. .
.
Beef assessments began being pr_llctlces that have been
·collected In October 1986. Add I· requested.
tiona! Information on the beef
This sign-up period will end on
. referendum is available from
April 1. We regret the shortness
county Extension offices.
of the period, but believe It

C8.ttle referendum May 10

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) Cattle producers are scheduled
to vote May 10 on whether they
want to continue financing beef
Promotion and marketing
research.
Voting takes place at county
Extension offices and, according
to the Ohio Cooperative Exienslon Service, absentee ballots
must be requested before April
29.
Anyone who owned beef or
dairy cattle between Oct. 1, 1986.
and March 31, 1988, can vote on
the proposaL So can Importers of
cattle or beef products .
·Members of 4-H and Future
Farmers of America are eligible
to vote if they owned cattle In
their name .during the time
period.
If approved , the beef referen·
dum would continue the current
$1 assessment on each sale of
domestic or imported cattle and
a similar charge on imported
beef and beef products.
Absentee ballots will be availa ble after April 1 and must be
returned to county Extension
offices by May 3. To request a
ballot, write to the Extension
Agricultural Industries Office, 30
Agricultural Administration,

After 30 years in business,

N

TAXES

Wrestling

COLUMBt:S, · Ohio (UPI) And' Ozkan says Initial cost
Before a farmer heads out to shouldn't be the main concern.
"Radial tires, for Instance,
plant his field , he'd be well·
advised to take a close look at the may cos! a few hundred dollars
tires · on his tractors, s11ys an
more Initially," Ozkan says. ·
agricultural engineer.
"But they also give you more soli
Erda! Ozkar. says a tractor's contact which means better
efficiency depends on hOw well It traction and less soli compaction
. ·tor a given tractor weight.
converts enerrY to work.
Good traction wastes Jess fuel,
"That also means better fuel
cuts the risk of damaging equip· efficiency and less wear and tear
ment and reduc~ the possibility on the equipment In the long
or soli compaction. And the run." .
_. ·
,
traction you get o;lepends.a lot on
A' key to tractor efficiency Is to
tires; Ozkan says.
spread the weight of the load and '
Radial tires mechanical front· the pulling power over the most
wheel
'front-wheel drive, surface area, Ozkan says. That's
four-wheel
dual wheels:
the Idea behind four·wheel ,dr!ve
and wider tires.
all are tractor

before lakin&amp; theCICpost In 1987. Appalachian Power Company;
Present for the meeting were:
Walter Stowers, Ohio Bureau of
John Lewis and Tom Sollars, Employment Services; A.J.
Merillat Industries; Joseph Trawick, Jr., Ohio Power ComCain, Judge, Municipal Court;
pany; Dwight Leedy and Ms.
Jay Caldwell and John Thomas, Paula Dobbins, OTTO; and presFederal Mogul Cqrporatlon; Ro- ent from Rio Grande College and
bert Daniel, Holzer Clinic Inc.;
Community College were Mamtazuddln Ahmed, Dr. Ray Boggs,
Mike Davis, Ohio Valley Bank;
William Frazee, Fro)ltler Clean- Kevin Kelly, Sanford Lane, Ms.
Ing and The ~teak House; Clyde . Phyllis. Mason, William Medley,
Hall and Ron Burton, Robbins Ms. Peg Thomas and Harold
and Meyers, Inc,; _Ms. Phyllis Walker:
Handley, Chamber of ComThe Ohio Valley Management
merce; Bob Lambert and John Association Is an Informal organ'
Lambert, Jackson Aluminum;
lzatlon of business leaders In the
Bob Hennesy, Commercial and Rio Grande Community College
Savings Bank:. John Kobel, Co- service district. The association
lumbia Gas; Ronald McDade meets on the first Tuesday of
and Dana Waldo, Columbus' each month, October through
Southern Power; Charlie Powell, May.

action."
Harford urges the "Improvement of education on allleveis"
and a more positive Involvement
by the family In the public scqool
system; . making loans available
to area businesses; conslderalion of part-ownership . of new
'

~h27,1988

Middleport-Gallipolia. Ohio-Point Pluxnt. W. Va.

toomey
success

123
2463

_Page4

29-37-1-40-44-.2

at y

featuring ...

rrfie 9v[yron ![{oren Orcliestra

I

/

Saturaay, Jllpri{ 16, 1988
8·9 p.m. · Cliampagne ~ception
9 p.m. · 1 a.m. · 'Dance .
·•

I

I

$40 per coupfe; $20 singfe
Caf£ 6 75-4340, e~nsion 308

llH ~-~HOSPrrAL

bt (looting on a doud with
!he buys you'll find in !he
dossifieds.

PolllmasleF o( Zaaeavllle. Realer, Wllh over 30
yean poslal aervlee, lllled tbe vaciiiiCy Cl,'t!aled
receatly by the rellremenl or Jams Soulsby.
Boldlnglhe Bible lor the admllllllerlng o( the oalh
ol oHiee was Reuter's wile, JaDice.

NEW POMEROY POSTMASTER TAKES
OATH R. Reuter, 18175 Rock Sprtap
Road, Pomeroy, was pvea IIIII oa&amp;l! of office as the
aew Pomeroy PoiUnuler Friday by Marprel
Rucker, left, Sectional Cealer Manager·

