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Page 1G-lhe Daily Sentinel
'

Scoring
records
broken

•·

•

.Jim Cobb
•.

'

Monday, January 30. 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY
LUMBER

Thi1
Week'1
Csms1

ChevroleteOidsmobilt
•Cadillac, Inc.

Sales ., Service
EAST IWN ST.

POMElOY

Your Diller on
.The River

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
565
Pick4

0628

Page 3

•

555 PARI ST.
,MIDDlEPORT
992-6611
Vol.39, No.187

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Wednesday, February 1. 1989

Copyrighted 1 989

•

992-6614

BOYS

COMPLETE
SELECTION

· Feb. 3-At Belpre
Feb. 7-Alexander

GIRLS
Feb. 2-lelpre
Feb. 6-At Alexander

EASTERN
BOYS

Featuring:
* Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on Croissant
Stuffed Baked Potatoes
* Taco Salads

GIRLS '

By DAVID VESEY
l.JPI BUlllness Wrltllr
WASHINGTON - New orders·
for consumer goods and surging
stock prices helped push up the
Index of leading economic indicators 0.6 percent lli December, the
Commerce Department said
Wednesday.
For 1988, the government's
main gauge of economic growth
was up 2 percent, down from 2.2
percent'ln 1987 and 7.3 percent in
1986.
The growth in the Index was

much stronger In the first half of
1988, up 1.5 percent compared
with 0.5 percent from July
through December, the depart·
ment said.
The 0.6 percent hike In December matches an Increase ln
August and was the biggest since
a 1.5 perpent jump in June and
followed a 0.2 percent decllne In
November. ·
Six of nine Indicators contril?uted to the December increase
with factory orders lor consumer
goods and stock prices leading

the way. Other contributors, In
order of impact, were contracts
and orders for plant and equipment, changes in prices for
sensilive materials, building permits and the money supply.
Two indicators were negative
factors: the average workweek
and the average weekly claims
for unemployment insurance,
according to the department's
Bureau of Economlc Analysis.
The ninth indicator in the
December indel(, vendor performance, was unchanged.

BOYS

Mon.-Thurs. 8 A.M.-11 P.M.
Fri. • Sat. 8 A.M.-12 P.M.
Sunday 7 A.M.-11 P.M.
898 W. Main Strwt, Pomeroy

992-2067

Feb. 3-At Hannan Trace
Feb. 4-Federai-Horking

,

GIRLS
Fe•. 2-Hannan Trace
Feb. 6-At Southwestern

,,

BAUM

~~
HARDWARE

·wE WILL
'

.. , .................... Plll!l''

915-3301

.

CHESTEI, OM.

MUZZLE LOADING
and HUNrltG SfiiiiLIS
HOURS:
Mon. thrv Fri.
7:30 o.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Satur4ay
7:30 0-!"- to 4:00 p.m. .

'

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

.

.

"DIGNitY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
len H. Ewing-Dir•tor

PH. 992-2121
108 MULURRY AYE.

POMEROY OH.
I

TAKE, CARE QF.
ALL YOUR
------------------BOYS SCHEDULE------------------ INSURANCE
NEEDS
Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Nov. 22-M iller .............. ............. Away
No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 2-M iller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York ............ Away
· · Dec. 16-Wellston ...................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co....................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-Logan ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away Jan. 24-,.Nelsonville-York .........;,., home
Jan. 27 ..:..wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co .................... . Home
feb; 3-Belpre ............................. Away
Feb. 7-Alexander ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

Nov. 29-Southern .. ......... ........... Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia ........... ......... Away
Dec. 9~0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace .............:. Home
·Dec. 17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath .......... Home
Jan. 20~0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek ...... ............ Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ............ ,.... Away
Jan. 28-M iller ........... ................ Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern ....... ........... Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley ...... ........ Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg Cat h........... Away

Nov. 29-Eastern ......................... Away
Dec . 2-Kyger Creek.. .................. Home
Dec . 9-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ........ ......... Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ..................... :...... Away
Jan. 6-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis .. :..................... Away
Jan. 10-Eastern......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away ·
'Jan. 24-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill ........................ Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away .
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Home

1.

Housing Construction l.Jp
Housing construction rose 2.5
.

percent in December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate . of
$422.7 billion, the Commerce
Department said Wednesday.
The December figures brought
1988 growth In housing construction · to 1.1 percent, or $403.4
billion compared with $398.9
bllllon In 1'387, according to the
department's Census Bureau.
The 2.5 percent Increase In
December followed a revised 1
percent hike In construction In
November.
.
Spending on single-family
homes rose 0.2 percentage points

In December to an annual rate of
$122.3 billion. Non-residential
private . construction increased
3.4 percent to $96.4 bUllon in
December, the department said .
Private new construction from
1987 to .1988 rose 0.4 percent to
325.1 biUlon.
Public construction rose 7.8
percent In December to a rate of
$86.8 billion. Year over year, new
publiC construction rose 4.4 percent last year to$78.3 billion, with
the largest Increases in school
buUdlngs and highways and
streets.

Ill SECOND AYE.
POMEROY ·

CALl-992-3381 or
992-2342

"COME GROW
WITIJ US

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 8-Trimble ............. ;............. Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co................ :.... Home
Dec. 21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away ·
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Meigs ........... ;............... Away
Nov. 28- Southern ...... .. ............... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ....... ..... ,.... .. Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .. :....................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace .... ............ Away
Dec. 17- Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................. Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ................. ,.......... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ...... i-, ....... Home
Jan. 9-Southern ................r..:.... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ......... ................. Away
Jan. 12-North Gallia ..................: Away
Jan._19-0ak Hill ................... :.... Home
Jan, 23-Kyger Creek .......... ......... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace .. .............. Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home.
Feb. 6- Symmes Valley ................ Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ................. .... ... Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away .
Dec. 5-Meigs ............................. Away ·
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22 -Alexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symm~s Valley ........... ,... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 30-Waterjord ................... :. Home
Feb. 2-Hannari Trace ................. Home
· Feb. 6-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 11- Meigsl........................... Home

.~ Fo

·=·=

FARft11RS

BINI

&amp; SA~d.J CO.

t,~ ', .
... "~. gj~ ~

'"!'''
3~
• • . .J 37

lUPPERS PLAINS, OH.
915-3315
. 667-3161

'

fDICI

,,.

BANK ~ .

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
.. 1 .

FOR

HO. PEOPLE"
MB'IEa FDIC

"Your Financial
Center"
97 NORTH SlCOND

IIDDIIPOI1', OHIO

PAY . . ,_, Inc.

992-6661
INSTAllMENT

..

,.,,.,

.JMJS · •

POWELL'S
LITTLE DAN~S
EXXON ·

...

Rawll•e•

.'

c••••

,''"''
• .,.,

·•

RETIREE HONORED -More than 200 people
atlended Tuetday afternoon's open house at The

Dally Sentlael to wish best of luck to retiring
General Maaa,er Robert HoeOich. More than 20
years of HoeOich's 40-year career In the
community newspaper business were spent with

the Seatbtel. At the conclusion of Tuesday's open
house feslivltles, Robert Wingett, at left,
publisher of The Dally Sentinel, the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune and the Pobtt Pleasant Register,
presented Hoefilch with a gift from the company .

Judge considering contempt
action against ABC-TV News
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
federal judge overseeing the
Iran-Contra trial said Wednesday he was considering a contempt action against ABC News
for a report on the start of Oliver
North's trial that used his immunized testimony.
. U.S. District Judge Gerhard
Gesell noted the network's Tuesday evening news broadcast
carried a portion of North's 19B7
testimony to Congress about the
foreign policy affair. ABC reporter Tim O'Brien said In his report
t)lat anyone who sees that testimony would be excused as a juror.
· · Gesell said O'Brien "took
pains to advise the public that If
they looked at (his report with
North's testimony), they'd be
excused from jury service.·'
''I have not decided whether or
not this Is the appropriate basis
for a contempt action," the judge
said, and he counseled prosecution and defense lawyers to
question potential jurors Intensely about their recall of North's

-~1

appearance before Congress.
North, 45, faces 12 felony
charges, including lying to Congress, destroying documents and
accepting an illegal gratuity. If
convicted on all charges, he faces
a maximum 60 years ln prison
and $3 mUilon In fines.
Early ·wednesday, North addressed a prayer ~reakfast of the
Rellglous Rountable at a Wa·
shlngton, hotel and joked about
his current legal troubles by
saying, "Normally, In order to
speak In Washington, I have to
have a subpoena."
When North appeared before
the two select congressional
committees in July 1987, he was
given lbnlted Immunity so his
sta,tements could not be usell
aghlnst him at trial.
He acknowledged, among
other things, that he lied to
Congress, shredded documents
in his National Security Councll
office and accepted a home
security system apparently
bought with proceeds from the

Iran arms sales.
Gesell Is dismissing as a
potential juror anyone who acknowledges reading about,
Watching or listening to North's
testimony to Congress about the
U.S. arms sales to Iran and the
diversion of sales profits to
Nicaraguan rebels.
At one point, Gesell mistakenly
suggested that 1he defense was
trying to "obstruct the selection
of a jury ln this case." Lead
defenseJawyer Brendan Sullivan
jumped to his feet and said, ' 'The
defense. your honor?"
"No, no, the press, I meant,"
the judge said, chilckllng,
Wednesday, the second day of
North's trial. jury selection resumed with another 52 potential
jurors asked to fill out a questionnaire on their knowledge of
North's case.
Seven people were chosen
TuJ!sday for the final jury pool, 11
group of about 50 people from
which the ultimate panel of 12
jurors and six alternates will be
selected.

news· briefs-.....,

Flu epidemic closes schools
The Ohio Valiey Christian School will be ciQSed tor the
remainder of the week, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, due
to the lnfiuenza epidemic. Classes will resume on Monday, Feb.

"

298 SECOND ST.'
. POMEROY I OH.
STORE HOURS:

MON.-SAT.
I A.M.-10 PJl

SUNDAY
10 A.at-10 P.M.

By DAN CHISZAR
freezer full of food."
United Press International
At 8 a.m., it was 24 below zero night because of transformer
A frigid mass of supercold in Thief River Fails, Minn .. with problems, officials said.
Most without power stayed In
Alaskan air whipped by high a wind chill of 52 below.
their
homes, bu I about 10 people
winds plunged wind chills down
The temperature in Russell,
mostly
elderly- were taken to
to a dangerous 80 degrees below · Kan., tumbled 72degrees from~4
a
nursing
home, said pollee
zero·!n the northern Rockies and on Tuesday to 12 degrees Wed·
patrobnan
Boyd
Hagen.
· Plains Wednesday and spread Its nesday morning. Valentine,
"I
live
in
an
apartment
and lt
chill as far south as Oklahoma.
Neb., went from 70 to zero In 10
was
fine
as
long
as
I
was
well
"This Is theworstofthewlnter hours, the National Weather
covered,"
said
one
of
them,
1
but we knew It was coming down Service said.
from Alaska so we are ready,"
Temperatures were as low as Elena Johnson, 78. "I wasn't
said Virginia Hull of Wllllams, 23' below zero In Montana and suffering too much but I suppose
Minn. "It was 31 below this North Dakota, and strong winds it would have gotten colder and
morning and we are expecting · sent wind chills to 80 below at colder."
Power was expected 'to be
wind chllls of 50 to 60 below this Minot, N.D., 75 below at Cut
restored
sometime Wednesday.
afternoon. ·
Bank, Mont ., 66 below at WllllsLight
snow
continued to fall
"Butwearewarmandwehave ton, N.D., and 65 below at
over
parts
of
the
northern Plains
plenty of wood for the fire and a Jamestown, N.D., and ' Butte,
and
northern
Rockies,
and win·
. Mont. The wind also created
ter weather and storm warnings
vtslb!Uty problems by whipping were issued from Washington to
up the snow on. the ground.
Cut Bank, Mont.,
Wind chill advisories were In Minnesota,
reported 5 inCheS of snow.
I
effect for the Dakotas, Idaho,
Winds gusted to 75 mph ln
J'
Kansas, Mlssouri, Iowa and
Bellingham, Wash., where the
Nebraska as the cold wave
pushe'd across the Mississippi temperature was Bdegrees. Five
Valley and the Plains states as inches of snow fell at Sp9kane, 4
inches at Everett, and more than
ST. ALBANS, W.Va. (UPn far south as Oklahoma, the
a
foot of snow was expected ln the
Kanawha County sheriff's officials weather service said: Okiaho·
Cascades.
puUed a sixth body from a St. AJ. mans were enjoying SO-degree
Winds gusting to 70 mph
bans j11nkyard. near to where four readings on Tuesday but by
others were found this month.
Wednesday the temperature had slammed into the Reno-Carson
City, Nev.. area Wednesday
The fifth body, found Monday, falled to 20.
was
identifi~
Tuesday
by
Wind chills of 40 to 79 below morning, knocking out a trans Kanawha Shenff Art Ashley. Ash· were expected in South Dakota, former and power for about 4,000
ley said the fifth body was that of where shelters .began filling up residents In Black Springs and
Jimmy Price, missin~ since Oct. 31. with some of the state's esti- the Lemmon Valley areas north
of Reno.
Price was an acquruntance of four mated 4,000 homeless people.
The winds set off burglar.
other victims.who have been foond
"People who normally live ·
alarms
at businesses ln Reno and
dead of shotgun wounds .in the outside are not living outside
prompted
the Nevada Highway
, same general area, Ashley said.
now," said Hugh Grogan, of the
Patrol
to
close
a section of U.S.
A spokesman for the sheriff's Minnehaha County Welfare De·
395
between
Reno
and Carson
departl)'lent said the body found partment In Sioux Falls. He said
Tuesday was pulled from Price's officials were scanning the shel- City to campers and trailers.
Junlcyard about 3:35 p.m.
ters to see if they expect an · Ahead of the oncoming co id
front, the south-central and souThe spok~man said the body overflow.
was too badly decomposed to 11:11
Ernie Evans at the Corner- theast portions. of tbe nation
whether it was male or female. stone Rescue Mission In Rapid continued to enjoy unseasonably
warm weather on the day before
With the identification of Price's City said the cold weather sent at
body, police now are sean:hing for least eight families into the Groundhog Day. Overnight lows
were only ln the 50s and 60s from
Michael Schillings, 20, fohnerly of shelter In the past two days.
the Atlantic states to the TennesNorth Carolina, who has been miss"We checked In a famllyoffour see Valley imd from Texas
ing from the area since last sumfrom
Wyoming. They were sleep- across the Gulf Coast states.
mer.
ing
In
their car," he said. Evans
The cold wav'e was expected to
Medical examiners w~ having
said
the
shelter will take in all reach the mid-Atlantic stales
a hard time establishing a time of
during the weekend, although
death on Price because of ~ wanderers. ''Lord willing."
It was 15 below with a wind
with a lessened Intensity, the
. body's condition, Ashley said.
'
weatl)er service said.
, ·
Mark McCallisll:r, 19, has been chill of 50 below at Valley City,
In Alaska, the cold air from
charged with firSt-degree murder in N.D., where 1,500 municipal
the shotgun killings of two power customers have been Siberia still held Its nearly
brothers, Otis and Billy Sanson. without electricity since Tuesday 3-week-old grip on the state.
Their bodies were found Jan. 10 in
a triter compound where the three
men lived.
McCallister also Is a suspe&lt;:t in
· the shooting deaths of Bonme Sanson Pauley, and Charlotte Ferrell,
who
was
McCallister's
grandmother.
Price's body was found Monday
with the help of Marian Hardy of
Maryland and her dog, P.C, who
also helped police find Pauley's
body.
Ashley said the search will be
continued in the same area. The object of the search has narrowed to
Schillings.
Both SchiUings and Price were at
different times boyfriends of
Pauley;
The junkysrd is about SO yards
from U.S. 60 at SL Albans.
Also Tuesday, animlt c111City
charges apinst McAllister wea
combined with the murder char&amp;ea
l&amp;lina him. McAllister wu cbarged with starving and mislmllin&amp;
three clop two months before the
murder cherges were filed.
8Dl'JCBI.&amp;PPRBCJATED- Bettrta1 DaiJr Senlinel General
Muager Robert HoeOich, left, reeelvt!l a plaqne 1rom Ute
Prosecutor Bill Forbes agreed to
IJlCiie the charges with the underMlddlepon Cllamber of Commeree In appreciation of his many
standing humane officers will be
yean of IM!rvlce to Ule commaniiJ. Middleport Chamber President
free to ruspose of the dogs in' a way
Dick Owen Jr. pre.entlld Boelllch with tbe p\&amp;Qae during
that is in the animals' beat interests.
Tui!Ray's open holliM!, In Boeftlcb'a hoaor, at The Dally Senlinel,\_.

• th body
SIX
ound T uesday
• St , AlbanS
r,n

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER.
INSURANCE

IRLSSCHEDULE~-----------------

"HOME

The components that make up
the Index were adjusted for
seasonal vartatlons.
Based on 100 In 1967, the index
was 194.6 In December.
Two other indices that measure economic growth also rose
In December. The index of
coincident indicators was up 0. 7
percent and tne Index of lagging
Indicators rose 0.8 percent, the
department said.

Mercury plur:tges to minus 31
degrees in northern Rockies

SOUTHERN

Dining • Carry Out •
Drive-Thru

25 Canto

A Multfm8dia Inc. Newspaper

•

· Fe•. 2--Southwestern

* Real Ice Cream *

I'

•

Feb. 3-At Sauthwestern

*

2 Soctlono. 14 Pages

Economic indicators up 0.6 % in December

MEIGS

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Cloudy lonlghl. Low In 40s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday, cloudy . high In mid
50s. Chance ol,raln 50 percent.

6.

Saturday's Gallta Academy High School basketball game
with Point Pleasant High School has been postponed, due to the
closing of all Mason County, W.Va., schools the remainder of the
week. The game has been rescheduled Wednesday, Feb. 8, at
Point Pleasant.

Patrol completes wreck probe
TheGallls-Melgs Post, State Highway Patro~ has completed
Investigation of an accident which occurred at 6: 30 p.m.
Monday on Kingsbury Road, 0.1 mnes west of US 33.
Troopers said a car driven b)i Audra. Houdashelt, 18,
Continued on Page 14

, OLIVER NORTH

�•
'

.r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentin_el
i.n Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THEJNTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~

.

ts:m~ ~._-.-

q,v

.......... d

..

.

•.==o ·

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and tile American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than JOO words
long. All letters are aubject toedltlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In

,ootll•tte, addreulng Llsues, not persmalltles.

Today in history

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Porueu)y-Midclap«t, Ohio

Education.
The Governor's healthcare In·
ltlatlve has three main parts;
Eldercare, Children's Health
Care and Adu It Health Issues.
The funding for these proposals
Is based an a $.10 per · pack
ln~rease on Ohio's cigarette tax.
This would raise 186.2 million
dollars over !he two year perlnd
of the budget. 8,4.2 million do.llars
of this money would go towards
Eldercare Servlc:es. Specifically
24.4 million dollars would be used
for a pilot program that would
otter Information, medical and
social service programs to the
elderly In Ohio. 19.3 mUilon Is ·

An idea turned sour

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP I) -Not long after the election, VIce President
Dan Quayle had this wonderful idea. He would help President Bush
By United Press International
and the GOP by taking charge of the Senate.
Today Is Wednesday, Feb. 1, the 32nd day of 1989 with 333 to follow .
Coming at a time when no one In the new administration realty
The moon Is waning, moving toward new .
knew what to do with the young man Bush mysteriously put a
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
heartbeat from the Oval Office, It was not an all bad Idea.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
After all, the framers of tire Constitution assigned to the vice
Those born on the date are under the sign of Aquarius. They include
pres !dent just one duty -to serve as the president ofthe Senate. That
composer VIctor Herbert In 1859, Hattie Caraway of Arkansas, first
allowed the humble person to preside over the Senate:
woman elected to the Senate, In 1878, f!bn director John Ford In 1895,
actor Clark Gable In 1901, poet Langston Hughes In 1902, humorlstS.J.
, The vice president can vote but only to break a lie, a happening that
comes with great infrequency.
.
Perelman In 1904, cabaret singer Hildegarde In 1906 (age83), !ibn and
special effects dlrec.tor George Pal In 1908, singer Don Everly and
But Quayle, in his eagerness for something to do, envisioned
himself whapplng the gavel with wild · abandon, recognizing
rock paradlst Ray "Dr. Hook" ' Sawyer In 1937 (52). Princess
Stephanie ot Monaco In 1965 (age 24) , and Lisa Marte Presley,
Republicans at crucial moments of great debate and handing down
daughter-of Elvis Presley, In 1968 (age 21).
r
rules favorable to the GOP.
It was a novel approach to the job, which through the time of Alben
Barkley, passed for a long nap.
Beginning with Richard Nixon, presidents found mare serious
dutlesfortheirvlcepresldentsintheadrrilnlstratlon,whlchtookthem
m g a w a y from Capitol Hill.
.
.
Bush, as an example, headed President Reagan's anti-drug efforts.
And Lyndon Johnspn was the point man for John Kennedy's embryo

Prison"ove.· rcr·0 W. d.
IOUgh .test Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON - "If you do
the crime, you do the time," Is
the kind ot rap that plays well on
the campaign trail. George Bush
used that tough-on-crbne Image
to help propel him to the White
House.
One of the first tests ot his sin·
cerlty will be the budget Increase
be plans to give the Justice De·
partment's Bureau of Prisons,
whlcb bas 54 critically over·
crowded prisons. The worst fa·
clllty Is the Federal Correctional
Institute at Tucson, Ariz., where
623 prisoners are squeezed Into a
space designed tor 196. The Tucson prison tops this month's list
of the 10 most avercorwded prl·
sons In !he tedera,l system.
The extent ot the overcrowding
Is not news to Bush. While he was
vice president, a 1987 Cabinet'
level report on the pr1sans spelled
out the crisis. But the conlldentlal
report was kept fran the public
eye, and even tram members of
Congress, because It showed the
shortromtngs of the Reagan ad·
m1nlstratlan.
We bave seen the report, and It
warns that It the overcrowding Is
not alleviated, the resulting grid·
lock would force "significant departures from current enforcement, prosecution, sentencing
and Incarceration policies." In
plain English, that means fewer
peale going to prison and shorter
sentences for those that do. And
that doesn't mesh with what
George Bush said on the campaign trail.

