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                  <text>Pomeroy-

February 12, 1989

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

.-----COl '1'01\" - - - - -

Ohio Lottery

West defeats
East in 39th
NBA contest

ARMOUR TREET

LUNCH
MEAT

Daily Number
689
Pick4 2849
Super Lotto
19-14-12-17-23-9
Kicker ' 269589

12 OZ. PKG.
We Reserve The Right To
limit 9uantities

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

Monday thru Sunday

Page4

99&lt;

STORE HOURS
I

I

•

LCJ_ood !!~'..:. !2.!!'!!!.!.•_1!: ~!_l!l!j

8 AM-10 PM

,-----CUL'I'OI\'·----~

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PILLSBURY
FLOUR

EFFECTIVE SUN., F.EB. 12 THRU SAT., FEB. 18, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, feb[U

S LB. BAG

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

79&lt;

--------------

r---:-·COVPON·----1

Chicken •••••••••••••.•L:·.
KAH~'S
lB. ·$
W1eners •••••••••••••••• ·
COLBY LONGHORN
$ 89
Cheese ••••••••••••••.•~~ 1

LIMIT 1 PLE~ SE

I
I
I
I
I
•I
Good fob. 12 thru hb. 18, 1989 I

79&lt;

L--------------'

--- --COIJI'ON-----.
I

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NON-RETURNABLES

!COCA-COLA
6 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS. ·

oz.

$ 09 Pepperoni •••••••••••••
Steak/Roast •••••• ~·~ 1
3.5

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$

USDA CHOIC~

Good Fob. 12 thru hb. 18, 1989

-------·------....l

•

r----COUPI)I\ -----,

39
Chuck Roast·•••••• !~· 1

I

FLAVORITE

Cube Steak ••••••••••
LB.

SUPERIOR

Lunch Meat: ••••.••~~

12 OZ. PKG.

2/$1

$1" 19

.,_ _____________
Good Fob. 12 thru Fob. 18, 1989 ...J

••The total value of the dou·
ble coupon may not exceed

LARGE 40 COUNT SIZE

$1 .00

Grapefruit ••••••••••~~· 1.2 &lt;

•Any manufacturer's ' cou·
pon greater than 51 c VIIi II be
redeemed at face value
only ..

FLAVORITE

•Only one manufacturer'"'
coupon per item.

2°/o Milk ••••••••• ;:l!~. $15 9
ORANGE OR GRA!EFRUIT
$ , 49
Kraft Ju1ce ••••• ~.6:.o;~ 1

.,.

t

•The total value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchase
price of the item . ~oney
will not be refunded . ·

..

•This offer does not apply to
Powell's Super Valu Coupons, free coupons, or any
competitor's coupons .

FLAVORITE DELUXE

llnLE DUBIE

. •This offer excludes cigarettes, or any other items
prohibited by law.

Ice Cream •••••••••••• $129

Snack Cakes •••••••• 69&lt;
FRESH BAKERY
12 PAK CARTON
·
.$
59
2
Donuts ••••••••••••.~o;~. $1 S9
Cola-Cola ••••• ~ .~~::~s. 2
12 PAK

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CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE

99&lt;
I·

•Offer is only good for pro·
duct on hand . No Rain ·
,checks.
•There is a limit of 20 .cou·
lpona ywu may red11em.,

.. ._-- ..MANtti!I,~IURf
-- ~ -- . . . . . . . . . . ..
A!;; Gil! Ji'ONOflft\fJ.PIRfSM.'.H0\31 1989

SaVe $1 oo vuu
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00

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RECEIVES AWARD Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce President Bruce Reed, at
left, roasted former Chamber President Bill
Nease justa lillie before presenting Nease with an
engraved gilt in honor of his service to Chamber
and the Pomeroy community. The presentation
was made at Saturday . evening's Chamber
sponsored dinner-dance at Royal Oak Resort, just
after Nease finished preparing the steaks for

those who attended the dinner. Reed also
presented certificates of appreciation to several
area businesses and Individuals, including, Tom
and Kathy Reed; James Carpenter, ol Meigs
Local School District; Paul Gerard, last year's
Chamber President; Jennifer Sheets, Allie
Simon; Roger and Mary Gilmore; Jim Hill, of
Pleasers Restaurant; Crow's Family Restau·
rant; Pizza Hut; Domino's Pizza; WMPO Radio;
and The Daily Sentinel.

Elderly victims· of ·myth

OYSTER
CRACKERS

BUCKET

I '

!

18.5 OZ. BOX

HORMEL Sll(ED
PORK BUTT

:

CAKE MIXES,

FRYER PARTS

.~

""'*" "~' uo .. ,,...... w--.l&lt;tllo t,.!llo..,.,l.., flo
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I

13 , · 1989

1 Section. 10 Pa ges 25 c ents
A Multimedia Inc. N ewspaper

Bush seeks support
for proposed .budget

Good Feb. 12 thru Feb: 18, 1989 J

DUNCAN HINES

Near 100 percent chance ol
rain. Low In mid 40s. Tuesday,
80 perc~nt c hance of rain.
High In m id· 50s. ,

By TOM TROY
United Press lnter.natlonal
Octogenarians are often por·
!rayed as Stubbornly lndepend·
en I old cusses, bu I two re·
searchers who recently wrote a
book on life after 85 sa y that
Image Is a cultural fallacy .
Another widely held belief,
which the nation's gerontologist.·
have not been able to put to rest,
is the idea that Americans do not
take care of their elderly.
Sally Bould of the University of
Delaware, Bever ly Sanborn of
the Health Care Corp. in San
Diego and Laura Reif at the
University of California in San
Francisco say they have as·
sembled ali the lates t research
lor their book, "85 Plus: Th e
Oldest Old. "
In 1980, 9 percent of Americ ans

older than 65 were over 85. can no longer care for them·
··Predictions are !'hat the·peteen• :'"selves, "American families really
tage of the elderly who are above
are caring for their elderly, the
80 will rise to 14 percent by the . authors said.
year 2000. There were nea rly 2.4
Research done since the 1970s
million people over 85, and that
shows that 80 percent of disabled
number is expected to rea ch 5.2 and frail Americans are taken
million by the end of the ce ntury . care of by family members. Most
Sanborn said the growth of the of the other 20 percent have no
aging population is putting heavy family members left.
burdens on family members and
Researchers said there are
on the nursing horne Indu stry.
three main reasons why families
"There are so many of the old
continue to care for their elderly.
old out there. It is the fastest The first Is love and affection,
growing segment of the popula·
and this accounts for the most
lion all over the world, " Sanborn intense care that is given.
said. "The new medical work
Second is a sense of reclproc·
·particularly in c a rdlovascula;
ity, that "she did this for me, so
diseases , has made huge
I'll do it for her," even if love and
strides."
affection may be lacking.
Despite a popular myth that • The third motivation Is what
the elderly are ofte n abandoned
the authors call "family duty,"
to nursing homes a s soon as they
expressed as "this is what one

does."

!Jeavy snows pelt Midwest
By United Press International
Heavy snows pelte d the Mldw·
est Monday, disrupting ser vice
at Chicago's O'Hare Airport a nd
icing over roads from Iowa to
Michign . Drenching r a ins
reached from Kentucky and
Tennessee Into Ar kansa s, Okla·
horna and parts of northe ast
Texas.

Three inches of snow fell at flight s were canceled because of
O' Hare Airpor t Monday morn· the snow.
" The operation is slowed,"
ing, causing Ame r ic an Airlines
to cancel doze ns of inbound and Stack said. He said flights were
, outbound flight s. Planes that did · being "thinned" to keep the rest
get off the ground were delayed of the day's operation smooth.
by upto30minutes as work crews
de-iced the wings .
United Airlines, O'Hare' s larg·
American Airlines spokesman es t carrier, reported no canceila·
Torn Stack said between 70 a nd 75 lions Monday.
"We have a surprisingly good
operation this morning- delays
of half an hour or less, " said Sara
Dornacker, a spokeswoman for
United. "It's just not that bad. "
The Natlenal Weather Service
said
7 Inches of snow fell
A breaking and entering sometime ear ly Sunday m orning a t
ove
rnight
at Des Moines, Iowa, 5
the Big Wheel Store near Pomeroy, was reported th is morning
inches
blanketed
Lincoln, Neb.,
by Meiss County Sher iff James M. Soulsby.
and
4
inches
hit
Rockford,.
Ill. A
According to the sheriff 's report, his office was notified
2-inch
snowfall
produced
Sunday morning of the bre ak ing and entering and a s afe job at
slippery roads at Muskegon,
the store. Authorities believe that entry was made sometime
Mich., resulting In numerous
after midnight through a side door .
auto accidents.
Because of a ser ies of breaking and ente rings at a number of
Big Wheel Stores . Sheriff Soulsby advises that the stores ma ke
A mixture of freezing rain,
nightly deposits in order to cut down on the amount of currency
sleet and snow moved through .
le!t in the buildings over night.
the Ohio Valley and Into the
Souls by reports that he spoke with a security officer from Big
central and southern Appalach·
Wheel and learned that the deta ils of th is case indicate a
lans Monday morning, forecas·
connection with the _entrles at other Big Wheel stores.
ters
said. Icy roads were re·
The Bureau of Criminal Investigation, London, Ohio, wa s ·
ported
over southeast Kentucky
called to assist in the investigation.
and
southwestern
West VIrginia.
In other matters, the sheriff reports that through an address
fell
as
far
south as the
Snow
given by Meigs County, the Parkersburg, W.Va. Pollee
foothills
and
mountains
of
Jilepartment was able to apprehend two runaways from the
northwestern
North
Carolina
.
Burlington, W.Va·.. Youth Home. The two runaways are
Rain and scattered thunder·
suspects In the I heft of an auto from Clarksburg, W.Va. that was
storms reached from much of
recovered Friday evening at the Ravenswood Bridge. The
Kentucky
'
and Tennessee to Ar·
sheriff noted tha t a wallet belonging to one of the juveniles was
kansas,
Oklahoma
and northeast
found In the stolen vehicle.
Texas,
the
weather
service said.
Deputies took a report from Penny Wiliams on Sunday
Paducah,
Ky.,
and
Evansville,
morning that her trailer had been entered illegally and
Ind.,
both
received
almost an
damaged. Charges are expected to be filed In this Incident.
inch
of
rain
In
the
six-hour
period
Also, the department Is investigating a false fire alarm that
ending
at
7
a.m.
EST.
was called In Friday evening to Rutland Fire Department. A
Dense fog was reported Man·
male subject called the EMS office and reported a lire at the
day
over parts of . Texas, MIS·
Clara Phillips residence In R,utland.
sour!,
Louisiana and near Boise,
Continued on page 5
Idaho.

___ Local briefs _ _____,
Sheriff probes B &amp; E

MANCHESTER, N.H. (UPI)
- President Bush launched a
campaign to bolster public sup·
port for his budget Monday,
calling his plan "a realistic one"
in the state that salvaged his
White House candidacy almost
exactly a year ago.
Before returning to Washing·
ton frorn a weekend at his famlly
retreat in Kennebunkport,
Maine, BushstoppedinManches·
ter to review his proposals before
the Business and Industry Asso·
elation of New Hampshire, one of
the many conservative groups
lhat supported his campaign
budget promises last y~ar .
The president recalled that as
a vice president seeking promo·
tton from the voters In 1988, " I
had a message, a message the
people of New Hampshire and all
of America understood: Sensible
ideas work and we can dO the job
without new taxes. r'
Acknowledging, however. thai
It took crucial early support from
New Hampshire to keep that
message alive, Bush said, "Now
that I've returned to your state
for the first time as the 41st
president of the United States, let
me repeat those four little words
I said on Election Night: Thank
you, New Hampshire! ''
That campaign tone Is ex·
pected to be matched in ad·
dresses to other groups this week
- as Bush seeks to rally the public
behind . a $1.16 trillion budget

blueprint that Demoyrat s say Is
s hort on specifics.
White House spokesman Mar·
lin Fitzwater told reporters th at
Bush plans to review " most of th e
major issues he proposed" In his
nationally televised speech to
Congress Thursday night.
Bush gave Congress . a fisc al
1990 spending plan that proposed
no new taxes, kept Social Secur·
ity benefits Intact, froze defense
spending and $136 billion in
dommestic spending and proposed funding increases for a
handful of his pet projects, many
promised on the campa!l(ll lrail.
The presiden t said Monday,
"We have made tremendous
progress and I mean to build on
that progress . ... There are some
areas in which we would ail like
to spend more, but We cannot
until we gel our fiscal house In
order and get the deficit down ."
He asserted, "The federal
budget will not be balanced
overnight bu I our plan Is a
realistic one. .. . It Is a budget
plan that will work, though not
with business as usual. It will
require a partnership with the
Congress."
Bush said late last week that
the publlc did not fully under·
stand his plan could include his
pledge of "no new taxes" be·
cause it was premised on what he
has estimated will be $80 billion
In additional revenue expected
from growth du~lng the fiscal

year , which beg ins Ocl. 1.
But left unclea r was from
where Bu sh pla nned to lrim some
$ll billion in domestic spe nding
th at m usl be made iA li!(hl of the
freeze to bring the budge t in
und er the Gra mm -Rud ma n de·
licit reduction la rge l of $100
billion .
Bush defends hi s plan as a
star ting poin t, . ac knowlcdg.i ng
"every 'T' hasn' t been crossed
and every 'I' dolt ed," but urgi ng
Congress to begin prom pt nego tl·
allons to produce a fin al product.
As !a le as Sa l urd ay he lnis istcd
he wa s pleased with reactio n to
hi s plan from "both sid es of the
aisle" a nd thai Democra tic lead·
er s, includ ing Senat e lea der
George Mitchell. had indicated a
willingness to begin. " We welcome all the help we can get on
sharing the und erta king to m a ke
these cu ts." Bus h laid reporter s.
In heading .b ack to New Hamp·
shire 'for his firsl of three
expected speeches this week,
Bush again saluted the state that
gave him a win F e b. l 6, 1988, ove r
Sen. Robert Dole , R ·l&lt;an ., and
reinvigorated the !lagging pres I·
dential campaign tha t he eventu·
ally rode to viet ory.
.
Said Fitzwa ter , " He want s to
personally thank lhe people of
New Hampshire for their help In
the primary. "
Bush went on two weeks la ter
to sweep 16 of 17 sta les in lhe
Super Tuesday prima1·y to lock
up the Republican nomination.

Ohio has at least 10 weekend highway dea!.hs
By United Press International
At least 10 people, including a
child who was run over after he
fell out of a car, have been killed
in Ohio traffic accidents lhis
weekend, the State Highway
Patrol said late Sunday.
The Patrol survey showed tour
deaths Friday night, five Satur·
day and one Sunday .
One accident Frld'a y night In
Ham II ton claimed the lives oflwo
peale when their car was hit by a
train.
In Marlon Saturday; a four·
year-old child fell out of a car and
was run over, suffering fatal
injuries.
The latest list of people killed in
traffic accidents In Ohio this

weekend
Frl~ay

Night
Warren: Wayne A. Kohn, 53,
Girard, struck and killed as he
attempted to walk across Ohio
193 in Trumbull County.
Bowling Green : Nancy M.
Ebright, 31, North Baltimore,
killed when her truck hit a tree
along a Wood County road.
Fairfield : Andrea Bales, 14,
Hamiton, and Tim Robertson,
address unknown, k llled wh en
their car collided with a train in
Hamilton .
Saturday
Defiance: Kevin S. Wheeler ,
24. Pioneer, killed when he failed
to slop his car at a stop sign along
a Williams County road and

struck a ditch al a high ra te of
speed.
Lancaster: Robert Ru scilli , 43,
Baltimore, killed in a one-ve hicl e
accident on a Fa irfield Count y
road .
Ashland : Gregg M. Weaver,
23, Ashland, killed in a two-car
crash on an Ashland County
road.
McArthur: Diana R. ·Smales,
43, Hamden, killed in a two-car
crash on Ohio 93 in VInton
County.
Marion : J oshu a Apthrop, 4,
Marion, killed when he fell oul of
a car in Mari on a nd wa s r un ove r .
Sunday
Clevela nd : Gene Tu cholsk i, 21,
Clt'vela nd . killed in a two-c a r
cras h on a CICV(' Ia nd street .

Meigs has new CPA office
I

Meigs County' s business com·
munlty should take note that a
new certified public accountant's
office opened last week in Pome·
roy . Kenneth R. Utt, CPA,
officially opened on Feb. 6.
His newly remodeled office Is
located on the second floor at 113
12 West Second Street, above
Back Slreel Video.
With a bachelor's degree In
business administration from
Ohio University, Ut1 has many
years experience In public ac·
counling, Including three and
one-half years wlthJ. D. DriiUng,
Racine. Prior Ia his move to
Meigs County about five years
ago, he was employed with the
firm of McLain, :ijlll, Rugg and
Associates In N:ew Lexington.
For the past 18 months, he has
practiCed out of his home In the
Five Points area but business has
expanded to the point that he
needs a full time office and
secretary .
Besides handling standard bus·
lness needs such as financial
statements and tax returns, Uti
also does some things which he
says are not typical of other
C.P.A.'s, Including, theinstaiUng
and setting up computer account·
lng systems, custom computer
programming In Rbase, payroll
processing (Including the lssu·
ance of employee checks), form
letters, mailing lists and labels.
"It seems a shame that so
much of this type work goes out of
Meigs County," Utt says. He

believes he can save area busi·
nesses time and money . by
eliminating long distance teie·
phone calls and expensive travel
often a ssociated with accounting
needs. Utt will provide quotes for
prospective clients at any time,

and complete confidenttalil y
with regard to any discussion or
financial Inform ation Is as sured.
Utt has sent out lei tPr s of
introduc tion to va r ious bu sinesses in the county , but Is
Co ntinued on page 10

OPENS OFFICE- Certified Public Accountunt Kenneth R. Utt,
has opened a new olflce In Pomeroy and Is available to meet the
financial accounting needs of Meigs County businesses. Utt Is
hosting an open house at his new location this Wednesday evening
at. 6: 90 p.m.
·

�The Daily Sentinei- Page-3
''•

--Sports briefs--

'
~

Cotnntentary
111 Co11rt Streel

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pllbllsher/ControUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
A.ssoclatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlon.
'

LETTERS OF OPINION are wei rome. They shouks be less than 30!1 words
tong. A1llettersare subJect loedlltng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wm be published. Letters should be in
goal taste, addr:esslng issues, not persmalities.

School district income
tax not .applauded by ·all

WASHINGTON - Mark 1992
on your calendar as the year
terrorists may get enough plutonium to make dozens of nuclear
bombs, courtesy of Japan and the
United States.
Unless the Bush admin!stra·
t!on shows some backbone, that
Is the year Japan will begin
shipping, by sea, tons of reprocesSed plutonium from Europe to
Japan. The shipments will run a
gauntlet of terrorists and pirates,
guarded only by the Japanese
equivalent of the Coast Guard.
The United States and Japan
quietly signed an agreement last
summer that wUI allow Japan to
ship a minimum of 153 tons of
weapons-grade plutonium be·
tween the years 1992 and 2000. To
put that in perspective, consider

that the entire U.S. nuclear
arsenal uses 100 tons of
plutonium.
The Japanese want the plutonium for nuclear power plants.
But a possible outcome Is that
terrorists stealing the plutonium
would develop a cr.ude, nuclear
bomb like the one that leveled
Nagasaki. Experts say it takes
only about 12 pounds of plutonium to make such a bomb. That
means the Japanese are permit'
ted to ship the equivalent of 25,000
Nagasaki bombs on treacherous
seas and through volatile regions
of the world. ·
High·levei government sour·
ces in Washington, D.C., and
Tokyo tell us that Japan Is
secretly planning· to use coast
guard vessels to protect the·

Sen. Robert Cupp, R-L!ma, whose area Includes two of the school
districts that have the Income tax, countered with the notion that
maybe the municipalities would like to concede ali Income taxes to
the schools and operate with money from the unpopular property tax.
· And Sen. Richard Finan, R·Cincinnati, pointed out that
municipalities often grant property tax abatement to encourage
buslnE!!'s growth, meaning the school districts forfeit the property
taxes.
Walter Ehrnfelt, mayor of Strongsville and president of the Ohio
Municipal League, representing 650 Ohio municipalities, said
allowing the school districts to cut in on the local income tax Is "!Ike
asking a starving man In the desert whether he wants food or water."
Carl Boltz, executlve director of the Hamilton County Municipal
League, said public education Is the best bargain inexistence. He said
he pays about $900 a year in real estate taxe!&gt;' and has put three
children through school.
"You can hardly hire a babysitter for $300 a year," said Boltz. " The
school districts need to do a better. job of selling the Idea that school Is
worth more than $300 or $400 ·a year."

