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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
r----

Local briefs...----. -----Stocks---Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .4 5%
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:3C a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis 6&lt; Loewi

Continued from page 1
members and 1,200 adult volunteers In 124 cub packs, scout
troops and explorer posts In the three state area. Financial
support enables leadership training, organization of new units,
program assistance and materials, operation of camps, council
and district activities and direct service to chartered
community organizations and their scouting unit s," McOade
said.

Heck 's ................. .. .............. ~
Key Centurion ........... ., ....... 13\1,
Lands' End .. .. ..................... 33%
Limited Inc ........................ 28~
Multimedia Inc ............... . ... 86~
Rax Res taurants .. ................ 2'1.
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ............ l 5~
Shoney's Inc ............. ... , ....... S:Y,
Wendy 's Inti .... : ....... ............ 6\-1
Worthington Ind ................. 21\4

Am Elect ric Power .......... .. .25 y,
AT&amp;T ... .. ............................31%
Ashland Oil ....................... .40 Y.
Bob E vans ......................... .1 5Y.
Charming Shoppes ............. .16%
Cit y Holding Co .......... ..... .. .. 18
Federal Mogul... ................. 52\1,

EMS has three Monday calls

.

Tuesday, March 28, 1989.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Three calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Monday .
At 2: 14 a.m. the Middleport squad went to Page Street for
Sarah McKinney who was taken to V{'terans ·M emorial
Hospital. At 12:43 p.m. the Racine unit took Ralph Marshall to
Veterans. and at 5: 25 p.m. the Tuppers Plains squad
transported Carrie Osborne from Township Road 319 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Missionary to speak

Lodge to meet

Donald ·Genheimer, mission·
ary to Afr ica, will be speaking
a nd s howing slides Wedn esday. 7
p.m ., at the Carleton Church.
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy. E ve·
ryone welcome.

Ha r risonville Lodge 411 F &amp;A M
will meE'! Saturday, 7: 30p.m .. for
degree work. All past masters
are urged to attend.

Hospital news

Weather

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Linda P ersons.
Racine; Elwood Phillips, Ru ·
tland : Ralph Marshall, Evans,
W. Va .; and Carrie Os borne.
R eedsvllle.
Discharges - Wilbu r Smith
and Allee Loomis .

South Central Ohio
Tonight : ShOwers and thunderstorms, with a low near 60. Winds
southwestl5 to 25 mph. Chance of
ra in 80 percent.
Wednesday: Showers likely .
with a cha nce of thunderstorms.
Highs will be In the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 70 percent.

Spring
• •
trammg
results

Free ('lothing Day
slated Thursday

Page 5

f

Plan softhall tournament
A men's slow pitch softba ll
tournament for eight teams will
be held April1 5-16 in Reedsville.
Cost is $70 and .two softballs. Tees hirt s will be awa rded for first
place; hats for second place and
a sponsor trophy for third. Call
614 -378-6406 for information.

Ohio Lottery
Pick3
417
Pick4
6480

Low tonight In mid ~Os .
Chance of rain near 100
percent. Thursday, high In
upper 50s. Chance of rain near
100 peuent.

•

Free clo thing da y will be- held
at the Sal \'ation Arm'. Pomero'.
on Thursday, from 10 a .m . until
noon .. All area res idents in need
of clothing .are WE'Icome to come .

Bloodmobile visit set Thursday

•

The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will beat Eastern High
School Thursday from 10 a.m to 2 p.m. and the public is invited
to stop by and donate blood . All blood types are needed .
according to a spokesman from the Red Cross.

1taf.l1e

Vot.39, No.226
Copyrighted 1989

I

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COLI,JMBUS, Ohio (UP I) - A
citizen lobby group released a
study Tuesday showing municipal electric customers paid an
average of $9 a month less than
customers of Investor-owned
electrtc companies In March.
Citizen Action, formerly the
Ohio Public Interest Campaign,
said the "rate gap" was more
pronounced in northern Ohio,

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FRANKFURT, West Germany
(UP!) Two Czechoslovak
teenagers armed with shotguns
and grenades hijacked a Hungar·
ian airliner In Prague, Czechoslo·
vakla, Wednesday and flew with
14 hostages to Frankfurt, where
they surrendered without lncl·
dent, airport -officials and pollee
said.
The Tupolev Tu·154, a Soviet·
made plane similar to a Boeing
727, landed at Frankfurt Airport
at 12:30 p.m. and the boys, aged
15 and 16, gave themselves up 40
minutes later to U.S. milllary
pollee, said Karl-Heinz Wagner,
spokesman for Frankfurt pollee.
No one was hurt In the hijacking.
U.S. officials turned the boys
over .to German pollee, who
·~ll'bnell them through a trans·
lator, Wagner said. They said
they wanted to remain In Germany, he said.
The boys, who said they were
Czechoslovakian, took control of
the Malev Hungarian Airlines
Flight 640 at the Prague airport
at about 9:30 a.m . , armed with
sawed-off shotguns and home·
made grenades. The aircraft had
been scheduled to fly from
Budapest, Hungary, to Amsterdam with 110 passengers, the
Hungarian riews agency MTI
reported,
They freed 100 passengers ·
before taking off.
"They wanted to go to Amer·
lea," said MTI spokesman Tlbor
Koves In London. ''They proba·
bly just wanted to get out.
Asked how the teenagers could
get weapons in Czechoslovakia,
he said: "It Is probably easier to
get those things than to buy an air
ticket to the United States .

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The Southern Local School
District Board of Education
reported Tuesday night excess
lottery monies In the amount of
$41,047.22 have been received
durtng the board's monthly meetIng held at the high school.
Priorities for expenditure of
the money were set with the first
priority being the Installation of a
new furnace at the Syracuse
. Elementary School, and the

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SALESMAN OF THE YEAR- Jim Cobb, Cl.:~:.~~!:~~;~~
Cobb Chevrolet Oldsmobile Cadillac Geo Inc. In
seen
.
here presenting the salesman ofthe year plaque to Mike
Anderson has been with the dealership for eight years and resides
in Middleport.
"They overpowered the crew the suspects were captured .
Tlie Hungarian consul, Lajos
in Prague. They first grabbed a
woman at the Prague airport as a Taga, offered himself In place of
hostage. They had guns. They the passengers on the 143-seat
forced their way through the VIP plane, but the hijackers would
room, they boarded the airplane. permit only women and children
Then they started some to leave. Several other pas·
sengers ·escaped through the
negotiations .
"Originally they wanted to go back door as the negotiations
to the United States buttheywere were being conducted.
The plane took off with 10 male
frustrated because the plane
couldn't fly that far," Koves said. · passengers, three of them Hun·
garian, and a crew of four,
The Czech news agency CTK
Including one flight attendant.
said the original hostage was an
After being told the aircraft
airline representative, but MTI
co11ld not take them to America,
could not confirm the report.
the hijackers, who spoke SlovaIt was the first hijacking of a
kian, asked to be flown to
Hungarian aircraft. There was a
Barcelona,
Spain, Budapest ra-h ijack attempt In Warsaw in 1982
dio
said.
but the plane did not take off and

second, installation of a fire
alarm at Letart Falls
Elementary.
Larry Wolfe was hired as
reserve softball coach by the
board which also approved the
Racine Ball Association for use
of the ball fields at the junior high
school and the high school
contlnguent on the association's
having liability Insurance.
The school calendar for
,•

Local news briefs--

:~3388

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Pomeroy Attorney John Lentes will be defending William
(Zeke) Collins, 28, Racine, on a murder charge in connection
with the Sunday shooting death of his uncle, Virgil Collins, on
grounds that the shooting was accidental.
Lentes was appointed as Collins' attorney during Monday's
Initial appearance of Collins before Meigs County Court Judge
Patrtck O'Brien.
· A date of April 5 was set by the judge for Collins' preliminary
hearing. However, Lentes reported Tuesday that his client
Intends to waive the t\prU ·5 preliminary hearing In county
court, and will ins lead allow the case to be transferred to Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Collins Is charged with murder, carrying a concealed weapon
and tampering with evidence In connection with the alleged
murder.

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deadline Monday

Jane Frymyer, director of the Meigs County Board of
Elections, reminded Meigs Countians that Monday Is the
deadline for regls~rlng to vote In Ohio In the primary election.
The Board e! Elections office located on Mechanic Street In
Pomeroy Is open from 8:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. dally and In
accordance with a directive from Ohio Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown will be open until 9 p.m.
Meigs County voters can also register at the Pomeroy Library
Continued on page 12

lloet Major
Credit Card•

}

••

Peter MacDowell, leglsllitlve di·
rector for Citizen Acllon.
MacDowell said Ohio Power
Co. and Cincinnati Gas &amp; Elect·
ric Co. are delivering service to
typical households at costs rang·
ing from 6 to 8 cents a kilowatthour and "have little to fear from
municipal competition."
"The clear exceptions are the
three northern Ohio utilities -

Toledo Edison , Ohio Edison and
CEI - which are now charging
far more than other private or
municipal utilities - 10 to 11 \12
cents a kilowatt hour, with more
rate hikes coming."
The study was based on a
telephone survey of 77 municipal
electric systems on their most
recen t bills for 500 kilowatt hours

of residential service, compared
with the Ohio Consumers' Counsel semi-annual rate survey of
lnvestor·owned utilities.
It showed average savings for
municipal customers In the
Toledo Edison area of $22.39 a
month: In the Ohio Edison area,
$20.78 a month, and in the CEI
area , $17.70 a month.

Numerous witnesses testify
for tobacco, alcohol taxes

Atty. Lentes to defend Collins

35o/a
Off

territorial limitation, claiming
the municipals can undercut
them because they are subsidized by taxpayers.
"Contrary to the line pushed
successfully by private utility
lobbyists In the House, our
survey shows that there Is no big
across-the·board 'tilt' In the
playing field bet ween private
and public electrl&lt;; bills," said

Syracuse school to get new furnace

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served by the Toledo Edison,
Ohio Edison and Cleveland Elect·
ric Illuminating companies .
The report of the study was
sent to state senators, who will
soon be considering a · House·
passed bill limiting the service
territory of the municipal elect·
ric companies.
The private Investor-owned
companies have asked for the

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MS·OOSIAog. TM M•croso« Co•p.

step-sister, Annabelle Sisson oi
Kyger.
.Joe Cook, Lincoln Terrace,
He was preceded in death by a
Pomeroy, has received word of brother, Bill Rope.
the death or his sister, Mrs.
Services will be conducted 1
William -Curls ton, (Anna May · p.m. Thursday from WaughCook). Mrs. Curls ton died March
Halley-Wood Funeral Home, the
19 at Brightoin, Mich.
Rev. Alfred Holley offlclatlng.
A native of Pomeroy. she
Burial follows In Providence
graduated from Pomeroy High
Cemetery.
School, anc~ until moving to
Friends may call at the funeral
Brighton, was a member of the
home, Wednesday. 6 to 9 p.m.
Pom~roy First Baptist Church.
Besides her parents, Mr. and Ruby Dinsmore
Mrs. William Cook, Mrs. Cursiton was preceded In death by
Ruby I. Dinsmore, 70, Rt. 5,
three brothers, Thomas, Lee and Gallipolis, (Centenary Common·
Dan. and a sister, EthelSavauge, lty) died Monday afternoon at
In addl:tlon to her brother, Joe her residence following an exCook, she is survived by a sister,
Edith Cook, Brighton, Mich., and tended lllne~s.
Born Dec. 29, 1918tn Kanawha
several nieces and nephews.
County, W.Va., she was the
Burial was at Brighton.
daughter of ·Alma Evans Salls·
bury of Gallipolis and the late
Virgil Collins
Sherman
Salisbury.
Virgil Edward Collins, 42, of
.
She
was
formerly employed as
32091 Dark Hollow Road, Pome·
manager
of Union Depart·
a
floor
roy, died Sunday at his ·
ment
Store
In
Columbus for
residence.
several years and was self·
Born on Nov. 28, 1946, he was
employed.
She was a member of
the son of Willie Mason and
the
First
Baptist Church of
Gladys Eileen Chaffin Collins.
Gallipolis
.
He worked as an equipment
Also preceding her In death
operator.
was
her husband, Fred F.L.
He Is survived by three siSters,
Dinsmore,
on May 8, 1978,
Emily Sue Reeves and Annette
Surviving
are two daughters,
Lamberter, Cheshire, and Birdie
Mrs.
Hilda
Drake
of Portsmouth,
Simpson, Baca Raton, Fla.; and
and
Mrs.
Betty
Statler
of San
three brothers, Jerry Collins,
A.ntoillo,
Texas,
six
grandchild·
Mason, W. Va.; Adam Collins,
ren and four great ·
San Diego, Calif.; and Willie
grandchildren.
,
Co111ns. Ridgeway, along with
Also surviving are two sisters,
several nieces and nephews, and
Mrs.
Emerson (lois) Corbin of
aunts and uncles.
Gallipolis,
and Mrs. Raymond
Besides his parents, he was
(Lois)
Green
of Gallipolis, and
preceded In death by a sister,
five
brothers,
Noah
Salisbury of
Freda Collins, a brother Harold
Procius,
W.Va.,
Warren
Salls·
Gene Collins, and a half-brother,
bury
of
Gallipolis,
Harold
Salis·
David Lewis.
bury
of
Columbus,
Sherman
Funeral services will be held
Salisbury of San Diego, Calif.,
Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the
and Alden,Salisbury of Patrtot.
Ewing Funeral Home. The Rev.
Services will be Friday, 10: 30
Ralph A. Butcher wlll officiate.
a.m.
at the Cremeens Funeral
Graveside services wlll be held
Chapel,
with the Rev, Archie
at 3: 30 p.m. Thursday at the
Conn and the Rev .•Joseph God·
Payton Cemetery, Midkiff, W.
win officiating. Burial Will be In
Va.
the
Centenary Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
Friends
may call Thursday, 4
home from 2 to4and 7to9p.m. on
at
the funeral chapel.
to
8
p.m.
Wednesday.
Contributions may be made to
Paul D. Rupe
the Gallipolis Chapter of the
Paul Donovan Rupe, 49, of American Cancer Society.
Route 2, Gallipolis, died Tuesday
at Holzer Medical Center follow ing a lengthy lllness. He was a
roofer and construction worker.
Born Oct. 9, 1959, he was a son
of Ora Marie Swisher Rupe of
· Columbus and the late Raymond
Rope.
Also surviving are three
daughters, Penny Sue Rupe,
Cathy Rope and Betty Bush, all
of Ga111polls; three sons, Paul
Rope Jr., 'Kevin Rope and
William Rupe, all ol Gallipolis;
.one grandchild; three brothers,
Richard Rope, Kenny Rope and
Gerald Rope, all of Columbus;
fourslsters, Delores Stevens and
Eunice Woodall, both of Colum·
bus, Francis McGuffin of Hun·
"tlngton, W.Va., and Mary Don·
nelty of Sarasota, Fla.; one

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Municipal electric is cheaper, study reveals

Pulp ... Continued from page 1
"They came back last week Peoples Bank.
Alabama Pulp and River Comabout the water pollution control
jlcnnit," she said shanty before pany is considered one of the larnoon Monday. Young said that it gest such finns in the world and
would "some time before the vcr- reportedly is interested in bringing
mitting process moves at any kind a plant 10 Mason County at an invesllllent of some $640 million
of speed."
from
the outset
"It just takes a lot of time,"
Word
of the company's reported
Young said.
interest
in
Mason County was anAlthough there is no mention of
nounced
in
December by outgoing
the finn, Mason County Economic
Development Authority President Governor Arch A. Moore Jr., and
Jim Lewis said Friday afternoon be has later been renned a "Super
understood the company will be Bowl" of industrial development by
part of the Alabama Pulp and River . Capenon, who has been involved in
Company,. Inc., of Alabama's attempting to bring the plant to
proposed operation in Mason West Virginia.
County, should the giant conAt the Thursday night Mason
glomerate decide 10 locate in the
County Area Chamber of Comarea."1 was told Thursday that these merce banquet, Lee discussed the
(corporation) papers had been possibility of obtaining a company
that would generare $8 million in
filed. • Lewis said.
new
tax dollars for the Mason
Frank
Lee,
development
authority
executive
director, County schools alone.
During that meeting, Lee raised
declined comment.
The action establishing a stare the invesllllent figure from $640
company comes hours before the million to $750 million and later
development authority was to meet said that figure could ~w tremenat 7 p.m. Monday to select officers dously if the plant is s•ted in Mason
alld conduct official business at the County.

Sections, 12 Pages 25 Cenu

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March29, 1989

1989-90 was adopted. Teachers
will report on Aug. 25, with
students to report on Aug. 28. The
last day for students In that
school year will be May 24, 1990,
while the last day for teachers
will be May 25, 1990.
Attending the meeting were
Superintendent Bobby Ord,
Treasurer Dennie Hlll, and board
members, Scott Wolfe, Charles
Norris, Gary Willford, Denny
Evans, and John Murphy.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - A stream of
witnesses concerned with public
health lobbied an Ohio Senate
committee Intensely Tuesday for
Increases in tobacco taxes and
for more coordinated alcohol and
drug recovery. services.
State Health Director Ronald
Fletcher said the economic costs
in Ohloattrlbutableto smoking in
1985 were $2.6 bllllon- or $240 for
every man, woman anq child.
Pamela Hyde, director of the
Ohio Department of Mental
Health, said a separate state
Department of Recovery Servl·
ces is needed to oversee alcohol
and drug treatment programs .
Both Cabinet officers tes tifled
before the Ways ·and Means
Committee, which ts considering
Increased · tobacco taxes and
liquor permit fees as part of the
state budget.
The committee also Is working
on a proposed oversight commls·
slon, headed by the lieu tenant
governor, of all drug and alcohol
treatment programs.
The latJer bill is sponsored by
Sen. Richard Finan, RCinclnnati, chairman of the

Ways and ME'ans Committee.
have the 15th highest clgar,ette
Hyde said she Is opposed, prefer· tax In the nation - 25 cents a
ring Gov. Richard Celeste's pack. It Is now 18 cents - 26th
proposed Department of Recov· highest In the country .
ery Services .
Chad McCarty, 17, a high
Fletcher said if cigarette school student from Plain City,
smoking were reduced by 3 offered the most graphic testim·
percent, Ohioans would save$132 ony In favor of higher taxes on
million In direct health care smokeless tobacco.
McCarty presented his junior
costs, and $279 million annually
in total costs, Including lost . high school science fair project
productivity in the workplace.
from three years ago, In which he
He said national data shows surveyed school pupils. Seven'
that a iO percent increase in the teen percent said they used snuff
cigarette tax results in a 4 or chewing tobacco, and 27
percent decrease in smoking by percent of those said they started
adults and 14 percent by when they were 14.
children.
The student showed pictures of
Celeste originally proposed a the mouths of chewers with
10·cent hike in the tax on a pack of inflammations and cancerous
cigarettE's, but the House . re· lesions.
''I really feel it's important for
duced it to 7 cents and added a 25
percent tax on the wholesale Ohio to tax smokeless tobacco,
price ol other tobacco products; ·--be~ It wut · l~ \otol
Including snuff, cigars and pipe kids not to use It," he said. "They
lobacco.
don't have a lot of money."
Hyde said Finan's proposed
State tax CommisSioner oversight commission on alcohol
Joanne Limbach said this would and drug treatment "would add
raise virtually the same amount •. to the bureaucracy and staffing
$179 million, as the governor's without eliminating any of the
version, with the proceeds going mid·level duplication." She referred to county mental health
to health care and elder care.
Limbach said If the House boards and regional alcohol
recovery boards.
version Is enacted, Ohio would

Athens Countians draw up
redistricting · plan for Ohioans
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UP I) - An
Athens County group is giving
Ohioans the opportunity to draw
congressional boundaries that
wlll be even in population and not
favor any party or candidate.
The Center for Research Into
Governmental Process, head·
quartered lh New Marshfield In
Athens County, said its plan for
redistricting would be In the form
of a contest with the top three
proposals being submitted to the
annual meeting of the American
Political Science Association In
September.

David L . Horn, director of the
group, said he hopes this contest
produces a congressional redls·
tricting plan based on population
equality, compactness and as
little splitting of counties , cities,
and villliges as possible.
State legislatures draw new
congressional boundaries after
each federal census Is taken.
Redistricting often results In
oddly shaped districts to protect
a given party or candidate.
Census estimates Indicate Ohio
will lose at least one, and likely
tl;'(o. of its 21 seats after the 1990

census. The new districts are to
be in place for the 1992 elections.
A package of materials needed
to draw boundarieS is available
from the group at $25.
Plans are to be submitted by
May 20 and three winners will be
chosen and receive $100 each.
The top three plans wlll be
submitted at the annual meetng
of the American Political Science
Association In September.
Horn said he expects entries to
come from political science
student at Ohio's colleges and
universities.

Economic
indicators

fall "0.3%
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Weakening capital Investments,
building permits and factory
orders for consumer goods
helped, push down the Index of
leading economic indicators 0.3
percent in February, the govern·
ment said Wednesday.
The decline in the Indicator
that foreshadows the nation's
economic growth followed revised Increases of 0. 7 percent In
January and 0.6 percent In
December. One month ago, the
Commerce Department reported the Index "up 0.6 percent In
January and up 0. 7 percent In
December.
Since last March, the Index has
fallen only three times: last
month, In September when It
declined 0.3 percent and In July,
down 0.8 percent.
In the 12 months leading up to
February, the Index was up 3.5
·
Continued on page 12
1

MAKING WAY FOR MORE CARS -lim Cobb
Chevrolet Oldsmobile Cadillac Geo Inc. In
Pomeroy hu expanded Its lot to allow lor 38 more

cars. The new lollllloe~d next to the new Rite
Aid store on Eut Main Street In Pomeroy.

.,....._-

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 29, 1989

.

Buy One----Get One

AOVERnSED mM POliCY- Each of th ese advertised items is
requ ired to be readily · a va~able for sale in each Kroger
Store, e~~:cept as specifically noted In this ad. It we do run
out of an adverli$9d item, we w itl offer you yo ur choiCe of a

comparabkl hem , when avai lable, reflec ting the same
savings or a raincheck which witt entitle you to purchase

March 29. 1989

The Daily

Ohio

Rose probe could take several weeks

the edvertised item a~ the advertised price w ithin 30 days.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
baseball c ommissioner's office
investigation into Cincinnati
Reds Manager P ete Rose's gambUng habit s will likely las t
several mar e wee ks, s tretching
into the star t of the season, the
man heading the Investigation
said Tuesday.
John Dowd, th e special counsel
to the commissioner, said lie
advised Commissioner Peter
Ueberro th and Bart Glamattl,
who will succeed Ueberroth
Saturday, he is not nearly finished looking into Rose 's affairs.
"The investigation which I am
directing into allegations involvIng Cincinnati Manager Pete
Rose is proceeding at full pace,"
DOwd said in a statement. " While
the investJgatlon is complica ted

Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item
purchased .
COPYRIGHT 1989 • THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND
· PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . MARCH 26, THROUGH
SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1989, IN
OM.UPOU' AND I"'MERDY ITO,.EI.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIM IT QU ANTITI ES . NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS .

and tim e consuming, the investigative team is working dil1gently to find and evaluate ali the
availabl e facts .
-"1 have advise d Commissioner
Ueberroth and Comm!slonerelect Giamatti that in my judgment , it is likely the investigation
wlll require at least several more
weeks . Rumors to the contrary
are inaccurate and prompted
this clarification. "
The cloud of a possible suspension will hang over Rose when the
Reds play at home against the
Los Angeles Dodgers on Opening
Day Monday.lf the investigators
determine Rose bet on baseball
games, he wlll be suspended for
one year. If he gambled on Reds'
games, he would be banned for
life.

Ueberroth first revealed hts
office was investigating Rose
March 20, in response to a Sports
Illustrated story alleging Rose
has gambled on baseball games.
Meanwhlle, Rose continues to
manage the Reds at their Plant
City, Fla., spring training base.
Rose is baseball's ali-time hit
leader with 4,256 hits, which
came over 24 major league
seasons. He last played in 1986.
If he Is suspended, he will be
the most prominent baseball
figure disciplined for gambling
since Denny McLain was suspended twice in 1970 for involvement with bookmakers.
Leo Durocher, then manager
of the Brooklyn Dodgers, received a one-year suspension In
1947 for consorting with

gamblers.
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
banned Hall at Fame rs Mickey
Mantle and Wlll!e Mays from
association with baseball afte r
they took jobs In public re lations
for Atlantic City casinos. Neither
Mays nor Mantle were involved
with baseball at the time, and
there was no sugges tlon of
Impropriety. Kuhn, however,
wanted to avoid any association
between baseball and gambling.
In March of 1985, Ueberroth
lifted the ban.
Rose, who turns 48 on Aprll14 ,
was born in Cincinnati and
played the first 16 years of his
career there. He appeared in five
playoffs and !pur World Ser ies
with the club, in a dy nasty known
as thl' Big Red Machine.
PETE ROSE

St. John's seeks record fifth NIT title
NEW YORK (UPI) -Beyond
scoring more points than their
opponents, St. Louis and St.

•

'

Scoreboard ...

