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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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at

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Vol.38, No.227
hted 1888

c

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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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111

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CHEESE ,
CURLS

992~6606

7 OZ. lAG

99&lt;_

SALES - SERVICE - TESTING
.
'

'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

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�·comment

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~v

....,__,._,,.......,.::;.......
..

ROBERTL.~NGETT

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslatanl Publlaher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER o(The United Press lnternallonal,lnland Dally P~ess
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wtth·nam~. address and
telephone number. No unsigned lettel'S wUI be published. Letters should be in

, gOOd taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

The tribulations
·of Bob Dole
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Wben a presidential campaign unravels,
mistakes chase more mistakes until finally there are just too many.
· Ask Bob Dole, whose pursuit of the White House ls now all but over.
Last week, Dole was roaming around Wisconsin In search of a
"surprise". win In the state's April 5 primary that could put some
slight fllln on George Bush's mad stampede for the Republican
presidential nomination.
·
He would have been better served had he stayed in the capital and
: voted on the overrl,de of President Reagan's veto of major civil rights
legislation.
In his absence, Dole was-done in by assistant Senate Republican
leader Alan Simpson, hls own nebulous !our-page statement released ,
by his office and his remarks In Wisconsin.
Simpson first announced to the Senate that Dole, were he present,
''would vote to sustain the president's veto" despite some concerns
and reservations.
· Not so, hls otrlce quickly said. Dole would, according to a
spokesperson, vote with the president only if he was needed and
disagreed with the veto of what Is the major civil rights bill of the
year.
Dole's statement, which was Inserted In the Congressional Record,
gave not one clue as to how he would have voted. . ·
.
In Wisconsin, Dole explained that he would have voted to override
the veto- unless President Reagan needed him to uphold the veto. He
said, "I wasn't needed."
The 73-24 margin by which the Senate voted to override the veto
would tend to Indicate he could not have made a difference. Some In
the senate aren 't that sure.
·
Eight Republican senators, who voted for the original biD, switched
to back the veto and two others, Alaska Sens. Ted Stevens and Frank
Murkowskl, did so before pulling back when they realized they could
· not stop the overrldP. And Simpson Indicated there were others ready
· to jump If they would have made a difference.
The Immediate fallout was that, once more, It allowed Bush, should
he even bother, to again raise the Issue of Dole as "Senator Straddle,"
a man who cannot make a decision on critical issues.
It was that approach, through the use of television ads, which was a
major element In Dole's defeat In New Hampshire, the start of the
. disintegration of his presidential campaign.
'
Prior to his both-sides position on the civil rights bill, Dole was
. hammered for a slow endorsement of the INF treaty as well as
pledging no increased taxes but refusing to sign a pledge to that
effect.
·
, Dole has been a staunch advocate of civil rights and what he felt he
could gain by showing loyalty to Reagan Is hard to fathom. Certainly,
· there is no way he can out-loyal Bush, the best housebroken viet!
president in memory.
In addition, Dole has been the apostle of opening up the Republican
Party, a position that can only be enhanced by voting for a bill that
helps women, minorities, the aged and the handicapped.
Ironically, Dole's position was not that different from Bush's. The
vice president backed the veto but said he supported the thrust of the.
legisla tlon.
Bush, however, can get away with straddling because his campaign
Is in full flower. Dole's, on the other hand, Is badly wilted and nearly
dead.

rfili!•••••

Today in history
By Unlte.d Press International
Today is Tuesday, March 29, the 89th day of 1988 with 277 to follow.
The moon is waxing, movin g toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury , Mars and Saturn.
The evening sta rs are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
[ John TYler, lOth president of the United States, in 1790; baseball
pitcher Cy Young in 1867; actor Warner Baxter In 1891; Texas land
baron Robert Kleberg. owner of the King Ranch, in 1896; Eugene
McCarthy, the Minnesota Democrat whose 1968 presidential
campaign focused U.S. opposilion to the VIetnam War, In 1916 (age
72); actress-s inger Pearl Bailey In 1918 (age 70); former pro
basketball player Walt Frazier In 1945 (age 43 ), and gymnast Kurt
Thomas In 1956 (age 32).
On this date In history:
In 1812, the first wedding was performed In the White House. Mrs.
,.· 1Lucy Payne Was hington, sister-In-law of President James Madison,
.• married Supr&lt;;&gt;me Court Justice Thomas Dodd.
: 1 In 1971. Lieutenant WHliam Calley was found guilty in the murder of
· 22 civilians In Vietnam; the same day, cult leader Charles Manson
·r and three followers .were sentenced to 'death In the Tate-La blanca
slaylngs in Los Angeles.
. ' In 1973, the last U.S. troops left South Vietnam and the last
: ; American prisoners of war acknowledged by tbe North Vietnamese
-; ' government were freed.
·, l In 1982, Mexico's El Chlchon volcano began a series of major
:: eruptions. A huge area was blanketed by ash up to 3 feet deep.
Week-long eruptions claimed more than 70 lives.
In 1987, Haitian voters__overwhelmlnllly approved a new
constitution designed to prevent dlctators~lps.
A thpught for the day: Eugene McCarthy said, "The only thing that
saves us trom the bdreaucracy Is Its Inefficiency."
'

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Scoreboard ...

Pomaroy-Middlapor:t. Ohio
Tua~day, March 29, 1988

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Page 2-The Daily Saalinel

iDEA sees lively drug trade __B_:_y_Jac_k_An_de_rso_n

The Daily Sentinel
~~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

WASHINGTON- Some of our branches are in New South Wales
friendly trade partners In the Far and VIctoria, and they sport
East and the Pacific may by exotic names such as the Black
gearing up ·to star.t exporti ng Uhlans, the Co!fln Cheaters,
products that won't figure in the Highway 61, Gypsy Jokers,
balance of trade. Countries In Odln's· Warriors, Sildlsts, .Fourth
that . region maintain a lively
Reich, ·Donald Duck, Black
traffic In drugs, largely among Hearts, Satljn's Sinners and
themselves , but in the future.
Satan's Riders.
more and more of their Inventory
New Zealand has drug
may end up In the United States.
smugglers whose "principal InA confidential repor t !rom the terest ... Is the smuggling of LSD
Drug Enforcement Administra- from the United States to New
tion looks at countries In these zealand," according to the DEA.
regions. which are the birthplace An ominous development In
of large quantities or "speed, "
Australia and New zealand is the
Quaaludes , barbiturates, heroin
beginning of synthetic heroin
and morphine. The drug trafproduction, which could forebode
fickers are · organized crime Increasing heroin traffic from
eloiments, street gangs and even
the Pacific to the United States.
outlaw motorcycle gangs, whO Australian drug authorities were
are doing a thriving local busi- alarmed by the recent discovery
ness, and who have the potential · of a synthetic he_roln laboratory
to expand further Into the Inter- in New South Wales. The chemist
national trade.
who ran the operation, a techniIn Australia, the Hell's Angels
cal college student, claimed it
have about 375 members, 38 of was 2,000 times stronger than the
whom are known 'to be Amerireal thing.
cans, according the DEA. AusSynthetic heroin may be retra ilian government officials
sponsible for an increasing
working with the DEA say the
number of deaths among Amerimotorcycle gangs "!raffle In can drug addicts. A synthetic
dangerous drugs " - specillknown as Fentanyl and similar
caliy, methamphetamlnes, or synthetics "have been linked to
speed.
over 90 deaths ·In California and
The key Hell's Angels
two known deaths in Oregon.

Australian and U.S. authorities
are cooperating In determining
what the potential Is for the
manufac·t ure of Fentanyl a nd its
analogs overseas," says the
DEA . .
In New . zealand, a uthorities
have discovered laboratories
making synthetic heroin and
morphine from a locally available, codeine-based pain klller,
Codral Forte, which can be
obtained .without a prescription.
" Using only $100 worth of
equipment. a kitchen and a
three-stage chemical process,
Innovative New Zealand chemIsts and heroin suppliers have
been able to separate codeine
from the tablets and convert it
into highly pure heroin or morphine," the report says. "This
new process for producing heroin
was developed largely due to the
scarcity and very high price of
the Imported drug on the street. "
Taiwan is a source of speed,
produced by freelance chemists
primarily for the Japanese
market, where It Is distributed by
Japanese organized crime elements called "Yakuza." It Is
smuggled In "principally by air
couriers ," says the DEA. Some
Taiwan-produced speed may gq
to Hong Kong for further dlstrl •

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Reagan's-zeal for
WASHINGTON (NEAl -Once
again, both houses of Congress
have approved ancj President
Reagan has · signed a resolution
officially designating James
Madlson,'s March 16 birthday as
the nation's Freedom of Information Day.
·
But Thjat annual ritual has
become almost meaningless as a
secretive government restricts
the flow of information, thus
denying Its ciiizens the opportunIty to exercise the Informed
political judgement upon which
the concept' of democracy is
based.
"A popular government 'wtthout popular information or the
means of acquiring it is but a
prologue to a farce or a tragedy.
or perhaps both," Madison noted
two centuries ago. "A people who
mean ,to be their own governors
must arm themselves with the
power that knowledge gives.''
Butt he Reagan administration
has waged a determined sevenyea r campaign to thwart access
· to Information. Indeed, It has
consistently displayed a preference for secrecy over openness.

Fish

The level of cynicism regardIng the Nicaraguan situation has
reached a repugnant level. Consider what happened after the
Sandlnlsta communists crossed
the border Into Honduras and the
president dispatched 3,200 AmerIcan soldiers to that country as a
show of force . Incredibly , some
Democrats who believe in bizarre conspiracy theories then
claimed that one real reason
Reagan did lt was to draw the
. headlines away from the Indictment of Oliver North on the same
day! Sen. Christopher Dodd,
D-Conn. , said It. Presidential
candidate Jesse Jackson nid 11.
And Massachusetts Rep. Ed
Markey apparently thought -war
Is appropriate for gags. Speaking
on the Hous-, floor, he said
Reagan "sent troops ·South to
divert attention from North.'' If
Markey has e\!idence that Reagan Ia Ullng troops to top a
newspaper headline, he ought to
lntrodl,lce a motion to Impeach
the president.
Enough. This Is ugly. The
Democrats say they want hu·
manitarlan aid for the contras
and thai the Republicans are

~andstandlng .

vert activities th ey have
launched In recent years range
from transferring millions of
dollars to Argentina to pay for
the training of Nicaraguan rebels
In 1981 to waging a dlsln!ormatlon campaign against Libya in
1986. '
During Reagan's tenure, the
Defense Department's "black
budget" (military spending
shielded from public view and
congressional accountability)
has surged from $5 billion annually to at least $22 billion - and ·
perhaps to as much as $35 bllllon
-per year.
Similarly, · the president has
transformed the use of li_ecurlty
classifications into a highly restrictive process. He has. for
example, eliminated the requirement that the public's right to
know be considered.
He also has taken the unprecedented action of allowing data
that already has been declassified to be reclassified - and has
eliminated a requirement that
Information automatically be
declassified after many years.
Whlstleblowers determined to

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Dodgers down Expos
By UaMed Preu IDtemaUonal
wtS'r PALM BEACH, F1it,
(lJPI) - Rick Dempsey doubled
home two runs In a fou~-tun 11th
!nnlng Monday, lifting the Los
~geles Dodgers to an 8-5 victory
over the Montreal Expos.
Gary Wayne, ln. his flr~t spring
appearance after reporting with
a foot Injury, was greeted with ·
. back-to-back singles by Mike
Deveraux and Mike Sharperson
In the 11th.
·
Da,ve Anderson walked to load
the bases before Dempsey
doubled for a 7-5 lead. Jeff
Hamilton drove home Anderson
with a single, and Dempsey
scored · on Mickey Hatcher's
sacrlftce fly.
Dodgers reliever Jesse Orosco
pllcbed one Inning and pushed hls
reconl to 3-0. Brad Heavens .
worked the 11th.
KISSIMMEE, F1a. (UP!) Mike Scott's sixth-Inning throwIng error, helped Atlanta io tw,o
runs In the Braves • 2-1 victory
over the Houston Astros.
Pinch-hitter Albert Hall
walked, advanced to second on
Scott's errant pickoff attempt,
went to third on a single by Terry
Blocker and scored on Ken
Oberkfell's single. One out later,
Blocker scored on an Infield
grounder by Dlon James.
Zane Smith pitched five innings_ for the victory. Scott
worked seven Innings and took
tbe loss.

Ben Wattenberg

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

Eastern hitters were Mark the last frame, when Lewis
In the fifth Inning Kenny
EAST MEIGS - Seven full
Griffin
·with two slngles,Jef! walked,stole second, and came
Innings of pure heat by both Caldwell and Wade McQueen had
Johnson
a (!ouble,Kyle Davis a home when Eric Crabtree delipllchers came to an end In the back·to·back singles and desigslngie,Kenny
Caldwell a slng- vered a run scoring single to win
bottom of the seventh Inning nated hitter Howle Lawrence
le,and
Wade
McQueen
a single.
the game, 6·5.
when Mark Griffin scampered walked to load the bases. Mark
Senior hurler DaveAmburgeyhome on a passed ball to itve host ·Griffin slammed a two-run sin: · , For HT Cremeens had two
,pltchlng three Innings of relief,
Eastern a 5-4 come-from-behind gle. Jeff Johnson walked, and singles and Brumfield a single.
win over the Hannan Trace Lawrence blllzed borne with the · .Eastern plays at Southern suffered the loss. while Rob Kuhn
picked 'up the win.
go-ahead run on a bang-bang Wednesday.
Wildcats here Monday evening.
Unescore:
Amburgey fanned six and
play
that
followed
a
passed
balL
Senior Steve Horner and JunHannan
Trace
..
003
001
0-4-4-4
walked
just one, while starter
With the score 4-3, Eastern
ior Tim Brumfield dueled long
Eastern...
100
030
1-5-6-3
Shawn
Cunningham
went four to
. and hard In a torrid pitching leading, HT again tied the score
Batteries
Horner
(WP)
and
strikeout
two
and
walk just
battle, but Horner came home In the sixth when Cremeens
Davis
·
three.They gave up six hits.
the winner, Horner fanned 12 and · singled and came home on a
Brumfield (LP) and Saunders.
Kuhn earned the victory In
walked just three, while Brum- single by Rick Swain.
going the distance to fan seven
In the finale, Eastern took It to
field struck out elaht and walked
Oaks 6, Tornadoes 5
and walk just two.
the limit, when with two out only
twO.
OAK
HILL - Oak Hill plated
After Southern gave OH a
Eastern Is now 3-1 overall and a glimmer of hope flickered from
3-0 In the SVAC,while Han'na:n
the EHS offense. Lead-off hitter the winning run In the bottom of couple unearned runs In the first Trace Is now 2-1.
Mark Griffin singled, Jeff John- the seventh Inning to edge the for a 3-0 score on two errors and a
Eastern went ahead 1-0 lri the son struck out by an error on the Southern Tornadoes 6-5 here hlt,Southern tied the score In the
· first ·Inning when Jeff Johnson
catcher allowed him to reach Monday evening In SVAC base- third. Ken Turley slrigled,Todd
Lisle slngled,and Amburgey had
doubled and came home on li
first. Steve Horner reached on an ball action.
Southern
had
threatened
to
go
·
an
RBI single. Chris Stout tied
Kyle Davis single.
·error to load the bases, setting up
ahead
In
the
top
of
the
seventh
the
score with a two-run double,
the passed ball and winning
In the third Inning Hanna11
when
Jeff
Caldwell
walked
and
3-3.
Trace went ahead, when with two
scamper by Griffin.
Oak Hill went up 5-3 In the
Unknowingly. the HT catcher stole second with no outs,but a
out Richard Stitt walked.Mark
even
with
the
top
of
the
order
fourth on two walks, a single, and
Jenkins singled, Eastern comthought the ball had rolled to the
back stop, but as Griffin cross the coming up, a ground out,pop up, an· error,that could well have
mitted an error ,Brad Cremeens
plate the ball rested just three and strike out left the senior been a routine double play ball.
doubled, and Tim Brumfield hit a
stranded at third.
In the fifth SHS plated a single
·feet away.
two run single to give HT a 3-1
The winning run came home In run as Caldwell walked,stple
lead.
Horner's record ls now 2-0.
second, and scored on an RBI
single by Stout. That was Stout's
third RBI of the game, the score
now 5-4, Oak Hill's ft~vor .
In the sixth Cunningham
Kyger Creek outfielder Chad lop, Brett McDaniel, Steve her replacement on the mound ,
singled and Turley doubled to tie .
the score at 5-5,but that's the way
Johnson hit a solo home run to Metzler and Steve Tarbet! had hit .a batter and walked five
straight
after
that,
though
the
It
stayed until Crabtree's herojcs
cap of! a three-run third Inning as singles for the Highlanders.
Highlanders
scored
all
of
their
the Bobcats defeated Southwest- . •'!'he' Bobcats played errorless
broke the Ice.
ern 8-2 In a shortened contest . bali, whlle the Highlanders com- runs on Drummond. Bobble Jean
Southern now 1-2 In the league
Shaver survived giving up three
and 2-2 overall faces Eastern,
Monday aftePnoon In Ch1!5htre.
mltted three errors .
whO is tied at 3-0 with OakHill,ln
The contest was shortened
Kyger Creek, now 1-2, will play hits and five free passes In
picking up the save.
caused by rule technicality, Wednesday at Symmes Valley.
Racine Wednesday .
Bobcats Drummond, Noble
caused when a Southwestern Uneaeore:
Uneseore:
Southern ............003 011 ~5-7-3
player was ejected for throwing SWHS ......................... 000 11-2 and Renee Ward each picked up
hls helmet. Because the starter KCHS ... ...................... 203 3x-8 four hits, while Christina Carroll
Oak Hill ............ 300 200 1-6-6-1
and
Missy
Darst
each
chalked
up
Batteries : Kuhn (WP) and Bill
he replaced could not return to WP - Matt Martin
three hits.
the same spot In the ba ttlng LP - Zane Colley
Ward.
Though she went the distance,
Cunningham, Amburgey 5th,
order, the Highlanders could not
Southwestern's
Lisa
Hall
was
and McCoy.
·
continue, as they were one player
. Kyger Creek scored at least
short of the nine required.
three runs In each Inning of their hammered for all of Kyger
Sophomores Matt Martin, the
six-Inning affair with Southwest- Creeks runs on 28 hits and four
The Daily Sentinel .
ern Monday afternoon en route to walks In the game.
winning pitcher, and Brian VlnSWHS .....................0 0 0 0 12 0
son hit doubles for the Bobcats,
a 27-12 blowout.
(USPS 145·900)
whlle Mike Bradbury, Chuck
Winning pitcher Jill Drum- KCHS ................ 3 4 8 3 6 3-27
A Dlvlfllon ol Multimedia. Inc•
London, Greg Reese and John
mond struck out 11, walked two
Published ~v£&gt;ry afternoon , Monday
SVHS defeats Pirates
Sipple had singles. Losing
and did not give up a hit In her.
through Friday , 111 Court St. , Po·
Senior Duane McCarty pitched
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
pltch~r Zane Colley, Josh Halsfive Innings of work. Vlkkl Noble,
lishlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
a no-hitter and struck out 14 to
Pomeroy, Olllo 45769, Ph. 992·2156. se.
take Symmes Valley to a 14-0
cond class postage paid a 1 Pomeroy,
knockout of North Gallla Monday
Ohio.
afternoon In VInton.
Member: United Press International,
The Pirates gave up nine walks
Inland Daily Press Association and tbe
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI) know how to take It easy."
Ohlo Newspapel' Association. Natlonal
·Cincinnati Red&amp; third llaeman ••. Bell, who enters the season and 11 hits, most of those In the
Advertising Representative, Branham
last
,
two
Innings,
whell
the
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
BuddyBell'sstreakofstartlng16 with a llfetime ..282 average and ·
New York, New York 10017.
straight Opening Days Is In 2,421 career hits, is having a VIkings got a total of eight runs.
jeopardy because of a strained difficult time dealing with the Tony Kennedy, who watched the
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loss.
Bell, 36, first suffered the 1972 with Cleveland. He has also
Todd Petrie and Don Mays
sprained 'left knee March 11 and played for Texas.
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time he slides he jams that knee. organization winning a cham- Monday afternoon.
Chris Karcher struck out four
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The first thing you know, he's plonshlp," Bell said. "Naturally,
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I want to be In there as much as
13 Weeks ................. ............ .. ... $17.29
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LP- Faught

Kyger Creek defeats SW nine, 8-2

Calendar

reveal · wrongdoing that less
conscientious bureaucrats and
politicians would rather suppress have been rewarded with
reprisals rather than protection.
The White House Office of
Management and Budget . has
used the power granted II In a
pair of executive ·orders signed
by Reagan to justify secret
consultations with special Interest groups and to thwart requirements for public participation In
the government decision
making-process.
In dealing with the Information
vital to sustaining an Informed
electorate, the president has
sought to politicize Its collection
and privatize Its dissemination.
The latter Initiative means the
knowledge necessary to ensure
government accountability Is
available only to those who can
afford II.
"Government information Is a
public resource which has a
political value," notes the coalition of concerned public Interest
groups. "It Is not simply a
market commodity with only
economic value.''