Berry'~ World

When one side in a public
controversy starts restoring to
outright falsehoods, you can just
about figure it's slipping. That's
what the pro-abortion activists
and their pals In our liberal
media have been doing lately,
and why I take a certain
'e ncouragement from their
behavior.
One can certainly see why they
sense that the abortion cause is
losing ground. For one thing, the
pro-life forces have recently
begun "putting their bodies on
the line": engaging In non·
violent forms of civil disobe·
d!ence, such as blocking the
entrances to abortion clinics and
compelling the police to drag
thell) away.
In the 1900s, when civil rights
advocates and Vietnam war
protesters did that sort of thing,
the media covered their activl·
ties with husky-throated rever·
ence. In the case of the pro-life
demonstrators, the media's tone
Is likelier to be one of open
contempt. But don't be deceived:
The moral passion of the prates·
ters is getting across to the

public, and having a verydelinite Research Center.found a major·
impact.
lty of those questioned In favor of
As a result, it's becoming abortion If a pregnant woman
harder for pro-abortion activists simply "is not married and does
to find polls that support their not want to marry the man.'' In
contention that a majority of the · recent years, not even 40 percent
.American public favors abortion have favored it.
An Gallup, In the past five
on demand. At .the moment they
are hanging on to a New York years, has consistently found
Times/ CBS News poll conducted nearly 60 percent of those quest!·
in mid-January which asked, "If oned declaring that a.bortion
a woman want to have an should be "legal only. under
abortion and her doctor agrees to certain circumstances. !!
Add to these statistic! Pres!·
it, should she be allowed to have
an abortion of not?" Sixty-one dent Bush's recent outspoken
percent of those questioned said attack on abortion-on-demand,
yes, and only 25 percent said no. the Supreme Court's apparent
(Eleven percent said It depended decision to reconsider Roe vs.
Wade, and Attorney General
on the circumstances.)
But what is that weaselly little Richard Thornburgh's frank
clause about the doctor's consent hope that that case wUi be
doing there? It seems to Imply a overturned, and one can see why
medical necessity of some sort. abortion activists are plunged
Why not just ask, "If a woman into gloom these days.
But that doesn't justify flat
wants to have an abortion, should
she automatically be allowed misrepresentation of the facts,
to?"
which is what they are now
Because, naturally, the answer resorting to. Again and again, TV
would. Inconvenience the pr&lt;r news reporters and commenta·
abortion lobby. As the Times tors have described abortion, on
itself pointed out, not once since demand as having majority
1975 has the National Opinion support in this country, when the

anything they want or don't want
to.
Mercy, It seems so cold: "Stay
unpregnant, and we'll give you a
dollar a day. Get pregnant, no
more spending money." But so
far, it seems to be working better
than most plans designed to help
teen-age girls avoid pregnancy.
Among most groups of teen-age
glrIs who have been pregnant
once, 30 to 50 percent become
pregnant again before the age of
18,
Of the Mariposa teens, only 17
percent has a repeat pregnancy.
Desiree Ramos, who is 16 years
old, has earned $462 in the
program. Desiree had an abor·

By United Preu International
Today Is Monday, Feb. 13, the 44th day of 1989 with 321 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward full.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Tht! evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
Bess Truman, wife of President Harry Truman, In 1885, artist Grant
Wood In 1892, entertainer "Tennessee" Ernie Ford in 1919 (age 70) ,
actors George Segal in 1934 (age 55) and Oliver Reed In 1938 (age 51),
and former Monkee Peter Tork In 1944 (age 45).
111811 by NEA, Inc.
'·

"Dan, I'm happy to hear what you;ve been doIng lately - but not hole-by-hole/"

,

facts (as described above) show
no such thing.
.
And on the day after the annual
pro-life march in Washington
last month, I personally heard
the number of marchers des·
cribed, by reporters with differ·
lng views on the issue, as
4
'10,000," "tens of thousands,"
u60,000," and "70,000."

The media are also good at
slanted lat.eling. The lively mont·
torlng orglnizationcailed Media·
Watch reviewed ail stories that
discussed abortion on the even·
ing news programs of ABC, NBC,
CBS, and CNN during the last
four months of 1988. Only one
story out of 49 described the
liberals' pets as "pro-abortion."
Nineteen applied the lobby's own
favorite label, "pro-choice," and
the rest used some harmless
euphemism such as "family
planning advocates." But their
opponents, who call themselves
''pro-ll1e," were given that label
in only 21 percent of the stories.
In the rest, they were just
"anti ·abortion."
And still the pro-abortioni~ts
are losing ground!

On this date in history:
In 1635, the oldest public Institution in America, the Boston Latin
School, was founded.
In 1945, Soviet forces captured Budapest, Hungary. The 49-day
battle kUled more than 50,000 German troops.
In 1974, the Soviet Union expelled dissident writer Alexander
Solzhenitsyn.
In 1984, Konstantin Chernenko succeeded the late Yurl Andropov as
Soviet leader; Cherhenko died 13 months later and was succeeded by
Mikhail Gorbachev.

•

Mf'mphlr~,

',

~
~

Wf!lil US. EMI IU
Monday'• Gamet~
No 11Ull8 .chl'dlllf'd
'l'uNIQ''s GameK
NI'W l'orkal Ch.netlir, 7::111 p.m .
Clevelaadal MIIU1tl, , :!Op. m .
Philadel pld aal la41 ana. 7: 38 p, m ,
BoNon Ill Ho•wlon, Mp.m .
Mtanla at Chlcqo, 11: 31 p.m .
New ""'*'Y at Mllwau lire. &amp; H p. m .

Nor-.lkPau11'7, Oanbury.n
Oak Hllrbor Mt Gt&gt;nta 110
Otlft'ln flrflantll H. ColllnR \\'n Rn

..

Ott.wa lUll• Rfl, Nortbwoocl 71
Rl~Pd.&amp; f! 73. M l.rlon EIAtn II
Sheranmatll &amp;a, Beallnllle53
SpriiiJt' NE 11. MechUik"!!burr u
Sl Hrney 71, Rodtlonl Parkway 53
Swanton "5, Ot*'~to 7t
'Tvl Uhbey 7t, Cellr. 68
Twin \'Wk&gt;~ n, Nail Tr~tll76

, LI\CIIppersat Dalla&amp;, K::M p.m.
Df'n\ff at Utah, 1:.111 p.m.
SiUI 1\nt..Vo at St'M&amp;tle, II p.m .
Del roll at LA LakeNI. JQ:30p.m.
W•Nn~o~at Sacnunf'nlo,to:311 p.n\.
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

W Bolr114!!!i 1!1, Akr Covt'nlry 17
Wo081tr 7:1. i\ll:hlahd 59
\\'Qrth ChriM ~:S. Nt'W AI h~tnJ ~
W Mnk 7t, Zanl'ti Ro*-'cntn!l&amp;t

Slll.,.a,y'l'i R!lulh
BoSII.on 5, Edmonlon2'

(:alpr)' ~. WuWn~on I
Hartford 7, Wlnnlpe« 3

Glrbi Ohio RIP Sc hoollla~"lelhall
By Unlltd Prl'!llllnterrMtklftlli
Sllfurdi\V. Ftoh II
Rt•plilr Se llfiDft
Arc&amp;dlll liS. Tlmn Cal•-erll(l
Galt'ti MIIIM Gllmeur U, JUrdlilld ~3
Genna 53. Oe Collinwood t!
Ulhlonltur« $1. M'ootlmono U
Shelby M, M'yN'ord 5I
SJtenwood FalrYIM~o' IW, llrylln 18
War•w Rlwtlr VIew II. Dn'Sclrn Tri-V

Que~

!

•
,•

II, 111ttflu r(h 1

Toronto t, Phlt-.dei.,Na 3
Monr.real 5, New .Jenry ..
St Lou• 5, NV lr~ .. ndru I
Dtlrotl 5, Ml•neto&amp;a I
llllll~ '!i ~ .. b
Loti Mrelf'l f. O.lca.:o t
Buffalo 5, St. Lold5!
Van()Quwr S, Plllladelphla 'l

.
.

Edmonloa S, NV

Ran~r!ll

('al pry 4 , Pltt!lbu f'KI\ t
MondiQ''fl Gunes
Que bet· at Mo nr.real, 1:35 p.m .
Wln,.Pf'a: at DetroK, 7: 35p.m.
Toronto l&amp;l New J erll'y, 7:45p.m.
Tu~IQ''!I Games
NY RIUIII't'rsat Phlllldelpld~&amp;. nla:hl
BuHalo Ill Plll!lbii~Wh, nlshl
Edmonton at NV labtn•er8, niKht

Girt!. Diwhlon I
Col MUOin 31, Ga&amp;hiUIIM "
Col South $1, R'orthlnKton U
Col M'll.lnul Rldtt&gt; n, Col Fran Win HIM

Dela•·an ,'!, C•l Eut 311
F1\lrfleld -U, Cblol'll Tala 3&amp;
Fr~tnldln 53, U11 Co!Praln .f7 (ut)
(!alloway " 'e8dll.nd 1l. Col ~IUIUnoor36
Grow l'lty n, f'ol Wattll'r!'!Ofll4fi
MilloN! 5!, HamlMon .. ,
Mounl Ver•n D. WC!tk'rvlllt S ~!I
Pk...erln&amp;ton 117, ('ol We.t '! ..
Rfonyoldllbu,. ~. Nt&gt;wark ti
UppM" Arllnrton 78. f'ol Nordlland 47

W•bln~onat

St . Louki, nllthl

t'hlcqo Ill: Mlnntsotla, niP~;
loslon at Vancouwr, nl_.,
Till.~

Week'liOhlo
IAIIil:"lte Buwtbllll Srhecllll:"
lly4Jnited Prl.'lia lnter..alo•l
MondiQ'; A:ll IS
Ohio Sbtt• at Iowa
EYIUI!IYillr at Clndn . . l
Akro. at t1ortcla lntrr ... kl•l
flt'\'el.nd Slate alllllno6a-Chi~IIJt'O
Wllminstoa at Wrt.:lll Sl111e
Tue!iChQ' , Fell. 14
WWsh .U Ce dantlle
Mt VeroonNu..atTimn
' Kt• Grllft•e 111 Ohio Domlnklan
Blulft nn at Dyke
KentSta'te-AIIIltahu .. at L11ke Erlt•
" 't'd11e!ida,y , Feb. 15
Ball State at 'J:oledo
Miami at BowllniJ Green
o•&amp;o Unh"Hd)' at E.u~rn Mich
Om:ln..UI at Memphis stale
' Wri«M Sta&amp;r a1 Eastern KeRtlll'ky
Vo,.n«Stown state a1 DriroM
Hehlelhrr« at Baldwln-Wallacf'
Ollerhel• at Mllfietla
Wltknber111 al Ohio Northern
C11.p IW at Mu~ldnxum
All~hetly (Pal al Obf'rlln

.

W...Wn1H• Nit, Grow:part "'
WM Chfti..., Lak0C115t. U•Sy('IUI'Ion•

Zanesvtlle 75, Elflt U\'f'rJIOOI 53
Glrh DIVI!IIkln II
GaiHJMIL'I '7t, J~tcbon ti
SheridiUI 5-4, Alhf'n!l :u:
Glrlli Dl\'lllon Ill
Bloom-CMrroll H. Falrlldlll Union ${l
Col Rf'ad)' 45, Mlldblon Plalns/15
GriUidvll!'l' 48, Uckln1 HIM 3.&amp;
lntlan Valli! , Unkln Loc 37
.Johr.~tuw• 5&amp;, S.-rta Hl~~:hlarid 37
Uhert)' UnkHl17. ('.ol Schl ForGirLo; ~1 ·
N... wton ..9. Ole~~lll.ng U
V•r•ll'leK "· lleii:Jrook 3A
Glrlll Dlwlato•JV
('ul Wtthrle 51, Canal " 'ln.::hl'fller :U

MM 31
~•

For1 Lorwmle7t Jackson Cenk•r It
Kalklal't, Mllter City 52

Mu•• l'alhtl, Eat Knox 45
N~•rk Clllh 7!1. Wellln,;ton-1-t
Jldunoml Htolfll.lf 60, Newhury !ell

Ca..w Reterw. at KeaJOII
DPntMn all WooMer

~ldney Falrl•wn4!1, Br11dford l3
Sllh")" IItman M, llou!Con :til
K'u•ildnatun Chr S2, ('ardln~on ~~

II ( W~o4e.-.O...rher-8chlndelhob·Morell),

!&gt;O:COres.

-------Sports briefs-------

COLUMBUS - Former Eastern
star Angie Spencer is still makIng headlines, this time for th e
Otterbein Lady Cardinals' bas·
ketball team, as she hit a caree'r
high 32 points recently against
Capital University.
Spencer now stars for the Lady
Cards, after serving brief s tints
at Marietta College and Shawnee
State.
Spencer is a senior post player
from Tuppers Plains, and led all
scorers against Capital with a
career high 32 points. She hit
13-of-22 from the field and hit 6-8
from the line. In that contest
Spencer virtually led all catego·
r!es wlth a team high 11
rebounds.
Otterbein Is 9-8 and 6-6 in the
OAC conference.
Spencer averages Spencer Is
hitting 48 percent from the field
and has a 9.6 scoring average and
7.2 rebounding mark.
Angle is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Spencer of
Tuppers Plains and has a brother
Chris, who attends Eastern High.

Speedskating
Leo Visser of Holland won the
1,500 meters and was second over
10,000 meters to capure the World
Speedskatlng Championships at
Oslo, Norway. Visser, who re·
cent!y captured the European

title, was followed by countryman Gerard Kemkers and Nor·
way's Geir Karlstad. Defending
world champion Eric Flaim of
the United States was second
after Saturday's 500 and 5,000.

••••••••••••••
,.
.• Valentine Special •
•

•
•

•

Mom Perry's Smorgasbord 4
.$200 OFF SWEETHEARTS MEAL 4

•

TUESDAy I FEB. 14-3-8. p.M.

•

•

4

AT

•

4

FEATURING

•

Ribs &amp; Losts More

4

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS JUliO)
A'Division of M•lttmellla, Inc.
Published every afternoon. Monday
throogh Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
mer())', Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing ~mpany / Multlmedla. Inc,,

Pomeroy, Ohio 15769, Ph. 992-2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
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( :enlral Mlch at Ohio Unl\'eridly
Earltern Mlclaat Kenl StlliP
Cincinnati it Vlrclnla Tee•
NorChetnJo•• al Cleveland Statt'

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Italy I tGflllllllo-Rotlirn!lk'lner-RusfiOUooNII'dll 3: SUI. 1, AuMri•ll (JUeiW!IIl·

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3:SS.7-I. !1, l\'BIIt O..rmany II (Spt!rr·

OhloNortherlllat Markle.

Hoerlni(·Hampei·Mueller) . · S:SU3. 10,

David R. Ayers, M.D.
Family Practice
Office Hm.irs:··
"'"'

.

·

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

NEW HOPE FOR
THE HARD OF HEARING

•

IT WORKS!

GI\LLIPOLIS: House of Hearing . Inc . announces newly developed
methods especially designed to give help to those who suffer from
not being able to hear and understand speech clearly.
.
· Hearing aid systems developed by Electronic Corporation .
San Diego. Caljfornia . equipped with the A.N .S. (automatic noise
suppression) are being l.nlroduced to help those who generally cannot hear in noisy environments . Especially for many who have been
told nothing could be done for them and those who have nerve
deafness .
This advancement in technology will be available lor inspection at the
Holiday Inn . cor ner of State ~oule ], and 35 . Gallipolis. Ohio.

Monda:}' through F:rtd~Y
~:30 a;o,:t. : ?:.().()J&gt;.•Ijh .
. --

success. Although they would have liked to have
won more, they didn't give up and finished with
good team play at the end of the season."
Pictured are sitdng,l·r, Chad Savoy. BrlaiJLong.
and Eric Powell. Seated are Amber Well, Carrie
Morrissey, Coach Don Eichinger, Amy Murphy,
and Crystal Kaylor, Statisticians . Rack-Michael
Hall, Chris Carleton, Benny Brya"t, Scott Baker.
and Jeremy Buckley. 'Assisdng Eichinger was
Dennis Newl.and. Below is a list of the season's

Boxing
South Korea's unbeaten Yoo
My ung:woo r~tained his WBa • •
junior flyweight crown by stop·
ping Katsum! Kamiyama of
Japan In the lOth round at
Chongju, 75 miles southeast of
Seoul. It was the lith successful
title defense for Yoo since he took
the title In 1985. and boosted his
record to 30-0 .. .. South Africa's
. Brian Mitchell retained his WBA
world super featherweight title
with an eighth-round TKO of
Italy's Salvatore Bottlgi!eri at
Capo d'Orlando, Sicily. Mitchell
sent Bottigllerl to his knees with
three rights to the jaw at the start
of the round. When the chal·
Ienger got to his feet, Ml,tchell
floored him with a straight right .
Cycling
Italy 's Fabio Bordonaii won
the Tour of Spain with an overall
time of '22 hours. 25 minutes and
57 seconds for the 516-m lie route
through southern Spain. Eight
seconds behind was Luc Roosen
of Belgium. followed by West
Germany's Peter Hllse.

John Carrollai,Belhuy i W Val
Thund.IQI , Feh. li
Xavier al E\·anntlle
'
OilY loll at Sl. Loul!l
C:Nttral SlatiP at Gt•orxetown (Ky)
Mt Vernon Nu.. at Cedarvllll'
Frld~Uf, F'tb. 11
No glllffles M!hedule.d
Sl&amp;urday, Feh. IM
Oll&amp;o Slale a1 NorthweMrrn
BowUn~t Green 111 We•ter• Mlch

8oh11lt!d Rel'llit'!

•• •

Spencer hits
career high

DelllllnCe at AIICIIQ'

IIJ Unite• Prl'f'N .. ler n&amp;lklftlll
World Four-Miih Ch llfllploftllllllpM
At ( 'orUru d',\mpeno, Ita!)' . Feb. 12
Fhal Four-ht'alllltal-1, Swhzerland

•\

EASTERN EIGHTH GRADE BASKETBALL
- The Eastern Eagles' eighth grade basketball
team started of! to a slow start, butlmproved
greatly toward the end of the season to finish at 11-9
overall. The Easterners of Coach Don Eichinger
progressed steadily thro11ghout the finish and
finished strong to average 35 points per game,
while allowing 38 poi!lts per game lor the se&amp;•on.
Coach Eichinger commended the team saying,
"They worked very hard throughout the seaso11,
and each player contributed to the team's

Malo..,IIIIUrhShawnee Stair a1 Al&lt;thland

Weekend
events

Sle(t'I-RI~etnlll,

ol

Sat....t•'• ~lllmet

N"' Bremn lt. .lllcboa C~tnter 1$

Union I

tettllil

All-Star Wee keiHIII.t Houaon
.SUIIIM!J'I AU-Star Gam,p

3 mlaulell, tt.31 llf'COIIIl'l. 2, SWIIU'rlan ..

:
•

men'r~

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASMC'.

NNar k 7t, CGI SDv .. n

J

Tf'•n.-

· Milan, lt!ll)' - meo'111ennl1
Waslll•~ton Vlr«lnla Slln
W•W•Iton

MldllelownMI.dhlonft, W~netwlllf.59

~

lion at 13, but has avoided
pregnancy while participallntrln
the three-year-old program. She
says .she does want to have
children, when she is 20 or 21.
"I want to have enough to buy
him what he wants." Desiree told
the Associated Press. "I don't
want him stealing. I don't want
us living in the projects.''
Critics lambasted the pro·
gram, calling it "paternal and
coercive." Higher-ups pulled its
funding for the coming year, but
the Mariposa staff hopes to find
private donors to support one girl
each.

pronounce many of the sounds we
worked on. I'm not kidding
myself that my little experiment
cured her of a serious speech
problem, or that M&amp;M's worked
any better than "Good girl!
Wonderful Denise! I'm so-o-o-o-o
proud of you!" would have. Ali I
know Is that experiment, and Its
little bag of M&amp;Ms, gave me an
opportunity to show Denise that I
cared about her and the· way she
said "spoon," and to positively
reinforce her for her work and
understanding. That wasn't
something she got very often at
home.
Intellectually, I can under·
My first thought, when I read stand the reluctance to teach kids
about the program, was the same that money Is a reason not to
thing I bet most people think at become pregnant. Emotionally, I
first reading: "What are we know our babies are sent out with
telling those kids? That the most adults' bodies are sent out with
important reason to keep from adults' bodies and children's
getting pregnant Is to get minds long before they are
money?"
capable of making adult dec!·
I wondered sotne of the same sions. The result of their ignor·
things when, as an undergradu· ance and immaturity often is
ate, I chose an experiment from unwanted pregnancy - the con·
one of my education textbooks to · ception of new lives that they are
try on my little three-year-old incapable of caring for. These
neighbor. She had trouble prO- new little people are consigned to
nouncing 11 Ch.'' "sp'' and a few Jol.n the cycle of poverty and
other sounds. The textbook abuse by children unprepared for
taught me how to work with her, the responslblity of parenthood.
and to pbp an M&amp;M into her sweet
I'm for anything that gives us a
little mouth every time she chance to sit down and talk with
pronounced a sound correctly. (I these young women, to show
know, I know, no one would them we care. I'm for anything
recommend popping a tooth· that gives them even a shallow
ratter Into a toddler's mouth incentive for not conceiving
today, but bear with me for the unwanted babies, If that's all we
sake of the story; It was 1970, can give them, before a .deeper
after au.)
incentive has a chance to
Soon, Denise was able to emerge.

MISL
No a:unes a heduled
Ten•

N Can Glt't!Oal U, Atr Hoban .JR
N. .ek&gt;oalt. AllthOny ·· ~nr It

•

...

Q.e~at MoDlrul, 7115 p.m.
Yt'lanlpq u Oft roll:. 7:H p.m .
Throat oat New .lf'rlt)', 7: 45p.m .
Soenr

MarlaJrlan Ill, Carrollton It (Ill)

Cevtn~on 35,

-·..

lluRtball
~~e..- led

No a:ams

M•• lacbon 15, Hud•on W~n RM\'
!it'adU
Mf'liM But'keye 1!, Bla..:k RknSt
Mllml Eut•. Sift)' Falr•w•H

Daa,..lll' 611, Ctonllt&gt;rhu I'K

s:xn.

Mo....,. 't Spons Calendar

Lollllonit. M••••PI•ass
Mapteto•lt. Ol!llrin Falla 5I

.,

·•
;

aramhlf'),

a.