Tom

1'lE ~ TAX PEOPU

1•
1•
nl
•t
'
,Galltpo 18··p o ICe reco Cl y 8
bust _in histO ,

Sat: 9 to 5

PH. 446-0303

e

M81tercard/VIsa/ Di~eover Accepted

~~~~~a-~~:,:j t~~~,,~···•tt: ;:!:', it~;:~~.1 ·,.~l~h,\1;' ;• q~~ri:r ~~fl.

AMAZING THINGS AWAIT YOU
At
The Adult Education Center
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS!
The Adult Education Center
Tri-County Vocational School
St. Rt. 691, Off Rt. 33 Nelsonville, 0.45764

1987. BUICK CENTURY
FACTORY OFFICIAL'S CAR

753-3511

Spring Quarter Begins
April 4th

•AM·FM • TILT • CRUISE
•REAR DEFROST AND MORE
ONLY 2 LEFT

$

WAS 510,900

. NOW .

9,795

.BRAND
NEW 1988 MARK Ill
.
CONVERSION VANS ·

.

.

-

AMERICA'S #1' CHOICE!

~==~ ~;mombig

STARTING AT

$-1$, 900

BRASS HAT

BUSS HAT·

1987 SUNBJRD SE
CONVERTIBLE

1987 FIERO GT

•POWER WINDOWS • AM·FM·CASSETTE
•TILT WHEEL • LUXURY INT. • CRUISE
•5,300 MILES • ' TURBO CHARGED

day,
Pollee executed a search· warrant at 1155
Second · Ave., arresting John
Rees for one count of possession
of COCjllne. Five other suspects
were qiaestloned and rel!!ased
pending further Investigation.
Tbe total street value of all drugs
found and confiscated was In
excess or $30,000.

•SUNROOF • TILT &amp; CRUISE
•P. WINDOWS • VI PERFORMANCE
•P. LOCKS • 3,1500 MILES

cocalae confiscated, other controlled substanced recovered In·
eluded morphine, dUaudld, demerol, phenobarbital and
mariJuana, and large quantities
of drug paraphernalia. Equipment lor processing Illegal drugs
such as "crack" were found at
the scene. Also discovered at the
scene were live loaded weapons
with a total of six confiscated·.
Rees, represented by attorney
Dave Evans at the arraignment,
requested a preliminary hearing
set by acting judge Dean Evans
for Thursday, 10: 30 !l.m, Bond
has been set for $175,000.
According to Mike Fenderbosch, Investigator of the Gallla
County Prosecutor's office, records of previous felony charges
of Rees have not been disco·
vered. If Rees has prevlo!JS
felOI!Y charges, he will be
charged with a first degree
felony with a minimum of live
years Incarceration. 'n!e actual
purity of the drugs confiscated
will be tested and determined by
the Bu'r eau or · Criminal
Investigation:
The ~arch warrant was the
combination of a joint lnvestigalion by thepolicedepartmentand
the Gallla County Prosecutor's
office. Present at the scene were
Continued on page 10

· .

_

.

.

,

'
In the store and had purchased a
box of cigars before demanding
the money. Gerard said the robber pointed a revolver to enforce
Ills demand for money.
Pomeroy Pollee were called
after the man left the store and
Gerard and Pomeroy Chief Jerry
Rought were In conference MondaymomtngnaUingdowndetalis
of the InCident.
Gerard said that a composite
sketch of the robber Is being
prepared at Ills office. The man
was wearing• a dark ball cap,
jeans and a dark jacket.
Employees and a few customers In the ·store at the time
handled the situation well, Gerard commented.

·

INVESTIGATING- GaWpoUs PoBce Seargent
Roger Brudeberry (L) ud GaWa Couly
Proaecullag Attoney Brenl Saudera ( R) look
over coDIIsealed cocaine and olber coalroDed

New

2 TO CHOOSE FROM

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
Two years ago Greg Gibbs and h.is
uncle, Joe Fallaler, planned to open

Welding
Financial Aid andlor Tuition Subsidy May
Be Available To Qualified Applkants
From AVariety Of Sources:
PELLGRANTS
VETERANS BENEFITS
BUREAU OF VOCATIONAL REHABIUTATION
GUARAN'J'EED STUDENT LOAN
SIN.GLE PARENT/HOMEMAKER GRANT
j.TP.A. (COMMUNI'I'Y ACOON AGENOES)

.

Fa, Mlltllf wtige
• AbaQI Oar Tlllailll fn1pm1

•one .owne, • AIR COND. • T-TOPS
•AM·FM-CASSETTE • AUTO. TRANS.
•TILT. CRUISE • ONLY 41,000 MILEs·

WAS S6995

NOW

$5,890

going to erect a new plant on a 13
acre sile there.
"Because of the size of the
project dollar wise, it wasn't
feasible enough to start on that side
of the river," Gibbs said.
Their plans came a liale closer to
reality in the sping of 1987. "Last
spring we were approached by The
Cenlrll trust Bank of Ohio. Larry
Headlee, president, made a commitmcnt to help see our project

modating for the plant, Gibbs said.
"West Vuginia waS very appealing
bec••se of the tax incentive ,
programs," Gibbs said.
·
The stale also provided training
money for the worlcen at the plant,
he llllid. 'Through the effons of
FIBDk Lee, Mason
County
Development Authority Director,
we were able to obtain training
monies in order to employ as many
local people as possible," Gibbs

a metal fabrication plant in the
area. After Aprii1S, diat plant will
be producing.
1be company, of which Gibbs is
vice p:esident, is called West-Point
Fabricattn, Inc. Falkner is the
company presidenL
sai4. "We are very pi~ 10 have
"My uncle, Joe Falkner,. who through," Gibbs said.
"In
Aug.,
1987,
one
of
the
been WCllking through Gov. An:b A.
lived in Birlillnghatll, Ala., .called
me lnd wanted m• to be a sales buildings that was formerly . the Moore's office on the training
-·
lepieaMtllive for .eveml steel Marietta Marine Plant became prog~~~~~s;• he added.
available and th!Ough nepiations
The plant, he said, should
~ics in the Birmingham
with the OWJIQ'S, Amhearst In· employ aboUt 40 people in the next
area, Gibbs llllid.
dustries,
we wete able 10 worlc out 18 io 24 months .
"' met wilb blm and we cJis.
a
good
lease
on the fiiCility," he
Contracts have alreldy been
covend tltlt 80 peltellt of the
plats' wmt was for companies Slid.
.
f~las~Eqwpment
{acility,CGibbs said.
ompany of
Witbill a 200 mile radius of our · The buildin.l, he said, bas 26,000 ·
..... Gibbs lltlid.
aq.-e foet of spM:e and bas two . Birm
, a ,l lllker of conveyor
. • Afttil lilt lltlllltbl of Jannin&amp;, 1Q.tall-QMI 1 C1111C1 aiJeldy ill· COIIIpOIICIIII, has plcdaed all of
we 1M kled dill with Iii /alkner'a) sr•necJ The baiJcllq lllo. has a .their conveyor wort 10 us," he said.
2S ,... ol ~ ill the steel tbcsaie SYI*t Jill rOad 1JU com- "We will make framework. ..bidallry ad my busiiiCII ox- ·
l*'r ce, we could build our oWII ·
OibiJIIIicl.
com""''y bas~ a 1,700 ' fano•dodiOtD,"Oibbudded. ·
. '11it lint Q IIIey looked at, IC• sqwl;ioot omce baildlna acljacent
'l'llo flllil:llion fJdlity will llO
Nndllaa WOik locally 1110, Oibbs,
cardiDa 10 Oillbl, wu DOnb of to 1be P,11nL

•

1981 PONTIAC TRANS AM

substalleed recovered In a . aearch SIUidll)'
evening. All approximate alreel value of QO,eee of
cocaine was conflsealed, lbe Jargeat amoanl ever
conflscaled In the 01)',of GaWpoUs.

area plant to open on April 15

By Matt Robertson

Office Services

eau. wri. .s•.., 11

' .'-'

1
•
·
,
.
L 0. ca·l store scene 0 .day .
.
armed ro bbery SUn

The Big Bend Foodland Store,
West Main St., Pomeroy, was the
scene of an armed robbery Sunday evening with an undetermined amount of' cash being Ia·
ken,
.
Paul Gerard, Investigator lor
Meigs County Prosecuting Attor- ·
ney Frederick w: Ctow, III, said
a white male, about five feet, six
lncbes tall and wetgtuni between
140 and -150 pounds, demanded at
gunpolat rnoney from two register~ at 1!le atilre about 7: 25 p.m . .
Sullday. Hi! wa• given the money
and left the store. He got Into a
small, dark car and headed
upriver, officials said. Gerard
stated the man had been ob.evettlooklng at greeting cards

Receive "Hands-On" Training
1
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Accounting/Computing
Auto Mechanics
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Machine Trades
Nursing Assistant/Orderly

.

on a
II!COIId de. . . felony charge on
oile count Of poaaession 'of cocallle amounting to $20,000 In
street value, with charges pend·
lng on pilsseaslon of other Illegal
drug&amp;. Officials said that the
cocaine was the largest amount
ever .conflscated ,ln the City of
Gallipolis.
liDd

breaking through the color bar- slowly," he told supporters. "We
rier that was primarily set up by knew It would be tight and
political party beads. It's a big competitive. Fortunately we got
boost for the campaign In Con- a substantial share or delegates.
necticut," declared Steve Thorn• In that sense It was a (good)
ton, a statewide coordinator for day.''
.
Jackson.
Indeed, with 94 percent of the
"This campaign bas revived
Michigan vote counted, Jackson
the hOpe of most people," the
had won 55 percent of the popular
candidate said Sunday In New
·Haven. "(I) have the least ballot to Dukakis's 28 percent but
amount of money and the most only 76 national convention dele.
amount of support. I want to keep gates to 53 for the governor,
America strong and make It according to a tally by United
Press r lnternatlonal. They
·better."
Jackson was greeted by an emerged neck-and-neck In total
enthusiastic crowd of 2,500 at delegates this year.
Bulkeley High School in Hartford - In the latest UPI count or
national convention delegates,
Sunday night. Earlier In the day,
he spoke to large audiences In Dukakls has 562.15 delegates,
Bridgeport and on the New jilst a traction ahead of Jackson's
Haven Green. ·
562.10.
'
Jackson hopes to Improve upon
At
stake
In
Connecticut
are
52
1984, · when he won In Hartford
· while an other Connecticut cities ol the state's 63 national dele·
went for Gary Hart In the gates, a small number relatively
- but with no other state voting
Democrat!~ presidential race.
Dukakls, stung by the Satur- Tuesday, Dukakls Is banking on
day Mlcblgan vote he expected to some attention by collecting
win, tried to put the best face on It most of them. He has the
the morning after at a Greek endorsements of Gov. William
Independence celebration and a O'Neill, ~n. Chrisiopher Dodd
with senior citizens ln and two or . the state's three
~r:~~l:~~;~a~~nnlngweekend reception
Democratic House members,
New Haven. ·
"My father used to say to me .. . and he sees his chance for a
"What (Michigan) shows Is
sweep of regional contests.
the sweetest
honey Is n\ade
.
'
that .the Reverend Jackson Is

HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) Jesse Jackson and Michael Dukakls, In a virtual dead heat In
tbe Democratic presidential
race, . are campaigning hard
today · for the leading delegate
edge as they head Into Connect!- ·
· cut's pl'lmary.
Civil rights leader Jackson,
claiming new strength lrom his
Michigan victory, and Massachusetts Gov. Dukakis, seeking a
sweep of New England states,
were greeted by enthusiastic
crowds Sunday In their head-to·
· head race.
Sen. Albert Gore Jr., D-Tenn.,
also carried his campaign Into
the state Sunday.
All three candidates planned
~;~ppearances In Connectl.c ut
today.
_
Dukakls, favored In the polls
but ahead In the delegate race by
only a fraction of a vote over
Jackson, Is . banking on his
familiarity a~ a neighboring
governor to land him most of
Connecticut's 52 delegates at
stake on Tuesday,
But Jackson aides predicted
majormomentumfromtheclvll

'

Point pfeasant Moose Lotfge, Cfiarkston !l{paa

•,

HtRILOCit

A.JI ~1.~~!!!?-~.e

1 Section. 1J) Piogoo 26 Conto
A Multimodlo ·Inc. Nowopaper '

Jackson, Dukakis seek
f..Onnecticut votes ,today

LIKE
Open 9

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 28. 1988

'Ba{{

WIDda up to 20 mph ex peeled
by evealag. ToDigbl, breezy.
Low In 50s. South winds
lacreaslng to l5 to 25 mpb.

•

•

e
Vot.38, No.228
Cap!c ... tted 1988

Charil!J

Daily Number
Piek4

Pftasant o/a{fty 9lospita£ ~~

necessary If CoillltY Committee
approvals are to be made In time
for spring seedlngs.
.
Long Term Agreements (LTA)
1are also · being taken through
April I. LTA'saretor3to5ye'a rs
and cover the sa!De type practices as the annual Agriculture
Conservation Program.
If you have several conserva·
tlon practices you would like to
do over a period of years, contact
the ASCS office or SCS before
April I.

Ohio Lottery

.1986· CHEVY CAMARO Z28
. •T·TOjo&amp; • TILT WHEEl. • P. WINDOWS
•POWER DOOR LOCKS • AM·FM-CASSETTE
•TILT WHEEL • CRUISE • AIR COND.'
•ONLY 7,100 ACTUAL MILES

......

TAJII AIVAIIfAGI OP111 SPIIIG SAVIIIGS

~m:rw::~-;;;.besi~ ==c:.~~=

pllnt-..

s,~ 0111o.

"'

110 llid they wac

Wei Vqinia was
l!

vee)' ICCOIII•

. · CoatlnuH OD ~ 10

•·

..

,

�'

Comment

Paga 2-TheDallySentlnel
Pomeroy-Midcllport. Ohio
Mondey, MM'Ch 28, 1988
.

lll Court street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBEST8 OF THE MEIGII-MA!ION AII.EA

~rb
tS:mlli,l ""'-' ............. ...-~.~v

..

.

ROBERT L WINGETT
Pabllllher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstanl Publllhei'/ControUer

BOB HOEIIUCH

General Muager

A MEMBER of The United Press lnternational,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

aoo

LETI'ERS OF OPlNION are welcome. ;ntey should be less tban
words
loq. AU letters are subJect to ediUna: and must be staned wtth name, address and
~elepbone number. No unsigned letters Will be publlabed. Letten should be In

IOOd taste, addressilll Issues , not personalities. -

,

WASIDNGTON- The surging
popularity of legal, u.nder·thetable Income being paid to
American workers Is taking Its
toll on the tax man.
The income Is in the form of
. non-taxable benefit packages
called "cafeteria plans." In the
glow of enthusiasm over these
tax shellers , the impact on the
mounting national debt has been
overlooked.
. In stark terms, the U.S. Treasury stands to lose $46.9 billion
over ,the next five years because
of the growing chunk of wages
being diverted !rom the taxable
pooL The estimate comes from a
recent study by the Department
of Health and Human Services
inspector general.'s office.
t:he report is the most critical

The Democrats:
brokered or broken

.

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The term "brokered
convention" conjures up· the 1\120 "smoke-filled
room" where Warren Harding was picked to be
the 1920 Republican presidential candidate, but
recent history suggests the Democrats might not
do so badly with a nominee selected behind the
scenes by political leaders.
"Brokered convention" carries the popular
Implication of cigar-chewing ward-heelers lore·
ing national convention delegates to nominate
candidates subservient to power-hungry and
often corrupt political bosses.
But the fact remains that some of the best
candidates the Democrats have had in the 20th
century were chosen with the active Intervention
of old-time political leaders and that the party's
biggest losers have been nominated by conventions where rank-and-file delegates ran the show . '
Consider the record:
-In 1932, in order to lock up the presidential
nomination, Franklin D. Roosevelt's campaign
manager, Jim .Farley, had to cut a deal with
Wllllam Randolph He·a rst to get 44 of the 86 votes
he needed after the third convention ballot FOR
won on the fourth ballot and the payoff was the
selection of Hearst's candidate. House Speaker
John Nance Garner, for vice president.
-In 1952, Estes Kefauver , who got the biggest
vote In the primaries, was the leader on the first
ballot But Kefauver, who made headljnes
exposing corruption ln the big Democratic city
machines, was poison to the bosses. With
Chicago's Jake Arvey spearheading the "Stop
Estes" effort, Gov. Adlai Stevenson pulled out of
the pack on the third ballot with the helpolsizable
vote switches in the New York, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, Maryland and Minnesota delegations . The " bosses" played a major role in the
changes .
-In 1960, John F . Kennedy won most of the big
state primaries, but did not have a majority when
all 1,521 convention delegates had been selected.
Some of the biggest states such as Illinois,
Pennsylvania,- California and Ohio were controlled by favorite sons and party leaders. Before
. the !irs! roll call. most of those states were in the
Kennedy bag, giving hlm 46 more votes than he
needed to win the nomina iton . This was done by
persuasion when possible, coercion when deemed
·necessary.
.
Stevenson was the only loser In this group, and a
case could be made that no one could have beaten
Dwight Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956.
By 1968, dissent was riding high and the
Democrats were so spilt by resentment to the old
way of nominating candidates that Hubert
Humphrey never had a united party behind him.
By 1972, the Democrats had installed demo_cratic reforms so sweeping that most party bosses
didn't even go to the convention. and one, Mayor
Richard Daley of Chicago, was thrown out
The Democrats lost that election by a landslide, .
eked out a 1976 win by bringing· the South back
behind Jimmy Carter, and then proceeded to lose
both the 1980 and 1984 elections with first ballot
nominees who owed nothing to the political
bosses .
Now. it is said that the 1988 Democratic
convention may require.more than one ballot and
the intercession of party leaders to agree on a
candidate. There ls no sure way to know who that
would be, but there are plenty of Democrats who
would love to have a Roosevelt, a Stevenson, a
Kennedy or a Humphrey Jammed down their
throats.

'

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."
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•

.

••
••

•,.••

He's .back!.Again! And .again•• __w,_·uw_·m_R_us_he...::..:_'r
The article itself. insofar as 11
offers advice on . foreign policy,
consists largely of platitudes
most of them obvious and none of
them new. We should be wary of
Mikhail Gorbachev. Moscow 's
muttary power is great, but can
be sustained over the long term
only ·by matching economic
power, which ·u signally lacks.
We should relax tensions and
expand economic ties in return
lor various major consessions on
Moscow's part
More interesting are Nixon's '
subtle efforts to pooh-pooh the .
policies · and achievements of
President Reagan in the field of
foreign affairs, where Nixon
clearly considers himself
nonpareiL
Thus Nixon endorses the view
that Amertca ~ s 1981 "zero option" proposal on Intermediate·
range mlsslles In Europe was a
blunder - though the record is
barren of any evidence that he
said so at the time, or for several
years thereafter.
Aware ol Reagan's highly
popular insistence on strict verillcation ol any new agreements

•

•' I
••
!

.

with the Soviets, Nixon sniffs that
rooted. It is something that illso
•
"Just because a bad ·agreement
lies, not surprisingly, atthe heart
can be verlfied does not make 11 a
of the problem he has always •
good agreement" - not pausing
presented lor many •'
to observe, with reference to the
conservatives.
.
disastrous upshot of hls own '
At bottom, Richard Nixon ts a •
treaties wttti Moscow, that if a
Machlavelllan, obsessed by •••
treaty ts unveri!iable It similarly
power, blind to Ideals and there•
doesn't matter much whether it's
fore (wars t of all) incapable of •
realizing the immense role that • .
a good treaty or a bad one.
He looks down his nose at
ideals play in politics. In his •
•
Ronald Reagan's "successful but
article for The Times, the word
relatively ·minor milltary mis- "power" appears 22 times; the •••
word "freedom." only four. Tile '
sions· llke the invasion of Gren·
ada and the raid on Libya,"
proportion will strike the typical •,,
correctly noting that It will take . liberal, who is. always a bit
••'·•
more than ·these "to build lasting uneasy when the conversation
new confidence In the United
turns to things worth fighting for,
'·•
•.
States." But In whose adminis - as just about right But does it
tration, pray tell, was that
suggest a man who truly u.nder- •'
•
confidence so heavily under- stands what is motivating the
mined in the llrst place because Nicaraguan contras, the UNITA ••
we were tricked intu withdrawforces in Angola or the Afghan ...••
ing our forces from Vietnam?
rnuJaheddtn?
In these sideswipes at Reagan, - It Isn't Richard Nixon's fault ,
Nixon will please - and Intends that he simply can't grasp the
to please- the llberals, on whom immense energy of ideals - any
(because they dominate the more than it Is a thalidomide
media) his rehabilitation so baby's fault that it was born
largely depends. But the force of without arms. But lt makes him a '
his appeal to them Is based on disastrously inadequate adviser
something fa r more deeply lor a nation founded upon them.

•

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"

A ·mistaken protest ______;_~_G_eo-=rg::_e_M_cG_ove_m

"'

opponents . We need to study the
lessons that it taught us, to care
lor its veterans better than we
have, and to reconcile with the
people of Vietnam.
At the very least, we can
forgive a passioqate young actress who was anguished by the
bombing of North Vietnam and
who tried to show her anguish by
going there. She acted from a

sense of moral outrage against
an outrageous war.
I :lm confident that the over·
whelming majority of the restdents of Waterbury, Holyoke and
Chicopee, including the Vietnam
vets, wlll ack!lowledge that the
"American way" means wel coming Jane Fonda to their
communities.

•

··'•

''·

..

Berry's World

,,

,,

..
••,,

.•·
·-

"·

••,
.~

~!

'

"

,.,

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,~·
I '

•r;:

''I hope we haven't CS!!Qht you at s bad time. •·
\

!)

........ . . ~. . . . . . . . . II

...

AMDICAN LaAGUI:
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.,••

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Etchlbllion

•

••

There's a color photograph of
the old con artist at the beginning
of the article, sitting In front of an
elegantly embossed table and a
walful of books and looking
thoroughly pleased with himself. ·
And well he might, for his arilcle
(" Dealing With Gorbachev," in
The New York Times Magazine
of March 13 - excerpted from a
forth coming book) marks
another important mllestone on
Richard Nixon's long comeback
traiL
From the depths of disgrace
after Watergate, Nixon is making his way, inch by painful inch,
back into the public consciousness as a figure for whom there is
much that is favorable to be said.
The image presented is that oi a
vastly experfenced and immensely wise authority on foreign
affairs. The target audience is
the literate American publlc in
general, with special emphasis
on the llberals who hated Nixon
throughout his polltical career.
For reasons that will be ex·
platned below, he is making
impressive headway among the .
latter.

...
_
......---··
........
I·--·
==
-:..-:.=:.
-_. _,..
___
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••

•

Today in history

~

•.

:~

analysis of the flexible beneflr
·
·
plans that have become a !a•
shlonable trademark of " pro· governments are jumping on the Social Security funds ol their
•·•·
•
bandwagon. Only about 200 rna· employees. They pay nothing
gresslve" employers.
••
••
Known as cafeteria plans be- jar companies had th.e plans as into those funds for the part of the
'·'·
paycheck that is .dlverted · tnto
cause of their broad menus ol recently as four years ago.
•••,
Despite the universal app«;!a) of benefit plans.
benefit op.llons, the .p rograms
So, there was little surprise
!·
were born 10 years ago when the plans, the companies appear
to
be
the
only
clear
winners
in
the
••
Congress passed legislation al·
when the business community
benefits
craze.
By
sheltering
lowing salary-reduction agreelobbied Congress fiercely and
•••
ments between employers and their true earnings, young and successfully last year to kUI
•·
legislation that would have
their workers. The employee low-lncpme workers run the risk
•
•
elects a reduced salary or of being left with reduced disabil- begun taxing the cafeteria plans
•
foregoes a raise so the increase ity or Social Security reserves,
in January.
'
••
can be taken in the ·farm at ·according to the Health ·and
Five days alter the House
Human Services investigation.
ta)&lt;·ftee fringe benefits.
·
q.uietly p:t1;sed a deflcit•••
As employers reduce their
More than 600 major U.S. firms
reductiori act that InCluded a $500
••
now offer broad cafeteria pro- taxable payroll, they also cut cap on non·taxatile income, a
••
grams, including different levels their required Social Security full-page advertisement apof health, dental and life lnsu- contributions. Employers pay peared in the Washington Post
••' •
ranee, vacation or Investment slightly more than 7 percent ·Of declaFtng, "Taxing Cafeteria Be•
•
oo-nefits. Even state and local their ta~able payroll toward ~he nefits Doesn't Make sense:.:
'
•
It was paid lor liy Hewitt
Associates, a · Lincolnshire, Ill.·
•
based·lirm that is a consultant in
••
the design and administration or
•
ca.feteria programs, The ad . ,
listed the endorsements of 181
•
•
businesses. ,
••
In the ensuing weeks, senators
and staff members ol the joint
•
1
tax conference committee were
· bombarded by a lobbying effort
to klll the taxation plan. Accord••
ing .to several staffers;- .the
pressure was more Y:ttense than
•'
any lobbying onsla~i!ht they had
•
seen in recent years.
•
The cafeteria taxation clause
'
'
was quietly dropped from the bUI
•'
before it reached the Senate lloor
i
in mid-December.
Cheerleaders for the cafeteria
••
plans say that ·taxation would
•
have singled them out as scape•
goats when the taxes should be . •'
••
spread among ail benefit programs. In addition , the Social
'
Security Adminstration ' thinks
•••
· that the estimate !rom Health
••
and Human Services of $46.9
••'
billion in lost taxes in . inflated.
••
The joint tax committee ol
•
Congress had ·put the loss at only
$12.8 titlllon over five years.
•

Jane Fonda, the cel~brated repeatedly expressed · regret
American actress who was over her trip to Hanoi. She
widely criticized in 1972 for continues to believe that the
visiting North Vietnam to demon- American involvement in Vietstrate her opposition to U.S. nam was a terrible mistake, but
involvement in Vietnam, is now she has come to recognize that
·being criticized again for her her tactics were not as carefully
managed· as they should have
wartime trip ol so long ago.
This time the reproof comes been. And with her husband,
!rom veterans, primarily ol Calilornia Assemblyman Tom
World War II and the Korean Hayden, she has since tried to
· War, who have amassed some champion the cause of Vietnam
local opposition to a film Fonda veterans .
. expects to shoot in Waterbury,
A group of California Vietnam
Conn., and Holyoke and Chico-. vets sent a mailgram to the
By United Press International
pee, Mass., depicting life in a · Chicopee aldermen saying 1hat
Today is Monday , March 28. the 88th day of 1988 with 278 to follow .
while Fonda and Hayden "made
New England mill town.
The moon waxing, moving toward its full phase.
The handful of older vets and a many mistakes In champalgntng
The morning stars are Mercury . Mars and Saturn.
few of the Vietnam era have ' against the war, they have many
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
prompted city council resolu- Urnes expressed thelr regrets
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They include
uons , editorial comment and and sincerely worked to heal the
Russian author Maxim Garity in 1868; bandleader Paul Whiteman in
community discussion over Fan- wounds and lend their sup'Port to
1891; brewers Frederick Pabst in 1836 and August Anheuser Busch
da's right to film in tbeli' areas. .Vietnam vets."
Junior in 1889; Ejmund Muskie, the 1968 Democratic viceSurveys indicate that most ol
The group reminded the alderpresidential candidate, tn 1914 (age 74) ; Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter
the residents support the ac- men that Fonda's movie "Com·
administration national security advisor, in 1928 (age 60). and actors
tress's plan, even though many ol ing Home" dramatized the surDirk Bogarde in 1921 (age 67) and Ken Howard in 1944 (age 44) . ·
them opposed her anti-war activ- !ering ol Vietnam veterans, that
lUes. But the mayor of Water- Hayden authored California's
On this date in history:
bury and the district's u.S. law to assist soldjers suffering
In 1797, Nathaniel Briggs was awarded a patent for the first · represent11tive have come out the effects of Agent Orange, and
washing machine.
that the couple have financially
against it
In 1939, Madrid surrendered · to the nationalist forces of
The mayor ol Holyoke says he · aided veterans' efforts.
Generalissimo Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War.
Former Speaker ol the House
believes Fonda has the right to
In 1969, Dwight David Eisenhower, 34th president of the United
make the film in his town, even Tip O'Neill; Max Cleland, GearStates, died in Washington, D.C., at age 78.
though he opposed her journey to gla secretary of state and former
In 1979, a !allure In the cooling system at the nuclearpowerplanton
the North Vietnamese capital in head of the Veterans AdminlstraThree Mile Island in Pennsylvania caused a near-meltdown, the
Hanol. However, asrilaligroupof tlon, ·who lost both legs in
worst accident ever at an American nuclear facility.
,local veterans has threatened Vietnam; Sargent Shriver, RosaIn 1916, Libya claimed victory over the United States In a
that "11 she comes here, she will lynn Carter and California labor
c:oatrolltatlon In the Gulf or Sidra and urged Arab attacks on anything
not be lu!PPY." The Holyoke City leader John Henning all defend
AmeriCan.
_
·
Council voted 11·4 ln.!avor of a Fonda.
Ia 198'7, NATO members Greece and Turkey backed off In their
resolution agreeing to let Fonda
The Vietnam War tore the
dllpllte over Aegean Sea all rights that had threatened a military
visit as a "persona non grata." American body politic asunder,
wofi'CIIIatlon.
·
The Chicopee Board or Aldermen but it is over now. We should not
. has scheduled a public hearing forget It, nor should we continue
k ,IIIOuaht for the day: Maxim Gorky Wrote In 1903, ''Lies - there
on the matter.
to recriminate against either the
yoll h'ave the religion ol slaves and taskmasters."
For her part, Fonda ' has people who planned the war or Its
ij

...••

CAN VoU STALL
A FEW MINUTES? THE DtMoCRATS
ARE CLOSE 10 ·SELECtiNG.
THEIR NoM1NEE.

· •

Ohio

,.•

·'Cafeteria' plans co8t· billons
·
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.
.
By Jack ArUlerson and Joseph Spear

The Daily Sentinel

....

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Brewers .down Indians, 8-7; Reds -Win
. on a sacr1fice fly by P.obin Yount.
Meyer at second.
·CHANDLER. Ariz. (UPI) For the Brewers Robin Yount
Juan Castillo hit a bases-loaded · Jones tried to pick Gantner oft
single In the 11th inning Sunday second but threw wildly, allow· had two hits and three RBI and
to give the Milwaukee Brewers
ing runners to advance to second Castillo, Meyer, Steve Kiefer and
an S.7 Cactus League victory and third. Jones then intention- Dale Sveum all had two hits.
· over the Cleveland Indians.
ally walked Ernest Riles to load Sveum alSo had a home run In t he
Dan Plesac pitched the last
the bases and Castillo then game, his first of the spring.
Pat Tabler and Bandoeach had
three Innings to raise his record singled Gantner home with the
three hits for the Indians.
to 3·0 and gave up just two ·hits winning run.
Milwaukee led 6-3 early but the
In Saturday's game at Tucson,
and no runs.
The win was the club's eighth Indians tied 11 up in the seventh Carmen· CastiUo went 4 for 4 and
In its last 10 games and raised the with three runs off Dave Sta· drove in the game-winning run In
Brewers' record to 12-14 .. Clev(;!· pleton Including a home run by the 11th Inning to enable the
Dave Clark to lead of! the inning. Cleveland Indians to defeat the
land is now 12·12.
The Indians went ahead 7-6 In ·oakland Athletics 9-8.
The Indians today host the
the top of the eighth when Brooke
With the score tied 8-8, Johnny
Chiacgo Cubs at Tucson.
Doug Jones. 0-2, came on in the Jacoby doubled and pinch- Moses led of! the 11th with a
11th to pitch for Cleveland and runner Ron Washtngton scored · walk. Three pitches later, Castillo doubled down the lett-field
Joey Meyer greeted him with a on a double by Chris Banda.
leadoff single. Steve Kiefer had a . The Brewers tied it up in the . line to score Moses .
· bad·hop single past third to put bottom of the ninth when Ernest
Mike Farr, 1-0, gave up one hit
men at first and second and Jim Rlles1ed ott with a double, went
and.
struck out anne inane inning.
Gantner was .s ent in to run for to third on a wild pitch and scored

.•

Duke, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arizona

NCAA's final four in Kansas City

Nl ··fta&amp;'IUII '
AIIAeAooPint
•arellll

By Unlled Press International
Tbe music of the NCAA TourArlit;• ...
nament stopped Sunday with
a..w-.Te.....
.,.,....., . . . . . . . 4
four
teams left on the dance
a.-.m,(.. )l,_.__,..&lt;•)l
Neft.,.LMYepaiM.IWIIIta~W'I8&amp; .
oc._.ll, .._.cur (ia) t
floor: Duke, Kansas, Oklahoma
II
..... Lo·Aoo-1
and Arizona.
8M huellee I, Oil leap (N) I
""-•ll.&amp;eiMJI.aUII
Mllwalll4ie8, Oe-welull1(ll...._.)
·The big winner so far is the Big
llwal .. ,UNLV ..
Eight Conference, with two
OaldMII II, BeMtle '7
caMte..... ,, s. Dlep a
teams still standing. All the talk
Naor6 c.&amp;nll-. 11. •e~~~~&amp;• •
....., .. a.....
the season of the Big Ten
during
Atlut. YL . . . . . ~ . .
WS!!,
' ............ M:lftlllll1
f1a., 1:• J .m.
·
Are--,.. Ner6 t:aniiM ••
East is just that now and
Big
IAat\11. . . n. MoMreal a&amp; Well Palm
"
~ ...... a'ty, ••·
and Oklahoma wlll
talk.
Kansas
BeNil, fta., 1: • p.m.
·
NMioMI Semlll.ala, .tprU I
MI--..,... Oncl. .u M PI•• Qly,
DllbOJa.au..
strui
Into
Kansas
City, Mo.
f1a.,l: ap.m.
.......... YL ArtaiJ•
.
Kansas
renews
its
partnership
a.;.
Nollt..tQo--Aprllt
.
.
.
.
_
......
n.
Olllalilorna·
with Duke In next Saturday's
..~,JIIa.,
Ar.........r
, . . , . . . \'1, St. Lollls&amp;t81 . P.,...ara;,
semiltnals. Duke won 74-70 at
Nfl' BASKI:I'BAU.
, .....:.p.m.
Kansas during the season. The
New Yull: (NLI vs. Bot&amp;M I&amp; Wlller
Matell II
............ 1:• p.m,
Bb,1e Devils beat the Jayhawks
a... awe •· ow ...... '71
n....._,.. ....._atrMBueball
--.:111'7
71-67
In the 1986 Final Four.
Cl&amp;r. rta.,l:ll p.m.
C.uedlcat . . . . . . ~~~~- 1'7 COT)
DMNit w. D&amp;kap ( A.Ll a&amp; SIIIMCIM,
Oklahoma's last trip to the
O....,.ll,_le_tll
na., t:a p.m.
·
Final Four came In 1947. Ariz·
¥L Mltwukee ..: OIUIIIer,
........_..._. ... An. -Utae klkM
ona, which five years ago was
.................I
Otc.p (NL) YL (]ewlll ... a&amp;~,
. .. .¥IDe ... tlaall •
comatose at 4-24, goes to the
Arta.,J .....
I
. Newllede.II.P~I•'JI .,
8D Dlep w. CAUfarala .a Palm
national semis !or the first time.
Ore... lt,l .... danll
8prtlp. Cdl.,l p.m.
MII'CIIII
The Wildcats also set doubters
New Yllrtl: 4AI...) 'JL Baltlmft M
--lt,NELo-lt
rl•
straight about basketball in the
aewlud
&amp;~a&amp;e 11,
Nate u
S.. PN
\'1, Oaldaed M Phellab.,
(OTI
.,
,
West.
Arll., ~:II p.m.
IIIMie ~.Mate U, Te-e II
• ............. ,... a - .
"I heard people say, 'Walt until
v.. c.name.we.- ........... ..
Seores
they're
tested,"' Arizona Coach
C::.hln ...... A, Nft'
It
Lute Olson said. "We won this for
M.relllll
ourselves - no one else -but it
CCIHed:lcal a, .. ....._ Tedlll
shows basketball can be played
Middle T-.. -~~
8&amp;. •• ........ •.
in all parts of the country."
........~&lt;&gt; ......- ....... ..
va. c .. , . . . .,._.ill 11, e-~A~n Mil·
Midwest Repoaal
.
. '
(Pontiac, Mich.)
• .._ C.lep II., 8\oalm'lllll II
C.tora.. ._... 11, ........
Kaneel 71, K!IIIIIAII Slate 58
--li,Orepooll
Milt Newton and Scooter
Ar.................... "
.
Barry,
Ignored by· a defense
,. MueiiD
.
Intent
on
stopping AII·Amerlca
,eo~... 11. V&amp; e.
......
••
.
Danny Manning, helped carry
.
Kansas Into the Final Four for
....• .::..
. ~~ . . . . Te. . . . .
the
secolld time in three years.
' . ., • .,, ::.:··
h
. . . . ..
' . i'l''
· Manning ' flnlihed ' with 20
.t&amp;JIIwYerl
potnta but had only 2 In the last
C. ........... (U,JI) YL . . . ltale
(lt-111,1-- .
. .
16:
26. Newton finished with 18
c.aeallc• (Jioll) ......... v. ....
points. Barry, son or former pro
(II-III, I ,.-. '
star Rick Barry, scored a careerMsn:h • at Nn
1 ,.~~~ •
high 15.
.
"Wf
have
the
greatest
player
Prep. scores
I've ever .been associated with,"
. .71 . . ,......,.. . . .lilt.
IIJ .,................... .
Kansas Coach l;.arry Brown said.
"And we've got some kids who
Ct• Wo......,..ln, C:.l u•u 'M
got to play because some unfortu........ u
ro......-M,WOnllla41
nate things happened, and I was
JN......_m
lam.... ••• II, 'hac VII t1
, too dumb tn. pla;,o them before."
........:nr
Newton excelled defensively
Col We~ 1~ &amp;,a llllaM
on Mitch Richmond, IIIJiiting the
K~nsas State star to _11 points.
William Scott led the Wildcats
with 18 poh\ts.
Kansas, down 36-29, scored on
nine of Its first 11 possessions or
the second half to move ahead for
good. Kansas, 25-11, and Kansas
25-9, split four games this
State,
,.
season.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Connec- the Huskies · ancf finished the
"Kansas just was the better
ticut and Boston College, the conference regular season in
team
today," Kansas State
,doormats of the Big East, sur- seventh place at 6-10.
vived in the National Invitation
. "We are the only team out or . Coach Lon Kruger said. "It was a
Tournament willie their confer- the fOUl' here that had to win two good game for 35 minutes. We
Pla:Yed extremely well but their
~~~~~~alsr7.~~~ eliminated !rom. games on the. road.'' Boston · .other guys stepped In when they·
College Coach Jim O'Brien said.
The league foes meet Tuesday "Evansville and Middle Tennes- had to:"
·
·west Beponat
in the semifinals of the 51st see were a combined 32-2 at home
(Seattle)
postseason NIT. Colorado State thiS season.
···we are really peaking. We'111
fa~es Ohio State In the other
semifinal, with the winners play- a different team than we were
Ing . Wednesday tor the title at th~ weeks ego."
The Daily Sentinel
Madison Square Garden.
·
Dana Barroland Steve Benton
The Big East, which pla¢ed two lead the Eagles. Barros Is
.( U8PIIl1Hit)
teams In last year's Final Four, averaging 22 pQJnts per game
A Dh1olooo o1 -eolia, Inc.
sent six teams, the most of any and Benton baiplayfid well I~ the
Publllhed every attenooa, Monday
conference, to the NCAA Tourna- NIT, scoring 17 polnta with 17
thn&gt;~~&amp;h Frldaoy. Ill Court St., Poment. All have been eliminated, rebound' , ~galnst Middle
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llo~lng Company/Multimedia. ·Inc.,
with Villanova the only confer- Tennes-. . , ·.
Pomm&gt;y, Ohio 45769, Pb. 992-21116. Se"We're aolai ·to sa'll! a lot ol
ence membe~ surviving the se·
cond clau postage patd at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·.
money
on ·ICOutlng reporll,"
cond rounC!. The Wlldcats'went to
the final eight before losing to Callioun AJcl. "We knoW a lot
Member: United Presa International.
Oklahoma Satun!ay,
about Boston COUeae and they,
Inland DaUy Preu Auoclatlon and the
Ohio Newapa~AIIIoclatlon . National
·
"We're a team that didn't have know a lot abjjllt ua."
Advertlltna
esentatlve, Branham
enough wins in our league to
Tbe other ai!me features ~
Newapaper Sa es, 733 'Iblrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
1
show how good we are," said· recent Winners o1 the NIT. 1'11!!
Connecticut Coach Jim Calhoun, Buckeyes won the tourument
I'OSIMAS'tER: Send addrell cbarures
whose squad finished In last In 19116 whUe Colorado State
to '1111 0.11)1 Sontlllel, Ill c-t st.,
Pc:utwtGY. am..,.,
place in the Big Ea~t at 4·12. Coach Boyd Grant led Fresno
"We're 13-1 outside the le_a gue- State to the title In 1983. In his
. IIVIIICliiiPIIO IIATIIII
maybe we've got to cancel some firat year With the Rams, Grant
onow,.................................... IU5
hu given. the team Ita flrat
league games ·next year.
on. Montb ....,............................15.45
'
''We played very hard during poetaeaaon bid In 19 yeara.
on. Year ..................... ,. .......... $65.1D
Ohio State Coach Gary WIJ!I·
·· the season and came to the well a
IIIIIOU: COPY
PIII(Z
·lot but didn't 1!!1 a drink. We ama I~ ' ao.ton Oolle&amp;e two
O.Uy ................................... 25 Cen ..
·played everyone competitively )'111'1 qo to Sublertbln not 111111'1111 to pay tllecarIn what I attn c:ollalder the belt Job••• team blat' Purdue and
rllr _1111)' remit Ill lllva- direct to
Mleldpn
tills
)'eat,
ud
IIWIY
conference In America." ·
,... Dllll)' . .. . . a. ... 12-(h
....... CNdltWII be tr1Wit carrier each
Colllleetkut polled aurprlalq· wen 1Ul1111&amp;etl Wbe!ll tile Buell·
victoria over Ceoraetowa aid l)'tl . . , . DOt llYn a bid to tile
No nblerlpU- by IIIU ponnltted 1D
Syracuse thll year. 'l'be Htllldll, NCMII*Id. .
IJ'HI WhOft llomt WTier terVlee II
''I tblllk _every team lltarti out
18-14 overall. cle...tecl Wt1t .
available.
!
•"'((ltDIJOtlle
. .NWCM aad ltl
....._

a.-.
c....... .
.... 1.,,........ar... ..

!NII
...... 1,Texut
Yeo!&lt; !All, .,.... I

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. ..

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

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The Daily Sentinei- Pag.i 3

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Arboaa 70, Norih Carollaa 52
All-America Sean Elliott had
24 points and Tom Tolbert scored
18 of his 21 points in the second
halt to spark Arizona. ·
The- Wildcats, 35-2, won their
15th straight and became the
first Paclflc-10 team to reach the
Final Four since i980 when
UCLA lost to Louisville for the
championship.
Arizona, which trailed 28-26 at
hallttme, ciosecrthe game with a
30-10 blitz. North Carolina, 27-7,
shot 31 percentln the second hall.
"I didn't even show up in the
first half," Tolbert said. "But
when coach told us to get more
aggressive in the second haU, I
knew It was time to take It to
them.''
Scott Williams led the Tar
Heels with 13 points. J.R Reid
was Umitedto10polnts-just21n
the lirst half- and 9 rebounds.
"We wanted to go toJ.R . more
than we were able to," North
·Carolina Coach Dean Smith said.
"Tolbert did a good Job on him.
And when he kicked It out, we
couldn't hit our shots. Tbey were
good shots, but they wouldn't go
down.''
Southeast Regional
(Birmingham, Ala. )
''They were like a time bomb
waiting to erupt," VUlanova's
Mark Plansky said Saturday
alter Oklahoma defeated the
Wildcats 78-5~.
The Sooners, 34-3, ended the
Wildcats' toUrnament run with a
' 194 spree III' the last 3:30.
"Oklahoma should win It all
right now," Vlllanova point
guard Kenny Wilson said .
"They're like the baby Lakers
running up and down the court."
Villanova slowed OklahOma
for more than 36 minutes . The
Wildcats led 48-40 six minutes
into the second hall. The Sooners
rallied for a 59-55 lead then reeled

'"·Buckeye•'

-=~~u~·~

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""altb

to . reaell

_..,_~·-

~~·

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. Till Eqles, 18-13, dlflatlld
llleaa, lvanavtUe ud WIA'cr

"'•c·IIi·
tli'ilr

to_~Bait
.'l'III.V­
..... 'Whll
'

..

willa you

WIIU.tima alfl. "I
tlllllk
t'a Wliat motlvatll our
team:
apportwllty to play
..S ·abDw people !low good we

Ill,

the . · NIT

I

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-·
r::.1.!...=r
w-.-. . . . ........ . . . . . ,. . . .
•w.-.. .;. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., .
11 Weob .........................;........ =.lll
.-.-............. ..................... .Ill
111
.1111

~ ... ~:10
liW-...............................
.IIJ

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

had been averaging 105 points a
game .
"We proved if someone tries to
slow the ball down on us we can
still pull out a win," Oklahoma' s
Harvey Grant said.
Stacey King led the Sooners
with 28 points and danced Into the
dressing room ~i!lging, "Kansas
Cl ty, Kansas Cl ty. here we
come."