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1-LB . PKG. REGULAR, THICK OR GARLIC

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13.5-0Z. SEA PAK

Serve 'N' Save
Bologna

Aander's
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Fantail Shrimp
'n Batter

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John'-s · bring completely different motivations into the National
Invitation Tournament finaL

Exhibition

Ch~\'e la.nd 10~

By Unl&amp;ed Prl!ss lnler~~~oUor.ll
Base ball E•hl h6t ton Standlnp

AMERI CAN LEAGUE
W
lK
IIi
1-1
15
13

Toronlo
L'l r:Ye land
Texas
MinnPsol.».
'Kanka.il f 'lt y

0 !1kland

"

L
K
18
ID
II
10

P l1 .
.692
.615
.5 K:t
~"i 11

.SGll

13

.519

13 U

.4111

12 U
12 13
1-1 16
1'1: 14

Seat•w

n 1.a

.4RO
.4li-O
.48"1
.482

L'hl caco

14 18

.13Jol

lio~lon

10 16

.385.

New York
B.altlmo"-'
Calllorl¥11

,Milwau.....
Detroit

NATIONAL LEAGUE
17 1
San Di e go
St . louis
( ;lndnNltl
::
15 IS
)..li s M RCh.'fi
1~111,\Jlll rgh
14 14
13 14
Sau r n Uld!tco
11 12
Atlanta
l i 14
New \ ' ork
lit l :l
M u lllr~ IIJ
Philadelphia
t 14

.412

.'WK

Dallas 9t

Hou!Con 100, Seattle Ill
Nrw \-' ork lt8, PortLand 1'!-1
l:hlcqo I 15, Gohkn Slate IOli
SIUI Ant onlo 13(), \\'liS hlngton I 14
l'hOf'ftb: 1!7, LA Lake1'8 10-t
\\' e ~q ' s Gllrnt'S
r ortland a! Bn."iton, 1: ~II p.m.
\\'ashlnK1on 11.1 Alllllll.a, 1:30

p.m .

Mhuulullndian!l. 7 ~ 311 p.m.
Chicago at Mll"·aul;re, R: 30

p .m .

ll4't roll at Ut~:~h , 9: 30 p.m.
Sa crv.mento at LA (' llppt"n, II: SO p.m .
Thun!da-,y' li Gamttl
Houston at New .full!!) , JJight
Golden Stat e 11.1 c-.a:rlo4U&gt;, nl~ht
Dallas at New \' orll., night
S e aUIP at Dt&gt;nwr, ni~
San Antonio ill I. A Laker !I, nil Ill
PhoeJJIX at

S 1u~m~nto.

nlcht

I~ ~~

BUY ONE

FROZEN 26-0Z .

IN THE DAIRY CASE 10-CT. 9.5-0Z.

24~ 0Z. REGULAR OR LITE

Free 5-lb. Bag Of
Gravy Train Dog Food

Mountain Top
Apple Crumb Pie

Kroger Butter Me
Not Biscuits

Kroger
Pancake Syrup

At the checkout with coupon

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FREE!

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.536
.500
..alii

.n il
.4G2
.-135
.391

llousto11

9 Ill

.333

Chl c a,~~;o

II 19

.298

1\H'!:id&lt;\.'r'' S Ra; ult~S
KansM CU )' 9. Boston 6
Trtronto 6, St. l..ouls I
New York I SL) 2, t\liWita 0
Philad elphia t , C'h lcaro ( 1\L ) 3 til Inn. 1
Los Angelctoll , New Y o rk (AL 1 10
Texas II, l"itlsbu!'lh -t
Ballhnore -1 , Montreal%
Dt&gt;l roll 11 1 Mln~!Wita 6
011.kland ( l'i M) 7, nwel..nd5 (I linn .)
s .. attle 9, Mll'ofiW Ire!
San Francisco (d ) -1, Oll cago (NI, ) :1
( 10 Inn.)
l; iUJ Dlt-KtJ t, Ca lllor~11 I
ClradnmtiH, Hou,;tonO
O&amp;.~kland (!Ill ) t S an Franci Jo~Co ( » ) 3

'

Today's events
"' tl dlt~&lt;Q' '!i

Spurt• ( 'alt"ndu.r
Blt.'ie haJI Eddhition
Mo11freiLI n . Los Aht~;eleti at \ 'c ru
Rt•m·h, Fll\. , 12 : 30 p.m .
Clndnl.-11 v~ . Boston at " 'Inter Havll'n,
tla. , I p.m .
St. Loub1 v~ . Philadelphia at Ch·arwatu. FII( .,I :O!ip.m.
Chh:a&amp;O I AL ) ""· Pit t!lbu rgh at Bradt'n·
ton, F1a.,l : O$p.m .
..
Mln~Hota \.' li. flo'pw York (NL ) at P o rt
St . LAi ch.•, tla ., 1: 05 p .m .
Balllmol'l' ¥s. T eu~ al Port Charlo.«.&gt;,
tl~~o . , I: 30 p.m .
Hou~onv !l . K~tnsa sC it~· at Hallll'li f lly,
t ' la, l : il!t p.m.

Dt'lroH \IS, Toronto ut DunciHn , Fla. ,
J: :t3 p.m.
Ch '\'l' h1.n d ,.,., San t' rant'isrQ at Sl'nl l~
dalt•. ,\rtt .. ~p . m .
Mlh,'.tU l!l•t· '' "'· Oakland at Phot•nlx ,

.

•
•

~;:# : . _:;~-~

·---·-··-··.

--

p.m .
SP!Iftle n . ('bl l."lt ~ ( NJ.) at Mt!Oa ,
r\rU., :J :05 p.m .
Sllll IM4'II!:O vs. ( 'allfornla at P~tlm
Sprinp.. Calli ., 4: 03p.m .
Atl.llratu ""· New York (AL) at t~oorl
Laudenlalt•, li1a .. 7: :10 p .m.
3 : 1}5

... , • v .. - - -

·- - · • r -~- -

-

Ba~;lwth~l

•
•

BUY ONE

•

•

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16-0Z . KROGER

FROZEN 12-0i. DEEP DISH

Pet-Ritz
Pie Shells

Anti-Plaque
Dental Rinse ·

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FREE!

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14-0Z. PKG .

Uo...:lng
('oloro~do

Sprlnll:!t. folu . l ' .S .
l' h lllnplon... hlps
lloclo: ey
!'lo.'l' RanKN~nt Det r oit , 7:!l!l p.m .
Mh1ntsuta id Toronto, 7::15 p.m .
N\' ls laJJdPr" al Nt•w ,Je r&lt;if'y, 1: 4S p.n1.
Qut•l"''-' at ( 'hh' l\11:0 , 11. :35 p.m .
\\-lnnlpf'j!" 111 Lu11 Anxt.-fno. 10 : ~5 p .m .
Edmonlon at \lan~·uu,~r . 10:35 p. m .
Suct.•t•r
MISL

Armel's
Pita Bread

GET ONE

B:dllmo rt• ut Kan~u. ('Uy. li::.IS p.m .
Dallw:i at Tat!llma, tO: :ts p.m.
TfiR ... !I

Caffeine Free Pepsi,
OiQt Pepsi or Pepsi ........ .

$ 69

Perdue
Whole Fryers..................................

12-oz.
Cans

THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM

Ole Carolina
Sliced Bacon

6-Ct.

1-lb.

50¢ OFF LABEL" SCOPE MOUTHWASH
32-0Z. BTL. .. $3.59

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•.

GROWN IN THE U.S.A .

4.6-oz. Tube

REGULAR
$1.99

1'tll'$d1U' '&amp; Kt'S ~ S

Nt'w Jer,.,..)· Ill. t\II1U1\Il 1011.

Phlladelptfa 117. Boston 110 IIYI' I

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IU-900)
A DlvliJton ol Multlmedla, Inc.
Published every afte rnoon , Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph . 992-215li. Second class postage patd at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Crest
Toothpaste

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

NATIONAl. BAMffiTUALL AS50C

c

lb.
U.S. GRADE A PERDUE CUT-UP FRYERS LB ... 69C

2 liTER BOTILE $1,09
THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM

Oven Fresh
Cinnamon Rolls

.

Kl'y BI!H'l\'r'n&lt;'. tlu. - · $t l million
Lipton lnt r&gt; rnut l onal Ph, ye r Jo&lt;
Chaanplonshlps

U.S. GRADE A

"CASE PAK" CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,

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Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advance direct to
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baslti. Credit wtu be given carrier each
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Easter 1........
· Developing Special

•

•
•

Portland at Roston. 7::w p.m.
Wa.~hinl(tonat Allantu., i :30 .p.m .
Miami allndawt. , 1: 30 p.m.
Chlcaa:o at Mll"·au lrP, 11.: 30 p.m .
DctroH al Ulah, 9: 30 p.m.
Sac r-.ml4'nlo at LA Clipper s, 10: 30 p.m.

-Offer Expires April3, 1989
•
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Sets Of Standard Size Printsl
OR
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( 1 Set Of Jumbo Size Prints)

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IMide Melp Coaoly
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13 W•eks .. ..... ...... .. ... :.. ... .. ...... .. $20.80
26 Weeks ..... , ............ .. ,........ .. .. $f0.30
52 W•eks .... ... ................ ..... ... ... $75.40
I •

NATIONAL HOCKE\' LEAGUE
Tut1tda,v ' ~ ResWht
Butlalo -1, Hardord 2
l'll'l" lslwutcrs ~. W111-ihlnr:ton I
Winmpeg 3. Los An,rt!l es 3 (lie)
Wedlwsdl\f 's Gam es
;&lt;rrr,'\' Ran~rtuiDetrolt. 7: 35p.m.
Mln~ s nta Ill Toronto, 7: 3$ p.m .
Sl' l!ilan dl&gt;r!l at Ne•· Jeuey, 7:-13p .m .
Que~~ C'fiiC"'O, K: 35 p.m.
" 'lnnipt'R lli l. o!l M~la~. 10:35 p.m .
Edmonlon~t.l

VIUicouwr, 10 : 35
Thu t-.da,y' " Gamel'

p.m.

Molllreid al Duflalo, nl(llhl
H11.. rtfu rd 111 Pllt!IIJU rgh. nichl
WashiJJgtoJJ Ill Phlh•.delphla,

nlrht

Que bet' Ill St. l .o W11. night
Tue Sih,l' 'IISportl'i Transactions

Bueball
ChiCiliO iNLt _. Rt-leMd ptce herll

BooNe Gos~~age and AI Nipper .
Mllwauket&gt; - Placed pltd1cr Teddl'
Hl,;uera on ltle lllllbledlli!C udwtll sen•
him on retlahlllta&amp;ton at!Sipment 10 El
Pl¥&gt;o oiiM Tau Let&amp;CUe !AA).
Nt~ w \'ork INL) Placed piUher
Edwin Nune.: on wal\lers lor Che purpose
of g1 \llngltlm his un~,~..Utlenal release :
. ta(1iulred cuehL't Mtarli Baii!)' IUid t~rd

hascmu Ton1 O'Malll'Y from Montreal
for pKcher Ste\' e Frey, assigned S.ltey
and O'MJLI\ey to Tidewater of Ute
lnterlllllknal Lelll'l(' (i\AA).

l"ltl!llu•h -

Aeqllred pllthcr Neal

HI!' at on from Mttnlre.allor a ph1yer t.o be
lll!.med; rele&amp;lll'-d pitcher Bill Kruerer,
St . Loul~~o- Placf"d pltchH Danny CoJC
011 64kl a,y dluhled II!U.: alped pile her
Tt&gt;d Power to ml11or leatue eontnct .

Tuas -

Rei~Ufld

plt('ller Ed Vuu&amp;e
lk&gt;f-K and lnfteldf-r Bobby MrMllhiUil and
re....,.lped infiel&amp;!r Andre Robert.8on Itt
Oklahoma. 01 y of Am edcan lb!ioclaUo n
{AAA ).
Toronto -

Al!i.!illftl:!d pitcher Mark
El l'hhorn ' to S]'ral'ae of lnter...tlond
Lt&gt;U~Uf! ; rMtwncd pltcherFrankWIII!llo
mlnor· lt;&gt;QIUC l."arnp .
Hou!Aon - Released oudlelder Ceur
Cedeno: optioned tnnelder Oluek Jack·
!ion to Tu cson of PucUit: Coartl Leque:
-'*!nt pitcher 1\nthon,y Kelley to minor
leape camp.
Clnclnralt - Rel eased plk'her RIUidy
Sl. Clair~ an:l !i~nt pitcher Chris Hl&amp;mmoNI to th~lr minor leat~Je camp •

College
Ct"ntral Mlchi!an - Nam~d \'olleyball
L'O~t.ch Marcy \\'t!!iton Mt!OCiate dlredor
of ~t.lhieliar; and women'• athleUc dlrel'tur, efftocth.'(' Aug. I.
Mllfshll.ll - Named Dave Rit c hie

defeni'ilVe (.'Oordh•tUr.
Orcxon - Samed Barbara Wallier
assl'itJLnt atl\letlc director.
F ootball

Kansas City -

SIJlnl!d frel' agenl

defensiYe back DaniQ' Copeland.

Philadelphia - Slped free lllftll
~~:uard MJke Sl'hiUI.
San Francl!K.' O- Slgnrd I! free at.•ents:
ctnwr 8111 Cht.rl')' , runnln• biM!It Willie
t:anmn, tackle OJweCulllly,nosetacklell
,ftlf

Gla!i!lf'r llnd

Ke\' ln Llll)'. wide

rt•l."t&gt;lv~r~~ Kofl;lf' M"'r;ee

and Guy Llcrtns,
and kh-kl'l' Matt Mcl..eod.

llouston -

Sl pd fl'f-e agent llnl'·

hM'kt't' Matl Mnrcer; IUIMuJJCed they
will not sign quarterback Kevl11 Murra)' .
Hot:key
NHL- Announc e d th e IMMI and IHI
AII-Siar giUHl'li '1'111 be lelevl!ied b)' NBC .

For the Redmen, the NIT has
mainly functioned as a preseason
for next year. providing extra
playing time to their· three
freshman starters. Coming off
their worst season in Big East
history, they are bidding for a
record fifth NIT title in Wednesday's championship game.
"Anything we do now will help

us for next year ," St. John's
freshman forward Malik Sealy
said.
The Blllikens, meanwhile, play
in the relatively unknown Midwestern Collegiate Conference.
They reached the NCAA Tourna·
mentlastin 1957 and won the NIT
once - in 1948.

Eastern beats KCHS 10-3
By SCO'M' WOLFE
EHS Baseball Coach
EA!)T MEIGS - Pitching a
complete game and a near ·
shutout, junior southpaw Kenny
Caldwell did what right-hahder
Scott Fitch had done the night
before - scattering three hits
over seven innings to lead
Eastern to a 10-3 SVAC victory
over Kyger Creek Tuesday
evening.
Caldwell picked up the win
with six s tr!keouts, just one walk,
giving up three hits, and allowing
no earned runs . The Eastern
defense was not as strorig as the
night before, committing four
errors and "several mental
errors. "
Eastern did look sharp at the
plate, compiling 10 hits overal!
and co!iecting eight walks from
the KC pitching.
Freshman starter Scott Newel!
and Mike Hol!and combined for
eight walks, four strikeouts, and
allowed 10 hits.
Eastern hitters were Wade
McQueen with a tripie,-and single

Organizational
meeting scheduled
for Monday night
An organizational meeting for
the. 1989 Mid-Ohio Valley Co-ed
Softball Associalion has been set
for Monday at 6 p.m.
Those no1 able toanend should
call lhe Ravenswood (W .Va.)
Public Library at (304) 273-5343
after 6 p.m . on Monday . After
this date inlerested individuals
can sign up a team until May 1 by
calling either Vickie Adkins at
(304) 273-5047 or Mark Adams a1
( 304) 273-4806.
The Association is open to
anyone living in .Jackson County,
W.Va. or anyone living In a
bordering county 1Meigs and
Mason Counties) .
The number of games played
and I he team entry fee is shown
In the following schedule :
Teams
G Wks. Cost
8 .. .... ........... ......... 21 11 $80
9 .... ... ....... .. ... ....... 24 15 $80
10 ........................ 22 11 $75
11 ........ ....... ... ..... .. .20 12 $70
12 ..... ......... .. ... ... ....22 11 $70
13 .. ... .. ...... .... .... ..... 24 14 $70
14 .... ...................... 26 13 $75

with' three RBis; Jeff Durst a
double and single; Scott Miller
two singles ; JeffHornerasingle;
Caldwell a single; Jason Hager a
double; and Jarod Barber a
single.
For Kyger Creek Mike Holland, John Sipple, and Chuck
London each singled.
KC gave a scare in the first
when second batter Mike Hoiland
reached on an error, stole second, and would have scored on a
hard-hit gapper by Sipple. He
missed the first base bag, nullify ing the run and an official hit to
give EHS new life.
Jeff Horner singled and Wade
McQueen tripled to produce
Eastern's first run, before Caldwell delivered a sacrifice fly for a
2-0 score.
In the- second inning Durst
singled, Howie Lawrence
walked, Jarod Barber had an
RBI single, and Wade McQueen
had a two run single for a 6-0 EHS
lead.

Viking arrested
on DWI charge
REDMOND, Wash. (UP!)
Keith J . Millard , a defensive
tackle for the Minnesota Vikings
who lives in Redmond during the
off-season, faces arraignm ent
next month on drunken driving
and other charges, author ities
confirmed Tuesda v.
Millard, who has denied re' ports of his arres t in the Minneapolis media, was arrested the
evening of March 22 on charges
of driving under the influence.
malicious mischief and obstruction, said Redmond police dispatcher Steve McDonald .
Millard was released on ball
and faces arraignment Apri110 in
Redmond District Court .
Officers and witnesses said the
6-foot ,5, 264-pound lineman was
allegedly quit e drunk and kicked
out a window on the arresting
officer's car, McDonald said.

Sports Information Director
John Justus and some players
confirmed that Staak had held a
team meeting Tuesday.
"We've ali decided not to say
anything until (Wednesday),"
center Ralph Kitley told The
News and Observer of Raleigh.
Staak coached the Deacons to a
13-15 record this season tha
ended with a lopsided loss to
Final Four participant Duke in
the first round of the Atlantic
Coast Tournament.

·DR. JAMES P. CONDE

·Newark
Zanesville
Caldwell ·
Meigs

614-345-0162
614/454-7252
614/732-2336
614/949·2166

OHIO UT1UTIES
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Other 1\lts were a double by

Jason Hager and a two-run
double by Durst.
Weather permitting, , Eastern
will host Hannan Trace tonight
and be off the rest of the week,
barring a rain out which would
save Friday for a Hannan Trace
make-up date.

NATIONAL GAS &amp; OIL
CORPORATION

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"At The End Of The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

.POMEROY, OHIO
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Hospital
Bills Hurt!

20 &amp; 22
INCH CUT

We Can Ease the Pain!

IN STOCK
LAWN

Call on us for all your insurance.

MOWERS
"Stop In Today"

JEFFREY J. WARNER. Representative
302 W . 2nd St .. Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Ph . 614 / 992 -5479 Res. 614-992 -2477; Claims : 1-800-42'1 -3535

PICKENS
HARDWARE
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Expect Staak to resign at Wake Forest
WI N STO N- SALEM, · N . C.
(UP])- Wake Forest basketball
coach Bob Staak held a team
meeting TUesday nighl and is
expected to announce his resignation Wednesday, sources close
to the school's basketball program said .
Staak, 41, who just concluded
his fourth season at Wake Forest,
is being forced to step down on
the heels of an Internal investigation of his basketball program,
th e sources said .

Before you break ground at
any c ons truction site, be
sure you' ve ta ken the proper mea sures to achieve the
highe st level of safety possible . A simple phone call to
National Gas &amp; Oil Corporation or the Ohio Utllitles
Protection service, 2 work in g days before starting
excavation, will result in a
representative locating our
buried gas Jines at your site.
The risk of disrupting gas
service can be virtually
eliminated by participating
in National's Call Before
You
Dig Program . It's
worth digging into.

.... ... _. . ..... -·...,...

::: ... .,,
M

11 14111 •• • ••• • • ·•· •

,

" • ' " ' ' lo •oo• •

••

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Have You Recently Moved or Married?
Are You A New Resident of the County?
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE MAY 2, 1989 ELECTION
YOUR REGISTRATION MUST BE UPDATED BY

-APRIL 3, 1989

IS RESUMING HIS MEDICAL PRACTICE AT

YOU MAY UPDATE YOUR REGISTRATION
AT OUR PERMANENT BRANCH, THE POMEROY PUBLIC LIBRARY

1'55 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORTI OHIO
EFFECTIVE APRIL 3, 1989

MON,DA Y1 FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
9:00 A.M. TILL 5:00 P.M.
TUESDAYI WEDNESDAY I THURSDAy
9:00 A~M. TILL 8:00 P.M.

TO SCHEDULE APPOINTMENTS

PH. 992-6800

~

THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS, 108 MECHANIC ST., POMEROY
WILL BE OPEN FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ON
APRIL 1989
A.M. TILL 9:00 P
'
I

�•

Wednesday, March 29, 1989

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'

Cubs cut Goose Gossage and AI Nipper

Wednesday. March 29, 1989 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

By United Press International

WE WILL REDEEM
UP TO 5 VENDOR
COUPONS
We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

'

(Maximum SO&lt; Value No Cigarette Coupons)

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday

·.

WITH THE TRIPLE .
VENDOR COUPON
BELOW

8 AM-10 PM

~RICES

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
EFFECTIVE SUN., MAR. 26 THRU SAT., APR. 1

(You must bring the
Triple Vendor coupon
Below. One Coupon Per
Family.)

MURRAY SCORES -The Dodgers' Eddie Murray slides home
safely In the first Inning of Tuesday's Grapefruit League game
with the New York Yankees at Dodgerlown ln.Vero Beach, Fla., as
V ankee catcher Jamie Quirk walls for the throw lrom lelt fielder
Stan Jefferson. Murray scored on Mike Marshall's base hit to help
the Dodgers wla IJ.IO. (UPI)

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fC)

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MARCH 29 ONLY
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HOMEMADE

Ground Beef •• ;~ •••• $119

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Chicken ··············~··
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Bacon ••••••••••••• !~..... 69&lt;

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Eastern girls win 2
no-hit SVAC contests
EAST MEIGS-Playing on a
beautiful new field at the high
school, Eas ter·n's Eaglettes
gained a little homefield magic
as senior pitchers Tr Ish Spencer
and Lisa Driggs pitched back· to·
back no hitters on Monday and'
Tuesday evenings to defeat
Nor th GaUia and Kyger Creek
respectively.
Coach Pam Douthitt's crew
was all fired up for· Monday's
opener In which they handed the
Lady Pirates a 20·0 route.
North Gallla had no hits and
committed 6 errors, while Eastern hammered out a whopping 15
hits .
Toby Hill led the way going
3-for·4 with a double; Edna
Driggs (2-3) had two singles, Lee
Gillilan (2·3) had a double and
single, Heather Finlaw (3-3) had
three singles, Lisa Driggs a
double, and singles each by Amy
Murphy, Amy Hager, and Amy
Well.
In the first Inning Amy Hager
walked, as did Trish Spencer and
Lee Gillilan before Driggs
reached on an error to bring
home a run. Tabby PhiLlips, Amy
Murphy, and Edna Driggs each
walked to force home runs before
Flnlaw delivered an RBI single.
Amy Hager , walked to bring
home the last ol the ten runs.
Senior hurler Trish Spencer
was near perfect, going 4 and a
thfrd lhnlngs before yielding to
Mandy Harris who finlsed out the
last two-thirds without Incident.
They walked one and fanned 10.
Karen Spence hurled for the
Pirates going just one-third of an
t)ining before yielding to Tina
Parson who finished the game.

They combined for 9 walks 'and
no strikeouts.
In a closer encounter at East·
ern, the hosts downed Kyger
Creek 2·1 in a hard-fought SVAC
battle.
Again Eastern got another
no-hitter, this time from veteran
hurler Lisa Qrlggs, Eastern's
mainstay of one year ago. The
elder Driggs walked three and
fanned seven, getting tough In
crucial situations to hang on for
the win.,
Vicki Noble pitched for Kyger
Creek and despite a super effort
of her own suffered the loss.
Noble struck out 9 batters, and
walked six.
Noble and Driggs hooked up In
an Incident free pitchers duel
until Eastern struck for one run
lr. the · fourth. Lee Gillilan
reached on an error, stole se·
cond, and scored on an RBI
single by Lisa Driggs.
In the bottom of the sixth,
Eatern scored what proved to be
the ·game-winning run when Lee
Gillilan walked, but was forced
out on a fielder's choice that left
the elder Driggs safe at first.
Tabby Philllps reached safely on
what began as a throwing error,
but led to two more errors on
plays made on the lead runner
Driggs. The double miscues
alloweQ. Driggs to round the
bases and score the eventual
winning run.
In the seventh KC fought back
as Bradbury reached ou an error,
Conkle walked to put the tying
run on, and Skidmore reached on
a fielder 's choice.
Easrern hosts Hannan Trace
tonight.