Is $1 a day proper birth controJ_ov_ers_tre_et

Today·)n history

.

shipment. The country's pacifist the General Accounting Office
constitution prohibits it from joined the list of naysayers and
sending its naval destroyers on said that the contract was Illegal.
Seri. Frank Murkowsk!, R·
such and escort mission.
Japan's plutonium originates Alaska, threatened to block the
in the United States as aranium agreement because it made
and then is reprocessed into provisions for refueling stops in
plutonium in France and Great Alaska.
Kennedy and the State Depart·
Britain. Every shipment from
Europe to Japan must get U.S. ment steam-rollered over the ,.
approval. The only previous protests, whispering behind the
shipment by sea cost Japan, the scenes that the United States had
United States, France and Bri· to placate the Japanese on this
ta!n millions of dollars . .finer!· one.
But Murkowskl, aided by some
can, French and British navy
lobbying
in Alaska from the
ships provided the escort.
respected, non-government Nu· ·
·A 30-year agreement was sent clear Control Institute, got the
to Congress In early 1988 over the administration to forbid the
objections of the Defense Depart· Japanese from flying over or
men! and the Nuclear Regula· landing in the United States
tory Commission. I n· February, · unless the plutonium was sealed
in casks that could withstand the
worst-case crash.
The· Japanese were happy to
get the agreement under those
terms, until they figured out that
the fall-safe casks were years
away from development.
In late summer, the Japanese
asked for an amendment to allow
sea shipments. Kennedy was
anxious to please. Instead of
proposing an amendment, which
would
have required a 90-day
~~ICS ~A~~
review period, he sent the change
11~U6LYH~
to Congress as a "subsequent
agreement." If Congress didn't
vote it dow.n in 15 days, the
agreement would automatically
go into effect.
Congress was too busy in
October, wrapping up the session
and running for re-election, to
pay much heed to the agreement,
or to imagine the worst case
scenario, that only Japanese
coast guard boats would escort
the deadly shipments. The agreement was allowed to slip into law.
Now the only option for the ,
United States is to cry foul and (
demand that Japan come up with
a better plan.

Opinions change -----.,-----W_il_lia_m_R_us_he_r i

"A Dollar A Day Keeps Preg·
nancy Away."
When I saw the headline, I
couldn't believe it.
I thought, "Nah, they can' t be
paying kids not to have babies."
And at first glance, it seems
incredible.
Counselors preside over a
"stack of dollar bills and a
smorgasbord of snacks,'' waiting
for once-pregnant teen-agers to
showup and get someofboth.lt's
a program that pay the girls $1 a
day for each day they avoid
becbming pregnant. All they
have to do Is show up once a week
at Denver's La Mariposa Health
Station, eat snacks, sit around,
and talk or not talk about

,,

Sahii'\IQ, Ff'b. II
.\aaron 18, I'Hryll
Bloom-Carroll J1, Gru\llllt It
lolW11 N. SIIIIPf Ll-tlman lit
Cu Mc K.IIk)' M, .M• l PII"fryll
Cu C~•tCU .. IILM ..
St Pf'lf'rG
Ctr 81 ,.,.., .... Ut' IAII ..wood 'fl
r.ol Ac:adeftu 15, II•Jnllle U
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Ram 1M . . . . diD ••
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LIIIHty Un .. n11, C.II:AMi lll
Llm11 Shaw~ 7t. (:OidwMer fl
u ... CC 7 •• Ore«&amp;nStrltch 89 ('llll)

-...w

AW,cJt\OOT.

A parade of mayors and business representatives · visited the
Statehouse last week and told senators a school district Income tax
would be inefficient, unfair and unworkable. They said it would be, In
effect, robbing city coffers to prop up the schools.
" You are going to ask people to choose between educating their
children and collecting their garbage," said John Reimers, president
of the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and a taxation expert who has
been fighting the school district Income tax In behalf of business for
the last 25 years.
The local school district income tax was permitted in Ohio In 1981
and 1982, but was repealed in 1983. Five districts which installed the
tax were allowed to keep it.
. State lawmakers concerned with school financing want to give
other school districts, particularly small ones In rural areas, the
additional tool once again.
Ever since the municlpa.l Income tax was permitted In Ohio, It has
become, In Reimers' words , ''the cornerstone of municipal taxation.''
Cities get only a small percentage of the property tax, most of which is
left for the schools.
City fathers get irritated with the schools' constant demand for
money, and say they ought to live within their means, as the city
·
governments do.
"There's always an Insatiable appetite for increased dollars,"
complained George Dobrea, representing the Cuyahoga County
Mayors and Managers Association.

Cau da I (Heyclelhtck-ftob e r1i0n1An lfo,.·llllut' 1. I ! 1111.
II, W81Ger....yl f8cllebMa·LuiF•·
O..cMJe.-HieiM!rJ , l : :tl.•. II, llntled
S(aiM I (Ro)'-G•K·Kirby·C.Iemu ),
1: JU•- IS. ltab II tD'Amleo- Port~~SI­
CaaNI-r\lldruUal , 3::SU!. 14. t"l'uce I
(flacller·Gu•rln-Sti·IUI•.&amp;kl, S: SUI.
15, llrlall I ('l'oYI-MII,...•&amp;rmlli"'al-

BoysOII .. Hl«hSr~ BuWthall
By U•lld PrMS ..4f'l' _. k)•l

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - One would think that an optional school district
income tax is harmless enough, 'and in fact could be helpful to the
schools as a potential revenue source.
You simply ask the voters if they approve of an additional income
tax, up to 1 percent, for their schools. If they say yes, start collecting.
If they say no, look somewhere else for the money.
The Idea is to offer to take some of the tax burden from property
owners and place it on those earning income.
But it isn't that simple, as state legislators are finding out.

·«&gt;

Prep scores

Japan tempts fate _________:..J_ac_kA_n_de_rso_n.

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publlsber

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 13. 198'

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�GAHS, Meigs to
meet in sectional
tourney tonigh~
'

Gallipolis (7-13) and Meigs
15-15) will open 1989 Rio Grande
Division II Sect lonal Tournament play with a 7 o:clock .
hardwood contest in Lyne Center
this evening.
The Marauders of first year
~oach Rusty Bookman are com·
lng off a 63-47 setback to Belpre In
.. a makeup contest at Belpre
Saturday while Gallipolis con·
,eluded regular season action
Saturday with a 46-41 loss at
Wheelersburg. Tonight's outing
will be the fourth in less than a
week lor both squads.
Bookman will probably go with
Matt Baker, 6-1 senior and Cary
Betzing, 5-lJ junior at the wings
and John Burdette, 5-7 senior at
point guard; Todd Powell, 6-4
senior, and Scott Nelgier, 6-1
senior at the posts.
·
First off the bench wiil be Ed
Crooks, 6-0 .junior and Kevin
Oiler, 6·1 senior.
Baker leads the Marauders in scoring with a 13.6 average. He Is
also averaging sii&lt; rebounds a
game. Powell leads MHS on the
boards with seven per-game. He
and Burdette are averaging 9.7
points a game.
• · Meigs finished 4·12 in tlie
Trl· Valley Conference this winter. The Marauders downed
Federal Hocking, 57-54, Vinton
, County, 57-45, Alexander, 52-47,
'· and Nelsonville-York, 55-50.
MHS beat Warren Local 53-52 ina
non-league contest two days
alter the Warriors bombed
GAHS, 71-50.
Non-conference losses were to
At hens, 81·60 and 62-55 and
Logan, 58-3{1.
MHS league losses were to
·Miller. 90-62 and 67 -61; Wellston,
60-57 and 80-58; Vinton County,
91-75. Alexander, 70-68,
Nelsonville-York 79-65, Trimble
86-59 and 69-67 in overtime and

Belpre, 64-59 and 63-47.
Meigs ls averaging 54.5 points
a game and giving up64. GAHSis
averaging 46.6 and givingup52.7.
t;:;alllpolls finished 3-7 inside
the Southeastern Ohio League.
The Blue Devils own wins over
Warren, 60-59, South Point, 58-53,
Southern, 57-46, Waverly, 37-36,
. Point Pleasant, 46-43, Jackson ,
60-47 and Marietta, 61-47.
Gallipolis lost twice to Logan,
49-47 in overtime and 62-42;
Athens, 63-37 and 50-34; and once
eac
h to Point Pleasant , 48-42,
1
Jackson, 69·62, Marietta, 48-45,
Wheelersburg, 46-41, Chesapeake, 52-35, Portsmouth, 59-36,
Greenfield, 57-37, Warren Local
71-50 and Vinton County, 49-45.
Coach Jim Osborne will proba·
bly go with Joe Owen, 6-4 senior,
Chris Rathburn, . 6-3 senior or·
Pete Anderson, 5-10 junior and
Rob Skidmore, 6-2 sophomore at
the post positions; William
Strait, 5-10 junior and Todd
Casey, 5-8 senior with Josh
Williams, 5-8 sophomore alternating at the guard positions.
Owen leads the Gal Uans In both
scoring and rebounding with 13.8
and 7.8 averages. Casey and
Williams leads the Blue Devils in
assists.
Following tonight's first -round
game, action will resume on
Wes nesday at Lyne Center when
second-seeded Rock Hill tackles
the GAHS-Meigs winner at 6: 15
p.m . In Wednesday's nightcap,
top-seeded Wellston will battle
Jackson at 8: 15.
The championship game is set
fo r 7 p.m. Friday. Winner of the
Rio sectional will face the Chilli·
cothe sectional winner next week
in Ohio University's Convocation
Center at Athens.
Admission for tonight's game
Is $2.50 per person. Tickets may
be purchased at the gate.

Eric Davis asks to be traded
CINCINN ATl (UP!) - Cincinnati Reds hitting star Eric Davis,
guaranteed to makemorethan$1
million this season, says he
wants to be traded because club
officials aren't treating him with

''respect."
Reds general manager Murray
Cook says he dismisses Davis'
trade request as just a contract
negotiating ploy.
Davis, who has led the Reds In
home runs, runs batted In and
stolen bases the past two seasons, w!ll have this year's salary
set by an arbitrator Thursday
unless he and the Reds workout a
compromise before then:
Dav is is seeking $1.65 million
this season. The Reds have
offered $1.15 million. lithe case
goes to arbitration, the arbiter
will pick either Davis' request or
the Reds' offer.
Usually, the Reds and fheir
players work out a compromise
before a case goes to arbitration,
but Davis says there's not much
negotiating going on in his case.

TVC standings

I

198S-S9 FINAL
TVC STANDINGS
(Varsity only)
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Trimble ......... l5 1 1044 913
Wellston ........ 14 2 1113 907
Vinton ..... ...... 9 7 996 923
Belpre ........... 9 7 1037 953
Alexander ..... 6 10 878 950
Miller ............ 5 11 978 1072
Nels-York ...... 5 11 949 963
Fed-Hocking .. 5 ll 881 995
Meigs ..... ....... 4 12 1o39 to63
Saturday's result:
Belpre 63 Me igs 47 (makeup)

"They are putting things on the
table and saying, 'Take it or
leave It,"' says Davis. "For
someone to do what I have done
and be treated like that, It's not
right.
"I talked to Murray !Cook) an
hour on the phone the other day .
He's telling me I haven't done
this. I haven't done · that. I'm
saying, 'Well, Murray, what
have I done?' It's as ill haven't
done anything.
"The way I look at It, he's
trying to downgrade me and I
can't let that happen. If they
don' t appreciate me, -let me go
somewhere where 1 am
appreciated.
"I just want to be treated with
some respect. I want to know that
what I 've done is appreciated. If
I'm the leai:ler of the team, I
should be treated that way, 1
want to go to spring training
happy and, right now, I'm not
happy,"
Since Davis is bound by the
arbiter's decision, he cannot be a
spring training holdout, but he
says there are "things" he can do
to express dissatisfaction with
the Reds.
"I can give them what they
must expect from me - nothing," he said. "The way they
are talking to me, it's like I'm a
utility player or something."

•

Monday, February 13, 1989

Malone
top player
in 39th tilt

The Daily Sentinei Page- 5

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2·1~9

South Cen tral Ohio
Tonight, a near 100 percent
chance of rain , possibly be

Bomb threat probed by officials
• In the Meigs Local School Dlsjrict were
Two schools
dismissed this morning after bomb threats were received. The
first call came In at 10: 15 a.m. to the Middleport E lementary
School, and was followed about10 minutes later by a call to the
Salisbury Elementary School.
In accordance with policy, school was dismissed, the
buildings were vacated and the buses called to take the children
home.

'

HOUSTON CUP!) - On a day
that the new stars of the NBA
took over from the old ones, Karl
Malone proved to be the most
dominating of all.
Malone, the powerful forward
who helped the Utah Jazz extend
the NBA champion Los Angeles
Lakers to seven games In the
Western Conference semifinals
. last season, led the conference
squad to a 143-134 victory over ·
the East and was named Most
Valuable Player In Sunday's 39th
All-Star Game.
Malone made 12 of 17 field goat
tries, claimed 9 rebounds and
scored 28 points ln 26 minutes to
win the honor, one that might
easily have gone to teammate ·
John Stockton or Seattle guard
Dale Ellis.
Stockton had )7 assists and was
a prime !actor in -. the West
. building the largest halftime lead
In the history of the event, 87-59.
"I want to split this right down
the middle.. with that little guy
(Stockton)," Malone said. "He
makes both of us look good."
Malone, stockton and Ellis
took the spotlight as veterans
Magic Johnson of the Lakers and
Larry Bird of Boston, who had
turned the All-Star game into an
extension of their storied rivalry
all decade, were absent with
Injuries.
Malone accepted the award as
his mother and stepfather, both
In tears, stood next to him.
"T look at my mom and my
steppappa and I know they are
the reason !han I'm here now,"
Malone said. "I am happy they
are happy."
Malone scored 18 points in the
first half on 8 of 9 shooting from
the field .
"I think we established ourselves in the first quarter,"
Malone said. "I've heard some of
the guys in the East say that the
West doesn't have physical
players.
''But in the West we have got a
lot offast players- guys who can
run the court in a hurry . We sent
a statement to them that we can
score with them."
And as for himself fitting in
among the physical players in
the East, Malone said:
"I think lor this one game I fit
In there with them somewhere.
But I didn't do this today by
myself.
·
"We came out here to win the
' game. We looked at the East
players yesterday in practice
and after we worked out we got
together and agreed that we
wanted to beat those guys.
"I think we were a little more
organized than they were
today."
Malone was on the floor as the
West fought of! a late East
charge and he was also on the
court as Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
made his final appearance in an
All-Star Game.
"I can say that I was there at
the mom.e nt he scored the last
bucket of the game," Malone
said.
Immediately after the game,
Malone donated the jersey he
wore to the Pro Basketbali Hali
of Fame.
Although Malone won the ho·
nor, Stockton came in for heavy
consideration as the top player in
the game.
"He !Stockton) played a heck
of a game," said East Coach
Lenny Wilkins. "Once they got
going and started shooting so
well, he had a lot of optlonns."

Valentine's Day

Auto Racing
Ken Schrader, driving a
Folgers Chevrolet, took the lead
!rom teammate Darrell Waltrip
with 12 laps remaining to win the
Busch Clash at Daytona (Fla.)
Inter national Speedway. Davey
Allison finished s~cond and
Terry Labonte third. .. . Dick
Simon, a driver and car ow ner, is
the first entrant for the 73rd
Indianapolis 500 on May 28.
Simon, lor the first time since
1970 expected to participate only
as a car owner, entered on behalf
of Dick Simon Racing of Capistrano Beach, Calif., for drivers
Arie Luyendyk ol Brookfield,
Wis., and Scott Bray ton of
Co ldwater, Mich. Stoops Racing
of Anderson, a new team, also
was a first-day !!ler.
·
Baseball
Outfielder Eric Davis, lacing
arbitration this week with the
Cincinnati Reds, says he wants to
bP traded because management
is not treating him with "re-

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Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As oll0:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

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OPEN AT 3 P.M.

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Map shows mirimum lemperatures. Atleasl50'!'o ot arry shaded area is forecast
to receive precipitation indicated
.
UPI

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weekend; three on Saturday and six on Sunday .
Saturday at 5: 03a.m., Pomeroy to Bunker Hill for Maxin e
Hart to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 12: 14 p.m. to an
auto fire on Kingsbury Roaq; Owner's name was not listed;
Middleport Fire Department at 5:33 p.m . to a garage fire on
South Fifth Avenue.
Sunday at 1:37 p.m., Tuppers Plains to Coolville Road for
· Margaret Westfall to St. Joseph's Hospital ; Syracuse atl: 56
p.m. to Dusky Street for Grace Clark to Holzer Me dical Center;
Middlepor6t at 5:58p.m. to Cole Street for Laura Scott to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10 p.m. to Couhty Road
28 for Martha Wolle to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at
10: 26 p.m . to Pomeroy-Americare Nursing Center lor Llta
Harbert to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10: 42p.m. to
Manuel Road for Edith Manuel to Holzer Medical Center. ·

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---Sports briefs--

~tmosphere
CLOSED MONDAYS

OPEN SUNDAYS

;

Am Electric Power ..... ........ 26'1.!
AT&amp;T ........ ..... ........ ............ 31%
Ashland Oil ........................ 3411.
Bob Evans, ............. , ........... 15~
Charming Shoppes ............. .16%

.,

Qty Holding Co .......... ... . ... .. 19

,

,

Federal Mogul... .................. 51
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48%
Heck's, .............. ........ ,.. ....... 'f.!
'
Key Centurion ................... .14%
Lands' End .. ............. .. ........ 28%
Limited Inc ........................ 28%
Multimedia Inc ........ ............ 81
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .16~ Shoney's Inc ........................ 8%
Wendy's IntL. ..................... 5%
, . Worthington lnd ............. .... 22%

AT 1 P.M.

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1·989 Tax

Supplement ·

Track Data and Write Reports With Ease
Mobile CT-101

''•
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The Middleport Literary Club
wlll meet at _7:30 Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Carl Horky.
Mrs. Horky wlll review the book,
"A Death In the Family" by
James Agee. For roll call
members are to respond with a
quotation about death .

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Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will
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regular session. All Masons are
urged to attend.

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Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Feb. 10 - Larry
Bumgardner, Rachael Cremeans, Mrs. Henry Henson and
son, Mrs. Kenneth Hill and son,
Vera Holliday, Donna Ingalls,
Evelyn Johnson, Mrs. Sherman
Kirby and son, Judith Moore,
Mrs. Jimmy Niday and daugh·
ter, Kelly Parsons, P au! PIckens,
Helen Sayre, Mrs. Robert Stein
and son, Penny Swisher, Mts.
Daniel Thomas and daughter,
, Jacqueline Walter, Jennifer WIF
bur and Carl Wlllet.
Births Feb. 10- Mr. and Mrs .
Randy Boggs, daughter, Oak
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Simmons, da~ghter, Reedsville.
Dllcharges Feb. 11 - Donald
Boggs, Mrs. Rick Brown and son,
Carolyn Bush, Mrs. John Dunn
and daughter, Mark Garvey,
Walter Hagy, Jamie Harless,
'Julie Kines, David Mills, Terra
Randolph, Chaela Rowell, and
Mrs. Keith Williams and son.
. BIJ1Il Feb. 11 - Mr. and Mrs.
James Oller, daughter, Bidwell .

Daisy Wheel Printer

'88 Catalog Prlc!l 419.95

Wireless Headphone
System

Chamber to meet
Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce will meet Tuesday .12
noon, at Main Street Pizza , East
Main Street, in Pomeroy.
Chamber members are urged to
take note ol the location change
and to attend Tuesday 's regular
meeting.

Computer

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'100

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Low As S40 Per Month •

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499.95

Tandy®

00

Lodge to meet

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Save 564896

59900* 799!!:0

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions- Ernest
Wingett, Racine; Nancy Gillispie, Long Bottom.
Saturday discharges - Laura
Scott.
Sunday admissions - Alva
Luckeydoo, Letart, W.Va.
Sunday discharges - Jeffrey
Stone, Will!am Hart.

To meet Wednesday

Handheld CT-301

Save •200 Save '700

Hospital news

Contact Your Advertising
Representative For Details

Don't Forget We Have
Classroom Exchange C:;ards
For The Kids.

~SNOW

A JlOSslble breaki!lg and entering at Gas Plus on West Main St .
in Pomeroy is under investigation by Pomeroy Pollee.
The incident occured overnight Sunday and was reported to
Pomeroy pollee at 6:07 a.m. Monday.

Ad Deadline Feb. 15, 1989

..

ORANGE, CA -

Pomeroy police check B &amp; E

You'll Find Savings On
COLOGNE GIFTWARE
PLUS MORE ••••••

"Overweight Patients
Lose Too Much Weight!"

40

A 1981 Ford pickup truck belonging to Larry A. Rider was
stolen Sunday night about 10 p.m. from where it was parked on
South Second Ave.
·
·
The keys had been left in the Ignition, according to Middleport
police who are Inves tigating the incident. Anyone with
information about th e truck which Is red and has a damaged left
front fender and a left missing taillight is asked to contact
police.

A Special Section
Coming February 21, 1989

Tuesday, February 14th!!!

Doctor Reportl . . . . .

Pickup truck said stolen

basic fundamentals ol basketball aS stressed by
SEVENTH GRADE EASTERN BASKETBALL
Coach
Eichinger and assistant Coach Dennis
-The Eastern Eagles' seventh grade basketball •·
Newland.
Coach Eichinger staled,"Each player
team finished the season with a super 13-1 record ,
contributed
to the learn's success and showed a lot
losing only to Hannan Trace nel!-r the end ol the
of
improvement
throughout the season as well as
season after going undefeated mos toflhe way. An
a
lot
ol
enthusiasm."
The lone loss was a narrow
outstanding effort led the little Eagles of Coach
4H2
defeat,
while
the
biggest victory was a 49-15
Don Eichinger to score a total of 565 points for a 40
win over North Gallla. Team members are Pat
point average per game, while allowing just 356
Newlan, Wes Arbaugh, Randy Kaylor, Buddy
defensively lor a mere 25 per game. Great offense
Kenney, Rober! Reed, David Koenig, Scott
and good defense spelled out the success oft he this
Golden, Joey Coats, Matt Martin and Jared
future Eastern team. The team worked hard on
Ridenour.
man-to-man defense and most Importantly the

heavy at times, with lows of 40
to 4S and southwest winds 15 to
25 mph. Tuesday , an 80 percent
chance of rain, with highs In
the mid-50s.

Weather

conunued from page 1

•

CARDS

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

r--Local news briefs...- -

•

...