The Indians broke a 3·3 tie In •
the sixth inning with four runs.
Castillo doubled in one, Jay Bell
and Domingo Ramos singled In a
run apiece, and Ramos scorE!d on
a groundout by Andy Allanson.
The Athletics came back with
two runs in the seventh on an RBI
double by Ed Jurak ami a
ruJI·SCOring single by Stan JavIer. They added two more In the
ninth, tying the score on Javier's
two,run triple. Oakland 5cored a
run in the JOth on an RBI double
by Mike Gallego.
The Indians tied the score In
the bottom ol the inning when
Cory Snyder stole home on a
double steal.
Red5 3, Royals 0
Dennis Rasmussen, Pat Paclllo and Pat Perry combined to
hold the Kansas City Royals to
seven singles In a 3·0 Cincinnati
Reds' victory Sunday · in an
exhibition game .
Rasmussen picked up his first
victory of the spring, while the
Royals lost their fourth straight.
Perry gained his third save.
Cincinnati today plays Mtnne·
sola at Plant City.
The Reds scored a run in the
first when Barry Larkin singled,
took t,hird on Jeff Treadway's
single and scored when Paul
O'Neill grounded into a double
play.
.
Larkin tripled in the sixth and
scored on Paul O'Neill's two-out
double to right. The Royals
loaded the bases In the fourth on
singles by Kevin Seltzer and
Danny Tartabull and a walk to
Scotti Madison, but Bo Jackson
struck out looking.

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THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

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INDIVIDUALS-FEDERAL-STATE
OUT OF STATE RETURNS
BUSINESS - SMALL OR LARGE
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SATURDAY 9 A.M .-6 P.M .
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

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0
$1139° *

Bucks face CSU
in NIT semi tilt

., c.nt.ro.--

ott 12 straight points . Oklahoma

.. i

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SpnngSale.

•'
''

Garden Tractor ModelJBJO
Tht 1810 prdcn ttaetor ftatures an 18 H.P. twin-q&lt;tinder
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Sale Ends AprU 8, 1988

D.J.'s TRADING POSt
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923 's. Jrtl ,,.~

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hgs 4 The Dllily Sa11inel

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Monday, Mlrah 28, 1888

Porn..ov MidtlaPDi"- Ohio

·-Woodward routs Linden McKinley for
Division I tide; Wehrle IV cage champ
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) D.J. Boston scored 27 points and
Chip Jones 24 to lead Cincinnati
Woodward to 107-70 rout of
Columbus Unden McKinley In
the championship game of the
Division I boys state high school
basketball tournament Saturday
evening In St. John Arena.
Woodward, which finished 26·
2, came within · a point of
equalling the all-time tournament scoring record of 1!l!, set In
1976 by Lorain Catholic. But the
Bulldogs did erase a 32-year-old
record for big sehools for any
tournament game. Middletown,
led by Jerry Lucas, had 991n the
1956 semifinals against Cleveland East Tech.
Woodward, which became the
first Cincinnati public school to
win a state basketball champion-

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ship, also set a ·r ecord for the the 6-foot-6 Boston.
most points In a quarter, 341n the
Unden, which concluded play
iirst, annd the combined 177
at
22-6, was led In scoring by
points .b y the two teams bettered
the 166 by Middletown and
Lewis Geter with 20, 14 coming
Canton McKinley In the 1956 title well after the outconre was
game.
decided, 14 by P.J. Mathews and
Saturday's game was never In 13 by sophomore l'errell Holdoubt after Woodward broke a 6-6 comb. Orlando Berry added 17'
tie on a 3-polnt goal by Jolt('s, one for Woodward.
During Woodward's record·
of 4 he had In the game, and raced
setting first quarter, tbe Bulto a 19·9 lead.
Another 13-2 run put the ldogs hit 14 of 18 from the field
(. 778 percent). had a 9-2 edge In
Bulldogs up 32-11 and they led
34-17 lead after the first period rebounding and committed just 1
and 46-25 at the half.
DlvWoniV
The Woodward lead got to 31
points midway through the third
Columbus Wehrle, led by Lawquarter and the only suspense rence Funderburke with 25
remaining was whether the Bul· · points and 13 rebounds, pulled
ldogs would reach the 100-polnt away from Kalida In the flnallO
mark. That came with 2:28 minutes for a 71-54 wtn over the
remaining on a reverse layup by · Wildcats In the championship

game of the boys Division IV
state high school basketball
tournament Saturday night.
The title was the second In the
lasl 3 years for Wehrle, which
won Its final 19 games and
finished wtth a 26·2 mark.
·
Kalida, which bowed out of the
tournament wtth a 25-2 record,
led the No. 1 ranked Wolverines
for most of the first half and was
up by as many as 9 points late In
the first quarter. .
Wehrle, behind the 6·foot-8
Funderburke, began to chop Into
the lead and David Owen's 2 free
throws with 1:07 left In the halt
gave the Wolverines a 31-30 lead
at the break.
Brian Vorst, who led Kalida
wttb 24 points and 13 rebounds,
gave the Wildcats their final lead
of the game when he began the
second halt with a 3-polnt play.
Just 14 seconds later, however,
Owen hit a 3-po!iltfleld goal to put
Wehrle back up 34-33.
Todd DIU, Frank Blake (2), Steve
Wehrle ran off 8 unanswered
Caruthers. Jeremy Rupe, Geoff points to go up 48-39 lind with Its
Cogar and Jeremy Heck (exhlbl· fast break clicking on all cyllndtlon match) .
ers, never trailed by Jess than 7
Coach Sheppard, who ex- the rest of the way.
Funderburke, boxed In by
pressed thanks to Jim Sheets,
Fenton Taylor and Gordon Kalida's sagging zone defense,
Fisher for their support, termed bit 11 of 18 field goal attempts,
the clinic · and tournament as several from long range In the
"very successful".
third and fourth ql!llrter ..
"I feel It generated genuine
Owen finished with 13 points
enthuslam In the sport and wtll for Wehrle and Lonnie Jolt('s and
h~lp attain my goal of filling out · Larry. Harper added 10. .
,
an enUre wrestling squad. In the
Kalida, which failed In Its
past we have always been four or attempt to win both the girls and
boys Division IV cbamplonshlps,
five weight classes short and this
has proven to be a disadvantage also bad Dave Hovest with 14
when we face schools who have points. The Kalida girls won the ·
wrestlers with seven to eight small school title last weekend.
years of experience. We defl·
Kalida, which shot .524 from
nltely plan to continue this the field the first halt, settled for
program In the future," Shep.303 In the second as Wehrle
pard concluded.
·
upped Its defensive Intensity.
Referee for the event wa 3 Ted
Contrastly. Wehrle was Just
Cotterman who coached at Meigs
.385 the first half from the field
High School with Larry Grimes. and .517 In the second. The
Cotterman Is now aulstant wres· Wolverines held ,a slight 34-31

:: First wre8tl.!!tg . tournament success
ROCK SPRINGS - Attendancewas low but enthusiasm and
competitiveness was blgb at
Larry R. Morrison gymnasium
at the first annual wiestling
tournament held under the dlrec·
tlon of Coaches Kevin Sheppard
• and Jim Sheets. After two weeks
of clinics tailored for seventh and
eighth graders to stir Interest In
the sport of wrestling, Saturday's
event was the climax and gave
the coaches and faris present an .
opportunity to assess the results.

Twenty two grapplers competed for first place In six weight
classes: First place winners each
received a special plaque and all
who competed were given a
certificate. Plaques were also
awarded to the other sixteen
participants. Several of the
matches won by declsl9n were
very close and stirred the Interest of t!1ose In attendance.
Winning their matches by pins
were Jim Puliln,s, Nathan Baloy,

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Why is she in pain?

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ALL SMJI.ES- PeriMiou&amp;ll'a Cllrlll Apella aD -liM u lie Clllla
doWII the net after Portamoatll dowiHMI Weat Geanp 14-t'l' ·~
Salunlay to win tile Dlvlllon II elille tHie IB st. Jolla' Areu In ..
Columbua. (UPI)
•
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. Group calls for AIDS tests

force of pUDChes and head butts ~
By lin lied ~ress Inleraatlonal
A New York State assembly· f~uently opens facial wounds:;:
man called for a review to . on both opponents," Assembly· ;;
consider periodic AlPS testing man Henry Barnett, R-C, Bed· ~
for all professional boxers In New ford, said. "Tbe exchange ofYork. "Boxing as a sport Is blood between fighters accurst:
_
unique In that oppolt('Dts wear often easily."
virtually no protection and the
""

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OUR JOB is to help you make and
save money.

KARL A. KElLER Ill, CPA
KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES
611 usnu111 SIIHI
H&amp;l llOa LOCAnON
POMROY, .OHIO 45769
(6141 992-7270

DEAR ~DERS: Remember the
letter from "Shreveport Reader"
who bas been living with pain for
two years and feels as if she is going
crazy? The IIOOY in, her neck and
Wlulders 111811!: a good night's sleep
impo!ISible. She wu sure she had a
brain lWIIOf and wis relieved when
the rleurolll(!ilt told ller she did not.
The woman was only 23 years of
age and desperate for relief.
. Thousands of. readers who had
experienced the same thing wrote to
tell "S!Jrevepon" what worked for
then). Here's a sample of this week's
mail. ·
From Beatrice, Neb.: I oould have
written that letter myself. The only
difference 'was that I suffered for
tbll!e years instead of two. After
spending a fortune on doctors in
Omaha and Uncoln, the cure was
~uw le~ by a man who came to fix
' our tractor. He told me to take two
· tablespoons of honey every morning. Within three days I felt like a
. different person.
From f;leaver, Pa.: The woma11
who ·is suffering with . neck and
· shlllilder pains sh9uld stop running
to doctors. She has anhritis where
the bones oonnect and nothing will
help but aspirin. I've been there.
From Middletown, N.Y.: I'd bet
my life the woman from Sbrevepon
has TMI (temporomandibular joint
dysfunction). After spending a fortune' on X·rays. nerve relaxants.
chiropractors, faith healers and
what have you, I finally found

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MONDAY
POMEROY - The Ken Amsbary Chapter of the Isaak Walton
League wtll bold Its annual White
Elephant Sale on Monday, with
dinner at 7 p.m. The club will
furnish the ham. Those planning
to attend the dinner are asked to
brlni a covered dish, drinks and
table service.

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••
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. RACINE -The American Red
Cl'OIIi Bloodmobile· ~II be at
Southern Hlgb. School In Racine
on Monday from 10
_,a.m. to 2 p.m.

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10'7-124 DIVISION WINNERS - Jeremy Beck, first; Nathan
Baloy, Brian Roffman.

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Bawball
.\t&amp;an&amp;a n . lle•&amp;on at Klealmmt!t',
Fla.', l :t$ p.m .
Los An plea vs . Montft'al atWeatPalm
Beach, lila., 1:11 p.m .
Mlrmeaota v~Jo tlnclanallatPiantOt)',
Fla ., I : 15 p.m.
Teu1 at PbU. .el pitla at Clearwater,

na.. , l:lli p.m.
To rente n . St. LoulaatSt. Petei'AbuJ1,
F1a. ,l: ll5 p.m.

....... .

Ne• Yorll. (NL) v s. Bucon at Wllller
Hawn, Fla., I : 15 p.m .
Plttlhurah vs. aa-. a,, a&amp;BuebaU
Cll)', Fla., 1:15 p.m .
Delrok va. Otlcap CALl at Saruota,
F1a.,I: J5 p.m.
Seatde Y!l. Milwaukee at O.aDdler,
Arb .. 3 p.m.
Ollcaro (NL) ..... Cleweaa• at Twuon,

Arb., S p.m.
Saa Dlero ..... cauro.-.l&amp; at Palm
eanr.• t p.m.
NN t'oril: tAL) va. B.alllmere al
Miami, , : )I p.m . .
.
San Fnntlseo vs. Oakland U Pboenhl:,

SCirlap.

Arb .. 8: SS p.m.

Soc(:er

Major lndflor Soccer Leap
No 1ames ~c:IN!duled

Pro results
N-'TIONA.L BASKETBALL A.SSOC .
!W..-dQ"'I ft.el .. &amp;s
WaMh••n •· New len!!)' 118
A.tlan&amp;a 1", Cleveluld lit

t•.

CMcap
lndl.- ••
. . . . . 113. New Yon IN
Dallu lSI, S.u AD•OIIIo IU

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Milwaukee 111, lltah 10$
Sacnmtftto ll4, LA Lallen 92
Seattle Ill, LA Cllppen 18

Denwr 111. Golden 8tMe 1111

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Su-~·•Ga~

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No llmeBICheciaded

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Ma . .&amp;J 'S GIImH
Bolton at New oleraey,1: • p.m.
O.IIM a.l N~ . Yarll:, 7: - ·p.m .
Ho•ton at Phlladel .. la, 1: • p.m.
Detroll a&amp; LA Clippers, lt:JI p.m.
'I'IIHdAJ't Games

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NewVorkal Ceovelud, alcflt
Dallu at Allaa&amp;a, .tpt
Portta.d aiSu MlHio, nltbl
Ulall at LA LUera. 1111111
Den~ at 8acnme-t.o, nllftt

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Chlcap .. 8ea&amp;de, .....

NATIONAL ROCI.EY LEAGUE
SMuniQ'a BeluiU
NY aa.en 4, DelNII4 ( 0'1')

Bo..O. 1, Quebec t:

.'..

NY Jabu:lden l, Edmontoa f
Pllllladel,..la 1, Wllllllpec a

.......
"

Calaary I. Vuco•ver 1 ·
Hardord Ml~ 1

a.

\:

St. IAub I, Terollto t: (OT)
Loa Allpiel t, Olcq• 5

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81111111.-,'a lleHILI
New .lene)' '7, NY R&amp;a~en !!

;

1"1tWiurah I, Qaebee S
Harllonl 4, MoMreaJ 1
Detrol: s, llllffalo s
Mo ..IQ''&amp;Gamet

I~

Edmo11toa at Toi'OIICO, ,:a p.m.
Olklapa1MI...o~A,8: Sip.m .

Dawson, Cubs expected to agree.
the new deill) have been settled."
By lJnlted Pi'ess Internatlon.
National League MVP Andre . Tbe deal would . require both
Dawson and the Chicago Cubs sides to tear up Dawson's $1.85
are expected to agree on a million arbitration salary for this
two-year , $4-mllllon-plus con· season, but would not prevent
tract sometime this weekend, a him from becoming a,free agent
published report said Saturday. If an arbitrator rules In his favor
The Chicago Sun-Times quoted In the Collusion II case.
... Kathleen Molitor, the
"sources who say the basics (for
mother of Milwaukee Brewers
Infielder Paul Molitor, died Friday after a long bout with
TOLEDO Ohio (UPI)- Bold
asthma. She was 59. Funeral
Spinnaker, 'driven bY Jim Muarrangements were pending.
Unix, won Sunday night's fea. (ured pace at Toledo Raceway
Park, four lengths ahead of Sum
Now Optn For Spring Season
Sorta Hy.
Mulinlx guided Bold Spinnaker
POTTED LILIES. MUMS.,
over the mile In 2:00 1-5. It was
TULIPS. HYACINTHS.
Bold Spinnaker's second start of
CALADIUMS. AZALEAS
the season at Raceway and his
COMPLETE LINE OF
second win.
VEGETABLE. BEDDING PlANTS
Khyber Pus was third.
SHRUIIERY • FRUIT TREE I
Utile N Special and Hot Rod
OPEl DAILY 9-5-SUNDAY 1-5
won the first two races to return
$8 on tile dally double combina- ,
tlon of hnd 6.
j
The crowd of 2,457 wagered .

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You'll want to
advertise in our
guide for timely
tips and iriformation
on gardenillg.

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$246,532,

SYIACUSI--991·5776

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(listed below) today
to reserve your ad space:

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AD DE.ADLII\lE ·I s

J

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FRIDAY APRIL 1st.

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EAfTER. fPECIAll

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

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Contact one of our
sales repre's.erltatives

Spinnaker triumphs

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·sPECIAL SECTION APRIL 5,1988
'
~oil11t Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily' Tribune
· 'The i&gt;.ur·sendnel .
.
675-1333

Vicky or Steve

446-2342

Larry or Chip

992-2156 .

Brian or Dave

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ANN IA."''DJ: ...

relief in the dentist's chair.
From El· Paso, Texas: Tell
"Shrevepon" not to let ·anybody
operate on her, I did and it didn't
help a.bit. The cure came when an
allei'JY specialist told me I was
allergic to cipr smoke. My husband wouldn't quit, so I divorced
him. I have been pain-free and a lot
happier since. (He was .no damn

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to my job to "catch up on things,"
but he refuses to tell our son the
truth about me. He says the boy is
very sensitive and they are afraid
Delores Will hosted a recent · It was decided that at meetings
he's too young to adjust to the
meeting of the Willing Workers
the. hostess will prepare the
shock.
Class of the Enterprise United
program and contest. Hostesses
I've done what has been asked of Methodist Church.
for next year were named and
me and not pushed. I know my
'Dorothy Long bad devotions
Ruby Frick will have the April
legal rights, but I lion 't want to using scripture from Matt 26.
meeting.
harm our son. Please advise. read by Mrs. Will, the legend of ·
Maundy Thursday service on
the · Easter flower by Agnes
TORN IN GEOltGIA
March 31 were announced with
DEAR GEORGIA: The boy · Dixon, and a re~dlng, "A Trip to quiet communion services between 7 and 8:30p.m. On Aprll2
should be told at the earlie5t Easter Bunny land'' by Sara DIU.
Several thank yous were noted
the annual egg hunt will be held
·opportunity, by you and his.father.
and the Easter sunrise services
Such information should not he for fruit trays sent at Christmas.
learned from an outsider. and it
might happen if you don't tell him

Deer Aan Landers: I've never
tried to put my story on paper
before, and it may take up your
whole oolumn. Please tell me what
to do.
I'm the mother of three children.
I raised two and the other one livE:S
with his father who remarried not
long after our divorce. I moved to
Alaska, John's present wife bas
been the only mother the boy soon.
It is important that he know you
knows.
·
After I moved back from Alaska gave him up because you loved him
I tried to locate them, with no luck. and believed he oould have a better
life with his father. Explain you
john would visit my mother from
waited, until he was man enough to
time to time and knew how to find
handle it. .Children have a way of
me.
.
One · day 'Six years ago, john living up to high expectations.
·
walked into the place where I . Good luck. dear.
Everyone does drugs, right?
worked and said he wanted to talk.
I asked when I could see our son.
Wrong. And today, more and mort?
He said, "The boy doesn't know people are aware of the dangers inyou exist because that's the way my voiYed. Ifyou want to be in the knoty,
wife wants it."
too, write for Ann l.ilnders' newly reNow I've moved to the same city vised booklet, "The Lowdown on
where john and his family live.
DoJH." Send 12.50 plus a self-adHe (the son) has seen me but dressed, stamped No. 10 enveloJH (39
thinks I'm just
friend of his cents postage) to Ann Uurdm, P.O.
father. john keeps ooming around Box I 1562, Chirogo,/11. 6lk51 1{)562.

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session wtll be be~ at 7p.m . .
preceding the meeting. A coin
auction wtll be held and refreshments . will be served. All Interested lndlvlduals invited.
TUEDSAY
CHES'Il:R - Chester Township Trustees will meet In special
session Tuesday. 7:30p.m., at the
town ball.

'
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RACINE - VIdeo tapes. of
Southern Local Band's activities
for the past year are available at
$10 each. Contact Edna Hunnell
at 949-2338, or Roberts Maidens,
or any band booster or band
member.

vlclOeii aYauabJe

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DEAN'S LJST - Ru-11 D.
KeDer, sob of Ropr and
Rosemary Keller, Route 3,
Pomeroy, has been named to
the dean's Jist for lhe winter
trimester al DeVry Institute
of TecbnoloJY In Columbus.
Russell Is majorlnJ In
electronics.

announ~

The third nine weeks grading all their subjects to be named to
· period honor roll at the Eastern the roll were:
HlgbSchoolbasbeenannounced.
&amp;enlors: Margie Baker, Ml-;
· Making a grade of B or above In chael Bartrum, Susan Baum,
all their subjects to be named to David Beegle Brent BISsell Jodi
tbe roll were:
Brown, Kin{ Calvert, Penny
Grade 12: Maralyn Barton, Clark, Charles Cleland, Jerry
Amy Berkhlmer Bissell. Lori Derenberger, David Dodson,
Burke, Renee Kaylor, Larissa Sean Dodson, Deloris Dorst,
Long. Trlna Barker, Lisa Burke, Stephanie English. Jodie Ervin,
Amy Connolly. Jeff Johnson, Sue · Fry. Wendy Fry, Lisa
Bonnie Koenig; Tim Lawson, Frymyer, Carol Gibeau!, Joe
Ruth Nutter, April Ritchie, Trent Hail, Kimberly Hamm, LaLenya
Upton. Janet Werry.
Hankla. Rob Harrison, Charlotte
Grade 11; David Rice, Lisa Hart, Deeanna Henderson, OrBissell, Heather Finlaw, Amy ville Hill, Audra Houdashelt,
Haif;!r, Uiura Hawthorne, Krls Mlkkl Hupp, Tim Jeffers, Teresa
Heines, Tammy Kennedy, Johnson, Kevin V. King, Michael
Tammy Leachman. Mike Mar- Klng, Charles Klein, Audrey
tin, IIObbl Price, Lea Ann· Reed, Lambert, Melanie Mankin, Dena
Jayne Ann R'itcl)le, Chris Manley, Patricia McGhee, si:ott
Spencer, Trlsha Spencer, Diane Oberholzer, Jeff Parker, Joe
Parker Donlta Pooler Krista
White
Grade 10: Shawn Bush, Amy . Roush,' Laurie Shenefield, John
Murphy, Jill Reynolds, Greta Sisson, Shannon Slavin,' Angela
Riffle.
Sloan, David Smith, Shannon
Grade 9: Andrea Cleland, Billy Stewart, John Swanson, verJohnson, Mary Ann Kibble, Mi· mana Thomas, Kelly Thompson,
chelle Malboltra, Leigh ' Ann Elizabeth Thornton, Sandy vanRe&lt;!ovtan, Suzanne West.
Cooney, James warner, Darrln
Grade 8; Steve Barnett. Tina Warth, Angela Wright.
Connolly, Toqey Maxey, Amy
Junl~rs: Michelle Adams,
Ranclall
Arnold, Ron Bachtel,
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Well
1
. Grade 7: ·Jeremy Buckley, Chris Bass; Jason Black, Laurie
Nicole Kanawalsky, Carrie Mor· Black, Nlchole Bunch, Usa ,
·r1ssey, Billy Baker, Scott Burke, Butcher, Mary Butcher, Danny
Lisa Hoffman, Letitia Holsinger, Carl. Melodl Carl, Lesley Carr,
Ells.e Manlc.ke. Michelle CharlesCarson,ShannonCoates,
Met7ger, Matt Michael, Karen Marc Corsi, Decker Cullums,
Mo'l'rls. Tracey Murphy. · Ste- Patricia Davis, Jason Dodson,
pbanl Otto. Sherr! Smith.
David Edmonds, Beth Ewing,
,
Terry Field&amp;, Abby Fry, Stacey
Tile third six weeks grading ·GtbbJ, James Grueser, Dena
per(od honor roll at the Meigs Hall. Dennis Harris, Wesley
H!eb School !W been1nnounced. Howard, Stacy Hysellr Ryan
Maldng a grade ot B above In Jeffera, . Ada King, Tosba Lan·

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daker, Jody Levingston, Thomas
McCourt, Elise Meier, Jenny
Miller, Martha Nelson, Kelly
Ogdln, ,Frank Par~er, Kacl Parson, TOdd Powell, Ronnie Reynolds, Melinda Riggs, Della
Riley , Tina Romine, Lynn Resllnskl, Dee See, Jared Sheets,
Susan Trader, Monica Turner.
Debbie West, Susan Young, Wesley Yo~ng.
Sophomores: . Nancy Baker,
Steve Bass, Melanie Beegle,
Cary Betzlng, Heidi Caruthers,
Barbara Coleman, Eddie
Crooks, Lisa Darst, Daniel
Kennedy, Rebecca Kerr. Krista
King, Kenda Kloes, Bracy Korn,
Robert. Lambert, Tammy Lambert, Tracy Lee, Rebecca
Napper, Shannon Newsome, Ml·
chael Parker, Tract Richmond,
Cheryl Stevens, Homer Welsh,
Anne Williams.
_
Freshmen: Gina Arnett, Tina
Arnett, Brian Corsi, John Evans,
Kim Ewing, Robert Fields,
David Frymyer, Troy Gibeau!,
Pam Haggy, E~lc Heck, Susan
Houchins, Tara Humphreys,
Cathy Lambert, Jamey Little,
Tina Molden, Mary Martin,
Missy Nelson, Stacey Shank,
Aaron Sheets, Kristen Slawter,
Jason Smith, Joseph Smith,
Susanne Sprouse, Jennifer Taylor, Kevin Taylor, Amy Wagner,
Afl)y Warth, Jennl Werry, Darcl
Wolfe. Jason Wright.