The Chicago Cubs released t)I'O
hlgh·priced but Jlecently lneffec·
live pitchers - Goose Gossage
and AI Nipper - Tuesday.
Gossage, who started the 1988
season as the Cubs' stopper, is
among the all-time save leaders .
With the Cubs last year, how·
ever, he went 4-4 and had only 13
. saves . He . blew 1l save
opportunities .
During spring training he
walked 10 and allowed .six hits In
nine Innings while working on
off-speed pitches. Had . he re·
malned on the Cubs' Opening
Day roster his salary estimates
ranged $600,000 to $1.3 million.
Nipper, a former starlet' with
the Boston Red Sox, was 2·4 with
Chicago last season.
Elsewhere, the Milwaukee
Brewers announced they are
putting ace left·hander Teddy
Higuera on the 15·day disabled
list and will send him on
rehabilitation assignment to El
Paso of the Texas League (AA).
The Brewers expect Higuera to
return In mid-ApriL
Higuera, who underwent back
surgery for the removal of a
herniated disc Jan. 20, was
placed on the disabled list
retroactive to March 25. He will
remain behind when the club
breaks camp Saturday, t hen

report to El Paso.
The plan is for Higuera to make
two starts with El Paso, then
rejoin the Brewers In Arlington,
Texas for a series with the Texas
Rangers Aprlll7·19.
Left·hander Ed Vande Berg
and Infielder Bobby Meacham
were given their ou trlght re·
leases by the Texas Rangers
Tuesday, and infielder Andre
Robertso.n was reassigned to the
club's Oklahoma City farm
team.
The Montreal Expos traded
left·handed pitcher Neal Heaton
to the Pittsburgh Pirates for a
player to be named.
Heaton, 29, was 3-10 wtth a 4.99
ERA last year and lost his place
in the starting rotation. He was
losing a battle to regain that spot
this spring.
Since his 10·3 start In 1987,
Heaton has been 6-17 for the
Expos. The Expos acquired him
from Minnesota for reliever Jelf
Reardon before the 1987 season.
In the Grapefruit League,
Baltimore defeated Montreal4·2,
Toronto battered St. LOuis 6-1 ,
Philadelphia edged the Chicago
White Sox 9·8, Texas skewered
Pittsburgh 84, Kansas City over
Boston 9-6, the New York Mets
blanked Atlanta 2·0, Los Angeles
nudged the New York Yankees
11 H) and Detroit ripped Mi nne·

Red Devils top SHS
RAVENSWOOD- After post·
lng consecutive SVAC victories
over league favorite Hannan
Trace and Southwestern. the
Southern Tornadoes fell at the
hands of non-league Ravenswood
15·2. here Tuesday In boys' High
School Baseball action.
Southern hitters were Andy
Baer with a double and single,
Todd Lisle a double, and singles
by Mark Porter and Hank
Cleland.
For Ravenswood Southall and
Gould each homered, McCorkle
and Turner each doubled , while
Miller, Reynolds, and McCl\lng
each singled.

Southern took a 2-0 lead In I. he
first, but saw that slip away as
pitching woes struck the SHS
camp.
Ravenswood came back In the
bottom half of th e inning to pos t a
5·2 lead, later claiming SHS
victim to the mercy rule, 15 · ~ .
John McClintock, Shane SIJ·•1P·
son (1st), Todd Grindstaff (3rd),
and Jason Quillen shared pitch·
ing duties for Southern, giving up
9 walks and three strikeouts.
Freshman Wes Swain went the
distance to pick up the win with
seven KO'·S and just one walk.
Southern plays al Oak Hill
tonight.

sota 11·6.
Houston played Clnclr\natl at
night al Plant City, Fla.
In the Cactus League, Sar
Francisco edged the Chlcag&lt;
Cubs 4-3, Seattle nudged Milwau
kee 3·2, Oakland stomped Cleveland 7-5 and San Diego ham·
mered California 9·1.
At Miami Rick Schu looped a
two-run double down the left·
field line with two out In the
E'lghth inning to give the Orioles a
victory over the Expos . Rex
Hudler homered for Montreal.
At St. Petersburg, Fla., the
Blue Jays Improved their spring
record to a major·league best
18·8 with a victory over the
Cardinals. Leadoff batter Lloyd
Moseby homered for Toronto In
the first.
At Sarasota, Fla., Eric Bullock
drove In three runs, Including an
11th-Inning, bases-loaded sacrl·
flee fly to lift the Ph lilies over the
White Sox. Von Hayes homered
for the Phlllles, and Ivan Cal·
deron homered for the Sox .
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Ruben
Sierra's two·run homer led the
Rangers to victory over the
Pirates. Glenn Wilson homered
for the Pirates.
At Winter Haven, Fla., Jim
Eisenreich led the Royals over
the Red Sox, driving in five runs
with a three· run home run and a
game-winning double In the ninth
Inning. The Red Sox Ellis Burks'
homered after a two-out walk to
Randy Kutcher.
At Wes t Palm Beach, Fla., Ron
Dar ling and Rick Aguilera com· ·.
bined to pitch a one-hiller and
faced the mlnin1um 27 baiters
while leading the Mets past the
Braves. Mookle Wilson and Tim

APRON. PAINTING CLASS
Ma·y 9-1 to 5 p.m.
SlO~O

Teufel scored both runs In the
lhlrd .
At Vero Beach , Fla., Mike
Morgan and Mariano Duncan
staked the Dodgers to an early
lead, with Duncan hOmering.
Yankees Mel Hall, Don Slaughl
and Randy Velarde hOmered In
the ninth inning for New York.
At Or lando, Fla. , Torey Lo·
vullo went 4 for 5 with three RBis
and Mike Brumley went 3 for 4
and scored five runs. powering
the Tigers over the Twins. Tiger
Billy Beane closed out the
scoring with a two-run homer in
the top of the ninth.
' At Scottsdale, Ariz.. rookie
Greg Litton doubled to lead off
lhe lOth inning and scored on
Chris Speier's one-out single,
giving the San Francisco Giants
a victory over Ihe Cubs.
At Tempe, Ariz., Scott Bradley
doubled home pinch-runner
Henry Cotto from first base with
one out in the ninth Inning to lift
Ihe Mariners over the Brewers.
At Tucson, Ariz., Mike Gallego
drew a bases loaded walk to force
home the winning run In the 11th
Inning as the Athletics defeated
the Indians . Luis Medina ho·
mered for the Indians ln the
sixth.
At Palm Springs, Calif., win·
ning pitcher Dennis Rasmussen
allowed one unearned run over
seven innings and Tony Gwynn
had two doubles and two RBI to
pace thE' Padres over the Angels .

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis

Fast efficient servile.

O'DELL LUMBER CO.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5500

•

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PH. 446-1699
~~"~o~u•~s~:~B~A·~·~··~6~P·~·~·~ ·

DON'T MISS THIS SALE!!

20°/o

OFF
ALL CHIC FASHIONS

•

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

Fee Includes All Supplies Needed For Class
LOIS PAULEY - INSTRUTOR

Call 992-2284 Today
CLASS LIMITED!

FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy, Oh.

JEANS
SHORTS
. JEAN SHORTS
TOPS
SHORT SETS
SLACKS
WOMEN'S SIZE JEANS

Corner Collections
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

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HOURS:

11 0 West Main

10 A.M.·
5 P.M.

992-2284

0

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WE REPAIR WINDOW
SCREENS AND DOORS.
634 E. Main

:

HUNT'S 27.5 OZ. CAN

SPAGHETTI
SAUCE

I

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FREE

I
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II S1 0.00 PURCHASE
·--------------

3 LB. BAG

Yell ow Onions ••• 2I $1
2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $1 59
$, 29
Margar1ne •••• i~~~~·... ·,•

PARKAY...:..JUM~O

BORDEN

Ice Cream •••••••••••• $129
112 GAL.

4
I
$1
Mac./ Cheese ~~!~;.
3~

OZ. FIEN&lt;M ROAST

:MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE

$599
c,,_
GeO&lt;I Only At Powell'
~mit 1 '"

1 ,.,,.,,..,.

Goool SII!L, Mar. 26 tin

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CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE

1 Pw Cull_,
Good Only AI Powell' 1 SuporYalu
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PKG.

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Good Only AI Powell' 1 SuporValu
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, 20 LB.
BAG

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Good Sun., Mar. 26 ''"Sat, Apr. 1, " "

FREE

HERITAGE HOUSE

SHORTENING

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TOMATO
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FROSTED FLAKES/
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1-RIH AUGRATIN &amp;

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TUBE ROSE
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FREE

119

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lll-RITE 15 OZ.

PORK/BEANS

99
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BI·RITE UGHT 2 LB.

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II-RITE 300 C(

$119
$15 3

NAPKINS
PURE SWEET

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4.4 11.

