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••
•

Pomeroy-Mktd~. Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

--Local news briefs ... - - - Middl eport ...·
.conttnued from page 1
had four OPT shots, four polio shots. one.MMR shot, and a TB
skin 1esl&gt;administered In the past year.
·

ODOT projects total $31.8 million .
The Ohio Department of Transportation has awarded 35 ~
highway Improvement projects totaling $31.8 million.
Included was a contract to the Chemi-Trol Chemical Co. of
Gibsonburg Tor $44,770.82 for applying herblddal spray to the
• vegetation along various routes and sections In Gallta, Hocking,
Mt&gt;igs. Monroe, Noble and Washington Counties. The scheduled
completion date is May 25.

Heap deadline Friday
Time is running out to apply for Emergency HEAP this
heating season which began Oct. 31. 1988. Assistance from the
program is limited to once per heating season and application
deadllnt' for assistance this season Is Friday.
. The program can provide a one-time payment of up to$200for
income eligible households with either heat utilities disconnected. threatened with disconnect , or whose bulk supply Is
down to a 10-day level.
Applications for Emergency HEAP are accepted at theGallia
Outreach Office. 220 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis;. the Meigs
Outreach Offlc'e; 39350 Union Ave .. Pomeroy; and t)l~ ·
Community Action Central Office In Cheshire. For additional
information, call 446-0611 or 367-7341 in Gallla County and
992·5605. or,992-6629 in Meigs County,

EMS has five Monday calls
, .

"

Meigs County Emerg&lt;'ncy Medical Services reports five calls
Monday: Pomeroy at 12:52 p.m. to U.S. 33 for George Pullins to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Rutland at 3:32p.m. to Story's
Run for Albert Fife to Holzer Metiical Center; Syracuse at 3:50
p.m. to Seventh St. for Justin Smith who was treated but not
tran sported; Pomeroy at 5:21p.m. to Weicht own Hill Road for
Eleanora RE'dman to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland at 7:07
p.m. to Hysell Run for Guy Priddy to Holzer Medical Center.

Fifty cases processed
last ~eek in Meigs court
Fifty cases.were processed last suspended to five days. two
week in Meigs County Court by years' probation. domestic vio Judge Patrick O'Brien.
lenc~; Luanne&lt;;. Gilham. PaineAccording to a report issued by . roy, $75 and costs. three days In
Judge O'Brien. the following jail. with $25 of ihe fine a.nd the
individuals were fined.
jail time suspended upon proof of
Gary Simpson. Pomeroy. $300 valid license, expi1·ed license:
and costs .. six months in jail Allen Jacks. Long · Bottom, $7~
suspended to 10 dan. 120 days and costs, :lO days In jail
license suspension, one ~·ear suspended to three. six months
probation. DWI; $20 and costs for
probation. driving under suspenleft of CE'nter: Robert E. Milliron.
sion; Raymond Cassady.
Racl~e, $250 and costs. 30 days in
Tuppers Plains. $25 and costs. no
jail suspend&lt;'d to three days. 60 valid HUT sticker; Becky Jones,
day license suspension, DWT ; $20 Gallipolis. $20 and costs. tint
and costs for failure to control;
violation; Robert Mays, Reeds·
Jerry .J. Haning, Pomeroy. $300 ville. $5 and costs. illegal ex·
and costs. six months in )ail
haust;' Richard A. Crowder,
suspended to 30 days, six months
Charleston. W.Va .. $23 and costs.
license suspension, two years·
driver - no ~eat belt ; Cleli
probation. DWI; $100 and costs.
LaBonte Jr .. Long Bottom . .$10
six months in jail suspended to 30 and costs, stop sign; Gerald J.
days to be sE'rved concurrently
Overturf. Rutland, $10 and costs.
with other sentence, two years'
failed to yield; Roger Riebel II,
probation. driving under suspen·
Tuppers Plains. Long Bottom ..
sian; Donald G. Jones .Jr.,
$10 and ·costs. no front license;
Reedsville. $250 and costs, 30 .Janine Schaekel, Long Bottom,
days in jail suspended to thre€' $10 and eosts. stop sign. ·
days; 60 day license suspension;
Fined for speeding were Mi·
DWI; Calvin R. Dowell, Racine:
chael Hysell, Proctorville, $23
$250 and costs, three days In jail,
and costs; Roy Jenkins, Miners60 day license suspension, DWJ;
ville. $19 and ·costs; Carol L.
$25 and costs for left of center;
Cross, Racine, $21 and costs;
Chester R. Green. Albany, $300
Lawrence K. Bays, Greenup,
and costs, six months in jail Ky ., $22 and costs; Terrence E.
suspend~ to 10 days, 120 day
Elliott, Gallipolis, $22 and costs;
license suspension. one year Susan J. Gillian, Chester, $22 and
probation. OWl; 30 days in jail to costs; Lenna K. Johnson, Middle·
be served . concurrently with
port, $20 and costs; William C.
other sentence, $75 and costs, 30
Herlman Jr., Reynoldsburg, $23
days in jail suspended to 10 days
and costs; Harry Cyrus, Pri·
to be ,served concurrently with
chard, W.Va., $29 ahd costs:
other sentenc. · no operator's
Glenn Rowe, Mentor, $25 and
license.
costs; Michael Johnson, Bel:
llire, $29 and costs; Annette
Donald Fitzpatrick, Pomeroy.
Kj lddlylng, Prospect Heights,
$100 and costs, 60 days in jail
Ill .. $29 and costs; Nick Marrale
Jr., Perrysburg, $22 and costs;
Barbara Dudding. Mason,
w :va., $20 and costs; Stanford E.
Fulks. Malvern, $22 and costs;
Dally stock prices
Roger U. Dunn, Lancaster, $22
(As oll0:30 a.m.)
and costs; Bruce W. Morgan,
Bryce and Mark Sl)'lllh .
Little Hocking, $25 and costs;
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Eugene 0. Adkins. Portland, $20
and costs; Frank Kovas, Martins
Am Electric Power ........ .. ... 26%
Ferry, W.Va., $22 and costs;
AT&amp;T ................................. 31)1.
Anne Slater. Albany $20 and
Ashland Oil ....................... .41~
costs; Melllssa Shiflett, LangsBob Evans ......................... ,l4%
ville, $26 and costs.
Charming Shoppes ............... 14
Bonds were fortelted by KenCity Holding Co ................... 17
neth Jamison, Fowler, $45;
Federal Mogul. ..... ..... ......... 52\1,
Larry
Triplett. Belpre. $55; Ben·
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 47 1h
nle Tlms Sr., Dayton, $51; Shari
Heck's ................................. %
Dlchel, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Key Centurion .................... 13)1,
$55; Rafael Escandon, ParkE-rsLands' End .......................... 30
burg, W.Va., $55; Steven Day,
Limited Inc ..............; ......... 27%
Argillite, Ky., $55, all for speed·
Multimedia Inc .................... 92
!rig; Romild Braden, CottageRax Restaurants .................. 2%
ville, W.Va., $40; Cynthia FreeRobbins &amp; Myers ................ 151\
man, Pomeroy, $40; Theron
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8%
Hodge. Cheshire. $40;. Mark
Wendy's lnt1 .......................... 6
Hawk, Pomeroy, $40, all ior no
Worthington Ind ................. 2H'o seatbelts.

Stocks

Granted divorces
Divorce act Ions have been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Cheryl Katherine Mal·
loy; Radne, against David Malloy, Long Bottom, and by James
E . Lucas, Pomeroy, against
Carol A. Lucas, Pomeroy.
A divorce has been granted to
Pamela J. Buchanan from Gre·
gory E. Buchan;m.

Hospital news

Tuaaday, April

Weather

~1.

1989.

- - - - - Ari1Iouncements ____..;;

Continued from page 1
By United Press International
Toslnc
.
Lodce 1o meet
Sou lit Central Ohio
The Grubb Family Slllg!!rs will :
Shade River Lodge 453 will
Chu reb and School regarding
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
meet In n!gular session at the be at the Middleport Christian •
Improved parking near that
low In the lower 30s. Southwest
Chester hall Thursday at 8 p.m. Union Church In ~ddleport:
facility.
.
:
All members are urged to attend. tonight (Tuesday), 7;30 p.m.
Councilman ' Gilmore an- . winds 5 to 15 mph.
cloudiWednesday:
Variable
Refreshments
will
be
served.
nounced that the American leGrance to meet
·
:
gion, Feeney-Bennett Post 128, ness. with a high between 50 and
Rock Springs Grange will meet,
.~
~
Middleport, has planned a Merri- 55.
7: 30 p.m. Thursday. A baking:
Meeting
cancelled
orlal Day parade' whlch will be
contest .will be held.
•
Licent&gt;eS issued
A meeting of Preceptor Beta · Tractor puU
:
highlighted by the d~dlcatlon of
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
A garden tractor pull will b~
the new war memorial honoring
Marriage
licenses
have
been
Sorority.
scheduled for Thurdsay
held Sunday ,1 p.m., at theSclpiQ:
deceased Meigs veterans to be
night has been cancelled. ReserTownship Volunteer Fire Depart-:
erected at the Legion's Mill -Issued In Meigs County Probate
CCourt
t.o
Dare!
Junior
Boyles
.
vations
for Founder's Day may
ment In Harrisonville. Refresh-·
Street park.
be made by calling Rosie ~lsson.
ments will be sold. A rain date:
Gilmore .said the activities will 38, Coolville, and Bonnie Sue St.
has been set for Sunday, AprU 23.;
take place on Monday, May 29 Clair. 38, Long Bot.tom; Jeffrey
Dance planned
Dance Friday
with the parade to form at ·Allan Gillogly, 26, Meigs County,
A dance will be held Friday at
A round and stjuare dance w!IC
.Hartinger Park and move out at 5 and Sharon Lee Henderson, 28,
Meigs
County;
William
Effard
the Rutland American Legion
be held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m., at the:
p.m. He said that there will be
Swiger, 19, Reedsville, and Cryshall from 8 p.m. to midnight
Senior Citizens Center In Pome-·
special speakers and local organtal Fay Wllliams.17, Reedsville; · under sponsorship fa the Legion
roy. Music by the True Country:
Izations and bands will be invited
Harold Michael Davis, 36, Ru·
and
the
f!,utland
Fire
DepartRamblers. Those planning to:
to participate in the parade. The
tland, and Sherry Gall Tackett.
ment. Admission Is $2.
attend are a~ked to bring snack·
Legion Auxiliary, he said, will
28, Rutland.
Items. The publiC Is welcome. ,:
open the annex on Mill Street for
refreshments. The marble monulnoorporatlon
ment will be 13 feet long with a
large center pedestal and side
papers filed
wings.
IEG.SI$,98 NOW
Secretary of State Sherrod
The mayor's report for March
Brown reported tOday that arti·
showed receipts of $5,231. ·
lEG. 5
Attending were Mayor Hofcle~ of Incorporation have been
flied with his office In Columbus
fman: Clerk-Treasurer Jon
EACH
.
Pfl ~:~
IDS.
by The Esses Corp. of Columbia
Buck, and Councilmen William
Township. Meigs County. IncorWaiters. Jack Satterfield, Geporators are Carolyn J ., Setty,
rard, Gilmore, James Clat·
J!.
worthy, and Dewey Horton.
James D. Setty. and Betty J.
Setty with Harold R. Setty of
31D SUHT- ·
949·2100
IACINI, OliO
42511 Throckmorton Road of
MASTERCARD -VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYE
Albany.

CLEARANCE... SHELL TYPE

I

SWEATERS.................
CUSHION TOPS

·.

.

2 Sectiont,. 12 Pages 25 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 12. 1989

Iman says 'revitalization. p~ject is . on-going'

...

$1 O" ,·

.

l,ACE EDGING · . . .
3 $1 00 ,

JIY NANCY YOACHAM

SenUnel News Staff
"Widespread Involvement Is a
key to any on-going downtown
revitalization project," said Gal·
llpolis City Manager Dale !man
Tuesday as he addressed approx·
lmately 40 members of the
Pomeroy t-rea Chamber of
Commerce.
In his presentation, !man listed
for chamber members the var-

S. B. Haught

lous component~ necessary to
downtown revltalizatlor&gt;,, s.uch as
the project underway In
Gallipolis.
''The first question you must
ask," !man said, "Is who will
benefit from revitalization?"
In answering the question,
!man said that everyone In a
community benefits from rev!tallzatlon, Including. property
owners wl\0 protect their Invest,

ments by Improving their buildlngs; ·merchants who Increase ..
their business by drawing more
customers; local gover[\lllent
through return on lnvestiment;
and the public at large through
more shopping, entertainment
and leisure opportunities.
''Thedowntownneedstobethe ·
living room of the community,"
Ima.n said, but hepolntedoutthat
It takes a prlvale·publlc partner-

.s hip to successfully complete lending Institutions and others
revitalization of any downtown · have also joined In the Gallipolis
area.
project.
Several different funding sourA revitalization project Is
ces have provided monies for the on-going, Iman said, because
Gallipolis revlltalization,lnclud- even after revitalization of. an
lng the city, which has commit· area Is completed, the area must
ted $192,000, and the Chamber of be maintained. ··
Commerce, ·whlch has commit·
Healsopointedoutthatrevltated $150,000, !man reported. The
lizaton cannot be accomplished
local tourism bureau, several
all at once, but should be carried
civic groups, property owners,
out In steps, which In Gallipolis,
started with Improvements to

building facades. Many other
steps are also In the works In the
overall Gallipolis revitalization
projectlncludlng streetscape lm·
provements, a beautification
project In the city park, waterfront development and expansian, and construction of an
amphitheater.
To enhance the overall appearance of Gallipolis, the city has
also secured state funding for
Continued on page 6

Search •
contlnues
for plane
•

WEDNESDAy I . APRIL 12th
JHURSDA yI APRIL 13th
9. A.M. • ? ?

By PAM RAMSEY
United Press lnlernatlonal
Fog and snow that ground the
search for a mtsslng plane to a
crawl in southeastern West VIrginia has eased up, allowing
au thor! ties to send out seven
aircraft to comb the mountains
surrounding Greenbrier County.
The single-engine plane, carryIng four people, dlsappe~red five
days ago, spurring an Intensive
search by the Civil Air Patrol.
The air patrol launched six
airplanes and one helicopter to a
large, sparsely populated area
along the western and northern
borders of Greenbrier County,
looking for clues to the whereabouts of the Beechcraft Bonanza.
"Everybody's volunteering.
They're all dog-tired, but It's just
one of those thiJJKS. They'r~ not
giving up," a Civil Air Patrol
spokesman said.
Snowy, cloudy weather that
has hampered the search since
Its outset last Friday cleared on
Tuesday, and authorities began
retracfng their steps to ensure
that nothing was missed during

.WEATHER PERMITTING
NUMEROUS ITEMS - BIG AND SMALL

SA~EI

Norman Thompson

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

Meigs County native, Norman
Thompson, 86, of Centerburg,
died Sunday at the Centerburg
Health Center.
·
Born Oci. 9, 1902 In Chester.
Mr. Thompson was raised in
Pomeroy. He married his wife.
Marguerite McClain Thompson,
on Jan. 9, 1931. Mrs. Thompson
died In May 1981.
Survivors include a daughter
and son-in-law. Rosemary and
Robert Dean, of Gahanna; a son
and daughter-in-law, David and
Marsha Thompson, of Rhinebeck. N.Y.; a . sister, Alberta
Pancake;
and
five
grandchildren.
Services will be Thursday, 12
noon, at the Schoe~lnger­
Margarum Chapel, 335 Johnstown Road, Gahanna, with
Father James Black officiating.
Burial will be at the St. Joseph
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Chapel from 7 to 9 on
,Wednesday.

.

•

S2!!cKcANS
1'

PEPSI
..
PRODUCTS

Hit a hole-ln-oneonNo.161n the
May 11, golf scrall')ble being
sponsored by the MGM Division
of the Tri-State Area Council,
Boy Scouts of America, and
you'll win one day's Interest on
two $1 million CO's. Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
Pomeroy, and Bank One, Pomeroy, are sponsoring the prize.
The golf scramble Is being held
at Cliffside Golf Club, Gil.illpolls.
Tee-off Is at 1 p.m.

2 UTEI

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR·
PRESCRIPTIONS.
AlL STORES

BancOhio National Bank, Columbus, has filed suit In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
a $12,662.70 judgment from Lorena Davidson, Pomeroy.
Nissan Motor Acceptance, Los
Angeles. Calif.. has flied a
judgment action for $5,369.77
from Terry Bell and Caria 'Bell,
Portland.

._ "'"'-' .. t'rw"""' To lll"'tot GuMto~•~

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

fof,..,...i~

A donation of $50 per participant will take care of green fees,
cart, dinner, prizes, and will also
help promote Boy Scouting In the
local area.
.
Prizes will be awarded fo~ the
longest drive, closest to the pins,
longest putts and many other
accomplishments.
Special awards will be given
for holes-In-one.
A new car, sponsored by ,
Norrls-Northup Dodge, will be
given to the person who hits a

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - · are paid.
The state and federal govern-'
The Senate adopted a bill Tuesday that would retain tolls on the ments had. ,a greed In the 1950s
Ohio Turnpike when the bonds when the hlgltway was constructed that when the bonds
are paid off In 1992:
expire,
the tolls would be abolThe bill, sponsored by Sen. Ben
and
tbe road would become
Ished
Gaeth, R·Deflance, won approa
federal
highway.
val on a 26-6 vote and goes to the
"By 1992, a decision has to be
House, where a' similar bill has
been lntro&lt;luced, as well as one to made whether to keJ!p or do away
·remove the t«?lls wtien the bonds with the tolls," Gaeth said. "My

1989 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY BROUGHAM
lUS't ,
Itt Stock lo1 lmmedl•te De/lre1gl
~tttl\~£9 ·
tl Air Bag Equipped

Veterus Memorial
Monday admissions - Mabel
Brlckles, Pomeroy; Darrell Nel·
son, Langsville.
Monday discharges. - John
Fralr, Allsha Potter, Brenda
Stewart, Jeffrey Carper, Alma
Riggs, Tom Buckley.

l.ncal news briefs.--

tl Anti-lock Brakes

Po-Wer disrupted in Middleport

.'

A short Jerm oulage of uUIIties occurred Tueliday morning In ·
Middleport on General Hartinger Parkway when a pole
carrytna the .Jines fell over while a television cable waa being
dilconnected.
Middleport pollee reported that Cablevlston was removtne a
cable from·a trailer and the l!lght pressure of lite cable drop
11!1Uited In puRina over the pole. Columbua Southern Power Co.,
Cablevlsl!&gt;n and GTE workers were on the scene.

2. 9°/o A.P.R.' FINANCING
·or

'$1500 CASH REBATE

Vehicle hits deer on SR. 143
Tbe a.JIIa-Melp Poat of the State Hlpway Patrol
1-tlplecfan accident at 8:20p.m. 'l'lleldaytnMelpCounty,
on SR. 143, 0,, mllel norlb of m~ 6. Troopers said a car
dl low by Vtralnl&amp; Underwoocl,l8, Pomeroy, alruek and kUied a
deer. No 111111 wu Injured. There was minor damaae.
Continued on paae 6

WEDIIISDAY, APIIL 12, 1919
1:00 p.M.•S:SO p.&amp; .
At Po•ero S1lllir Cltlz111 C

.• ·
-•

'

•

Mass ur.ave
,

~

0

discovered
in Mexico

hole-In-one on No. 4.
A $10,000 shopping spree by
Empire Furniture will be given
for a hole-In-one on the sixth hole.
On hole 13, one day's Interest
on two $1 million CD's will also be
given away by Citizen's National
Bank and People's Banko! Point
Pleasant.
And then there's hole 16, where
Bank One and Farmer's Bank
will pay one day's Interest on two
$1 million CQs.