The Republicans ·States sold an ally down the river
had voted lor House Speaker Jim
say they are for humanitarian - while the Soviets pump In a
Wright's original Democratic
aid and the Democrats want to billion dollars per year supportbill - since · defeated ~ are
sell out the contras. Nasty Ing their Nicaraguan surrogates. . co-sponsoring MacKay's bill.
personal vendettas are at work
Sen. David Boren, D-Okla.,
The votes for. aid seem to be
on both sides. There is plenty of acting with four other moderate
there In both houses. The probblame to go around, although by Democratic senators and five
lem Is procedural. Will Speaker
my lights the Democrats of the Republicans, has proposed a
Wright and Senate Majority
left bear a heavier burden of Wise plan to break the gridlock. It
Leader Robert Byrd schedule
blame. Still, how strange it Is; . calls for$48 million In human Itar·
votes on the new plans. Both
everyone's for aid, and there Is ian ald. In addition It would free . Wright and Byrd are under
not only · no aid, but no vote up for delivery about $5mllllon In
pressure. Many liberal Demoscheduled up or down regarding previously committed lethal ald.
crats
have made the anti-contra
ald.
·
Perhaps most Importantly, Bor·
aid position·their litmus Issue . .
Wonderful. Young Nicaraguan en's plan guarantees' the pre~l­
. Here's how Boren sees the
kids In the jungles who want to dent "expedited proc~dure" o~ · situation: "This Is a tragedy. Too
free their country are dying, or congressional votes for military
many members of Congress are
will die, .as !bey run out oi aid If he feels the sandlnlstas are , locked Into rigid positions, castsupplies. It Is a brutal fact: They taking advantage of their milIng blame, personalizing the
will be ,dying because the Con· Itary superiority during negotiaissue, making It a schoolboys'
gress is dithering.
tions. That threat of renewed · quarrel.lt Is not a proud moment
As the Congr~s played polit- mUitary aid caR be the club in the
for the United States or the
Ics, the Sandlnlstas mobilized to cloaet to keep the communists
Congress."
deliver a knockout blow to the honest and push toward the
We sha !I soon see the stuff of
contru. But the contras hung peaceful democratization of
which Coneress Is made. This !sa
tougb and fought well. The contra Nicaragua.
central issue or our time. You11g
arms caches were not destroyed.
Rep. Buddy Ma~Kay, D-Fia.',
men will die. It deserves more
We were lucky.
has proposed a similar bill in the
than
a procedural mora11 ·a nd
But such luck cannot continue. Hoilse, although differing some·
bitter backbiting. Flab or cut
Without American supplies the what on provisions from expebait,
Congress. This deserves a ·
contras will withe~ away. And It dited procedure. A number of
vote, up or down - soon, ~fore
will be said again !hat the United moderate House Democrats who
more kids die In the jungle.

. ....

IWIIMIIIII ........... I:Mp.m.

'

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

Ml__. ... Wlc:..ta, 1: H p.m.

~Yeft:ll~,'l:• p.rn.

'
'

a1 V~ll\'el',

Major Ja,._8oc!eer I.Aap!

..................m.

s~recy_
_____R_ob_er_t_~_al_te_rs

Some examples of that policy
were ·c ited recently by a coalition
of public Interest organizations,
including the Advocacy Institute.
Government Accountability Pro- ,
jeer. National Security Archive,
People for the American Way
and Public Citizen. ·
The coalition said, "The Reagan administration's hostility
·toward the Freedom of lJlformatlon Act - manifested by Its
largely unsuccessful effort to
weaken the law In Congress has emboldened agencies to
utilize myriad bureaucratic evasions... to abrogate the objectives of the act. "
Those tactics range from imposing prohibitively expensive
search fees to Interminably delaying responses to requests for
data- both violation~ of the law.
Reagan's penchant for covert
military and Intelligence operations has led him to Issue almost
300 National Security Decision
Directives. far more than any of
·
his predecessors.
NSDDs secretly authorize polIcy Initiatives, often without
congressional oversight. The co-

or cut bait

button . . One destination Is the
United States . .
Taiwan also produces methaqualone, known by its trade name,
Quaalude. At the moment,lt Is all
consumed locally , but shortages
In the United States may make
the Taiwan product marketable
here. Tougher enforcement in
this country has created the
shortage. ''(If) availability continues to decline in the United
States without a commensurate
drop in demand ; Talwan has the
potential or becoming a source of
methaqualone for the United
States," says the DEA report.
Hong Kong has been used as a
funnel (or ~peed destined for
,Japan and the United States. In
011e recent DEA Investigation, a
Yakuza · source said the speed
produced In Taiwan was
smuggled by ship to Hong Kong,
where It then went by commercial flights to Hawaii.
The abuse of Quaaludes,
known In Hong Kong as "mandrax, " Is on the rise there; the
drugs are smuggled In from the
People's Republic of China. The
DEA also picked up evidence
that poor-quality speed Is being
made in China and that distributors In Hong Kong ml.x It with
higher-quality goods to Increase
t(lelr profits.
·
The Philippines also Is a funnel
for drugs, according to the DEA
Investigation. "Recent intelligence Indicates that members of
Japanese organized crime, ·already heavily Involved In other
criminal actlvllles In Manila,
have been smuggling drugs from
the Far East to the United States
through the Pl\lllppines," says
the agency.
1
South Korea is another major
drug producer. Each year, It
manufactures about 4,000 ,kilograms of speed, which Is called
"hlropong" there . Although
some of It Is consumed locally,
about 90 percent of It Is exported
·by ship to Japan. '!'he production
in Korea is con I rolled by Independent gangs. TM distribution
to Japan Is controlled by the
Yakuza.
·
Indonesia is seeing an upsurge
In the use of psychiatric drugs,
eSpecially among young people,
who are mixing them with
alcohol. Amphetamines and -barbiturates are produced legally
there.

olerM)',

Eagles slip by Hannan Tra~e, 54; SHS
drops 6-5 decision to Oak Hill Oaks

singled before Puckett's third
homer of the spring gave Minnesota a 4-3 lead. Mike Mason, who
pitched the seventh Inning after
Joe Nlekro worked' the first six,
got the win. Guy Hoffman, who
surrendered Puckett's homer,
took the loss.
Minnesota's Greg Gagne led
off the game with a homer off
Ron Robinson, who yielded only
three hits through six Innings.
'

CLEARWATER,' Pa . (UPI) Milt Thompson singled In the
winning run with ~ out In the
ninth lnnlng to give the Philadelphia Ph!Uies a 4-3 victory over
the Texas Rangers.
Thompson singled on reliever
Ed Vande Berg's first pitch to
score Steve Jeltz, who had
reached on an Infield single.
George Vukovij:h waikeil and
Tom Barrett lined out to Steve
. Buechele but the Rangers third
baseman threw wildly to second
base, sending Jeltz to third on the
error.
Jeff Russell, the losing pitcher.
then was lifted In favor of Vande
Berg.
Winning pitcher David
Palmer worked four scoreless .
Innings and scattered three
hits. He walked two and struck
out three.

..

, Bucks face Colorado tonight
' NEW YORK (UPI) - Ohio
State's role as the National
Invitation Tournament .f avorite
falls to ease fears Buckeyes
C.oach Gary Wllllams hu about
M dls
""
e
I yl
I
~=rd~~- n
a on .,..uar
The Buckeyes, neglecled by
the NCAA Tournament selection
committee despite upset victorles over Purdue and Michigan,
face Colorado State In the semlflnals of the NIT at 7 p.m. EST.
Boston College·and Connecticut,

NIT In 1986, advanced to the
semifinals with a victory over
New Mexico at "The Pit," where
Final Four contender Arizona
lost thls season. Colorado State
Coach Boyd Grant led Fresno
State tO tbe NIT title In 1983.
Grant brought Colorado State,
21-13,1ts first postseason bid in 19
years In hls first season as coach
of the 'Buffaloes. He said he
knows "absolutely zero" a.bout
the Buckeyes, wllo are led by
guard Jay Burson with 19 points

who each pos~ three NIT f~pe~r~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;!iiiiiiiilii
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
victories after finishing at the
(UP!) - Rance Mulllnlks' two- , bottom of the Big East race, play
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (UPI) run sinllle In the seventh Inning In the second semifinal.
- Ketth Hernandez's double helped the Toronto Blue Jays win
Williams coached Boston Colhlahllghted a three-run third 5-3 over the St. Louis Cardinals.
lege for four seasons before
lrulln&amp;,llftlng the New YorkMets
Mulllnlks'· single off Steve moving to Ohio State two years
to a 5-2 decillion over the Red Sox Peters followed a double by ago. In bll ftnal three ~na at
that snapped a aeven-eame Bol- Gregg Myers; a walk to Tony Boston College, the Eagles were
ton winning streak.
Fernandez and a wild pitch as the eliminated from the Big East
The Meta sco-' all their runs · Blue Jays Increase their lead Tournament at the Garden In the
.~
from 3-2 to 5-2.
ott s~r Jeff Sellen. who left
St Louis scored a run off quarterfinal round.
"I thought I was cominll back ·
the pme In the fourth Inning
·
after getting hit on the left wrist winner Jim Clancy In the first.
for the Big East Conference
Whln you nHd 1s• .J.·n be
by a Wally Backman line drive. VInce COleman doubled, sto~ tournament," Wllllamauld Sun·
thtfl ... wHh prompt, con·
The X· rays on Sellers' wrtstwere third and scored on a wild pitch.
day at a Manhattan luncheon. "I
cemtd Insurance Hrvlce. Wa
negative
Toronto scored two runs off did that four tlml!l and didn't
11wars
try to be friends you
Form~ Red
left-bander Danny Cox In the third on asjngle want 10 do It qain."
e~n
dlpend
on. Clll us today.
Bobby OJeda atarted· for New byClancy,adoublebyRobDuey,
Oblo State, 19-12, allo beat
York and pltcbed sill lnnlnp for a double by Uoyd Moaeby and a
natlollally ranked Illinois and
tilt victory. OJeda was called for Fernandez groundout.
Iowa th1a ~eason and went 9-8 In
the Big 10. 11M! Omlulon of tbe
threbaJb,
/
BucU,.S wu co.ltlered one of
A alqJe by Mike Greenwell, a
the DIGit 4ueallonalrll decisions
HAJNES CITY, Fla. (UPI) doUble by Rich Gedman aDd a
. . ..II)' __ _ Owa )II'CIINIId Brlaa l'llbtr pttcblld llx lhutout · by the NCAA commltteee.
Bolton'l two runs In the lecOIId tnnlnp ud Barry Bondi strolled
'1 thlllk every team 1tarta out
214 EAST lAIN
three hits to pace the Ptttsbur&amp;b trytna to pt to the NCAA and Ita
Pirates' 5-3 victory over the alway• dllappolnttna wbell you
Kana• City Royall.
'
don't get In," WIWaDII IBid. ''I
Rmdl led off the fint with a thlllll: that's what mcUvatea our
double, tool!: tleCOnd on outfielder team: · the opportunity tq play ·
Bo JaciiiiiD'a tlu'owinJ error ud anll abow people bow aood we
IClOl'ed on Randy Mllllaan's are."
....le.
The Bucke;yel, wbo won the .

SoJ

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POlE ROY
992-6687

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the sponsoring store before 5:00 p.m., April

1st.

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MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

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�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Marauders top I.ancers, .13-2

'70 lo 88 POUND CLASS WINNERS Ia 1be ftnt
aanual Meigs wret~Wna loumey over lbe weekend

were Jim PulllDI, first; Bobble O'Brien, P.J.
ChadweU and Grant Reynolds.
·

By JIM SOULI!BY
King's second hit plated the
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs Marauder's 13th lind final run.
Marauders bounced back from ,
The LancerS picked up two In
two consecutive losses to take the sixth Inning when Cllrls
their Trl Valley Conference op- Frashler ·doubled to center and
ener against the Federal Hock- Toby Workman rapped a round
Ing Lancers to even their record tripper over the lett lleld fence.
at 2-2 on the season.
· Bartrum started on the mound
The Meigs mound crew gave for Meigs, working three Innings,
up four hits to the Lancers while fanning seven and Issuing two
the Marauder batsmen pounded free passes as he picked up the
!)Ut 13 safeties Including a home win . Durst worked the fourth
run and two doubles ,
frame and whiffed two of the
Meigs ~ored In their first at · three batters he faced. Junior
bat as Jeff "Cheez" McElroy laid Keith Mattox, up from the
down a bl!nt on the first pitch to reserve. sq~ad; turned In a good
reach safely and stole second on · perfonpan:ce despite getting
the second pitch by Frashler of tagged for the tour hits and two
Fed;Hoc. He advanced to third ·runs In three Innings on the
when Brent Bissell got aboard on rubber. He gave up two freebies
a fielding error and scored on a
wild pitch.
Wes Young picked up the
Marauder's second run In the·
second frame after he drew a
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI) free pass, advanced to second on Mario Solo, trying to make a'\
a steal and crossed the plate on comeback after two years of arm
two consecutive ground balls problems, has made the starting
that went for . outs with Matt ~otatlon for the Cincinnati Reds.
Baker being credited with the
· Soto was one of five pitchers
' RBI.
manager Pete Rose chose Saturday morning for his starters.
McElroy led off the third with Others are Danny Jackson, Tom
hiS second Infield hit and Bryan Browning, Dennis Rasmussen
Durst followed with a single to and Ron Robinson.
Jose Rljo, acquired In the off
left. Two wild pitches and a balk
plated 'Cheez" atter which Brent season In a trade that sent Dave
Bissell lofted one over the 330 foot
mark In left field for two Parker to Oakland, was rele"rlbbles" to give the locals a 5-0 gated to middle-Inning relief,
advantage.
despite the fact he has only
Nick King picked up Meigs' allowed one rup this spring.
sixth tally after he walked, went
After Rose made his choice of
to third on McElroy's third single starters, he called them Into his
and crossed the plate on catcher office at the new complex at
Plant City to tell them.
TobyWorkman'sthrowtosecond
"Solo Is one ·of my starters,' '
In an aitempt to wipe out Durst. Rose said. . "I told blm this
Mike Bartrum opened the fifth
with a double but was picked off morning. I called all five to- ·
gether In my office. We talked
by PItc her Ch aprnnn on a close about different things. We were
play at second. Terry Fields diScussing signs and things and
walked, Young reached on an
error and Joey Snyder singled to Mario was very helpful, really.
center to load the bases. Baker He's ready."
got his second RBI when he
Solo had suffered arm probreached first on as fielders lems the past two years and had
seen limited action. He came to
choice and Snyder was nailed at spring training with his sights set
second. Nick King ·then singled
on a starting assignment.
· to
·
I ft t 0 I te Y
e
P a · oung.
He has retired 32 of the last 33
Ten batters went to the plate In batters he has faced and has
the Marauder s lxth · Durs t compiled · a 1.37 earned run
singled, Keith . Mattox ripped a ave.rage In his five starts.
double to left to drive In Durst
So to needs to regain the velocand Eddie Crooks followed with a
base knock to get Mattox home tty he exhibited In the past, but
and then scored, himself, on Rose doesn't seem too conField's sacrifice fly. With two cerned. He 'thinks his starting

and ended the game by pu ttlIIi
the Lancers down In order In the
seventh frame.
·
The Marauders played error·
less ball enroute to the win and turned In a couple of outstanding ·
fielding. plays. They will face
VInton County this evening In a
make-up game at tbe Rocksprings diamond.
Uaeaeore:
FHHS ............000 002 o- 2 4 3
Meigs ......... .. 113 125 x-13 13 0
Batteries - Frashler (LP-2), :
Wo0!1,(1), Summerfield (1),
Chaprnnn (1), Lewis · (1) &amp;:
Workman. Bartrum (3), Durst
(1), Mattox (3) &amp; Bissell (4)
Crooks (3) .
'

Soto cracks starting rotation

· 93-10% DlVISION WINNERS Ia tile first annual
Meigs Wn!lltllag tOUI'IIey over lbe weekend were

Matt HayDe&amp;, first; Malt Craddock, Todd DIU,
Adam Sheets.

•

•

'
In the three years he has lieen In
the manager's spot.
"All are capable of winning 15
to 18 games and maybe 20," Rose
said. "Allbavedoneltbefore. All
are throwini good and all have •
experience.' •
·
Rljo Jacks the velocity and the
explerence, mainly the reasons
for his being sent to the bUllpen,
despite the fact that In 13lnntngs
1n four games, he has allowed one
run, 10 lilts, five walks and 14
strikeouts. The only run he has
given up came Saturday by the
Pittsburgh Pirates.

Daugherty given
district honor

.,

ADA, Ohio (UPJ) . - Ohio
1 • G 1
Northern Unlvers ty.s
ae
Daugherty was named the Great
Lakes District coach of the year
and one of eight Division III
coaches to receive district · honors, officials said Monday.
Daugherty was se1ected bY the
National Association of Basket-:
ball Coaches following a 21-9;
season with the Polar Bears.
Daugherty, who has coached at
0 Nu for 16 seasons, s ha red the
Ohio Athletic Conference coach
of the year honors with Musklngum's Jim Burson.
The natlo.nal Divisions I, II, III,
and junior college coaches of the·
year will be announced April 3.
The year's team was DaJ~Kher­
ty's 11th to rank In the top 10 In

out, Snyder hIt safely, Oller r;f;lv;e;m;a;;;y;;;·;;;be;;th;;;e;;;be;;s;;;t;;;he;;h;;;as;;;s;;;ee;;n;;;;;th;;;e;;na;;;ti;;;o;;;n;;;ln;;d;;;e;;;fe;;;n;;;se;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
reached on a fielding error and
124-1.38 CLASS WINNERS In the first annual
Meigs wresUing meet over tbe weekend were

Fraak Blake, first; Joe McElroy, Steve Caruth·
ers, David Dalley, Richard Stewart.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) r
Ohio St11te forward Grady Ma- ·
teen Is expected to sit out
tonight's National Invitation
Tournament semifinal game
against Colorado State because
he missed a practice session and
the team flight to New York, a
published report said today.
"Unless there Is a major
change, I 1doubt very much
whethP.~ he'll play against Colorado State," Buckeyes Coach
Gary Williams was quoted In the
' Columbus Dispatch. ' "This will
bother us, no doubt about lt. This
will hurt our subs tltute roia tlon.''
Mateen, who planned to fiy to
New York today to join the team,
denied he Intentionally missed
practice Sunday or the team
were Geoff Cogar, llrst; Paul Van Cooney, Heath
flight Monday.
Shoemaker, Shannon Scott.
Williams was quoted as saying
he believes Mateen's absence Is
related to playing time. '

170.220 CLASS winners In the first annual Meigs
wreslling meet at Rock Springs over the weekeud

J'treston·e

Mateen to sit out
semifinal enc:oullllerl

TIEPIJI.IJIIIi RI/CE M.-TIIESDf'J4
Good
Selection
Now in
Stock
All Priced
For
Carry-Out

CHANGING &amp; PUMPING AVAILABLE

Abbott honored

By United Press International
Jim Abbott, a 20-year-old
power pitcher who was born
riamed winner
the 1988
Tan·
a right ofhand,
has been
wtthout
. queray Achievement Award for
excellence In amateur sports·.
The University of Michigan
ace, with a fastball surpassing 90
miles pet hour, will be honored In
New York June 14. Previous
winners of the award Include
Darryl Strawberry, Herschel
Walker, Bo Jackson, Sugar Ray
Leonard; Grete Waltz, Kurt
Thomas, Olga Korbut and Mary
Decker Slaney.
Gary Parllng and Mark
Hlrschbeck will join National
League umpire ~rews this season, NL President Bart Glamettl
announced Monday. Dana DeMuth, a four-year veteran NL
umplf!!, wllljoln Henry Wendelstedt's crew Instead of beginning
In the Pacific Coast League and
up for vacation periods.
coming
147-157 CLASS winners In lbe llrst annual Meigs wrestling meet
Hlrschbeck
will start In the
were Jeremy Ruj,e, llrsl and .Rick Smith.
American Association and work
the NL during vacations. Darling
will start the season on Bruce
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) - The players In camp, with 13 Froemming's NL . crew.
Cleveland Indians Monday re· pitchers, 3 catchers, 9 Infielders
turned catcher Todd Pratt to the and 7 outfielders. The roster will
be cut to 24 players before the
Boston Red Sox for $25,000.
The Indians paid $50,000 for opener In Texas Moriday.
· Now Open For Spring
··
Pratt, 21, after drafting him from
EASTER SPECIAL!
the Red Sox during the winter
Hu
·third
·
commitmenl
POTTED
IllES, MUMS, TULIPS,
meetings In December. But, In
HYACINTHS,
CAlADIUMS, AZAliA$
order to keep Pratt, the Indians
COMPlETE
UNE
Of VIGETQl£ &amp;
By United Press lnlematlonal
were required to keep him on
·lfODING
PlANTS
.
Louisiana State has received
their regular-season roster.
SHRUIII!IY &amp; FRUIT mES
Pratt, who the Indians believe Its thlrd commitment before the
OPEN
DAllY 9-5-SUNDAT 1-S
13
signing
date,
from
April
will eventually be a major league
ClOSED EASTER
catcher, was hitless In two games 6-foot-7 forward Steve Cook of
during spring training. He hit !1gard, Ore. Cook,ath~sport
.258 with 12 home runs In a Class letterman, averaged 21 points
and nearly 10 rebounds per game
A league last season.
SYRACUSE-992-IIn&amp;
The Indians now have 32 last season.

Indians retum catcher to

Mateen, an Akron native,
played only 15 minutes In Ohio
State's 68-65 victory over New
Mexico In Friday's quarterfinals

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
.