HOSPITAliTY 11 OZ.

~~~:~~ER GAl. $1 09

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99C
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FACIAL
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HOSPITAliTY 20 OZ.

40% BRAN
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HOSPITAliTY 15 OZ.

INSTANT
POTATOES

99C
GRAPE JELLY 99C
Dlll .PICKLE oz. 99C
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HANOVER 15 OZ.

DINNER MIX

32

LITTER

CAKE MIX oz.

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COFFE~ 3.5

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llEF &amp; CHEESE

MARCAL 100 CT.

BI·RITE WHOlE

ELBOW
MACARONI
PYOMY

7.S Oz. lo11

Plastic Gallon

79L·.. 4/Sl $1 ~!

HOMEIEST UQUID

HOMOIST 10 ll.

' WAGNER'S 54 OZ.t

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HOSPITALITY

RUfflES 20 CT;
30 GAl.

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WITH COUPON AND
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HOSPITAUTY

SCALLOPED
POTATOES

RUFFlES 13 GAl. 30 CT.
TAll KITCHEN

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75(
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4
9
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TRASH BAGS
COFFEE FILTER
9
9
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$119
PAPER PLATES
TEA BAGS
$1
09
BATH TISSUE 79(
MEAL s
99 (
lEST
CORN
FLAKES
CRANBERRY $1 79
$1 79
JUICE .u oz.

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COFFEE

TRASH BAGS

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~~~ $649

oz.

APRIL 1 ONLY
115.5 OZ. JOAN OF ARC

39 OZ. AD&lt;, DRIP, "' REGULAR

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SWIFrNING

CHAMP CHUNK

$1 ~~~- 99.tL
=
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MARCH 31 I ONLy
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SAUCE

LIMIT ONE EACH COUPON

FLAVORITE

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ASSORTED RAGU

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�Wednesday, March 29, 1989

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

In the spodight

GradU4tes
announced

What to do with Easter leftovers
Other Ideas include scalloped · hours or until firm In center.
potatoes and ham or macaroni Calories per serving: about 350.
and cheese with ham chunks. If
As for the colored eggs, if they
the cold weather persists, a ham were refrigerated they can be
chowder, soupbeans and ham, or kept up to one week to maintain
split pea soup might really hit the maxiurn qual~ty. Eggs held In the
spot.
refrigerator for a long time may
For an easy dinner, try this develop off-flavors.
. recipe for ham loaf.
Eggs that were held at room
temperature for an extended
period of time should not be used.
HAM LOAF
6 servings, two %-inch slices They were a pretty decoration,
but shouldn't be eaten a.f ter
each
eggs, beaten ........................... 2 setting around the house for a
round snack crackers, crushed 1 couple of days.
If you feel guilty about throwcup
milk ........ ·....................... 'J-4 cup Ing them away, try thinking of
onion, very finely chopped2 tbsp them as a floral decoration -we
green pepper, very !1 nely don't expect to eat our old cut
chopped ................. , ........ V. cup flowers, do we?
. If hard-boiled eggs have been
pepper ............................. % tsp
ham, cooked, ground ....... 4 cups stored In the refrigerator, you
ground fresh pork ........ 8 ounces can use them In a variety of
Preheat oven to 350"F (moder- ways, such as egg salad, deviled
ate). Mix eggs with crackers, eggs, pickled eggs, or as a
milk, onion, green pepper, and nutritious part of spinach salad.
pepper. Mix ham and pork. Stir This recipe Is from the American
meat mixture Into egg mixture. Egg Board.
Marvelous Make-Ahead Salad
Mix thorougl:lly. Pack into 9 by 5
12 side or 6 main-dish servings
by 2~ Inch loaf pan. Bake IV.

By Cindy Oliveri
County Extension Agent,
Home Economlcs/4-H
Last weekend we epjoyed a
delicious Eastern meal complete
with a whole ham and all the
trimmings. We also colored
several dozen hard-cooked eggs.
Now the problem Is .... what to do
with all the leftovers!
The following chart will give
you some Ideas on suggested
horne storage periods for high
quality In cured hams.
Type- Refrigerator-JS• to
40" F - Freezer-0" or below_
Whole Ham- 7.days1-2 months
Half Ham- 3 to 5 days ........ 1-2
months
Frozen cured meat such as
ham loses Its quallty rapidly and
should be used as soon as
possible.
Some easy ways to use up
leftover ham include sliced for
sandwiches and barbecue ham,
ground up for ham loaf, ham
salad, western sandwiches, or
cut In strips for chefs salad.

I quart bite-sized pieces salad
greens
(about 8 ounces)
1 cup chopped green pepper
1 cup chopped celery
1 package (10 oz) frozen peas,
separated
~ cup minced onion
10 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
1 cup (4 oz) shredded cheddar
·cheese. divided
'2 cups (16 oz) bottled buttermilk
•dressing
On bottom of large salad bowl
•or 13 x 9 x 2-lnch baking dish,
•evenly distribute salad greens.
Evenly layer green pepper, cel·ery, peas and onion over greens.
Reserve cent slices from 1 egg
lor garnish. Layer remaining
egg slices over vegetables. Sprinkle with % cup of the cheese.
Spread dressing evenly over
salad and sprinkle with remainIng cheese. Cover and chill to
blend flavors. Garnish with reserved egg slices. For each
serving; serve a portion of all
layers.

Community calendar
TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter OES pre-Inspection meeting .
Is Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
VINTON - American Legion
Post 161 meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.
RACINE - The MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of University Women will meet at 7:30
Tuesday evening at the Racine
United Metholdst Church.
· POMEROY -Second and final
sign up day for the summer youth
league program will be held at
the Pomeroy Elementary School
Tuesday from 5 to 8 p.m. The fee
Is $11 and lhose who have not
previously played must present
birth certificates.
' RACINE - Donald Genhelmer, an African Evangelical
Fellowship Missionary, w!ll be
speaking and presenting a slide
show at the Antiquity Baptist
Church, State Route 338, Racine,
on Tuesday, March 28, at 7:30
p.m.
POMEORY- The Meigs FFA
banquet will be held Tuesday,
6; 30 p.m., in the high school
cafeteria. A buffet style meal will
be served with FFA providing
meat, rolls and beverage. Those
planning to attend are asked to be
a side dish.
RACINE - The regular meetIng of Southern Local Board of
Education will be held Tuesday, 7
p:m., In the highschool cafeteria,
The school district's recent evaluation by the State Deparlment
of Education will be available for
publiC review and comment at
this meeting.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Uterary Club will meet on

Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the home of
Mrs, Wendell Hoover. Mrs. Ronald Reynolds w!ll review the
book "Sacajawea" by· Anna Lee
Waldo. Roil call wUI be an
example of native American
woman love.

---

POMEROY - A Family Seminar will be conducted Wednesday and Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ, by
Dean Mllls. Everyone welcome.
APPLE GROVE - Revival
services will be l;leld at the Apple
Grove United Metho!dst Church,
March 30 through AprU 2 at 7
p.m. each evening. The Rev. Carl
Hicks, pastor, wlll be the speaker
and Invites the public to attend.
There wlll be special music each
evening. On April 2 the special
singers will be Dan Hayman and
the Faith Trio.

---

HARTFORD, W.Va.- A revival at Father's House Church in
Hartford, W.Va. wm continue
through April 1. The evangelist
will be Rick Weaver and services
start at 7 p.m. each evening.
Special singing w111 be featured
. each night.
MINERSVILLE - The WildWood Garden Club wlll meet 7: 30
p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Doris Grueser.
POMEROY - Donald Genhe!rner, missionary to Africa, will
speak and present a sUde show
Wednesday, 7 p.m., at the Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A birthday
party will be held Thursday,
March 30, at the Overbrook
Nursing Center, Middleport, for
all residents of the center having
a birthday In March. Family and
friends are Invited. An Ice cream
cake will be provided for the

party by Dairy Queen.
RUTLAND -Fallh Tabernacle Church, Balley Run Road, the
Rutland area, will be In revival
Thursday through Sunday at 7:30
each evening. Everyone
welcome.
POMEROY - Meigs County
AA and AI-Anon meet every
Thursday, 7 p.m., In the basement of the Sacred Heart
Church, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT- A birthday
party for all residents of the
Overbrook Nursing Center with
birthdays In March will be held
Thursday. Family and friends of
the residents are Invited to
attend the party. Ice Cream Cake
will be furnished by Dairy Queen.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Belles arid
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club Is sponsoring an open dance
on Friday, March 31, fl·om 8 to 11
p.m.; at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Caller wlll be
Kent Hall. All western square
dancers invited.
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club Is sponsoring an open dance
on Friday, !rom 8 to 11 p.m., at
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. Caller will be Kent Hall.
All western square dancers are
invited.
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge No. 453 will meet Friday,
7:30 p.m.,forwork In the entered
apprentice degree. Refresh·
ments will be served. All master
masons are welcome.
CHESTER -

Chester Town-

Pepple in the news---.

Wednesday, March 29, 1989 ~
Page- 6

.

ship Trustees wUI meet Friday,
7:·30 p .m., at the town haiL
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will
hold a regular meeting Saturday,
7:30p.m., for work In the master
mason degree. All past masters
are urged to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS-Eastern
Athletic Boosters are sponsoring
a baked steak dinner on Saturday, 'with serving starting at 5
p.m .• at the Tuppers Plains Fire
House. Dinners, $3.50. Everyone
welcome.
'
--TUPPERS PLAINS

- The
Eastern Athletic Boosters are
sponsoring a dinner on April 1 at
the fire house In Tuppers Plains.
The menu will Inc! ude baked
steak, mashed potatoes and
gravy, green beans, coleslaw, pie
and a drink, all for $3.50. Serving
starts at 5 p.m. Everyone
welcome.
Alzheimer group
POMEROY -The Alzhelmers
support group w!ll meet at the
Overbrook Nursing Horne on
April 4 at 3 p.m. The topic for
discussion wUI be "Joys and
Guilt." Retreshmen ts will be
served.

Dinner slated
A ham and turkey dinner will
be held at the Southern High
School Cafeteria, Racine, April 9
by the Southern .Junior High
Boosters and the ·career Educa·
Uon Committee.
Serving will be from 11:30 a.m.
to 3 p.m: The cost w!ll be $3.50 for
adults and S2 for children.

HANK CLELAND Ill

Cleland named
to Boys State
Hank Cleland III, son of Hank
and Kathy Cleland, Minersville
Rd., Racine, has been selected as
a delegate for Buckeye Boys
State by the American Legion
Racine Post 602.
Cleland, a junior at Southern
High School. is taking college
preparatory classes. He also
participates in basebalL
Before transferring to Southern, he W.PS a student at Meigs
High School where he participated In cross country, basketbail, baseball was sophmore
class president and a member of
student counciL
He is an Eagle Seoul with troop
249 of Pomeroy where he earned
the bronze palm, is lodge chief of
Thal-coo-zyo Lodge in Huntington, W.Va., and vigil honor
member and he also attends the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Upon graduation, Cleland
plans to attend Ohio University
and major In bio-c hemistry .
He Is the grandson of Leona
and the late Henry Cleland,
Pomeroy, and Donald and .Juanita Roush. New Haven. W.Va.

Four Meigs Countian~ wrre
among the March graduates
from the Tri-County Adult Edu·
cation Center.
·They are Rose Tucker in
acco~n tlng-compu ti ng; Ray mond Litchfield. au to mrchan·
!cs· Marv Moore and Chri stopher YeagN, electronic
servicing.
Thirteen Meigs Countians
were listed on the honor roll for
the period ending in March.
They are Bev Cummins a nd
Rose Tucker, both in accounti ng·
mmputing; Mary Moore and
Chris Yeager. electronic se rvicIng; Kevin .Tewell. machine
trades; Raymond Litchfield.
auto mecMncs; Deborah Dow ·
nle, Debra Lyons. Linda Moore,
.Jeannete Radford, and Amy
Satterfield, DMO; Aiisha Duncan and ,Jan Roach, nursing
assistant.

•'
'•
•
•

•
•
•

,
•.,

Home on break
Suzan Thoma, daughter of
Mrs. Pat Thoma. Pomeroy, is ,
home on a nine day spring break
from the Columbus CoUege of Art •
and Design where she is a first '
semester junior.
531 JACKSON PIKE

ROUTE 35 WEST.

Phone

..6-4524

Potna'oy-Middlepon, Ohio

•

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
Uaited Pre~~s lnternatloaal
ANTI·AIDS ART: Elizabeth Taylor will again use art against
AIDS. She's organizing an April 22 benefit party and May 18 art
auction in San Francisco, much like the affairs she hosted In
New York, which ralsed '$2.4 million, and Los Angeles, which
brought In $1.5 mUIIon.
.
The goal In San Francisco Is $1 million and ~halrlng the
fund- raisers are Mayor Ar&amp; Ap08 and his wife, Sllerry, and
artists Wayne Thiebaud, Mark dl Suvero and WIUiam T. Wiley.
Artists, galleries and collectors from all over the country are
contrlbu ling works to the sale, which will benefit the San
Francisco AIDS Foundation and other groups.
THE JACKSON FIVE.MINUS ONE: Is It really an album by
The Jacksons If Michael Jackson Isn't heavily Involved? The
record-buying public can decide in late April when ''2300
Jackson Street''- featuring Jennalne, Jackie, Randy and Tlto
Jackaon - hits the stores. Michael can be heard on the title
song, a reference to the family home back In Gary, Ind., along
with other Jackson siblings Janet, Rebble, LaToya and Marlon,
as well as their 16 nieces and nephews.
.. ",Basically, It's about our career," Jackie says of the song.
Its about growing up in that house and working hard with our
mom and dad sacrificing all their wants and needs so they could
buy Instruments for us." The album marks the Jacksons' 25th
anniversary of their first performance In Gary.
JERRY LEWIS PLAYING THE JERRY LEWIS THEATER:
Jerry Lewla Is too big for Caesars Palace and he's getting his
own place. This year Lewis Is moving his Labor Day Muscular
Dystrophy Association telethon from Caesars to the 1,900-seat
Cashman Center, which will be renamed the Jerry Lewis
Theater.
"This theater Is the best kept secret In Las Vegas," Lewis said
at a news conference Monday at the Cashman. "lllve here.! am
a resident. I have offices here and I dldn'tknowlt was here. ! am
grateful they are renaming the theater for me. This Is my own
fair city of Las Vegas and I live nine minutes from the theater."
SEPARATED BEFORE PRISON: Mar&amp;o Blqgl, the New
York City congressman convicted of corruption charges, Is
going to prison next month and his wife of 47 years may not be
waiting for him when he gets out. Marie Blagg! riled for ·a
separation earlier this month, according to court records In the
Bronx.
Mrs. Blagg!, described as a quiet homemaker who shunned
the political llmelight, loyally stone! by her husband as he was
Indicted, tried and convicted In 1987 of accepting two free
vacations and obstruction of justice and then convicted again In
the W.edtech scandal. Blagg! Is scheduled to report to prison
April 10 - 10 days before his 48th wedding anniversary - to
start a 30-month sentence.
MARRIED BEFORE WEDDING: Cal Worthlncton, the
colorful California car salesman who made mllllons through his
· off-beat TV commercials, also has domestic problems - he's
being sued for divorce and palimony by the same woman.
Sui&amp;D Worlhlngton, 42, says she and Worthington met In
Mexico In 1972 and, while he was still married to his first wife,
were syrnbollcally married. They made It oft!clalln Las Vegas
In 1979 but she still wants pallrnony·for those early years. Mrs.
Worthington also Is suing for hl!llf ofthe Income and property the
couple acquired whlle married.
The case Is currently before a jury In Willows, Calif., and Is
expected to last through next week. Worthington became a
California cultural · Icon through his "My Dog Spot"
cornmerlcals In which he would drag out all manner of beasts
and Introduce them as his dog, Spot.

RUTLAND
0EPARTMENT ST0f~ f
PI-iON[ 742 / l U(J

Pll ICl S lf ll CII VE f HHU SA f. Af' HI L I . I ~Hl:l
CIISP &amp; SaVE iiCiiiii PACilEI

SLICED BACON .................!!·•• S1.19
KAHN'S
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FRANKS.~!.~~- Sl. 99
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LOW
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HAM
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SMITHFIELD
SHREDDED '2 .19 LB.
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HOMEMADE MEAT SALAD •••• !!-•• 79(
CHOCOlATE Mill( ...Rt-89&lt;
KRAFT 16 SUCE PROCESS 12 OZ.

AMERICAN CHEESE ... S1.87
BlUE BONNET

MARGARINE ....9!~~.~··-· 97 c

HOIIDIADE GRADE A

.-

SUNICIST
LEMONS".....!~.~£! .. 3/ 59&lt;
NEW YEUOW
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TASTEE BIID FlYING

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20 01.
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GARLIC BREAD..............1.'.~!~ S1.79

WE HAVE EVERYTHING
VOO'LL NEED
TO CELEBRATE YOOR
SPECIAL DA Yl

OA\iff 5tru.t
Q3oohs
93 Mill St., Middleport
992-6656 (998-00KSI

We have a complete
selection of fine
Carlson Craft products

•

Omitted

Fireman's dinner

The name of second grader
Michael Ables was unintentionally omitted from the most
J11cent six weeks honor roll of
~tart Falls Elementary School.

RUTLAND - A dinner for all
firemen who have served In the
Rutland Fire Department wlll be
held saturday. Aprll22, 6 p.m., at
the fire station.

nan

• Announcements
• Name Cards
• Memory Book
• Jewelry
• Party
Supplies

Buy any Jewelmont family ring
and we'll give you this decorative,
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BAR B.Q. SAUCE •••••••••••1!.~!~ S1.59
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APPLESAUCE ••••••••••••!~.~~-. 2/S1.19
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(

Hollywood·has a case of Oscar fever
By VERNON SCO'IT
picture of 1988, best actor for her daughter In "A Cry in the . Landau in "Tucker: The Man
UPI Hollywood Reporter
Dustin Hoffman and best direc- Dark"; and Sigourney Weaver and his Dream," River Phoenix
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - As tion for Barry Levinson.
as anthropologist Dian Fossey in in "Running on Empty" and
star-struck fans lined up for
"Rain Man," which won uni- "Gorlllas In the Mist."
Dean Stockwell in "Married to
choice seats and traffic cops versal critical acclaim, led all
Director Levinson was up the Mob."
braced for the Impending Inva- other films with eight nomina- against Charles Crichton for "A
"Rain Man's" other nomina sion of hundreds of limousines, tions. It continued to top all other Fish Called Wanda," Alan tions Included best art direction,
Hollywond swooned In the throes best picture nominees at the box Parker for "Mississippi Burn- cinematography, film editing,
of Its annual attack of Oscar office with a gross of $135 million Ing," Mike Nichols for "Working original score and screenplay.
In 15 weeks.
fever.
Girl" and Martin Scorsese for
"Who Framed Roger Rabbit,"
The first of the 2,500 to 3,000
Also In the running for best "The . Last Temptation of the biggest box-otrtce hit of the
fans expected to crowd the picture with seven nominations Christ."
year, won six nominations -for
entrance to the Shrine Audito- each were "Dangerous Llal·
For the rtrst time In Its 61-year technical excellence In art direcrium for Wednesday night's 61st sons," a tale of sexual Immoral- history, the Academy Awards tion, cinematography, film editannual Academy Awards show Ity In pre-revolutionary France ceremonies were without a mas- ing, sound, sound effects editing
began staking out their star- and "Mississippi Burning," ter of ceremonies. Instead, each and visual effects. It failed to
watching seats Tuesday.
based on the FBI Investigation production number, song, film earn any major nominations.
Into the murder o! three civil cllp and nominee was slated to be
Huge rolls of red carpet Nominated for best foreign
rights workers In the 1960s.
more than 1,000 square yards Introduced by a different pair o! language film were "Hanussen'' · ·
awaited rollout and state traffic
performers.
from Hungary, "The Music
engineers put the finishing
Also, Instead of saying, ''And Teacher" from Belgium, "Pelle
Rounding out the category
touches on their plan to deal with were "The Accidental Tourist," the winner Is ... " presenters were the Conqueror'' from Denmark,
the 800 to 1,000 stretch limos- at a romantic drama about an Instructed to say, "And the Oscar "Salaam Bombay!'' from India,
$500 to $750 for the 'night - that Introverted writer torn between goes to . _. '' to make the ceremony and "Women on the Verge of a
wlll serve as charlotso! the stars. two women, and "Working Girl," seem less like a competition and Nervous Breakdown·· !rom
The three-hour show was sche- a Cinderella comedy that takes more like a celebration.
Spain.
duled to begin at 6 p.m. PST, and place In a high-rise office tower.
Carr said more than 80 film
Among the participants In this
wlll be broadcast live on ABC,
stars
were
signed
up
as
enteryear's
ceremonies were last
Challenging Hoffman for best
which has set up 17 cameras to actor were Gene Hackman as an tainers or presenters of the year's winners of the best -actor
beam the program to an esti- FBI man In "Mississippi Burn- familiar golden statuettes to the and actress Oscars, Michael
mated worldwide audience o! 1.5 Ing"; Tom Hanks as a 12-year- • winners In 23 categories.
.
Douglas and Cher.
btlllon viewers, according to old In a man's body In "Big'';
The nominees !or best supportAlso taking part in the actlvltes
· Allan Carr, producer of the show. Edward James Olmos as an Ing actress were Joan Cusack In were veterans Bob Ho~. James
Ticket agents said people were Inspiring matb teacher In "Stand "Working Girl,'' Geena Davis In Stewart, Kim Novak, Doris Day,
paying up to $2,500 for prime and Deliver"; and Max von ''The Accidental Tourist," Fran- Sean Connery, Michael Caine,
seats Inside the 6,000-seat audito- Sydow tn "Pelle the Conqueror." ces McDormand In "Mississippi Jane Fonda, Richard Dreyfuss,
rium, and advertisers paid
The nominees for best actress Burning," Michelle Pfeiffer In Walter Matthau and LucUle Ball.
$375,000 for 30 seconds of network were Glenn Close as an amoral "Daneerous Liaisons" and SiOthers scheduled to appear
commercial time during the marquis~ In "Daneerous Liai- gourney Weaver In "Working Included Jacqueline Bisset, Dudbroadcast.
ley Moore, Bo Derek, Don
sons"; Jodie Foster as a rape GirL"
"Rain Man," the touching victim In "The Accused"; MeBest supporting actor noml- Johnson, Farrah Fawcett,
drama of the cross-country trek lanie Griffith as an upwardly ness were Alec Gu!nness. In Sammy Davis Jr., Kim Basinof an autistic savant and his . moblle secretary In "Working "Little Dorrlt," Kevin Kline In ger, Jeff Goldblum, Rob Lowe,
mercenary brother, was ex- . Girl"; Meryl Streep playing a "A Fish Called Wanda," Martin Dennis Quaid and Carrie Fisher.
pected to win Oscars tor best woman accused of murdering

Quirks in the news,--------By United Preu lnterna&amp;klnal
Judge: Horse Is not motor
veblcle
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - A
judge has ruled that a man
cannot be charged with driving a
horse under the Influence and
without lights because the
animal Is not a motor vehicle.
Laid-oft coal miner Ron Nestor, 34, of New Florence,' Pa.,
near Pittsburgh, was charged
with driving under the Influence
and not having lights on a motor
vehicle last Dec. 11, when his
horse was hit by a piCkup, state
pollee said.
Nestor was on
horseback In the southbound lane
or the road. IDs blood alcohol
level was .0.11 percent, pollee
said, slightly higher than the 0.10
level at which Intoxication Is
presumed under state law.
Neither "driver'' suffered serious Injury but Nestor's horse,
an 18-year-old Arabtan appaloosa, was killed.
The court was packed with
observers and the media during
the 1 ~-hour proceedings Tuesday. State trooper M.L. Smith
and defense attorney Irving
Bloom, both of whom have been
interviewed on Pittsburgh radio
talk shows about the case, were
In court, as was Nestoreand his
wife.
Bloom said he was pleased at
the verdict after the judge threw
out the case.
"I won the case," he said. "I
just ·argued that a horse Is not a
vehicle. The magistrate liked
that case I cited from Utah. That
was the basis for her opinion."
Dlrly plcturea booted

BRANDARAMA WINNER.-. Loretta Tiemeyer waalaal week's
winner In the 13-week Brand-a-rama being held by V1111ghans
Cardlaal In Mlddlepor&amp;. Here Baby V11111h1111 preaenla a 1100 1111
certificate to her.

Hocking Tech announces recent dean's list
.'j'wenty-e!ght students from Racine; Debra L. Snyder, MidMeigs County have been named dleport; David F. Sorden, Ruto the Dean's List at Hocking tland; Sherry L.. Wilcox, PomeTechnical College for the winter roy; Todd Allen Wilson,
quarter.
Reedsville; Tracy Wolfe, MiddleTo be a Dean'sL!ststudent, the port; and Joe A. Young,
grade point average must be at Reedsville. ·
trast 3.3 or above for completion
of 12 or more credit hours.
~hose named to the list are
H()bart A. Barker, Rutland;
Susan Bauer, Long Bottom; Jndl
L&gt; Brown, Middleport; Loretta
Final plans for the fashion
A. Brown, Pomeroy; Lori L.
show, "Putting on theR!tz",to be
Burke, Coolville; Leanne S. · staged April 13 at the Pomeroy
Ciark, Racine; David A. EdElementary School auditorium
Wards, Long Bottom; Kirk Flck,
were made at a meeting of the
Long Bottom; Kimberly J. Fol·
Pomeroy Area Merchants Asso!rod, Racine; Joyce Foreman,
ciation Tuesday at Main Street
Portland; Julie Hawk, Reeds·
Pizza.
vllle; Valerhi J . Jeffers, Pome- .
Susan Clark, show chairman,
roy; Teresa L. Johnson, Pome- presided at the planning session
roy; Allen L. King, Racine;
noting that Joe Struble will
Erich Philson, Pomeroy; Calvin emcee the fashion show In which
Pickens, Racine; Brenda Ran·
more than 80 models will show
dolph, Nelsonville; Lee Ann sport, casual and dressy cloRobinson, Coolville; Barbara thing, shoes and jewelry from
Rupe, Pomeroy; Kimberly local stores. She also reported
Ryan, Racine; Susan M.'Sandy, . that the program wlll be ready to
Langsville; Resa J. Sawyers,

SAN JOSE, Call!. (UPI) Dirty undies are not for the sliver

Quote of the day
By United Press lnternallonal
Mayor John Devens of Valdez,
Alaska, whose 3,600 citizens
depend on oll, fishing and tourIsm, on the worst on spUiln U.S.
history:
"I think It's quite clear right
now that we are facing the
destruction or our entire way of
llfe. "

Now You know
By United p.._ lnlernatlonal ·
Bela Lugosl, the Hungarianborn movie actor famous for his
sinister portrayal of the elegantly mannered vampire,
Count Dracula, was burled wearIng the long black coat he used In
the 1931 horror classic.

screen - they may offend film underwear a female pool player
patrons watching murder, may. was wearing -If any -led to the
hem and sex.
shooting of one man and the
Promoters of Oasis Laundries arrest Tuesday of a second.
Inc., a chain of eight washing
Taatu T. Sau, 35, Benton, was
spots In the south san Francisco
In the abdomen Sunday and
shot
Bay area, said Tuesday that they
taken
to Memorial Hospital In
.had hoped to advertise on 16 area
Carbondale
where he underwent
movie screens operated by AMC
surgery,
a
hospital
official safd.
theaters, a subsidiary of NaHe
was
transfered
Tuesday in
tional Cinema Network or Kansatisfactory condition to the
sas City, Mo.
The proposed laundry ad In- Veterans Administration Hospi·
cluded a hamper brimming with tal In Marion.
soiled clotlltna, whlcb Oasis and
Charged In the shooting was
San Francisco advertising Frank M. Williams, 35, of Benaeency Mandelbaum Mooney ton. Williams, charged with
Ashley planned to run In the armed violence and aggravated
movie theaters to complement a battery, was held In the Franklin
b!llboard campalen us!De the County Jail. No bond was lmmesame dirty picture.
diately •set.
The billboards, which have
Assistant Franklin County
featured the ad for three months, State's Attorney Mike Rowland
show the overflowing clothes said the two men had been
hamper and soiled undies on the drinking Saturday night in a
floor alongalde the words: "Are Benton bar called "Our Place."
you buying underwear to avoid
your laundromat."
"People said they had been
'They dropped us," Tanya bet ling on everything ImaginaRoberts, marketing and com- ble and one bet came down to
munlcatlo.n s manager for Oasis, whether a lady pool player was
said of the theater chain.
wearing any underwear, or what
The men's undershorts on the kind,'' Rowland said Tuesday.
floor In front of the hamper was "One thing led to another and
the problem, she was told. The ad they went outside and one guy
could run If the shorts were shot the other."
deleted with an air bruab.
Rowland said a .25·callber
"I thought It was absolutely pistol had been recovered In the
ridiculous," Roberts said.
. shooting.
"We did a major blllboard buy_
Rowland said the • woman,
Millions and mllllons of people whom he declined to Identity, did
saw that billboard and I d!dn' t not appear to know the two men.
want to change II."
·
"I don't know who won the bet
or how It went,'' Rowland added.
Waalhe or wun'l abe!
"She apparently wasn't with
BENTON, lll. (UPI) - An either man, neither had firstargument over what kind of hand experience.
"That's how they celebrated
Easter."
"Once Upon a Cross," "It Was
Enough" and "Holy Spirit,
Touch Through Me" were presented In concert during Easter
S11nrlse Service at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ, 212 West Main
St., by Keith Shaffer of the
Hooverson Church of Christ,
Follensbee, W.Va. Shafter IJ the
son-In-law of Rev. and Mrs. Leo
Lash of the Pomeroy church.
Breakfast was served by the
men of the church.
Suzan Thoma sang "Because
He Lived" during worlhlp service and Shaffer presented "I'm
Glad You Gave" and •Then
Came Morning-:'
.
The public Is welcome to all
services at the church; Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m.; church at
10: 30 a.m.; and prayer service
and Bible class on Wednesday at
7 p.m. The Jesus And Me
(J.A.M.) organization for youth
meets on Sunday at 6 p.m.

go to the printers once the model
list Is completed. Leese Murphy
has designed the program cover.
Dress rehearsal has been set
for Sunday, April 9 at 2 p.m. at
the school.
Again this year Ann Chapman
will be narratlne the style revue.
Special features will Include a
scarf presentation by Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs County Extension
Agent,. Home EconomiCs, and
quick makeovers for balr by
SandY, lannarelll of Chateau and
Mary Powell of Top of the Stalra.
Clarice Krau tter, ticket chair·
man, reported on ticket sales.

The tickets are for sale at
participating businesses IncludIng Dan's In Middleport, the
Fa brlc Shop, Top of the Stairs,
Chapman Shoes, K&amp;C Jewelers,
Buttons and Bows. and Clark's
Jewelry Store. Only 400 will be
sold due to the limited l)lllce In
the school auditorium.
Numeroua·door prlzel will be
awilrded durin&amp; tile eventna with
members of tbe Oblo Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Slama Phi SororIty, aallattne In getting the prizes
to the audience. Dlacount cou·
pons from partlclpatlne mer·
chants will be elven to everyone
purchasing a ticket.

Raising funds
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO Is
trying to raise money for fencing
aroung the Rutland Elementary
School. Donations for the project
will be accepted.

Free clothing day

.

llcl'i Brit h

..

The ltrm ''huutrfly'" de'scriht'S

the l~chnique used to cnnk
a thick stc;ak without

hurnin111hc outside

F•dikOSA]
Great Steaks. Guaranteed.

OPPB
UP.
J/lt/19

In case of accidental poisoning, know what to do!
• Time is vital. Quick action can save a life!

"FlEE"

"SYRUP OF IPECAC
"FlEE" PAMPHLDS While Supples Last.

Whit. Supplies Last

,POISON PREVENTION CENTER
DAYTON, OHIO

l-880-762.o'7f7

-·WE CARE ABOUT YOUR HEALTH
A!'lD YOUR SAFETY ... "
'

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

'""""

271 NOITI SICOIID

·

POMEROY -The Meigs Coop- ,
eratlve Parish w!ll sponsor a free , .
clothing dl$trlbutlon on Wednes· · .
day and Thursday from 9:30a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the Cooperative
Parish Office, 311 Condor St., •
Pomeroy. For Information, call ,,
992-7400.
·-

Easter program

Fashion Show planned in Meigs

t

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

.DDUPOO, OH.

.

�,...
Page- S- The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County property transfers-CompUed By:
Emmocene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Melp County, Ohio

I

I

••'I
l

I1 -

David Lincicome, 30 A, to Rita
Lincicome, Orange.
Inez Abolln and Theodore
Abolln, Right of Way, toTuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dlst. ,
Orange.
Franklin E. Ihle and Kathy L.
lhle, right of way, to Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dlst. ,
Bedfond.
Michael Elberfeld and Heidi
Elberfeld, right of way, to
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Olst., Chester.
Martin R. Nesselroad and
Margaret R . Nesselroad, right of
way, to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water Dis I., Meigs.
Carleton Church, right of way,
to Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Olst., Bedford.
Robert Vance and Donna J.
Vance. right of way, to Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dlst.,
Scipio.
Dana A. Covert, dec'd, Sharon
Ann Johnson, aka Sharon Ann
Covert, Affidavit, Salisbury.
Danny R. Slivers and Renee R.
Silvers, parcel, to Southern Ohio
Coal Co., Salem.
Hazel Van Cooney, parcels, to
Charles Van Cooney and Janice
Van Cooney, Salisbury.
William Soulsby, 7.45 A, to
W!lllam Soulsby and Thelma
Louise Soulsby, Chester,
Dorothy VIolet Brewer, .28 A,
to Freda M. Bays, Lebanon.
Robert Sloane and Regina
Healy, 4.25 A, to Mark R. Wert,
Burton A. Sloane, Sydney M.
Sloane, Jacob A. Sloane, Meigs.
Allen D. Stacy and Donna
Stacy, parcel, to Cecil D. Frye
and VIckie J . Frye, Salem.
Lee Cowdery and Joyce
Cowdery, Easement, to Monongahela Power Co. , Olive.
Clyde E. Cross and Selma N.
Cross, aka Selma M. Cross,.
parcel, to Raymond H. Cross,
Sutton.
Judllh A. Murphy, parcel, to
Southern Ohio Coal Co., Salem.
Kaiser Aluminum Properties,
Inc., tracts, to Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp., Lebanon.
Mary F. Hayes, 1.51 A, to
William 0. Hayes, Chester.
Sa!Jy Conard, 3.3 A, Ia Crenson
R. Pratt. Bedfond.
Hoover Elkins, dec'd, affiv., to
Frances Goeglein, Salisbury.
~alma· Goodwin, parcel, to
Mary Hart, Pomeroy Village.
Marjorie Snider , Morris
Snider, Randall Snider and Kellle Snider, 100 A, to Robert
Scarberry and Cathy Scarberry,
Pomeroy VIllage.
•
· Paul Richard Torrence and
Naomi E. Torrence, parcels, to
Merle E. Parsons and Pamela G.
Parsons, Orange/ Olive.
May Walson, dec'd, cerl. of
trans., to B. Thomas Smith and
Gleva Stephens, Scipio.
Pearl Webb and Marsha Webb,
parcels, to Robert Allen, Scipio :
Edwin M. Aderer, 1 A, to MI.
Union Baptist Church, Columbia.
Myrtle Clark, parcel, to Franklin J. Cremeans and Margaret E . .
Cremeans, Rutland.
Patty Jo McMullen and Clyde
S. McMuUen, parcels, to Dalton
W. Henry, Sutton.
Victor Perry by atty-ln fact,
and Dessle Perry, parcels, to
Meigs Co. Commissioners,
Columbia.
Putl H. VanMeter, dec'd, to
affldavll, Barbara E. Van Meter,
Rutland Village.
Alva J . Coales and · Mary J.
Coates, parcels, to Marlin Ra y
Evans and Debbie Lynn Evans,
Chester.
Nick R. Blackburn, parcels, to
Karen S. Blackburn, Olive.
Peggy Lynn Harris and Robert
W. Harris, lots, to James B.
O'Brien and Roberta M. O'Brien,
Pomeroy VIllage.
William E. Criner, dec'd, affid,
to Ruth Criner, Middleport
VIllage.
Myrtle B. Starr, parcels, to
Dwight E. Ross, Joellyn R.
Milligan, Betty Van Winkle,
Marian Custer, Joseph Ross,
Mattie Allison, Le!Ja Pinney,
Arlen Fyfe, Clairanna McClung,
Ronald DeCker anrt Ann Gage,
Lebanon.
Billy W. West and Teresa West,
right of way, to Eldon McCoy and
Mark McCoy. Olive.
David Tyree, part Lot, to
Dorothy Williams, Middleport
VIllage.
Jerry M. Milam and Elizabeth
aka Emma Elizabeth Milam,
sheriff's deed, to Sec. of Housin g
and Urban Dev. Duval Fed Sav.
and Loan Assoc., Middleport
VIllage.
Denver W. Polllns, dec'd, cert.
trans., Sarah Rollins, Scipio.
Laura Rollins, William Rol·
!Ins, Karen Rollins and Nora
Hughes, parcels, to Sarah RolUns, Scipio. Edwin Andrew Cross and ArVilla Duff Cross, lot, to Lowell
David Flowers and Carol .1.
Flowers, Pomeroy Village.
Patty Miller, 3.8945 A, to
Robert L. Miller, Sulton.
Ruby K. Ludwig, parcel, to
Dewey J. Ludwig, Jr., Lebanon.
Rlclwd Rupe, Alta Ann Rupe,
Dever B~&amp;aerstaff and Martha

Wednesday. March 29, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Biggerstaff, lot 427, to Harry
Yarbrough, Pomeroy Village.
Jeanne S. Wert and William
Wert, 'h Int. , to Mark R. Wert,
Burton A. Sloane, Sydney M.
Sloane, and Jacob A. Sloane,
Meigs.
John David Gillogly and Jacqueline Gillogly, 1.4932 A,- to
Mark D. Gllloghy and Sherry L.
Gillogly, Columbia.

Danny Lew Meadows and
Karen Meadows, pt. lots, to
Mitchell H . Meadows ,
Middleport.
.
Harold D. Brannon, dec'd,
affivd ., Lavina C. Brannon,
Olive.
Ralph E. Barton, dec'd, a!·
!lvd., to Hazel R. Barton, Olive.
Judith K. Moore and David
Moore, Lot 28, to Mary L.

.,

Dorst aka Ma ry K.. 11.83 A, to
Charles Lawson and Hazel
Herbert E. Whaley and Sheila Lawson, 1.093 A, to Edward
Arthur Lawson and Nancy Jean
Whaley, Bedford.
Donald D. Porst and Mary K. Lawson, Letart.
Dwight R. Bissell and Carolyn
Dorst, 5 A, to Kermit Gilkey and
D. Bissell. parcel, to Glenn · R.
Martha J. Gilkey, Bedford.
Carl VIncent Gheen and Pam- Lawson and Eleanor R. Lawson,
ela Sue Gheen, parcels, to Olive.
Leon Carol Pierce and BarManuel E. Gheen and Barbara
Gene Gheen, Racine VIllage.
bara Ann ·Pierce: parcel, to
Richard Myeress and Dorothy James R. Kinnison and Debbie
Myeress, 73.175 A, Marlta Mye- ' Kinnison, Salem.
ress, Salem.
Jeffrey S. Werry and Ruby J.
Lewis G. Taylor, dec'd, affld, Werry, parcel, to Patrick H.
Daisey Taylor, Middle VIllage.
O'Brien, Rutland.

Scarberry, Olive.
Marion R. Hawk, dec'd, cert.of
trans., Dennis Raymo nd Hawk,
Sutton.
Forrest Dorsey Jorda n and
-Pansy Jordan, 7.3 A. Forrest
Dorsey Jondan and Pansy Jordan, Columbia.
Norman 0. Weber and Vera A.
Weber, parcel, to Trustees of .
East Meigs Church, Orange.
Herman A. Carson, tracts, to
Herma n A. Carson and Teresa A.
Carson, Sutton.
Donald D. Dorst and Mary

Wednesday. March 29, 1989
Public Notice

PEPSI SALE

Low-Priced Sua•enna.-ket

ODLAND

"'

'

.MT DlWr PEP51 FREE, uiET 01 REG •

PEPSI COLA .

l
' l

'
8 - 16 OZ. BTLS .

2 .LITER BOTTLES

For Tho Fiscal Year Ended
December 31, 1988
RACINE VILLAGE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYPES
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
Local Taan ............ 18,753
lntergDIIernmontal

TOTAL
.
RECEIPTS ......... ... 165,25 2
DISBURSEMENTS:
Socurhv of Person &amp;
Propeny ..............61,055
Public Health
Sorviceo ................ 1,874
Loolure Time
Activhieo .................. 700

Char-for
Serviceo .............. 44,643
Fineo, llconMo, &amp;
Permlto ................. 7,344
Miocaltoneouo ........... 4.161
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ......... 100.761
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS:
SeC\Iritv of Person &amp;
Property ............ , 81.066
Public Health
Servicos ................ 1.874
Loolure Time
_ ......... .. ...... .700
ActlvUit ios
BIIIC 111IIY
T ServiC81 ..lo.............. 6,134

mont.. ................. 18,248
Caphal0uilay .......... 1.394
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ............. 10&amp;.912
Total Receipts Over/

Sorvicea ................6.134
Trenoportation ........ 16,507
General Governmont ...................18,248
Personal
Service ..... ..... ..... 10,087
Travel Transportation ............... 1.&amp;oo
ContraCtual
.
Sorvlcos ........... .....3,922
Supplies end
Materials ............. 13,609
Capitol Outloy ........ 21 .818
TOTAL DISBURSET ME NRTS ., ...... ..... 166,434
Oil1 ecetpls over I
under Diobunoment• ................... 9,818
Total Other Fin.
Sources/ (Uoeoj ......... (677)
Eac. RcptoaridOthor
Financing Sources Over/
(Under! EKpend. Diob. &amp;
Other Uo0./ Not ........ 9,141

menlo "" ............. (6.161)
Eac. Rcpts and Other
Financing Sourc:u Over/
(Under) Eapend. Diob. &amp;
Other UoH / Not ...... (5,151)
Fund Cosh Balance
1/ 1/ 88 ................. 90,455
Fund Caoh Balance
12131/88 ............. 85,304
Reserve for Encumbr.
12/ 31/88 .. :............... 100
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
OPERATING '
REVENUES:
Char- for
Servicos .............. 54,0&amp;0
Miscalloneous.. ....... 10.441 ·

1/ 1/ B8 ............... 136,&amp;26 .
Fund Cooh Balance
12/ 31 / 88 ........... 145,667
for Encumbr.
. 31 .. .................... 100
Bat. ........ 140,987
............. 6.500
Total Treasury
8otonce ............. 147,487
Outstanding ..'......... (1.8201
TOTALI)Al. .... ..... 146,867
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
G.O. NOTES !Fire Truck)
Ou!stonding
11118B .............. ... 55,000
Rotired ................... 20.000

RECEIPTS .............. 64.491
OPERATING
EXPENSES:

12/31 / 88 ............. 35,000
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED
FINANCIAL STATEMENT

Personal
Services ....... ....... 1 0 ,067
Tr~v(tl Trans-

I certify this report to be
correct and true to the belt
of my knowledge.

Revenue ............. . 26,860

·'

EASTMAN'S .. You.- lndea•endently Owaied

Public

ANNUAL FINANCIAL
Ptrmito ................. 7,344
cMHus~~M~Nro
~-~--&amp;
REPORT
Miocollanoous......... 14,602

"'

12 PACK CANS

ransportat n ........ 16,507

General Govern·

TENDEIIEST QUALITY
COUIITIY STYlE

TENDEIIEST QUALITY
ASSORTED

FRESH LEAN

Ground

Pork Chops

Beef

Beef
Bu(ket Steak

:tlu;iP(•)."

.

Under Disburse·

Fresh Chi(ken
Leg Quarters

'

••'

:-:-~

,.

.,

I

•
\
)

..
SPECI.\L ( FI'S OF \IE

\'1'·:·:

WE WELCOME
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

IF YOU DON'T SEE WHAT YOU NEED, I'LUSE ASIL ..
OUR MEAT CUnERS ARE GLAD TO MAllE YOUR SPECIAL CUT!!!

TOTAL

WE SELL
USDA CHOICE
MEATS

portatlon ............... 1,500
Services ................ 3.922

Supplies and
Materials ............. 13,609
Capitol Outlay ........ 20.424
TOTAL DISBURSE- .
.MENTS ... ..... .. ..... 49.522

MARCH GOES ''OUT LIKE A LION"
WITH OUR HOT FEATURE ITEMS PLUS THIS

Total receipts over I

Fund Cash Balance

Outstanding

3/ 22/89

Jane G. Beegle,

Clerk-TreMurer

66 6th St..
Racine. O.h. 46771
814-949-2891
(3) 29. 1tc
2

Under Disburse-

GET ONE FREE SALE!

BUY

Baaic Utility

Contractual

~AT~~~~S~P~O=T==============~~~~~~

In Memoriam

Sources/ IUsesl .........(8771
EKe. Rcpts and Othar
Financing Sources Over

lUnder) Eapend. Diob. &amp;
Other Uses/Net.. .... 14.292

Fund Cash Balance

1/ 1/ 88 .. ·............... 39.571
Fund Cash Balance

12/ 31/88 ............. 63.863
NONEXPENDABLE TRUST
FUNDS-Cam . Fund
Fund Cash Balancil

IN MEMORY OF
LUCillE BRANDT
MARCH 29, 1988
Often times our mind
goeo bock

To one year ago;
And what it meant to lose

you

No one will ever know.
We think of you so often.

Mom·.

You're in our thoughts

tcxlov.
of God

1I 1/ 88 ................... 8,600

And memory is one gilt

12/ 31 / 88 " ............. 6.500
TOTALS
RECEIPTS:
Local taaos .... .... :.... 18.753

That death ean•t take'

Fund Cuh Balance

Intergovernmental

Revenue .. .. , ......... 26,860
Charges for

Servicn ........ ...... 98.693

away.

Your memory is our keep..
sake.
With that we'll never
part .
God has you in His keep-

ing.

W• have
heart1.

In

you

our

Sadly missed by husband,

Elmer.

children
and randchildren

ONE 32 OZ. JAR

BUY ONE b4 OZ. CARTOON

BUY ONE 1-LB. ROLL

Chilled Five Alive Juice

GET ONE

FREE!

BUY ONE 7 OZ. BOX

Sani-Cat Litter Plus

Banquet Pot Pies

E!

GET ONE

BUY ON£ 16 OZ. BR. ASST.

Reward for information leading to the
arrest and conviction of person or persons involved in the vandalism of
Richard Starr's log cabin on Boston Hoi·
low road. Incident occurred around the
18th of March. If you have information,
call Sheriff's Department at 992-3371.
All information will be confidential.

FREE! .

Downey Flake Waffles

FREE!

:

GET ONE