BROWNSVILLE, Texas CUP!)
- Authorities suspect there may
be more bodies burled on a
border ranch In Mexico where
the corpses of 12 men mulllated
during voodoo sacrifices were
discovered ln. a mass grave.
The grisly discovery was made
Tuesday by authorities after one
of the four suspects arrested a
day earlier led them to the grave
site. Among the 12 bodies, all
men, was that of a 21-year-old
pre-medical student at the Unl·
verslty of Texas who had been
missing for three weeks.
Sheriff's Lt. George Cavlto
said the scene "was like a human
slaughterhouse."
Pollee could not confirm there
were more bodies, but were
expected to resume digging
Wed.esday after suspending the
bill would keep th~ tolls and keep
search late Tuesday night. At
It the super highway It Is known
)east five other suspects were
to be.
being sought.
"When you have something
The sheriff's department schegoing as well as the turnpike, you
duled a news conference Wednesdon't mess with it. If It Isn't day to discuss the murders, and
broken, don't fix it."
Mexican pollee also were ex· The bill also expands the size of pect,d to release more details In
the Ohio Turnpike Commlssl~n to the case.
Include two non-voting legislaAlthoUgh only 12. bodies were
tors and creates a Turnpike found, Cameron County Sheriff
Oversight Committee to monitor Alex Perez said he was told that
operations of the Turnpike one of the suspects confessed to
Commission.
taking part In at least 14 slaylngs
Senate Ml,norlty Leader Harry at the ranch.
Meshel, 0-Youngstown, offered
Evidence of satanic and vooamendmenta that would allow doo rituals was found In a small
the commission to be audited at caliin on the ranch about 20 mlles
. least oDCe a year, and to allow the · west of · the border city of
minority leader to name one Matamoros, where the men are
member to the Over~ight Com- believed to ~ve been kWed. said
mittee, which Is to be composed u.s. cuatoma aeenl Oran Neck of
of lix legislators.
BriiWIIIviiJe, wbo helped UDCOver
•Sen. Palal Ptelfer, R-Bucyrua, the bodlel.
gave hll support to the. bill,
Neck said pollee searching the
saylq the' turnpike was well cabin foUDd cudl• lllld pots
maintained.
filled with blood. "There aiiOWU
'1t'a the JllihWIIY cleared ftrat a 1111&amp;11kettle wltb tile heada of
of snow and Ice," be said.
pta," Neck said. "You couldn't
In the Hou• Hlllon, repreten- evee stand within !50 feet of these
tatlv• puled, BU. and IBDt to graves and not feel like
the Senate a IIW •tablllhlq for beav1J18."
.
the first Um• P Oblo trant
He added that two of the 12
· l}'ltem for Head Start a viCtlml "bad evidence of beiDa
pretehool PJ'OII'&amp;III 10 aet Y0UD1 tortured before they were
children ready for achool. . . killed."

. Tumpike toll blll moves to
House after·· Senate approval

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!

CY

Bonnie Carmichael, hole-in-one ehalrman ror lite
golhcramble, with the one day'slnlerestfor hole
16. For a hole-In-one on No.13, Citizen's National
Bank and People's -B ank of Point Pleasant are
also giving away one day's lnletest on two $1
mWion CD's.
'
• •

. 'Ho_ le~in-on_e'·contest _May .ll

99C

Court news

SCOUT PBOMOTION- How much 18one d11'•
Interest on t.wo Sl mUilon CD's? Promote Boy
ScouUng In a May 11 golf scramble at CIUfalde
GoUClub,hltahole-ln-oneonNo16,andyou'llflnd
out. Bill Ne88C, manager of Bank One, Pomeroy,
at left, and Bruce Reed, of Farmers Bank and
savlnp Compapy, Pomeroy, at right, present C.

RED ClOSS ILOODMOIIU

.'

.

Vol.39, No. 238
Copyrighted 1819

SO DO ITI

'(

Partly cloudy tonlghl. Low ·
In mid 3Gs.Thursday, mostly
swmy. High In mid IIOs.

•

Area deaths

DONAnNG BLOOD IS SAFE, SIMPLE AND
SAVES UVES.

•

Pick3
250
Pick4
7679

Page 3

75 (
RACINE DEPARTMENT. STORE

Funeral services for Summers
• B. Haught, 73, of Leesburg, Fla .
were held April 3 at the Beyers
Funeral Chapel a.t Leesburg,
.wit~ Internment at
Hillcrest
Memorial Gardens.
Mr. Haught is survived by his
wife. Wilma Weber Haught of
Leesburg. formerly of Meigs
County; two daughters. Alice
Suffivan. Lady Lake, Fla. and
Kathryn Haught. Chicago, Ill.;
and a son. William Haught .
Beaufort. S. C.; three grandsons
and one granddaughter; two
brothers. Forrest of Leessburg,
and Ralph of California.
He was preceded in death by
"Is parents. and lhree brothers.
Traveling to Florida for the
funeral services were his
brother-In-law, Norman Weber,
Tuppers Plains, and two sistersin-law, Doris Koenig, Tupers
Plains. and Barbara Sargent.
Chester.

Lottery

SV·AC
athleteS
honored

•

.

(:.. .....:.-"---

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1

--L .

REVITALIZATION BENEFITS - · Dale Iman, GalllpoHs city
manager, hlchllghls plans for GaiUpoUs' streetscape lmprovments during Tuesday's meeting of the Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce. lman's participation In Tuesday's meeting was
arranged by Ron Ash, manager of Ohio Power Company's
Pomeroy office.
piloted by Jon Metz, 38, an
the first effort, the spokesman
said.
off-duty Ohio Highway Patrol
trooper. and was carrying three
"The weather Is breaking a
passengers when It took off from
little and we've got our search
Parkersburg las I Thursday on Its
aircraft out. But there's been so
way to Lewisburg. The other
much snow on the ground the
passengers In the four-seat craft
past two days that we're going
back over the areas," thespoltes· · were Kent and Shirley Place .of
Beverly; Ohio, and George John·
man said.
son of Parkersburg.
The missing airplane was

Sen. Long to speak
at Southern banqnet
Top scholars In Southern Local
School Dis trlct will not only be
recognized Thursday evening
for their academic abilities, but
will also be given some words of
enco11ragement from State Senator Jan Michael Long (DCirclevme) . Long will be the
guest speaker at Southern Local
School District's second annual
academic banquet to be held
Thursday, 6:30p.m., at Southern
High School In Racine.
As state senator representing
Ohio's 17th Dis trlct, Long has a
professional Interest In the education of Ohio's youth. As the
father of three sons, ages '3 to 15,
he has a personal Interest In
education In general. Being a
Meigs County native, Long has
personal knowledge of education
In a rural setting.
Long was elected to the Ohio
Senate for his first four-year
term In 1986; His district' Is
composed of three Ohio House
Dis trlcts and Includes Athens,
Ross, Plckaway, Vinton, Jack'
son, Meigs, Gall Ia and Lawrence
Counties In Southern Ohio.
In the legislature, Long has
been appointed to serve on the
Senate Education· Committee of '
which he Is the ranking minority
member; Finance Commit~~!~!;
Highway and Tr81111JIOI18tlon
Committee and the Senate Ethlcl
Committee. He alao served on the
~te Select Committee on Tort
Reform and the Senate Sllbcommlttee on Senate Intrutrueture
Improvement~. He wu - t l y .
appointed to sene on tile Governor'• Conflict M•napn"'llt ~
mlttee and al10 ltl"M on tile
Solid Waste Dtlpoeal Commit•
of the National Conleretlce ol
State Lqlalatora (NCSL).
Prior to bla election In the OhiO
Senate, Loqllmld u ualltant
prosecuUne attm'III!Y In Plcka-

way County and as the village
solicitor for the villages of
Commercial Point ana South
Bloomfield.
Long was admitted to the
· practice of law In Ohio In 1979
after receiving his Juris Doctorate degree from Capitol Univer·
slty Law School. He received his
Bachelor of Arts degree In 1974
from Ohio State University.
Long and his wife, Susan,
reside In Circleville with their
sons, John, Justin and Jason.
Awards at Thursday evening's
banquet will be presented to
honored scholars, grades two
through 12 from each Southern
District school, who were chosen
by their teacqers based solely on ·
academic achievement. Awards
will be presented by Charles
Norris, vice-president of the
Southern Local Board of'
Education.
,
.
Scholars, their parents and
family members and Invited ·
guests, will be In attendance at :
the bllD•quet.

�Commentary
I

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

glh

~~

....,_.._...,...,,..,._=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Publlshe.General Manager
PAT WWTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. ad~ress and lelephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

ties.

President Bush buys ·
a Nicaraguan truce

.

.

By E . MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON- George Bush bought himself a virtual one-year
truce with Congress on the divisive Issue of war In Nicaragua, while
bringing Capitol Hill leaders to the table with him lo forge a policy
dealing with the troublesome country .
~ Bush has not abandoned the Nicaraguan Contras. Bul for now , he
·has junked Ronald Reagan's policy of bashing Congress for nol
complying wllh his vision of an Imminent Armageddon In Central
America unless lhe guerrillas gel American arms 10 fight their
countrymen.
q'he arrangemenl forged wllh Congress by Secretary of State
James Baker virtually gurantees that Washington wtll pay around
$45 million lor food, medicine and other supplies- but no military aid
- to keep the Contra army logether through lhe elections scheduled
In Nicaragua next February.
·
Baker's skillful negotiations on Capitol Hill mean a cease-fire with
Congress on the most bitterly contested issue of Reagan ' s
presidency: the wisdom or Washington financing a guerrilla war tOI
topple revolutionary government It sees as a subversive threal to
Central America.
Congress cut off military aid to the guerrillas In 1988,'and Bush said
he had no chance or getting the pipeline turned on again now .
Bush and Baker hardly wanted a political bloodletting with the
Democratic majority In Congress on armlhg lhe Contras - It was
· clear that Reagan's policy had failed In Nicaragua and on Capitol
Hill.
Instead, Bush followed through on his Inauguration Day pledge of a
·new day and an open hand In relations with Congress. And In doing so,
he brought Congress fully Into the Nicaraguan game.
The Democratic leadership of House Speaker Jim Wright of Texas
: and Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell ofMalnecould hardly
: have slapped that hand away.
·
If the leadership rejected this humanitarian request, the estimated
· 12,000 Contras and their families would begin to run ou1 or food and
other basic supplies In April.
Critics In the West and even In· communist Eastern bloc nations
would have heaped criticism on the United States for abandoning a
• group of people It had supported with arms and humanitarian aid
: since 1981.
Wllhout this supporl, elements of Ihe Contras would be tempted to
raid the poor Honduran countryside for food, turning a political
problem for Washington Into one of banditry and destabilization for
an ally.
Instead. the Contras will be cared for and encouraged to tesl the
validity of the democratic reforms promised by President Daniel
Ortega In Managua, Including the elections set for February. The
Conlra leaders In Miami have been urged to return home and flghl for
political rights with ballots, not buUels.
The emphasis in U.S. policy towards Nlcarauga Is on negotiations
- with Congress as well as Orlega.
Ortega has about a year to prove to the skeptics In Congress, to the
Contras, and the presidents of Nicaragua's Central American
. neighbors that he means what he has repeatedly promised about
· democrallc reforms.
: He can still demand as a condition for enacting reforms that the
: Contra organization be dismantled and the Contras shipped oul. But
thai will expose him to mounting criticism In the reglon,'in Congress,
·
and In the West. .
By enacting genuine political reforms and allowing the Contras to
freely reintegrate Into society, Ortega will himself be able 1o reap
. some considerable credit for ending the war and ll!tlng the American
. trade sanctions that have helped devastate Nicaragua's economy.
Bush and his new partners In Congress could share In lhat peace,
too. Bush and Congress, by being on board at the beginning, can work
togelher lor the success or the new policy- but must be willing to
share a failure, too.
·

a

Letters to the ·editor
QuestiOns gun control issue

..

lilt

...

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

·
VA
· W8tChdOg&amp; Shelved

Ponwoy-Middlaport, Ohio
Wednesday, Aprl12, 1989

.

-·

)

• the president~ Pakistan and the U.
S. ambassador to that eountry.
Rep. BIU McCollum, R·Fla., lhlnlcs
It may be too late, becau111 the FBI
was not allowed to do Its Job soon
.I'IEr the cruh. Presldeat Mo. hammed Zla tn·Haq andArnbassa·
dor Arnold Raphe! were killed In
tile crash, Which Pakistani Invest!·
gatprs believe was an act or terror·
Ism. The FBI can Investigate ter·
rorlsm In foreign countries If the
host country gives permission.
Pakistan didn't objecl to an FBI
Investigation, but the Slate De·
partment refused to give the FBI
access to the crash site. Now
some members of Congl't!'ls are
wondering If the CIA had anyth·
lng to do with that decision, Our
sources say hearings will be held
soon on Capital Hill to get some
answers.
MINI-EDITORIAL- It's no
coincidence that you get more
Junk mall from your representa·
tlves In Congress during an elec·
tlon year. Congress uses Its free
mailing privilege as a blatant
campaign tool. The Senate Is
peeved that the House spends so
much money on mailings, so It
recently voted to spend ~ore
money Itself. The senators ex·
cused their a:ctlon by saying they
. wanted to force the House to
spend less. We won't even at·
·tempt to explain their convoluted
logic. What Is clear Is that
members or Congress, who re·
cently whined that their salaries
were too low to make the job
worthwhtle, will stoop pretty low
to keep those jobs.

.est, petitions are 'currenty being
circulated to place on the ball9t a
constitutional amendment that
would place limitation on cam·
palgn expenditures.
As dis·
cUssed In previous Weekly Re·
ports, the proposal would at·
tempt to deal with the 111ue of the
spiralling costs of campaigns.
Most all of us ·lgfl!@ that cam·
palgn spending has become out·
rageous and unacceptable.
Thus, II you are Interested In
signing a petition or circulating a
petition, please contact my of·
flee.
.
If you hav~ an~ questions per·
talnlng to guardianship reform,
or other Issue of concern, do not .

By tlo!Wd P""JJ lnlt'r•lo.a

&lt;
I

'

HOUIS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

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Please reeister me .in the Third Annual Ohio Eta Phi
Golf Tournament on April 29, 1989.

PLUS ~NY MOll

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MASON, WY•

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coach Howle Caldwell received
Coach of the Year honors lor
piloting his Tornadoes to an 11·3
record, good lor a second
straight league crown, and a 13·4
overall record.
Other basketball players re·
celvlng all·SVAC awards were
Eastern's 'Mike Martin and
Shaun Savoy Hannan Trace's
Tim Brumlleid Kyger Creek's
Chad Leach, N~rth Gallla's Don
Mays Oak Hill's Jedd Rawlins
South~rn's Andy Baer Brad
Maynard and Chad 'Taylor
Southwestern's Mike Walker:
and Symmes Valley's Carl
Robinson.
Receiving honorable mention
were Eastern's Kenny Caldwell
and S.cott Fitch, Hannan Trace's
Bill Bailey and Brad Cremeens,
Kyger Creek's Aian Denney and
Mike Reese, NorthGallla'sBrlan
Stout. Oak Hill's Chuck Miller,
Chad Smith and Bob Ward, and
Symmes Valley's Paul Hayes.
and Scott Miller.

"At a. W Gf '111r P11111r., I•• •t\ ,
. . . .,,...
~u•

271 N01111 SICONI

Ohio.

HAMBURGER

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ltf;IGH IND. SERIES: Marl•• wu .... '

Published every a~ternooo , Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·
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Pomeroy, Ohio 15769, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,

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three In the first Inning off
Mahler, and two In the eighth orr
Tekulve.
DeshaieS, H, gave up three
runs, struck oulthree and walked
two before being relieved by
Danny Darwin In the seventh.
Dave Smith pitched lhe ninth for
his first save. ·
Mahler, 0·2, struck out two and
w~lklng three over six Innings.
Houston scored four unearned
Continued on page 4 .:

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basketball
her efforts
In
pushing lhefor
VIkings
to a 14-0
league record, good for the
conference title. Her coach,
Jennifer Davidson, was named
Coach or the Year for her
guidance or the VIkings through a
tournament journey that led to
the district finals, where they lost
to New Boston.
Other girls' basketall players
named to the aii·SVAC team
were Kyger Creek's Yon Ra·
gland, North GaiUa's Rachel
Borden and Rita Cordell, Oak
Hill's Janelle Jenkins, Renea
Lundy and Melynda Galllamore,
Southern's Crystal Hill and
Dawn Johnson, Southwestern's
Lisa Hall and Symmes Valley's
Becky Fuller and Brooke Smith.
North Gallla center Rusty
Denney, a 6·5 senior, was named
Most ValuablE: Player lor his
efforts In propelling the Pirates
to an 8·6 league record and a 12·7 .
overall record. Tn his varsity
career Denney scored 1,084
points and was the leading
rebounder lor Coach Bruce Wll·
son's Pirates. Souihern head

'I\! !'lid 1Q' '•
ChiC&amp;fG 5, 8t .
4

MIERK:..tN lEAGUE

Nf'~'

By United Preaslnterna&amp;lonal
Today Is Wednesday, April 12, the 102nd day of 1989 with 263 to
follow.
The moon Is In Its first quarter.
.
The morning star Is Saturn.
'
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
American stat.e sman Henry Clay In 1777, opera singer Lily Pons In
1904, singer Tiny Tim, born Herbert Khaury, In 1922 (age 67). jazz
trumpet player Herbie Hancock In 1940 (age49). talk showhostDavld
Letterman In 1947 (age 42), and actor-singer David CaSII!dy tn 1950
(age39).

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

A......
lA!' A.ft~t'li
Hoalllon

Majors

I'll. 446·1699

.

named Most Valuable Back for
rushing for more than 1,000 yards
In the 19888 campaign. Viking
coach Merrtll Triplett was
named Coach or the Year for
guiding the Vikings to a 6·1
league mark and a 7-3 overall
record.
Other football players recelv·
were Eastern's Lisa Driggs and · ing all-league awards ~
T,rlsha Spencer, Hannan Trace's
Eastern's Chris Lance .. ~a~na~
Autumn Adkins, Kyger Creek's
Trace·~ Brad Cremeens, Scott
Tracy Eggleton and Vlkkl Noble,
Caldwell and Todd Saunders,
North Gallla's Denise Pickens,
Kyger Creek's John Sipple,
Oak Hill's Melynda Galllamore
North Gal Ita's Keith Eleam and
and Janelle Jenkins, Southern's
Greg Glassburn, Oak Hill's
Tracy Beegle and Becky Wine·
Chuck Miller, Josh Ruff, Tony
brenner. and Southwestern's Simpson. Steve Snyder, Ml~e
Christa Bailey.
Walls and Bob Ward, Southern's
Danny
Gheen and . Kevin
North Gallla tight end/ tackle·
Grueser,
.
Southwestern' s An·
/ llnebacker Don Mays, a 6·3,
205-pound senior trl-caplaln, was thony and Glen Arrowood and
named Mosl Valuable Lineman Josh Halslop, and Symmes Val·
· for his lronman efforts In leading ley's Paul Hayes, Scott Mlller,
the Pirates to a 4·31eague record Jason Pernestl and Joe Smith.
Symmes Valley forward Deon
and a 6·3 overall mark. Symmes ·
Valley fullback Kenny Daniels, a Mays, li 5·7 senior, was named
5·9, 165-pound sophomore, was Most Valuable Player In girls'

Scoreboard ...
llo!iton
Ddroll

Today in history

......... _. ..

Darwta, Oblo

T.,;o Southern coach~s and · a
North Galli a football player were
among the honorees at the SVAC
winter sports banquet Tuesday
night al Buckeye Hills Career
Center In Rio Grande.
Tornado volleyball coach Su·
zanne Wolfe received Coach of
the Year honors lor piloting ber
team lo a 9·3 league record and
second place In the coriference
behind league champion Oak
Hill. The Oaks moved through
the SVAC schedule with a 12·0
record In part through the efforts
of junior Memra Ingram, who
was named Most Valuable
Plaver.
Oiher volleyball players re·
celvlng all-conference honors

GOOD USD
WASHEU, DIYEIS,
IEFIIGIUTOIS, TVa,
GAS &amp; EUC •.UIIGES

Berry's World

David H. Smith

CAWWELL COACH FO THE YEAR - Soalhern boys'
basketball coach Howle Caldwell (left) rec!elves his Coach of the
Year plaque from !Wulhern principal Jim Ad8Dlll at lhe S,VAC
winter sporta banquet Tuesday nllht at Buckeye Hills Career
Cenler. Caldwell was recognised for pldln&amp;llle Tornadoes to an
11·3 league record and the conference championship. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

hesitate to call me at 614-466,8156, or write: Senator Jan
Michael Long, Stateho11se, cOl·
.umbus, Ohio 43215.

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe;, Gr•p•lh

Reds permit five
unearned runs .in
loss to Houston

RECEIVES CHAMPION'S TROPHY - Southern bukelball
player Brad Maynard (rilht) receives lhe SVAC boys' basketball
champlo118hlp trophy from Symmes Valley principal Ken Shipley,
president or ihe SVAC Board of Control, at Tuesday night's SVAC
wlnler sports banquet ut Buckeye Hills Career Cenler In Rio
Grande. The trophy wu given In recognition of the Tornadoes'
winning the league title. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

.........::::::Sen:.::....

and alleged thefts froma descen·
dent's estate. Establishing protections tor tl)e elderly and those
Individuals who are least able to
care for themselves Is an Import·
ant component to the bill.
Other provisions of the bill In·
elude:
• Authorizing' Increases In probate court fees to cover the cost
of hiring lnvesUaat~~rs.
"The appointment of limited,
Interim and emergency guar·
dlans with specific powers.
"Requiring pardlans to file
periodic ~ports with the court.
"Periodic review of guardian·
ships.
.
Senate Bill 46 now goes to the
House of Representatives which
Is currently working on a compa·
nlon bill. Depending on the ver·
slon . the Hduse ultimately ac·
cepts, the Ohio General Assem·
bly Is on the verge ormaklngdra·
matte changes In the laws to protect te unwary from potential
scams or abuse.
The bill has received the support of Ohio Association of probate Judaes and various advocacy groups for the elderly and
young people for .whom par·
dlans may have to be appointed.
• As an additional note of Inter-

honors athletes

HOUSTON (UPI) -The Houston Astros made the most of five
hits and a pair ol .Cincinnati
errors Tuesday night .
Ken Caminiti's two-run single
capped a , four-run first Inning
and Jim Deshaies scaltered six.
hits over six Innings, leadl~g
Houston to a 5·3 victory.
All five of Houston's runs were
unearned and Reds pitchers Rick
Mahler and Kent Tekulve com·
bined to retire 17 straight Hous·
.ton batters before Terry. Puhl
singled with one out In the elghlh .
Houston was held to live hits,

~Jan:.::...:.L=ong~

.Guardianship reform ____

---

Sincerely,

SVAC sports

,.