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Recently the Racine Royals 5th
&amp; 6th football, basketball and
cheerleaders flnsbed , I heir

season.
On Sunday, March 6th the
group went to Show Biz Pizza·for
a party. The Committee would
like to thank the parents that
helped take them &amp; bring lhem
home.
Then on Sunday, March 13th a

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An Easter craft sale was
planlt('d at the reCent meeting of
· . the Rock Springs United Methodist Women held at the church,
Betty Wills presided at the
meeting with plans being made
for a soup supper In May. Named
to the nominating commltt~
were Violet Hysell, Sharon
Folmer, and Thelma Jeffers. The
group voted to become a member
of the United Methodist Women's
District Conference.
Group singing of several
hymns Including "Burdens Are
Lifted at Calvary" and "The Old
Rugged Cross" were sung and
Mrs. Hysell's devotions were

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Cbruch visitors were Fannie
and Bob Bernard, Dutch Ridge.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Brooks, Debbie and Jim were
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Brooks and
Hallie, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. ·
John Brewer, Jonathan, Billy
and Cassandra, Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Stearns
returned from a business trip to
Fairborn. While there they vi- 1
sited !heir daughter, April Nelly
and her husband.
Mr. a!\d Mrs. Richard Yost,
Aaron and Sarah, visited Mr. and
Mrs: Delbert Yost , LancasterRt.
on March 13.
Willis Parker, Parkersburg,
visited the Poole- Parker home on
March 12. He also visited other
relatives: Violet Parker, Oak
Hill, and Irene Parker, Syracuse.
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If HEARING 11 your problem -- and you te.l that
hearing aida are priced TOO HIGH for your
BUDGi!T - then please contt.ct ua at DILES
.HEARING CEN.tlR. We have many, referral
10urce. for asllitance and you may qualify
Whether you are regularly employed or not. 1,.11
o"r hope that NO ONl who can be hal_.. should
be deprived of better hHrlng. Let ua be your ed·

(614}' 594·3571 '
We

1-110-217-7716
· lldefrom:
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clally also. The basketball players were bought new uniforms,
the football new flags and belts
and the cheerleader advisors
received money to help with their
needs.
We would like to take this time
to thank the parents, businesses,
coaches and advisors for all they
have done. And to thank our boys
and girls which made It all
possible.

taken from Psalms 22. She also
read, "I Have Faith In God to See
Me Through All Situations."
Mrs. Wills read a poem, "Assurance", and there were special
prayer requests by Lenora Lelf·
belt. Frances Goegleln reported
on Illnesses and officers' reports
were given.
Next meeting was announced
for AprU12 atl2: 30 at the church
with Dol Long and Harriett
Sinclair showing slides of their
recent trip to the Holy Land.1AII
women of the church are InVIted
to attend.
The Rev. Mel Franklin had the
dosing prayer. Refreshments

were served by Linda Foster and
Mrs. Wills with a surprise
~irthday party being held honor,
lng the Rev. Mr, Franklin.
Attending besides those named
were Betty Dill, Dorothy Jeffers,
VIrginia Wears, and Dawn
Koj)ec, Stephanie and Aubrla
Kopec.

EASTER PERM SPECIW.
s5.00 OFF AU PERMS
March 21·April 2

IEFUCn,NS OF YOU

773·5311
Dionn

....... wv.

J-•t • Sondy Henry

Alfred notes

DillS·
HEARING
CENTER
326 w....... s,.......... Gilt 45701

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sports banquet was held at the Jr.
High In their honor. Approxlmiatly 120 people attended. The
players and cheerleaders were
presented with certificates, tro·
pbles and pens from their
coaches and ·advisors. Also the
coaches and advisors were presented with plaque from !be
committee and kids.
The Royals finished not only
good In playing, but good flnian·

Rock Springs UMW has meeting

vocate.
CALL TOLL-FRE~ 1'·800-237-7716

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will be held at 6 a .m . with
breakfast to follow.
On Aprll9 the youth fellowship
will have a yard sale at the home
of Ann Carswell, and on Aprlll6,
a car wash will. be held.
The mother-daughter banquet
was announced fo~ Ma~ 9 at 6
p.m. Others attending were Do· .
rothy Clark, Mary Starcher,
Frances Carleton, and Mabel
Moore.

Racine Royals hold season-end dinner

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ton, Sheryl Lambert. JoAnn
Fe! ty, Henrietta, Crystal and
Wanda Jacks, Kathy Van Meter,
Rita and Kathy Chapman, Bonnie, Terrie and Carl Brewer, and
the host, Mrs. Kelly. Prayer
closed the meeting.

·Willing Workers hold recent meeting

good.)

.I!•'-• Meigs ·~hool honor rolls

HoUI&amp;H IU, Portlutlllt
OMrol IIJA, Phoe.b: 113

*· lA IIb at Ca)farr, t : J$ p.m .

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Cola Club wtll bold a l'egular
meeting on Monday evening at
Burkett's Barber Shop In Middlepori. A social hour and trading

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Mrs. Kelly was speaker for the
Plans for . completion of a
cookbook were discussed and a meeting using as her topic,
'bake sale was set for Good "God's Chosen", with scriptures
Friday at Foodland when thEC . from Cor. I and I land Ephesians.
Full Gospel LlghihQuse Ladles A covered dish luncheon was
Auxiliary met receqtly at the served. to the group Including
VIrginia Hartley, Elizabeth Milhome o! Jean Kelly.

·. Community calendar ·

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Auxiliary conducts recent meeting

Ann
Landers

Ft~ers s~ate

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The Daily .Sentinel .
Monday, March 28, 1988

r-tl-ln_g_c_oa
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at_S_h_e_rl_d_a_n_.__~----ed--ge--ln_r_e_bo_un_~dln~g~
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Calendar

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.Pllge-8-The Daily Sentinel

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MondaY. March 28. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

-l

Ohio

Another study says fish ·oil may help artery·

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IAVNCB - A ball- lauacb wu tile ~d !Iaale. for lbe
obMnuce ol BIJbl-lo-Read Week al Letari Falls Elemelllary
8ehooL

J.etart Falls notes reading week
' LETART FALLS - " What's of reading were carried out.
.Cooking In Reading?" was the · Students m ade cookies, peanu t
"t!!eme for the week-long obser- butter, butter and pancakes .
v.ance of Right-to-Read Week Students got to eat the Items they
held at the Letart Falls Elemen·
had prepared. A book fair was
tary School.
conducted throughout the week
· A nlirnber of cooking projects
to encourage reading. The week
requiring a considerable amount
concluded with a balloon launch.

Syraruse notes Right to Read
.: . SYRACUSE- " Reading Is the
Recipe" was, the theme for the
.bcibservante of Right-to-Read
Week held at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
." Numerous.actlvltles were conducted during the wee -long

observance and each student was
prese nted a badge for reading.
Students took part in a number of
cooking projects which Included
making cookies. pizza, butter,
peanut butter and pancakes as a
part of the program .

.People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TRO'lT
Untied Preea lnleraatloaal
SKATING INTO MARRIAGE: Debt Thomas knows how to
·: keep a secret. The Olympic skater was married two weeks ago
but she didn't even tell Alex McGowan, her coach for the past 11
., sears. Just after ending her competitive skating career with
-aaotber dlsappolntlng_..w:lrd In the World Championships In
Budapest, Hu~turday night, Thomas revealed that she
had married Brian Vanden Hocen, 23, on March 151n Boulder,
·: ·Colo., where he Is a student at the University of Colorado. "I did
.• not want the news to detract from my focus on the World
·• Championship," said Thomas, whose routine was plagued with
stumbles as she again finished behind East Germany's
Ka&amp;arlaa Witt and Ettzabetll Manley of Canada. "Now that
these championships are over, I want to let all my friends and
supporters know how happy I am. My husband will travel with
me on parts of my upcoming skating exhibitions tour. I am
. thrilled." · McGowan was surprised and at first refused to
. believe the news when told of the wedding. He left before the
exhibition ended.
STARS ON SKATES: Two other Olympic skaters, Bonnie
·Blair and Dan Jansen, will be honored with the Super Bowl
champion Washington Redskins April 13 at the Salute to
Champions benefit In Waslllngton. Blair won a gold and bronze
medal and Jansen was the hard-luck competitor who fell twice
and endured the death of his sister, Jane, tbe day of his first
. race. The benefit Is for the Natl!)nal Foundation for Cancer
Research and will Include a tribute to Jane's husband, Richard
Berea, and their three daughters.
ACTOR'S PICTURE IS PERFECT FOR POSTER: Keith
Carradlae not only,. stars In the upcoming movie "The
Moderns," he -also painted the promottonal poster for 11. The
fllrills about a ne'er-do-well painter running with the American
expatriate crowd In Paris In the '20s and Carradlne's poster
work Is one of_several paintings he did In his hotel room while
shooting in Paris. Three Carradlne paintings also can be spotted
In the movie, which Is directed by Alan Rudolph, who previously
worked with Carradlne In the critically acclaimed ''Trouble In
.Mind,'' ' 'Choose Me'' and ''Welcome to L.A.''
DIVORCE AND MARRIAGE: The body beautiful couple actress Brigitte Nielsen and New York Jets star Mark
Gasllaeau - won't be getting married until he takes care of a
few formalities, such as his divorce. Lisa Gastineau, who
married the muscled-up defensive end when she was 19, says
they aren't even close to a settlement, according to People
magazine. Lisa says her husband and Nielsen have something
In common - "both publicity conscious" - but predicts
Gastineau 's jealous streak will cause problems. "I can't see
him with a ny person who has a past and, God, she has a past,"
Lisa said. " He wouldn't let me wear certain clothes, certain
bathing suits, because they were too flashy. Anybody who knew
us knew how jealous he was." Regardless, the ex-Mrs.
Sylvester Stallone says she's In love and has never been happier
and Gastineau says the same, although In a slightly different
way. "I love her deeply and lfanyone should ever try to hurt her,
I'll kill them," he said.
.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Another team of sclentis ts re·
ports favorable evidence In the
r unning controversy over
whether fish on can slow harden·
lng of the arteries and thus help
prevent heart attacks and
strokes.
In a report to be released
today, scientists at the University of California at San Fran·Cisco· say their research with
rabbits showed fish ollln the diet
slows hardening of the arteries.
The finding confirms previous
animal studies and human epidemiologic data but contradicts a
recent rabbit study In the publication Atherosclerosis 1987,
which Indicated fish oil Increases
deposits of plaque In the arteries.
The effect of fish oil on humans
awaits further studies, the UC
San Francisco scientists said.
The results of the San Fran·
cisco study were to be presented
at the 37th annual scientific
session of the American College

supplying blood to the heart
muscle or brain. ,
The study and other research
The San Francisco study also
sug&amp;est that consuming cold appears to . confirm previous
water fish might help Jessen the
flndlnp that fish oil slows the
chances of a heart attack or
progretalon of a theroeclerosts by
stroke, according to UC re- slowlq blood clotUng, not by
searchers On. Bo·Qlng Zhu , a
reducing cbolesterollevels In the
vlalting lecturer from the Peo- blood.
ple's Republic of China; William
Tbe study used 39 rabbits
W. Parmley, , chief of UCSF's divided Into lour groupa. One .
division of cardiology and Do'
control group was not given fish
nald L. Smith, of Syntex Corp. of oil, while the other three were
Palo Alto, Calif.
given different amounts of ftsh
oil, raqlaa from one to three
Their findings lend further milliliters per day (a teaspoon Is
support to the theory that oil 25 milliliters).
from cold water flab contains
All were fed for 10 weeks on a
certain polyunsaturated fatty ChOlesterol-rich diet, and then
acids, In particular 50-Called · killed to look at the amount of
ome&amp;a-3 fatty llclds, that slow the plaque In theb' pulmonary arterdevelopment o~ atherosclerotic Ies, which carry blood from the
plaques In the walls of the heart to the lungs, and the aorta,
arteries, and may even reduce which sends blood to the rest of
plaques already present.
the body.
Heart attacks and strokes
The researchers found that two
occur when plaques compbsed of · milliliters per day of fish oil
fat and cholesterol clog an artery slowed the progression of ather.

"In the rough It 's a little over
3,500 carats with a beautiful
cobalt · blue to gray with the
predominant color cobalt blue,"
said Meyer. "It was a llltleover4
Inches by a bout 3 % Inches and 2
lnches.ln depth."
The finished sapphire, with Its
six radla tlng lines of light, should
be 2 % Inches In diameter, 1 %
Inches In depth and weigh more
than 1,500 carats, he said.

Visitors
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Henley
and Mr. a nd Mrs . Bill White,
Garretsvllle community, were
recent visitors of Mrs. Iva
Powell.
Scout meeting
HARRISONVILLE - A cub
scout organizing meeting for
Harrisonville and the surroundIng area.will be held Thursday, 7
p.m., at theZionChurch.Parents
are needed as much as children.
For more Information, call 9925770 and ask for Brenda.

JOHN A. WADE, ·M~D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE · HA~E HEARING AIDS"

Meyer and Peden, who will
share the wealth when they sell
'the
some
gemologists
theystone,
spokesaid
to by
telepbpne
were
skeptical about It because of Its
size so he contacted Robinson
and described It to him .
. "I suggesled he send ltto me by
registered mall and I'd take a
looil at It," said Robinson ,
acknowledging some Initial skep·
tlclsm . Meyer and Peden decided
to deliver it.
Late ln. February they Wjllked
Into Robinson's office. Meyer
pulled the crystalfrom his pocket
and tossed It to Robinson.
"Think this will at least pay for
my plane trip out here?" he
asked.
Robinson's jaw dropped, recalled Meyer.
Public Notice
LeGAL NOTICE

current intrastate tariff is
unjust and unreaaonabl8 to
the ex.t8nt that the method it
must use to , calcua.te volume discounts for

Ohio

intrast&amp;ite customers differs
from that uMd for interstate
cuatome,. and, thus. caUMI
additional adminlatrative
•COltS. which ultimately
must be paU.d on to its
Ohio subscribers. It further

allogu tho ,.riff to be unjust

and unreaaonable because It
provides fof charges to
customer• for directory as·
sistance whk:h are below its
own coat of making this
service ·available. MCI pro·
pons to amend its intrastate
tariff to provide for the Ame
volume diacour1ts that are
contained in its inters.. te
tariff. and to provide for a
directorY auistance charge
with a flexible range of 8.46

to $.90 per call. Any interested peraon, firm, corpora·
tion, or .entity desiring an
oral hearing in this matter

should file with the Commis·
sion a request for one, along
with a motion to intervene
on or before May B, 1988.
Unleu the Commission re·
celve~such a request foroi'al
hearing and an aucompany·
ing motion to intervene. the
caoe will be decided on the
basi&amp; of the Information
contained in the complaint

and the affid.vit submitted

by MCI . Further information

may be obtlinad by contact·

ing tho Public Utllltlol Com-

million of Oho. 180 East
Broad StrHt, Columbua,

Ohio 43288;0673.
MAR. 28; APR . 6. 13
Public Notice

CASH BASIS COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT
for the Fiscel Year Ended

December 31, 1987
RACINE VILLAGE
Meigl COunty, Ohio

GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYPES
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
Local Toxu ............ 18.864

lntergoYJrnmental
CALL (614) 992-2104
Revenue ..
24,102
Charge• for
(304) 675-1244
Sanricoo ..... ......... 57, 857
Finea. Licenaes.
1----,----------------,.----------l Miscellaneous
• Permito ............. ......
1,873
.... 10,557
1...........

1

MICHAEL TAYWR

:raylor birthday
l Mlchael Taylor recently cele~ated his fourth birthday at the
Jiome of his P.3rents, Marvin and
~lla Taylor, Chester.
.
A
train
cake
and
Ice
cream
was
1
Jei'V('d. Presenting gifts were
Jim and Beverly Bailey and Ruth
Taylor, grandparents, Paul and
llfeDda Hollinger, . Lena and
Ouck Bailey, Heather and Samaatlla and die honree 's sister,

llcliJ.

·

Selldllllllftl.were Sherrie and
1Cit' RGift aDd .- . Clnclnna tl,
IUDk and Ute Linthicum ,
IV~•· Mau. , Charlotte and
GAr1 SmJtb, Clyltal and Amy,

Ql ....

To,.l
Receiplo .... ........ 113,053
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS:
Current:

Security of Peroon
• Property .......... 44,918
Public Hulth
Sanricu ......... ....... 1. 132
Leisure nme
Activities ................... 67B

Community
Environment .......... 2.913
Batie: UtAity
Banriaeo ................ 7,832
T,...oponadon ........ 14.838
Genonl Gov·
, .
ornrnMt ...... ,....... 13,238
Ca=. ................. 18,888
To,.l Ollb...rnente ............ ... 104.827
Totllllecolpto-/
under Dill&gt;............ 8,228
OTHIII FINANCING
80UROE8/(USE8}
Tranlfero-ln ..... .............. 12
Tranot.no-Dut .. .......... (liDO)
Totel Other Fin. ' ·
louraeo/(U-) ........ (4881
E•c. llopte and 0 - Fin.
Sourwo Over/(Under)

:~.:··~-·-, -

..
.....!:.:;o-::,
. _. ...,:.-::.=:=-···
...
...,
f."'"....::;:""

~

until Thurlday, April 28.

198B at 11:00 a.m. and

OHIO

5

'
Happy Ails

Ja~ .

Miscelt.neous ........ ... 2.681

1. '87 ........... 76.866

444 plus

70.08 on Mid centerline,
Mid corner being the TRUE
PlACE OF BEGINNING' of
tho porcet·horoln CCHIVOyod;·

thence along Owners· ·

Retirod ........... ........ 21.885

eoiiOtly Nne end Nid center·

Out1t1nding

linti .Wtth 1

.

curve to the left,

To,.l Receipt&amp; ........ 52.633 . Poe. 31 ."' B7 ........ .. 55,000
OPERATING EXPENSES:
Memorondo Oata:

having o rodlum of 9114.93
foet, o. aentiol angle of 5

Travel TransVoluotion ....... 2,884.074
porlontrootctlonu • ......~•..: ........ 988 ProperiJI' T.. l.tovi01:
C
01
lnoldo 10 Mlll .... ........ 2.0
Sorviceo ................ 9.473
Outlide10 Mill ........... 7.1
Supplioo and
Eltimated Pop .............963
Motorloto ............ ... 5.001 Federal Conouo
Capi,.l Outlay .......... 6.482
Populolion .... ...... .... .. 908
To,.l DioburseTHIS IS AN UNAUDITED
men.. .. .. ......... ,... 29,946. FINANCIAL STATEMENT
Totol Rocpts. ova&lt;/ un I cortlfyf thio report to be

~

Personal Services : .... 8.021

der Dilburse·

mont* .... ... ... ....... 22.588
NON-OPERATING
.
REVENUES / (EXPENSESI
Tranofero-Out .............. 1121
Other Useo/ Nonop .
E.p-iluros ............ [3301
Totol Other Fin . Sources
/ (UHIJ ........ ......... .. (3421
e.c. Acpto and Other

AaMsled

correct and true to the best

of my

~now)odgo.

degren

38

minutes 48

on ore length of
~~ floetou._ ~.n'!_!-i:hotrd
8
- .....,
u• ....,
m1nutoe 38 ACOndo Wuto
dlltonce of 94.07 foet. to a
poinl on uld -orly line ol
Stotlon 443 pluo 711.97 on
Nid centerline;

thence continuing otong

Nid IIIIo end Mid centerline
South I degf'Ms 27 minutes

LEGAL NOTICE
FOR PUBLICATION
SHARON DAVIDSON,

14 -ondo Wotll dis,.nco
of 25.97 feel, loa point ot
Stotlon 443 pluo 50.00 on
uld centorlln"'
thence North 83 dog-s
32 minute&amp; 41 MCando
WOII a dil,.,_ of 30.00
lui, to o point on tho
oxlotlng weolo~y light of
way Nne of U. S . Rout"~~
Mid point bllng 30.00 ful
left of Stotlon 443 pluo
SO.OOonthecenterHnoofU.
S. Route 33;

Fund Cash Balance

whose adclreutea) is un-

thence along the weeterly

Reserve tor Encumb.

t8kenoticethetshehasbeen

Jana G. BHgle,
Clork-Truo .. 3-7-88
P. 0 . Box 376. 66 8th Sl.
Racine, Ohio 46771
Ph. 1114-949-2B91
(3128. 1tc
Public Notice

Financing Sources Over/

(Under) Expend. Disb. •
Other U101/ Not ... 22.248
Fund Cooh Bolonco
Januory 1 ............. 17,326
-D8comber,31 ... ..... 39.511

Doc. 31 ... ............... 1.000
NONEXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
CEMETERY
Transfer-In ................. .500
Exc. Acpto and Other Fin·
onclng Source&amp; Dvor/(Undart· Expend. Dlllb. &amp;
Other Uoeo/Not ........ ... &amp;oo

ouod by the OINCtor of
Tronoporlllion of tho s ..te
of Ohio, who hoolnltllutodo
proceeding in tho Common
Ple01 Court of M•lgo
County, Ohio, to opprop·
rlato c-ln prOperty des·
cribod h....- for highwoy
pu.._o. - t y the mak·

line of a propolod highWII'(
ueen\ent to bt taken for
Project MEG 33-01 .73,
North 5 degrees 27 minute&amp;
7 -nd&amp;Woltodiotancoof
1011.48 - · to . o point
1111.00 lofl of S,.lion
444 pluo 50.00 on sold
con10111ne:
·
the,_ continuing along
tho - . , Qno of sold

fund Cash Balance

ing. con1tructlon or im·

IIMmtnt Nonh 31 degi'Ms

Jon. 1' '87 ............... 6.000
Fund Cooh Bolonce
Doc. 31, '87 ........... .8.500
•
TOTALS
!Memorandum, Only)
RECEIPTS:
Loco1Texeo ....... ..... 1B,B64
lntorgovemmontol ,
R..,.nue .............. 24.102
Charges for
Sanriaeo ...... ...... 107.809
Flnu, Licenses. •
Pormlta ............ ..... 1,873
MiiCOt-.ouo ..... .... 13. 138
Totel Rocelplo ...... 186,688 '
DISBURSEMENTS:
Security of Peroon •
Property .............. 44,11&amp;
Public Health
Sorviceo .. ..' ........... ;1,932
l.toiouro Time
Actlvldeo ................... 678
Community
Envlronment.. ........ 2,913
Booic Utility
Sorviceo .. ............ .. 7,832
Tronoportotlon .... :... 14.835
Gonorol
Govomment ........ 13,233
P....,ol
Sorvtceo ... .'..... ....... 8,021
Travel
T,...portodon .......... 988
Controctuol
Serviceo .............. .,B.473
Supptlel and
' Mllorloto ............... 5,C!Q1
Copltel Outlay ........ 211.170
Total 0 -,

known to tho Plaintiff wMI

provomonl of s..to Route
No. 33. Section 1.73. Moigo
County, Ohio. end to fix tho
voluo !'f Mid property. Tho
property oought to be eppropriotod to more opedti· cally ducrtbod 01 follows:
· D~SCRIPTION OF
THE PARCEL OF LAND
AND ESTATE. INTEREST
DRAIGHTTHEAEIN
APPROPRIATEb
Slluolod In thoTownohlp
of Bodford, County of Molgo
end Stele' of Ohio, end
known 01 being port of
Section 17. Town 4, AMp
111. and more futty bounded
ond doocrlbed 11 foUowo:
PARCeL NO.1 '
(HIGHWAY!
PERPETUAL
EASEMENT FOR
HIGHWAY PURPOSES
a.lng 0 percot of 1ond tying
on the left olde of tho
centerline of o ourvoy. modo
In 11187 by Konhi/Nomolh
Engl-ng, Inc. tor lho
Oopertment of Tran&amp;pCIIUtlan, ond being locotod
wllllln lho following doo·
cribod pointe:
Commencing. ·for ret.ronce. ot the oouth-st
of the norlh•we&amp;l ·
quortor of hclion t7,
olangtholll!uthorly
11no of Aid _,w•t q1111r.