~~~~~~~~-

Residential
IN1EIIOI•EXTEIIOI
ROOFING
Jot &amp; Robert Brown

FREE! .

NEW-REPAIR
O Gutters

· owns pouts
Guner Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
2-10-'88-1 mo. pd.

ALTERAnONS
SINGER AND WHITE
SEWING MACHIN£$

992 •2284
3~ 1

mo.

PAINTING
WITH
PROFESSIONAL

CARE
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

SUPPLY COMPANY
•Plumbing Supplies
•Electrical Supplies
MON.-TUES.-WEO.-FRI.
9 A.M .• 6 P.M.
THURS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON
SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
Calf Anyti111'e Day or
Night

We Haul and
Spread
Limestone
Dirt. Sand &amp;
Coe_l Delivered
1,000 Gal. WaterService

992·6135

Bri., Houd01htlt, Ownor
3rd St.. Syracu.., Oh.
2·17-'88-1 mo.

WANTED
WEDDING GOWNS, PROM

Orange Juice
64 oz.
CTN .

$149

~' ~ 'MARCH 1s FROZEN

~~-~ '

• FOOD1AND

2 - :n l,.

~

$899
50 lB. BAG

Rinso Detergent
f~MILY SIZE

t.:.;..----1132

oz.

$ 399

oi~-i~,

W~1pped Toppmg
12 OZ.

IAN.QUET ASSORTED , _s oz.

99(

aowL

NATURE' S BEST

7.S Ot.

Frozen Pizza
BROUGHTON PREMIUM

Ice Cream

'" Gal.

9
(
7
$ 39
2

Swanson Dinners
Ch1cken Nuggets
""1. !o!u,

il;• ~~ j
,_ ~ iii.

r... s:,

I

:

99 (:
•i

FOODLAND FROZEN

0 range j u1ce
•

~ ~r· ·~A~z.

•We Aeservf! The Atyht To l1m it OuMiitrte' •Pr ir.e~ Good Th ru Set ., April 1 , 1989 •USDA Food Stlm~ Gladly Accepted •Not Rtlponsible For Typogrephill Errors

I

$2 49~

HUNGRY MAN

KENNEBEC

SEED POTATOES

•

FOOD MONT"

~

,

SELlER ..... Makos Money
BUYER .... Soves Money

·n

i

_

t; suite,
HOUSEHOLD MISCELLANEOUS: 2 pleoe living room
and tables, recliners, 9 pleoe dinette set, Amana
&amp;

• refrigerator, Emerson mic:rowaw.oven. rollaway bed, metal
! wardrobe, pots, pans, rag rugs, linens, sewing machine, bird
: cage, Maytag wringer washer, Maytag automatic washer,
~ dryer, grill, 2 grinders, Craltsman dril and press, air com pres' sor, rototiller, battery chatger, vise's, wheel ban-ow, showls,
,

•

•
•••
f .

304-

CUSTOM IUilT

Day ::r· Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

4-1&amp;-8&amp;-Hn

·31 1

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associales

PUBLIC
RELATIONS
108 High S1n-o1

CALL 992-6756

Pomt&gt;roy, Ohio 45769

Phon• (614) 9q2.2922

Certified Licensed Shop

5-25-tfn
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNII: GIEG I. ROUSH
GENERAL

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must h Repairable"

IERCIAL
.CUSTOM KITCHENS &amp; BATHS
-EXlENIIVI! REMODELING
•YINVL ·I104NG &amp; ROOANG

KEN'S APPLIANCE
.SEIVICE

.Ill.

•METAL 8UIUMN08

HOUI\NG &amp; NJT. PROJictJ

....

98S·H61

SINCE 1969

II_IISII' ST. IY

1122118/lfn

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

RACINE. OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.9-19-881fn

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. IT. SO lAST
GUYSYilE, OliO
~14-6~2-3121

Authorized John
Deere, Now Holland.
Bush Hog Farm

Equpmem Deater.
Ftr• E••tr•sef
SliM &amp; Serrlu
t-3-'88-tfc

r----------.
BINGO

POMEROY -EAGlES
CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976
THUIS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.
SUII. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

•Mobile Home ··
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

915-4141

It. 33 North af
Pomeroy. Ohio

1-13-'89-tl~

'

References

GENERAl CONTRACTORS
11-16-'88-tfn

STONE
DELIVERED I SPREAD
GAU.IA CO. AIEl
$7.50 PEl TOll
Contact llllino Taylor

614·245·9557

3· t0· '89 -1 mo.

7 DAYS

CLEAN ALUMINUM
StiETS _ .................. 52\ 111.
CLUN AlUMNUM
CAST ......................... 40• Ito.
AlUMINUM
llVEIAGE CANS ..... 50' Ito.
IRONY
SIIET ............. S• to 30• • ·
•oNY CAST ... 3' to 20' Ito.
STAINLESS ................ 20&lt; lb.

992-S114
Loce1ed Off Bypoas
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;
143, Pomeroy, Oh.

1-12-' 89-tfn

~

ABl1 PUNCH!

INSURANCE

c.ll:

J. WARNER

REPRESENT AT lYE

302 W. 2nd Sl.,
Pom•oy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 614-992-5479
... 614-992-2477~

Claims:

1-100-421-3535

•

................ ==...

LIMESTONE
HAULED
DRIYEWAYS &amp; ETC •

Call AI 742-2328

~

OF BUSINESS

Jo's Gift Shoo
SYRACUSE. OHid
Everything Marked
Down

•Cement Items

•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments
Because of Cold Weather
Everything Inside.
Ring Door Bell lor Service
2·7·!

mo.

·.

2282.

-:---,---,-----

Complete houteholdt of furnl·"
ture l $MtiqU81. Alto wood •
co•l ha.at•s. Sweln't F11n1ture
• Auction. Third &amp; Oltve. -..
814-ot.48--3159.
;
Junk Car• with or wtthout
motors. C.ll Llrrv Lively- 814-' ·

•

--:------- ~
Furniture end IIIPPIIancea by 1he

piece or entire huu.ehold. Ftlr '
prices being paid. C.ll 614-44&amp;- •

3, &amp;8.

•

Will buy or IPP111118 enythlngl..
Antiques .. furnltu,.., appH .. OII. •
••••· 1utoa. oomplete horne '
furnilhlngt . M•Un Wedemirfer,

814-246-6162. '
--,------=----·

aca

U1ed lnnh:ure by the piece or·
entire hou...,old elso selling ...

putthase of min. H.C. PackLim~ 1 Coupon per CUS·
tomer per binJJ 10sston.
Wt Pay •5o.oo Por Gome
o.., 110 Ptopla 'M.OO

_________ _
p., Gom1

...lit. #OOS·U

2·l· tfn

'

814-742-2465.

-

Quilt•

....

Pre 1940 quih1. Any condition. •

Caah peld. Call614-982· &amp;1117
or 814-692·2461 .

U1td furniture In d hou.-.old '
eppllancea . Phone 014- 742·
20418.

Announce men Is

...

Wanted aumdlng timber • .-vlng •

top price. 304-5418·6624 eftw

8:00PM.

3 Announcements

•·

'.

RIHllce your Welghl· Teke "New
Shape Diet Plan" and E-VIP
Wat• Pilla. AVI118ble Fruth

Emplovnn:nl
Servtces

Ph•m~~cy .

We hwe the IOYII'Itt pricel on
ehlin .aw1 .,d ttring trimmers
lft'Y..,....,'· Slderl Equipment.

304-875-7421.
.
,
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN- 11 Help Wanted
FREE VOC. TRAINING. U.S.,
.Dipt. of Labor now ecceptlng
application• _from young m• NUCLEAR POWER TRAINEES •
and women for enrolment In
WANTED:
Job Corp. Must be t.tween the
CASHBONUS .
"
age of 16-21. out of school or
work. Meny tr.ct• to choOM Poalttona mm.. •etv ..... lbl.
room • ba•d .., high achoot gr...........:::
from ·
prCNkled. medical .,d d..-.t:el

*'"

c•e. e,.-,ding eUuw.nce .,d
liVIng~. See A8¥ Pllule'f' It the
Pt. Pl...em Job S.viCe. 225
flthSt .. Pt. P l . - hours 10
e .m, · 3 p.m. Wed. 3-21. or cell

.

17-24 ln NYM. . fiii'OIIU'Itof\ 1

Mllnlenence. E~etllent t..,llng
oompttittieHIIr'Y. be~ ,.·
neftta md • CMh bonua UIJDfl '
completion of training. Mutt be
wlfllng to relocMe. Cell Mon.·
Thurs., 9 AM-2 PM ot 1-80D- •
pad~ age.

282-1384.

Giveaway

.

••

Eern •tra monlrf foryouraprlnf't
wardrobe. Awn. Clll Bee 814-

Good watch dog. h..f chow. 1
VMI' old mile, n•dl home In
country. C.ll 114-448-1253.

&amp;ve• old male part Doberman
and RetriMter. Neutered, obedl.,t tNined, houllt broil:•.
Heve mediCIII recorda. Cell 114-

379-2308.

Female lordar Colli• to good
home, p-:ef••blv in oountry. Cll

814-892·3128.

4411-4882 "'c.... 4411-4397.
:::---:::-:-:-::---c----;·•
EIIV Work! hcentnt Payl A• •
1emble prO&lt;llctt It home. Csll
for lnform.tton. 504-8-t9-0170
Ext. 313.
·'1

AN po1ttlon1 IVeillble. stertlng
hourtv n~t••10. 711. LPN Pot._ •
tlons ..,IM8bl• ltlrtlng hurt;-'"• .7. 4&amp;. DIHwtntlll for • ·
perlence. E Rill ern ben.tlt1
IYeil.bla. Full or pirt time. •
ContiCt Dirtetor of Nuralnt"
Plnecr_. Cere Cent.-. 81
j

4411-7112.
:So::-ci-;-oi-;-Sorv::--;----:D::-Ir-oct-o-r--_;__dtd:

Lost and Found

3 · 7-'89-1 mo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

Mastic - Certointetd®
Vinyl Siding
525 North Second
Middleport, Ohio
Seamless Gutter
RtplacenMnl Windows EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
Blown Insulation
SUNDAY 7:00P.M.
Storm D-s &amp;
WEDNESDAY
7:00P.M.
Wirulows
Pa&amp;lor
Jame&amp;
E.
Keeeee
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992-2772

99'' ... .,

lott : 3 rings &amp; 1 bi'ICaioL
s..tlmentel value. Rewerd Cal

814-4411-4084.

LOST: Small t.,.-i• dog-m .. a
White with white Spotl. lalt
s-.t on D1n Jon11 AoMI. n81f'
Recooon Craek P•rk. C.ll 114-

379-2803. '

Found eround Swen Cr81k
bridge. Cock• •PMiel type dog.
whtte wtth brown spota. Call

814-2&amp;8-1378.

FOUND: Sm .. l brown Dech·
1hund mixed dog. North 01111•
.chool • •· Clll 014-388·
Lo.t: Bl.ck Cltwlh wtitep.wa.
In Hyull Aun er• on Mtrch 2&amp;.

&amp; bonollta. Apply In POr&gt;on It,
Scenic Hils Nurwlng Cen1 • or-

nurolng facility. E-1- ... ..,,

Call 81 .. 982-1422.

7

Yard Sale

-------G-allipolis·--------&amp; Vicinity
.. ---· -·- -·· ------ ·- ·-· .. ··--- ·- ..
3 Fa-nit.,. Y•d 511&amp; Childr••
clothing, tooit. dlshel, lot•
more.
9-&amp;. Firat hou .. on
right balow S.,der• Or. nelgh-

s...

laturUy. V.. mile on Addl•onl~ovlh Rd. off lit. 7 Bluo

hoo•. Houothold R-1.
Call etol-387-7834.

-------po·marov··---------

$ 35DELIVERED
I'EI LOAD

Middleport

&amp;

BILL SLACK

stow. bed •Dringe, overload
1prlng1. .tc. Aoma CrtmeM' •
........... Covmy . Rood 18.

, :. ..... tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

614·985-4180

Vicinity

Fridor. M«ch 31, 9:00.3:00.
1171 Ch..., Novo, little glrl't
clothing, clothing, a• hooling

992-2269
Listening
Dependlblt Heariog Aid..Sales &amp; ~oNii••
·
0 Heari111 Evaluations For All A1es

a.

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

:r:
:a
-

(614} ~-7619 II' (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
·Gallipolis, Olio 45631
DT at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
MulbttTy Hps, Pomeroy,

IMclt Qroye Aoed. Autltnd

hou•-Wotch to.- signa.
tn•lde. rWn or lhtne.

lolao
I

flmlty,

one Iewing • •·

M«ch 31ot•dApril1tt. tll8

College Rd .• Syrecuae.

call 814-4411-7150.
Atlontlc City-Selling

llifta

:
In

Bowdwlllk gift lhop. o•ls - ··
mllory on Boardwelk lnduded.•
lmmedl•e emplovment· ,e•tV
or IUmrTW'. A.., •• Ulery 300
week. Write tor ~formMJon •n~
eppllcetlon. lrene'l 1239 BDMcf. '
Wllk. Att.,tic Chy, NJ 08401 · 1

n.!

W111ted: Truck drlv• with
bed experl10e. 48 Nt11. Pev·

•8oo ""'"'iv- cali 814-281•
7881 Of 4415-9443.

--:---:-----·

Allembltn. Earn mon..,•••ern-;
bUng Muaicel Tedct( le•s.
Mat•l• 1upplled. No ullin_g.
Write: .Jo· EI Eni•Pf'il•. P.O.
Box 220 3. K11Slmmee FLr

l'fo- 32742-2203.

thlna. babt 1tam1, mite. hems.

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

EARN MONEY Aotd boo"-1
t30.000/yr Income pot~ntilll l
Detallo. (11 8011-687-8000 EJct.
Y-10189.
--:---:--:----'
Pwt time cl•k c•hi•. Big1
Wheol Conv Out. Rt. 3!. Galt&gt;,
olla. Colt 614-4411-3990 for
C
ntwv'-'.
FtAI time • p.t tme LPN's'i
needed .t 100 bM •klled

boi-Rd.

FIREWOOD

•od•

Blehelora degr•ln
work
recommended or 2 ye.-. of
superv•ed •Dirienaeln • hlllltft'
e. a fldltty. l:.:eUtnt •lary &amp;"
ben eftt1. Appt.,. at Scenic Hill ,
Hurting Cent•. At. 2 Box 202.
Bldwelf or ce11814-446-71SO.

8711 .

4 ftlmlly Glrlllia8al1. Fridovlftd

INTERIOI-EXTDIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Tab the pain out of
pcintlnt. ut me do
it for you.
VEIY IEASONAILE
HAVE IERIEIICE

992-2156

TOP CASH paid for '83 model .
and newer used e••· Smith
Buick-Pontic. 19l1 Ee.t.-1\,
Ave., G•llipolit. c.n 614-44&amp;- ;

2 H.D. FREE w~h coupon and

LIGHT HAUUNG DO~IEI

SMALL
WANT ADS

Wanted To Buy

for • 100 bed Nur11ng t.clllly."'

Ul'l
JEFFERY

"

4 wheeler. 200 or 260. Cell
6,4-246-9223 ~"• 4pm.

DOOI PIIZI

4

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- 8ATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

31 . Apr. 1.._ Furntrure, dlth•.
Vl•km coo~e. chine ••· "
linen•. fens. pr••u,. oook«t. ;
Iampi, dr••IM. clothing; 11WCh •
more. 1 mile out S.nd Hill Rd .
Slgn1.

388-9303.

6

AUCTIONEER: Rl&lt;k Peanon
Mason, WV 773-5785
EXECUTRIX: Janet Bumgarner

TERMS: C.lh or Clleok with I.D.
Not Rt 1ponellllo for Aooldlnll c.- Looa of l'l'apel1y
u-111 wv &amp; 01t1o ,...

INDUSTRIES,
INC.
Reasonable Rates.
Fully Insured
CALL 992-6681
1-31- '88-1 mo.

344-8088 coltoct.

MARCUM C

-lono. 304-n!-&amp;78&amp;
•
ESTATE SALE. 9 A.M. Mar. 30,

9

SERVICE
MEIGS -

2-n-89-1 mo.

I

MMiinWodom..,.-. Aucti&lt;&gt; '
&amp; Bon&lt;Md in
llquidotiono,
00101
01
"
·
t•'""
ontlquoo.
~
·
1 24 8
4- 15- 1&amp;2.
'
•
AUCTIONEER
Edwin Wn•• now booking ~
opring ,.,... 17 . . . . ..,..•
rlonce Phono 304-273-3447 ·
Rav.,woood. W.Va.
'
Call

·-·
State Ucenoed
or Ohio:

HOME

CLEANING

992-6855

EVERY SUNDAY

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

W.VI , State Chtfl"'fion Auc::·
tlon•. Rick P•••on. lcenud In • 'I
Ohio end W..l VirGinia. Booking ..,

:
•
Foctory ~.hoko
12 Gaup Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforad
10-7-ttn

3·20· '88· 1 mo.

THE
BASKET WEAVE
Hand Woven
Baskets
Basket Weaving
Classes
Basket Supplies
OPEN SATURDAYS
10:00 'TIL 5:00
PAM MIIHO AN • OWNIR

•

6 30 P.M

PRIVATE

8

Page-9

"

· Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

992-6506

GUN SHOOT

BISSELL
BUILDERS

FIRE DEPT

Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPSREPAIRS ·
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS.
ROTOTILLERS.
ETC.
DAVE'S ENGINE
REPAIR

Fe.- Mort ~n!~:r!!l!'~on

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

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

porch swing, same as new Murray lawn mower, lawn mower
par1S,Iots ol good tool a, pluo much mare.

WNCII

MON.-FRI.: 9 am-6 pm
SAT.: 8 am-12 NO.n

2· 24-' 89- f mo.

We Service All Mak"

#I COPPER _ ........... 16' tto.
#2 COPPER_........... 65' Ito.

• ware &amp; more.

89(~ : s

We Buy Aluminum
Cans, Gla... Brats.
Copper and More

FOR INFORMATION
614-992 -7521
614-992 -2661
WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS
North Second, Mi~•oport

111•1.

Without Notice I

ANTIQUES &amp; MISCELLANEOUS: Oak flatwall cupboard,
' oak dresser, latge apple butter kettle, several quillS, nice ma~ hogany oval library table, walnut night stand, Victorian walnut bed, Larf&lt;lns desk, Victorian platform rocker, rockers,
•' spinning wheel, oak chairs, 2 flattop trunKs, wicker sewiflg
: rocker, oak dresser painted, oak base cabinet, small walnut
• hanging cupboard, bucket borl&lt;:h, work table, session wall
, clock, oak kitchen clock, 22 Remington single octagon barrel
; gun, Dazey chum, 2 wagon wheels, iron tea ket11e, com
l grinder, crocks, gran~e pans, stone jars, iron skillel&amp;, glass-

'

RECYCLING
NOW OPEN FOI
BUSINESS
14th &amp; 11a1n St.
Paint ,._rant, W. Ya.

DRESSES, FORMAL AntRE
AND ACCESSORIES
"Just In Time For Spring

''2-5275
3-2H- 'HH-1

(Subject to Change

Locsted at 405 2nd Street, New Haven, WV
Tlie Estate of Ethel Jewell Will Be Sold
MINUTE MAID CHILLED

.... ~- lullt
"Free Eotimat""
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SONDAY

WANTED

ALLEN'S
HAULING

Jan. 14, 1989

Saturday

WE HAVE ALL YOUR
SPRING GARDENING
NEEDS NOW IN
STOCK

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"DOC" VAUGHN

3-2-'89 tfn

RACINE

2nd Ave.

9AM-7PM

ESTATE
AUCTION
10:00 a.m.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN .IN
INSULATION

h•ts .... "

SINGER KNITTING .
MACHINES
FABRIC SHOP
110 W11t Main. Pom•ay

GUN SHOOT

Middleport, Ohio
1 2" ·aa· tf
· o- • n

•Mobile Home Parts

Paying today

April 1 , 1989

319 So.

::=:;:::::=====; L========~
r
MASTERS TUXEDO RENTAL
DIY CU:ANING SERVICE
SCISSORS SHARPENED
USED SEWING MACHINES

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992 ·6282

G T nk

SYRACUSE

OPEN

Public Sale
8t Auction

•

Howard L. Wrl'tesel

ROOFING

PLUMIING I HEAnNG
Ntw Location:
161 North So&lt;ond
Middl-t, Ohio 4s760
..,...
SALES &amp;- SERVICE

We can repair and rt·
cor~ radiators anti
heater corM. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair 01 0 1 ·
PAT HILL FORD
99 •
M dl 2 2196
id aport. Ohio
1-IHtc

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
8

RADIATOR
·
SER"ICE
11

992·3801
992-6347

Callh•ints....

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2860

$1000.00 REWARD

BUY

Manetti Dressing
GET ONE

FREE!

Light 'n' Lively Yogurt '

FREE!

COmmercial

"At Reasonable Pricos"

BUY ONE 8 OZ. UP

BUY ONE 25 LB. BAG

GET ONE

GET ONE

B&amp;B PAINTING
SYRACUSE, OHIO

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Webber's Sausage

Smuckers Grape Jelly

Services
Offered
r~~~~~~~~ITF~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======~~

742-2328

ments ................. 14,969

Total Other Fin .

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

'
GOVERNMENT JOBS.
•10. 040. · t&amp;8. 230 y..-. Now.
hlrln~ Colt Ill 8015-887-8000
Ext. R-9805 for o.ment fedwel
llat.
.

1380.• DAY PROCESSING .

Phone orders. People clll you.
No •periMce nec••rv. Call'

IRafundablol 1-&amp;18-4!9- Be97o
Ext. K16227days,

,

Gov•nment Jobll Now hiring
thl1 ereal e10.213. to 875.471 1
lmmedl.-e openlnUII C.ll lA•·

llndablol 1·315-733-B082Eat.
F2748A .