The Daily Sentinei-Pege-3

&amp;UditS_a_nd,.___D..;.,;.,.;ale_Van_Atr_a

WASHINGTON- Watclldop
unneeded· l*ieltrtan brtllge at do It again. The Inspector ge·
at the Veterana Admlniltratlon
the VA ~cal Center In Port· neralls not supposed to have his
have been acCUied of concelllna
lud, Ore. Sato agreed wltb the strings pulled by the agency that
politically sensitive findingS of
conclu1lon, but the audit ended he Investigates.
waste and abuse- findings that
up In the credenza, and the ·
Sato' staff also suspended an
ended up on a shelf Instead of In
bridge was built. Sato explained audit ot the Walla Walla, Wash .•
the hands of Congress.
that Sen. Mark Hatfield, R·Ore., VA hospital. &lt;The VA was grap·
The Inspector geMral's staff
had already budgeted ihe money piing with the Idea of turning the
at the VA produces audits, which
tor his home state and the VA au· hospital into an outpatient clinic.
are normally released to the pub·
dlt would not have changed that. Sato told us the VA had already
lie In semi-annual reports to Con·
We a1ked him It he was afraid of made Its decision, so It was not
gress. But we have learned of a
st~pping on Hatfield's toes. Sa·
necessary for his team to con·
lew audits that never saw the
to s answer Indicated that he bal· · tlnue the audit. But It seems to us
light of day for reasons that indl·
anced political considerations. that the audit would have been
cate the inspector general may Sato said he could have been useful In that decision-making·
have been distracted by politics. called before Congress or suf. process. Rep. Tom Foley, D .
Inspectors general have been fered other distracting, political . Wash., proved that It wasn't too
Installed In ma.ny federal agen·
repercusslns If he had Issued the late to change the VA 's mind.
cles since the 1970s. Their job Is report. "You have to consider
Foley flexed his considerable
to audit and Investigate their how to get the most bang for the political muscle and stopped the
own departments without con· buck," he said.
VA from converting the hospital
cern lor politics or the depart'
We think he Is wrong. The In·
to· an outpatient clinic. Man)t of
ments' reputation. More than an· spector general's Job Is to lnves· . the patients In the hospital were
yone, ·these watchdogs should ligate waste, even It he bumps up Foley's constituents.
·
follow the axiom of Supreme against a member ot Congress
The General Accounting O!flce
Court Justice Louis Brandeis:
and the Office of Special Counsel
and even If the money Is already
"Sunlight Is said to be the best of spent. It .Is not the job to play pol·
Investigated the reports that
disinfectants."
·
!tics.
•
Sa to did not give to Congress the
For reasons that sound flimsy,
round no "conClusive" evidence
In another report, Sato's lnves·
however, some VA Inspector ge- tigators found that many vethat the Inspector General's of·
neral audits were· never re· terans who were paid tor being flee has lost Its Independence.
leased . A whistle blowl!r has 100 percent disabled were work·
A spokesman lor the Inspector
dubbed them "credenza" re· lng In other federal jobs. A per·
general told us that the credenza
ports, for their final, private, son who Is 100 percent disabled Is
reports are not a secret, even
res ling place.
not supposed to be able to work.
though they were not listed In the
Our associate Stewart Harris The audit was canceled before It office's semi-annual report to
saw the uncirculated audits and was finished. Sa to said there wa~
Congress. lt's true that the au·
found evidence that former VA no reason to finish It because the
dlts are available! for public In·
Inspector general Frank Sato VA saw an early draft of the In·
spectton, but only II the public
may have caved In to outside formation and agreed to clean up
knows what's In that crede112a.
considerations.
Its act. That Is comparable to the
STEPPING ON TOES - Con·
A 1986 audit by Sato'sstaffcon· pollee deciding not to tell the dis·
gress wants to knoiv If the Central
clulded that the VA could save trlct attorney about a robbery
Intelligence Agency stopped the
$6.7 million If It didn't build an because the roflber agreed not to
FBI from Investigating the air·
plane crash last August that kWed

The Ohio Senate voted unanl·
mously on Tuesday In favor of a
bill that would Implement the
· most comprehensive overhaul or
Ohio's
guardianship laws In
nearly 40 years.
Senate Blll46 would' revise the
legal definition of an lncompe·
tent person, removing advanced
age as a factor In determining
whether a person Is Incompetent.
Incompetent people would be
those who are so mentally lm·
paired, by reason of physical Ill·
ness, retardation or a result of
chronic substance abuse as to be
Incapable of taking proper care
or themselves or their property,
or falling to provide for their
families.
The bill requires probate courts
to appoint Investigators to look
Into the circumstances of an al·
leged Incompetent for whom a
guardian was being sought. Thein·
vestlgator would have to Inform
alleged Incompetents of their
rights and file a report with the
court.
It would also permit probate
judges to order appropriate law
enforcement authorities to In·
vestigate alleged physical abuse
or
financial exploitation of
elderly or Incompetent people

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Jack Anderson

there enough government Inter·
ventlon In our lives? Will SJ86
On this date In history:
·
and HR1190 really give us protec- ·
tlon from criminals and make
In 1861, the Civil War began when Confederate·troops opened fire on
Fort Sumter •. S.C.
.
our streets safe? I doubt it.
In 1945, President Franklin Roosevelt died at Warm Springs, Ga.
It a woman living In the coun·
About three hours later, Vice-President Harry Truman was sworn In
try were to see a prowler and
as chief executlve.
possible rapist coming up the
driveway and call the sheriff, the
In 1961, the Soviet Union launched a manned spacecraft. Yurl
Intruder would have time to
Gagarln became the first human to orbit the earth and return safely,
Ioree entry Into the house (and
the woman), take a shower, eat a
sandwich and escape before the
ENVIRONMI!NTAL
·NOW OPEN FOI
sheriff got there. And that's no
PRoTECTION
,retrectlon on the sheriff, he is just
SPIING SEASON
AGENCY
spread too thin. In spite of what
Com(ll«e Une. at V....ebl•
the lawyers would have you be·
• Bedding Pl-., " ' - ' lleve, we alone are responsible
• Fruit Tt-. Ger1nluml,
tor our safety.
Hanging S.llete. Shrubbery
Another aspect to consider , 1ndTr-.
are these bills the beginning of
OPIIIIaY t gfO 1 ..
totally disarming the citizens of
the U.S. The British tried to dis·
arm the colonists before we be·
9tl·5776
came a country. the Jewish peo • .
pie In Warsaw llad only six pia· ·
... "
tols when the Nazis came for
them. · •
ldonotqW!IIIonthepatrlotlsm .
of tile maJority of the anll·pn
facllona. I do quettion the wll·
dom Of CaUIIJI&amp; Ul to fall Into llep
wttb stated alma or albers that
1
t11a1 would OliWtbrow this COUDtry.
'lblnk aboutlt!
.
Read ·the Metzenbaum/Siark
billa -.HR1190 and write your
Colljii'UIIDan and Senator today.

Editor, The Sentinel,
The justice system Is unable to
control the International drug
cartel. the justice system Is
unable/ unwilling to control so·
clal drug use that supports the in·
ternatlonal drug cartel. I serl·
ously doubt that you could find a
person l.n Ia w enforcement, or
any field, who doesn't either
know or suspect strongly enough
to Investigate, someone who uses
: drugs for recreational purposes.
: But there Is not enough time or
: resources to pollee ihe laws that
. we now have. Add to this,
repeated background lnvestlga·
lions each time you purchase a
firearm.
. The population Is afraid, so
- poUticlans are In the process of
. : pa11lng a law, S386 In the Senate
• and HR 1190 In the House of Re·
pretentatlves, that will restrict
.and eventually prevent law a bid·
tng citizens from owning
firearms. U you conducted an In·
. formal Interview with the· aver·
, age citizen who owt11 a firearm,
: you would ftad thai few would
• IUrrtl -lr their IIIDI wtliiJII!y.
: Of CClVII, all wbo do not com.r,~
wiD Ill lltleral felona 1111111r

Uti IIIU110.
IWUiet-law

Wednesday, April12, 1989

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·-

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Meigs girls .split pair

00 . . . . 0 0

'

Twins
:h umble
Jigers
o..

I

'

Pomeoov-MUdlapon, Ohio .

Reru ... ::::-:-:--::-:-:-Con~tlnued~!r()lll::...::.:pa~cea~_ _.:,.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

rut ns tn the fwilrst as Mahler
Innings and held off a late Lancer s rugg 1ed, allo ng three hits
rally eroute to a .3 victory over and two walkS, throwing a wild
4
the host.
Pitch and hal kine twice. The l011a
The Maruders scored In the washlanlnthstralgbttoHouaton.
!lrst,EitseMelerreachedftrston
"The flrat lrin!nB wu everya single, alter a Shannon New· thing you try not to do all roUed
some sacrifice she sqoled on a up Into one," said Mahler, who
KellySmlthbasehlt.AfterSmlth last beat Houston on June 25,
stole second she came around to 1985. ''Two walkS, two balkland
make It 2-0 on a Lancer error. The a wild plti:h . seems like I kind of
Marauders made It :a.o tn the lost It there for a white. It just
second when W
. eaver s Ingled, took time to get. golng. I bea t '
..
sto1esecondandscoredonaKing myself."
base hit. The Maraud;rs scored
Billy Hatcher led off the first
their last run In thel il!th when with a grounder that second
Tara Humphrey wa·· hit by a baseman Ron dester mishandled
pitch, she tater scqred on a for a two-base error. Hatcher
Weaver base hit.
;
advanced on ~ groundout and
The Lancers sco~ one run tn scored o!l Puhl's single to left.
the third and two In tjle seventh.
Pub! advanced on a wild pmtch
But King got clean up bitter Lori and, with two out, scored on Bill
Wiliams to ground to ~nd with Doran's single. Ml\hler twice
the tying run on second to end the balked, movtna Doran to third .
:
Kevl.n Bassdrewawalkandstole ·
game.
Trtca Baer had a double and second, then Alan Ashby walked
triple to lead the Marauder to load the bases.
attack, Weaver chlpt\ed In with
Caminiti then singled to right,
two singles, While Smtih, Stan· driving In two runs and giving
ley, and King each hdd a single. Houston a 4·0 lead.
King was the winnthg pitcher
Mahler .s ettled down alter the
walking six and strlklflg out one, two-run single by Caminiti, retlr·
Schall was the losing pitcher for lng 16 of the next 17 batters he
the Lancers.
·
· · faced. The lone Astro to reach
Meigs will host Alexander on was Puhl, who drew a two-out
Thursday night. Tomorrow walk In the second.
night's games against Athens
Eric Davis led off the second
has been cancelled.
with a home run for the Reds,
Meigs ..... OO oOOOOO OOOoooo2ll 010 0-4 lifting the flt:st pitch !rom Desha·
Fed-Hock .. oo.oooooooooooo001 000 2·2 les over the left-field fence. It

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
: To Sparky Ander~on, the Min·
hesota Twins must resemble the
1927 Muderers' Row Yankees.
"They're the best team of all
time, as far as I'm concerned,"
Anderson said after the Twins
shelled Detroit 14·0 Tuesday at
:rtger Stadium. "They're the best
hitting club In our league. They
ilon't have a player In that linup
that hasn't hurt us at one time or
!Qiother."
• Mlimesota beat Detroit for the
12th straight time over two
· seasons and It was Detroit's
worst shutout loss since BostOn
bombed the Tigers by the same
score on Sept. 24, 1973.
.
- Since Detroit's Doyle Alex·
under shut out Minnesota last
May 13, the Twins have limited
the Tigers to just 18 runs In 12
James while scoring 79.
. Tuesday Allan Anderson
· pitched seven Innings of
seven· single ball and Carmen
CastUio clubbed a pinch·hlt
grand slam. Anderson, the
American League ERA leader
last season, struck out one and
yial ked only one In winning his
second straight start.
· He gave up two singles In each
of the first two Innings but
Minnesota's defense helped keep
Detroit scoreless.
"A couple of hils here and there ·
and It's a real good ball game,''
Twins Manag.e r Tom Kelly said.
"Once we get the bfg lead, It
changes the game. It's tough to
come back In tli'ls kind of weather
(40 degrees)."
CastillO. a recent acquisition
trom Cleveland, hit his home run
during an eight-run eighth. Kelly
sent him up to bat for Kent Htbek
when the game was out of hand
and Castillo responded with his
second career grand slam.
In other AL games, California
downed Oakland 1-1, Kansas City
edged Balttmore 6-5, Toronto
beat New York 11·6 In 10 Innings
and Chicago topped SeatUe 8-li.
In the National League,lt was:
Chicago 5, St. Louts 4; Phllildel·
phla 6, Montreal2; Pittsburgh 4,
New York 3 In 11 ' Innings;
Houston 5, Cincinnati 3; San
Diego 3, Atlanta 2; and San
Francisco 8, Los Angeles 3.
Angels 7, A's 1 '
· At Anaheim, Calif., Bert BIY·
Ieven pitched a four-hitter and
Lance Parrish doubled home two
runs to cap a six-run fifth Inning
for the Angels. Facing a llneu p
that lacked Injured sluggers Jose
Canseco and Mark 1\lcGwlre, the
38-year·old Blylevet\" struck out
five and walked two for his 255th
career victory and his first
decision as an Angel.
Royals 6, Orioles G
At Kansas City, Mo., Bo ·
Jackson hit a two-run homer In
the sixth Inning, enabling the
Royals to beat Baltimore for.the
15th consecutive time. Alter
hitting only one home run In their
J!revtous seven game!!, the Roy·
als recorded three In a span of 2
2'·3 Inn~ off Baltimore starter
Jose Bautista, 0.1.
BIDe lat• 11, Yukeet I
At New York, Manny Lee
ttroked four hits and Georce Bell
drove In four runa, helping
Toronto hand the Yankees tllelr
seventh straight 'defeat. Fred
McGriff also 'homered twice ·to
drop the Yankees to 1-7, their
worst start IInce a 1·7 opentnctn
1966. The Blue Jays scored five
runs In the lOth Inning.
Willie lip ..
: At SeatUe, Steve LyOIII bit a
ow-run homer with two out In the
qlnth oft Tom Nladetltuer to rally
die Wblte Soli. RoD KarlaiYic:e,
who will replace CarltOII Flak
behind the plate, dr&lt;M!In atblrd
ruD lOr Chlcap ID tba niDtb.
earry Jones, 1.0, wu the wlnllll'
1114 Bobby ThJipell aotclled hll
fecoad save.

llanlen.

v.t.dftUdl'f, Apr112, 1989

Pomeloy-Midtlaport. Ohio·

Page 4-The Da41y Sentinel

ROCK SPRINGS -The Meigs
Marauder girls softball team
under the direction of head coach
John Arnott after two weekS of
rain and cold weather finally hit
the diamond this week splitting
two TVC Contest.
In action Monday night the
Lady Cats of Trimble pounded
out 12 hits and scored two runs In
eacb of the first three Innings
enroute to a 14·2 victory. Leading
7-2 In the fifth the Lady Cats put
the game out of reach with 4 runs.
Peart picked up· 'the win on a
two hitter, while striking out 8.
Marsha King was the losing
pitcher for the Marauders. Tara
Humphrey had the only two hits
for the Marauders, both singles.
000 000 2- 2 2 0
Meigs oo ..
Trimble ....... 222 143 x-14 12 1
.:Tuesday night at Federal
HOCking, the Marauders scored
runs In each of the first three

-· . .• . .

00

a-

. O&amp;Mr
In other National i..eaaue
camea Tue141ay, tbe Cblcqo
Culll pol ted t1111r tourtllttraltllit
offwlthanlnfleldilnlleand~eft vlctarywltbaWciliCIJinowr
ReeddoubledtochueDelhllel.
tbeSt.LouiiCerdllaii,Pldladel·
Darwin relieved and 'bia tlrst pbla deteated Mollitr'Mll-2. Pltllpitch waa wild, allowlnl O'Neill burp beat Nn York 4-3 1a 11
toscre.Twopltchel)a~,Oeltar · illllblp, san 01110 alladed
singled to r(Jht, drlvlnlln Reed,
Atl&amp;llta 3-2 and San ~leo
In the elgbth, the Astroaloaded trouliCed Loa Aqel• 8-3.
the basel with one out before
I'll-· 11 t, .., 11 t
Puhl ,scored on a ""··
1ft
*2
.,...s sacr ce
At Phlll....,pbla, Steve
OattveflY to I 1ve Houaton a.,.
•a 1ea d .
...,..
roacollecledtbewtnanddroveln
"'(hat's twice. this week we've three 1'11111 wtth hia tint major· '
had a bad first .lnnln&amp;.'' said · leque hit tor the PhUUet.
Cincinnati Manaaer Pete Rose.
Onttveroa, 2-0 ~auerecl ftve hill
"lthoughtRickpltchedrealwell, over aeven 'tnniJ!p. Paacual
good eno111h to wtn. "''e battlecl
Perez fell to 0.1.
back, butltwas toolltUe, too late.
~ t,
I'd like to aee us score more runa ·
lllalap)
for hl!n."
At
Bobby BonUia

was hla secondbomew In u many
days.
Cincinnati pulle4 to within 4·3
In the aeventh. Paul O'Neill led

alqled In JoJe Ulld trlllll tll1nt
bue with two 011t 1ft the 11\11
tnnllll to 1~ the Pirate.. Pittsbllrlb III&amp;Jped a four.,ame
lollq atrelk with Ill bolll&amp;-

opeaiJII vtctary.

Randy

Mll••:

IUY ONE
3 ll. lAG OF

·'

Yellow Onions

who alto cave up the tyln&amp;l'llllln
the niDtll, fell to G-1. Jeff

~· tmpt?ledtol-1.

We

RIIIIYI

~OH.
W11t Mlin St.

00 .

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"-tllrlv .. 51toh.

,Grapes ..............~; •••••

27,1 -:ZV/31," 35,"

69 &lt;
2% Milk~••••••;.••:!';••• $1 49

Or 3$" xl4 Inch.

FLAVORITE

....
Paint
FLAT

""' .

59&lt;
·Medium
Eggs
•••••••••••
LITER BOnLE .
KEMP'S
Diet Rite/RC (ola .••• 89&lt; Ice· Cream ••••••••••••••• $299
STOKELY .
FRESH BAKERY
.
$
Tomato Juice •••• :~::~ •• 69 (·
ts .................. 159
5QT;PAIL

'I.OD.WIIIIe,off

or ceiling willie.

·

,

DOZEN

IUY

u.:-.r~

Pancake Mix

DOZ.

...bJ
Qlo Pllnt
t!

'

ONE

36 OZ. flAYOIITE PANUKE
STIIIP AT IIGUlU PIKE
biT 32 OZ. flAYOIITI (CNI'lETE

GRADE A

....

IUYOM

11.5 OZ.IOI Of
DUNOM-S

16 OZ. m. snDI SEAS

(ake Mixes
AT REGULAR PmCI

on THE 2nd
'11.5

oz.

c

SALAD DRESSING

•

AT HGII.AR PIKI

OIT THE 21111

•• oz.

m.FOI

~.

IUY ONE

IUY ONE

ll. PIG. Ullft'S

HI.TUI

WIENERS
AT RE&amp;UUI P1K1
GIT THE 2ttd
ll. PIG.
FOR

1C

PAllA YSPREAD
AfatiUR PIKE
GUTIIW
3 ll. 111

• I
·~·

•

.

16 OZ. lOX OF

'

\

~

Umit 1 With ttlil OOU~~Gn, V.. ld April 1
Allfll ~·· , .... .......... PoWttrl

Monday thru Sunday

.

~

.

AT REGUlAR PRICE·
GE.T THE 2nd
~
16
·~

IECEIVE 2 flEE
PEPSI'Sl

stC. o•Y

GET TH£ 2n.l
3ll. lAG

Lintll Qu1ntities

..._a

1

AT REGUlAR PIKE

The Riehl To

--···-

'

c

11 OZ. Elf PEANUT IUTTEII

AT REGUlAR PRICE
GET RAY~ITE

Grape Jelly

.~,.......
....~1..~
............
~

�•
•

Pom8i oy-Mido hport. Ohio

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

~-Local
'

news briefs....---.