600 E. MAIN ST.

GALUPOUS
MIDDLEPORT
POINT PLEASANT

Home Ec.
changing
with times
.ro meet
today' s need

Beat of the Bend

The Double Whammy
By BOB HOEFLICH
would be so much more attrac-·
You're
to get a double tice than lrylng to perch some
whammy
·
guard ralltng along In . that
Not only does
location. The wall was to have
Daylight · Savbeen built so that there would
Ings !1me go
even l;le a planting area.
Into effect at 2
Well--don't look now, but the
a.m. but the lndivision office of the Ohio Depart- ·
. crease In pos. ment of Highways says the wall
tage rates, letmust come tumbUng down. The
ters are u'p to 25
department, according to Mayor
cents from 22 cents, will go Into .Seyler, says the stone wall would
effect also.
have no resiUency and the village
There seems to be a Utile Is opening Itself up to a lawsuit If
conflislon about the hour sunrise someone should hit the wall even
sefvlees will be held In sorne of though It might save them from
the churches. However; ni'ost are going Into the river.
going with 6 or 6: 30 a.m. hour
Sunday and that, of course, will
So last week this column
be on tile new time schedule. contained a ·ust of Democrats ·
So--remember you will be setting that Meigs Countlans of the party
your clocks ahead one hour would be voting upon In the May
Sunday morning--and you're go- primary elections.
Ing to get one hour's less sleep.
You know . how It Is--equal
Sunrise services will really come strokes for equal folks so here are
pretty early--but you can handle the Republican candidates for
. lt.
voters of that party:
--Larry E. Spencer, for clerk of
A new organization, . Legion courts; Robert E. Beegle and
·P layers, was organized Sunday Howard Frank, for sheriff; Eml!fternbon at the Middleport rnogene Holstein Congo, for
American Legion Annex.
recorder; George M. Collins, for
ThiS Is lbe new community treasurer; Robert H. Eason and
theater group and already. the Philip M. Roberts, for county
group has a play under consider- engineer; James P. Conde, for
atlon tor Its first presentation. coroner; Fred W. Crow III and
Sunday afternoon, the new or· Charles H. Knight, common
ganlzatlon named Shirley Smith pleas court judge; David J.
a!ld Shirley Quickel as coorolna- Koblentz, county commissioner,
tors; Dewey Horton as director 1-2·89 term; Richard E. Jones,
and Neva Curtis as treasurer. county commissioner, 1-3-89
The first play may be ready as
term; Steven L. Story, prol!8cutsometlme In May.
·
lng attorney; diStrict delegate
The next meetlng.-and eveand alternates to the National
ryone Interested In any phase of Convention, George Bush, Bob
community theater Is Invited-- Dole, Pat Robertson; &lt;)!strict
..will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday. delegate !lnd district alternate to
Aprll10, at the American Legion the National Convention, George
1 Annex In Middleport. FeeneyBush, BOb Dole; United States
Bennett Post 128 Is sponsoring Senator, George v. Volnvovlch;
the new organization.
representative to Congress, Clar- •
--ence E . .Miller, Ronald . ShoMrs. Hazel Hayes, known as emaker; justice of Supreme
Grandma Hayes to so many, will Court, full term, 1-1-89, Paul R.
be honored on Sunday In celebra- Matla; justice of Supreme Court,
tion of her 90th birthday.
full term, 1-2-89, Joyce J .
Following a famtty dinner. an · George; Judge of Court of
OPBll ltDIUe wiU be held at lbe Appeals ·fourth district 2-9-89
~.ra~'.Jieme-la.Syracu•1rom a__ term, William H. Harsh~; state
to 5 p.m. Members of her family c:entral committee rnnn Pete
extend a cordial Invitation to you, Couladls Bill Keslar· state ceoyou an.il you, but they do ask that tral committee woman, Norma
gUts be·omitted.
Jean Bowman, Barbara L. Deed;
state representative, Norman L.
You may have noticed the Stewart.
·
attractive stone wall.whlch bas
been under conslructlon.,.by vii·
Heritage Weekend and an
lage \!VOrkers across from the exit appearance by the Ohio Univerat the Kroger Store.
sity Band are on the agenda this
The Idea was to provide a summer. Everything's not combarrier so that someone coming pletely dead In the Big Bend
out of the Kroger exit wouldn't area-•lt just seems that way. Do
skid on.lce·and,go Into the river. keep smlllng.
Mayor Dick Seyler thought It

' Stafford, son of Marvin
Deron
.and Wanda Stafford of Rockport,
Ind.. fol'lllerly of Pomeroy, has .
enUslellln the U.S. Navy.
He will be stationed at Orlando,
Fla. for his baste training and
will remain there for an additional tWQ years whetP. he will
specialize In nuclear electronics.
Prior to joining the navy, . he

,.,
''~

r

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NEW COURSE - Creative Clolblnl 18 a new
course added by Mrs. Kathy Reed to lbe bome
economics currlculnrn at Meigs mgh School.

CONSTRUCTION- Mrs. Becky Baer, lnslruc·
tor, provides some fine polnltlpslo Debbie Blake,
a second year student worklag on garment

Mre:

Here
Reed shows course students, Danyan
Magen nd Teresa Johnson how to locate
rnanda&amp;ory Information on clothing labels and
hand Ia" Ia garments.
'

construction at Meigs IDgh School. Students learn
to prepare their pattern ·aad fabric for cutting,
marklnl the material and technique&amp; of sewing.

Community calendar

attended two years at the university of Southern Indiana, EvansTUESDAY
ville, Ind.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
He Is the grandson of Hubert . ship Trustees will meet In special
Stafford ot Pomeroy, and Mr. session Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the
and Mrs . John Harrah of Mason, town hall.
W. Va. Hls great-grandparents
are Lillie Cummings, Pomeroy,
WEDNESDAY
and Mr. and Mrs. Basil Harrah,
MIDDLEPORT - The Church
Mason, W. Va.
of Christ In Christian Union,
Pearl St., Middleport, will have a
temperance speaker Wednesday
evening at 7:30 p.m. Facts
concerning · the liquor trafflce
a.m. Sunday . ..
Breakfast ,wlll be served In the will be pres en ted.
church .fellowship hall following
THURSDAY
the sunrise service. Sunday
HARRISONVILE
- Harrlsonschool and morning worship will
'v!lle
Wesleyan
Holiness
Church
begin at the usual times of 9; 30
a.m. and 10:30 a.m. respectively. will be In revival Thursday
through Sunday with services at
7:30 each night.· Rev. William
Capterbury will be the speaker.

Easter service slated at church
The Mt . .IJermon United
Brethren In Christ Church Youth
will present a candlelight Easter
sunrise service entitled "My
Tribute to the King" featuring
special singing by Del..eah Sanders. The service will begin at 7

only *2.00 •••
PT. PLEASANT STORE

MIDDLEPORT STORE

Sunday, Mar. 27-2 p.m. 'tH 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Mar. 29-6 p•.m. 'til I p.in.
Thursday, Mar. 31-6 p.m. 'til 1 p.m.
Saturday, lpri. 2-;_3 p.m. ~til 6 p.m.

Monday, Mar. 21-6 p.m. 'til I p.m.
Wed1111day, Mar. 30_;6 p.M. 'till p.m.
Friday, Aprl11-6 p.m. 'tU 1 p.m.
Saturday, AprH 2-11 a.m. 'til l p.m.

srotr·
Tuesday, Marcil 29-6 'iL•· 'tl I

_.. .__

p.m.
Tharsclay, March 31-6 p.-. 'tH I ,;m.
Satarday, April 2-2 p.M. 'tU 4 p.m.
•

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With today's world growi!lg
more complex, subjects of study
In economics have also been
expanded to help tod;~y ' s student
cope with adult life.
At Meigs Hlgh School these
days, home economics courses I
and II are year-long comprehentsve ·ctasses based on all facets
of homemaking Including family
· and .personal relatlonsl\!ps, hous:
lng and home furnishings , consu•
mer and home management,
child development, clothing .and
textiles and foods and nutrition.
· During the first year students
learn the bastes In these areas
with knowledge and expertise
becoming more advanced the
following year.
As part of the current home
economics curriculum, students
are required to complete lndlvld~
uallzed extended experiences.
This consists of 30 bours of work
outside the classroom. The student organization Is Future
Homernnkers of America and Is
·an Integral part of the course
with students participating In
local, district and state level
activities of the organization.
There are several semester
home economics classes offered
at Meigs High School these days
one popular subject being "creative cooking" with students participating In a variety of cooking.
labs and demonstrations. Meal
management , International
foods and experimental projects
· are lncorpora ted Into the course
as well as basic food preparation.
In the semester clothing ci!ISS,
students discuss wardrobe planning, fashion, and textiles. La. boratory experiences place emphasis on the actual construction
of garments.
Family Living , another
course, offers students knowledge In making decision concern
.. f!!-ltllty. relatlollshlps. and prob·
!ems. A class In singles living Is
also offered to those students who
want to learn skills necessary for
living on their own.
Vlldoes available
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 Roberta Maidens,
or any band booster or band
member.
Meeting cancelled
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting
of Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
scheduled for Thursday night Is
cancelled. Work In the EA
Degree will be done at the next
regular meeting on April 5.

Revival underway
CHESTER - Chester Church riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ll
of God Is In rev! val through
COLLECTOR'S ITEM!
Sunday with Evangelist Steve
Hoskins. Special singing wil be ·
featured each night. Services
start at 7 p.m.
ANNIVERSARY
Car wash
COMMEMORATIVE
POMEROY - A car wash will
COMBINATION
be held Saturday at Pleasers
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. by the
Soutben High School Band.
Charge will be $4 for washing
.796285
outside, and $6 for cleaning both
the Inside and the outside.

PORTLAND - Hazel Com·
munlty · Church, between Portland and Long Bottom, will be In
revival with different speakers
each night, Thursday through
Sunday at 7:30 p.m .

--. 33

---

POMEROY - An Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting will be held
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Community Action Building on West
Second St.; Pomeroy. Ala-Non
will meet at the same time and
location.

$2395

Revival uoderway
CHESTER - Chester Church
of God Is In revival through
Sunday with Evangelist Steve
Hoskins. Special singing wll be
featured each night. Services
start at 7 p.m.

Alfred and Grace Rusche!,
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town· Sunrise service
Pomeroy. Great-grandmother Is ship Trustees will meet In special
DEXTER - Easter sunrise
Hazel Hayes, Syracuse, and session Thursday, 6: 30p.m., at ·service will be held.at the Dexter
great-grandfather IS Albert Ru- the Reedsville Fire Station.
sche!, Sr., Palm Bay, Fla. ·
of Christ
at6: 30a.m.
with
'Church
a -breakfast
to follow.
Theme
of
Paternal rp:andparents, are
SALEM CENTER - Salem the service will be Slmqn of
Gene and Dorothy McDaniel, Township Trustees will meet In
Sunday school wlll be
Mlcldleport, and great - special session Thursday at 9: 30 Cyrene.
beld
at
9:'30
a.m. with worship
grandmothers are Gertrude a.m ., at the fire house.
service
to
be
at to: 30 a.m.
Greenlee, Middleport, and Laura
McDaniel, Clifton, W. Va,'
COOLVILLE - Pre:Easter Scout meeting
HARRISONVILLE - A cub
revival services will be held
scout
organizing meeting for
Thursday through. Saturday, 7
Harrisonville
the surroundp.m. each evening, at the Van- lng area will beand
held
Thursday, 7
derhoof Baptist Church. Speaker
The spring meetllla of the Ohio Flowere." Mrs. Holter, a past will be Mike Homer, youth p.m. , attheZionCburch, Parents
Association of Garden Club&amp;, regional director, Is a member of minister from Torch, Ohio. Spe- are needed as much as chUdren.
Region 11, will be held on Aprll16 the Chester and shade valley cial singing Saturday nigh~.
For more Information, call 992In the Rio Grande Colleae Stu- Garden Clubs.
·
5'710 and uk tor Brenda.
dent Center at RIO Grande.
Reaervatlol\8 are to be, made rfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij!!;!!ii!!iiiii;!i!ii~~~~i!i!!!!~!!!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitjj
Hoetlng the meetiJll will be. the with ~tie Shoernnker, Box 190,
garden clubl of GaWa County.
· Cheshire, 45620, by Aprtl9.
Reglltratlon will begin at 9 . r-'----~---~--1
OFFER GOOO THRU APRIL 2. 1888
a.m. folloWed by the morning :
seeson at 9: 30 a.m. The momlna
prosram will be bY Mr ,'and Mrs:
.HICIUII YOUI SAUS SUP CAW FOR
Bob Evans and will feature a
preientatlon on their trip to
...... WI
Table •• of •rch•lllllte
Aultralla. A buffet atyle lunSTOIIIIOUISo IIIII. lllrv Fri. 9 &amp;&amp;·S ,...., ~t. t ILIIL·I p.m.
cheon will be held at noon.
Pat Holter, Pomeroy, will
prnent the afternoon program
wbll!h will be a !lower arrur·
llllllt MmoutraUon entitled
•MaldDJ_ the Moet of Your

Flame
POMEROY - Mrs. Marge
Hanlon of Letart, W. Va. will be
guest speaker at the April 5
meeting of the Long Bottom
Chapter of Flame Fellowship to
be held at 7:30p.m. at the Mt. ·
OBolltvte CommTh unltybliChlurct hvl,tLodngto
om. e pu c s n e

.

DON'
T
FORGET WE
CARRY GROCERIES
EBER'S GULf

ST. RT. 124, RACINE, OHIO ·.
949-9200

r~a;tte;n;d;;·;;~;;~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~~~~~::~

50Jo·1 00fo·200fo

DISCOUNTS .

A

Ufe

lftSIINIICe RAIIU.V Clft
~-,
COYer eY..V
•
·
1
_..__

11-1......-

of JTnNir
¥·--

•
SALLV LAMBERT

Ag_ent ·

1fl P.tc.

GAL11POUS

•

29, 1988
Page-7

Garden Clubs planning meeting

Bring your camera •• ·.or we .rill take the picture for

Ma~h

.,

Mr. and Mrs. Mike McDaniel,
the former Sandy Rusche!, of
Richland, Ind. are announcing
the birth of their second child, a
dautthter, . Janette Mariah, born
on Feb. ~6.
·
She weighted seven poUnds,
seven, ounces and Is 19 Inches
long. The 'McDaniels have
another daughter, Jennifer
Megan, four. ,
Maternal grandparents are

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

•

Tuesday,

McDaniel birth being announced

rr:=======::::::;-1

•

OH.

POMEROY,

f~tn;A1;;b;uq~u~erq~u~e,~N~.~M~.===~~~~;;E;;~~~9~9~2~·;2;0;9;4;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Red Sox

s.o,...

. All Tr8ctlon
Field &amp; Rood
. 4 Ply

3 &amp; 4 RIO

--

The Daily Sentinel

Stafford·enlists in the service

.·

FRONT
TRACTOR

By The Bend

'

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ptiiP

' 'I

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I

Lambert Insurance
Agency
·
992-6641
I 15 EAST SECOND

POMEIOY, OliO

�Ohio
The

Honesty .about benefits.
Dear Anq, Landers: I'm in real
trouble and I don't know what to
do or where to turn to-for help. I'm
so worried that I can't sleep or eat.
My husband is becoming concerned
about my weight loss.
What I've done is criminal and I
pray that I can turn myself in
without going to jail. Here's the
story:
I lost my job several months ago,
filed for unemployment benefits
and received them. I got another
job a few weeks later but continued
to collect unemployment compen·
sation for three mont~. I told
myself it was OK because · my
husband's income barely covers our
utilities and house payments.
My husband doesn't know what
I've done. My nerves are shot. I
look like hell. I'll pay. the money
back, Ann.' I'll do anything to get
this mess straightened out. Please
tell me what to do. - JEAN IN SAN
JOSE
.
.
DEAR jEAN&lt; I called the head of
unemployment compensation in
Sacramento and explained the situ·
SINGING FRIDAY - The .Shoppe Sisters and David will be
amoa1 the featured s1D1ers at Friday's aU nllht 101pellliDI at the
Rutland Civic Center. Tbe s1D1starill at 7 p.m. aad Is sponsored by
tbe Churches of Rutland. Other sla1ers wllliDclade the Chrlatlan
SoUDda, Narrow .W&amp;)' SIDler&amp;, Rutland Church of God Choir,
Voices of Love, Samarltaas, ReDectloas, FeDowsblp SID1ers aad
True Gospel Souada. Tbe pubUc Is welcol_lle and admlsaloa Is free.

VideoView: On
war destruction
'

By JEFF HILLEARY
In this month's column, we
take a voyage. Into the steamy
jungles of VIetnam and return to
greatness for the world's greatest secret agent.
PLATOON (120 minutes, R.,
_ HBO &amp; VIdeo) Is the long-awaited
. apocalyptic catharsis for Dlrec·
· tor Oliver Stone who touted It as
the release of all the painful
realities of his time In Nam. It
won four 1986 Academy Awards
Including Best Director and was
the center or a legal battle that
held up Its releas~ on the video
markets.
· This film , for all the ballyboo
and hoopla,_ls not as great as you
have been led to believe, You are
swamped right from the start
with v!'slons of violent Imagery
and emotional brutality as you
watch the loss of the naive
Innocence of Chris Taylor
(played excellently by Charlie
Sheen) due to the Influence of his
platoon sargeant who comes
across as a nasty, unlike able sort
right from the start This film,
which feeds that fanatical pacl·
. flsm and the Sylvestesr Stallome
Rambo psychotic soldier dying
for his country "l!ut I'm going to
take as many of them with me as
I can" Image, Is a great dlsap·
polntment It portrays the Amer·
lean VIetnam Vet as having been

a junkie and a foul-mouth.ed
murd~rer . And sadly, that Is the
Image that you are left with long
after the end credits run out. This
film has overdone violence and
out-of-hand swearing and Is very
disturbing to watch If you are
sensitive.
On ta lighter note,ls the return
of James Bond 007, the secret .
agent for the British Secret
Services, who seems to always
put the baddies to flight and get
the pretty girl. The 15th entry In
the series Is called THE LIVING
DAYLIGHTS (130 minutes, PG,
CBS Fox) and stars the fourth
actor to play him unless you
count ' the movie that starred
David Niven which most people
are trying to forget. The new
Bond Is Timothy Dalton and he Is
marvelous In the role. But the
movie Is great too, and Maryam
D' Abo Is definitely worth watch·
lng. This movie Is one of the most
faithful, next to the first movie,
Dr. No, at following the book In
Its adaptlon.
If you want some pure escapist
fantasy that has surprises, plot
twists and hair-raising escapes
from the edge of death, this
movie Is for you. I won't tell you
anything about this film because
I want to you see the unfolding for
yourself, but I will tell you that
you won't be disappointed.

New on the video scene:
By JACK E. WILKINSON
United Press hiternational
What 's new on the home video
scene

MOVIES
"The Princess Bride" - Rob
Reiner's delightful fairy tale is a
whimsical, satirica l and adven·
turous e xcursion to a storybook
land of miracles a nd monsters.
swordplay and sorcerery - and
true love. The beautiful Butter·
cup !Robin Wright) loves the
dashing, heroic Westley (Carl
Elwes) . but is being forced to
marry the evil P ri nce Humper·
dink (Chris Sa randon) , who has
sinister plans for both of them . To
the rescue come valiant swords·
man Inigo (Mandy Patin kin ) and
his huge buddy Fezzlk (wrestler
Andre the Giant) . E ventually the
lovers are reunited, the villains
vanquished and eve ryone who
should, lives happily eve r after.
As In William Goldman 's book,
the story unfolds as a grandfather (Peter Falk) reads the
. story· tO his ailing grandson who
Is skeptical · at first, then en·
thralled . He's not a lone. 1987. 98
minutes. Nelson Entertainmen t.
Rated PG. $89.98.
"lnnerspace" - Steve n Spiel·
berg's bustling sci·fl comedyadventure mixes high tech and
high Jinks to produce an lnven·
; u;ve,lighthearted fun movie that,
· like a good book, Is hard to put
down . However,lthelps to be In a
silly moOd. Dennis Quaid Is Turk,
a cocky Navy pilot miniaturized
In a top-secret experiment that
goes awry . Instead of · being
Injected Into the bloodstream of a
rabbit, he finds hlmselflnsldethe
·body of nerd Ish supermarket
· cierk Jack Putter (Martin
Sbort.) The two eventually make
@ntact and begin a remarkable
• ~latlonshlp, a cross between
• 'Fantastic Voyage" and "All Of
"!lie." Turll moves about In his
121nr ~~spaceship pumping up
- with self-confidence pep
tallCit as they work agal_n st time

;,.cctl

•

f

toward rescue, learning In return
something about his own arro·
ganl personality. Meg Ryan
.co-stars as Turk 's girl friend.
1987. 120 minutes. Warner Home
Video. Rated PG . $89.95.
"The Rosary Murders" - A
killer Is stalking a bleak Inner
city Detroit church during
Easter week. Seemingly Innocent priests and nuns are being
murdered. In each case, a black
rosary Is left draped across the
victim's hand. Father Bob
Koesler (Donald Sutherland)
knows who the killer Is after
hearing his tormented confession
but he Is bound by church law not
to tell anyone' even though the
murders continue. So, he sets out
t ~ trap the killer himself, learn·
lng the Identity of the next victim
through , of all things , the Ten
Commandments. Charles Durn·
lng co-stars as Koestler's hard·
line superior and Belinda Bauer
Is a reporter who further compll·
·c ates matters by falling for
Koestler . An Intriguing film ,
though at times It tends to move
too slowly . 1987. 105 minutes.
VIrgin Vision. Rated R. $89.95.
"The lUdden" - A good allen
tries to stop a bad one from
seizing global power In this high
velocity sel-f! thriller full of
violence and suspense, yet with a
touch of humor and warmth,
Inevitably compared to " The
Terminator. •• LOs Angeles pollee
are stumped when law-abiding
citizens suddenly turn Into cold·
blooded killers, unaware that a
slimy creature Is moving from
one body to another as It creeps
toward Its ultimate goal. Another
· extra-terrestrial (Kyle Maclach·
Ian) , who has been hot on the
creature's trail for eons, poses as
an FBI agent to join Detective
Tom · ~ck (Michael Nourl) In
tracking the thing down, The
growing relationship between
the human cop and his unhuman
partner plays a major diverting
role amid all theviolence.1987. 98
minutes. Media Home Entertain·
ment. Rated R. $89.95.
~

_..._

_

1

"rks in the
Truck catcbes fire, chlckeas
die, traffic snarls: SANTA
CLARITA, Calif. ( UPI) - A
truck loaded with chickens
caught fire on the Golden State
Freeway during rush hour, kll·
ling the birds and causing traffic
to snarl for several hours,
authorities said.
The truck fire northwest or Los
Angeles forced officials to close
the southbound · lane of the
Golden State Freeway shortly
after 9 a.m. Monday. said Call·
fornla Highway Patrol Officer
Dwight McDonald.
The ensuing traffic problems
were compounded when some
southbound motorists made U·
turns on the freeway and tra·
veled north In the southbound
lane, McDonald said. No ace!·
dents were reported.
There were l)O Injuries In the
truck fire, whose cause had not
. been determined, but the blaze
killed hundreds of chickens,
McDonald said.
Three of four southbound lanes
had reopened by 1 p,m., on
California's main north-south
·
highway.

:;-:.:'

.::.:
.... _
... ,_ ..
-=

·--·-·..

~·... -

••t-M ,...Ntt
_.. " ··. ,-. ·

JDA~

--

....

.. DA1'11

__

_. _.

M::.:.":!!:". -

IC -

111..

...

N l ..