111 - · 114 IOCOndoEost

~dlotance of 24.47foet.too

point on Ownoro' uomly
. line, Nid point being 48.110
- left of l,.tlon 444 pluo
71.12 0.. uld c.,Mrtino;
thence olong Dwnoro'
uiiOtly Nne Iouth 75 dogrees 41 mlnutu 2 socondo
Eut a dlltlnco of 48.14
fool. lo .lho T,.. Piece of
Beginning, contelnlng 0.12
of on acre. moN or leu, of
wlllch tho l'rftoin Rood
Occupilo 0.08 of on ocro,
more or lela.
This doocriptlon Is belod
on • ourwy mode und01 tho
dlreclion ond oupervlilon of
RonaldW. Eifert. Aegiltered
Sunooyor No. 110411.
Sold IUitlonl being tho
' s..tlon number&amp; 01 11iputoted In tho ho,.inbefore
rnenllonod lllrvoy and ••
llhownbypiM&amp;onflloinlho
Deportment of Tronoporto tlon. Columb111, Ohio.
Ownoro claim Iitie by
lnotrumont recorded In Vo·
lurne 242, ol Pogo 2B7: ond
Volume 290. 11 Pogo 715. of
tho Deed Records of Melgo
County. Ohio.
Sold peroono noted above
llholllurthor ,.ke notice thot
unleoo )hoy, or lheir ottornoy, fila on A,.._ no later
then 28 c1oyo ofler tho

T.::=;:-H;iij,U'o;;e;-~~2 ::.:...~.•!..::S~J! ~==·of::;,s-:r:

Dlllbu-nte .i .. 30,814
T,...ot.ro·ln ................. l12
Tron-·Out ............(812)
. , _ U-/N-.
EIIIORCI- ..........(3301
Total Other '"" .....,_/
(U-1 ....................(3311)
Exc. llapll IIIII
Fin·
Ov./(Unc1orl
• Dlllb. •
~UIMINet .. :30,4811
Fund~..._
Jon. 1, 87 ........... 108,041
Fund Calh ....,_
Doe. 31. '87 ........ 131,1128

onclnl:::::r*" a-

d...._of348.71r..t.too
point 1t . _ 441 p1uo
11 ;87antheoenlllii•ofU
• I. I I - 33;
·
.
olona A i d -·
11no 8 - 36 dJII- 31
mlnutoo 31 1111111111 w..t o
dlotwlll8 of :d.U r..t, to 1
IIOint It 11811an 447 pluo
'78.18 on llld . ,....... · ·
-nuing 111iong
Aid ..
aurve
tothelofl......... ll'lldlulof
18413 teet. 1 - - ' t
of1id!to-3Dmlnutedl

~llmodtohovewolnclt..lr

on-.

right to
end the
pelltion wll ...,....., . . -

~nd judgment will be Nil·'
dorodoccordlngty:ChiiiA...
12(ANIJ.
IERNAAD I. NUIIIT ·
O~or of Tr8llltl0rtlltlon . '

ntorll,.- •

·--=::i:Eit=...~

•

'

performing tho lobor for tho

execution and con-.ruction

CopiH of the.plans, spitci·
ficetlons and propoaal forma
will be forwarded from the
Divt-'on of Reclamation, De-

AU1'LAND II
AECL:AMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG·R1.·2

pertment ~f Noqdl Rooour·
- . upon roaelp1 of o chock
In the omount . of •19.00
mode peyoblo to the Oo.,-rt·

i• accordance with the plana

Thou moy oloo be pur·

ond opoclficatlono proporod

by: the Depl]rtment of ~atu·
ral Resources, the Division

of Reclamation, Columbus.
Ohio. Bid&amp; will be opened in
tho Second . Floor Conference Room of 18&amp;6 (Building HI of Tho Foun,.ln
Square Offices of Tho Ohio

ment of Natural Resources .

chased with cash in the
exact amount .· Plans· and
specifiC8tiona become the
property of the p;ospective

bidder&amp; ond no refunds will

be mMie. Additional information may be obtained

from the Division of Recla·
mation, Department of NatUI'III R11ources. 1866 Foun·

,.In Square, Building H,

Second Floor.

Columbus,

Ohio 43224. (Phone' (6141
28&amp;-1 068). ' .,
E~~eh

bid must be accom·

ponied by a BID GUA·
R ANTV r meeting the re·

quirements

Of

~ection

153.54 of tho Ohio Revised

71 Auto's For Sale

Code.
Contractors are 'advised
that in accordilnce with the
provi1ion1 of the January

27. 1872 o~ocutive order by

Happy
Birthday,
Thelma Chase,
from your

KEN FOUGHT
USED CAIS

II. SO Wost of Coolrilo,lllio
AM Of Our Cora Are
Worth The Money
I tl7 , ... Ill• • • -~..-

SI" I

..., .... t--------$W7S

:.........: __
==. . ,. .
ltl6..,, ..... - -

$t1SI

,...

$•too

.... a..•. c.p. O.lfk.-

IIIII

lo.lllil:u.JU..I

POMEROY, OH.
992-2269
NEW liSTING -it trees are
what you want on a lot
suitable tor build i n~? then
this is it! Visualize the·house
you've always wanted on
this I acre sha~lot. Electric
ayJOitabl( .~Pf?$~,soo.~.
NEW liSTING - Nicely
remodeled home in town,
Could be 2 unit apartment.
Sellers may help . with
f i nancin g . WANT
$18,500-90
POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED - Beautilul modern kitchen .compliments
th is 3 bedroom home w~h a
deck lor outdoor eating. full
basement. lots of erose!
space . Nice wo odwork!
MU ST SEEJ ONLY
$42,900.00. .
.
HEMLOCK GROVE - Country home on 1 and 2/3 acre
lot. Home in good condition
w/3 bdrms,. new carpeting,
·attached garage . .Big yard
tor kids. Much more'
$30,000.00.
POMEROY - 3 bedroom
trailer just out ol •town!
Woodburner. J, car garage,
equipped kitchen, AC ,
lenced yard. Fruit trees,
workshop. MAKE OFFER
~15,000.00 .

STARCHER ROAO - Just
out oltown - 64'1, acresof ·
ground wiih a 10'x90' barn
with loft area. Electric
available . ASKING
$52.000.00.
SYRAC~SE

- Remodeled 2
story home. 3-4 bedroomsr
l 1h balhs, basement, garage
and an older barn. Approx. 1
acre. Nice tor the growing
family' $39,900.00.
~YSELI. RUN - Nice ranch
with gorgeous iitchen, huge
lamily room, big living room
wlfireplaee. 20 acres ol
peaceful surroundings. Also
a trailer hookup. HAS BEEN
REDUCED TO $49,900.00.
MAKE OFFER.

POIIEROY - Nice neigh·
borhood' 4 bedroom home.
2 ear garage, WB firepiace,
lull basement, oak trom,
workshop over earap. Lots
ol cabrnet space.. MUCH
MORE! NOW $39,900.
lltTEREST tAUS NOW
AVAILABLE - 7.0% to IO'IIt
variable, 9.35% - 9.75%
lixed rate. Wt c111 help you
choose a loen best lor youl

the ·Governor of Ohio, and
amended eaecutive order
84-9, Fobruoiv 15. 1984.

equal employment OD1oor -.I
tunity conditions are opptlc.tble to thia bid. Wage rates
eatablishad In accordance

with Section 1513.18 end
1513.37 of tho Revlood
Code ore oloo opplicobto.

Bid• are ••lad and ad dreaaed to : Daplnrhant of
natural Resources. Division

of Aoclarnotion. 1865 Foun·

,.., a...

tain Squar~.. Building H.
Second Floor~ Columbus.

lt7t

withdraw hia bid within aiaty

.......
. ,.

·E.eoe
M-'n l

NEW STOIE- IIIW STOCK

11m ........,..• __ ,,._,.

das

I TIVCKl

NEW ...... IIPAII
Guners
Downspouts
Guner Cleenlng
Painting

•ln•ulation
•Storm Doors

•S\orm Windo•Replacement Window•
•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES ·

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

3-28-18-1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

·

949-2263
or-949·2168

3·2·11-1 mo.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES .
"At Real~ Prius"

PH. 949·2801
or let. 949·2160
Day "' Night
NO SUNDAY CAW

4-16-16-tfn

WANTED

DEAD 01 AUYE
•Walhere •Dryare
•Rangae •Freezer•
•Refrigerator&amp;

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

KEN'S APPUANCE
SDVICI
985-3561 •
We SaNtee All Meklo
l/22118/tfll

3 Announcements

BlOWN'S
TRAILER PARI
.
CamPers, RVs,
or Mobile

.

Home Lot

Rentals
992-5623

POMEIOlf,_~:\~o.

vised Code' and Administrative Aula 123:2' 15-02 of
the Dapanmant of Adminia·

TRACTOA thall make every
effort to enaure that certified

minority business subcontractors and - materialman
participate in the contract .
The total nlue of subc:on·
tract• awarded to and mate·
rial• a~ Mrvlces purchased
from minority businesses
shall be as set forth in the

contoct tho

s..to

• ·., Television Listeninc Devices
Dependable Hearin1 Aid Sales &amp; O:.rviirol
CJ Heariitc Evaluations For All Aces

Employment Coo~inator by

L3

;I: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

Tha Minority Buain•• Development Division by cal -

z

ling 16141 486-5700 or Toll
Free on 1-.IBOOI 282-1086.
RECOMMENDED:

Tim L. Dieringer, Chief

Divisiqn of Reclamation

APPROVED '

417 Second AVIItue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy, ·

3121 / 88

-JWIAD.urt'
· ~un
Serving Meigs, G alli ~ and
M:~son Counties

WANT ADS
ARE-PING

J/U/'11/1 .._

WITH BARGAIB

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE D~PT.

EVERY
6:30P.M.

Factory (hoke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

ID-7-Ifn

•VINYl SIDING
•ALI,IMINUM. SIDINq
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

P: E.IULLEI
&amp; ASSOCIATES

._,

Name Health Care
.

"Free Eotlmoteo"

NURSES AlOES,
OADEAUES. LPN'&amp;

PH~ 94~-2BOI

Arrangements

or R11. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-11-lflo

Hourly or live-In

BONDED - INSURED
Covered Wwtth Workmen 's

Compen.8tlon

PH. 614-992·2657

Roger Hysell
Garage

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG
1
CHESTER. OHIO I
1

Rf. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

oHOME BUILDING
•ROOM AOOI'fiONS

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
AI•• Trtmtllll ..

PH.

992~5682

or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

I

•KnCHENB • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEliNG llo
'

REPAIRS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS llo
eACK HOE WORK

lw"'""'
915·4141

..... loy

II

GlltiUL COIITUOOIS

Refll~

11 -~.tr..

Custom Home
Building, Room
Additions,
Remodeling 8o
Repairs, Raota,
Baths, Kitchens

-~

ttt;.t.Vf...

F'!o('~~?~ ~D=~~ ..

Wllulor Deoler. or you
jult moy mloo 1 Mlol

....

.... 1-992-1327. t-164-4233

.,

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
for

, YAIDIIAN &amp; ECHO
Located Helfway between Rt. 7 • Baohan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWEIS
B. 7 Financing on

Yardtnan
Service on All Meku
Wt lloftor MC/Dist!Vita
317/'11/1 ....

J&amp;L

- Addon• end remodeling
- lhNifl"l and gutter work
-concn• work

...:Piumlllnto""'
•work

(Fr-eE-tell

V. C. YOUN,G II
9t!·621S ., 992·731,4 .

,_.,

-~·-· 1
•~
4- ~
L---...:.-.....;.
_

3 Announcements
Please move vour Chriatmu
flowers in Sun crest Cemetery by
the 6th of April.
Helen's, Cold Wa\les $20.00.
PhOne 304-675-5709.

Giveaway

Giveaway to good home. Black
Lab. puppiol. 8 wks. old. Call

614-256-9367 .
2 Dog Houses. Call 814-448·
3718.
Cute puppies - part Collie-,.rt
German Shepherd ; Exira. nice. 6
wk1. old. Wofmed. Call 814-

446·2168.

A General Electric range tO give
away. Cell614-992-2221 .

.

HEAnNG &amp;

1 v••r old femate cat, 4 months
old female dgg. 304 -676-6118.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Ctrry FilhiniJ Suppll•s

Pay Your Phone
and ·Cable Billo Here
IUllljlll PHONf
16141 HHSlO
IESIDEN&lt;E l'lfOitE
16141 992·

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

lt.
ServlaJ Melp &amp;
AlheDI Co•alle~
llolltyllng • ROUIIIiolttonftll

Roololoio!w •

lA ClNE
GUN CWB
IACINE, OliO

ID-9-Ifn

Floor lumece. needs few perU.
call 304·882 -2708 .

6

Lost and Found

faund Mound March 9 In
Lang1ville ar... Beautiful medium 1l1ed long·haired fem•
dog . Bklnde with touch of white.
Celllllit4-742-2830 pMaael
lost: Gra, Cockaliel. On Pearl
St.. in Middleport. Reward.

614-992 ·27&amp;4
lolt gold chain briC81et Thur~ ­
dey .ttarnoon GalliJ)Oiis or Point
Pleaaent area . l'5entlmental
value. Please aall 304-871 ·
1333 or after e p .m.. 304-87&amp; ·

1356.

7

Yard Sale

....... Giillipo1li·········
&amp; Vicinity

CCNIImlf8lll •umhure

Aut-vo8-no

CARTER'S
PLlJMBING
&amp; HEATING

Y•dlale: March21, 21. &amp;30. 9
AM til I PM . Tope r•ldenca,
KUeker Rd.. OaiHpolll. Toy..
gem•. ch)th•. dilh". electric
stove, • much more.

....... P.omero·v·........ .
Middleport ·
&amp; Vicinity

992-6212
319 So. 2nd Ave~

' HEIIY

Middl.,...t, Ohio
1-21-'11-111

\

lotuld11. April 2nd.
10:00•5:00. Enol of Belom Bt.,
flu-. T0¥0. -.ollng s ....
I l"!ft!!''.

llolly

Me'llllhap lw.... tuer

II

......
..
,..,.
_..
_ . ..........
, _ _ _ .14-

.

Applications are ~ing takOn f
the position of maneger of t
miniature golf cour~e at Middl
port's Hartinger Park . Appli ct
tion• are available at the Mayo~
office and mu1t be raturned
April 1.
your location. Pays 25% co~
million. Write: Dept. 333, P. .
Box li42. Sulphur Spring•. lnd
ana 47388 -0342 .
Full time Secretarial pos1t 1
available: Must be good Wi
public. Experienced in accoun•
payabta. accounts reeeivabl&amp;
billing, transcribing &amp; , wof
processing . Some ewening hou
required. Send resume &amp; lett
of lntere1t to: P.O. BoJC 91
Gallipolis. Ohio 46831 .
'
Wanted: Lady lo stay with laJf
for companY &amp; light houu worl.
Call 614-446 -2218, 8am-4p"'
or 614 ·448-1764 aher Spm J
Government Jobs. t16.04
S69,230 year. Now hiring . Yo
.,... 1· 806-887-8000 Ext.
9805 for current Fedefal list.
Job hunth\g? Need • skill? ~
train people for jobs as AutJ
Mechanic•. Carpmters. Electrt
c:ians, Food SerVice Worker4
E l~rOAics Technician•. lndu ~
trial Ma intenance WoO~
NUraing Assi11anu and
lie1, Machlanlstl, and Welders .
Re(llster now for clu1ea b~n­
ning April 4th. Call Tri·C'
ty
Vodtional Adult Center ai 7. 3511 e~t1 . 14. A vari~ ... of
funding sources lo pay 1or
training . are availablt for theMe
... ~
eligible.
Do you have the spirit of cari!Jli?
Thtfe are many job opportur1itijts
for htllth care workln. Beuoma
a valuable memblr of the hellkh
care team in- iust 18 w. .s.
Enroll noW In the Nur~g
Allistant· Ordartv prograil'
::-.;,
..
Tri-County Vocational Sc
Adult Educ1tion Centttf',
d
money for tr1ining? We· h~a
variety of funding sourc:41s .,llil·
eble for those eligible. Ae~'
now for the cl•s•• begi
g
April 4th, call753 ·3511 e.11t: , .
Catc h the Spiritl
.._
Federal, slate an.d civil ~~
- e
j'!)bl 518,4 IO 169,891 . I
diate openings ! Call Job
e
1 -518· 459 -3611 E.lltf·1622 4
Hrs.
Hair Styll1t1. Acro11 The Stree1
styling 18km 11 seeking t hr~
1dditionat stylists who arelobiling for mo re than ju1t al'\o.. . er
job . Call Terri at &amp;14 -446· 9ti'io
ior detlills .
·

,

AVON · All ar..a. Call Mui\yn
Waav!"' 304 ·882· 2845.
I
Part· Time Jobs!! Join th• Ar~
National Guard. 304·175· $50

or 1 ·800-142-3818.
AVON ell areas; lhlrtey SPem,

• J PI

-·71-142..

-~

'

Ol*tlng X· rav technid•n ~
phy•lcltn• oHica. 304-6~~

-·-e~P:J:ib.rii
---·
·
-.............,.......
, _
...
- Co-. bod,
- - - · I T.V.'o. T.V.
tMh

'

Appllcllion• are baing tak•n f~
the positions of pOOl manag
and life guards for ,the Middl
port Municipal pool for t
aummef. Appttc.tionaare h1il
ble at th... Mayor's office a
must be returned by April 1.

-

741·- or e14-HI·HI3.

I

Help Wan·t ed

Sell Memorial Day Wreaths fro'

4

10 month old male Oalmation
pup. 304-678-2486,·

Other terms and cund~iOIII
vary.

Anno uncP.m ents

INSULATION

3·28-U-1 mo ..

·11

Co11614·446·3368 .

1-14-'11-lmo.

676·6606 .

·PH. 992·2772

SP.rv1ces

AVON· Sell Avon for Allaraa .

4 '11 month old puppy, mlud
br.,.cl. great with chl)dren , 304·

1':00 P.M.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
. SERVICE

550 PAGE STIIEET
IIIOOUPOIT, OliO
OPEN 8:30·11:00 P.M.
·

Employmenl

- ~.

FREE ESTIMATES
Now locolion:
161 North Socond
Mid&lt;l1p0rt, Ohio 45760

quilts. Applique. piecedo lf}i'l
con dition. Call 614 ·992-2101
or 61 4-992·6657.

$16.040 - $59.230/ VJ .. No
hiring. Your area. 806· 68
6000 Ext. R-10189 for curre
Federal lilt.

915-33'65

Day or Ew.,•lna

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

Prtmlorint

High prices paid for pre-1960

GOVERNMENT JOB

GEARY
BODY SHOP

CHESnl, OHIO

haler

.," '

materiaL 614-742-2839 .

lO·I·tfe

3/lsra ttn

We ProviG. -eire For the
Elderly In Their Home.

.llow"-tWt

QUILTS

Rough sawed poplar lumbe .
Must be air dried and goc

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

SAT. NIGHT

Buying dally gold. silver cpins,
rings. jBwelry. slerling ware. old
coins. large c urrency. Top..,P,ice•· Ed Burkett Ba rber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 8M·
992-3476 .
.... ~ ·

Scrap lead . Pay;ng .12 p
pound. CAll 614-742 ·2925.

992-3410

NEW HOMES
REMODELING &amp;.
ADDITIONS
CONCRETE&amp;.
BLOCK WORK
ROOFING &amp;. SIDING

949-2748

Basham Building

Wanted Standing tim.ber. Lllrge·
or small acreage. Caii614:.,8 IZ·
7348 or 682· 7216.
•1

Thr" head Taylor soft HN• ic
cream machine. Call 614-79
4295 or 614-664-4761 .

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

IACINE, OHIO

Poin1 Plonant, ft.
. 13041 675· 7~11

. -..

Dalton logging Inc . Buy8r1
standing timber and logs. A
bany. Ohio . 814-698 -8284.

BELL
CONSTR..OION

RICK HAlSTED, AGENT

... .... , .... lltilt...

1614)

Junk Cars with or wittn:J(.It
motors. Call larry Lively-1114-

for Joseph J . Somnior.

Resourcu

• .-

Want to buy : U1ed furniture end
antiques . Will buy entire hou.•t~·
hold furnishing. Merlin Welte·
mayer, 814-246·61 5 2.
• •"

Charles Mauger. Aut , Dir .
Department of Natural

2282.

614·446-3169. .

Will do Federal
and State
Income Tax,
typing.
bookkeeping.
and Notary
ServiQ&amp;.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
-az: Ucensed
Clinical Audiologist

Equal

Director

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uHd cars. SMith
Buidi-Pantiac, 1911 Ea.wrn
Ave .. Qallipolit. Call 614·446-

388-9303.

calling (8141 466-8380 or

(31 28: 1!11 4, 2tc

·

con(paete . household• of f.u~i­
tur e &amp; anllques. Also wood' 6
coal heaters . Swain's Furniture
&amp; AUction, Third &amp; Otive.

Parh &amp; St~J!tt

Contfactors requiring aalistance in Heuring b'ds
from certified MBE 1ubcon·
tractors and suppliera may

Tho orialnol Buy, Bell,
Tr_. Magazine for cars.
trucks, boiU, ~CI ... RVs

auun ,... SltDP .

Bill Gene Johnton

fu• E~•l,. ..t

specification&amp;.

saus-•VICI-SWI'UIS

. . . . . . . . . . . 45741
~ 1614) IU-506

Jim Mink Chev.·Oid t Inc.

Aulhorizod John D•ro,
New Holland, lktsh Hog
f•m Equipmont
Doalor

trative Services, the CON-

•. ,......
IIOIIIII&amp;T

We pay cash for lata model ......
u•ed cars.
.
....,

1-2-'11· looo.

123.151 of thi Ohio Ro·

I'IIOT.O ADS SEW

llayal &amp;SCM Typowrlttn •
loyol I IWI Clllaolatws

tion u laa. 304-773-6786 .

U. 5. Rt. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
..614·662 ·3121

COOLING
MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

Rick Peanon Auct ioneer; II·

cented Ohio and w..t Virginia.
Estlte, 1ntlque, (•m. liquida-

Now Grips $3.50
Squoro Gr-n $10.00
....olflaU Trophies ...t
Ploqun$3.50
lngrilring
JOHN TEAFORD
ChHier, Ohio

As provided in Section'

3·21-'87 ·1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

6 for S4S

Clulos lhorlt!lod $5.00 ·

'SALES &amp; SERVICE

Stole.

'

VINYL I
ALUMINUM SIDIMG

304-895-3430. Lie. No . 754 -

88.

·aoGGS

nata proposals ·as may promote the best interest of the

The Dir8ctor of Natural
Raaou.rces r8181'V8t the right
to ,reject any or all bids, or to
accept the bid. which embraces such combination altar·

ROOFING -

lot- 9 o.m.-6 p.ll. .
orl.oon.. 2.1?--la-ttn

Auetlo,;..,. Col. Oacar E. Click.

sa.oo

614-446-3672

cloy&amp; afl~r the actual
dolO of the opening thereof.

INSiiLAnON -

614-742-2617 .

.6162 .

Public Notice

(~01

Howaftl L WrltBHI

-FE ElTIMATElfer any of thoH Arrias call

Come In - l.,ols of
New Gi{t•l
3· -'11·1110.

Business Services·
J&amp;L ILOWN -

WANT TO IUY WB(IID 01
JUNK CAIS OllltKll

Registlr for FREE
Bird lath .- No
· Purchase Necessary

and loe11tions. Marlin Wede·
mevtr Auctioneet"· 814 -24&amp; -

GOLF
lESSONS

•Dozer • Backhoe Work
•WII Do HouHng With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Y•rd Bualn. .

lOW PIKES

Ohio 43224. No bidder may

..ltu.,21s,.tot.-----.....
,.
ft. ••• "'""· ... ....
WE IUY

__ ... ,_

5Jtr1n1 IIIII s.-

SYUCUSI, OHIO

U"l:I'U':
.:5::1=_ .. _

Public Notice

thlo project •• dotorminod by
tho Dlvlolon of Roclomotlon
io' 8680,224.00) .
A pre-bid muting will be
hold on Wodneodoy, April
13. 198B at 10:00 e."". ot
tho site.

seconds, •nd arc length of

:rotal Balance ....... 138,526

,.

Fer

il

Oe.,.li1:ment 'Uf Naturtl "eeourCM. The estimate for

Public Noticlf

Aaserve for Encumbr.

for

'

n-= ·r-

DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
· DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
· Socond·Fioor
,COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224

Bolonce ........ ... .. 132.214 308.50 fHI, end o chord
lnveltmento ..... ,...... .8,500 beorlng Iouth 21 daa-•
To,.ITrouury
21 n\inutu 20 socondo .•
Balonco ............. 138,714 We&amp;lo dletonce of 307.18 '
Outo,.ndlng ........ ...(2,1B8) feet, to the Owner&amp;' NIIOrly

.Sanrices .. ............ 49,952

Public Sale
8o Auction

available et vour convenience

!COUNTRY CLUB

TIIPLE P
EXCAYAnNG

JO'S GIFT SHOP

Cl.,.ified IMP• Wt~er I lie
/-'lowl;.fl.-l•pllorw ~c:hanp1 ...

of:

........

SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
G. 0. BONDS:
Oulslonding

--···--·

"lshlng the materials and

18156 Fountain Square

992-3233

DIIC. 31 ... ................... 300
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
(WATERI
OPERATING REVENUES :

_

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sooted propotOis will be

receiWd at the;

.,'

S~tion

;:;;:at"--Eei:.'"'L.

Public Notice

. GALLERY HAIR ARTS

comar 1t

1M ••

....

··-

'

Tre11ury

....

-~­

OFFER GOOD THRU SAT., APRIL 2r 198B

Public Notice

IM1'1

ii&amp;

U'o01/Not ............... 7.739
Funcl Cooh Belonco
Jon. 1, '87 ...... .. :....82 ,716
Fund Caoh Balance
Doc. 31. '8"1 .......... 90,455

Charge~

_,,
11:-

opened thereafter for fur·

111EAS1IIAIN

-.,... ...·-.... .. ....·-·
...
.•

·-... .......
,........ ""

IIATII

••·•
......-"' 1:1.... •n.•
.........
:_,..,.!'!
::....,.....
_
.
·
....
-·
__
,.._...._
........
_
....
_ ......
..-.... .
.._ .. .:;r._..... .. _,_ ......

EASTER
SPECIAL
.
. . . $500
SHAMPOO &amp; SET.... ·.
.HAIR CUTS. ...................-.~..... s.5·oo·

Expend. Diab. &amp;. Other

Ohio (Case No. 87-1265Tp-SLFI alleging that its

_
---_ __

I'QI.IC~t:
(I.OS(D.. MillAY
....
-t,..,..._
___ .. _

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!~;;;~

Public Notice

Notice is hereby given that
MCI Telecommunication's
Corporation has flied a self
complaint with the Public
Utilities Commiuion of

TO IUCI All. C1U ftt-11 U

IIDieA! ttn liMY I u. tt s r.a
I lJl Ulrtl MOC* SAIUIDA'f

crystal to 1,154 carats with a
wonderful star on It

ROblnsonsaldhecuttheStarof
America "from a 1,905 carat

··7

Wedemeyer' • A~.actlon Service·

.