Continued from page 1

Officeq attend seminar
Twenty officers of the Meigs and GaiUa County Sheriff&amp;'
Department attended a seminar on crime !icene Investigation
and evidence collecting held at the Melgs County Emerpncy .
Medical Service training room Tuesday evening.
.
Agent John Perry of the BCI conducted the seminar.
ltttendlng besides · the 20 officers were Meigs County Sberltf
James M. Soulsby, Ga!Ua County Sheriff Dennis Salllbury,
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Steve Story, aud Aaslatant
Procesutor Linda Warner. Other classes to assist offlcen In
their law enforcement work are being planned, Sheriff Soulsby
· ·
reported.

Showln&amp; llldes
Mr. aud Mrs. Larry McNickle
will be sllowtng slides of the Holy
Land on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at
·the A!ltlqulty ~pdst Church,
State Route 338, Racine. The
public Ia Invited.

Ducealaied
· Square, round. and slow dane·
lng will be featured saturday

Meigs County Emergency .Medical Services reports five calls
Tuesday; Racl111! at 10: 28 a.m. to Trouble Creek Road for James
Hinkley to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy Fire Department,
assisted by Scipio Township, at ll: 57·a.m. to a brush fire ou the
McKenzie property on Gold Ridge ROad; ltaciDe at 1: 39 p.m. 10
Broadway St. for Flossie Badgley 10 Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:58p.m. to Woi!Pen Road torJohnDean
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 6:23p.m. to
Reedsville for Nicole Forshey and James Swiger Jr. to St.
Joseph's Hospital.

.

.

.

.

Velllt- Me-w
·'l'uelda1 admlaalou - Flollle.
Ba481eY. Rac:IDit.
Tuelday dlacharges - Dt&gt;rothy 1\011111, Charles Schoonover, Darrell Nelson, Mabel
Brickle&amp;.
·
Nutrttlanllla IMklna the MCnll o1 lnclellnt18 lhelt tHe lor fooda h*ft but to
cheala aut pickled egg~ and ••• gee

'

NEW .1989 RANGERS

YELLOW DEL.
@%LES .....lJ..Q,•• 2/69c

..,)

.' 1,89 E·150 CONVERSION VAN. ·

XLT Trim
Deluxe two-tone
XLT equlpmen1 group:
80/40 cl.o1h oplh bench set
Chrome Raw Step Bumper
Elec. AM/FM/S1ereo Aedlo w/C11set1e/Cio~
Po-•-ing,
Tachometer
Sliding r811r window
Headliner
Deluxe wheel1rtm
2.9L EFI VB angina
6 opel. man. 0/D tranamission
P215 steel OWL all a811oon tires
Brt Low-Mnt awing away mirrors ·
AnER REBATE
Ail conditioning
TUI' mU
Front Wcense plate bracket
NOTIJIQUIIiu
Clearcoat paln1.

,.

J

·.

.

•.

$99.95

'

·

SA~E S6333

ON STAGE - Here, some of the forl:y models
w•vl,l ~l . kollt "PI..._4Miq;INiell let tile
belbmblg ol the acoutlntr movement, poee on
stace at Eastern m~~~t ,School durlug Saturday

· ...198S.
. . BRONCO II

·...

35 TO CHOOSE

42.000·1!1iles, AC, Cassette, Like new.

"&gt;'

· WAS fl995oo .

I·

.,,.,_' .... -·
......

-r----------------------------,
•COUPON•
.

·I

Expir.. April 30. 1989

.

'

'IESCRiniON
SHOP

'"'~

...... ...,

- ......

~ ~~-

....

- _____
_ . ___ .,""""'"
. _"""r"_""_
-..,....
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•

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'
NOW

S7795

...In~-~

__

.,._.,._.
/.'

..,..,...~.~---""'·-

197·7 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
MARK V
'"63,000 actual miles. Lea1her trim.

197 5 LINCOLN .CONTINENTAL
46.000 actual milea. Leather 1rim.

I
I

I

S5,395

-.

!
I

l

~---------------------------Ju.t bring In any prMCriptlon or preacriPtlon bonia
from lily er• phllrmacy ·with the above coupon end
I'IMI)'I•3.00 oft our elra.dy low pr•crlptlon prlceell

'

nleld'a Olrl Scout ol:yle show. The alyle show waa
' tile ,.,..... 1u tke·1lllllUIIl-oJrttl aat ·MvtJIR. ·
DIWghler Banquet wblcb was bel!! at the !ICbool.

Mothers,
daughters
remember
Scouting

•Fast Service &amp; Low Prescription Prices
•Quality Prescription Drugs
•Full Line of Generics, Available
•Most Insurance Carries Accepted 1
Frea Delivery to Middleport, Pomeroy,
Bradbury, Minenvllle, lutl•d, Syracuse,
·
and Mason, W. Ya.
·
H you fHI you hawe bNn poying too much for
your pracrlptlons, glwe us a call. WI will quota
you prlaslll

·The Meigs County Retired
Teachers will have a luncheon
meeting on Saturday, at 12:30
p.m., at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Reservations may be
made by calling 742·2141.

' ,
~
.
~'DEMO" - F.,Ll WARRANTY
f:UlLY ~OADED....., COLOR TV

At The Prescription Shop
Prescriptions Are Our Business!

1

Mother-Daughter Banquet with the Pledge of Alle(lance and the
Girl Scout Promise. The baaquet waa held at Eastern mg11 School.

•

Weather

ANY NEW OR 11ANSFEIIED
PBSCIIniON

by Debbie Cooke, opeaed Saturday night's aanual Girl Scout

Retired Teachers meet
..

SEE RJCK TOLLIVER, JAY HILL. DWIGH'r HONAKER OR PAT HILL

,,

PAT HILL, FORD·I c.
•

614-992-2196

Meigs County's ):!lg Bend Girl
Scouts, their mothers, grand,
mothers and sisters, gathered
Saturday night at Eastern High
School tor the annual mother·
daughter banquet. A highlight of
the evening was the presentation
of the Arst annual ''Woman of the
Year" award, wblch was given
this year In memory of the late
Evelyn Knight who was the first
Girl Scout leader In Meigs
County. Mrs. Knight died In
November 1988.
.
A$ eltpllilned by Shlrli!y Cogar,
dlrectoroftheBigBendEastGlrl
Scout Service Unit, Mrs. Knight
formed the first Meigs Cqunty
troop In April 1932 In Pomeroy.
Over the years preceding the
fonnallon of tbe troop, Mrs.
Knight remained extremely active In the scouting movement.
Even In later years, a member of
her famUy said, If scouts needed
a place to deliver Girl Scout
Cookies, 1he would volunteer .
thelr.llome as a drop-off point.
Accepting the "Woman of the.
Year" plaque In Mrs. Knight's
memory was her husband, A.Jl
Knight, of Pomeroy. Mrs. Char·
lotte Knight Dillard, also of
Pomeroy, accompanied her fa· .
ther to the banquet.
Dee Lawrence, area field dl·
rector, uslsted Cogar In the
presentation.
.: '
Another hlghllght of the even·
lng wu a atyle show of Girl Scout
uniform• from 1912, the beginning of the Girl Scouting movement, to today's uniforms.
Forty models, Including
scouts, their mothers, and several friendS, parUclpated In the
style show which waa presented

Golf tournament set
·I'A benefit golf tournament to
rille tranl!lOflatlon coall tor the
Mldllllbt CRigers to travel to
Dlsaeyworld to ..,rorm In Ju~;
will be held Saturday,.starting at
10 a.m., 11 lhe Rl.-de Golf
. Tournament Ia M•na, W.Va.
N~ pttlu tor tile touma·
meat ll't lleiJia do•tld by over
'10 buiiDfllll wtth ftrlt prbe
bellllaiOif Cart dtl•tl!d by JaR
.Sporui Shop. Pomeroy.
.

..

"

-

'

liS. SMITH

PUMPKIN PIE •••••••~·.~~•••• S2 ~89
FOX PIZZA ••••••• .-••~~~·.~ ••••••• 97&lt;
MINUTE MAID

APLE JUICE ••••••••·••~\~~.... S1.09

STOKELY

APPLESAUCE ........~~~~•••••••• 89&lt;
lED HAWAIIAN
PUNCH •••••••••••••••••!~~~........ 99C
VAN CAMP
.
PORK 'N' BEANS.!!.0•1.o 2/S1.19
CAIIP.U'S
.
.
TOMATO SOUP .....~~':.~';;. 2/89C
IUmN HOUSE
BEEF STEW ...........~!~~•... S1.09
SWANSON liEF 01
. CHICKEN BROTH ••~!·.~~·•• 2/99&lt;
MUEWI'S OLD FASIION
NOODLES .............~~~~•••• S1.19
D-ASAGI
DETERGENT •••••••••• !~~i·.... S1.09
. ••sco aHAL.
SHREDDED WHEA'f~~~•••• S2.29
IUFnNS SMALL
GARBAGE BAGS.~~~~!.6f.·•• S2.29
BOUNTY
PAPER TOWELS ••••t::w... S1.49

r---------------------------------~-

Jim Cobb's ....

''Your· Choice'' Sale!!
1989 CADILLAC
SEVILLE

BDORAQO

·snmNG AT

AtCEPISIM WIPB'BIIIBMORY -If uyoae 11-lhe amoaat
of time a OlriScool le..w dnoteslothe-Dtla&amp; pi'O&amp;ram,lt'allle

6 TO CHOOSE FROM

m. .berl of her family. Retired Pomeroy buolaeumau, A.R.

KnfP&amp;, accepa a plaqae frtPil Dee Lawrence, areaGirlScoutfleld

dlrec&amp;or,in memory ofbllla&amp;ewlfe, Evelyn, wbo died Ia November
of laat year. The la&amp;e Mn. Knlchl waa named Woman of lhe Year
by Big Bead Girl Scoota for belq the-flnt Girl Scout leader Ia
Melp Counl:y. Mrs. Knltrhl atarted a troop In Pomeroy ID AprU ·
1132.
..
.
t!u'ough the combined efforts of
Racine Junior Troop 1042, led by
Nancy Yoacham and Brenda
Jones, and Racine ' Brownie
Troop 1259, led by Beth Theiss.
Narrator for the show was Nancy
-Yoacham.
The older uniforms were
loaned to the Racine troops from
Black Diamond Girl Scout Coun·
ell In Cbarlel10n, W.Va. Other
uniforms, according to Yoa·
cham, were "Begged and bor·
rowed" from all over Meigs and
Athens Counties. Deardorff's
Fire and Safety Equipment,
Athens, provided some new .
Items for the show.
Following
style show,
!lWarda were prtaented to sev'
eral leaden tbroua'bout the
COUDty by both Cogar and Lynn ,
Arms, who aervea as director of
the Big Bend West Service Unit.

lbe

AA. slated
, to meet ·
Melp County AlcoboUca Anonymoua 8Dd AI-Anon meet on
Thunday ataltts, 7 p.m., In the
u - u t of the Sacred Heart
Church, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

$21,999

1989 DELTA 88 ·.

Door prizes of flowers from '
local greenhouses were also '
given to several of the girls and
women In attendance at the
banquet.

5TAITING AT

S12,999

6 TO CHOOSE FROM .

Spring revival set
A mid-spring revival Is being
held AprD 17-23 at Tuppers
Plains Church of Christ. Services
begin at 7 'p.m. each evenblg and
the theme for the revival Is
"Keep Your Focus." On Monday;
Faron Franklin will preach and
Greg Campbell wtll sing; Tuesday, Bob Thomas will preach and
Apprentice wtll sing; Wednesday, Mike Leavitt and Drew
Grounds; Thursday, VIc Clevenaer aud Robert Foster; Friday, Chris Duncan \lnd Sean
011011. Saturday will be a youth
revival with Robert Foster
speaking and Tracey Tooley
singing. Featured on Sunday will
be Robett Foster preachlnK
again and Paula Adsms llnlllna.
For more tntormatlon, calf 6()6.
474-3880.

1989.
CUTLASS

SU,._ 01 CIERA

aEIA

SUPI10 TO CHOS.E FROM .... STARTING AT

S11,399

1988. OLDS DELiA •11-.... STUIMAT"$9,999

~~---:~~===~:0:;:;:::;:-:-;::;;:~;:~:;::;-::;-~~::':"::;:'---'1

8ol I"' II I type of IIUMI'
balDDeJII foolllll ~ ,
' .

I•

-'-.-'

CAUFORNIA
CELERY •••••••••~A.U..... 79(

. COWR GUARD- Members of Chester Brownie Troop 186'7, led

The Eleanor Circle of Heath
United Methodist Church will
meet at the home of Emma
Clatworthy pn Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Members are to bring Items
for a white elephant sale.

Stocks

I

CELLO PACK
CARROTS
......1!\.9!, ... 29c
•

· ·ly ..l.oraln Motor Coach

.

!

w!ll

S3oo OFF

•

Circle to meet

probably be limited to one
rehabilitation of many GalUpolls
homes which are In need of lane traffic during painting.
repairs.
Reed also reported that the
Another necessary aspect of Nolan Amusements' Carnival
downtown revitalization Is to . will be In Pomeroy May 24-29.
promote and market the area
Tickets for the July 4 chamber·
properly. "You must develop an sponsored Phil Dirt and the
Image for your downtown," Dozers' concert are on sale and
I man said, and then promote the may be purchased from many
Image locally as well as outside chamber members. Single
the area. "Youn.eed todetermlne tickets are $7.
the assets of your community
Reed announced that Bob
and then build on the · most Sheppard, of Ferrellgas, Is the
Important," he added. "And If newestmemberofchamber,and
you don't know who Is shopping in that Lennie Eliason, owner: ,
your area,'' marketblg efforts operator of · WMPO Radio, bas
are worthless, he added.
accepted a position on the :
Iman commended Pomeroy Chamber Board of Directors,
VIllage for "being on the right
replacing Paul Gerard who
track" and encouraged the com- resigned.
Tuesday;s regular monthly
munlty and chamber members
·chamber :meeting at Main Street
to continue to push forward.
!man then fielded questions Pizza, East . Main, Pomeroy.
· from members of chamber.
··
In other business, Chamber
President Bruce Reed reported · .
t!J.at the Pomeroy-Mason .Bridge Bryce 1111d Mark Smith
Is going to be sanded and painted of munt, Ellis A Loewl
In the near future. Although the Am Electric Power ............. 26~
bridge wJll remain open during AT&amp;T ........................... ......31%
the sanding-painting process, It Ashland Oil ........................ 41 'h
Bob Evans .............................15
Charming Shoppes ..............14'h
City Holding Co ................... 18
By United Press International
Federal MoguL.. ....................$3
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................48 ..
Sou Ill Central Ohio
Tonight: Part)y cloudy early, Heck's .................................. 'h
then clearing late. Lows will be In . Key Cen turton .................... 13%
the middle 30s. ~u thwest winds Lands' End ....................... 30'H,
.
27~
'
· 10 to 15 mph.
Limited Inc ........................
· Thursday: Mostly sunny, with Multimedia Inc ................... 93~
' highs between 55 and 60.
Rax Res tau rants.................. 2%
Extended Forecast
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15'h
Friday through Sunday
Shoney ·s Inc ........................ 8'h
A chance of rain Friday and Wendy's Intl. ......................Giii
Saturday and fair Sunday.
Worthington Ind ................. 21%

I

FRANKS ••••~..............l.llh S2 .19
SWin ECIIICH
VA. BRAND HAM ••••• l.ll•• S1.99
SMITHFELD
SHIEDDED...Ib. S2.1'9
COOKED·HAM·•••• IVU! ••II•• S1.97
HOMEMADE
•
ME~T SALAD ................n·.. 87&lt;

tn-

ONE OF TH~ FIRST - Racine Brownie Leacler Beth Theiss
. models the oldest of the Girl Scout unlfonns In Saturday nlgbt's
style llbow at the anaual GirlScoutMother-DauJbter Buqllel. The
unlfonn, 1111 "oUve drab kbakl" color, with proficiency badges
· wora on the sleeves, dales back 1o the 181.3-14 era. GlriScoutln&amp; Ia
the United States began In 191%.

CQntlnued from page 1

.

SUPDIOI lUND'

I.

'

'

Nine fined in Middleport Court

I
I

''

\

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L

.I man...

Hoep1181 news

Blllllpup
Anyone wlslllng to participate
In t!H! Rutlalld Bait Leque
should alp-up lmmedlately at
the Dennis McKIDDey realdence,
next door to the Rutland Leaton
Post. S11ll"up Is necesAry as
quickly as possible so that
uniforms may be ordered. Peewee and girls' senior softball
teams are Included along with,
other teams. For lntormatlon,
call 742·2279:

NEW, US.ED &amp;.COLLECTORS

Nine were fined and two others forfeited bonds In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday nlght.
Fined on charges of theft, $200 and costs each with restitution,
were David Smith and John Hill, both of Middleport.
Ell EberSbach, Hilliard, was fined $425 and costs and
sentenced to three days In jail on a charge of DWI, and $25 and
costs on a charge of expired driver's llcen~~C when he appeared
before Mayor Hoffman. Also fined on a . DWI charge was
Anthony T. Seyier, Racine, $425 and costs and three days In Jail.
Others tined In the court were Edward T. Baer, Middleport,
$10 and costs, Improper backing; Alvin Smith, South Caronna,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner and $200 and.costs and five
·
days In jail on a charge of assault on an officer.
Richard Jarrell, Mason, W.Va., was flned$25 and costs, open
container; AprU Ellis, Middleport, $10 and costs, expired
reglstratlon.-and Tammy Zedeker, Mldaleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner.

Tl!e Daily

PAT HILl FORD .IN'c.

.

EMS has five Tuesday
. . calls
.
.

nlght at the Ell Denllon Po~t of
the American Legion, Rutlaad.
Uve music and retrestunents
will be featured from 8 p.m. to 12
midnight.

Paacake eupper
St. Paul United Methodist
Church In Tuppers Plains will
hold a pancake supper from 4 to 7
p.m. on Tuesday, Aprll18, at the
cliurch. All·you-can.eat for $3 ~r
$1.50 for children · under 12.
Proceeds will benefit the church
buDding fund.

12.1989

W8dnnday. Aprl12. 1989

•·

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·-~

- -- -·-·--- - -- - -- -

-

..... ~ ...

·- ------ ·•-

I

--~ --

�------------------------~----~·

. ;PIIge-8-The

THURSDAY

Community

Calendar

·'
;

MIDDLEPORT - A Resident
Council meeting will be held
Thursday. 2 p.m. , for residents
and famUies at .the Overbrook
Center In Middleport.

LONG BOTTOM - Mt. Olive
Community Church will be In
revival Thursday through Sun·
day at 7 p.m . nightly with
Minister WIU!am VIllers of Big
Bend, W.Va. Special singing will
be featured. Everyone welcome.

· RACINE -'I'heSoutllernBand
Boosters will have their monthly
meeting on Thursday, at 7:30
p.m .. In the high sc:hool band
room. All parents of bllld stu·
dents In the district are urged to
attend.·

FltiD.tY
RUTLAND - Return Jona·
thlll Meigs D.A.R. will meet
Friday at the home of Mn.
Vernon Weber with IJ'ave mark·
1n1 ud memorial service for
~wrence Milhoan.

RACINE - Weekend services
at the Red Brush Church of
Christ on Bashan Road will be
held Saturday at · 7: 30 p.m and
Sunday. at 10 a.m and 6 p.m.
Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. will
speak.· The public Is Invited to
attend.

Mr•.

S&amp;TUBDAY
HARRISONVILLE -

Harrl·

re-

~OPYRIGHT

The
Grange

County Pomona
will be held
Fri.~"" 7:
, at the Salls·
bury
School. The
speaker I will
Samantha
Mercer .. State Grange Princess.
Entertainment will be provided
by Ken a Ward-Bunce and Bob.

ITE~S

SU'i~f'X.

ADVERTISED ITHII'OIJCY-E.ch o f - o&lt;MoniMd llomolo requ.ifed be rMdlly lvllilble '"'•·
1888 ·THE KROGER CO.
AJ D PRICES GOOD
APRIL
11ie In IICh Kroger Storo, IXcept 11 opoclftcaly notld in thio ad. If WI clo Nn outolen 9, THROUGH SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1!¥111. IN G.&lt;u.uoo•MOoldveniled ~em. -will olltr you your - o f 1 - - ' - · when IYIIilble,
·
reflecting the ...,.IIIVinfll or 1
which wllondtlo you 10 PIIIC-the 1dvtrt1Md WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS
~em It the odvertjlld price within 3D cllya. Onlf one coupon wll be occepted per
·
•
~om

PUIChalld.

'

,I

OT

;:r=-=--=a-::.N::o::o::"':'::_:;:"';tl

I

W

ROOFING

1I

PO.IOT.UGLIS
224 E.cwa
MAIN ST.

TilliS~~:?:, ,..

f

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

sYMBBLOF
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless
Round Steak

D

'-"'""-"

dtl&amp;ltll
l'fiUI1I,; L

•

MOilLE•
Ho• PAll ..

2·15-'11·1 mo.