Miller sasters hot
topic in at WSU
POMEROY ~ Not much has
been said about the Wright
brothE:rS these days, at least In
the world of sports, but in the
hometown of the Wright's at
Dayton, the "Miller Sisters" are
a hot topic and a big part of the
Wright State University girls'
basketball team.
The Millers, Jenny and Julie,
are the daughters ol former
Meigs High principal Jlm Miller
and 1987 graduates of Meigs
High.
In this their sophomore year,
the 1 Millers are enjoying muchsuccess for the 7-11 Raiders .
Jenny gets to see more action
than 1\er look alike ' sister, bUt
both are a big part of the team.
After a victory over Evansville, Jenny was named player of
the week as shed led the Lady
Raiders with 14 points. Jenny
averages 4.5 points per game and
four rebounds, seeing action In
alllS games this season.
In more limited action Julie
·averges one point and one
rebound per game.

Monday, February 13. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

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Welcome

i.

.,

'

�By The

The Daily Sentinel .

d

Monday. February 13, 1989
Page-6

Meigs Co4nty school honor rolls
The third slx weeks grading
period honor roll at the Salem
Center Elementary School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above In all their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
First Grade: Scooter Ashburn,
Orion Barrett, Scott Colwell, Les
Hale, Stephanie Kopec, Brandy
Laudermllt, Erik Metheney,
Laura Payne, Jeremiah Smith,
Richard Tackett, Daniel Young,
Adam Tillis
Second Grade: Tara Butcher,

Andrea Dunfee, Lori Klrinlson,
Bridget Vaughan
Third Grade: Leigh Ann Canterbury, Amanda Napper, . Re·
becca Russell
Fourth Grade: Stacy Silvers,
Cynthia Jo Sandy, Jennifer
Ervin
Fifth Grade: Melissa Eriewine, Jake Gannaway, Mike
Jarvis
Sixth Grade: Crystal Vaughan,
Kim Janey ·

DAR ESSAY WINNERS - The American
IUs lory Essay Contest winners were honored at
Friday night's meeting of the Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, held at the Heath United Methodist
Church. Receiving cerUflcates from Mrs. John
Rose, chapter chairman, were from the left,
Erika Meadows, Portland, sixth grade, second
place, for essay on Paul Revere; Chris Rood, sixth

grade, Tuppers Plains, third, essay on Washing·
ton; David Fetty, sixth grade•. Chester, first,
essay on Paul Revere; Brandl Reeves, fifth
grade, Chester, first, essay on Deborah Sampson;
Laura Penhorwood, fifth grade, Bradbury, third
place; C.J. Harris, fifth grade, Portland, second
·place, essay on Molly Pitcher. Reeves and Fetty
as first place winners in their respective grades
were also awarded ribbons ,

POMEROY - Pomeroy PTO the first three nights, ·and at
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. , in the ' Carmel Church the last three
nights.
school gymnasium.
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and the
Ladles Auxiliary will meet Man·
day, 7 p.m., · (It the hall at 124
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .

DARWIN - l)edford Township
Trustees will meet Monday, 7
p.m., at the town hall.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce will
hold their monthly meetingTues·
day, noon, at a new location,
Main Street Pizza. All members
are urged to attend.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday.
7:30p.m., at the town hall.
HARRISONVILLE - A free
blood pressure clinic, sponsored
by the Harrisonville Senior Cit!·
zens, will be held Tuesday, 10
a.m . to noon, at the Harrisonville
town hall.

Missionary service
HARRISONVILLE - A mls·
slonary service will be held
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel,
State Route 684. Pomeroy.
Speaker will be Rev.. David
Jones, Papua, New Guinea.
Everyone welcome.
Spring retreat
ZANESVILLE - Registration
information lor the W.~Jmen's
Aglow International, Sou,!h Cen·
tral Ohio Area Spring Retreat, is
available by writing Corrine
Hartmeyer, 1046 Country Club
Drive, Zanesville, 43701, or cal·
ling Hartmeyer at 614-453-4635,
. or by contacting your local Aglow
Chapter. The retreat will be held

.....
i!i·--

RUTLAND - · The Leading
Creek Conservancy District wlll
hold Its monthly meeting on
Tuesdlly at 11 a .m.

~AU.
..
1 .......
-t O ......
fiiiOAY thr-o~ tiiUitSDI\Y
...

00

ONLY$6
Craft show
TUPPERS PLAINS - A craft
show will be held March 18, from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m .. at the ' V.F.W.
Post In Tuppers Plains. Display
tables may be rented lor$10. For
Information, call Mary Bryant at
985-3376.

Elementary PTO. The play will include six songs
by the entire class with these students, left to
right, Terri Smith, Jeremy Felty, and Roxane
Williams being featured in "I Uke the Way That I
Look."

Rutland·Garden Club has meeting
The Region 11 meeting to be
hosted by Meigs County Garden
Clubs on April 8 at the Hocking
Valley Motel in Nelsonville was
announced at the Rutland
Garden Club meeting held re·
cently at the home of Margaret
Belle Weber.
During the meeting plans were
made for making valentine
plates to be taken to the Meigs
County Infirmary with Stella
Atkins to serve as chairman.
l)onatlons were made to Amerl·
flora, Waukeena, and the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
Scholarship fund.
Reports were given on holiday
projects with Pauline Atkins
reading a thank you note from
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
Center for things taken there at
Cllrlstmas. Also read was a note
of thanks from the Harrisonville
PTO and teachers for the tree
planting on the school grounds.
The Christmas lighting contest
sponsored by the three Ru !land
garden clubs and judged by Betty

Dean and
discussed.

Pat

Holter

Revivals ·
RACINE Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Churches will
be holding revivals · services
beginning Sunday. Feb. 19, at
7:30 p.m., and continuing
through Friday, Feb. 24. Servl·
ces wllJ . be held at 'the Sutton
Church, Raclne-Bashan Road, on

was

Raccoon Creek and Tycoon
Lake.
Stella Atkins gave for the
Neva Nicholson and Mrs.
program entitled "A Favor Re·
Weber reported on the plantings
turned for the Birds." She
at the mini-park In lower
suggested keeping a steady llow
It was noted that
Rutland.
of bird seed and sunflower seed
flowers for churches were fur·
through the winter. She said the
nished by Pauline Atkins, Pearl
birds don't care what the Ieeder
Canaday, and Marcia Denison.
looks like as long as there is feed
For roll call members ans·
Inside. She also talked about
wered with birds they , are feed·
keeping water available.
lng. Mrs. Weber had 'devotions
Binda Diehl gave hints on
using "Language of Love" fol·
replacing DDT with other pestl·
lowed by prayer, the club creed
cldes, a technique which Is
and collect. The traveling prize
credited with brinign the bald
sent by Octa Ward was won by· eagle back from near extinction.
Margaret Parsons. Mrs. Weber
Dorothy Woodard talked on overwill provide one for the next
watering plants and said that
meeting.
humidity plays a large part in
Pauline Atkins displayed a ·how much water they should
winter arrangement featuring
have. She suggested using a
buds. Bernice Nelson won the
watering gauge.
door prize.
Neva Nicholson's paper was on
Neva Nicholson read an article propagation of plants.
on the bald eagleofGallla County
Members of the club met at
noting that the eagle has been
noon at the the Weber home lor a
seen along the shoreline from the luncheon preceding the meting
Ohio Power Co. to Crown City to hosted by Mrs. Weber and
Bernice Nelson.

Bradbury, Norman and Allegra
Will, Herman and Beu Ia h Grate,
Webb and Es !her Carson, Wlb
and Ruth Young, Mirlnda Young,
Eleanor Hoover, Dorothy Young,
Steve, Donna, Gabriel and Sarah
Dawn Jenkins, Johnnie and Mitzi
Oldaker. She also received greet·
lngs from her sister, Maude
Selman, Houston, Texas, and her
brother and sister-In-law, Claude
and Elizabeth Delaney of Cosby,
Tenn. who were unable to attend.

'

SUNOAV PAPER

Health Desk
•

•

larl A. r.llltr II, CPA
818 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
992-7270

•ACCOutmNG
•BOOKKEEPING
•FINANCIAL STAIUIENTS
•TAlES
•PAYIOLL

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

"WE HA~E HEARINO AIDS"

What ·D-

IIed Module Do?

•checks your blood pressure
and pulse.
ehllps calculate your ideal
weight.
ehllps naluat1 your risk of
· a .heart aHack.
egiviS you informalion about aerobic conditioning.
•provides you a personaHud stress analysis.
eprovides information about preKription mtldicalions.
·eanalyus your l!festyle - so you ca11 make improvlf!ltnts that
· contribult to your good health.
·
•provides you valuable information through its "Health Facts
Digest."
•

Prescription Shop
992-6669

271 NORTH

MIDDUPOU
OliO

(304) 675-1!44 .

I

ilhat Is "Met! Module"?
Mtcl Module is an 11citing
MW CDI!CIIpt to help you
keep track ol your own
good health. instrt your
"Health Card" and Med Module reads your blood pussun and pulse. Plus it giYis
you i....-tant health informatitllt in a variety of ways.

..

2:00P .M . TUESDAY
2'00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P .M . THURSDAY

5556575859-

Ser v11:es
11 1 21 3· 141616' 17-

2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

County
Arva Code 614

MaigsCoumy
Area Code 614

Mason Co., WY
Area Code 304

446 - Gallipolls ,

992- Middleport

675- Pt . Pleasant

367- Cheshire

Pomeroy
985- Chester

458 - Leon
576- Appla Grove
773- Mason

G~llia

388-· Vinton
246.o... Rio GrandQ
266- Guyan DiSt.
643-- Arabia Oist.
. 379 - Walnut

843- Portland
247 - Letart Falls

949- Raeine
742 - Rutland
667- Coolville .

Help Wanted
Situltion Wanted
lnsurance
Businesl Trainin~
Schools &amp; lnstructton
Aadlo. TV &amp; CB Repair
Miseellaneous

21-Busin•s Opponunity
22- Monay to Loan

882- New Haven
895- letart
~37 - Buffalo

23- Prof•lional Setvicet

Real Estate
31 - Hom• for Sale
32- Moblle Homes tor Sale
33- Farms for Sale

34-Bus!neu Buildings
36 - lots &amp; Acreage
.
38- Real Estate Wanted

ljf@lfid
41 - Houus for Rent
42- Mobile Homes for Rent

Get Results Fast
PUBLIC NOTICE
1ion. Rule 3745·81·21,

Ohio Adminittrativa L .. -te.
to routinety monitor the
microbiological qualjty of
the drinking water in their
diltribution •ystem in order
to inaure that aafe water is
being supplied to the
consumer.
. The Viii- of RuUand is
required to collect •nd examhte a minimum of one
microbiological N~ple each
month. One 11mple wa1
collected an" analyzed for
the month of November.
1988 and w• not able to be
~illyzed for coliform bectafia. A check aampla wa
raauirad but was nOt collected. In addition. no aampl• were enetvzed during
ihe month of December,
t1988. A safe analysis wa1
'made in January, 1989.
The water depanment haa
blum 1tepa to ineure that
adequate monitoring will be
'Performed in the future.

.(21 6, 13, 20, 3tc

Public Notice

of Ohio, Euttm

Civil No. C2·BB·0650, UN!·
TED STATES OF AMERICA
·-vs- JOHNIE C. DO·
NAHUE II, 81 ol., I will offer
1for

~ale

to the highest bidder

•on April 12, 1989 a1 f2:00

Noon at the front door of the
Meigt County Courthouse.
Pomeroy, Ohio, iha follow.ing dncribed real property:
Situated in the State of

ttfollowing real estate. being
~ n Syrecuae Village, and in

•100 Aero lo1 No. 296,

Sutton Township, Meigs
~County, Ohio; and described
'IB followt: Beginning at a 2
lnch pipe on the southeat
corner of e 9.8 acre tract of
t1111d deeded from John
~McCoy to Archie Lee. r•
corded ,in Deed Book No.

239, Page 783. Doed Re·

tcords

of

Meigs

County.

Ohio; thence Woo1 348.65
fee1; thence North 13.9

"feel, the place of beginning
~tor this description; thence

' South 78 dog. 11' Wes11 00
"teet: thence North 5 dog.
•24' Wos1, 83 fHI; lhance
"north 87 dog. 11' Eoo1100
,. feet: thence South 6 deg.

• 24' Eut83 fNt 1otheplace

~ of

beginninng. containing
The
fur,.niahed by Hom• Hy_.l.
'' Regittered Suurveyor No.
~ .19 acres. more or la81.
~ abo11e description Wll

~ 2274.

PROPERTY
AD·
• DRESS, Syrocun. Ohio

~46779.

72- Trucks -tor Sale
73- Vans &amp; 4 WO ' s
74-Motorcvcle~

75- Boatl &amp; Motors for Sale
76- Auto Pans 8t Accessori•
77- Auto Repeir
78 - Camping Equipmeflt
79 - Campen &amp; Motor Hornes

Services
PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
Now lo&lt;atian:
161 Harth Sacond
Middloport, Ohio • 57 60
SALES &amp; SERVICE

81 --Home Improvements

82- Piumbing &amp; Hosing
83-hc 811ating

84- Eiect:rical &amp; Refrigeration
85- 0ener•l Hauling

48- Equipment for Rent
49- For le•e

87 ~ Upholsterv

86- Mobile Home Rapaif

We Carry FishinG Supptl•

Pay Your Phone
Cable Blllo Here
IUS!Nill PHONE

Public Notice
Real Estate General

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio

February 3, 1989
Contract Sales

legal Copy No. 89·128
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
FFG·OOOF(38)
RSG·OOOR(291)
Sealed propouls will be
received at the office of the

Director of the Ohio DePIIrt·
ment of Transportation. Columbua, Ohio, until 10:00

A.M .. Ohio Standard Time.

Tuooday, March 6, 1989.
for improvement in:

Ath!Jnl, . Gallie. Hocking,
M4Hga, Monroe, Morgan.
Noble, Vinton and Washing-

ton Countin. Ohio, on aec-

1ion ATH·50·19.08 on U.S.

Route 60 in Athens County
and other various r utes and
sections in Athenl, Gallia.
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan. Noble. Vinton and
W•hingtan Counties, by

applying re1roreflllC1ive po-

lyester pavttment marking
materiel for center linee and

lane linea.

Project length: 0.00 fHI
Work langth: various f!let
or various miles.
Pavement Width: varies.

The Ohio Deportment of

Transportation hereby notifies all bidders that it will
affirmatively insure that in
any contract entered into
pursuant to thi1 fdverlite·
ment, minority buain•• enterprises will be afforded ful
opportunity to submit bide in
r•ponae to thi1 invitaUon
and will not be di.criminlted
a.gain•t on the ground&amp; of
race, color, or national origin
in coneideratktnn for
an
award.
"Minimum wage ratH for
this project have bean predetermined 11 required by law
and are set forth in the bid

porposal."

"The date set_for com pi•
tion of this work shall be stit
forth in the bidding
propo~al."
·
Each bidder shall be re·
quired to file with his bid a
certified check or c•hiw'a
check for an am :Junt equal to
!iva per cont
bid, but In
no event more than fifty
thouund dollilrt, or 1 bond
for ten per cent of hi1 bid,
payabte to the Director.

!!!Jtlo

Bidder mu01 apply, on 1he

proper forms, for quelifica·
tion1 at leMt ten dey•· prior
to the date Ht for opening
bidl in accordance with

Bldo wll be occep1ed un1i1
12:00 noon EST on Thur•
day, March 2. 1989. for a .
1972 Model M·BO Dump
Truck off•ed by the Villago
of Svracuae. Bldo, inolde o

-t614!

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Moigo Coun1y Health i HARRISONVILU - Real~
Department would like to · nice 14x70 Schultz Mobile
Home w~h 2 bedrooms. lireisaua the following advisOJY
as directed by Chapter
place in iving room, equipped
3701 ·29-03 of tho Ohio
kitchen, dishwasher, big2 car
Administrative Code.
garag~ storage building and
{A) Any person propoting
a
nice 1.06 acre lot ASKING
to create a subdivision thall
$33,000.00.
submit to the bOard of
01 to 3701-29·21 of 1he
Ohio Sanitary Code can be
adequatetv met. before any
of the lots in the subdivision
are sold or offered for ule.
whether or not such ule
enteila a transfer of title or

doed.
(B) No person shalt install
hou~&amp;hold

aawage diapoaal
sy•em• In new aubdivi-aions, unless il ia to be
impracticable or inadviHble
by the board of health and
the Ohio Envtronmental Protection Agen_c y to install a
central aewagesyatem.

!C) II houaohoid sewage
disposal systems are pro-

poaod, the plans shell show:
(1) The 1otal lend area 10
be used;
{2)

location and size of

lots;
13) The properties and

character~tlcs of the toils in
the tubdivilion;

(41 Depth to normal

ground water tabla and rock
ttrata;

AND

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
111 W•1 Sa&lt;and, Pom•oy

992-6720
Howard · L. Writesel

IIIDDLEPORT- Good Street
- This nice H? st!l)' home
!natures l4 bedrcxms, m!f
dern k~choo wRh dining ba:,
all sttYms &amp; many other features. lndudes lr.~ihr kt Call
for Appointment. $26,500.00.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Guttars
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

MORNING STAR ROAD- A
fresh newly built home is
just the ticket to enjoy the
coming spring. Quality construction ranch with 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, elec. heat
pump, Andersen windows,
beautiful front porch, and
garage on a large lot.
located in a growing devel·
. opment on Morning Star
Road. $59,900.00.

949-2168
2-10-'88·1 mo. pd.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At R-onabla Pricts"

POMEROY- Abeautiful m!f
dern k~chen compliments
th~ 3 bedroom horne. Full basemoot, newer back deck, lots
of closet !'pic~ nice wood·
wtY~ PRICE REDUCED'
$41,900.00.

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160
Day~

(51 location of all bodies

TUPPERS PLAINS - Very
neat 3 bedroom ranch with
attached garage. 1 acre of
ground. FmHa Approved.
this or ad)acent lots within
$39.000.00.
one hundred feet of tho 1
propoHd tubdivlslon, or any ! EASTERN DISTRICT - Spa·
other lnform1tion which 1 · cious living with privacy on a
may affect the •nst.llation or : lleadood road. Large home
opero11on of houaehotd sow· 1 w!h
4 bedrooms, family room,
age dispoaal system&amp; or the
dining
room. living room with
enforcemont of rules 3701 · I
29·011o3701·29·21 ofthe i fireplac~ nice krtchoo cabi·
Ohio Sanitary Code;
i· net~ Many other features.
(8) Existing and finished I $38,500.00.
grade of all 1a11.
I
tD)If 1he propooed subdi· I RIVERVIEW - Here is a
vision is to be served by I good home with a beautiful
either a s., itary MWerage
System or 1 water aupply ! view, basement. garage, 3
sv11om or both, pions oholl ' bedrooms. MUST BE SEEN!
$27,900.00.
1&gt;0 submi11ed to the Ohio

Left ue on
Feb. 13, 1987.

surer, Vllloge of Sv.recuae,
SvrecuN. Oh. 45779.
FEB. 13, 20, 2tc

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
... . . _ llult
"Free Eotlm11111"
I PH. 949-2101
1 or Res. 949-2160
~0 SUNDA YCALIS'
3·11·1fn

NEW LISTING - Third
Street -lliddleport- To·
tally remodeled 2·3 bed·
room, one floor home. Beau·
tiful cond~ion. Carpet throu·
ghoul. New wiring vinyl sid·
ing 1 car garage, insulated
and all storms. $29,900.00.

•

NEW USnNG - POMEROY
- (2) 50x290 lot~ vacant
· wound. with eledric. water,
city sewer available. $5,900.00
Henry E. Cleland

•••

,,

SALES &amp; SERVIa
U. S. H. 50 EAR
GUYSVILI, OliO
61.·662-3121
Authorized John
Deere. Now Holland.
Buoh Hog Form

)

992-7479

Equpmant Dealer.

Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy. Ohio _

hra E••IP••'

I

POMEROY -EAGLES

I
CLUB
1 224 E. MAIN ST.
1
992·9978
I JHUIS. E.l. 6:45 , ...

SliM &amp;

I

I·
I

1
I

E.l. 1:45 P.M. 1
I SUN.DOOI
Pltll
I 2 H.D. FREE w~h coupon and II
I pun:hase of min. H.C. Pack·
1... lim~ 1 coupon per cus- I
1tcrner per binF sess1on.
~

Wo Pay •so.oo P• Gam• 1
Our 110 Ptoplo •u.oo
1
Per Game
1.._UL IOOS-32
2·3·ffn 1

__________,

1
1

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
Rt. 124 ..twNn Wilkuvala and Salem Center
EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.
12 Gaugt Shotgun• Only
Factory Chokt
STlllcnY ENFOlaDI

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

ao0:\

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associates
PUBLIC
RELATIONS

INDUSTRIES,

INC.

108 High Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone(~ 14) 992-2922
2·3-'89-1 mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE. OHIO

Balhanlluldlng

EVERY ·
SM. liGHT
6:30P.M.

Factory Chob
12 Gaugt Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforced
10·7·11•
1.-

1·31-'88·1 mo.

PEl LOAD .
DELIVERED
LIGHT HAUUNG DONE

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Foliage Plants
Baskets
$6 AND UNDER
EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 MI. past
Sout._m High s.•oo1

•W81here •Dryers
•Ranges •Fmzer•
•Refrigerators
"Must It Repairable"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
915-3561

949-2612

We Service All Mek11

PUBUC
' RECYCUNG

Jo's Gift Shoo

141111 ...... St.

POillf Ploaoallf, W.Va.
We Buy Aluminum

Cono. Glut, Brut,
Copper and More
MON.-F Rl.: 9 am-6 pm
SAT.: I am-12 Hoon
304~675-3161
Far Mart Information
1-24·'11-t ....

SYRACUSE, OHid
Evervthing Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•Flower Pots
•Bird Betha
•Yard Ornaments

Becauu of Cold Welllher
Everythinc Inside.
Rinc Door Bell for Service
2-7-1 ma.