Same experts believe the grid·
lack Is already here. The federal
report credits Increased law enfor'
cement and a greater number ot
pi'OIIeCUtors, judges and enforcement agents with sending more
peapli! to prison. Fed~al prisons
have always counted on stale and
local prisons to take the overflow,
but local authorities are putting
more people In Jail, too. At the sametbne, lawsuits by Inmates and
clvD rights groups are torclng the
lllate and local prisons to give the
Inmates more space.
The authors ot the report, led
by then-Attorney General Edwin
Meese, thought the . situation
would only get worse and did not
feel their own administration
was handling the problem effectively. The shortcomings were
tactfully blamed on fiscal restraints.
Bush pledged to speod more
mouey on new prisons. He pointed
to one 1tudy tl!at concluded 11 costs
$25,000 a year to keep one Inmate
In prison, while a career criminal
on the loose can cost society
ldl,OOO a year In law enforcement
nad loul!s to vlctbns.
But If Bush sticks wit the
budget proposed by Ronald Reagan for new prisons, he wut start
UU mUHon behind what !he report recommended should have
beell badgeted by now.
u .. doa IDcrease the budget,
dial wiD be IQCIII news to the warcll!lll cc-•a "'W with the touc11
ova a CMtlbc today. J•vlgtng tn:m
llllrMII ol Pi lieu statlltlcl!l, we
IIIYe delll!nnlllecl the 10 most overoowded te11era1 prllons lh the
country IIIII JWIIL 'lbll list does
DDt Jnrh• the IIIIIIY lllate and bCII PI lieu tbat are bul'lllng at the
lelllll,

too.

marks .fall in 181-150 contest

Governor releases proposed budget
This past week Governor Celeste released his proposed two
year budget. The Budget as . lt
stands right now will go through
numerous an~ various changes
before It Is approved ,by the
General Assembly this coming
July,
The Budget Is currently recelv-.
lng It's tlrst hearings In the !louse
Finance Committee and will soon
be arriving In the Senate for
hearings by mid-March.
Wbat follows Is a general
outline of the major points of the
Governor's Budget. The· Budget
has three main areas of con·
cerns; Healthcare, Jobs and

s~~~~-~~~O::~e. viceprestdentstoundsttcklngaroundtheSenatea

proposed to assist the elderly In
housing, meals and transporta' tlon. The passport program will .
also be expanded so that more
elderly clients can live In their
community with assistance
(rather than nursing homes).
Adult Care facUlties may also be
set up to provide Seniors with the
option to live more seitsufflclentty within their own
homes.
The Governor's Children
Health Care proposal would
provide medical screening and
testing tor Infants and treatment
services tor chronically Ill child·
ren. This budget would also
expand the Healthy Start program that would serve economl·
caliy disadvantaged two and
three year olds.
The Governor has . also proposed a new Cabinet level position that would be called the
Department of 'Recovery Services. This Department would be
funded by a praposeo revision In
the tax rates tor beer, wine and
spirit coolers that would establish a uniform tax !lased on·
alcoholic content. This would
raise an estimated 63.7 billion tor
the biennium. This cabinet level
position would be respilnslble for
administering programs that
deal with drug and alcohol abuse.
The second section of the
Governor's proposal deals with
jabs and economic development.
The, Governor has asked for a
continuation of funding tor the
· Thomas Alva Edison program
which assists start-up business's
In Ohio with public and private
resources. There Is also a recomendatlon tor 3.5 million dollars

total waste of time and made their headquarters In the. White House
The Tucson prison Is 218 percent and In the Old Executive Building next door. They kept offices In the
overcrowded. (The Bureau ot Prl·
Capitol but rarely used them.
sans considers a prison to be 100
• On the rare times that they were needed io break a tie vote, there
percent overcrowded when It Is at
was always ample warning from Senate headcounters. A motorcade
double Its capacity, so a prison was always available to whisk them to the Hillin plenty of time.
that Is 218 percent overcrowded
Quayle said he was urged to spend more tbne an Capitol Hill by
actually has more than three Howard Baker, the former Senate Republican leader, and by former
times the number of prisoners It • President Gerald Ford, who spent most of his adult life In the House.
was designed to hold. )
No matter, the Idea was not sound for several reasons.
After Tucson comes the ' At·
First of all, the -Democrats· control the Senate. That means the
lanta Camp (184 percent), the U.
Democrats hire the parliamentarian who whispers rulings that are
S. Penitentiary ~t Atlanta (177
repeated by the presiding officer - no matter who he Is.
percent), Metropolitan CorrecSecondly, the Senate has a president protem, former Democratic
tional Center In Miami (165 perleader Robert Byrd, who has tlrst dlbs on presiding when the vice
cent) , Federal Correctional In· , president Is absent. And he probably knows more about Senate rules
stltutlon Texarkana, Texas (132 'and procedures than parliamentarians.
·
percent), FCI La Tuna In Texas
More Importantly, Byrd did not feel that having Quayle preside
(112 percent), FCI Pleasant on In would be very politic for the new vice president.
California (110 percent). FCI
As a result- sometbne before he became vice president- Quayle
Ray Brook In New York (102 per· had a change of mind, although he Insisted he was not really backing
cent), Yankton Federal Prison off his original Idea.
Camp In South Dakota ( 101 perQuayle said at a news conference he would be "a bit more active
cent), and FCI Loretto In Penn·
than (vice presidents) In the past but not to a great degree."
sylvania (98 percent).
Later. Quayle said he would preside "more" than his predecessor ...r:
THE STUFF OF LEGENDS but also said his role would be "not significantly different than In the
Sources close to George. Bush tell past.''
us he has assigned high prtorlty to
Quayle said that "when you get light dawn to It, It's an allocation of
the Middle East. He knows how
time," adding that being a full-time vice president Is "just not a
well It wUI reflect an his place In
possibility."
his story If he can negotiate a lastIng settlement, but his biggest. obstacle will be Israeli Prbne Minis·
ter Yllzhak Shamlr.lf Shamlr
won't .cooperate, Bush will sbnply
go around him. American negotla·
tors are already talking behind the
scenes with Israeli leaders who
are wRing to reach an accommodation with the Palestine Libera·
tton Organization. Our sources say
Bush Is worried about the Amerl·
can Jewish lobby, but his advisers
remind hbn that Jews voted
overwhelmingly far Michael Du·
kakls, so It won't be the first time
that he succeeded without their
support.
MINI-EDITORIAL - A congressional subcommittee recently
MEN-WOM~N-CHILDREN
suggested a solution for the falling
public school system - have the
NO UYAWAYS- CASH SALES ONLY
taxpayers foot the bill for preschool and college tuition, too. The
Joint Economic Commit tee lJe.
moaned the fact that kids are unprepared to make their way In the
world when they leave high school
and that no one can make It
. without a college educ,at ton. That's
992-3639
true enough, but the solution Is to
102 EAST MAIN
cure the public schools, not spread
the disease by spreading the
money.

Sen. Jan M. Long
In grants that would assist steel
manufacturers that work to
become more compettllve and up
to date In the changing market
place. Tbe Budget also allocates
29 million dollars far the Ohio
I&lt;~dustrlal Training Program
that provides on the job training
for our workforce to prepare for
Job· skill requirements ot the
future.
The. third emphasis of !be
proposed document deals with
education. The Governor's
:Sud(et allocatey 9 billion dollars
tor Ohio's prbnary, secondary
and post,secondary Institutions.
This would expand· the school
foundation formula by 2. 7% In
1990 and 2.6% In 19911n order to
ottset any tnftallanary Increases
In Instruction.
The funding recomendatlons
also call for the use of excess
lottery profits for public school
building construction and reno- ·
va tlans In low wealth diStricts.
This educational proposal would
also establish accountablllty
criteria tor our local schools.
Most budgets, whether submit·
ted by the President, the State
Governor, or local Mayor, Is
usually a topic of controversy.
Undoubtedly, the budget proposal will generate this same type
ot response, and Indeed has done
so at this point.
In any event, the General
Assembly now has the starting
document and we must now take
the Initiative to develop a fair
funding Instrument for a better
Ohio.

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4. All entnn mul-l bt post ma~ ~ Forbruaty 17. 1989
tndrectMtdbyMarchJ, 1989

BOB'B'ilts BALL- Notre Dame forward LaPhonso Ellis (20)
bobbles the ball durbJg. the first half ... Tuesday nlght'.s came
against tile viSiting DAyton Flyers, !IS Flyers Ray Sprlnrer (11)
and Wes Coffee t52) presstire Ellis. The Irish won 115-75. (UPI)

Number one teams hold
•
spots in weekly ratings

TVC standings ·

SAVE UP TO

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OFF
WAY FOR A NEW LINE

By United Puss International
A rematch or the ' highest·
scoring game in college basket·
ball managed to break every
record established 24 days
earlier.
Hank Gathers, the natlon'•s
leading scorer, scored 41 points
Tuesday night , leading Loyola
Marymoun( to a 181-150 victory
over U.S. Internatlonaltnagame
that set four official NCAA
records and two more unofficial
marks.
The game set records t,pr total
scoring and points by the winning
and losing teams, all established
Jan. 7 in Loyola Marymount's
162-144 victory over the Gulls. In
addition. Loyola Marymount's94
flrst·half points broke the old
record of 93, which the school
also set In the earlier game.
The 220 ·shots attempted by
both teams and 130 made were
believed to be unofficial records.
"Wedidn' tcometnheretaseta
record," U.S. International
Coach Gary Zarecky said . "We
actually thought there would be
more pressure on them. The
difference between us and them
Is their great athletic ability . We
actually had thoughts on winning
the game."
But there wert" some wh'p
weren't happy with merely s~t·
tlng the records. They were
looking for a milestone.
"We were sbooUng for 200, we
set a goal' to score 200 points,"
said Loyola Marymount's Bo

SHS girls

Buchtel and Canton McKinley.
South (17-1) also suffered its first
loss of the season last week.
Trinity, 1~·0, led this week's
Division II ratings by a 248-199
margin over Tipp City Tlppeca·
noe and had a 22-1 edge In first
place votes. Tippecanoe also
went down to Its first defeat.
losing 53-49 at Lima Senior, No.4
In Division I.
Watkins Memorial, despite its
loss to Pickerington, advanced
from fourth to third this week,
followed by Millersburg , West
Hobnes, up from · fifth a week
ago, and Avon Lake, which fell
from third to fifth alter. its first
defeat.
Fairview (16·0), which i10w has
won 57 consecutive regular sea·
son games, took a 273-216 lead
ovev runnerupPemberville East·
wood this week, receiving 24 first
place votes to just two for
Eastwood, a 45-381oser to Kansas
Lakota last week.
Lisbon Anderson, despite a
59-58 loss to Berlin Center West·
ern Reserve, advanced from
seventh last week to third with a
17-1 record. Ottawa-Glandorf
went tram a tie fdr fifth to fourth
and Avon Lake fell from third to
fifth.
Kalida (15·0) held a 247-190
lead this week of South Charleston Southeastern (17·0), which
Inched ahead of Upper Scioto
Valley after three weeks In third
place. USV was third with 180,
followed by Rocky River Lutheran West (14-0) with 160 and
Fremont St. Joseph (17·1) with
132.

------· .--· .. -

•"·

•
WID,

45-16

Girls' toumey
destinations
announced

t •

J

"We've ~n through a great
deal," said Leonard, standing
with a microphone on thestageof
the Roseland dance hall like a
nightclub singer eyeing the
house. "The collision course had
to be deviated from. But now
we're here and I'm excited."
Hearns, In a black doublebreasted suit and his scowl In
fight form , stood at the opposite
end of the stage. ·
"I'm determined more than
ever before." he said. "Thatflght
Is something that always lingers
on my mind. Now it's time for me
to get the fight off my mind.''
Apart from the hefty payday .
ahead these are not the ~st of
times for the two aging fighters . .
Leonard, 32, last fought in
November, coming out of retire·
ment a third time, only to be ·
knocked down In the fourth round
before knocking out Donny La·
londe. Hearns. 30, survived a
knockdown before outpointing
James Kinchen in November. In
his previous fight, Hearns was
knocked out in the third round by
Iran Barkley .

The D~ily Sentinel
(USPS 1411-9110)
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NEW YORK tUPI) - To the
accompanbnent of a dance
troupe In battle fatigues and
newsreel footage of military
bombardments, Sugar Ray Leonard and Thomas Hear ns Tues·
day announced a rematch of
their 1981 bout In what the
promoter termed a: "declaration
of war.''
The 12-round bout June 1-2 at
Caesars Palace In Las ·vegas,
Nev., will be far the World
Boxing Council's super middleweight title. The boxers return to
the site of their storied fight
nearly eight years ago when
Leonard rallied to win the
welterweight title with a 14th·
round knockout.

$22

CAB CO.

··~·

Rematch of
1981 bout is
announced

I

·•

TOP OF THE STAIRSAND
DESIGNER
BOUTIQUE
111 wm SICOM .
992-•no .
. POIIilot
~

Jeff Fryer scored 34 points for
Loyola, Including 6 ·ot 14 threepofuters, while Enoch Simmons
. added 25. Gathers, also the
nation's leading rebounder,
pulled down a school-record 29
rebounds. Loyola made 13 of 34
shots from three-point range.
Steve Smith scored 32 points to
lead U.S. International, 8-14,
while Demetrius Laffltt added 28
and Gary Williams had 25. The
Gulls outshot Loyola 62 percent
to 56 percent.
In other games, Temple
drubbed Penn 77-55. Notre Dame
ripped Dayton 85-75, Iowa State
d~:feated Nebraska 88-76 and
DePaul routed Duquesne 85-63.
At Philadelphia, freshman Mlk
Kilgore scored 16 points and
Mike Vreeswyk added 15 to lead
Temple. Duane Causwell scored
13 points, Ernest Pollard h.a d 11
and Mark Macon tallied 11 points
and had 12 assists as all five
Temple starters scored in double

figures.
Macon, las t year's Freshman
of the Year and Temple's leading
scorer (his season with 19.9
points per game, handed out 8
assists before he took his first
shot.
"I just wanted to run the
team," saictMacon, who com mit ·
ted only one turnover .. " I was
concentrating on my defense and
not an my offense right away. I
felt I had to be more patien t."
At South Bend, Ind., LaPhonso
Ellis scored 18 points and Keith
Robinson added 16 to lift Notre
Dame. The Fighting, Irish, 11 ·3,
scored the first 6 points of the
second half to take a 4o·31 lead
with 17:36 remaining. Dayton,
9-8, was led by Anthony Corbitt
with 15 points and Ntgele Knight ·
. with 13.
At Ames, lowaa, Victor Alex · •
ander scored 22polnts to lead five
starters In double figures for
Iowa State. Mark Baugh scored
20 points, Terry Woods had a
career-high 19, Mike Born 16and
Sam Mack 11 as the Cyclones.
11-7 and 2·4 In the Bill E! ght,
never trailed. Nebraska,12·9 and
0·5, was led by Eric Johnson with
18 points. The Cornhuskers ha"e
lost their last nine regular·
season Big Eight games.
At Chicago, Stanley Brundy
scored 14 of his 18 points In the
first half to help DePaul Improve
to 13·9 and give Coach Joey
Meyer his 100th career victory.
Meyer is 100-43 in five seasons.
Arnd Neuhaus scored 18 ' points
for Duquesne. 8-10. which came
no closer than 20 points in the
second haiL
In other games, it was: Dart ·
mouth 93. Harvard 91 in· over ·
time; Fordham 81, Army 79;
George Mason 85, American 79;
North Carolina -Charlotte 7r,
South Florida 47; and Northeast
Louisiana. 88, Southern Utah
State 71.
Alse, it was : South Alabama
95, VIrginia Commonwealth 91 ;
Southern Mississippi 81. Sou·
theast Louisiana 50 ; Oh io Univer·
sity 76, Akron 72; Oral Roberts
114, Lamar 109; and Air Force 86 ,
Hawall79.

canto to lead 26-8 at the half.
SHS went on to lead 34-12, then
coast to a 45·16 finale.
Senior Crystal Hill led ihe_
winners with 14 points on 7 field
goals, while Debbie Greathouse
fallowed closely with 13 points.
Becky Evans added 9, Dawn
Johnson 6, and Becky Wine·
brenner 3.
Debbie Deming and Heflther
Thottlnger each scored ; four for
Waterford behind Cl\1'\. Harra
who led with 8 points.
Southern hit 7-15 from the field,
hit 19-37 from the line and had 13
steals, six turnovers, and 39
rebounds led by Hill and
Greathouse.
No Waterford statistics were
Gallla Academy's Blue Angels available.
(13·1), the top seed In the Division
In the reserve contest Mica '
II sectional tournament at Oak Jones and Sarah Duhl each
Hill High School, will take on iossed in eight points to. lead
Jackson on Saturday, Feb. 11 at ' Southern to a 29-26 win. Tanya
8:15p.m.
Ingels hit four free throws and a
Other 'games In the Oak Hill · field goal to score six for
sectional include McDermott Southern.
Northwest (7-9) against Wellston
For Waterford Holly Huck had
(5.lJ) onTuesday,Feb. 7at7p.m .. 8 and-Kim ' Arnold 6,
.with the winner of that game to
Southern plays Hannan Trace
play 'Meigs, the No. 2 seed., on in Racine on Thursday.
Saturday, Feb. 11, at 6: 30 p.m.
Box score:
1'1\e winners of the Feb.11 games
SOUTHERN (4~) - Becky
will meet on Tuesday, Feb. 14 In Evans 4-1·9. Debbie Greathouse
the title game. The sectional 6·1·3:Dawn Johnson i-4·6, Becky
champion will advance to the Winebrenner 1-1-3, and Crystal
district tournament at Chilli· Hill 7-0·14. TOTALS 7-1945.
cothe High School to face the
WATERFORD (16)- Deming
Unioto sectional winner on Tues· 2-0-4, Harra 4·0-8, Thottlnger
day. Feb. 21 at 8: 15 p.m.
2·0·4, Houck 0·0·0, Arnold 0-0-0.
Meigs sectional
TOTALS 8-0-16.
Kyger Creek (2-12) will face
Score by quarters:
Reedsville Eastern (2·14) will Southern ............ 13 13 11 11-45
open the Division IV sectional , Waterford .......... 4 4 4 4-16
tournament at Meigs HighSchool
on Saturday, Feb. 11 at 7 p.m . .
. The winner of that contest will
take an Racine Southern (7·9),
the second-seeded team, on Tues·
day, Feb. ·14 at 6: 30 p.m. The
Southern gall'e will be followed
by the game between top-seeded
North Gallla (9-4) and Crooks·
ville (2 -14) at 8:15p.m ..
The winners of the Feb. 14
games will advance to the
district tournament at Waverly
High School to face the Lucas·
ville Valley tower bracket
winner. That game will be on
Monday, Feb. 20 at 8: 15 p.m.

OHIO
_ _,,,

~

...-...

· Kimble, who scored 20 points on
his return after missing a month
with a knee injury. " But 180 Isn't
bad."
The· teams scored at a rate of
8.3 points a minute. They took an
average of 5.5 shots per minute,
roughly one every 12 seconds.
"We want to run and shoot
within four seconds every time
we get possession, so this was
1ike a practIce for us ," Loyqla
Marymount Coach Paul Wes!head said.

The , Southern Tornadoettes
rolled to a lopsided 45·16 triumph
over . the Waterford Wlldklttens
Monday evening In area nonleague girl's basketball action.
Southern is now 8-9 overall and
Is 6·6 Inside the SVAC.
Southern rolled to a 13·4lead In
the first round, then ramped to
the tune of 13-4 In the second

College
... Former University of HousThomas Wood was named ton football coach Bill Yeoman.
president of the Orange Bowl the man largely blamed for
Committee for the next two NCAA sanctions levied against
years. Wood, a MiaMi attorney the school· In December, will
and president of a mortgage. retire fr.om his campus fund ·
banking firm in Coral Gables,
ralslitg post soon, according to a
Fla .. has been a member of the newspaper report. Yeoman, who
Orange Bowl Committee for 15 led the Houston football program
years. Wood replaces James to national prominence during 25
Barker, whose term expired .... years as coach, Is In the t~lrd
The University of Texas says It year of a tour-year, $412,000
will begin construction In May to contract. ... Tank Adams, who
replace the football fllild and helped lead the Ben Davis Giants
track at Memorial Stadium at a
of Indianapolis to two consecu·
cost of more than $1 million.
ttve Class 5A state championAthletic Director DeLoss Dodds ships, has committed to attel'ld
said the school hopes to have the
Purdue University on a football
work completed by early or scholarship. ... Tailback Dewell
mid-September.
Brewer, who scored 33 touch·
downs during his senior season at
Lawton High School In Lawton,
Okla., plans to attend the Untver·
slty of Oklahoma.
J!1 cure Skattnr
(Varsity only)
,
Caryn
Kadavy, 21, the 1987
TEAM
W L
P
OP
world
and
1988 U.S. bronze
Trbnble .......... 13 1 988 858
medalist,
was
forced to withdraw
Wellston ...... ... 11 2 945 796
VInton ...... ...... 8 6 881 816 from the 1989 U.S. champion•
ships after suffering a stress
Belpre ............ 7 6 844 794
Miller........... .. 4 9 804 878 fracture of the leg In a workout In
Denver.
'
Alexander .. .. .. 5 8 703 765
Fed-Hocking ... 4 9 787 885
Nels-York ....... 4 9 768 742
Meigs... .......... 3 10 900 907
Tuesday's results:
Alexander 67 Bel pre 66
Trbnble 60 Miller !56
Meigs 57 VInton County 45
Wellston 64 Federal Hocking 51
Athens 83 Nel59nvllle·York 67
Friday's rames:
Meigs at Belpre
Miller a I AI ex a nder
Federal Hocking - Open
Nelsonville-York at Wellston
992-6471
._
_ _""!-_ _ _ _ _ _MIIDUPOU,
____
T{bnble at VInton County

I

•SLACKS •S
•BLOUSES •DRESSES

.

•

-------Sports b r i e f s - - - - - -

F1om Carnerlon"sldldwfl

SAYINGS FOR

'•

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII
The four No. 1 ranked teams
continued rolling merrily along
in this week's United Press
International 'Ohio High School
Board of Coaches girls basket·
ball ratings; but the road was
somewhat rougher for those In
the runnerup spots.
Last week 's leaders - Pickerington in Division I, Garfield
ljelghts Trinity In II, Sherwood
Fairview In 111 and Kalida In IV
all remained unbeaten
through last weekend 's games
and in solid control of the top
spots in their divisions.
.Three of the four No.2 teams of
a week ago, however, went down
to their first defeat of the season
and the other, Upper Scioto
Valley in Division IV, slipped
from second to third despite
running its record to 17·1.
Pickerington, now 17-0 after a
68-58 win at previously unbeaten
Watkins Memorial, the No. 3
team in Division III. held a
225·182edge this week over North
Canton Glen.Oak. with a J5-5edge
in first place votes.
GlcnOak fell to 16-1 on the year
with a 48-47 loss to neighbOring
North Canton Hoover. ·
Cincinnati Princeton and Llma
Senior again finished in third and
fourth place and Beavercreek,
the state's only other unbeaten
Division I team, bOlted all the
way from eighth to fifth.
Elyria slipped one spot to sixth,
followed by Toledo Central Ca·
tholic, Columbus South, Akron

CARNA110N AND CONTADINA JNVI1E YOU 10:

w

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Modem college cage scoring

Wednaadav. February 1, 1989

•

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�Wednesday, February 1, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

.•..

Wednestlay, February 1. 1989

The Daily Sentiliei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Marauders defeat Vinton County in rematch, 574S
ROCK SPRINGS- "Our game
plan was to takeaway the outside
shootlng of (Charles) Bowden
and (Jayl Palmer, make them
drive for the bucket and let the
other three beat us ifthey could."
So said Coach Rusty Bookman
after his Marauders.avenged an
earlier blowout at the hands of
Vinton County by downing the
Vikings 57-45 at Larry R Morrison Gymnasium.
The strategy paid off as . the
Viking du.o totaled only 22 points
as opposed to the 58 they racked
up in their first meeting.
Without a doubt , the foul
shooting figured greatly tn the
outcome, too. At McArthur the
Vikings hit on 42 of 54 from the
line to just eighteen for the
Marauders. Last evening they
visitors had only seven attempts.
making five, and never reached
the bonus situation in the final16
minutes of play. The Meigs squad
sank 18 of 23 from the line for a
hot 78.2 percent:
Palmer opened the scoring on
the night for a 2-0 Vike lead
before John Burdette canned one
from beyond the arc to put the
locals ahead. Cary Betzlng then
hit a pair of field goals and Todd
Powell sank two from the line to
give Meigs a 7-2 advantage at the

3:55 mark of quarter one.
· "Falmer hit his second goal
(3: 59) and Betzing relaliated at
2: 10. In the final 120 :;econds of
the lnillal period, field goals by
Jason Caudill and Adam Conway
cut the margin to 9-8, favoring
the Marauders.