'

Someone to do odd joba. e..rlenoect fence bulldlr. olean up
work. Send rtf•in0111 to P .0

8o•

729 Y, Pom.-..,. Ohio.

.

Adontlc c~v- Sailing gttlo '"
llg Ywd iot•l F~ .. lot .. Mon .. Bo•-lk gift ohop. Oliio dorTu•. Morch 31ott-"'April mitory on BOirctNIIk included.'
4th. 33871 F l · - Rood. lmmodloto tlmployftWI~ - l y
Corne to I PolntsandwMCh for or 1unwner. A..regee.t-v •30o
ligna to n.,. log home. Colt wHII:. Write for lnfarnwtton •nd
814-ltz-nsa !10:00-8:oo IPPIIC815on.lrtne'•1238 e .. ro.
p.m.)
wolto. Atl•tlcCity. N,J. 08401.
Dove HoaGY. Hippy Holt- Rd. Drtvera, VI'_. houM lllborn.
Mor"' ftUt, April 1. Motor andtr.,splantn. Ph* upeppiicycl&amp; camp•. 01r ,.rta, m61c. Ctlk'JM et Herrll Ferms. Portl•d. Ohio.
ilems.

�11

SNAFUtll by Bruce Beattie

Help Wanted

Wednesday. March 29, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10- The Daily Sentinel
44

51

Apartment
for Rent

Household Goods

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry

74

Wright

AVON ~

AI 1r.... C.ll Marityn
We.,., 304-H:Z..21411.
AYONoii•-IIShiri"''BPo•o.
304-17&amp;-1429.
J ult went to ••n • little •tra
mon&amp;¥7 Or would vou Ike to
....,. • a.•? Etthlr w-v Avon
can hllpyaubethlbMtyoue.,.

45

882-28411.

Roomt for rent-~ or month.
St1ning It •120 1 mo. Gill•

belli CMI Marilyn

w..,.,, 30 ..

1982 Yamaha Sect 750. E~eet
cond. Shaft drive. n~ tiree. like
. -. o1soo. call &amp;14-44&amp;- .
0'584.

25 Inch RCA color conoolo TV.
eso . Hot point
refrigeretor.tvecedo· 11 00.
F...,cll Pr-lol blo. . 8 trock
Iter_, !. 2 tabl• •40.1Ctnmore

2 bl*aom. furnilhed. Large
Jl'lllo. romodoled. SOanlly dopoolt. Cell 814-992·8881 oft•
8:00 p,m.

Coppertone

wa•'*"· •11.llofL
GE

SIMP.:Ing r0om1 wtth cooWng,
Alto Trill.- .-ce. AM hook·l4)1.
CAN oft• 2p.m. 304- 773·
5151.MMonWV.

Uoed oppllon ....

~l.CJ5

~~~~

&lt;;/II:( I '('t::OOI,U 'THAT";; 1H6
~THI~~

I!M~b

'EAID~l~~
M'( ~

•

a:x:&gt;t:..
•MAc.eern-!

75

Boats an.d
· Motors for Sale

0.-odledl Big 8111lnll"oN
n.,../ ulld. SJnglt wldet stock.
Rnonclng A .alloblo. F,..oh City
Mobile Hom•. Coli 114-44&amp;-

9340.
2 BR trlllor ond lot In Rutlonci
U50o. Coli 381-7217 .. .,.

12

"'"'·
1986 ForreotPork 14o70. 3BR.

Situations
Wanted

un1::innlng, atorege bldg.
c•
ol colllng. LR • ldlohon.
other ••trat. can 81~441Eldertv m-' loOking to 1twe 9513 or 01.._448-3958.
home. Will peyfor room&amp; bo•d·
Coli 814-44&amp;-3888 oft• 8 PM . Two 12x80 1972·•8.280..
1888-t5,410.. 2 SR electric.
lnt.,for PelntJng. Free E1tf. g•-bott\ Ike naw. N.w C•pet.
ColiS 14-44&amp;-0171!.
mil•. 304-175·3753.

In Tuppan Pl.. ns, 2 bedroon'tt.
t175. P"' momh
dopoolt

end utlllti•. Col
3487.

1~

814-742' 3033.

Schools
Instruction

1979 Etcont 14K70, 3 bed--

RE-TRAI!'I NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COU£GE. 529 Jocuon Pille.
Coli 44&amp;4387. Reg. No. 8&amp;-11·
10588 .

l)l~odDrlvor
Trudl Trolnlng
-·
Truck
o.o .T. Cerllftcotlon Job,._.
ment Alllrt..,oe Home Study-

/Relldtnt Training. Fln1ndll
Aid Awlleble,

room~. 1~ hthl. centrlll llir,
total ltll(ltrlc, vinyl und. .ldrt·
In g. porch, out bldg., one r...al
lot. tiO,IOO. Coli 304-1782949.

For Sale fire d1m._.td traM•.
-Off•. 304-875-1078.
19S41Cnollwood 14o70, .3 bodroorr&amp; ceiling ..,,, ..-.tel lllr,
cllhordol ceiling. 304-878·
48153.

Accredited

Momw NHSC. Coli Toll Froo
1·800.8411·8411 . Locol oflloo.
Alrlcerlturg.. W. Va. Hdqn:
Clw.. Fl.
18 Wanted to
.

'

1

Bockhoe op-or. htNtiV equipment operetor, pipe lln·e
for..,_.·N••• work. CIH 8 1...

388-1148t.
Pip•.nd Tr~ahlng workw.U•
blo. c.ll 114-44&amp;-0159.

~lllrlllCirli

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOT1CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLIS fl.
lNG CO. ,_,..,_. 1h• you
do buoln- with people knOW', lnd NOT to ~Md monev
throUgh tt. mill untl you hw•
lnvootlgotod tho offering.

UV

GPMitlon. Downtown
lor ond lou- whh 22 • •
din•. 2 two bet.*oom upetMra
ep.-trNrttl. Own• h• other
Turn

Business
Buildings

O.llipoUs f:erry, W.Va. 4 mUM
from new dam lite, n.,.. metal

Do

" George~• Porteble S..Vmlll
Don't hall your loge to
-mil. Col 304-87&amp;-1987.

34

lnterwta. e7&amp;.ooo. Ne_i_otlable.

CAl Ron ot 114-992·9972.
Retail bualn•• for •1 .. Mlclcl•

port, Ohio. Johnaon'a VarllfY

Store (8to1 Fronkln). 1·304773-1301 oft• 8:00p.m.

Homes for Sale

IO•cr•. Coin Ridge. Aloo2·ono
tore trlt;t.. PotiiiJie OW1111'
ftn.,clng. c.N 304-4811-1178.

One hllf ICfe lot C.mp Coni.,
Rouoh Ferrel Rood, 304-8787511 •ft• 5:00.
Aultk: cabin In -.lc loaatlon
20x24 unct." roof on hilt ea-e
tMded lot ... 100. 00. Ella•
Bond Pork, 10 mM• Point
.PI•••Int. phone 304-1578·
2028.
2 to 200 ecr• •• low ••
.110.00 per _.. 10 mil•
aouth of Point Pl-lnt, 304S7S.202e.

41

Homes for Rent

mo. C.U

87S.539t.

304-87&amp;-&amp;104,. or

! BR hou• n.rtto lodge hollln

er-n Cltv. t175 mo. Coli
814-445-11111.

Sm. 31R hou•n . . Petriot. 2
BIIIJ: moble home at Ewrgr..,..
Coli I 14-378-2178.

GOVEA NMENT HOMESI From
n oo (II Rooolrl. Forecloo-.
Ropoo.. T• D e l l n q - tl•. NOW I ELLING 11118
AREAl Col (Aelu . .bloii·31573:J.tiOM. Eot. 2732-A. fOil
CU ARENT USTINOII
P~oo rodUcecl-3 IR .. 2 both

homo on , ....,ae Rd. COl
· 11.._44&amp;-1221 for morolnfo.

-00-

Price Reduced-Linoaln Log
hou ... 3
2 botho.
oodor log oldln8 llropl- Fl·
nondng 1Volttilllo. Fronoh City
Moble Hom•. COl 814-448-

9340.

2 nori-. 4 IR. fUll unllnlohd
b•.ment. 20x40 lnground
DOOf, 2· Diu••«•. ln Vlnton.cllll
.14-3811-1114.

hou•.

7 room
In ground pool,
F.A . fur,.,._ wOod burner,
i•llll•r_ov_ , . . ." ..
Colt 814-992-3938 oftor 4 end
walkmdl.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1110 ..,_,.., 14&gt;&lt;70. 2 BR .. 2
botho. ol ol-lc. CA. """""
tour-. 101111 .... I Zx14
...- . bel 114-24&amp;-

1021.

For rlftt : 3 BRoom houM,
eon .,.._38&amp;8321
oft• 5:00.

Ev•-·

or 3 bed rOOm hou"~e in Poir,1: · Kolvlnotor electric ron go 40".

em •r•. 304-B7&amp;n17
oft• 5:00PM.
Pl . .

....,. good cond. t126.
304-89&amp;.3101 or 89&amp;-307~

Wanted to rant nice hOuse,
prefw Wehama but route, 304-

2 be•oom trail•, water and
..,_. turniahed, 8 mil• North;
of town on Rt. 12. 304-878.
1071.

16 Bolg. Browning YR. he.
t485. 1100 Rem. 11 mod•
1981. Ylt t395. NIB. Col
61 4-448· 7830.

Merchand ise
51

Apartmant
for Rent

53

Houn : M.T.W 10e.m. to lp.m..
&amp;ln'lll\' 1 to lp.m. 81it.992·
2526.

54

starting- egg , Rec;:llnera
ltlrtlng- 199.
USED- Beda, dr81atrS, bedroom

T•a Towohou~ IPirtmentt· 2
BRo.. HI botho, CA., di..
tM'uh•. dllpoul. prlvete '""
cloood potlo, pool. pl"''ground.
MWer, &amp; traah induded.
81.-t:lng lit • 289 p• mo. CIU
814-387· 79110.

IUit• . Dllkl. wringer 'NIIIher, •
complete line of used furniture.
NEW- \'lelterln boot• •3&amp;.
Workboot1 *18 a up. (Steel &amp;
10ft tool. Coli 814-44&amp;3159.

DO¥tntOW'n 1 BA. JPt. n•tv

County ADpli..ce, Inc. Good

w.t•.

poto. Dopod. COli 11,..44&amp;0139 .

Swimming Pools· •199
New left over19B8Modetpoolt.

Huge 11 by 24'ft. Mlm lrM, 4
ft. deep. lncludoo dock. fenoo.
flh• &amp; w•r.-rty. lnltalation a
financing tvtlltbte. C.ll 24 hra.,
1·800.345-09411.
.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wuhera. dryert. refrigerators..
renget. Skegge Appllencaa,
Upper RN• Rd. betide Stone
Creot Motel. 114-44&amp;-7398.

SHADY LAWN APTS. 729
S.oond Aw. Furnlohod offtclonci• lt... lng It I 176 a mo.
In c:tJ clng wet• ·II girbaQe.
Single 1dult1 only' . c.ll 8f444t'41107 or 448-2802.

Flr..,ood for ool•opiM ~el­
wood. Plcltup 11Uck. dollv•ect•30. Cal! 814-44&amp;4982.

Sofu end chllirt priced from
•3915 to •99&amp;. Tabl• 1&amp;0 end
up to tl21. Hid•o·bo• t390
to tsiS. Recllnero U25 to
t37s. umpo ·~· to t12&amp;.
Dlnlttel •109 1nd up to e.q&amp;.
Wood tebte w-e cheirt e211 to
nn O.ok 1100 up to U71.
Hutch• •400 Md up. Bunk

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Aile on. 1210 S.oond Aw ..
Oolllpollo. Ohio. 114·448·
4338.
Grocery ltore dlapllll .....
meet, vog11oble &amp; dolry •
cer... fcklln for life. Alhl ..lt. Ky
1·80&amp;-928·3818.

bMI compiMe w-mattr•se•

1211..,dupto •39&amp;. Blbv t.da
•110. Mam. . . . orbox IPI'In•
full or twin US. flrm t78. ond
tn. au- •2eo a up.
King •aao. 4 drew• Ch•t ees.
Gun ceblnett e. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
Soby mott-• Ul • •411.
Bed from• •20. t30 • King
fr.no UO. Oood eolectlon of
Hdroom 11.11t•. m•il cabinet._
hoodbo.,tl t30 end up to t86.

•••• required. CIJII 814-44~

Ptpe ... d Trenchrigwork well ..
bie. Coli 114-441·0189.
21TiM' 1 su"•llke ntw: 1 blut. 1
white, lize 34w-381- Calllftr 4
pm. 614-448-3810.

fu&lt;nlohod ...... I BR . 243
Jeckaon Pika •225 1 mo.
Lll~l- poid. . Call 44&amp;4411
1ft•7 PM.

Mod.n Ill floO&lt; I 8R. furrwlhod
..,.. • 2 IR . lot floor unfur·
nlohod opt. Ref. • dop. COli
114-4411-1079.

New- end uted furniture and
eppllcences. Call 814· 4•87572. Hours 9-1.

B11ebell

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete hou•hold furnlshin'gt, "t1 mUe-Jerrlcho. 304-6761450 . 814 - 388 · 9773 .

Aluminum ' porch 1wnl.n a .
10•30. Bought n- for •1800.
will oell for tiOO. 11 ... 992·
8505 ... &amp;14-992-&amp;n8.

evening~ .

cerde. .1989 Flter
bo•e•. C011304-87&amp;·7981 .

.

VIR• Furniture &amp;

Kenmore wtahlr, ttw• cyd1,
two speed, Reel nice. eto.
I 14-3·7·0322.

Appll.noe~

Opon Doly 9 AM -5 PM
Sundoy 12 Noon-S PM
114-44&amp;-3158
e pc. wood •dng room suite•
e389. Allsofe's&amp;chllrsm•ked
down. Y.t price mattr- ule.
HoO\JY duty bunk with
bodtllng. U29. Free mettrIM with purch•e of cert•in
bedroom 1Uit81. 7 PC. wood

UnlJr'*hod opt. for ...,.. U&amp;O
1 mo. For furttw infonnetion
coli 814-4411-1188 Mon.· F~.
bot- BAM. 5 PM.
1 SR . opt. in Rio Orondo. Lo!rgo
1-n. - - • ~. AI
utl~l•lold. 1225 o mo. CoD
814-21 1402.

poltlf

Furnilhed 2 Br g•age ipa1:·
ment. ldell for coupl• No pett.
Coll814-44&amp;-2404.

10 HP. Unitrldc - riding ltlwn
mo-. CAII14-949·2574.

Paint Plut Ptttsburgh P.fnttfar
vour pointing n - . Ho.

~II

meowner, contractor or piMit

mainten.,ce. Cont-=t ui for
Price O..oto. Point Pluo, 2418
Jockoon Avo. (3041 1711-4084.

bedroom sutt•e748 . 7

pc. country dlnnette let (inclu. . hutch)· 1810.

Aoom fuU af ceramic bilque and
paints for 11le.- htlf price II ttkt
oil. coli 304-882-2019.

All 1ppt1enon hiiYt 30 d8'11

Smol lJrnlohod .,. .mont. nice
for I pnon. 118 StlloSt. Col
11 ... 4411-3351.

guonnt... TRADE·INS. 1111'11·
weya wetcome. Lota of new
arrtv1la. Rt. 141 Centll'lary. v..

::---:----:---

Electrokl•
Buy E~ctrM.I• Factory direct
ohlpped 40 to 10 p• cont oR,
ftnonclng OYolloble. 304-837·
2722 envtlmo or 114-448·
3373. One dttl only F~doy
Morch 31. 11:00 1111'8:00.

mHe on Lincoln Pike.

Extra nice. qulat, 2 l•ge bedroom a, equlpp•d kitchen .
1.,nc1ry room. olr. oonvonlont
loe1t6on. Na pets. Cell 81~4481817.

VfllfY good furnltu,..Couch, co f.
fM tebl' end tlbiM, curto, etc.
Coli 114·448-8778.

·n Chev BIIHf ..... or trllde.

Wtrm mar'*'g hut•. medium
- · 38.000 BTU. Uoe with
n_.,...l or LP g•. Automatic
thtrmoawt. EJCellent concltion.
US. Col 814-318-9883 or
114-39&amp;-ean.

UnlJrn. Ar. 322 Third Avo. No
Polo. Cll 114-4411-3749 or
7.,.. old. 3 bodroornbrl'*· "'""' 2611-1803.
tDtol ol-lc. '""oh otylo homo, - - - - - - - - - ~pttld throughout. 1 tcre Now accepting tppUcatkms1or
f.,aed in Nell yard wtth deck. Z be*oom ap.tments. lilt¥
LOCIItld 7 ml• from Holrw c•ptttd, •pH.. CII, wret• .,d
Hoo~ol on Rt. 110. Awloblo tr•h plcloopo II'OV- Molnt•
March 1. e310 P• momh. If rwtae frMIIvlng dote to lho~
lnt_,od, CAI814-2BS.131'1 pln8 bonka ond oohoolo FIW
(Jecklonl eftw 7p.m.
·
moralntormllt5on cllll 30.:882-c--~---:.....--- · 3718. E.O.H.
Awlloblo A111l lot In Mlddl.. ~--------­
port, 2 bodr- cllpl"" Nooth 3rd Aw. Mldoloport. I
niWIV dooomod. nlooly ~~~~ on d 2 bedroom !Urnllhod opto.
nlohod. Acluho only. no potL COli 304-112-2818.
·
814-992-7215.

-II.

1188Ch.,otto. 2 dr.. 4opd .. olr,
'2.200. 1891 ChW&gt;~y S· IO
4 eyl . 4 opd.. t4. 000.
ISIS Dodge Ch•a-. 2. 2. 5
opd .. air, AM-l'M-18po. am roof,
•a20o. Coi814-21&amp;-14IO.

w.,ted atud s.vioe for mini•
tu,. Snauz~~: lfnmecbtety. 304175-2754 oft• 3:00p.m . .

1985 Buick Pork Aw. El...re.
LDotlo&lt;l 1Jor1111o kept. Call 6144411-H34.

BliCk Lab one

ve•

mila ule

•so. oo. 304-17&amp;-2785.

I...,

1981 Ford MullonA 4 cylinder,
In folr oondltlon
4 •High ..,._ but dop.,tloblo
.,to. Will cwed fDF. Price
Coli 814-2411,9&amp;73.

._.lobi ..

1987 Monte Corio ouperoport.
I~"""· 306 high output
an &amp; :t7,000ml•, 110, 1500.
c 114-38.8288. .

Good cond Bund¥ trumpet .nd
c - 304-175-8837.

•

1180 Lincoln Continental.
LDodod. nooo. Coli 814-24&amp;1223 oft• 4prn

SUiliJIII::;

[IVI:Slllt:k

1.8 hp tflletor. Fremlng lumber
ell elz... llkinl ordera for .,aa,ic
lObi•.
1:00.

304- 71-4004 oft•

~5 Building Supplies

61 Farm Equipment
UTILITY ILDQ. 8PI;30'Jt40'•t'
- • · 1·1&amp;-•r oldlng_cloor,
l ·,..lk - . M991. Ell I!CTED •
IRO~ HORSE BLDIIS. 814332-8748.
4010 JD dl_., -or. 1400
hro .. t4.180. Oehl
grlndor/mlnr·•781.Qohlll00
round bol••2.510. 12081nt..nationet trtletor- e&amp;,810. Ownw
will llnonco. Coli 114-28111522.

o.••

drAI- till!. 41noh w o t • w~h 8 eyL onalne B 100 ft. 4
lnoh ho,. .f.IIIO. ·CII 11._:
2&amp;&amp;1031
Tobocoo lllcko, FIWd 11000 dl•
ool, trectqr toolo. Aloo Htoy·
•1/bolo. Col 114-378-2704.

-"'"f.

410.3&amp;0JohnDeoro·dtnloed•· - - HD11. HD21,
HDI. AC4ol ... 040 Cat•• tD
20 Int. H-gton, WV. 304738-7111&lt; 8 81tld- lood...
Bobcot; Ford. Cooo a - . , .

c.d•.

1

1811 Ford Eocort. 43,000
ml•. •c.llent agndiUon. BliCk
with • ., Int-.• 2100. COli
1
1 4-_21_&amp;-_u_,_e_oft_:•__;7p.:..m....:..
__
. _
1881 Flroblrd. good oond. 310
outo. •J.ooo. 304-882·271&amp;
oft• •.

'71 LTD II. l400.00. 304-8853S08. .

lou-•·

One -oorn opt. lor rent In
Mlddlopoot. •110 P• month
llluo utili-. CAll 114- lt:Z.
184117o.m.· 4p.m. or814-9482217llfl• lp.m.

!Urnlohod. - • Md ~- olr.
Coiiii4-91:Z..7478.

Tree Trimming.

stump

{R)

T

t .MUoT HAVE

!='ELL A'OLE5P IN

I 'WA&lt;O

~N

ClFFICS WITH A a..orrte5PIN

SNORI~, e.ecAU6E

CL.A'55 '1'0DAY.

IN THE: PRINCIPALS

ON MY NOSe.

WHEN l \1.01&lt;5 UP...

Myero Bloclctop end Pwlng.
Hen derlon, WV•· Wepave~hte­
weys. .-rklng lots. IMiing. Free ,
eotlmoteo. 304-175-2467.
Remodeling. nM addtkms. carpont, garao• and decka. Free
elllmlleo. coli 304-89.5-3425.

MARY B.ETH !!

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

WHAT ARE YE
DOIN' IN YORE
MAW'S
SHOES?

I NEED TO

RUN REAL
FAST!!

SO'S JUGHAID
CAN'T KETCH ME
AN' KISS ME

i

HE'LL NEVER
KETCI;l YE NOW,
MARY BETH!!

YUCKKKK!!

0 MOVIE: Wltchae' Brew
(PO) (1 :39)
9:30 D (l) il5l My Two Dade
Michael and Joey begin their
new jobs in a linancial
publication. Q
a VldeaCountry

Residential or corilm•cilll wiri~g.

New aervica or repairs.

Electrical. 304-17&amp;-1798.
86

TNcks

for

Sale

·-oa

DAIIIY fAIIMBII
Yool ........ -lnll "'"'In
-h', 3-7
-IIQ.1111&amp;
......
d••
old. Col 814llolno.
24f. 181L

"I'm not climbing in there! I
smell a litter box!"
I

73 Va111i 4W.D.

1-------11711
tcb.

CJ-1, new ol, Jill.
fuH
•Coli
·· 1.... t:z.ooo
firm.
114-2111-1443
bolero
9

Jo&lt;t"'' - Cow far oolo. PM.
-lo.
-lot. Dill to -hen -,,-..
- -fiWd
------.Good ......... lh-Ohlo '
Ron.-. te.IIOO.
• , . . . . 11M.

.

. _30_..
_._7..;.&amp;-_441...;..:0_.- - - -

I .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

J 6 J Wet.- Service. Swimming
pools, cilterne. walla. Ph . 814245-9285.
R 8t R WMer &amp;.Nice. Pools.
cl1tern1 . wells. lmmadlete·
1. 000 or 2.000gallonadelhlery
Coli 304- 87!;.&amp;370.
.

Livestock

ASTRO-GRAPH

General Hauling

Oill•d Water Service: Poola.
Ci1ttms. WeU1 . Delivery Any llme. COli 614-44&amp;-7404-No
Sunday calla.

Plltricka W.tw Hauling Service
1,000 or 2.000 golo. dollvori•.
phone 304-578·2311 or 11.:
44&amp;-4088.

COil 304-5711-2919.
87

.

.

Upholstery

Mowray'o Upllolotorlng IO!Ving
trioountyarM23~.

The a-t
In furnltur. u•lttering. Clll

304·175 - 4154 for froo
enlmar•.
.

,I

Academy Awlrdt Th1s
year's presenlation will
originate from the Shrine
Civic Audllorium In Los
Angeles. CA and features as
presenlers famous star
couples. such as husbands
and wives, ta1hers and sons
and co-stars in famous films.
Some of these include Kim
Novak and Jimmy Stewart,
Melanie Griffith and Don
Johnson. and Bruce WIMis
and Demi Moore. (L) Q
.
(!) Black Fore11 Joumll)'
Travel through one of the
most baaublul areas or
Western Europe, the Black
Forest, which IS being
threatened by !Wo deadly
environmental poilutanls.
(!) Ama~can Playhouee A
zookeeper has a knack for
writing cheap im"abons of
popular songs. C
®I B1!21 MDVI[: 'Stroker
Aca' CBS Special Movie (PO)

(1 :34) Q
all Larry King Llval

Electrical
Refrigeration

Uceneed electrld.,, Ridenour

!:J

ill Collage BaekatbaU
ill C) (J) 61 11 Annual

w•her•.

82

Nashville Now

9:00 II (l) IBll\light Court Dan
· sacrifices a posh law club 10
save Christine's reputation.

RO~'S ""PUANCE SERVICE. •'
houM cllill tervk:ing GE. Hot
Point.
dryers In d 1
....... 30 ... 57&amp;-2398.

A t - Llvollock lola Alben¥· 1. .1 Ford ouotom Ronger 4o4
lol• •erv ......-., ,M. lllnt oob. Col 81 ... 44&amp;4101!.
Uv_,....._ .. lli•4PM
IVery F - . 1 mla ,_, of 11711 Oodgo - . 311 outo- Watteraon 'a Water Hauling .
Albon\1 oo lt. lit. . . C11 -lc. 1-21Grl. t971. 304-1711- ·R••oMble r~t•. volume dis·
OOUntl. 2.000 to 4,000 CIPK814·812·2321. 119-SI:n. 1021.
tty. cilterns. poole, well• Me

.

r,•o.

21R wlth .. ~dc. LIYingroom.
Coli 114-379-2408 oft• 1p,.

For rlnt ar lila. 2 bedroom.

57.2154.

72

Menor end Rt.t . .Jdl APII1·
ment1 In Mldchport. From

qulrod. No
Ooy 814-91:Z.
2311. won nt 114-H2·2109.

2 boll'oorn ...... tlrnlohod. On
WolnutSt., In Recine. 114-lt2·
1031.

83

Groclouo lvln~ I end 2 bodroom ap.tmenta et V6111Qt

mo. Coli 114-448-1132 ...
31&amp;-11311.

a

RON'S T•levlslon Service.
HouM c,.l, on RCA. Quaur.

• &amp;

2 bt*oom AJtta. for rent.
C-,otod. Nice ootlin!l' loundry
loc:IMJto wollobli. COil 114912-3711. EOH.
.

2 -oorn opt. In Mldcloport.

(1 :001.

Septic T.,k Pumping. $90. Galli a Co. RON EIIA~S ENTER ·
FJf:USES. Jeckson, Ohio 1· 80G537·9528.

84

1118 Chryaler Le Baron.
. . . .5. 304-17&amp;-4410.

•111 p• month. dlpoalt r•

HO!AJ'RE. 1HIIJGS AT
IJ()F!SIOS SCPDOL?

ploto. Coll614-4411-7829.

1871 Chryol• Lollo•o" 318
..,...,._ good oond, t250.00.

-for Mlrlollrn,
off•. 304-8711-2990
ook
1:00 1111:00 PM .

82 Wanted to Buy

2 BR. mobh ho- Wot• •

'IW\T A. HOT
ONe?

SWEEPER and tMing macf'line

1171 01. 88, h• I!Ood 486
moko off•. 304-175-

711 M . - t II willie

- · pold. lief.• " -· •22s.

looks tor her falher before
she dies of .cancer. (R) Q
ill C) (I) The Barbara
WaHera Speclel Barbara
W•ltars interviews three of
the mos1 glamorous women
in show business: Candice
Bergen, s1ar oflhe television
hit Murphy Brown; music
superstar Diana Ross and
one of Hollywqod:s greatest
stars, Audrey Hepburn . Q
ID Cil The Infinite Voyage
Explore the richness of life
on earth and how it all
interacts. C
illl II) ~ liard Tlme on
P11111at Earth Jesse laces the
ultimate battle o( the sexes
with a lemale warrior. C
DI!D MOVIE: Loaln' It {Rl
(1 :44)
~ PrlmeNews
@ MOVIE: Night ShiH (Rl
(1 :45)
0 Hollywood lnalder
Academy Awarda Special
1981 A!llhe excilmenl builds.
this special Insider episode
talks to some the the
nominees and looks at what
an Oscar win has meant to
films and performers. (NR)

1·814-237·0488. U, or night.
RogtrsBeaement
WM•prooflng.

Fetty

. 7:QS ill Andy Q~ftlth
7:30 D (l) Family Feud
·
ill Entertainment Tonig~t
C) Cll USA Today
!Ill !Ill Jeopardy! Q
ID llD M'A'S'H
~ Cro'10flre
II) ~ Jeopardy
® Night Coull
a CI'O()k and Chaot
7:35 Ill Major League Buabell

8:00 D Ill il5l Uneolved
Mylterlot WWII war baby

FrM .-tlmtt•. C.ll ooUect

;'stz_o.

'11 Ch•ottoc '81 CMotio"' '81
Ford FIIO with toppr. '81
Chryol•- YIWioer. 304.17&amp;2711 .

nu Coli 114-9U·nB7.

IT.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANO
UnconciUonll llfetlma guaran·
tee. locllil rBf•.,cea furnithed.

CARTER'S PWM.BINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
oon~":'· Ohio
Phone 6,43888 or 6144411-4477

·
- olum
ohodlo
. _ "'•·
,.,......
good
. .,,.10Cl
304-

Nloo 21R . m.blohomo for ,.,t
Ref. • clop. roqulrod. Col
814-448-0127 oft• 2 PM.

~f$UMf . .

'711 ...,. •••" •80o.oo ..

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR .. coblo ovollllllo, beoullfUI
rtw• view 1rt Kan .... Fcwtrt
Moblo Home Pwk. 11 ... 44&amp;1802.

MY

Home
Improvements

1981
COvell• Typo I~·
Cl. 4
ttMdard tranaMselon. P /Pl. AC. AM/FM rod!-'
oloaea.. crull&amp; doth lnt.-lor,
otool w - . reclining buckll

30~H2·2182.

3 bodr_,., fUn boo . ..,.,
quiot locotlon. a mil• nooth
Point Pl-ont. 304-17&amp;- 10711.

Fully !Urnlohod D•lllle opt. AI
utlkl• pold Moopt oloctrlolty.
- ¥Aloo
-3- .......
c.potod.
Dep.
bedroom
COl
114-44&amp;1811. 44&amp;11110.

81

removal. Call 304-876-1331 . •
.,..--~------ .
Rotary or cable tool *llllng.
Mott\Nells compl•adumeday. •
P\Jmp ••• .., d ~~~Vice. 30489&amp;-3902

1977T·Bird. •1000. Col 814992-8943.

~ oN

I

L.ET!.S' SAY :t JufT

'

OE. Speciollng in Z.nRh. COli
304-6711-2388 or 814-44&amp;2484.

- · - · 114-398-9028.
It It true you c• buv Jeep a for
*44 through tho U.S . Oovommont! Get tho fecto tot1ov I Coli
1·31:Z..74:Z..I142bt. 4019.

•

YOU GOT IT,
CI.VPE! ISN'T

1H7 Ford Touruo. 32,000
mil-. 4 eyL, !Uol ln)octod. •c.
ag nd.. like ov., JWfmenta. ·een
114-317-7582.

1911 Folrmont Futuro. Very
good oond. eon ..,.,,... end

:t . PIPN•T AGTUAL-L.Y

ALLEY OOP

Carp11ntry work lly the lob or
hour. j:8ntling. dry waH, plumbIng. etectricat remodeling com-

One owner-38,000 mil••·
.... ~ Col 304-175-7342.

Ftrm Equip"*": z.torTri!Ct-.,
Howard Rot1111etora, lledW.
lilrlno old bOlt.,.
'•· Morrlo qultln.tt. Rutlontl.
Ohio 814-742·2485.

_rio...

1972 22 foot camper, lelf·
contained, awnin8. Call after
6PM 814-448-35 6.

1172 Pontl.c Venturi, nerN
point • vln¥1 top. cluol •houo~
NOW JOod, good mlloogo. Coli
814-317·0337.

Mlt.. cuatom two--tone paint.

TEO TURNER INDUSTRIES
PERSONNEL

·-

ropolr. porto; end ouppll•. Plclt
up •d deiNery. Devil Vacuum
Cltaner, one half mile up
Qeorgoo C - Rd. Coli 8144411-0294.

=

Jahn Detre 2 row corn p1.m•.
l171. Jolin
8 ft. groin

FRANK AND

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1981 ChOIIY Mollbu cl. .ic
ttetion wtlgOn. Light bill e. RebuHt ongMo. AM-FM rodlo. AC,.
PI, PI • ohH. . ..... gl ...
t1300. Coli 114-44&amp; 7020.

1982 Cutl••• Supreme
Broughom. very ohorp looking
c. lnoltle end out. 2 de or. COli
11 ... 992-8S41 .

'
Jou'"7o~ 3i9 !

c.ot..o~IZ.tP

1983 Pontloc Fir-d. anroof,
11- ..... t3.491i. Sh•p. Coli
114-288-7214 or 314-2212.

lndtvklJal gubr l•sone, be·
gin.... - · gu~rlot Brulc•d(o Muolc. 114-445-0187,
JoH _ , . , lnotructiW, 1144411-9077 Limited op.,lnp.

Brillion 8' ourw otond gr• • • doubl•pMik• ...d.
with Hyd ...,.port -mont.
l3.800. Deuti·AIIIo MOdol398
4 r - no-ll plent• plote unlto
dry fort..
lnooot
o1toch monitor •a.eoo.oo.
~- Svo.
lt. Rt87.
Loon WI/. 304-••3174.

6:351ll .One Day at a Tlma
7:00 ()) Kane end Abel, Pert I
II Ill PM Magazine
(!) College llallletball
ill D (I) Cunttnt Aftalr
(!) I]) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
!Ill B1!21 il5l Wheel ol
FortuneQ
ID llD Three'• Compeny
all Montyllne
@ Cheara
0 Miami VIce
a .F.ndango

I

Pontiac 400 big block 111Ding
motor, also trans. Beat off• or
b'ade. Call 614-388-8647.

Services

be-

~'-Your

~'Birthday
Morch 29, 1889
What you've leamtid In 1he past will put
you In good &amp;lead In 1he year ahead, especially where your career Ia con·
earned. Advancemenl In your chosan
Held of endeavor Ia Nkely.
ARIII (March 21-Aprll 11) Be carelul
ln career situations today so thai you do
nol make ml-es In procedures you
usually do with-· II you taka matters
lor granled and your mind siar18 10
wander, you may end up With a meu.
Ariel, treat youi'Mif 10 a birthday gift.
Send lor your Aalro-Graph predicllona

lor !he year ahead by mailing $1 to Astra-Graph, c/o 1his newspaper. P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
Be sure !o state your zodiac sign.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You could
be overly r-ntlul today If your companions do not respond favorably 10
your plans. Keep in mind your disapproval might be mora emotional than
rationaL
GEMINI (Mar 21-June 20) There's no!
likely to be any tree rides In joint ventures today. Your counterparts will expeel you to con1ribute equally and
you'd belter be able to do so.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Oon't view
a prellmlnary agreement as a liniShed
product today. The person with whom
you're negotla11ng could have second
thoughts and beck oul wi1hout notice,
LEO (.lulf 23-Aug. 22) In matters thai
·affec1 your ...,_ todey, be mindful of
your limlta11ons so thai you do not pul
!f(&gt;uraaH out on a limb. You can only operale
effec:11vely
wlthln
your

parameters_
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llepl. 22) · Usually
you're a reasonably caullous person,
bul loday you may be Inclined to take
gamblel on lhlnge buad upon -umptlona lnsteed ol facti. Don't trip ovet
your own lmpuiS~.
LIBRA (lept. 23-0cl. i3) lflhe outside
\

world Is rough on you today, don'tcome
home and take i1 oul on loved ones.
They might have a day somewhal simi·
lar lo yours.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If you don'l
have some1hing nice to say about olh·
ers when converting with friends today,
il's best not to say anything at all. Critical comments could be dls1orted when
your listeners repeal them .
SAQmAIIIUI (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) In a

commercial involvement today, there's
a possibility you might do something.
foolish even !hough associates may advise against lt. Don'1 be closed minded.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) 01
courae your self·inlerests are impor1ant, bul they should not be so paramount loday lhat 1hey affect your relatlona Yillh Olhtlra and create needlele
lrlctlon.
AQUARIUS (.1811. Ill Feb. 11) Avoid the
pllfal of letting outllde lnllt8lcaa dominate yaur course of action todey. You
could become 10 lnvahttld with
lr.1U81, you may o-lool&lt; lruly Important
objecllvaa.
PIICII (F..._ 20-lllrch 20) Usually
you know how to regulate your actfvltlel
In waye that do not jeopardize your budget. Today, h.,_, there'l a c h you might "' your guard clown a bit too
far.

•'de

10:00 (]) 700 Club
II Ill il5l Nlghllngalel
Allyson covers lor a doctor
she's dating; Becky is
mugged. (Rl C
(!) MetNIWatc:h
ID liD Areanlo Hall
all Evening NtWI
®Newl
a Crook and en...
10:15 (JJ MOVIE: The Unlorglven
(NR) (2:05)
1Q:30 (l) Expecting Mlreclel
Follow lour Southern
Callfornis couples, diagnosed
as inlertile, through three
years o( their struggle to
concefve a chlld.

a

I

New Countrt

11:00 (])Kane and Abtf, Plrt 1
• (%] (I) Gil • ~ IIJ) •

OLWAG

I

1--r.ll;--::,-...1;.;-.IT--Il ;

I

. ....,:...:.;...::..,:....:..;..---ll
I N E V A . :.!

~~

"Which
i do you
like
best?"
asked
my
teenager. "The blue one is my

·1• I I
I
=:;:::====~~.., my

first choice, and the while i.s
second," I answered.
" Good ," he laughed , "I' ll
wear the · - -. "
.
5
Complete the chudde quoted
by filling in ·the missing words
L._J._J._.J........J.- ·-L....J yov de
... elop from step No . 3 below .

~-rs:...·.:,U.,.:D:...;.U...:S;..::E.,.....-1

II

1 I I I Ie

8 · PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS
THESE SQUARES
C)

iN

l

I

Ut)IS(RAMBL.E ABOVE LETTERS
. TO GET ANSWER

I I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Blazer - Sassy - Vogue - Zealot - USE it LAST
My spouse misplaces everything and depends on me
to locale whal he's lost. One day he blurted, "I've los1 my
mind I" Sweetly l asked , ' 'When..--'did
you USE: it LAST?"
' ....:..._

a

WHAT I OON'TUNDER;,TAOO...

UNDtR~TAIIID 1

4- 14 in. aluminum elot rima &amp;
tires for GM product. S1 60. Call
614-379-2581 .

19·8 7 01•. COioll. Loaded.
23.000 mi-. t7,800. Coli
114-218-1410,

Musical
Instruments

A"" Chll-. MZ 01-•· 4
row corn hlld p1Us13 ft. be.,
hood. E-. oond. COli 304937-2018.

For Sala.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED whi·
clet from 1100. Forde. Mercect.. Corvett... Chevye. Sur·
plus. Buytra Guide (1)
BOII-117-IOOO ..t. S-10188.

AKC r11111o- moloW. . Highlond Terri•. hod ollohoto. houoO
brolon, good with ohltlren.
304-882-2210.

&amp;

RototHier for 1 Boler" trector
t250. Coll614-44&amp;-4599oft.;
I PM.

Yeller Furniture

4425 or 448-2325.

71 Auto's

Floh Tonk. 2413 Jockoon Avo.
Point PI-~ 304-875-2083.
10 gohot up •14.9hnd IOpol
..,mploto t43.25.

% lnoh uoed ft• otool. Coli

I DOI-H UI.IDER~TAOO..

f'l.l. fEU. YOU
WHAT I DOt.l'T

Transpurtalion

Beaett puppia, Red Bon•
puppl•. Wolk• ...ppl-. Mou ...
teln Curr puDDia Md •o ac*Jtt
Rtdbon•. Wt~k. . ll"'d Mounloin Curro. 814· 742·2412.
Snowd.,'o Konno!, lit. I, Au·
lion d.

I ,H lfl

3·ZY

optlona. lteepa 2. 70 mph plus.

Decllb ,..d corn an 'd tlftllfa · BUDGET TRANSMISSION ·
Uaed S. rebuilt all typea.
· 304-875-1501,
Wartenty-30 dl'/1· Prices •99&amp;
up. Uud &amp; repulh torgue
converters. standard dutchat ~
pressure platea, &amp; throw out
boring. W•ranty-12 moa. CVC
jolnto·all IVP"'· Coli 614-3792~20 or 304-675·8788.

Orogonwynd Cottery Konno!.
Penl111 and llem••tnd Him.
1-w"M
Chow rtud ,.,..
..... Coll81 ... 44&amp;-3844oft•7
PM.
.

Firewood for llii•Oik &amp; mbctd
h•ciWooci 8ft. plckui)'UO. CoN
., ...448·1187.