.....

ne•

;:n;:

--

:::-~~·

...._

RKI HALSTED, AGENT
roint l'loloent,

Public Notic11
FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For. FIICIII VNr Ending
D_.,., 31. 1987
Bedford Townohip,
County of "Molao
"Tille II on uneudltad
Flnenc•l Report"·
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS: '
TIXH ............. ,t11,419.53
lnt.,.._,menl81
R~ ......... titi,l31 .96
lnt-t ..... .......... 1.640.28
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .... .. I8,691 .76
· DISBURSEMENTS
Gon. Oov't. ..... .. 211.896.44
Public Safety ....... 1,660.00
I Public Worka .. ... 42,872.94
Coplml Outtoy ..........36.00
TOTAL
DISBURS .... ... 70,064.38
Tol81 Receipt• Over/
UnderiDIIb ..... (1,424.38)
A~ncaa-ln ... ..... 2.000.00
Advii-·Out ..... 2.000.00
OlherSourcea/
11-*Pt INfund) .. .. 906.03
' TOTAL OTHER
FINANCINCI SOURCES
USEII .......... ...... .906.03
Dllb .•.
Other u..... ,....... 6t9 .33
Fund Cooh Ba•nce, Jon. 1.
19a7 ....... ...... 26.3B3.!9
F!llld cah Bal. Dec. 31,
: 1887 .... ..... .. *24,8211.1101
Fund Caoh Bolonce
Depollit. 1111 ...... 37,844.63
Tolllt Truaury
a.•nca ..........37.844.63
IAu OUU!IIndlng
Checka ......... .. 13.01 8.93

=::::·: :
....-.-

··-

m:=.

42774 Helwig f!idge

(3)

29

1:c"-d:1 :~~8~m TR~~~E~;~RK

Public Notice
ADDENDUM TO PART 1.
ITEM 3 (6)
soUTHERN OHto
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE NO.3

South~'::' 1 Ngth':

Coel
Company, Raccoon · Mine
No. 3. P. 0. Box 490,
AtMno, Ohio 46701, hu
1ubmltted ~n application to
-loe • Coal Mining end
Ohio Department of Natural

Reeourcea. Diviaion

Of ·Re-

ctamotlon. The propooed
coat mining and reclometlon
-•tlon witt be conducted
In Melg• County. Solem
T-nohlp. Boctiono 13. 19.
26, 28, 31, andFractiona7,
13, 19 ond 21. TM pro·
pooed underground mining
lrMI encompa11 439 ecrea.
and are located on the Wilkeavltle 7'h minute U.S.CI.S.

quodrongto mop. opproxi·
rnotoly one-hall mUe 10uth
to two mltea aouthwnt of
Solem c-er. Ohio. Tho IP·
plication prcipooe1 to ex·
the areal for room and

requnta for on lnformol
conforenca may be to
the Dlvlolon af RIIOiomldlon.
•IF~~:"~~~~.::~:~ BuMdlng
Ohio
d•v•
at
loll dote af publication
of thla notice.
(3) B. 16. 22. 29. 4tc

2

•

5501: Misses Sizes
10 to 24. Flange
details highlight t.hree

In Memoriam

In · memory of Ronald W.
Harrison who was killed in
an auto accident on Mid·
dleport Hill 5 years a&amp;o.
March 31, 1983.
S.dly missed

piece ensemble.

Uned coat comes In
two lengths. State N
(10-12-14), u
(1!1-18-20) orW

(20·22·24) when
ordering.

pattern $3.25

plus $1.00 P/H

S.nd to: Reader Mail.
Dept. 0000 Box 4000.
Nii&amp;s MI. 491 20·4000.
Priht Name. Address ,
ZiP. Size. Patlem Num·
bar. (NV &amp; Ml residents
add sales tax)

(

ampers, RVS,·
or Mobile
Home lot
Rentals

992-5'6 23

Howard L. Write--•

ROOFING

~ u~~~~s
sa.oo

MEWGutter•
- REPAIR .
Downspouts
G tt Cl
·
u er eanmg
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2263
or 949·2168

6 for '$45
Clubs shortelitd $5.00
Now Grips $3.50
Groovts SIO.OD
losketball Trophits ond
l'laqws U.SO

Sq-•

Jo::~~~~RI)
Chester, Ohio

RACINE
FIRE 'DEPT.
·EVERY ·
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
fildory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-J.ttn

JO'S GIFT SHOP

For Sprl.. ,... Su.....,..
SYIACUSI, OHIO
NlW STORE-NEW STOCK
LOW PRICES

Register fDr FREE
linllalh - No
' Purchast Necessary
Come In - Lots of
New Gifts!
·

Roger Hy~ell
Garage
Rl.

12l, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tr••••lsslo.
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

TRIPLE P
EXCAVAtiNG

•Do..r • Backhoe.'ll!o~
•Wilt Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wnockor Service
eJunk Yerd Bualne.ll
WAN£ TO IUY -CIED 01

JIINI CAIS OR TIUCIS
-FitH lSTIUllSF.• any of '""' sonkts '""

.....

614-742-2617
letw- 9 ........ , ....

J&amp;L

.

•·ttn

Z·1

B~OWN

INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

· FREE ESnMAT£S

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

·

3-21·'87·1 mo.

BINGO

RADIATOR
SERVICE .

,-----,

Home Health Care
AgMcy
We Provldi Care For the
Elderly In Their Home.

TIM orlglnll Bur,, SeH,

NURSES AlOES.
DRDERUES. LPN'a

uvcka. boata. cvcln. RVa

Hourly or Live-in
Arrangements

Tr. . "M1gulne or cars.

FOR QUICK RESULTS ...

Advwtiae today in

Wheeler O..ler, or you
juat may mlu 1 Nlel

rtL 1·992-U27 or 1-164-4233

or .loa.. . . . _
2-25-'IJ-1 '"·

BONOEO • INSURED
Covered Wwtth Workmen's
Compenaetlon

.PH.

61

NtwH-Iullt
"'Free Estimate•"
PH. 949·2101
ar Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAW
l·ll·tfn

RandS
AUTO REPAIR
41926 ST. RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
17 Yrs. Experience

CERTIFIED MECHANIC

· ·aus. 667-6102

HOME 374-5599
HOURS: 9:30 o.m.·ll p.m.
Monday-Friday
Sat. by Appointment
1
. l-4-'11-1 mo.

So many times we've
.Jonced for you
A million times we've
cried
II love could have sued
you, MothtJ
You never WOIIId hive died.
II hurt us so to see you eo
But you never weri alone
For a part of us went with
you
'
The day God called you
home.
Sadly missed by Helen,
Eileen &amp; families and
Aunt Vera.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
.HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable

Prices"

949-i801
Res. 949-2860

PH.
~r

Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CAW
4-16-I&amp;·Hn

GEARY
IODY SHOP
SSO PAGE STREET

OPEN DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Lot of N~w Items:
Flahlng Supplle1. Guno,
Archery. •nd Much
More.

can T. o. Stewart

We Cany Fishing Supplies

· or •• Stewart

742·2421
Or Stop ly Tlte Stare
Dn New u- load out

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Here
IUSINESS riiON£
1614) 992-6550
ttlSIOENCE PHO..
16141 992·77S4

of llrtlancl

2·28·'17·1 mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
. SERVICE
- Addo.u and remodeling
-Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing and alectrical

AOIIyllng • Aaupholotoring
Relidwltlal •
Commerd.. Furniture
Automotive • Marine
D,..,.,....Comlcet
A LAROE SELECTION OF

(Free Eatimatesl

v:C. YOUNG
Ill
or

FABRICS

9~2-7314

992-6215

Pom«oy, Oh,i~ '"·' .~ 1

Pickup • Deliwry
FREE EsTIMATES

1614)

,.-----------I.----.:.____

Lllwoon. cllrk·tNu....,r, VII·
111ge of lyroOUto, Third at.,
8 yrecuoe, OH. 48778.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
1-28-'88-tfn

J&amp;L

INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

(3) 22. 28. 2tc

=

l.,.t:
:=::
·=", ..

c..lt .......

.........

~~

I

. . 457..,

... 161 4) 141·5416
IIAUII Pllllll' SlOP

16141 ttl· '4

3

Announcementa
DCYUING

will

WANTID

UNDO NEW
MANAG-NT

NAIIIAUYI

•Willi!.. •Drytn
•Ren... •F,_. .

MEIGS
NON· FERROUS,

•. ""' .....
INC.

1814)88~-88011

PH.

E.O.E.

•

d

992·3466
llldl
felr

vtp-

......... Mol.

SOUTIIIIN HW I. E.;
.lilY DIWitt, iROIIR

MEIGS

CHDn

•....... Ill"

DWSAPfUAia

Dlperxble
Aid Sites &amp; Se!VIci
llearlnc Ewluatlons For All

AI•• .

LISA M. KOCH; M.S.

Ucned Clinical Audiologist
.(614~7619 or (614) 992-210f
417

Awnut. Box 1213

llllpolls, Ohio 45631

jUt

Vetalna 11Htori1l Hospltll
lll'eny Hats. Po.rQJ.

Olive.

Want to buv : Used furn iture and
antiques. Will bUy entire hot.(se-

Cute puppies · part Collie-part

WANTED TO BUY
ANTIQUES

A General Electric range to give
away: Call 614 - 99~ · 2221 .

4 V.a month old puppy, mixed
brMd , greet with children , 304575 -6606 .

Floor furnace , needs few parts,

Crocks ,

cupboards . be'ds ,

dreners , bOokcases , chairs,
quilts , dolls , iron &amp; tin toys, PQit
cards. picture frames . guns. frUit
jars. lamps, wicker. chine ca·
binet, coins, costume jewlery7
mu sic b0)(85, gum ball rna·
chines, &amp; misc. old items. Will be
it1 town on April 4th &amp; 5t"' .
Peying cash . Call collect-Tony 216-644 -1111 or Chuck, 216769•2693 or Write: ChuCk' s
.Antiquea. P.O. Box 4021. Co ·
pley, Qhio 44321 .

call 304·BB2·270a.
Free to good home. Miniature
· Collie, female and her two cute
puppies. 2601 1fz Lincoln Ave.
Pt. Pit.

6

Buying daily gold. silver coins,
rings. jewelry. sterling wara, old
coins, large currancy. Top pri·
ces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 6'14992 · 3476.

Lost and Found

GUILTS

FOUND: Ctlillicothe Rd .· Female , tan -blonde Chihuahua.Ciaim at : Gatlia County Animal
Shelter.

7

Yard Sale

High prices psid for pre-1960
quilts. Applique. pieced. any
condition . Cell.614 -992 -21 01
or 614-992-5657 .
Dalton Logging Inc. Buyer ~of
standing timber and logs . AI·
bany, Ohio. 614 -698-6284 .
Three head Taylor soh serv8 ice
cream machine. Call 614-797 4295 or 614 -664 -4761 .
Scrap lead. Paying · , , 2 per
pound . CAll 614-742 -2926.

Em pl oym ent
Yard Sale: March 28, 29 , &amp; 30. 9
· AM til 6 PM . Tope residence ,
Klieker Rd .. Gallipolis. Toys,
games, clothes. dishes . electric
stove, ~ much more.
March 30-31 . Baby furniture .
bikl!l. clothing. furniture. mise .,
Past WMPO . Rein Cancels.
Garage Sale-Wed ., Thurs ., &amp; Fri .
9- 4. 495 Oak Or.

....... Porrlerov· · --..
Middleport

Serv; ces
11

Help Wanted

GOVERNMENT JOBS .

$16.040 · S69,230 / yr . Now
hiring . Your area. 806-687·
6000 Ext . R - ~0189 for current
Fed&amp;ral list .
AVON- Sell Avon for ALL areas.

Call 61 4 ·446·3358 .
Applicat ions are being ttken for
the position• of pool manager
and life guards for the Middleport Municipal pool for the
summer. Applicationsareavailable at the Mayor ' s office and
mutt be returned by April 1·.

&amp; Vicinity

3 family. Saturday, April 2nd.
10:00-6 :00. End of Salem St.,
Rutland . Toys, including Sfar
Wars Collection. baby bed,
Applicati o ns are being talcen for
toddler car seat, 2 T.V.'s , T.V.
the position of manager of the
stand, brand n~w stereo, turntaminiature golf course at Middleport's Hartinger Park. Applic a ble with speakers, new turntable
with speakers. stero stand,
tiona are avail1ble at the Mayor ' s
console stereo, loveseat. double
office and mu at be returned by
April1 .
oven range. Sears ping pong
table, 10 speed bike, girls 1 8 ' .,.-,..,.--,----- Inch bike, cardtable .and chairs,
Sell Memorial Day Wreaths fn)m
sleeping bags. Tupperware,
your location . Pays 26% commission . Write: Dept. 333, P .O.
clean clothes (all sizes), other
knick ·lcnaoks and furniture. 614Box 342, Sulphur Springs. lndi·
742-2848 or614-992 -2683.
ana 473B8-0342.
3 family yard sale. Friday and
Saturday, 1st. and 2nd at 1 OB
Pearl. St. , Middleport . Inside
building In back . Rain or shine. B
till 4 .

....... Pf"Pieasiiiif" ... ·
&amp; Vicinity

·

Full time Secretarial position
available. Must be good with
public. Experienced in accounts
payable, accounts receivable,
bill ing. trans cribing &amp; word
processing . Some evening hours
requ ired . Send resume &amp; letter
of interelt to : P.O . Box 910,
Gallipolis. Ohio 46631 .
Wanted : Lady to stay with l"~ dy
for company &amp; light house work.
Call 614-446-2218, Bam-4pm
or 614-446-1764 after 5pm·

3-28-18-l mo ..

..........

&amp;

Wanted Standing timber. Large
or small acreage. Call 614-6827348 or 682-7216.

PH. 992-2772

SAUS-··lCI·M'PIIIS

Third

Giveaway

992-6282

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

.._.1111

Auction.

614·446 · 3169 .

Junk Cars with or Without
motots. Call Larry lively -614 388· 9303.
.

&amp; Vicinity

'----:...._ _4;_· ~

BID NOTICE
Tho Village af Syracutola
occepttng oeetad blda until
12 noon Thurodey April 7
1819, for ,....ving. ond
...._,. lmpro-nto. to
the vii.... tennl1
courta et lyrac- Municipal Pork. Proaptollw bldd·
. . wllhlng further lnlonno·
lion, or wentl"' to aubmlt a
bkl, .,.uld contct: Jenloe

&amp;

Helen ' s, Cold Wawes $20.00.

1:00 P.M.
RA(INE
GUN CLUB

l/28/t1n

UPHOLSIEIY
It. I, Coehrlle
Serving Meigs 6
Atheas Counties

won.

Public Notice

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

ho!c! furnishing . Marlin Wede meyer, 614-245 -6162.

....... Ga11Tpolis ........

10·9-ttn

Ntw Location:
161 North Second
Midlleport, Ohio 45760

Day or Ewenlng :
2·25·'17·1 mo.

All on Ohio River . Very beautiful.
614-9 .9-2526 .

SUNDAY

RACINE, OHIO

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

apt.

7 wlc. old pupp ies . Have been
wormed . Pitt Collie. Call 614388 -8796 .
.

In lovin1 memory of

CLARA ROUSH
who passed away .
March 16. 1986.

Racine Ohio River Camp
Grounds . Opening April 15.
Come camp with us! 21 camp
sites . For ren't : House keeping
fu~ished

•
:

Complete hou seh o lds of furni ture &amp; entiques . Also wood &amp;.
coal heaten. Swa in' s Furniture

•

wka. old. Wormed. Call 614446· 2158 .

EVERY

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

3 Announcements

•

985-3365

German Shepherd. htre nice . 6

GUN SHOOT

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

CHESTER, OHIO
Custom Home
Building, Room
Additions, ·
Remodeling &amp;
Repairs. Roofs.
Baths. Kitchens

9

Announcemenls

4

Middleport, Ohio
1·13·tfc

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

ERWIN
.'
CONSTRUCTIOf(

Phone 304· 675· 5709.

99Z·2196

PIIOTO ADS SRU
Premiering

3/ 15/'81 lfn•

Dealer for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway be·
tween Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan.
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8. 7 Financing· on
Yardman
Service on All Makes
Wi Honor MC/DiK/Visa
3/7/'8811 mo.

rooms; · camp,r,

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

949-2748

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

992-2264

PAT HILL FORD

6-17-tfc

3·'1-'88·1 mo.

Will do Federal
and State.
Income Tax,
typing,
bookkeeping,
and Notary
Service.
Margaret Parker

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

IO· B·tfc

Basham Building

l 2 'II 1
• • · mo.

· · · mo.

3·28-88-1 mo.

Daytpn company closes health clubs

f

IOUNTRY CLUB

3 2 88 1

Reclamation Permit numbered R-0483·11, to tho

Written aammenta and/ or

' t -!

Ptrtl &amp; Senlu

.March 19, 1988
c•~ rL-----------------~----------------~~::::::::::::::~

pillar method of under..
ground mining, and for long·
-n mining devolopmant.
The application 11 on file at
tho office ot tho Molg1
County Recorder. Melgt
County Court Houoe, So·
cond Street. Pomeroy. Ohio
411719 lor public viewing.

.-

hrt~ E~•lt•••t

GUN SHOOT

Barbara J . GtueMr

OPEN

fJomeroy .

BOGGS

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

' 614-662-3121
Authoriud Jehn D•re,
Now Holland, luJh Hog
Farm Equipment
Doalor

Business
Services

TOT. BAL . ... ...... 24.a26.60
I certify the following ,..
port to be correct and true.
to tM bell of . my knowl·
adge:

~'lid

news--~-----

and said the clubs were losing a . Agriculture and Consumer Servl·
total of $3,000 a day, said Living ces, the state agency regulating
Well area manager Ted health clubs.
.
Brisebois.
Republican Reps. Rll!hard
Living WeU has 25,000 active Crotty of Orlando and Dorothy
members at Its three coed and Sample ot St. Petersburg have
two women's clubs In the .area, both sponsored bllls pending' In
Brisebois said. He estimated the Legislature that would · reHoliday had 15,000 active quire bonds to remain posted as
members. although there are long as a fllness center Is open.
200,000 names In Its membership
file.
__:.=._
It was not certilla If Holiday
members could obtain member·
ship refunds.
Fitness clubs are required to
Your career and pereonalutlefactlon can metchyour
post $50,000 bonds during their
goa
Ia
in health cere'a fastelt growing market - Long Term
first three years of operation to
Care.
.
make refunds available should
Arnericare·Pomeroy ha• an Immediate' oP.nlng for 1
the buatneaa ao bult.
pan-time
R.N. dealrlng dey shift. Flexible scheduling
·But moat ot the Holiday clubs
competitive
Alary and benefit• offered.
'
were older than three years and
.
Our
Netlon's
demand
for
long
term
care
extind
It waa unclear If any still had
welllnta the 211t century. Join thefutura ... Joln the Arner·
active bonda, said consumer
lcare·Pomeroy'Teaml
·
I
servl!*i consultant Gloria Van
CONTACT: N1110y Van Meter, R. N .. D.O.N.
Treese of the Department of
AmeriCilre·Pomeroy
38718 Rocklpringe Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788
1

992-3410

U.S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSYUE, OHIO

Public Notice

BELL
CONSTRUCTION

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

..... ,......t ..... old Mo•ios
I Slidto "'" to 001y YH5.
CW AMY CARTlR
or 101'5 lUCTIONICS

(3041 675·7611

'SALES &amp; SERVICE

MIDDUPOIT, OliO

ORLANDO, Fla. · (UPI) - A
Dayton, Ohio, company has shut
down without notice Its chain of
six health clubs serving some
15,000 members In three central
Florida counties.
Hollday Health Spas &amp; Fitness
Centers, owned by Universal
Fitness Operations Inc. of Day.
ton, was the second major health
club chain to fold In the area In
the last six months.
Holiday operated three clubs In
Orlando and one each In Ormond
·Beach, Longwood and Altamonte
Springs.
.
State law requires spas going
out of business to arrange for
members to have eccess to
similar faclUtlea nearby. J4ving
Well of Florida, part of the
Houston company operating 440
fitness clubs nationwide, will
honor the Holiday memberships.
Holiday Ironically had ac·
cepted the 4,800 memben of
World ot Fitness lac. when It
closed up four of Its clubs laat
fall.
Sidney Joseph Moore, who
heads the Ohio company, was
unavailable for comment after
the clubs were closed Monday.
Bot he was In Orlando last week

wv

MOVIES
VHS TAPl

lllf /'1111 .....

··::~:.­
~-.,.-

1!1-.. ~.

Each

Mason Coundes

ClaUi.fied pOfe• c01.1er the
/ollowi.RI lelcplloM e.~~chcntt • .. .

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Serving Meig5, G:. llia :~ nd

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CH•'fll-·un

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t:":4
::;

The story of Jessica. the toddler who was trapped In a well
shaft for two days, Is being sought by four or five movie
production ouUits but her parents are staying out of the fray.
Instead, two factions of the people Involved In the rescue effort'
have been fighting but Thomas hopes his committee will settle
·
.
,
·
things.
BALLET TRIBUTE: Legendary Soviet ballerina Maya··
Pllaetsll)'a did her signature work, "The Dying Swan," for the
audience at the Wang Center In Boston and received such a
mighty ovation that she did It all over again.
.
Pllaetskaya, the prima ballerina absoluta of the Bolshoi
Ballet, then was casca&lt;!ed with flowers from fans and fellow
Bolshoi dancers. Soviet defector Mikhail Bar)'Sbnlkov paid
tribute by performing with three members of his American
Ballet Theater company and then appeared on stage In tuxedo
and read c;ongratulatory telegrams addressed to Pllsetskaya
from choreographers Agnes De Mille and Martha Grabam,
President aad Nancy Reagau and Frauk Slaatra, who called her
"one of the great ladles of our theater family."
"The whole situation was very touching for me,"
Baryshnlkov said later. Pllsetskaya Is leading a 75-member
contingent of Bolshoi dancers In a two-week series of Boston
programs as part of a cultural exchange program with the
Soviet Union.
GLIMPSES: Vanna White, the "Wheel of Fortune·~
letter-turner, was In New York Monday to promote the
paperback version of her book, "Vanna Speaks." She visited the
members gallery of the New York Stock Exchange and traders
started chanting "Vanna, Vanna" when they spotted her ...
Robt!rt Plant, the former lead singer for Led ZeppeUD who Is hot
again with his "NOif and Zen" album, Is going on tour starting
May 5 In Quebec City with Stevie Ra)' V aughaa as his special
guest .. . There was a public trlbutetoFritzLoewe, who teamed
with Alan Jay Lemer on "Camelot," "Gigl" and "My Fair
Lady." In New York Monday. Attending were Kitty Carlllle
Hart, Robert Goulet and Richard Harris. Loewe died last
month.