••

.1. rea Gas

HILL FOlD

. .lt. 33 North of

MAsrEIS TUXEDO RENTAl
DIY ClONING SEIVKE
SCISSOIS SHARPENED
USED SEWING MACHINfS

Real Estate

Kroger Deluxe
Ice Cream
%-Gallon

SINGER KNIITING
MACHINES

FAIIIC
3·

insulated. Well and public
water, satellite system and
2.34 acres. Priced in the
$40's. Call Ieday.

SYIACUSf, OHIO
Mold For•un and
DGm•llc VtNd•
A/ C Service
All M.. or &amp; Minor
Repairs

CALL 992-6756
· "DOC" VAUGHN

limestone
Dirt. Sand 8&amp;
Coal Delivered
1,000 Gal. Water
Service

!late MacArthur

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

. '
.'

HAN[! WOVEN
BASKETS
Largo Supply of Buktt
Weavtng Suppli•

Sign up now for Baoket
WoavlngCiuOPEI lOST SAIUR~YS
IOtO 11L 5:00
, . -~~~ • 0111111

992·6855

4-4-89-1 mo.

Whole Wheat EIJow Macaroni
Whole Wheat SheU Macarori
Whole Wheat Egg Noodles
Whole Wheat Lasagna
Whole Wheat Spaghet'i

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

...

·lMI
--

....

"Free E•timat•"

PH. 949·2801
or .... 949-2860

EVENINGS

....

,

&amp; Auociateo

&lt;:UITOM KITCHINI • eATMI
-t:X11NIIYt: RIIIOD.UIIIG
.VINYl IIDINQ aiiOOftNO
•MifAL IUI.DINGI
HOUIINQ. UT. PROJECTI

PUBLfC
RELATIONS

SJNCE 1969.

I 08 High g;..,,.

n. naws

Complete Small
Engine ·s erVice
TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS •
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS,
ETC.

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SEIVIU
I. S. IT. Sl USY
IMITSYIU, OliO
614·6"·3121
Author~ld John
De•e. N- HoiiMd,
Bueh Hog Form
Equpmiont De81•.

DAVE'S ENGINE
IEPAII

lAGLE RIDGE

SMALL ENGINE

NO" 01111 FOI
BUSINESS

Ulllllllt MOWDS

KilO SAWS &amp; 11111MIIS
OIIGOII IAIS, CIIAIIIS
· lYAII Sima CIIITII
Parh &amp; Service On

14111 &amp; . .. St.
Pelootl'llll-1, W.Va.

We Buy Aluminum
con•. Gl•e.
Copper end More
MON•• fll.: hm·6 pnt
SAT.: I om- n lliiooi -·

a-•·

AIMM

Pomeray
Ohi11

Public Sale
8&amp; Auction

1

949-2969 .

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
•MANNIS TILLERS
•INTERSTATE
BATTERIES
LAWN &amp; GARDEN
SUPPLIES

PATRICK H. ILOSSER

AUCTIONEER

CUSTOM BUilT

Se&lt;ond &amp; Georqe StrHt019 George St.)

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

CALL 882·3293- ASK FOR SCOTT SHANK
''We Ruorve Tho Right To Reject AU Bleil."

"At bason,.lt Prictl"

PH. 949·2801
or Its. 949~2860
Day., Night

PUBLIC. SALE

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-I&amp;·IS.IIn

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1989
10:00 A.M.

CARTER'S
PLU.ING
&amp; HEAnNG

LOCATED: 128 Elm Strttl, Racine, Ohio
(Near the Racine Unitld Mathlllst Church)
HOUSEHOLD: Oak dinette set with 4 chairs, nice 3-pc.living room suite, Hotpoint 22.9 no· frost refridgerator~
apartmen1 s1ze gas cookstove. kitchen cabinet, 3-pc.
bedroom suite, Eureka sweeper, small appliances,
pots pans, washers, card table with 4 chairs, Fedders
window air condition unit, book shell, ELco fans, baby
bed, coffee slble, hutch, chest of drawers, etc.
PRIMITIVE. COLLECTABlES, ANTIQUE: Handmade
quilts, comforters, 2-4-posr beds, ~a plain's .ciJair,
marble slab out of lhe Ractne Bank lthe one under the
cage where the money crossed!!.
MISCELLANEOUS: 5 HP Unico riding lawnmower, alu·
minum extlllSion laddet, floor vise, screw jack ste·
pladder, hand tools, etc.

KROGER

Grade A
Larae Egp
Ta.c•.

"CASE PACK" CAFFEINE FREE DIET ,
COKEiiOCA COLA CLASSIC,

uiet Coke
or Coke

SoleM St., lutl..., Oh.
3/31/ll/1

4-1·19·1 mo.

. (MINIMUM . . Sli,OOOI

GaUon

742-2455

PH. 304-428-7245

--- .

SEALTEST SKIM MILK GAL ... $1

.PUBLIC
AUCTION

COHSIGNMENTS WQCOME

BISSELL
BUILDERS

992-6212
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, qhio
1·21-'11-ttn

992-5114

Located Off Bypaaa
At Jet. of Ru. 7 &amp;
143, Pornaroav

U. S. SPRINT

America's only 100~ Fiber Optic Long

Dist-• Network
COMING TO THIS AIEA SOONI

Part Time Job With Network 2000
In Network Mark.ting
Cost '184•• (lncludea tntining &amp; materialo)
BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTATIVE
For more info writo:
Scott Anderson
p; 0. lox 337
Oh. 45783
411/otlt '""'

J&amp;L

INSULATION

Mastic - Ctrtaintlldtt
VInyl Sitll..

SeamltssGuttw

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

525 North Seeond
Middleport, Ohio

Rlpiactllltp1t Windows EVERYONE WELCOME
!jUNDAY lOoQO A.M.
llown lnnlation
SUNDA \' 7o00 P.M.
Stornt 0.. &amp;
WEDNESDA\' 7o00 P.M.
Witttlows
FREE EITIMATEB
Pulor Jemeo E. Ke..ee

•

I

~

•

Olivo,

do•
Rt. 311 Bhoka Bhoppo vl'*'lty·

Lon: Smell fern ..• ......

R-•d. Call 114-...fi. 187...
814-&gt;WI-0481 or 114-448·

llt_,M,

IU~ot.

COmpllle homt

furn ..hlngt. Merlin Wedem~~ter.

114-2·5·5152.

Went to buy·Prlv•t• lot ov.,..
looldng R1c~on CrMk. 0111

114-4411-7114.

W.u:ed to buy : u11d moblt
hoONO. Call 81 ......11-0178.

12 . Situation•
Wanted

Schools
Instruction

RE·TRAIN NOWI
BUSINESS
COWiClE, 829 Jocluoon Pike.
Clfl448-4317. Reg. No. 16-11·
1011&amp;1.
SOUTHEAST~RN

Uaed furniture and hou..,..ld

eppll..,coo. Phon• 814-742: 21
20'18.
•.......... propony. Coii114892-B858.

l 1111 11 11 Vllll:nl
S1:1 V I C~:.

B111ineu
Opportunity

I NDT1CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . I'IIOOmm.,dt thlt you
do b.tsln- wllh P~• you
knaw, 8nd NOT to .-d mo"tr..ou.-. ,._mel untl you

lftvloligoladlho 0 ..........

Help Wanted

Elrn 811trtl mon., torrour ....,.."
w1rdrobl. Avon. Cal lea 114•4a.4882 or C.rol ...._4397.

Donut Aao._ .. - -d
reeume to lox Cia 111. GeiUpc&gt;
lltDaflvTrilllno. 82BThildAvo.
_Clol_llp_:_•_._o_H_4a_e_3_1._ _

a. ..nd lounge wtth 22 tilt
din•. 2 two Mdroom upateks
liP-'"'-"•· Own• h• other
tnt.-. t715.000. N-lablo.

CAl lion ot 114-892·9172.
Rottl butln•tlor- Mklol•
roon. Ohio. Johnton'o Vorlotv
810&lt;1 Ill.. Frenklln). 1·30.._
773-B30Biftw 8:00p.m.

Vtn61g8.-ln•tAout•for..r..
11710. not p&lt;ollt p• ononth.
C11h busln••· ••t•blllhed
rou1e. 3 d-rs I * month. C.ll

114-742-2017.

Own your own IIPP•II or •'-•
110r1, choo11 from : Jtenlportlw.tr, Udlll, Mln' 1,
Chii..-. . . Mot.-nity,l.orgo Site,
l'oltl&amp;

Lltgo mlio • · omol femolo
to good home 1ft
COUntrY. 2 dog hou-lncludod.

814-379-21&lt;10.

0 . . -·Aorotilc. Bri-

dll. Unlllril or kce..orf41 .
Store. Mel oo1or
BNnd
Nlm•: Ul Cllibo&lt;na HotiiJo.
Ch..t, LM; It MIChal&amp;
Forowe, .luolo loy, l.ov~ Clmp
lev•rly tllll1 , Org1nicelly
Grown. Lual&amp; av• 2.000 othn. Or •13. II ant prlol d•·
1 tior P'iclna dl•·
count Otfllm., lhoeltt;tra Retllll

'"**·

t•.

2 • ., hou• c.ts, 1 m .. e Md 1

To good oovntry ho-.
Uttortoolnoct. 81 ... 912·7020. Locol oounuy bind looking lor
.=::..::.::;::.=..:..;.;....:.;~:..:.:.- area mulidlnl ~ &gt;Mnt to
fllvwat bODt Ot n""'•J&gt;IP••· plov. Coiiii~&gt;W&amp;-1822.
Colt 814·7•:z.20.52.
t. .tlo.

The AAA n. . . drlv• tflining
MUit h1n good
driving NOOfd end hiWI had I
v•d Ohio *ttrteft llcen.. I
yeeq. ldltl tor ...~-- \WI
lnltructor.

trtln. au- quoH•iona "''
Ono- old Beegle ·dog. 311"' AAA. 380 Booond A,....&amp;
898-3002.
_Cloll_:.lp_otto._o_H_.a_8_3_1._ _
F- puppl•, 30 ...178- 7829, £MN MONEY Ro-g bookol
130.000/ yr...... _ .......ill
-Y·10119.
· 1111011-117·1000 ht:
6 Lost and Fcllmd
.-g.:z:•~o doilv
1pm-2Pm.
OSPIIZII. 81~
Loot: Smtl molo IO&lt;Tior do.. U&amp;-4040.
'NhttewhhbtiCIIspott.-AnaMn ----......-,---,,..,..-~
to,_...,,. Lolllnvlolntty ol Don LICENSED BOCI.III. WORKER
Jon• Ad. l lll•cooon c.- Echoing MtedDwa A•ldlntilll
""k. If lnfor-n. ~~col C_,•,IIIICFIMRiolooldngto
114-37a.2J()3 or 114-448- 1111•-•tonafell...octeodtl
7151.
-.whom.... both-•
fldlrel rljqU"--''&amp;Int•_.
"""'"'' toiiiOk. ionv-h~MI. ,__
-d ,__ •
dlum - . !omtle doG Found rolor•- to Eaholng IkeApril 10th ol Rt. 124 ......... ·-&amp; J1tW. Union If. A 11-o. 114--23U.
OH 417111 or 011 11 ... tll43141-dova--lal
p.m.
7
Yard Sale

-

...

,._Ill

h.,,

ktrt oplf8don. Downtown

Turn

dotl'tfM'IOCI

Reduo.yourWIIIght- tllle "N.v
Sh•• 0-.: PI"''" Md E·V·
wlte pllll, Awl.ble at Fruth
Ph•ITIICy.

VInton • Bldwtll. CoM
114-388-9295 .. 38a.B119.
Will do bobvtlttlng In my ho-.
Vwy good homo tn d IMniJy
IIW~onment. Clll 114-4411.18.
oft• - • \ nlghllo
aBobrolttlng
..-....
C:lll 114-317·
01111.
tloo.

UI.t llrnitu,. b¥ tt. piiiCI or ~-----W..PIP• lftd plllnting. Ou.Wty

Elav W&lt;orkl EJOCIII_, Poyl A•
eemble pro«rta•t home. C.II for
'
lntcrrn~tlon. 1504-U.I-0870
F,_.Pelr ot Betta~•. 1 mlle. 1 ut. 313.
.
lomllo. 2 moa. old. Coli oltor I. - - - - - - - -

w-

church•. tpeclel occ•lon

d ...lno. before end efttr per·

tnln houotloold lliao ullin.. -ahlp. 20 v....,...
514-74:Z.2&gt;1118.
rl•• t:lil t-304-nl-&amp;341.
Oullta
Pro 19-10 qullta. Air¥ oondtlon.
tlllollCial
Caoh pold. Call 814-99:Z.B857
.. 114-182·2481.

3808

Coil

~~tlill!bte It

18 Wanted to Do
Llvolr-11... - - - - - - - -

Giveaway

Pu:r.ploo.,

n.rtte. Appllationt
thomlin lbar;.

with .. · without

Wll buy or IPP...tl• MVthingl
Antlqu11. fur-. opptl.,_

11

•ltn•· ....

prl. . u.-wlblolor top quol119. Ill 1110. Dv• 250 bnndo
2800 etyiH . 111,900 to
t21.100: lnverrtDfY, Trlllnlng.
Flot-. Alrforo. Cl,..d OtoWI·
Ill• Ole. Can opon 11 cfor~ Mr.
llc:hn- f-10713118-aeoe.
lly thoM normelv priced from

Heal lsi.JI I:
Hamn for Sale

31

Vwy attractive brldl4becroom,
2 b•h. f.wnly room with fir•

pi- formll,.dng. ,_go living
room. 30ft. cult om Dill kh:dten
Clbinlll. ollt wooMork. ftnilh
*«nent, 2 ce o-"ID&amp; lwll

ltndootpMI lOt. 4 mhl rrom
- - Hoopltol off Rt. 311Aiotorbroolo lu-lolon. con
114-......1...
DMIH 3 IR. hau• tar •le.
a..- fin.... Col 304-1711-

8104.

·"·····Galrrpc;Jis···..··· ..
&amp; Vicinity

Call 992·2772

. ·;:;a-·-"'
-Hll_._
.....
.........m
17 ""'• from lloll• off 1M.

11'

_._.

·- - ... ,_ - ...... _,_
Coii1·. .77JI.

....

........... y~ou, . .
. _ . . niaiii • · c.l ...
-

. LUIICH SERVED

~- 118-71a-- ...

RESPONSIBLE FDR ACCIDENTS
OR LOSS Of PROPERn·

AUCTIONDia •

•

....... 304-178-4817

11"'2.8-11827.
glv-oy. I
'!I . eoa 114-,..e-&gt;W77.

or

Mow"''""· Call81.._2118-8261
orl14-4*3t59.
. . . bolngpolct. Coli B1 ... &gt;W83158.
a.nn hou11 c1....~"' Dfflc.,

Mein St.. W.ch for Q...,d
()pen""a wtth chence to win
n.t TV lftd elao • n• VCR.

TOMS: Cash • Cltldt with Preper I.D.
NOT

• Auctlon. Third
114-&gt;WI-3159.

L. MVIDED'B
to olvlllon of IM' 1 Dllc Storll.
Wll be opontng 1000 o1 421

THE EFFEQS OF THE LAT£ CAlliE IIEASE, OilED BY
DAVID AIID lAY IIUSE OF SUIIIIER. WASHIIIDTOII.

,.

Complete houMholdl of lnnltu,. • lnticlue•· Aa.o wood •
ooll heltwt. Swain' I Fwnlture

Announcerna~ts

VISA · MASTERCHARGE

HOWE'S GROVE PARK

HOUSE &amp; DOUBLE LOT ONLYl

floljg)

4

1n d

Furniture 1nd ..,Pti~n.:. br' the
piece or Intire houMhold. Fek

#I COPPBI - ........... 16' I~
#2 COPPBI-........-65' I~
CLEAN AWMINUM
SlEETS ..................... S2' ~~
CLEAN AWMINUM
CAST_ ...................... 4QC I~
AlUMINUM
IEVEIAGE CANS _ .. 50&lt; I~
IIONY
SlEET_.......... 5&lt; to 30&lt; ._
.ONY CAST-· 3• 11 20• Ill.
STAINLISS --.......... 20• Ill.
NO GLASS AT PIESDIT

3

Approprl•• e$.1CIItlon

experi•ce working with chilO.
r1n n~.-y . W• off• good
Jl!l'ori*ISJ condition~ 1nd 1 low
moclilrate NltrY with good be-

TOP CASH plid lor '83 modol 16
111d n_.-er uHd en. Smith
Buld&lt;-Pomlac. 19t1 1111..
Avo., Clalllp~. Coli 81 ... &gt;W822U.

Ju'* Can
318-93111

Arlrlllllllt:P. 1111:11 t:;

PUBUC
IECYCUNG

POdton mw become ,.-m..lnl thlre Ill«. W. neMI • ..ff
nwt• who Clft ct.tlop progr.-na on 1 county wldl ta.ll.
Dul.. lndu•:
•
Pr•lchootltOtyHours.Jedlon
of Chit•.,·• Mllt•llll working
clootng wllh tho public
·

Wanted To Buy

mot.... Col Llny

llubjtd to Ch•p W'dhout

"'•lll•"•llf
Ill•&amp;

992~6506

3/31/81/ 1 mo.

·APRIL 15, .1 ,89
10:00 A.M.
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.

9

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
Paying today
A_pril S, 1989

Leeaa Murphey

Vtr-

Sit . .d Bun, Arbudde 81or1
North ot Butflllo. 0.11 . . fr•
flnt Zdlyt.

Til· COUNTY
RECYCUNG

NO SUNDAY

AUCTION

Kroger
Skim Milk

booking

Fl•~klt

GINWI. CONTiiftOIS
; 1 1• •I •··'BB·tfn

Phone (614) 992-2922

THE
.
BASKET WEAVE

ORGANICALLY GROWN
PRODUCTS

..,d-

985-4t'*l.

hlprt, Ohio

(SOLD IN PKGS: OF 10·11-LBS·)

now

W.Ye. Stitt Ch1mpion Aw::·
don•. Ride PetnOn.llc.nt_, in
0to1o
BookJng
Auctiono. 30...n3-17ae

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG 8&amp; REPAIRS
PHOIIE DAT 01 EVENINGS

PLOUTZ REALTY, INC•.

530 Rlcltllnd Awenut
Athens, Ohio 45701
Business (614) 594-4211
Rlslillta (614) 594-8183

64 Misc . .Merchondlse

44

Ctll Millin W-ov•. Auction... UC*t_. &amp; 8onded In
Suto of Oflfo, Uqu-lono.
f•rM. . . . . .. .m:iqu., etc.
II ... Z41J.IIB2.
.
AUCTIONEER

CHESTO, OHIO

Pomr.roy, Ohio 4.5769

992

In a lend whera1hare's
life beyond dallh.
The Oouglll Circle
Foml

Fresh Silver

llltlnt untl June 30. 1989.

4/ 8/ 89/ dn

Spreld

laet broath.
But we'll havo 1 family

8

Clorogollolo. April 8,7,8ot 2$23 flolnt,._...Job&amp;orvice.22B
llxth II .. Point Pl-orrt. bl-niO;OOAMWid3:00
PM. Ao&lt;1 12 0&lt; coli
t-30 ... 344-IIOM oolleco.
8
Public Sale
Chll*•' 1 Ll.. •ltn neect.d.
8&amp; Auction
T1mpor..y 1..!11-time pa•itiDn

"-'• Aw, two old I d.,s
dodta and mile tt ......

rltna.. Phone 304-273-3447
Rw.-.w~ W.V1.

We Haul and

ered o'er her:
Aa aha elowly drew her

514 East Main
992-6910

.'

from • fr• room ..d bo•d
&amp; Vicinity
- - - c o l .. d·d-11
.. ---------------- ................ . c.-a Spencln_t IIDWMC8 .,d
-lnflll. Ill lloy Poult¥ ot tho

MARCUM

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

OHIO VAWY BULK FOODS

19

...._. ..PfPraasiinf"' ...

Edwin 'Nint•

HAULING

We Accept Food Stamps

Assorted ' $
Pork Chops .. tb.

1 ltla. Furnltu,..: -.. ... c::hl•-. Dlpt. of llbor now •ccwtlna
bllbv clot'-: microweve. 2 •d lllpliwllonl from young min
two tenthl mil• out At. 141
•d wo"*' for wuolt'MIII In
Job Carp. Mutt 1111 ~-- tt.
tv• of 18 .,d 21 , out of 1Chool
or work Meny trld• to choote

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.
Call AI 742-2328

NIASE Cart Hied M1chenlc

aWn.
lt...

lnoldo. Thuroctav. Fd""" Wid EARN WilLE YOU LEARNlolurdov, Aprl 13th. 1•th. RIEl VOC. TRAININCl.• U.I.

LIMESTONE
HAULED

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

ALLEN'S

II AC.E FARM on quiet
road wrth easy access to SR
33. Sold quickly lasl time.
Don't let it slip away again.
Call to see it Ieday!