Paperweight is major blue star sapphire
BLUE RIDGE, Ga. (UPI) What may eventually turn out to
be the world's largest blue star
sapphire, possibly worth a fortune, was until recently just a
paperweight on the hospital desk
of an X-ray technician.
Steve Meyer, 32, and his fellow
gem hunter, Craig Peden of
Chattanooga, Tenn., found the
crystal corundum near Canton,
N.C ., shortly before Christmas
w(111e searching for gemstones.
Meyer was using the sapphire
for a paperweight at his hospital
office until a patient suggested he
have It looked at by a gemologist.
The crystal is now In the hands
of one of the nation's top gem
cutters, John Robinson of Dallas.
who said Sunday It could be the
world's largest blue star
sapphire.
"I'm polishing It now and It's
looking prettl.e r every day,'' said
Robinson. " What's It worth? I
can't .say. How do you place a
value on the largest of
anything? "
Meyer and Peden, friends
since childhood, became lnteres ted In gemstones after hearing
about a sapphire cut by Robinson, the Star of America.
Robinson said the owner of the
Star of America was offered $2.8
million uncut and $4 million after
Robinson cut lt, but rejected both
offers.
He said Meyer's star sapphire
should weigh more than the Star
of America.

8

oscleroals the most . In the aorta,
two miiUlltel'll per day reduced
the amount of plaque to one third
that seen In the control IIJ'OUP
alter 10 weeks . In the pulmonary
artery, It reduced the amount ol
plaque by a factor of 10.
Parmley said the dosa&amp;l!l
cannot be extrapolated directly
to humans. To determine the
optimum dosage that can slow
the progression of atherosclerosis In humans , clinical trials are
necessary, he said.
The study marked the first·
time anyone has looked at the
effect's of fish oil on the pulmo·
nary artery. Atherosclerotic
plaques In the pulmonary artery
-generally are less severe than
plaques In !hi! aorta.
The researchers currently are .
conducting experimen~ tO see It
fish oil can decrease · plaque
already present, and to deter- ,
mine If fish oil combined with the
heart drug verapamll can slow
atherosclerosis even more.

of Cardiology meeting lnAtlallta-

Sentinel-Pegs

The

58~ .

-

�The Daily

POmet'oy--llo'idcleport, Ohio

Hl\lt

fOOIIII

Flrmiolood ,_.111 ........
-\.... Cloflitlollo, f121 • U-pald, l-molo.S....
bodl. CoM 446·44'1hfl0f 7 PM .

In prhata home for

lkllfty PfirMIII.

Reuonable r••·

1,000--u.n~u. n.
- ..~ 2, ..

,., ,..• . • -

Coiii14-IM·IH, .

Good CeN. ReftnenDH. C.ll

114-261-8101. .

.

Insurance

"It ..n·••ouldn't ha"e
been so
,y•
bad if l•t had been recalled,

s-a
m.....
for
rent. Famlly
Pride"""'"
Mobile~Home

but

Troll• Iota. At. 1 lccuat Roood.
baCk of K • K Mobila Homn.
304· 176-1078.
. .

my

DEPOR'}"ED',

Car

was

1-----------,1'""----------f

Coli •i for yoOH morloilo homo
Insurance: Miller ln11.n•nce,
=~·:~:i~!l~h. Also ; •uto,

31

It·

Hom" for Sale

41

Top jqbs require top akille; Act. 3 bedroomt, 2 blth home with
Now! Southntt•n Bu...,eu 12ecrn. *45,000,00. AuumaOoi'-De-«t-4387 ·AIC Accre- bleiY.t loan . &amp;17-4&amp;1 -1050.
dh:ldRe9 . 81-11-10558

32 Mobile Homes

18 Wanted to Do

for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
\
In Eureb-2 niCI • ciMn 2 8R.
mobilll hom•. t200 6 *2215 I*'
mo. O.p required. No ptll.
Adults only. Cell 814 -2455813.

.·

1985 Neahu. 14a&amp;O, 2 Bed·
rooms. underpinned, central air,
porch. unlurni1hld . Perk Lana.
Cell 614·441· 1315 Mominga.

Will Hby.tt in my home. .Mon.Fri.. Hyt. Cloae to toWft, CaM
114-441-0196.

1911 Crettridgti. 14x70. TOtal
.a.ctric. 2 bedroom, 2 bet:hi-1
garden tub, laundry room, large
porch a. underpinning. ·Call
8 t 4-441-9663.

Nice modem 2 BA. mobi ..
home. 11h beths, dining room,
pertl.ety furnished. Upper Rt. 7.
Cell 114-24&amp;-5811.

1916 New Moon ' 1 Ox&amp;O.
t10oo. Call 814•387-7633 or
387-7239 .

Nice 3 Bedroom trailer with
ex.,.,do lhflng room. Large yd.
·314 Third St.-~neyge . ~II
614-441-7473.

12al0 El~e 1971 . 2 .BR ., g..
heat. wether • dryer, air. Elttra
nice through out. 15450. Cal
614·441-0176 .

14x70 whh expando- 3 BR .. 1112
beths. Rt. 141: Aef. &amp; dep. Call
114-448-4824.

FillJilCiiil

Business
Opportunity

1970. 1.x70, 2 large lA on 1
acre. North of Porter. Aural
water. t14,000. Call11-'·388·
9719

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recomm.-.da. th81 you
do bltUnea with peo:rl• you
know. end NOT to aen · money
th'rough the m•il aantU you hl'le
invHtig-!ed the off..-ing.

12x60, 2 bedroom•. 1970, gat
heat. Di1hwalher. ·w11her and
dryer· included. With Add·A·
Room. 614-698·7030.
14x70 Schutt!. All electric.
Washtr and dryllr, retrlgeretor,
stove, drapes. porch, twning
included, Excellent c:ondition.
Call 814· 992-5682 or 114·
992-3348.

Toning Tebln II), t12 ,500.
Price indud:H w.,rtnty, train·
ing. 1et ~o~p. Deal direct. 1 ·800·
33-'·041 1 ext . 1203.
.

FREE FASHION STORE BROCHURE
.
Open your own $13.9&amp; land
lell)lldl.. or children's apparel
store fe81uring h1111dr~a of .top
n-.ne br•nd• for the incredible
priCI of f1 3 .99 1ncfl•1 C~IIUM
to $50.00) . t19,975.00 includn inventory, fi~~otur61, 3V.:
days of in·store treininQ, supp·

Wlndeor trailer 3 bedrooms. with
addition. 3 •cr11 land. out
building•. Gellipolis Ferry, 304·
875-8930.
Mobile horne on 1 Jere lot will
1111 separ..ely at Glenwood,
phone 304 -&amp;76-201 8 .

lill. 2 dey buying trip end m~~Me.
Alto. Ilk about OIJf new 119.99

1984 Fairmont, 14k60, two
bedroom•. 1 1/:t baths. air cond.
wuher -dryer. 304-676-3118
aftet' 5 :00 pm week.daya, WMkends anytlma.

!end Ins) men's department and
shoe dlpartment. C•ll ~..-t.nna
Fuhions. 1 · 104· 786-4111
anytima.

1974 Castle 1-'d6. 2 bed·
rooms, 2 bltha. all electric,
awning • underpenning . 30-'·
882-3121 .

Professional
Services

1967 AIJ:o. 12ft..camper, steePs
6, link. stove, ref. &amp; furnace. All
good cond. •eoo. 304- 773·
5873.

Piano • Organ lnsons. Call
Mary lucll-614· 446-9787 or
441·4426.

&amp;410x&amp;O Mobile HOme. t3.000
or"best offer. 304-176·1967.

Real EstJte

Wanted t8rm land to rentsuitable tor raising com-Crown
City area ." Cell 614·258· 8689
after I PM .
·
'

Big 3 BR . farm homes built on

your lot, S1 6,995 •nd up. c;au
1-614-886-7311 .

Two loti in Pl1ntz tLtb·division
oH AI. 2. 88,000 .00 b9lh. Call
anytime 304-675· 1745.

Wilke...,iUe area : Newly ramodeled 3 BA .. bath . b•ement,
large deck , fruit tteel. outbuilding, 2 .6 acr .. on CR 8 bl~ektop
rd., w / rur1l w•ter. S31,000.
Call614 ·669·7722.

Tuppet"l Pltin1· l

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

BA .• t•t -ln

kitchen, lerge li\lil'!g room , 1~11

Acreago for ule. Septic aystem.
water and electric availtble. C•ll
814·992-2759.

basement, garage, all electric,
central air. Cal! efter 6 PM -&amp;14446-7-'96 .

3 acres Of land. lots of firewood .
Call 614~ 992 -2 221 .

24x40 aectlonai· 3BR .. 2 blths,
utility room. new fireplace.
porch . .1 •ere-land. 3 yr1. okl.
Cell 614-388-9306.

lots · Commercial lot &amp; house
lOts. Gallipolis Farry. 304·8766908 .

3 BR . houae . g•rage. Reduced

for q~o~ick tale. Moving. Call
614-446· 1358.

Building lot, Gellipolis Ferry,
144x106, phone 304 -675 6429 .

3 BR ., 2 b1th.1, Vt acru, ~atellite
·dish. Qownpeyment. Fintneing
av•illble. t30.000. Call 814·
U6-0899.

Re nta ls

2 bedroom. 2 b1ths. 2 car
garage. level lot on. Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, sttehtt, close
to Meigs High. Call 814·9923254.

41

pets. Cell 614-446 -4921.
NeWly remodeted 2 BR . huse in
Addison. Cell 614·912-6304 or
44,-8898 after 6 PM .
Nice house, 3 miiH lOuth of
Gallipolis. 1 '12 • crel, 3 bed·
roomt, large kll~hen . Call 814·
448-9430.

It'•

Go-..ernm.nt Homes from • 1 . (U
rep.airl. Delinquent tax ,roperty.
Repolllsliona. Call1 -80&amp; -187h:t. GH-880&amp; lor current
repo list.

eooo

In PDmlfoy, 2 -3 bedroom; Uving
room. nt·WI kild'ten. T.V. room.
1 Af' et11Ched
ful
b••"*"· renge. wasMr-dryer.
dl ;c ... ~~....
·~:
H1 place. n..- - --..-· 034,000. C.ll 114-tt2·
A20 O&lt;l14-tt2-133t.
tn It• r c . .. Ohio. 6 roomt.
_
_,.... churcl1 .. d...-.
C011114-H2·3110.

a

t rrt. ee~•1· ·

.1 987 Newport. 2 bedroom , total
electric. Will Nil on Land
Contract or rent for $2150.
Depoati require. Enquire at 66
Pearl St ., Middlei)Ort.
2 bedroom, furnished." Washer
and dryer, eir. f~10. per month
pluil depoalt •nd ulllitl81. Call
614·992-7479.
2 bedroom mobile home hall
mile out Jericho Road. call •fter
6 :00 pm. 304·876· 6483. ·
Mobile home furniahed. 2 bed·
rooms, *200.00 plu1 gal and
electric, call after 7:00 pm
304-8711-8&amp;12 or dtya 6757182 aak for Ethel.
2 bedroom trail• in c:ountry.
Deposit and r!llference reque11.
304·676-1926.

2. bedroom trtile.r tor rent. close
to etor-. achoals and ho1pittl.
304-17&amp;-4e00, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

44 · Apartment
for Rent
2 RA . epts. 8 closets, kltchenappl. furnished, Washei'· Dryer
hoak-up, ww carpet, n.wly
plintld. dedr;. Regency , Inc:.
Aptt. Cell 304·875-n3B or
875·5104.

.

Upa11ir1 ~o~nfurnl1hed apt. Carpeted. utilities peld. No children .
Iiiio pets. Call814· 448-1637.
F~o~rnithed ettiCienCy-920 4th .
Ave. 8186. UtillliH ptid. Call
814· 446·4416 tfttf' 7 PM .

2 8R., 2 .bath IJ)t. All utilitin
included. 1350 1 mo. Oep.
required. Call 814-4-'8-4222
between 9 -5 .
Rauhllor tpt. • trailer - fur·
niahtd or unturnilhed. W•ter ·
HWege paid. Cable TV. Foater'•
MObile Home Ptrk· ~ 614.·446·
1802.
Gracioul Uvlng. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartment• at Village
Manor and Aivllf'l.ide Apart·
menta in Middlaport. From
tz15. including ·utilities. CeH
614·992-7787. EOH .
1 bedroom apartment•. Fur·
nithed and unfurnished. $200.·
t226. per ~nth . Utilitltt fur·
nished. Call 6~4-992 - 5724 .

14ear•. barn . pond. mile out. 2
bad:oomt, c:entrtll air, leaH or
f480.00. 3044-118-Htl.

beJ
OOI"M.
.,.....
llr,
14 -·
- "·
-..._
- ·or
2
. .... 0410.00 ..304-178--.
3br _ _ _ _ 2bolht,

*·

.....,....3
.....
.-2-lutl
..........
...,•..
o••·•·_,_2,a.
···~!.....

'

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group· $399.
Uvlng room ault•- *199-*599.
Bunk blda wtth bedding- *111.
Full siH m.atkel.l &amp; foundetlon
atertlng - • ·88 . flecllnen
lterting- fiB.
USED· Beds. dr....,., bedroom
tuitet. '111-tZ99 . Deska.
Wringer weahet', • complete line
of uHd fumlture.
NEW· Wt~t•n boots· *30.
Workboota *18 &amp; up . IStHI &amp;
&amp;Oft toe). CoN 114-441.-3169.
County Appll•n~ . Inc. Good
uaed appliances and 1'\1 1111.
Open lAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
So1 . 814-448· 1199. 627 3r,d.
Ave. Gtlllpollt, OH.

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Weah••· dry... refrigeretora.
rarigea. Sllaau• Appliances.
Upp• River Rd. bulde Stone
Cr... Motel. 11.·4418-7398 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa1 end cheil'l prietd from
*3915 to f9915 . Tabln tl50 and
up to 1126. Hlde·e·btdl t390
to *596. Rec:Hners f2215 to
*37&amp;. Lampt a2e to .t125.
Dinette~ t109 aft41 up to *496.
Wood IH!e w -8 chalfl t286 to
· *79&amp;. Deak t100 up 10 *376.
HutCh" t400 and up. Bunk
bedt complete w-mattres1e1
*29~ and ~o~pto t38&amp;. Baby bed•
*1 10. Mitt,..... or box spring•
lull or twtn
firm t78. and
•sa. OuMn sets f225. King
*350. • drawer chnt *19 . Gun
cabinets I gun. Baby mattrMHI
*35 &amp; t45. Bed framu t20.
*30 &amp; King frame t&amp;O. Good
aeteotlon ·of bedroom auhea.
metal cabinet•. headboerds t30
and up to t815.

-lo-

APARTMENTS ,
--Pt. -ondGoMipoUs. 114-448·1221.

-~~- Mldd'-"- Ohk!.
2 t I oom fumllhtd apt. utiM·
........................ dlpoett.

304 882·2BM.
Two llld one bMroom fumtahed
............. .... 304-111·3100.

HDR.W

7R..ety lroklr. 304-

171·- or882· 2401.

e

room

~...

.... 171-,010.

btth, need
....... 304-

45

Furnish~ Room•

ADDINI for rant,wltk or month.
• ..,.., ot ., 20 • ono, Gollio
Hotol•l14-446-9510.

;

•w

~me-.

&amp;I!T AT

THI~

POI"'T

e

,ANVTHIN6.

I

•ea.

90 Days . 11me 11 Cash with
•pprovld credit. 3 Milee out
B~la...ille Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. 1hru Set . Ph. 814·"8·
03.22.
.
V-'ley Furn_ij;~o~re
New and , uald furniture and
epplicancea . Call 814·4467572. Houra 9-6.
·

J &amp; S FURNITURE
141 &amp; Eastern Ave.
l.N'ing room tuit81 •179 &amp; up.
Bedroom 1uit" f 399 • up.
PICKENS
FURNITURE
Oinnetttl, beds. bedding,
drasaen. chesu. eouchu .
chain, l•mpt, coffee, end t8bln.
Every day Specials. Y.t mile out
Jerricho. 304-17&amp;-1.50. ·

SofJ a. ch1ir. Good con d. 11100.
Call614-4922 after 5 PM .
Mellohan Furniture. Queltty fur·
niture • cerpet 8t lowes:t poatl·
ble pricet. Financing Mvallable to
quaUfied b~o~v•• · Upper River
Rd. Gall. 0 ·. 614-448-7444.
S1ove
4 burner Gibaon, Hlf·cl11ning.
full·autOtt:'ltic tim... etc. 2 yrs
old, like new, u1ed very little,
$300.00
.
Refrigerator
Gibeon. 17 cubic feet c.pacity,
troat frH, energy-1aver, 2 yeen
old, like new, t300 100 . '
Automatic: Wa1her
.Maytag, large capeclty. variou1
cycle1, 2 speed, 101k, permaprlla, rtguler cyd11. lie. like
new. 2 yrs old. 1360.00.
Dryer 1
Gib.an. 7 y. . . old, works good.
lerge capacity, heavy dlfl'tl, front
loading. f1315 .00.
Buy Slperately or all for
t900.00. Waugh Clinic. 304·
676-6433.

64 Misc. Merchandise
Signa portable. lighted. with
lettert, 298, free delivery,
W.VA. 1-800-642· 2-'M. Ohio
1·800-633-3413.

118, a... '""· onoo onc1
1171 D - v.n 02100 . 1&amp;84
Honda VSI labro, 02100' C.H
I14-H7-0848
1811 P:ontiaa Grand Am .
Loadocf, 4700 mtiM. Col 114112·3112,
rl

FolK window•. four 1torm Win·
dowa. 304· 875-2482.

55 Building

Supplie~

Bulldjng Malerlals
Block. ·brick. sewer pipe~, win·
dowa. lintels~ e1c. Claude Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . C.H 814245-8121.

Pets for Sale

Groom end. Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breed• ... All
stylll, lama Pet FOOd DtJiar.
Julie Webb Ph. 114-446·0231 .
Dregonwynd Cattery KeRnel.
CFA Himalayan, Ptraien and
Silman ll.ittent. New AkC
Chow pupplaa . Call 114-... 8384.. efter ,7 PM .

Wantod to buy tolracco dot·
ment. For ule-tobKeo iltler.
Co11ei4·UI·1004.

63 ·

Livestock

Musical
Instruments

Fender G~o~ttar 215 C flettop.
$260: Call 614-318-8135.
Uke new benjo ..., Atverer0 126 · Hand mode top of Hn•
Alvere;r: Ylrl tcOustic guitartiOO or b . .t offer . Call
814·441-7104.
Lowrey organ like new, 304·
882-2011 .

-.e

Horte~

1 880 Pontile Trant Am.
12,100.00. 304·171·4480 .

Holaein lrHdlnl lull. CaM
614-446-4202 .

1978 Uncoln Contontial Town
Car. exc. cond. or 1feda for
olclo-up, oquol volue. 304-1823121 .

Stallton Banrlce AQHA. lncen·
tive Fund Pelom6no Stallion.

'77 C~o~tiMa; 3&amp;0 Mltometlc.
IHO. 614-441-2171.

011
.......
-,. - ·orllgoble.
- for - tiOO.
don.
NOQHA
114-~41-2411.

' 71 Muatang, lood cond,
fiOO.OO. 304-17 ·1043.
·

Aogiatorocf Pollod Ho-rd lui.
1 yoor old. Colll1.4·742·2015.

'74 oldo c - a u , _ uo
outo. n.W baHory. -lntorrlor.
runt good, 304s·11S·2·17. .

for HI.. StandarCibred
and TenneaiH Wllklf'l, Cell
114-441-4781.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay tor sale. t1.25 bale. Larry
JohntOn 814-742-2442.
Kanworth and O.Kalb Mid eorn.
Scon Farm Oren SHell. W L
_.., AKoKo. 304·178·1801.

1113 Z21 C.nwo. T topa, PW,
Alplna stereo ayuam.
17,000.00,114-317-0320.

llqulm

LrNE ONE IS ouF fl)&lt;et&gt;
e)(.pfNS'ES, LINE TWO .
rS ou~ FIXEO INCOME
P.NP THE PI~ENCE IS'
Tf'E fiX ,we·~E IN.

Gllll8meyMIIIer

e (l) WKIIP loi Clnclnno11
7:35 (J) ll8nfonl ond Bon
1:00 ()) Fllher Murphy Parable of
Amanda

72

71 Auto's For Sale .
1983Ch...,. C -.Amrodlo.
t lUll!). trent.. PS, PI, 19,000
rna... t1•10. ~nbeMtnatthe
.GaiUpoU• Dalty Tribuna or for
morelnform•ktn •u11114-4412342.
NEW INFOAMAnONI ~1.
Catl, -'x41 Hized In drug . ..
Buy from ·•1 00. Cll lor fiCis
todJy , 213 -925'-9101. ut
2824.

1974 c........ whlto • nlco.
Call Clatworthi. 114· •46,
2718, ofior 1'30 304·175·
SBH.
1iB4 Mercury Lynx 01-4
tpd.trMJ, 4 cyl .. 2 dr. hatah·
bock. Pl. Pl. AC, roolo. Motollc
- · · 02878. Coli 114·441·
22t7 anytime.

1.111 co-ro1ot c-.v~ 4 dr••
PS, PI, tilt, crulla, olr, ).M·FM·
,_..,, Cal 814.... ·4110 oi
448-0112. anytime.
1181 Doctg. Deytone Turba.
Goodoond.Coiii14-441-HI4
eher e PM.

Trucks for Sale

-a.

1111 ilavona · Flat. 10 fl. 2
lprood. Willi oldoa, high
..., tMp. Excellent condition.
Colll14-1148-2411.
1913 Ford pickup f100 . 13200.
Calll14·112·6110. .

1t1t Cllovy. 4 350
engine. 4 b_,.. carburetor,,.....
tlroo. Good CCMidMion. 01500.
Coiii14-H2-3B11 .
1911CIIovyS10,blua.5-.
01.400.00. 304-882-3974.

73

1t72 Ford 4 whool drlvo old&lt;·
up. New tlrel, duel UhiWI .nd
· 114·112·11011. ,....
mes~~ge on miOhlnl.
1H3 Ford Ao-. 4 drive, V-1. ' •· PS, auto;
f4.100.00. 304-175-1211 .,,
t•I;OO liM.

1174 Honda 7110. Eatroo In·
f4BO. C.ll 114-246·
1120.

d.-.

___ ......_,.,..,
•••7 •• ,M.

· C.h 114·448·0141.

710- ·-··....... IU-1111.

-

· Call 114··
.

..... '171

Hondo lUI JIG., a olf, 1400.
Coiii14-JM.,il4.

nrcr

Vllliilll 101.

·
-I,,...., 'JOG-·
~-- Clll114-tU.J712.

w-., lrllloil. 104·178-.·
1111.

_____.,..=

=-·
....
,--····-=
---·- --=--.,..-..
ATV

.

'""· HiriiJr llorll •

Ti.•IIIW(NR) (1 ;46)

llorHI Don't Thay'l (PGI
(2:00)

S&lt;IUJTlSI'S la.'tRtYI~ 10

J:X.

FIID oor IA.MAT IT IS·lHAT

CPI..W

M~ 10

1:30 e ())

Judge Wilbur lnvltaa media
scrutiny of Michael, Joey and

rAIL

Nicole.

rultic: cabin turns Into a war
of 1he sexes.
1:00 ()) 700 Club
Gil 'Gore Yldal'o
Uncoln, Pill 2' NBC Mondty
Night lllhl Movleo D

.......

-

I

....,.,!

-.~,.---.
·i?WHI.

WINTHROP
NO, SHe

'

BUTOHES THE .:n;1&amp;\TEST
LITTLE ~~PULI....SR IN
IH!" CIVILIZED WORLD.

OOESN'r

· ' BELIE\11: IN
6Fl6\NKING... ·

1

e:30111l eoe-aLuU

••

Bud gats jelloul When
Mll)an's ••·husband arrives
in town lor a gig . Q
ID:OO W lltrllgllt Toll!
•

f

.

10:30 ()) Good Flolllllfl
W.TIIe Prlclauolllglcy
European Jewllh hlatoly
before, during and after the

.

''

J WMer S!IIVict. Swlmmlna '·'
~

Wlftl , Ph. 114· ~-: ·

.-rgy through
llllldng homiS -lher·llgl!l.

1;;::...-r.
""'*'
Nlglll

"lndl-

=..............,. :;

,.

•

'
'•'•

'.

•'•'

••

~ ·­

l

14

j~
~~

I•

' ..
.'

DAILy CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'a bow to work II:

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

0 11cmo11n• Leem tipo on

,.

1•

river

eo......

li.=P
,_to-

• ...

!•

creat
3tGaeUc
40Pitcher
41 Gernuut

ID=a"'(L)

. t

UMIITONI· t7 .00 · per ton . ..,., •
t1'81h du~
Mlullftl all
load. ·f31. Codl 114-.U I,:;,

lit ...

lti Mountain

11:30. ()) Gillett., CMon

.

I

c.a

1111 • ill

8lclo of 8portl

• fi) Low

-·

IO•· t71 · 41 14 fer fra•

(J)

==~Four
of ua
• .. Dying

PHI RUIM. Jr. w. . S.rvlce. ~,..
...... ciaHma. ..... ~ 814· ·~~~

• tumltwe .......... ~• .

()) ([) •

~ =~~=· Joumtl (0:30)

1

:

.......