In the final 57 seconds, charity
tossed by Betzing, BurdNte and
Powell and a last second goal by
Baker notched !he very satisfying win for the Marauders and
Coach Bookman.
Oiler led all storers with 17 and
teammates Powell and Burdette
finished in double figures with 14

Vinton took a five point lead
(18-13) with· 2:28 left in the first
half as neither team could be
credited for playing a perfect
Despite another weak first
game. In the 5:30 time span, a
total of eleven turnovers was half, the Rio Grande Redmen
recorded. Down the stretch to came l)ack late in the second
intermission, Kevin Oiler hit a period Tuesday at Lyne Center to
pair of field goals and had a trail Mount Vernon Nazarene by
charity shot drop to knot the one, but It just wasn' t enough to
score at 20 with two quarters stop the Cougars from winning,
remaining. Oiler sparked the 99-96.
''I don't ~now If we've ever had
Marauders in tht&gt; second period
a
loss that we've felt worse
with nine points and a pair of
about,"
Coach John Lawhorn
rebounds.
"But you have to
commented.
Meigs fell behind 25·28 two
cr!'dit
to
Mount Vernon.
give
thirds of the way into the third
They
hit
every
big.hoop
and they
eight minutes bll't came back,
hit.
again behind a great effort by
Oiler to go ahead by three with · "We burled ourselves In the
first half," Lawhorn continued.
one quarter left to go.
The final frame, for the most ''The bright spot was that we
part, belonged to the local five as · executed and played hard In the
they bullt to an eleven point lead second half. But we have to
undersland that there are 40
at the midway point before the
minutes
in a basketball game.''
Vikings made a run to close it to
The
Redmen
go to 15-10 overall
five with 1:02 left.
and 4·6 In the Mid-Ohio Conference. MVNC is now 13-10 and 7-3.
The Cougars. led by Ron
Holmes' career nigh of 28 points,
shutdown thehostsformorethan
three minutes to post a 22-7 lead
with 12: 42 left in the first period . .
Rio Grande had led for roughly 40
win, in which Illinois trailed by 10 seconds (4·3), but Bernie Balikiat the half. . ;·
an's club took charge at 17:18 on
"! think we have to play a full a basket by post man Rick Burke.
40 minutes each game," Henson
TheRedmen tied at 7 on a Brad
said. , "I don't think you can Schubert 3-polnter, but then the
afford to play poorly for a long ensuing drought helped MVN C
period of time on the road. For a lead the Redmen by as much as
long time, we were getting off to a 18 (45-27) at 6:19. Holmes'
great start, but we haven't been jumper at the buzzer gave the
doing that lately. I'm not sure Cougars a 53·44 advantage.
why."
In a near-repeat of Satunlay's
Gettlng off to "a great start" game with Malone, Anthony
could be crucial against Purdue.
Raymore - who also posted a
With a front line of 6-foot-9 career mark of 30 points - led
Stephen Scheffler, 6-8 Kip Jones the Redmen In a rally that saw
and 6-8 Melvin McCants. the
Boilermakers have a vast height
advantage over the llllnl. Illinois' tallest player is 6-8 Marcus
Liberty, who has been filling In
for the injured Kendall Gill at
I
guard.
CHICAGO (UPI) - Michigan
The weakness of Purdue. 9·11
State guard Kirk Manns, who
overall and 2·5 in the Btg Ten, is
was averaging 6.3 points a game
outside shooting. The team's two
until scoring a combined 641n his
starting guards are Tony Jones
last two ou lings, was named
and Keith Stewart. Jones is
Tuesday United Press Internahitting 47 percent of his field
tional's Player of the Week.
goals and averaging 10.9 points a
Manns, a 6·1 junior from North
game. Stewart is' shootlng a
Judson, Ind., rackejl up a career·
respectable 52.5 percentfrom the
high 40 points last Wednesday in
floor but is averaging just 3.1
a 106-83 victory over Purdue, the
points an outing.
most points scored by a Spartan ·
'Their perimeter people are a
since Darryl -Johnson's 42
little inexperienced," Henson
against BYU Dec. 29, 1986.
said. "But we know they're good.
Manns connected on 11 of 16 field
We're just hoping they don't
goal attempts, 8 of 10 3-polnters
shoot well against us. I don't
and 10 of 10 free throws, all in 28
think anyone looks forward to
minutes .
going to Purdue. They could
,In a 73-64 win over Minnesota
break out of their shooting slump
on Saturday, Manns scored a
at any time."
team·high 24 points in 24 min·
utes, hitting 7 ofl2 shots from the
field , including 4 of 5 from 3-point
range, and 6 of 6 free throws.
regular site for theeventbecause
In the two games, Manns, who
of the Hoosier Dome's controUed
averaged 5 points per game last
conditions and the nearness of
season, scored 64 points, was 18
hotels.
of 28 from the field (64.3 percent),
Coaches will have the chance 12 o! 15 from 3-polnt range (80
percent) and 16 of 16 from the
to meet players and judge their
personality as well as Jale_nt,
free:throw line, all in 52 of 80
gathering Information they hope
minutes.
will lead to a successful top pick
and later-round choices that can
mtike key contributions. Agents
GOOD USED
also will be at the players' hotels,
WASHERS, DIYERS,
hoping to sign contracts with
IEFRIGEIATOIS, TVs,
uncommitted players.
Notre Dame's national cham·
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
piOns will send five players to the
combine, Including two AllAmericas, defensive end Frank
Starns and offensive tackle Andy
Heck. Wes Pritchett, the line·
627 3rd AYI., Galipolls
backer who led Irish tacklers,
will also attend, along with safety
PH. 446-1699
George StreNer and tailback
HOUIS: I A.M.-6 P.M.
Mark Green.

Illinois, one of the hottest team
tn the nation during November
and December, cooled off considerably tn the second part of
January. First there was the
close 75-70 win over Northwestern. That was followed by a 103-92
double overtime victory over
Georgia Tecl!.
The team followed those lackluster performances with the
Minnesota loss and the Indiana

Vinton.
0; Oller 7-0-3-17; Crooks 0-0-0-0;
Meigs committed 19 turnovers Greene 0-0-0-0.
to the visitor's 20. Burdette had
VINTON - Palmer 3-0·0-6;
seven assists and four steals for Bowden 6-0-4-16; Conway 3-0-0-6;
the Marauders.
Reed 1-1·1-6; Reld1-1-0-5; Caudill
SCORING;
3-0-0-6.
MEIGS .:.. Baker 3-0'2-8;
Scorl•l by quarters:
Burdette 2-1-3-10; Powell 3-0-8· Meigs .., ...............9 11 13 24-57
14; Betzing 3-0-2-8; Neigler 0-0-0- Vinton ........... ...... 8 12 10 15-45
The young Marauders triumphed In the reserve game with
· a tight 46-45 win. Frank Blake
canned 13 points for Meigs with
Robert Fields and Mike VanMe(22·26).
Scoring 17 points for MVNC ter adding 12 each. Nick Kruger ·
was Burke, who also snatched garnered 20 for Vinton.
nine rebounds and offered tll,ree
asststi. Joe White added 16
markers,' three rebounds and
,
CAll
four assists; Steve Gregory had
YOU Al'"fiCIOIIIIIDID
15 points and two rebounds; imd
Sam Barber ta!Ued 11 points,
DISM'm
three rebounds and three assists.
Hitting 33 of 58 attempts,
MVNC was 56.8 percent from the
field and 76.9 percent (20-26) at
the charity stripe.
The Cougars {ace MOC cham·
piOn Malone Saturday in Canton.
The Redmen will be at home
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. against
second-place Urbana.
In the only MOC game played
Dioebility c . . be one of the greaTuesday, Urbana edged Walsh,
-llhreMa to your famly' ofinan93-92, in overttme.
ci.. oecurily. And it's up to you to

MVNC edges Ri9's Redmen 99-96

Henson happy about
_being No. ·2 in polls
URBANA, Dl. CUP!) - The
unblemished record and the
nation's No. 1 ranking are gone,
but Ulinois Coach Lou Henson
said Tuesday his second-ranked
team is happy to be where it is
with a pair of Big Ten road games
coming up this week.
- Illinois, 18-1 overall and 5-1 in
the conference, travels to West
Lafayette, Ind., to play Purdue
Thursday and to Iowa City to
take on No. 13 Idwa Sunday.
"I think it's great to be No. 2,.,
Henson said. "The thing I don' t
· like Is the avenue wt&gt; had to take
to be No. 2."
Illinois enjoyed one week atop
the polls but fell to Minnesota last
week. A comeback victory over
1tith-rated Indiana later in the
week was not enough to revive
Dlinols' No. 1 bid.
" What difference does it
make? We feel good about where
the team is," said flenson.
"We' re more concerned about
gettlng on !rack and gettlng the
• team to play good basketball."

· and 10 respectively . Bowden was
high point man !or Vinton with16.
TheMaraudershit19of46from
the field and the Vikings canned
19 of 54 from the floor. Rebounds
were close with meighs gettlng27
to 30 for Vinton. Baker had eight
to lead the Meigs crew and
Conway grabbed eleven for

them slowly strip away MVNC's
margin to one point {9.1·90) with
1:12 remaining.
Foul trouble - wliich earlier
resulted In the loss of forward
Mike Tidwell and guard Brian
Watkins · - helped keep the
Cougars ahead. Jimmy Kearns'
3-pointer with seven seconds lefl
completed the scoring.
Balik ian said later that MVNC
decided this week to shoot
aggressively on its 3-point attempts, and as a result, six of his
players pumped in a total of-12
trlfecta shots against the
Redmen.
The visitor-s turned over the
ball13 times, whUe the Redmen
lost possession 20 times. In
addition, Rio Grande was out·
boarded 33-23.
Of the Cougars' strong first
half lead, Balikian said "we
needed a .big jump because we've
had no succes_s previously on the
road with. Rio Grande. I think
that lead gave our kids some
confidence."
Raymore also pulled In three
rebounds and three assists, while
Schubert boosted hts scoring
stock with 23 points, four re·
bounds and four assists. Kearns
completed the high scoring for
·Rio Grande with 11 points, three
rebounds and three assists.
The Redmen shot 52.3 percent
from the field (34-65) and were
84.6 percent on free throws

•

to•co••
'

Box score:

RIO GRANDE (96)- Anthony

Raymore, 8-14-30; • Jimmy
Kearns, 3·1·2-11; Brad Schubert,
4-5-0-23; Larry ·Benning, 4-1·9:
.John Lambcke, 2·1-5; Marc Go·
thard, 2-0-4; Brian Watkins,
0-1·0-3; Mike Tidwell, ~-2·8; Rob
Jackson, 1-0-2; Scott Slusser,
0·2-2. TOTALS 27-7·22-96.

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•

Repnaentative

.

POTATOES

•

NFL eyes top college football players
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!)
UCLA quarterback Troy Aikman
and 340 other top college football
players take a ~ajor step toward
an NFL career this week at the
league's annual scouting
combine.
The testing sessiOns will be
conducted Thursday through
Sunday at the Hoosier Dome.
Players will undergo physical
examinations and drug testing
during their first day. That is
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gence, strength, speed, agility
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Scouts, coaches and general
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212 E. MAIN - POMEROY
"
HURIIYIIIEUT£ EHPS IIAIICH 10,1-

Rt. 62 North

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(

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(304) 675-1155

Point Pleasant, WV
)

�.
Wechnday, February 1, 1989

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Seuti1tl

Hannan Trace Wildcats slip past Oak Hill quintet, 64-62
. By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Staff Writer

ovr

·'We needed. that win, and the
kids went out and got It," said
Hannan Trace mentor Mike
Jenkins of his Wildcats, whose
pressure defense and a seasonhigh eight three-point shots were
just enough to edge visiting Oak
Hill 64-62 Tuesday night.
The win gives the Wildcats a
third-place tie with North Gallla
at 7-5, and the decision drops the
Hill Into a second-place tie in the
SVACwtth Eastern at 8-4, both of
which are a full game behind
Southern.
The Wildcats started o!t the
game by feeling out the perime- ter and finding the best places to
shoot, butTrace'sflrsttwopoints
came In the game's first minute
on a layup by forward Tim
Brumfield, a 6-0 senior who used
his quickness to freeze the Hill's
frontmen in the paint just long
enough to drop In 14 points, 12 of
which were scored in the first
half.
.
.
·
The Oaks made passing mistakes early' which allowed Trace
to post three seven-point leads In
act one, but the Oaks battled
back with seven points from
Ward in that quarter to cut the
Guyan lead to 17-15 at the end of
the first quarter.
After Oak Hill guard Chuck
Miller stole an errant pass
Intended for HT guard Brad
Cremeens and scored on a layup
25 seconds into the second
Ql\arter to lie the game at 17,
Brumfield sank a jumper from
the left baseline to give Trace a
19-17 lead. Then Rawlins sank
three of four one-and-one shots in
a 12-second span to give the Oaks
their first lead at 20-19.
It took 52 seconds for Cremeens
to erase that lead with his second
three-pointer of the night (his
first one was in the first quarter)
to give the GaiUans a 22-20
margin at the 5: 20 mark. Then
OH forward Chad Smith, a 6-2
junior, rose above the Wildcats'
pressure defense to score on a
jumper at the 4:09 mark to tie the
game at 22. On the Wildcats' next
possession, point guard J.J.
Bevari fouled ,OH guard Bobby
Coon after Coon stole tile ball
from him and was going for a ·
layup. Snyder canned both free
throws, and the Hill was on top by
a 24-22 count.
Craig Rankin, the Wildcats' 6-1
sophomore center, took a pass in
the paint, faked Rawlins and
passed him on his way to a layup
and a 24-2~ tie. Thirteen seconds
later Rawlins redeemed himself
by hilling a jumper from the .
right baseline to give the Oaks a
26-24 lead with three minutes le!t
before halftime. That was the
last time the Oaks would be
ahead in the game.
"Their pressure forced us Into
turnovers, and we were lucky to
be behind by two points at
halftime," said Oak Hill skipper
Doug Hale ..
After hitting one of Trace's
three first-half three-pointers,
forward Richie Cornell, a 6-0
sophomore, led the downrange
assault by dialing long distance
three times, . while Bevan
dropped In a bonus bucket to give
the Galllans an average lead of
five· points in the third quarter.
The fact that Rawlins found
enough room to dunk ·with six
minutes left in round three didn't
seem to faze the Wildcats.
Though the Oaks cut the
Wildcats' lead to three In the last
minute of the third quarter, the
Wildcats were continuing to pass
the ball around and connect

I

wherever they decided to shoot.
Though Trace had Its share o!
misseS from the floor, they had a
variety of baskets scored from
most spots on the floor. When
Wildcat forward Bill Bailey sank
a three- spot with 5: 50 left In the
game, Hale called time-out nine
seconds later. ''They're kUling us
on threes ... We've gotta match
up," he said to his troops on the
sideline.
Though the Oaks hurt themselves with various fouls, blockIng and traveling being chief
among them, they refused to say
die, as Ward connected from

three-point hind with 2:42 left to
cut Trace's lead to 61-57. Fourteen seconds later, OH guard
Josh Ruff, who had barely been
on the floor one minute, stole the
ball !rom Cornell near the
halfcourt line and drove In
uncontested for the layup, which
made the score 61-59.
With 1:16 left, the Wildcats
went up 64-59 when Cornell sank
one of two one-and-one shots, ·
adding · to Bailey's two free
throws dropped In 48 seconds
earlier, but the }Jill wasn't dead
yet. Coon launched a threepointer with 1: 06le!t to make the

score 64-62.
With four seconds left, Brlll!f-'
field missed the front end of a
one-and-one, and after the ball
had been knocked out of bc&gt;unds
. by the Wildcats, the Oaks retained possession. Smith inbounded a long pass to Rawlins,
but Cornell and Bailey, who with
Rankin had stayed on Rawlins all
night, pressured Rawlins the
moment he got the baiL Cornell
and Bailey allowed Rawlins, who
led the Oaks wtlh 20 points, no
room to move toward the basket
as time expired.
In the reserve game, the

.SALE DATES: J•nu.ary 30 thru Febru•ry 4, 1989 Quanllry

Wildcats thumped the Oaks 75-35. 1·l-3-8; Cremeens 1-2-0-8; Bevan
Brian Unroe powered Trace with 2-1·0-7. TOTALS- 18 8 t 1M
From the field - 26-61 (42.6
a game-high 20 points, while
Jones and Simpson scored eight pet.)
'
From lhe line - 4-9 (4U pet.)
each for the Oaks.
Off lhe glaaa - 24 (Cornell 6)
On Friday night both teams
Alellta- 24 (Brumfield 7)
will be Involved In pivotal con·
Stellll17 (Cremeens 5)
tests, as the Wildcats will host
Turnovers - 12
Southern and the Oaks will host
North Gallia.
OAK HD.L ( 12)
Score by quarters
Rawlins S-0-4-20; Ward 2·2-6Oak Hill ............ 15 16 16 15-62 .
Hannan Trace .. . 17 16 18 13-64 16; Coon 1-1-7-12; Smith 5-0-0-10;
Miller 1-0:0-2; Ruff 1·0-0-2. TOHANNAN TRACE (64)
TAlS - 11-1-U-82
From lhe line
11-14 (78.6
CorneliH-1·17; Brumfield 7-00.14; Rankin 5-0.0.10; Bailey pet.) ..

..

Corner of General Hartinger Parkway and
· Pearl Street
TELEPHONE: 992-3471

'

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8 A.M.-10 P.M.

We Accept Food Stamps a. W.I.C. Coupons

·WEDNESDAY

'(k'·,\o.

"l

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~·

EAST MEIGS- Eastern High
School Alumni Basketball prac·
tic~ will be Wednesday, 8 p.m.,at
the high school. The Eastern
Ht~;h School Alumni Basketball
Games wilt ~yed Saturday,
Fe\1. 4, not ~ep. 7, star\lnr with
the women'J g~ )t , 6 p.m.,
follOwed by tilt! mln's game.
Prqceros from the games will go
to the Eastern . Wgh Athletic
BoOsters. f "~l,f!. ~
.. '
·. '' '
....

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.About, Quality,
Selection and eel

P

(SVAC games)
TEAM
WL POP
Southern .............. 9 3 825 739
Eastern ............... 8 4 902 864
Oak Hill ............ ,, 8 4 755 697
North Gallia ........ 7 5 843 741
Hannan Trace ..... 7 5 719 692
Southwestern ...... . 5 7 794 8&amp;1
Kyger Creek ....... 2 10 738 836
Symmes Valley .. 2 10 652 798
TOTAlS ............ 48 48 82%1! 62%11
(Reserves)
WL POP
North Gallla ........ 11 1 694 446
Southern.............. lO 2 604 467
Hannan Trace ..... 9 3 610 469
Symmes Valley ... 7 5 509 528
Eastern ............... 5 7 527 614
Oak Hill .............. 3 9 479 576
Southwestern ...... 2 10 482 591
. Kyger Creek, ...... 1 11 398 592
TOTAlS ............ 48 48 ass 4283 '
Tue&amp;dQ's reaulla
Hannan Trace 64, Oak Hill 62
Dawson-Bryant 68, Symmes Val·
ley 48
FrldQ's IIClbedule
Southern at Hannan Trace
North Gallla at Oak Hill
Eastern at Southwes~rn
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley

from 9 a.

in. to 12 noon, at the old

Morse Chapel Church, RacinePortland·Road , County Road 35.
The Grubb family Singers of
Gallipolis will be singing. The
pub! iC Is invited to attend.

high school building In Cheshire.
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
County 8 &amp; 40, Salon 710. will
meet Thursday, 1 p.m., at the
home of Rhoda Hackett in
Middleport.

Trustees
POMEROY - The Columbia
Township Board of Trustees will
meet Monday , Feb. 6, 7:30p.m.,
ai the fire station.

POMEROY -Salisbury Town·
ship Trustees will meet Thurs·
day, 7 p.m., at the township hall.

POMEROY- The' Red !:rois
Blooclmolllle will be at tile 1\fl!igs
c'ouncy Senfllr Clflzerilrcen·rer on
Wednesday,. February 8, ftom 1
to 5:30p.m.

Order of Eastern Star
POMEROY- PastMatronsof
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Star, will meet Feb. 7 at
the home of Emma Clatworf11y.
Members are asked to bring a
homemade baked Item or handmade craft Item for the Valentine's Day gift exchange. Therewill be a cater-:d dinner prior to
the meeting at 6 p.m. Cost of the
dinner Is $6. Any member wishing to make a reservation for the
dlhner Is asked to call Twlla
Childs at 992-6188 by Feb. 1.

THURSDAY .

Joy Green
Fresh Extra Fancy

Pepsi

STIVERSVlLLE - VIc Roberts, of Uttle Hocking, will
speak at the Stlversville Word of
Faith Church, Thursday, at 7
p.m. Pastor Gary Holter Invites
the public.

Broccoli

$}29

69C

16 OZ. BOTILES

CHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
Corpmunlty Action Agency will
hold free clothing day tor lowincome persons on Thursday,

LARGE
BUNCH

..

Umlt 2 With Other purehaae

2 Uter

Pepsi

-

Cauliflower
•

Califomia Iceberg

-

Meat, Plain or Mushroom

Ragu Homestyle
Spashettl Sauce
(

Cardinal
White Bread
(

32 oz.
jar
16

Head Lettuce

Cream Style
Whole Kernel
Corn or Cut or French Style

Enriched

Del Monte
Green Beans
$

oz .

oz .
cans

6-17

lo;~f

TEAM

••••
, lllf l.ettuce ·--$129 "

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SATURDAY
RACINE -A hymn'sing will be

held Saturday at 7:30p.m. at the

mstal/.ation set
Plans for • the sem !·annual
Installation of officers of Bethel
62, International Order of Job's
Daughters, were made at Monday night's meeting held at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Installation will be held Sat urday night at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Temple. Gretta Rime will be
Installed as honored queen .

PLAY OUR EXCITING NEW

••• ._.._sJtt ..

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
SUNDAY ADVERTISEMENT IN
THE MEAT DEPT. SHOULD
HAVE lEAD

l\1A'fCl-l &amp; \\'IN GAME!

. . Lttlact...- ..S24t ..

COUNTIY

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The newest way to shop and save big' lUI.)()'~ of cash and priu winners.
Ask lor your fn·e game ticket each time you shop.

r., •• a1r ••_ ... rtc·. .

C.ata...........79C ..

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SPARE IllS

$499
S Ll. PACUGI

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r-----···-- _ . -·-"'""' -- -

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realize how many people in the
country could be "Sam. G."?
You owe an apologytoallofus.Sam GrosSJDan, Canoga Park,
CaiH,
Dear Mr.- Grouman: I'm terri·
bly sorry if that letter created a
problem !or you. So far, I haven't
heard from any other Sam G.'s,
but it's early yet. Let this be a
blanket apology to all who may
have been embarrassed.

Ohio Eta Phi meeting held
Several spring social activities
were discussed at Tuesday
night 's meeting of dbio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorotity, hell! at Senior Cit lzens
Center.
The Valentine's Day party to
be held on Feb. 18 at the Holly Hill
Inn was noted, a long with a St.
Patrick's Day dance to be held on
March 17 with other chapters to
be invited. .
Also announced at the meeting

Planning · a wedding? What'"
righr ? Jr/ hat't wron,g? ..The Ann
Lander.t Guide for Bride~" wiU
relieve your anxiety. To receive a
cop_\·, &amp;end !3 plus o self.fJddre~sed,
srampPd bu.!line.u-.ti.:.e ertt'~ lope (45
certt.s poJ.toge} to Ann Landers. P.O.
Box Jl562. Chirogo, Ill. 60611·0562.

The 65th annual meeting and
school of instruction of District
25, Order of the Eastern Star, will
be held Thursday at the Morgan
High School In McConnelsville
with the opening session at 4 p.m.
Louann Adkins, district president, will preside at the meeting
after which a dinner· wil be
served at 5: 30 p.m. The evening
session will begin at 7 p.m . and
participating in the school of
instruction· will be Barbara
Crites, worthy grand matron;
Sandy Quick, deputy grand matron, and Chlorus Gaul, Pomeroy
Chapter, Grand Adah.

was the April 27 Founder's Day
observance at the Blennerhasset
Hotel In Parkersburg.
Teresa Kennedy presided at
the meeting. A report was given
on the Xi Gamma Epsilon card
party. Fund raising projects ··
were discussed Including a possibility of a golf tournament.
Becky Triplett and Lori Powell
will secure information on a
tournament and report back at
the next meeting.
·

1

Xi Gamma Mu meets

The traditional hearts and
.,.:en\ to the Meigs County Cancer
hands get-together of XI Gamma
Society. Chapters were also
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
asked to make additional donaSorority, was planned at a recent
tions to the local society.
chapter meeting held at the home
The St. Patrick's Day party
of A .R. !(night.
being hosted by Ohio Eta. Phi
The meeting will take place at
Chapter was noted. An all·
7:30 Tuesday night at the home of
chapter function was discussed
Lynn Shuler. Members are to
during the meeting.
take homemade gifts for their
The cultural program was
secret sisters wrapped in white
given by Linda Bates on nutrition
paper with a pink bow. Those
and Sharon Pratt on Inner
beauty.!
unable to attend .are asked to
send their gifts.
A thank you note was read
The chapter voted to make a
from Rita Fields, Meigs County
donation. to the International . Health Department.. . thanking
Endowment Fund. A report was
the chapter for children's gifts at
given on the recent card party
Christmas time.
hosted by XI Gamma Epsilon and
A pizza patty "'as held followit was noted that the proceeds
Ing the meeting.

·

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·
·
.

Save$4.00

"

-'·
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p••••••••C 0 UP 0 M•••••••••

REG.$1.4:99" 1t) Sheer-to-Waist Pantyhose

" 'The problems with teenaged
pregnancies are that the mother
often stops her education and
that children of teenaged mothers tend to become teenaged
mothers themselves," said Sandra Bennett. director of communications for the Ohio Nurses
Association.
The coalition asked lor $1.5
million for such a program for
each of the bUdget's two years.