A city dogcatcher arrived to
"We've had some comments
· Dogs stop tunnel traffic:
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Two take the 11-year-old dog to the
about them 'doing their duty' In
wayward dogs that scampered pound, where It was picked up by
the tanks," Goodlett said.
"It's a waste of time," said zoo
Into Pittsburgh's busy Uberty Its owners.
Tunnels forced auihortties to
Stray dogs force closings sev·
director Charles Wlkenhauser,
close some of the lanes In the
eral times a year, tunnel otrlclals
repeating one of several jokes
said.
making the rou_nds. .•
mUe-long tube, creating a traffic
Jam and a line of angry
''Dogs art! our biggest fear."
Using' the·waste matter In such
motorists.
Ladonlk said.
a way Is "not unusual," Goodlett
"Soine motorists were upset,
About 35,000 vehicles pass
said.
but It had to be done," said tunnel through the Liberty Tunnels on a
"You have to get bacteria
employee Steve Ladonlk of the typical weekend day, about half
growing. But they won't grow
shutdown Sunday.
of the number of vehicles on a
In numbers unless there's
animal waste products." he
"We know (closing the tunnel) weekday, Slm6n said.
causes a lot of Inconveniences,
Zoo officials use turtle waste:
said.
but we didn't want an accident to PI'ITSBURGH (UPI) - The
The turtles are considered to
be very sturdy, and can live In
happen," said AI Simon, Pen· Pittsburgh Zoo says It Is using
nsylvanla Transportation De- · ammonia-rich sea turtle waste to
water conditions too harsh for
partment foreman.
prepare an aquarium for-sharks.
other reptiles; Goodlett said.
The 40-mlnute closing of In·
"All animals produce ammoTwo feisty loggerhead turtles
bound lanes of the Pittsburgh have already been released In a
nla. The turtles are very hearty.
tunnels started around 11: 15 renovated shark tank at the zoo's
The waste products would not
a.m., when two dogs scampered aquarium unit Aquazoo, curator
hurt them," Goodlett said.
Randolph Goodlett said Monday. ,----.;___ _ _ _ _ __
Into the tube.
One of the dogs left on Its own. Ammonia from the turtle waste
The second one - described as a will stimulate growth of certain
small sheep dog that was types of bacteria beneficial to
"scared and cute" - ran nearly shai'lcs, Goodlett said.
the length of the mUe-long
It's serious business, but zoo
Inbound tube, then stopped at a officials admit they've gotten
doorway and waited to be some good-natured ribbing, the
rescued.
cura tor said.

• w• ......

10na

· - - - _ . . . . . . . ......... , _ _ _

news---------~-

SHE HAS A DRE~, TOO: Bernice Klq delivered a sermon
at the church her father made famous and became a licensed
preacher .Sunday. "At some point In all our lives comes the
moment of decision," the daughter of Martla Luther JUog Jr.
told the faithful at the Ebenezer BaptlstChurchlnAt)anta. "For
me, that moment Is now, as I submit myself totally to the will of
God."
King, a lifelong member of the church where she Is known as
Bunny, has gestures and a speaking style that reminded
longtime members ot the flock of her father. "So many.of her
mannerisms and so much of her style Is so much like her
daddy." said Mayor Attdrew Young, who attended Bunny's first
_se~mon along with her mother, Caretta Scott Ktn1.
It was an emotional occasion for me." King, who turned 25
Monday, wlll be ordained when she completes her five-year
study program at Emory University.
·
HmT HAND OK NOW: Dr. Michael DeBakey released his
famous patient, New Orleans trumpeter AI Hlrt, from a Houston
hospital Monday. Hlrt developed an Infection In his right hand
last week and flew to Houston so he could be treated by his friend
DeBakey. "The outlook Is excellent, although there Is still some
pain and swelling," said a spokeswoman at The Methodist .
Hospital. .
"Dr. DeBakey has prescribed oral antibiotics to treat the
Infection.'' Swelling or no swelUng, Hlrt, 64, headed back to New
Orleans with plans to play Monday night.· The Infection
apparently developed-from a growth that formed on Hlrt's hand
from years of trumpet playing.
MESS OVER JESSICA: Midland, Texas , Mayor Carroll
Thomas will be the chairman ot a five-person committee that
hopefully will put an end to the squabbling over who will make a
movi~ out of the story of Midland's best-known resident little
Jessica McClure.
·
'

•

.-.. ....·-·. ···- ..._...
._.. ......... ----__
_
-·.·::.:----·-"
....
.
"::'..:::::::..-·
-:.;;:":::;"--·
__·--...
... --.--..----.. ...........

7

By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
Vatted Press lntel'llatioaal

-.

Business Services.

Ann
Landers

ation . He asked that you phone
been for the rail that left an ugly
him. You will be instructed to send
bump on the back of my .head, I
a money order for the amount of would probably be dead now.
ANNIANJIEiiao
compensation you rereived unjustly
I'm only 17 and know there must
rlus a 30 percent penalty. (This is
be better fish in the sea, but I can't
~a....
.. 75 . . .
California ' law. The penalty varies
bring myself to dump Hank. When
according to state.)
he daesn 't hit me, he's a neat
Keep the receipt. If the bookkeepperson.
store and other public places. If this
He says he really loves me and
ers catch up with you down the
is true, what is the reason? road, the evidence that you have
needs me to hang in there for him.
IN SAN BERNARDINO,
CURIOUS
paid up will put you in the clear.
The problem is. I'm afraid to go
I'm·sure others who are reading and afraid to stay. I need your heir. CALIF.
DEAR CURIOUS IN S.B.: There
this have done the same thing. If so, • Ann. - M~INE PROBLEM
send the amount owed to the
DEAR MAINE:· Women who put are slightly more males born .than
department of unemploymeiu com· up with being knocked around . females. However. the survival rate
pensation in your state carital. hav.e low· self-esteem. They accept of female infants is higher, resulting
The~ will be no prosecution or ~buse because they don't think they in more female children. Also, .you
probably see fewer boys than girls
pu!&gt;hc exposure.
lleserve better treatment.
Dear Ann Landers: I've been
because
boys are more often left at
You need counseling. Check out
going with this guy for dose to a the mental health facilities in your home.
year now. I take a lot of abuse from communitY and let me know you
Planning a wedding? What's
"Hank,"both physical and mental.
are getting help. When you dump righr? What's wrong? "The Ann
Friends tell me I should leave
Landers Guide for Brides" will relieve
him, but what they don't under· this creep, you 'II feel a lot better your anxiety. To receillt! a copy, send
·
about yourself,
stand is that I really do Jove the
Dear Ann Landers: ~ Hispanic $1.50 plus a No, 10, self-addressed,
guy.
stamped envelope (39 cents postage)
A few weeks ago he tried to People have more daughterS than
to Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562,' Chi·
throw me over a bridge because I . sons? I've noticed this whenever I
cago,
Ill. IXJ61 J.0561.
said I loved my uncle. If it hadn't ~o to a shopping mall, a grocery

-People in fhe

Sentinei- Page-9

2218 Jefferson Ave, Wed.,
.T tlufl, Fri. March 30. 31 , April1.
Cabbage Patch dona with extras.
Government Jobs. 116.040 ·
other dollt. live plants. silk
169,230 year . Now hiring . Your
errangments, baby end Junior · area. 1 -806 -887-6000 E.11t . R clothes, electric range. much
9805 for c:urrant Federal list .
more .
Job huntin~? Naed a sllill? We
train people for jobs as Auto
8
Public Sale
Mechanics, Carpenters, Elec'tri·
&amp; Auction
cians. Food Service Workers .
Eleetronics Technicians. Indus trial. Ma intenance Workers ,
Nursmg Assistants and Order·
Wedemey.,'s Auction Service·
lies, Machianiltl, and Welders.
avalleble at your convenl1nce
Register now 10r clas .. s begin ·
lnd IOCitions. Marlin Wedefling April 4th, Call Tri· County
miler AuctionMr· 114· 245Vocat ional Adult Cent..- at 763 ·
SI 2.
3511 e.11t . 14. A v1riety of
funding source~ to pay · for
AuCtioneer Col. Oscar E. Glick..
training are available for thoH
304·816·3430. Lie. No . 764- eligible.
SS.
Do you have the apirtt of carlnu?
Rick hlrton AuctionMr, 11There are many job opportunfti"
c.nMCI Ohio and Watt Vlrolnla.
fOf health care workers. lecom•
Eltlhl. antiQuti, f...-m. liqukle·
a valuable meml»er of the heatth
"tlon ...... 304· 773·1788.
dere tNm ~ lutt 1 8 wllllka.
Enroll now In the Nuraing
.AIIIatant•Orderly program at
9 Wanted To Buy
Tri·County Vooational SchOOl · ~
Adult EducltkNt Center. Need
money for trllnlng 1' We have •
Wt pay onh for 1111 model clean
var6ety of fundfng eourca awtilullel c.~ .
•bl• for thOM 111'-'bl•. "qtn•
Jim Mink Ch• .-Okllllno .
now for the cluHI botlmlng
BIN Oono Johnson

Sl4·441·3t7Z

TO' CasH polcl 10&lt; '13 -

and- ulod .... • luklll·-· 1111 e.Ave.. tlolllpolil . C.M 114·441·
2212 .

AprUIII.ct11713·3611

c- t~~elplrltl

o•t. 14.
•. ·

fledorol. II... ...,. civil ..,.,. .

,_. 111.4 to 111.111 . lmm•
..... .........., Coil Job
1·111·411·31111xtf· IIZ2 Zt

u...

H.,.'

�Pomeroy-M~Ieport. Ohio

Plaga 10-The Daly Santinel
11

Help Wanted

46 Space for Rent

LAFF·A·DAY

AlliER 'LOTS

Haft Stylith . Acrou The Str"t

styling salon is •-'ing thr•
addition.t 1tylillts who. are look·
lng 1or more than Jusi anothar
job. Cal Terri 11 114-441 -9510
for det1il1 .

Pa"•Time Jobs II Join the Army

National 0\lard. 304-176-3950

or 1-800-642-3119.
304-675-1429.

Opening X-ray technician for

'

304 -675 -

I

SaiH penon for advertising
sales, ••penses plus commission, 304-757 -7881 .
someone with bookkeep i ng
bKkground, must have eKPI·
rienc:e. Accounts receivable 6
gen•~atledger .

Situations
Wanted
- - - - - - -- - Have room in prtvate home for
elderly person . ReaSonable rate.

Good c;:are. Refenem;es. Call

614-26e-6609.

Elim Home, 209 S. Fourth,
Middleport. Ohio. Room and

boa rd for senior citi;a:ens. Special
care in private home. 614 -992 -

6873.

.

Sleeping

rOOfJIS

and room and

board for the elderly. Under New
Management. Reasonable. 6149 92 -7204.

Wi ll do babv sitting in my home
anytime. Ex -dav Cere teacher.
References. Call 614 -742 -

2261 .
13

Insurance

Call us for your mobile home
insura nce : Miller Insurance.

3 04 -882 -2145 . Also : aut o,
home, life, health.

1-5

Schools
Instruction

Top jobs require top skills; Ac1
rt~ o w l Sout heastern Business

Co llege-446-4367 AICS Accredit~ Reg . 86-1 1 -10558

Jim's Odd Jobs

Sundecks, siding , painting, roof·
ing, carpenter work, trailer repair. Call 614 · 379 -2416 .
(!

Want to do interior and exterior
painting, 28 years ~xpetience.
free estimates. 304-675-5907 .

Financial
I

I

3 bedrooms, 2 bath h9me with
12 acr... 148,000.00 . Auuma·
ble 8 1/t loan. 517· 461 -8050.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1986 Naahua 14x60, 2 Bedrooms. underpinned. centre! air,
porch. unfurnished. Park lanfJ.
Call 614·446-931 5 Mornings.
12x60 Elcona1971 . 2 BR .• gu
heat. wutier &amp; dryer, air. Elttra
nice through out. $5460. Call

I

Business
Opportunity

I
! NOTICE !

Homes for Sale

Big 3 BR . farm homes built on
you r lo t, $15,995 and up. Call
1-614 -886 -7311 .

9719

.

1979 Duke Crown Royal ,
14x70. Total electric, 2 BA ..
underpinning, CA, microwave.
porches. Panty furnished . Call

614·256 -9340.

141170 Schuhz. All electric.
Wuher and dryer. refrigerator,
stove. drapes. porch, awning
included. Excellent condition.
Call 614-992-6662 or 614-

992·3348.

Windsor trailer 3 bedro\)ms, with
addition. 3 acres land, out
buildings, Gallipolis Ferry. 304-

Mobile home on 1 acre lot will
sell separately at Glenwood,
phone 30.,· 676-2018.

24X40 sectiona l: J aR .. 2 bath s.
utility room, new fi replace.
porch . 1 acre-land . 3 yrs. old.
Ca11614-388-9305.
3 BR . hou se - garage, Reduced
for quick sale. Mo\ling. Call

614·446·1358 .

2 BR . house surround ed by pine
trees, 13 acres , full base.. 2
bath s, hardwood floors, new
ffmce, pond &amp; outbuildings.
Priced in S40's . Call 614-4462107-days , 245-560Q-evens.
2 bedroom. 2 baths. 2 car
garege. level lot on At. 33.
Swimming pool. s 11telite. close
to Meigs HiQh . Ce!l 614·992·
3264 .
7 room 3 bedroom hou se on
Laurel Cliff 'with 7 acres. Wash er
and dryer, refrigerator, stOve,
di shwasher. Asking S45,000.
6 14 -992· 6310 after 6 PM .
In Porfteroy, 2 -3 bedroom. living
roo m. aat· in kitchen, T.V. r~..om ,
1 ca r attached garage. full
basement , range. wathitr-dryer.
dispou l included . Brick exterior.
fireplace, near schools and shop·
pi ng . $34.000 . Call 814-9926820 or 61.4-992 -6339.
4 bedroom. 1 V:! story house.
Nice lot, 70x100. Beautiful oak
woodwork. Quick potaetsion m
Middleport. Call614-992-6714
Partially burnt houn on St. At.
3 3. New aerator septic syatMJ,
Price negotiable. Call814-992 ·
2473 or &amp;14-992 ·6031 .
By owner Grandview Heightt, 3
bedroom ranch. 2 baths. fuM
basement. many axtru .

169.500.00. 304-e76-2183.

Nice condition. &amp; miiH from
Gallipolis on St.Sr. 218. Call

8o Acreage

Vacant lot on Pine St., in
Gallipolis. No Mobile Homes
permitted . $4,000. Call 614694-3833 after 6 PM .
Ac reage for sale. Septic system,
water and electric available. Call

2 bedroom trailer in country.
Deposit and reference request.

44

2 BR . ,apts. 6 closets. kitchen·
appl. fur.nished, Wnher-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet. newly
painted. deck . Regency, Inc,
Apts. Call 304-676· 7738 or

Merillat oak base cabinet . Eacelhint cond. Use for microwave.
160. Call614-388-9744 after 5

614-US-0338.

PM .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

Sofa &amp; chair. Good cond. $100.
Call614-446-4922 after 5 PM .

SON ESTATES, 536 Jackson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movies .. 614-446·

Refrig .. washer &amp; dryer. Good

Rent als
41

Homes for Rent

Nice ly furnished small house.
Adults only. Ref. required. No
pets. Call614-446-0338 .
233 Second Ave.:w / W carpet, 2
BR ., 1 1h b11th, kitchen furnished.
$360 a mo. plus dep. 6 ref. No
pets. Call 614-446-4926.
Nice 3 Bedroom house. Large
Yd. · 314 Third St.-K11naugs.

Call61 4-446-7473.

On River-private, small 2 Bf1.
unfurnished home with screen
porch. Lower River Rd . Ref. &amp;
de p. 8300 a mo. Call61 4 ~ 446 4922 after 5 PM.
Furnished nice brick 6 room
house. 1 V2 baths. willing to share
with l, dy or ladies for c9mpany.
Call ~14 - 446 · 2218 8am-4pm,
or 614-446-1764efter 5pm.
2 BR .-Vinton ar"a. Elec., water.
&amp; trash furnished . 2 c hildren.
Ref. 250 a mo. &amp; 160 dep. Call

614-388·9686.

2 bedroom on Wolf Pen Rd. C1ll

1-704·495-8135.

14 acrea. barn, pond. mlie out. 2
bedrooms, central air, lease or
set!, 1450.00 . 3044-675-6999
14 acres. btrn. pond. mile out. 2
bedrooms, central air, InN or
tell, 1460.00. 304·875·8999,
8 roo'm house, beth, need
depoait and referencea. 304- ,

Mallohan Furniture. Quality fur·
niture &amp; carpet at lowett possible prices. Financing available to
qualified buyers. Upper River

Rd. Gall. 0 . 614·44e-7444.

614-446-4926.

1 bedroom apartment•. Furnished and unfurnished. S200 .·
S225, per month. Utilities 1ur·
nished. Call 8, 4-992-6724.
2 bedroom · Apt. for rent. Car·
peted. Nice aetting. Laundry
facilities av1ilable. Call 614-

614-949-2234.

Furnished elf. basement apt.
One person. Utilitlet furnished.
S160 per month. 307 Spring

A... 814-992-2545.

Do you have the spirit ot c•ing 1
There are many job ·o pportunitin
for hatlth care workers. Become
a valuable member of the h•lth
care team in just 18 weaka.
Enrol now in the Nursing
A11istant-Orderly program at
Tri-Coumy Vocation_. School-Adult Education Center. Need
money for training 1 We have a
variety of funding sourc11 availab4e for those eligible. Regilter
now tor the cleaau beginning
April 4th, call763-351 1e.Mt. 14.
Catch the Spirit!
Diamonds and gold. Brand new
men and women's di1mond
rings, gold chains .and w·a tchel.
All merchtndise 60 percent
below jewelry 11ore coat. For
information, call Jim at 614·
992-2962 evenings.
Smai't truck toppei'; 4x 10, farm
trailer; 300 gal. tank tor hauling
water; Nova body and parts; 276
gal. fuel oil tank. &amp;14-992-

2221 ;

'

Woven basket pet1ern quilt.
Hand quilted. 10()x81 . Small
Pollan Chain Saww. Sm1ll air
compressor. Taking ordert for
baby turkeys; Call 61 4·949-

Firewood delivered , stacked.
836,00. Mason County, G•llipo·
tis, Ohio and other areas within
995~3 4~ ~ur dlsertation. ,304·

4

SURPLUS DENIM, army, rental
dothing , Wild turkn- seaaon
soon. camouflage green. black
white clothing. NO checks.
Political advertising " imprinted
specialties. Sam Somerville. R,.
21 junction Independence Road,
Eaat RavensWood. Fri. Sat, Sun,
noon-8:00 pm. 304-273-5855.

POLITICIANS - BUSINESSES
liberal discounts on union made
advertising tpecialties (book
matches) etc. H. 0 . "Sam"
Somerville. Mason County property owner over 32 yeart, call for
1ppolntments 304-273·6656.
Basketbell swing gym 1e1. 2402
Mt. Vernon Ava . 304-675 ·

Building Materiall
,
Block, bri,ck, sewer pipet, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude Win·
ter1, Rio Grande, 0. Call 814-

245·5121 .
Concret~

Sofa. good

e984.

cond. , 304-676-

blOcks· all sizes· yard
or delivery. Maton aand. Galllpo·
lis Block Co .. 123'h Pine St.·,
Gallipoli1, Ohio, Cell 614-446·

56
Callahan 's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000tifes.sizet12, 13,14, 15,
16. 16.5. 8 milaa out At. 218.

Call e14-251·6251 .

SWIMMING POOLS · 8988
ORDER NOW · PAY LATER
HuQe 31 ' oval pot&gt;! with deck.
fence &amp; filter . ln1talletion &amp;
financing available. 1 ·800-346-

0946.

.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming , All breed I ... All
ttyln. lams Pet Food DNier.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-446-0231 .
Oragonwynd Cattery Kennet.
CFA Himalayan, Persian and
Siameae kittens. New AKC
Chow puppies. Call 814-446-

oportmont, call 304-176·3900.

b..h. Coli 441-4416 olle&lt; 7 PM.

pies, no popors, 304·176-6809,

Cocker Spanlel1. 3 black with
whlta. fematu; noo.oo each.
Ctll aft• 8:00 pro 30•·1715·

4606.

'

67

Fled Hot beraintl ONg dealen:
cart. bo..1. pl1net repo'd. Surplua. ~our a~u . Buyers guid•.

1-&amp;06•eaHsooo. e... s -9806.

1977' Oldo Cull••· 2110 v ,a.
bodY rough~ Interior very good.
mech. aound bUt hklh mMtl, nice

........ '360. Coli 114-8926331 or e14-892-1820.

Musical
Instruments

Fender Guhar 2115 C flattop.

*2&amp;0. Colll14-388-8136.

Uka new blnjo by Atveru$121. Hand made top of line~
Atverez Ylri acouatic guit•r1600 or beat offer . Call

814-441-7904.

1190.

1979 Mercury Bob Cat. Good
running condition. •2150. 814·

982·13"'2.

1 980 Olda 88. 18. 360 engine.
rebuilt . . New tlr" and braba,

2 seta, Prum,. EK~el. cond.
1;600 •ch, firm. !SM at KIDS· . 1973 Mustang. 8 cyl., auto ~
Rt. 180 Of Coli e 14-448-e440 1979 Muateng. 4 c,yl., 4 apeed.

or 379-27110.

c.u 114·982-8722.

Wurlhlnr Spinet Piano. 614·
843·&amp;1 21 anytime.

1988 Pontiac Gr•nd Am .
Lollded. 4700 milea. Call 814·

882-2011 .