(!) Llglrtlr

Dillard W818f s.r..tce: Poola.~ ,J
Cilterns, Wells. DtUvlfV Any· "4:
time·. Cell 114-44t-7404,No .~·
Sunday cellt.
•

Mow:uf'a Uphot.IIHIII ~lng
lriiiDIIIftYirue2:1,_.. Thabalt

changed
87 Resiliency

Crazy Alter All Tl*l Yssn
•

General Hauling,.:

Upholstery

URent
35 lt'e often

11 :00 W ~~em~ng~on· BINie Steele
'

!'1

W1tt1rt111fa Wetir Meullng.
re~•nelrle r1t11, lmnuflilstt
2.000 ....... - . . ,, · - . .

13Hale

Holocouet 11 chronicled.
ONiwl
e&lt;Z&gt;Hopn'l-

-;;::;;:;::;:;::;::: ,,

rot.

I I Evaluate
31 Pixie

Central end Eaatem

Residential or commercial wir· •~
ing. Naw HrVIae ot repairs. •
Llctnlld llect'ridan. £ "e tlmttt1 ~ 1
free . Ridenour Eleciricel•. 304- ·, t
175-1788.
·1:

441-311'1.
.

Muter"
role
28Uke Tim

Plflll ,._(G) (1 ;53)

Electrical
' :
&amp;
Refrigeration
'·
_ _ _ _ _ _ ____;,' •I

.

monarchy

27"Barney

10:05 (]) MOVII!: Tha Aa1Um of lhl

84

=•

26Arab

•w - n t HIH

~~--~~~~------, "

-::;

creator

25 Paired

Gll-

MAW··JHAT
DONE IT

I

PEANUTS

This is the story of
a free· spirited dog.

•

Hucklebeaqle Finn

Uti
ond MoCall

poiCI Ct11Mt, lnd
. . !llllkld tor deelh, (Al
ill " ....... PJ. AA far One,
Pill 1

emTut

I

uumpet
4 Opposite
of a syn.
G Mills Bloom ·
6 Shofar,
for one
7 Walking
on -19 Furniture 27 Improved,

me..."
23Cruaoe

e tal WlHguy L.oc:occo

rlll&lt;t his Nf6 and Vinnie his
career to testify in 1he
Senile.
iiJl E-'tlg Newo

THANKY,

1 Social
group
2 Jordan's
capital
3 Blow the

16 Whitney's
8 ·-- and
wood
as
machine ·
pass the 20 Gather
weather
1'7 Here (Fr.)
ammuni- 23 Be~wed30Touch,
18 Bechllrm
tlon"
affection
e.g.
20 Hebrew lyre 11 Recital
(on)
31 Pilot
21 --, Balcer,
bonus
24 !ago's
33 Festival
CharUe
14 Allin
wife
36 Pepe Le-21"-- al~hol 16 Actress 25 Sprayer 37 Carpenter's
doesn t
Stonn
setting
square
thriU
_ _,_

91 •lllNewhlrtQ

Phone 114-441-3UI or 814· · 1
441-4477
,j

.

111 Buker's
hue

iiJ)lllny King Ll¥al

O.N~. Oh~

poola, CiJtlml,

18 0o"--'""t
..•u '6''

Proctor, and others diiCUSS
the subjeCt of evil.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER"&amp; PLUMBIIIjG
AND HEI\TING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

J •

e ()) MO\~E: 'Aolclc'*l

Jordan, pastor Samuel D.

Roury or eMit . tool drilling.
Monwellacomplet:echamedey. '
Pump .... Md tervicl. 304- :
815·3102

85

ography

to Ill Love' AIIC MondtJ
Nlgllt Movie Q
(!) 0 Moten: Fldntl Evil
Paychlalrlll M. Scott Peck,
poet Maya Angalou, Barbara

'5·...W

Fetty Tree Trimming, .turnp ·•
removal. Cell 304-175·1331 . ·_

27.100 ..... -

II, 100. 104 OJI·4018.

.......

.(1)

&gt;

lawn cere, landacaping. .1tump
removel, 304·576 -2142 or
671-2103.

deity
10 Nantes'
. river
12 Porn-

e ())

RON'S Televition Service.
Ho\IH
on RCA, Quuer,......
GE. Speciallng if'l Zlmhh. Cell
304r5'71· 23t8 or 114·448· . ' 241..
.... .

Starke Tr11 anct Lawn S.rvic:e,

I Place for
a sala
II FeUow
9 Egyptian

•Romantic
• o ski
Deotgnlng wweskand 11 a

Tfl!llchlng-r...onllble rate~- we- ' ·
• · aleatric, gu. d111inagelinu. "'7PI,. • fb.turee at d-.ur,t. Cell ··'
114·441·1108.
l~!

a.a

1., THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

1:01 (I) MOlliE: Clloll of the
lltlnotPGl (1 :5$)
illl My Two DICit

Cox.

·" " . . _ ,,00, - . . . . :
- J r , 4 y n .........

114-....IQT,

I

R A R Wlter S.rvlo.. Home•; '·
clll.,._ '"'"·
filled. For- ,:-;..!'.
liMit¥ James
Waten .Call , ,.
104-111•1370,

11• 11

IBI·dn.

t

C1,....mer wart-by hour or job.
PaMing. paint6n&amp; df'Wall. re,_lng. Wn 114·441·1377
Now C.lll14·446-3018· Frod

- - - - -. Very

llllo. ..... -

,171 Mo- ... COl. ........... ld
0210. 114-

I

,,

241•1218.

pluo.Your-. lluyors=,

Clll 114-111·

I
•

SOUTH

e (l) MOlliE: Tllay 8lloot

I

SWEEPER and ,.,,,flng machine ':
......,, porta. end Npplloo. Pl..__ ;
up end dattnry, Onle Vecwm ...
Cle•ner, . o~e helf mite up 111'
o.o- c- Rd. c.11 &amp;14- •
441-0214.
.

1110 Hcrnde h&amp;IU I l •

,.,_Cflll--

I'll,

,....,en

'

74 . Motorcycles

lltci· H o t - 1 0 . . . , -

.,177~
N&lt;. -·Pl.
Aflll·flflll • lit. -

underwater ealvage, from
18111 century to today. D
llll eo Kn • AllliAIIe
gate cold feet and penlca
when Kate plana an
engagement perty. Q
1mWilndaf -'co YO&lt;Jng girl
and her aunt &amp;hare
understanding through love
of no1ure. Q
11J PelmoNewa
1111 MOlliE: ThB A-g

,·

8AIEMENT
...; t
WATERPfiOOFINO
~&lt; ~
Uncondltionel lifMime gu.an· 1 •
t•. Local
fumift!ed. , ~
FrM eatimatee. Calt cohct .1;
1·614-237-0418, cloy or notht. ,. ·
RogersBaaemenl t
Weterpeoollng.

1911 Cunorn Chevy Van Stir·
""''-· 010,000 Firm. Coli
114·318·1711.

-

1·-.el7·1000....... 101.

Home
,
lmpro11ementa

B2

IIIOic a
-...... 11.000 ...... Hondo

•

Cfl Die aaIWiee UndiNa"r
look at equipment for

91

Vans &amp; 4 W,D.

,.....

c--. boeta. ,..... repo'd, lur-

MICGyvar pursues crlmln.,8
acroso the Great Whlta North
by dogsled. !;I

614-367-0121 .
1911 Ford plclowp F1 sa, I cyl., ..
apd.. Pl. Good cond. fZSOO .
Colll14-448·1109 ooftOf I PM .

11111UNIIIIn-700. 1800
1977 Corven.whltt/qd lnte- m..._ bled&amp;. •• ,..., Mlnv
rior. Lc.llded. 11,000, mHas. All · orotr-. 12.200, Call IU-448,
orlglnll. Call . 11•·441·1120 11201tet
~bo~IW~-~n~7~A~I~Pflll~.~~;; ' 1 8 7 - 1 - . C h . . ,.
1•10 Y......._on R•bbh, dleIll . .,OIO, Callll'·388-1211. 11
-~4:::·
0848. vo.v - - C.l

73 , . _ 110 2 IL.'
CoUI14-441·12,0.

81

•·..

tQJU
.K653

2.

1Ji College 118oobol
(() e ()) MocO,-

.11

~-"7.""-~-

Gil AI.F ALF plays

pink elephant to perauade
~oblem drlnltar.to SOik help.

ALLEY OOP

•u

+Q5
Team-of·fOtlf bridge is scored very
.KJ
much lite rubber bridge in that decent
tAU
boo111811 exist for bidding and making
.AJ9842
games and si11111A. Overtricks count
•'
very little, but making the contract is
Vulnerable: North-South
crucial. This is particularly true when
Dtialer: Nortb
you have bid to a "thin" game.
Nor~ Eul
S.O.do
Despite the silo:-eard club suit, South West
!NT
Pus Pass
opened one JIOotrump. He bad honors
2t
Pus
Pass
in all suits outside of clubs, and bls prl·
3NT
2NT Pass
mary club sUit would likely be a good Pass
Pass
Pass
~
souree of triCks in no-trump. North
bad Invitational game values, particuOpening lead: • 3
larly If opener held four in either major, so be bid two clubs (the stayman
convention) to ask for a major. It was
a slight overbid for South to go on to
lbJ:ee no-trump ~ith only u; high-card casb if South's finesse against the king
pomts, but justified, at team-of-four of clubs failed that would still not SO!t ·
play because of the Slll-eard club su1t. the
t t 'A d Ia · dumm •
Although the diamond suit was the
con rae · • P Yllll
Ys ·
weak point in the North-South annor, queen on the heart jack put the lead In
West made the logical lead of his long dum~y so tbat South could take the
heart suit Declarer won the king and club fmesse without having to releue
returned ihe jack. When "Vest played the spade ace. Of coune, since the club ,
low, South overtook the jack with kl~g wa~ ous1de, declarer took 10 .
dummy's queen. Although West now . tncks, With only 23 high-card poiDta In ·
bad three good hearts (the A·lO•S) to the combmed hands.
.

.IIJI 1111 ,_~, Q

e ())

EAST
+KJ 8

WEST

+9H4
. • Al053%
tK7U

By James Jacoby

.())Judge
iiJl of Fortunt Q
· iiJl Crossfire

Painting. roofing. remodltlng,
tree trimming. buildlnge tom
down, gen~~r~l hauling. Call

1977 Ford F·ZSO plcloup. Auto·
matlc, with topper. Asking
11,)00, C.lll14·388·9128.

1980 Toyota CoroNa. Very tDOd
cond. Oneowner.C.III14, 311·
8191 .

57

Oldl Cutllll Suprema
lrouotaam. 2 door,. •c cond,
low
31,000, prlvoto
_,.., bough1 n., loedtd with
atrM, under NADA rBiall.
17,111.00. 304-178·211-1 bo·
tween 10:00 i:nd 8:00.

Nomt
+A lOU
•QtH
• .10 3

Stretching
to game

()) 1111 Ma,IOr LHgue
118111111111Speclal

..

·ee

.

+Ql07

7:01(1) Andy Q-

WANTED ueld travel trailer.
wrlle P. 0. ,8011. 85, Apple Gnwe,
w.v•. 25802 . •

Want~ to Buy

I.

James Jacoby

7:30e()) ([) Hotlrwooct

&amp; Campers

62

I

UNSCRAMBLE LE TTERS TO
GET ANSWER
,

e&lt;Z&gt; M"A"B"H

'·

1 tl2 Olda Omega. WI tittle car
Ia 304·17&amp;·21113 or
178·,1751.

Complooe lhe chvcklo quoted

by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

BRIDGE

of Fortune

i~

79 Motors Homes

~ Chow puppiet. Al)pr. 8 wlc1.
old. •ao uch. 2 red. 1 biiCk.
Cell 614-446-0814.

White Germ.-. Shepherd PLIP·
pie1, no papers, 304·676·1109.

IIJI Moneyllne
eiiJl 1111 -

•

1175 'ford Courier. 1171 Ford
F-2&amp;0 tor Part1. Call 304·6715·
5043.

1m MolcNell/ ...-

NeWIHour (1 ;00)

.,1
,'
' .

2220.

1913 Bt.iidl P•rtr. Avenue. Sharp!
low mllaage. Call 114-4480139.

085.00. 304·111·4801 .

·(!)

c.....y.. _,' ·

the

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
~ -- Pfllly --·Ninny -- Joafle -- ISN7 IT .
''what a this?" asked the man looking at an lbstract paint·
lng. Tha v.ulde gaw a lengthy description to which lhl man
repllad, "So why ISN'T I T ? " . - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,

1D E - - Tonight
ew Peaplo'o eoun

•

low •• t39. 350 conw. .ion 1tt11 •••
to Itt 8 -10'•· C-10'1, metric •
oventrive. Herd parts for lrana·
million a 1ransmiaion ldtt. Call f
1s304·4230 or 1 · 814 · 378 ·

AKC Rag. female Lha11 Apto.
Good with children. Houle
broken. 2 Beagle doga. Cali after
6 PM, 814-UI-4737 .

8 month old, regllllered femele
Beegle dog, box end pen,

..
'.

aUOGET TRANSMIIIIONS· ·' .
UHd • rllbuilt. all tvPM gueren· , -; .: ·
teld 30 deyt 1!\Jnimum. Prloal· ··"· ·
til a up. R~t 1orques-a1i "No;

Concret, block•· ell siz'"'l- yeN
or delivery. Mlleon .. nd. Gai!IPQ1!• Slott. Co .. 123'12 _Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Cell 114-«82783. .
.

56

Okla., ••1o:11. Pontiac,

• ••
•

0161.

p.m:

A
V

ID~(l)

...... flnl) , w. buy )ul!k
•~n~mtutona. Cell 114·448·"' ~; .

U Haul truckl and 1rall1rs far
rtn1,. 304-175· 7.421.

8

e ())

Auto Pam
&amp; Accessories

Chevy truak. FOrd, Chrysler• ""•
lulld, are lr:ter-··.t. ' ,
...U,In•peotad•cany3000mi. ,.. :
or 30 dey wananty lwhlchwer •

Woven batlcet pattern quilt.
Hend quilted . . 100x.l1 . Smelt
PoiiM Chain Stww. Smell air
compr-or. Taking ordett tor
boby turlurya; Coli 114-1412272 .

Belkllbelltwing gym 11t, 2402
Mt. Vernon Ave. · 304·8715·
3278.
"

L_J.___.J.I-..1..__J.___.J___.J.

7:00()) Remington· . Stronger Than Sl861a
PM M8gulnl

lr.,lft'ti•IIIIM

&amp;mall ~clr. topper:' ••10 laim
tralter; 3QO gat tank for hauling
water; Nova body tnd parta; 278
U-'· fuel oil · tank. 114·1122221 ;

POLmCIANS · BUSINESSES
liberal lhcounts on union made
edverti•Jng apec:lalties (book
matchet) etc. H. 0. "&amp;.m''
SomiMIIe. MalOn County propany owner OVII' 32 .,..,., call for
•ppohttm•tt 304-273-51&amp;&amp;.

=. . . . .

I~6~.,.~:.:,;:1;..:::..,.;17;..::;.1..::..,,---1 0

e Cll AIIC - !;I
llepofl
cu-

1:35(1) ~ H To ..._

76

Just when I think I -

~channeL

NOODGS

IIJllnllde Pallllco 'II
Gil WKRP In Clnclnnd
• w Too c-. for Comlolt

M-..

I

whole picture of life ciMrly, IIOfTl&amp;o
~-------- one or somelhing tile

IIJlllody I!Jeclrlc

1173
I cyl .. auto.
1171 Muollnt. 4 cyl.• 4 .,....,.
Can 114·182..722.

I

.l...L..sI. __LI~.,.u. .LI..s,A__uL....JI-:!
I. ..·

GIIF-ofUfe
(l) HaPPr lloyo
I:OI(J)Aice .
.1:30 etll 1111 NIIC Nightly New1

t'M WILLING TO Tll.Y

•
1 1 •.

...

.,..:.:..H,::O;..G:.,:::.U..:C;.,_...jl ;

01 8howlllz Todlly

1111

Diamond• end gold. 8rand new
men and women'• dllmOnd
rings. gold ch.tnt and watchel.
All m•ch•disa IJO percent
~ow jewelry lltora colt. For
lnformaUon. cell Jim et 1.14992-2912 wenings.

SURPLUS DENIM, army, rtntal
clothing. Wild tu,.ey tu~Qn
soon. cemouflegt g.-n, bladl
whh:a clothing, NO chDs.
Po111lcol ool1!ortlllnv imprlntod
• .,.,..u... Sem lomtr¥ill. Rt.
21 junction lndeP.,...II'Ic:eAoid,
Eaat Rntnswood, Fri. Set, Sun,
noon-8:00 prn. 304·273·5161.

rIIIII"

eo

~())
lpaltalook
(!) Dr. Wloo Time Lash

(!)

IIOU,_

Firewood delivered. atadcld.
*36.00. Maaon County. Gelllpolie, Ohio and. oth• .,.., wtthln
reason at our dlscrutlon, 30.a95-3441.

8

Group tnc n WDnn. TX

· Gtronlmo MIIChlne
e!ll Cll
Gil

Ill

114-992-8013 .

One Or two bedroom •Ptrtinent
With tppllancn. carp« and
w•o hoOk-up In O.IUpolla.
1200 month. 814·4-'1·1•'78.

1917 01 ••rrrt Ski 8Ht. 11.1
ft. 120 HP. uud 20 hours. Call
114-742:2aoe,

the
be·
low to form four slrnple words.

i-of--.iR)

Do you hwetlte .,lrtt af oerll:tl7
Th. . ••many job Dpportunll'for hellth CN:re won... ~eeome
· • vetulbla member of the health
care tNm In jult 11 wweeb.
EnroH now in the Nur~lng
·A -.....t-Ord!Wty Pf'OOIII'II ..
Tri-County Vocatiol'lll Schooi-AdUb: EdUNtlan C.n,_, NHd
money for tra....? We have •
variety of fundi"'
available for thote eligible. "eem.
now for the .c iUMI Mglnnlng
April41h, cell753·311 1 axt. 14.
Catch lhe Spirit!

Very nice 1 bedroom apt. in
Mktdlepon. t150 per month, ·
reterence and depollt required.

centn1
b r r •••• a ......
N._ IDI. A - 1...........,.

.,_..a:4als

,

On River-privata, tmell 2 BA .
unfurniahtd home with acreen
porch. Lower Riv• Rd. Rtf. &amp;
dep. t300 a mo. C•11&amp;1•·"1·
4922 after '15 PM.

2 bedroom on Wolf Pen Ad. Cell
1· 704-411-1138.

/''1.

Ml•ed hll'd Wood alabt. 112 P.,
bundlo. Comoining opprox. 11'o
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallol Co.
PomotOY, Ghlo. l14' 112.- 1481.

2 bedroom APt. for rent. Carpned. Nice Mtting. Laundry I .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:Jl,:::;::;::;:;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;~
fec:llitin aveilebll. Call 814· ~
9U-3711 . EOH.

Furnished 3 room lpt. No pBia.
614·1141·2213

•

:t:"*"· ••.
•

WOlD
lAM I

Rearrange letters of
0 four
Kro•ubltd words

1:00 ()) Couy. Llkl 1 Fox

·

noo. Caii.,4·24B·9448.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 631 Jecll1on
Dinnettll, ,b eds, badding,
PiU from I 183 a mo. Walk to , dreuen , chests, couches.
shop and mavin. 814 -441- chairs, ltmps, coff"·•nd tablu.
2568. E.O.H.
Every dey Specials. Vi mile oUt
Jerric:ho. 304-876-1450,
1 1 Coul:t St .· 2 BedrOom. 2
baths. kitch• tumished , w / w
Merillat oak basec:abinet. Ex.cel·
carpet, •3215 a mo . plus u1llitie1.
lent cond. Uae for microwave.
No pen. deposit • ref. Call
sao. C•ll614· 388-9744 after &amp;
814-441-4921 . .
PM.

814-446-1932.

I

1114 llja, red mwtal fteke, •1 ' ·
,...,, - · 11-1 ....... •
~ PfOP., custom bui.. 1reller. ·.~•"
llrp ~. kM hours, ski
100 . .tl 1144 2128 0&lt;448:3141,
•.

. f.

MON., MARCH 28

'::!~;~' S©~c{llA-~t.~S*
E41rod .y CLAY R. I'OUAN

EVENING

,_,.,

~..... 1...-ly
130 - o· ...
uHII
lurnW
l, AI""""'
for

PICKENS
FURNITURE

Brook1ide Aptrtmenta; Located
off Bulaville Rd.• 1 BR . spacious
apartment• with modern kitchen
tnd Wllhtt·dryer hOOkups, cable televition tVJilabla. Cell

•

01 988 Tno TV L~!II"IO

127.100. C.H 304·727-1110 .

8HPEioctrlcoun.--tiOO. Wblel Ho~se I H.P
mower-*37&amp; . C1ll 11ol· 3782741.

Nice 3 Bedroom hoUH. L..rge
Yd .• 314 Third St.· Kiintuga.
Coli 814· t'6 -7473.

Fumlshed nice brick I room
houR. 111.1: Htht, willing to there
wl1fi lady or ledle:l tor com~Mf'y .
Coli 114·441·2218 lom·4pm,
0&lt; • t 4·446·1714 5pm.

p....

.t 1 ' uonr. 1"" storY houu.
_
.... 7011100. ...
a iluee l. &lt;kM:* P1'n2 ,171'ln4

Homes for Rent

BR .• 1 Ya b•th, khehen fllrniahld .
1360 1 mo. plus dep. &amp; ref. No

In MiddlepOrt. nice 3 bedroom
with 1ttach.cl 2 cer g••ge.
Central hNt. 2 baths, carpeting.
eq~o~ipped kh:chen. pmio. ahrmi·
num siding. storm dool'l and
windows. Close to schools end
shOpping.
a steal. priced 10
..., C.ll 11-'·992·1072 or
IU-592 ·7102.

2

Mobile Hom• for Rant. Call
614-448-0527.

233 Saeond Ave.:w l wcerpet,2

7 rool'f'l 3 bedroom houae on
LIILM'.. Cliff with 7 acrn. w.. htr
aJMt dryer. refrigerator, atove,
dithw..her. Aaking f46,000.
614-992-1310 after 6 PM .

I7

2 BR .• w.ll to well ~erpilt, AC. In
Galllpollo. Coli 114·446·1409
attar 5 PM .

New completely furniahed
ap6ftment &amp; mobile home in
city. Adulta onty. Parking. Call
614-UI-0338.

Homes for Sale

•aoo. 9 .a.m .-4 p.m.

.._ I. Very -

Coli·oft•
PM.I14·UI·4737,
- I ··· ...... -d.

vo.

Trail• apace to Nnt. 304-676·

'

2 pc, IMng room tuite. coflwe

51 HQusahold Goods

Jim'• Odd Job•
Sundlcb. siding, painting, roofiftg. Carpenter work. ttltltr repair. C•ll 114-379-241&amp;.

W•nt to do Interior and extlfior
IN!inting, 28 yetrt e~~operience .
trM estimetll, 304-175-5907.

w.

••

21 ft . . .ylln• crullor. 1181
wkll beam. a1J el,.:tronie. , .....,,
....,.., iltC, 310 Ysl tnfl.,

Whole hau.e little fan . Nev.
UHd. 011. CoH 114· 2414120.

Homes for R11nt .

Four bedrooms:. 2 bfiht. Ned
Sam Addition, Central Air Cond.
bo.. _ , , ,.....,••_ flropl ...a,
eo·•. 304sl7~s8999. .
'

Schools
Instruction

31

Porll. Golllpolla I'Ofrv,
304-,1 75-307i . . i

with-.

01141.

Spaee for smal tr~. 'All
hook-ups. Cable. Alto efficiency
room1. air and cable. Muon.
W .Va. C•ll304-773·151&amp;1 .

Wil do beby a~g In my hom1
tnYtkM. Ex-ct.y care teacher.
Rtlerencea. C•ll 114-7-'2 ·
2211.

23

Boatsand
Motoro for S.la

",

-oint a..Oiablo, 1·100-:MI·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trai••· CJtl 814·1f2·
7479.

roo,_

21

Hue• 31' ...1 poo1

RIVER LOTS
'
"For Boating • CarnpAng-ForSaJe
or Rent. A-One Reel Ell ..•
...,..,. 304-171-1104.

S...,int
end room and
- f o r t h o -. U-Now
......"""'t. RtNOnlbll. 11-'·
912·7204.

·15

'-··-··-·

46 Space for Rent

Elton Homo. 201 ' S. Fourtl!.
MlddiiiiDn, Ohio. floom end
- f o r -lorc~lnno. Spoci~
c.,. In priv•te home. &amp;14·1128173.

13

76

IWIMIIIIING I'OOLI · 1 0RO.R NOW · PAY LATEII

Don't put your loved one in I
nunint hamel We· h•v• Ol\t
v.c.ncy in my home. 1 7· YNrt
e~~operienc. . Call 614· 6873402.

Television
Viewing

1171 Honda 780, fiOO.OO . .
114-317-0320.
•

CeM111111•1 Uull TIN . .. Ow.

'

I

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L'a, X for the two O'sr etc. Single !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

..

·•

hlnla. Each day the code letten Ire diffe'l'ent.
ClliPOOQUOTBS
.

....