1~

I

I
I

3 $2

1

Regular and Queen Size

c11p*'

I

J
·

pairs
4'.or
It

1

II

99R . , _ _

eg. """'" I
a pair.· .

I
I

Coupon must be presented wHh purchase.
otter expires Februoty 12. 1989.
Customer Zip Qode

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•••••••••c ouP oN•••••••••

FOR HIRE - D. J.

305 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

TOP 40 CURRENT HITS
Profe••ional Sound
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lhru Feb. 12. MasterCard or VIsa.

AFTER 4 P.M.

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VALASSIS COUPON
VALUES ___
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Syndif'llif'

Dog warden
POMEROY - Meigs County
residents are advised that Dog
Warden Wayne Roseberry may
be reached between the hours of 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. by calling the
animal shelter at 992-3779. After 5
p.m., residents should call Roseberry at his home at 992-3026.

--

°CORRECTION°

•,

,,

(~at an

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club wtll meet Monday
at 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Dorothy Roller. Each member is
to take a valentine.

•
'·

I• I• 'ltttuce- $129 ..

______ ..___________-

J\ebruary has been designated
by the National Soclely, Daughters of the American Revolution,
as ~mertcan History Month. The
local Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter encourages residents to
par,tlclpate by reflecting on the
historical record of this country,
its many patriots and historical
documents.

IMlJp
..., littun ........$129...
l1•1h I
$
.

~N LA.I'IiDERS•
,.1988, Lo. An~~
Tlmt"' Syndlt111r.,. and

t radUion of musical excellence at
Capital University.
· This year's festival featured
quartets and accompanists from
27 schools qnder the direction of
Craig S. 1\rnold, director of
choral activities a\ Capital
University.
Students attending were Des·
tiny Jenkins, Brandl Stacy, and
Steve R. Martin.

Five Meigs students of the
Meigs and Eastern Vocal Music
Departments attended the CAP
Honors Festival held Saturday at
Capital University in Columbus.
The festival is designed to
provide the opportunity lor select
high shcool singers from a five
state area to rehearse and
perform together, to receive
critique on their solo preparation, and to be Introduced to the

Garden club

Job's Dtmghters

DAR
month set
,
Va .....aa'a Freah.
California Lettuce
Section

Ann

Women want a-bigger slice of the pie

•

...... __......_ 129._

IS oz.
plea.

POMEROY The Meigs
CountyR.E.A.C.T. will hold their
monthly meeting at Pleasers
Restaurant on Friday at 7:30
p.m. All members are urged to
attend.

GOLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) program for Aid to Dependent
Meinbers of the Women's Budget Children. ,
.
Coalition Tuesday asked the Ohio
''ADC Is less than half of the
House for a bigger slice of the standard of need and therefore Is
budgetary pte for J)rograms that lnadquate tor low·lncome famiwoald help women Improve their lies," said Charleta Tavares o!
status, Including more than dou- · the Public Children's Services of
blbig the governor's request for Ohio. "'We support an Increase to
welfare.
at least 10 percent In each year."
Sen. Linda Furney, D-Toledo,
Furney said current A-DC paysaid the coalition of 25 statewide ments are $321 for a family of
women's children's, and service three.
organizations, wanted the legisThe coalition asked t~at some
lators to increase funding for of the other programs Gov.
their programs to 5 percent. She Richard Celeste put Into his
said only one percent of the budget proposal receive more
current budget goes for their money, and called for Initiating
programs.
others, including the reinstating
The governor's budget now tor the teenaged pregnancy prevunder study in the House would entlon projp'am.
allocate 4 percent of the welfare

Jumbo ;·
Snow White

99C

FRIDAY

MIDDLEPORT- A square
dance will be ' held Friday evenIng, 8 to 12 midnight, at the
Middleport American Legion Annex. Music will be provided by
the True Country
Ramblers.
!_ _ _

CAP honors festival attended

School of instruction
scheduled for OES

calendar

.

OP

940
1277
1065
1054
984
1199
1114
1118

Discuss your fears with your now that I have found something
obstetrician and ask about the I enjoy, everyone seems to think!
new techniques for making child· · have a problem. 1 would like your
birth easier. He or she will give views on this. - Wln, Place and
you the reassurance you the Show In OK City
reass11rance you need . And
Dear OK: Since you enjoy
. please go back and reread the going to the track and you put a
first sentence of my advice. No ceiling on your losses, I see no
truer words were ever spoken.
reason for your husband (or
Dear Au Landen: Recently, anyone else) to criticize you. But
you published a test for complu· watch It, dear. Gambling· has an
slve gamblers. I took the test and Insidious way of getting Into your
have no problem.
blood. Unless you are wellLast~ptember a horse race disciplined you could find your·
track opened near our home. I
self In over your head. The next
love to go to the races and will go letter was In the same batch as
alone If l can' 1 get anyone to go yours.
with me. I atudy the publications
Dear Ann Landen: That letter
and have been pretty good at you printed from a compulsive
selecting winners. The most that gambler got me an awful lot of
I have ever,lost In a single day Is unwanted atientlon. The signa$25, which Is not serious for me.
ture of the writer was "Sam G."
On the other han!!, my husband
Ever since that letter appeared
drinks, hunts and fishes three in the paper, my phone hasn't
weekends out of four. all year stopped ringing. Dozens of
'round. Tliese weekends cost · friends and relatives have called
between $50 and S'15. We both to offer help. They all said,
work full-tlrm! and make about "Sam, I didn't know you were a
the sam,e moDe)'.
.
compulsive gambler."
I have been s~ndlngweekends
Why didn't you at least print
alone for nearly 10 years, and the name of the city? Do you

POMEROY - Clergy Apprecl·
. ~HESTER ~E:lster'n Athletic atlon .Night, sponsored by the
BOOsters will meet Wednesday_at . Meigs County Clvltan Club, will
7:36 p.m. In the E!lstern Wgh · be Thufsday, 6: 30 p.m., at the
SchOol cafeteria . ... ·'
'
·
Meigs County Senior Citizens
'
Center In Pomeroy. Ali local
RUTLAND - The Rutland clergy are Invited. Anyone who
Township Trustees ~I meet In has not received an Invitation
regular session ·on Thur'sda)r at and would like to come should
6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire call Sue Maison at 992-2084, or
StatiOn. The meeting is open· to . Yonlece Miller at 992-5656, by
the public.
Wednesday.

(All games)
1063
1248
1093
1013
1001
101i9
1010
864

Dear Allll Landen: My husband and I are both In our 30s. We
wanted to start a family right
away, and I am now pregnant.
I have beard so many horror
stories a bout childbirth that I'm
terrified. Some of my friends
have gone Into great detail about
the labor pains and what a
terrible time they had. This has
not only taken the excltem'ent out
of being pregnant, It has scared
me ou I of my wits. I know labor Is
not exactly a picnic, but I never
dreamed It was so excruciating.
Thank you, Ann, for any help
you. can give !De· I desperately
need a better attitude than I have
right now.- M.R. Ill Greetl!lboro, N.C.
Dear M.R.: Anyone who would
describe the tortures of child·
birth to a woman who Is expectlng 'her ·flrst baby is no friend.
True, labor is not exactly a day
at the beach, but no two deliverIes are alike. You might have a
cinch. Also, many women will
tell you that the thrill of bringing
a new life ·Into the world blocks
''
out the memory or pain.

Comm~nity
J,.

Wednesday, Febru.-y 1. 1989

Forget telling the horror .stories

Supplement to the Sundly Tlmee Sentlntl

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Bend

Page-7

SVAC standings

TEAM
WL
North Gallla ..... 10 5
Eastern ............ 9 8
Southern ........... 9 8
Oak Hill .. ......... 8 9
Hannan Trace .. 8 9
Southwestern .... 7 9
Kyger ·Creek ..... 4 12
Symmes Valley 2 14

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rights reserved. Nor responsible for typographical or plcmrlal errors.

Cardinal

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Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Febru.-y 1, 1989

Wednnctay, Febn.t.-y 1. 1989

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomeroy-Midllaport, Ohio

-People in the news-----'----w Meigs County pro_perty transfers
By WILLIAM C. TROTl'
Ualled Press lnleraatlonal
CRUISE MISSES: Tom Cruise stood up Philippine President Corazon Aquino but her
daughter was stUI thrUied to meet him. Filipinos
are known for their punctuality and. when Cruise
was five minutes late lor a visit Monday night at
the presidential palace. Aquino told her daughter,
''Hey. Krts. I waited tor them. Just tell them I
waited. ''
Kris. 17, an aspiring actress, couldn't convince
her mother that Cruise was as important as any
,)lead or state. and when the actor and wife Mimi
-Rogers finally showed up. she told them she was
sorry that her mother had split.
Cruise, whoh wore a black cap, polo shirt, blue
jeans and rubber shoes tor the visit. is In the
Philippines tllmlng "Fourth of July."
DRINK UP: II you're still keeping track or
which celebrity promotes which soft drink, add
.singer Robert Palmer to the Pepsi list and put
Patrick Swayze down tor a Mountain Dew.
. Swayze's commercial will feature him dancing
'with his wife, Lisa Niemi, in a routine
choreographed by his mother. Patsy.
I, Palmer's wlll be a reworked version of his bit
"Simply Irrestible. " Last week Pepsi announced
Madoana would be doing a TV ad, which counters
Diet Coke's new Geprge Michael commercial.
MORE FROM MEESE: Edwin Meese, whose
tenure as attorney general was marked by
controversy and investigations against him, is the
latest member of the Reagan administration to
get a book contract.
Henry Holt and Co. will publish his memoirs
under a title that has yet to be determined: It will
concentrate on Ronald Reagan's presidency but
It's doubtful Meese's book wlll be as critical as
lhose from Michael Deaver and Donald Regan.
although Meese promises it will "tell everything I
ilnow abOut lhe operations of the eight-ye'ar
administration."
LONESOME DUVALL: Robert Duvall feels so
strongly about the mini-series "Lonesome Dove"
that he ranks it right up there with his work In
"The Godfather."
: "When we did 'The Godfather,' I said. 'We're
'doing something special,'" Duvall said In an
Interview with "CBS This Morning,' ' that will air
Wednesday and Thursday .
· "When I was doing 'Lonesome Dove,' I said,
•'This to me personally is at least as important as .
:\'The Godfather" if not more so because tome it's
a more Interesting aspect of American life than

organized crime." '
Duvall said all members of the "Lonesome
Dove" cast wanted to do their best because they
were so respectful of Larry McMurtry's Pulitzerwinning novel about the Old West. "All actors say,
'I would love to do a We&amp; tern,' and I've done some
before,'' Duvall says, "and if I never do another
one. rve done a wonderful one that Larry
McMurtry allowed us to do."
puKE'S DAUGHTER IMMATURE: A judge In
Santa Ana , Calif., says John Wayae's daughter,
Alssa, is too immature to raise her baby daughter
and 'g ave custody of the child to the father.
The ruling Monday ended a three-month
custody trial between Wayne and her ex-husband,
orthopedic surgeon Thomas A. Glonis, and gives
the mother visitation r ights for every other
weekend.
" The various mental health professionals who
testified seemed to have one common thread
running through their testimony,'' Orange County
Superior Judge Ronald E. Owen said. "That is,
that the mother, although loving. lacks familiarity with the child, is emotionally Immature and
lacks direction herself."
The father's case included testimony from
psychologists. counselors ami private investlg!ltor;; who said Aissa Wayne, the first child of John
Wayne's 1954 marriage to Pilar Pa,iette, spent
little time with Anastasia and often left her in the
care of housekeepers.
Alssa Wayne already shares custody of two
children, an B&lt;year-old girl and a 6-year-old boy .
by a previous marriage.
GLIMPSES: Anita Baker had 'some news to
reveal after co-hosting the American · Music
Awards Monday night. The singer confirmed that
she had married her long-time fiancee, Waller
Bridgeforth, on Chrlsimas Eve and went on to
say, "We have a little bambino· on the way" .. .
Princess Diana arrives In New York Wednesday
for a visit t.hat will include a performance of the
Welsh National Opera and a visit a British toy fair
..·. Heavyweight champ Mike Tyson is the 'winner
of 1988 Man of the Year award, says the Men's
Crisis Center of Columbia, Calif. The center
singled Tyson out because his wife, Robin Givens,
broke his heart, filed suit for millions a nd
humiliated him on national television. The center ·
was established last year to "restore masculine
pride by encouraging traditional activities like
playing poker, smoking cigars , drinking beer and
watching football o·n TV," spokesman said.

Quirks
ifl
the
·
news
_
_
_
_
_
,

..;ompUed by the Office of
Emmogene Holsleln Con1o
Meigs Coualy Recorder
Clarence Triplett to Carol Triplett, ~ interest, Lebanon.
Douglas W. Jude, Pamela K.
Jude to Douglas W. Jude, Pamela K. Jude, tracts, Salem.
·
Wallace Bradford, Muriel
Bradford to David B. Baum ,
June M . Baum, pt. lot 2, Middleport village.
John F. Coil!leil, Catherine Colwell to.ITTFin. Serv.-Com. Dlv ..
parcels (corrective deed), Sa·
lem.
ITT Fin . Serv.-Commercial
Dlv. to Ishmael Smith, Shirley
Smith, parcels, corrective deed,
Salem.
ITT Fin. Serv. - Commercial
Dlv., to Charles Thomas Chapman, Tammy K. Chapman,
57.754 acre, corrective deed, Salem.
Cecil L. Stacy to Cecil L. Stacy,
parcels, Salem.
Delton M. Gates to Delton M.
Gates Family Trust, Barbara A.
Gates Family Trust, one-fourth
interest of coal, oil and gas, Lebanon.
Dorothy M. Wells, dec. toChes·
ter Wells, aka Chester E . Wells,
affidavit of transfer, Olive.
Robert Molden, Gladys Molden to Robert Molden, Gladys
Molden, 7 acres, Salem.
John F. Fultz, Ellen B. Fultz,
J . Marcus Fultz, Marilyn K.
Fultz to Ohio Power Company.
easement, Pomeroy.
Robert S. Marcinko, Mary
Maxine Marcinko to Stephen P.
Marcinko. Tamela S. Marcinko,
parcel, Orange.
, Jed Junior Webster, Betty
Jane Webster to Ronnie Eakin,
parcels. Pomeroy village.
Mary B. Nichols, dec. by executrix to William Stewart, Sha·
ron Sue Stewart, 2.661 acre, Rutland.
Terry L. McGuire Sr., Chris·
tina J . McGuire to Southern Ohio
Coal Co., parcel, Salem.

-

: lly Up lied Press Internal kmal
i\s Bush goes, so go beer prices
(UP!) -Two cafe
owners figure that since · the
inauguration of President Bush
has boosted morale In Houston,
Bush's sometimes-home town,
Bush could do something for beer
sales.
, Doug Prater and Steven Foster, owners of Sabine Street Cafe,
will be rooting for Bush ln the
Gallup opinion poii to be released
Thursday.
, The cafe is offering a mug of
beer - Busch, of course - .at a
price equal to the "res !dent
president's" popularity In the
most recent poll. For example, it
53 percent of the American
~ple give Bush , a favorable
rating, draft beer at Sabine
Street Cafe will be 53 cents at
~ - HOUSTON

time the results of a new poll are
announced, and the offer is good
at least through the first year of
Bush's four-year term.
"Sabine Street Cafe Is really
proud of our fellow Houston ian In
the White House, and I am so
confident in his ability I , am
willing to make this offer," said
Prater. " Having Bush' as president has already boosted the
morale of Houstonians and im·
proved our city's Image
worldwide."
But a drop in the president's
popularity could have the cafe's
. owners crying in their beer.
Prostate troubles afflict dogs too
ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) -Prostate problems, an aliment common in older men. also afflicts
dogs, a professor said Tuesday,
but the only current treatment
for canines seems to be
neutering.

l~nchtime.

The price will change each

Dr. Jeanne Barsanti, a professor of veterinary medicine at the
University of Georgia College,
said studies have shown prostate
infections can occur In 18 to 20
percent of dogs older than five
years, regardless of breed.
Many dogs have the disease
without suffering major problems, but others are not as lucky.
she said.
"Dogs are. the only animals
other than man that are affected
by problems with the pros tate
gland.' '· Barsanti said. " For men
over 60 years of age, pros tate
disease Is a common problem
and the same is true for older
dogs. "
PresideDiilll sports

. The Kid's World Almanac calendar
notes that George Washington's favorite sports were horseback riding
and fishing. Abraham Lincoln's favorite sports were wrestling and
weightlifting.

.

.

Gary P. Norris, Donna M.
Norris to Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Inc., Columbia gas Transmis·
sion Corp.. agreemenveasement, Sutton.
Robert L. Sawyers, Jr., Resa
J. Sawyers to Administrator of
Veterans Affairs, sheriff's deed,
Sutoon.
·
Sl!ella Willi ken to Steven A. GIglio, parcels, Columbia.
Steven A. Giglio to Mara C. Giglio Trust, Eben A. Giglio Trust
by Trustee, Columbia.
1
Orland J . Laudermllt to Leta
L. Goodwin Hall, parcel, Pomeroy village.
Norman M. Hysell, Dora F .
Hysell to Norman M. Hysell.
Dora F. Hysell, 11.16 acres,
Chester.

Friday, February 3rd &amp; Saturday, February 4'th
9:00 pm·l :00 am
S2.00 per person

:Orange Ju.ice

$149

BIG BEND

CLEAN SWEEP
SALE!

•

.•

•

•
•

Every day when jimmy comes home from school, he runs
upstairs, closes his bedroom door and snorts some cocaine.
Every day for the last six weeks.
You see, lately, just doing cocaine with his friends before school
hasn't been enough. Lately, he's been needing something to get him
through the rest of the day.
So now he does cocaine alone. He says it gives him the extra
energy he needs to do his homework.
.,~
· But then, you'd expect that of a drug that can increase your
heart rate to 200 beats per minute.
· What you might not expect is that, sometime~. this effect doesn't
wear off. Because some people lack the enzyme that destroys the
cocaine circulating in their system.
So their heart continues to pump at this accelerated pace until

FORA

-

it just gives out. Untii it just works itself into a heart attack.
What you also might not expect is that this can happen to anyom;. Whether they're regular users or first time users. Whether
they've just had an ounce of cocaine or only one line of it. Because it's
simply a matter of body chemistry.
So even though theres no history of heart problems in Jimmy's
family, he could have a heart attack at any time. And it could be fatal.
A horror story? Well, that horror happens every day all over
America. It happens in towns like yours, to families like yours. Nice
families. Families these things aren't supposed to happen to.
B\lt there is help available. Help from your local agency on
drug abuse.
So if you know someone whos using cocaine, please call. Because
the next time they use it COL41d be their last.

'

G

REPLACEMENT CONTACT
LENS SERVICE

SHOE BOOTS
NOW

Refill Your

..•

CONTACT
LENS
..

••

Prescription

••
•

•

'

'

thru Our Pharmacy

•

30°/o OFF

SAVE
UP TO

65°/o

Table of Valutt
Purses, Men's and
Chillren' s House
Slippers, large
Selection of Faihion
Bows fot' Shots

ONE LAIGE GIOUP

Dress Shoes, Fla1s
and Sport Shoes ·
UOUP CHILDIEII'S.

Do•'t fortet Te C~11k Otr Low Prla11 01 01r
·
Premlptlo••

~rescription

Shop

992-6669
271 HITH
SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

o•o

Shots &amp; Tennis Shoes
HOW

60°/o OFF

60°/o OFF

---

.CHAPMAN
SHOES
Nm TO EllllnLDS IN PO.IIOT
r

·•.
:-

-.

30°/o OFF

,'

LADIES
SEASONAL
. APPAREL

2$ 0/o OFF BOYS AND
STUDENTS•••• LEE &amp; LEVI'S
BASIC BLUE DENIM JEANS!
GIRLS FASHION JEANS
Sl:lES 7-14 " ....................

2 5°/o OFF

290 N. 2nd, MlDDLI;PORT

AMISH DUTCH

LOAF LUNCH MEAT. ••••••••~••• S1.99
SMITHFIELD
Ill. SliCED Sl 95
COOKED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••
•
SHREDDED ll ... $2 19·
o

MEAT SALAD.•••••••••••••••••••~~ ••••• I 7(
AMERICAN
CHEESE ..................... S1.87
HtLWDALE GRADE A

MEDIUM -EGGS......~••• 89&lt;
KRAFT PARKAY

MARGARINE
SPREAD ••.,.....,~~

CALIFORNIA
CELERY ........~o.~..P.~I\~11 .. 69&lt;
WINESAP
APPLES .........AJ.UNi. S1.29
RED
RADISH ..............tlii.!.JJi.39&lt;
I .

HUNT'S SNACK PACK

CONNIE

'

.• .

Western Boots

FISH STICKS •••••••••••••••••~~·.~!~ S2 .19
FHSH UIE BABY
LIMA BEANS ••••••••••••••••~~~!•. S1.S 9
IAIIIQUO
COOK IN THE BAG ......~P.z••••••• 59&lt;

THURSDAY ·FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

•

.50°/o OFF

MIS. PAUL'S

Final Clearance
•

50 PAIRS

HOMEMADE

RIVERBOAT
INN
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

20 LB. TRAIL BLAZER

112 GALLON BORDEN

"FEBRUARY SAVINGS"

NOW APPEARING AT

•

:Dog Food

Payne, parcels, Salisbury.
Garnet Williamson, dec. to He·
len L. Saxton, cert. of trans .. Rutland village.
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan Co.
to Newaza M. Smith. lot 29 and
lot 30, Middleport vlilage.
Charles M. Hysell, Rli tfi Ailee
Hysell to Charles M. Hysell,
Ruth Allee Hysell, lots, Pomeroy
viilage.
William Howard Gloyd, dec. to
Audrey M. Gloyd, altidavit, Salem .
Rex E. Shenefield, Catherine
Shenefield to Southern Ohio Coal
Co., 0.375 acre, Salem.
John Bass to Linda Beaver,
lots 9 and 10, Salem.
Betty L. Holter, fka Betty L.
Levacy, George Holter to James
S. Eakins, Teresa Eakins, par·
eel. Sutton.
Rober ~ E . Miller, Judy Miiier
to James A. Moore, Frances P .
Moore, 1.145 acre, Sutton.

----------------------~-•

James P. Hunt, Barbara Hunt
to Lewis 0. Pickett, Judy A.
Pickett, _parceis, Letart.
Thelma Walton to Steven Tealord, Richard Teaford, parcels,
Letart.
Sandra A. Nelson, James A.
Nelson to Sandra A. Nelson, Hu·
bert L. Wolfe, parcels, Chester.

BLITZKRIEG BAND

CORRECTION!

State of Ohio and Wiiiiam B.
Ledlle, Emma A. Ledlle, Do·
rothy Barnes Woodard. James J .
Crisp, Teresa Ann Crisp, Journal
Ell try of Settlement, Meigs.
State of Ohio and William A.
Ledlie, Emma A. Ledile, Dorothy Barnes Woodard, James J .
Crisp, Teresa Ann Crisp, Journal
Entry Granting AppropriatiOn,
Meigs.
·
·
Dorothy Wells, dec. , to Chester
Wells, Cert. of transfer, Olive.
Sharon Lynn Hartman Tucker,
Eugene Dan lei Tucker to James
Frank Huff, 1.280 acre, Chester.
Carol S. Love, dec. to Winston
A. Love, certificate or transfer,
Scipio.
Gary Rothwell , Cindy Roth well to Philip Joseph Custer, Pa·
trlcla Lee Custer, parcels, Mid dleport village.
Gordon Proffitt, Bonnie Sue
Proffitt to Alan Nutter, 1 acre,
Lebanon.
K;'nnPth H. Payne to Lois J.

4 PACM-17 oz. $1 49
PUDDINGS •••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
MIALEIS
ELBOW MACARONI ••••••~to.z....... 99&lt;
IIPLOCI
SANDWICH BAGS ........~~.'!•. S1.7 S
STOOL Y' 15 01.
,
MIXED VEGETABELS ••••••• 2/S1.19

QUAIEI 111151 ANT

OAK 'MEAL •• ~ •••••••••••••• ~.2.!.~~·. 52.5 9

DB MOlliE

PINEAPPLE JUICE •••••••••~~-~z... S1.6 9
CAMP.LL'S CHUIIIIY
CHICKEN .SOUP .-•••••••••••~~.o.z... S1.3 9
AIMOUI
BEEF STEW ••••••••••••••••••~~~~•• S1. 79
DEL MONTE
·
,
FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••••••••~t~1•• S1.99
CIAIMIN
•
BATHROOM TISSUE ••• ,••~m~~ S1.49

,•

�- ·Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

- -

~--.,

-

..