~~~e~0J~i.n~~~clt2'3;'0t,p~u;1

I

814-317· 7410.

90 Dlv• atme 11 ce~h wtth
opproved crod~. 3 MJ• out
lui011IHo Rd. Open 9om to 5pm
Mon. thru Sot. Ph. 814-4450322.

end t225 per mont!&gt; Stove end
rolrlo-otor !Urnlohod. eo...
nlmt loCition. Ref•111cea tnd

Pets for Sale

OrOc&gt;m end Suppt,o 6hop.PII
GrOoming. All brHdt- .. AII
stylet. 11r11e Pet Food Deel•.
Julio Webb Ph. 114-44&amp;0231.

57

Grain

HAY FOR sALE. Cell 614-245- . 814-445-6667 doyo. 304-6754212 evenlnga.
1292.
Ground shilled ann ee.Oo P• · For Seltl 1972 17ft. Stercraff
100 cwt. M0rp11 ferm. Rt. 35, , Tr1Hau1Boet.126H .P.E\Iinrude
Pllnoy. 1:00 tift 12:00 except engine, complete top, new uphorotory. t3600. COli oft• 7:00
9undov 304-937-2018.
p.m. 814-2811-1318.
Mbcod hoy for •lo. t1. 50 bola.
304-H:!-3315.
.
Auto Parts
76
&amp;
Accessories
65 Sead &amp; Fertilizer

For Sele · Conawte 1nd Pl•lc · Feno. bats gulter. e1oo. Y•
teptic tankl. AI alzn. RON noho FO·75 fot top gultor· t7B.
I.Dtuo· eloctrlc gu ~or· 110. CoN
EIIA~S ENTERPRISES. Jock·
114-3711-2511.
..
.
son. Qhlo. 1· 80().537·9528.

LAY~E'S FUR~ITURE

Two 1·bedroom untur,.htd
.,. .,_.,, In OoPipollo. t175

Misc. Merchandise

Whealc:helr•..w or UMCI- 3
wheeled oloctrlc oooot... Coli
Rogoro MobRtv colloct, 1· 814870.9861 .

uHd lppiiii'ICM In d TV tete.
Open SAM ;o &amp;PM. Mon thru
Set. 814-44&amp;-1199. 627 lrd.
Avo. Oolllpol•. OH.

redeCOf'eted. c•PIIt· oompiMe
kitchen. AC. Ptl,kKtg. Adults. No

Antiques

Buy or Sen. Riverine Antiquea.
1124 E. Mains,,-., Pom•ov.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliye St., Galllpole.
NEW· 6 pc. wood groul)' t399.
Llvlnt room ouh•· t198· t899.
Bunk bodo with boddlng. 1249.
Full tlze mmreu &amp; foundlltlon

BEAUTIFULAPARTME~TS AT
IUDOET ·PRICE9 AT JACK·
SO~ ESTATES, 831 Joclooon
Plh from t183 o mo. Wolk to
ohop ond movloo. 814-4482588. E.O.H.

•II id

ldtt...

Household Goods

&amp;

Newt Q
ID Body Electric
I]) Nighlly Bull nell·Report
®I ID ~ CBS Nowt
ID llD WKRP in Clnclnna11
~ ShowBiz Tt&gt;4ay
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
I1Jl cartoon Exprell
New Country

New condition. S ~0 .600. Call

Concr•• bkJCibobonOfdollvory,Mooon-ciOoJI olio Block Co.. 12~ Plno .,
Oalllpol• • Ohio. Coli 114-44112783.
.

56

Hay

the

low to form four simple words

Ill ~

~ SpOIIILOOk

52 Sporting Goods

773-9122.

P••·

3 SR. houM. d.d. AC. e350e

Dltuxe 3 BR . hou• for •••·
Ow- tlnonoo. Col 304-87&amp;&amp;104.

i

dry•. In Mooon -304-7738751.

44

Upper River Road
Oollipolio, Ohio
614-44&amp;-7444.

Cootvll&amp;

building 50.100 llttlng on holf
acr • krt. tor ••• or ..... Cllll
Som. .lllo Reo~y. 304-175·
. 2 8R . opt .• ntrN '*'•h c•pot.
3030. 876· 3431, 17&amp;-4232.
n. . point, utlhl• plltiolly pold.
tl75omo. Coll304-175-5104,
e75-53911. 87&amp;- n:~~r
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Aportmont ovoloblo. HUD oc·
ooptod. Coli 304-1711-5104.
0.1. WMo Rd.· 2 woo*&lt;!
buildlnJI loto. Appr... 2 ocr• Fwnilhed 2.3. or 4 roorN •
eooh Coli 114-24&amp;-H85 oft• · both. Cloon. Adu~o ofllv. ~o
e·:30PM..
Ref. • dep. ~uir.:l. Call
., ... 44&amp;-18~··
C....v-.v Subd.-7 mit• IOU'Ih
of Golllpollo. All ~-round Nicely fur'*hod omol houoo.
utlltl•. Root riciN. Col 814- Efllclon"f opt.-1 mon. Mobile
4411-34115.
.
home bolow town ovnoklng
rN•. ct &amp; h . .. aGJtt• mly• .-f.
91-l•«•ln ·Ohlo Townohlp. 11 Coli 114-44&amp;-0339.
.•
•«•In Ohio Townohlp. A"""'•·
3 - • In Porry Towowhlp. Will Furnlohod efllclon"f. 807 9o·
1
... on lend contrlct. Clll oonci Qolllpollo. tiiO. Shore
514-4411-2404.
both. eon 44&amp;4411 oftor 7 PM.

RenL1Is

31

f'"'814-887·

2 bt*oom tr811W. compt•ety
furnished, air oond .• Ylliah• end

1971 Fl.,.lngo 121815. 3 bod-

roan.. Loc•ed n.., HerrllonvMie. •sooo. Mev ktep on lot.

YourG E•wtlve looldng for 3
8R. llo mo In Oolllpolio oroo. COli
814-441· 0100 or 817·3178

. . Cll l!a)

ill 8 Cll ABC

64

Rearrange latters of
0 four
scrambled words

I· . H E L A X E

(!) N~ Today
ID Dagrnal Junior High
Wheels is having a hard time
with his parents alive. even
harder dead. Q
I]) Doctor Who: Sontoren
Experiment
ID llD Happy Dayt
IBJ Factt Of Life
0 She-Ra
a Amarlcan Magazine
6:05 Ill Allee '
6:30 II (l) il5l NBC .Nighdy Newe

1980 Motorcycle. go·od CQnd.
304- nl-5878.

65 BuDding Supplies

Editool by CLAY R. POLLAN

Epleod..

• Ill (I)
!Ill Newt

STOP AND CHECK OUR PRI·
CE9
Furniture snd Clrp•
Vinyl 14.97 yd. comm•cill
c•pet e3.99 yd. lots, eoom aile
remnMtl and roll, c•ptt. hill
lnohpod •1.79wwlth..,pet.
·
Mollollen Purnlt.,..
2 l6c.tlont
122 Vlond Stroot
Point PJe....,t, W.V1.
304-17&amp;-8419

'::~:~:~' S© RJllA- "ttrS"

WOlD
GAMI

~:00 (]) Bonenu: Tho Laet'

250. good eond. low mileage, 1
$800.00. 304-67,5-4397 .... .
twftn 12 and 6:00PM.
.•

W•~.

WED., MARCH 29 •
EVENING

198~ motorcycle Vamllh1 XT

drv·
n. •n gee, refriverator., mlaowave ovena. Ken' • ANII1n01.
217 E. 2nd St.. Plim•oy.
814-992·5335 or 814·98&amp;3611.

46 Space for Rent

IM~ Q: M\C.T,

Television
Viewing

1983 Hondo Oddaooy 260cc.
Good oond. $350. C.ll 614'258-8466 Of 2611-1226.

chiolr. •· 21ompo.*21f0.
- - · 2 al...•d
10111•
Bofo
chair· 130. Choo1· 120. Kenmore
portobltd•bwo•~•21.8e. .
ben wOod or ooll •tow-e200.10•8 rnnll •t0111ge bulldlng150. Wood ~llder • 2 oholr•
wlro
138. 100 ft. of fen ... l25. COII814-24&amp;-5991.

Hot.,.814-448-H80.

Cf&gt;/.1 AA)U.~
1J.\AT( I"'~

Cf~~ ~·H~~~~~~~~.

1981 Suzuki 450, street bike.
Coli 61 4-44&amp;-8805.

oopoertono dtyer- t711.

Furnished Rooms

BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 29. 1989

______

..

BRIDGE

NORTH

.

__,

3·ZI-8$

+J97'4
• J85

Silence
speaks loudly

+763

..

+AH

EAST
+A32
32
tiO S 4
+1063 2

WEST

-By James Jacoby
.AKQI09
tQJ982
.
After an opposing opening bid, the +Q7 4

•a

overcall in a !!mit has a wide range $0UTH
from a few points up to opening-bid'
+KQ 1086S
values. !lut the standard way to describe a good hand of 16 or more high·
tAK
card points plus a long suit is to double
+KJ 9
lor takeout first and then bid the suit.
Vulnerable: East-West
That was the approach selected by
Dealer: West
South in today's deal. Still, North did
not have quite enough to cotpe in when · West
Soullo
Nortb East
West bid his second suit, diamonds,
Pass
Obi.
Pass
over the takeout double.
2. . 2+
Pass
2t
When . South then bid two spades, Pass
3t
Pass
4+
Pass
Pass
North had a sound invitational raise Pass
with four spades and an ace. South bid
Opening lead: • K
the game and now had to make it. The
defense played three rounds of hearts. ,
Declarer ruffed and played a low ..__ _~_ _...;.__......_._ ___J
spade. East took the ace and returned provided an unusual winning play a diamond. ·Declarer now had some in· the backward finesse.
formation to guide his play. East, who
So declarer picked up the remaining
had shown up with the spade ace, had trumps, ending in his band. He then led
passed his partner's one-heart opening the jack of clubs. West covered with
bid. Unless East was being incredibly the queen, .won with dummy's ace.
timid or bad overlooked his hand, he That left declarer's K-9 over East's 10,
could not hold the queen of clubs. and South took that finesse to make
(With six high-card points, he would the contract.
have responded.) Declarer. was thus
Jamfi JACOby's boob "J•coby on BrJt:We • •nd
safe in assuming West had that queen. ~J~coby 011 C.rd G,.mes• (wrilten rrith hil father,
He could play for the club queen to the lale Os•ald hcoby) are now naJI•ble •t
drop doubleton, but his nine of clubs boobhnw. Both are publlWd by ~1'011 ~

.,.