IN LOVING MEMORY
OF
ELSIE G. CIRCLE
FE8.11. 1920
APR. 12. 19B7
The engel of death hov·

'•-oy

992·:Z:ZIS4

LOG CABIN on SR 33. Fully

In Memoriam

·

SHOP

II 0 .... llal..

Bring in this ad for an addltiHal 1 0'%.
savings off of everyday loll' prices.

•

c

...,llttw,......

otonn - - - - - - : - - : - tor 2 chlldrtn
. . . 4 • 1. '"'• .. .,. home.
Woct. Thur. 12th •d 13tli. 2 Dl¥1hlfl. ..... lvto: ... C·22.f'i.
m••· HYHI Run. RllhlaraHn&amp; JltMIInt, WV 21650 ~ c.e of
Ciotto.. hou-td. h•dw•o. tho lloQiot•. c.m,. c ...1111 .....

DAY 01 EVENING

SIWING MACHINES

a liHie hard wor~ lhis home
can see the best ol yours.
Current~ income ptcducing
but could be nice family
home. P1iced accordingly.

ore·.

NATURAL FLAVOR

ALTaAnONS
SINGEI AND WHITE

SEEN BEIT£R DAYS but wnh

3-10·'11-1 mo.

.

bowing bell, -

doOI"'. lott mlec.

985-4222

Gaup s"::~ Only
Slri tlyl E

to ••n a IItt. . .,,.

monw'l' Or woukl you •• to

IDrina "'•· 17 v•n •~»­

c-·•
...... TaV!oto
614·1CS·95Si

,.

12

6: 30 P.M •
r...,,,,.. Cholet

Jult want

hi'*'

Cer!Hiod

S7.50 PO TOll

•

EVElY
SAT• NIGHT

Help Wanted

A,.... 13th llld 141ti.- Hopo boil! Col Morllyn Wo••· 311~
Rd .• Chtlt•. Trucokt-. 11r-. n:uea.

CHESTER, OHIO
INSIAWnOIIlND SEIVIU OF HElL
ENEIGY EFFIOENT HEAT PUMPS, All
CONDITIONING AND 95"!. EFFICIEf!fT
FUINACE.

lathaM lulldlnt

11

hare 1 w•1 Ellhlr '"V Awn
c.. hllp you bet
you e11t

.

GlWl CO. AliA

¢

T••·

992-2198
M lddloport,

STONE

2

SEbiCE

hHtw c••· Wa can
Clho acid lloil and rocl
out ••tan. We aho

992-7479

DEUVDD &amp; SPIUD

Fres
Asparagus th..

p4

Wa can r~ and n·
cora radiatan and

•Mobile HomoPart•
··-.Mobile Home
Rental a
•Lot Rentela

614-915·4180
.,

I

I

reunion

Pound

4·11· I mo.

I

YilT IIASOIIULE
HAYI BniiiKI

.LJ'-'Pwest Price
....... Years''

. . •
Ext. 4051

4-10-'lt-1 mo. pd.

FREE ESTIMATES
Talco the pahl out of
pahltlllti.Let- do
It for yeti.

'

1-lb. Pkg.

a

949·.2 168

UNDA'S
PAINnNG

. , I

1----...

existinJ mortpae. ...
No rehnancin&amp;. A
Mort•••• .Consultant
Service
C II 1 800 422 9010

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

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

Count On Kroger For. • •

Kwick Krisp
Sliced Bacon

....... pon;e-;oy:··.. -· .. ··

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

UCINE
FilE DEPT.

Save thouSinds, on

Gutters
Down·spouts

51111. 1.1. h4S P.M. · 1
1001 PIIZI
2 H.D. FREE wilhcouJ1911•d, l
puo:h• of min. H.C. l'lck· I
11e. Lilli• 1 coupon ,., cus- 1
tC!II* por bit110 •sslon.
I
Wt Pay sso.oo '• Ga!na I
Onrt11 Ptopltl65.oo I
Ptr Gaolt 2·3-11• 1
,uL •oos.u

/'

.
·ow· rtces.
n

REDUCTION
SYSTEM·.

NEW - IEPAII

I

MIEIIOI-EXTEiiiOl

SERVE 'N' SAVE OR

Ohio

Servi
ffered
;:.=...=.=L=w=rit=_.=i1i==M=on:=G::A:GE~rr;:~G~U~N~$H~O~
.

sonvtlle Lodge 4ll, F . and A. M.,
will have Ita unual lnapecUon In
the muter mason degree at 7: 30
p.m. Saturday.

.

..•.,;.;...:,;,.; " ,..··.1'"''?

.'

of Dorothy C&amp;laway, tOWIIIhlp
clerk.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township 'l'r!llleetl will
meet In special -•lon Thunday, 7:30 p.m.• to dllcllu dust
control and other matters. The
meeting will be held at the borne

12.1989

1989

Ohio

Sentinel

*"'"

CARNAHAN

~~--·--mJ..11".~011

6f.-.Mt·I7GI .

'

•.

II

"

I

�__

..

_....._~

~· 10-The
31

·-

Hom81 for S1le

LAFF-A·DAY

001/ERNMENT SEIZED Yoh~

.... tiOO. , _ - -pluo . luyoro Oulofo. Ill
IOtUa"J.IDOO Eld. 1 -IOIIt.

..... c.....,..a-v......

GOOO

UIED APPUANCU

w...... .,... ...............

'
0
0

... _

_ ...... A ....... -

.

71

--·0_. .,.__

...... -

... _

t

114--ZIIO.

.,,..,d

- ........ _
h-- m---..

..... ·-· · - IZII10
1718. O.k noo """' 1371.
H - 1100 ..d ........

lnttra~m

ll101 -

2

lnformllio" ollll14-t48-2t30
or el4-112-32e4.

~:,='.l*..."::"'"Ho:".\'!'r
llood oond. 304-773-1181 .
3 boctocrn ,.,ott. trrlood eo-.
oixtronioa Mo-lrrookA~
tlo" ctll oltor e,oo *'d wk.,cll 304-1711-743&amp;
3 btctoomL 2 b.tt.. ful tlnlhld
~-- - . r - .. d
control olr, IWIIO. t..ood yorcl
2414 Mt. Vwnon Awe. Pt.
Fl . . w . PrieM on lnlpection

304-1711-1774.

~ 4111- 1971or lnlor_.,n.

I r""::'lhou:t!:."'to'! :O~:l
lbeltoomhou~•C.mpConl_,

•oo. '14.100. Noocir ....... ~
~4-8711-2121.
I 911 2lx 58 HOUIO, 2 cor
D!l'll&amp; 3 br, 2 bllho.
room. ..,,,., tllr, Ml longth
dock. outbuldln&amp; """-· 1
lett on Creb Creek Rd .
UI.OOO 304-8711-3044.

COT

,;,t•S make him

44

7-old.3--brtdi-W&gt;yi
totol ol-~ -ah otylo homo,
.,..,_ thnrughout I .....
fM.-:1 1n
y.rd with d.._

'**

La.-. . 7 rnl• from Halz•

Hoopltol on lit. 1e0. A,.. ...,
Morch I , t310 p• .-11. 11
lnf••od. CAll 814-ZIII-13 11
IJoc:klonl oftw 7p.m.

'*''

3 bedoom houll. buNt In
kkoh., U25 montl!
ctep.
ook. 131 Hudoon St.. Mlddl•
port. 814-112-3111.

firepfece.

Fult, fur . .hM 1•110• lilt• AI

Nlwlw l'ediGDfllt.cl • C8'p•ed.

I :!a 70. 3 IR .• 2 t.l botho. , _
c.p•. HouH tvPII window ..
un.-plnning. Prii\Od lor quid&lt;

DIP. Atoo3boct_,trll•. C.R
11+44&amp;1111. 44&amp;-1810.

- ' • Fon.'sMobilaHom•Pafk.

!'loor locto, 2 BR, Rot. I [lop.
Recl'ed. t121/ mo. Glrden
Coli 814-441-7714 or
143-2144

2 lr mow, home b r.rt. Call

1ft• Bpm 114-317-0181,

CUllom Mlnn• moble ho,.,
Wot"--, dr;or. lfaiiOr. rotrlotor, 1• t.rnoco. t4100. Col
114-251-1218.

EJC, loatlon In ctty. Off street
pork".a ~ • ""'- Co"
-··
...,..
•
8!4- 11- 4111·

1971WindocrMobloHcrna o1
.. Ktrla. 2 IR. l•ge Nwlng •
clnine .... dedl. on blec*top
rood, 10 nolnutoolrom Holzor
Ho1pital. Set· "'I on•gertfltld
lot with storage building.
'IZ.IOO. Coll .work 814-245130&amp; er - · · 245-51&amp;1.
198BBroldmooremobllehorM.
1-72. 3aR.2tJIIbdlw.aaklng
fiOYoll. Coli 114-446-9301 b•
IW- &amp; I I pm.

e... o nioo, 14rtl0 2 lA, CA.
prlwote tot, hoopltof. t2&amp;0
pw monttw, no petl. C.H
II. • •• ·-o

175-2949.

Ollllpallt. l,~441-1171.

Str. . Middleport.Ohlo, I .,d2
boct_, turnlotral opto, rotor. , _ roquirod. 304-882-2188.

Uood ....., _ _ W • - dry. .. - .... rofrt. .- . . ......~
MVI ov-. K8n' • Appll ..-.
217 E. 2nd It , Pomoroy.
114-"2·&amp;13e or 114-18113581 .
.

be*olor.t •pt h Hen dlrwan,
oolt 304-8711-1972 ollw 1 :00
PM.
.
'

Conw boOth tv1» din.ltt wtth
tollfe .. d mlldolng oloorr. colt
oft• 1:00. 304-1711-3432.

Nn'l.

. . .ch

82 Sporting Goods

.,..,mem:,

utllti• pllld MOIPt tlldridty ,

etectrlc. 2 bedroom. flriiPiace.
Eltc. Cond. *10.500. 30 ... 11913141 . ·
1971 Elcono. 141&lt;70. 3 bod
room~. 1"h b•t.. n.w -..nity.
· underliih'tlng. pordl.buildln_g_on
1 rentedlol, t10.1500.00. 304-

Onebedroomllrnilt.tapt.wry
nloo .,d ct.... ..,Ito ortly, no
- , phono304-1711-1311.

g. lm. II r-•311.. 1100
llroclouo itvtn&amp; I .,d 2 bod- ....
room
•t Vll~ge A... II; f'j.l. .-t37&amp;., 2 wit.
with lglltt-tlll. CoN
1\bnor ~d Rlv. .~ A.-rt· troll•
menta ln 1 Middleport. ftrom II 4-441-7130.
.112. Coli 114-112-7717.

-·dot...

1980ihorwood Pork 1... 70. oH

Uoid living room t.rnlturo. he.
Col Corbin 1 Furnlturo. 111 leoond . . ..

•-g.

. . :uoooo. lo.. - - l o n
•olobl&amp; Pl-o coli 304-5711·3473 ...

l21&lt;44 I I . Kirkwood 2 BA.
I• h... oloo -plnnlng.,d
pcroh. Vorv aood condtlor&gt;
114-4411-017&amp;.

morolnfarmotlon Doll 304-1123711. E.O.H.

2 bo•oom Apto. foi ,...t.
Carp-. Nloo
U.. ndr;
tocl•too "'""..,.. &lt;=- el4912-3711'. EO H.

olumn-Go-ll&amp;l!l'gollolng
room. tln•hld

oft•

10 ln. oouch • ch• for • • :

2 beG'oom. furnh:hld. R«nodolocl liO!"' pt.,ground, forgo
rrotlo. Soarrlty dopoolt. CAll
II 4-992·N81 oltor lp.m.

992-111~.

,..d.

2be.oomfurn"hed•.-t..,.,.,
Allutlltl..
*210montll.no
more ltwl 3 ,_,pta. llom.roy.
514-112-2141.

Buv or Soli. lllvorine Antiqu-.
1124 E. Moln - · Pom. .y.
Houro: M,T,W IOo.m. to lp.m.~
SuroUy I to 8~. m . 814-1122128.
Large coin oo..ction lnd l•ge
PIP• mon• collection. lilt

rtMonebleofftr. Ceh 114-MJ.
2101.

3 roomo \trod bato. -.rntotral.

Am ftoor. Privet• .,..,.,oe. No . 64 Misc. Merchandise

polO.

Coli ~14-149-2213.

- - - - - - - --

oddln9 _,.,._

Undoo wood
phono 304-119-33 2!

56 BuHdlng Suppllea

to( rent·..,.,.... or month.

9tlrtlng tt t120 I mo. Galla
Hotol-814-4411-91180.

F...-hl r'o om t711 month. AI
. utlltl• l*d.
bill h. 111
S.mnd Aw. Cll'l 114-44•
2bochom,IIOOdopoo • . 11110 3141.
mont!\ in&lt;*rdoo
pldl
14'· 114-182-312
.
141&lt;70. 2boctoom. ~~ooniy,
no....._ Callll14oll2-3328 or
814·•2-8722 or 1:00 p.m.

lh••

i.

COncnte bloabor_...,
_ _ ell
_.......
ci·Qelt
Ho Block. Co.. I 2~ Plno
•
Oolllpollo, Ohio. Ctll 114-4412783.

.a.: 100 ,.....
atd,wtHoolllloroort.E_I.,.
cond, onelnah ttiolc ...,.and
timlrono, 304-179-17111.
S.rn wood fur

58

P8bforS•Ie

Groom .,d

.,pply -p-l'ot
Oroamlng. All br . . .. . . AU
otyloo. lomo l'wt Food DHior.

Julio- Ph. 114-441-11231.
Droaonw,nd Colt., ICMtnol.
Porolal .,d 11om. . .,d Him•

,..,..,c.

2 bect'oom treH•.
requred. Routh Lana Ch•tWa

w .ve. fult;' fur,.hed. Wlehtr
and dryer, 1w-cond. 304-773-

1918.

o..m..
purrol•-

AKC -mao Shop"--d pupo.
Block • - - - · .olt•'4pm.
. . . .Ctiiii4-2411-•U

Floh T.,li. 2413 , _ . , . Awo.
PlooHnt. 304-1711-20U
IOgolootup t14.11.,~ lOp

-

~mptc•

•u 21.

-~

57

Mu1icll

i

304-773-5983.

33

Farms for Sale

OHIO FARM· 219 A. .. rtoco.
At. 141. II mi. lromlloMipatio.

n . . AacaoonCo. Ptc . tpprt:~t. 10
A . bottom. ro•ina crOI)tlf'ld. Trt'

Pk, HouH. 2 Wnt. out buMclng,
Nrll wot• drntod .,d oprlnG
*110.000.00 13041988-343"-

O.J . Mila Rd.- 2 woodtd

bUidlng - - ApprOII. 2 oet•
,. each. Cal 114-245-95815 eft•
1:30PM .
18 ...-•17 mil• from Hoben
off 1~11dctop rOIId. Nrlll
gond. 1115,000. Call
I -IIIF?"122.

wM•.

10011300 lot. N.G. &amp;Iota Coli
II,. 317· 7190.
ApproiC .

11h flat ac:re•-

Rookoorin• Rd. Good l_.lon.
241&lt;44' bulclng. Col el4-982en4.

44

~~-""" "'....,. n.-.oo.

I411Wooloilol• •211.00. 22
llgrotn ...,_
Altn
IOodoood. L.l . ...... 30417.2111.
.

noo.oo.

77 l'ontloo • - • -

llotltotlo • tlly do Ill. O!rtl- 1 - - 10 ...d _ ... 1.
Mike..,_, Callseua•t••· 3\11
HP '71. Col 1 1 4 ' - -

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, &amp;31 Jodloon
Pille from t183 a mo. Walk to
ohop ond !MYioo. 11 4-4-tl2588. E.0 .H .
_,w~:.,_,.

...dll·2

lAs. . 11h b .. t., CA. ,
hweetw. diapc.al. private encloe.t patkJ. pool. plafground.
w.c •. .wet"• • tf'l•h Included.
Stlftin11 It f 289 , . mo. C. II

el ... 3f7· 7110.

Downtown 1 BA , IPI. niWIV
redeOOt"Med, c.rpet, complete
ldtdoon. AC. Porking, !'lo pMo.
Dopooit. C.ll 114-441-0131 .

2 8R .

llcholalllc lpOtll
Ametlca (0:30).
Cll Entlllllt'.mem Totttghl

(!)

:t GOT A JIRTHPA'(

Un--.r•-. .-.--.-IMEMINT
WATIIIPIIDOI'INQ

e (IJ UIA TodaJ

'-AFP fFOM TtfE
fi!EINCA(tNATION .SOCIETY..
THEY tNIStf Mf
/IIA.NY tfArPr ~ET'u~N.S. .

!
i

ClUIIIIy ,...... •••

'lloo-LittloC'*r.to-. .oln
"""'
10117
·......
__
., CH, Dlllo.
116--1711. I.Mtnotlrttoor1
Thor . . bo "-"' I zo 1 - ·.,dor tul
lamlts .froM lohllohtar,

ft..--.
e-.
Ploioto • loipplloo

voa•,r.&amp;•
• - .. •• ,.... ftll
retell. SunthlneM t20,.r:l*e
Ken •. Ed'•

-loor tO

...,.. llook. Ha _ ... Col
816-441-1 Ill

Fruit

• Vegetables

DAIIIY fAIIMIIII
Yool - - _ . , . "f'onn
- h " oolv• 10-111 Ia Helot- 3-7 dwo ettl II 814241•18.

pl-

Gr~~no

ltrr .211'17.

Clrl 11+1141-

e

• •••••

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

Tanzania's Serengetl
National Park and 111
environment. D
·
1111
D Herd T1mo ott
Plan8l E1nlt Jea~~e learns
about dating and saves a
woman from a dangerous
-llaaon. C
e tD MOVIE: llardbod'- (A)

e

wortl-...

1177 Dlcll-o - · Jofwo
A. Jolin. Col 114-. .2-7212.

.

1111 loiok ..., -~~. . . . . .
n- ropolr. Ctll 816. .2-2311 .

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

'H - · ~ n.zoir.lfll.
PhoJio 104-171-11".

1117 -too-dAm turtro.
... 00000. 304-n.-- al•
. . a:Oo
-.,.......,..·.:.
· -· . . , . . . . - - - 18771-IINtl, _ , , _ ..
310 ..""• ookli!o ti,IIOQ.OO.
ID.,.oof 2:1nd ploano
304-17• •20.
Uood ..._ _ Jll . , .
. . _ . . . 304-n.-IIOQt.

Hou•
OR lri
IICA.
-Col
·
GE.
-oltnl
Jlplll.
304-1'111-2. . . ._.., ... 4 . .
1414.

llofOfV or ..... tool -,._

_ _ oo....,..odoomo""'.
PUmp . . . . . . . d ...... 3041111-1102
R DN'I APPUMC! I EAYICE,

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

houH coli IIIY.... I QE, Hat

!'Oint. "'• .....

dry. . . . d

· - 304-1711-2311

.I'VEer'OT

I'VE AL-WAY5
,WANTIED 10 1-1'11/E

1183 Ctuy 1ler I cl•••
• , _ 00. 304-1711--

A
PARROT.

A PARRor.

BIGrDEAL.

1111 lloodo I 2000. loodocl
Coli lt4-"2-ZI22 or II 4112-21•3 Wllllntt efter
I:OOp.rn.

2 .... Dodp ,.,
••__
hod _ ... ~
lrydnullclfllllo.
mil•. IJIUflent oondltlon.
UIIOQ Coii114-141-IIDI.

-

Motile Touato
-..,.c..,...,
.

TanG.Im cllc, mow-er .nd two

64

Hay • Grain

M..od hor.- .....

Col

• I "'441- I 771 .

BARNEY

82

I GOT A

CAIITIII'I P.-.NO
ANDHIATING
C•.:~'..••~rth .,d Plno

-···Ohio

,

FER YE,
PAW!!

Phono 11+-1111 or II+ ·
44.4477
.

73 . v• .,.. 4W.D.

84

Electrical
• Rlfrlger1tlon

BERNICE
BEpEOSOL

Far I•
1114 Hondo Nllht Howk

61 Hpuaehold Good1

cr .....-· ....... . . . . .k-""""'- ,C\':".::-.:.:..
=
.......
.
.......
--hod . .. . ,. ..........
--""'Col.,...._,_
-" -- ""•
................
-----·
=-=
"'""'.......,.,
.............. -. ..... Cettnlr:m•
......... , _,Ill ..........

,

IWAIN

AUCTION • PUIIMTUII! II
Olivo It,. Wlpollo.

NEW-,.._--.&amp;...._

1110.-

otorthtl· til. lloeflooro

Dfolrftf, I Nnk Col 114--4411

UIID·~.-~•••o.,.

JIll • . , . . - IIICitlll- Pwtlllfrld ~· 1 111. •MO.
noo • - .... -1111.,

"iiiiitt~Wjbl
11 ...... • . ..
.
. . ... .. I1..........

lioo ..... -

.,..._

·3001-- Ooiii6-441-UJO,

... ~

"'1 ...

f:.".,:.-,.. ' IY . .