-

.

-

~

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10... PM
_

•

CAROliNA PRIDE ·

{

Sliced Bacon •••••••••
LB.

for eKh d!W

•Sentinel is not rnpontlblefor errCM' t •fter firtt dav . (Ch edc

for errors first dl/'f ad runs in paper}, Call before 2 :00p. m .
d.,. attw public.- ;on to make correef'IOn.
•Ada th.t muse be paid in actvann are
Card o f Thanks
Happy AdS
In Memori..-n
Yard Sal•

Giveavay
Happy Ads
Lost and Found
Yard Salelpaid in advance)
8 - Public
e &amp; Auetion
9- Wanttd to Buy

•A cla.. ified advertiHment placed in The Daily Sentineltu·
cept - ciMsified display, Bus in•• Card and legal not icetl
will also appear In ~he Pt. PleMant Register and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune. ,... ching over 18.000 home..

Employment

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPE~
TUESOAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
lHURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

4567-

13- lnsurance

14- Butinlls Training
15 - Sc.hoolt 6 Instruction
115- Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair

17- Mit cell•neous

18- Wanted To Do

21 - Butin•• Opportunity

10 Loan
23 - Prot•sional S.-vices

following telephone exchanges ...

Real Esl ate

Mason Co .. WV

Area Code 304

31 l Hom• for Sale

992- Middleport

675- Pt . Ple•int

367- ChMhiu
388- Vintan

Pqmerov
985- Chester

458- Leon

32 - Mobtl• Hornet for Sale •
33- Farmt for Sale

·Z46- Rio Grtnde
256- G'"-vtf'l Di1t.

843- Porta.nd

643 - Are~e

~79 - Walnut

Oi11.

571. 773247 - Letart F, allt 882949- Rac.ine
89&amp;742- Rutland
937667- Coolville

34 ~ Butin•s

Apple Grove
MaiOn
New Haven
Letart
Bufhlo

•One opoce wMI .,. volldotod ooch
with tho purch•• of
t1&amp;.00 or more, nctudlng
.,._, wine and. I tobacco producto. Tho firot' twa ....... ere
FREE, no minimum pum.-.
Only one opeco rMY .,. ¥81·
ldotod MchwMII. no molt•-.

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

s
'
•
W
1ener
••••••
~ ••••••••••
·La. $1 09
Steaks/Roasts •••••
12 OZ.

FRESH PORK BUTT
COUNTRY STYlE.

j

...

Spare R1bs •••••••••••
COLlY LONGHORN

Cheese •••••••••••••••~••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

,

La

T-Bone Steak •••••••

PKG.

•No ..... - .,.._alter
Botunl-r. Jen, 14, 111tto ...rt
tho promotion.

Sl 09

•Onty one Ham Certificate per

..
$199

family .

mu•

oAII 12 -

loe

pr-'t

.... wll be
-hcinarllll.
· . - Ceotlll-

•

•Certlfleatn can onty btl redeemed
on the purcbaee of 1 Whole Of
Hell Bonel•• Hom. NO c•h rolunclo wll be modo.

$359

•Hom certllie81M will .,. honored
March 1 B·21. 1111. No redemptlono lhlo dolo.
•Tho wootc ot fob. 21·Mtrch 4.Ilk thot you lrrlng In yaur coni
and axch.-nge It lor 1 new cent
llor our Invent..., purpallt) .

SPECIA.'L
OFFER ON

GENUINE
STONEWARE

Bananas.~ •••.•••••• ~~

2.9&lt;

•

FlAVORITE

•

Margarme •••••••••'!3 /
FOX DE lUXE

$

1

,,)