LASHLEY
SERVICE

1 MI. East of St. lt. 7

on 241 at Chester
WELDING
AUTO&amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY&amp;
WRECK REPAIR

(LEAN Alu.IUM
StiETS '""'"""''........ 47' IlL
(LEAN AlUIIINUM
IlL

AWIINUM

• VEIIAGE UHS _,, 46• ilL
IIONY
SIIET ....- ...... 5' to 30• ._
IIONY CAST-- 3' It 20' IlL
ST MNlESS _ ............ 20• •
Located Off Bypeso
At Jet. of Rto. 7 •
143,

We can r~air and recore radiators and
htottr corn. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wt olso
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middlepor1, Ohio
1·13·1fc

Ann uuncement~
3 Announcements

w•

We
hatl ooll for 1mergen.;
HEAP. Mol go Cou n1V Dop1. af

Human Servtcee. tnd HEAP
... ouch... We eM give you
prompt deltv...-t•. E111Ce11ior Sell
Worlcl. Inc. Pom•ov. Ohio.·
814-992·3891 .
Heyea Re.Jiy

Jeck W. Cera.y--Relhor.
814-992·2403 .. e14-992· .
2708. Call for lletlngs or •••·

OF IUS..ESS

NOW OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

992-5114

RADIATOR
SERVICE

1/22188/tfn

mo.

Ave.

1·28-'88-tfn

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE

So. 2nd

Middleport, Ohio

l-1·'11· tin

GREENHOUSE

#1 COPPER _........... 16• I~
#2 COPPEll _........... 65' I~

UCINE
FilE DE".

319

CALL 992·6681

$3 s

NIASE Certified Mech.,ic
CALL 99~-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
CertHiod

CAST __ ,,,................ 40C

992-6282

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

ch•r

GUN SHOOT

Reasonable Rates.
Fully Insured

FIREWOOD

Most Foreign lind
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Rep•irs

1-27~"88·1

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

MEIGS

(Subject to
Without Notice

Mom. We Mia You
Dtnnll, Mary &amp; PIUI
Cl•dettt &amp; Christopher
Nettie &amp; F11n
Family &amp; Frienck

~

.•Mobile Home
Pans
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

.----------...,
I · BINGO
I·

BOGGS

MOBILE
HOME PARK

Paying taday
Jan. 13r 1989

NEW LISTINGS NEEDED Wt have buJirS for lleip
Countr Plaperty. Ust with
us far b•t mutts.

•

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAILABLE

Meigs Industries. Inc., in addition to provid·
ing general office and commercial cleaning,
now offers
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
u a service.
We will contract to clean your home on a fixed
schedule, attending to items you desire.
We provide full liability coverage, workers
compan ..tion, and pay all tax
requirements.
FOI A PIICE QUOU CAlL:
.
LARRY HOFFMAN - PH. V'~'~·"'

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

992-6191

-•

ltlprt, Ohio
CONSIGNMENTS Wii.COM£
PATRICK H. BLOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304-421-7245

or at
Veterans Memorial Hoi&gt;pital
, Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

RECYCLING

Jelll Trussell ..... 94H660
Dottie Tumer ..... 992-5692
Jo Hill .............. 915-4-466
Offict................ 992-2259

,•.
•"
•

Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS
4·16-16-tfn

of water. stream•. ditchn.
sewer1. drain tile. eKiating
and proposed potable watlll'
aupply sources and llna on

Revised Code.
(2113. 14. 16, 18, 17. 5tc
In Memoriam
2

HOWES GROVE PARK

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

1·13-'89-lfn

LADIES WANTED!
PERM,· CUT, STYLE
ONlY$27
Plus FREE .....
I Tanni111J Session and
1 S.Hion at Fit &amp; Trim
TOP OF THE STAIRS

Public Notice

health. for approval. plana
clearlY ahowing that the
provisions of rules 3701-29-

:r:

t ·11

.BERNARD B. HURST
DIRECTOR
t2)13. 20

Plan• and apicificattona Agency u required by aac~
era on fila in the Oep1rtment tlon 8111 .44 of the Ohio

Public Notice

992-6550
IE!IDENCE PHONE
(6 U)

of Transportation and ·the
otfi·c e of the District Deputy
Director.
Tho Director reserves the
right to reject any and all
bids.

Chapter 5625 Ohio Rovloed
Environmental Protection
Code,

Terms of Sale: Cuh
!"On dey of sale. I rMerve the
11' right to reiaet
any and all
: bids. Robert W. Foster,
• United State&amp; Marthal,
~, S thhern District of Ohio. ••led
envelope marked
~·s:~ect to reel 81tate taxes, 1 "Dump ~ruck Bide.. : are to
J.. penaltiet aand aM:ument 1 be submitted or m•led to:
~ not yet due and payable.
Janice law80n, Clerk~tree-

·13) 13 20. 27; (4) 3, 41o
'

.l!.s

71 - Au101 fof Sale·

48- Space for Rent
47 - Wanted to Rent

Public Notice

or 0.00 mile.

NOTICE OF SALE: By virtue
'pf an Otds lor Sole isllll!d on
1he 14th dll'f of December.
't 988, (JV the United Sta1•

$1695
Transportation

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:DO P.M.

1-1 1·'19·1 mo.

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

63- Uvestock

64- Hay &amp; G~•in
66- Seed &amp; Fertilize,

PUBLIC
AUCTION

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

~

9/ 20 / tfn 1

61 - Farm Equipment
62- Wanted to Buy

•s- Furnished Rooms

Public water supplies are
require~ by State Regula-

1115/dn

Dependable HeariDg Aitl_Sales &amp; Ser1ic•

SUPPUES
Muulsloeding Supplloo
...... Gun Supplie
Guns • Ammo . Slvgs
22 Ammo
R1. 124 E•t of Rutland
Acrooo Happy Hollow Roed
Ph.-614·742-2355

Building Supplia&amp;
Pets for Sale
Muticallnatrumants
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
For Sale Of' Trade

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

43- Farms for Rent
44- Apartment lor Rent

Public Notice

1 1 . 1 8-' RR-ttn

C!J ·Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

AIID

18- Wamed To Do

following telephone exchanges ...

;ohio, Coun1y of Moigs: The

for your good health ..

2 :00P .M . MONDAY

-

Reference•

MODEIN GUN

53 - Antiques
54-M!sc. Merchandise

En111loymP.nl

Classified pages .cover the

:.oN ilion. at Cofumbua. Ohio 11

uleTM

9 - Wanttd to Buy

-

51-Household Goods

ljhfiUIM611

District

.
I

FRIDAY PAPER

bistrid Coun for the South•n

KElLER
BUSINESS SERVICE

Young birthday observed recently
Alice Young celebrated her
73rd birthday recently at the
Overbrook Center In Middleport.
There for the celebration were
her husband.' Frank, her daugh·
ter and son-in-law, Patty and
Ralph Clark, and her grandsons,
Robert Carson and Richard
Clark.
Ice cream cake and punch
were served to Tina Grtmm,
Joseph A. and Rowena Young,
Clarice Erwin, Margaret Belle
Weber, Charles and Jeanne Anne

THURSDAY PAPER

RT .35 VEST

AU.IUJ'III,IO

Sal•

"A classifi ed adllenisement placed in The Daily S'ntinel (ell ·
cep1 - cl•sified displey. Business Card and legal notices)
will also appear in the Pt. Ple•ant Regiater and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune, r. .ehing over 18,000 hom.,.

TUESDAY PAPER
WEONESOAV PAPER

985-4141

loADING

62- Sportlng Goods

7 - Y•d S~e (paid in adl.lancel
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auct ion

- 11 ,00 A.M . SATURDAY

Seam less Gutter

Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Eotimates
Call 992-2772

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

HILLSIDE MUIILE

Merchandise

4 - Giveaway
5 - Happy Ads
6 - lost and Found

da;- aher publicalion ro make correction.

•

992 611

$25.00

Mastic &amp; Certlinteed 1
Vinyl Sidin1
Roofin1

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

. DUllY IT, IUAOIII

$60.00

INSULATION

CHESTEI, OHIO

ads.

2 - ln Memory
3 - Annoucemeots

"Ads 1hat must be paid in advance are
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

•MfTAL 8UilDINQI:

HOUSI"Q. -'PT. PRD.JECTS
SINCE J969

8700
$10.00
$15.00

S21 .00
$51 .00

1- Catd of Thenks

for errors first day ad runs in paper) . Call before 2 :00p.m.

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER

28-36 WORDS

se.oo ·
S13.00

$,S333 .00
.00
11

"Sentinel is not respOnsible tor errors after first dfli . (Check

Yard

$5.00

J&amp;L

MARCUM CONTRACTING

for consecutivtt runs. broJte;n up days will be charged

"Price of •d for all capltalletltiJI is double price of ad cost .
•7 point line type only uted.

PIW:E

Phonol oMll· 4S2C

3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

run 3 d8;' 1 at no charge.

In Memoriam

11-26 WORDS

$4.00
$5.00
se.oo

1 DAY

POLICIES
.
"Ads outs+de Meigs, Galli• or Mason cOunti• must be prepaid.
"Receive $ .50 discount for ads paid in advance.
•free ads - Givuwav and Found ads under 15 words will be

531 JACICSON

.,......._

0 · 15 WORDS

COIIIIERCIAI.

.CUSTOM IC.ITCHlNI. IATHI
-EXTINSIVE RlMODEUNQ
•VINYL SIDING. ftOOANO

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED

March 10·12 at Deer Creek State
Park Lodge, Mt. Sterling. Jeanie
Balwln, from Seattle, Washing·
ton, will be the keynote speaker.

This
Valentine's Day
Give the Perfect
Gift .••A Med
Module Membership

MIDDLEPORT - A b'ean
dinner, sponsred by Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, will be held Tuesday in the
basement of the Middleport
Masonic Temple.

RUTLAND PTO ENTERTAINMENT - The
'fifth grade students of Mary O'Brien at the
Rutland Elementary School will be presenting the
play, "Only Love Is Spoken Here" at the 7 p.m.
meeting tonight (Monday) of the Rutland

•

Community calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY- A meeting of the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
members will be held at 7:30
Monday.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNii: GREG I. IOUllt
,~,
GENERAL

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

The district meeting to be held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Chester was
announced when Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, met
recently at the hall.
Virginia Lee, councilor, pre·
sided at the meeting which
opened In rltuallstlc form . Scripture was taken from Psalm 92. ·
Several members wm;e reported
Ill Including Betty Young and
Ethel Orr, both confined to their
homes by illness, Goldie Krack·
omburger. · hospitalized, and
Lora Damewood, recuperating
at home following
hospitalization.
It was announced that a silent
auction will be held by the good of
the order committee at the next
meeting. Members were also
reminded to take gifts for the ·
district spring rally ~
To . close the meeting, Erma
Cleland read "Remember."
Refreshments were served to
Alta Ballard, Erma Cleland, Mae
McPeek, Charlotte Grant, Sandy
White, Kathern Baum, Thelma
White, Marcia Keller, Doris
Grueser, Faye Kirkhart, Vlrgi·
nla Lee, 'Betty Roush, Mary
Holter, Beulah Maxey, Jo Ann
Baum, Esther Smith, and Ada
Bissell.
•

The Daily Sentinel-Page-?

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cla·s sifie

Dof A
· meeting held

Bridal shower given
REEDSVILLE - A bridal ringer, Beth Kennedy, Carolyn
shower honoring Jodi A. Smith. Teaford and Roca Reed, Sue
Douglas, Kay and Darlene Bar·
bride-elect ol Brian D. Bissell.
was held recently at the Reeds· ton, Ruth Ann Balderson, Kay
Long, Grace Weber, Sue Suttle,
ville Methodist Church.
,The wedding colors were car· Pearl Baker, Nell Wllson, Emma
rled out in !be decorations by the Durst, and Barb Master.
Sending gifts were Diana ·
hostesses, Connie Smith, Bobbie
Reed, Dolly Reed, and Teresa . McLevey, Sandy West, Hattie
Sml:h. Games were played with Rockhold, Bonnie Richardson,
prizes being awarded. Vivian Shiela and Betty Buchanan,
Diane Blse, Tammie Kimes,
Humphrey won the door prize.
Refreshments were served· to Pauline Barr, Norma Rockhold ,
Vivian Humphrey and Jennifer, Mary Hunter, Brandon Fitch,
Sylvia Curtis, Jenny Reynolds, Carolyn Bissell, Lillian Pickens,
Carolyn Bissell, Elizabeth Pat Martin, Erika Boring, Betty
Stnith, Melissa Smith, Barbie Donovan, Alberta Edwards,
Smith, Debbie Smith, Barbara Frances Holsinger, Karen
Burns, Olive Smith, Elizabeth Walker, Robin Testerman, Jean·
nle Watson.
Duffy.
Betty Spencer, Frances Reed,
Kim Reed. Carolyn Boring,
Dorothy Cashdollar, Pearl Po·
Wanda Kimes, Heather Rock·
well, Betty Gaul, Opal Wickham,
hold·, Mary Blse, Shelia Curtis,
Mary Talbott, Betsy Herald,
andy Cowdery, Theda·and Char·
Mace! Barton, Maxine White·
lene Dailey, Robin Putman,
head, Linda Fitch, Ruth Durst,
Carol Kanawosky, Judy Elkins; VIrginia Walton, Carla Soulby,
Tammie Boyd, Connie Soulsby,
Phyllis Reed, Terra Barringer,
Margaret Cauthorn, Ruby
Tina Chevalier, Marjorie
Brewer, Janie Fitch, Sally Brewer, Debbie Weber, C_athy
Brown, Diane Jones, Mamie Masters, Maxine Hoffman,
Buckley, Nancy Buckley .
Frana Riffle, Ruth Grate, llla
Wendy Wilfong, Marlene Put· Westfall, Janet Shields and
man, Lucllle Smith, Debbie Bar· Karen Wheeler.

Monday, February 13, 1989

40

3 8 44

~~S~E·xr•eF

4

Giveaway

•••tttul ofct.r Cock• sp.,.leL
Prlfw to give ewey to old.coupfa Good wtth ehlldren. Cell

"4-387· 7fll9.

7 wk. old Tom ldttans. Gentle i..
lltt• trained. Clll 814-387•
7120.
While German Shepherd pup, 8

wlto. old. Fomelo. COli 814- 3e70t83.
Bleck &amp;. tan Doberman with..,.·
• tall cropped. frtmlfe. 1 yr. old.
Bl.ttk Leb R.tr.._,ll', mala. Cell
814-387-0183.

1 ve• old black male lib. &amp; 2
ve• o'd ,..,... ,.. to glv_.way:
Call 814·218-8504 .. 114288-9387.
2 bedroom. fur"ilhed. West..-, ·

dryer, air. t221S. per month ptu1
d!lpOitt end utllltl•. 814-192-

7479.

Smell cretm

colorect,

Dachshund·tv.- pupp;. Strll¥.

Ooodwnh kids. &amp;14-192-eno.

n.-

Pup pi• to give to tlovinJI home.
old. 304-1711-4831 .

To Give A'-Wy young smaH

GUN SHOOl .
EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M .
RACINE

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.9-19-lllfn

IP"Yed hou•dDgtogoodhorne,
304-87&amp;-4331.

6

Lost and Found

Loll lnh.tLet~erMonF•b. t .
mile Elk Hound. 4 monthe old. ·
An-. to HM lillY. 814-247- I
lt28.
'
Found R1bbit lloqla bl_..

brown and white. with ooll•.
l.otlr1. 304-898· 3857.

Found · Smol groy

tlulfv kltt.,,

Phone 304-1711-1414 •fter

8,30.

I•

I

I
I.

�'

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

6

omes
for Rant

Lost and Found

LAFF·A-DAY

lOST let of hiland her wedding
rings b.twtwt Murphvl and

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

51 Household Goods

2 BFi .• furnithecl t226 e mo.
· t1SO d..,: Y.:. mHee-.t of Port•.
COII814-3811-9983.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNrrUR£ 12
Olivo St., Golllpoils. ,

w.-t

cent-.d Ohio and
Virginia.
Eltete1 antique, f.-m. liquida·
tion ...... 304- n3-5785.

chain .aw. riding mows,, phorie

304-251H505.

Wantad To Buy

1""- ,~l
.
, n '"'

TOP CASH poid for '83 model
and nMer used cars. Smith
Buick- Pon1iac~ 1911 Eutwn
:2:2oompolil. Call 61 4- 44 11-

.

.

1'
"Would you care to know
how long it's been since I'VE
s. tanton?!"
got.ten a

Compllla houoel&gt;olda of fu rnf.
ture Ill .ntjqun. A}so wood &amp;

heotors~woln'o Furnoure

~. ~~~~~r...,.,. s-....--

.... .w,.,.. ,.,.., ·• - z

Help Wanted

uaed appN.,ces .nd TV •••·
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sot. 614-4411-1899. 827 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolie, OH.

19B7 Ford F-150 4114. 50,000
mil•. topper. EXCel. cond. Ae·
41cedprice. CeH 8 1.._245-5432
•ftw .SPM.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wuh~r~. clryora, refllgOrotora.

Modwn 1 BR. dow mown. complete kitch., lir. c•pet. Deposit, no pets. Cill 614-44601 39 811eninga. after 5.

ranges. Skagg1 AppllancBI,

19n D-150 Dodge. 8ft bed
w/1-. ~d cond. Coli
814-245-5897 oft• 5 PM.

Upper Rlvor Rd. boaldl· Stone
creet Motol. 814-4411-7398.

73

SHADY . LAWN APTS. 729

Sofa .,d chlir• priced from

VISA/MASTER CAR 0
US CHARGE Guaranteed

Aeg•dl•s ofCredH Aating.C.II .

Nowl 213-925-9906 ... t. U
2524.

TURN KEY BUSINESS
Company ettablilhed ecoounh.
Abtolutetv no competition. Earn
uptp *1500emonth. Part time.

No Mperience n~~Ce~H~ry.lnter­
BONUS INCOME
Earn $20().$500 weektv. Mail· ' Ht fr•.e•penlionlft•a•nup
ing 1989 invel brochures. For ..850 lnv81tmenl COli 24
more inforrrlldlo.n tend stamped houro, 1· 80(}327-89 19.
envolopoto: INC. P.O. Box 2139
Pays 26" commi11lpn. Sell
MiamL FL 33281.
Memorl•l D1y WrHihl from
Y&lt;M" loc;.tJon. No monetary
·GOVERI\IIIIIENT JOBS I
Now Hiring THIS AREAl mvaatment. Wrlte·P .0. Box
$10,213 to •75,473.. Coli lr• 342. Sulphur Springs. In
fundoblol 1 -315-733-8012. 473811-0342.
axt. F.2732-A.

Position availebi.. Chemlcal
Company h• opening for •rN
sal11 representative, Eatebllshecf,
accounu with growth pot.rtlel.
Mu1t be self· motivated ..dhwa
reliable transportation. Send r•
sume 1o: BDJ~: Cle187. c / oOIIIfpoNo Dollv Tribune, 8211 Third
AYO., Gelllpolio, Ohio 4&amp;831 .
GET PAID tor Nlding bOoksl
e 100 per title. Write: Plt•330,
1 8 1 S . lincolnWIIy, N. Aurora, IL
80!542.
Need extra ca~hi Call Awn.
81 4-44&amp;4397 or 4411-4882.
Ladl•. Would you Ike to e•n
extra money? Ar• you borld?
. llred.tteyW.get homa. You don 't
hwe 1 baby lin•. You t.J.t nHd
to get -.., a f8W' hours a dlff.

Cell814-446-2370. Let me tum
your diuvanage In to doll••·
Coli between the houro of 1:00
PM to 11 :00 PM SIWen days e
week. ealc for Fatth.

Fi•t• ttair Fashions,thel•o-t
salon cheln In the MIMMt. h•
lfull or .-rt-tlmel poatUonsevall·
able far profesllonel Styliat(s).
We're looking for peapl&amp;who are
entt..afeltic end enjoy working

with people. We offer Nl.-y plue
commlsek»n .. d 1 generoua
benllfit1 package. If yOU're tal ented. succ••orisnted. and
lnoklng for a greet: opportunity.

coil 814-448-9162.

ApplicatioN are bing accepted
for 1989 manager of london
Pool. Send IPPIICIII:ions. including oomplete r•um• and refer·
en on, to:.J•Icet..wson, Cl•k·
Tr.-um, Vllege of SvriiCUse,
Syucuoo, Ohio 46779. Appllc.
1ion deadUne il March 1. 1989.

GOVEIINMENT JOBS
ili18.040.- S59,230. ve•- How
~iring. Coli 111 80&amp;887-1000
Ext. R-9806 for current fad•al
lilt.

Government Jobll $18,037. to
S69, 406. lmmedille Hlrlngl

Your area. CaR (Airfundeble)
1-518-469· 3811 EXT. F1822

Reol lstalf!
31

Homes for Sale

Very .ctriMIIN'e brldl 4 bedroom.

c• v•..._

l.,dl_od lot. 4 ml• from
Holzor Ht*pltol off Rt. 35Pbn•brook Subdivision. Cal
814-4411-4189.
O.lu•• 3 BR .. hou• for •I e.

Own• lln.,co. Col 304-87116104.
GOVERNMENt HOMESI From
I 1.00 IU Ropolrl. ForedoaRepu, Tu DellntiUinf Pro.,..
tl11. NOW SELLING THIS
AREAl C.. !Rdlndobltl. 1·
316-733-1101!54. Elll. G-2732-A.
FOR CURIIfNT USTINGSI
Nice 2 br. homo In Pt. Pl-ent.
Utility ooom dining r - II! go
ltving room. b•lnW'It'A c•port
on cor'* lot:. Lind contrect or
euurM loan w•h emell down
payment. Ow,.... w81'1t to eeN
flOW II SAVUU. Cell114-2469588 oltw 8 PM.
2 """'· 3 bowoorn. 2 botlw. on
river in Mid~eport Call 614985-4134 ..,enlnga andwelkendo.