- - Col·l-1111, .

ltto. ....

c.,.•~11ifi'ia
..,,.. ~.,.,-

Ari-IRI • . . . . - - . -

lor . . . .

Col

__,_7DOoc. •· ceon lt"-•7-DI71.

.. - ·

-

..

Avo. Gq1all.

H.

• -127

tlrtu
3ttl

l'llr ...., . Kit I 33 !CI400.
.,. · - Col . , .

"*'HU.

l:-.ft,,_tr.=--.,.
--li ......... -:=a:.
R • R -'"'''·
· -lllllllediiC•
- ,__
Olllenta.

1.-- _.._....,_
......
...
.
.
;"~····---­
ll?t-'2111 .. II+

~-·· w...

Moulltlt-

Criilirli'f..ft-. ...

17 upi!OI...,,

Aprll11, ~In the ywar 8llllld II iookl ll&lt;e you Will

larQit -aral """j"' objaOII-. Af.
lltougll - h mliy not be at1afnetl. you
nMIIIIH&lt;ef)l to do- with lite ono lhal
llfflrlllte gru- btMIIII.
, ..... 11-Aprtl11) " you ...
-tv protecllve or too restrictive of

rao..tn your Charge tOday, your m'ea·

- · a w l l l l o l l l t l i r r - ...

·c.....

01111111.

,.,.. ..... - - OOttlfl
In lhe ttnli1. Arr.,

11'111 younelf lo I btrlfrday gift, Send lor

' your ~~h predlotlitnl lor the

nice.
SCORPIO (DoL 114-Nov. 22)11

might be
wise today to temporarily shelve lash
or aoolgnmentil you don't enjoy doing.
When your mood chongoo you'll be for
more elfecllve doing lhe umo job. IAGITTAIIIUIINo¥. 11 Deo.ll1) Envy
or jttalousy muotn'l be permitted 1o gain
the upper hond today 11 someone you
love_,.. lo be paying more ollentlon
nancially. This Is a !18nsltlva area where 10 anolher than 10 you. Keep your emomllhepo could occur.
·
tlonl In check.
CANCEII (Juno I1..Julr 21) 9tttve 10 be CAfiiiiCOIIN (Ilea. ......... 11) Minor
dtptomotlc ond loleranl In any clullngo dllleiet- bel a n you and your malo
you -Willi ... .,_ today. Allhough COilld tum Into aomet1o1ng rartow torithe .,_ ..., be wrong, lhla " ""' IJW· Dill today
1011 wtto atgne the
not you.
be 11t1 one 1111to 1ttrr11 to rev upDon'l
the
LIO (..., 2J.Afll. 21) Todty you mlghl
sectelfy , _ t haYing 10 do IOIM!hfng -~ADUAIIIUa (olen. 211 ...... 11) Today II
for anotiWt who you'H fool l•lftlklng un· you - requlrtra 10 be of ..,vroa lo ....
roeaonlll* requesls or you. Don'l mak1 Oltow, dtln'l do II In • . . , 111M tolllellhe
an Issue o1 ~ i~lhis peroon hu helped reclptenl IIIIOw your ' - t lln'1 Ill II.
you In the put
Y~N~aas Jttt•t•wou•aaa atnwent .
'VIRGO (Afll. 2J.Iept. II) A lrlerttl o1 NOla eM • Mr ._ • 11 llllght
yours who 1111• to keep confidential not ptDCiuae .......... ,., wltiGII you
mtgltl . ,...,., _,you today H you Uk
hope" you~~.,,
100 many ~ . . . . . . oSubdue you've
r lflllrl WIIWI. Ayour OUtloelly. , ,
en. llmpltllf!Oiogy will be 11r IliON
LIMA(...... n-o.t.ll) You might nol elleellft.
be In roo 11rong • Pllllllon 1odty- n

peyc-.

If----

....-In

--·

43 Golf
tournament

DOWN
1 Chance
I Exist

.·

3 Sun. talk
4 He played
Emile Zola

I CoU
I Unyielding
1 Conatel-

-'
· , _ __.__.. _. - - r

lstJon

--

..._...,

,.

I hvorlte
• Dutch

"

..

·'

comm1111der'll hr+---il-+--

concem
32 Subject
33VIIIIt

desert
H"Do 1 8 -,

I do"
400ne of the
kln&amp;doms '
41 Sllnll)'

•

..
0 •

'

denllll
' 41Spurn

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOIU-IIeft'a ... tewerlllt:

4111

A:I:YDLBAAllR
leLONGFELLOW

•·.

One letter . . . for 11111111er. In UU umple A Is Uled
for lhe tine L'a, X for lhe two O'a, etc. Sinlle letters,
aiMb opbea, lhe leror&amp;ll• ad f011111tlan ol the WGids 11'1 all
hlnll. Eedl da1 the eDde leUen ~ndlfterent
ClftFIOQUOn
t-Il

~OOJ.Il
.,..."' Vlnnle
and Mc:Jr..; Ill lite lriR..for

Ntwqul.":
eo
tte•.

lu&lt;:c 1VMe

=of,....,
....
c..,
11rGO(I) A I at
GllwnlniNawa

1tld01

H XOAHD

t ......

XOAHD

•(J) • • •

ICIIrttld In

r.:r:'!Molc OMit 110111

A'HICQL

==::.r:=
Klllultl;::-

liz

.•

ao Battle

ln-ettt lOOk 81 how
Mlneapolllltn trec:ome one
of .... htppael pllcu lo be '"
lhe -'«! of pop rnulic.

•u
! ~ ....

tl09832

etc.
li8Th;yme
or basil
at Born

vtolet-1;1
CDNI•• 'lh
(J) MIIWIIIIIDII lound Take
an ofllllalend oocalionally

n bait.

.,

.3

notu

OlllglriLtga'- Dr.
Chldway's career Ia
lhroetaned; Chris daahll
with Dr. Chaun. Q
(J) Ladlaa Plo louular'• Touo
Lttgue •·•-•••
Cll • (J) Cltlnl a-It ' .
Morltn l.ulher Klng'l
auualna11on aparke racial

(I),..,
cpmes lo negotlallng agreemen1s.
'Don'tlmpulllvlfy say ya8 to something
wllhOUt thinking II 1hrough just tO be

•u

EAST
19 2

section

e (2)

year ahead by mailing SI 10 AslroGraph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Ctelleland, OH 44101-3428, Be
sure to a1a1e your zodiac otgn.
TAURUI (Aprtlzo.Mer 211) Bring II out
lnlo lhe open loday II aomeone you care
aboullt.os done something lhal his hurt
you. There's a chance the offender
might be completely unaware ol llt.o
lnfriCflon. ·
.
GEMINI (lbf 111-Juno 211) Continue lo
exerciH your vory bell judgment In
mailers thai are meaningful 10 you fi-

WEST
.AKQJ 108

21 Newspapers,
'IV, radio,
lr+---'1-+-

10:00 (JJ 700 Cltllt

74
71 AulD'~

Q

;~

... zoo.oo. 304-n.--.

..

'

It To
31 Meek
defell!le)
ahelt.er
aa P.trtotic
II Thin l•yer
commune II Condemn . · (!rOUp
18- carte
II Whirl
II~ a4 Chemk:ll
II .Finlt
lllslet
liCtor
. .mx
appelrii!Ce II River
17 Morally
al Knowtna
21 Fr. premier, embankment neutral
(sl.)
Pierre I 1 Relldence II Hindu Utle 37 Bribe
14 The Bard's 18 Be oluae II OctOber's 88Jmltlte
river
II Fish speer
atone
H Desire
lll fllghway

e

. . . . . opt. 3 -.rn'od. -mo I

Efll-01 opt. ldt~ for I
pnon.• , .... honw below
JU.houJOI.diiUJOI,AC. tSIOo t - o v - , ..... CA.
mo. Col 306-171-5104 or ...... 1181. Col • 4-441-0331.
171111t.
'
·-ofD&amp;quiol,21g. ...
llllhouJOI totolod ' .... - · 1111- ........... , .
a •• . Col 11...-.Mtl. ••
.....
- - Collt6-441-1117.

aecy or

ChampiOnship from Aflantlc
City, NJ· Fran Crl.ml v1 Jean
Balluku (R) ,
(J)
(I) llobetl Oullttuma
Edward's plans are brown
when Ann's ex-huabttnd

ONE!!

4-12-81

•As

tQJ

(Nixon's

ReiiOfiS International 9-Ball

TH' RIGHT

1114 Dlteun C1raw1n

41

Lelltte, e.g.
14 MeMn -

1111 Night Court Roz
lelia heid'over heels for
Christine's fonnerly
Imprisoned pen pel. Q
Cll e(J) Coatch Haytlen
reHnts Kelly's boyfriend
attenda' toer birthday diMer.

(J)

I PICK

1111 Slid • Flrtlllz.-

dryer,
........
Dop. roq'od.
Col

home
13 Kldd or

M'='.2 3rd Annual

IOODYII

IODACIOUS
SURPRISE

IOO.M•...·o--nForro,
'"· 31. 306-117·2011 1:00 ..
12:00dflr.

,For Leaee

Ill Lima's

NICola's beet friend develops
a queen sized cruah on

Ground ohol - n ti.DO ,_

49

II Contour
10 Space
11 Wu
lenient

e (2)

dtVOtced mother.

WMkendl.

tl711omo. CoH 304-e711-e104.
1711-8318. 1711-7731.

ACROSS
1 flook

,. e D Jalca And T1Mo
o"T::.,~..... LJYOrr
&amp;.~:!:'~
c.\rJal
(NR) (1 :30)
8:30 e (2) 1111 My Two Dad•

1M
,._..
.._
--~
_ Col ... 304-1711lntorfo.
7!37. II~ I ._ 10 'A, Porlnt
.. - . w. Vo. 211110.

1.::-:- --

low ltoy . . . .
21 toro wit~
-• 304-. . . 2271 · - '71-hofft......... _
oood. _,_ 306-17117112 lift• 4:00PM.

....... d -. f -

NORTH
US43
.J9765
tK5

by THOMAS JOSEPH

mind and nature of
conactousneee. Q
(f) Ametlcan PllljhouN
Teeneger grapples with life
over 1he summer with his

............. 306-llll-34211.

". ''

CROSSWORD

~~ Mind Examlna1he

IMiaJIII oe, HW edlll:loM. OW·

I 118 GMC plokup tnrolc. Col
II 4-2411-1200.

81 Ferm Equipment-

woy pbNo lor Formol Coil
........ Coli 114-2511-11874 er
2111-1112.

8:00

.,

boobt01'8. 8oUJ are pubJJ$Jted by Ph11rw Boolw. ·•

1:30 Cll e (IJ Heed of lite Clan
Sarah is assigned to be
T.J.'s peer counsaror. l;l

,_.oull CIIII04-171o1331.

III

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

.J9742
Aggressive ·bidders have to play · .K63
their cards well or they become quickSOUTH
.ly ostracized from pOlite bridge society. ln today'sdeal South really bad lO
· •AKQ108
t A7 6 4
right to hang his partner by bidding
.Q 105
slam alter North had carried on to
five hearts. South, of course, was hopVulnerable: Both
ing for more high cards in North 's
Dealer: South
hand. And, truthlully, either the queen
of diamonds or the king or jack of
Well
Nortla East
clubs extra in the North hand would
4•
Pass
have provided a reasonable play for
5•
Pass
slam.
Pus Pal\S
West led two rounds of spades .
South ruffed with the ace of hearts and
Opening lead: • K
played the queen of clubs. West covered wilh lhe king and dummy won tbe L------------1
ace. A spade was ruffed with the king
of hearts, and the heart 10 was over- diamonds . Meanwhile declarer, si~ce
taken by the jack in dummy . Dummy's he did not see anybody throw away tbe.'
last spade was ruffed with the heart club jack. had nothing better to do ·
queen, and the heart eight was over- than keep three diamonds to the ace ·
taken by dummy's nine. Declarer now and hope for the best. Sure enough, the
led our the remaining hearts ffom seven of diamonds became· a winner,
dummy, throwing a club and a dia- tbus ensuring that South would continmond from his hand. On the last heart ue overbidding lor the rest of his days. .
Ja,. J•coby'l botHc6 ~Jllcoby on Bridre " and ~
from dummy, East had ro come down
to three cards. In order to preserve the "JIIcobyM C.rd GIIIIIH'" (wrjfltft wirb ltis flltMr,'
jack of clubs. he reduced to only two tM I''' Ostrald JM:Oby) •re no w •vailable 11t

finannce (NR) (1 :40)

,..., ,... Trtrromln• -

..' -.

PRINT' NUMBERED LETTERS IN
IHESE SQUARE S

By James Jacoby

Ill Some Enclta- Evrtnlttg
· wtllt Willie N.raon This top
enlortalno~ performs
selections lrom nlo new
album. Jhe special, 18ped In
Nashville. TN.,wu pert ol a
global tribute 1o Nelson by
mulic lnduotry I-ra
around the world.
1:08 Cll MOVIE: Crlma of

olclng. - ' " · - . - - -

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing wofdl
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Overbidder
goes scot-fre~

(1 :27)
IIJ PrimeNewo
11J Mu-, Sloe Willie

I

Jirn'o Odd Job'o. l u - o.

Jumplilg

Qaogoa'pillc
Spacial Take 1 took II

,

4. . C.,.uts;
lyjDbor
haur. Wll • ,..,.. ...... nM
....lo... -outlluldln• •
-~··:t:a
0411.
.I
-.814-317-

killers

(lJ (f) -

•hrubl. ••·

ft'AIIdt.

0

BRIDGE

uniqueness ollhe human

r• baa l_.n mower.·
Coli llft.-lprn. 114-449-297&amp;.

Ctll 114-441-7307 OYeningo or

I:OO(JJ MOVIe: Tltuttdarltoacl,
loll of F1lclur (NR) (I :18)

Cll
(IJ Growing Patn1.
Carol's boyfriend 11 uverely
Injured In a car cruh. 1;1

116--7814.
Colt " " ' - - '"'

72

22 Inch

fitt•.

_-Son

. 7:31 (IJ . . .

(!) -

- - - Col 816-171-2411
orii6-Z41-•30-

58

12ft. x 381n. pool. Bought naw.
JUne of '81. lnctudll
pump. a 10.,.. oh..-niallll .~ t 100.

IIJCnla•IN
lUI MfliOt' IAag• laoeltaH
Ill Crook end ChatH

I'LL .JUST 1AJ(E 'THESE !lACK
T'MV PLACE A)t &amp;HAR£ •EM
WllM 11-IAT LITnE CRITlER!

RON'I Tot•lolton ........

700 R. .ington 310 Moonuin
Tr .. • a,.ce 3 mil ill from lown w/3x8 Wew• eoop•t3&amp;0 .•
at old Y , At. 2 .,d 82. cllll Mlrlln 22 atto., WI ICDP••&amp;a.
Ctll 114-21111-1270.
304-304-1711-3248.

ltiiAf.rc""'rdyl Q

. . . . . . . ... . . . - A I

01110.
- - - , .......
11~A.M. • doo - -

tc.y A.....O loll, W

·

• (2) Olllnlolved
My linin Hunt lor the

____ ..__,..
,,. ..._ _ . __.
w...-. -.. _
"• .........
,

m . . . Cil ..16-1111-.22.

0no t.t~~too!fod H-ololro
-ltrrlrr . . . ._......, _ . .
Colt 114-. .1331.
.

e (2) Family Feud

of a rookie U.S. Secret
SWvlce agent. 1;1

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

n.w pkltfl c•pet,
~ow ""'"'· utllkl• ..,.lolly poid.

Apwt rn.11 availlltl&amp; HU D ac·

7:30

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

-- -

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

I ,,'Ill Slli'lllli"
1'. liVt: .. l:d I

-.n..

coptod, Colt 306-171-1104.

7:08 Cll Andy IJtlfllllt

lmprov-tl

R•e•r•l•••ment

.

Fr.!• beef, corn •
IPtlrOidmotoly, 210 II. oldoo. 30!4-17114182.
1

47 Wanted to Rant

FRANK AND ERNEST

:;;8-:-1--""H"'DI"'I'"'te_ __

'I

116-141-2214 or 114-1412211.

11o1.. Jodloon. Ohio. Col ei4-U..3U3
er446-0HI.

1 acre tr~l.- IDt for rent. At. 2
Nat1 t\ I mil• from Point
Ple•ant. 304-676--2991 8ft•
8 :00PM .

I

,,..
.......... Cal . .. .
- loool
1-816-137--""' ......... .

A•c-112-or,4
,_ -n ploro tl It lroM
flood. •• . . 306-IS"J.
2011

-• Twlor...- .....
I-,..,...
wootd; DH. ooll

_,... of .buHding on corner af .
&amp;ooond .,dPin&amp; llollit&gt;olo. C.ll

11.441-1111.

l•~ool

--·--........
C.l1 ........ 1210 .......

I

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

LAitior

~DQIIIl w.-1 Of
• tD TI!Na'• CompaiiJ'
Ill Mo1111Y1Itta
lUI a-n
IIJM-Yico
Ill Top C.rd

~I IV I I'

6

I I I 1

of rh&amp; day would be rhe - : ·

SCIIAMoi,ITS ANSWERS

Newallottr

116-.6-1:114.

11 P•d,...ftOOUiltllld I I l l ft
- - . . AC, crutoo. - IOod aondltlon. tl7l. ·OlD.

·-oo - -"'.,R_ •atn• •-.
UOO.OO. PTO I tiL - lrod
t 131.00. 2 , _ *DI.OO..Ut .. _ o _ _
.. nd. forti PTO lift toko
fiiO.OO. J.D. atO. 41 I

. .... - . . -·-..bod.
••oo.

Allar a long wall ar a
restaurant ona woman sighed,
" I didn 't realize that the catch

Acu1!181! - Knife ,.... ~e ~ Thirty - STICK to IT
Salesman ro customers who were IOOI&lt;ing at relrigerarors:
"This is becoming our most popular model. There isn 'l a
magnet made thai will STICK ro IT."

e (I) c:un.nt Alfllr

(!) (f) llaCNIN/

c-....

11+-1337. ,

~

(J)~

Cll

eom,or
0.... Co!rrlo&amp; ...... 1171 23 11.
GORtltlon. Y-1. with auto.
• - or rtttor. Col •DIIIIM •n*lon.

114-441-

Apartment
for Rant

""" ·•
noflof.

lhlw•ll

1-

ft

7:00(JJO...• (2) PM Magazine

7iMotonHcrrn•
l'orloloiiiOCom . . ZZI.N.
• C•rrpenl

fil&gt;llod fior-d bulo lor . . .

48 Space for Rent

F\rrnilhod opt.. I Sfl . 243
2 toto on a..d H• Ad. Rollng- JICkaon Pika t2215 a mo.
/llln• Dtwtolon. 304-1711-2141. Utlltl• pilei Coli 441-44 I I
ear... eoc. 114x14t tt. E*'•· aft• 7PM.
w.v•. on bla tap-..• .,.._. Furn. Apt. n•l to Ubrary
.,d-•oloblo. n .10o.oo. porklna • A.C . Rot. roq'od.
:104-372-1483.
a.ltellll far 1 penon. c.tl
114-4411-0131.

1.11 r, I d 1' •

- l i Z ....., 710.00. Ford
101-·-·-00J
.......... 111--

Ron Allaon, 1210BeaondAw••

,.,_t,

T•• Townhou•

35 Loti &amp; AC1'811ge

Hol.,d 110 ltltrlrlrod. I ft.
-Coli 114....; .,.._
-...... '1100.

WHrrFB METAL DETEcTORS

Plllture lor
Rio Ofllhde
1ree. BIDbum Rellty. Clll
81 ... 44&amp;-0008.

$

IIINewCoumr,
8:31 Cll One Dey 81 a Time

. .. ln.

..,_ ...... c - ..~

EVANS EIIITEAPRIIES, Jodl•on. Ohio. 1-~137-9828.

II 4-4411-44211. el 4-4411-4249
or 81+449-232&amp;.

ew ABC 11ewa1;1

tiJCa.-E-

· t1400. Col 116-1171.

E.,..,.,.

toouoo. 1177

-

-Col 81+-MII"""-·· -

,.1

.;;.I

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

Clnt:jnnall
Ill lhctwtllr Today

wtro loolrod pofntor
hu-g po- · 113
Llv..tock
toortlll. lhot~ 'rllormod. Col - - - - - - - - .ei4-3111-I7ZO.

w~ ..

1913 Mobile HOm a 14x70. 2

~·

- · IIIZ Choory OwriAw.
11.- ml, 4 • .. •o. oond.,
ooldnl . , _ Col 116-S?e- Nl
4 .
·
- lloolng
. wllh
41h-PI3711- ·
21 • • . ,• • :114.
.
1111. W.I.W. tt-. 304-1798,814.
1178 - .. " Morquio tor

filohlo llooko. luy-Wfo-Cht
Ooe ltrr ... 11Hiolo.