Tuna •••••••••••••••••••••• 69( .Pizza ·•••••••••••••••• ::.o:~
DUNCAN HINES
FRESH BAKERY .
$ 59
Cake Mixes •••••••••••• 89&lt; Donuts
•••••••••••
~~~~...
1
6'12 OZ. CAN

..

•

18.5 OZ.

36
39

91.

ROAST or
ADC, EP or IEGUlAR

.MAXWRL HOUSE

COFFEE

ss.~9
limit 1 Per CustGocHI Only At Pow••1 Sopor Valu
Good Sun.. .1aoo. 2'1 tloru S.t. Fsb. 4

BOX

~HARMIN

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROU
PKG.

99&lt;

limit 1 ,., custGood Only' At Powlll't S.. Valu
Good Sun., JoM. 29 lhru Sat. f • • 4

·····couPON··
or
WIDE

•
•

•• ••

MEDIUM, WIDE

• •

.HEArn

MUELlER'S NOODlES
• 160Z.3

f$2
v•

Umlt 3 1* CustGood 0n1y At ,..••, s.,.
Good Sun...... 29 tloru Sat. Fsb. 4

FlAVORITE SUGAR
Sll.
BAG

$159

Umit tr.c..._
Good Only At Powlll's S..W Yalu
Good Sun., Jan. 29 lhru Sat. Fob. 4

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

,r

~

'

'

5 PC. PLACE
SETTING

$199
WIToH 20 BONUS
CERTIFICATES
6 Piece Place Setting
Conliata of: Dinner Plate ,
Cup. Saucer. Soup/Cereal
Bowl end Sal1d Plate .

Two Beautil'ul Pallrrn.
· To Claoo•r From

•••

Matchlnjl -\('(Ueoril~•
A\ 11ilahle·

•••

SEE STOlE DISPlAY

FOI DETAilS
''

Bu114ings

35 - Lott • Acreage

I 1 -16·'88 -tfn

53- Anliques
54 - Mit e. M..-c:hll'!dis•
6 6- Building Suppliet
51 - Pets tor Sal e

l;tgnrng

41 42 43 44 46 41 47 4849 -

Houses for Rent
Mobile Hom• fot Rent
Farml for Rent
Aplrtment for Rent
Furnished Ro om s
Space for Rent
Wanted to Rent
Equ ipment for Rent
Forlu..
'

61 - Farm Equipment
62- Wanted t o Buv

'Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

63- livestock
64- Hay &amp; Gr•in
65- Seed &amp; Fertill.l:er

Autos f01 Sale
Truckt for Sal a
Vant &amp; 4 WD 's
Motorcycl•
Boatt &amp; Mo1ors tor Sel e
Auto Part t a. Ace• tOr i•
Auto R: ep1ir
Can1ping Equlpmem
Cimpert &amp; Motor Homes

Paying today
Jan. 13, 1989

out radiators. We olsa
repair Gas Tanks.

also

(Subja&lt;l to Chonge

#I COPPII •...•.•.•...• I6•

1~

#2 C()(IPIR ••••••••••••• 65' lb.

ClEA .. AlUMINUM
SIIEITS . . ................. 47' lb.
ClEAN AlUMINUM
CAST ........................ 40• lb.

81 ~- Homelmprovements

.YEIAG£ CANS . .... 46• lb.
•oNY
SIIHT •••......... S• to 30• ._
•oNY CAST .... 3' •• 20• lb.
STAINLESS _,......" .... 20« IlL

83- E.c...,atlng
84- Eiectrical &amp; Refrig..-ation
85- Gen eral Htuling
86 - Mobile Home Repa ir
87- Upholstery

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tupperl Plolnt·Cheotor .Wot• Dlotrlct lo lnv~ing
bij,lo lor • 18B9 l·tqn cob
and oh•oil with tho fallow·
lng:
1. 6 opMd IUndord monu&lt;il •-drlvt tronomlooion
·2 . Duel r - whtelo • mud
andanow tlrw
3. Engine 480
4. e ply tlr• front ond roor
6. 137"whttlbeto
B. HNVY duty rur tprinfll
7. -lng end

---

8. HaiiYY Duty Vinyl ••t
8 . Rulrber lloor mota
10. Domolomp
I 1. Clgorette lighter
12. Catar red
Two bldo ora req-ted,
one with trod• In of I 186
Ch8Vrolet 4 W 0 ond one •
otrolght out purcheoo. Inter·
- d blddon coli office to
oko -lntm.,t to view '8&amp;
truck trom 8;00 ta 4 :30 ot
Dlllrict office.
·Bido wll bt op.,ed Mondoy. Februory I~. 1189 ot
the ofllce ot tho Dlotrict.
38611 Ber 30 Raed, RHdo·
ville, Ohio ot 2:00P.M.
The Dlotrict ....,.. tho
right to reject ony ond/ or oil
bido.
111 27:121 I , 6. 3tc
'

"
Public N otlce
Ai&gt;DENDUM TO PART 1.
ITEM E 1&amp;1 SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY MEIGS MINE N0. ·1
.
LEGAL NOTICE
-Sou-n Ohio Cool Com·
pony. Melfll Mlno Na. 1, P.
0 .. Box 490. At'-•· Ohio
~701 , heo oubmltted on
application to N¥ ... I Coal
Mining end Reclemetian
Penn~ numbered R-031547, tothoOhioDeportmentol
Noturol ••ou,..., Olvioion
of Roctomotion. Tho propaoecl cool mining ond rectomotion o,...otlon will bt
conducted in Melfll County.
Solem Townthlp, .Soctiono
1, 2. 6. 1. B. 12. 13. 17. 18.
18.24, 21. 21. 30. 32. 33
o11d 34, Froctiono 1. 2, 7.
13. 19. 24, 26, 31, 32. 33.
and 3&amp;: Gillie County. Mor·
., Townohip. Sectiono &amp;.
1, 17, 23 ond 21; VInton
County. Willceovllt Taw•·
'ohlp. Sections 3. 4 • .,d 4E .
The propo•d underground
mining ere• encompe11
7,051ocreo. ond oroloooted
on tho Wllk•vllo .,d Ru·
t .. nd Th Minute U.S.G.S.
qllld~M~glt mopo. utendlng
Weot to Wlllceovlla Townohlp ond 2.1 mil• oouth of
s.tem C..ter. Tho oppllca-

tion propo,. to expend the

.,... far room ond pNI•
underground mining. proviclo far plllor removel on
tho• .,.. . .d - - prevlously epproved to be
mined .,d to jlermit .,...
for lallfiWoll mining.
· Tho oppiiGition lo ern file ot
tho office ot 11M Mtlfll
County Rocanlor, Mtlfll
County Court Hou•. &amp;•
oond ltrMI, Pomeroy. Ohio
4&amp;789 ond tho VInton
County Recarder, Vinton
County Court Hou•. Mtln
Street, McArthur, Ohla
48111 ond the Gtlllo
County Recanlor. Oollla
County Court ttou... Loculi
Street, Oelllpollo, Ohla
41131 "" public viewing.

. Writ'*'•

com"*'" .,dlar

....,_. for ... lnfarmol

..... ,. • .,. ... to
.... DMtlcrn of .........- .
Fou,....n 8quore, Bulrlng
a -3, Columbuo. Ohio
43224, wltNn 30 ...,. ot
lho 1tot dm of publlcletlan
of IIIII nodoe.
(II 18, 215; 121 I , B. 4tc

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
;The Privata
lndultry
Council IPICI end lho Conoortium of Locally Elected
Olliciolo (LEO'o) oorving n·
ven 17~ Southeat Ohio
Counties IAthono, Gollio,
Hoclcing. Lawrence, Melfll,
Peny ond Vlntonl thot heo
bMn d•leneted by the Gov·
ernor of Ohio. a a Subet.te
S""'ice
Ollllvary
Aroo
(SDA), ore ._eating thot
Pllrtles lnterooled In becoming the Subaute Grantee
and Adminiatr.tive Entity
thot will provide far dtllvory·
of Mrvicea to dialoclted
Worker• under the Economic Oiolocotlon Worker
Adjuotmont Alllotonce Act
IEDWAAI. oubm~ o propo·
ool. In writing. thot od·
drill- the following:
e) the needa of eree dislocated workon;
bl tho prapo•d method
of HrVice delivery. including recruitment, • aes•
ment. teatlng. career counoollng. rotorrol to troining
end tupportive Hrvic81 or
provision of tf11ining 1nd
supportive aervicft;
cl lho eligible oiltlly'o ••·
cord of perform1nce on any
priar Title Ill programs;
dl the oliglble ontity'o ro·
cord of performance on prior
employment and training
progromo. Including odmln·
iotratlvo coptlcity;
e)demonatr1tlld ability to
coordinate activittes with
other employmen1 and tr~~ln­
ing providers.

Eligible ont~ioo include:
•I Private ln..,stry Councils in the aubltete eree;
b) SillY leo Ool Ivory Aroe
Gront Rocipionto ond Ad·
minietrative Entitiea;

,

c) private non-profit or~
genizetiana;
d) units of eonorol local
government in the tubstete
area or their 1genci•;
e) local olficw of State
egenciea; end
I) other public ogoncieo.
such es community collegM
end arH vocetionel echool1.
Propoula will be .:cepted
until 4 :30 p.m. February 9.
1989 It tho lronton-U.wrence ~ County Community
Action Orgonizotion. 305
North &amp;th Street. Ironton.
Ohio 4&amp;138. Telephone
1114-1532-3634. All prop.,..
olo should .,.. marked:
EDWAA Propaul in lawer
left hand oornw:
Propaulo will be opened
ond reviewed february 10,
1989 by the Worker Adjuot·
ment Aaaiatance Committee
(WAACI, tho Private ln.d u•
'"' Council Eucutive Committee end reprnentetion
from tho conoortlum of
Elected Offlciels. Ajoint rec·

omm.,dltiDn from tt. Pri-

vote lnduotTy Council ond
El-d Officitlo wll .,.
modo to tho Govornor of tho
Stole of Ohio contllning tho
following:
II 1 d•crlptlon ol tho
method uNCI to contact oil
eligible .,titles in tho oub.utte•ea;
2) o list of tholt entkles
which l'llpandod lo thlo ,...
ql*t;

3) o cletcription ot the
proc•• by which entlles
wwe able to preHnt propoeod plene ot oorvlce;
41 e detcriptlon of tho revl- p-owhich r • u ln tho joint
tlon;
ll)o dolcriptlon of-tho
PIC'o WorUr Adlullmont
Advloory Comm- Pll'·
tlclptited In .... pr-e . .d

-m-•

eoopyot---··
Wilttw 001ftrnent8 of the

...-eondttltctian.
(211.2,3.311:
'

IN THE
COMMON PLEA'S COURT.
PROBATE DIVISION.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT Of
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Accou nt1 end vouchers Of
the following nemld fictucrerles hove been filed in tho
Prob11• Court, Meiga County. Ohia. lor opprovol ond
oottlemont:
ESTATE NO . 19106 Thirteenth Annual Account
of louil 8 . Veughen. Guardian of tho Eotato of William
RHYH. en Incompetent
Poroon.
ESTATE NO. 22264 Fourth Partial Account of
Jahn T. Wolfe. Trultliil of
tho Trull Crooted Under
11om V of tho Laot Will ond
T81tllmllflt of Creed Jam•.
Doca•ed.
ESTATE NO. 22808- Finol Account of Fred W.
Crow, Ill. Guordion af tho
Emte of E.ther Smith. an
Incompetent P•aon.
ESTATE NO. 26750- Fi·
nel1nd Distributive Account
of Mlchotl Oeon Bokor. Executor of the E.Ute of Emmit
V. Baker, Daceaad.
ESTATE NO. 24881 Firll Account of Coralvn M.
Teylor, Guardian of Jo.eph
C. Taylor, Mary A. Teylor,
Jnon C . Toylor. Jeremy C.
Toylor, end Soroh R. Taylor,
Minort.
ESTTE NO . 21641- Second Account of C . Robert
Fither• .Guardian of the Perton and Estate of William
Thomes fit her. en I ncompetent Per10n.
ESTATE NO. 24909 - Finol Account of Fred W.
Crow. Ill, Guordlan of tho
Estote al Soon Flomlng. •
Minor.
ESTATE NO. 24909 - Fi·
nol Account of Fred W.
Crow. Ill, Guordlan of tho
Ellote of Shannon Fleming,
• Minor.
·
Unl1111 eKceptianJ ere
flied theretO, ..id aC:COUntl
will be for heering before

o

In Memoriam
In Loving Memory
Our Our Husband
and Father
ROY G . PRIDDY
Who died one ve•
ago February 1st
A
hao como and
gone now,
Since duth took you

,O:h

to 1a1d accounts or to ~Itt­
era pertaining to the execu·
tion of the lrult, not lest
then five .devs prtor to the
date Jet tor hearing.

COUNTRY
.
MOBILE
. HOME PARK

Rabolt E. Buck. Judge
Common Pie• Court,
Probate Oivi1ion
Moigo County, Ohio
121 1. ltc

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentels

Public Notice

M

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
446·7619 or (6141 992-2104
:r: (614)
417
Second
Avenue, Box 1213
3
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

i5

-

mechino. Soid property seized on Juno 9, 188B. by
Dept. Liquor Control. at 137
N. Second St .• Middleport.
OH. oild lo proontly hold by
tho Depertment. Any proon
having en ownenhip or •ecurity inter•t in the 1bove
m.y contest the pethion.
(211 , 8. 21C

n.

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
. Now laotian:
161 North S..ond

Midtii(IGft, Olio 457 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing Suppll•

Pey Your Phone
Cable Bille Here
IUSINISS I'HONI
16 W H2-6l!O
IEIIDENCE ,HONE

INC.

992-6282

1·31 · '88·1 mo.

COUNTY VEHICLE
FOR SALE •
Public Notice
Purtuont
to
Section 1.-- - - - - - - 307.1 Z O.R.C. the Moigo
PUBLIC NOTICE
County Commiaaionera will
The ·· Rutland Emergency
receive Haled bids until 12 Squad is now taking sealed
noon on Wedn•dey, Feb- bida lore12ll 12rollupdoor
ruory 16. I 989. in the allic\1 w~h trocko. 81qo mull be ••
of
the
Meiga County . ceived by' Feb 2nd. Send
Commlooionon loe&lt;ited In biill to Box 1 I. Rutlond.
tho Courthou•. Pomeroy, Ohio 46776.
Ohio. withbidltoboopened 11)30. 31 ; 1211 . 3tc
11 1 ,30 p.m. and rood eloud
Public Notice
lor the ule of the following
vahlde which is no longer in

u• by tho County:
1977 Ford Piclcup Truck.
Minimum bid of e300.00.
Vehicle may .,. inopocted
by contacting Blair Windon,
Melgo Soil ConoiiiVotion Office It 992·1647. Vehicle to
.,. oold "AS IS" with no
guerant... Ou11ide of en-

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice it given thlte hear·

ing will .,. hold on the 15th
dey of February. I 989. in
Hooring Rm 1. 10th Fl .• 369
S. High St., Columbuo. OH .
4321 6. upon t pot~ion lor
Hiz ure of the property ·
and / or contrablind: ona
"ectric:
video gambling
machine.
Said property
seized on June 9 , 1988, by
Oept. Liquar Control 11 4
N. Second St.. Middl-rt.
OH. and io p,..antly hold by
the Department. Any person
having en own"ilflhip or It·
curity intw"t in the above
property may cont•t the
petition.
1211. 8, 2tc

velope cont1ining bid must

FOR SAlE - BY OWNER

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At leasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

' '1·. :d.
..• &lt;. ~ ·. I"··~· .'':"''·

'·''-':AI
~.~
.. ··e'
'· ··'" "':;; -.;·~'i,{

- · :t:-- ·t· ~"·· ,.

LADIES
PERM, CUT, STYLE
ONll

Plus

$2 7

FREE.....

I Tanning Session and
I Session at fit &amp; Trim

TOP OF THE STAIRS
AND
DESIGNER IOUIIQUE
Ill Wost Stcond, Pom•ay

992·6720

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

.

FACTOI!Y CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
. ONLY

..~;}¥.:;.;i.o;~,:~~~-"~'"'

BeautifLII new cedar and stone
home, in Pomeroy. Home featurea
spacious formal living room with
cathedral ceiling, bay window, and
stone fireplace, formal dining room,
custom kitchen, oak cabinets. pan·
try, and built-in appliances, large
family room, large recreation room,
three bedrooms, three baths, full
basement, double car garage.

CALL (614) 742-3092
" I

Free Estimates
Call 992· 2772

1/~~/nn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
NowN-Iullt

"Free Eotimatoo"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY C~W

3-ll·lfn

PUBliC
AUCTION .
EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARI
ltlpre, Ohio
CONSIGNM£NTS WB.COMl

PATRICK H. BlOSSER

AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-428-7245

1·11-'19·1 mo.

KAREN'S ·
GREENHOUSE

LUBRICAnON
OIL FILTER

S6 AND UNDER

N-'5

Foliage Plants
Baskets

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 ML past
Southern lllgh Schoel

949-~682

$1695

SUNOCO
c•ml, OHIO
985-3350

1-11·'11-1 ....

1-27· ' 88· 1 mo.

GUN SHOOT

ROMINE
CONSTRUCTION
NeW HOMF
f1EMODU11\G
DRYWAl.L
IN T~RIOR PAINTING
WAll PAP~HIN!i

WTH ROMINE &amp;
LARRY RO.'•IINf

Ohw 614.992 69i6
wv. 304.882·2788
l JO

·sa

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham

Building

;, EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
fodary (hoko
12 Gaugo Shotg11111 Only
Strictly lnfor&lt;H •

10-7-tfn

1 mo

4-16·86-tfn

RACINE, OHIO

•w•y.

For Private

Mastic &amp;Certainteed'
Vinyl Siding
R'ooling
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

1·28·'88-tfn

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
·,;r

J&amp;L
INSULATION .

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

.9-19-88 lfn

...

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

lOADING

MODEIN GUN
SUPPUES
MunloloMI"I Supttli•
IIHtrn Gun Su111rli•

Go111 • Ammo • ]lup
21 ArniM
Rt. I 24 Eeot of Rutt.nd
Acr011 HoppyH- Rood

Ph•• 14·742-2355
1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

U. S. IT. SO EAST
GUYSYtil, o•o

Rt. 124 latwHn Wilkesville and Saltm Contor

Authorized John
Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Oooler.

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

614·662-38~1

fir• E••IP••I
Sll11 &amp; Sm111
1-3·'88-lfe

l/Z6/ I 1110.

Reel Estate General

.

East of St••,, 7
on 241 at Chaster

(614)

INDUSTRIES,

CALL 992-6611

Public Notice

SERVICE

1 MI.

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
1-5-'89-1 mo.

992

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Reasonable Rates.
Fully Insured

HOUSEKEEPING SERVLCE AVAILABLE
Meigs Industries. Inc .. in addition to provid·
ing general office end commercial cleaning,
now offers
PR!VATE RESIOENTIAL CLEANING
as a service .
We wil contract to clean your home on a fixed
schedule. attending to iterna you datlira.
We provide full liability coverage, worken
compensation, and pay ell tax
....
requirements.
FO• A P.ICE QUOtE CALL:
.
LARRY HOFFMAN - PH. 99l!·6~11

985-3844

I; 13-'19-lfn

electronic video gambling

· ·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

SINCE 1969
DIISO
IYI&amp;Cig

Rt. :13 North of
Pomeroy. Ohio

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE'
MEIGS

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

•VINYL SIDING. ADORNO
•METAL IUILOINGI
HOUSING • APT. PROJECTS

COIIIIERCIAI.

.CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATH&amp;
-ElCTENSIVE AlMOOELINQ

992-7479

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice 11 given th•t a haaring will bo held on the I &amp;th
doy of Februory, I 989,
Hoorlng Rm 1. 1 Orh fl .. 369
S. High St.. Columbuo, OH .
43216, upon o petition for
•izure of the property
and/ or contraband:
one

GENERAL

Television Listening Devices
Dependable Heariilg Aid. Sales &amp;Sentic4
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

WELDING
AUTO I!&amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY I!&amp;
WRECK REPAIR

..1-t2·'81-tfn

v••

Yot oorrow llngoro in
our heorto
Aa "though it were to. day ..
We love and min you.
oh, so muchl
A void io in our hellrl.
Though you have gone
and laft our 11de
Your memory will nev•
pert .
Wordo can't up,. a
jult how WI fHI.
But thlo- want to uy;
We h - a hope of
maatlng you
In HNVOn onaflned-r.
Sadly mlsaad by your
wlfa, daughters and
families

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Located Off B ypilu
At Jet . of Rts. 1 '&amp;
14;3, Pomeroy, Oh.

Public Notice

.,. clearly marked "1977
Truck" .
Hid Court on the 6th day of Ford
Tho Boord of Moigo
Mon:h. I 9B9. ot which time
said accounts Will becon1id· · County Commiaatonera reSIII"V• the right to acc:eot or
erod ond continued tram d-r
bldl.
to day untN llnolly diopaltd reject ony or oil
Mtlfll
County
of.
Commissioners,
Any peraon interested
Mory Hobltetter. Clerk
may .fi.l a written exceptions 1211 , B, 2rc

2

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-IJ.tfc

OWNER: GIEG I . IOU511

AUIIINUM

82 - Piumbing &amp; He lilting

boil and rad

acid

PAT HILL FOlD

Without Notice I

S8rv1ces

SER~ICE

9AM-7PM

OPEN 7 DAYS

Transport altOn

RADIATOR
We can repair and rt·
care radiators and
heater cores. We can

992-5114

Public Notice

-az:

AVOn Ar-:; ••,9s-n11

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

71 7273?47576777879-

(!J

(all the Avon District Manager
For Job Openings In Your

57- Musicllllnt trument•
58- Fruit l &amp; VegetatM et
69 - For Sale or Trade

•
Pul:llic Notice

2 H .D . FRE E with coupon and purchae o f min.
H.C . Package. Limit 1 c oupon per c ustomer per
bin go session .
WE PAY S60.00 PER GAME
OVER 1 1 0 P EOPLE '66 .00 PER GAME

START SAVING NOW
FOR NEXT YEAR'S
VACATION!!

36 - Real Estate Wanted

let Results fast

LB. ROLl

•·

s..

22 - Mon~

448 ~ Gall ipol i t

~ ivtNINGS

985-4141

&amp;2- SPQI11ng Goodl

11 - Help Wan'ed
12- Situ-' ion Wanted

Classified pages cover the

Area Code 614

DOOR PRIZE

GENERAl CONTRACTORS

Merehani11se

Finanwl

Meilfl County

$7.00
510,00
$15.00
125.00
$60.00

51 - Household Gtto*

s~rvlces

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY .
- 2 ~00 P.M . MONDAY
- z,oo P.M . TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . THURSDAY
- z,oo P.M. FRIDAY

Galli• County
AruCode 614

PHON&amp; DAY

ZI· 35WORDS

$5.00
$8.00
$13 .00
$21 .00
$51 .00

MAIN ST. - 992·9976 '
THURS. E.B. 6:4 S P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

224 E.

•HOME BliiLDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING I!&amp; REPAIRS

separat e ads.

1- Card of Thanks
2- ln Memory
3 - Annoucemenls

GUNNOE'S OAK RIDGE

·
Sage
•••••••.•••••••••
Sau

$5 .00
S8.00
S13.00
$33.00

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB

(HESTEI, OHIO

An noun cc me nts

•7 point line tyJM onty uled.

AT
POWELL'S
SUPER VALU .·

•

u .oo

BINGO

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
..

Rates are tor con.. cutNe runs. brokenupd fiVs w ill bec:h .-ged

G•llia or Meson co11m ies mu11 be pr•
pat d.
•Receive S.50 cheount for ads paid in advan ce.
•free ~~ - GNuway and Found ads under 15 words will be
run 3 d~s at no charge.
•Pfice of ad for all e.pitalletten it double pr i~ of ad cost,

Sl 39 H'AM

I

•

0-1 5 WORDS 11-ZSWORDS

DAY
3 OAYS
• 6 OAYS
10 OAYS
1 MONTH
1

1

Business Services

RATES

• Ad~ outsictiMeig~,

EASTER

The Daily

Ohio

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2t156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M•. until NOON SATURDAY

Chuck Roast ••••• ~·•• .

-...

• The Area's Number. 1 Marketpla_ce

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

---- ------ -·-·--····

.

ClasSified

SAVE
ON YOUR
WHOLE OR
HALF
BONELESS

-~

1,1989

----------W-ednesday, Febru.-y 1; 1989

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, O.H.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., JAN:29 THRU SAT., FEB. 4

··--

-'"

WANTED

DEA~

OR AUVE

•Washers •Dryera
•Ranges •FI'IIBzers
•Refrigerators
" Mull . . .

.,..,.It"

lEN'S APPUAN(E
SEIYI(E
985-3561
We Service All Makes

12 Gauge Shotl'l•• Only
fadary Choke
m1m Y ENfOiil'mil'
. 'J. ll . 'l9.1mo.

PUBLIC
RECYCLING
NOW OPEN FOI
BUSINESS

14th &amp; Main St.
Point Pleasant, W. Yo.
We Buy Aluminum
Cans, Glau, Bra11.
Copper and More

. MON.-FII.: ' am-6 pm
lAT.: I om-17 Noon

304·675-3161
for Mare Information

1· 24-'lf. 1 mo.

1/22181/lfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SUlCUS£, OHIO
Moat Foreign and
Domestic Vehi cles
A/ C Service
All Major • Minor
Repairs

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

$3 s

NIASE Certified Mechanic

PEl LOAD
,
DEUVEIED
UGHT HAIUNG DONE

CALL 992-6756

BILL SLACK

"DOC"

Certified

992-2269
• ....... tin

..

�®Til~
~e.+IT

•

VIol.,-

Very 2- t22l.....
..,.,._ Col
114-_

. , liVIng • • • In• • • •

_____
_
-···-Veoy--.

. . . Owrn.r c.w. Ori..Oft. cllll
""-448-0111.

,....

'71Fordpldoup. 1100-00.Fod
30"-176-2417.

-·114-448-111110.

....... ............... aldJd

Dlldl -... Tran- ...,_

LQ?I(

--tor--or ...........
..,Inti ot 1120 o mo. Oollo

38R . - - 1 - 7 0 w l l h
•JIIIftiiD. flit 110 I • . . ..

28R . - -. .h14oo30

-

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

-

•••••:t rooma

73

...,.• _ wv.

1111 Ford . _ Iiiio.. 302

lrodoodod. - - - llllplolo.

Eptudu

..

0IU.

•!2l &lt;ll
1111 ......

PI-

14dl S - W.Vo. W. buy . _ ........
cooper lftd mal'&amp; Mon., dwv
FridliJ 1:00 til 1:00. Solurdoo
I :00 til noon. far more Infat',.._
:104-171-3111.

J 1!11 - -hod
- ·""-'•
..
courey.
t171 • _,.

11

Halp Wanted .

Blue tred while twnale c•. 1

Need . ,.. CMhf F.... kk b
lmlt_. ,..._ to 11M' Awn
_ _ ... _ Coli 114-448-

bl.._

2 adul ......... ,...,...

~L

-..-v-A•--tor-

,,_of

while p- -

....... Community ~orv-.
W.p&lt;wilouiiFfpM'-•dtdllr tOOmlr'ldbolrdr•e.
You prcMdiJ • hol'l'll. .,icllnce
ond Mcoollhlp In o
tim ; 'w • "-""' llbiltty tD
·~.,::* llr!ling .... ettd.
co
....... to . . ..,wth •d
Mw lap ••Ill of .. ln*._.,lllfal
wtlh .,._.... r•.-dlllon. Con-

f....,

-ld - s.,...

LMt -Vicinity of Redmond
Ridge. m. . I'Od holt•.
.., -

Clllod bobo col
booll. Couldn't lind you. 304171-1271.

mu•

0., • 448-7109
ott•I!IO PM. Applwoto
,.ldo In Gollo COUnty. Equll
Opportunity Emfllav-.
BONUS INCOME
E•n t200-tiDO wotlo:ly. MoilIng 190 -ol _ , . _ For

tor

Dolu•o 3 IR . houoo
lola
o..- ...,_ Col 304-17.
5104.
-

3 IR .. 2 bll- fomly
room. centflll Ill. l_.... on
_,.,. . . lot In Mo- H.. 3
.... 11om Pt. Pf-ont. Collar
an eppointment.. 114-441·

2 •ooy-4 aR .. ... unflnlthod
..._
20.40 . . _ ... pool
Oft 2 . . . . . . . ~ Ylnton. Cell
11"-318-llt&gt;l.
Z IR . -IIhou•flloo hi•
11111n •~ . c-.. c~y,
Ohio. ..100. Col 114-4481511 .

hoo....,.

rMct..
...,,wln_L

In $yr-..ae. 3 bedroom

Ill tl-1~ noqujppod kltch"" - o d ... , -•otlondwllh14oo11ft.
outbullclng. Coli 114-1121211

2 O!CII'f. 3 - - 2bot• an
""• In Mldcloport. Col 114tll-4134
ond .,do.

..,_Ill

10.,•3beSoomho,. ... d
H. Rood. 304-811-3427.

32 Mobile Hom•
for Sale

morelnformltion JMd IWnpld

onvolapooto:INC. P.O. 80012131
lllloml. It 33211.
Bab,•~• n.adld In

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

tor

mv

home

2 · - - Rot. ,_lrod. Col
114-441-3131· don 4411 347-w.. lngoo.
Solo Rop.- Conomunic:otlo101.
Full or ..... Col Bob
Browring ot 114-448-2411.

15

·---.. -TOP CAIH pold tor '83 modo!
Md
UWd car.. Smith

n••

,.,

Aw.. Golllpollo. Coli 114-4482212..

c................. of .,,.,..
-·--Aioowood•

_....,,wnau,.

coal._....

•

A&amp;.CIIon.

Olloo.

Third •

114-448-3111.

Schools

Instruction
RE·TRIUN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
CDWGE. 121 Joc:baro Pika
Ctll448-4317. Reg. No. I&amp;- 11·
1011111.

F--ond~-

A...ol pr--two troRn •
lone! R~ 211.~ Col 114-2111551.

lot. 7111100
more·• - ilia. ..
In dMldclepoft.
2
beet...,._ 114-ft2-1111. oft•.

2---

1t73
-·heme
1 Z.IO with ......... - - •d
............... 114-742-2311
1114 . T-n Hou• 1.,70
mable ........ •c aand. priced
'"'""-"'" 304-171-1431.
o....-.,R.... _ '14W..I
1..... ·
- 2l•ooo
· 2
bedroom.
- ·o1-

d..U. - -..... 304-1717113.

35 Lots &amp; ACTeege

18 Wanted to Do

IMutlldiNMM: ••• own aIrina
Racaoon ct., oor... lot In

ct..... -· -

Junk Coni with or wit'-!
- Coli Llny Uvtly-114-

318-1301

•

114-448-1117ott•IPM. C.l

... lllo

40 or 10 _e G"•. tor .... N. .
l..,.lad&amp;Grow• .Melgl County.
AI mlrocol rlghto.
uoo. ., - ,.. - · 114- 717·
2714.

pi- or ..... Folr
,.._ - 0 ...... Colll14-44131118.

Will do lnoom• Tu. Shon fDrm
020. Call 11"-ft:l-1137.

llb¥aftt« wlllleblt. fl•lblt
houro. .." 01 .... -

bohtnd
Orm-.a.lc:hooL Nw• ,.,..,..

-

304-175-2714.

w-.

3 ....... pond. . . . . .Ad ..
10
ow.,. wll lrl•oa
with - n .-Y"'-. 304-4181171.

IIGf-.

F!lldiiCidl

Antlqu••·CIIh for hncv
hlrnltuN- KnodHiown ._,.

8uaine11
- - 21 · Opportunity

_...,._..,. _ _ jukO

t.a....-

"'.. -

old coke machin•.

·t i AOnc:Mftlll
- . 1408
Cennl
Pwltouuur.
Dlolo41210- 113-241-2111,

41

I NOTICE I
THE 0110 VALLEY PUIIUSH-

Hames for Rent

31R. houoo.-u.AC.U50o
mo. Col :104-171-1104 or
171-1311.

INGtaoolnCO. --~~~-­
do
with p - you . 3 IR . houoa Dopool -lrod

Mow, 111d NOT to _,d moner 10 DldF... Trol. Colll"-441tlnush tho mol u!CI Y'"' h•• 2113.
ltolldolf\&lt;.
Top price tor -

.. rnilun.

..
d _ ...
_ _Ill tyCol
goon~
... ~
114-111-4311.

-lgltod tho otic-Ina-

Own your own . ,.... • .tiN

ttore. choo• from: Jean,

Spontwetr: Lalli•. Men' 1.

.......LinDon--·

Chlchn. Metwnlty. &amp;..r .. tlr:e.

!

"II 1"111 I' ;I

J t' r \'ll. ·' ,

11

Help Wanted

GOVERNMENT JOBS
t11,040.- IU.230. - - Hhlrlna- Col 111 105-817-8000

....

Ext R-110&amp; tor '"'".., -

&amp;rn mo._ .t hom.r Aaa'nWe

..,,..,, ............ ott..

-·=

AlroMo. lotdol.
or............
- -d
ltoro.olodilootor
u.
Clolloor... ttoon~&gt;
t•. Clt.,L LM. It MiciMie.
Forcu . ...... 10\'. !,..,( CMop
Beverly HTIIs. Or_genlcelly .
01'0111111'1\ lucia. . , . 2.000 CICh. .. Dr tl3.ft- prloo do...... __ , tlor prldng ....
......... - l y .tllooot--

..

• 11. ..

•ao. o- 210 otyl•. tii, IOO

••II -- Sp....

-

tirno htlp wino tor *-tr

'""' 1n - - . co11 oft• 1~0
114-448-4712.

...

PACK
AlE PliOtl

f..T2141
Rof, •

dopollt.

In Ctooohlr•3 8R , 2 bll- ol

.. _,,_

-lrod.

Dip.

Col

11"-317-7187 or 1·703-,..
, 101.
7 room loouoo_.h 2 bot-131
lbkd A¥e. Unt.nnilhld. Ref•
_.._ ........ Cell . ,.......
0231

.

Couploo.

--·

Houoolar -

v.., _..,.........

4--

2 "'"" 1-av
wtth • •
pi-""
........-~ lorgolollng
room. 30 II.. ...... Ollllclteh•
. -................ loh
._,...._ 2 c.- IIF80&amp; ._..
lon....,od IDt. 4 .... from
. . .., ttaa;lll otr .Rt. 31Su-itloro. Col
114-448-4118.

OOVU NIIIENT HOMES! From
11.00 (U ... ~ . , . , _
R-T·~11•- NOW I ELLING Tltll
AIIEAI Col (Rot~-~ - 1·

311-731-1014 E•. 0 2732-A.
lOR CUIIMNT 1 1 1 -

.
IWAIN
IIUCTION • PURNITURI! 12

----It
m-•

F.. •

otorllog- Ill .

IUIJTIIIILAPARTMENTI AT
BUDOEI' PRICEI AT JACKSON ESTATES, 131 Jodtoon
,... t183 o mo. Wolk to
lhoo ll'td mowill. 814-44•

. ,• .,. til.

1241.
...,_liMo
llhllnoro

IIIED--. clr&amp; rs.-oom
-ko. - . . . - -. •

waotdlelln• of uMd -.mlture.
NIW- V:OWtcm ~ 13&amp;.
Wockbooll t11 a up. cat• •
T•o r......_.. _,.,_. 2 -teo!. Colll14-448-311t,
BRo.. 1 ~ botho. CA.. dll·
dlo-" prtvfto .,. C""nty~ca Inc:. Good
ctoood
pool. pl.,...,.,.... • - lild TV
trooh
0p.,.
to - - Man thru
• _,!no ot UBI ,_ mo. Col lot. 114--fltl.
127 3rcl
11"-¥7·7110.
- - Goii""'So. OH.
21588. E.O.H.

••o.

""*'dod...

0000 USED IIPPUANCES
W•Jooro. ..,.._ oololtacotoro.
.,., .... • - • API&gt;ll.,coo.
""'•
1141. booldo cUpper
__
,._114-441-nte.
lAYNE'S FURNITURE

lofoo ond oholro ...-from
1311 to • - · ToM• 110 ond
\op to t128. Hide-.- 1310
,~a till. Roolln- 1221 to
- l r - o d 1 IR . ~t -.371. 1M&gt;D0 121 to 1121.
.I\PI'l fur,.hod.ldool -lor&gt; I Din- I!Oiondup to e4111.
lolodc from dow-. C.l tololo w-1 cholrl e211 to
114-448-4131. '
17H.
1100 .. to .37..
H
.
•
ond up. • Nice 1-2 bedroom
w~111.nr
Anlllbl• ..,,,.... or ur..u·· •211•d•ptoe311.1o...,_
nlollod. Dl&amp;tool _.lrod. Col tt10. Mlfti Ill II orbox .....gil
tul or twin , . , .,d
11"-448-4346 oft• I PM.
1 • . au- t210 • up.
2 IR. opt, plutll
l(lrog · - - 4· - - I l l.

-k

..,.,mlf'l'l:t. ... oomp••

--1.

_P._

Sunollr 1 to lp.m. 114-ftZ.
2121..

na.

a•

Ar--

for .....

c-.

PICQNI u•o IURNITURI!
ComeiMe houlthotd t.lrnlt~
lnl&amp; )lomHoJ olcho. 304-1711410. 114-311-1773 •

--...
..... "*" .........

Jonu-vltlo
-Holl.,dMonurelproodn.
Orin dol Mlo- Skid I I - Lood-

Towonotor ' - time doc:lo.
linch
rim1, clock pt~~;·-. IIV
. . . offtc.

Modo! 213 ....' 10814.
U.7110.00.
. Modo! 321. 131 bu. 12.110. oo,

t-· -·

""""'-4-,

d•kO. -

.. . . . - 1100;

L-oool•. 4 • - lotColi 114-441-2311.

"•·

2 - • o o - -. N-.,glnoo.
1171. Col814-24t-1113.

300 0 -InpiMdc
-·
-"Modototft
piok•upiNdc
bod UIO. Coll1&gt;4--40411.
Movlng-Hou-ld .,r_goo
• mile. 10118 . _... Aw..
114-448-2107.

of

Sot
Golf ~bo. boa • con.
171. Coli 114--2721.
Shot ....., riOUirltlood.._ ln-

ffllloblobo•. oodo, - · ..
... ,.,_ bu..... - · .....
tmnil
Call 614-14&amp;-

r.dl•.

-co-·

1131.

boling boo-. U5

2--

- . -h.
3100Coll14--40118.
10
.....

Oi&amp;iM

""'*·
- - A.... I14--·-bod-~·
448-1171.
.

---····---La---...
Coli 114--1141.

~me·---"'-­

-lol.

,... -nth
"'"' ..or
d
Coll14-ft2-IUI
l1"-ft2·1732.

2 -oom on - d 111. In

""""*'•

-...............
· c - to 114-ft:Z.
1178.
2171-

lklol -.111ot- 11.3adofc
ft.. fNo. V - v - tlon. Coli 11"--1304. ...,
1 0 4 1 - A •.

--0. . -.-. .. .

- 27 1210. WI.\ I ..
• I . Whklpoof, OYOCMo,
210. Pol.l"l .......... o,.,,
o........ lollng. , •d 2 ..... •1121.
~. . ......otrlit
room IPtrt,_..l It VII ...
- o r .,d R - A..... - · 1171. SM&amp;IwMor_..
orotor.
N=e~·
m.nt1 In Mlckl•ort. From ..
. 11711.
....
1112. Col11"-ft2·7717.
· - - · .,10.
'oA,.
- o h h - . Mldd-. Dlolo, l'o~.
pll•co. 217
Eoot ·· - " "·
11"-ftZ-1331
or
llttGOiufuau.W••trt"*"- 114· . . 1·3111. 10 doy

UJO.

OII•Iol 001&lt;1 - - Phone

30"-lll-2111.

NIDI

rlfrki.~Am•a

tro.t fr-.

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

-~

-

lrod.~~

304-178-2141.

.....

ptUAw.e•t.~

45 Fwnished Roome I - - ' - - - - - - -

Nlcoono_pl.,-·117
Mulloony Aw .. -.oy. Flwo .
•-pluolovolr ..npordl.,d
ott porfolng. s - .,d
r•~-=•• ..,...., Home II
..*•od . , d - - . . . . . . ,, no
1*1 01
e221. ....,...._
pluo .....ooll Col 114-0Z.
1212.

chi*.._

•-•

111 lo

nd

..:-e:m-:....•..~

~-~

room-

•••

..,

11 - • 7 PM.

Antiqu•

53
43\t

-•'-011. t . m - - v .

~=-=~==-===-===ti:I:I.:OOO.=OO=.
SNAFU® by Bnce
Beattie

•

.&amp;c-7".. ..... - -

. ·

otock.

·

In

llorvloo Cent•. St. Rt.

-

17. -

Roed.

-

.

.

Ill C&amp; """
I!INighlc• Cnlolt wtd Chne .
7:31(J) a.shwd wtd Son
I.-GO (J) MOVIE: 8wwl long INR)

63

{H51

ex-monk; IX111111na
Undblrgh'a Atianlic crossing.
® CaiJgllukelbal
(J) CDI1ge llfolkl'llll Q
(I)TBA

• (I) Clnl...og .... Mfkl

•~o.

Home
Improvements

81

••1124 or 4.1117.
21oo . . larollol111uo1UIIond
1 Homp Duooc Croool- lorvlco
A~&amp; con 11&lt;1- 742-2718.

and Boner'a lrlandlltlp
roacltel 1 lumina POint. 1;1

.···,•
.• .

Uveetock

Ro I • ' • I I ' t m • n

IIOYII: A IWIIn In t11i1
lilt INRI (2:08)

(I)

GlIIGJ~
l .eOTV1= ~ .
~(1'0)11:58)

of

OPIII&amp;..,._&amp;
ill MOVII&gt; Cllaa 11M (R)
(1:331
O ... der,IIIIWI'CII8
•Ne1h ..... Now
... . (I) MOVII: , _ 11'01 (2:49)

...
..

.,'

1:311. (I) -

evening with the IChOOI'a
moat dlelrld girt. Q
(2) • Niall! Cotl'l Q
.(J)llle
Kevin gats h11 tnt gllmpee

1:00.

Youoogl'urolwodYor-•B-.
t300. 11"-378-131 1 otter·
7:00p.m.

Gl e111 '1111 l!qullnr
McCall ftndl romanDI with I
lrom hll put

Hay &amp; Grain

3 - bike e110.00. 2 ·-·ot-lotwwlth-eh'-"•
~~~-- WOO bird COOL
304-171-4148.

56 Building Supplies
1-gMo&amp;ort•

llodo.
.............
L .- . . . oto:.·Cloudo
lllo o.... 0 . Col . , ...
241-1121.

8.

71 Auto'l For Sale
- - lolzod - l d •
"""'-noo.
FCitdo.
-c
. Cllolly
. .........
a ....
. . Guido 111 106-117-1000
Ell. 1-10111.

Oldo.

2713.

c..

81 .. 4-t&amp;-

WI!I'I!RN REO CEDAR
•et~.nMIRUdlc

1173~Duot•.2-.

'*·

•otl. .,...,1 ooncl. boolr
1400. COif ony- oft• 8 PM,
114-448-7212.

OIOd_l.op_g

·Doolo--

156

Pets for Sale

Groom ond lupplr

_,_Pot

Groomlnt- All brM • •.. AII

Julio-

oty1o1. .......... F - Dotl•.

Plo. 114--0231.

1110 HooiOf ...,,..... ••n-.
,_ ...... 1177-~
Coli oft•71'M.I14-218-1:104.
1141 - - Col 114-2181207orl88--.
1181-locl-oLE.AC.
M. AM-I'M. aruloo.
cond. 21.000 ..... Col 11"448-1117 ott• I I'M.

.._E-.

Orogo""""" Colt.., tc.nnll.
MdSiom-MdHim•
..... ldn- Chaw ...... vloo. Ctlll14-448-3144oft•7

PM.
1S71 G,..d 1'nr. PI, PB.
MC C*n T_,lor pupploo. Col t!IOD. 114-111-4427 ott•
114-317-7700.
I:OOp.m.
Floh 11
24 13
--'-----------•II.
J 'won ~w.
,...."snn-t. 304-11... 2011 ar.tNIIkor.._ . ..._., ...
10gool . . . . l14.11•d10 ... ot Jim Min• Ch . . rol .. .
we;? II eu.a.
Olcllmobl&amp; I14-.... M7:Z •
304-773-1134.
·
MC I
- p u p . - 304171-7141.
1117 C-oc lodon. 11000
. .-. M... aond.Ciol30"-37267
Muaiclll
1310. Rfplor. WY. 21271.