' JFXTZCDX
GE

VCZG

JFXTZCDX

JFXTZCDX

J T S Q . -

'ZCRRXXM
XFZX

GCDQZ

JTZG
G E

Y ·o E N Q S Q U

. Y•t ,.,.. oaau pa&amp;CI HONOR W&lt;l7 w
'I1IBY ENIWINB AND WBAYB IIIAVINI.T 87
OOR EAimiLY LIPE. -JOANNB ac::muo
.
I

•

�'

Pagt 1~The Dtily Sa •111111

Ponl8iOf ""ldcllport. Ohio

,....._Local news briefs___,
HEAP funds avai.ltJble
Funds are still available from the HEAP eneriY assistance
pro~~:&amp;m, accordlnl to the GaWa-Melgs COmmunity Action
til tllltl
AgeDcy.
The prDifam prQvlcles ualltance to realdeala wi u
es
dlscolllllleCted, t11oae faclnl threat o1 belnl dllconnected or
tboae llavlnl a 10 day or less 1upply of buill: fUel.
The pnJil"am provldea for a one time payment of up to $200for
a heati.Dg season to reatore or retain home beallnl service.
Appllcuta'wlill PUCO re,ulated utlUty companies must enroll
In the percenta1e of income plan to be ellllble for emergency
assistance. In order to be eligible the total household Income
must be wltiiiJllllO percent of the federally estabvUsbed poverty
· . · ·
.
Income luldellnes.
AppUcatlons will be accepted by commiiDity action qency
tbrougb . AprU 15. Residents In GaWa County may call the
Galla-Meigs Community Action Agency at «&amp;-0611 or 367-7341
and Meigs Countlans may call \192-5605 or 992~ .

EMS IUJs nine ·weekend calls
Meigs County Emefllncy Medical Services reports nine cans
over tbe Weekend; four Saturday and five SUnday.
Saturday at 12: U a.m., Racine to ADUqultyfotDavidSayre to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 8: 11 a.m. to Carpenter for
Carl Castor to O'meness Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at
2:03 p.m . to Route 681 East for .Ardward McMIWon to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital: Middleport at 1(!: 10 p.m . to
an auto fire on Poplar Ridge; the vehicle was owned by Patricia
Wilson.
·
.
Sunday at 2:53p.m., Middleport transported Harley Jones to
Veterans Memorial Hoapltal; Pomeroy at 6:08 a.m. to the
Americare-Pomeroy Nuralnl Home tor Flosale Story to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:55p.m. tom West
Main St. for DoUR Burns to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7: 29 p.m. to Foodland Supef1!Ulrket for NataUe
Clark who was treated.but not transported; Middleport at 10:46
p.m. to 838 South Second St. for Janet Ambrose to Veterans
Memorial Ho,pltal.

I

Area deaths

Thelma PIU'IIOIIll

Thelma 1. Parsons, 83, Canal
St., Nelsonville, died Saturday at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital Jn
Athens.
· Mrs. Parsons was born Oct. 5,
1905 In Athens County, a daURh·
ter of the late WIIUam and Nora
McGill Green. She was formerly
a nurse's alde1ilt the old SbelterIDI Arms Hospital In Athens; a
member of the Ladles Aux!Uary
of Nelsonville Veterans of For- ·
elgn Wars Post 4367; a member
of the former Rebekah Lodge at
Stewart, and · was formerly a
dispatcher for the Rome Township Volunteer Fire Department.
Surviving are a son, Donald
Parsons of Gallipolis; three
grandsons, Dwight Parsons,
West Lafayette; David Parsons.
Nelsonville, and Dean Parsons,
Columbus, six greatgrandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Besides ber parents, sbe was
preceded In death by her busband, LeRoy Parsons; a sister,
Effie Strickler, and a brother,
Everett Green.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the White funeral
Home In Coolville with ·the Rev.
Paul Dorsey officiating. Burial
will be In Butts Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4· and 7 to 9 p.m .
today. Veterans ol Foreign Wars
memorial services will be held at
7 this evening at the funeral
home.
.'

Hilda Beegle
Funeral services for Racine
area native, Hilda Sayre Bee1le

J

(Mrs. Edward Seelle), who died
Sunday mornlnl at a Zanesville
Hospital, will be Tuesday ,1 p.m.,
at the William Thompson and
Sons Funeral Home, White Cottlge, Ohio. Vlalllnl hours at the
funeral home will be from 2 to 4
an 7 to 9 today, Monday. Burial
will be In MuSklnlbam County.

James Anderson, Jr•.
. James A. Andenon ir., 69, Clif.
IIlii, waa pronounced dead on ar-

rival at Pleasant Valley Hospital
Sunday, March 27, 1988.
Born Feb. 14, 1919, in Ripley, be
was a son of the late lames A. and
Nellie Bass Andenon Sr.
Several brolheis and sistm also
preceded him in death.
He !etired from the ShipPing
Department of the Foote Mineral
Company. He was a minister, and
served in the U.S. ArmY during
WorldWun. .
.
He was a member of the VFW
Post 9926 of Mason. .
Surviving· are his wife, Lora V.
Anderson, Clifton; cne daughter
and son-in-Jaw, Kandy S. and Bill
Hammaclc,
Oifton;
another
daughter, Rhonda K. Andelson, Pittsburg, Pa.; two sisters, Leona
Varian, Cliftoo, Marie Smith,
Mason;
three
gmndchildten;
several nieces and nephews.
Services will be Wednesday at 1
p.m. at the fDilesonl Funeral
Home with the Rev. Samuel Anderson officiating. Burial will be in the
Clifton Hill Cemetery.
Friends may can Thesday from 2
to 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
home. Military rites will be conducted at the graveside.

.......--.---Announcements---To meet tonight
Racine Vllla1e Council will
meet tonight (Monday), 7: 30
p.m., at the Shrine Park building.
Meeting canceled
Thursday's meeting of Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM bas been
canceled. The work In E .A.
Degree will be conducted at the
regular meeting on April 5.
Revival
Chester Church of God will be
In revival through Easter Sunday
with· Evangelist Steve Hoskins.
Services start at 7 p.m. and
special singing will be featured
each night. Everyone welcome.
Temperance meeting
Tile Church of Christ In Chris,
tian Union, Pearl St., Middleport, Is haviDI a temperance
speaker on Wednesday at 7; 30
p.m. Facts concerning liquor
traffic will be presented: Everyone welcome.
AA to meet
A Meigs County Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting will be held
Thursday, 7 p.m. , at the Community Action Building, West
Second St. , Pomeroy. Ala-Non
will meet at the same time and
place.
Special 11rvicee
Stlversvll .l e Community
Church will ob$erve special
services on Friday at 7 p.m .
Communion will be served. Putor Gary Holter welcomes
everyone.

The Blue' and Gold Banquet for
Cub Scouts of Pack 249 will be
held on Aptil 7 at 6: 30 p.m. The
location hal been moved to the
old American Lelion Hall In

•
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GaU'}l(&gt;
• · fts••• ~::::.
CqnUnued on pap 1
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List dates
~~~~----~----------~-rw-~---t-o~be~lp--u~.:..~Sa;.:u:n&amp;ri!~~;.~
'aawpolla Ponce otik:en, Brent
· Accordi.Dg to SaWiden, the
,
for ProtJr&amp;Dl8 Sallllden, pre ucutlq attorney, pi'OieC\Itor'a
office received a tip sa!~ a reault o1 eoilcmll4: '2

Area

... '

Fenderbo8ch, and Carl Lan&amp;The Racine Vllla1e Park •OJ'd,
.~•·•
vesHftator ot the
Board In a recent meetlq aet
•G.llla
~""'•
...
County Sheriff'•
datea for the free summer
deparmellt.
pl'01f8111s at the vlllage'a Sllrlne
Punutna the 110urce of tbe
Club Park. Board member Rodrup Ia attn under lnvesu,&amp;Uon.
bert Beetrle report&amp; the followlq
PoUce offk:er Roger BrandebSaturday datel for the tree
erry said that with a search,
concerts: May 7 ilncl 21; June 4 leads are available and followed
and 18; July 2. 16 ud 30; A111111t
upon.
13 and 27; September 10 ud 24.
Brandeberry said the pollee
Musical gi'O\Ipa are now belnl
aecured the front door and
scheduled and anyone lntereated
Intended' to enter thrOUih the
In preaentlnl famUy-type enter- . . baCk door. The 1 offlcen forced
talnment II asked to contact
entrance after ~latance ..
board member Ivan Powell.
The board voted to problblt the
briJI&amp;I.Dg o1 coolers of food and
drink to the prop-ama, stnee the
pro~rama are "free" and refreshments are sold to help
defray expenaes and to make
Improvements at the park.
Currently, the park board Ia
looklnl for a cheat type deep
freezer and an Ice milker, "cbeap
If not free," for llie at tbe park.
Volunteers to helP with repair
and maintenance work at ~
park are also belnl SOUiht.
Anyone lntereated In helpi.Dg
should contaet board member
Carron Teaford.
The board reminds residents
that the shelter ho1lle at the park
Is available tor reun~ns. picnics,
etc. A "user fee" Is charged for
the shelter bouse.
Members of the Vllla1e Park
Board are Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beegle, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Teaford, Mr. alid Mrs. Richard
Wamsley, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Hart and Mr. and · Mrs. Ivan
Powell.
t
. n

from a coneerned citizen two citizens cornln&amp; forward we well ' .
wwkl aiJO. Brandeberry and
,.,.,h~rmll,tloDOII
·
,,_.._,_ __ h ......1111 llll'VaD'"ft able to get en-..' ;·'
... .....,,.,.,.... - .
....
•or•"Aaearchwarrant, ·
·~·· bo\aae. The concerned citizen · our own • ..,..
· ·...:
....
Brandeberry said. "With peoplf...:; •
caned one week later·
belpln&amp; u, we can prote,ct ~- ·;.;
"I hope other citizens stepped , Identity and letreaultlllketllll.: .. '":

FrldaJ lel'Ylce
MoiiDt Union BapUst Church,
on Route 143, south of Carpenter,
Is baVIDI .a Good Friday service
at 6: 30 p.m. Everyone welcome.

f~ture the Unity SI.Dgen ~: ..

:---

Daily Number

756
Pick 4
5282 .

Pages3-6

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FrldaJ ~emcee

Ohio Lottery

·baseball
results

:: . ·
South Bethel New Teatamen£ •
Church, on Silver . Rldle, will; ~

•

GOod Friday ~lnl at 7 P-~·. .
•• •
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Vol.38, No.227
hted 1888

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By BOB )JOEFUCH
costs for maintaining ·village
Sentinel News Staff
· service and the lack of revenue
. A village Income tax, to be Increases In tlie' town.
effective In July, appears to be . it was pointed out that dUring
beaded for passage by Middle- the past 10 years, costs of village
port VIllage Council.
operations have climbed steadAt a meeUng of Middleport Ily, ~ as Jt. bas with almost all
V1Ua1e Council Monday night, businesses. During this period,
Mayor Hoffman reported tllat be revenue bas remained substanand members of the flaaDce tially the same, Mayor Hoffman
committee met to dlscuaa the said. Basic operations of the
conUnulJ!I problem of Increased vlllqe have been maintained by

reducing expenses In many .
areas, by combining jobs and by
not making capital expenditures,
such as street resurfacing or
equlpment purchases, the 'm ayor
stated.
"The time Is here when we do
need to make Improvements and
think about purchasing new
equipment. Tile majority of our
vehicles and other equipment Is
10 to 15 yean old and some are

.....

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·"'
•

AJIIA,

AJJIA,.

1M TIIA&amp; I

CUILLIES

IIIC&amp;W••

Shoney's Inc........................ 24
Wendy's Inti........... ............. 6%
Wortlllnlton Ind ...... ,: ........ ... 20

Hoephal new&amp;
Veterau Memorial
Saturday Admissions - John
Myers, Racine; Clarence Proffitt, Portland; Albert Hoffner,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Rl ta
Hendrickson, Carl Nelson, Wood- ·
row Hall, Marie Thomas, Clarence Gans.
Sunday Admissions - Harley
Jones, Evans, W.Va.; Flossie
Story, Pomeroy; Dorothy
Schwab, Mason, W.Va.; Timothy
Hively, Middleport; DoUiiaS
Bums, Pomeroy; David Fisher,
Middleport.
Sunday DIScharges - Tyler '
Winebrenner.

bow
With llalldlcap8 cope.
Tile pnJI'IUII wiD be PfllHntecl-:- by )Mil'ealll- lo
all flnt lbnap elptl'i enders In tbe dlslrlcl
dlli1Da late Aprtl. 1\ dlffere•* handicap or
d...bWQ- win be focued ape. taeaellp~e level,
111111 leacllen .1111d p-Ill are worillll1 eluely
*epller to ptepare tbe preaentatlons. The

•

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CHEESE ,
CURLS

992~6606

7 OZ. lAG

99&lt;_

SALES - SERVICE - TESTING
.
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'IIOWI I SIOUFFEI
FilE·I SAFm EQUIPMENT

A•••• ·

· PH. (6.14) 992-7075

:RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
,

,201 EAST MAIN Sliltl
POIIROYI OHIO
PHARMACY I'IIONEi 992·2516

I

ttJ-7446
I

would -cost us much more to
litigate lt. I cannot advise my
c.llent, lngolngtocourt, that after
spending $300,000 to $400,000 In
legal fees, that they are going to
win."

The same settlement received
only two votes from the board
F'eb. 29. Four votes are required
for approval. At that lime, BWC
told the board Arthur Andersen
had not fultllled 1the terms of the
original $1.9 mllllon contract.
The bureau withheld payment of
the $176,321.
Tl\ls time, Edward Meyers,
director of data processing for
the Department of Administrative Services, assured the board
"we did get full value lor the
original contract. They provided
the documentation on the
dellverables."
Sen. Wllllam . Bowen, -D,.
'Cinclrlrtatl , got Meyers to say
, '-'T his Is a . reasonable com- that -''sel(eral pieces of the
, promise, '' said Shamansky. "It system," but not all of It, are

operational.
Meyers and Shamansky both
said the bureau will !lnlsh the
project on Its own.
"Is Arthur Andersen going to
come back here for more money?" asked Bowen.
" This ends their participation," said Sham~nsky. "There'll be no more money for
Arthur Andersen. Absolutely not.
They're out."
A decision on $3.3 million In
rerttorthe W.O. Walker RehabilItation Center In Cleveland was
put off for two weeks . Board
president Terry Thomas said the
rent request for the controversial
rehabilitation center will be
combined with a request for
money io pay utility bills.
The board approv,ed the expenditure of $86,632 by the Ohio
Department of·Health .f or publicIzing advice to mothers on how to
prevent " baby bottle tooth
decay.' '

U. S. journalists detained in Panama

PANAMA CITY, Panama seized because they violated a
(UPI) - Lawyers reported at government ban on public demleast 30 opponents ol Gen . Ma- onstrations during march Monnuel Antonio Noriega were held day by more than 2,000opponents
today at a mllltsry stadium alter of Noriega, Panama's armed
. their arrests dUring a raid on a forces chief and de facto ruler.
downtown hotel by paramilitary
The march - the largest
forces and riot pollee. ·
anti-government protest since
Witnesses said up to lour dozen wlcjespread street demonstra.
.
A. $2.4 million learniDR center ties by offerlng1ncreased resour-- Will be deslg!led for present people were detained during tions last summer - was broken
addition to the Jeanette Alblez ceil for (ltudy and research."
needs and future growth at the Monday evening's raid IIY pollee up by riot pollee using water
Davis IJbrary at Rio . Grande
The pres!den I expressed his college. The design calls for the who brandished pistols, shotguns cannons, tear gas and shotguns.
Collelie/Communlty College appreciation Ill House Speaker building to be adaptable to new and submachlne guns and used
Lawyers tot the Civic Crusade
rubber clubs to beat journalists , -a coalition of business, profesdemons.trates the state's .com- Vernal G. Riffe\Jr., Stale Rep. and developing technology.
mitment to lmproviDI educa- Jolynn Boster of GalUpoUs, Sta.t e
Features . of the addition, guests arid opposition actlvilsts. sional and civic groups that
Those detained Included 11 or organized Monday 's march and a
tional opportunity on all levels In Sen, Jan Michael LODI of Circle- '· Mauer explained, Include stusoutheastern Ohio, according to ville and State Rep. Mark Malone dent study space, room . for 12 journalists - at least five ol general strike now In Its second
. Dr. Paul C. Hayes, collqe ol Ironton, for their assistance In facility and ·equipment needs, them Americans. A U.S. Air week - said at least 30 Crusade
president.
the legislative process that al-. Increased space ·"rm: cpmputer Force serviceman also was re- members were In detention at a
Fuilda for the addition were lowed for the Inclusion of the usage, availability of l!duc,a- portedly detained.
stadium within the main military
A Panamanian military spo- headquarters In Panama City.
included In Gov. Richard F . library In tbe capital Improve- tiona I media display and crea- '
Resman said late Monday authorCeleste's capital Improvements menta program, which Included tlon of small group study areas.
About a dozen men In civilian
all
the
journalists
Ities
released
budget for 1989-90, announced lundlnl for projects at other area
clothes
brandishing pistols, shotFuture plans Include an autotaken
.fi'Qm
the
ftre,star
Marriott
Marcli 4. · The budget ll(as ~ unlvenltles and colleges.
guns
and
submachlne guns burst
mated circulation system, with
Cesar
Park
Hotel
In
do,
w
ntown
cently IIPProved by the Ohio
Into
the
391-room hotel - a
The 18,000.:squat:e foot addition an on-line catalogue ol available
Panama
City
shortly
before
an
Le~latute.
,
gathering
place for journalists
will double the size of the current resources a I the library. The
·"With this addition, education structure, opened In 1965. The overall benefit, ·Mauer said, will opposition news confere8f:e ~as, a~ ~pposltlon figures - at 6:10
p.m . ....
for Rio Grande students will be addition will also make the be enhanced concentration of to begin.
The
spokesman
did
not
say
how
enhanced," Hayes said. "The - library more accessible to the · · learning resources, particularly
Some · ol the . gunmen were
addition w!U benefit the residents handicapped, colle1e oUictals with the addition ol more volume many opposition supporters 1 we~IDI caps· and ·s~eatshlrts
were arrested but said they were with the letters DENI, the
of our tour-county commi!JI)ty . said.
space.
college service dlltl1ct of GaUia,
J. David. Mauer, Director of
"In general, It means more
slay
J ackaon, Meigs and Vinton coun- Davis Library, said the addition
Continued on page 12

HERR'S

Nursing and
Rah 4ilitalio4 Center

.,......rt..... 41760

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state CpntroUing Board, In a
turnabout from one month ago ,
has approved a $176,321 settlement with Arthur Andersen &amp;Co.
for work performed for the Ohio
Bureau of . Workers '
Pimpensallon.
· The board voted 6-l Monday to
approve full payment of the
accounting firm 's $1.9 million
con tract after former U.S. Rep.
Robert Shamansky, counsel for
the bureau, warned that It would
be more costly to reject the
settlement and risk a more
expensive lawsuit.
Shamansky told the board
Arthur Andersen, which worked
with the bureau to create a lee
bill processing system, would sue
for an additional $500,000 In
compensation, and attorney fees
would amount to $300,000 to
• ,'or.tUJJ,
••, 000 •
.

a

Spanish acronym for the Depart- ·
ment of National Investigations
- part of Noriega's Panama
Defense Forces.
Frigh tened ho te l patrons
knocked over chairs and tables In
a· rush to flee the gunmen, who
were followed by riot pollee with
shotguns and rubber truncheons
that they used to club journalists,
guests and opposition activists.
Opposition leader Luis Guillermo Casco Arias clutched a
Iuggage cart and screamed for
help as he was dragged feet firs t
down the front steps of the hotel.
Opposition leaders said those
arrested Included Casco Arias ,
leader of the Molirena opposition
party; Rodrigo Arosemena, an
opposition lawyer; Jose Manuel
Faundes Sr.. and his son, Jose
Manuel Faundes .J r.
The detained journalists Included two U.S. photographers,
two Americans working for ABC
News, an American worklng for
CBS News, a Mexican film cr&lt;!w
for NBC News, two Spanish
journalists and an undetermined
Continued on page 12

of
of expuslion and,
restraining order

An~~ricart-PGfntroy

(614)

tlons of county government but Is .
of no financial benefit to Middleport VIllage, Mayor Hoffman
commented.
The mayor pointed out tha t
expenses In several areas over
which the village has no control
have Increased drastically such
as: liability and property Insurance premiums Increased from
$4,000 to $16,000 even though the
Continued on page 12

Request

...· ·~ - - ~ - .... ~- -- ~ ·-. -

' . s...... -

PNJI'IUII wll
Ia 11.-.!er ~* eacll year,
aallillcleMa move
next ll'aile level, tbey wiD
alllo lean about a
h1111dlcap. Shown In a
recent meet1n1 dlaculllllng some of the protram
materlala are, left lo right around llle table,
Ramora Youn1 and Joyce S!a10n, parent&amp; from
Syracue Elementary, and Joyce ~n Bllehle,
Janice Curry, DoOy Wolfe 1111d Jeany M1111ue1,
Soathern teachers. Members ofSoutben's career
development learn Initialed lhe propam In the
dlalricl.
.

OPIOMDU
SEIYICES ON
PIEMISES

..

needed Improvements and better
services to our reslden Is . The
Budgets ·for the past several only way this can be done .Is by
years have been for basic servi- Increased reve.nue, " !'lfayor Hofces without any capital Improve- fman said.
menta since there lUis been no
Mayor Hoffman pointed out
money available, the mayor thai villages are very limited In
reported.
ways to Increase revenue. With
"In order to keep our progres- the recent loss of revenue sharslve reputation and better pro- Ing fl!nds , the county governvide for residents of Middleport, . ment enac!ed a one percent sales
we need to move forward with tax, which certainly helps opera-

82.4 million expansion to aid RGC

Issued license

Pre Easter revival
A pre-Easter revival will be
held Thursday tllrou1b Satur·
day, 7 p.m. each evening, at the
Vanderhoof Baptist Church.
Speaker will be Mike Horner,
youth minister from Torcb, Oblo.
Special slnglq by Sue Matheney's group will be featured on
Saturday night.

much older than that, " Mayor

· Hottman rem11rked.,

Ohio State. Controlling Board
approves $176,321 settlement
-~

A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs CoiiDty Probate
Court to David Anthony Kucama,
Middleport. Advance ticket pur- 35, Gahanna, and Michaela Carol
chases are requested. Contact · Hoback, 35, Racine.
any den leader for tickets or
Divoree granted
more loformatlon.
A divorce bas been granted In
'
Revival
.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Hazel Community Church, Court to Melody R. Ramsburg
Portland, will be In reVival from Edward H. Ramsburg.
Thursday through Sunday, 7: 30
Catherine McGraw has been
p.m. , with different speakers granted a divorce ·from Charles
each night. Everyone welcome.
C. McGraw and restored by the
court to her former name .
All nilbl slnl
Proffitt.
An all night IO&amp;pel sing will be
held on Good Friday at the . Case dismiseed
Rutland Civic Center, bellnnlnl
The case of Tom Rue versus
at 7 p.m. Admission Ia free.
Featured singers will Include the Cooper Chrysler-PlymouthChristian Sounds, Narrow Way Dodge Inc. bas been dismissed In
Slftlers, Shoppe Sisters and Meigs County Common Pleas
David, Rutland Church of God Court.
Cbolr, Voices of Love, Samaritans, Refieetlons, Fellowship
Singers and True Gospel Sounds.
Everyone welcome.

Section, 1 2 Po goa 26 Canto
A Muttimedil Inc. Newapaper

Middleport tax appears ..headed for passage

Da!17 llock prlCII
(AI of 18:18 LDL)
Bryce aad Marl lllilltb
of Blunt Ellla 6 Lqewl
Am Electric Power ........ ..... 26%
AT&amp;T ......... ,....................... 26%
Ashland 011 .......... ..............64%
· Bob Evans ... .'............ .......... 16%
Charminl Sboppes .............. . 13
Clty rHoldlnl Co ...... ............. 31
Federal Molul ....................39%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................62%
Heck's Inc ........................... 1%
Key Centurion .......: ....... .....40%
Lands' End ............ ............. 19%
Umited Inc.... .. .•. .: ..... .... ....19 ~
Multimedia Inc ..... .. ,........... 63%
Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 9%

Cloudy, chance of showers
thunderstorms tonight. Low I
mid 50s. Showers likely Wed
neaday. Highs In mid !14ls.

en tine

Pom~rov. Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, March 29, 1988

Stocks

172 las •• In•••

Ballqae$ AprO 7

.

'
Monday, Men:h 28, 1~ ·. ;
.

An !lCtlon requesting that expulsion orders be stayed and two
Meigs High students be allowed
to return to schoo1, pendiDI a ·
final hearln1 on the expusUons,
has been flied In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Flllnl the
action are Archie D. McKinney,
Rutland, and David Carr, as
father and next friend of Brian D.
Carr, a minor, Alblllly, against
the Meigs Local Board of Education and Dan Morris,
superintendent.
Aceordlng to Information con·
talned In · the action, the two
students, both junJots, were
expelled for 80 daY.s, effective
Feb. 29, based on allt~atlons of
poaaeaston and purchase of a
counterfeit substallce, In violation of student rules and
regulations . .
Plaintiffs claim they were ·
expelled without benefit of a
lleiJ1na or notice to parenta, as
provided for In the student
handbook ot rules and
replatlona.
All, nlDGE - ...... Plllltl •• I I II I' I I b
z "' .....
Platnutt. fllrtlllr claim that
mp,c..,..OidPamez-UIIK 'JDilliu ..............
the balldbook al*lftlll a five-day
olhldpln tbe ncallmalllome Nl
cee1t IU. (lee lltorJ,
Coattnlled oil pqe 12
~__. pbo*- oa !NIP 1).
3

...........

'1'111 ] ......... protldd "' . . . . . . . . .
,.. ~or ... artfleeverua&amp;tbe ~beN

,.,
,j

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t

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