Government Home11 From

11.00 IU Ropolrl. ForldoouRepoe. T-. D..lnquent Prop.,..
Now . .lng thil ereel Call
(Relundllbltl 1-316-733-1084
h :t, 027 41A for current
Hotlngel

ti•.

2 bedroom. lull boaemorrt. flto 1
c•. Aero.. from DIIVground.

P&gt;lced to ooll U3,500. 326
SprlngAuo., 814-992-1138.
Tosettle81'1M•7roomho'rneon

3.&amp; - • In Autt.,d. CIH
814-992-7371 ovenlngo or

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

ca.ehing potitiont must meet

1980 Sp . .on 1... 70. 2 8R ., 2
bat!W, en electric. CA. woodburnor, 10.11 deck. 12x14
wood bulltlnll Col 814-24115028.

certification requirements of
ohio tor spor1s medlctne end

Furnished mobile home for •Ia.

Appl~
va~d ohio

1988-90 ochcol v-.
taeching

c~111cate

and for

CPR. Penoow lnt-od ohould
contect: JlmC.rp•'l1•. Sup•lntendent of Maigs Local Schools.
•1 821 Sou,th Thled Ave. ft .
MlddiOI&gt;Or1,' 0hio .

···rection.

Qualified candidate
Wil have 3 vu. experl.,ce In
checking rriechanicallir.ll. Call·
brate ~eges end work with
electrical specifications. Sand
rwumes to BoJt 372, Middleport, Ohio. 45780.
AVOII · AI

at-. Call

M•iP';'n

Weel• 304-882·2845.
AVON Ill ••II Shirllll' Spe...
304-8711-1428.
MT or MLT ASCP
Flolll ol oootiono muot bo
elllotoWotkd-ondolohlft. 3
to 1.,.............. proltrred.
Cell p..,OMII offtao 304-87114340. AA·EOE.

M.,ag• Train• - E.:. opportunity for right p... on. Rapid

..

adVMCimen1. Bclnathe ....a~~
ble. RopidAdv.,...,_ Bon of.

Ito evolloblo t:I00-1400 -1¥
poulbl• c;oll Mr. Woll-12112887 lor lntiiYlow.

Homos for Rent

feel~·- .......... Coli 8143 BR. houoo,dolu••· AC. t350o 99;!.3711 . EOH.
mo. Cell 304-876-5104, or
87&amp;5386.
'
GraciOus living. 1 .wid 2 'bedroom ap..tmenta at Village
3 BR . house. Deposit required. · Manor li"'d RNerside AP-t·
10 OldFort Troil. C•ll814-4411- menu In Middlapor1. From
2583, 9 to 5 dolly.
•1B2. Coll814-992-ne7.

2 BR . LocMed-58 Millaeekwith
llovt·&amp; refrlg. 1180 a mo. t7fi

eon 814-4411-3870 or
446-1340.

Caiii14-3811-9B34

peto. Coll814-949·2253.

Nlcelv lurnlohed 3 room hou•.

In Syraa.~se. 1 be«room. *120.
P• month plus depoatt ttld
utlil:ies. Call 814-992-6135 or

one becaooom, In town. No pata.
·Dop. &amp; ref. COli 814-"4&amp;2543.
Nice 2 Br. hou .. ln Ch•hlr-. 2

c• g•eu• • 250 s- mo. $2&amp;0
d011. Rtf. required. Cell 814889-3381.
.

For Sale or Rw-3 BR . house
with lltt.ch.t g•lll• centrel
air. No pets. Dep, &amp; ref required.

814-4411-3027.

.

Well mainteined2 br. home in Pt.
Pl. . n. VI b•ement, lots of
itorage ••· c•pet throuahout.
*2911 J* mo, plus .-c. dep, &amp;
rol. Call of!• 8 PM 114-2411-

8118.

3 lA . in Crown City. Good
m•once. C•ll 814-256-1991.
Ront or ooll 3 BR modern home
1ft Petriot. 1250. mo plus dep.

c•p•ed throughout. 1 ac:re

'-'Old in beck yard wtth deck.
Located 7 ml• from Holzer
Hoapttal on At. 180. A... Hebl•

814-982·8~73.

Furnilhed one
d
8200.00 plua electr

r m ep1,

100.00
dopce-. 304- 57&amp;3900.

One 3 Foom furrdthed utliti•
paid very nice. refren011 r•
quired. Two bedroom. 4 rooms
and blllh gou nd r.,el, reler4W'C81

One bectoom apt. utfiti• pltid.

304-876-5838.
Furnished Rooms

Roome for rent· weft Of' month.
Starth\g lit 8120 a mo. Galle

Pom•ov- Anractfve hou• for

Sleeping room• whh cooking.
AhoTrlll• apace. Alll)ook-upa,

a.unpai'ch. allwlh cwpetingand
Stove and refrig•ator.
Woeh•·dryer hco .. 14&gt; In lull
ba......,., drtv.way. Aclutta. no

*liP•·

poto. 122h month pk11 depooM.
Phone 814-992-6292.
2 bed'oom houl8 and 2 beck"oom

ep .-tment. W-D hookup, remodoled. SeOJrlty depolllt. Coli
81 4-992-ISBhft• 8:00 p.m.

Newly .wnodaled 3 br houl8 In
Mason. t2ISO. per month. Pay

own utiiMI•. 304-773-9814.
Houte In Meaon. eneched g...
gaa Mil. • • lot .,lteble
ror
30&lt;~-8711-11177.

•o•a••-.

CAll lftM 2p.m. 304-7736861 . Muon WV.

8

bedl complete w-m~r....

129. 5•ndupto8395. Bib¥' beds
•11110o. Mtwlenr...
•ae•florbo,"J..'P'ingsd
lu
r
n
• rm .1'!- an ·
UB. Queen olll 8250• &amp; up.
King $360. 4 drewor ch· '-• •89.
•
Gun cobin.U 8, 8 &amp; 111 gun.
Beb'( mettreuea 136 a. 846.
Bod lromoo t20, t30 &amp; King
frame $50: Good aeltc:tiorl of
bedro
. om suit•. m•lll cabinllo.
heodbo•da•...•.•••..•
f30,end up to U5.
1

Wheelctulir•nii'N · or u.ad. 3
wheeled electric acoot. .. Cal
Rag.. . MobUty collect. 1- 814-

For Lease

2 IR . mobile homeloetlled In

th• spec• IS rooms. 1'h balhl.

1•t ftoor commercial or reafd«~·
Rutored historic buldjng on the
pork 1380 per month .. cludlng
udlti•. Ref. required. 0.11
8-::44:.;25:·_ _ _ _

·WrM chiin IIWS •d acce~iOriM. Slchrs Equlpmem Com-

17 9881.
RrMood for •I• t30 pickup.
deitvered. *26 U·h.,l. A·acooon

p-.y, 304-8,75-7421 .
FEBRUARY" SALE
NEW HOLLAND
Grinder mllert. Manure spread·

Rd. 0111114-448·4982.
F'

en, SkfdSt•loedero.

,. . .ood tor ••• $21 to •30
dollvorecl. Dovid Hill. 614-388·
B138.

Modo! 213 Spreod• 108 bu
12750 00
Mo"~ ·329· Spr-"w 138 bu
~
.-u
fZ.980.oo.
Model 1514 8prMder 177 bu
t3 300 00
'
'304
· Slu
·
Mo•~
S ~
- go1 •7.500.00.
rrv
1.221

2 Myers Captivelir wlter 1.nkt
model wx201 L.er.- S•••
water flit er-uted IS ..--manthl.
• 100eoch. Cell814-2411-92)8.

P'-••·

IN,..,

a•-

Yellow Glbeon troat fr-. refrlct
erlltor .,d matching g• I'Mga
814-992-8788.
piece living room tulte. rose
end blue floral on beige back·
ground. Excellent ooftdltion.

$260. Coli

814-949-30~4

2 pieCe eecUonel sofa. used
about 2 months. 30'4-882·
2904.

.16 cu ft fr••er andOP Ex«ciae
bike both •c cond. 3d4-8758363.
I
53

Antiques

81"' 378-2789.

Hay for tal&amp; .220 .quare

Pats for Sale

Groom end Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All breeds .. .All
-tvl•. lams Pet Food Deal•.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-448-0231.
DrogonWynd Cattery Konno!.
Pert:lll'l and Slam•• end Him ..
I-ran ktnent. Chow ltud s•
vice. Coll814-4411-3844eftor7

2 totsendveultt in thiiGerden of
Veter.,t in Memory G.-delia.

$1100. COli
I

304-87!&gt;2757 ell• 4 :30p.m.

SURPLU5-0~glnol Army, Oenim. Rental Clothfng. green

comoufl.,pofblock-whltoj. Som
SomervHie t Old Route 21·

10 .W. old Chow puppl•.

worrnecl 6 lhott. Full blooded

bUt no ~--· • 100 each. Call

814-387-01113.

AKC Reglotwed Shih Tzuo, 2
ye• old fltmlie. *126. Two 6
weeks old t:nele puppi-. t176.
eoc:h. 32300 St. Rt. 143,
Pomeroy.
AK C Roolotored Cook• SpMiol.
Bkmdl and white male. 1126.
Cell 814-985-4407.
Fish Tonk. 2413 J•cklon A110,
Point Pl. ..,l 304-876-2083:
10 galoll14&gt; t14. 99 ond 10 go!
c,o mpl.tl 143.26.

,

. ' Buck
For tale fr• ltend_,g
Stave, '"""' Hotgpolnl r.,ge.
Phono 304-87&amp;5182. 1
Half price ..Ia. awe.tirt end
blou .... 12.00. The Attic Ae•
1110. 2488 Fifth Avo.. ~untlnlt
ton. w. Ve.
1
Porte~ellght~lignwtihl«t ...
1329.00. FRE~ DELIVERY,
pl. . lc ....... $47.50 liox,
1 F0 b
=· 2:2:,:1:
· BO=Q-:5:3:J.:3:4:5

17&amp; roUnd bol• hill' 800 ""·
good fHtL 304-468-1142

Transportat1on

1987ChwvSS hlpalaconvenlblo. UOO. 1973 Chevy en gino,
414. . 400 ....... 1&amp;00. Coli
114-3811-14&amp;2.
1977Ponti.cFirablrd. 350eng..
.,to. ,...., PS, P8. nM point;
nM tlr-. Aoldng I 1200. COH
114-4411-7371 of!• 6 PM.
1818 Buick WHd. ., 430,4 bbl.
•110 firm. CoM 114-4411-8992.
'1987llncol" TownCer.loedecL
led'- lntlrior. E.:el. cond.

57

1918PontloclonnevlllelE.AC,
PW, AM·FM, cruiH, tilt. Elal.
oonct 22,000 ml•. Cell I 14~411-11 67 oft• &amp; PM,

Musical
, lnstru ments

lndlvkl.lll ...... II!IIIOftl, be·
ginnera, •rioua guttlrilt. Bru.,_
. .dll Muolc. 814-4411-01187,
Jail Wemol .. l n - . 1144411-80n. llmked

-••Ill·

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

GOVERNMEf!IT SEIZEO Vo~~
ol• lor noo.Chwy1.
Fordo. -·
Corvettea.
Sur.Wt.
Buyon Guido. 111 8011-1178000. ext. S-10189.
·
1917 leb•on Coupe Turbo.
17,000 mil•, EIICtl. oond. AI
optlono. Mull Ill. CoH I 14448-ICJ&amp;O.Koep trtfng.

··r

=-I

...,jL:':"'':·=

SNAFU® by Bmce Beattie .

&amp;

SlliiPII' \
1988 Monto Corio SS. Good
concltiDn. 21.000 mR•. Mult

61 Fel'JTI Equipment
Llto1111Ddoi550DIIvlrw/plowo.
rohry--nplont•.-8

. . ... ••ao.

miChln•

hlrf aoncltio,.., NH

1020JDw/Chl·
hoe.
'17110. o - wa t i n - CoM
1114-2811-8822.
... plowo. 14 ft. -

Trel••· Unl.lrn6JMd. Coupla
omoll c:hM«on •ccepted. Rt. 1,
lODIIt Rood, Pt. Pl-•t IJe.
NndK&amp;K. 304-176-1071.

•

2 . blctoom moJJie home. hlllf
mlo oot Jerrlchc Rood, 304876-1012.

"DI(actlons: Don' t let the person taking ·
these read the Ingredients."
'

'

.

IT

HeR ANYWA'&lt;..

«3 ~"!~~~:::
S II

3 000

r

~-v

Fonuna

l

!1

~~-=-~ L......:-...a...=:.l....lo..-.,...--.-J!tJ1~~~~
'

a.., Boot- 19B7 Lon d., 16'&amp;",

BANK

atftec:t

up .,d delivery, 0..,11 Vl(l.lum
Cleaner, one h1ff mile up
13oorg~~~ Cnoek Rd. Cell 11444&amp;0294.
.

Molt well completedsemedBY.
Pllmp .., . and aervk:e. 304-

:_::.,:..::..:.,..:..:_:,.:~.:.::_:..::__ _ _

For olio '88 Cedlllec E l - . ..c.oond.Dno-.
41,000 mil•. e.n 304-17114131.

1917 11 II. T.,..,., Trllw.
7100 lb. 0111 oolty, oloctrlc
..d .... d _,.., .700.
l•d( I 11 4-liiiZ. 7403.

1971 llulok Rogol. olr, br*eo. eNloe.
•1.000. Cell 304-982-3171 .. ·
304;882-2714.

. 31

(l) Newa-ICII
(J) Powar Gamt! Look at 1he
relative power of the
President of the United
States. C
1111
Aimoot
Norman recalls black friends
and musicians who
Influenced his life.
•101 Araenlo Hall
IIJI Evening Newa

Ohio

•a

44&amp;4477

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

o,_.,

Ing. New s.-vice or repairs.
Llc11111K1 eleclrid8'1. Ridenour
Electrlcll. 304-8711-1786.

General Hauling ,

Dll•d Wet• Serv!oe: Pbo ...
Wolll. Oellvery A"Y·
time. Coli 814-4411-7404-No
Sunctov colll.
J&amp; JWal• S.Vica Swimming ·

'lOur

qfjrthd
'
ay
Fab-13,1. .

· Ph. 614-

Watt nod a Wit• Haultng. m•
IONIIIIM retw. yotJ nM dia-ntl. 2.000 to 4.000 • .,..,.

ltv.
clot- 304-176-291..

Bernice Bede 09ol

· -

otc. .

"8:;-7--,U..,..p""ho~ls..,-tery
---.. - '

------··

It-Ina. -

-------

You are likely to experience marked lmprovemeu1s In the year ahead where
your -tat lite Is concerned. In many
wayethtllrlendshlps you'll establish will
be of greater value than gold.
AQLWUUS (Jan. JO.I'ab. 11) lncllna- .
tloni to lake chances on things that are
not of a material nature shoold wort&lt; out
i rather weil for you today. However, ·
·-l think twk:e before gambling on anylltlng
that Is a pure' ttnanctal riBk. Major
changes are ahead tor Aquarius In 1htl
coming year. Send tor your AalroGriiPh predlc11onS 1oday. Mall S1 to Astro-Greph, c/o this ,_.paper, P.O. ·
Box 91428, C-and, OH 101-3428. ·
Be aure to state your zodiac sign.
PI8CI&amp; (Feb. z.M1 ch 1111) Two lm·
port11nt matlara you'VII been wanting to
gel off your back can be concluded today. You already know which ones1hay
are 11nd what's needed to be done.

«

ARIES (lii.rcii -~:Aprti'II) . Thare Isn't VIRGO (Aug. zs.ilept. 22) Great permuch that Is likely to escape your notice 1011111 satlatactlon can be gained today
today. You're both menially alert, as from lfluetfona whM8 you u"! your
well as a qulclt study, and yDI.t'll be ea- mental proweaa to mall and overi:Omt~
ger to either gain or Imparl knowledge. chlillengee. Tlllnk, win 11nd aCt
TAURUS (Aprll211...,. :1111) You may be accordingly.
able to Improvise something personally LfiiRA (Sepl. 2J.Ocl. 22) SomettrMa
advantageous today In your nnanctelln- It's u n - to offer advice to a frlond ·
volvementa H yoo do not IIPPrDIIch · -lllen't solicited. However, today H
thlngaln too structured a tuhlon. Keep you haVII conatruc:IIVII IIUQII8811ona that ,
pould help a pal, don'1 keep them to
an open mind.
.
'
GEMINI (MBJ 21-June 1111) One of your younen.
greatest attrlbu1es Is your ability to ef. SCORPIO (Oct. 114-Hov. 22) In coliaofeciiYIIIy juggle
projects Blmul- '· live venturea today, let 1hose with
1aneoualy. You may have11n occaalon to strong backS do 1h8 heavy lifting whla
you do the brain work. If you . - thla
uae your unlqua talents today.
CANCIR (.lunei1-Ju1J 22) Keep a lOw procedure, your conl{fbutlon will be
pronto In development• today that have equal to thai,..
a direct eflecl on your~. If yoo're SAGITTAIIIUI (No'l. 22 Dec. 21) Slant
not obvlooa abou1 your Intentions, com- your Judgment toward that whiCh wa
pet"ort won't have1argetato lllloot at.' prevloualy -ce•lul H you haiM to
LEO (.IUIJ 21-Aug. 12) Today you are mike a deliCate deel8lon today - .•
Mkety to feel more comfortable with ' 1h8 allamal'- appear 10 be of equal
friends who don't take t h a m - or value. Trade on...,..-.
Rfe too -looaly. Their attitudes wll CAniiCCNI (OM. . . . . 11) lmhaw an uplifting effect on your own . palnld oommunlcatlon oan be ...rabllahed lod8y H you tjjle time to talk
psyche.
things .,.. with _.......... regarding

-•I

prevloua mlaunderalandlnga.

'.

'

lake
Thi!lk

'·

1=+-+-1!1!

'

"•

1 Salubrious
2 Handle copy
3 Boxer's
garh ,

Clll Crook and Chll•

or comm•cill wir-

'island
6 Prl!'st's
garb
7 ~uay
8 Otiose
9 - Gwyn
II Task
14 Hue
18 Long
Yesterday's Answer
poem's
division
26 Memorable 34 "The Music
19 Out of
years
Man"
the way
28 Neighbor
35 Auk genus
20 Gypsy
of Costa
37 Motller
21 Yale
Rica
(Fr.)
student
30 Italian
38 Presently
22 Calaboose
cash unit 39 Morro
2.&amp; G .I.'s
32 Enamel,
or Neagle
P .O.
e .g .
41 Grassland
25 Meat cut 33 Exchange 42 Buddy

DOWN

01 .....

R•ldent:i~

4 Brl'lm•
5 l'hilip11ine

temple
36 Brazilian
bird
37 Lamb's cry
40 Penn.
founder
43 Fred
or Steve
· 44 Brother
or Moses
45 Fold
. 46 Russian river

10:00 CD 700 Club

Cor. Fourth and Pln..t

·-·-

33 Shinto

ii6 VldeoCountry

TH' FIRE
STARTED!!

8AR8Y·O!~

191111 Chwole Mollbu 2 doCK
AI origin II, 283
·mint oondllion. low mlooge.
Colt 814-141-2181 d~· Wid
114-247-4111.

,_,EquiD-. z.torTricton.
Howwd Rotwetor1. .....
' - " " '.......... o l d ... - l l l q u - . Rutt•d.
Ohio 114-742-2411.

PAW JEST WENT
DOWN TO GIT

TH' 815

1000 g ... w .. ., twvlot. Lhn• .
tone apread. We hAll grwel,'
IMd oo ... IJI:C. Celt fJ14-99·2-- •
52711. .
'

Ofdl-o. 114-446-3872 ...
304-'773-1134.

I AIN'T FER60T!!

DON'T FERGIT,
LOWEEZ.Y !!
TODAY'S

R &amp; R W•• Servlco. Poolo.
clttlrns. well1. lmmtdtM•
1 ,000 or 2. 000 Dlllona dollv rry . •
COH 30 4- 876-1370.

'"'o.

(Fr.)
16 Slower
(mus.)
17 Elec. unit
18 Crete's
capital
20 Disavow
23 Auction
27 Swedish
island
28 Scottish
musician
29 Where the
buck starts
30 Largest
European

Lerry King LIVIII
8:30 (I) Cottoge Belkllbell
~ • 01 Deelgnlng Women

Phone 814-44&amp;-3888 or 814

84

u;

8

.BARNEY

--·- ~.

ACROSS
I On this
spot
5 Rabbit fur
10 Worship
12 Slur nver
13 Symbol of
freedom
Summer

•a

otO¥N. 304-5711-1!398.

1IIB2 Nlorc:urv Ceprl I cyl,
outo.. PS, Pl. AC, AM-FM
t81ttle •d surwoof. 114-1121223.
h~rcltop.

,.

·--

by JHOMAS JOSEPH

•a

SWEEPER andtewinomechins
rep..,., perta. end suPflll•. Pldc

•Ks 2

CROSSWORD

8:05 (J) MOVIE: King, Part 2 (NRI
(1:40)
8:30 D f2l The Hogan Family
Mark enters phase of
adolescent rebellion and
changes his personality. Q
1111
Kate I Alita
Wealthy women oHers 1he
women $25,000 10 shop for
her a husband. C
(1)1 ALF An extorflonls1
threatens tc;&gt; tum In ALF as
an Illegal allen. Q
9:00 8 f2l (1)1 MOYIE: 'The
Hijacking of lhtl Achlllo
Leuro' NBC Mondar Night et
the Movta•C
(I) D (I) •a:L Sliykar' ABC
Myatary Movlo Stryker is
pursued by the .killer of
beau~ful Palm Springs
debutantes. g
.
(l) Shining nme Station Matt
and Ta~a find a ball of
string. Q
(J) secret lntelllgenca This
program analyzes 1he mos1
recent dilemmas of secret
intelll118f1ce. Q
Ill
MIIIPhY Btown
Murphy and Frank arrange a
Valentine's Day double dale.

or night.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANDHEATIIIIG

... ··-

Doll Show
Clll Neahvlle Now

RogersBasement
Wllt•proofing.