--c•

1117 YuF CGTYI 30"-171,3103.

a-. ,

lHEN I5UE55
IT MU'=&gt;T AAVE

·&lt;

!5EEN CHIL-l.

iibimp

304-17.1331.

""'"" or ~· tool ctlflng,
Moetwelt oon'PIIttdt~m••·
.... •d - - 304.""""'
. . 3102

• (I) Ha ~~ 11111111
,
Hooperman II caught In 1

compromlalllg position with a

a~Mullc

••looro.

~~Z:."1:':Q

'ii(jfClllna ......
CtolrTy'e PI,_ Ilk K.C. to
Iter l&gt;ody homa lrom
Yil1nllm. Q

(I)

-

1-;.;:::;;;;:;:;;;:;;:;;::
172 TNcb for Sale
1-:-:=-::-=--,:-------

1111 f-110 Ford ,, ... ,_
37, 000ml&amp;1.,...4 . . . 1'1.
, •• All·fiii-C... tuMing
Coli 11"-·7--- .

!Il IRINein

::-g..~ !;I

c-..., •-

AN' FER SUPPER, WE'RE
SERVIN' FRIED CHIC~EN,
SMASHED TATERS AND

Rono
BPodtl :
ohno "-01¥· 304-773-1341. ,'

82

·.

Plumbing
&amp; H•tlng

"

P!ACIW P!ACH

COIIL!R

Cnr. Fountt Md .....

Qolipolo. Ohio
Phone 114-&lt;MI-31U or 8t444t-4477

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

-··•

) 7

lo

•••

u.... . ...

'
A•idlntllf or oarnnwd,. wlr- •
"'• -o
rRidenour
. . . .~ -­
rldtn.
Boc&amp;rlcol. 304-171-1118.

815

Bernice Bede Osol

_

_

Complete the chuckle quoted

_

by f11lmg in the miUing words

J • J W•• ..,;,""' Swt-g
- - -· Ph. 114245-1218.
.
II • A W•or . . . . Paolo.
cltterna, w .. lt. fmmedlat• ·
1.000 or Z.DOOtlllo'!l dtl.. -v. '
Ctll 30"-175-1370.
.

w..-·.-·......,•-

--2.000 .. 4.000 • •..,..

=·. .a::~,r- - ·.,.
87

Allllis ( - 21-Aprll 111

.

An old, inleatible idea may be dlecarded 1oda)
lor a bright lind promlilng , _ concept
wfoldl will have the po1en1iaf bearing

~-~·

NORTH

.AQJ

James Jacoby

•Ks

tiU

When declarer generously lets you
•usu
take your trteb, lie Stllplclous. After
EAST
today'alimple alldloo, West made tbe , ~
+101154
appareatly sale lead of the club queen. • Q 10 7 4 2
Declarer won the oce of clubs and • J 5
tKQIOI7
made the natlll'lll play of a spade. • Q J 10 t 2
When West'a Iring came up, declarer
SOUTH
returned to Ilia band with tbe king of
S2
!'CIIObll. If East bad I aeeond club, de•us&amp;
Claret mlgbt eventually aet up dum• "42
my's lilt club lor tbe pme-going .
.AK
trick. But East let a low apade go. DeVulnerable: Both
clarer
eJilted with a·l... diamond,
Dealer: South
Welt came in with the diamond
jack, but East overtook with tbe queen wnt
Nortlt Eut
aDd cootinlled with tbe ldnc. Declarer
I NT
took tbe ace and played another clia- Paa
Paa
SNT Paa
tmlllld. Eut bappUy won tbe 10 and
Pus
cubed tbe good Dine u South dilcarded a spade from Ilia band and a Club
Opening lead: Q
from dummy. Meanwhile West bad
!brown a club and a heart. East then
cubed 1111 fUth diamond. South th,. would take the rat with bll A·l;l iff
·another spade 1nd threw another club hearts. All tbls could bave ' - nold·
Hr'!lm dummy. West let another heart · ed If East bad beeD w1ry of cleclerer'a l
go. East tbell played tbe beart jack to gene1'08lty. If East doel DOt cub 1111
dummf'• kin&amp; and declarer cubed fUth diamond, !be 11quee.e on West
tbe Q-J of spades. West could tllacard will oot operate.
tbe club 10 011 tbe apade queen but bad 1 - , _ _ , . . - 'Jaeoolo:r • ...,... MOl .
ao play when tbe jack of 1padel came . •,_.,...
,., ... o.wJI ~) .,.. . . . . . . . •
aat. If West threw !be club jack, dum- ~ 1 1 .. - . , . ; "' If
my'•clubnineWOIIIdbea wilmer. And
e- - • -.
H West lbed aaolber beart, declarer '
'
-·

••r

••

now

-

+

tl!--

Cinf_.,__.ltl&amp;_,

·CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOS~PH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 - David, I Browbeat
Md.
~ Rooney's
6 French
fil'llt mate
seaport
3 S.A.
10 Bathtub
monkey
sbllJIC
4 Entreaty
11 llasPhall 5 Extort
pitch
money
12 Pottery
rrom
13 Demure
6 Slower
14 C111ada'~
(mus.)
- Leaf
7 l1111dle
22 Geraint's 34 Cruising
16 Pagoda
copy
beloved 35 - -froid
orl18ment 8 French
24 Me111tlme 36 Common
17 Byre sound port
21 Betray
suffix
19 Assistant 9 Corner • 26 Poker
38 Assuage
21 Place
11 Just back
"three" 40 Russian
into
from Reno 28 Complex
river
23 Haze
Ill Peel
30 Subway 42 Rink
27 Vista
17 Junior -·
gate
covering
28 Railroad 18 Formerly 32 See II
43 "Gunsmoke's"
car
20 Exude
Down
Adams
29 ERYPlian
pharaoh
30 Colonize
31 Fruit
33 Ht&gt; played
Tarzan
34 Free
-bird
37 Actres,q
Laurie
39Shoe
41 Eager
44,Popular
piect' or
music
45 River
in Maine
4686 or99
In "Get
Smart"
47 Publk
lltllity
(abbr.)
DAILY CRYPJ'OQUO'I'ES- Here'a bow to work It_: 211

of

.

fruit mono quickly.
TAUIIUS (ApriiiiO M8r 110) There Ia a
poulbllty you may profit In _,. man-

You llkllfy to become abl«bad In
miii)Y , _ InterMit In the -·
e.cii will hhe a place In your life. bu1 ,
. , 0111 In panccuter may ouW.Ine Ill lite ;

ou.a.

·

1oday through a CO!tllderlltt auoelate, who has your beo1 lnt- at
-

heir!. Thia parson hal helped
previously.
811111 (IIIJ 21......,. 110) Thil Ia a

· o\QUAIIIUI (ollll. 110 ftlb. 18) Do not .good day to move upon on lmportont
111161do&lt;t your oto:t proJacll. but today dawfoprnen1 you've been a1udytng
try to fOcul your-"- on yoow- thoroughly. Declllono that are well
~ilwwta. ~ 1 1 - you.,. thougll1
out
lhouid
P&lt;llltllfy 10 be the
... AquMut, ,... ~(-11--"- 22) Some!.......
__.to,..,_,giii.Sendloryour
~.
,_.,

Allro-GNPh poecllcllonl
...._ bl' noe111ng $1 1o
c/o -

ac 'WI

for the ~

A81ro-Grlj)h,
nl llllfl'l', P.O. BoK 111~1.

you're -lng on -

_,..,. .. hal

ld, OH 44101-3428. 11e...,. to
--date you.
(Ptlb. . . . . . . . 110) Don't 1e1 LEO (...., J:I.Aug. 22) Condl1ionl ir
..,.,_.11111.,.. -tpetlllon 1nttm1- ' QWIWallhould be mucll monoharmon~
d... you today. Your oppoe111on mlghl ouelor you today in your duMrva witt
1oo1c 1V0f111 on Plf)ll', but the oddlwe -- - H you've_, ._.iCing an1
, ' 1 in pw directiOn.
diiiQ- 111, patch tltam UP now.

·=:"
1181e

One leUer stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the tine L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophel,the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leUers are different.

of

that you've left dangling. You'll feel bet·
ter onoe H't off your mind.
U8IIA (hpt. J:I.Ocl. 22) H loolca like
you migh1 be getting 101118 good , _
todoy. H could come lrom or through a
penon with whOm you're pa!fy-wally.
SCOII'IO (Oct. M Now. 22) Your
c!al proepec1allt0Uid 111111 lO briiJhMOI I
· bl1 at this ~me. -· do not 11111
aa allgnal1o looMn your puras 111rtngl.
Try to live within yollr old budget for 1

CIIYPTOQUOTE

I· I

CY

bH long«.

SAOI'nAIIIUS (...... 22-Dec 111
Tltingl In general llhOulcl go rallter

LW G

amootllly lor you today-- Hwon't
!alta muc1t 1o .,.,... your - . . ,

gooclclten-foreuccnu11hll11me, and optlmlwn. -

,PI.., malt• 101M nee 1'Y
IICIJualmenta. Don't let Cltenglllntlmi-

II LONGFELLOW

VlfiGO IAug. Zi-lepl. 22) 1111 u productive as poaslbie todoy lind make a
concened enort to wrap up a project

you -

SG

like a

-.you'Nbe-.
CAl NCO Ill (Dio. INwl. 111 Floo
wt1h ....., loday, lnltiiiCI of·-~~~
agaln11 the tide, lllpl':illlly In ,..,..
thll1are a comniW c111 or financial natUI'II. You 8hould come out OK In a1t1tet

......

SBQUR

SG

UCAWL
EQFL

UGL

AQCRG

BY

DN

KGTFBM,

BQ K

E C M R F.

DG

DBUR . .!... UBQCF ' DKTMRGCF
CtUPia.Nte: ADULTS HAVE TROlJ.
BLE OPENING 1liE SAFElY CAP ON ASPIRIN

,v......,.•

of

BOnt.ES BUf CHILDREN CAN DO IT EASILY. -

.lAMES FEIBLEMAN

J

C) 1M King F - !lyndiulo. Inc.
•I

'

'''

BRIDGE

.

Feb. I, !Ill

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

Tragic - MoNI ....; Seier - Writer - FROM the REAR
A policeman Who defttnd&amp;Q the practice of· not putting
license platH on the front ol cars wink&amp;Q, " I've found most
pinches coma FROM th1 REAR. "

AXYDLBAAXR

General Hauling

DB•d W•or llorvioo: Pl&gt;olo,
Clot- Wollo, Dllivory Any.
t'- Coli
Sun...,
_ _114-448-7404-No

01.........

-10:311GIII New c..

CARTER'S P~ING
AND HEATING
1

·

C1h tullon llrendll.ee and
Ray Sttwnl ccH1DII with
special musical gueall T.
Grlhlm Brown. the Gl~a
Next Door, and Joflnny
Gimble.
10:00 (J) 7011 Club

RDN'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
loou• ... OOhldoo~GE. Hot :
Point.
ond •.
...... "4-.,..231
•

.'

100. XLT Boon-. 1114 Cfoeory 1-10- " 100 cit -lolo booo. 11 '-d&amp;. AC. AM-I'M • .._ PI, I' I ,
llo..,cll o..COO
J04. ONioo. ._ 2 P*1L D.....
'171-2123'oft• 1:00.
·14.000 mla A&amp;lifng tfiiOD.
1:--------...;.:_...;,._ ·CO!f·l14-448-11 11.

•-dl.

. 1:311 .IJI 1111 MJ Two IIIICII
•

-.T-Trlm"*'a.,dltuorip . •
Rom-. , _ 0011Mta Col .
304-171-7121.

c-.tololodto-olo-~
. , . -.... - - c i G o l l
Ill llodl Co.. 123'h Pine ..
Clll'r~Mr

11 :43)

RON'S Tet.,fllon Service. "\,
Houoo on IICA.
GE. Spoaf&amp;lfn' In loooll\ Colt .'
30"-I'78-2P or 114-446- . ,·
2414
'
'

_,_Col

. ,._

g
=-=~~
IRI

T• o
· -""'- ~
topool
.._t - ·--•110
..,........_ ....,. Voudloro ..,. • ·
copied. Don o Lon•copli•t(:~·
814- ..... 1141.
I
' • ,.,,

Fot1y Trw Tri..-g,

Tr &lt;1 l~IIIJrLillllll

w-- , ...

of hll ~ 11 raaf.
seperallt people. 1;1

-;=;:;;::;;:::;;::;::==
-;;

...... *"

ol the Clul

Ar!ld gats 1o spend an

t ,

w...~.

.

• (2) 1111 UMMuad
MJ l &amp;II~ Sean:to lor missing

'Tou&lt;* ,_., 18112. •• DIQ ; '•
Oodu• •• n.w. t130.00. 1
Ptoono 304-773-1177 otter · •

... :104-05-3174.

·ard•••-

448-1077. Llmltod .......

''Bafot a - celebrate curing my
patient'• kleptomania. has anyone
my lighter?"

a ea
11 J.;u~~·•rdd"'' Q
•o
II'A'1'11

...... Comoufloup

-IW IMbuolue.
""--a.7.
..Pefl •
114-

Coli 1 1 4 - - - or 1110.

• Cll USA TOCIIJ

PI-- .,d Rlpl.. ...---------------·•.·..•
-'

fNI I 1 d eo..r.... 304-273- For Ill• CleM wire drlttrnrw,
111118.
- · - - A -. 2,000btl • .
11141474--.
Portololollchtodolgnwlth...,_
•321.00. , _ dollY .... ,..."' .
-147.10-. 1-800-1333411...,_
Ground thlil cOrn. ti.OO P•
100. 11.110 1111 12:00 PM doly.
p - 304-175- - ....·, Fonn, A~ 31. Ph.
2211.
:104-137·2011.-odlot.Folo.

-lilutl . . . . I
4 bo...... - · ~~~- INi-

a.~~r

A!Mitcl
l!latwlaliwatNI Tonight

..

1

(2) ,...., ,Wid

(I)

up.

...,..... Wotw Hou~tllorv'"'
phe.. 304-178-2311 or 114448-4018.
'

-!rot

. "i·c

_

'JS

® 8aholtlllllc: tlpotll

- - , .... 10...- df.

~

...... Md • • - · 114BU:4427 ""• 1:00 ...,.._

=lrod.
114-~12'74

good-"""-

,.,... tt.ooo.oo.

w. h... 3

PIANOFDRI-"LE

20 uoodw.,_wlth • ....,
- . . . . . " " - Col
114-448-2141

7:311 •

TJ-41$ I) TH! PA"'
I HATE -·MATCHING
Ttff ,S'OGJ:$'!
\

-- --d .tell.. .,
a... ..

-olro ::7.

s._._..

1110.
p - ....,. 114-

Ill a-ni

OMIMtl VIce
. , . dingo
7:01 Ill Andy Clrtffllh

Launc.trorna.t \

76 . Auto Parts
&amp; Acceaaories
IUDGET TRANSMISSlONUood ' • r-Ift ol typM.
w.,.,...30 ct.vL P"- 1ft •

••

FRANK AND ERNEST

""•I

· Col 114-44&amp;-1224.

For ulo: Olio f i r - Col
:104-17•2717 oft• 4:30 p.m.

...

1971 Hondo CR-210. l""d
conot. 11118 K8woulll KLR 210.
~10
...... _.,.. _ _ ... Col "
114-248-1432
PM.

A- Llv001odclola A.._ .•
Solo ...., - - - 1 PM.
llllood toordwoodol- t12,. Uv•odc - o d oft• 4 PM ----------------~
burod• C - l n t l - 1~ ov-v 'oldo¥· 1 mlo oat of
BASEMENT
toft. ONo ,.... C'"0 ., Pomeroy,
Ill~ .., St. R~ 10. Col
WATERPRDORNQ
Dlolo. 114-ft2-1411.
114- 12·2322. 118·3131 u..., _ _ - - ......
,...,.,
.._"'....;...
:____________ . ... Loa! · - - - · - 'IWo III.OOOITUotowo tor tole. ..
COif 114-112-3131 oft• 1~0 2
bull-•~~
- - - dol'
Col oroolfoot
·
- F,.
1·11"-237--B.
night.
p.m.

-

Instruments

3010.

- · h e - for- Dop. •
rol.
Coli 1111• 2 PM,

Motorcyclea

For••llldtllon•n••..,..

Dlpollt .... !rod. Colll"-112-

. . . . . . . . . . . dop.

_

SCJIAM.lm .ANSWERS

=-=~-~':....of
ForluMQ •o
Tlnt't Compcnr
QMo .,,...

Uood • - · - ·
_
....... t-out
boorlrog.Worr-12-.CYC .
lo- IY- Col 114-37• •
'.
tii,OOO . OO ooll tor 2220 .. 30"-111-17118
::--:-----~...,..,.-----114.-00.
Modo! 311 Grind. Mlow 100 -loyo Tlralloo)-- w. •
ttr..... ood.ouo- - ·
bu. wlh &amp;o&lt;ol• .,d Hyd. drive. v•.
loa Flr-CIIMt I I - Md UHCl •
t!O.IDO.OO.
381w•h Modlonlool drive •d 3414-17.3331.

:..I =:::::-:--::--:----:--:-:-::

:10=4-=418-=:1:11:1:.

Un-.r. . hld. 2 bI ltoom. Nice
llld al.... ftO ....... , . . .

4 - - ..

1221.00.

with ....., ••h mlnowa.
..._ 304-773-1411.

F ---~~

10 .,... Nnk W8frlf'lty Gil Sluny
SprUf..iml wernnly on...._ •d
loor on •• bat ........
Hollond Modo! L-111 42
hp. oil- oldd .,_ Lood ... lol

T•lbl•

G-ood Ouollty
CETIDE, INC.. llth.,o-114114-3171

Now ICC $ tlt4 W' ?leN for
• pc. .......... -

Modoll14. 177bu. 13,300.00.
Model 304. 1.221 ttl· Sluo&lt;y
IDroill•. 17.100.00,
Modo! 30BT• dOm II &gt;Ia 2, 275
gal. Slurry Spraader,
t12.100.00.

frldoo, loturdorr. ..,....., ...., 64

Pl&lt;*ono UoodFumlborw
Mottl twill -'lialonOI'. 1 mole
....,.lllololoho-1 mloliolow
Rod T01 IPtool•
~ ouMoMstii rtw•. Adulle I unll b•de·camptete, 111.
a'il:.Jt03._~. Rot. Coli
f r - 131. 4 _ . . -~~~.
·131.
up.
IIIII.O.,boclt11:1dooko.l31
2 - - Apto.
Nl,. o - L.ondoy • Mp. M - 3 1110folon- •
, .............. Col 114- oh •• l .... .................
111-3711. EO H.
W. VL :104-171-1410. or
In~ ... 1--1120. 114-318-1773 ....

tor ......

74

Wlldot,.._work.PiloodP•
...... c;-11114-448-0119.

SURPWI-Drlglroll A...... Do·
nlm. R - Clothlroa. Ill'-:::!':'J.''M-wtillti.Som
So
1 Old Rout8 21 ·
Juucolooo lndopcodooooo Rood
C-!IIAI.I!ootR•-wood).

a

-nwrt .......

4~21.

_

I I IOVER I I .I I I I

•IJIPM"~gn.,.
(J) lpai'IICtnler
(J) • (I) eun.nt Affllr
(I) (!) MIIIIIIJ Lllvw

lf4-ft2-71107.

""'""'ood

- o 1 1 R . .......... Col
• 1"-448-0310.

-~~~---­

..

3 BR .- 1 c-t St. ll~chon wlh
• - • rofr9 1210 P'lodop. •
.... No Col 114-448-

I

''-over-.''

L.....J......JL....L-....1--.L....J you develop from step No. 3 below .

7:00 ())Our ......

1170 Cflolly Von with olr. 402
... · - Cltwy _ . ,_ Col

- - t30 pldouptNCk ""......
Col 114-448-4112.

.4.,
a "'*•·___
o,..,.,ectin•. ,

2 IR ..., . .hod · - In
- .. Coli. 11"-448-1332.

•

Gill New Counlrj
1:31 (J) One .,., It • 11mt

1917 Ford - - Mini lion.
Looolod Lor...,.c.,;,.......,, E•·
cotl_co_ _ 30.000 .....
112.000. 114-811-4331.

Whflllkh*•,., or u.ct. 3
whotlod oolarlc ooootoro. Col
R~ . . . lllobllly colloo:O. 1-114870--1 .

~ pold. G..,
.........._
131 10.,,.
. . . ..
I 178omo..,..lol
Col :104-171-1104.
171-1311. 171-7731..
-fr..,e......
no.
•30 • Klnt
tiO. Good I ' ='Iori of
Unt..... hod28R ...... ~...
·••30•duptote5.
mont. Int-. Corp-. -llo
on~r . No
Col 114-44141111.
to Dlya Hme .. CMh with
r:J oved crtdh. 3 M._ out
A
t«JO t~e­ I ••• Rd. Opon 11om to lpm
Mon. thN lot. Ph. 114-448coptod. COl 304-171-1104.
0122.
F-hod 2.3. or 4 ,_,. •
bllh.
Adult• - · No
- · Rot. • clop. 10qulrcl. Col
114-448-1111.

114-21.. 1011
· -or 4*'7SI7.

,._,., daca 8llid. 2 M .,

'·

Goods

154 Misc. Merchllndlae

AJ*bl•n
for Rent

., _n., Troao

,..7111 ,..

;oo----;c;-:::::-::-:-:===3 1 Hom• for Sale

51 Housellolcl

-!poll.
wood_,_

. . h ii IUo o . . . . Col 114241-5221

I

A hair" salon owner moved
his shop above a shoe repair
store. He named the salon

1--TIWEPHEN
-TI~,.r'T,,.-'-1,--i 0

oc-...,....

HDUI'I: M ,T,W tOe.m. to lp.m.,

Olivo ....
NEW· I pc.
1311.
Living_ ..... .,........

~~------------n
Mdew ....mini w/.,WMe

.;.

ill WKIIP In Clnclnnetl

lOP( or loll. Rlvorlroo Antlqoooo.
1124 E. Mlln ..,.._Pomeroy. ·

2 -oomM_!!Iohodtrol•wlh
- - ..d drjii. _ . . In
w.v•. 304-773-1111.

p•o.

•

•o
WIIIIP 111 Clnolrold
Q . . .a-.Toclo!r

2_...., __

n--·

5

11 Ill Report

40111.
-::-:-:------::--:--:-:---1nHoodn11711.00--r-. coll
ott•l:00ll04-171-1t72.

M-nl I R . - - . ..,.
ploto ~"""" olr, c:orPOI. Dopoo1t. no Col 114-4480131-00. oil• ISHIIDI' LAWN AI'Tt- 721
- . . . oto ... f..-. . ~ oflf-.
110111ng ot t171 • lro-g - · • ..
•Ill• •11o .....,, COl IJ4448--7 Cit 446-2102.

AT&lt;'II ,1
It-. _,,I"ci:-'-THI_E,s_
I1 t
11--T.I~-N.,.,_A..,IP-;-7 _vll'""'il ~

(!)......,
•
a•oces .....

-:7"'-· :----:-:-:----::--

3 - - locotool In lyr•
...... Col . , ..
1:00 p.m.

1'8rt-...

SMALL
WANT ADS

c::ottep.on.• . . .oom. Mttta
....,. No
Col 114-

2100
to
.21.-. l-ory.
flxtu-. .._._ grMd Ol*'lna
etc. Cln ~ tl d.,a. Mr.
- - c-121-1001.

Col ~--.. 1·407· 74430000011.1122. 24hrl.

AVON ol
304-171-1421.

Nicety furn .. Md 3 roam

·--·
"*'"'•

~-·-~-·--;:
.,., ,...,... f .,.._ om
~~

,. en. FT' Md PT wcwt: •ellbl•

AVON • .U • - Col --.n
Wo81• 304-112-2141.

II NIC NtghlfJ ......
(I) a, a 'I' ooll
(J) e (I) ABC Newe 1;1
!Il 11oc1r 111 clrtc

1:311.(2)

a ............. _ -

W••· -· •

low to form fo.ur simple words

·

1:01 (J) ' - wtd llttlfey

... _Rood. P t . - - . ...
hindU II. 304-171-1071l

"'""''*·p-

letr,rs ef the
0 Reorronge
fOur Kromblecf words be·

·

OllltRI
• Ameu'-'Magarlnl

----R~I.