992·3792.

1975 Olda Cutt~u. Blue wtth
white vinyl top. Auto, PS, PB.
good tirM. new timing ge.,.,

n-ly ollanod. •teo. Coli 814·
992-7231 , 8:00 om-8'00 pm.

Fu111 Supp iii'S
&amp; Llve:;lock

1982 Oldt ()~~·· this little cer
Ia lo1dad. 304· 875-2563 or

875-1768.

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS. SONS
:l&amp; Weat. Jackson, Ohio.
614-286-6461.

'

'86 Old1 Cutleu SUpreme
Broughem, 2 door. exc cond.
low mileage 36,000, private
owner. bougl)t.new loaded with
extras, under NADA retail,
tWeen 10:00 and 5 :00.

Massey Ferguson, New Holl1nd,
Buah Hog Saln • Service. Over
40 uaed tractors to choote from
&amp; complete line of new a. used
equipment . Largest selection in

·1978 Uncoln Contential Town
Cer. exc. cond. or tr1da for
pick-up, equ11 value. 304·882·

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT 448-9777
3 Pt. hitch, seeder, fertilizer
tp, ..d Jr with PTO ah1ft. S199
white lhey laat.
UliLITY BLDG . SPL: 30'x40'-.a·
etve- 1B'il8' slkllng ,door 6: 3'
servioe door, •4987 ERECTED.

IRON HORSE SLOGS. 814·
332-8741.

3121 .

'74 Olds Cutlast Supreme, 360
auto, n.w battery. good interior.
runa good, 304·87&amp;-2467.
1 983 Z21 C1mero. T tops, PW.
Alpine etareo ayatarn.

07.000.00, 614·317-0320 . .

1978 "Mercury Muquls. high
mileage. good work car.
S&amp;OO.OO, after 6:00 call 304·

w/ wench. 29 hrs. Owner will
finance. C.ll 614·286-8&amp;22.

1981 Chevene. air cond, auto
trana , 1900.00 . 304 -6764313.

•zoo, 1974 Plymouth Fury. •400.00
or beat offar.,Call efter 8 :00pm.

J .D. 4010 Tractor Di11al with
4020 kit haa 90 HP. Excellent
condition. 614-843· 6184.
John Deere 7 ft . hay bind, New
Holland grinder miKer. loth
eacallent condition. 304· 273-

4215.

30.·675-...606.
72

Trucks for Sale

19n Ford F-250 pickup. Auto·
with topper. Asking

mati~.

01000. Coll614-318-9628.

1983 FordpickupF100. i3200 .

Call 614·992·8190.

Livestock

1979 Chovy. 4 opood. 350
Horses tor sale- Standardbred
. and Tennea... Walkert . C•ll

S14-448-476e.
Holstein

Breeding

614-US-4202.

.

Bull . Call

Stallion Service AQHA. Incentive ' Fund Palomino Stallion.
Offaprlng wallable for inspac:tion. NOQHA elklable. $100 .

614-949-2466. .

.

c

R1giatered Polled Hereford Bull.
1 year old. CJII614· 742·2066.

64

Hay

8o Grain

1nglne. 4 barrel carburetor, new
tir81. Good condition. 11500.

Call 614-912-3618 .

"1888 Chevy S10. bluo. 6 spood.
.6.400.00. 304-882-3674.
73

Vans lit 4 W.O .

117&amp; Plymouth Ven. Cruise
control. Tr•Herspecial. Like new.

Coli 614-441-1768.

Hay. for sale. Mixed gr..aas.
Square b..as. 11 .2&amp; · per bale.

BUOGET TRANSMI8810NS-

1978 CJ&amp; Jeep, J .C. Pennyh•d
top, rabulh angina, new tiraa.
•1.300. 00 or best Offer. 304·

Hay for ...e. e1 .26 bale. Larry

74

Kenworth and DeiCalbaHdc;:orn.
Scott Farm Gra11 SHda. W l
variety AHalfl. 304 - 175~ 1&amp;06 .

Trallspor Li l lo n

Kotoi-614-UI-9&amp;80.

Motorcycles

1974 Honda 760 . Elc.trat In-

:~:~ · 1460. Call 61,4· 245·

1888 Suzukilntruder700. 1 8po
ml..a, black, lille new. M1'ny

extroo. 12,200. Coli 814-4481120 betw- 7. I PM.

1987 Honda !ntantata, Cham·
palgn color. 8100 mlln. Jent..,
aound system. Very nice. CaM

Fred 18 lllrald olaurprlee
by porc~plnes.

boou1lful. 11.000 mlloo. Hondo

IOUnd lya.rti. New tlru. Very

1881 Dodgo Dovtono Turbo.
Good oond. Coli 614-441-1814
oftor I PM .

blto. .._ m111o. •••o. 1111
Hondo XA 210 on • off. *400.
eon 114-211-1824.

.,,

Ono -· ~-Mutt ....

)'oU~E: 50~RY.

."')I, I I

I Tt-&lt;AVE.S
C1_.,...._.,.!1·2~

ALLEY OOP

1971 St1rcraft pop--up camper.

Serv1r.1~s

Home
Improvements

a ())

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFING

Uncond6don:e! Ntetime ....,.....
tee. Locel ,.,.....CH fumliiMd. '
fr• aatimetn.
collect

c•

1-11.·237·~; day .......t .,

'

Roge- r t B i t e m a n t
WaterprOofing.

YtAH,
HIS Wll=b. ...

SWEEPj:R end MWing mechlne
'fPiir, partl, and auppiiH. Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
C leaner, one half mile up

Gaorgoo .CrOOk Ad. Coli 114·
44e-0284.

Painting, roofing, remodeling',
tree trimming. buildings torn
down, gen••l h•ullng. CaW

!;{ i

1181 Hondll ,CM 400 atreet

~=--::-:--:--::::::--::--:-..•

Frontilne Join Jerry
Schecter In Moscow
exploring lhe country under
glasnost
·
1111 e1121 c-lng of Age
Dick and Gl~ny are thrilled
.when their daughter and her
family vlalt. 1;1
\IJI Leny King Llvll
1:30 1111 e1121 Fr8nk'l PIICI New
England COllege prof lntterns
a New Orleans resteurant

Trenchlng·r•JOneb.. r81n· WI·
tlf, alactrk:, ges, dr8lnegelinu.
Pipe &amp; tixturu at discount. Call

e14-U6-8508.

Siding. overhang gutt.._ atorm
doors 8a windowt. F,... estl·
mata. Call 614· 448-8070.

IUUIII ttl!

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

RON'S T'levlsiO!" Service.
Houae calla orr RCA. Queu.-.
(JE, Speoieling In Zenith. CaH

304-576-2398 o'r 114-4412454.

"YCUR [)A.JLY HCJR05Cl:)PE :.

" ' 1-ti:s NO IJ5E CRYIN&amp;

e6&lt;.l\ EBOOrS BE'EN

pONDER THE WJ5DOM

0'1113&lt; SPli-T Mil-K.' "

WA'iOiiNGME EA-T.

'

·a= THE: 01-D~€1-E: :

Fetty TrM Trimmln,, ttump
removal. Can 304-87 -1331 .

(R) .
10:00 (I) $1r81ghl Talk
e (J) Ol Crime Story

Torelo's reporter friend
plans to expo118 Ray Lues's
smuggling cartel. 1;1
&lt;Il • (J) thirty-thing
Gary and Mellsaa rekindle
their lOng dormant love affair.

Rot1ry or cable tool drlllng.
Moatwella completed eamedey.
Pump saln 1nd aervlce. 3CM·

896-3802

•I

Starke Tr• and Lawn S.rvk:1,
lawn care, landiiCIIping, ttump
removal, 304·176·2142 or

!;/ s:'o1cao l VIllano

&amp;71-2903.

Plumbing
lit l:leeting

LOWEEZY !I · CAN I
BORRY. YORE NEW

MAIL·OROER
CATALOG?

Cor. Fourth and Pine

GalllpoHs, Ohio

Phone 814·«8·3BBB or 8,4·

446-4477
B4

Preaenlatlona of Stevena·
works llluatrate the heroism
of Imagination. INRI D
all .eiiJ Cogner lo Lacey
Cegner and Lacey come to
the aid of Cagney's old.
nemesis Jim Thornton. 1;1
liD IIJ) Newa

BARNEY

CARTER'S PlUMiiNG
ANOKEAnNG

. I'LL GIT VE
TH' BROOM, OUST PAN
AN' A SACK

\IJI EVIIIfng NIWI

e (!) lenny Hill
10:20 CD T11rM Stoog11
10:30 (I) Celebrity Chell
Gl Mlalc Yun In IJporla
1972: Phil Esposito tAl
II) Tony lrown'l Joumlll

I

.

Elec1ricel

lit Refrigeration

e (!) Hopn'a Hera 11

11:00(1) RemingtOn 81Mia Steele
Among 1he LIVIng

Ruidential or commercial wlr·
ing. New service or rlplira.

Licenied e.lftt~M. Eatlmate
frH. Ridenour Electrical, 304.

e76-178e.
8&amp;

•

•Ol (])
w•
.....

THE GRIZZWELLS®

General Hauling · , •

Bundti"l calla.

750 Maxim Yomoho. 8.hoft
d-. 8100 mll01. Coli 114241-8112.

- · -· coll14·411·1m
oft« I PM.

e

TVANC&gt; $AY

Sloops 6. Collll14-388,1320.

1980 Honde Int. .tate. BliCk a

1887 Chovrol"' C'olobrtty. 4 dr ..
PI, PI, tlh. cruiH. otr. AM-FMo1oroo. Col 114-441-4850 .,.
•411-0112. onytlmo.

1111 Oltlo. C.lolo • ..,..,..

r

79 Motors Homes
lit Campers

614·441-0841.

nlco. Coli 614-UI-08411.

73 Pontiac LIMine. 310 2 lt.

I
-.'\~ "
f'

1876 Ford Courier. 1871 Ford
F-210 for portl. Coli 304-1766043.

Dilltrd Water Service: Poola,
Cittarna, Wall•. Delivery Any·

2342.

Colll14·44e·3210.

Gf':AY
JR!?A~ ONElF 'jbu CiO oN

;t. VNDE.~STANP rr~

1-304-4230 Qr 1-114·3782220.

Coli e14·441·7137 oltor 5 PM.

896-31177.

614·742-2442.

•

Used &amp; rebuilt, all typw guaran·
teed 30 diiY'• minimum. Prtcea·
$99 • up . Rebuilt torquea-as
low •• 139. 350 QOR¥Wtion lilts
to fit S-10's, C·10'a. fMiric •
overdrive. Hard pans for tr••·
mluion • tr1n1mlulon kttl. Cell

1988 Plymouth Voy1ger.
21.000 milea- · fully loaded
w/running board1. 110,600. ·

Coll614-388·83e1 oiiOf 3 PM.

Jo~nson

3000 mi.

0961.

82

1'1-1\S

'

~EME?ta
'

1-!AVI~cS

Thrlllo and Spills (AI

WE'RE

Cl)llgnOfl
liD n.. lreln Overview of the

I.Ae ~DIE'?
11-l~E~E ...

~

latest underslandlng of the
mlnef and lntellgence. (t :00)

8!HI Moneyflnez- Third from

Twilight
the Sun
(!) Low CDI•"lM1fon
11:01 (J) Portrait of Amarlol New
Hempahlrl

J • J W- Sorvlc:o. Bwlmmlnfl

A • R Wotor Sorvlco. Homo

304-171-6370,

Paul Rupo. Jr. w..., * -·
Pools, ........ wells. CoiS111441·3171.
'
.
.LIMESTONE· *7.00 ..., ton.'
Hauling- Ill ~Indo- INih du!"P
truck lcod, Ul. QN e14·441·
7011.

· · - ' · .... oolf304-1712818.

11:30·=
.... ofC.!IOII

....

~

Bel~l6 TilE MANA6ER OF
BASESALLTE~IS

•
'

A

VERV STRESSFUl. ..

-n

.
elii'DII-*' CIS Lll8

I

PEANUTS
'f'OU CAN IWIPI.e IT, 11016H,
CI-IARLIE BROWN, BECAUSE
'I'OU'RE A I.OIIH(El( PERSON ..

_

_

_

.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Tranch - Cough - Usual - Godson - CHANGES
Just when I think I see tha whole picture of life clearly. someone or someth.lng CHANGES tha channel.

.---------------,

BR

NORTH

l*akmalled fOr en affair the
hlef.
8 ........... P.l. All For One,
Part2
e(l) Tltld
,
t :1:011 ........ Allin
....... PGA'-!RI

MOW ASOUT

BELOW· KEI(?

.J

James Jacoby

+A 7 6 4
+93 2

A costly
opening lead

WEST

EAST

t64

+KB 72

.AK754
+KJI085

.Q9 32
• 93
+A 54

+to

SOUTH

By James Jacoby

+AQ

• w86

Some of my readers know that this .
+Q2
year I am attempting to win more :
+KQJ876
masterpolnts than anyone else in tourVulnerable: Both
nament play. The McKenney trophy is
Dealer: Wes!
awarded each year to the player who
heads the top-500 list compiled from
Weal
Norlb
tournament competitions in the Amer·
Pass
3+
3+
ican Contract Bridge League. Since
Pass
Pass
early 1985 tbat top 500 has been called
Pass
5+
the Crane 500, In honor of Barry
Pass
Pass
Crane, whO up to his death in 1984 had
amassed 34,000 inasterpoints, well
Opening lead: • K
ahead of all of us. There is, however, a
strong Jacoby tradition in the annual
mas~rpoint race, since the late Os·
wald Jacoby In the early '60s was the
leading masterpolnt holder, the first
player to win more than 1,000 poi~ts contract was made via a combination
in one year, and the winner of the of ruffs in dummy plus a spade fineslie
McKenney trophy for four of the five followed by a ruffing finesse. But look .
what happens if the opening lead is the
years that he was competing for it.
Today's deal cost my team second club 10: East wins the ace and returns
position at the El Paso Regional in a club. U he then is allowed in with the
January. My comment is "What a dif· queen of hearts to play a third club,
ference a lead makes!" Our South op- it's down three for +BOO, as opposed
ponent played five clubs doubled. Af- to -750 when the doubled contrad
ter tbe king of hearts lead, the makes.

••

61t~UuJr~·
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

36Twine
around
370pera
feature

1"- Hai"
5 Racer's
goal
9Jewlsh

38Deck wood

· month

39 Raison

tO Jobseeker's
· need

12 Stubby
or Sammy
13 WJ. Bryan,
for one

14. Self-esteem
15 Nutria, e.g.
16Sioux
17 Thickness
19 Pheasant

brood
(var.)
20"When you

hear

the

•
21 Dream (Fr.)
ZZActed
the smithy
Z3 Vile

24. Visible
25 Suffice
28Make

grlllee
27SOprano

Monserrat
30Word
with "king
or mode
31 Viemarnese

city
32 Half a
sawback

33Lapin

311 Hebrides
Island

DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES-Here's bow to work It:

812e

AXYDLBAAXR. ,.
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Eaclt day the code letters are different.
.
CKYPTOQUOTE

.NT

KEC

ZMS

AIP

KST

LD

NYKP

LDPTSTEP

'

- '·..

FMEP

H

OMDZLS

c.,.,..._:

'

.

LDZMSFKPLMD

MQLDLMDE.-EMISOT

...

3-%1-88

+JI09~3

Nlglll WeiJtlty
COiiittlll IUk:kle after

1114 HIM\r Dovldoort. 1.000
... __ 304-17a-7381.
-

•.

Contw(L).r

P.L
Iill '='III;J
ltMirll Tonlahl

~

304·871-1~8~7;:::;;;;:;:==
Upholatery

HMIIaiOR.
elil,tuMwtll.
..-- . . ._ •• 21111 ...

.

e

paola, ciatems. welle. Ph. 614-

241·8286.

clltera. wellt. poo11 fiHtd. for.
merty J•ma loya w.....Cell

(J) 1111 e1121

ill ap.c!WNk llpeafel

limo. Qll 614-441-7404-No

a.ooo 11111an .....,_, ...-.

.....
,
.
.•
i-.7--·
...... ,_...

Atpor~

e(I) M•A•s•H
7:05 CD Andy Griffith
7:30 8 (J) &lt;Il Hollywood
Squarea
(J) NHL l!ockey
.(J) Judge
all Wh11l of Fortuna 1;1
\IJI Cro111tre
e1121 Ol Jeopardy! 1;1
1])1 Iemay Miller
(!) WKAP In Cincinnati
7:35 CD Benford end Son
8:00 (I) CI'OIIbow The SanC1u8ry
8 (J) Ol MeHock A
VIetnamese fisherman is
accused of murdering the
town bully.
W e (J) Who'o the lou?
Mona says no tc a barrage
. of marriage proposals from
her su"or Max. Q
Cll «J) Nova Follow the
International race to find the
elusive superconductor. C
1111 e1121 Trtal and Error 'the
fate of a canlna film star
res1s In John's hands. 1;1
\IJI PrtineNawa
1D1 MOVIE: The One and
Ollly (PGIII :38)
a (!) MOVIE: Cuetar of tile
Waet (G) (2:20) .
1:05 Cl) NIA laokalball
1:30 (i)
The Wonefer Years
Kevin recalls an
unforgettable vlsll to his
father's builness office.
all e1121 My Slater Sam
After fixing up her vls"lng
girlfriend willt Jack, Sam
gets jealous. 1;1
9:00 (I) 700 Club
G (J) Ol In tile Heat of the
Night Two missing youlhs,
pure cocaine and a grudge
seem linked together.!:;!
&lt;Il e (J) Moonlighting David
and Maddie's big night oul
lands them In a boxing ring. ·

Chrysler·

e14-367-0121 .

Muley Ferguson 7 ft . mower 1981 Revent Flat. 10 ft. 2
conditioner in excellent condi· Spread. With tid•, high ~··
don. 304-876·4800, 9,a.m.-4 . new tarp. ExCtMient condition.
Coli 814-149-2451.
p.m.

63

corry

IG

Complete toe cnuck le quoted
by f1ll ing in the mi!sing words
L.....J'-:,-. .1...-L-...J'--....L-.J you de¥elop from slep No. 3 below .

!;I

ichllra

or 30 diY warranty (whichever
OCCUrt firJt) . We buy }unk
tr.ntmiiSiOns. C811 114·448·

8800.00. 304-675-6043.

676-1800 ..

4' Kinu Cutter Bushttog.

Ford.

nolly "'-od •

81

&amp;000 Ford die. .l tractor, hay
baler, rake, mowinu machine,

03695. 1981 50 HP bulldozer

Acce&amp;~ories

tr1ntmluions tu1ec1t era Inter·

' 75 Muueng. good cond,

Coll614-446-9321 .

Auto Pen•

Cltovy , _,

I

ETBOLT

t--r'~"'lr'11-:f7'-l,:......;.-,;,erl

&lt;Il Entertalnmenl Tonight
Ill (J) People'l Courl
Cll liD MacNeil/Lehrer
NawiiHour (1 :001
all Nawa
l!JI Maneyflne
e1121 Ol Whlll of Fortune

A

low hours. n.ooo.oo. 304·
176·4178.

lit

i

Ad . seen in our local paper
under tha heading " Garage ·
r--::-:::-::--.::-:--:::---, Sales": "Sailing odds to--."
E,_I....,,

-.L.-.J.-.J.L-.J .,;.

L._ . . _ _

(J)I~r(LI

,l

$7.985.00. 304-171-2151 be-

U.S .

S.E. Ohio.

opon

bow, red •
m.u.l tleke on
black. 14 MetcNIHr, Eagle
trailer. mooring cover, exc.cor,d,

76

I~

I
5
-.-,
E
:
;
.
.
y
G
I
'
~
~ "11r.;...

•(I) Too Cloae for c-tort
8:35 Cl) Cerol Burnett
7:GO (I) R1111lngtDn Steele Have I
Got a Steele for You
a(]) PM Magazine

&gt;'~

304·&amp;71-2314.

•llv•

2

\UIInllde PoiiUce 'II
1D1 WKRP In Clnclnllllll

not,..ing down, V-1. ·11 ft. 171
hp, utr•s. usld 14 hours,

198&amp; Bojo. 184 Sun-rt

I I I' 1 I
0 R N.~1 I
Tl,,~.'I,,--;

all e1121 CIS Nlwa
liD lody Eleclllc

Old1.. Buick, Pontiac, CfMvv,

eH-849-2437 .

Lowrey organ like new. 304-

Cll Nlghlly lual11111

"'

old oqulpmont. *41110. Col
&amp;14·892·7113.
1987 boot. ta1to ovor poym.,...

1977 Corvette. Air, auto, PS,
PB, AM-FM c....Ue. tilt, tal•
scope, cruise. C..ll 114·112·

1187 Chevy Col- Rl. LIM
,... - ··PI,
10.1100
1111 .•
outo..
AC,.Pl.
AM·FM·
ColO. 111100. Col 1114·1.... ATV or .-y trollot.
8240.
2188.

Rooma for rant·wllk or month.
Starting It 1120 a mo. Oallla

FATHERf

be·

DRUREO

rr-l

e

MOTH&amp;R AND

&lt;Il e (J) ABC -

' 1112 Vlimoho 880 Ho,._ .
lpeaiol U. Good oond. 18Sll.
rlor. L.Oo-. 11,000 ll!llu. An Col IU-388-1121 .
original. Col e14·441·1120 ------~-· -betwMn 7 • I PM.
1978 ICo-1 400. &amp;700
lttloo. •aoo. Coli 114-441- ;;:::::::=:::--:::-:--:::-::1110 Volklwo- A.-, die- 74l2.
Watterson'• Water ~ng.
MI. *10110. Colfe14·311·1218.
rH&amp;on1ble r••· 1m
ate

Furnished room· l19 Second
Ave., Olllipoiit. 1126 1 mo.
Utilititl peid. Slnel• mala. Share

4100, 9 o.m.-4 p.m.

White Germ.,_ Shephard pup·

·7 1 Auto•a For Sale

1177 Corven•·whtttllred .tnt•

1----------

&amp;813.