OOUipolil,

In the

c-ommon (PG) (1 :SB)
(1)1 The Hagan Family Mark
enters phase of adolescent
rebellion and changes his
personality. C
(I) Weatmlnafar Kennel Club

Horne
lmprovaments

+Q1098
.AQ875
+A
~TH

IIJ PrlmeNawa
fRl MOVIE: Nolhl!.ii In

•

.9

tAK73
Poor Willy Nilly! Last summer bis
.KJ102
, partners were berating him for not
+63
knowing much about percentages, .so
+AJ 5
be started to study that subject. AI·
Vulnerable: Neither
though be lost Interest rapidly, he did
Dealer: South
learn that a five-card residue will di·
,vide 3-2 about 88 percent of the lime, a
Nortb Ea11
Soa1b
I'uaeful statistic if applied properly. We Wesl
1 NT
1;~~~~~now to today's deal, with Willy
Pass
3 NT
Pass
I' I
One no-trump and his partner ~=
raising
to three.
·
Willy covered the club 10 with dumOpening lead: + 10
my's queen and won his ace when East
played tbe king. He led a diamond to
dummy's king and East's ace, and
East played back a club. Willy ducked. There's no way any defender would
West won and switched to a spade, not hold up the ace of diamonds to
covered by the jack, queen and WiUy's break tbe communication for declarer
ace. Noll' Willy played another dia- if.that defender held more tban one dh
mood and went right up with dummy's amond. So the chance that East's orig·
jack, remembering the percentage lor lnal holding was the singleton ace
11-2 splits. But East $owed out. De· changed to 98 percent. Why only 98
clarer eventually worked out an end- ..percent? This wu a friendly game, .
play In tbe major suits to get out for and there's always a 2 percent chance .'
down one, but should he not have done In a friendly game that a player will
better7 ·
pull a wrong card. Willy should put in
In fact, percentages go out tbe win· .tbe eight or nine of diamonds on the
dow when a defender with bls head on .second play of tbe suit and make his :
bis shoulders takes the first diamond. cootract.

weapon-saturated place In
the world. C
Ill • 01 t(e-rl Wl1h
Michael sidelined, Dick
ascorts Stephanie' to a
formal gala. !;!
Ill i!ll MOYIE: F,.a\ty Friday
fGI (1 :35)

T'POl.ISH ME
BOOT!

f-ll-lf

EAST

WEST

I +65 2
+107 52
+109876

becomes the most

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondll:knwl lf•lme guarantee. Local ref•ene. furnished.

.

JAMES

Nuclailr Age Europe

TRUST HIM

'

Plumbing
H1111ting

NORTH

+JI

JACOBY

D f2l ALF An extortionist
1hrea1ens to tum In ALF as
an Illegal allen. Q
(1). D (I) Mac:Oyvar Peter
Thorn1on's son is Implicated
In theft of IO!!:secret

AS FOR REI&gt;
~D ... J:
WOULDN'T

' •. J

&amp;

i

+KQJ9H
+Q4

0 Miami Vice
Clll Fandango
7:05 (J) Andy Griffith
7:30 D f2) Family FIMHI
(I) Coltoge Belkllball
(I) l!ntartlllnmanl Tonight
D (I) USA Today

(!)' (J) War and Paaca

·,

Ak•oTree Trimnin~=~ Stump
... CIIN
Removal. Free eat
304-176-7121 .

;I

.643

IIJM_,tlne
®Ch....

information. t;1

houM cell ,...,icing GE, Hot .
Point, WMherl, dryMa afld

Complete the Chuckle quoted
by ftll ing in the missing words
you develop from $le P No. 3 below .

·

7:31 (J) Benford and Bon

1977 Motor Home. Oood oond.
$5500. low m l - eon 1142415-5768.

82

Q

I&amp;""A'·:Opardy( Q

,.

896-3B02
.:,.:,:=-,:.c-:,:..,.-----RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,

year old - - . '

O

UNSCRAMBLE ·ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

·BRIDGE

1:00 CD MOVII!: Mr. Belvede,.
GDH lo Colloge (NR) 11 :23)

..
- - - -- -

Clll

.

My daughter started her own window cleaning business .
The s1gn on her van re~d: " YOUR PANE Is My Pleasure."

c

® Night Court

'·

d~

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Urchin - Photo - Briar - SYfi,ne ~ YOUR PANE

Clll Croolt and Chll•

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

811.1nwt•.

said the

bill is one

~
PRINT NUMBERED lElTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

8
8

oc.........

198; Mercury 3111&gt; rnolorwkh
powar trim .,d .,.a ol inject: ion. '
1987 MerC11ry Troling motat.
1987 Shoreline trel• plus :
more. AI in_good condition. C.lt
81"' 992-2770.

1·814-237·0488,

A shop owner
sang "Happy
Birthday"
to a customer. "It's
not my birthday," said the

Ill i!ll Th-'• Company

mlloo, 13, 500.00, 304-8953929.
.

frM

• IS I .. I
_.l..~.l
I
.
.-.l.-.J.L-:.J...
_:
I
L

1111 • 01 91 WhHI of

'79 Chevy Cuotom Von , 83.000

81

;. r_,.;..;A...;S:.,;..;H...;.,U;.._;,T..:I~-11

Na-Hour (1 :00)

'

Services

!. ...-.'.

·
c u stomer. "No,"
. - - - - - - ' - - - - . o wner , "but xour

(I) D Cll Cui'Nfll Anatr
(l) (J) MacNeil/ Lehrer ·

I

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campars

8

,I•·; E L y D 0
. I I I I

D f2l PM Magazine

(!) SportCenler

'

304-876-3331.

-~.1--ll i'

l_z.J._f

L....J....r__.

c.,

98.

·Poor Boys Tir•. Htndarlon. W.
Ve. Cheap eat 11r• around. Dunlop. firellone. nM and used.

:I

1

1:31 (J) One
at a nma
7:00 CD Our Houae

,

Boats and
Motors tor Sale

r I I. I

I

Clll New Country

•.,

·1376.
w...-.,

76

LAWEDO

(I) Cartoon !xpNII

1980 GMC, 4•4. L.W.S. Roily '·
nice truck. 304-875- .. t

75

Eplaodao
(J) D Cll Ill D 01
(1)1 Newt
(!) Spor1ran.
(l) The Power of Choice Q
(J) Square One TY
• i!ll HIPPY Dara
181 Fac:11 of Life
(I) SIHo-Ra
Clll Amarlcen Magazine
1:05 (J) Leveme and Shlrloy
·1:30812) (1)1 NIC Nightly Nawa

11J ShowBiz Today
181 WlCIIP In Clnclnlllti

aJto. 1rana., •
~11\ te · •
convert«, front &amp; r • lodl ~.
dift&amp;rential . 1971 Dodge
Demon boctv • -~· "•
is:"·$100. 1~.ulre 8t Tonev' •
~ 81 •••• 30

~"

I

a

1978 Dodge VIII . ~~,. long.
8·300. C..,-teln .ch.n &amp; aofe ...
bod. Goad tor huntinG flohlnlior
Clmpln"- Mult be s.n tQ
,_.....!' C 111 4-2
23
apprro.e. a 1
45-5 2.
Cultomil:ed Dodge 4x4 w / lft

~n:1 P9~

low to form four :simple words

•

(1) D (I) ABC Newa Q
(l) Body Eloclrtc
(!) NlglitiJ Sualnlaa Repolt
1111 •
CIS Nawa
111101 WKRP In Ctnclnnatl

•

........ 2415-92811.

... truakor_,, . . Kenny a..
et Jim Min• Chevrolet-

Furnllhed 2 bed'oom moble
l!orno ,fur ..... noo. 00 plus

Doll. 304-5711-219&amp; .,.,time
aft• 4 p..m.
·

W.O.

.... 171100. 080. 114-94929:te.

For • 1'-' dhl on 1 new "'ueed

Mobh home. Ashton. Anna

1LL NEllER HAllE
THE N.ERVE TO 61VE

CLAY I , POLLAN

!etters of the
four scrambled words be·

~SporlaL-

Clot•"'·

LiVl!SiiJIJ

•

utllltl•. t100 . 00 depoolt,
phono 304-8711-11112 or 87113100.

1

---------:-- '

85

f.ll !II

I

NO, MA'AM .. NOTHING
TOO EXPENSIVE ..

Government Seized VehidM . =ON'S 11T1eleviaRioCnA
. s 0ervlce.
from t 100. For~. •·-~...
ouse c 1 on
, uuM.
- ~-GE. Spodollng In lanKh. CeH ',
Ccrv-. Chevy. Surpluo. Buy· 304-1711-2398 or 814-4411.,. Guide 111 11011-887-1000 24••
Ext.S-10181.
--~-·-------- :
1178 Oldl Dolt• 88, 2 dr. Good Fetty Troo Trlmmng. ltump '
tlreo. Good cond. 11200. COli romoval. C•ll 304-8711-1331 .
814-379-274~.
Rotary or cable tool Jiolllng.

2&amp;.000 mil•. Cell 814-44111117 eftw 5 PM .

58

1

71 Auto's For Sale

2 AKC roglotorod mole Chlhuohuoo 7 - k l old. 304-8781317 cell eflor &amp;:00.

Firewood t 30.00 load call
Wll')lne Melt an. 304-4fi8-198 1.

Mb&lt;ed hill' lor •le. •1. 50 por
bolo. CoH 814-74:Z.2270 oftow
4:00p.m.

"(ES, M~AM, 1D LIKE TO
6ll'r' A BOX OF VALENTINE •
CAND'i FOR A GIRL WHO
DOESN'T KNOW I EXIST...

WORD
GAM I

O Rearrange

• CD

.

uoo ...h. Cell814-367-7422.

Firewood for a~le. Mbtlld h•dwood. HEAP VOUCHERS ••·
copted. Pick up or dollv•. Coli
614-742-2421 onytlme.'

bal•.

Clarence Wickline. Racine,
Ohio. • 1"' 941-29 18.

puppiea. 1 mele 6 1 famllle.

I

Vans &amp; 4

1600 bol•- mb&lt;ed h ... . con
81"' 24&amp; 5827

• Deck Mat•lals

Guorenteod Quol~v
CETIDE, INC .• · A1hent-814594-3678

Bur or Sell. Riv•ine A~iqu-.
Ceirn Terri• puppi•. Cell
1124 E. Main Street, Pom•ov· · AKC
614-387-7700.
HouFJ:,M,T,W 10a.m. tollp.m .•
Sunday 1 to 6p.m. 81'4 -992·
2·AKC Reg. Boston Terri•
2528.
l
54 Misc. Merchandise

nrew for Mle. Call

Wh..

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Chwlnel Rustic
•nd llovo!ed lap Siding

56

5865.
Couple with one child to rent or
lea e. Urge 2or 38r. hou~&amp;wH:h
singl• or doubie Q•age. Pets'

We hwe the lowelf; prices on
Homtlt• Jon••ed tnd Hu-

•cal•

l.n1ulated Covarellt. 304-273-

~~8~1:4-:44:·

54 Misc. Merch11ndise . 61 Fal'JTI. Equipment

90 D•ys same as cas'h with Big Dltkota Farm
. · heme built on New Holl111d Modlil L-.564 g••.
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
112 hp repo , 42&amp; hra
yourlot.
l13,991•up.SMour
•1090000
BuI.... me Rd . Open 9am "to ~pm
c
11 1 1
•
· ·
0
Mon. thN SOl. Ph. 814-4411- . model.
· 1 4-888-7311.
Modol11-442. 30 hp gu, 100
0322.
•
M in Sol .
hro .7.1100.00.
ov 9
•Couch. c:hllir. end Now Holl.,dModoi3B5. 100bu
18bl11, bonl• in~.uting Avon.
9tlnder mix• with ·a . and
fiONen, &amp; mflc. Thurs.• Feb. 18.
hydro drfve *10.1500.00.
9-6. At. 7to218-ebout1 mile on S-.,e model with mechanical
Vallay Furniture
New Md used furniture and left. garage IIJ1.
li'lve ilnd
•s.ooo.oo.
epp!lcancea . Cell 614-446- 197&amp; o' o•·o Pl·~up. ·
omp
,
K
eetetServk:eContw,
St. Rt. 87
100
7572. Hours 9·5.
'
o.v
ut.
Point Pl . .ent endRiplt¥ Road.
Woldor. 35 Uled roof tin. 2 ft. 8 Phone 304- B9&amp;-3874.
in. door. c,ll 814-4ol&amp;-8568.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete houaehold flunlattlngs. Y1 mlle-Jerricha. 304-875-' AlUminum John bu.t. 14 ft. 63·
Livestock
1460 , 514 - 388·9773. 19~8 Ford Courier pickup
w
/
cap.
COmpu•
wlprint•.
ev.,.-,ings.
Porch twing. Call 614-4462907.
Athenollv-'ock Solo. Albony.Vi'Re Furniture • Appliena.
Op., Dolly, 9 AM -5 PM
Sole fNtrY Stturcloy-1 PM .
Mixed h•d wood sl .... $12 P• Uveotock tccept ed of! ow 4 PM
Sund.,., 12 noo ... s PM
bundle. Comainlng apprOK. 1'12
Frldlrf. 1 mHe e•t of
814-4411-3168
ton. Ohio Pallet Co .. Pom•oy. AI...... on St. Rt. 50. Coli
114- 592-2322. 89B-3531
Truck loads of nM' iurniture Ohio. 814-992-8481.
ev.-.lngs:.
have iU•t arrived. Bring your old
furnhure II TRADE -IN tor new.
e piiCe wood group, •389.
R•o•••oct e,
Nubi.,
go.-:s. Breeding a.-vice. TiSot.. &amp; cheirl. 1289. 17 piece 65 Building Supplies
motiJv hill'· Coll114-38&amp;-8548.
couf11:ry dinnette set, *650
lin dud• hutch}. 6 piece bedroon tuitit, •39&amp;-extra nice. Building Mat«ielt
Roglotwod3ve• old ooM. Broke
· to ride. UOO. Coli 114-4411Mattrea-half off r.,l.r price.
Block,
brick.
IIW'er
pip•.
winBunk beds w / beddlng. *229.
2107 9\'1, 814-388-8604
Rt. 1411nCenten.-y, ~,.,. mile on ckrNt. lintels. etc. Claude Win· ev•lnga.
•••·
Rio
.Grende.
0.
Coli
814pncoln Pike.
245-5121.
1
Couch &amp; chair, 1 en'd 'tabla. 2
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Concrete bk&gt;ckl· all sizes- r.•d
lamps, rol-awav bed wtth m•- or
delivery.
Meson
11nd.
Olll1p~
treu. full •lze bed, queen sil:e
mattress set . Call 814-44&amp;- llo Block Co .. 123'1&gt; Pine St.,
Golllpollo. Ohio. Coli 814-448· "'bled~~""'' hoy. Coii814-3881 171 .
84J9.
2783.

Trail• tot for rent. e70. per
month plus utilltl•. 304-882- Junction lndep.-.danct Road.
2904.
.
' IN-ERAI,IE.,tRov.......,d).
Frldlll'. Soturdoy, Sunclor onlv
Noon-8:00P .M.. ·1 0 p•cent off.
Carhart elathlne. camquftaug~
47 Wanted to Rant

49

lngo. .1 14-142·2%32

'f.;3t
~~ek ••1 00"::•1:~:,:
Hutcheo UOO end up Bunk

FOr aa!e: Olk fir·$Nood. Cell

Country Mobile Homo Po&lt;k.
Rou1e 33. North of Pom•ov.
loti, ......... , . ,. . . . . .. Cell
814-992-7479.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Btl .. cable .,.IIebi" bo.. tlfl,l
r~• vierN w, Kena~ga . Fost•'•
Mobile Home Pork. 114-44111802

to $696. ReclinWI 8225 to
1375. La~• 828 tO I $125.
Dl nott ea f1 9 1n d up tvo , 4,~1111 •

Melge Ccuntv.
614-681-3803.

46 Space for Rent

For r•t. 2 bectoom unfUrnished
houn, 107'11 2nd St. New 01&lt;copted with d011. Nolg~borttov ... •180 month lllu• dep- . hood pref..,ed. Coli 814-448ooM. 304-8711-5278.
8872.

81... 111. Awftoble Feb. 11. C•ll
114-4411-9189.

t395 to t995, Tobl• Uo ••d

up to *126. Hld•e-bedl t390

p~

Hotof. 814-4411-9580.

rent. 197 Mulbwry Ave. 2
bedroom. l•ge llvr.g room.
khchen. dining room. endos.t

j•.;,;:;~~:;;:_:;:;:::;:=~;:;:::=:~~:::::~i

requi'ed, 304-675-2722.

MDarch 1. U&amp;O. P• month. If
lnt-ed. coli 814-286-1318
!Jocklon) olr• 7 p.m.

141&lt;?0, ~ bowoom g11'1111•
ffont porc:h. bed&lt; deck. Depod
.n d r.t••oe. Shown bv liP'
polntment onlv. Col 114-&amp;98134&amp;.

'

Now eccepting appNCIII:Ions fof
2 beG'oom ap.-tm1nts, fully
c•p•ed. a1Jpll111c.. Wilt• and
tt•h pld&lt;upo provided Molnt&amp;
naru::e free living c:loae to shoppin g. ban Ill ., d echOo... Far
morelnformltion cell 304-88.2-3718. E.O ..H.

Furnished · room-919 Second
Ava.. GellipoHI. $75 a mo.
Utllhi• l)llhl. Single male. Sh•e
both. Co11448-4418efi•7PM .

1980 Boyvllw D"'xo 14•70.
lll llrnllhed. EIICtl. oontl CoR
et 4- 44f. 71103 or 44f.81B7.

Min&gt;f•m. 8 ..,..,.. .,d both.
blrn, ohlck• COOP, pony lhed
lnd W&lt;Wk lhop. 6.98 - ·· AI
fen oed. N.w drll«&lt; wat• well.
'29.500. 814-982-21'43 or

ref•.,*· Phone

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

304- 88;!.2688.

7v- old. 3bowoombrlck·vlnyl
total electric. ..nah •tvle home,

1978 2 br. trill•. 1'A ICI'• on
E-gr- D'"lllll' Rd . Aoking
t13.000. Col 814-446-3154.

Farms for Sale

utllll• paid,

45

RloQ,.,de-2becWoom. Nop«a.
Aduha. Pref•r.t. Aet•encea
and depooM required. COli 814448-9430.

33 ,

Beech Str-.. Middleport, Ohio,
2 bect'oom furnllhad epert:m.n.

1340 or 114-4411-3870.

3 ecra private mobile home lat.
dote to Centen..,. Call morn-

MoYina ""'"' oon. 1111 M...
Ilion 141170. 3 _ _... ol
electric. underpinning .. d
porch. 171100; 114-143-1483.

814-992-5732.

Will hlllp finance. Cell 814-446-

For Soi•Moblie Hotno. 1 2x8&amp;,
3 br., 1972 Dorion. t4600. CoM
814-2&amp;$-1138.

1872 Mobh Hotna 110x1Z.
v ..oy~oo. Air m • • - · • ..,
''"~~" 83100. 114-982-2387
d~. 114-982-3411 ovonlng.

Fu,nilhed 3 rooms and 'bath.
First floor, private an1rance. no

dep.

House for rMt In Hann.n Trace
eree. Ref. • d..,, requir.t. Call

Gat peid for rMCIIng booktl

The Maiga Local School District
is currantt, tllft;ing application~
from certified IIJ)pli&lt;*'ttl for •
Head Foot~! Coach for the

2 be'*'oom Apta. for rent.
Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry

cllbln••· oak wood!Norlc. finish
basement, 2
l•el

In Syrec:u... 3 be*oom rench.
All olootrlc. ... vinyl window'
•lr conditioned. oqulpped kltch.-.. mateh.:J ,...... 1 acre
l•d with 14Jt18 ft. autbulldng.
Cell 814-992-5293.

Februory. 814-992· 7180.

41

Furnilhed ap1. in town. Cell
814-448-1423 for an appt.

39 Chllllt»the Rd. con 8144411-2583d111¥ 9-5.

for Federal List 24 hours.

Avon ceiling. Went to do aomethin _g new and exchlng? Free
start-14) kit during month of

11 "'4411- 0338.

2 b•h. f . . llv room with flo•
pl-. lormol dining. lorgolv!ftg
room. 30 ft. cultam oek kitchen

week-ends.

$100.00 P• tille. Writ• PASE310 , 181 $ . lincolnwov. N.
Au.rora. 118064~.

city ov.-fooking river. Adults
only. CA &amp; heat. Ref. Cell

'

_ _ _ __:;,_,: Edited

6:00 CD Bonanza: The L.Mt

Trucks for Sale

County Applimce. I nc. J Good

SecondAw. Furnilhed effiden-

Rentals

72

1987 ford RMger XLT 4x4,
Bigfoot pkg.. """"" loedod. low
miTaege. Teke over p,._-ments.
Coli 814-4411-2713.