Cor-

...... boj&gt;k
c--.ftr
. mn. . tront•

-

11-- Untl-llod.

t340.

4317 .. 441--2.

,...., lnlkk _...
one
........ prootl.,. Durioo h . do
ondwhltt, 304-171-1100 purah•ln• acmu,... ..,.... •
for R..-ne.
word PI'OOIIalna • ._. •
,.,...,... •ecr•.-flll ll'ld rec.pMile ......, 3 yrs old, wtl run tionllt ...., Some 1•1111•
plolo 304-171-4041. houro. Stood -umo
Int.,.. to: , _ _ P.O. Smol 1 4 - old puppy, aood 110.
Oollpolo. Ohio 41131 .
with dlldron. 304-171-1224.
W~NTED : Fulf...time ..nploy·
m.nt In ,... own home • 1
6 Lost and Found
Homo - - _ , _ with

LOST: 1- Jlo Ill'.. Chow
..,._. to "Oootlor". Vldnly
af - · Ool! Rd. - • d
Oftwod.
Colll14-317-0113,

Homes for Sale

31

uust.-....

-ald. Coll14-742-2321.

Dilella

• 0 Happy .,.,.
Ill , _ of Llfl

honw on prMita lat.

Pfli:t. 203 ..t.c:bon Pile t. ·
1:30-4:30.

Col 114-ft2-HS1

NO. HIS SCARF 15
CAUGHT ONTHE BACK
OF ~ IS Cf.IAIR..

t-,.;=ii:;;;;iiT,:::;;:==-r;;;::;,:;;;;::;;:::;;;;;:;::"j montll pluo _..._ 304-171*171.

1 mk.od llriulny Sponlol OUP' Port- tirnoMLTtor ..... _jppod
- . 2 whtte lf'ld brown ll'ld 3' Phyold.,'o Ofllco Loborooooy.
bfodl oo\d ....... Call 114-985- _ , h,....,.tolloo-011

UNd .., . . ......

15 HE HAVING TROUBLE WITH
Ol!li. FRENO~ LANGUAGE ? 15 HE
.!-lAVING DIFFICULT'( W!Trt THE
IMPERFECT SUBJUNCTIVE ?

448-.11117.
- - • dopollt . Coli """

"PLEASE ...if you can't be
gentlemen at least act like
lawyers."

4

3817.

WHAT IS WR0'-16 WITH THE
FAMOUS WORLDWAR I FlYING
ACE? ~ E HAS A VERI{
PAINED ~)(P RESS I ON ...

lrrilabll!IJ~
.
Melanie
.
I]) Dr. Wlto:
to ...

1 .,.._,, "' Mloldlopon.
1210.
,... ........... - - poloi
Coli 114-111-71107.

·-coli

P•PI&gt;I• 1o give -av-P•rt
Chaw, 1'-•
Hill• • 3Glrm1n
lh-cL
2 lomtla
mola
Coll 814-441-1119 oil• 1:30
PM..

Klthleen'l Nting habitl and

Mo ...le Ho•e. 2 bedrMfft.
IllS. COif IIA-318--

·----

Dan'• T,.h • CO.h "'
l'ullllc -ling , _ tor
......_. Wt •• on Mllin and

•Cil 111 •o

OONIIA T-J
Junior High

. . . 3017.

1l - --

W

(l) Dt. 111

CiMy - · 12711 I mo. fii&amp;IO •
Col 11 ... 218-1717 or

l

- - - - - - - - - - - Uilo~ ~r CU.Y R. POLlAN

EVENING

dop. Coli 114--1118.

I

,~~~;~' S©~oll1J- 2£ £.trS"

WDID
IAMI

I:GG (J) a..tu: The Loet

AM.fM.()Ioo, l*o• o lot mora
&amp;col. oond. Coli 114-317-

s.,_ for Rent

441

WED.. FEB. 1

&lt;;tCJE...

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

wlltt oooiMo.
CAl
ott.
2D.III.
304-773AlloT · - · · --

The Daily Sentinel- Page 13

Television
Viewing.

YoEI.l,
.3 Amouncementa

•

Pomeloy- Midclaport. Oflio

1. 1989

·

�I
Paga

---Local news briefs ... ---..,
Contlnu~d

from page 1
Pomeroy , went olf the lelt side of the road, strlkl.ng an
embankment. Damage was moderate.
Houdashelt suffered a minor visible injury and was taken by.
her parents to Veterans Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
The patrol cited Houdasheit lor lalluire to wear a seat belt.

EMS has 12 calls Tuesday
'

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 12 calls
Tuesday; Middleport at 9:10 a.m. to Main Street for James
Brewington who was dead on arrival; Syracuse at 9:49a.m. to
Minersville lor Zelma. Hawley to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
' Pomeroy at 10:22 a.m . to Main Street lor Anna Roush to
Veterans Mernorlal Hospital; Racine at 12:19 p.m. to
Stivers ville RC)ad lor Dorothy Brewer to· Veterans Memorial '
Hospital; Syracuse at 12: 45 p.m. to Hill Road for Ulla Strauss to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 2:18 p.m. to Vance Road for
Taylor McGraw to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3: 15
p.m. to Barringer Ridge Road for Wilma Black to Veterans
MemorlalHoapltal; Pomeroy at 4:43p.m . to State Route 143 for
Walter Eblin to Veterans Mmnorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:32
p.m. to Mulberry Ave. for Ada Hoce who was treated but not
transported; Middlepor t a t 5: 38 p.m. to Plum Street for Jimmy
Casto to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 10:37 p.m. to
Riverview Drive for Charles Wright to Pleasant 'Valley
Hospital; Middleport at 10:41 p.m . to the Cedar Bar for Ernest
Ward to Veterans Memorial Hos pital.

-----Announcements---Letart Township Trustees will
· meet Monday, 7 p.m., at the
office building.
Round and square dancing will
be featured Saturday even lng, 8
to 12 midnight, at the Racine
American Legion Hall. Mu sic
will be by the True Country
Ramblers. The public is Invited.
---

night, from 8 to 12 midnight, at
the Eli Denison Post of the
American Legion, Ru Ua.nd.
There will be a live band and
refreshments. Everyone
welcome.
The Olive-Orange v. F. W. Aux·
lllary wlll meet 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day at the hall.

1.,

There will be square, round
and slow dancing on Saturday

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Beyce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elllo &amp; Loewl
Am Elect ric Power . .. .......... 27%
AT&amp;T ........................ ....... .. 31%
Ashland Oil .. ....................... 35
Bob Evans .......... ..... .. ......... 15¥,
Charming Shoppes .. ... ......... 16*
City Holding Co ................... 19
Federal Mogul... ................. 51~
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .49\i,
Heck's .. . ......... ...... ........ ....... \6
Key Centurion .................... 14Y,
Lands' End ...................... ... . 29
Limited Inc ...................... .. 29%
Multimedia Inc .... ...... .... ..... 81\6
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .. .......... 17
Shoney 's Inc ...................... .. 8Y,
Wendy's Inti ....... .... ......... .... 5')4
Worthlrigton Ind .. .... .. ......... 23\6

Wednesday, Febru.-y 1, 1989

Pomaoy-Midcleport. Ohio

14-The Daily Sentinel

The Mason Fire Depar tment
Ladles Auxiliary Is sponsoring a
soup sale on Saturday, starting at
11 a.m. Vegetable soup and chill
J.:&lt;.:ili be sold for 50 cents a bowl,
$1.25 a quart or $5 a gallon. Bring
your own containers. Hot dogs
will also be sold. Everyone
wel.come.
The Hemlock Grove Church
wlll have a potluck dinner on
Sunday, starting at 12:30 p.m., at
the grange hall. The dinner Is In
appreciation of Charles Domin·
gan, temporary minister for the
past eight months, .and also to
welcome new minister, David
Pre ntice. Everyone welcome.
The Red · Cross Bloodmobile
will be at the Senior Citizens
Ce nter on Wednesday, February
8. from 1 to 5 p.m.
Clergy Appreciation Night,
sponsored by the Meigs Civllan
Club, will be held Thur~day, 6:30
p.m. , at the Senior · Citizens
Center In Pomeroy.

Area
deaths,_·-----~-----~--:-:James Brewin8Jon
Brenda Graham

James E. Brewington, 70, of
Main Street, Middleport , died
Tuesday at his residence.
. Mr. Brewington was born Jan .
8, 1919 in Spartanburg, s:c., a son
of the late Guy and Lillian
And~rson Brewington. He was
retired from the U.S. Army
where he was a mastl!r sergeant
with Medical Services and later
wtth Combat Engineers. He
Aerved In World War II and the
Korean Conflict. After his mll·
ltary career, he worked as· a
school teacher and retired Iron;~
Meigs Local School District. He
was a member of Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion,
Pomeroy; Heath United Metho·
dls t Church, Middleport; and the
Meigs County Teachers' Assocla·
tlon and the Ohio .Teachers'
Association.
Survivors Include a daughter
and son-In· law, Sandy and Roger
Luckeydoo, and two granddaugh·
ters, Amy K. and Lee M.
. Luckeydoo, all of Richmond,
Va.; a sister, Mrs. John (Mary)
Rogers ,' Spartanburg, S.C.; a
brother-in-law, John Vroman,
Middleport; two nephews. John
E. Vroman, Westervllle, and
Charles Vroman, Belpre; and
several great nieces and great
nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by hls
wife. Frances Bowen Erewing·
ton, In 1985, and a brother, Cecil
Brewini;lon.
. ·
Services will be Friday, 10
a.m .. at Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home, with Rev . C.S. ·
Zuniga Jr. officiating. Burial will
be In Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
from2 to4 and7to9onThursday.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Zelma
Hawley, Syracuse; Dorothy
Brewer, Portland; Wilma Black,
Portland; Walter Eblin,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - Teresa
Wood, Chester Rose.

Funeral services for Brenda
Lee Grimm, 18, "Green Acres
Clly. Fla. who died Jan. 25 were
held at the Green Acres First
Baptist Church there.
The Rev . Richard Be hers of!J.
dated and special music was
provided by Mark Nalesnick.
Miss Grimm was a senior at
John I. Leonard High School
where she was a member of the
Future Business Leaders of
America and a member ot the
First Baptist Church of Green
Acres.
She Is survived by her mother,

Mary Lou Houghtaling. Green
Acres; her father. Roderick
Laurence Grimm, 818 N.F. St.,
Lakeworth Fla. ; a sister, Krista
Martino, a brother, Jeffrey . at
home; and grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roderick Grimm, Ra··
cine. and Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Wagner, Belpre.

Lillian Romine

surviving are ' her husband,
James R. Romine, New Have ; one
5on Harold Lee Howell, G ton·
one' sister and brother-in-law, Mary
Elizabeth and Evereu Pauley, Albany, Ohio; tWo sisters-in-law,
Sadie M. Marr, West Columb1a an
Mary L. Hoffman, New Hav
eight grandchildren; two gr !grandchildren ; several nieces
d
nephews.
Services will be Friday at 1 p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral Home
with lhe Rev. Clifford West officiat-

Ohio Lottery

slip past

Daily Number

858
Pick4 4284
Super Loato
11-16-24-25-33-44
Kicker

Buckeyes

Page 6

862270

•

Lillian P. Romine, 73, New
"
.
Haven, died Tuesday, Jan: 31, ing.
Burial
will
be
in
Wells
Cemetery,
1989, at Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal.
Born July 9, 1915 in Trimble, Hanisonville, Ohio.
Friends may call Thursday from.
Ohio, she was a daughter of the late ,
6
to
9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Pearl and Anna Hawk Wakely.

at

Jackson, Gallia now
included in new solid
waste district proposal

FEBRUARY

ARK DOWNS!
EVERYTHING IN STORE
REDUCED FROM
TO

70°/o

DINETTES
FROM

Soulll Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy , with a
slight chance of drizzle· or rain.
Lows will be near 40. Winds north
5 to 10 mph. Chance of preclplta·
lion Is 30 percent.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy. with
scattered showers. Highs will be
between 50 and 55. Chance of rain
Is 50 percent.

-

ve More Than A Lot.

PUNXSUTAWNEY, i&gt;a.
IUPil - Punxsutawney Phil,
apparently aware of the Alaskan
cold front working Its way across
the nat.ion made his annual
Groundhog Day appearance
Thursday - and reported In
"groundhogese"that he had seen
hl$ shadow, meaning six more
weeks of winter are coming.
Hundreds of people made the

s1s•
.• 52"

· ••

'• 1411

5tHI. Bog .

.

•
Phil sees shadow; SIX
more
weeks of winter predicted

Whifa Plltlto Sale

.

·o·

GROUNDHOG SEES SHADOW - Punxsulawcoming. "General Lee", no kin to Phil, came out
of his fashionable burrow early today In Lllbum,
ney Phil, apparently aware of th~ Alaskan cold
~. frtl@l worldn1ut w.ay &amp;lll'fJM the nallon, ,made·hls
Ga., after being awakened by buJh~rS~~ott Medlin,
annuat ' Grolilfdhotf ·Day aJjlol..-ance· TIIIi'rsday c • a memlier of ~ Georgta· ·Teeh's Navlil ~ ltOTC
and reported In "groundhogese~' thathe.hadseen
program. "The General" also saw his shadow.
his shadow, meaning six more weeks of winter are
( UP_I)

At Kroger You Can ...

a...a..
FFIQllN

Fox De Luxe

Pizzas.

trek to Gobbler's Knob on the
outskirts of town to witness the
forecast of "The Great Seer or
Seers."
Shortly alter sunrise, James
Means, Groundhog Club presl·
dent ... removed Phil from his
man-made burrow. Phil then
"whispered" to Mellns, who
dressed in top hat and tails .
"He has spotted a long dark
shadow ," Means told the crowd.

I

·

By NANCY YOACHAM
which dog In the pack actually
did the biting. The commissionSentinel News Staff
A resolution for Meigs, Athen s. ers debated ye~terday whether
Hocking and Vinton Counties to all of the five or slxdogs should
form a sollil waste dislrict was be confined at the dog sheller to
withdrawn Wednesday by the rule out any posslbllty of rabies,
Meigs County Commissioners and the county's responslbllty in
and replaced with il new resolu· such a situation. The commtsllori to Include Jackson and stoners said It may be ne~essary
Galtia Counties In the district to turn th e matter over to
with the original four.
Prosecuting Attorney Steven
Approval of the ·slx.-county Story .
solid waste district must come
The commissioners received
from Columblis by March 24. notice from Randall Lambert,
"We are pleased Jackson and fiscal officer of the Buckeye
Gaitia Counties decided to jQJn," Joint -County Sell Insurance
said Commissioner Richard
Council. that $500,000 In notes,
Jones .
which were issued March 15,
Prior to approval by the state, · 1988, are up for relssuance this
a solid waste management com·
March 15. A ballot was included
mlttee must by formed. The with the notice for Commissioner
committee is to Include Hve
David Koblentz, who serves on
members from each county In
the council, to vote on how to
the district , Including the chair·
handle the relssuance. Koblentz
man of tbe county commission- voted to authorize the governing
ers, the health department com·
board of the self-insurance counmissioner, the chief elected
cil to determine whether to
reissue the notes. .
officer from the largest municl·
pality In each county, one townThree bid openings took place
ship trustee representative and a
at yesterday's meeting.
" filth member to be selected by
Thefirst·bid opening was for an
the other four. These appoint ·
extendahoe for the county high·
ments must be made by Feb. 20.
w;:~y department. Two bids,
A problem .situation with at
$21,500 for a Ford from Fairplain
·· lea~t 28 dop Qn private prQPerty
Tractor Sales. Ripley, and
In the RaCine area was discussed
$21.995 for •a Case from So~ at some length. According to
theastern Equipment, Gallipolis,
Information from Dog Warden
will now be reviewed by Meigs
Wayne Roseberry, one of the ·county Engineer Philip Roberts.
The second bid opening was for
dogs. which wu In a pack of five
or six other dogs , bit ...a family
food stamp insurance coverage
member living next door to the
for the Meigs County Depart·
home with the dogs. However.
ment of Human Services. Only
the individual could not Identify
one bid, $16,000 for coverage In

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79 c

Hudson

'25-lb

Cream Raur".. . ..,

S399

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Roll

By Unlied Press International
The warm unseasonable
weather that prompted people to
wash their cars or hang their
laundry outdoors finally left Ohio
Wednesday, but not before
record-high temperatures were
reached in parts of the state.
Sunny skies and southwest
winds pushed temperatures Into
the 50s and 60s across Ohio.
In Gallia County, Gallipolis
tied Its Feb. 1, 1988, all-time high
on that' date of 70 degrees.
Gallla's all-time February high
is 77, established on Feb.l5, 1945.
Every major city In the state,
except Toledo, set or tied a high
temperature record for Feb. 1.
· The mercury climbed to 59 In
Cleveland, 6llnAkron-Canton, 60
In Youngstown, 64 In Dayton, 58
In Flndllly and Mansfield, and 66
In Columbus. Cincinnati and

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Cut
Green Beans
au"~Tf iiS

Coat Cutter
Margarine ..... ... .
Wntover
Cottage Cheese. , ....
~AOC~SSEO

fllGU~ 0111 wm111NY11&amp; &amp;WIE'I

IIG I - lht tiM

Soft Drinks

$169

90 DAYS SAMf AS CASH!

C0111ty Line

Ch... Slicn..... , ....

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Local news bn.ef:s·

Layaway - Easy Credit Terms
"FREE .DELIVERY"

w-....vOII'
Fedelll
Food St8111ps

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10750&lt;

1.08 WEST MAIN

s experiment a success

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby conducted an
experiment recently which has proven successful.
'
As a result of a backlog of bench warrants, the sheriff tried
mailing letters to a number of persons wanted by ben~h
warrants and received 55 percent positive response.
Soulsby. reports that 18letters were mailed with Instructions
to make payme~tsto the Meigs County Court or to appear at the
sheriff's office on Feb. 1. Five letters could not be dellvered by
the post office, while 10 persons either appeared or paid. Only
three Individuals failed to respond and sheriff's deputies are
trying to locate thoae .three.
·
Soulsby says he will continue mailing the notices to help
eliminate the backlog of warrants.
Soulsby also reports that on Wednesday evening. he
·
Continued on page 12

EMPIRE POMEROY
992~3307

Zanesville.
In Toledo, the high temperature was 54. four degrees short of
the record.
Record high temperatures for
OhiocitlesforFeb. 1: Toledo58ln
1968, Cleveland 59 in 1968, Akron·
Canlon 55 In 1968, Youngstown 53
In 1988, Dayton 59 In 1968,
Columbus58ln1968,Findlay47ln
1973, Zanesville 51 In 1952,
Cincinnati 65 In 1887 and in
Mansfield, 56 In 1968.
Wednesday's spring like
weather changed abruptly when
a cold front began to move across
the state.
Walt Drag of the National
Weather Service office In Cleve. land said a cold front located In
the Central Plains area was
moving eastward, and put an end
to the balmy temperatures.
"There's a mountain of cold air

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:00 A.M,-5:00 p;r.;.

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

J.

&lt;&gt;I a new type ol wln\et patching

material which contains fiber·
glass fiber. "just to try It out."
The material costs about $38 a
ton, Roberts said.
Also discussed with Roberts
was the liability of the county In
regard to creek drainage on
private property . Roberts was
asked by the commissioners to
on

16

I

Late Wednesday afternoon,
State Rep, Jolynn Boster, D·
allipolis. ended specu latlon by
confirming that she Is being
considered as a possible appoint·
ment to chair the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. The term of ·
current PUCO chairman, Tho·
mas Chema. expires on AprU 10.
"I am being considered for the
appointment by the nominating
council. Over the past month, I
have been contacted by people
both Inside and outside the
district and encouraged to per·
Continued on page 12

out there,'' Drag said.
The cold front was expected to
continue moving south and be
along the Ohio River by Thurs·
day morning.
A low pressure area was
expected to develop along the
front southwest of Ohio, causing
the front to become a ~arm front,
which would move back north
Thursday.
The National Weather Servjce
said rain was likely Thursday,
with highs In the mid 30s In
northern Ohio to the mid 50s In
the southern counties.
The cold front extended from
the St. Lawrence River Valwy
through northwest Ohio, to a low
over Oklahoma.
A strong area of high pressure
extended from western Canada
Into the Central Plains.
Drag said cold weather should
remain In the state during
February, but the longer days
will help mitigate most of the
bitter temperatures that may
arlve.
Arctic Express
Rolls thro111h U.S. ,
The supercold arctic air that
forced heartY Alaskans Into
hlberna t ion barreled through the
heart of the nation Thursday.
leaving snow, Ice and misery In
Its wake.
Snow carved a frosty swath
early Thursday from the upper
Mississippi Valley, the northern
Plains, the northern Rockies and
Wyoming to ihe Pacific Northw·
est, the National Weather Ser· ··

One county out of slx In
Southeastern Ohio showed a drop
in the December 1988 unemployment rate while the jobless rate
increased as much as 1.0 percent
in the five other counties, accord·
lng to the Ohio Bureau of
Unemployment Services.
Lawrence County's unemployment rate for December 1988,
was 5.4 percent, down 0.1 percent
from 5.5 percent In November.
Lawrence County had an avalia·
ble work force of 22,500 In
December 1988, with ~.200
unemployed .

ORAND OPENING WINNERS - Prlle
wbmen at the 1r1111d opelllnl of Rile Aid
Pblll.'lllacy In Ita new Main Street, Pomeroy,
strud~ were awarded prtze. W"-day. The
wlnnen were rrom the left, S.Undra Btuh,

Continued on page 12

----- --·-- ·----'(

'

the amount of $400,000, was
received from Downing-ChildsMullen· Musser Agency In Pome·
roy, which is already the food
stamp Insurance provider for the
county. The new bid was the
same as last, year's and wlf.S
accepted by the commissioners.
A bid from Middleport VIllage
to provide office space for the
Department of Human Services
was tabled by the commissioners
until next week. pending a
discussion with Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
The commissioners renewed a
computer hardware service contract with the ATEK Company,
Canton, for the courthouse compulers. The contract Is for a
two-year peflod at a cost of $634,
and is the same as the county's ·
expiring contract with the same
company.
Problems with two roads in the
county were aired by the commissioners with the county engJ.
neer. · Roberts reported he Is
planning some work this summer
on one of the roads, Sand Hlli
Cemetery Road between Chester
and Long Bottom.
Roberts also said he Is consid·
erlng purchasing a sma !amount

Jobless rateCo~uped ~age
· ·
in Meigs County

Bost~r being
consr,dered for
PUCO chair

Phll's predictloncamedesplte
what has been an unseasonable
warm winter In Punxsutawney, a
community of 7,500 In northwest
Pennsylvania. The thermometer
outside Hunger's Office Supply
on the main thoroughfare in
Punxsutawney ~it 62 degrees
under sunny skies Wednesday,
but the weather was more
seasonable Thursday morning
with the temperature In the 30s.

Record_high temperatures are
reported in Ohio Wednesday .

lib

2 Sectlono. 1 tl Pogos 26 Conti
A Multimodlo Inc. Now

February 2, 1989

18811

Weather

1..._ 111

•

Vo1.38, No.1 88

EMPIRE OF POMEROY

Low In upper 30s tonl&amp;'ht.
Chance of rain near 100
percent . Friday, cloudy,
chance of rain 50 percent.

r

-~-

•

The six county area had a to~tal
available work force of 81,700
employees. however, 5,300, or_6.2
percent, were unemployed.
Athens County's jobless rate
Increased 1.0 percent !rom 5.1
percent to 6.1 percent, with 1,500
pf Athens County 's 24,200
workers unemployed: Gallia
County, up 0.7 percent, 800 of
11,400 workers unemployed;
Jackson County, up 0,6 percent,
i,OOO of 12,000 workers unem·
ployed; Meigs County, up 0.9, 600
of 7,800 workers unemployed;
Continued on page 12;

LanpYille, a bicycle; Dorothy S.ayre, Racine, a
1'111 111opplnr spree; Jat1111ta Humphreys, Pomeroy, a 1100 lhopplag 1pree, and Carolyn Lambert,
Letart, W. Va., a VCR, belq presented to her here
by Randy Pierce, maaa~:er of the local aliore.

,.'

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