Pets for Sale

mHu. 11450. Can besaenetthe
Oallpoli1 Daity Trlbun1 or for
morw infonnetlon calll14·44t·

Two and 'One bedroom furnished .

mobllehomea. •200•12211*
mo. Dop required. No pots.
Adulu onl-, . C•ll 114·2~&amp;- , Trailar space to rent. 304-876-

I .66

:us:ed:.:0:6:5:.:C:at:l:e1:4;;;·:;24;;;6;;;·;;;6;;;12:;0:;.J.;;:*:;6:;6.;;;0;;:0;;:.3;;;0;;;4;;;-6;;;7;;;6;;;·;:480=1;:.::;:=~ Mlto.
1883 Chovy. Cltotlon. Am rodlo.
trans.. PS, PB, 11.000

304-882·251e.

In Euroko-2 nice • cloon 2 BA. l4o;;6-S=p-'
a-=c-=
e-;f;:oc::r-;R;oe-n-t::--

~;::~~~;;::::;:;:::"T;,;::::;;;:;:;~:;:;:::~

Whole 'house · attic fan . Never

Beech StrMt:, Middleport, Ohio,
2 Ndroom fuml1hed apt, utili·
tin paid, refer~~nceund deposit,

CAN I 8&amp; SAL.EP
TOI!&gt;f:TKE:R WITH
Ill(

•=

00 lnllldllhl POA Tour

•s

71 Auto's For Sale
8 month old~ ragiatarad female
Beagle dog, boK and pen, · ~::::~--::------

lis. 614-U8-8221 .

&lt;:eNTRI'\L PUMP.

1883 slxleen foot Baytln• Boet
whh Force Chryll~tr
HP 1nd

Big Dakota farm home. 3 BR ., 2
be. S16,996 &amp; up. Models open.

~

WE'LL. WAIT FIVE&lt; MINUTEf
AFTER THE T~Ut:K L~VEI!P,
THI!N WI!''~L CLIMII OUT
. TO FREI!DOM.

GAReA6e OFF AT A

814-742·2801.

30 gallon fish tank-include~
hood, Ught, aand. gravet &amp;
pump. Call 614-446· 3732.

Call614-886·7311.

TliliY'Ll- DROP THE:

ski

1887 GINOport 81tl 8o... 11.&amp;

3844 allor ?PM .

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
hqusn. Pt. Ple•sant and Gallipo-

e

80's. 304-676·6998.

Pets for Sale ,

hours.

11. 120 KP. uood 20 houro. Coli

2783.

54 Misc. Merchandise

low

118t a.ylln•. Like new. Call . "
614-258·1001 .
-

8 ft. uuck topper. insuleted,
wired 12V-1 10. Full rear door.
1150. 614-992-2717 .

VW Camper. Sleeps 6. Good
condition. Garden tiller $85.
Electric dryer. S76. 614 - 949 ~

cover,

tarp

oqulp,_t. t9,1100. oil 114·
441-2129 Ot' 441-3141.

I ::-;:---:-----:--:--:-

2 prom gowns. One is long.
peach. si~e 7. Other is tea length_.
white, sh:e 5 . Call 614-742301 8 ~venings.

CAPTAIN EASY

18W• ..P., - · 11·1 onglno.
turbo prop .. cuatom buihlfellar, ,

2272.

675·1090.

SmaH unfurniahed houae, clean,
eood lo~tion. prefer couple
jona chikl), no 'pett, 3218
Howard Ave., 304· 87&amp;·8821 .

.

55 Building Supplies

992-3711 . EOH .

2 bedroom apt. for rent. Stove
furnithed. Deposit required. Call

Mixed hard wood -'•ba. S12 pltr
bundle. Containing appro-.. 1 'A
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
POmeroy, Ohio. 614-992-8461 ,

Four windows, four storm win dowa, 304-676-24B2 .

1602.

614-992-7787. EOH .

&amp;14-44&amp; ·2857.

I

(J) llpcxtaLook (T)
Cll Dr. Who: Mark of lltto
Rani
liD Owl TV I;!
\IJI BhoWIII• Today
1])1 F - Of Ufa
(!) Happy Daya
8:05 Cl) Allee
8:30. (J) Ol NBC Nlgh11y Newa

1984 Baja, rid metal ' ftlke,

1-800·533-3453.

2 BR ., 2 bath apt. All utilities
included. t350 a mo. Dep.
required. Call 614·446-4222
between 9·6 .

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riv&amp;rside Apartments in Middleport . From
8215. including utilities. Call

I . \lory ..._.
t27.600. Con 304-727-sno. 1

the

loW to form four simple words .

TUES., MARCH 29 •

Wonderland
ew w e(J) 1111
Ol ......

.. _

scooten. 12" scooters. 12' '
BMX bicyclu - stlrting 11
S19 .9fi· will take trade ina.
Stroller•-•44.$6, ladies fro1tad
blue iean sklrta- t10.98, laced
hair bowt· $2.99. iron I tone
dinnarwa,.,-4 pc . tatting ·
$1 8.9&amp;, 12" ailver atone Jkiht· .
$15.99, Iron ttOne pitchera •
bowls-112.89. twi!" 1111 mat·
treaa, box tpringt -$99 / MI.c full
size mattress. box tprlntJs·
$1 1 9. Wholet~le da111r1 are
welcome after 8 PM. Mon. Thurs. unleiS by appointment.
You must be a Valid 0.11ar. ·

Signs portable. lighted. with
letters. 299. free delivery ,
W.VA. 1-800·842· 2434, Ohio

Furnished efficiency-920 4th.
Ave. 8185. Utilities paid. Call
614· 446-4416 after7 PM .

Bachelor apt. &amp; trailer - furnished or unfurnished. Water ·
sewage paid . Cable TV. Foster'•
Mobile Home Psrk· 614-446-

82.98, 10" .12" tricycloo,10"

3278.

Brookside Apartments: Located
off Bulaville Rd.· 1 BR . spacious
apartments with modern kitcr-ien
and washer-dryer hookups , ca·
ble television available. Call
Upstairs unfurnished apt. Carpeted, utilities paid. No children.
No pets. Call814·448-1637.

6908.

cond. Coll614-446·3548.

11 Court St. - 2 Be'droom, 2
baths. kitchen furnished , w / w
carpet, S325 a mo. plus utilitiet.
No pets,. deposit &amp; ref. Call

3 acres of land. Lots of firewood .

Mon-SI1 ..9·6. e14-441-3168.

WOlD
GAM I
bv CLAY I , ,OILAN - - - - - - - :

~dltsd

Rearrange letters of
0 four
sc:rambled words

.8:00 (I) Cr8zy Ulta 1 Fox Fox In

28 ft. Baytiner CfUIMr. 1111
wide beam. elf electronic, eeMey,
canvu, etc. 310 V·l .ng.,

pogo ba•s· 19 .71, hulla hoopa-'

Eureka sweeper, tr• ulmmer.
dehumidifier. entertllnment
center. General Electric refriaer·
ator, rocking love s81t. Call

S©~~lA-~ttfSB

THAT DAILY
PUUIII
-------

EVENING

ST. AT. 1.. 1 et Centenary.Ve
mile on Uncoln Pike-Open Dally,

1920 Walnut dining room suite
with deco cantors $495 . 1920's
9x 1 2 wool rug with ~x6 metch
runner $100. Smith till rota tiller
6HP. 8100. Call Thursday •
Sunday 614-992-3966.

New completely furnished
apartment 6 mobile home in
city. Adulta only. Parking. Call

2568. E.O.H.

•

Boeta end
Motora for S•l•

7&amp;

t200. Coll614-241-8448.

Valley Furniture
New end used iurniture and
applicances . Catt 614 -446 7572. Hours 9 -5.

e75-5104.

8UDGET PRICES AT JACK-

Television
Viewing

Motorcycle•

1178 Kondo 7110, ..00.00.
&amp;14-317-0320.

Appre~ . 130 pea: uMd rough
lumber (mostly olk). All for

2526.

Dinnettes. beds, bedding,
dreuers . cheats, couches.
chairs, lamps. coffee, and tables.
Every ·day Specials. V::! mile out
Jerricho. 304·675-1450.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

882-2971 .

2741.

Coli 114-371-

0322.

PICKENS
FURNITURE

Four bedrooms, 2 bl1ha, Ned
Sam Addition, Central Air Cond.
Msament. gar-ve. fireplaces,

room . house, lrd Str~Mt,
Maton. WVe. walking distance
to grocery. furniture store. polt
offlc.. bank. 114,000.qo. 304·

mow~r -U 76 .

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1415 Eastern Ave.
Living room suites ., 79 &amp; up. · U Haul .truckt and trail8f'l for
rent, 304 - 876 ~ 742, .
Bedroom sultea $399 &amp; up.

Apartment
for Rent .i

614-U6-1932.

Lots · Commercial lot &amp; house
lots. Gallipolis Ferry. 304· 675-

90 Days same as cash with
approved . credit. 3 Miles ' out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph. 61 4· 446-

2 bedroOm trailer for rent, close
to stores, schools and hospital,
304-676-4600. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.1

614·992·2759.

Ca11814-992-2221 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sofas and chairs priced from
1396 to $995 . Tables $60 and
up to S12&amp; . Hide-a·beds $390
to 1696. Recliners 1226 to
$376. Lamp• US to e1 26 .
DinetteJ U09 and up to $496.
1987 N.wport . 2 bedroom, tot ..
Wood table w -1 chairs $286 to
elecuic . Will 1111 on Land
1795. Deak $100 -.p to 5376.
Contract or r..,t for 1250. ' Hutches 1400 and up. Bunk
Deposti require. Enquire at 56
beds complete w-mattretset
Pearl St. , Middleport.
S295 and up to $396 . Baby beds
S110. Manreu.. ot boll springs
2 bedroom mobile home half full or twin 168, firm $78, and
mile out Jericho Road. call after 888. _Queen sets 8225, King
S350. 4 drawer chest 189. Gun
5o00 pm, 304-675-6483.
cablne11 6 gun. Baby mattresses
t35 &amp; 846 . Sed frames $20,
Mobile "ome furnished. 2 bed·
rooms. $200.00 plut g•• and
830 &amp; King frame $50 . Good
electric. cell after 7 :00 pm
selection Of bedroom suites.
304-875· 8612 or days 876- metal cabinets. h81dboards $30
7682 ask for Ethel.
and up to 865.

3 bedrooms , all electric ,
S260.00 month plua utilities,
private lot. 304-676-4088.

Wanted farm land to rent suitable for raising corn-Crown
City area. Call 614-258-66B9
after 6 PM .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, retrigeratort,
ranges . .Skagga Appliancu ,
Upper River Rd. beside Stant
, CreSt MOtel. 614-446-7398.

Furnished, 2 BR ., Addaville
school arn, AC. washer-Dryer
and garden space. Weter/ HW·
age paid. Call 814-387-7745.

1974 Castle 14x66. 2 bad- .
rooms. 2 baths, all electric,
awni!"Q &amp; underpenning. 304-

Farms for Sale

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appli1nc.s and TV sets.
Open SA~ to IPM . Mon thru
Sat. 114-446-1899 , 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

9151 or 245-9173 . .

304-e76-1926.

882-3121 .

ltarting- .99. Recliner .•
,
.,arting- 199.
USED- Beds. dress8{t, bedroom
aultas, S199 · t298 . Oetks.
wrtnger wether. e complete line
of uaed furniture .
NEW· Western boots- S30.
Workboots 118 &amp; up. !Steel 8t
soft toe) . Call 814-446-3169.

Mobile Homes for Rent. Call
814·448·0627-

1984 Fairmont. 1 4a60, two
bedrooms, 1 Y2 I;Jatha, air cond.
washer -dryer. 304-675-31 18
after 6:00 pm weekdays, weekends anytime.

Wilkes"ille area: Newly remo deled 3 SR., bath. basement.
large deck. fruit uees. outbuilding, 2 .5 acres on CR 8 blacktop
rd., w / rura l water. $31 ,000 .

Call e14·669·7722. ·

Olive St .. Gallipolit.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- 1399.

e14-U6-7473.

1987 Southbrook· 14a86, 2
BR ., CA, all elec. Call 81 4· 246-

35 Lots

31

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62

N'ce 3 Bedroom trailer with
expando living room. Large yd.
-314 Third St.·Kanauga. Call

19~0 . ·14x70, 2 large BR on 1
acre. North of Porter. Rural
water. 814,000 . Ca11614-388-

Services

Real Estate

51 Household Goods

Nice modern 2 BA . mobile
home. 11,1 bath•. dining roam.
pertially tumished. Upper At. 7 .
Call 61 4-246-681~ .

614-256-6009.

THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH ING CO . recommends that you 49 acre farm · 1200 ft . pa\led
do business with people you road frontage on Ohio At. 554hnow. and NOT 10 send money 2.6 miles from Rio Grande
through th e mail until you have . College &amp; Bob Evant Farm· 10
lnvesliga1ed the offering .
' minutes from Holzer Hospital&amp;
Gallipolis, Ohio. Several good
Toning Tables (6). ~$ 12 , 6~. building sites. good hunting &amp;
Price includes warranty, uatn - fishing area. Mineral rights.
ing, set up. Deal direct . 1· 800- S36 ,900. Call 304· 523-8558.
334-0411 ext . 1203 . .
Two lots in Plantz sub -division
off Rt. 2. $8,000.00 both. Call
anytim e 304-675 -1745.
23 Professional

Pia no &amp; Organ lessons. Ca ll
Mary Lucas-614-446-9787 or
446 -44 26.

Merchandise

f or Rent

614-446·0175.

33
21

304-176-1071.

Livi~beds
roomwith
I!UitH·
$199-$1199.
699.
Bunk
bedding·
r;;:~~~~~~;;~=-r:~;;:;~:;~~~=!i
31 Homes for Sale
42 Mobile Homes
FuN slzo monr1111 •loundotion

676-6930 .
18 Wanted to Do

-d ~~

Trailer lOts, At. 1 Locust Road ,
bacll: ot K 8a k Mobile Homet,

you can't live within
your income. How would
you like to live without it?"

Send ruume. to Point Pleasant
Register, bo11. C-26. Point Pleasant, WV 25550.

12

•

304-175-3073,

~~----~"So,

Local organization looking · for

payable. Payroll.

Spacioua mobile home lots for
rent. F1mily Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

l __

AVON all ar..s; Shirley Spears.

'

VI ' AA

SpaciJ for small trailera. All
hook·upi. Cable. Alto afficiencv
rooms, air and uble. M ~son ,
W.Va . Cell 304-773·&amp;6151 .

Woovor 30&lt;-882-2645.

74

The Daily Sentinei-Page-1 1

Pumerov-Middaport, Ohio

1988

8 HP Electric .tart: Bolen mower·
$1100 . WWeel ... orse 8 HP

7479:

AVON • AI ar .... Call Marilyn

5525.

.

COUNTRY MOBILE Hoi'ne Park,
Rout• 33, North of Pomeroy .
Rental trailers. Call 114-992·

Babysittlf nHded in Middleport .
Call 814-99~ - 721 5 .

physicians office.

64 Mlac . Merchendiae

For Boating &amp; Camping· For'Sale
or Rent. A-One Real Estala
Broker. 304-676-6104.

29~

Tun=tey. M.-ch

MIS

IDCD

D

Y..-...,'1
PUWJUR£ MUST SUC. CEED TO PLIASURE, ElSE PAST PLEASURB 'I'URNS
TO PAIN.- BROWNING

I

...
' ..

�Pomeroy-Midclaport• Ohio

Pega 12-The Deily Santinel

•

.--LocaJ news briefs-. Thunderstorms batter Southern PlaiDS
One mishap probed by patrol

By United Preas International
heading . northeast, forecaster
·Strong thunderstorms that Dan McCarthy said.
spawned a tornado which killed
At least' two tornadoes were
an Oklahoma .woman fiung hall reported Monday night. One
the size of golf balls and heavy slammed Into a southwest Okla·
rain In the southern Plains today, homa City trailer park, kUling
while snow fell In the Colorado U!Uan Robinson, 69, and Injuring
Roc kies and Ice formed on upper her husband Sam, 69, officials
Michigan roads.
said.
Showers and thunderstorms
A twister touched down
scattered along a cold front from northwest of Little Rock, Ark.,
the upper Great Lakes 111to the early In the evening, but there
soutl!ern Plains, with the strong· wer~ no reports Of Injuries or
est storms In Oklahoma, the damage.
National Weather Service said.
McCarthy said a severe thun·
Heavy Oklahoma rains were . derstorm watch was In effed for
north central Texas, southeast

.

.

The Glillii!·Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol
Investigated only one accident Monday In Meigs County.
Troopers said a deer was hit, but not killed, by !I car driven by
Thomas D,. Metcalf, 47, of VInton Rt. 1, The accident occurred
on SR. 325, near Danville, In Salem Twp. There was moderate
damage to the car. The animal left the ,scene under Its own
power.

EMS has seven oolls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
C!IIIS Monday; Syracuse at 9: 21 a.m. to Route 1.24 for Kathy

Sayre to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroyat 10:47 a.m. to
Wolf Pen Road for Robert Russell to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 1: 29 p.m. to Mechanic St. for Charles
Gilmore to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:27p.m.
to East Main St. for Kenneth Large to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 4: 13 p:m. to UbertY Lane for Nancy
Griffith to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 6: 15 p.m. to Third
St. for Brenda Manuel to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 7: 24
p.m. to Portland for Allee Adams to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Middleport...

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Robert
Russell, Pomeroy.
Monday Discharges - Burton
DeWees, Louis Taylor.

Announcements

Continued from page 1

village has had no claims; · Statterfleld, Dewey Horton, Wll·
vehicle Insurance substantially . !lam Walters, Bob Gilmore and
Increased; audit costs Increased James Clatworthy.
from $2,000 three years ago to
~ separate office would be set
$8,000 last year; employees up for an Income tax admlnlstrahealth Insurance doubled during tor who would ensure adequate
the past four years now costing privacy ,for this setup with a
the village $41,000 annually. person to be hired by council to
While costs have continued 'to set up and administer the pro·
rise, the village no longer re- posed tax.
During last night's meeting,
celves '$15,000 a year In federal
revenue sharing funds.
Mayor Hoffman reported excel·
The flliance committee and the lent response to letters sent to
mayor Indicated they feel that local businesses soliciting funds
village real estate tax Is high for new town Christmas decoraenough and that the Income tax Is lions. Pledges and money sent
the only fair means of Increasing now total $2,620. Mayor Hoffman
revenue. It was pointed out that Indicated that contributions from
almost aU ·s urrounding commun- residents are .welcome and those
!ties, Pomeroy, Athens, Galllpo· wlshingtohelpwlththecommun·
Us, Rio Grande· and others ' ttY project may mall their
already have this tax and that 35 contributions to the mayor's
percent of Middleport's work office or drop them by making
Ioree employed In these com- suretolndlcatethepurposeofthe
munltles are already paying this donations. The order for the new
tax In support of these other decorations must be placed by
communities. Officials at last April 1 In order to secure a 40
night's meeting report that res I· percent discount.
dents will have an option where
Mayor Hoffman reported that
they ·pay the community Income Bob Pooler has secured a P.O.W. ·
tax. That Is, If they currently are flag for the town and the mayor
paying ) n Gallipolis, they could will secure Information on Its
pay In Middleport Instead. No prpper display through the
person would pay the tax In two Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Amerl·
communities, however, the can Legion.
.
mayor said.
·
Council authorized securing a
A one percent Income tax loan of $65,000 which will be
would mean that residents would needed If a grant application Is
pay $1 for each $100 they earn. approved for the town to pur·
The tax would only be paid by chase a lot at the corner of Mill
Income producing Individuals St. and North Second Ave. It the
and would not affect the many grant Is approved then the loan
elderly and retired Individuals of can be repaid. The money wlll not
the town.
be borrowed If the grant Is not
Mayor Hoffman reported that approved. Word will be received
a recent telephone survey shows by Friday.
that 44 percent of Middleport
Council also entered Into an
residents are either retired or agreement with the Ohio Water
are on . dlsab!llty and these Development District for possl·
residents would In no way be ble financial help In the manda·
affected by the Income tax.
tory sewage disposal system
The tax would be one percent of Improvements.
all wages and salaries and one
Council acknowledged prob·
percent on the .net profits of !ems with skate boards, bicycles
businesses. Interest and Invest· and school buses which are being
ment Incomes would not be taxed parked on the streets. It was
or reported and there would be no reported that Councilmen Horton
tax on any pensions ot other a nd Clatworthy wlll visit a West
forms of assistance, Mayor Hot· Virginia communitY today to
!man said . Elderly and retired secure information of how the
people would not be affected community has establiShed .Its
unless they operate a business television cable system. Plans
for profi t and then only on the net · were made for securing a "clubprofit of the business.
house" for the new miniature
It was estimated that the new golf course at Hartinger Park
tax would bring In approxl· with Councilman Gilmore report·
m ately $80,000 a year and the lng that the course should be open
suggested breakdown on the by April 30. Improvement of
percentage of the total amount village parking lots was alSo
for the various village depart· discussed. Also present for the
me nts would be: streets, 25 meeting was Clerk-Treasurer
percent; cemetery •. 10 percent; Jon Buck.
recreation, 10 percent; fire department, 15 percent, and gen·
•
eral fund ,' 40 percent. The dlv·
Continued from page 1
lslon of the breakdown .could be stl!dy space, more stack space
changed at any time · with the and more room for specialized
study," he said:
a pproval of vlllage council.
Mayor Hoffman commented
College officials said the Initial
that the Income tax would not timetable for the addition calls
provide excessive revenue but for a library consultant to view
would permit thd village to the current facility as early as
maintain services at the needed August. Officials anticipate It
level and provide funds for some will take 15 months for construeneeded Improvements and lion documents to be drawn up,
equipment.
allowing bidding to take place by
Council discussed the need for December 1989. Actual construe·
additional Income and no objec- tlon could begin the following
lions were raised against the spring.
• ued
proposed tax which Mayor Hot· Li
!man and the finance committee
cense 188
Is recommending lor enactment
A marriage license has been
at the next regular council Issued In Meigs County Probate
would become Court to Roger William Hysell,
meeting. It
effective July 1. Council 47, Mason, W.Va., and Barbara
members present were Jack Faye Vance, 32, Mason, W.Va.