&amp; Auttton.. Third &amp; otiva. I~;::::::::;::;:::~::::::-t-----------1 ci• ltartfng at *176 a mo.
814-"45-3159.
inducing water 6. e-beQe.
Junk em with "' without 15
Schools
. Single acl.ltta only. Cell 61436
Lots
&amp;
·A
cr1111ge
4411-4807"' 44&amp; 2602
m01ot1 . can tany livolv -814Instruction
388-9303.
NO!Wiv remodoled 1 BR . "'t.
Furnitun:t and applien.CM tw the ·
RE-TRAIN NOW!
BeaJtiful home aile OY_.ooking Appt. furnillhed. ldealocation-1
plec:e or 1!111tire household. Fair SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
Raccoon Ck., corn• lOt in block from downtown. Call
pr ices being' paid. Cell814-446- COLLE.GE. 629 Jackson Pike.
.Cielr'VI811N Eitet• Slibd. Cell 814-44&amp;4839.
31S8.
Coll448-4387. Reg. No. 811-11· ·814-448-8157eftw 5 PM.
10 5158.
.
2 BR . ept .. n8w plush c•pet
Wanted To Buy-Set of used Golf
Landfor•l,.1 to6aaep.-cala. RIW pefnt. utitltl• par11ally peid.
In Ru11andTownlhip. 814-992- •175omo. CoN 304-87&amp;5104,
Clubs . con 614-448·3495.
18 Wantad to Qo
3643.
'
.
1711-538&amp;. 87!&gt; n38.
One own• 2 door car or truck. I will c•e for the elderfv r. my
Unt.nnilhed 2 BR . g•agt:t apart·
1 2 Nl'll Long Hollow Road,
\filii PIIV c•h. Guns, knives.
m.,t.lntown: Cerpeted. A(tuhs
watch a~, &amp; f.-m machinery. Call home. Famitv 11mosphWa 7 30"' 895-39 29.
ve•s
•p•ienoe.
AeMonable
ontv. No pets. Call 814-448614-379·2160.
nrtn. Ew;ellli"rt m• .,c.. Call
4581 .
Key, 814-25&amp; 1878.
A,:.rtment avaitebla. HUD ecUsed furniture by the piece or
do hau.ecle.,lng. Coli
cepted. Coli 304-87&amp;5104
entire hous~ld alto selling. Will
36
R1111l Estate
814-4411-8483.
8)4-742,:/.466.
Wanted
Fumlehed 2.3, or 4 rooms &amp;.
bel h. Cia~. Aduhs ontv. No
Top priea for us~ furnilure.
poto. Rof. &amp; dOll. ooqulrod. Call
general household, antique-.
Financial
•11d eQpllances. All typea. Call
FemUy int«•tfdfn purch•inga 814-4411-1519.
814-985·4398.
building_lot orllt'l"aegelnGalllpoMod•n 1 BR . ep.-tment.' Call
~ or Rio Grande aree. No
Roeltort. pi-e. Ctll814-446- 814-448-0390.
21
Business
6~81. eveninga..
Employment
Opportunity
Motel tYP8 efflci41\CJ/, 1 male
onto;. Mablehome. 1 mile below
Serv1ces

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLIS ~
lNG CO. rocc""'*'dl thot you
do butin- with peo;rle you
know. and NOT to _, man.,
tlwough tt. mall until you have
inv81tlg•ed tho oHorlng.

IIYrting-. 199.
USED~ Beds. dre..era. bedroom
1uit". Oe1k.t, w~inger we't her, a
compiBte line of uted furnh:ure.

Sentinei-Page-9

'~:~:t~~, S©ttJJ~-L£"Btrs~
by

EVENING

19B3 2%8 Com•o. T'o. on
•..,... •eooo.. cou 814-992·
71B7.

NEW- Weoteln boot• ! U5.
Workboots • 18 It up. (81881 &amp;
soft toe). C.ll 614-446-::1159.

cloted p•io. pool pllll'!l"l&gt;Und.
Wat•. IIWer. &amp; truh lncl.lded.
Starting et I 289 p• mo. Call
81"' 387-7850.

MON., FEB. 13

1968 Cedill~. 4 dDor. t400.
Coli 814-,2·5777.
.

Full tin mM1re11 • foundltlon

T•a TqwnhoUse ap.-tment... 2
BRa., 1'12 blltht, CA., diahwut... dilpoul. private en-

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

•

uanino- t99 . Reclinen

AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 538 Jocklon
Pike from t183 a mo. Wllk to
shop and movt.. 614-44ft..
2568. E.O.H.

,_.ovtng Sale Mual Sell, 4 pc

·- canu must hold •

ttt·•

Bunk beda with beddl•lt ' U49.

BEAUTIAJ~ APART~ENTS

living room aui'le. 26 cu ln
Am.,a aide t:Pf tide refrigarator
-f reuer, full size book Ceae b11d.

11

3-1880 Chwv CltotloM bocleO.
•so olc:h. ee11 s..
81499:Z.740J.

Uvfng room .uk•· t19t- tl99.

Apartment
for Rent

Television
Viewing

71 Auto 'a For Sale

NEW~ 6 pc. wood grou~ 1 t399.

Rick Pe•son Auctioneer, ll·

cool

Wright

19e8 Chwy Non 4 aDOod. nc
""'· 12200. 114-9112-5371.

Newiv deoonted, 2 BR ,. lullv
Sec. dop. roqu~ecL
COl 814-4411-8558 ot 44118850.

44

9

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Merchandise

••r•oct·

Coun Houoe, 304-895·3827.

Moriday, February 13, 198l.

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

13,198'1

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'

'

.

.

�Monday, FeDruary I.:S, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ M

i.u

e~s,,.

Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
tonight and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Tuesday evening_ Eastern Star
services will be held Tuesday at
7:30p.m at the funeral home.

Beulah Bradford

Beulah Mitchell Bradford, 93,
of Main St. , Racine. died Sat urday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born on May 12,1895, at Reedy ,
w. Va. she was the daughter of Lester Thomas
the late Lewis Mitchell and
Na nnie Conrad Mitchell.
Lester F. Thomas, 77, Rt. 1,
She was a member of the Langsville, died Sunday at Vete·
Racine United Methodist ran's Memorial HospitaL
Church, the Racine Chapter 134,
Born Sept. 10, 1911 in Cheshire,
Order of the Eastern Star; and he was the son of the late S.W.
t he American Legion Auxiliary, and Letta (Shu ler) Thomas.
,
Racine Post 602.
He retired as the own and
She Is survived by two· step· operator of the Saien Center
daughters, Ruth B. Frank, Ra· Market In S.alem Center, and was
cine, and Mrs. Herman (Mary) a memberoftheChes)Jire United
Carso n,. Coolville; a step- Methodist Chu rch.
daughter-in-law , J eanne Brad· . He is survived by his wife,
ford . Worthington, along with Nora L. (Kessinger) Thomas; ·
several nieces and nephews.
one son, Raymond Thomas of
·Besides her parents, she was Newark; two grandsons, Larry
preceded in death by -her firs t Thomas and Steven Thomas,
husband , Ernest Morris In 1951, both of Newark; and six greatand her second husband , A, C. granchlldren.
(Crit t) Bradford in 1985, a
He was preceded In death by
stepson, Critt Bradford, Jr. , and three brothers and two sisters .
four brothers and three sisters.
Services will be Wednesday, 1
Funeral services Will be held at p.m. at the Salem Center United ·
1:30 p.m. on Wedn esday at the Methodist Church with the Rev.
Ewing Funeral Home. The Rev. Robert Steele officiating. Burial
Roger Grace will officiate and Will be In Gravel Hill Cemetery In
burial will be in the Letart Fails Cheshire.

Friends may call Tuesday, 2 to
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in
Vinton.

B. Harlow Tate
CHILLICOTHE - B. Har low
Tate, 84, of 808 East Water St .,
Chillicothe, died Sunday at the
Ross County Medical Center.
Mr. Tate was born in Cheshire
Township in Galila County, a son
of the late Hugh M. and Laura
Lenora Jenkins Tate. He was a
member of Ross County Senior
Citizens and Moose Lodge No.
4153.

Tate, and three brothers, In
addition to his parents.
Services will be·1 p.m. Wednesday at Rawling-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home with Rev. Wilbur
Crace otliciating. Burial will be
in Grave! Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after l2 noon on Tuesday·_

Continued from page__:_
l _____
_____

hoping to have the opporturnity
to speak In person with local
business men and women at an
open house whl~ he and his
secretary,' Camellia Walker, are
hosting on Wednesday, starting
at 6:30p.m., at thelrWestSecond
Street location. The pubic is
invited to stop by and visit Uti's
newly remodeled office on Wednesday evening.

Regular business hours are
8: 30 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, with the exception of lunch hour from noon to 1
p.m. However, lunch hour, even·
ing and Saturday appointments
are available upon reques t. To
make an appointment, or to
discuss any types of projects on
which Utt may be of service, call
his ollice at 992· 7559.

RITE AID PHARMACISTS

Ohio Lottery

GAHS ousts
Meigs from
tourney play

Daily Number

313
Pick4

6547

Page 4

r

1

"

Survlvlng .are five daughters,
Mrs. Stanley (Sylvia) Rupe, or
Kyger, Mrs. Charles (Mary)
Drummond, of Gallipolis, . Mrs.
William (Dorothy) Treuhelt, of
Fort Mycts, Fla. , Mrs. Everett
(De annie) Stewart, of New Pa·
rls, Mrs. Cecil (Clara Jane)
Rinehart, of Chillicothe; a
brother, Harry Tate, of New
Lexington; 19 grandchildren a.nd
35 great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by
his wife, Ruth Emma Shoemaker

PIIESCRJPTIOIIS ANNUALLY
LET US PRICE YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTIOII

at
Vol. 39, No. 195
Copyrighted 1989

Crystallize

Just call or visit us today to
send the FTD®Candy
Just call or visit us today t
Hearts '" Bouquet. ·
send the FT[)® Crystal
FTD Flowers- The
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feeling riever ends.
FTD Flowers-The
feeling never ends.

your love.

Two Hearts
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SHAVER

StLLEm

RIGHT GUARD

IIEDIIfiiiAIIT-11 DZ. IIZE;,

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99
IJM n:gistered trademark d FTOA

SHOW OF S\]PPORT - Meigs County senior
citizens traveling to Columbus to show their
support for the Eldercare proposal included in
Ohio's biennium budll'el legislation were second

tl1968 FTOA,

1

FLORIST QUALITY PREMIUM

RED ROSES

$29 9 5

DOZEN

Tell us

Meigs County's Oldest Florist

~

(IIIIJrE

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-2644

FLORIST

RJIIJS7li11ES
CDIII'I.ETE
VIJJMHIS
r:HII.IH!fN'S

CHEIIIUL£
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99.

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Large Bot lluhtd Ndou &amp;Ad

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Jllnp AIMIIa . , . ..... ,.JM a, /lor.

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•

•

PRICE GOOD THRU

FEB. 28, 1989

. '

RITE

Ohioans who gatherE-d to call for spends 96 " cents or every one
incr~ased state funding !oF In·
dollar for nursing home care
home and community services . · while only four cents goes to
known as Eldercare.
.
home and community services
As banners waved, leaders The state ranks 47th nationally i~
from the House or Representa· per person state spending on
lives and.Senate accepted scrap- community based in-liome care
books filled with hundreds of according to the agency 's report'
personal testimonies by careglv·
Thursday 's rally was a part of
ers and seniors.
a statewide campaigu by senior
The Eldercare proposal In citizens retiree groups family
O.hio's Biennium budget, is not caregiv~rs and service p~ovlders
designed to replace 24 hour to support funding for Eldercare
skilled nursing home care. in the current budget
Rather it Is designed to help those negotiations.
who could remain at home with
Locally older persons their
some basic assistance, like home families and other con~erned
delivered meals, transporta~lon, individuals in the community are
home health and housekeepmg.
being urged to contact their
According to information from legislators, Rep. Jolynn Boster
the Area Agency on Aging, Ohio and Sen. Jan Long In support or
the Eidercare program.
e

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
306 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Prices tor existing homes in California went through the roof ln 1988
wbile most other parts or the
country experienced modest
price increases or declines, the
National Association of Realtors
said Tuesday.
From the rourtb quarter of 1987
to the final three months or 1988,
the median price of exiting
homes in Or'imge County, Calif. ,
skyrocketed 32.2 percent to
$231,200, tops in the nation.
The second highest median
price - the point at which half
the homes cost more and half
cost less - was the San Fran·
cisco Bay are;t, up 29.6 percent to
$228,100. The Los Angeles area
experienced a 24.6 percent run up
In median prices to$191,200while
San Diego was in fourth place
with a 18.6 percent appreciation
rate to $157,200 median price,
NAR said.
In a second aurvey, the NAR
said sales of existing homes rose
'lo the highest level in two years

employees. The raises are scheduled to go into effect If the
ordinance proceeds as scheduled
with the third and final reading to
be given on Feb. 27.
A second reading was also
given to an ordinance which
would permit Council to secure
future building permits in the
village from Washington County .
It was noted at an earlier
meeting that one advantage in
securing the permits through
that county would "e a faster
turn-around on state required
inspections.
A letter from the Environmental Protection Agency regarding
proposed regulation of the water
system was presented by Mayor
Hoffman. He noted that the
proposal is to enforce regulation
of the water systems much as
was done years ago with the

repor ted that
the village has 45 days in which to
called· to the scene a~d trans- respond to the requirement that
on the scene looking for pr ints.
ported 20-year-old Mandy Hill to the village have a Class 1
On Sunday night, the sheriff's
operator. He further noted that
department investigated a one· Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Boso was charged with driving the EPA plans to enforce a·Ciass1
car accident on State Route 681. ·
According to the accident under the influence, failure to operator for the sewage system
within the next year. He said that
report, Charlie Boso, 21, Por· control and no insurance
The depai'tmentis also 'tnvestl- · some schooling would be re!land, was travellrigeastonState
Route 681 when he lost control of galing the breaking and entering quired to fill the classification
his vehicle and left the road, or a river cottage owned by Jack requirement.
The mayor also mentioned the
damaging approximately 30 of Wiliiams, Syracuse. The entry
fence owned by Mike Harris, was made sometime during the EPA proposal which would add
1·1~ cents P!!r thousand galit)ns
Route 1, Reedsville, before over- past week.
According to the report the tax on water with that money to
turning on the roadway.
Tuppers Plains EMS was door of the cottage was kick~ ln. be used to regulate the system.
A Lew's Speed Stick fishing rod
The first reading was given to
tool boxes and tools were taken' an ordinance providing for the
. transfer of the Race Street

during the final quarter of 1988,
reflecting the demand for owner·
ship by the "baby boom" genera·
tlon despite rising Interest rates .
Ira ' Grlbln, NAR president,
said the price survey shows how
hard It has become for people to
enter the housing market in
hlgh·prlced areas.
"Without some form o! assist·
ance, first-lime buyers have a
very slim chance of owning in
places where home prices have
soared to such high levels," he
said. "They simply are shut out
of the market."
Nationwide, the median price
or a house, condominium or co-op
was $87,900 in the fourth quarter,
up 3,4 percent in one year.
Fifteen metropolitan areas of
the United States had median
prices of more than $100,000 in
the last quarter or 1988.
In markets outside €aiifornla,
Honolulu had the highest median
price at $225,000.
"The prices In California and
Continued on pag 8

building housing the Department
of Human Services from the
village to the Middleport Housi ng
Corporation. Mayor Hoffman
explained that the transfer is
necessary because of state law
which puts unrealistic restraints
upon the leasing of property by
one public entity to another public entity.
The village has secured a four
month extension on the lease
which expired Fe b. 1. The
department. pays $1,050 per
month rental on the building.
According to the pian. the
village will advertise the build·
ing for sale lor the req ulred six
weeks, and then accept the bid of
the Middleport Housing Corporation with the stipulation th at a
contract be signed by the corporation transferring the rent to the
v illage.
The proposed act ion comes on
recommendation of Bernard
Fultz, attorney , Mayor Hoffman
reported, as the appropriate way
to handle the situation si nce it is

in the best interest of the village
to main ta in control over the
building. •
Again a t last night's meeting,
two reside nts appreared before
council to discuss Hudson St.
Jack Satterfield and Dewey
Horton both reported on the need
of both th e street and the
turn-a-round for some general
repair. Again one resident offered the sale of lots owned by her
motther to the village If s treet ·'
widening is planned.
Further discussed was the fact
that she has hao the property
surveyed at a cos t of $925 and the
request was aga in made that
council reimburse her for a part
of that charge based on the fact
that several years ago council
had agree d to spend $500 lor
survey work on that street in
o.rder to establish property lines. ·
The surveying was not carried
out at that time beca use of a
r e port ed n e ighborh oo d
controversy.
'
Continued on page 8

Racine officials
~~\~~~i~:~~~!r~~:~;~~r~l~:;~ get nl? response
~ from recent letter

•ff
&amp;
E
Shert contmues 8
probe se~:~~:~~~~~n

Califontia tops in
home price increases

MANUFACTURERS'
COUPONS

t ~"

"I need my meal to live. My
driver will 'find my body when I
die. } have no family. Thank
you.
So read a plea for help to Ohio's
legislators from a Meigs County
senior citizen receiving home
delivered meals.
This story along with other
touching accounts of difficulties
and needs faced by elders and
those who care for them was told
at the recent rally In the
Statehouse Rotunda.
Meigs County Senior Citizens,
Dorothy Downie, Dorothy Long,
Mary Frances Baumgardner,
Lula Hampton, along with Eiea·
nor Thomas, Meigs County Couneli on Agl~ director, joined the
enthusiastic crowd of older

A breaking and entermg at
Eastern High School during the
early morning hours of Sunday is
now under investigation by
. Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Souls by . Entry to the school was
made sometime after midnight ,
Soulsby reports.
Entry was gained by breaking
out a pane of glass in the kitchen.
A number or rooms were entered
in an apparent search for money.
The Bureau of Criminal Inves·
tigation, London, Ohio, assisted

... ,. 4 BuHtrmiUJ: lllcnaBI

99

t;, By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A five year plan of capital
improvements, to be carried out
in the village with Issue ll funds,
was adopted at Monday night 's
meeting of Middleport Village
Council.
The village, according to
Mayor Fred Hoffman, will re·
cejve $31,500 a year during the
first two years of the five year
distribution program, and
$36,000 annually for the rema in·
ing three years.
A 10 percent local match is
required lor the expenditure of
funds and monies !rom Issue II
can be used only for the repair
and improvement of exis tin g
racliitles.
The plan includes a prioritized
list of 23 projects all over town.
Installation of storm sewers,
sidewalk and curb replacements,
widening and reconstructing
from the left to right, Dorothy Downie, Dorothy
streets,
some resurfacing, and
Long, Lola Hampton, and Mary Frances
correction
of draining problems
Bauml{ardner.
are among the projects which fall
under the guiditnes of funding
use.
•
The list of project s is to be
turned into the Meigs County
Commissioners this month .
A second reading was given to

Meigs County senior citizens
·~k e. - part in C0 Itim
_ bus rally

3
FOR

\)'leleOom:

CASH AND CAllY

A Mutttmedialnc. Newspaper

Council adopts 5-year
Issue II project plans

BIC

Give the
Love Struck.
GARFIELD

2 Sections. 12 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 14, 1989

I.

For red hot lovers.

•

•

DISI'tiSAIU

Uzlentine's Day is 1ites(kt): February 14

RJtin tonight. Low nejU' 40.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Wednesday, rain. JDgh in mid
50s. Chance of rain 80 percent.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Members of Racine Village
Council, in a recent meeting
expressed disappointment that
. officials at the Philip Sporn Plant
in Mason, just across from
Racine, have not yet responded
to a letter written to them asking
for co.operation in eliminating
excess noise from the plant.
The poise from the plant Is a
nuisance to Racine residents.
Council authorized Mayor Frank
Cleland to write another letter to
plant officials anti If there Is stili
no response, to file a complaint
with the Ohio Environmental
Prot.e ction Agency .
Meigs County Game Protector
Keith Wood, representing the
Meigs County Fish and Game
Association, met with Council to
see if any plans are in the works
to improve the boat launch
facility at Racine. Wood lndl·
cated the Fish and Game Association would make a donation for
Improvements. Council advised
that improvements at the boat
launch had been discussed.
It was the feeling among
Counciimembers that indlvldu·
als using th e facility should help
pay for improvements, not just
village tax payers. Councilman
Scott Wolfe volunteered to under·
take a drive to raise funds to
make improvements.
Council extended thanks to the

Fish and Game Association for
their offer to help.
Norman Weber, representing
Skyview Cable System, met with
Council to ask for a franchise to
set up a Cable TV system In
Racine. It was noted that when
cable first came toRaclnr, Angel
Communi cat ions was given an
exclusive franchise to the Racine
system and when Angel Communications sold the system to
Ca blevislon, the rights went with
the system.
Weber reported that Skyview
wants to build a system In Racine
and Syracuse and that prices
would be competitive, although
he was unsure if Skyview would
be able to get Columbus
c hannels.
· Lee Layne, Elm St. resident,
reported to Council that he plans
to open a live bait and ta ckle
shop.
He also Inquired if council
would 1haul gravel to fill in his lot
for parking. Mayor Cleland ad- .
'vised Layne that State Auditor's
guidelines prohibit ustng public
property and equipment to benefit private individuals.
Council does wish Layne good
luck in his buslnes~ venture.
In regard to State Iss ue II
funds , Council authorized the
mayor to submit the village's
Jive-year improvement plan
which is required by the state.
Continued on page 8

Ice causes
rash of minor
auto mishaps
Icy roads caused a rash of
minor accidents Monday In
Meigs County. Four accidents
occurred between 8:25 a.m. and
9: 26 a.m. No one was injured.
One driver was cited In a two car
collision.
Tony L. Barringer, 25, Reeds·
ville, was cited for lett o! center
after an accident at 12:15 p.m.
Monday on SR. 681, 0.1 miles east
or mile post 22, near Tuppers
Plains.
Troopers said a van dr lven by
Barringer went left or center and
collided headon with a pickup
truck orlven by Robert D.
Dalton, 57, Coolville. There was
heavy damage to both vehicles.
The patrol cited Dalton for not
having his vehicle registered.
An accident occurred at 8: 25
a.m. Monday,lnColumbla Township, on CR. 1, 0.1 mUes west of
SR. 143. Troopers said MonicaL .
Continued on page 8

--

Storefronts
CELEBRATE SCOUTING throull'hout the Big Bend Area are decorated this
February with Boy Scout memorabilia In honor of
Nattonal Boy Scout Week which was Fe.b ruary

at

5-11. This window Quickel's Insurance Agency
In Pomeroy was decorated by Pomeroy Cub Scout
~Pack :149.

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="36691">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36690">
              <text>February 13, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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    <tag tagId="1366">
      <name>bradford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="74">
      <name>mitchell</name>
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    <tag tagId="934">
      <name>tate</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
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  </tagContainer>
</item>