I.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

3 "Serpi~o·
actor
ol Peruse
5 Take '
the helm
6 Asian
-· • festival
7 Land or Cork~~
8 Being (Sp.)
9 Scout's act
11 Small herrlnl!
15 Norse god
or war
25 Grimm

1 Fly high
5 Polo
animal
10 'I nactive
11 Novelist
Laurence
12 Family
member
13 Small
14 Cherish
18 Actor
Beatty
17

Air defense

35 Saharan

17 Medieval
group
worker
19 Mend
18 Winglike
21 Draw forth 20 Undiluted
23 Collar
22 Grooming
type
aid

30
32

27 Continued .24 Captain
28 N.D. city
Furlllo's
29 • - Here to
alter ego

is one
34 Celebratlon

28
28

character 38 Met ·
Knot
singer
Entertain- 38 Chore
ment
40 D.C.
Showery
lawmaker
"Parsifal"
(abbr.)
,

..

t2 Use a
shuttle
43 Existing

Eternity"
30Hinder
31 TV's

"Love-"
33 Churchill's
sign
34 Wander
about
37 Religious
sculpture
39 Originated
41 Square
column
44 Unlfonn
45Luminous

body
48 Turkish

city

47Banklng

fraud
DOWN
lTBBte

2 Harem

room

L....I-..J......L--1-

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

8/29

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In

the

this

sample

A is

used

L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diH!!rent.

for

three

apOstrophes,

CRYPTOQOOTE

3-29
PVVKRMT

8 L F I

~OLGSVH

NeWI

I]) Sign Off
II) liD Love Connection
0 Moneyllne
QJ llol!e,mOCIIIerl
ll) ...miVIoe
a Yau Cen 118 I Btar
11:30 8 (%] IIJ) Tonight lhclw

ilJiportaCinllr

ill ChMrl

(l) AmeriCIII.Art Fonn

!Ill USA Toelly

• il;ll Nawtr•ed Qame

DVOO
BLF

KIVHHVW

UILN

DROO

OLLPRMT

PVV K

•

SZIW

KIVHHVW.- XLOVNZM
XLC
Y•terdav'• c.,.t. .aote: CLOTHES DON'T
MAKE THE. MAN But THEY MAKE A LOT OF
PEOPLE THINK THERE IS A MAN IN THEM. -JOSH
WISE

Cl 1919 King FealuriOII Syndicate. Inc:.
~

.

-

�••
Wednesday, Man:h 29, 1989

Pomeroy-Micktleport. Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

--Local news I;Jriefs ...- - Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
contlnued from page 1
which will have eventng hours, both Wednesday and Thursday.
Ms. Frymyer noted that those who have moved need to update
their address with the board, and anyone who has changed his or
her name must also report that tnformation In order to be
registered to vote In the May primary.
According to Secretary of State Brown, registration remains
open after April 3 for elections other than the upcoming May
primary. ''To become eligible to participate In our democracy
takes only about two minutes," Brown said, "but people can't
vote If they're not registered."

Passenger hurt in accident
A passenger was slightly Injured In an accident at 8:10a.m:
Tuesday In Meigs County, on !:R. 12, 4.1 miles west of SR. 7, In
Rutland Township, according to the Melgs·GalllaPost, State
Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Gregory B. Carpenter, 17, Langsville, flagged
Ronald F . Reynolds, 17, Middleport, to stop. Reynolds pulled
over, stopped on a bridge and Carpenter's car struck the rear of
the Reynolds' vehicle. Damage was moderate to both vehicles.
A passenger In the Reynolds vehicle, William D. Doczl, 16,
Middleport, was Injured and taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by his mother.
The patrol cited Carpenter for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance and Reynolds for stopping on the
roadway.

School funds distributed
Meigs County's total payment for March, 1989 from the State
School Foundation Subsidy Fund was $587,562.47, according to a
report from State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
The breakdown of funds shows that Eastern Local School
Dis tr!ct received a net payment of $124,491.01, that Meigs Local
School District received a total of $335,915.75, and Southern
Local, a total of $127,155.71.
In addition to that amount a total of $26,629 was put Into the
school employees retirement fund and $80,5321nto the teachers
retirement fund.
,
The allotment to the Meigs County Board of Education was
$31,496.25 for the month of March.
The total March State School Foundation Subsidy payment to
612 Ohlo city, exempted village and local school districts and 87
county boards of education totaled $167.835,646.56, according to
the report. Of that amoung the State Teachers' Retirement
System received $42,951,340.83 and the School Employees'
Retirement System received $11,343,689.09 as the employers'
share of the pension program for March, Ferguson reported.

Grand jury session cancelled
A session of the Grand Jury scheduled for Friday has been
cancelled and jurors need not report.

Woodrow Engle Sr.
Woodrow Wilson Engle Sr. , 73,
Shady Cove Rd.. Middleport,
died Tuesday at Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospital following a brief
Illness.
Born July 1, 1915. in Pleasant·
ville, he was the son of Wilson and
Myra Nelson Engle. He worked
as a farmer and construction
worker. and was an army vete·
ran of World War II.
Preceding him In death were
his parents, his son, Fred Allen
Engle, and two grandcl)lldren,
Tracl and Susie Cooper.
Surviving are his wife, Julia
Engle, son and daughter-In· law,
Woodrow W. and Debbie Engle
Jr., two daughters and sons-In·
law, Mrs. Darrell (Peggy)
Krautter, all of Middleport, and
Mrs. Gary (Marilyn) Cooper, as
well as daughter·ln·law Sue
Engle, both of Portland.
Also surviving are two broth·
ers, Earl Engle, Grove City, and
Ernest Engle of Athens, Texas,
and two sisters, Anna Cox and
Dorothy Dllcher, both of Colum·
bus, a step daughter, Dorothy

Taylor of Chesapeake, three step
sons and daughers-ln law. Jack
and Cheryl Nelson, Proctorville.
Richard and P,atty Nelson, South
Point. and Charles and Judy
Nelson of Tampa. Fla., as well as
several nelces and nephews.

HW8t AITOwood
Hurst Arrowood, 67, of Route 1
Gallipolis (Bulavllle·Addlson
Road) , died Wednesday at
Holzer Medical Center following
a sudden Illness. He was retired
from the UnltedStatesNavywlth
21 years service. He saw active
duty In World War II, the Korean
conflict and Vietnam.
He was also a self-employed
carpenter and fonnerly was
maintenance man with Banntng
and Pickett Company Real Est·
ate Developers In Columbus. He
was also manager of Marples
Barber Shop at the Amos Shopping Center fn Columbus.
He . attended Bulavllle Chris·
II an Church and was a member of
VFW Post4464, American Legion
Post 27 and the Naval Fleet
Reserve Association, Branch 199
In Columbus.

He bas been a resident of Gallla
County stnce 1978.
Born Jan. 12. 1922 In Johnson
County, Ky., he was ·a son of the
late Ulysses G. and .Oia Mae
Pack Arrowood.
Surviving are his wife, Bonnie
L. Woodard Arrowood; three
stepdaughters, Yvonne Reiser, .
Cindy Hatcher, both of Golum·
bus, and Shaleen Mercer of
Gallipolis; six stepgrandchlld·
ren and a special nephew, Mike
Massie, and several other nelces
and nephews.
Also surviving are four sisters,
Dorothy Massie, .Becky Lane.
both of Gallipolis, Vlrgtnla Hen·
son of Addison and Glenda Rife of
Cheshire; one brother. Jackie
Arrowood of Huntington. W.Va.
He was also preceded In death
by two brothers, Ralph Ray
Arrowood and James 0.
Arrowood.
Services will be conducted 2
p.m. Friday at Bulavllle Chris·
tian Church, the Rev. Ron
Hammond officiating. Burial fol·
lows In Addison-Reynolds Cemetery. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel

Thursday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9p.m .
Military graveside services·
will be conducted by VFW Post
4464 and American Legion Post
27.
.
The body wUI be taken to the
church one hour prior to:
services.

NOW OPEN FOI
SPIING SEASON

1:·

Complete. Une of Veget•bte .,
&amp; Bedding Pt•nto. Azeleu lo
Fruit Tr-. Ger•niumo,
Hanging B••keto, Shrubbery t
endTr-. .. ·

I

Common pleas
eourt

I

An action for $5,441.55 has been
flied In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court by the Motorist .
Insurance Co. of Columbus
against Greg B. Roush, DBA
Roush Cons tructlon, Syracuse.
and John Electric Co.,
Columbus.
The plaintiff charges that the
defendents negligently per·
formed repairs on property
owned by Melvin Forrester at
Racine Which was Insured by the
Motorist Insurance Co. The ac·
lion by the Insurance company Is
to recover the amount which was
paid to the 'property owner as a
resull of the alleged damages by
the defendants.

Papers filed
Articles of Incorporation have
been filed with the office of
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown by Ingels Electronics,
Inc.. Middleport, with Jason
Ingels as Incorporation and
agent.

Hospital news

992-5776
SJIACUSE, OHIO

~

•

•

'·

•

REGIONALIZE - Markettng by reglonallza·
lion was the topic of an ail-day seminar sponsored
by the Southeast Ohio Regional Council Wednes·
day at Rio Grande College. The seminar attracted
community leaders from 11 counties. Here,

Dennis Mlngyar ol the Governor's Office ol
App!'IIWhla tells the 50 participants to practice
what they've learned and follow through with
regionalized marketing of the area to overseas
businesses'. ( OVP photo)

Floo~ing

follows heavy rains
in eastern section of country

$2,00000
MINIMUM TRADE

WE WILL TRADE NO AlTER
WHAT. CONDITI.ON!!!
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

The National Weather Service
Issued flood watches for through·
out the day over ~outherri Vet' "·
mont, much of New York state,
the southwestern third of Pennsylvanla, the northern panhan·
die of West Virginia a nd southern
Ohio.
The flood watch over north·
central New York state was due

Southern district
evaluated by state
Evaluation of the Southern
Local School District has been
completed recently by the Ohio
Department of Education, according to a report from G.
Robert Bowers, assistant super·
intendent of public instruction.
Purpose of the eva luation, he
said, was to determine the
degree to which the schools
comply with the minimum standards for elementary arid secondary schools.
Under the mlnnmum stand·
ards, schools must be evaluated
at least once every five years.
Bowers advised that evaluation
reports have been sent to the
principal of each school and to
the superintendent. and to the
president of the b&lt;iard of education. He said that the evalkuation
reports are public record and
available for examination.
Evaluation reports Include a
checklist for each school and a
district overview.

The checklist is provided to
identify any standards that are
not being met. Any deficiencies
are required to be corrected
immediately. he said. or a plan to
correct them Including a time·
line, is to be prepared. In either
case, a response to the Ohio
Department of Education is due
by the specified date, according
to the assistant supertntendentof
public instruction.
The overview inc! udes a des·
criptlon of the programs and
services that are similar in the
sc hools throughout the district.
An evaluator may offer sugges·
\Ions or reocmmendations In the
overview for enhancing or
strengthening the school program. he concluded.
Standards require that a public
meeting be held within thirty
days of the receipt of the reports
to discuss the result of the school
evaluation, according to Bowers.

Pomeroy to lwve new fire listing

•

*OFFER GOOD ON ALL NEW FULL SIZED
CARS OR TRUCKS AND SELECTED USED
CARS. (PRIOR SALE PRICES EXCLUDED.)
*ALL REBATES AND PROMOTIONAL CONSIDERATION TO OEALER.

'"""'--~"'--~------.-·-~- -------------~--

·By United Press International
Heavy rain deluged the East
Thursday, creating the,threat of.
flooding in some parts. and
winter weather persisted in
northern New . England, the
Great Lakes area and the North·
ern Plains, while Texas and
Louisiana recovered from
tornadoes.

Local news briefs--

NO DEALERS PLEASE

Here's a report from To·
peka, deacribing an accident:
The telephone pole waa ep·
proeching feat. I attempted
to move out of ita way. but it
hit me. A men in Shreveport
waa sitting in hia apartment.
lietening to a recording of the
aong. "Cry of the Wild
Goose". wl!en a live male
gooae crashed through the
window. Coincidence? Maybe, but who knowe7

Beginning at midnight on Friday, the Pomeroy Fire
Department will use a new telephone number, 992·6663,
according to Danny S. Zirkle. chief.
Zirkle advises that the Pomeroy Fire Department on that
date will join the county-wide dispatching system. This, Zirkle
says, means that no longer will fire calls be handled through
Pomeroy v!llage hall, but will go to the Emergency Medical
Service office on Mulberry Heights. with trucks being
dispatched through there.
Pomeroy has been the only fire department which has not
been using that central system.

No one cited after mislwp
Moderate damage was Incurred to the right side of a Limited
Leastng Inc. truck parked at the Beacon Station, Nye .Ave.
Pomeroy, about 4 p.m Wednesday.
According to Pomeroy Pollee, .David Friesen of Aylmer,
Ontario, driving a truck of Laidlaw Carriers, Inc. struck the
Limited Leastng. Inc. truck as he pulled from the service
station. There was no damage to Laidlaw Carriers, Inc. truck.
Driver of the Limited truck was Bufford Smith, Ravenswood.
No citations were Issued by the officers Investigating the
accident.
Continued on page 5

_......,

____

P•u• 25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. N8WIPIPet'

Regional marketing
SEORC seminar topic

'

Mike Fox Can't Believe Jim Cobb
Allowed $2,000.00 For This Trade-In!!!

2 Sections. 12

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 30, 1989

1989

Hubbard's Gr•nhouse :

Veterans Memorial
Admtsslorill - Curtis cau:
thorn, Reedsville; Alma Hayman, Racine; Eliza Hayman
Racine; Michelle Barrett, Dell:
ter; Georee Pullins, Racine·
Mlah Maxey, Tuppers Plains:
and Michael Shuler, Langsville:
Discharges -Curtis Cauthorn,
Frank Oark, Edna Davidson,
and Howard Damron.
·
f'"""-

.

ClOSD IASTD SUNDAY

'

Dally stock prices
(As ol 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

iAlY.C\.A
. .

Vot.39. No.227

OPEN DAILY I AM TO 5 PM
SUNDAY 1 TO 5

COBB'S
PUSH, PULL or TO
SALE

Low In mid 40s toniJht.
Chance of rain near · 100
percent. Friday, high near SO.
Chance of rain near 180
percent.

•

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

Stocks

Am Electric Power ............. 26\1,
AT&amp;T .......................... ...... .31')8
Ashland Oil ..... .. ................. 39 )i
Bob EvanS.. ........................ 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul. .................... 53
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 46'h
Heck's ................................. 'h
Key Centurion ....................13\1,
Lands' End .......................... 34
Limited Inc ....................... .28\1,
Multimedia Inc ................... 87%
Rax Restaurants ........ \ ......... 23,4
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... ...... 16%
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8¥.
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6\1,
Worthington Ind ................. 21\1,

.Page 3

A marriage license has been,
Issued to Clifford Richard Icen· •
bower, 24, Coolville, and April:
Elaine Br!ckles, 22, Coolville. · :

Eight calls were answered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service Tuesday.
.
At 12:41 a.m. Middleport squad 14 went to Shady Cove for
Woodrow Ingle who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:51 a.m. Tuppers Plains squad 86 went to Reedsville tor
Curtis Cauthorn who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then to Holzer Medical Center.
At 3:10 a.m. the Racine Fire Department was called to a
brush fire at the residence of Rodney Nelgler. At 10:49 a.m.
Syracuse squad was called to Landaker Rd. lor Norman Wood
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. Atll: 24 a.m. Rutland
squad 44 went to Meigs Mine 1 for Jerry Kovack who was taken
to O'Bieness Hospital, Athens.
At 6:49p.m. the Racine squad was called to SR 124 for' GeOrge
Pullins who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
8:13p.m. Pomeroy squad 1 went to SR 7 for Beulah Maxey who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and atlO: 53 p.m. the
Salem Fire Department was called to Old Dexter Rd. for a
structure fire on Eddie itadd's property.

Continued from page 1
percent compared with 2.4 per·
cent during the previous 12
months, according to the depart·
ment's Bureau of Economic
Analysis.
Eight of 11 Indicators contributed to the decltne last month.
Investment In plant and equip·
ment, building permits and
orders for consumer goods had
the blgges !Impact tn February.
The other negative factors
were, In order of magnitude,
money supply, consumer expec·
lations. weekly claims for state
unemployment Insurance,
vendor performance and
changes In unfilled factory
orders.

Pick3
178
Pick4
1481
Super Lotto
12-13-19-35-38-41
Kicker 777299

Ucense issued

Meigs EMS has eight calls

Economic...

Ohio Lottery

Boggs,
Rose share
laughs

..

to the threat of heavy rain along
with a ra(lld melting of snow.
Tliere '· was floodtng· aireaoy In
northern Vermont with several
roads closed near Cambridge
and Jeffersonville, the NWS
reported.
Winter weather was not yet
finished as snow, sleet and rain
fell over much of northern . New
England. Winter weather advlso·
rles were posted for Thursday
afternoon and night over portions
of Maine, northern New Hamp·
shire and' northern Vermont.
Snow also ex tended across
much of Michigan, northwest
Continued on page 5

Woman is
arrested on
B &amp; E charge
Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that 31
year-o ld Debra Lynn Estep,
Harrisonville. was arrested Wednesday evening on a North
Ca rolina warrant charging
breaking and entering and grand
theft.
The Yad kin County. N. C.
warrant charges Estep with
feloniously breaking and enter·
lng a building used as a kennel in
Boonville, N.C .. on or about Jan.
19 and taking seven Australian
shepherd dogs valued at $4,000.
Several dogs were recovered
at the Estep residence In Meigs
County on March 1.
Estep was to have been taken
before the Meigs Common Pleas
Court this morning (Thursday)
for an extradition hearing.
Sheriff Souls by reports that the
department Is Investigating the
damaging of a 1981 John Deer
bulldozer owned by 3-R Indus·
tries of Langsville.
The dozer was on Titus Road
and headlights were shotoutand
the hydraulic lines were also shot
out with BB's.
Over the weekend, a building
on Jones Road in Columbia
Township was entered and ca·
bles from an electric welder and
wiring from a house were taken.
Tuesday evening, the depart·
ment was notified that a 50 gallon
tank had been taken from the
porch of a house owned by
William Rapp In Harrisonville.
The theft occurred Sunday night.
Souisby also reports that Rl·
chard Starr, owner of one- of the
cabins In Boston Hollow that
were vandalized the weekend of
March 18, has offered a $1,000
reward for lnfonnation leading
to the arrest and conviction of
persons Involved In the vandal·
Ism. Information will be kept
confidential the sheriff said.

By LEE AJI(N WELCH
OVP News Staff
Be prepared may be the Boy
Scout motto, built's also a good
idea In regional economic
development.
Approximately 50 people at·
tended an economic develop. ment workshop Wednesday to
learn about coming together as a
region, rather than trying to
entice business as Individual
communities. It was sponsored
by the Southeast Ohio Regional
Council, and conducted at Rio
Grande College.
There's strength In numbers
and, if the counties In the
Southeast Ohio Regional Council
work together as a unit, the
probability of enticing Industry
and jo)&gt;s increases dramatically,
according to Bill Snyder of
Columbus a·nd Southern Power.
Snyder, and several others In
private business, work with the
Ohio Economic Development
Council in presenting the state to
overseas co ncerns.
The Japanese are being innundated with information. not only
from Ohio, but other states and
even countries, aboutlocatlon. If
you present a package with 15
counties as a region. you have
Increased your chances · that
many times. Snyder said.
• "If ybu present a package,
you'll be taking a quantum leap ' '
ahead of much of the compel i·
lion, Snyder said.
According to Snyder, and the
other presenters. reglonalizatlon
is "smart money" both now and
in the future.
Individually, small cities don't
have the resources to finance the
search for new business. If rural
areas , like southeast Ohio, pool
its money and people, the search
Is easier.
One good Idea for the regional

Kennard of Ohio Power, another
member of the OEDC team at the
seminar said.
Kennard told · the group a
regionalized approach develops
a solid marketing program
geared toward the small to
mid-sized business and research
shows rapid growth In the service
'
industry.
In actdltlon, Kennard said to
not forget about the existing
businesses and monitor thelt
trends.
·· '
When the communities markei
the area. "regional rivalry•:
must be forgotten. according to
Dennis Mlngyar of the Gover·
nor's Office of Appalachia.
"We talk regional, but don't
practice It," he observed.
Eac h area within the reglOI\
must be knowledgeable a bout not
only that community, but the
DENNIS MINGYAR
ones next door.
Paul Clappsadle, ·another
marketing is an Information OEDC member, who works for
book. Snyder said the Japanese Columbia Gas, said each com·
want printed materials on areas
munlty within the region needs to
and the OEDC will send to the be articulate on the others, and
have rapid access to the person•
Regional Council a guide for
nelland Information.
·
compilation of such a book .
In the binder-ty pe present at ion
Sometimes, the economic de·
should be maps of each potential velopmel\t office may call and
site, that area in relation to the say they're bringing a potential
region, the region to the state and client to view a site one more
the stale to the nation, according time - ln about 90 minutes, he
·
to Cindy Bunfll o! the Ohio said.
It's that clme you' need to know
Department of Development.
She also suggested accessing about that site. and have rapid
Informal ion on the port au thor!· access to the other Information
ties, utilities, transportation, ed·
the client may want.
ucalion opportunities, tax strucBeing prepared and undertures and a workforce profile.
standing economic development
There should also be a list of are the keys to regional market·
communitles and ·counties with ing and the area has a readythe names and numbers of the made organization to achieve
contact people, she sa Id.
that In the Southeast Ohio Re"Smart money takes the re- gional Council, and according to
gional approach and keeps the Carl Dahlberg of SJCORC, they
communities' identities, while will be laking advantage of lhi!
maximizing resources ,.. John concept.

'Rain Man' dominates 61st
Academy Awards ceremony
By VERNON SCOTt'
UPI Hollywood Reporter
LOS ANGELES "Rain
Man," the touching story of an
au tis tic man and his greedy
brother, dominated the 61st annual Academy Awards, winning
four Oscars, Including best pic·
ture and best actor for Dustin
Hoffman.
Jody Foster was a surprise
winner over some of the biggest
names in Hollywood as best
actress in "The Accused."
Geena Davis was named best
supporting actress for her role In
"The Accident~! Tourist" and
Kevin Kline was best supporting
actor for the comedy "A Fish
Called Wanda."
"I'm supposed to be jaded by
this point," said an emotional
Hoffman on accepting his second
best actor Oscar Wednesday
night. "(But) I'm very honored.
... I wani to thank all the autistic
people I talked to and their
families," he said, referring to
the research he did for his role.
"It Is for us a Cinderella story.
The picture was literally canceled three or four limes," said
Hoffman, who was joined back·
stage by co-star Tom Cruise and
Barry Levinson, who won the
best director Oscar.
Foster. who has been acting lor
24 of her 26 years and was
nominated for supporting ac·
tress for "Taxi Driver" In 1976,
said of her role as a rape victim, .
"I'm very proud of the movie'.
The movie Is true and It's honest
In a way that's not pandering ....
It takes the truth and It smacks It
In your face."
''Rain Man' • had more nomina·
lions than any other film with
eight, and .picked up a fourth
award for best original screen·
play. The film got Its name from
a mispronounced Raymond the name of Hoffman's character

-in the childhood memory of his who Immigrates to Denmark to
brother, played by Cruise.
give his son a brighter future,
"Dangerous Liaisons," a lush was named best foreign ian·
story of sexual fencing among guage film.
the aristocracy in pre·
The big loser of the evening
revolutionary France, was nomi· was "Mississippi Burning,"
nated In seven categories. II won based on the FBI Investigation
for best art direction, costume Into the murder of three civil
design and screenplay based on rights workers In the 1960s.
material from another medium. Nominated for seven awards, It
Davis played a free-spirited won just one for best
dog trainer In "The Accidental cinematography.
Tcrurist" and said she was
The Oscar show at the 6,000·
surprised at winning the Oscar. seat Shrine Auditorium ran 16
" I felt I had a one In live chance minutes over Its scheduled three
at least," she joked. "I'm rather hours. and was broadcast live on
stunned."
ABC to an estimated worldwide
"This is astonishing," said audience of 1.5 billion viewers,
Kline. who played a trigger· according to Allan Carr, prohappy jewel. thief In "A Fish . ducer of the program.
Called Wanda" and was a sur·
"Who Framed Roger Rabbit:·
prise winner for his non· which combined live action with
dramatic role. "So often comic animation. won awards for film
performances are overlooked," editing, sound effects editing and
he said backstage. " I think this Is visual effects. Animation direcvery encouraging."
tor Richard Williams was given a
"Pelle the Conqueror" from special achievement award. The
Denmark, the story of an old movie made more money at the
Continued on page 5
Swede played by Max von Sydow

DUSTIN HOFFMAN

JODY FOSTER

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