I

''

I.

Good Friday services
A Joint CommunitY Good Frl·
day Worship Service, sponsored
by · the Middleport Ministerial
Association, will be held starting
at 7:30p.m. at the· Heath United
Methodist Church, at the corner
of Main St. and South Third Ave.
In Middleport. Rev. James A.
Seddon, newly-Installed pastor of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church, will be preaching. There
will be choral music and special
musical numbers. The public Is
Invited to attend.

Request...
Continued from page 1
suspension for the first offense,
and that parents must be notified
and expulsion shall take place
only upon .a third violation.
They also allege that state·
ments given In the principal's
office, regarding the possession
allega lions·,. ·.were the result of
coercion by school officialS.
The plaintiffs are requesting
that the expulsion orders be
stayed; and a temporary restraining order granted until a
final hearing on the expulsions.

Stocks

Snow fell over the so11thern
Oklahoma and northwest Arkan·
Colorado Rockies. The Salida
sas early today.
area received !Ieavy snow late
Hai12 ~ Inches In diameter hit
Monday afternoon and numerous
the · Oklahoma communities of
traffic accidents were reported
Duncan and Comanche as well as
on
Icy roads. ··
Cotlon County. Hall the size of
Snow
advisories were posted
aolf ballS was reported today In
·
for
the
southern
foothUis as well
Ada.
as
farther
east
over the upper
Winds up to 60 mpb battered
Arkan.sas
Valley.
Velma, near Duncan, the
On Monday, numerous funnel
wea !her service said.
clouds
were reported In the
· In a 24·hour period ending
southern Oklahoma CitY metro·
early today, nearly 3 Inches of
rain doused Oklahoma CitY. Four · politan area. Strong winds piled &gt;
up abQut 19 seml-traUers at a lot
to 51nches was estlmaled around
In
the citY
Duncan and Stephens County,
with amounts ''pOssibly reaching
7 Inches," McCarthy said .
Creeks a11d small rivers were
Contlniaed from page 1
,
brimming to the tops of their
number of other Mexlca111, wit·
banks, reports said.
Showers and thunderstorms nesses and released detainees
were scattered In eastern Arkan·
Air Force servtC!!I!lan
sas, southern and eastern Kan·
eating
at
the bote! restaurant
sas and western and central
alSo
was
detained,
according tp ·
Missouri. Afiashfioodwatcbwas
Cable News Network.
Issued for southwest Missouri.
Tw.o U.S. televlslqn journaltsts
In a six-hour period, nearly 2
-one
for ABC and cine for CBSInches of rain was recorded at
were
treated
In them!Utarywlng
,Joplin, Mo., and l % Inches at
·
of
Santo
Tomas
Hospital for
Tulsa, Okla. ·
undisclosed
Injuries
sllf!ered
Showers ·and a few thundertheir
arrest.
during
storms hit parts of Dllnols and
A U.S. embaay spokesman
eastern Wisconsin. Rain was
said
all other U.S. journauati ·
reported across parts of Michl·
staying
at the hotel at the time of
gao's Lower Peninsula to New
the raid had been accounted for:
York state.
Hotel manager Horst Sieber
Freezing drizzle stung
said
telephones were .cut off 10
Houghton CountY and Sault Ste.
minutes
before the operation
Marie In upper Michigan early
said a DENI agent
began.
He
today .
.
pointed
a
gun
at him when he
"Ice was forming on power
Identified
himself
as the hotel
lines and roads across parts of
rri!lnager.
He
said
the
!!gent then
the Upper Peninsula,'' McCarthy
ordered
him
to
go
upstairs.
·
said.

'Big Klu'
dies\ at 63I

Area
deaths
Betty Hayes

BettY Hayes, 60, of Route 4,
Metropolis, lll. , formerly of
Meigs County, died Sunday at
Western Baptist Hospital In
Paducah, Ky., after a lengthy
Illness.
Mrs. Hayes was born Feb. 1,
1928 In Racine, a daughter of
Clifford a'nd Elsie Reeler
Decker.. She was a secretary and
a member of the Baptist Church
and Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
of Eastern Star.
Survivors Include her husband,
William R. Hayes, of Metropolis;
two daughters, Mrs. Debbie
Wolfe of Racine and Brenda
·,

Daily Number
084
Pick 4
. 4615

•

.u. s....

Am Electric Power ........... , .. 27
.AT&amp;T ................... .... ... , ....... 27
.\Shland 011 .............. :.... , .... 63*
Bob Evans .............. ........ " .. l7%
Charming Shoppes .. ............ 13%
CitY Holding Co ................. .. 31
Federal Mogul... ....... .. , .......39*
Goodyear T &amp;R .... .. .............. 63
Heck's Inc ...... ..................... 1
Key Centurion ................. ...40*
Lands' End ........... .............. 20~
Limited Inc .............. .... .. ....19%
Multimedia Inc ... .. ........ ...... 63*
Rax Restaurants ... .. ............ . 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ........... ...... 10
Shoney's Inc. , ..................... 24%
Wendy's Inti ..................... ... 6%
Worthington Ind. ;...... .......... 20*

*

------Weather----......20 to 30 mph today, becoming
South Central Oblo
Variable cloudiness and windy westerly at 15 to 25 mph tonight.
Extended Forecut
today, wl th highs between 75 and
ThunMiay tbroup Sa&amp;ui'clay
80. Mostly cloudy tonight, with a
Fair Thurs~y. with a chance
chance of showers and thunder- .
of
showers Friday and Saturday.
storms and a low In the mid 50s.
Highs
will be In the !Ills Thursday
Showers likely Wednesday, with
and
ranging
from the upper 50s to
highs between 65 and 70.
·the
middle
60s Friday and
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is 20 percent today, 50 Saturday. Overnight lows will be
In the 30s Thursday and Friday
percent tonight and 60 percent
mornings and In the 40s early
Wednesday.
Saturday.
Winds will be from tqe south at

Cloudy tonl1bl. Low !~&amp;­
tween 40 aad 45. lnereulnl
cloudiness TbunMiay. Cbaace
of afternoon showers. m,... tn
mid 6011.

•

at y
.

sa~u.s.

·Dally etoek prices
(~ ollO:ae a.m.) ,
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt Ellla A Loewt

enttne
· Z Sectlono. 111 Pog.. 26 Cents
A Muhimedlo Inc. Newopeper

March 30, 1988

Dukakis rebounds in
Connecticut prima•ies

OPTOMnRY
SERVICES ON
PREMISES
Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center

'

HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) Democrat Michael Dukakls put
hts presidential drive back In
forward gear with a strong
victory over Jesse Jackson In
Connecticut primaries that saw
Republican George Bush run
away with a race all but over.
Dukakls rode his advantage as
the familiar three-term governor
of neighboring Ma~sachusetts to
head toward the April 5 Wlscon·
sin primaries with a win after
setbacks In IllinoiS and Michigan
that stalled his front-runner
bandwagon .
,
Jackson could not capitalize Qn
hiS weekend upset In Michigan,
and Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore
Jr. was again denied his first
Jesse Jackson ID tbe Conneetlcut primaries
CAPTUREs CONNEcriCUT WIN - DemoNorthern victory, finishing a
Tuesday. Ills wife, Kitty, loob on at rllhl. (UPI)
era* Michael DvkaJd• poateclaatna1 victory over
poor third Tuesday In a state
where he Invested time and
money. llllnols Sen. Paul Simon,
who made no effort In Connect!·
'
.
.
cut, trailed the Democratic field.
Bush, .who grew up In Connect!·
cut and whose father served the
state In the Senate, won hlg In a
Republican race he called "Icing
TOLEDO, Ohio ( UPI) - A larly In central nelghbQrhoods to and public policy at the
on the cake" after the wlthdra·
chaage ol attitude In the neigh· · begin a massive campaign of UniversitY of Toledo, said
wal Tuesday of chief rival Robert
borhooda and "guerrl~" war· turning In known drug · traf- attitudes must change In the
Dole. The decision by the Senate
. GOP leader frotn Kansas virtufareareneeded toellmlnatedrug . tickers to the authorities," said neighborhoods.
dealers and to wipe out ToledO's ' Ford, who operates a substance • "There has been a tradition of
non-cooperation and non·
drug lords, a city councilman abuse center. ,
.
uld.
' '1 am convtnctd that a disclosure to authorities, tnclud·
+.IMil.IINd ~~~~ IIIMn:lty. rwl• . :prllla·type war muat be lql,tlte JI9JIC(l, \II the pasti'.Ford
.d l!nta· ahould n0t tolerate drug
waged, block by block, netanoor: said. ''BuTihls must stop and we
traffickers and \"mini· hood by neighborhood, against must act with great vigilance
!lgalns~ the ever Increasing
ayqdlcates" that operate In their the drug lords," Ford said.
violence· prodUcing drug trade."
neighbQrhoods because of the
Ford, who Is a drug counselor
danager It poses to their and teaches a course In drugs
chUctren.
·, '
•
By MICHAEL BABAD
, Toledo bas six to 10 major drug
United Pr~a International
pushers, J!&amp;Ch with a netWilrk of
Hostile suitor Campeau Corp.
10 to 60 workers that use Cllllldren
Tuesday rejected a final bidding
to act as couriers, Ford said at a
· process set down by takeover
news conference Tuesday.
target Federated Department
"It Is an lmme!lse temptation
Stores Inc. to settle the costly
for a poor kid to ~lve $60 or $80
bidding war between Campeau
•
cash for running a few errandspr
and
R.H. Macy &amp; Co.
. ·
about tw'o dozen IJ'IOre to come.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) making sales to their friends," be Gov. Richard Celeste bas signed
But
at
a
hearing
late
Tue~day
Also Inked by the governor
said.
42 billS .-Into law, Including three were bills revising the state's In U.S: District Court In Ne.w
Ford said some youngsters are
York, Cincinnati-headquartered
major capital construction mea- horse racing and liquor laws,
becom1ng a family's "prime sures and a supplemental budget permltlng Franklin County com·
Federated agreed to accept
breadwinner" because of drug
containing $2 million for the Ohio missioners to Impose a 4 percent Campeau's bid for consideration
sales.
·
Natlonal Guard scholarship hotel-motel tax lor a convention · whether or not the Canadian
The call for more treatment program.
center, and strengthening the developer met Its conditions .
centers and more pollee officers
Separately, the Securities and
·
open
meetings law for the news
The governor signed the huge
has been Ineffective, Ford said, stack of bills In his office Tuesday media and the public.
Exchange Commission advised
·
and he Ufied residents to cle~n ~fore leavllig for .Ohio trade
The new $618 mUIIon capital the same court that Campeau, of
·up their neighborhoods by blow· mtsslons In Africa and China. Improvements appropriation for Toronto, had not obtained firm
lng the whistle on the pushers.
The bills had been sent to him 10 1989·90 contains $417 million financing for Its offer and should
"I am calling on citizens days ago by the Ohio General worth of construction projects on extend Its bid for five business
.throughout Toledo, but partlcu- Assembly. Aides said there are · college and university cam· days after commitments are
puses, $48.3 million for mental met.
Campeau's move threw Into
health and retardation facllltles,
$56.7 million for parks and disarray the complex procedure
designed to end the almost
~reatlonal facilities and $45
million for correctional 10-week fight for Federated, the·
fifth-largest .U.S. retailer and
facllltles.
•
A companion . bill has an $83 parent of Bloomingdale's, Abra·
million long-range construction ham &amp; Straus and other store
Reclamation projects for abandoned strip inlned land In
·program for replacing outdated chains.
Meigs County will receive $110,414 for design and planning
Campeau said In a statement
·facilities for wayward youth run
costa, State Rep. Jolynn Boster and Sen. Jan Michael Long
the
bidding process .was "unlawby the Ohio Department of Youth
announced.
Services. That co111truction pro· ful and deslped to ensure that
Funding has been approved by the State Controlling Board.
gram will take 10 years to stockholders not be glv~n the
The Jesse Creek Reclamation Project In Rutland Township
opportunity to evaluate the com·
accompllah.
has been awarded $44;507 to complete the final design plans tor
Showpiece of the main capital petlng bids."
the reclamation of three sites totalilli 90 acres of abandoned
The multibillion-dollar bids
Continued on page 6
strip mined lands. The Paaevtlle m Reclamation Project In
Scipio Township ':viii receive $43,752 for Inspection services of.
three sites totaling 95 acres. The Rutland n Reclamation
Project, also In Rutland Township, . will receive $22,155 for
1\lpplemental design work to finalize the reclamation plans for
226 acres.

'Guenilla' warfare needed
.to fight drugs, official says

(614) 992·6606

With all of the state's 739
any assured the nomination for
precincts reporting, Dukakls had
the vice president.
For both Bush and Dukakls, 139,968 votes or 58 percent to
Coqnectlcut completed sweeps of 68,193 votes or 28 percent for
the New England nominating . Jackson and 18,542 or $ percent
contests, but the Democrat read· for Gore. Simon gained only 1
lly admitted his fight was not percent of the vote.
·
On the Republican side, Bush
over.
had
.72,867 votes or 70 percent to
''This Is 15 rounds and It's
going to be a decision," Dukakls 20,975 votes or 20 percent for
told supporters In Boston. Dole. About 3 percent went to
"We're on the way .to the final ex-television evaqgellsl Pat Ro·
bertson, who vowed Tuesday to
round and the final bell."
Taking a page from Jackson, stay In the race In a bid to gain
he noted, "Where we have not enough delegate strength to have
won, In many cases we flntshed a power at August's GOP convenstrong runner-up. That's the way tion In New Orleans..
All 35 Republican national
you build a strong campaign;
that's the way you win delegates , delegates and 52 of the 63
and that Is the way you win the Democratic delegates from Con·
. nectlcut were selected Tuesday.
nomination. "
Jackson, who carried the The remaining 11 Democrats will
state's three largest cities of be elected and partY officials·
Bridgeport, Hartford and New .Based on the unofficial vote
Haven and· managed almost a totals, United Press Interna·
quarte!' of .the white vote accord· tiona! figured Dukakls to win 35
lng to exit polls, was undaunted delegates, Jackson to gain 17,
Bush to collect 25 and Dole to
by his second-place finish.
''We've won from Puerto Rico wind up with 10. With some ·
to Alaska, from Mississippi to Democrats voting fractionally,
Michigan, and .we have shown that would give Dukakls a total of
that our campaign message Is a 606.15 commltt&amp;! and projected
Winning message," the black delegates, edging Jackson's
civil rights leader asserted.
Continued on page 6

C&amp;mpeau rejects fmal )lidding
process sought by Federated .

Celeste signs 42 bills;
goes ort trade mission

r;.-looal news

To receive reclamation funds

Contact one of our
sales representatives
(listed below) today
to reserve your ad space.

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

AD DEADLINE IS

FRIDAY APRIL ist. '

•

Gallia woman killed
. in mishap
A Gallipolis woman became Gallla CountY's first traffic
fal!lllty of 19881n a three vehicle accident at 8: SO a .m. Tuesday
·
on US 35,juat west of Rodney.
The State Wgbway Patrol Identified the victim as Dawn C
Layne, 20,. ol 203 Klneon Drive. Ga!Upolls. Layne w.aa
trusported to Holzer Medical Center where she died In the
emeraency room.
Trooperasald the accident occurred when the Layne car went
lett ot center, atriklna a !ractor-traller driven by Johnny
C.Rice, 35, or Hurricane, W.Va. Debrla from the accldentatruc~
anotbel' veblcle driven by Barbara S. ·Chapmu, 23, of Rt. 2
Patriot. Neither Rice nor Cbapmaa _wu Injured.

I

Davis of Syracuse; three sons,
David and Steve Hayes, both of
Metropoll!l, and William Hayes
of Syracuse; 11 grandchildren;
and one aunt, Mrs. Beulah.Circle
of Columbus. ·
She was pr41eeded In death by
her parents;. a sister, Pauline; a
brother, Paul; and a grandson,
TeiTy Lee Wolfe Jr.
Servlcea will be Thursday, 1
p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home, .
with Rev. Charles Norris officiatIng. Burial wtn be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. Frtends m!ly call at
the tuneral home on Wednesday
trom2tohnd7to9. ~astern Star .
services will be t..,Jd at 7: 30
Wednesday evenlngc

'

Page 3

$.2 4 mr,"ll"wn ...

I

Ohio Lottery

SPECIAL SECTION APRIL 5, 1988
Pleasant Register
675-1333
Vicky or Steve

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

Patrol probes Meigs accident
Patrol IIIVI!IItlgated a minor accident at
Melp County, at tl(e llltenectlon of SR. 7
Twp oceurrecJ

Meigs receives grant
for ·drug &amp; ee schools

· The Meigs Local ' School Dis·
trlct has received a .lfant for a
drui·free school Protram.
The lfant money wiD ·be uled
to promote theclevelopmentofan
f!lementary and secondary
school drug abuse education and
p~oacurrl~um.

In cooperation wlt!t tbe devel·
opment of the K,hool drug abuse
education and prevention currie·
. \11\lm, a proaram of family drug
abuse preven lion will be
developed. ·
A pi'OifBm•ayltem of referral
of · atudenta for drug abuae
treatment znd rehabWtatlon will
be developed.
: Current drug abule preventljOII COUIII&amp;IIDI. actlviU• wtJl: be
expanded aacltmproved uUIIzlag
drill tree scbooll JI'Ut moaey.
1be T-..Iaatltl!te lfOUP wUJ
•IIIICOun.aed to become more

'acllvlbr ID\iolwd Ill pr=o".
"'""'taft'' ,._. pniiUI'IIIIIOIII
aiudliatll'OQI.

.,.._r-"""' ·

L.......,....,._ _...,......,._ _ _ _ _

.were to .be studied by Federat- complete the tender and $1.8
ed's board at a meeting In New billion of that would come !rom
York Wednesday.
note sales. The SEC said CamJudge Leonard Sand took no peau obtained letters from three
action on Campeau's challenge Investment tiankers stating a
to the bidding process or the willingness to commit to buy
developer's renewed attempt to notes but they did not constitute a
Invalidate Federated's "polson commitment .
pill" takeover defense.
Federated demanded both sui·
But Campeau's lawyer asked
tors agree to a provision that
.whether Federated would accept . would see the loser either end Its
Its bid for consideration If It did tender or extend the bid 30
not meet the terms. After a short business days. Because an
recess, Federated lawyer Stuart .amended offer must under securShapiro said In court the retailer Ities laws be extended 10 days,
would take the offer.
that would give the winning
A Campeau spokeswoman said bidder a 20-day advantage.
It wp.s a positive move.
Federated said It would agree
Earlier, Federated demanded
to kill or modify the polson pill to
sealed bids from Campeau and give the winning bid the
New York-based Macy's and "prompt" attention of
called on each to make Its best stockholders .
offer and agree to give the
Arbitrageurs, professional In·
winning proposal a 20-day vestors who hold an estimated 40
heads tart.
percent of Federated stock,
Observers said Campeau's ref· speculated the bidding war could
usal threw a ·wrench Into Feder- push the cost of a takeover to $75
ated's plans but stockholders a share, or about $6.7 billion, or
.would have the float say.
more.
"Basically, the one with the
Campeau has offered $82 a
highest bid that Is most attrac· share for 70.5 million shares,
tlve to the shareholders would with a back end merger proposal
likely win In the absence of the " paying $37 a share for 17.7 million
polson pill," said New York shares .. The blended deal was
analyst Monroe Greenstein of valued at about $73 a share, or
Bear, Stearns &amp; Co.
$6.54 billion, Including an est!·
Campeau earlier had lost two mated $100 million In stock option
legal attempts to kill the defense . costs. Campeau also proposed a
plan, which would raise the cost friendly deal that would pay all
of a takeover by allowing Feder- stockholders- $73 a share.
ated stockholders to buy newly
Issued shares at half price If a
hostile suitor acquired 15
percent.
Macy's, whose takeover bids
originally were accepted by
Federated, would not comment.
Committee members of the
Federated demanded bids be
curriculum committee luclude
received before lis board meetKaren Walker, elementary
Ing and ufied Chairman Robert .
teacher; Mlck ChUds, junior high
Campeau and Macy's cblef Ed·
teacher; Saundra 111Us, apectal
ward Finkelstein to address the.
education teacher; Dale Harrl·
directors.
son, vocational teacher; John
Both the Campeau bid, valued
Redovlao, bigb school teacher,
at
$6.54 billion, and the Macy's
and Sharon Birch, achool nurse.
offer, valued at up to$6.3 billion,
Members of tbe advllory coun·
were to expire April · •· But
ell are Annie C)lapman, comcampeau
announced late TuesmunitY member; Jeannie Taylor, teacber; Rich Jonea, countY day, In response to au SEC
stateme11t, It wu extendinl the
commlnloner; Dr. James With·
erell; cart Hysell, juveoUe of· , bid to an lllllpi!Cifled date ud
had .d elayed acceptance of com·
fleer; Mo-,;rr Anthony Clan· . mltmenta lor $1.8 billion In
I'DLL IN POR&amp;- P namore; ·
Redovlan 111gb
~rldp llaanciJII.
m••h•
•Uitarr leader 0...
school 0011111elor; Sharoa Blrcll,
replaton
told
the
Securltlea
Maaaol
Aa&amp;oalo Norlera
scbool aurae, and ·Wendy Halar,.
court campeau mlllt, If' IJid
nllll
a
ci*W Ill&amp; •
proJect coardlnator.
wileD
It obtallll flrm commit·
delepa.
Mteaflwl
Colllral
The iflllt wu written by menta lor llnanclq, aDow atock·
"-lea
aad
CUibbeu
1\lelp Local Supt. Daa E. MorTis.
holders at leut five lloleti!Ma
1101111r1c, w1111
Tbe eommlttlll Will be working days
to ablorb the lnformatloll.
wltll lVIII FlUe aDd Qlarlel
A letter from SEC ........
Walller ol ·tile lllldlatial treat·
0011111e1
Du Goelzer 1114 Camefll1a nlla aa1
ment PJ'Oifam Ia Athena.
peau would need .._1 billion to

. . . . . .,. .=,No=
.

••••ae lor
.. .• lfp'•••·

~

..

eo.

.,

an •

call!lleriiiiii1110\11L (111'1) • •

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