01\lo. 30 "" 77 3-!1121.
.
2 bectoom tr.. • fn Maaon. · For Rent: Large o.,..ca- v•lllt.

~

1111 e D C88 NoWa
etD til WKIIPin

.,

,,

--.T.:.....:O;...:.:K..;.E::...:.;R;..C.:...,..~~ -

I:OI(I)U..
1:30. (2) ~ NBC Ntghlly Newa · ·

.

l"'""'"

oft

a~-ofute

PM.

Instrument• '

llolllpollo, Ohio.
4331.

5

tiJ ...Ra

'"'. .Ctl1116-446--loft•7
ldtt&amp;IO. Chow vice.

4 cu .

bectoom~. 2 till batt., priced to

••eo.

ZIO AC -ol. · - 1 8oM "'"·
Nt.
roke. tiOJII, I II ........
- ··
..
_Col1....
116--·22.

•

For Sale · Concr. . 1nd Pl•ic
Furnished Rooms. IIPIIc
tlnkt. AI aR•. RON

Aoon"ll

.,. 71143

lullclna-atodl. ....
brick.
dowo.
._ -otc. et,;,a.
-t - Rio Q,.,d&amp; D. Colt 1142411-1121.

One bedroomunfurniiNd IP-'·
•141. Pw1illl utllll•
plld, dopoolt roqulrod. Col
114-982-2014.

46

Colt 114-•
-··oft•
I.
Hoy - ·

m.m.

__-.....;._·_____

••do

Antlqu81

1-------

I boctoom orrt. for - - t221
montlt. d""oolt roqu-. el4-

1 --~-~

LMge traM•. 2 IIR , Locllt_. an
771. ,... Pltriot. C.III14-3782841
·
y,. . . for rMt. Nice. 3 lA.
lllngroom.llrgeyard,
314 l'lolrd Bt. Kon01go. CoM
81+4-11&amp;-7473.

83

g

(!) lodr !IJctrlc
(f) 1-2-1 C-.:1 Q

.

• • SJI'Mn. wry fOod oond.,
•1110. Colt1+441-3318.

One

rdom ., d dining

11 u--,, 1...,10 2 BA on
rontod lot Oollip.,. dly odlool
- - Coli
4PM 114-3792443. .

v.t•

c•piiiiCI, IPPhnOII,
•d
••h pidlupil provtdad MaiM•
-•••ttvlna cloooto thoppin&amp; ba1!oo .,d oahoolo. fer

·ljl . .

• tD HeiiPV 0.,.

Cll

vrM, Furnlturo

-.rnluro .,d
Coli el4-44117172. Hourol-1.
PICKENS USED RIR!'IIrURE
c"""""'' Joouooholcl lurnlof&gt;.
;,..._ \\.mlt.,Jt 'ldao. 304-1711410. 114- 381-1773,

ICkt

(!) R11dlng ~lnbow

. iJi 8porlll.ook

Now - l n g ....,._,. for _.._-_.
;:_
. _ _ _ _ __
2 - - ., .......... luflv .

AJ*tmtnU: for

101111

a- VACATION/

ANP I DON'T WANT
TO Blii LA.,._.'

I

--Fc-L
I. ; .LI-;.;H~Y.I. .-l
~1

Wheeta runs away: Shine

10 Doyo . . . . . . Coth with

03Z2.

I

""~"'

HAWET
--r-1
.:.;-.:1~1--.:,t~ i

1;-,

gou to a co-rt and gets

I'M 1"' 1 '\'e IN FOR THE
.S I~( WHILE IE'S

· 1_-. u ..d • oc1t· 3 M1• out
:::.r":!d~...!~·;w:.::

Apabl,..t
for Rent

t

:I. :l'UST GOT AN
IMPORTANT JOS

"::·
116-17130
n.-1711-

oult-.
UOondupto MI.

2

Ttlvle (D-.30)
(!) llegnrHI Jflllkrr High

rolrttllt II tyJIIO.

I

I I' 1 I I I

• ()) Cll • (I) Ill
(I) . . _ lowl of 8porlt

••-eve
-·-­
~
2211•

uo. no • lllna
Good ... , ..., ot

t~r:iiiii~i~~~~"ii=:::;~~~~~==1
Now .,d 41 Homes for Rent
opptt--.

. For ... eByOwn.

114-446-IIOZ.

•eo.

--

believe we've been fee . g a
Strange kid for twO days!"

320&amp;Jacklon Avenue
v.., N• 4orlbac6oomhome.

32 Mobile Hom•
for Sale

.s-

w· ash· • · I
din

.I..IC

f.,..

be• ement,

::&gt; •

tr~me

N e31 6 t41.

low to form four aimplt ~ds.

·=

.......

IAIIII

tho
be-

ARRESE

lptJII rJJI

up. Uood •-tllr4
-•
........
......

. . . . I I IOeun.

m.atb
loci . _ .

. . . . .,...·11

2VI bllh. I

1¥...,• lngrou..r poal, go&amp;olro. toto of
•troa Priood to ""· Fer """"

,.

lui " ' - .... t71. .. d_
K'"-t310.4
_
__
til- •zao
I up.

Rookoprtngo . . . c ...... bull,
1 owrw home on •prCII'. 3

flrepl-=-.

Uood I

M·

WED.. APRIL 12

1:00 (JJ llonenza: T1te Loat

IUDGIT TIIANIMIIIION·

*110. Mlltb IIIII or boa ....II

8 four
Roorrongo lottoro of
tcrambl.d wards

11 '

....

_ru_,._!:"'_u_I'...:S;;_
. ~,;;;.~c!l~:[E~S·

EVI!NINCl .

•... ....,._ ....

1218.,duptot3M.'-"-

The

Television
Viewing
M

=~
7i

em 10
U71. 1 - . til to tiZI.
Dln4tw
up to . . . .

labr

•

. . .....
- -·
=·t"Jii"Va,r"*

lofoo
.,d
"''""'
- UOfrom
1111110
tttl.
Tolll•
ond
up to t121. Hide-- tiiO

1874 er 114-742-2110 ...
mor • in forrn1t.,n.

•

· · - Coll16-117-. .1I.IIIX.130HP,
COin, 110..._
.... , ......

LAYNI!'I fUIINirUAE

ey. . aldtrl-l•.a. 4acra clot•
to town. Tim lhlt 814-tl:i-

.....nd
Molonl for ....

M_lcklaport. Ohio

111-U..... 4 . . . . . . . .

""""
..... llil. -·
c--ot.ll4-44e-711e.

3 or 4 bectoom ho.111e in
........... Ohio. 111.000
114-71"J.Z744.

Pon&amp;ov

12,1989

...-··-···"'. -... --·-.
•• *'

oolie!!l•

to tllll. A - -

•era e be·~

.•w:a1ay,
... d

11111

AFECOA,
KHVA -,

HD

-

E
JOliN IJURilOUG!IIS

lll---.----~----------~~~------~---------------,--------~-----------------------------,-.----------------------------------------,--------------------------~---------.~.----.2•1- __ _

'
I

DBA

ZOHoiVQCcl

TO

IR

:

H

FNID

Cl

UCPCoiCISAU

AUXAI.-PAorl

to .......

QCVA

'

'

q

•

•

.
•

0

�'

'

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

BIG BEND

You .. h•dependently Owned
Low-Priced Supel'market

E ACCEPT
FEDERAL

Lottery··

FOOD ,
STAMPS

Reds slip
past Astros

AND

w:1.c.

Pick3

153
Pick4
34()4,

Supper Louto

COUPONS

Page

3

4-7-12-31-38-40
Kicker

WE'IE PIOUD TO IE AN

984472

. OFFICIAL SPONSOR

•

OF THE SCOn CONNEllEY MEMORIAL

ALL STAR GAME BENEFIT
.
.
'

NFL AFC CHAMPION

Vol.39, No.237
Copyrlg~ted 1989

·CINCINNATI BENGALS
PLAY BASKETBALL AGAINST THE

AREA'S COLLEGE ALL-STARS

TICKETS
NOW AVAILABLE

FRIDAY, AP.IL 21 -

,.. !~~:~~~:un

7:30 P.M..

$350

AT RIO GRANDE COLLEGE LYNE CENTER
PLUS

ASSORTED
FLAVORS.

•

'

.FOODLAND

ADVANCE . .

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'h Gallon

HEINZ

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12

oz.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel .N ews Stall
Plans to relocate Township
Road 333 In Salem Township, as
requested py Southern Ohio·Coal
Company, was discussed Wednesday by coal company repre·
simtatlves. ·· Salem Township
Trustees and the M'etgs ·county
Commissioners In the regular
weekly commissioners' meeting.
SOCCO wishes to relocate the
road to better serve the needs of
the company when a new shaft
site Is developed In Salem Township. Coal company representa' tlves contend that relocation of
the road wlll be a benefit not only
because It wlll betll!r serve the
· shaft site, but because It could be

relocated out of the flood plain
and away from a dangerous
curve on State Route 124.
Wednesday's meeting was ac·
tually just a tro)lbleshootlng
session to determine 1! any
problems are evident at this time
with regard to relocating the
road. No one at Wednesday's
m,eettng had problems with the
relocation, however, It was suggested that SOC CO's engineers
meet .with Meig$ County Engl·
neer Philip Roberts at another
, time to determine what might be
the best relocation site, and also
to determine if water runoff
could be a problem.
Neither Roberts nor Commissioner Richard Jones were pres ~

ent for Wednesday's meeting
because they were In attendance
at a State Issue !! meeting In
Marietta.
SOCCO proposes to pay for all
costs of constructing a new road,
with the township In charge of the
actual construction.
If plans to relocate the road are
finally approved, after all appropriate steps necessary for
such a project are met, the
commissioners will have to abandon the old road and then
dedicate the new. However,
nothing definite was decided In
yesterday's meeting.
At the request of County
Engineer Roberts, which was
relayed by Highway Superln·

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Jets scour. area .for missing plane
equipment used by the jetS also
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!)
- Air Force jets using Infrared wlll pick up large anlrnalllfe, and
Air Force technicians were to
spy equipment swept a huge
review the Information to make
section of southeastern West
sure deer and bears were not
VIrginia, hoping to spot the heat
mlstak.en for humans. .
given off by any survivors from a
The single-engine plane dlsap· ·
plane that disappeared a week
peared
last ' Thursday on a
ago.
5-mlnute
flight from Wood
Two F-4 jets from Shaw· Air
Force Base flew from Parkers- . County to Greenbrier County.
Piloting the plane was Jon
burg to Lewisburg and back
again on Wednesday, using the !'IIetz, 38, an off-duty Ohio Highway Patrol trooper. The other
radar equipment to try to spot
passeng(!rs were Kent and Shirdifferences ln temperature beley Place of Beverly, Ohio, and
tween the ground and surround·
. George Johnson of Parkersburg.
lng objects.
Metz, a friend of the three, was
Civil Air Patrol Major Bob
Anderson· said search teams and . taking them to a business appointment In White Sulphur
rescue aircraft were grounded
Springs,
officials said. Metz, a
Wednesday in an area along the
Parkersburg
.native and Ohio .
Nicholas and Greenbrier county
highway patrolman since 1976, Is
Une to give the jets more room to
stationed at St. Clairsville, Olilo,
work.
after serving five · years at ·
Anderson said the hl-tech

147 oz.

gallon

By LEE LEONARD
97·2, and was forwarded to the
UPI Stateho~ Reporter
Senate . Rep. Ray Miller, D·
COLUM.BUS The Ohio
Columbus, the chief sponsor,
House of Representatives Wed: · said It Is needed ·to help an
nesday adopted legislation proestimated 1.4 mUllon working
viding tor five demonstration
Ohioans whose Income Is too high
projects on sickness and accident · to allow them on welfare; yet too
benefit&amp; for the uninsured.
low for them to afford health
The blll cleared the House,
Insurance.

. l.ncal news briefs-Man liwaits charges

UQUID

CLOROX BLEACH

Felonious assault charges are expected to be tiled this week
against a 20-year-okl North Carollna man for the Saturday night
assault on Lonnie Taylor, Middleport, according to Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The ~herlff reported that the North Caronna Individual called
the sheriff's offtce Wednesday evening after being Informed by
hla famUy that th~ department was looking for hlin. He advised :
offtclals that he would contact the procecu tlng attQrney. Sheriff
Soulsby said that the name of the Individual Ia being withheld
pending the actual filing of charges.
Also under lnves ligation Is the theft last week ot between 100
'and 400 pounds of aluminum bars from tlle Meigs Non-Ferrous
.
.
Aluminum at Pagetown.
Wedlielday deputies took a complaint from Allaba Bllaell,
ReedsvUie, that her purse had been stolen. Jack Braley, Sr.,
Reedsville, reported damage to hll station wagon Ill March and
It wu noted tbat chqes on that are ~ding.
·

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Marietta. Ohio.
Search teams have been concentrating on an 800· to 90()..
square mile area alol)g the
Nicholas and Greenbrier county
line because officials have received tWo reports of low-flying
alrcraft.ln the vicinity the day the
plane disappeared.
" It's a blg area and Its straight
up and down," Anderson said. "If
you flatten It out, It would- be
bigger than the state."
One call came from a pilot who
told officials she saw a plan
flying about 700 feet to800 feet off
the ground, Anderson said, ad·
ding the plane was heading
toward a 1,300-foot-hlgh
mountain.
·
Anderson would not speculate
about the odds of finding
survivors.
"We keep going on the hope
that there are,'' he said.

House adopts ·pilot projects
FAMILY SIZE

BROUGHTON'S
ASSO.RTED FLAVORS

School of OllleoP!'thlc Medicine received a federal
KJ'BIIt, The Teen Sexuality · and Pregnancy
Prevention Grant, which enables Mrs. Jacobs to
teach adolescents about their sexuality.

•

. S2.19

s

SEXliALITY DISCliSSION- AdolescentSexu-

alltf Education Coordinator CeciBa .Jacobs talks
with Melp Jlllh School home economies
studenls, Chris Gilmore and "Heather Mitchell
about teenage sexuality. The Ohio llnlverslly

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OLE CAROLINA SUCED

""

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 13, 1989

2 Sections. 16 Pages

26 Ce~tl

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Coal company requests reloCation of road

ALL STAR HIGH SCHOOL GAME ~s·a.o_o·1- '-'•1- 10-01,.,
ALL MEAT

Clear tonight, low In mid
80s. Friday, mostly sunny,
· breezy. Highs near 70.

(ContiDUed on page 8)

I

•

Cost-conscious lawmakers
balked at a bill establishing a
joint legislative commltte.e to
oversee skyrocketing Medicaid
expenditures. They said they
want to see cost figures. A vote
was rescheduled for Thursday.
Meanwhile, the Ohio Senate
voted to change the lyrics to the
Continued on page 8

·tendent Ted Warner, a bid of
$19,260 froin Falrplaln Tractor
Sales, Ripley, W.Va., for a new
hlghwar department tractor,
was accepted. Three other·trac·
tor bids were received last week
by the commissioners, however,
according to Warner, Falrplaln
was . the only bidder meeting
specifications.
In other matters; Clerk Mary
Hobstetler reported that a meetIng this week with the architect
on the courthouse elevator pro·
ject has been canceled and will
be rescheduled at a later date.
Hobstetter also announced that
the Buckeye Hills Semi-Annual
Polley Council meeting will be

held 6 p.m. AprU 25 In Athens.
However, neither Commissioners Manning Roush nor David
Koblentz believe anyone from
their board will attend since a
public hearing on · the State's
Solld Wasil! Management Program Is being held the same
night, also In Athens.
·
A letter from former State
Rep. Jolynn Bosll!r wa s read by
Hobsll!tter, announcing that a
meeting to discuss the Tuppers
Plains sewage project wlll be
held Friday, April 21, 1 p.m., at
the Tuppers Plains Fire Station.
Representatives of the parties
Involved In the project will be In
attendance. Local people Inter-'

es ted In \he m eeting should
conta.ct Jon Jacobs at the Meigs
County Health Department fo r
more Information.
Finally, at the wrltll!n request
of the Community Assault Prevention Services, the commissioners proclaimed April as Child
Abuse Prevention Month . Special activities to promote child
abuse prevention have been
scheduled for April, Including an
appearance of Splderman on
April 29 at the Pomeroy Kroger
store. The Sptderman tour,
which Is sponsored by the League
Against Child Abuse and the
Huntington Banks, Is the largest
event of Its kind In the country.

Cooperation, communication
key to area eco!'tomic growth
By JULffi E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Enhancement of economic
growth through cooperation and
communication between the
Meigs and Mason County com·
munilles, the development of
shared community activities and
;lttltudes, and the promotion of
actlvl.tles that Improve the qual·
lty of 1\le In the two communities
were tlie focus of the Bend Area
Development ' Committee when
the group met Wednesday
evening.
Frank Lee, executive director
·or the Mason County Developmental Authority Board, spoke
on the Importance of both commurtltes working together to
develop both sides of the river
and gave examples of the devel·
opment of Mason County IncludIng the one that American Alloys
has set In that area.
Lee spoke or the various
aspects that the Developmental
Board has to offer such as the
small business counseling program, which works thrqugh
Marshall University, the ,Job
training program, . the research
program, and the Importance of
the lndentiflcatton and develop·
ment of industrial sites. He
estimates that to organize a
developmental board successfu Uy, It would take a budget of
approximately $150,000.
Lenny Eliason discussed the
development of an extended area
service on long distance telephone rates. This development,
which would allow toll free calls
across the river, has to have
strong reasons as to why the

Hoffman
dead at" 52

service Is desired or needed material that would identify all
before the request will ever be the communities In the Big Bend
Area.
considered.
Hollday activities were dis·
In other matters the group
discussed the Importance of the cussed with the posslbllty . of
development of new roads and schedullng dlffereQt events at
highways through the Bend Area different times within each of the
which would link the river Bend Area communities. It was
communities to larger areas. It also noll!d that there needs to be a
was noted 1hat there wlll be a creation of new and spec!;¥
public meeting, regarding the events that would draw people In
development of four lane high· to the area.
The group also discussed the
ways In the area, on Aprll26 at 7
p.m. at the Mason County j&gt;osstblllty of commercial and
recreational development of the
Courthouse.
The development of a logo for river's shorellne through the
the· Big Bend Area, which would · development of a river study
committee.
·
Identify !loth sides of the river,
The next meeflrJg for the group
was discussed with the posstbllty
of having a conies t to design the ·will be May 10, 7 p.m. at the New
logo. Bruce Reed Is also putting Haven City Hall In New Haven,
together Ideas for promotional W.Va.

Meigs reSidents
donate 75 units of
blood Wednesday
Seventy-five units of blood
were donated when the Amerl·
can Red Cross bloodmoblle vl·
sited Meigs County Wednesday .
Of the total units donated, 27
)l'ere specllied for a relative or
friend. Dr. James Witherell and
Dr. Wilma Mansfield were the
doctors In charge, with Beulah
Ward, Joyce Kerns ,and Winifred
Marcinko, nurses assisting.
First time donors were Wayne
MilhOan, Leese M. Murphey,
Carmel Evans, Sherman Buskirk, Randy George, Greg Cun·
nlngham, Buddy Sams, Nancy
Broderick, and DOI)ald Mora.

Kenneth Imboden and Gerald
Rought were slx gallon donors at
the bloodmobile, with Charles
Pyles being a four gallon'donor,
and William Allen Blackwell
'
'
Dan Follrod, Lenora McKnight,
Linda Fraley, Donald Meadows,
Susanna Heck, Darla Thomas
and Alva Clark being one gallon
donors.
The canteen was sewed by the
Middleport Child Conservation
League. Clerical workers were
Mary Nease, Jean Nease, Peggy
Harris, Linda Diddle, and Edward Cozart, a representative of
Continued on page 8

SOLEBURY TOWNSHIP. Pa.
(UP!) - Abbie Hoffman, the
Ylpple founder and Chicago ,
Seven defendant who hld for
seven years as a· fugitive for
cocaine trafficking, was found
dead at his home at age 52.
Authorities said they suspected ·
no foul play but ordered an
autopsy Thursday.
Hoffman was found dead by his
. landlord Wednesday night of
apparently natural causes In his
apartment 25 . miles north ·of
Philadelphia.
Solebury Township Pollee
Chief Richard Mangan said the
body was taken to nearby Doylestown Hospital for an autopsy.
"There was no evidence what·
soever ot drugs or drug activity,,"
Bucks County District Attorney
Alan Rubenstein said. "We do not
know the cause of death and we
order~ an au topsy. U Is suspl. claus only because we carry It
that way not knowing the actual·
cause of death." ·
Divorced. twice, Hofbnan 1s
survived by Jobanna Lawrenson,
his common-law-wife, and three
children, lncludlq AmeriCa,
who appeared with him at Point
Pleasant demon1trat1ons. Halfman was long estranged from
hll fa tiler, who died three weeka
after his 1011 went UllderJroUnd
while awaltlllg trial on tbe
cocaine tllarpl, but he remallll!d cloee to hll mo!her even '
clurlllfl hla yaara of hldlq, the
Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

'
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•

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